Introduction
In so far as
capital markets predict economic trends, the downturn in global markets during
December 2015-January 2016 indicate the kind of contraction that IMF economists
are also predicting after revising earlier estimate downward for GDP of major
economies. “World stock market losses are approaching $8 trillion so far this year
and investors last week poured the most money into government bond funds in a
year, suggesting they fear the global economy could tip into recession, Bank of
America Merrill Lynch said on Friday (22 January 2016.” http://finance.yahoo.com/news/nearly-8-trillion-wiped-off-140643148.html
What does this
say about the nature of the economic recovery after the 2008 Great Recession,
about the soundness of the economies not just of developing nations suffering
the most but of the core countries? Was
it a hollow recovery and an uneven recovery mostly limited to the core
countries and within those to the top 1% of income earners? Does this mean that
the fault rests with governments that are not providing even greater
incentives, even greater tax breaks, even greater corporate welfare measures
for capital?
Is this just another “market correction” or is capitalism
manifesting structural problems pointing to chronic decay? If one takes
seriously the mainstream media coverage, listens to market analysts,
politicians, journalists and pundits, the inevitable conclusion is that fault
for the economic problems rests in anything but gross socioeconomic inequality,
and the income and wealth inequality on a world scale. It is simply astounding
to read and hear that the fault of the global markets tumbling rests with
everything except the structural flaws within the system that includes the
following:
1. Wealth concentration: Although there
are literally thousands of books, articles, and other empirical studies showing
the incontrovertible evidence of wealth concentration and its detrimental
effects on society, nothing has changed even when the capitalist economy is
threatened with imbalances both at the microeconomic and macroeconomic levels. Sixty-two
people own more wealth than 3.6 billion of the world’s bottom-tiered income
population; Four Americans own as much wealth as 40% of the US bottom-tiered
population. “A global network of tax
havens further enables the richest individuals to hide $7.6 trillion. The fight
against poverty will not be won until the inequality crisis is tackled.” https://www.oxfam.org/en/research/economy-1?utm_source=oxf.am&utm_medium=Znhx&utm_content=redirect
2. Artificial dollar value as a hard
currency losing its preeminent global status, a reality that has been brewing
since the IMF secretly warned President Eisenhower in the late 1950s that the
chronic US balance of payments deficits accounted for an artificially high
dollar value. US currency manipulation through the Federal Reserve and imposing
monetary austerity on most of the underdeveloped countries through the IMF,
thus keeping capital concentrated in the core nations, has kept the dollar
artificially high to the detriment of other economies using the dollar as a
hard currency to trade. Because of China’s rise to a preeminent global economic
status and the increasing skepticism on the part of many countries about the
value of the dollar as a hard currency that only helps the US, we have more
diversification in the basket of hard currencies under the IMF Special Drawing
Rights than ever before (euro, yen, British pound and Chinese yuan).
This could (and
very likely will) lead to the fact all foreign central banks will dump part of
their dollars to buy the Chinese currency in the future, thus flooding the
currency market with dollars and
reducing the purchasing power in the US. This would also mean that the era of cheap
borrowing costs would eventually come to an end and lower living standards for
Americans saddled with massive public and private sector debt, thus precipitating
more and deeper cyclical economic crises. https://reason.com/archives/2012/09/13/occupy-the-fed; http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-05-06/usa-manipulating-its-own-currency-important-imf-meeting
3. High structural unemployment in the US
and EU is twice the official rate and when combined with underemployment the
fulltime working population drops between two-thirds and three fourths. Meanwhile,
there has been an assault on labor unions and organized labor in general as
much in the US as in Europe. Ever since the Reagan-Thatcher decade of the 1980s,
neoliberal policies became prevalent and governments determined that labor
rights, especially collective bargaining, impede capital concentration. The
so-called US “right-to-work” laws and their versions in other countries that
the IMF has been pushing are nothing but another way of driving wages down as
low as possible; all of it made possible because government yields to corporate
demands. http://useconomy.about.com/od/suppl1/f/real_unemployment_rate.htm; http://www.salon.com/2015/03/25/noam_chomsky_blasts_the_assault_on_labor_right_to_work_means_right_to_scrounge/
4. Geographic wealth concentration. When
the G20 own more than 80% of the world’s wealth and rich countries account for
90% of overall global financial assets – stocks, bank assets and insurance -
the rest of the world suffers and helps to contribute to low consumption that
accounts for the crisis of overproduction. (Michael Hudson, Super Imperialism: The Origin and
Fundamentals of U.S. World Dominance; https://www.gfmag.com/global-data/economic-data/wealth-distribution-income-inequality.
