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	<title>Futuresearch Blog - Futurist Richard Worzel &#187; employment</title>
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		<title>It Can’t Happen Here: What Happens After Occupy Wall Street</title>
		<link>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2011/11/20/it-can%e2%80%99t-happen-here-what-happens-after-occupy-wall-street/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 20 Nov 2011 21:48:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Richard Worzel</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/?p=991</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[by futurist Richard Worzel, C.F.A. The Occupy movement is most significant not for what the protestors say, but rather that the movement is happening at all. It demonstrates significant unrest, and the greatest dissatisfaction with the capitalist system that we&#8217;ve &#8230; <a class="more-link" href="http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2011/11/20/it-can%e2%80%99t-happen-here-what-happens-after-occupy-wall-street/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>by futurist Richard Worzel, C.F.A.</strong></p>
<p><em>The Occupy movement is most significant not for what the protestors say, but rather that the movement is happening at all. It demonstrates significant unrest, and the greatest dissatisfaction with the capitalist system that we&#8217;ve witnessed since the fall of the Soviet Union. But where is it headed? That&#8217;s a much more worrisome question.</em></p>
<p>The fuel that powered the Vietnam war protests was the draft. There were many other issues – objections to the military-industrial complex, objections to American foreign policy, objections to the money misspent on the war, dislike and disagreement with McNamara and Johnson, even objections to war <em>per se</em> – but without the draft, the protests could not have been as sustained or as widespread as they were.</p>
<p>In the same way, the fuel that powers the Occupy movement is jobs – or rather, lack of jobs. In America, and most other developed countries, the official unemployment rate is high, but the true unemployment rate is obscenely so. In the U.S., for instance, the official rate is 9%. But if you include those who have stopped looking for work, and therefore are no longer counted in the official unemployment statistics, then add those who are underemployed, the true rate approaches 20%. And if you look at the rate for young men, particularly among minorities, it approaches 40%. There is immense frustration with the lack of opportunity, and the smug, self-righteous people who look at the protestors and sneer, “Get a job!” only reveal the vast depths of their ignorance.</p>
<p>It’s true there are many issues embraced by the Occupiers, but without the lack of jobs, the movement would never have developed into much of anything. Americans are not generally a jealous people. If people were prospering, the middle class was expanding, and young people were able to find jobs and start their careers, they wouldn’t really have cared what percentage of total wealth is held by the top 1% of income earners. What rankles is that the rich continue to get richer through a perceived manipulation of “the system”, while the vast majority of other people suffer economically. It leads to the belief that the game is fixed in favor of those who can afford to buy the politicians. Whether this is right or not may not matter – it’s the perception that’s important here. And that perception may be explosive.</p>
<p>But where is this movement going? What’s next?</p>
<p><strong>The Future of Work</strong></p>
<p>If the future holds more jobs, and greater prosperity for most workers, then the Occupy movement will collapse from lack of fuel, and be remembered as a strange fad that came and went, like pet rocks or hula hoops. That’s not the case, because the future of work is much bleaker than people, even most top economists realize.</p>
<p>There are two forces that are squeezing workers in all developed countries: foreign competition, and domestic automation. One is going to get much worse, and the other is going to get slightly better.</p>
<p>The one that will get slightly better, at least in manufacturing, is foreign competition. There have been headlines for decades about the offshoring of jobs. There was even a management cliché for it in the 1990s: “Emigrate, automate, or evaporate,” which meant move your factories offshore in order to take advantage of dramatically lower wages in developing countries; decrease the labor content of your products in order to reduce the advantage of cheap labor in developing countries, or go out of business. (As an aside, there’s actually a fourth option: innovate, but that’s another story.)</p>
<p>This happened because of the emergence of the global economy. A global marketplace implies a global labor pool. If workers in developing countries can do similar work, but at much lower wages, then the work will naturally gravitate to them, and away from workers in developed countries. This has been going on since the 1970s, and is a familiar tale. It makes headlines, and becomes the subject of learned papers by economists, and protests by industries and unions that want protection. And the offshoring of jobs will continue until there is a rough parity between those producing things offshore, using cheaper labor, and the cost of producing things at home, using more expensive labor.</p>
<p>One way this could happen is through wages falling in developed countries, and rising in developing countries. But wages tend to be sticky; not many people are willing to take a cut in pay. As a result, what has tended to happen instead is that workers here are let go, and their jobs disappear, even as the wages in places like China and India are, indeed, rising.</p>
<p>The mild good news here is that much of this adjustment has already happened. Indeed, there are a few reports of manufacturers moving production back to America as the cost of labor in China, for instance, has risen, and as governments, particularly in the southern American states, have reduced legal protections for workers, effectively lowering their cost. (Whether you view this as a good thing or not is a separate issue. Indeed, it’s a difficult issue: do we want good worker protection, but no jobs, or bad worker protection and some jobs?)</p>
<p>The other way for workers in developed countries to compete is through higher productivity, and many companies have survived and kept their production in America that way. Yet, even when they succeed, the number of jobs required goes down. Businesses survive, but only by shedding jobs, leaving a trail of unemployment in the wake.</p>
<p>This is the past and present. The future will be different.</p>
<p>Increased productivity comes most notably through increased automation, and we’ve all experienced that, as when we go to the gas pump, swipe our credit card, and pump our own gas, all without an attendant. But automation is about to become supercharged.</p>
<p>The rate of change in computing speed and cost-effectiveness is not only accelerating, but the rate of acceleration is increasing. Some technology forecasters believe that computers will increase in power by 1,000 times over the next 10 years. With this growth in computing power available at steadily cheaper prices, automation is going to accelerate dramatically, eating its way up the workplace food chain. Only this time, it’s not going to be primarily blue-collar jobs that disappear – that’s pretty well already happened – but white-collar jobs that are hard hit. Indeed, anyone who uses a contemporary computer can experience this for themselves.</p>
<p>With the Macintosh laptop that I’m using to write this blog, I could (if I had the talent) write a new piece of music, score it, perform it with dozens of (computerized) instruments, record it and release it for sale. I could take videos with my iPhone, download them to my laptop, edit them, add titles and special effects, add in the music that I had created, and then publish the end result on YouTube. In effect, with these two tools, a laptop computer and a smartphone, I can replace composers, performers, and an entire movie making team – and that’s using today’s technology. Very shortly, I could make an entire movie, using technology to create photo-realistic virtual actors and background scenes, dub the voices myself, then change the sound of my voice using technology, and produce an entire movie without anyone else. True, it would be a terrible movie as I know nothing about directing, editing, or acting, and not much about composing or playing musical instruments – but that’s not the point. The point is that the tools we use are becoming so powerful that high-end jobs that used to require skilled people can now be done by ordinary folk.</p>
<p>Likewise, computers will move into medicine, performing research using Genetic Programming, and assisting doctors to do complex diagnoses using smart computers like IBM’s Watson; performing clerical work in almost every conceivable industry, and displacing millions of white collars workers along the way; drive cars, trucks, and trains unassisted; and almost any other kind of routine work. Indeed, computer intelligences and everyday robots will move towards replacing workers in any and every kind of repetitive work, leaving only creative, innovative, entrepreneurial work – and leaving millions, or even tens of millions of people unemployed.</p>
<p><strong>What Happens When Too Many People Are Unemployed?</strong></p>
<p>If you look at the Arab Spring from earlier this year, it wasn’t so much a yearning for the freedom to read newspapers not approved by dictators, or the desire to vote that was the driving force that caused people to revolt, but unemployment, especially among young men – leading the inability to create a life, to feed your children, or even to be able to afford to get married and start a family – that drove the revolutions, and inspired young men to face bullets and tanks. If you look at the protests in Europe, it’s not just the anger that a lazy, luxurious way of life is being taken away from Greek citizens, but a very real fear that they won’t be able to live that drives citizens to the barricades.</p>
<p>Unemployment, the specter of want, and the inability to make a decent living, to have a decent life, is historically a very potent, very scary force in geopolitics, and it’s with us now. The Occupy movement is not just about fairness, but driven by the fear and anger that there is no opportunity unless you are one of the privileged class that has a job. As the number of jobs lost to automation rises, so too will the number of people who will respond to the goad of fear and anger about their future.</p>
<p>Worse, it’s not just about finding a job – it’s also about keeping one. Jobs appear and disappear faster than at any time in history, and someone who is a valued employee and a rising star one day can be redundant and valueless the next. A person in that position can try to retrain and find new work, but they find themselves among the multitudes of people desperately seeking work. Without the in-demand skill that got them a job in the first place, they are reduced to the same pavement-pounding, resuming-producing, faith-sapping odyssey that afflicts so many out of work people today.</p>
<p>I’ve seen this coming for some time. In 1993, I wrote a book called <em>Facing the Future</em>. In that book I wrote the following passage:</p>
<blockquote><p>It’s an overall decline in the need for work that concerns me, brought about by the increasing capabilities and sophistication of computers.</p>
<p>I seem to be very much in the minority on this view, and I may be dead wrong. The conventional view is that as jobs disappear from manufacturing and clerical work, for instance, the steadily rising productivity of workers using increasingly sophisticated automation will create a new prosperity that will increase demand and create new jobs. This is certainly reasonable, because it is precisely what has happened throughout history. But where, I wonder, will the new jobs appear? The conventional view is that new services will spring up, and that higher living standards will allow people to spend money on things they could never afford before, and that much of this will be for personal and personalized services.</p>
<p>I can see logic in this. New services do appear. There were no aerobic instructors, for example, in my grandfather’s day. But how much personal service can we use? Moreover, generally speaking, service jobs pay less than manufacturing jobs. As for being able to buy things that we couldn’t afford before, since manufacturing will increasingly be automated the higher demand for manufactured goods won’t necessarily generate more jobs.</p>
<p>This is not a problem that will burst on the scene in the next five to ten years. Humans are still capable of offering a flexibility, initiative, and creativity that machines cannot duplicate. But at some point, whether it’s twenty years away or one hundred, I’m afraid that the time will come when there will be very few jobs that computers can’t do better, faster, cheaper, and more reliably than humans. As that day approaches, we will be confronted with several problems.</p>
