You guys hear about Argentina's hyperinflation of the 90's? I was regional director for Latin America at that time for a European optical company and made several trips to Buenos Aires and my representative was a friend with whom I traveled the country.
Walking the streets of Buenos Aires and hearing the stories of the locals and how they survived these times was sobering back then. There was a collective depression that was palpable and disheartening.
There was a story that always struck me. Argentina imported Tropicana orange juice from FLorida back then even though Argentina had large orange production domestically. But there was no domestic comparable product available (except of course buying oranges and squeezing them yourself
I was told there was no capital available to buy the equipment and invest in the infrastructure to make a comparable domestic product.
Argentina's debt to GDP ratio back then was even lower than the US today when foreign investors pulled the plug. The US$ role as a global currency and still weakened but robust American consumer are the only reasons China and friends continue to prop us up.
We wont see a pulling of the plug the way foreign investors did in Argentina here in the USA because we are still not an irrelevant small country in Latin America.
But there is a slow process underway that is moving the USA in incremental steps down the path toward this irrelevancy.
We talk about reviving our local industry. I think about that Tropicana story down there in Argentina and wonder how one day the USA is going to relocalize their domestic manufacturing if this would happen after our currency loses a big chunk of its value. We are very dependent on globalization to procure capitol goods required to rebuild our domestic manufacturing. Germany for example is a leading exporter of machinery for manufacturing.
There is still enormous wealth in the USA and leverage in the way our economy is co dependent with trading partners. What is scary is that the inertia we are stuck in seems to be forcing us down a road of further over extending our debt to GDP ratio to the point where we one day will be become as irrelevant as Argentina was to foreign investors.
Here is the irony of all this. We might be forced to buy whole oranges and squeeze them ourselves in a severely weakened economy. And this is exactly what we so often advocate when we promote a less energy and more sustainable economy.
We despair the direction we are heading and yet it is the direction we advocate also in terms of living in a powered down society. There is real cognitive dissonance here that I marvel at.
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
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