After WWII, the
US recognized that its own economy would lapse into recession quickly unless
the US helped to strengthen the economies of Europe and Japan, as major trading
partners, albeit for geopolitical considerations as well. Although the
international political economy of the early 21st century does not
resemble that of 1945, disequilibrium on a world scale owing to centralization
of capital in the core countries poses a threat to the entire capitalist
system. (Mario Baldasari et al. eds.. Global Disequilibrium in the World Economy)
5. IMF austerity policies and the
integration patron-client integration models that the US, EU, and Japan\have
imposed on the underdeveloped nations have resulted in massive transfer of
wealth from the periphery to the core. What the IMF, backed by the World Bank,
OECD, the FED and all central banks, calls “structural adjustment” results n
essence of wealth transfer from the debtor nations in the periphery –
essentially non-Western nations, but also Southern and Eastern Europe – to the
core countries. http://richmondvale.org/blog/structural-adjustment-a-major-cause-of-poverty/; http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/does-austerity-work-or-does-it-make-things-worse/;
6. Tax havens for corporations and the rich.
Corporate and individual money amounting to several trillion dollars (as much
as $10 trillion by some estimates) that is sitting in tax havens instead of
absorbed back into the economy, and the failure of governments to absorb
surplus capital from the private sector to use it to stimulate economic growth
and expansion based on a horizontal model of development – benefiting the
broader middle and working class. When the top 500 US corporations have
sheltered away at least $2 trillion and demand massive tax breaks to repatriate
some of that money it is indicative how highly concentrated capital rules over
the state. http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/10/6/top-us-companies-keep-21-trillion-in-tax-havens-abroad.html; http://www.huffingtonpost.com/news/offshore-tax-havens/
7. Steadily declining mass consumption
across all core countries relying on middle class and working class consumer
spending to stimulate growth remains a very serious cause of the cyclical
contractions. In the US, consumer spending accounts for 70% of GDP as
comparable percentages account for the top 20 richest countries. When the mass
consumer suffers downward income pressure, to the degree that some US corporations
have decided to raise minimum wages voluntarily, the signs are very clear of a
real structural problem in capitalism. The world’s largest retailer WALMART
which has just decided to close more than 160 stores, mostly across the south where
incomes are low, is the last company to raise wages voluntarily. Although US
consumers saved $88 billion in energy in 2015, there was a decline instead of
rise in consumer spending when compared with 2014.
Despite a real
GDP rise of 2%, sales decline in the US during the fourth quarter of 2015 was
-5.3%, indicative that consumers are simply unable to carry any more debt given
their income levels. World trade decline in 2015 was the worst since 2009 amid the
Great Recession, reflecting a world consumption slump. Ironically, the IMF
whose monetarist (austerity policies) are responsible for steadily declining
consumption among the middle and working classes lists “low consumption demand”
as a root cause for the declining global GDP in its latest revised estimate
that I am positive will be revised downward at least once in 2016 possibly
twice. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2016/update/01/; http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/2/fe1df514-4b43-11e5-b558-8a9722977189.html#axzz3xtlGwZsK.