<p>In the first place, we will need a new economic system. Much as it grieves me to say so, free market capitalism may be dying, for it only pays those who are part of the production process. If virtually no one is part of this process, all the fruits of production will belong to those who own the machines – a recipe for the peon-and-aristocracy patterns of Third World economies. But where will the machine-owners find their customers? People can’t be consumers unless they have money to spend. …<a title="" href="#_ftn1">[1]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>In the intervening 18 years, I’ve seen nothing to change my mind. We are, indeed, heading towards a world of aristocrats and peons. Indeed, that is precisely what the Occupy forces are demonstrating against, only they use a slightly different terminology: the 1% and the 99%. Same thing.</p>
<p>So where is this leading us? If I’m right, then even if the economy and employment picks up, and mollifies the Occupy protestors and their spiritual kin, the concerns will return again and again as the long-term rates of unemployment, especially among the young, continue to rise. And that way lies revolution.</p>
<p><strong>What Should We Do About This?</strong></p>
<p>If we lived in Naples in 79 A.D., and saw steam pouring out of the top of Mount Vesuvius, we would try to warn the residents to flee. We are in an analogous situation. This volcano won’t erupt in the next month or next year – but as things are trending, we need to take action, and soon, or we risk precisely the kind of revolution we witnessed in the Arab Spring earlier this year.</p>
<p>It’s no good trying to stem the tide of automation. That smacks of the 19<sup>th</sup> century luddites smashing mechanized looms that they felt were stealing their jobs. Moreover, it would be like trying to hold back the tide, and about as successful. It is possible that politicians, under voter pressure, will seek to ban automation and the productivity increases that automation produces in order to preserve jobs. (This is also called “featherbedding”.) All that means is that countries that do not ban automation will see their relative productivity increase, their cost structure decrease, so that the jobs will migrate from here to there rather than being lost to automation.</p>
<p>Instead, politicians, economists, and anyone else interested in our future prosperity and stability should be taking a serious look at how to create new, better jobs that people can do best. These will largely be entrepreneurial, I suspect, and will all be creative, and focus on innovation. This also implies a complete revamp of our education system, away from rote learning and memorization, and towards creativity and individually customized education, to enable each person to emphasize the things they are best at.</p>
<p>None of this will happen quickly or easily. It requires a very different view of “job creation” and a very different understanding of the future of work. The “magic of the markets” won’t solve this problem. Capitalism, left to itself, will emphasize greater productivity through automation, leading to greater profits for the owners of the machines – until profits collapse because there aren’t enough consumers to by the goods and services industry produces. Capitalism will lead to a dead end.</p>
<p>This is not the conventional view, and many will decry my message as “socialist”, although I’ve said nothing at all about redistributing wealth. Some will pillory me for being alarmist, but without attempting to refute my reasoning. And some will just hide their heads in the sand and say “it can’t happen here.”</p>
<p>To this last group, I would suggest that they tell that to Moammar Gadhafi and Hosni Mubarak. They were sure it couldn’t happen there, either.</p>
<div style="text-align: center;"><strong>© Copyright, IF Research, November 2011.</strong><br clear="all" /></p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ftnref">[1]</a> Worzel, Richard; <em>Facing the Future: The Seven Forces Revolutionizing Our Lives</em>, Stoddart Publishing, Toronto, 1994, pp.82-3.<em></em></p>
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		<title>It’s Not Just Stocks that Are at Risk</title>
		<link>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2011/08/10/it%e2%80%99s-not-just-stocks-that-are-at-risk/</link>
		<comments>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2011/08/10/it%e2%80%99s-not-just-stocks-that-are-at-risk/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Aug 2011 20:01:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Richard Worzel</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/?p=927</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[by futurist Richard Worzel, C.F.A. The stock markets have fallen out of bed since President Obama signed the ludicrous debt ceiling deal. I don’t wonder about that; what I wonder is why they took so long. I was expecting stocks &#8230; <a class="more-link" href="http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2011/08/10/it%e2%80%99s-not-just-stocks-that-are-at-risk/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by futurist Richard Worzel, C.F.A.</p>
<p>The stock markets have fallen out of bed since President Obama signed the ludicrous debt ceiling deal. I don’t wonder about that; what I wonder is why they took so long. I was expecting stocks to fall two weeks earlier than they did. But now the question becomes: What happens next? This is actually a much deeper question than it seems, because it goes far beyond just the behavior of stock prices and markets. But let’s start with stocks.</p>
<p>When I started work on this blog, the S&amp;P 500 index was at 1,119 which put it almost exactly half way between the October 4th, 2008 high of 1,565 and the March 6th, 2009 low of 667. Specifically, it was 452 points below the high, and 446 above the low, so almost exactly half way. (And if you want to look at that in percentage change terms, it’s 40.4% down from the high and 39.9% up from the low.) That would seem to imply that while there may be more risks yet in holding stocks, we may be getting through the worst, and should start compiling lists of stocks we want to buy. Indeed, since I went to virtually all cash in my personal and corporate investment accounts more than two weeks ago, I am waiting for buying opportunities, and creating just such lists.</p>
<p>But there’s an old stock market cliché for times like this: Never try to catch a falling knife. Don’t buy when markets are in free fall, because you’ll only wish you waited longer. Barton Biggs, a well-respected market analyst and money manager, was interviewed on Bloomberg TV, and said he had a list of great stocks that were now bargains, but that he wished he’d waited longer to buy them – and that was 150 points higher. So, that being said, what are the risks, and how will we know when the worst is over?</p>
<p>Well, first of all, you need to consult a properly licensed investment advisor for specific information, someone who knows your financial position, tax status, age, risk tolerance, cash flow, and all the other pieces of information that go into making a proper assessment of your investment needs. I am not that person, and this is not intended as investment advice. Here endeth the small print.</p>
<p><span style="color: #000000;"><strong>Risk management</strong></span></p>
<p>Let’s take a step back and see if we can find some benchmarks. To do so, I want to go back to a concept that I’ve written about repeatedly in this blog, and use regularly with my consulting clients: the ratio of risk managment. What are the possible risks? And what are the potential returns? Once you’re assessed those, you’re in a better position to make decisions, rather than just guessing whether the markets will go up or down.</p>
<p>By my definition, risk is the cost of being wrong. So, if we invest in stocks now, or don’t invest in stocks now, what are the risks either way? Let’s start with the potential positive risks, because, unfortunately, this is a much shorter list.</p>
<p>Could the markets surprise us on the upside? There are three factors that drive stock prices: interest rates, corporate earnings, and investor psychology. I don’t foresee any upward pressure on interest rates unless there’s a true financial panic. Even if there were a panic, there are so many trillions of dollars invested in U.S. Treasury securities that there is nowhere else for them to go. Accordingly, absent an end-of-the-world type scenario, I believe interest rates are a neutral influence at worst, and probably slightly positive.</p>
<p>Next are corporate earnings, which have been surprisingly good of late. Yet, I believe the outlook for the U.S. economy – and all others that are at least partly reliant on it, which is everyone – is worse now than it was before the manufactured debt ceiling crisis. That political stunt by Tea Party fanatics shook people’s faith in the American political system, and raised doubts about the American economy that weren’t there before. As a result, more people are talking about a double-dip recession now than before, and such talk tends to become self-fulfilling. Moreover, falling stock markets tend to make people feel poorer, which makes them spend less, which slows demand, which slows the economy. All told, then, I would have to assess corporate earnings as being neutral at best from here, and possibly negative.</p>
<p>Finally we come to investor sentiment, which is always the hardest to get a handle on. Moreover, if the markets have a couple of high-flying up days, then psychology can change from being deeply fearful to being deeply greedy overnight. But one solid indicator of market sentiment which has been consistently good is market volatility. High volatility times, even when markets are rising, are times when there’s lots of uncertainty, which is why values seem to change overnight. The best environment for bulls is one where markets make a slow, steady advance, not ones where markets zip up, then down, then up again. And a handy index for this is the Chicago Board Options Exchange SPX Volatility Index, or VIX index (VIX:IND). This index recently reached levels unseen since April of 2009. All told, then, I would suggest that market sentiment is unsettled and nervous, which is definitely bad.</p>
<p>So could markets surprise us on by running away from us on the upside? There’s always that possibility, but I think the odds are pretty small that we will lose a lot by staying on the sidelines. If the market recovered to where it was in May, the S&amp;P 500 could go back to 1360, which would mean we might miss a gain of about 22%. And that’s if the market took off so fast we couldn’t respond. So the risk of being left behind by the market is, in my view, relatively limited.</p>
<p><strong>Possible Positives</strong></p>
<p>Another positive development is that falling stock prices have also brought down commodity prices, notably oil. Since high oil prices act like a tax on the economy, lower oil prices clearly benefit economic growth.</p>
<p>And banks are generally in much better financial condition now than they were in 2007 – except those that have loaned too much to weak European sovereign credits.</p>
<p>Beyond these points, what might is likely to happen to the economy? Well before the phony debt crisis, the outlook for the U.S. economy was disappointing at best, with feeble growth, weak employment, and nothing on the horizon promising to change that. Now the outlook is worse, as I said, so at best we could see the economy return to that slightly depressing, feeble outlook. So, again, the potential to be surprised on the upside, or the return half of the equation, seems limited. Now let’s turn to the potential risks. Alas, here the list is much longer and more compelling.</p>
<p><strong>Potential Negatives</strong></p>
<p>I’m going to list the risks, and merely touch on most of them rather than go into exhaustive detail. The prospects are dreary enough without dwelling on them. I’m going to save the worst ones for last. Here are the major risks that I see now:</p>
<p><strong>• Stocks go down because they go down.</strong> Markets develop a mind and momentum of their own, and while I don’t believe you should ever rely on momentum investing, it’s also clear that when investors become fearful, and especially when they panic, it’s dangerous to get in their way. In particular, investors, particularly boomers hoping to retire, were deeply shaken by what happened to their investment portfolios in 2008, and are likely to be faster to bail out on markets rather than try to ride them out. This increases volatility, which, as I’ve said, is a bad thing.</p>
<p><strong>• A possible double-dip recession.</strong> There is no real reason why the U.S. economy should go back into recession. I had been expecting it to dribble along in a slow growth, jobless recovery that was disappointing. Now, though, the talk about a double-dip is, as I said, likely to become self-fulfilling. There’s no fundamental reason for it, but the phony debt ceiling crisis shook confidence, and ultimately the economy. And the markets run on confidence.</p>
<p><strong>• America’s downgrade from AAA.</strong> This doesn’t help, but it is currently a split rating, with only Standard &amp; Poor’s lowering America’s credit rating, and only on long-term debt. If the two other major agencies, being Moody’s and Fitch’s, were to follow suit, that would be an enormous negative, but that doesn’t seem to be in immediate prospect. Neither, though, is America likely to get its AAA rating back anytime soon. Canada was downgraded from AAA in 1992, and then got it back ten years later. But that was during a period of strong economic and productivity growth, and the Government of Canada, under Prime Minister Jean Chrétien and Finance Minister Paul Martin ran 10 years of budget surpluses, paying off big chunks of government indebtedness. The odds of America doing that are vanishingly small. The only reason American debt has performed as well as it has so far is because, in the words of one commentator, “It’s the best looking horse in the glue factory.”</p>
