Friday, June 17, 2011

A Good Summary of the Troubles in the US

I came across the follow passage from this month's edition of The Dines Letter, published by the legendary investor James Dines.  It provides summary of the challenges facing the US in the coming years, and is the basis for much of my investment think:

A richly-endowed America drained the bulk of its inherited reserves of
crude oil long ago, along with many of its other resources, well ahead of the
rest of the world. Now, with its work force priced uncompetitively higher than
hungrier labor in world markets, it is basically out of business and in
forebodingly deepening trouble. Why is that not more widely evident? By
historic accident the United States owns the world’s "reserve currency" such
that it can print as much money as it chooses, which we described clearly in
our Goldbug! book.
America can still use its great intellectual resources to create games and
social websites, much as a comparably hollowed-out England became the
world’s balladeers (exemplified by Beatle mania) after World War II. But
every action has consequences, and the racket of just printing money and
borrowing has never ended well. America scurries about to spend its wealth
on wars – justified or not – and nobody inquires as to where those dollars
wind up. Worse, to crown the spending, America additionally borrows over
$40 for every $100 it spends, a clearly unsustainable folly.
Unlike George Friedman's more optimistic analysis of the prospects for the country in the next decade, Mr. Dines is decidedly less enthusiastic about his country's future.

In the same article, he also predicts that we will soon see the end of free markets as nations scramble for the remaining resources of the world.  This line of thinking is similar to those of historian Harold James, who sees a general move towards state-directed capitalism, the type commonly practised in this part of the world.

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