8. Wealth inequality is one-hundred times
higher than income inequality, thus signaling a very dire future not just for
the US, but the entire western world. Just one month ago, December 2015, the US
congress passed legislation providing tax breaks amounting to just over half a
trillion going mostly to the rich. This was with the considerable backing of
Democrats whose rhetoric is that only Republicans favor tax breaks for the
rich. In the EU amid economic contraction and austerity in the last five years
the wealthiest 10% have become wealthier, even in the hardest hit countries of
Southern and Eastern Europe, thus curbing the consumption power of the middle
and working class. According to the PEW Research Center, the US wealth
inequality is the highest on record! This does not mean that situation is much
better in the EU where inequality is also growing. http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/12/17/wealth-gap-upper-middle-income/; http://reports.weforum.org/outlook-global-agenda-2015/top-10-trends-of-2015/1-deepening-income-inequality/
9. Neoliberal and corporate welfare policies
that are parasitic and simply recycle money from the bottom 80% of the
population to corporations and the top one percent that own most of the wealth
have been at the heart of the contracting cycles that started during the
banking crisis of the 1980s and is continuing today. US taxpayers are paying
out money to fund everything from sports stadium that millionaires own to
subsidizing General Electric that is a very profitable company to providing
lucrative contracts by government at all levels to subcontractors for work that
is done at a higher cost and less efficiently than it would have at the public
sector level. Corporate welfare is not just in the US but all across Europe and
it is a policy that the IMF and the World Bank are imposing on governments
around the world because it is what the richest are is pushing to maintain
their privileged positions. http://thinkbynumbers.org/government-spending/corporate-welfare/corporate-welfare-statistics-vs-social-welfare-statistics/; http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/jul/07/corporate-welfare-a-93bn-handshake
10. EU monetarism. Under Germany’s economic
and political hegemony, Europe has been pursuing monetarism and imposing
austerity on the periphery countries – Southern and Eastern Europe – in the
last five years in order to solidify its dominant role in Europe under the
patron-client model. This has caused disequilibrium not just in the periphery
economies of the EU but across all of Europe against the sanctions imposed on
Russia and counter-sanctions by Russia, thus slowing growth down and impacting
EU-US and EU-China and Japan economic relations. In short, the Greek crisis
mushroomed into a greater crisis because Germany was determined to use
austerity as a mechanism for EU hegemony.
In an article entitled: 'The Fourth Reich': What Some Europeans See When They Look at Germany” argued that:
“Following World War II, a German
return to dominance in Europe seemed an impossibility. But the euro crisis has
transformed the country into a reluctant hegemon and comparisons with the Nazis
have become rampant.” http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/german-power-in-the-age-of-the-euro-crisis-a-1024714.html. European Central Bank president and former Goldman
Sachs executive, Mario Draghi has faithfully served Germany largely because the
EU multinational corporations benefit from the German model. http://www.socialeurope.eu/2014/09/mario-draghis-policy-ideas-wont-work/
Beguiling Rationalizations for Global
Contraction
There all kinds
of excuses and shallow propaganda often by well paid consultants promoting
various financial services on why the economy is in its current state of
contraction, including the weather is too hot or too cold, thus preventing
consumers from spending on winter products and services or conversely staying
hope because it is too cold out! The utterly absurd arguments aside, of which
there is no shortage especially considering that most people are paid to
propagate, the IMF has just released a new report that has revised global DGP
growth downward. This includes US growth that Obama, the media and analysts
claimed would be robust.
In the 2016 State of the Union address, Obama
claimed that it is a myth the US economy has problems as Republicans claim. Nevertheless,
the IMF report lists “subdued demand” as a cause for lowering GDP estimates.
However, the IMF proposed at Davos in January 2016 that EU simply lower minimum
wage laws and labor laws to absorb Muslim migrants. It goes without saying that
refugees would work for food and shelter given their desperate condition to
flee war-torn Iraq and Syria where the US and its allies created chaos in the
first place. The irony here is that he same IMF that lists “low consumption
demand” as a cause for the lower than expected global GDP in 2016 and also
2017, is recommending a wage policy that would only worsen the situation. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2016/update/01/
One can
understand why corporations and governments spend billions trying to convince
the public that economic contractions that account for lower living standards
and downward socioeconomic mobility has nothing to do with the structural
contradictions of capitalism and the policies governments are pursuing favoring
the very wealthy. If they were to admit such a thing, then they would have to
accept blame and change the political economy to the benefit of the people
rather than corporations and the top one percent that own half of the world’s
wealth. The only thing left to do is to manufacture excuses and to have
well-paid Nobel Prize winners in economics, politicians and journalists
manufacture a pretext, to insist on a better neoliberal model and never examine
the structural flaws in a decadent system.
1.
China
is to blame.
a.
