|
Everybody wants predictions. The following article does a little better than
that, in that I wrote it back in November of 1997, outlining several theories
of history, and pointing to a logical way of anticipating what will likely
happen to the world at large over the next generation.
As you will read, the methodology I relied upon for anticipating the events
that are now unfolding - 11 years later - were actually quite accurate, confirming,
in my mind at least, that now is a time to be very cautious in your personal
and financial affairs.
The article is unaltered in its text from the original, though I have added
some current commentary in bold italics
Doug Casey
December 26, 2008
"Don't know much about the Middle Ages, look at the pictures an' I turn
the pages. Don' know much about no rise and fall, don' know much 'bout nothin'
at all" "Wonderful World," Sam Cooke.
The lyrics quoted above probably describe the average American's knowledge
of history about as well as any academic study. Not only don't they know anything
about it, and think it's irrelevant, but what they do know is inaccurate and
slanted. And they must not think very much about the future either if the amount
of consumer debt out there, mostly accumulating at 18% interest, is any indication.
One point of studying history is that it gives you an indication of what's
likely to happen now, if you can find an appropriate analog in the past. This
is a tricky business because as you look at factors contributing to a trend,
it's not easy to determine which ones are really important. Making that determination
is a judgment call, and everyone's judgment is colored by his worldview, or Weltanschauung as
the Germans would have it.
Let me briefly spell out my Weltanschauung so you can more accurately
determine how it compares with your own, and how it may be influencing my interpretation
of the future.
I'm intensely optimistic about the long-term future. It seems to me a lock
cinch that the advance of technology alone - and nanotechnology in particular
- will result in a future of incredible abundance and prosperity, and that
alone will solve most of the problems that plague us. Space migration, intelligence
increase, and life extension will be commonplace realities. These things, plus
the growth of both knowledge and its accessibility and the concomitant rise
of the individual from the group, will constantly diminish politics as an element
of life. The future will be much better than anything visualized on Star Trek,
and will arrive much sooner. That's the good news.
The bad news is that within the longest trend in history, the ascent of man,
there is plenty of room for setbacks, and much of history is a case of two
steps forward and one back. My gloomy short-term outlook, and my reasons for
maintaining it, is recounted here monthly. Whether it's right or wrong, from
an investor's point of view, the short term is more relevant than the long
term. Notwithstanding Warren Buffett's great success in going for the long
term, Keynes was right when he said that in the long run we're all dead. History
shows that goes for civilizations as well as people. The problem is that our
civilization is probably just now on the cusp of the long term.
Hari Seldon: Where Are You When We Need You?
Isaac Asimov's classic Foundation trilogy centers around a scientist,
Hari Seldon, who invents a science called psychohistory, which allows the fairly
accurate prediction of broad trends in society going for centuries into the
future. Seldon lives on Trantor, the planetary capital of a galactic empire;
the entire planet is covered with a high-tech version of Washington, D.C.,
devoted to nothing but taxing and regulating the rest of the galaxy. Seldon
forecasts that the empire will collapse and Trantor turn into a gigantic ghost
town. And of course that's what happens, because it's a novel, and that makes
for a good story. It's a good story because it's credible, and it's credible
because people know nothing lasts forever, and there is a cyclicality to everything;
birth, youth, maturity, senescence, and death. These stages are shared by everything
in the material world, whether it's a person, a city, a civilization, or a
galaxy. It's just a question of time and scale.
From that point of view everyone knows the future, i.e., we all know that
everything eventually dies. But we'd like a bit more precision on the timing
of their lifecycles. Some gurus believe, or appear to believe, they can actually
predict the details of the future; I consider them knaves. People who actually
do believe them should be considered fools. That said - Nostradamus, astrology,
channeling, tea leaf reading, and the like aside - I do think the best indicator
of what will likely happen in the future is what has happened in the past.
That may seem like an obvious statement, but it's not. There have traditionally
been three ways of looking at the problem; call them theories of history.
Oldest is what might be termed a chaotic view, which presumes mankind doesn't
have any ultimate destination but is wafted on the wings of Fortune or hangs
by the thread of Fate. Subject to the arbitrary will of the gods, whether it's
the Old Testament's Yahweh, or Homer's Zeus, the future is unpredictable, and
prophecy or an oracle gives you as good a read as anything else. I discount
this theory heavily.
A second ancient view is that everything is cyclical, and therefore somewhat
predictable. History may be viewed like a giant sine wave that's possibly headed
somewhere, but the direction is unknown. Or history is really a circle, constantly
repeating itself, much like the four seasons of the year. There's a lot of
wisdom to the cyclical view.
