When we hear “economic collapse”, we often
think about Venezuela or Greece, but there’s reason to think economic
collapse in the US will be very different…When
we think of “economic collapse” our imaginations usually lead us immediately to
the desperation we’ve witnessed in places like Venezuela or Greece. We think of starvation, a complete lack of medical care, and
waves of suicide by people who simply can’t survive. We imagine an apocalyptic
societal breakdown that is immediately visible.
Here in America, I suspect the collapse is going to look a lot
different than it has in these other countries…at least, at first. And in my
description, it’s entirely likely you’ll see that many of these signs have been
happening all around us for years.
It will be gradual.
The thing with collapses that we see in the media is that we are
seeing the end results of events that have been slowly declining for years.
Venezuela was one of the wealthiest countries in the world back until the
mid-1980s, due to their rich oil reserves. Then oil prices collapsed and their
fall began. It was actually several decades though before it was truly evident
that the country was in trouble.
Preparedness bloggers here have been sounding the warning bell
since 2008 (at least) when our economy went into a recession. While the US
managed to dig its way out of that to at least an illusion of renewed
prosperity, it’s questionable how much of that return was real and how much of
it was propaganda.
It’s unlikely that we’ll see just one event that says clearly to
everyone, “Hey, our economy has collapsed. The Great Depression 2.0 has
arrived, today, January 14, 2019, due to X event.”
Instead, we’ll continue to see signs like a lack of full-time
jobs with benefits, growing
student and consumer debt, more people who can’t afford rent and food, and more stores closing
their doors forever in an ongoing
retail apocalypse.
Because of the ready availability of credit cards and loans,
things don’t seem that bad. People are still shopping for frivolous things.
They’re still spending
billions on Christmas. They’re still eating out at restaurants.
But just because that “money” is being spent does not mean that
people are okay financially.
It will seem like it’s just
individual families having a hard time.
The way things are going down in America, it doesn’t seem like
we’re facing a national crisis. Consumers are consuming. People are working –
just look at those “jobs” numbers. Folks are still having barbecues with the
neighbors, hosting extravagant holiday get-togethers, and avidly following the
football season.
But the American dream isn’t actually that dreamy. Because
beneath all the trappings of our pleasant lives, people are right on the verge
of a crisis.
40% of Americans could not handle an unexpected expense of only
$400 without having to sell something they own. 78% of Americans are living paycheck to paycheck.
That means that only one missed paycheck will be a financial disaster for
the majority of Americans.
And when that missed paycheck or unexpected expense comes,
people will completely blame themselves. They’ll silently feel like failures
and not realize that the entire system is crumbling all around them. They will
believe it is only their family, due to their own bad decisions, that is
suffering.
Sure, we could all make better choices from time to time. We
could skip those vacations or spend less on the kids at Christmas or go on the
beans-and-rice-and-apples diet. We could eschew credit cards, live beneath our
means, and go full-Spartan with our lifestyles.
Sometimes the money problems
are out of our hands.
But even with the very best personal economic decisions, a lot
of things are out of our hands. What if a family member becomes seriously ill,
with heaven forbid, a heart attack or cancer? Even with health insurance (which
a growing number of middle-class families, mine included, cannot afford), the
out of pocket costs will be astronomical. And that’s not even factoring in the
long-term loss of the sick person’s income. Total financial disaster and it’s
not something that can be avoided.
Or what if your vehicle is totaled by an uninsured driver? Even
when your own insurance covers what you’ve paid off on your vehicle, what if
you just break even and then can’t afford another vehicle? Then you can’t get
to work…then you can’t pay your bills…then, again, a disaster not of your own
making has struck.
Any time you see a family suffering financially, you must
understand that very few of us are immune to money problems. We all handle
these financial catastrophes differently and we all use the skills and talents
we have to deal with them. Some of us are more fortunate than others – we’re
able to pick up second and third jobs. We’re able to slash our expenses more
relentlessly. Maybe we live in areas that are ripe with employment opportunities,
instead of economically depressed small towns. We may not have poor health or
sick children who require 24-hour care and supervision.
Heck – once you add in children at all, you’re paying for
daycare every time you go to work. I know that when my kids were little and I
was a single mom, I had to take a second job just to cover my daycare costs,
which, in the summer, were as much as my rent. I worked seven days a week for
years and lost so much time with my children that it broke my heart.
It’s really easy to look down on others who are having a hard
time with money but always remember that just one crisis could put each of us
in that place. We’re living in a system that is designed to put us
in that place.
The divide will get bigger.
In the United States, we’re watching a disappearing act that
unfortunately is no illusion. We’re watching the middle class vanish. Remember
when it was common for just about everyone to have trappings like houses, two
cars in the driveway, and kids who play baseball in the summer and take
gymnastics lessons in the winter? Lifestyles that used to put us firmly
right in the middle class are harder and harder to achieve. And it isn’t just
that Americans are lazy and addicted to spending money they don’t have.
