When I was about 9 years old, my father took my elder sister and I to see
a performance by a famous magician called Blackstone.
What I remember most about the show is when Blackstone, with a flourish of
his cape, made an elephant appear onstage out of thin air. It was an astonishing
feat, and the crowd - including me - went wild with applause. I had no idea
how he did it. After the show however, as we were exiting the theater, my elder
sister said, "I didn't see what was so great about that elephant. It just walked
onto the stage and everyone started clapping."
My sister's revelation was just as amazing as the trick itself, which suddenly
made perfect sense. Blackstone had used some kind of sleight of hand, distracting
the audience over here while he got the elephant to walk on stage over there.
With this simple, well-known magician's tactic, he managed to fool just about
everyone.
Yesterday, as the Dow "smashed its all time high," closing above 13,000 for
the first time in history, I was strangely reminded of Blackstone's performance
that day some thirty years ago. The Dow's current levitating act is the result
of another well-known sleight of hand trick used by central bankers. It's called
inflation. Even so, most everyone is mesmerized by the performance. Everyone
seems transfixed, clapping in amazement at this spectacular feat.
But
at the margins of society, far from the action on Wall Street, a silent depression
has already begun - one that is affecting the most vulnerable members of our
society. This depression is documented in two books that I recently finished
reading: Tamara Draut's Strapped:
Why America's 20- and 30-Somethings Can't Get Ahead, and Anya Kamenetz's Generation
Debt: Why Now is a Terrible Time to be Young. Both were recently released
in paperback, and I was able to find the hardcopy editions at the local library.
What both of these books confirm, though painstaking research and in painful
detail, is what today's younger generation has already long known: Simply surviving
in this hyper competitive world is harder than ever, to say nothing of getting
ahead. As Draut points out, a college degree is the new high school diploma;
to be considered for any kind of a "good job," you've got to have one. The
problem is that college tuition costs have been rising three to four times
as fast as inflation for the past few decades, and financial aid hasn't kept
up. Whereas the Baby Boom generation had the hat-trick advantage of cheap tuition,
ample grants and scholarships, and a booming economy providing well paying
jobs upon graduation, the younger generation has had none of these advantages.
Financial aid has shifted increasingly towards loans instead of grants. Because
of higher tuition costs and generalized chronic inflation (in spite of official
Federal government statistics), housing and food are more expensive too. Many
kids who want to go to college simply can't because they just can't afford
it. Of those who can cobble together enough money - and here I'm talking about
working class families, not the privileged minority whose families can college
without much pain - many have to work full time to make ends meet. And even
then, in this inflation-ravaged world, it still isn't enough. So they turn
to credit cards, which are amply peddled on college campuses to bright-eyed,
green newbies who don't know a thing about debt or personal finance.
Welcome to higher education - at the school of hard knocks.
Today it is not uncommon for young adults to graduate with unmanageable thousands
of dollars in combined student loans and credit card debt. "The next generation
is starting their economic race 50 yards behind the starting line," says Elizabeth
Warren, co-author of The
Two Income Trap. The debt is unmanageable because good jobs are hard
to find. This is not your father's economy. Sure, there are plenty of jobs
available. How does $8 per hour sound, no benefits? As Kamenets, a recent Yale
grad points out:
...when the Boomers were entering the workforce in 1970, the nation's largest
private employer was General Motors. They paid an average wage of $17.50
an hour in today's dollars. The largest employer in the post-industrial economy
is Wal-Mart. Their average wage? Eight dollars an hour. The service-driven
economy is also a youth-driven economy, burning young people's energy and
potential over a deep-fat fryer...The entire labor market is downgrading
toward what was once entry level.
In case you missed it, this week GM
was dethroned by Toyota as the world's top automobile producer. Earlier
this year, in an effort to shore up American manufacturing, the
Bush Administration proposed reclassifying hamburger flipping as "manufacturing." The
times indeed are changing, and the experiences of the younger generation
shine a light on the terrifying leading edge of that change.
The Second Great Depression is Here
For the past five years I've been saying "The
second great depression will not be televised." In addition to paying
homage to the 60's civil rights activist and poet Gil
Scott Heron (The Revolution Will Not Be Televised), it is a jab
at the inadequacy of the mainstream news to actually report the news. The
composition of the American economy is changing in fundamental ways -- ways
that will not, in the long run, be favorable to most Americans if current
trends continue. The younger generation is simply the first to bear the brunt
of these changes, and as a result, is the first to grow up poorer than the
generation preceding it. This, ladies and gentlemen, is known as national
economic decline.
This is unpleasant news, and is therefore completely unacceptable to the mainstream
media. It's easier to sell the idea that the younger generation is just plain
lazy, stupid and hopelessly screwed up. After all, didn't you hear? The Dow
just hit 13K! How can the economy be bad?
As a result, Draut and Kamenetz take the brunt of Boomer criticism from elders
who dismiss their claims and only hear what they believe to be whining. But
all these authors are doing is telling the story of their generation, pointing
out how times have changed, and just how difficult it is to be young, broke,
in debt and with little hope for the future. To me, it is the story of a second
great depression. College, housing and food are more expensive, taxes, debt
and interest rates are higher, (In spite of the fact that official rates hover
near historic lows, one late or missed payment by a financially strapped young
person sends credit card interest rates soaring across the board -- 29% or
higher), wages are lower, competition is fiercer and most of the good jobs
have moved away. Given the facts, it is amazing there is not more complaining
or real demands for change. Draut points out that this younger generation was
thoroughly "Reaganized" - raised under a steady diet of conservative rhetoric
which they have fully internalized: The government is the problem, the free
market is the solution - if you fail, it is your own fault, so don't complain
and don't ask for help. Even though youths 18 - 24 are the most likely to hold
minimum wage jobs, giving them a poverty rate of 30% in 2000, we've heard pitifully
little about this in the MSM.