<p><strong>• Weak economic growth compounding American government indebtedness.</strong> The Tea Partiers have overlooked the primary fundamental of government finance: that government revenues and expenditures are inexorably tied to economic performance. A weak economy will sap government revenues and force up expenditures, compounding deficits, and piling up debts. Slashing spending in such an environment cuts jobs, lowers economic growth, and increases deficits. This is precisely what happened in the 1930s under President Herbert Hoover. He and his counterparts in Congress kept slashing spending to try to bring the deficit under control, only to find that economic growth fell further, increasing the deficit. In response, they slashed spending even more. It became a vicious cycle, and this is still <span style="text-decoration: underline;">the</span> textbook example on how a government can turn a recession into a depression. Unfortunately, right-wing politicians in America seems to be embarking on precisely the same policies now.</p>
<p>• Another negative that has ramifications that go far beyond stock prices is the <strong>high rates of unemployment</strong> for men and young people. We can see the results in the riots in Greece and Portugal, but now in London as well. In America, the official unemployment rate is 9.1%, but the percentage of working age (16 to 64) American men who are employed has fallen from about 85 percent in the early 1950s to under 65 percent now. Some put the actual unemployment rate of men in America at 25%, and that for young people at 45%. These numbers are hard to confirm, because unemployment surveys don’t include people who are so discouraged that they’ve given up even looking for work. Whatever the true numbers are, this is bad news economically, bad news socially, and bad for America’s future.</p>
<p><strong>• The political deadlock in the American Congress.</strong> America has become steadily more polarized over the past 20 years. There have been many analyses of why this is, but I think there are two primary reasons. First, the media have discovered that it is more profitable to be biased and outraged than it is to be balanced and thoughtful. Fox News in America, and <em>News of the World</em> in England are or were the exemplars of this trend. And with the splintering of media caused by the Internet, people can now choose to consume only those viewpoints with which they agree. This creates the echo chamber effect, where like-minded people reinforce their own prejudices. The result is rather like being surrounded by yes-men: you become convinced that your point of view is the only valid one. This pushes people with different viewpoints farther apart, and causes them to summarily dismiss any views that don’t coincide with theirs as being obviously, even maliciously wrong.</p>
<p>The other reason is <strong>jerrymandering</strong>. As I’ve discussed this at length in another blog (found <a href="http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2009/07/15/why-american-politics-is-dysfunctional-–-and-dangerous/" target="_blank">here</a>), I won’t go through the arguments again. But the result is that the extremes in American politics are being over-represented, and the center is being ignored. According to <em>The Economist</em> newsmagazine (<a href="http://www.economist.com/node/18560747" target="_blank">14 April 2011</a>), the results are pretty stark: “On average, House Republicans have voted with their party’s majority 91% of the time and Democrats 90% of the time. The picture is very similar in the Senate.” This is making American ungovernable, as was clearly on display during the unnecessary debt crisis, and an America that cannot govern itself becomes a danger to itself and others, geopolitically as well as economically.</p>
<p>• Finally, the greatest immediate risks out there right now relate to <strong>the financial crisis in Europe</strong>. Greece is functionally bankrupt, and all that is left is to decide how to cope with the financial mess. The other weak members of the EU are being shunned by the credit markets with more or less justification, but the net result is a potential run on European sovereign credits. The results of this could be very much like the run on Bear Sterns or Lehman Brothers in 2008, with the same kind of knock-on consequences. Worse, this financial crisis could lead to the possible collapse of the Euro as a currency, which would endanger the survival of the EU. And that would be a very big economic (and financial) shock indeed, especially as the world’s central banks don’t have as many resources left to battle a global financial crisis.</p>
<p><strong>The Costs of Being Wrong</strong></p>
<p>So the cost of being too pessimistic is the potential to lose a market gain of perhaps 20-25%. The market cost of being too optimistic would be a repeat of the kind of bear market we saw following the 2008 market panic, which could be a further 40% drop. But the greatest risk is that the problems in Europe and America are compounded by policy mistakes, such as those followed by Herbert Hoover in the 1930s, or a market collapse brought about by forces that overwhelm the world’s central banks, such as the collapse of the European Union with the subsequent economic catastrophe. Either of these could produce a market drop similar to that of the 1929 to 1932 period, which was a fall of 89% would take the S&amp;P 500 down to the vicinity of 170 points – an 85% drop from where it was when I started writing this blog. That, and the very dangerous economic fallout that would come with it, are the real risks.</p>
<p>So if you’re only mildly pessimistic, weigh the potential for a 25% gain against a 40% drop. If you’re really scared, weight that 25% upside against an 85% downside. Add in your assessment of the probabilities of each, and place your bets accordingly. As for me, at the moment, I’m staying on the sidelines and watching the carnage, biting my fingernails all the while.</p>
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		<title>Danger Is Rising Rapidly in Debt Ceiling Issue</title>
		<link>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2011/07/19/danger-is-rising-rapidly-in-debt-ceiling-issue/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Jul 2011 16:44:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Richard Worzel</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/?p=837</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[by futurist Richard Worzel, C.F.A. My last blog dealt with the debt ceiling debate within the U.S. Congress – if “debate” is the word for what looks like a combination of Mexican stand-off and Russian roulette. I’d like to update my &#8230; <a class="more-link" href="http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2011/07/19/danger-is-rising-rapidly-in-debt-ceiling-issue/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by futurist Richard Worzel, C.F.A.</p>
<p>My last blog dealt with the debt ceiling debate within the U.S. Congress – if “debate” is the word for what looks like a combination of Mexican stand-off and Russian roulette. I’d like to update my comments with some things to watch:</p>
<p><span id="more-837"></span></p>
<p><strong>1)</strong> August 2nd is probably not the deadline. I believe the actual deadline is unknown, and uncertain. If the rating agencies drop the credit rating on US debt, or the markets start to panic, that will start a chain of events that will probably be irreversible, and trigger a US default. Yet there is a real danger that all three parties involved in this mess (Republicans, Democrats, and the President) actually believe that they have until August 2nd to back away from the abyss. In fact, the ground may collapse under their feet while they’re still posturing on the edge.</p>
<p><strong>2)</strong> Suppose that the Speaker of the House of Representatives (John Boehner) and President Obama do arrive at a deal in time. What they may not be counting on is hold-ups by others, such as a defeat of their deal by ideologues within the Republican party in the House, or a filibuster by a disgruntled ideologue of either party in the Senate. This could prevent a deal from passing in time, and could trigger the events described in point 1 above.</p>
<p><strong>3) </strong>Even if a deal is struck before panic happens, this event has already caused significant damage, and we won’t know the extent of that damage for months or years. As one of the commentators I follow, a retired money manager who keeps tabs on things for his own interest, put it in an email to me: “a great deal of damage has already been done. Anyone who would have said a year, or even six months ago, that there would be major talk of the US defaulting would have been laughed out of the room. Foreign investors, incl. the central banks, are already &#8216;voting with their feet&#8217;, as witnessed by the price of gold that this morning leapt through the 1,600 level and the fact that last week was the 16th month in succession that assets under management dedicated to emerging market bonds funds were up.” In effect, the United States government has called its own credibility into question, and announced loudly to the world that it is dysfunctional and untrustworthy on financial matters. US debt is no longer “risk free”, and investors will hereafter try to find other, less schizoid places for their money, which will cause U.S. interest rates to rise, further exacerbating the U.S. deficit by increasing interest costs. This is an incredibly dumb action by the U.S. Congress, notably the brain-dead ideologues in the Republican Party.</p>
<p><strong>4) </strong>There are members of the Republican party that are saying they won’t vote raise the debt ceiling under any circumstance, which is an ideological statement, not a rational one. There are Republicans who are saying a default would not be as bad as Obama is saying, that he’s fear-mongering. That’s a clear illustration of their ignorance. There are even Republicans who are saying that default would be a good thing because it would force liberals to cut spending – completely overlooking the fact that it would dramatically raise the interest rates the US government would pay, which would raise the total interest costs, which would increase the deficit. It is truly frightening that our collective future is at the mercy of such idiots. Moreover, if a default happens, these same idiots will blame Obama because they always blame Obama.</p>
<p><strong>5)</strong> There are only two small pieces of good news of the last week or so. First is that while the American public is condemning all sides on this issue, its greatest condemnation is for the Republicans fanatics. Hopefully this will scare them enough that they will rethink their positions. The other is the bizarre, Rube Goldberg-ian mechanism proposed by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. In effect, it would allow Republicans to vote to give Obama the power to overrule them and raise the debt ceiling. They think that this is somehow different from voting to raise the debt ceiling. The only thing to recommend this wacko idea is that it might lead to the debt ceiling being raised, and rescue the Republicans from themselves.</p>
<p><strong>6) </strong>So far, most Democrats have been remarkably silent (or at least unnoticed), but I suspect that some left-wing ideologues will say they won’t vote to raise the debt ceiling if Social Security, Medicare, or Medicaid are affected by cuts. These people are as dangerous as the Republican fanatics. The US has no choice but to cut its deficit, as I’ve written elsewhere. Any such Democrats are idiots, too, if they hold to this position.</p>
<p><strong>7)</strong> Some have suggested that President Obama has the power to raise the debt ceiling without Congress by virtue of Section 4 of the 14th Amendment, which says “The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned.” First, I don’t find this unequivocal, but more importantly, how many investors would be willing to take a chance on buying debt that may not be legal, and might subsequently be declared invalid by the U.S. Supreme Court? I think this is a non-starter.</p>
<p><strong>8)</strong> The financial markets aren&#8217;t reacting more because they don&#8217;t think that the Republicans are serious about refusing to raise the debt ceiling, while the Republican fanatics assume that the markets don&#8217;t care. Meanwhile, the bond market is torn because investors are so concerned about what&#8217;s happening in the EU that many are fleeing to US Treasury issues. Where else is there to go? Both of these effects leave the impression that things are better than they actually are – and may given the parties involved in negotiation more time before a panic occurs.</p>
