Saturday, November 21st, 2009

Boomer Trends Coming to an End

Jun 6th, 2008 | By Bill Bonner | Category: Politics & Economics

Being in the right place at the right time is far more important than brains. Luck provides better investment returns than talent. Too bad. Because our luck seems to be running out.

George Soros says the great credit expansion that was born with the baby boomers…and has lasted as long as we have…is now over. And this week comes word that the “end of abundance” is here too. That’s what it said on page nine of Monday’s Financial Times. And then, Bo Diddley died.

All the palmy trends of the boomer generation seem to be coming to an end.

Naturally, the world’s leaders are worried. They gathered in Rome this week for the customary monkeyshines. Even Robert Mugabe – who is banned from traveling in Europe – put on a false mustache so he could dine out on the Via Veneto, leaving his lieutenants in Harare to beat and starve Zimbabwean voters. Poor Mugabe. Goebbels would have gotten a warmer reception at a meeting of Jewish orphans.

At 84, Mr. Mugabe is almost living proof of Haeckel’s biogenetic law. It maintains that the history of the individual rehearses the history of the species. In Mugabe’s long life, from prison cell to presidential palace, he is the history of revolution…a Kerensky and a Stalin… the liberation struggle’s saint and its monster, too…all in one. To black Africans he is a big disappointment. To whites he is proof that Ian Smith was right all along. When Ian Smith left the top man role in Rhodesia, the country was the ‘bread basket of Africa’ with a currency as strong as the pound. Now it is a basket case whose peoples’ bones stick out and whose dollars are already as worthless as a campaign promise.

But everything follows the same laws – from embryo to corpse…from boom to bust…from seed to fruit to rot…nothing escapes, neither an individual, an empire, a species, nor a market.

This is not the first time in our lifetimes that the world has seen this kind of show. In the ’70s, Paul Ehrlich, like Malthus before him, foresaw a crowded, hungry world. In his popular book, “The Population Bomb,” he said hundreds of millions of people would starve to death. This was a world in which England couldn’t even exist; he said it would disappear by the year 2000. He was wrong about that. He was wrong about a lot of things. Julian Simon challenged him, arguing that a free economy always reduces real prices. On September 29th, 1980, the two made a famous bet – on whether the prices for 5 basic metals – chromium, copper, nickel, tin and tungsten – would actually go down, inflation adjusted, in the following ten years – despite population growth. What happened? Simon won. On the 29th of September 1990, the prices of all five were lower. Ehrlich settled up with a check for $576.07.

In theory, Simon will always win a bet like that; competition and technology always force prices down. But Ehrlich wasn’t wrong about everything. And Simon wasn’t right about everything. While one believed the weight of numbers would send the world to Hell…the other had a god-like faith that the market would always save it, guided by an invisible hand to progress and prosperity. But while Simon is right in theory, the invisible hand is not always the gentle paw that he imagines; it does not necessarily call out for more booze just because the crowd gets thirsty. In fact, sometimes it vanishes altogether, allowing a Mugabe to ruin a country…instead of permitting the free market to build it up.

Simon had the good luck to make his bet at the beginning of a major decline in commodity prices. Oil, for example, hit an all-time high over $100 a barrel, in current dollars, in December 1979. Ten years later, it was trading near $30. And by 1998, the price had fallen to $10. Had he made his bet ten years earlier or ten years later, he probably would have lost.

Back to the raw facts facing the Roman holidaymakers: Over their plates of crespelle all fiorentina, delegates will learn that high food prices are putting millions of people on the verge of starvation. Then, as they wash down their peposo with a tide of Barolo or Chianti Classico, they will reflect on how this came to be. The “green revolution,” someone will mention, seems to have run its course. (Out of politeness or imbecility, no one will mention the Fed’s easy money policies.) Ehrlich’s population bomb never exploded, they might come to believe, because irrigation, selective breeding, and the use of petroleum-based products greatly improved farm productivity.

But now, the green revolution has turned brown. It is as mature as the credit cycle…or Robert Mugabe himself. The water is running out. Opposition to bio-engineering is growing. And petro-chemical inputs are both less effective and much more expensive than they used to be. Result? In 1961, crop yields grew by 10% per year. Lately, they’ve increased less than 1% per year.

Meanwhile, in 1970, there was about 1 acre of arable land on the surface of the planet for every pair of feet. But the feet have multiplied – just like Erhlich said they would – from a bit over 3 billion people to more than 6 billion; and now the species is expanding like sub-prime debt. Just look at a chart. Human population looks just like the NASDAQ in ‘99 or oil in ‘08. This bubble-like population explosion, along with urbanization, highways, pollution, desertification and so forth, has cut the amount of farmland per person in half. Meanwhile, the number of people bellying up to the bar continues to grow by 11% per year – more than 10 times faster than crop yields.

Everyone wants a drink; but there’s only so much beer on tap. Who knows? This may be a good time to short the whole damned race.

Enjoy your weekend,

Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning

Editor’s Note: Don’t forget – you can hear Bill speak at this year’s Agora Financial Investment Symposium in Vancouver, British Columbia. This year’s theme is “View from the Peak: Seeking Profits in a time of Risk and Scarcity” – and it’s your first look at investment opportunities, global market concerns, and the best investment bets across the globe.

The Symposium takes place July 22nd and July 25th, 2008…but tickets are sure to sell out, so secure your spot today by clicking here for all the details:

Agora Financial Investment Symposium – July 22-25

Bill Bonner is the founder and editor of The Daily Reckoning. He is also the author, with Addison Wiggin, of the national best sellers Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st Century and Empire of Debt: The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis.

Bill’s latest book, Mobs, Messiahs and Markets: Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance and Politics, written with co-author Lila Rajiva, is available now by clicking here:

Mobs, Messiahs and Markets

Source: Boomer Trends Coming to an End


AdvertisementThe 3 stocks you'll need to bank as much as 19,000% on the new Gas Rush

Ballooning crude prices and shifting energy technologies have pushed the world to the brink of a global rush on natural gas. Here are the 3 petro-companies one ace analyst predicts are poised to cash in the most — including one that recent history proves could quickly yield 190-fold gains. Get all the details on these companies, and the maverick who recommends them, right here...



Tags: , , , , , , , ,

By Bill Bonner

Related Articles



About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning and three best-selling books, Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving The Soft Depression of the 21st Century, Empire of Debt: The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis and Mobs, Messiahs and Markets..

See All Posts by This Author



The Daily Reckoning offers a "uniquely refreshing" perspective on the global economy, investing and the ability to live well in uncertain times. You will learn what you can expect from today's markets and how to prosper in the face of uncertainty.

See All Posts from This Publication

Leave Comment