economic

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I believe we are going to see ever intensifying recessionary and inflationary spiral. During the inflationary periods, Americans will experience higher prices. These prices will be caused by more money being created and disbursed into the market, with fewer products being produced to offset this new money. Government controls will expand, causing increased subsidies with fewer people contributing. Combined with the higher prices will be higher taxes.

During the recessions, more individuals will become unemployed as basic industries contract. Many of these people will be added to the government payrolls in an effort to appease those being hurt by the system. I believe we will develop what might be termed “shear economy.” In a shear economy, one segment will boom while another will suffer. Workers in the boom industries will be able to demand higher wages, while those in a lagging industry will be laid off. The unemployed will then demand compensation from the government, which will step in with subsidies, welfare and job supports, thus creating the need for more money to be put back into the system.

It is easy to envision shortages in industries involving fuel, food, and shelter. As other nations such as oil countries, demand higher levels of affluence for their people, we must begin to relinquish some of our affluence to compensate.

In this situation, more people will depend on the government for the answers—perhaps even a national hysteria in which the government is expected to make virtually every decision.

Pressure groups will chastise government leaders whenever they make wrong decisions. Consequently officials will become less prone to make any decisions, but when forced to act, they will be more likely to just treat the symptom to pacify the people, whatever the cost. During the recessions, they will spend all the money necessary to reverse the cycle. In inflationary spirals, leaders will try to appease the people by giving them something “for nothing.” The attitude will be to deal with whatever happens to exist at that time. It will become almost a necessity for the government to have total control of the money supply through some form of nationalization of the banking interests.

Will we ever have another great depression or collapse? I don’t know. But I do know that we are evolving into a new system, perhaps precipitated by a collapse. No matter what happens, we will have another “new deal”—one that people will ask for because of devastating problems (high prices, high unemployment, money almost worthless because of inflation and the prospect of a crime epidemic).

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These events should alarm economic decision-makers, because they verify that the highly publicized controls no longer work. The trend toward economic collapse—runaway inflation followed by major depression—seems irreversible.

Lack of fiscal discipline and sound management is partly responsible for the trend. These inadequacies reflect an economic system created by popularity. Politicians who make decisions based on what is popular rather than what is financially sound have virtually bankrupted us.

It is hard to visualize the kind of political climate necessary to reverse this trend.

Rather than working on a feasible solution to our problems, government officials quibble about which group should get the most handouts. They grant price supports to one group, unemployment benefits to another, and gratuities to many people who are undeserving. They provide grants to New England ski resorts because of insufficient snow one year, then support beaches in the south because of too much rain. They pay people not to grow products in a time of shortage, apply price supports to foods when they begin to drop and then complain of runaway inflation on these same products.

The Federal Reserve System cuts off credit to industries that are profitable, protesting that they should be more self-sufficient without credit, when for forty years the system promoted the use of nothing but credit. Nor is the “average” American guiltless either. Most families today live on the brink of disaster. The excessive use of personal and business credit has weakened the already shaky family structure. All of these factors contribute to an almost uncontrollable economy.

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