|
Long
time readers know that I am a huge fan of the work of Neil Howe. His book, The
Fourth Turning, was one of the seminal pieces of my reading over the last
30 years. And it has turned out to be stunningly prophetic. Uncomfortably so.
A roughly 80 year cycle has been repeating itself for centuries in the Anglophile
world, broken up into four generations or turnings. We have begun what Howe
called many years ago The Fourth Turning.
Neil Howe is the co-author, with the late William Strauss, of a number of
seminal works on the impact of generations on cycles of history. Howe is a
founding partner of LifeCourse Associates (lifecourse.com)
which provides research to institutions looking to capitalize on generational
research.
The June 2009 edition of The Casey Report, the flagship publication
of Casey Research, featured a comprehensive 23 page interview with Neil Howe
as well as suggestions on how to position your portfolio to profit during a
Fourth Turning crisis. I persuaded my friend David Galland to at least summarize
it for my Outside the Box this week, and he graciously did so. David is the
managing editor of The Casey Report and has had a long career in the financial
services industry; as a founding partner of the successful Blanchard Group
of Mutual Funds and, before joining Casey Research, as a founding partner of
EverBank, one of the big success stories in independent online banking.
Casey Research is offering readers of Out of the Box the opportunity
to read the full edition of The Casey Report featuring the Howe Interview,
and receive the publication for the next three months with a 100% satisfaction
guarantee. For
details click here...
I trust you will find this week's Outside the Box to be helpful. The more
things change.....
John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box
A 20-Year Bear Market?
By David Galland, Casey Research
In November of 1997, my partner and co-editor of The Casey Report,
Doug Casey, wrote an article titled "Foundations of Crisis," which leaned heavily
on the research of Neil Howe and the late William Strauss.
Howe and Strauss have written many books on how generations determine the
course of history and how they will shape America's future. Their forecasts
on a wide variety of indicators have turned out to be amazingly accurate. They
were among the first to predict (back in the late 1980s) the rise of Boomer-driven
culture wars and the simultaneous rise of Gen-X-driven free agency and distrust
of government. And they were completely alone back then in predicting, for
the post-X "Millennial Generation" (a label they coined), a decline in youth
crime and risk taking and an increase in youth civic engagement that would
first become apparent around the year 2000. Guess what? For the last ten years,
everyone has been noticing exactly these trends among teens and 20somethings.
Howe and Strauss also made extensive predictions, based on generational aging,
on how America's entire social mood would likely change, in dramatic fashion,
during our current 2000-2010 decade. To quote Doug's prescient 1997 article,
which was reprinted in Outside the Box late last year...
"... 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. 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.
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, who 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 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.
As eye-opening as Doug's predictions were, they brought us only to the onset
of the current crisis. Consequently, we thought it both timely and important
to check back with the source of much of the research he relied on. And so
it was that I spent several hours talking with Neil Howe, co-author of the
seminal work on generational cycles, The Fourth Turning, and,
just recently, the subject of the DVD "The Winter of History." Howe
is not just an historian, but also a Washington DC-based economist and demographer.
While our conversation covered a great many topics, the overriding focus was
on how things are likely to unfold from here.
Many bullish readers won't be thrilled to hear Howe's latest findings about
the future, but given his predictive track record, dismissing them out of hand
could be a costly mistake.
The summary outlook, according to Howe, is that we are in the very early stages
of a 20-year period of economic and institutional upheaval -; an era denominated
by a crisis during which we'll likely witness the tearing down and reconstruction
of many aspects of society as we know it.
As individuals, understanding Howe's views and taking some reasonable precautions
makes a lot of sense. As investors, those views also have the potential to
make us a lot of money.
Following is my high-level recap of my long conversation with Neil Howe, along
with some general thoughts on the investment implications of a 20-year bear
market.
Remember the Sixties?
If you're old enough -- or possess even a rudimentary sense of history --
think back to the 1950s, with roller-skating waitresses, crew cuts, and nuclear
families of the sort represented by the iconic Leave it to Beaver. Fathers
worked, while many mothers stayed home. Life had a certain predictable quality
and, as far as anyone knew, would continue along the same lines for time immemorial.
But then something happened... the 1960s. Literally no one saw it coming.
