Tuesday, May 18, 2010

The bursting of the Regulatory State Bubble

In May 1939 as storm clouds of war built over Europe, an astonishing archaeological find was unearthed at Sutton Hoo, on the east coast of England. A Dark Age King's tomb was excavated, providing a window into the world of the pagan kings of old.

Rædwald was the most powerful of the many kings ruling various pieces of the old Roman province of Britannia. The Legions had been recalled to protect the Eternal City itself, two hundred years before, triggering a "land grab" by Germanic barbarians.

Britannia was rich, and weak. Long used to protection by the Roman Army, the peoples were easy pickings for increasingly large bands of roving barbarians, who eventually settled down as conquerors. Rædwald's horde showed how a king gathered and maintained power in those brutal days. Basically, it was a Ponzi scheme.

Kings of this day were Ring Givers, as described in Beowulf and echoed in J.R.R. Tolkien's novels. Simon Schama writes about how the system worked in his A History Of Britain:
Their political power rested on the spoils of war and on the unwritten custom of the clan. The blood feud and the inhumation of bodies were standard practice among them. This does not mean, however, that the early Anglo-Saxon kingdoms were places of sub-human brutality and ignorance, perpetuated by thugs in helmets. War was not a sport; it was a system. Its plunder was the glue of loyalty, binding noble warriors and their men to the king. It was the land, held in return for military service, that fed their bellies; it was the honour that fed their pride; and it was the jewels that pandered to their vanity. It was everything.
To keep a large kingdom's fighting men in booty, you had to fight a lot. You also had to fight smart - a king that loses a lot of battles loses his men's loyalty and ultimately his life. The chronicles tell us that the Merovingian boy king Sigebert wept in his saddle as his army was routed. That's what led to the Mayors of the Palace becoming the war leaders and Ring Givers, and that led to the replacement of the Merovingians by the Carolingians. You might say that the Merovingian bubble burst.


Risk vs. Reward is a calculation that a king had to become good at. But the easiest pickings always went early, and so over time the risk increased and the reward decreased. Eventually there wasn't enough plunder to keep the system going.

The modern Regulatory State has a more subtle (and less brutal) method of getting plunder, but at its heart the system is the same: politics is still about feeding bellies, vanity, and pride. Regulations need Regulators, which gives ample opportunity for patronage. New regulations can be crafted with the help of powerful allies, which gives ample opportunity to flatter egos and let them show their followers that they too can deliver results. Plunder must be distributed, even it it takes the form of intellectual booty.


Some of this takes the form of filthy lucre. The "Stimulus" program is notorious (and unpopular) because the bulk of the payouts are going to the public employee unions. Thanks for all your support, guys - now that we've conquered the kingdom, we're looting the treasury for you.

Obama the Ring Giver.

The problem is that the dynamic facing Obama is the same that faced Sigebert: the easy plunder is gone. The battles he must fight have become much harder, and the payoff for winning is much lower. And it's not just him. The dynamic driving the Regulatory State is strained to the limit. Consider the big, early wins of the Regulatory State:
  • The Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906. People were dieing because of poisoned food and snake oil patent medicines. This act required labeling, which made it possible for the consumer to choose which product to buy.
  • Social Security (as originally envisioned, i.e. a minimal safety net against destitution). Essentially a nation wide insurance policy against starvation in your old age, it was very low cost (contrast with today's system).
  • The European Economic Community which took the first steps into turning western Europe into a Common Market.
But even here, the trajectory is apparent: lower rewards, higher costs. From keeping citizens from being poisoned to a moderate rationalization of tariff levels. Big gains lead to modest gains lead to poor gains. You can see the trajectory even within individual areas of the Progressive agenda over time:
  • Women's rights, from the Vote (1920) to employment opportunities (1960) to "feminism" which has become unpopular, even with young women.
  • Environmentalism, from the National Park system (1916) to the Air Pollution Control Act (1955) to the Superfund act to Cap and Trade.
  • Unions, from Dickensian Mills to the right to organize to public employee unions.
The early gains are always at the beginning. Always. This makes it hard for Obama and his intellectual brethren in Europe; just as Valéry Giscard d'Estaing is no Jean Monet, Obama is no Teddy Roosevelt. They can't be - the easy wins are already gone. Just as Rædwald had to fight tougher opponents than the soft Romanized Britons, Obama and the folks in the EU have bigger challenges than their predecessors.

