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Like cocaine, consumer credit comes in lines and is dangerously habit forming.
It has been around a long time:-
"Prosperity was assisted, too, by ... stimulants to purchasing, each of which
mortgaged the future but kept the factories roaring while it was being injected
... People were getting to consider it old-fashioned to limit their purchases
to the amount of their cash balance; the thing to do was to 'exercise their
credit' ... 15% of all retail sales were on an instalment basis ...It was fun
while it lasted." - Only Yesterday, an informal history of the 1920's, F.L.Allen
(published 1931).
These 'stimulants' of the 1920s were benign by comparison to our own.
Credit is now elevated to the status of a fundamental human right. It lifts
up consumers with personal loans from the bank, credit cards through the mail,
store-cards at the till, and on the back of any imagined increase in the value
of overpriced homes. So important is credit to modernity that some western governments
even create new banks to grant ever more of it to those unfortunates excluded
by the prejudice of a wicked banking sector which reckons, not unreasonably,
that it is daft to lend money to people who have no real prospect of paying
anything back.
But although current consumer indebtedness is bigger than it has ever previously
been it is still only the tip of the iceberg. Corporate consumption of credit
is far worse.
The numbers from the publications of the IMF and the Bank for International
Settlements show the world bond market, i.e. debt which has been issued in the
form of traded bonds, grew from $800bn in 1970 to over $35,000bn in 2001. This
is 43 times. It is still growing rapidly, but even this colossus is of no consequence;
because next to it is the world of derivatives.
Our cleverest brains have for twenty years been constructing arrangements which
allow giant corporations to get things which they cannot pay for. The BIS estimated
the main financial derivatives markets at $1,100bn in 1986. Recently it went
through $150,000bn and a further $98,800bn in Over The Counter (OTC) derivatives
have to be added as well. So in 16 years or so the notional sum of derivatives
outstanding grew by about 250 times, and still it marches on.
Not surprisingly in the minds of the investment bankers who earn fees from
these derivatives every cent of the credit exposure is perfectly secure. But
J.K.Galbraith - who wrote the definitive account of the events surrounding the
Great Depression of the 1930s - had this to say:-
"One of the paradoxes of speculation in securities is that the loans that underwrite
it are among the safest of all investments. They are protected by stocks which
under all ordinary circumstances are instantly saleable, and by a cash margin
as well....A few firms made this decision: instead of trying to produce goods
with its manifold headaches and inconveniences, they confined themselves to
financing speculation...This was, possibly, the most profitable arbitrage operation
of all time." The Great Crash - published in 1954
Meanwhile his contemporary R.L.Smitley, who could never happily resist the
chance to rubbish a conventional wisdom, offered this :-
"The complexity of this era of credit liquidation is far too great for the
mob mind to grasp. It is hardly possible for them to see the picture wherein
about 700 billion dollars of physical and intangible wealth is attempting to
be turned into about 5 billion dollars of money" Popular Financial Delusions
- published in 1933
Seven hundred billion dollars? Try seven thousand billion dollars - the amount
issued by just one of our modern credit addicts. Click here <http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/opd/opdpenny.htm>
to review its progress in paying it back.
Articles in the Disastrous History of Money series include :-
* Athens
- Housing the Gods (on borrowed money) [500 - 300BC]
* The
Carthaginian National State Lottery [450BC]
* Rome
- Monetary Expansion & Republican Militarism [200BC]
* Chinese
Credit Derivatives after Ghengiz Khan [1200AD]
* Why
Sweden's Central Banker was Beheaded [1719AD]
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