Crushed Under Idols That
Topple
Wilfred Hahn
All the
king’s horses and all the king’s men couldn’t put Humpty Dumpty together again.”
That’s the last line of the well-known nursery rhyme. We doubt that the world’s
economic/financial systems will ever be put together … in other words,
established upon a stable footing. That can never be the case as long as mankind
continues to choose to harness greed and fractional-reserve banking as the
foundational theories for progress and prosperity.
It is
crucial to realize the huge tsunami-like developments that are sweeping the
entire world, not just the seismic upheavals of financial systems. The
globe-spanning reverberations have been quick and pervasive. First, a
“globalization bubble” unfolded—one popularly thought to never end— then
followed by the biggest and most rapid bust of world financial and real estate
wealth since the 1930s (in fact, even worse). Next, the most invasive and
coordinated intervention of governments ever seen (collectively around the
world) has occurred. Most latterly, a flagrant manipulation of money has
unfolded on a coordinated basis around the world. (Graph on the front page
provides an indication.) None of this was expected by the world’s
policymakers nor societies at large. It all happened rapidly … like a sudden
trap. What next? We expect the waves to continue and in surprising ways. These
are treacherous times where people are being herded from one disaster to
another. Just how can the average household either anticipate or navigate
through such see-saw conditions? In our view, it is an early sign of the times …
the global period trouble and anxiety where faith runs cold (Matthew 24:12).
Forecasts these days are not worth much since there are quite a few scenarios to
consider. But suffice it to say that the world will again look very different 3
years from now (perhaps sooner). It would not be surprising that massive
inflation problems will have emerged by then. It only follows, given the blatant
debasing of money being perpetrated as we speak. Again, the majority of people
will likely again be caught in the net. In recent times, many have run to what
they perceive are safe investments — government treasury bonds and money markets
funds, for example. These investments are now massively overpriced, especially
so considering that inflation will again heat up in future years. It therefore
would not be surprising if long-term bond funds might lose 25% of their value
and more by that time. Time will tell.
That
said, the king’s men have been working very hard lately. Humpty Dumpty will
again be propped up … whether with massive drug stimulants and/or bailer twine
and duct tape. When that will be accomplished is difficult to say. But, you can
be sure it will prove to be another surprise. Why? Because no one is expecting
anything to improve. Pessimism and confidence measures are at their most
extreme. Hardly an economist can be found that doesn’t believe a long, long
economic recession is upon the world. Of course, little did they know that the US
recession had already started more than a year ago. Then, very few were willing
to contemplate the possibility of disaster such as actually occurred. For the
time being, the world economy still appears to be in free-fall stage (looking in
the rearview mirror). But, before falling prey to groupthink, consider the
interventions that have occurred around the world to date.
Remember to expect the unexpected … namely, what the majority do not anticipate.
Every major country has been rushing to jump-start business and consumer
spending; to coax investors to buy and banks to lend. Interest rates have been
slashed to near all-time lows … virtually zero in some cases. US short-term
rates qualify in that latter category. In
England, the central bank has reduced rates to
the lowest level since 1694. In Japan,
short-term interest rates are at 0.15%. Huge government spending programs have
been announced virtually around the world from
China
to Canada to Brazil. Just as
we go to press, the Obama US stimulus program tallying $819 billion is being
pushed through senate. A lot of money will be spent by governments over the next
few years. And, we have yet to count the cost of
financial bail-outs, all of this tabulating to trillions and trillion of
dollars.
It is
indeed very possible that economic troubles can yet worsen before things get
better. Yet, at the same time, financial conditions are now beginning to free
up, offering huge speculative opportunities. As we often point out, the flipside
to large and growing debt levels is that someone must be lending and have assets
to lend to begin with. Commercial
systems are binary as they must have a buyer for every seller; a lender for
every borrower. The loss of one person may a gain to another. While it is true
that capital is being destroyed during this recent financial crisis, in large
part, wealth is really only being transferred to different hands and converted
into different forms. Wealth has been accumulating into fewer, richer hands.
Therefore, there is much idle money at waiting to take advantage of the low
prices and emerging opportunities.
