Sultan Knish
Debt is the surest and shortest path to a global economy. Punishing all
actors in local economies but those who are “too big to fail” empowers
“too big to fail” systems and “too big to fail” economies. Encouraging
debt and the eventual assumption of debt passed on and commodified by
increasingly larger political and economic entities creates
supraentities built on debt and dedicated to economic regulation.
The assumption of state debts by the Federal government was a major step
in the federalization of the United States. The growing assumption of
micro and macro debts by the United States government and by
international bodies allows for greater macro and micro regulation of
economic activities.
Rewarding and promoting irresponsible economic behavior creates debt
which creates opportunities for intervention. Individuals are encouraged
to engage in irresponsible day to day consumer spending and large scale
home and college loans. Financial institutions package irresponsible
loans into commodities of debt. Governments bail out financial
institutions by amassing even more debt to pay for the bailouts.
The buck keeps getting passed on until everyone is in debt from the
micro to the macro level, from the citizen who has his own debts, the
annual and the lifelong, and those of the nation which he is also being
taxed to repay, up to banks and governments, where the same experts move
imaginary numbers around until everyone is in debt and also a debt
holder and then a global state of debt has become universalized.
The universalization of debt leads to the universalization of economic
authority and eventually planned economies. By indebting everyone from
the individual to the government, everyone is forced to maintain a
bankrupt and broken system. Debts are obligations. Obligating everyone
to the same system forces everyone to comply with the system.
Interlinked economies are more unstable and require more regulation.
Interlinked national economies become regional economies with common
regional regulations imposed on multiple countries. And regional
economies link in to a global economy which requires universal global
economic regulation of all actors from the lemonade stand to the
multinational bank to maintain centrally planned targets.
Growing instability is met with tighter regulation leading to the
increased power of oligarchies who regulate the system and the
diminishing freedom of individuals. Every action taken to create greater
security and stability for the oligarchy has the net effect of
subtracting from the economic freedom of all smaller actors.
As debt gets passed up the system from the micro to the macro like a
spark of electricity, the assumption of failure becomes
institutionalized. Encouraging individuals, banks and governments to
fail becomes a pathway for larger entities to capture smaller entities
and for smaller entities to capture individuals. Irresponsible spending
is promoted from the top down and captured from the bottom to the top so
that larger entities promote irresponsible economic behavior and by
accepting the consequences of that behavior take on the political and
economic power of that assumption until the global economy is one great
totalitarian welfare state built on subsidies and debt.
Financial institutions gain by encouraging consumer irresponsibility.
Governments gain by encouraging irresponsible behavior by financial
institutions. Global entities gain by encouraging irresponsible behavior
by governments. Responsibility is traded for freedom, but individuals,
institutions and governments, who give up freedom of action in exchange
for being able to pass their responsibilities up the ladder, are
participating in a shell game.
Responsibility is being passed up the ladder, but accountability isn't.
Larger systems cost more and distribute that cost widely. Endowing
larger systems with responsibility universalizes the obligations of that
system. Passing debt upward to national and global institutions means
turning nations and global bodies into collection agencies which
distribute the obligation of that debt in accordance with their own
social and political agendas.
The obligations themselves cannot be escaped; only the direct
responsibility for making the difficult decisions can be passed upward
along the chain. If the frogs don't want to make their own decisions
then they elect a king who makes all their decisions for them. The
assumption of debt elects kings who decide how the debt must be repaid
and who is first in line to collect and who is first in line to pay.
Larger systems do have more resources to tackle a problem than smaller
ones, but those resources are less efficiently managed. When it comes to
the individual distribution of those resources, the larger system has
less to offer than the smaller one. All that it really offers is the
evasion of responsibility.
When failure is institutionalized then the primary task of each failing
system is the evasion of responsibility. Institutionalizing failure also
universalizes failure so that no one is responsible, but everyone is
responsible. No single person, company or government can be assigned the
blame, but all of them are obligated to pay upward into the larger
system which has assumed the debt.
The universalization of debt breaks the direct connection between debtor
and debt holders, both the real one and the moral one. Class warfare
colludes with debt collector economics to go after the most prosperous
individuals and nations first. And then down the line so that those who
amass the most debt are also the last to be asked to pay it. This
institutionalization of failure rewards failure economies and implements
feudalism with those who have the most accepting responsibility for the
welfare of the serfs and implicitly gaining power over them. The more
the serfs run up debt, the more the power of the barons grows. This is a
formula for mutual resentment and class warfare.