The third view sees history as a linear sequence, one that's actually headed
somewhere. That view holds a special appeal for followers of evangelically
oriented religions, particularly Christians (many of whose beliefs have an
apocalyptic tinge) and Marxists (who were, until lately, given heart by the "scientific" inevitability
their views would prevail). The linear view ties in with the idea of Progress,
that (more or less) every day and in every way, things are getting better and
better - although there's also a subculture populated mostly by deep ecology,
animal rights, and anti-technology types who believe things are headed to hell
in a hand-basket. But they all believe we're headed somewhere in a more-or-less
straight line. There can be a lot of truth to the linear view, certainly if
you look at the technological progress of mankind over the past 10,000 years,
and this view prevails today.
My own view is a synthesis of the cyclical and linear theories. I see history
evolving towards an incredibly bright future, but cyclically suffering setbacks,
cyclically repeating the same patterns along the way. To me history looks like
a spiral, heading off in a specific direction, but always covering the same
ground in a different way with each revolution.
That's one reason The Fourth Turning, (Broadway Books, NY, 1997) by
William Strauss and Neil Howe got my attention; we're all drawn to those who
see at least part of reality the way we do. The book is an extrapolation of
their last work, Generations, and notwithstanding its literary faults,
is simply brilliant. I've never met Howe, but did have lunch with Strauss once
about five years ago. The way I see it, although they're both conservatives,
neither of them has any particular economic, political, or social philosophy,
and they're not trying to grind an ax. Their books are a value-free look at
U.S. history, and their conclusions are more credible as a result.
Their basic hypothesis is one I suspect Hari Seldon would recognize, and my
thoughts are built on the research Strauss and Howe have done over the years.
I suggest you get a copy of The Fourth Turning while it's still in the
stores. That's also true for my own Crisis Investing for the Rest of the
'90s, which has several chapters on related subject matter, and Arthur
Herman's just-released The Idea of Decline in the West, which also bears
on the subject. With 50,000 new books published every year, very few stay available
for more than a few months. If something has appeal, you should buy it now,
because it may be hard to come by when you have the chance to get into it. (Of
course, I was wrong on that point -- websites such as Amazon and Alibris.com
now make it easy to pick up many older books.)
Generations
Generational conflict has been recognized since ancient times. The twist here
is the discovery of several things that have previously eluded observers. One
is that the well- known conflict between fathers and sons is only half the
story; there aren't just two generational types that alternate (e.g., liberal
and conservative), but four. The reason for looking at it this way is that
a human life can be conveniently divided into four stages: Childhood, Young
Adulthood, Midlife, and Elderhood. Throughout all of history, a long life might
be considered to be 80 to 100 years, with each of the four stages equaling
a quarter of it.
Just as each person's life holds four stages of about 20 years each, each
generation comprehends a group of people born over about 20 years. Members
of a particular generation tend to share values and ways of looking at the
world not only because their parents also shared a set of views (which the
kids are reacting to), but because every new generation experiences a new set
of events in a way unique to them. They hear the same music, see the same events,
are exposed to the same books. Members of a generation share a collective persona.
There appear to be four distinct archetypal personae that recur throughout
American history. And throughout world history as well, although that's a bit
beyond what I hope to explore here.
It also seems, throughout history, that there are periodic crises. About once
every century, or about when each of the four generational types has run its
course, a cataclysmic event occurs. It generally takes the form of a major
war, and it generally catalyzes a whole new epoch for society.
The four mature generations alive today each represent an archetype. Let's
review them from the oldest now living, to the youngest.
Hero Archetype
The "GI" generation, born between 1901 and 1924, includes basically all living
people in their mid-70s and older. They grew up and came of age in the midst
of the most traumatic years in human history: the 1930s and '40s. This was
a time of catastrophic financial and economic collapse, world war, political
dictatorship, genocide, and virulent ideology, among other unpleasant things;
a period of intense turmoil. The times required them to be civic minded, optimistic,
regular guys who could be counted on to do the right thing, fit in, and see
that everybody got a square deal. As a consequence of what they've been through,
they tend to be indulgent parents. As kids they're "good"; as adults they're
selfless, constructive, and communitarian. Hero archetypes encounter a Crisis
environment in Young Adulthood; assuming they survive it, the odds are the
rest of their lives will be lived in growing economic prosperity, leading to
a leisurely retirement.
