If We Don't Change the Way Money Is Created and
Distributed, We Change Nothing
The only real solution in my
view is to create and distribute money at the base of the pyramid rather than
to those in the top of the pyramid.
by Charles Hugh Smith
Many well-intended
people want to reform the status quo for all sorts of worthy reasons: to reduce
wealth inequality, restore democracy, create good-paying jobs, and so on.
All these goals are
laudable, but if we don't change the way money is created and distributed,
nothing really changes: wealth
inequality will keep rising, governance will remain a bidding process of the
wealthy, wages will continue stagnating, etc.
If the money creation/distribution system
isn't transformed, "reform" is nothing more than ineffectual policy
tweaks that offer do-gooders the illusion of progress.
Mike Swanson of Wall
Street Window and I discuss the The Future of Currencies and CHS's New Book A Radically
Beneficial World (33:21)
Few are willing to
admit that the way we create and distribute money at the top of the wealth
pyramid necessarily generates
increasing wealth inequality because once we admit this, we realize 1) the
money system itself is the source of inequality and 2) we have to change the
money system if we want to stave off the inevitable rise of wealth inequality
to the point that it generates social disorder.
In the current
system, money is created by central and private banks at the top of the
wealth/power pyramid, and distributed within the top of the wealth pyramid. The only possible output of this
system is rising wealth inequality and debt-serfdom for three
reasons:
1. Those with first access to nearly free
money can outbid savers and serfs who must borrow at much higher rates of
interest to snap up income-producing assets. In effect, borrowing unlimited
sums at near-zero rates guarantees that those with this privilege have a
built-in advantage in buying income-producing assets. The only possible output of this
system is the rich get richer as they buy up all the most
profitable and lowest-risk income-producing assets.
2. Those who can borrow virtually unlimited
sums at less than 1% interest skim vast wealth by loaning the money out to
everyone below the top of the pyramid at 4% (mortgages), 8% (other loans), and
18% (credit cards). This funnels much of the national income stream to those
who can borrow cheap and lend the money at much higher rates.
3. Since the wealthy already own most of the
income-producing assets, the easiest way to boost their wealth is to bid up
those assets with cheaply borrowed money. For example, borrowing $100 million
and using it for stock buybacks leverages the value of the shares by far more
than $100 million.
Three different
perspectives of the wealth pyramid illustrate how our money system generates
wealth inequality as the only possible
output of the system:
The system of central banks, private banks
and fractional reserve lending is global. The net result is that globally, the
vast majority of wealth is owned and controlled by those at the very apex of
the wealth/power pyramid: the top 8% own 85% of global wealth.
In the U.S., the wealth-income pyramid can be
represented by an inverted pyramid: the bulk of wealth and income are in the
hands of the top 5%. The bottom 80% own an essentially trivial percentage of
the national wealth.
This pyramid
illustrates how the money creation and distribution pyramid works:
There are a number of proposed alternatives
to this the rich can only get richer
and the rest of us can only get poorer system. The only real
solution in my view is create
and distribute money at the base of the pyramid, to those generating useful
goods and services in the community economy, rather than to those in the
top of the pyramid. This money isn't borrowed into existence, so there is no
interest to be skimmed by its creation.
I explain how this works in my new book A Radically Beneficial World: Automation, Technology and Creating
Jobs for All.
The World of Work Has Changed, and It's Never Going Back to the "Good Old Days”
Wishful thinking is not a
solution.
The world of work
has changed, and the rate of change is increasing. Despite the
hopes of those who want to turn back the clock to the golden era of
high-paying, low-skilled manufacturing jobs and an abundance of secure
service-sector white collar jobs, history doesn't have a reverse gear (tm).
The world of work is
never going back to the "good old days" of 1955, 1965, 1985, or 1995. Jason Burack of Wall Street for Main St. and I discuss these trends in a new podcast, Radical Changes in the Job Market, Now & in the
Future (47:37).
Those hoping for
history to reverse gears place their faith in these wishful-thinking fantasies:
1. That automation
will create more jobs than it destroys because that's what happened in the 1st
and 2nd Industrial Revolutions. The wishful thinkers expect the Digital / 3rd
Industrial Revolution to follow suite, but it won't: previous technological
revolutions generated tens of millions of new low-skill jobs to replace the
low-skill jobs that were lost to technology.