<p><strong>9) </strong>Most of the reactions I’ve had to my blog have been wishful thinking, along the lines of “This can’t happen. This is all posturing. They’ll come to an agreement.” I certainly hope so, but I’m not seeing signs of it. I can only hope that there is real progress being made in the back rooms on this, because everything I see in public pronouncements indicates two sides that are too far apart to reach a deal. And, by the way, through this and other of my blogs, I’ve been ripped as being both a tool of the Republicans (by liberals), and a tax-and-spend liberal (by conservatives). I guess I must be doing something right.</p>
<p><strong>Possible calendar of events to default – or avoidance thereof</strong></p>
<p>Let me offer a possible timetable of events for avoiding a default. Anything worse than this must, I think, lead to default. Anything better may avert it, although that’s not certain:</p>
<p><strong>Thursday, July 21st, 2011</strong> – Markets begin selling off in earnest as time runs out to craft, draft, pass and sign legislation permitting the debt ceiling to rise. (Foreign exchange markets are already starting to move.)</p>
<p><strong>Monday, July 25th, 2011</strong> – One or both of the rating agencies offer one last warning, saying that a ratings downgrade is imminent unless a deal emerges to raise the debt ceiling. As well, both agencies emphasize that raising the debt ceiling alone is not enough; the deficit must be tackled in a realistic manner as well.</p>
<p><strong>Wednesday, July 27th, 2011</strong> – Congressional leaders and President Obama announce the outlines of a deal, forced on them by falling markets, plus a fast-tracking process to get it through both houses of Congress in time. Markets have dropped by about 8% from a week earlier, or more than 1,000 points on the Dow Jones Industrial Average.</p>
<p><strong>Friday, July 29th, 2011</strong> – Grandstanding Republican fanatics try to stall or fatally amend the legislation, but are slapped down by Republican leadership. The bill clears the House.</p>
<p><strong>Monday, August 1st, 2011</strong> – Members of both parties attempt to filibuster, delay, or fatally amend an identical bill in the Senate, but are voted down by combined Republican and Democratic Senators. The bill clears the Senate.</p>
<p>The bill goes to Obama to sign. He signs it with the media watching, and thanks leaders of both parties and in both houses of Congress. He also announces a task force with members from both parties to come up with $1.5 trillion in budget cuts and revenue increases over the next 10 years, such cuts to be enacted by the end of 2011, plus a secondary goal of recommending budget cuts and tax code revisions amounting to $4 trillion over the next 12 years, to be enacted after the elections of 2012.</p>
<p>The Federal Reserve announces a special debt issue to provide the government with immediate cash, which it purchases from the Treasury, pending a successful new public bond issue. Critics call this “QE3”, but it’s really about the only way the Treasury can get enough money fast enough to meet obligations – by having the Fed print it.</p>
<p>The markets rally slightly, then begin sinking again more slowly on the continuing crisis in Europe and the weak economy in America. Moody’s and Standard &amp; Poor’s maintain their negative watch on the US credit rating.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p>Is this the way it will happen? Certainly not. First of all, I don’t know enough about the process of passing legislation through the US Congress, but I do know that the Treasury Secretary has said they must have a deal by July 22nd in order to get the legislation done. Moreover, there are too many aspects of this very complex future for me to successfully get them right. What I’ve tried to do is come up with an at-the-last-moment scenario to use as a benchmark to see how the process is going. As I said, if the process lags behind this, then a default seems likely.</p>
<p>Just so you know, I am backing my words with actions. I have, at this point, sold or am in the process of selling all of my investment holdings except for (a) precious metals, and (b) a small investment in developing economies. I may sell both of these positions before the dust settles. I am also trying to minimize my holdings of US dollars.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">© Copyright, IF Research, July 19th, 2011.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Why the World Really May End on August 2nd, 2011</title>
		<link>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2011/07/05/why-the-world-might-really-end-on-august-2nd-2011/</link>
		<comments>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2011/07/05/why-the-world-might-really-end-on-august-2nd-2011/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Jul 2011 19:47:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Richard Worzel</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/?p=822</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[by futurist Richard Worzel, C.F.A. The world as we know it may very well end on August 2nd. This won&#8217;t be the end of the world in a metaphysical or spiritual sense, but rather in a financial and economic one &#8230; <a class="more-link" href="http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2011/07/05/why-the-world-might-really-end-on-august-2nd-2011/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by futurist Richard Worzel, C.F.A.</p>
<p>The world as we know it may very well end on August 2<sup>nd</sup>. This won&#8217;t be the end of the world in a metaphysical or spiritual sense, but rather in a financial and economic one because of the incredible, almost unbelievable stupidity of the extreme members of the Republican Party. These wing-nuts are using the financial equivalent of the threat of nuclear winter to negotiate their agenda of spending cuts, coupled with no tax increases or even tax cuts, to eliminate the U.S. federal deficit, or else. In this case, the “or else” is a refusal to raise the debt ceiling for the U.S. government. If that happened, then the U.S. government would run out of money by about August 2<sup>nd</sup>, and begin to default on its obligations. There are two major aspects of this: financial, and political. Let me deal with the financial aspects first.<span id="more-822"></span></p>
<p>The debt ceiling is the maximum amount of debt that the U.S. government is allowed to borrow to finance it’s operations, and is legislation originating in the House, approved by the Senate, and passed by the President, like any other financial legislation. The U.S. government cannot borrow any money beyond this authorization. Given the current massive deficit being run up by the American government, this would force the U.S. government to default on its debt. Such a default would produce a vast disruption in the financial markets, and cause America’s credit rating to be downgraded from AAA to AA or less. This, in turn, would require many pension funds and other investment groups required to hold nothing but AAA securities to sell all of their holdings in U.S. government bonds and T-bills. This forced sale would trigger a panic on Wall Street, and in financial centers around the world. U.S. treasury bonds and T-bills are considered the most secure investments in the world – but then, suddenly, they wouldn’t be. Investors would have no idea what was safe, or where they should put their money. And the amount of U.S. securities held by investors, including countries like China, runs into the trillions. If there were a run on U.S. securities, it wouldn’t just be dramatic, it would be cataclysmic because there would be nobody to buy them.</p>
<p>And it wouldn’t just be the U.S. federal government. All of its agencies and the agencies it supports would be downgraded (and their securities dumped). And it’s quite possible that a number of state governments would also be downgraded as well. Indeed, as anyone who has studied financial panics of the past (as I have) knows, once a panic starts, the mob sells anything with any hint or rumor of possible financial difficulties. As a result, the panic would instantly spread to all of the shaky sovereign credits of Europe (Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Belgium, and more), and move into American state governments (Illinois, California, and more), and into corporations thought to be less than rock solid. Eventually, everything would become suspect, and gold and precious metals would shoot through the roof.</p>
<p>This would cause a huge spike in interest rates, causing stock prices to collapse, and, worst of all, would critically damage investor confidence. Since all investment markets rely on confidence, this could produce a panic as severe, or worse, than the panic that seized Wall Street in October of 2008. Worse than that, there would be no U.S. Federal Reserve to save the markets from themselves. They wouldn’t have any money with which to operate, and whereas the U.S. government was seen as the only possible savior in the Panic of 2008, it would be the cause of the problem this time. With no one left to act as “lender of last resort,” it’s entirely possible that financial markets around the world would collapse, possibly triggering a depression on the scale of the 1930s or worse. We really do not know how bad it would be – only that it would be unprecedented, and very, very scary.</p>
<p>But if the consequences are potentially so extreme, why are the markets not reflecting this? Let’s run over the potential counter-arguments.</p>
<p><strong>“This is all just negotiating tactics. They won’t allow a default to happen.”</strong></p>
<p>Perhaps so, but playing chicken while driving a truck full of nitroglycerine over rocky terrain doesn’t leave you much room for mistakes. Moreover, I’m not sure that the players involved are smart enough to understand the magnitude of the problem, and they could easily misjudge the situation. Even if they are planning to come to a last minute compromise, it’s not clear that the markets will wait that long. The rating agencies have already warned that if they don’t see a settlement by mid-July, they could downgrade U.S. securities, even without a default. Since a negotiating posture is only effective if you make the other side believe that you’re serious, the Republicans will have to act as if they are prepared to allow a default if they don’t get what they want. In so doing, they may also convince the rating agencies of the same thing, triggering the kind of run on Treasuries that I described above.</p>
<p>Moreover, the markets might get spooked before the rating agencies can act. The thing that scares investors most is uncertainty. If the biggest, most important financial entity in the world suddenly looks shaky, investors might suddenly decide that they need to run for the hills. Once a panic starts, it would be very difficult to stop.</p>
<p><strong>“The U.S. government can’t possibly be this stupid. This is all show. It’ll blow over.”</strong></p>
<p>Not true, and there’s precedent to prove it. On June 17<sup>th</sup>, 1930, President Herbert Hoover signed the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930 into law, raising tariffs on 20,000 imported items, and triggering a massive trade war that caused global trade to drop by two-thirds in a period of four years. Yet, Hoover had been warned by over 1,000 of America’s most eminent economists. He had been intensively lobbied by Henry Ford, who called the bill “economic stupidity.” The CEO of banking giant J.P. Morgan begged Hoover not to sign the bill – but he did, for political reasons.</p>
<p>Make no mistake, this is a very, very dangerous situation – a big, honkin’ Black Swan if there ever was one – that is comparable to the massive error of passing Smoot-Hawley. So don’t count on the government coming to its senses. History argues that governments sometimes do stupid things for ideological and political reasons.</p>
<p><strong>“You’re exaggerating. The effects of a temporary halt in payments couldn’t possibly be this extreme.”</strong></p>
<p>Who knows? This has never happened before. Once the U.S. government has failed to live up to its responsibilities for any reason, and for any period of time no matter how short, it will be impossible to regain the “full faith and credit” of a borrower that is beyond suspicion. Indeed, the rating agencies have a policy of automatically downgrading the ratings of a borrower that fails to live up to <strong>all</strong> of its obligations, if any investors lose money through delayed or halted payments of interest or principal. At time of writing, for instance, Standard &amp; Poor’s has just warned that if Greece extends the payment schedule on its debts, as is being discussed within the EU as a possible solution to Greece’s debt problems, that would constitute a default and trigger a downgrade. And the rating agencies are still smarting from being accused (correctly) of not being tough enough on issuers in the asset-backed securities markets prior to 2008. They won’t want to be seen to be committing the same mistake again so soon, regardless of the consequences.</p>
<p>Perhaps I’m wrong, but as a former credit analyst, and one who used to assess sovereign credits for a living, I don’t believe I am. Moreover, those who pooh-pooh the consequences have no basis or evidence for their assertions. It is wishful thinking, pure and simple.</p>
<p><strong>“This is nonsense. It can’t happen. They won’t let it. This just isn’t possible.”</strong></p>
<p>Who’s “they”? This is just more wishful thinking, and is comparable to pulling the covers over your head to ward off danger while the house is on fire.</p>
