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Lessons from The Great Depression The risks of gambling in speculative frenzies and depending on serial asset bubbles continuing forever are easily observable, yet few act to reduce these risks. Longtime correspondent Ishabaka recently shared key takeaways from a classic on-the-ground account of The Great Depression in the U.S.:, The Great Depression, a Diary. Another reader reminded me that The Great Depression was global, and occurred earlier that 1929 in other nations and had equally (or even more) calamitous consequences elsewhere. That said, humans are running Wetware 1.0 everywhere, so it's likely that many of these lessons are applicable to the collapse of speculative asset bubbles in other economies and eras--for instance, the global economy's Everything Bubble of 2023. Here are Ishabaka's key takeaways from the book: Mr. Roth was a lawyer in Youngstown, Ohio - a steel mill town, and near Weirton, West Virginia where I worked for two years. He kept a diary from 1929 through the entire Depression. He seems an intelligent guy who sort of drove himself crazy trying to figure out economics and investment timing. Some of the lessons are timeless:
Most salient take-home points for me are: 1. diversify 2. nobody is good at predicting the market - doesn't stop anyone and his uncle from trying though 3. avoid margin - that's what really ruined people in 1929 - a lot of people were investing in stocks using 25% margin i.e they borrowed 75% of their investment. Recurrent themes: investment manias keep happening, despite everything that has gone before. Many people who owned stocks that went down a lot would have been OK eventually, except they bought on margin and were ruined. The best performing investments during the Depression were government bonds (many corporations stopped paying interest on their bonds) and annuities. What I call the "Enron Effect" - people put all their money in one stock - generally a corporation in their home town that was doing well, when things got bad they were ruined - lost work and stock crashed - probably would have been survivable if they were diversified. Politicians don't get elected and re-elected for fiscal prudence - they get elected and re-elected for printing money, having the government go into debt, and handing out free stuff - sound familiar? Back then Roth was horrified that the federal deficit hit $47 billion in 1940. Haha! Thank you, Ishabaka for the summary of timeless takeaways. I would emphasize two: Fewer bad things can happen if you're debt-free. Margin is debt backed by collateral. A mortgage is margin, too, debt backed the collateral of the house and land. All such debt has an inherent risk: the value of the collateral may drop below the debt owed on thr asset. When the debt is called, i.e. repayment demanded (or cash must be paid to lower the debt to the current value of the collateral), the borrower either pays up in cash or the asset is forfeited. As noted, debts become feather-light in hyper-inflation, which is why banks won't let hyper-inflation be the "solution". Germany was under geopolitical pressure to pay its external debts to the victors of World War I, which was the ultimate source of the central government deciding hyper-inflation was the only "solution" within reach. This is why many expect asset deflation to occur, i.e. asset bubbles will pop.Central banks will avoid generating hyper-inflation because: 1) geopolitics (destroying the nation's currency has virtually no upside and catastrophic downsides); 2) the central bank exists to protect the interests of banks, and hyper-inflation wipes out debts, loans and banking; 3) th risks of political disorder skyrocket: favoring the already-wealthy and capital is tolerated as long as the middle and working classes feel they're prospering or have hope of prospering. But when the middle and working classes are wiped out, favoring the wealthy (the default setting of the status quo everywhere) triggers blowback that very quickly goes nonlinear, i.e. chaotic overthrow of the status quo. The risks of gambling in speculative frenzies and depending on serial asset bubbles continuing forever are easily observable, yet few act to reduce these risks. The easiest way to minimize these risks is stop going to the casino. Another is to ask how dependent we are on the serial asset bubble economy: if "The Everything Bubble" pops and cannot be re-inflated, what will the likely consequences be for our household? Another is to need less, waste less of everything: income, energy, food, etc.: get lean. Another is to invest in what we personally control. Owning a productive plot of land with a livable micro-house and no debt is lower risk than owning a grand house with an even grander mortgage and property tax bill. Owning 100% of tools and assets that generate essentials of fundamental value to human life provides us agency and control of how best to deploy those assets. Being dependent on central bank "saves" of speculative bubbles and assets held 10,000 miles away that may be expropriated by other governments is the acme of uncontrollable risk.
At readers' request, I've prepared a biography. I am not confident this is the right length or has the desired information; the whole project veers uncomfortably close to PR. On the other hand, who wants to read a boring bio? I am reminded of the "Peanuts" comic character Lucy, who once issued this terse biographical summary: "A man was born, he lived, he died." All undoubtedly true, but somewhat lacking in narrative.
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