Millions of farm laborers moved to the factory
floor in the 1st Industrial Revolution, and then millions of displaced factory
workers moved to sales and clerk jobs in the 2nd Industrial Revolution.
Even white-collar jobs that supposedly
required a college degree could be learned in a matter of hours, days or at
most weeks, and little effort was required to stay current.
The Digital/3rd
Industrial Revolution is not creating tens of millions of low-skill jobs, and
it never will. Even
worse for the wishful thinking crowd, the 3rd Digital Revolution is eating tech
jobs along with the full spectrum of service-sector jobs.
Those expecting to replace low-skill service
jobs with armies of coders will be disappointed, because coding is itself being
automated.
The new jobs that
are being created are few in number and highly demanding.Jobs are no longer
strictly traditional boss-employee; the real growth is in peer-to-peer
collaboration and what I term hybrid work performed by Mobile Creatives, workers with
highly developed technical/creative/social skillsets who are comfortable
working with rapidly changing technologies, who enjoy constant learning and are
highly adaptive.
The work that is
being created in the Digital/3rd Industrial Revolution is contingent and thus
insecure. The
only security that is attainable in fast-changing environments is the security
offered by broad-based skillsets, great adaptability, a voracious appetite for
new learning and a keenly developed set of "soft skills":
communication, collaboration, self-management, etc.
I cover all this in depth in my book Get a Job, Build a Real Career and Defy
a Bewildering Economy.
The problem is the
number of these jobs is far smaller than the number of jobs that will be eaten
by software, AI and robotics. The number of workers who can transition
productively to this far more demanding and insecure work environment is also
much smaller than the workforce displaced by software/robotics.
In short, we need a new system; wishful
thinking isn't a solution.
2. That the U.S. can
unilaterally demand the right to export its goods and services to others at
full price while refusing to accept competing imports. In effect, the
fantasy is to return to 1955, when the U.S. could export goods at full pop to
the allies who were rebuilding their war-shattered economies. Imports were few
because those economies were busy focusing on their own domestic needs.
Trade is a two-way
street. Fair trade is a
moving target, depending on which side of the trade you happen to be on.
Everybody wants to export their surplus at top prices, but competition lowers
prices and profits. This forces global corporations to seek cost advantages by
lowering the cost of components and labor.
3. The wishful
thinkers want strong corporate profits to prop up their stock market and
pension funds, but they don't want corporations to do what is necessary to reap
strong profits,
i.e. move production of commoditized goods and services overseas or replace
human labor with cheaper automation.
You can't have it both ways.
Wishful thinkers choose to ignore the reality
that roughly half of all U.S. based global corporate sales and profits are
reaped overseas. It makes zero financial sense to pay a U.S. worker $20/hour,
and pay the insanely expensive costs of sickcare/"healthcare" in the
U.S. when the work can be done closer to the actual markets for the goods and
services at a fraction of the cost.
Memo to all the
armchair wishful thinkers: if you want to compete globally with a high-cost
U.S. work force and no automation, be my guest. Put your own money and time at
risk and go make it happen. Go hire people at top dollar and provide full
benefits, and then go out and make big profits in the global marketplace.
The armchair pundits and ivory tower
academics would quickly lose their shirts and come back broke. That's why they
wouldn't dare risk their own security, capital and time doing what they demand
of others.
4. The wishful
thinkers decry the lack of "good-paying" jobs yet they refuse to look
at the reasons why employing people in the traditional boss/employee hierarchy
no longer makes sense. The
armchair pundits and ivory tower academics have never
hired even one person with their own money. These protected privileged
are living in a fantasy-world of academia, think tanks and foundations, where
workers are paid with state money, grants, venture capital, etc.
As I have often
noted here, Immanuel Wallerstein listed the systemic reasons why labor overhead
costs will continue to rise even as wages stagnate. This means
employers see total labor costs rising even if wages go nowhere: it gets more
and more expensive to hire workers.
Why I Will Never Hire Anyone,
Even at $1/Hour (November 10, 2015)
Then there's the staggering burden of
liability in a litigious society, the costs of training and supervising
ill-prepared employees and the hard-to-calculate costs of increasingly complex
regulations.