They have to, if they are to be Ring Givers. Money, pride, and vanity are on the line today just as they were in the seventh century. The battles are bigger (European Constitution, Health Care Reform) because that's the only way to satisfy the requirement for money, pride, and vanity.

Where does the money come from? As the programs have gotten bigger and more expensive, governments have turned increasingly to deficit spending. While politicians like to talk of this in terms of "making an investment", it's nothing of the kind. It's consumption. For a long time it was assumed that low levels of deficits (2-3% of GDP) could be tolerated, or were possibly stimulative. But remember that trajectory: programs get bigger over time, and so do deficits. The balloon swells.

The US government next year will borrow 42% of what it spends. Europe is as bad: Greece's government deficit is 13.6% of GDP; Ireland is even worse, and Spain and Italy are not far behind. And so to the bubble.

The Euro has been "saved" by a Trillion dollar cash infusion. Where did the money come from? Government loan guarantees, or direct cash infusions via the IMF. But that begs the question of where the cash infusions came from, if all the governments are running deficits? More borrowing.

The Regulatory State has led us, step by step, vanity project by vanity project to a massive bubble of Sovereign Debt. Like someone who refinanced their house to take a vacation, the industrialized world is facing a crisis caused by a dynamic that Rædwald understood: the need for rulers to cater to their supporter's money, pride, and vanity.

When this bubble bursts, collapsing governments (hello, Greece) will take down other governments that loaned them too much. As those governments collapse, they will take down other governments. Once government bonds look to be junk status, the interest rates will rise to ruinous levels, straining even the less profligate governments.

What happens when there's nobody left to bail the Progressive States out? In Greece it's rioting in the streets and firebombs lobbed at businesses. In the US, there are already mutterings about the Fed.Gov seizing 401(k) accounts. In none of the countries will the Progressive State be able to provide the service level that they've promised. In many states, the government won't even be close to what they've promised. Social Security will look precisely like the Florida Real Estate market.

I'm terribly pessimistic about what's going to happen over the next decade (or maybe two). Europe's further down this road than we are, but international financial crises are contagious, and I simply don't see the intellectual capacity on the left to deal effectively with this. The Tea Parties will put a break on things here, but we're going to take serious damage from the collapse of Europe. I hope that I'm wrong, but it's all too easy to see Obama as Sigebert, not knowing what to do, weeping in his saddle at the route of his armies.

9 comments:

  1. Sheesh, I was worried you were going to put up your "post that's made you depressed."

    Another one out of the park, sir. I wonder, though, if there might somewhere be a Ring-Bearer, who will put an end to this cycle of plunder. Of course, that notion comes from the world of fiction...

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  2. The Tea Parties will put a break on things here, but we're going to take serious damage from the collapse of Europe.

    There's the only place that I think your analysis goes awry.

    The Tea Party movement is a large and vocal minority, but it is a minority.

    We'll probably see a rout of the demoncrats this fall and in 2012, but with whom will they be replaced?

    The Republicans are no less "big government" tax and spenders than the Dems, they just boil the frog slightly less quickly.

    If, by some miracle, we elected a congress and President willing to take the dramatic steps that would be necessary to even delay the inevitable (I'm fairly certain that our economic fall can no longer be prevented...we're beyond the tipping point in terms of debt load), there would be riots in the streets of Chicago, New York, New Orleans, LA, Newark, etc. Every city with a large population of "the less fortunate" would burn.

    Tea Partiers are fed up right now, but they are peaceful. What happens when the "rallys" are made up of union thugs, anarchists, socialists and all the others who have repeatedly demonstrated their penchant for...um...somewhat less than peaceful...demonstrations?

    The Republicans, with the singular exception of perhaps Ron Paul, simply don't have the fortitude to deal with anything like that.

    They'd cave in a New York minute.

    Which means: put a fork in us...we're just as done as the Europeans.

    Their inevitable economic collapse will hasten our own, but even if by some miracle, they found a way to keep on going just like they are forever, we'd still fall just the same.

    We are past several tipping points: over half of the population now lives at the expense of the minority. Whenever the majority can vote for the minority to pay their bills...game over.

    Our debt load is simply too great to overcome...and its growing unabated.

    Most of the population is insufficiently educated to even grasp the problem, let alone understand or embrace any viable solution.