Artist Archetype
Meanwhile, another generation was being born at the height of the Crisis -
something that seems to occur roughly every 80-100 years - from 1925-42. This
generation, the "Silent," watched these titanic events happen but were too
young to take part in them. They were relegated to being protected, while trying
to be helpful in the limited ways available to them. They're overprotected
as children, when they might be characterized as "placid"; they tend to underprotect
their own children as a reaction. As adults they're sensitive, well-liked,
sentimental, and caring.
Prophet Archetype
Next came the group we call the "Boomers," born from 1943 to 1960. This was
the first generation born after the Crisis was over, and they grew up in an
environment where their parents (mostly GIs and early cohort Silents) felt
obligated to protect them from all the trauma of the preceding years and were
desirous of giving them all the things they never had. As kids they're seen
as "spirited.' Later in life, they tend to be narcissistic, presumptuous,
self-righteous, and ruthless. Born after a Crisis, their Childhood years coincide
with a rebirth of society, and their Elderhood coincides with another Crisis.
More on them below.
Nomad Archetype
The fourth generational type is represented by today's "Generation X," born
1961-81, during what might be called an Awakening period when the Boomers were
in the limelight. As a consequence, they were overlooked and a bit abandoned.
Their reputation as kids can be summed up as "bad." They're oriented toward
survival, which is partially a result of their being underprotected as children.
When they become parents, they react and become overprotective. They tend to
be savvy, practical, tough, and amoral.
The kids born between 1982 and perhaps 2002 should be another Hero archetype.
My own experience with them is that they're shaping up that way. Represented
by clean-cut, straight-arrow Power Rangers. Quite a reaction to the sewer-dwelling
Mutant Ninja Turtles that were analogs for the previous generation. They're "'can
do" kids, programmed to do the right thing in a smoke-free, drug-free, eco-sensitive,
politically correct world. Like all Hero types, they respect their elders,
do what they're told without much questioning authority. That's just the type
of person you want to have fighting a war for you, and that's probably just
what they'll wind up doing. Just like the last Hero types, the GIs. (Iraq
was first. Iran next? Or will it be Saudi Arabia?)
It's risky to characterize everyone born in a certain time frame as sharing
a persona; after all, people are individuals, not ants or atoms, each like
the other. But it's really no different than characterizing people by the country
they're from. There's no question in my mind that people share characteristics
by virtue of the milieu in which they live, and that's true of time as well
as geography. Take a look at the people you know by age groups, and see if
they don't roughly fit the brief descriptions.
The interesting thing is that through about 400 years of American history,
it's possible to see these generational types repeating themselves. It's not
an accident. The characteristics of each type shape the next generation, as
well as current events. And events leave a further imprint on all of them.
Making an Example of the Boomers
Just as every generation has its own persona, the character of each generation
evolves as it moves through life. The Boomers are perhaps the most relevant
example of this. First they were Mouseketeers and Beaver Cleaver clones. Who
could have guessed they would mutate into Hippies and even Yippies as they
reached Young Adulthood, reacting against everything they'd grown up with,
everything their parents worked so hard to give them.
They came of age during a period that might be called an Awakening, and it's
recurred on schedule five times so far in American history. Awakenings are
times of religious and moral ferment, when the youth tend to challenge prevailing
cultural values pretty much across the board. Young adults were into New Age
things this time around, in the 1960s and '70s. At the time it seemed utterly
shocking and completely new, but that was only because nobody then alive had
seen the previous Utopian Awakening in the 1830s and '40s, the Pietist Awakening
of the 1740s and '50s, the Puritan Awakening of the 1630s and '40s, or the
Protestant Reformation of the 1530s and '40s.
Like all the generations before them that grew up in similar times, they eventually
put away the things of their youth. But who guessed that their next mutation
would be into Yuppies, whose motto was not "Peace and Love" or "Revolution
for the Hell of It," but "Shop Till You Drop" and "He Who Dies with the Most
Toys Wins" as they moved into midlife.
But even now the acquisitive mania that characterized the '80s is ebbing,
now that the first cohorts of Boomers are crossing over 50. You can already
see the signs of their next stage of evolution, in the judgmental behavior
of people like William Bennett (George Bush) and Dan Quayle (Ann
Coulter) on the "right," and Al Gore and Hillary Clinton on the "left." They
did sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll in the '60s. They believe they've fought
the war of good against evil in both Vietnam and the segregated lunch counters
of the South. They know they were the first generation to have traveled widely
thanks to the jet, to have been brought up by television, and had the telephone
as a given. They've been there, done that, and now that they're getting older,
they're going to make sure that everyone else benefits from their wisdom -
like it or not.
