BY CHARLES HUGH SMITH,
 

This is why denormalization is an extinction event for much of our high-cost, high-complexity, heavily regulated economy.

A collapse of major chunks of the economy is widely viewed as “impossible” because the federal government can borrow and spend unlimited amounts of money because the Federal Reserve can create unlimited amounts of money: the government borrows $1 trillion by selling $1 trillion in Treasury bonds, the Fed prints $1 trillion dollars to buy the bonds. Rinse and repeat to near-infinity.
 
 
With this cheery wind at their backs, conventional pundits are predicting super-rebounds in auto sales and other consumption as consumers weary of Covid-19 and anxious to blow their recent savings borrow and spend like no tomorrow.
 
 
As for the 30+ million unemployed–they don’t matter. Conventional analysts write them off because they weren’t big drivers of “growth” anyways–they didn’t have big, secure salaries and ample wealth/credit lines.
 
 
What this happy confidence in near-infinite money-printing and V-shaped spending orgies overlooks is what I’ve termed denormalization, an implosion of the Old Normal so complete that the expected minor adjustment to a New Normal is no longer possible.
 
 
We’re already in a post-normal world because the expansion of globalization and financialization needed to fuel the Old Normal has reversed into contraction. This reversal is an extinction event for all sectors and institutions with high fixed costs: air travel, resort tourism, healthcare, higher education, local government services, etc. because their fixed cost structures are so high they are no longer financially viable if they’re operating at less than full capacity.Â
 
 
Only getting back to 70% of previous capacity, revenues, tax receipts, etc. dooms them to collapse.
 
 
And there’s no way to cut their fixed costs without fatally disrupting all the sectors that are dependent on them.
 
 
Most operational costs are mandated and cannot be reduced: union contracts, property taxes, regulatory burdens, tax accounting, debt service, employee healthcare costs, minimum wages, etc.  Other essential expenses such as commercial rent are difficult to renegotiate lower, as the landlord also has the same high fixed costs and any reduction comes directly out of his pocket.
 
 
A good example of this collapse dynamic is a restaurant with high fixed costs.  It can’t survive financially at 50% of capacity because it can’t reduce its expenses by 50%. The owners can reduce staff but there are operational limits on this: even if there are only 10 customers rather than 100, you still need a kitchen and wait staff. Stripped to the bone, the owners might be able to reduce costs by 15% to 20%. In other words, if business rebounds to 80% of pre-pandemic levels, the restaurant can survive but not generate any profit.
 
 
It might survive at 70% if the owners do double shifts, but that isn’t sustainable. Eventually the overworked owners burn out and collapse.
 
 
Reducing costs is even more difficult for institutions such as hospitals, colleges and government agencies. Most of these institutions are unable to cut more than a few percent of expenses; a 10% reduction in expenses would require the closure of entire departments and eliminating core services.
 
 
Denormalization is an interlocking series of self-reinforcing feedbacks. People have less money and more insecurity, so they spend less. Those living off the fixed costs paid by the private sector (landlords, local government, insurers, etc.) can’t survive on less than their full measure, and this inability to absorb massive cuts causes everyone in the food chain above them to collapse, which eventually triggers their own collapse.
 
 
The restaurant can’t cut any of the big-ticket expenses: rent, taxes, wages, benefits, healthcare, tax accounting, insurance, etc. It can only lay off some staff and reduce its purchase of ingredients. Those variable costs are too small a percentage of total expenses to be consequential.
 
 
The restaurants collapse first, and since there’s no way anyone can afford to pay current rents and survive on a shrinking customer base, the landlord goes bust next. These collapses cut local government tax revenues. Each of these reductions means everyone down the food chain– enterprises that depended on restaurants, landlords and local government contracts–lose a critical chunk of their own revenues. Since there are no replacement sources of revenues, these collapse as the line of dominoes topple.
 
 
Few sectors or institutions have any buffers. They’ve been running at full capacity or higher and burning every dollar to keep from imploding. As a result, any deep cuts are extinction events: no income from college football means eliminating entire sports down the food chain. There is no stair-step down, there’s only binary triage: save this program as is or eliminate it entirely.
 
 
Federal/Fed subsidies don’t fully replace what’s been lost. Giving the restaurant owner a subsidy to pay rent and stay open doesn’t mean the restaurant has enough customers to keep staffing and purchases at pre-crisis levels, and giving consumers subsidies such as Universal Basic Income (UBI) doesn’t mean these households won’t decide to save some of that subsidy rather than spend every dime, as the zeitgeist has shifted from complacent confidence to uncertainty: any subsidy is subject to change, as it is ultimately a political decision that can be amended or cancelled.
 
 
The production of goods and services stagnates as demand declines. When money-printing expands while goods and services contract, the result is inflation–the purchasing power of the newly issued money declines as too much money starts chasing a pool of goods and services that’s shrinking as small businesses dry up and blow away and the dominoes fall down the supply chain of dependent industries.
 