    Ben Franklin, upon the nation's founding, clearly understood the basic truth that nothing built by man can endure forever. He clearly understood that, no matter how finely crafted or ingeniously designed, human beings would find a way to break it.

    He comes across as quite the pessimist in some of his writings, but reading his words now, the only thing I can say is "he was right."

    Everything that has a beginning, also has an end.

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  3. Scotaku, it is the one that's got me depressed. The governments are over leveraged, and as the bubble pops it's going to do a whole lot of damage to the economies of the western world.

    We may see people's standard of living regress to what we saw a generation ago.

    Curt, I fear you're right. And I absolutely agree with your assessment of the Republicans.

    The problem is that we're only about 3 years out from the collapse, and that assumes that everything works "normally" up until then (no EU collapse, etc). But in 2014 Medicade goes very negative (budget-wise), the Health Care "reform" kicks in (as far as the government paying out real money from the treasury), and Social Security goes negative only a year or two after.

    Since costs are ALWAYS underestimated, I expect we'll be at permanent, multi trillion dollar a year deficits by the middle of the decade.

    The only way out is for Congress to tell the American people that their mouths wrote a bunch of checks that the country can't cash. Thanks for all that Social Security "Trust Fund" dough, but we spent it all on ocean front time shares and nice vacations. Hope you have something saved up for your retirement, although the Fed.Gov would really like it if you handed over your 401(k) ...

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  4. The problem is that the dynamic facing Obama is the same that faced Sigebert: the easy plunder is gone.

    Wow... awesome analysis! It also explains why this administration are panic-mongers. To make their "plunder" seem necessary they have to make every opportunity seem like a must-do-immediately. See: cap and trade, stimulus, jobs bill, healthcare reform, et al.

    Best case scenario, we have bad news.

    Worst case scenario, we have awful news.

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  5. Ring Giver - what an awesome analogy.

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  6. Great work, Ted. Thanks for seeing it throught.

    The following offers a glimmer of hope and a couple of amusing thoughts.

    http://finance.yahoo.com/banking-budgeting/article/109562/sovereign-debt-vigilantes-put-europe-on-notice

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  7. Sutton Hoo - one of my favorite digs, a place I always wanted to visit...

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  8. I was once encouraged to go to bed each day a little less stupid.

    After this, I think I'll be good for at least a week.

    Jim

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  9. Borepatch, first off, the article is great. Well written and a wonderful historical analogy. My hat's off to you.

    But, srsly, if that got you depressed enough that you didn't want to post it, you should see what goes through my head. On second thought, maybe you shouldn't.

    I'm largely with SailorCurt. We are basically in a single party system, with two public faces. Both are driving toward monstrous governments, the only difference being one is going at Bugatti Veyron speed while the other is a bit slower. This administration, though, has some differences. While they espouse socialist ideals loudly and repeatedly, they also are not beyond using their offices to enrich themselves. That makes them the worst kind of thugs to me.

    If we keep on our current economic path, I also think we're basically done as a country and economic collapse is unavoidable. Hate to quote myself, but I said in a blog post a few weeks ago, "We could avoid financial collapse with sober spending, and intelligent regulations. In other words, we're screwed."

    I find that unspeakably sad because it didn't have to be. It is literally death by a million paper cuts, no one of which did can be called the cause of death. It could have been stopped a million times, but we didn't. We were so busy working 50, 60, 70 hours a week, to get that big income or vacation home or whatever goal we set for ourselves, that we didn't pay attention to the politicians. We put people in office who we trusted to do their jobs, when the best test for who to vote for would have been the one who wanted the job the least, and we didn't watch them closely enough.

    They say, "you may not be interested in politics, but that doesn't mean politics isn't interested in you". That big income became a target to redistribute. That retirement account you put away became another target to tax or take over outright. Those million pieces of paper (legislation) that inflicted a million paper cuts, have morphed into a million pieces of red tape to restrict your ability to do anything you please.

    We are very likely going to be the last people to live in a pretty much free society. For how long? I don't know. A generation? Several generations? A thousand years? I fear deeply for my kids and the eventually likely grandchildren. And nothing makes me sadder than that.

    Winston Churchill said something like, "You can always count on the Americans to do the right thing - after they've tried exhausted all the other options". If we tried to do the right things now, have we waited too long to start?

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