The Boomers are an archetypal Prophet generation, a type born after a secular
crisis, just in time to create another one. Get the image of a grim elder,
with a well-defined vision of what's right and wrong, calling down wrath, and
laying down the law for a troubled nation in chaotic times. That's the type
of person who tends to lead countries into wars, as well as through them. Interestingly,
the Boomers in America have their counterparts abroad today, especially in
China, where they grew up during the Cultural Revolution. Two ideologically
driven, righteous groups running two such powerful and alien cultures is almost
a guaranteed formula for a millennial-sized crisis. Which should appear, coincidentally,
sometime shortly after the millennium. (We're right on schedule.)
So What's Next?
The real watersheds in history, crises that make or break a civilization,
occur roughly every 100 years. The most recent ones in American history that
will resonate without looking up the facts in a reference book are the Revolution,
circa 1782; the Civil War, circa 1863; and WW II, circa 1943. We've had other
wars, and they were traumatic enough; that's the nature of war. But the War
of 1812, Mexican, Spanish, World War I, Korean, and Vietnam wars had nothing
to do with the country's survival as an entity, as a civilization. They were
optional wars, sport fighting, if you will, by comparison. Wars that occur
at a secular Crisis, a "Fourth Turning" to Strauss and Howe, when a Prophet
generation is acting as elder statesmen, with Nomads as operational commanders,
and Heroes as front line soldiers tend to be total wars that have an ideological
underpinning. They're life-and-death struggles not just for the individual
participants, but for the civilization as a whole.
That major wars occur at such long remove from each other probably isn't an
accident. Really catastrophic wars, from at least the days of Troy on down,
have usually been the Great Events that resound through living memory. The
Great Event of a century forms the thought and character of everyone alive
when it happens, influencing them relative to the stage of life they're in
at the time. Perhaps that's why a people will collectively do its best to avoid
a repeat, at least while there's anyone still alive who saw the last crisis.
(It's been said that war is a force that gives life meaning. And I think
that's true, although it's perverse that the most destructive and idiotic
activity that it's possible to engage in would just have to be the most
important. Maybe, after the orgy of self-indulgence and conspicuous consumption
that has characterized the past couple decades, Americans collectively
feel they need to prove something. There has to be some rationale for the
current war hysteria other than pure stupidity...)
In any event, the way the current generations line up relative to historical
analogs, an excellent case can be made the U.S. is approaching another time
of secular crisis, a Fourth Turning, with an expected due date of 2005 - seven
years from now - plus or minus a few years in either direction. The Stamp Acts
catalyzed the American Revolution, the election of Lincoln catalyzed the Civil
War, the Crash of '29 catalyzed the Depression/WW II era. What might precipitate
the elements now floating in solution? The answer is, practically any random
event that's sufficiently traumatic. Any of the theses of current disaster/action
novels and movies will do nicely. Perhaps the accidental or intentional release
of a super plague vector. The crashing of an airliner into the Capitol during
a joint session. (Close, but not quite.) An all-out assault on
the IRS computers by an armed group - or perhaps the computers just melting
down due to the Year 2000 Problem. Perhaps a financial disaster that cascades
into the Greater Depression. In any of these, or a hundred other scenarios,
the federal government would almost certainly act precipitously and with a
heavy hand, which would bring on a whole other set of consequences.
(In the historical context, 9/11 will be viewed as the opening kick-off
for the coming Crisis... and the messianic overreaction of Bush and his
cronies as the catalyst for turning things from bad to worse. It may be
that Hurricane Katrina, for instance, a completely accidental event, may
be blamed for providing a pin to burst the financial bubble - which would
be a pity, since the neocons could then blame it, not themselves.)
There's no way of telling where the Crisis will lead, or how it will end.
That's going to depend not only on exactly who's in control, but what they
do, whom they're up against, and a hundred other variables we can't even anticipate.
One thing that seems certain is that real crisis brings out strong (although
not necessarily wise) leadership. Because of its age and size, it will
come from the Boomer generation, and it will be in the mold of Roosevelt or
Lincoln - both very dangerous precedents. The Boomers in Elderhood will be
dogmatic, harsh, puritanical, and quite willing to burn down the barn in order
to destroy whatever rats they see. Admix that attitude to a time resembling
the Revolution, the Civil War, or WW II, overlain with today's ethnic strife,
urbanization, financial overextension, and powerful, compact new weaponry in
the hands of foreign fanatics out to teach the Great Satan a lesson, and it's
a real witch's brew.