China
not growing its GDP at the same double-digit GDP pace as in the previous
decade. If this is the case, then does it not reveal the structural weaknesses
of the Western economies and their inexorable dependence on China? Besides, is
it realistic to expect China to grow at double digit rates without suffering
the same cyclical crises given that it is operating within the capitalist world
economy?
b.
China’s
stock market has dragged down the entire world markets. But who drove the
values of markets China higher if not speculative foreign investors that expected
growth to take place and drive global demand even higher at home and globally?
Even under a quasi-statist system, the evolution of the Chinese market followed
a pattern of expansion and contraction as all capitalist countries have done
historically.
c.
Chinese
currency (yuan) manipulation by the government intended to increase exports is
the problem along with “shadow banking” that conceals the real debt problem of
China, thus intensifying capital flight. China actually helped the US and the
world economy soften the blow of the Great Recession of 2008 by keeping its
currency at such levels and stimulating continued growth amid global
contraction. This at a sacrifice to its own population for the sake of securing
market share in the future.
d.
Chinese
government owns slightly more than half of securities, and manipulates the
stock market. Therefore, the absence of market freedom is to blame because the quasi-statist
policies preclude free markets from reflecting real values in companies. If
China did not have a quasi-statist regime, would it have achieved the economic
miracle that it has in a country that had no capitalist class? After all, is
this not how Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea also developed after 1945? Are
analysts so blind to the realities of China’s history, traditions, institutions,
and social structure that the stock market is the only focus as though it
operates totally separately from the rest of society? Are they so oblivious to China’s internal
dynamics everything from huge income gaps and the need to continue transitioning
the economy to better serve its own population instead of serving foreign
investors? (http://www.wsj.com/articles/a-global-recession-may-be-brewing-in-china-1439764500; http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/08/18/experts-china-global-recession-currency-rmb-yuan-stock-market/; http://www.cnbc.com/2016/01/20/is-china-really-to-blame-for-the-global-sell-off.html; http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2015/12/capitalism-not-china-is-to-blame-for-the-current-global-economic-decline.html)
2.
Energy
Glut
From June 2014 to January 2016, the price of oil tumbled by 60%, contributing to the uncertainty about energy stability and of course overall downward pressure on all commodities from cacao to natural gas effecting primarily developing nations that depend on commodity exports. As revenues of energy and commodity-producing countries fell sharply, some including Russia and Iran but smaller states like Azerbaijan among them, used revenues to diversify production and become less dependent on imports. Although the overall impact of the energy and commodities slump has entailed lower asset values, this has hardly translated into any kind of a growth stimulus, as many were speculating but now know better. http://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/01/azerbaijan
The low energy
argument hardly explains the current world contraction and market slump because
it is high energy prices that invariably contribute to such contraction as they
divert spending from other sectors to energy – as has happened historically.
Nevertheless, this is the pretext many are using instead of looking at real
causes for capitalism’s structural flaws, just as is the inane argument about
Iran releasing a few hundred thousand more barrels of oil in the market. The
reality is that Greek oil tankers were already transporting Iranian oil
illegally for years to areas that supposedly had sanctions on Iran. http://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/politics-government/article24746689.html; A. H. Cordesman et al.The Gulf and the Military Balance)
3.
FED
Rates
FED raised rates
too quickly and should have waited because this precipitated a negative
investor psychology considering companies were used to rates close to zero that
allowed them to borrow at practically no cost. FED was slow in raising rates so
that market psychology was confused and took this as a signal things were not
going as well regarding real unemployment and GDP growth. The FED has been
manipulating the currency to the advantage of Wall Street since the 1930s and
it follows what Wall Street dictates. If the FED was interested in helping the
average American, it would have an inflationary monetary policy, something that
would of course entail low dollar value given that the US public debt is about
equal to GDP. http://www.cnbc.com/2015/06/03/federal-reserve-policy-helping-rich-get-richer-blackrock-pro-rick-rieder.html; Anthony Sutton, The Federal Reserve Conspiracy,
2014; Stephen Lendman, How Wall Street Fleeces America: Privatized
Banking, Government Collusion and Class War, 2011)
4.
Presidential
Election Jitters: Will Wall Street Have its Favorite?