The biggest blow I can think of to the middle class was the
inappropriately named Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). While that helped
a lot of people who couldn’t afford any healthcare at all, with subsidies and
low-to-no deductibles, for the rest of us who had a reasonable plan before, it
was financially apocalyptic. There was story after story of families paying
thousands of dollars per month for shoddy care that didn’t kick in until
$10,000 had been spent out of pocket. This took formerly middle-class families
and pushed them into the poverty level. But because their ridiculous monthly
insurance payments weren’t write-offs, they couldn’t get subsidized. Talk about
irony – the ACA impoverished people and then wouldn’t cover their healthcare.
When I talk about the divide, I’m not referring to so-called
“income inequality.” That will always exist because we all have different
skills, and different skills are worth differing amounts of money.
I’m talking about a divide in lifestyle. I’m talking about how
people who work often two and three jobs can barely manage to survive. It’s a
real problem when all we do is work and we can’t spend time raising our
children to be good and productive members of society.
Don’t get me wrong – rich folks can spend their money however
they want. But at some point, their glaring frivolity is going to paint a
Marie-Antoinette-style target on their backs. Regular people who could pay for
a year of living comfortably with one of the Birkin bags in their collections
of $20,000 purses are getting increasingly ticked off of the way things are
going in this country.
Eventually, things that are
normal will become luxuries.
While things are tough, even some of our poorest citizens still
have it better than 2/3 of the world’s population. Most of us have roofs over
our heads, heat in the winter, running water, food, and electricity to run our
refrigerators.
But that could change.
As our economy plummets and our national debt soars, we could
see the things that we all take for granted today could become luxuries tomorrow.
Imagine if the ordinary trappings that we’ve always had became as out of reach
for most of us as a Lamborghini in the driveway.
What if only rich people could afford electricity? What
about heat? What about running water? What if that divide between the
rich and the poor could be delineated by who had the ability to turn on a light
at the flick of a switch and who did not?
Many people worry about an event like a solar flare that would
wipe out electrical power, casting us back about 200 years. We’d have no
refrigeration, no transportation, no climate control, and no lights. But in
that situation, we’d all be in the same boat. No matter how wealthy you are,
any unprotected electrical items would still be useless.
What if that’s what the
economic collapse looks like?
What if the real threat was simply that no one could afford to
pay the electric bill? What if prices escalated to the point that it was
a choice between food and electricity? What if, home by home, the lights
went out across America?
And what about running water? A few years back,
in Jefferson County, Alabama, the price of water quadrupled, making
monthly water bills over $300.
Jefferson
County in Alabama is the state’s most populous county and also its poorest. One
of the poorest of those poor areas is Birmingham, Jefferson County’s largest
city. Here water and sewerage bills have quadrupled in the last 15 years and
with combined sewerage and water bills coming in at around $300 a month, this
leaves the same amount out of the average social security cheque of $600 a
month to cover everything else, food, clothing, and all other utilities. Low
paid workers, of which there are many fare no better.
Many
people have opted to buy drums of water from petrol stations rather than pay
their ever increasing bills. They use these drums of water for drinking,
washing and in their portable toilets which can be seen dotting back yards
across the area, the modern version of the outhouse. They pay a fee to a
sanitation company to remove the waste. It’s cheaper than letting the city take
care of it. (source)
So imagine if this kind of thing became even more widespread.
What if you had to be rich to have electricity and running water?
This is how it could happen.
What if it’s just an incremental crumbling of our way of life,
one household at a time?
No bank runs. No government confiscation of resources. No
dramatic event that we can all point to and say, “This is how the American
economy was destroyed on (pick a date).”
Instead, it becomes harder and harder to pay your necessary
bills. You go deeper and deeper into debt trying to pay for things like medical
bills and food. Your job, if you keep it, doesn’t provide increases in pay to
match the increases in the costs of living because the person running the
business is just trying to survive too.
Then you re-evaluate what necessities are. You think about what
you can work around. Which is more important? Medicine or childcare? Running
water or electricity? Rent or food?
This is the future for which
we should be preparing.
Stop expecting some huge event and look at the decline that’s
already happening all around you. Think about your options in a world where
only rich people can afford electricity and running water and food all at the
same time.
- Perhaps
you can plan for an increasingly low-tech world.
- Maybe
you can figure out ways to acquire and harvest food.
- Now
is the time to build a stockpile of food to get you
through some rough spots.
- You
can start living beneath your means
- You
can learn to make things from scratch instead
of buying them
Maybe the epic disaster everyone has been preparing for is
slowing happening right now. It isn’t really that farfetched, is it?
Maybe the disaster is the crumbling of our First World lifestyle
due to unsustainable debt and consumerism. Maybe it’s how they roll out the
socialist utopia that control freaks all seem to desire. If everyone is
desperate to survive or to regain their former luxuries, how hard would it be to
manipulate them into a comfortable control grid?
If you want to maintain your independence, then self-reliance is
survival.
What do you think?
How could you see an economic collapse in the United States of
America actually going down? Is this something you’d like to see more articles
(or even a book) about?