5. We can solve the
decline of the traditional work model with more education.This is also wishful
thinking, as not only is higher education failing to produce workers with the
requisite range of skills, the emphasis on higher education has produced an
over-supply of people with college diplomas.
In the real world, even wages of the most
highly educated are stagnating.
The structural
changes in the world of work are visible in these charts:
The civilian participation rate is
plummeting, despite the "recovery:"
The civilian participation rate for men is in
a multi-decade decline:
Part-time jobs do not provide enough income
to have an independent household or raise a family, nor do they pay enough
taxes to fund the Savior State. The only jobs that count are full-time jobs,
and they haven't even returned to 2007 levels despite a higher GDP and a rising
population.
As a percentage of GDP, wages have been
declining for decades.
Self-employment is the wellspring of
entrepreneurs and small business. As you can see, it has also been declining
for decades.
It's time to get
real, people. Wishful thinking is not a solution. We need a new system for
creating paid work and money, and here's my proposed alternative system: A Radically Beneficial World: Automation, Technology and Creating
Jobs for All.
Wall
Street for Main St. podcast (47:37): Radical
Changes in Jobs Market Now & in Future
The Most Profitable Work Will Be Automated: The Rest Will Be Left to Us
A new system is self-organizing
before our eyes. We just have to stop obstructing its rise and start
facilitating its expansion in self-evident ways.
What's abundant and
what's scarce? The
question matters because as economist Michael Spence (among others) has noted, value and profits flow to
what's scarce.What's in over-supply has little to no scarcity value
and hence little to no profitability.
What's abundant is unprofitable work, commoditized
goods and services, and conventional labor and capital (which is why wages are
declining and yields on capital are near-zero).
What's scarce is profitable work, highly profitable
niches that are immune to commoditization/ automation, and meaningful work.
Drew Sample of the samplehour.com and
I discuss scarcity and profit in the contexts of Decentralization,
Entrepreneurship, Bike Paths, Craft Brew, Automation & more (1:12)
The conversation is
not between two ivory-tower types who have never started an enterprise in their
life;
it's a conversation between a young mobile creative(Drew) who is establishing a hybrid work career of
multiple micro-enterprises and paid work and a grizzled veteran of multiple
careers and businesses (me--with plenty of failures that gave me the necessary
experience to learn how to accumulate all forms of capital and own my own means of production).
In other words, this is a conversation
between people who are walking the walk, not just jawjacking about abstractions
that somebody else is supposed to make real with their own money and time.
So let's get
started.
Everyone wants an abundance of "good
paying" jobs, but employers can only afford to pay employees if the work
being done is profitable. Paying people to do unprofitable work is a one-way
street to bankruptcy.
Those who want the government to fund
"good paying" jobs forget that government tax revenues depend on
profitable enterprises and the private-sector wages they pay.
(Borrowing from our grandkids to pay
public-sector wages today is immoral and financially unsustainable.)
If we look at urban slums and impoverished
rural communities, we find the problem isn't a lack of work that needs to be
done--it's a lack of paid work and a lack of profitable work.
Businesses have
pushed unprofitable work onto the customer. Paying people to pump customers' gas is
not profitable (if it was, some corporation would be doing it). Rather than
lose money by paying employees to pump gas, the industry shifted that
unprofitable labor onto customers.
A great amount of useful work is not profitable and can
never be profitable. We
need to differentiate useful work from profitable work. One example that illustrates the
difference is building and maintaining bikeways to serve commercial areas. (By
this I mean bikeways not devoted to leisurely rides through parkways but
bikeways that one can use to reach grocery stores, banks, post offices, cafes,
childcare centers, etc.)
The work of building
and maintaining safe bikeways is clearly useful. Safe bikeways have multiple
benefits for commerce, communities, the environment and for individuals: safe
commuter bikeways cut traffic congestion, improve the health of the bicyclists,
lower healthcare costs, boost small businesses along the bikeways and reduce
air pollution.
Safe bikeways (i.e. those which are dedicated
to bikes so riders aren't sharing the road with semi-trucks and autos wandering
over the pavement while the driver is texting) are win-win-win, yet they can
never be profitable unless bicyclists are charged a toll, which defeats the
entire purpose of the bikeway.