<p><strong>“You’re being irresponsible by talking about this. You’re going to create a panic by doing so.”</strong></p>
<p>No, the irresponsible, brain-dead idiots at the extremes of the Republican party are running that risk. I’m just talking about the potential consequences of their actions. Besides, I’m not the first, nor am I the most important person to discuss it. The rating agencies have issued very forceful (for them) statements on this. The Chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, has said this is dangerous folly (although not in those words). The International Monetary Fund has warned that this is an irresponsible and exceedingly dangerous path that could cause a “severe shock” to the American and global economies. The current Secretary of the Treasury, Tim Geithner, has said that it would be “catastrophic”, and even one of George W. Bush’s economic advisors, Keith Hennessey, has publicly said that he’s “terrified” at the prospect. I doubt if my comments will make much difference – except to my readers. For them, I hope it helps them prepare contingency plans in case the unthinkable happens.</p>
<p><strong>“A default would actually be helpful, as it would force America’s government to face the reality of its financial position.”</strong></p>
<p>Nope. As I’ve already said, it would trigger an absolute panic and bankrupt the government, which would then be forced to make long-term policy on the basis of emergency conditions. It would have to make bad choices, possibly even very bad choices, because better choices would no longer be available. Tackling the deficit is going to be tough. Trying to do it while simultaneously trying to keep the global financial markets and global economy from complete collapse would be impossible. This is just a bad idea.</p>
<p><strong>“This is Obama’s fault. He’s the one that’s being unreasonable. We have to bring down the deficit, and this is the only way to force liberals to cut spending.”</strong></p>
<p>Presidents and Congresses have disagreed about critical issues before, but no one has ever used the debt ceiling as a threat, and it is the Republican extremists that are doing so. This is on all fours with strapping a bomb to your chest, and threatening to blow everyone up if you don’t get exactly what you want. It’s no less threatening, and no less extreme than that, and it is Republican extremists that are doing it, which brings me to the political dimension of things.</p>
<p>I grew up in the Republican party. My father was a die-hard Republican, and I was raised that way. I voted that way when I first started voting. Since then, I’ve voted more discerningly and hopefully more thoughtfully for candidates that I thought were the best (or least-worst) choices, both Republican and Democrat. But this is not my father’s (or my) Republican party. The current Republican party seems to have been captured by fanatics who believe that ideological purity is more important than reality. They are spoiled children, throwing a tantrum to get what they want, and endangering us all in the process.</p>
<p>And those who have regularly read my blog know that I believe the U.S. budget deficit must be tackled, hard choices must be made, and sooner rather than later. But what the Republican extremists are demanding is that a process that should be thoughtfully devised, then carefully negotiated, and implemented over a period of years in order to minimize the necessary harm inflicted must, instead, be accomplished overnight, and that all the costs must be borne by someone else’s constituents, not theirs. Some of these extremists have even demanded tax cuts be part of the deal, even though such cuts would increase the deficit, not decrease it. They are clinging to an ideology as defunct as Soviet Communism, and pointing to the Reagan tax cuts as being self-financing, even though Reagan’s own budget director, David Stockman, has said that tax cuts in today’s environment would be a bad mistake. Indeed, in talking about extending the Bush tax cuts during the 2010 debate, Mr. Stockman said that the Republican position was “Utterly disingenuous. I find it unconscionable that the Republican leadership faced with a 1.5 trillion deficit could possibly believe that good public policy is to maintain tax cuts for the top 2 percent of the population”.</p>
<p>But extremists don’t want to hear that, and so they don’t listen. They have substituted ideology for thought or reason. They are ideologues as blind as any group of religious fanatics, except they could cause much greater harm to a much larger group of people, both at home and abroad.</p>
<p><strong>“Forcing the government into default is the best way to make sure we’ll beat Obama in 2012.”</strong></p>
<p>I haven’t actually read any reports where someone has said this, but some Republicans seem to be thinking it awfully loudly. If I’m right in thinking this, then it is a morally bankrupt attitude, verging on treason. It amounts to saying that you are willing to crash the American economy, trigger a collapse of the world banking system, and bankrupt many American citizens for selfish political gain. It would be like deliberately losing a war in order to win the presidency.</p>
<p><strong>“So, what should we do about it? If the situation is as bad as you say, what’s the answer?”</strong></p>
<p>Now we come to the reason for this blog: to offer some thoughts about what individuals should do to prepare for this possible black swan event.</p>
<p>The first thing to do is to hope that the participants are more intelligent than I give them credit for, and resolve this issue quickly, before they spook the markets or the rating agencies. If they wait too long, it may be too late, so August 2<sup>nd</sup> (or sometime that week) may be the outside deadline; the markets might panic before than. And writing to your Congresscritter wouldn’t hurt. Tell them that Congress &amp; the president need to come up with a credible plan for reducing the deficit through painful spending cuts, tax increases, and especially through reductions to Social Security &amp; Medicare entitlements, but that not raising the debt ceiling is not a legitimate negotiating tactic.</p>
<p>Next, watch the news for developments. Assuming that we can’t influence the participants (and they seem impervious to argument no matter who offers it), then you need to prepare yourself for the worst. You needn’t do it all at once, but make sure you stay ahead of the market’s perception of a crisis. And this is where <strong>systematic risk management</strong> comes into play.</p>
<p>In this situation, we are running two opposing kinds of risk: the risk that there will be a panic, market collapse, and massive recession or depression; and the risk that the U.S. won’t default, that a crisis will be avoided, and the markets will continue to advance. Let me deal with the second risk first.</p>
<p>If a crisis is averted, and the world carries on with business as usual (which is what I devoutly hope will happen), then the market will carry on as if nothing important happened. As the stock market has been rising of late, it’s possible that if you sold holdings in advance of a possible crisis, you could forego potential capital gains by liquidating your holdings. This is a potential opportunity cost, but not a large risk. Suppose the S&amp;P 500 were to regain its previous 2008 high before you could manage to buy back into the market. This means it would have to run up by about 16% in a very short period of time. So, on the extreme high end of things, the second risk is that you might forego about a 16% gain from where we are today – and that’s assuming that the market keeps going up, and actually goes up much faster than it has of late. I think this is highly unlikely, but let’s leave it at that: the risk of missing an upside move by the markets is foregoing a 16% increase in your portfolio.</p>
<p><strong>The Default Risk</strong></p>
<p>Now let’s consider the first risk: that, intentionally or not, by August 2<sup>nd</sup> or somewhat before or after, the U.S. government defaults on its obligations, and that triggers a panic. What would be the financial risk if you don’t prepare for that possibility?</p>
<p>Well, first, how far might the market fall? In the market panic of 2008, the S&amp;P 500 fell more about 54% from its October 4<sup>th</sup> high. The stock market crash of 1929 was slightly worse, with the Dow Jones Industrial Index (“DJII”) falling on the order of 58%.</p>
<p>But the initial market crash of 1929 is not the biggest risk; the potential for a prolonged severe recession or depression is. Indeed, the stock market decline from 1930 to 1932 was actually worse than the crash of 1929, with the DJII falling 79% from the market low of 1929 to the market bottom in 1932. All told, from the 1929 high to the 1932 low, the DJII lost an incredible 89% in value. And that is, in my opinion, the comparable risk investors run from a potential default, aside from any economic damage they might incur, such as losing their income or their home.</p>
<p>So, now we come to the issue of risk assessment: Which is the greater risk? Missing out on a potential 16% investment gain from here, or losing 89% of the value of your current portfolio from here, plus experiencing significant economic suffering? Remember that the markets are largely ignoring the closed-door discussions on raising the debt ceiling, so that if a deal is announced, it is unlikely that the stock market will blast off to that 16% gain in a short period of time, whereas if a default occurs, everyone will thunder for the exits at the same time. In my mind, there is no comparison: it is far riskier to ignore the potential for a default than it is to forego the potential for gain.</p>
<p><strong>So What Actions Should You Take to Prepare?</strong></p>
<p>If you concur with my assessment, what do you sell, what do you buy, and how do you prepare? I’d start by selling investments that have done well for you, but may have limited upside from here. You can always reinvest later if the crisis passes. If the days tick by, and there is still no word of settlement, I’d start selling more earnestly, including things that perhaps you don’t feel have done as well as they should. Remember that the rating agencies have warned that they are expecting to see a settlement by the middle of July. If no such signals emerge, they may start being more vocal, and the markets may become more unsettled.</p>
<p>If, by the third week of July, there is no sign of a settlement, and the two sides continue to say they are deadlocked, it’s time to take serious defensive action. Sell any investment that is not a disaster scenario holding. Perhaps even sell money market funds to hold cash. And check the terms and conditions on your financial accounts. Following the banking crisis of the Great Depression, financial institutions added clauses that give them the option to require 3-5 day’s notice of a withdrawal. Just because they have waived that requirement for almost 80 years doesn’t mean that it’s not there, so check with your banker or broker.</p>
<p>In the extreme, if it seems likely that a disaster is going to happen, think about what you think will hold its value. This starts with gold &amp; precious metals, but also think about how you want to hold it. If you have investments in a mutual fund that invests in precious metals, and the company that runs that fund goes bankrupt, what will the value of your holding be? Cash is likely to be worth having, or being able to get hold of quickly – but who’s cash? Do you want US dollars? And always keep in mind safety. Do you really want to have bunches of cash under your mattress? What about the risk of fire or theft? How do you want to deal with that? These are issues that deserve some serious consideration.</p>
<p>And if a deal is struck “at the last minute” (whenever that might be), and there is no default, and no run on the markets, then what? Then you take a long look at the risks as they are at that time, and, if you’re convinced that the risks are now on the upside (i.e., that you might lose more by missing a major market advance than remaining on defense), then unwind your defensive positions, and go back to your investments.</p>
<p>If I’m overreacting to the potential risks, and life goes on as usual instead, it will have cost you some money in transaction costs, and you might possibly forego some upside on your investments. If I’m correct in my assessment of the risks, then taking a defensive position may make the difference between financial survival or not.</p>
<p>And, for the record, I sincerely hope a deal is struck. I may wind up looking foolish, rather like Chicken Little screaming that the sky is falling, but I would prefer that result to the horrors of being proven right. If it’s a choice between pride and survival, I’ll pick survival. But I’d be prepared for either one.</p>
<p>© Copyright, IF Research, July 5th, 2011.</p>
<p>.</p>
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		<title>Why Education Must Change</title>
		<link>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2010/09/01/why-education-must-change/</link>