It was as if someone had flipped a switch that electrified America and, quickly,
the world. Most everything changed, and a society accustomed to conformity
was blown away with a fierce individualism expressed with long hair, sex, drugs,
and rock and roll, topped off with civil disobedience and bloody riots in the
streets.
What happened?
According to Neil Howe, in the mid-1960s, generational change pushed society
around a dramatic corner as idealistic, individualistic young Baby Boomers
(born 1943 to 1960) rebelled against the midlife leadership of their G.I. Generation
parents (born 1901 to 1924).
These periods of transitions are part of a larger cyclical pattern made up
of four distinct eras, or "Turnings," each lasting approximately 20 years.
It can be helpful to think of the four turnings as you might think of the four
seasons, repeating predictably in their own natural rhythm. A full cycle of
turnings takes place over a period of about 80 to 90 years -- roughly the span
of a long human life. A new turning begins as a new youth generation comes
of age, bringing a new social ethic that compensates for the excesses of the
midlife generation then in power.
While we don't have the space here to go into the full details of Howe's research,
it's important to the topic at hand that we quickly recap the Four Turnings.
The First Turning is referred to by Howe as a High. As this follows
a period of crisis, one of the hallmarks of a First Turning is a heightened
sense of community and collective optimism, driven in part by the fact that
the society has just come through a difficult and challenging time. Consequently,
during First Turnings, societal institutions tend to be strong while individualism
is weak. The post-World War II "High" of the mid-1940s through early '60s is
the most recent example of a First Turning.
The Second Turning, called an Awakening, typically starts out feeling
like the high tide of a High, with signs of progress and prosperity everywhere.
But just as everything seems to be going along swimmingly, large swaths of
society begin to chaff under the social conformity of the High, beginning to
gravitate to more individualistic pursuits and demanding that their personal
interests come first. You may recognize the "Consciousness Revolution" of the
mid-1960s through early 1980s, correctly, as the Second Turning.
Next up, the Third Turning, which Howe calls an Unraveling, is much
the opposite of a High. To wit, individualism dominates, while institutions
are increasingly weak and discredited. Quoting Howe on the Unraveling...
"This is a time when social authority feels inconsequential, the culture
feels exhausted, and people feel bewildered by the number of options available
to them. It is a time of celebrity circuses and a tremendous amount of freedom
and creativity in our personal lives, but very little sense of public purpose.
The most recent Third Turning began in the mid-'80s with Morning in America,
and continued through the '90s. Previous periods of Unraveling in American
history were also decades of cynicism and bad manners. Think of the 1920s,
the 1850s, the 1760s. And history teaches us that the Third Turnings inevitably
end in Fourth Turnings.
Finally, there is the Fourth Turning, called a Crisis. The recent Third
Turning appears to be winding down, and we are currently on the cusp of a Fourth
Turning. This is a time of great turmoil, when society's basic institutions
are torn down and rebuilt, and seemingly insurmountable problems are addressed.
During Fourth Turnings, America engages in a struggle for its very survival
and redefines its identity as a nation. Large wars are often a part of this
process. The American Revolution, Civil War, Great Depression, and World War
II were all features of past Fourth Turnings.
In sum, Howe's research has shown that, with remarkable predictability, history
is not a straight line extending toward a better and brighter (or increasingly
awful) future, but rather a repeating cycle of the four distinct social eras.
These four turnings have recurred with remarkable consistency throughout Anglo-American
history, as Neil Howe outlines at length in Generations and The Fourth
Turning. It is therefore no accident that America has experienced great
cataclysms or "Crises" about every 80 years. Travel back eighty years from
Pearl Harbor Day, and you land in the middle of the Civil War. Eighty years
before that takes you to the Revolutionary War. If the rhythms of history hold,
America is now poised to enter another Fourth Turning.
Bad News, Potentially Good News
You don't need me to tell you that the United States and in fact the world
are now facing a plethora of intractable problems. The world's former powerhouse
economy, the U.S., is now the world's largest debtor nation -; and by a wide
margin. The nation has trillions in unpayable liabilities coming due on Social
Security and Medicare, to name just two of many broken government programs
weighing on the country. And our much vaunted democracy is increasingly dysfunctional
-; rotten to the core, truth be known -; thanks largely to entrenched special
interests and a voting public clamoring for their own piece of the pie, while
trying to hand the bill off to somebody else.