Impoverished areas are impoverished because there
are few highly profitable scarcities to fill and few people with the surplus
income to pay for profitable services. Taking money from one community to fund
make-work jobs in another community (the essence of government redistribution
schemes) deprives one community of income while providing a temporary injection
of income in the other community--income that is controlled by a government
that is itself controlled by lobbyists and privileged elites.
Redistribution schemes act as bread and
circuses to suppress social disorder, but they don't address local scarcities
in a sustainable way or foster the expansion of long-term solutions to a lack
of work.
There are two
fundamental solutions to a lack of profitable work. One is to pay people to do useful work that
is not profitable and do so with a labor-backed crypto-currency that
isn't borrowed or taken from some other community, and the second is to nurture
community-economy entrepreneurship that works within decentralized networks and
groups rather than through central states and global corporations.
I explain how these solutions work in my new
book A Radically Beneficial World: Automation, Technology and Creating
Jobs for All.
Slums get government
transfers and remain slums. Communities that rely on global corporations sink
quickly into impoverishment when those corporations pull up stakes and move to
cheaper locales or automate the profitable work.
Communities that foster small-scale
entrepreneurship, local efforts to address local scarcities and paid useful
work thrive in ways that contrast sharply with communities dependent on bread
and circuses and global corporations.
The model of
expecting global corporations and Big Government to solve the scarcity of paid
work is broken. Paul
Mason does an excellent job of explaining why in this article from mid-2015: The end of capitalism has begun: the rise of non-market
production, of unownable information, of peer networks and unmanaged
enterprises.
We need a new
system. A
new system is self-organizing before our eyes. We just have to stop obstructing
its rise and start facilitating its expansion in self-evident ways.
From Of Two Minds
@ http://charleshughsmith.blogspot.com.au/2015/12/if-we-dont-change-way-money-is-created.html
, http://charleshughsmith.blogspot.com.au/2015/12/the-world-of-work-has-changed-and-its.html
and http://charleshughsmith.blogspot.com.au/2015/12/the-most-profitable-work-will-be.html
For more information about employment see http://nexusilluminati.blogspot.com/search/label/jobs
- Scroll down
through ‘Older Posts’ at the end of each section
Hope you like this
not for profit site -
It takes hours of work every day by
a genuinely incapacitated invalid to maintain, write, edit, research,
illustrate and publish this website from a tiny cabin in a remote forest
Like what we do? Please give anything
you can -
Contribute any amount and receive at
least one New Illuminati eBook!
(You can use a card
securely if you don’t use Paypal)
Please click below -
Spare Bitcoin
change?
Xtra Images by R. Ayana – https://c2.staticflickr.com/6/5752/22910797513_3753dcc80c_k.jpg
For further enlightening
information enter a word or phrase into the random synchronistic search box @
the top left of http://nexusilluminati.blogspot.com
And see
New Illuminati – http://nexusilluminati.blogspot.com
New Illuminati on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/the.new.illuminati
New Illuminati Youtube Channel - https://www.youtube.com/user/newilluminati/playlists
New Illuminati’s OWN Youtube Videos
-
New Illuminati on Google+ @ For
New Illuminati posts - https://plus.google.com/u/0/+RamAyana0/posts
New Illuminati on Twitter @ www.twitter.com/new_illuminati
New Illuminations –Art(icles) by
R. Ayana @ http://newilluminations.blogspot.com
The Her(m)etic Hermit - http://hermetic.blog.com
DISGRUNTLED SITE ADMINS PLEASE NOTE –
We provide
a live link to your original material on your site (and links via social
networking services) - which raises your ranking on search engines and helps
spread your info further!
This site
is published under Creative Commons (Attribution) CopyRIGHT (unless an
individual article or other item is declared otherwise by the copyright
holder). Reproduction for non-profit use is permitted & encouraged - if you
give attribution to the work & author and include all links in the original
(along with this or a similar notice).
Feel free
to make non-commercial hard (printed) or software copies or mirror sites - you
never know how long something will stay glued to the web – but remember
attribution!
If you
like what you see, please send a donation (no amount is too small or too large)
or leave a comment – and thanks for reading this far…
Live long
and prosper! Together we can create the best of all possible worlds…
From the New Illuminati – http://nexusilluminati.blogspot.com
The author wrote- "There are two fundamental solutions to a lack of profitable work. One is to pay people to do useful work that is not profitable and do so with a labor-backed crypto-currency that isn't borrowed or taken from some other community, and the second is to nurture community-economy entrepreneurship that works within decentralized networks and groups rather than through central states and global corporations."
