Thursday, December 23, 2010
Economics Is Simple ... The Fat Cats Just Want You to Think It's Complicated So That You Won't Demand Change
Economics and finance seem like complicated topics, and so many people "leave it to the experts".
However, these topics are actually simple, and if people hear a clear explanation, they will be able to form an opinion about our current economy and the government's response to economic challenges.
It will be easy to understand the economy if we think of money as water. Links showing that the analogy holds true with the economy are provided for convenience.
Let's imagine that there is only a limited amount of fresh, drinkable water in the U.S. (which is true), and that a handful of say 5 big water companies control the rights to 90% of the water in the country.
Let's further imagine that the water companies - wishing to make more money - expand beyond their traditional water business, into mining for oil and gas. Indeed, the oil and gas mining business becomes so lucrative that it soon dwarfs the size of their actual water business. They keep their traditional water business, but soon also become the largest polluters in the country.
They dig for oil and gas right around where the aquifiers are where they pump water. Unfortunately, they are greedy and cut corners, and end up polluting all of the aquifiers with toxic crude petroleum compounds.
The water companies loudly tell the government that this pollution was "unexpected" and simply a temporary "water-flow" problem. They jump up and down and yell that - unless the government "bails them out" by giving them more water - the entire water distribution system in the U.S. will fail, and Americans will suffer a water shortage and severe thirst.
Advocates for the American people argue that the big water companies should be forced to clean up the aquifiers. They point out that we will have a drastic water shortage unless these water supplies - which constitute the lion's share of fresh water in the U.S. - are cleaned, and that the water companies must be forced to stop mining for oil and gas right next to the water supplies so that it won't happen again. They also demand that the government distribute the water in its emergency strategic water supply directly to the people, as that will directly address the problem of thirst and water scarcity.
They point out that drilling for oil is a wholly-separate business from pumping and selling drinking water, and demand that the water companies sell their petrol business.
They point out that if the costs of cleaning up the aquifier are honestly tallied, the water companies are bankrupt. They say this the problem is not a "temporary" water shortage, but that the big water companies are actually insolvent, and that their entire business model is flawed.
And they note that the big water companies are not as efficient at extracting water from aquifiers as smaller water companies, but that the big companies are getting so big that they re driving the smaller companies out of business.
The big water companies respond that they're "too big to fail", that they're doing fine and only experiencing a very temporary "liquidity crisis" shortage of water, that they just need a little temporary help to get the water flowing to America again, and that they'll drill safely for oil and gas and that so new rules are needed.
The White House and Congress (having received a lot of contributions from the big water companies), and the Federal Water Reserve - a quasi-governmental agency owned entirely by the big 5 water companies - decide not to crack down on the big 5 water companies. Instead, they exempt them from pollution laws by relaxing reporting requirements so that the companies don't have to report how much oil and gas pollution has really gotten into the aquifiers. Indeed, the government let's the big companies write the rules for a series of highly-publicized "stress tests" which are simply a P.R. ploy to reassure the public that the water is safe and the companies sound, even though neither is true.
The government and Federal Water Reserve also buy all of the polluted water in the aquifiers at 100% of the normal price for clean water (and used it for security for cheap loans to the big water companies), and that water is stockpiled in the bowels of the Federal Water Reserve building (even though the high petrol content makes the water highly flammable, and thus a fire hazard). So instead of the water companies having to pay for their toxic pollution problems themselves, the government takes care of it ... at the taxpayers' expense.
The government also taps into it's emergency water supply, and gives all of the water to the big 5 companies to help them through their "temporary" water shortage. Americans are starting to get thirsty, but the big 5 don't sell to average Americans. Instead, they use most of the water in their oil and gas mining operations (it takes a lot of water sprayed on the rocks being drilled to keep the dust down). The big 5 sell some of the water to fat cats who already have lots of fresh water in private ponds and storage tanks, and stockpile some of it. Somehow the water given to the big companies never trickles down to the public. The average American on "Main Street" gets thirstier and thirstier.