Meanwhile, the economy -; despite rigorous jawboning by the government and
its many friends in the large banking institutions -- is in serious trouble,
with the housing market buffeted by tsunami-like waves of defaults, foreclosures,
overvaluations, historic levels of personal debt, and tight credit that has
left the U.S. government as the sole lender in many markets.
Bernanke and his ilk may see green shoots, but what they're really seeing
is the deep, green sea rising up once again to bury the economy.
That's the bad news.
The potentially good news, if you credit Howe's research, is that the Crisis
we're now entering will change pretty much everything. While this change will
entail a great deal of pain and a reduced standard of living for a large number
of people, by the time the Crisis subsides, society will have pretty much remade
itself in ways that no one can predict at this point.
Put another way, today's intractable problems will be solved... one way or
another.
What's Next
When discussing what's likely to follow next, Neil Howe turns to his generational
profiles and points out that the rising societal power today belongs to the
generation he calls the Millennials, individuals born between 1982 and
2004. They are a "Hero" generation, just like the G.I. Generation that coped
so well with the turmoil of the Great Depression and World War II -- the last
Fourth Turning. Coddled as children, the G.I.s were ultimately called upon
to help society through a dark and dangerous period and rose to the occasion.
Again, quoting Howe on the Millennials...
"These are today's young people, who are just beginning to be well known
to most Americans. They fill K-12 schools, colleges, graduate schools, and
have recently begun entering the workplace. We associate them with dramatic
improvements in youth behaviors, which are often underreported by the media.
Since Millennials have come along, we've seen huge declines in violent crime,
teen pregnancy, and the most damaging forms of drug abuse, as well as higher
rates of community service and volunteering. This is a generation that reminds
us in many respects of the young G.I.s nearly a century ago, back when they
were the first boy scouts and girl scouts between 1910 and 1920.
Unlike the Baby Boomers, who are largely individualistic and anti-establishment,
the Millennials are good team players. We hear a lot these days about working
together for a common cause, volunteerism, and the need for stronger government
institutions, largely because these are the new priorities of the Millennial
Generation.
As you may recall, out of the devastation of World War II, a spate of transnational
political and economic institutions were born, including the United Nations,
the World Bank, the World Health Organization, and the International Monetary
Fund. By the time the current Fourth Turning is over, expect more of the same
-- but probably even bigger and more ambitious.
What Does This Mean to You?
Most importantly, if Howe is right, this crisis is far from over. In fact,
when I asked him where we are today on a scale from 1 to 10 -- with 10 representing
as bad as the crisis will get -- he replied that we are at either 2 or 3. In
other words, the worst is very much yet to come. And, per above, he expects
this period of turmoil to take 20 years to play out. Thus, if nothing else,
you may want to continue approaching matters of personal finance cautiously.
Secondly, if you're the type of individual that tends to get steamed up by
larger and more intrusive government programs, you may want to take a few deep
breaths and resolve yourself to the fact that this phenomenon is likely to
get far worse before we see a return to celebration of individual rights. (And
the cycle shows that we will see such a return -- about 40 to 50 years
from now, when the next Second Turning comes around.)
If it is any consolation, the Millennial Generation places a great deal of
weight on teamwork and the notion of doing things "smart." That doesn't mean,
of course, that the various programs that are kicked off in an attempt to fix
the many problems now confronting society will in fact turn out to be technically
smart. But they will almost certainly be better thought out than some of the
numbskull initiatives we've seen over the last 20 years.
You can also take some comfort in the fact that Millennials are builders,
not destroyers. By contrast, the individualistic Boomers that dominate today's
aging political class are world-class dissenters, radio talk show aficionados
always ready to scrap it out for their beliefs. Millennials want to skip the
philosophical debate and get straight to fixing things.
Other insights about Fourth Turning periods gained from my conversation with
Neil Howe...
-
Government grows powerful, and sweeping new legislation is enacted. The
old 1990s rule was: just compete and stay off the state's radar screen.
The new 2010s rule will be: better have a presence in Washington so you're
not dealt out of the "new" new deal. One political party tends to dominate.
The Democrats under FDR during the last Fourth Turning offer a good example.
While Neil Howe doesn't think it will necessarily be the Democrats this
time around, they are certainly in the pole position at this point.