The presidential
race is not going as well as the billionaires funding the Republican campaigns
and Hillary Clinton wanted. The chaos in the Republican camp with Bush
marginalized and Sanders doing as well as he is brings into question of how
well the wealthy control the candidates that they hand to the voters for their
final approval. No matter who wins, the capitalist system will remain exactly
as it is today, but that is not enough for the billionaires that demand even
greater concessions. The reason for the market slump is that investors fear
Donald Trump winning and proposing measures that curtail some of the
manipulation of Wall Street as he has stated publicly.
The billionaire
Koch brothers who own as much wealth as about 20% of the US population, have
stated they are adamantly against Trump because of possible tighter market
regulations. http://theweek.com/speedreads/587257/donald-trump-reportedly-tried-woo-koch-brothers-sheldon-adelson-turned-down; At the Davos meeting where the world’s most powerful
businesspeople and political figures are meeting, the international elites are
just as alarmed about Trump as the Koch brothers. "Unbelievable",
"embarrassing" even "dangerous" are some of the words the
financial elite gathered at the World Economic Forum conference in the Swiss
resort of Davos have been using to describe U.S. Republican presidential
frontrunner Donald Trump.” http://finance.yahoo.com/news/davos-elite-alarmed-prospect-nominee-trump-185041216.html. In the last analysis, Trump is a billionaire who will
faithfully follow Wall Street as every president has done in US history.
Bernie Sanders
is the other pretext along with Trump for Wall Street contraction. Bernie Sanders
as a self-proclaimed Socialist-Democrat that many on Wall Street adamantly
oppose. While it is true that he is outspoken against the neoliberal political
economy and dilution of the social safety net, when one looks at his votes in
the senate and his policy positions on fiscal, monetary, trade, investment and
labor policy it is clear he is interested in restoring some modicum of
Keynesianism that neoliberals have eliminated. Ending some of the pork barrel
corporate welfare measures, fiscal advantages to the rich, strengthening
banking regulation, criminalizing corporate crimes are some of the proposals he
has put on the table.
Contrary to CEOs
fears, Sanders who admittedly opposes “cannibal
capitalism” (a term coined by Eugene Debs) has proved that he works within
the system he wishes to reform on some new version of neo-Keynesian model but
realizes it is almost impossible. Even if he wins the presidency, which is
highly unlikely, Sanders will fall into the Obama mold and cater to Wall Street
with only modest policy changes to strengthen the social safety net. The last
time the US reformed its political economy to save it from catastrophe was
under FDR in the 1930s who acted out of necessity. The US is not yet in the
kind of crisis it experienced in the 1930s and Bernie Sanders is not FDR. http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/34314-ten-powerful-reasons-why-bernie-scares-wall-street
5.
The
BRICS and Non-Western Economies Contracting
Is it any wonder that instead of slashing defense spending after 2008 and keeping it at low levels, the US demanded that NATO spending increase to maintain an effective containment policy on Russia, policies that have diverted capital from the civilian economy in the US and all across Europe, as well as Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea. When bankrupt Greece asked permission from the EU and Germany to cut defense because it had cut just about everything else under austerity since 2010, the answer was that would defense cuts impact contracts with German and French manufacturers. In short, cut mass consumption and reduce living standards that the IMF and monetarists advocate but not defense.