Looking
ahead, what would be unexpected? At some point, all of the heightened stimulus
spending by governments is bound to bring the comatose patient back to
sputtering life, if only for a while. That would indeed come as a surprise to
most people. However, we do not make any such predictions without at least two
qualifiers. Firstly, short-term predictions are hazardous. While trends may
indeed unfold as one might expect, the timing can be very different …
considerably faster or slower than thought. There are too many complicating
factors to consider. While professional investors must try to anticipate such
interim developments, they will carefully consider the risks.
For
North America and other nations it will likely
prove to be a false dawn. Longer-term, a different outlook is in view. America and
other high-income countries will again sink under the weight of much higher
burdens (debt, unfunded pensions taxes, interest rates … etc.) than exist now.
Consider that America
entered into the current crisis in a weaker condition than in the 1930s. Says,
George Soros, the intrepid mega-investor, “[...] the problems facing the
administration of President Barack Obama are even greater than those that
confronted Franklin D. Roosevelt. Total credit outstanding was 160 percent of
gross domestic product in 1929 and rose to 260 percent in 1932; we entered the
crash of 2008 at 365 percent and the ratio is bound to rise to 500 percent”
(Financial Times, January 29, 2009). Other parts of the world will emerge more
strongly following present economic dislocations. It’s part of the endtime
transition to “multipolarism,” a concept described in this issue’s Feature
Article, Endtime Shoe.
Just
how do recent trends fit on the cosmic time line? Bible prophecy does not
provide the required detail on short-term developments. We are forced to
speculate which we do not want to do. But here are some guideposts to consider:
As already mentioned, the world eventually will end up in a state of
multipolarism where globalism and humanism are resplendent under 10 kings. At
some point, world conditions will again appear prosperous, global policymakers
likely exulting over their success of having successfully engineered a recovery.
This prosperity is sufficient to enrich the kings and sea captains of the world
as foretold in Revelation 18. This later commercial edifice will likely stand on
legs even more wobbly than the last global boom. The final economic collapse of
this dispensation—complete and eternal—occurs in the latter half of the future
Tribulation period. As fearsome as the current economic crisis may seem, it will
compare as a small tempest to that future time of destruction.
One
lesson of the last few years is a modern-day rendition of an Old Testament
teaching: Man’s idols all must topple. It is a characteristic of all idols. In
the end they come up empty. Surely, many of mankind’s idols have toppled
recently. The very largest of companies thought to be indestructible engines of
profit and stability have required bail-outs. The largest US bank failure
occurred—Washington Mutual Inc. with $307 billion in assets. The largest
insurance company needed to be rescued—American International Group. The world’s
one-time largest car company, General Motors, was technically bankrupt,
requiring bail-out financing from governments. One of the largest and most
trusted investment funds ended up utterly worthless due to the Ponzi-scheme
swindle of Bernie Madoff. $50 billion disappeared into thin air.
God
laughs at mankind’s attempts to build and set-up their own idols. He chuckles
that these idols have to be propped up. “A man too poor to present such an
offering selects wood that will not rot. He looks for a skilled craftsman to set
up an idol that will not topple” (Isaiah 40:20). “The craftsman encourages the
goldsmith, and he who smooths with the hammer spurs on him who strikes the
anvil. He says of the welding, ‘It is good.’ He nails down the idol so it will
not topple” (Isaiah 41:7).
In the
same way it is today revealed that the world’s venerated global systems of
commerce—invested with the hope of humanism and future peace—are held up by the
prop of man’s confidence. This Babylonian idol must be nailed down by human
hands so that it will not topple. Try as its worshippers might, the propped-up
idols will ultimately again fall. It is a lesson to take to heart.
Wilfred
Hahn, (Article excerpted form Eternal
Value Review - February 2009)
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About the Author:
Wilfred J. Hahn
is a global economist/strategist.
Formerly a top-ranked global analyst and chairman of the country’s largest
global investment operation his writings focus on the endtime roles of money,
economics and globalization. He has
been quoted around the world and his writings reproduced in numerous other
publications and languages. His
most recent book is The Endtime Money Snare: How to live free.
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