		<comments>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2010/09/01/why-education-must-change/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Sep 2010 03:00:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Richard Worzel</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/?p=576</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[by futurist Richard Worzel, C.F.A. This article was originally published in Teach magazine. For most of the 18 years I’ve written this column, I’ve focused on how education will change. This time, I’m going to focus on why it must &#8230; <a class="more-link" href="http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2010/09/01/why-education-must-change/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by futurist Richard Worzel, C.F.A.</p>
<p><em>This article was originally published in <strong><a href="http://www.teachmag.com/" target="_blank">Teach</a> </strong>magazine.</em></p>
<p>For most of the 18 years I’ve written this column, I’ve focused on <em>how</em> education will change. This time, I’m going to focus on <em>why</em> it must change, and it relates to the purposes of education.</p>
<p>There are two major schools of thought about the purpose of education, and for some strange reason, most people believe they are mutually exclusive. One school believes that education should primarily be devoted to the enlightenment of the individual, to equip them with the mental tools to enable them to appreciate the fine and important things of life, and to enable them to contribute to their society and the world. The other school believes that education should provide the individual with the skills they need to  get a good job and a vocation, so that they can support themselves, contribute to the economy, and enjoy the material things of life. Both are right, and they are actually mutually supportive, not mutually exclusive – but that’s a topic for another day.<span id="more-576"></span></p>
<p>For both purposes, education must change. Let’s look first at the enlightenment of the individual. The world around us is being driven largely by commercial interests. This has become such a normal part of our lives that we hardly even notice the daily bombardment of advertising, and the pervasive, subtle pressures to own something, or behave in a particular way. And there is nothing especially wrong with society because these pressures exist – this pressure has largely been responsible for the richness and luxury of our daily lives. Yet, there is more to life than just commercial offerings, and most commercial offerings are shallow, and lack deeper purpose. Moreover, commerce and society generally tends to emphasize novelty, and while, again, there’s nothing wrong with new things <em>per se</em>, there is much more to life than just the novel.</p>
<p>On their own, few people would delve deeper than today’s satisfactions – which is where education enters the picture. Education provides context, history, art, depth of understanding, and perspective that most people would not otherwise be exposed to. This is part of the traditional role of education as it fulfills part of the purpose of culture, which is the transmission of our society’s values.</p>
<p>But the world is changing, and at ever accelerating rates. And the shiny baubles that novelty and commerce provide are increasingly being designed to be “sticky” or addictive. If education is to capture the attention of children, and persuade them of the value of what we know, what we have, where we’ve come from, and who we are, then it must compete with the increasingly effective seductions of commercial offerings. Assuming that just because we can hold students captive for six hours a day, 180 days a year, for 12 years is enough to allow us to brainwash them into appreciating the riches or our society is, in my view, a short-sighted and foolish view. Instead, I believe that education must compete for attention, not just for enforced time, and the only way we can do that is to seduce students into a state of fascination with what the wider world has to offer. As I say when I’m invited to speak to groups of students, we adults have perpetrated a cruel hoax on you: we’ve convinced you that learning is an intolerably boring process that you have no choice but to endure, when the reality is that learning is the most fun you can have with your clothes on.</p>
<p>We need to change that. Today’s students are, in my view, smarter, hipper, more skeptical, and less likely to believe propaganda than any other generation in history. They know that no matter what the school system tells them, the odds of them needing, wanting, or using most of the crap we teach them is vanishingly small once they leave their formal education. And yet, there are things that they will need to know that we’re not teaching them, and there are things they would love to know if we could present them in a way that doesn’t bore than pants off them. And as far as I can see, the only way we can seduce students into loving education is if we approach that education by appealing to those things that the individual students themselves are passionate about. We have to stop teaching the curriculum, and start teaching the individual – <em>each</em> individual, <em>every single</em> individual, and teach them <em>as</em> individuals, with unique interests and abilities. We have to stop teaching Mr. Smith’s grade 11 English class, Ms. Phansalkar’s grade 9 geometry class, or most of the groupings that assume that 25 kids are all the same simply because that makes education simple for us (and excruciatingly boring for them). And I don’t see any way that our current education system can achieve the level of interest or seduction necessary to compete with the enthralling, but shallow, offerings of commerce and society.</p>
<p>Now let me turn to the vocational aspects of education. And if anything, the need for change is even more compelling here.</p>
<p>We are all aware that countries like China and India, plus fast gaining countries like Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia, and Malaysia, are providing enormous competition for low-level and low-skilled jobs. What is not as well known is that these same countries are aiming for the best jobs that require the highest levels of education. They will not be satisfied with low-skilled jobs that don’t pay well and offer little opportunity. This means that our students will be competing with the best in the world in almost any field. Worse, they are starting at a big disadvantage: our school days are shorter, our school years are shorter, and our society no longer has the devotion to higher education that parents in developing countries have.</p>
<p>Some commentators and politicians contend that the way to deal with this issue is to lengthen school years and school days, pile on the homework, and really get “back to basics.” I think this is precisely the wrong answer, because it means making our education system even more boring than it already is. Moreover, we are headed into a world where creativity and innovative thinking will be more valuable than rote learning of any depth. Indeed, what’s the point of memorizing facts if you can command them with a wave of your search engine? Understanding and context, on the other hand, are critically important. Accordingly, if our kids are to compete with smart kids from around the world, our children will be better equipped if we focus on helping them identify their peculiar talents and abilities, and then develop them.</p>
<p>But there’s another threat that is, perhaps, even more worrying than rising competition from smart kids abroad, and that is automation. Most people are familiar with Moore’s Law, coined (and repeatedly reframed) by Gordon Moore, one of the founders of Intel. In economic terms, Moore’s Law states that computers will double in speed, and halve in price, every 18 months. Yet, it turns out that Moore’s Law is wrong because it’s too conservative. Moore’s Law posits an exponential growth rate – which means a constant rate of change (i.e., doubling every 18 months). But computers are evolving faster than that, and not only is the rate of change accelerating, but the rate of acceleration is increasing. As a result, a rough estimate indicates that computers will become about 1,000 times faster and more cost-effective over the next 10 years. And, as we develop new, more effective tools and techniques to harness this power, it means that automation will become dramatically more powerful in the next decade.</p>
<p>Automation has been increasing in power for millennia, since the invention of fire and the wheel. It really started to accelerate with the advent of the Industrial Revolution in the 18th century. Now it is moving at a rate that may be beyond our comprehension.</p>
<p>In the past, automation has led to a steadily rising standard of living, as well as new, better paying jobs that offer more opportunity. And so it still does. However, the major difference now is that automation is changing things so fast that the skills we develop at the beginning of our careers may not be enough to allow us to make a living for more than a few years – and eventually a few months – before they become obsolete. We are being thrown out of work at ever-faster rates, and if we are to hope to continue to work, we will need to constantly upgrade our abilities.</p>
<p>To some extent, the effects of both of these developments – foreign competition and domestic automation – are already evident. Whereas when I and my peers left our formal educations, we had a choice of jobs available to us, today students finish a university education, and spend years looking for anything more than menial labour. Worse, the next 10 years are going to make this seem like a happy outcome. Within the next 10 years, we will face an employment crisis that will shake the foundations of our society, our political system, and our economy. And the only answer is education, and education for adults as well as young people.</p>
<p>But it can’t be the same old education. It has to be education that emphasizes our human talents and abilities, our creativity and our ability to improvise and innovate. Skills training in most fields, with a few exceptions, will become obsolete at faster and faster rates. We will, instead, need to fall back on those things that are uniquely human, like art, teamwork, leadership, empathy, understanding, creativity, ingenuity, and all of the deeper aspects of human life and society. Computers, robots, and cheaper competition from abroad will take everything else.</p>
<p>And for those who say that the way to combat these things is by protecting domestic jobs, and halting the use of automation, let me say that like King Canute, you might as well try to stop the tide from coming in. Such efforts are not only doomed to fail, they will also make it even harder for us to succeed by diverting our attention and efforts away from the real task for tomorrow’s education: helping us to blossom into self-actualization, to become the best people we can be.</p>
<p>Do we have the wit to see the problems that are racing towards us? And do we have the will do to something about them? Those are the questions that will determine why we need to change education.</p>
<p>© Copyright, IF Research, September 2010.</p>
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		<title>10 Things You Need to Know About the Next 10 Years</title>
		<link>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2010/07/27/10-things-you-need-to-know-about-the-next-10-years/</link>
		<comments>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2010/07/27/10-things-you-need-to-know-about-the-next-10-years/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Jul 2010 15:57:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Richard Worzel</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/?p=558</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[What follows is a summary of a presentation I delivered to the World Education Congress of Meeting Planners International in Vancouver, Canada at the end of July, 2010. This was part of a series of “Flash” presentations, each limited to &#8230; <a class="more-link" href="http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2010/07/27/10-things-you-need-to-know-about-the-next-10-years/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>What follows is a summary of a presentation I delivered to the World Education Congress of Meeting Planners International in Vancouver, Canada at the end of July, 2010. This was part of a series of “Flash” presentations, each limited to 15 minutes, which didn’t leave a lot of time to elaborate. I’ve fleshed some of the points out here, but the most important reason for approaching the future in this way is that it is never shaped by just one thing, but rather by a confluence of forces, many of which are conflicting.</em></p>
<p><em><br />
</em></p>
<p>The next 10 years will dramatically change your life and almost everything in it. And while there are lots of things likely to change, I’d like to focus on 10 that will be of particular importance to you personally, to our society, and to the meeting planners generally.</p>
<p>Someone always benefits from change – and those who will benefit most will be those who prepare most successfully for what’s to come. Since I’m necessarily going to have to be brief, I would encourage you to contact me if you’d like to discuss any or all of these 10 points.<span id="more-558"></span></p>
<p><strong>1. Everyday robots</strong></p>