Because of the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the public debt rose substantially and the average homeowner paid $600 more in mortgage interest by 2008 when the recession hit. Deficit spending is one thing when resources are devoted to productive projects for the civilian economy and to the benefit of people, and entirely another when devoted to the parasitic defense industry. While the media, politicians and pundits in the US and the West defend raising defense spending, they bitterly criticize Russia for doing the same in response to NATO encirclement policy. Oddly enough, the neoliberals in the West defending defense spending argue that in Russia’s case it weakens the civilian economy! http://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/costs/economic/economy/macroeconomic; https://news.vice.com/article/russias-economy-is-a-mess-and-its-problems-arent-going-away
It is just as important to mention that the US and UK have been manipulating their currencies to the detriment of the emerging economies. For example, India has recently decided to trade with Iran solely on their currencies and to leave out reserve currencies euro and dollar. Having to pay debt and balance of payments in dollars or in UK British pound that are highly inflated is hardly in the interest of countries trying to enjoy monetary and economic sovereignty. It only stands to reason that both trading partners derive benefits from trade transactions in their own currencies just as it stands to reason that they along with many emerging economies see the dollar and other reserve currencies as obstacles to their growth because it imposes underlying monetarism on their countries. In October 2015, the IMF predicted a global US dollar recession, as more countries abandon it and begin to consider alternatives, including the yuan that the IMF accepted as a hard currency. The decline of the dollar is the result of US policies, not the fault of Brazil and India or other emerging economies. http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/3/d86944c0-6d14-11e5-aca9-d87542bf8673.html#axzz3xtlGwZsK; Barry Eichengreen, Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar and the Future of the International Monetary System, 2012)
Conclusion: Solutions to the Crisis of Capitalism
What
solutions do mainstream economists, politicians, businesspeople, pundits and
media, offer for the cyclical crises of capitalism? These are same solutions
they have offered since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution when Adam
Smith wrote the Wealth of Nations. Increase market share domestically and
globally, innovate to lower production costs, lower taxes on business and the
wealthy, less regulation of business, more flexible labor laws more government
support for business - everything from exporting products abroad to pursuing a
monetary policy that allows for low interest rates and liquidity and providing
incentives for research and development, and lower spending on any social
programs.
Even
if every single one of these were to work out as ideally in the real economy as
its advocates wish, the question remains how it is possible for the mass
consumer to stimulate the economy when income and personal debt determine
consumption power. No matter how great and how less expensive the smart phone
may be, where is the consumer base once the market is saturated on a global
scale? How much more debt should the mass consumer carry so that more products
and services are consumed before we have a major consumer debt crisis analogous
to the student debt crisis in the US about to explode even with US government
guaranteeing such debt currently at $1.3 trillion in an $18 trillion economy?
US average total debt is at $130,000 or $12 trillion total representing
two-thirds of GDP, while US average income is just $52,000. When we consider
that public debt resulting in higher taxes for the mass consumer, and consumer
debt, the combination of the two necessarily contributes to cyclical crises as
scholarly studies on this issue have demonstrated.
(http://www.nerdwallet.com/blog/credit-card-data/average-credit-card-debt-household/;
This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial
Folly, 2011; R. Z
Aliber and Charles Kindleberger, Manias,
Panics and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises, 2011)
The
economy has not escaped cyclical contractions and periodically very deep ones,
even under a policy mix that includes Keynesian measures. Yet, there is not a
single mainstream economist or bourgeois politician who would dare to address
the core issue of the problem that is the wealth and income inequality issue.
Of course, some of the reformists in the Keynesian school argue in favor of
strengthening the social fabric in conjunction with the saving of capitalism by
providing a better safety net for the middle and lower classes to secure a
democratic society.
Under the neoliberal political economy that has prevailed
since the 1980s, even those politicians who claim to support some degree of
Keynesian policies have not dared to put them into policy and use the rhetoric
to win elections and nothing more; France, Spain, Portugal and Greece serve as
good examples of politicians running on a Keynesian agenda but governing as
neo-liberals. Even the nationalist regimes in Latin America that invoked
Keynesianism – Venezuela, Argentina, Bolivia, Peru and Ecuador – catered as
much to the nationalist capitalist class as to the comprador bourgeoisie and foreign
capital. Embracing the neoliberal path is a manifestation of market hegemony
over the state, thus forcing politicians, businesspeople, economists,
journalists, and commentators to manufacture myths about disequilibrium in the
economy and chronic downward socioeconomic mobility.
There
is no reason to look for scapegoats in the economy, no reason to create
fictitious forces or policies that brought us to the reality of Bill Gates,
Warren Buffett and the Koch brothers owning more wealth than 127 million
Americans. There is no reason to constantly evade and avoid the bitter truth
about the inescapable crash of the markets that most likely will come in a
decade perhaps in the 2030s on the 100th anniversary of the Great
Depression. When the culture of the
Western world, now a global culture that reaches from Mongolia to Mozambique,
celebrates the millionaire and billionaire as society’s hero instead of villain
who destroys society, while marginalizing those who work and create, why is
anyone surprised that the sharp market decline of January 2016 amounting to
more than $8 trillion in losses is but a small signal of a crash that is
inevitable probably toward the end of the next decade or early 2030s.