I have lost count of the number of people who have written
to me after a blog post. “David, please
make it simple. I have to read your blog
with one eye on the screen and the other in a Thesaurus or on Wikipedia.” I don’t know when we were taught to be
intimidated by money in our society but I’m pretty sure that it was not
accidental. Create a system of
indenture; co-opt every human endeavor within that system; and, use terminology
embedded in small font and, voila, you’ve got slaves to the celebrated illusion
of capitalism that has never been truly and transparently attempted on the
planet.
I would suspect that the first encounter most of us had with
money was the “responsibility” laced allowance in which parents paid children
for doing basic household chores. As
early as the 1830’s, the Progressives encouraged parents to give their children
money to teach “fiscal restraint” and “charity”. Behaviorists advocated the habitual
enticement in the form of allowances or pocket money to induce socially
acceptable behavior. In post-Depression
America and post-War Britain, an estimated 50% or more of children of white
collar workers received allowances while only 15% of their blue-collar or
agriculture peers had any such experience.
Churches got in on the act by including charity collections in Sunday
schools and children’s gatherings placing the expectation on children to be in
a position to adopt the practice of tithing.
This religious tax, once meant for the sponsorship of clergy and relief
funds, was long ago co-opted by the institutional patronage required to support
real estate and corporate programs operating under the moniker of religion.
Ironically, during this first introduction to money, none of
us were told what money was. We knew
that it could be granted or withheld capriciously. We knew that it was “important” and with it
we must be “responsible”. But these
constructs were devoid of any explanation.
In adolescence, the idea of working for money was introduced – in same
cases out of familial support and in some cases to enable greater autonomy of
behavior. With money, one could
individuate: go to the movies; get
clothes that were more to one’s liking; gain status as a sustainer in a family;
etc. At no point was money
explained. And then, for many, the first
sizable encounter with large sums of money came with education and with that education
– debt. Still no education! No real knowledge of how monetary systems
work (or not). Just the certainty that,
having been invited into debt, “getting a job” would be a necessity to become a
responsible adult. How’s that for
insanity? To get an education to get a
good job, someone has to be indebted – student, parent, or society – for which
an obligation of indenture is explicitly formed – get a job! Besides being circular in its illogic, it’s
no wonder that I could sit this week with a group of women in D.C. who, at
mid-life, had little to no actual financial literacy despite being highly
educated. What they knew was that they needed
money to sponsor their lives and their causes but they had no idea what
they actually were asking for with that blind insistence.
Make it simple, Dave!
O.K. Most of you are
wearing your chains modestly well but you are slaves!
As a “responsible adult” you buy life insurance. Why?
So that your family can pay off your debts when you’re dead. Really, that’s why most of you buy it. And many Americans buy term life insurance
(insurance that is only good while you’re paying premiums and accrues no
terminal value). In data collected by
the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, in 2010 alone, $1.1
trillion in term life insurance was bound.
At the same time, $112 billion in credit life insurance was in
force. The average life insurance policy
in the U.S. is about $160,000. With
funeral costs running about $8,500, this leaves the balance of benefit for, you
guessed it, the debt you didn’t pay off in life.
As a “responsible adult” you invest in real estate. O.K., kind of. What you really do is attach your labor
indenture to a contract that flows much of that money to the bank (oh, and did
I mention that the bank required you to get credit insurance?). By the time you pay off your mortgage – a diminishing
prospect in the current refinancing regime – you will have paid more to the
bank than the real estate was worth by as much as 150% (or more). So who won?
As a “responsible adult” you will put money into
savings. Your bank – not you – will have
your money insured for their benefit through the much
misunderstood FDIC scheme. And you will
be paid a fraction of what your bank will charge for the use of your
money. And when they use it, they don’t
use it. They use it ten times over. That’s right, your dollar deposit gets to be
used by others 10 times at the interest payment the bank imposes. You get paid once. They get paid 3-5 times what they pay you 10
times over. Who won?
As a “responsible adult” you will donate money to charities
and non-profits. Good news here,
right? Well, let’s not get too
excited. About 39% of what you give for
others actually goes to others – just not the “others” you thought you were
helping. It actually is going to
administer the charity.
Make it simple, Dave!
O.K. Between taxes (40%), credit-related fees (25%) assuming
you’re living among the top 20% of fiscally responsible citizens, and “charity”
(5%), your existence is a majority indenture to the interests of others. And if you’re capable of using the remaining
30% wisely – for things like eating, being mobile, and communicating – you’ll
put 5-10% into “investments” which, at the moment do not earn enough to make up
for the management fees you’re being charged.
In short, this whole racket, from start to finish is a mess. You’re in the middle of it. And the system is structurally unstable
meaning that, when central banks decide to stop flooding the market with money,
you’ll run the risk of inflation (rapidly rising prices), increasing taxes
(governments doing less service for more of your money), and highly
volatile investment markets (think about the mid-June equity swoon when Ben
Bernanke said he might relax
the Federal Reserve’s intervention).
Make it simple, Dave!
Here’s the little problem.
The simple part is that the current taxation-state, indebted government,
indentured labor routine has effectively enslaved the populace across much of
the planet. The average informed citizen
knows that they’re part of the predation but doesn’t want to confront that
reality. The majority of humanity is
chasing the illusion of fiscal footing and, in so doing, doesn’t take any time
to reflect on the structure that is in place to insure that they do not
progress. Even elite capital market
professionals, when asked basic questions like: what is a derivative contract?;
how is solvency of government sponsored enterprises truly calculated?; what is
the real capital exposure measured by rating agencies and what does ‘investment
grade’ actually mean?; can neither answer nor clearly articulate where they’d
go to find the answer. The hard part –
the part that defies ‘making it simple’ – is the fierce defense of the system
of predation mounted by humanity – the prey – when they are confronted with the
fact that they’re enslaved. And that
one, that core Stockholm Syndrome paradox, is the one that defies
simplicity.
These posts are simple.
They are direct. And they’re not
written in cartoon or Crayon. That’s
because you, the reader, are intelligent.
Co-opted, exhausted, but intelligent.
And with any luck, you’ll make the simple choice. To continue to be more informed. And with that information, choose to
disengage from the utilities of your indenture.