ReplyDeleteMy reply- None of these proposals will work. Money, a private enterprise is always centralized in the hands of those who create it. Money is always based on a scarcity determined commodity valuation, hence the psychological need to create planned obsolescence programs that automatically wastes our vital resources. We do indeed automate as we eliminate jobs, hence the money system is unsustainable. Why not talk about eliminating the abstract concept of money altogether? The only common denominator of all the goods and services we produce, distribute and consume is ENERGY. Why not talk about freeing energy in a way that eliminates any scarcity notion as abundance becomes all of ours as a right of birth? If everyone knew that abundances were guaranteed form the cradle to the grave, there would simply be no psychological need to hoard, to be greedy or to go to war, or to perpetuate any conflicting ideology that serves only a few self-proclaimed elitist at the great expense to ALL. I new paradigm based on free energy is needed in order to solve any reality based problem we're faced with. A system based in REALITY as we ignore the fairy-tales of a bygone era based on war and conflicting ideologies is needed to assure a viable future for generations yet unborn. In any kind of money system there will always be just a few winners and a vast majority of losers, and who in their right minds would consciously be a loser? And that sets the stage for immediate conflict and wherever there is conflict, we can never have peace, freedom, love, or any solution to our worlds most complex problems. Think about it.... We need to desperately get over the myth of money and the lies of politics.
Agreed,the 7 billion people of this planet will back the next currency. Every resource on the planet will be used for the good of all.
DeleteThe best suggestion mentioned by Mr.Smith: "One is to pay people to do useful work that is not profitable and do so with a labor-backed crypto-currency that isn't borrowed or taken from some other community, and the second is to nurture community-economy entrepreneurship that works within decentralized networks and groups rather than through central states and global corporations." Beautiful. Very good idea based on common sense and observation.Why must we only think in terms of labor for profit? For example,pay with cryto-currencies people to be one-on-one mentors/tutors to students in their local public school system and daycare centers. Expecting one teacher to successfully teach 30 students is absurd. A major contributor to dysfunctional cultures/economies is because humans are dysfunctional due to a lack of care/attention in childhood. People could be paid to keep their elderly at home instead of profiting the nursing home industries. We also need to remove the morass of complicated state & federal laws which act as a deterrent in the creation of small business entrepreneurship. I know a very talented jeweler, who has a profitable business and works by word of mouth advertising only,his business being a little hole in the wall shop. But he refuses to expand his business and hire people because he does not want to deal with the complicated BS state & federal laws.
ReplyDeletePerhaps if the 1% elite had not gone into Asia from the outset, and for one purpose only, to USE the Asian populace as wage slaves, offering no employee protections or benefits, countries with NO environmental restraints, our economy would still be solvent. Perhaps if the central banks lending foreign countries loans to duplicate their fractional reserve system,had not been established in those countries, our nation would still have a satisfactory economy. Of course we must address the fact that US labor unions became very GREEDY and power-mad, much like the system they were originally resisting, and that is a fact.
With computers and now artificially intelligent robots on the horizon, the future job market looks bleak indeed. Do you think the greedy 1% will allow the bulk of humanity to rest idly while robots do the work? Those useless eaters will have to go.
Any new monetary system must show some kind of advantage for the 1% or it will not be implemented. But perhaps I'm too cynical. Thank-you very much, any realistic alternative to our rapidly failing economic system is deeply appreciated.
What are you talking about? Useful work that pays but is not profitable. Talk about being oxymoronic! And why pay anyone when labor continues to become more and more obsolete? Automation systems can run more efficiently without engineered obsolescence built into them. Think outside of the psychological need to PAY anyone. Simply get rid of the wasteful 95% of all meaningless and wasteful jobs that don't have any direct effect on the entire production and distribution system. What a waste! All these bullshit paper pushing jobs used to keep the the bogus status quo in line.... Who gives a shit about the greedy 1%, as money becomes a socially accepted disagreement the only FACT that matters is energy distribution that could benefit ALL equitably. Are people going to sit idly as their jobs are simply rendered meaningless? Hell no, most people despise their jobs and would rather being doing something else. People will always find something to do and they'll do what they love to do, and people who love what they do are happier, more fulfilled, less stressed and healthier.