The government also props up the big water companies by giving them all sorts of subsidies, incentives and business opportunities which guarantee that they'll make money. The government offers none of these to smaller water companies, and actually penalizes smaller water companies by charging them extra fees to pay for the misbehavior of the big companies.
The American people become thirstier and thirstier, and without water to grow crops, put in their cars' radiators, or even wash their hands, America becomes poorer and living standards decline.
The big water companies try to make the situation seem extremely complicated, so that only the "experts" can understand it. By making things seem complex, the American people won't feel competent to demand changes. Indeed, they even promote academics who are trained to ignore the real world and instead focus on highly complex - and unrealistic - models.
But the situation is actually simple. Things haven't improved, and won't improve until:
- The government gets back to the real system - that is, actually delivering water - instead of ignoring water and stressing the artificial paper profits or oil mining operations of the big water companies
- The big water companies are broken up, so that smaller water companies focusing just on H20 can step up to find clean water and sell it to normal Americans
- The big companies are forced to clean up the polluted water, and the illegal mining operations of the big companies are prosecuted
Simple, isn't it?
3 comments:
→ Thank you for contributing to the conversation by commenting. We try to read all of the comments (but don't always have the time).
→ If you write a long comment, please use paragraph breaks. Otherwise, no one will read it. Many people still won't read it, so shorter is usually better (but it's your choice).
→ The following types of comments will be deleted if we happen to see them:
-- Comments that criticize any class of people as a whole, especially when based on an attribute they don't have control over
-- Comments that explicitly call for violence
→ Because we do not read all of the comments, I am not responsible for any unlawful or distasteful comments.
Yes, simple. But politicians are in the cowardly (and often corrupt and complicit) attitude of the mice of the story: who hangs the bell from the cat? And none dares and the fat cat keeps running the depressive show.
ReplyDeleteBtw, it sounds as a metaphor for banks.
GW, your analogy by metaphor would make Plato proud, well done. By the way, Good Will and Wishes for You and Yours this special Christmas of 2010.
ReplyDeleteOn the subject of water, I would like to draw your attention to Obama and the Law of the Sea Treaty. LOST is one of those backdoor Bush/Obama administration maneuvers that are not reported by the Main Stream Media.
Here is an introduction link by Cassandra Anderson on LOST as reported in Patrick Wood’s August Review. Patrick Woods is one of my favorite diligent researchers, modern thinkers and author on paramount economic fact.
http://www.augustreview.com/news_commentary/treaties/law_of_the_sea_redux_20100804158/#
When I began investigating the Public Retirement Systems, the HOUSING BUBBLE was all in there as "debt." Then as people began to sue, it disappeared into pharmaceutical stocks. Prison stocks (Vanguard). GREEN was a well planned agenda. Check out people in the UK such as BRIAN GERRISH. Partners such as UNIFUND which is a money laundering operation set up by Israel, literally operated trade shows, at debt fairs. Attorneys would pledge a few cents on whatever the debt was alleged, then the attorney debt collectors would do what they do best - no law, indeed THE criminal class, why Obama was elected as a punk criminal who bought his law degree, like almost all that are in the housing bubble foreclosure mill biz. The judicial and our legal are criminals and so are the police. Whatever class of humans in America most prone to crime are basically in charge. The worst of the lot are in the judicial, thought, and tragically GOLDMAN SACHS is the management of the entirety of the Public Retirement System. NOAM CHOMSKY is who I heard about IBM, from. Our "MONEY" which is digital credit. So the owners of IBM digital money are who the cat is and the mice, well we are being played with and definitely eaten. That's the deal with the cat alright [BRILLIANT METAPHOR], the house cat as pet, love it all its life and then, human shrinks to smaller than the cat, and cat does what cat does. Human is now small and not the big caring, loving, human. Bye-bye human, always is with the cat when smaller meets its nature.
ReplyDelete