Saturday, January 15, 2011

How Personal Development Can Change Our World

Over the last sixteen years, I have offered my personal development clients a whole range of what I call 'mental exercises' - quick meditations that help them focus their minds and keep them clear. Remember that a clear and focused mind opens the floodgates to happiness and success. But how they then practice what they've learned varies wildly. One of them recounted how he locked himself in the toilet at home to do his meditation. He couldn't bring himself to reveal his secret to his wife - God knows what the poor woman thought he was doing! OK, I realize that personal development is actually a personal thing - but I don't understand why someone would wanting to keep the fact that they are trying to better themselves a secret! Indeed, in bettering yourself, you might be even improve the lives of those you claim to love.

Perhaps it's time for personal development to become inter-personal, for like-minded people to actually stand up and be counted for who they want to become - leaders in their own personal lives and a real and positive influence in the lives of all those that they claim to love. Our world needs this positive action because, as things stand, we are faced with an historic dis-empowerment of ordinary people who are simply trying to make the most that they can of their ordinary lives. I've just glanced through the latest news on Europe-wide protests against the austerity measures being introduced by European governments to ensure that the markets' faith is restored in sovereign debt and the euro. But 'the markets' are run by the financiers who created the burden on sovereign debt in the first place.

For example, Ireland's sovereign debt market standing is tarnished to say the least - the market demands that it pays practically three times the interest rate on its debt that Germany is paying. Ireland's sovereign debt is burdened by the State's rescue of Anglo-Irish Bank - a financial institutions, according to Brian Lenihan, Ireland's Minister for Finance, that has no intrinsic worth as a bank but is 'systemically important' as a result of its size. In exactly the same way that the world's financial power-brokers huddled up with the political masters, so Ireland's financial elite were given unprecedented free rein to create a beast of such magnitude that it has ruined Ireland's financial standing internationally, rocked the European Union and dented the value of the euro on international markets. The Anglo-Irish Bank story is one with international ramifications - however it's but one of many similar stories. Royal Bank of Scotland, Lehman Brothers and a whole plethora of US banks. And those banks that are still standing, often as a result of the taxpayer bailing them out, are not lending to re-ignite the economy and are, in the words of on consumer watchdog, 'fleecing' the ordinary bank customer with extortionate interest rates and charges.

Now, a quick question. Which has had a greater day-to-day affect on the ordinary lives or ordinary people, 9/11 or the economic crisis? With 23m people unemployed in Europe, with double-digit unemployment in the US, Osama Bin-Laden need not have bothered. The real terrorists are wearing Hugo Boss suits and these guys are still manipulating the levers of power. And just like all terrorists, these guys are fundamentalists - consumed by a dearly held love. But it's not love of God that's the driving force here but a deep and abiding love of large sums of money - your money, my money.

Now, you may well ask, what has all this got to do with self improvement or personal development? Well, it was Gandhi who said that if you want to change anything that you have to be the change. And it was that same little man, who spun the material for his own clothes, who pulled the rug out from under a super-power that once ruled one third of the world. Wasn't it Martin Luther King who had his dream, perhaps fulfilled in Obama's ascent to power - a victory that resulted from large number of ordinary people, and their individual donations, who really believed "Yes We Can". It remains to be seen if Obama's election actually represents real change - but that's because it took place in the context of a political system that doesn't care about all those grassroots people. And, looking beyond the US, who would have believed that, during the Soviet era, a shipyard worker from Gdansk could set in motion the domino effect that spelt the demise of such a mighty and powerful bloc? A quarter of a century ago who would have ever even considered that South Africa might be ruled by the majority of its people?

The ordinary person in the US and across Europe is, just like the client that I mentioned earlier, hiding behind their toilet door, frightened to stand up and be counted as people who really and truly matter. Personal development and self help books make up a constantly growing major sector of the book market - yet all their readers are closet converts. Sure, you can change your own life for the better - you can be out of work but full of the joys of life, you can find your pay-packet savaged or be up to your neck in debt, but still be happier. But, as I say to my clients, if you don't have concrete results to show for your personal development (and that is not a pun on the concrete mixer that was driven through the front gates of Ireland's parliament!), you're fooling yourself. And, at present, it strikes me that there are just too many fools around.