But poverty is a big impediment to getting higher education. Kamenetz points
out that the nationwide high school graduation rate peaked in 1970 at 77%.
It was around 67% in 2004....For every 100 young people who begin their freshman
year of high school, just 38 eventually enroll in college, and only 18 graduate
in a timely manner. This is especially worrisome as the world continues its
march towards a knowledge-based
economy. America is clearly falling behind.
The question of particular interest to readers of all ages should be whether
the current decline in living standards is a one-generation anomaly, or the
start of a new American trend. The problems afflicting the young - the outsourced
jobs, the low wages and high levels of debt - are increasingly moving up the
generational ladder. Just ask the entire city of Detroit, where
a house can now be purchased for less than the price of a new car. This
year also marks
the first time in history that the median American home price is likely to
decline.
Transition Ahead
What these two important books demonstrate clearly is that at the margins
- where all the interesting economic (and other) activity takes place - the
US economy is no longer able to provide its citizens with an increasing standard
of living. Having read Jeremy Rifkin's 1992 classic The
End of Work a few years ago, the only surprise to me is that his scary
predictions of the disappearing jobs are actually coming true. And with "Outsourcing
2.0," things are only bound to get worse. Yet as Boomers retire - the first
crop starts retiring next year - it is young people that they will be relying
on (i.e. taxing) in order to maintain their disproportionately wealthy lifestyle.
A Generational
Storm indeed looms on the horizon.
What will this mean for the future? Neither Draut nor Kamenetz offer a comprehensive
view, but James Fallows had an excellent piece in the Atlantic Monthly a
few years ago that remains relevant today: Countdown
to a Meltdown, a look back from the year 2016.
Lack of Awareness
To my disappointment, neither author goes deep enough into the root causes
of the inflation that makes life for young people so difficult: The Federal
Reserve System. We all know by now that the Fed has a "printing
press" with which it can mint money, but like the 70%
of Americans who don't know that plastic is made from oil, the majority
of Americans don't realize that a fiat money printing press is the cause of
currency inflation. The result of this inflation is more expensive food, housing,
college tuition, and (surprise!) Dow 13K. You certainly won't read about that in
the New York Times. The information is, however, widely and freely available
on the internet, as my friend Charles
Zentay points out. All it takes is some thinking to figure out what is
really going on.

[Thank you to BlueWire Studio for
the above image, which was originally published in the Trendsman's excellent
report The
American Inflation: Where we are, How we got here and Where we are going]
Not surprisingly, many of Kamenetz's interviewees regret ever having gone
to college in the first place. They're saddled with debt and working in jobs
that are completely unrelated to what they studied - if they even graduated
at all. As a result, she makes the daring recommendation that kids think hard
about whether college is right for them or not. Before deciding to become an
indentured servant to the bank in exchange for a college diploma, she recommends
investigating this book: 300
Best Jobs Without a Four-Year Degree. The key point, which I wholeheartedly
agree with is to look at the landscape of the world, see it with clear eyes
and think! Don't go to college just because everyone is doing it and because
your parents want you to. The world is changing and navigating it will require
a new set skills and street smarts - smarts you're likely not going to get
in school. More on this in future installments. Sign
up here to be notified.
I urge everyone to go to the library or the bookstore and take a look at the
books. For young people, I give the nod to Kamenetz's book. Her writing is
more urgent, more suited, I think to the younger crowd.
Each generation reshapes the country in its own image. The Boomer generation
is the current cultural center, but its cultural power will soon be in decline,
and as they fade from the national spotlight, a new generation is rising. Based
on Strauss & Howe's generational analysis in The
Fourth Turning, the current young generation will likely be shaped
by an extreme crisis - brought on by the exiting Boomer generation - sometime
quite soon. It is from this crisis that a new America will be born - perhaps
it will be the Golden Age that Ravi
Batra writes of, or the complete reorganization that Peter
Drucker predicted in 1993.
Every few hundred years in Western Civilization, there occurs a sharp transformation
. . . Within a few short decades, society rearranges itself - its worldview;
its basic values; its social and political structure; its arts; its key institutions.
Fifty years later, there is a new world, and the people born can't even imagine
the world in which their grandparents live and into which their own parents
were born.
We are currently living through just such a transformation.
Conclusion
Thirteen is considered an unlucky number in American culture. Strangely, most
American buildings don't have a thirteenth floor. Both the income tax and the
Federal Reserve were established in 1913. The much-maligned Generation X is
the thirteenth born on American soil. It makes me wonder just what Dow 13K
will bring.
Getting back to the theme with which I began this piece, Dow 13K is a kind
of sleight of hand, brought about by inflation, and distracting the majority
of people from the true condition of the economy. Inflation makes the economy
less prosperous, not more. If the younger generation is any indication, prepare
yourselves, for the times indeed they are a changin'.
The way that is bright seems dull;
The way that leads forward seems to lead backward;
The way that is even seems rough.
The highest virtue is like the valley;
The sheerest whiteness seems sullied;
Ample virtue seems defective;
- Tao Te Ching 41