John Rubino: The Verbal Stage Of The Coming
Civil War Has Begun
Politics in the US is spiraling out of control,
but it’s just the third inning in a game that will get a lot uglier before
we come to our senses…With the election of Donald
Trump, the US right let its id off
the leash. Now pretty much everything conservatives have thought but not said
is finding its way to Facebook, Twitter, and the evening news.
So it’s no surprise that the left, wildly envious of
conservatives’ newfound rhetorical freedom, have decided that what’s good for
the misogynist pig is great for the crazed socialist. From today’s Wall Street
Journal:
Nancy Pelosi will have
a hard time keeping the ultraprogressives in her caucus quiet.
The White House
Correspondents’ Dinner in 2015 included an ingenious skit featuring President
Obama and the comedian Keegan-Michael Key. As Mr. Obama stood at a lectern
offering vapid pleasantries about White House press coverage, his “anger translator,” portrayed by Mr.
Key, lurked behind him acting out what the president was really thinking.
Today, Democrats keep
their “anger translators” in-house, among the progressive members of the 116th
Congress sworn in last week. Already we’ve heard Rep. Rashida Tlaib, the
freshman Democrat from Michigan, announce with an obscenity that her caucus is
dead-set on impeaching President Trump. Next came Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
of New York, laying out the new House majority’s ambitious agenda—universal
health care, free college tuition, a Green New Deal to combat climate change—in
an interview with Anderson Cooper that aired Sunday on “60 Minutes.”
There have been some
halfhearted attempts by Democratic leaders to distance themselves from Ms.
Tlaib’s remarks and Ms. Ocasio-Cortez’s plans, but the reality is that both
women are expressing views that fall well within the party mainstream.
Dutifully, they’re trying to mollify the “resistance” while Democratic leaders
appeal to more-moderate and independent voters.
Sure, Speaker Nancy
Pelosi has insisted that Democrats are focused on health care and
infrastructure, and not on running the president out of the Oval Office. She
even spurned a request from Ms. Ocasio-Cortez to establish a House committee
tasked specifically with advancing the freshman lawmaker’s green agenda. But
these disagreements are over tactics, not objectives. The speaker and the
freshmen remain united in their desire, among other things, to impose
single-payer health care, increase environmental regulations and, yes, impeach
Mr. Trump. There’s little difference between Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s
progressive cri de coeur and the campaign platforms of Sen. Elizabeth Warren
and other Democratic presidential wannabes.
It was Ms.
Ocasio-Cortez’s response Sunday to a question about marginal income-tax rates
that received the most attention. When Mr. Cooper asked her if she had a
specific tax rate in mind, the congresswoman replied: “You look at our tax
rates back in the ’60s, and when you have a progressive tax rate system . . .
sometimes you see tax rates as high as 60 or 70%.”
The Wall Street Journal reporter continues for several more
paragraphs pedantically explaining why lower tax rates actually generate more
revenue for government — thus completely missing the point, which is that we’re
finally going to see what both ends of the political spectrum really think.
For, well, forever, the major political parties have calculated
that they’ll hold their rock solid 35% of the electorate no matter what, and to
win they need to capture moderates numbering an additional 15.1%. So the
relatively small cadre in each party who wanted to speak their minds even if it
cost elections were muzzled by the somewhat larger group who wanted to win more
than they wanted to tell their “truth.” The result was a (in retrospect)
quaintly civil politics, with code words like “law and order” and “justice”
serving to disguise the racist (in the first case) and collectivist (in the
second) policies being sold to the unsuspecting middle with a knowing wink to
the base.
Those days are over. It’s now okay to call immigrants “bad
hombres” and “rapists,” and also to refer to the head of the Republican party
as a “motherfucker” and propose a 70% marginal tax rate on the evil rich. The
gloves are off. The dogs have slipped the leash. The verbal stage of the coming
civil war has begun.
Why now? Well, it’s at least an interesting coincidence that the
political system is spinning out of control at a time when the government’s
official debt has doubled in two consecutive administrations and is now accelerating from
there. And at a time when interest rates have been cut to levels that make it
impossible for small savers to generate much of anything on their
savings. And at
a time when “jobs growth” has come to mean people taking on second and third
minimum wage part-time “gigs” — and still not being able to support their
families.
Sound money advocates might blame Richard Nixon’s 1971 decision
to take the world off the gold standard and thus usher in history’s greatest
debt binge. And they’d be right. Tech-skeptics might point to social media’s
amplification of the darkest impulses of previously isolated crazies. They’re
also right. Liberals might see increasing corporate control of banking and
media alienating and confusing the masses. Right. And conservatives might see
the ever-expanding welfare/entitlements state crushing the old civic society in
which people instead of bureaucrats looked out for each other. True. All true.
Add these and a few other negative feedback loops together, and
you get a societal breakdown that’s being reflected on big screens and small.
The coming election will be unique in terms of invective (though probably not
in terms of feasible policy ideas). What now looks like 20 or so mostly
far-left Democrats will spend their primary being rewarded by their base for
creatively insulting Trump, who will gleefully come back with “thoughts” on
would-be opponents’ looks and sanity. Fun times!
And this is just the third or so inning of a game that will get
a lot uglier before we come to our senses.
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