The Unintended Consequences of Unintended Consequences
November 7, 2022
Decades of central bank distortions and regulatory / market-share capture by cartels and monopolies
have completely gutted "markets," destroying their self-correcting dynamics.
Unintended consequences introduce unexpected problems that may not have easy
solutions. An entirely different set of problems are unleashed as unintended consequences
have their own unintended consequences. This is the problem with complex emergent systems
such as economies, societies and global supply chains:
the system's feedback, leverage points and phase-change thresholds are not necessarily visible or predictable,
yet these dynamics have the potential to cascade small failures into systemic collapse.
The unintended consequences of unintended consequences are called second-order effects:
consequences have their own consequences.
So for example, you juice your economy with massive stimulus after a lockdown that upended consumers and
global supply chains, crushing both demand and supply, and suddenly you have rip-roaring inflation as demand comes
back while supply chains remain tangled.
Shifting critical industrial production to frenemies so corporations could maximize profits while reducing the quality
of goods and services seemed like a good idea until the potential costs of that dependence on frenemies become apparent.
Assuming oil and natural gas would always be in abundance made sense when they were abundant, but geopolitical
forces kicked that assumption into the gutter. All the reassuring economic stories we told ourselves--energy is
only 3.5% of the economy and the household spending budget, so cost really doesn't matter--fall off the cliff
when availability and supply become the paramount issues setting price.
That 3.5% loses meaning when there's not enough to supply demand and somebody loses the game of musical chairs.
Then there's the fantasy that monetary policy imposed by central banks control inflation. The inconvenient
reality is central bank monetary policy is akin to building sand castles on the beach: when the tide is ebbing,
the castles look magnificent. When the tide is rising, the sand castles are quickly washed away.
Inflation is actually a consequence of much larger forces that central banks don't control: demographics (labor supply),
social changes (quiet quitting, laying flat, let it rot), supply of essential minerals/materials, flows of
private-sector capital, and most profoundly, the real-world productivity of capital, labor and state policies.
The tide of inflation has reversed and is now rising. This tide is gradual and will temporarily be reversed
by the gluts of supply that inevitably follow artificial scarcities and the deflationary impact of credit-asset
bubbles popping. But these reversals will be temporary and misleading: inflation has reversed for structural reasons
unrelated to credit-asset bubbles and temporary gluts.
Another fantasy is that "markets are self-correcting" and will sort themselves out. The inconvenient reality
is sometimes markets sort themselves out by crashing, as a good cleaning is the only cure for decades of distortion,
manipulation, fraud, embezzlement and the dead hand of cartels and monopolies, whose sole reason to exit is to
strangle market forces to enable unfettered profiteering and control of what's passed off as "markets."
Decades of central bank distortions and regulatory / market-share capture by cartels and monopolies
have completely gutted "markets," destroying their self-correcting dynamics. This is why Crash Is King.
This is the ultimate irony of the Unintended Consequences of Unintended Consequences: the more insiders
and elites attempt to "fix" the cascade of second-order Unintended Consequences, the more
Unintended Consequences they unleash.
Tweaking existing distortions and profiteering won't work. Clearing the mess requires a collapse of
all the distortions and profiteering skims / scams of cartels and monopolies, which is why I say Crash Is King.
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