<p>The first thing you need to know is that we are about to experience the emergence of what might be called “everyday robots” and computer intelligences. We’ve been raised on the idea of robots, and they’ve always been just beyond the horizon, like flying cars, vacations on the moon, and the three-day workweek. We grew up with pulp fiction fantasies about what robots would be like, such as Rosie the Robot from <em>The Jetsons</em>, the Terminator from the governor’s mansion in California, or the classic Isaac Asimov <em>I, Robot</em> series of stories. But over the next 10 years, we are going to experience an increase in computing power of roughly 1000 times, and that means that that the hesitant, clumsy robots that are now appearing in laboratories will get dramatically better over the next decade, improving about as quickly as an 18 month-old toddler improves at walking. Robots will first be used with applications in the military, police, health care, and be created by hobbyists for fun. Much of the non-military development is in Japan, because they have, by many measures, the oldest population in the world, and need arms and legs to do things.</p>
<p>Aside from the sex trade, which seems to soak up new technologies and harness them for sexploitation, the development of robots for civilian use will start primarily in the workplace, especially in fields like health care. (I&#8217;ll deal with sex robots at a later date, because they are a real prospect.) It will take time for robots to come to households, because they will cost about as much as a car. But the business potential of another household possession in a field that may become as important as the automotive industry is going to drive development. And along with everyday robots, we will also get computer intelligences that rival human intelligence in certain, tightly defined areas. This leads to my second point.</p>
<p><strong>2. Dramatic increases in productivity</strong></p>
<p>Related to the rise of robots will be automation and dramatic increases in productivity, which has several implications. The first is that increased productivity will lead to cheaper goods and services, which will produce a substantial increase in your standard of living and a much higher level of wealth – <em>if</em> you have a job or occupation. But greater productivity also implies that companies won’t need to employ as many people, which will mean that many jobs will disappear, replaced by automation.</p>
<p>Traditionally, automation has led to new jobs with better wages and prospects appearing, and that will happen – but these new jobs will also require more education, more intellect, and more creativity. This means that people who don’t have appropriate skill sets will become chronically unemployed or underemployed. This could make it even harder for young people, just finishing their formal educations, to get their feet on the bottom rungs of the employment ladder.</p>
<p>In the meeting industry, it also means smart tools for planning your conferences and running your business. Think of having an automated assistant that can do a lot of the routine work in organizing a conference, including the routine interactions with hotels, travel agencies, printers, communicating with conferees, and so on, leaving you to do the tougher creative work, and to focus on the human, interpersonal aspects of your job</p>
<p><strong>3. The ascent of women </strong></p>
<p>Next is the ascent of women and different ways of doing business. The first part of this is the decline of men, as men seem to be harmed more by environmental degradation than women. Based on research that is only just starting to emerge, two to four times more boys than girls are afflicted by attention-deficit disorders and hyperactivity disorders in America. Sperm counts are dropping in many parts of the world, and testosterone levels are lower. Testicular cancer is higher in many places. And the birth rate of boys in many countries, including America and Japan, is far lower than statistical variance should allow. We don’t really know why this is happening, but researchers are theorizing that males are more vulnerable to new chemicals, such as synthetic hormones, that are making their way into the biosphere.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, girls have better roles models now than ever before in our society, up to, but not quite including president of the United States. More businesses are being started by women than men, and the businesses started by women are more likely to survive, so that over time, more and more businesses will be headed by women. But the clincher is that almost 60% of college and university students are women, and the ratio is even higher in most graduate fields. As a result, a steadily rising share of tomorrow’s leaders will be women, which will lead to a cultural shift. Without being too glib, I think it’s safe to say that women have a different way of thinking and acting in the world than men, and this power shift to women is going to change the way our society – and this industry – behaves.</p>
<p><strong>4. The health care revolution</strong></p>
<p>Point four is the health care revolution, starting with customized drugs and treatments. Herceptin is a drug used to treat breast cancer – but it is only used with patients that have two particular genetic markers. If you don’t have these two specific genetic characteristics, there’s no point in giving you Herceptin, because it won’t help you. And it’s the precursor of customized drugs. They will be dramatically more effective – and, at least initially, dramatically more expensive as well because the research costs will have to be spread over a much smaller population.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, decoding your personal DNA is rapidly becoming affordable. You can already get genetic tests that show whether you are susceptible to certain kinds of diseases, such as Alzheimers, ALS ( Lou Gherig’s disease), or Huntington’s. But whereas it took decades, and billions of dollars to decode the first human genome, within 10 years, having your personal genome fully decoded will cost about $1000 or less, and take a few hours, bringing it into the realm of the possible. And this cascade of data about you will, gradually, allow us not only to ascertain what diseases you need to guard against, but also which lifestyle choices, including foods, will work best for you.</p>
<p>And a third leg of the future of health care is the wearable computer companion to monitor your health and guard against threats. There are already smartphone applications to monitor heart rate, blood sugar, calories burned, and so on. These are going to become increasingly sophisticated, and will, over time, become dedicated to monitoring your health, heartbeat-by-heartbeat, and intervening as necessary to reduce the risks of health crises, such as heart attacks or strokes, as well as to advise you on optimal health management.</p>
<p>These three things, combined with electronic health records, will, over time, produce the greatest tool for health treatment and research humanity has ever had: a global system to identify health risks, and find cures or treatments for them in something approaching real time. And I fully expect that they will eventually lead to life expectancies of 120 years and more, although this development will take much more than just 10 years. Which leads me to my next point.</p>
<p><strong>5. Transhumanism</strong></p>
<p>Like my previous point, this is going to start over the next 10 years, but will carry on into the indefinite future as we learn more, and figure out what to do with what we know. Transhumanism is the school of thought that science and technology are going to allow us to first cope with disabilities, and then to augment and exceed our natural abilities. Some of this, such as stem cell therapies, will mean using biological mechanisms to repair our own bodies. Beyond that, transhumanism also projects that we will use artificial means to augment our abilities. It has already started with devices that help us survive. Some, like heart pacemakers, have been around for decades. Others, like brain pacemakers to prevent seizures, are relatively new. Next are prosthetics. Of course, the oldest prosthetics, like peg legs and hook hands, have been around since Disney invented pirates, but I’m talking about arms and legs controlled by thoughts and nerves. Prosthetic arms &amp; legs will act and seem natural.</p>
<p>As we move towards computers that can read your intentions and interpret your thoughts, we get into interesting man-machine combinations. Eventually we will be able to choose, by an act of will, to control distant machines and mechanisms by thought. We’ll be able to use the power of computers to augment the speed with which we think, and the depth of things we can “remember.” Imagine, for instance, being able to Google something on the Internet just by thinking a query, and getting the answer either whispered into your ear, or displayed on contact lenses on your eyes that act as a computer monitor. There are already prototypes of precursors of these things, from thought-controlled wheelchairs for paraplegics, to memory glasses that can remind the forgetful who the person in front of them is. As I said, this is a brand new field, so I doubt if you’ll need to worry about the Borg just yet.</p>
<p><strong>6. Critical economic uncertainties</strong></p>
<p>The headlines this spring have centered on whether we’re likely to have a double-dip recession, and the financial and fiscal crises of the PIIGS of Europe (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and Spain). These uncertainties are caused by too much debt borrowed by consumers and governments alike.</p>
<p>Having too much debt is like having a rowboat that’s heavily loaded – it doesn’t take much to swamp it completely, and it doesn’t have much resilience. Moreover, it takes a long time to bail out of debt, so these problems are not going to go away overnight. Accordingly, in your plans and planning, I would strongly recommend that you be prepared for repeated, periodic shocks and crises that lead to financial upheaval, and economic slowdowns or outright recessions over the next decade. Believe me, I don’t like this prospect, but I think it’s better to be prepared for shocks than to be caught by surprise by them. You need to have plans in place for dealing with such upheavals and slowdowns, or else you’ll be flattened by them.</p>
<p><strong>7. Growing political and social turmoil </strong></p>
<p>In addition to the potential for new crises and turmoil in the global economy and global markets, there is also the potential for increased financial and political turmoil in the developed countries. Not only is the U.S. federal government, among other nations, running up unprecedented amounts of debt, increasing its financial vulnerability, but many of America’s individual states are in a squeeze. This is happening not just because of the Great Recession, but also because they’ve been too generous with pensions and benefits to their retirees over the years. For example, by 2018, the state of Illinois will have to pay $14 billion a year for benefits for retired state employees, which is more than a third of the state’s total revenues, and could bankrupt it, much as happened to General Motors.<strong> </strong></p>
<p>And in a larger sense, there are going to be growing conflicts between public sector retirees, who mostly have decent pensions, and private sector retirees, who mostly don’t yet will be paying taxes to support their civil servant neighbors. As well, there will be conflict between aging boomers, who will vote for generous Social Security payments and unlimited health care, and their children who will be paying taxes for benefits they don’t believe they will ever receive. Accordingly, the political situation in most developed countries will likely get worse – hard as that is to believe!</p>
<p><strong>8. Climate change accelerates</strong></p>
<p>Within 10 years, the debate on climate change will be effectively over except for those who are willfully choosing to ignore evidence. It’s already clear from changes happening in the polar regions that climate change is happening, and climatologists are astonished by how fast they are occurring. Change may come not only more rapidly than we expect, but faster than we can adapt. I suspect we’re in for a wild ride, and that will almost certainly force changes on us that we will find difficult. We will also find some changes that are helpful, such as longer growing seasons in parts of North America – particularly the northern tier of Midwestern American states and the Prairies of Canada – <strong>IF</strong> we get the right rainfall patterns, which may also change. But it’s also clear that many of the changes will be harmful to us and the way we live.</p>
<p>I also suspect it is going to force us to make significant changes to our lifestyles, imposing Green Economy ideals on even disbelievers. This doesn’t have to be a bad thing, because another name for “pollution” is “waste,” and by decreasing waste, we can actually increase profits. Specifically for the meeting industry, I would suggest that we need to develop a “green index” to indicate the environmental cost per participant of conferences as a means of first measuring, then pushing for improved efficiencies.</p>
<p><strong>9. The energy revolution</strong></p>
<p>We’ve already seen with natural gas that new technologies can revolutionize even well-established industries – but that’s not going to be enough. If you look at the long-term cost of oil over the past 150 years, you can see that, with the added demand from rapidly developing countries like China and India, coupled with the sheer volume of energy we need to add each year just to maintain our lifestyles, we will push up the price of oil at a remarkable rate – at least for the next several years, until we come up with good energy substittues.</p>