Current Economic Depression Requires a Thoughtful Debt-Default by Next Election

The current high debt can only be resolved through mass restructuring to create base for post-default recovery, aggressive drive to court foreign investment, and properly timed default itself. It is highly unlikely that American power elites will be able to successfully restructure while preserving large parts of both the political and economic architecture. That is due to 2009 economic foundations being drastically different than in 1870s, 1930s, or 1950s.

United States debt, as % of GDP, has been within 15 to 30 percent range from 1917 to 1930. The last time debt got that high was Civil War militarization and the following long recession of 1870s. Before that, there was the high debt of political restructuring from colony organization into nationhood in the 1780s-1790s period. The long recession of 1870s and the long depression of 1930s, were both used by American elites to restructure minimal state capitalism into a more productive expansionary force. American power elites had access to cutting edge industry and used every crisis to expand it and outproduce their European neighbors. Economic reversals in 1870s served to weed out the less efficient oligarchs and consolidate wealth in the hands of those that remained. Contraction in the 1930s resulted in a managed bankruptcy and then rapid filling of idled industrial capacity through mass military exports and production.

The chance to preserve a minimal state capitalism model in roughly the same form as it existed for a hundred years before 1930s, was lost as soon as US engaged in a second large scale aggression on the European continent. American leadership's focus shifted from improving structural fundamentals ( and continuing to build minimal state capitalism in one country) to mass wartime economy. Repayment of debt became impossible due to the demands of producing goods (tanks, planes, bombs, artillery shells) that are used up without anything given in return. Once war began, the historically crushing debt ( that began with the banker supported war in 1917 and continued into the 1930s), could no longer be repaid through isolationism and exports to either the German or Soviet victors of European unification. Sustenance of minimal state capitalism now involved forceful expansion and passing down of the debt based pyramid scheme to other peoples of the world.

At the time of the disastrous US involvement in another European conflict, there were two mid level state capitalist powers that were on the road that US would undertake from WW2 to the present. They were the forcefully expansionary and indebted economies of Japan and Germany. Both wanted to secure sufficient amount of natural resources and room that England, France, Russia, and America already had. This would allow them to become co-equals on the world stage in terms of pushing their economies, currencies, and exports on others. Japanese leadership knew that the energies of both United States and Soviet Union were heavily focused inwards on building and preserving their own systems. Just like Americans a world away, Soviets were trying to create domestic demand for its industries while consolidating a hybrid of maximum state capitalism with a decentralized socialist base.

Japanese strategists calculated that Soviet Union would not be distracted into a destructive cycle of trying to forcefully impose its still developing system on all of Japan. Thus, they probed into Soviet border colonies around Manchuria in 1939 but were repelled with heavy losses. The mere fact that Soviets signed a gentleman's peace treaty after repulsing a Japanese attack, led Tokyo to conclude that indebted isolationist Americans would be equally negotiable and prudent in a colonial skirmish. The rest is history as United States completely overreacted to border pressure on Philippines and Hawaii after only losing a couple thousand men. Thus began a change from Washington's focus on building domestic capitalism to Trotskyist efforts to violently spread it abroad abroad.

The vacuum of imploding Western empires allowed the dollar to become a reserve currency and the cold war provided a perfect excuse to export arms and further dollars around the world. The exports, from American militarism propped industrial base, allowed the national debt to actually get reduced by more than half by 1960s. Relentless Soviet pressure and China falling to Mao, prevented Americans from being as reckless with their debt as they have become in the 1990s. In 1960s, US leadership actually began large scale provisions for social safety nets and moves towards mid level state capitalism as practiced in France and Western Germany. Many political theorists actually spoke of future convergence between evolution of US and Soviet systems. JFK/Lyndon Johnson's Christian democratic efforts towards reduction of socio-economic inequality and increased role for the state complemented Nikita Khrushchev's liberalization efforts of restructuring and partial decentralizing. Both efforts got derailed by geopolitical needs of empire and ideological reactionaries.