The broken connection hides the forms in which debt is collected as the
assumption of failure requires higher taxes and more structured systems
that deprive people of economic freedom without alerting them to the
real reasons why this is done. The institutionalization of failure
raises the cost of every part of the institution that engages in the
assumption of failure. This cost is universalized to hide its sources.
Protecting the sources of failure is a primary goal of those who benefit
from institutionalizing and universalizing failure. If the failure
sources are addressed, isolated and treated then smaller systems and
actors will reclaim economic responsibility robbing larger systems of
their regulatory power. Creating entire sectors dedicated to economic
irresponsibility in the name of greed and idealism is a means of
weakening smaller systems and individuals in order to subsume them into a
global failure economy.
Every local failure where the responsibility remains localized creates a
mandate for local regulation, whether it is the individual regulating
his own spending or the municipality or company learning the lessons of
their own setbacks or governments addressing their own monetary policy.
However every local failure where the loci of responsibility are passed
upward creates mandates for regulation at the level to which that
responsibility has been passed on to.
The assumption of debt increases regulatory mandates to the highest
level of its assumption. And as the mandates increase they tip from
regulating risk to mandating activity much like the way that universal
health care went from offering health care to mandating health insurance
purchases. The federalization of power reduces the natural limits of
that power. Expanding economic authority within a central system leads
to a planned economy.
The more debt is assumed, the more authority is assumed. Maximizing debt
also maximizes and centralizes control over spending. Central planning
reduces economic flexibility and diversity in order to meet target goals
which can never be met because the very system created to meet them is
incompatible with the efficiency and productivity necessary to achieve
them.
An ever more expensive system that produces ever diminishing results and
warps the economy around itself creates another economic black hole.
It's an economic black hole whose event horizon could be seen in the
declining days of the Soviet Union when the failure of the agricultural
collectives took it deep into debt buying American wheat or in the Obama
Administration’s obsession with government stimulus plans to revive an
economy even as that spending is pushing the country closer to default
on its debts.
Grandiose political and economic systems come wrapped in ideologies that
reinforce assumptions about an ideal state of human behavior. A state
which does not exist in the real world. Drawing links between an ideal
state of behavior and an ideal economic state inevitably results in
ideologically driven economic disasters as leaders and regulators assume
that enforcing and enacting ideal behavior will yield an ideal economy.
The cloistered nature of central institutions makes them all the more
vulnerable to ideological mapping. Ideologies thrive in hothouse
atmospheres alienated from the real world where the ideal is easily
mistaken for the real and passion for castles in the sky construction
outweighs the mud and dirt challenges of building actual structures. The
further an institution is detached from the consequences of its
policies, the less capable it is of experiencing negative feedback and
the less reliable the reports that reach it are.
When failure comes it is never attributed to the ideology or to the
entire structure, rather to a failure of comprehensive control. Each
attempt at deepening control expands the system that is the cause of the
problem and deepens the level of failure in areas affected by the
system. The more the ideal is pursued, the more the real declines until
the entire system implodes with devastating consequences.
Having exploited the failure of the preexisting systems to amass
authority and responsibility within a centrally planned economy, the
failure of the central system destroys the decision making capacity for
all areas under its responsibility. A central system creates a culture
of failure by robbing individuals and smaller entities of power. When it
gives out, the smaller entities have lost their capacity for making
their own rational economic decisions and have to start from scratch.
Having turned everything under its control into one giant welfare prison
where the inmates are cared for by the nanny state, the collapse of the
system leaves the inmates, whether they are individuals, municipalities
or nations with no available skills to care for themselves.
The economics of planned global failure threaten to repeat the
consequences of the decline and fall of the Soviet Union on a global
scale. While such a system is never likely to successfully come into
being, it has been the long term progressive aim throughout the
twentieth and now the twenty-first century. It is now closer to coming
into being than at any time before. The distillation of free market
economics into the crony capitalist corporation which looks to the
government to take care of the messes It makes even as it campaigns for a
borderless world is tipping the globe closer into the black hole of a
planned global economy where universal debt leads to universal power and
universal failure.
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