<p>Now, let me reassure you – we are not running out of oil, because almost ¾ of the Earth’s surface is covered in water. We haven’t discovered or exploited the vast majority of the oil under that water. But we are running out of <em>cheap</em> oil. The BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is an example of the problems ahead. More expensive petroleum will provoke us to develop new ways of using energy more efficiently – so called “negawatts” – as well as developing new sources of energy. It’s astonishing what demand for a critical resource can do, but it&#8217;s going to take time to displace oil from the center of our energy equation.</p>
<p>For this industry, though, it’s also going to mean that travel is going to become more expensive. We will see more moves towards virtual meetings, more local meetings, and regional satellite meetings that combine through telecommunications into national conventions. Start thinking about, and looking for ways of stretching travel dollars, because it’s going to be a fact of life.</p>
<p><strong>10. The purpose of life</strong></p>
<p>When people ask the question, “What is the purpose of life?”, they are starting off in the wrong direction with an improperly formed question. This is not a question at all, but a statement: Life <em>is</em> purpose. Without purpose, there is no life.</p>
<p>But this raises a different question: What’s <strong>my</strong> purpose? And this is a question that can’t be answered by looking out there, but in here, inside yourself. I got this from a wise man, Viktor Frankl, in a book called <em>Man’s Search for Meaning</em>. And here’s the question he posed that you should ask yourself: “It’s not a matter of what you can expect of life, but what can life expect of you?” It may be that you think your purpose is to bring home a paycheck, and that’s certainly important. But I would urge you to stop and think about what life can expect of you, what you feel is your calling, and then be guided by this sense of purpose.</p>
<p>The decade ahead is going to be radically, remarkably, dangerously different than any period you’ve lived through or have experience with. And it’s going to offer opportunities that you cannot now anticipate. If you don’t have a clear sense of where you are going and why, and are not prepared for the challenges we face and the opportunities ahead, you will be devastated by what’s to come.</p>
<p>Someone always benefits from change. Let it be you.</p>
<p>Good luck, and God speed. Thank you.</p>
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		<title>Free trade doesn’t work for the ignorant</title>
		<link>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2009/06/24/free-trade-doesn%e2%80%99t-work-for-the-ignorant/</link>
		<comments>http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2009/06/24/free-trade-doesn%e2%80%99t-work-for-the-ignorant/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jun 2009 15:04:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Richard Worzel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[America's future]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Canada's future]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[free trade]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Free trade works for everyone – but only if everyone works. Rich countries, especially in North America, are getting lazy, and that spells trouble. <a class="more-link" href="http://www.futuresearch.com/futureblog/2009/06/24/free-trade-doesn%e2%80%99t-work-for-the-ignorant/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
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<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>by futurist Richard Worzel, C.F.A.<br />
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<p class="MsoNormal">I’ve been a free trader all my adult life. I studied international trade in university, watched it develop with the collapse of the Bretton Woods Agreement in the early 1970s, and have seen the amazing consequences of globalization, which has lifted hundreds of millions of people out of desolate poverty. Moreover, it makes sense: free trade is merely an extension of occupational specialization, so that just as it makes sense for the cobbler to make shoes and sell them to the farmer in exchange for food, it makes sense for countries to do what they do best, and trade with each other.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Of course, freer trade (because we don’t really have <em>free </em><span>trade) has a downside. It creates winners and losers. Some folks do very well out of free trade, including consumers who get cheaper goods, plus those who are capable of competing and finding new markets. Some folks lose their jobs, as those jobs migrate to other places where the wages are lower, or there’s a natural advantage. I remember hearing one labor leader, who represented workers at GM when those workers were on strike, saying in a radio interview that “We’re not going to let workers in other countries take our jobs just because they’re willing to work for lower wages.” I thought to myself: here’s somebody who’s really out of touch with reality: why should you be able to keep a job if there’s someone else who can do it as well, but for less money? Of course, if you have the job and are losing it, you will naturally object that it’s unfair. But I can’t see as you can make a reasonable case to anyone not related to you that you are entitled to that job.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">But my purpose here is not to defend free trade, but, perversely, to warn about one of its unintended consequences. The fundamental (and correct) premise of free trade is that it destroys older jobs, and creates new jobs that offer better pay and working conditions. But it does that only if workers have the ability to fill more demanding jobs that require more thought and higher levels of education. Otherwise, workers wind up competing by cutting their wages or taking poorer, less rewarding service jobs.<span id="more-198"></span>Generally speaking, this means that free trade benefits developed countries because they usually have better levels of education than developing countries. It also benefits developing countries because less remunerative jobs migrate to countries where those jobs are not only welcome, but a distinct improvement on what those people had available before. Hence, both sides are better off.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">But what happens when the students in developing countries are better educated than those in developed countries? In the past, this would have sounded nonsensical; education is expensive, and so is more likely to be available in rich countries. Yet, this pattern is changing, partly because of our own laziness, and partly because of our conviction that we are naturally superior, and hence naturally deserve higher paying jobs.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">A recent column in <em>The Economist</em><span> newsmagazine, published on June 11th, 2009, and entitled “</span><a href="http://www.economist.com/world/unitedstates/displaystory.cfm?story_id=13825184" target="_blank">The Underworked American</a><span>,” described the development of just this kind of situation. American children, the Lexington columnist said, do substantially less work – and presumably learn less – than their counterparts in Europe and Asia. Our children go to school fewer days a year – about 180 days compared to up to 220 days. Over a 12-year primary and secondary school career, this means that American children “lose out on 180 days of school, equivalent to an entire year” compared to their future competitors abroad. They also have school days that are two or more hours shorter, and far less homework. And the same is true in Canada as well, which tends to mirror the patterns of its largest trading partner. </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It has been known for many years that post-secondary education in North America is the finest in the world, but that secondary and primary school education lag behind other countries, including most of the emerging Asian countries. And there are other indications that things are going wrong as well.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>Indicators of trouble</strong></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The first indicator is that graduate schools largely could not function without foreign students filling their classes. In many graduate schools, including most of the best, foreign students fill the majority of spaces. Interestingly, when I recount that to American audiences, their almost knee-jerk reaction is that we should get those foreigners out of there, and make room for American students. I gently point out to them that the reason there are so many foreign grad students is that there often aren’t enough Americans to fill the classes – there aren’t enough Americans who go to the trouble to work through grad school, and those that do apply, may not be as well prepared as their foreign counterparts.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The other, and in some ways more worrying, indicator is the steady rise of cheating at the undergraduate level. I was at a party the other night, and met a very bright young women. She has a graduate degree, and has started her own business, but is finding it tough to make ends meet. This isn’t unusual: the early days of any new enterprise can be tough. What caught my attention is that she said that she could make a very good living off the Internet by writing essays for undergraduate students who are too lazy or too ignorant to write their own. And this is only one example. Anyone who wants to look can find lots of descriptions of<span> </span>how colleges and universities are struggling to cope with widespread cheating. In other words, while education is clearly the currency of the future, we are systematically cheating ourselves, first with inferior primary and secondary education, and then by looking for ways of ducking the hard work of post-secondary education.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>“Yellow Peril”?</strong></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">I was recently a panelist in a discussion about the problems of North American education on a public-affairs program called “The Agenda.” One of the panelists had written a book about the short-comings of the American education system, and his thesis was that while we are the best at the world in holding football rallies, our education is going to relegate us to second-class status (this is my summation of his work, not his). We also had panelists who had grown up in other countries, one in India, and one in China, and they both agreed that school children worked much harder there than they do here. And there was a representative from a teachers’ union, who was brought in from another city by a remote hook-up. I was there as a futurist who writes about education (I’m a columnist for <em><a href="http://www.teachmag.com/" target="_blank">Teach</a></em><span> magazine). </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">After the moderator introduced the topic, and spent some time talking with the author, the gentleman from China, the woman from India, and me, asking us all what we thought, he turned to the woman from the teachers’ union. That was when things became decidedly sticky. She was most insistent that there was nothing wrong with our education system, it was the finest in the world, and that we were all preaching a racist doctrine that amounted to scaring people about the coming “Yellow Peril,” meaning a metaphoric invasion of Asians. The author and I just looked at each other in disbelief, then he commented that we weren’t talking about a yellow peril, but an intellectual peril, where we were rendering ourselves uncompetitive in a world where education standards were rising. She wasn’t having any part of it; it was all lies, foul lies, and we should be ashamed of ourselves.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">At that point we ran out of time, which ended the discussion, but off-camera, the host apologized to us for the unreasonable attitude of the union representative. I took it as yet another sign confirming my concerns about education and our future.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">So the bottom line is this: Free trade is good for a country and a people if they are prepared to step up to more challenging, and more rewarding, work that requires better education and deeper thought and insight. Instead, we are trying to see how little work we can do. We idolize Homer Simpson instead of the author of the <em>Iliad</em>, and look for short-cuts instead of digging in to see much we can learn<span>. In the short run we can get away with this. Eventually, it will mean a long slide into (relative) poverty, with our children and grandchildren having more and more difficulty finding meaningful work. </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Free trade doesn’t work for the ignorant.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">–</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">© Copyright, IF Research, June 2009.</p>
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