One society broke first and the other rapidly overextended and actually allowed Trotskyist minimal state capitalist proponents to come to power (Cheney, Wolfowitz). The American debt as % of GDP is as great in 2009 as it was during the mass industrial production of WW2. This time around, US does not have the industrial capacity (proportional to the size of its economy) necessary to even attempt managed bankruptcy like in the 1930s. Neither does US have the natural resources the way it did in 1950s and 1960s. It also does not have a cold war equivalent to continue to distract the world and push the dollar pyramid scheme on smaller nations. The recent attempts to find a motivational ideological replacement for the cold war (with combination of criminal investigation into religiously motivated organized crime and huffing and puffing over Putin's FDR style policies), is not just a pathetic joke, but a worrying development studied in European capitals.

Volatility of the Dow Jones industrial average between 1925 to 1929 was 22% and was 21% between 2005 to may of 2009. Volatility in 2008 alone has been 38% compared to 22% in 1928. The housing bubble has reached its peak in 2005 just as it similarly reached its peak in 1925. Due to the regionally uneven speculation on housing, the inflation as well as deflation of the bubble was uneven and less observed. 2005 seems to have been the furthest extent in influence of the paper tiger superpower that is United States. 2005 was the eye of the storm in terms of stock volatility nested between the events of dot com collapse/911 and the crash of 2008.

An economic depression does not happen overnight as desperate government efforts create repeated sucker's rallies. The high volatility (44%) in the first few years of The Great Depression made sure that the last drops of capital have been purged from the hopeful speculators before true bottom was hit. It's not difficult to compare the substantive drop over the last 6 months and extrapolate a similar race to the bottom as occurred from 1929 to 1933.

The ease of technological transfer of money and increased access to the stock market by the the masses, allows greater pain to continue on longer as foreigners get in on the act of shorting and buying American assets. The globalization following Soviet collapse allows the current economic depression more potential for widespread economic damage than depression of the 1930s. Even China is not completely immune although much better protected than more globalized neighbors.

American leadership is reverting into the mode of trying to salvage parts of US economic and political system through top down restructuring. Unlike with Gorbachev, most of the world's elites want US to succeed and not become a failed state. There are no rapidly adaptable alternatives other than to have an international cooperative effort by minimal state capitalist countries to work together to make sure US restructuring and bankruptcy is gradual, peaceful, and manageable. US has already been stagnating like Soviet Union for over a decade with real wages not rising for large swaths of the population. Infrastructure is poorly maintained and remains 10-20 years behind more pragmatic hybrid nations. The intelligent and politically connected have already taken advantage of the decades long rot in the form of the finance industry (up to 40% GDP economic growth relying on financial non-producing sector). Cracking down on the money manipulators will be just as futile as Soviet attempts to stamp out the black market. Money manipulation is structurally hard wired into the capitalist system.

Obama is between a rock and a hard place when it comes to options and has very little room to maneuver. The default on debt is coming one way or the other but taking the proper road there can position American economy for long struggle for post-bankruptcy recovery. Obama must restructure the economy from the top down but not rapidly enough to cause a destabilizing reactionary backlash from federal, regional, and military elites. If he restructures too slowly, the stagnation worsens and gradual inflation risks becoming accelerated and then exponential. Obama must strike a balance when using a doomed currency to have the state take control of strategic industrial sectors. Default must occur before 2012 for reasons of social stability. The near future impoverishment of top 20% of educated people, who call themselves middle class, risks election of a leader more willing to dismantle the bonds of federal government rather than make American economy a more hybrid model. The mere fact that American population can be very divided over whether to support their democratic or economic way of life underlines the gentleness with which Obama must approach every step.

The population of the last major ideological power has completely internalized decades of propaganda as well as successfully had millions of foreigners internalize it as well. Even to socially conceptualize alternatives and pragmatic non-ideological approaches provokes instinctive distrust, misunderstanding, and reactionism. American people have been lied to and manipulated by their own politicians for so long that they cannot even imagine politicians abroad or at home who speak pragmatically and analytically. The idea of "American way of life" must not become one that borders on the religious since that risks the use of federal government for internationally dangerous purposes. The greatest burden since Gorbachev rests on Obama today. Hopefully international leaders realize that sheer extent of the domino effect that can occur with a rapid collapse of US economy. The Asian financial crisis in 1998 shows that even medium sized countries need to be helped to prevent a detrimental chain reaction. Leading industrial countries need to take some pressure off Obama for the security of the world.