The modern financial system was developed to support the rapid
economic growth that took off about 200 years ago with the
phenomenal amounts of cheap energy made available through the
exploitation of fossil fuels. As a result, its viability is
completely dependent upon the continuation of that growth.
Unfortunately, the more recent fossil fuel discoveries, especially
for oil, have tended to have lower production levels than earlier
ones. In addition, greater amounts of energy are required to
extract the fossil fuels leading to less net energy available for
society. The Energy Return On Investment (EROI) for oil has fallen
from 30:1 in the 1970's to 10:1 today. Thus, newer energy finds
produce lower extraction rates and more of the energy provided is
offset by the energy used in the extraction processes. The result
has been economic stagnation or even contraction, with growth in
China and India etc. only possible due to the extensive use of
local coal reserves, and recession-induced drops in OECD country
energy use. Renewable sources of energy will not be able to expand
fast enough to replace the 87% of energy supplies provided by
fossil fuels, and apart from hydro and wind, tend to have very low
EROI rates. They are also critically dependent upon the cheap
energy infrastructure provided by fossil fuels. The phenomenal
amounts of path-dependent energy infrastructure will also greatly
inhibit any move away from fossil fuels.
Without continued economic growth there will not be the extra
output to fund loan interest payments, nor the revenue and profit
growth to support share price/earnings multiples. The financial
system acts as a time machine, creating asset prices based upon
perceptions of the future. As an increasing percentage of investors
come to accept the future reality of at best, financial asset
prices will fall to reflect a realistic future. The resulting crash
will remove the underpinnings of the banking, brokerage, mutual
fund, pension fund, and insurance industries. The comfortable
futures of many will be shown to have been based upon a mirage of
future growth that will not take place. With the financial system
acting as the critical coordination system of the global economy,
its crash will also intensify economic problems. Written by a
retired financial industry executive with over 25 years of
experience, this book describes how the crisis will affect
different regions and industries to help identify the career and
investment choices which may provide a relative safe harbour.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!