If things evolve over the next decade as they did in past analogs, it will
be a very un-mellow time indeed. That's assuming things end well, and there's
no guarantee they will, as many foreign countries have discovered throughout
history. We've been uniquely blessed.
What to Do
Strauss and Howe aren't financial types, and their advice is nebulous along
those lines. To sum it up, their suggestion is to learn to swim with the tide
by not hoping the current good times last forever; the chances of the good
times are coming to an end now. They'd also advise not sticking your head up
above the crowd, something that is always very risky when times are in turmoil;
remember what happened to Japanese-Americans during the last crisis. They suggest
that there will likely be a resurgence of nationalism, much as was the case
during past crises. It won't be a good time to be a maverick in the U.S., a
thought that makes places like Argentina and New Zealand look even more appealing.
(I bought property in both places shortly after this was written, and
have been rewarded with a quadruple in both instances - considerably better
than would have been the case in the U.S.).
Strauss and Howe suggest you look to diversify in all things, so everything
won't go bad at once. Brace for the collapse of public support mechanisms.
Set your roots with your family, because people you can rely on will be at
a premium. Heed emerging community norms, bond with like-minded people, and
return to basic, classic virtues. This is sound advice any time, but critical
if you're rigging for heavy weather.
Assuming you wanted to stay in the U.S., you'd rather be on some land near
a small town, and far away from a major city. You'd want to be self-sufficient
in as many ways as possible - freeze-dried food. etc. Perhaps Howard Ruff will
make a comeback with advice like that, which seems quaint today. But then I'm
nothing if not a contrarian.
(In hindsight, the original article could have been a bit more specific
- other than the suggestions about Argentina and New Zealand. Personally,
I believe that unassailable wealth is the best protection against global
crisis. For it to be unassailable, your wealth must be at once substantial,
free from threat of confiscation, divorced from the whims of the masses,
and located in a country or currency that has a good risk/reward profile.
Unfortunately, the U.S. doesn't make the cut.
In the first instance, the single best way to build wealth now, while
there is still time to do so, is in carefully selected gold and other resource
stocks. In order for it to be free from the threat of confiscation, at
least some part of your wealth needs to reside in a country where you don't.
To state the obvious, I would be very cautious about traditional stocks
and bonds until we see how things shake out. Rather, get positioned in
gold and silver stocks now, ahead of the curve, then sell out for a big
profit to the panicking masses and move an increasing percentage of your
wealth into tangibles such as gold, silver, and maybe, as part of a diversified
portfolio, real estate in especially attractive areas - but only after
the bubble has decisively burst.)
A Parting Parable
In case you have any doubts, I buy the theory outlined above and its many
ramifications that there isn't room to explore here. It really is scary to
think that we could again experience a real Crisis with a capital C; I'm not
talking about just a bear market in stocks. If it happens, I promise you stocks
and mutual funds will be about the farthest things from most people's minds.
At the same time, there's no point in feeling terrorized. This stuff has been
going on since the dawn of history. So let me leave you with a parable. I could
appropriately quote Ecclesiastes (To every thing there is a season, and a time
to every purpose under heaven: a time to be born, and a time to die, a time
to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted, etc., etc.). But everyone
knows that reference. Let me rather give you John O'Hara. At the beginning
of O'Hara's novel Appointment in Samara, he tells a brief parable, which
I'll summarize:
There was a merchant in Baghdad who went to the market with his servant. There
they saw Death, who stared at the servant in what seemed a threatening way.
Later the servant said "Master, lend me a horse. I shall ride to Samara, and
there Death will not find me." The merchant did so, then returned to the market,
where he again saw Death, whom he approached and asked why he had stared at
his servant in such a threatening way. Death responded, "I wasn't threatening
him. I was just very surprised to see him here in Baghdad, since I have an
appointment with him in Samara later this afternoon."
(Strange, the location for the proverb, in that this was well before
the current war).
***
There is no doubt that we are now in the Crisis stage… which, according
to Strauss and Howe's "Turnings" theory, may last another decade or more. Is
there any way to escape this economic tsunami unscathed?
In fact, there is: market "riptides," big economic trends that have always
made money for those bold and farsighted enough to seize them. Those trends
are what The
Casey Report focuses on. Where others will be pulled under by the current,
with the help of the Casey experts, you will be able to catch the big waves
emerging on the horizon and ride them like a pro. If you try a risk-free, 3-month
trial subscription with 100% money-back guarantee today, you will also receive
our bonus report "The Greater Depression" - completely free of charge. Click
here to learn more.
|