-
While public history speeds up, personal life slows down. Families will
spend more time together, like in the old Frank Capra movies. Ever more
households will be multi-generational, a trend now spurred by Boomers with
large, empty McMansions and Millennials without jobs. There will be a blanding
of the pop culture, with the entertainment of the young (put Miley Cyrus
or "High School Musical" on fast forward) increasingly regarded as tamer
than the entertainment of the old.
-
Innovation tends to stagnate, while a few new technologies will be chosen
to be adopted on a large scale. We will see the equivalent of canals or
railroads or interstates being built across America. To borrow from Carlotta
Perez' four-stage description of technological revolutions, we are moving
from the "innovation" to the "implementation" stage.
-
New laws and regulations will do less to referee a free market and more
to pursue one or another national priority. They will increasingly favor
the large producer over the retail buyer, investment over consumption,
planning over risk, debt over equity. Businesses will hustle to reposition
themselves. Anti-trust legislation will weaken.
-
The authority and obligations of community will strengthen at all levels,
from local to national and possibly beyond (if our alliances prove durable).
Personal reputation and membership will matter more. A "new localism" will
reshape town and urban planning. A global slide toward national or regional
protectionism will loom as a real danger.
-
It is too early to tell whether the crisis will ultimately be inflationary
or deflationary, though we at Casey Research come down on the side of inflation
for the simple reason that the government possesses the means to inflate.
Due to the gold standard, that was not the case early in the Great Depression.
-
In the past, Fourth Turning periods have always resulted in the nation
redefining who we are in some essential way. That was certainly the case
during the American Revolution, when we transitioned from a British colony
into a collection of independent states -- and the Civil War, when those
states were hammered into a single nation. And, again, after World War
II, when the U.S. went from being a relatively isolated nation to a global
empire. A wild card, for instance a terrorist nuke going off in a city
anywhere on the planet, could similarly take the country, and the world,
into unforeseeable new directions.
-
Baby Boomers will continue to be respected for their cultural achievements
(it's not a fluke of history that Boomer music and other entertainments
are still wildly popular among the young), but will be increasingly ignored
in the political debate. The term "senior citizen," already in decline,
will disappear entirely. And if push comes to shove, Boomer's financial
interests -; including Social Security -; will be subjugated "for the greater
good."
-
There will be a growing push to rebuild the middle class. The wealthy
and the impoverished alike will both come under pressure thanks to new
pro-middle class initiatives. If you are a high-income earner, it's a certainty
your taxes are going up, and likely by a lot. If you want to make a fortune,
don't pursue the niche or the "long tail." Invent the next big brand that
will appeal to Everyman.
Don't Worry, Be Happy
That is, at best, a sketch of my long conversation with Neil Howe and doesn't
do justice to his research. If nothing else, however, I hope I've succeeded
in giving you at least some sense of the man and his unique research and encouraged
you to think outside the box about the nature of today's crisis.
A couple of final observations.
First, Neil Howe is not a negative person, nor a professional doomsayer. Rather,
he is a social scientist and historian with decades of experience in the social
sciences. As you speak to him, you get the sense that he doesn't view the world
through any particular philosophical bias, but rather is simply reporting what
his research is telling him about the current players on the global stage,
and which act we are currently in.
Secondly, speaking as a Baby Boomer and someone with a lifelong distrust of
government and its meddling institutions, talking to Neil left me feeling oddly
relaxed -- letting go, if you will, of some of the frustration that has been
building within me as I watch the nanny state grow more and more bloated.
That is not to say we won't continue to speak out against government waste
and prolificacy. We will. But it seems increasingly clear that we're now caught
up in a powerful trend toward bigger, not smaller, societal institutions --
and that these institutions will, over the period ahead, change the world as
we know it.
Of course, being active investors, at the same time we raise our voices in
protest, we'll deal with the reality of the situation by strategically positioning
our portfolios to profit from the coming changes.
And so, like the Rockefellers and J.P. Morgan during the Great Depression,
we'll make the trend -- to matter how negative -- our friend. You may want
to consider doing so yourself.
Making the trend your friend is more important than ever, if your assets
are to make it through the Fourth Turning intact. The Casey Report discovers
and analyzes budding economic trends and turns them into hands-on, actionable
recommendations for its subscribers. Read the latest report from Casey Chief
Economist Bud Conrad about our favorite investment of 2009... a play on an
all but inevitable economic development. Click
here to read more.
|