ReplyDeleteA realistic alternative is already here, we just need to get over the myth of money and politics. The incentive to do work for the betterment of ALL is always based on love. Money on the other hand is an abstract concept that got us to where we are today, yes, here we are teetering on the brink of self-annihilation.... Get over the price system, and free your minds!
Mayhap we agree with your vision of utopia, anonymous commentator, but there's also a need to discuss how to get there from here, as Free Your mind is doing. And those who forget the lessons of hissstory...
ReplyDeleteHow to get there.... Hmmmm individually and collectively ignore the money myth and all the politics behind it. Or through an awakened military type organization we could actually install a viable technate that would benefit the entire world through free energy systems and technologies. I'm talking about reality based ENERGY DISTRIBUTION networks that already exist though needs some basic refinements in efficiency procedures, etc.... We need a well organized core of the very best FREE ENERGY engineers and technical experts working together so that when the shit hits the fan, they'll be ready. Kind of like a functional, non-political, non-influenced by money FEMA acting on behalf of the entire world.
DeleteIn other words, the UTOPIA is already here, it's just not acting up to optimum functioning capacity because of obvious price system interference elements.
DeleteYes, the money system defeats itself and at that time we'll have a window of opportunity to get things right. At this time, It's so very important to be able to distinguish between facts and fictions. I'm not saying get rid of our beliefs, I'm saying don't allow our beliefs to interfere with what we know about the FACTS related to how free energy systems and technologies can work for the great benefit to ALL, politicians cannot do this, they don't have the technical skill, the chairman of the FED can't do this for what does she know about ENERGY systems used to produce, and distribute all the goods and services we depend on for our survival. These people simply work for the controllers listed above, their job is to elaborate on various fairy-tales we buy into about how our net worth is determined through BS numbers and rhetoric about socially accepted slave contracts that create inequality, prejudice, bigotry, constant conflict, beliefs in a chosen people, etc.... All just a bunch of BS. Political leaders don't really lead, the people above are just snake-oil selling acrobats who don't produce one unit of anything of REAL value other than ideological divisiveness. Continuing on with another form of money keeps the controllers in their myth of power as we the sheeple follow them over the abyss to no more tomorrows!
DeleteHow do we get there from HERE? Here is NOW!
ReplyDeleteAttention!! À vous tous, Via Global, je suis ici pour partager mon témoignage sur la façon dont je rejoins enfin le nouvel ordre mondial des Illuminati, après avoir essayé de rejoindre le groupe pendant plus d’un an et six mois, mais les arnaqueurs m'ont pris plusieurs fois. Je cherchais depuis si longtemps à rejoindre le nouvel ordre mondial d'Illuminati, et j'ai été arnaqué à plusieurs reprises jusqu'à la semaine dernière, où j'ai rencontré M. Patrick en ligne qui m'a aidé à rejoindre le nouvel ordre mondial des Illuminati aujourd'hui. de 3 millions USD sur mon compte bancaire immédiatement après que mon initiation a été faite et aussi je gagnerai 80 000 USD à la fin du mois, je suis si heureux! Si vous êtes intéressé à rejoindre le nouvel ordre mondial d'illuminés aujourd'hui, contactez M. Patrick aujourd'hui au lieu d'accepter les fraudeurs pour prendre votre argent au nom de vous aider à rejoindre, envoyez-lui un courrier électronique via agentpatrick5@gmail.com ou via WhatsApp +2348055329159 pour que votre initiation réussisse et que vous receviez votre adhésion instantanée.
ReplyDeleteC’est un fait connu que ILLUMINATI se compose de plusieurs
ReplyDeleteMillionnaires, milliardaires qui ont une influence majeure sur le marché mondial
affaires, et la planification d'un nouvel ordre mondial. De nombreux dirigeants mondiaux, présidents, premiers ministres, membres de la royauté et hauts dirigeants sont membres d’ILLUMINATI. suivez les étapes pour Excel dans la vie. vous bénéficierez de nombreux avantages. Pour la première fois de l’histoire, nous ouvrons nos portes à ceux qui croient. Si vous souhaitez rejoindre ILLUMINATI, inscrivez-vous. Texte: leovincey08@gmail.com