 
As the newly issued subsidy-money buys fewer goods and services, demands for increased subsidies rise. The Universal Basic Income (UBI) payment doubles from $1,000 to $2,000 a month, but it still only buys $750 of goods and services as the declining purchasing power of the newly printed money accelerates.
 
 
This expansion of money as the pool of goods and services contracts further accelerates the loss of purchasing power in a self-reinforcing feedback.
 
 
I have long admired John Michael Greer’s concept of catabolic collapse, a dynamic in which the institution is forced to downsize some of its costly complexity but it restabilizes at a lower energy state. I now think this might be overly optimistic.
 
 
 
 
A stair-step down to consequentially lower complexity and cost structures is simply not practical in much of the real world as fixed costs are mandated by regulations or impossible to cut for operational reasons. (For example, reducing a fleet of airliners by half doesn’t necessarily translate into an ability to reduce aircraft maintenance facilities and staff by the same percentage.)
 
 
Airports, airlines, cruise ships, sport franchises, resorts, malls, local government services, venues, theaters, hospitals, universities and so on can’t reconfigure at 50% of previous complexity and capacity. Their fixed costs and mandates simply don’t allow for a 50% reduction in complexity and revenues.
 
 
This is why denormalization is an extinction event for much of our high-cost, high-complexity, heavily regulated economy. Subsidizing high costs doesn’t stop the dominoes from falling, as subsidies are not a substitute for the virtuous cycle of re-investment.
 
 
The Fed’s project of lowering the cost of capital to zero doesn’t generate this virtuous cycle; all it does is encourage socially useless speculative predation as Tim Cook et al. sell Apple bonds in order to buy back more shares of Apple, further enriching Tim Cook et al. This is not a virtuous cycle, it is the denormalization of what remains of free markets, which require capital be priced by markets, not central banks.
 
 
Collapse isn’t “impossible,” it’s unavoidable.
There was no New Normal for the dinosaurs. A few winged species survived and evolved into the birds of today, but that is by no stretch of the imagination a New Normal that included all the other dinosaur species. For them, denormalization meant extinction.
 
 
De-Normalization: everything that was normal is gone and will not be replaced with some new normal.
 
 

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4 COMMENTS

  1. And who “wins” in these scenarios? Let me answer that, because you’re probably already thinking it: the “elite wealthy scum”, whom triggered the whole mess to start with. Yes, sort of, they will use their unlimited wealth to go on a world shopping spree, buying up everything their minuscule tiny shrinking hearts, desire, attempting to continue the elite ruling class that own literally everything and anything, they,, felt, worth investing in… All liquidated assets will get absorbed, either at fire sale prices, or at scrap price, from buildings, to real estate to shipping companies to transportation, to well, you name it. If it’s for sale, they,, and only they, those whom manipulate every aspect of government, policy, and economy, “win” but, what do they win exactly? A world built on money, built for money, yet, a world where they have all the money, in a world that will no longer, use,, money, because “it will have no value to the common man” – common sense right, they will be all powerful and yet, powerless…
    I cannot foresee how exactly (without positive military reorganization and or ET assistance) how with shifting timelines, this will all work out but, this world must be changed. We all knew it was coming, we knew it for for decades because they began laying the groundwork for this hundreds of years ago, manipulating currencies, incorporating assets, we all saw it coming, there were warnings even in the most main stream media, it was ‘possible’,, and now, here it is.

    If this collapse occurs as predicted in this article, it is ‘we the people’ (the slaves that worked our butts off at minimum wage for those elite scum, enriching them beyond imagination, whom have little or nothing to show for it), whom will be forced by a money driven world out of control, back to what is important when the money runs out. Forced back to the basic, core values ie; production and procurement of basic necessities like food water clothing and shelter, that alone, will alter the entire paradigm, of society.
    It was once said, “all we have to fear, is fear itself”. Don’t listen, to the fear porn, be proactive, take care of your, your family’s, and if you have abundance or ability, in any core value area, help your neighbors with their needs, go ask them what they need, how can you help them, especially as things get worse in the money-world.
    When ‘civilization’ collapses, if you can grow/can food, create electricity, have abundant clean water, sew clothing, if you have horse and maybe wagon to help provide deliveries when gasoline becomes too expensive, if you have some skill at making things, whatever your skill, or abundance or ability like fixing roof’s or whatever it might be, barter it, and just give your time, to help when you can, however you can, with your neighbors. Create local barter systems, an equal, hour for hour worked barter, locally. You work for a hour, you get a hour credit, you can then use against an hour of someone else’s work. In this time of difficulty Community is our strength. Money was the basis of this insane collapsing world, and ultimately, now or later, it is, going the way of the dinosaur. We can go down with it, or we can change, and ‘Prepare for Change’, indeed,

    It’s coming time to look at the necessities of life, not selfishly hoarding as the elite scum that created this mess but, as individual souls, working collectively, giving and serving others, because in the end, all we have in the world, and all that matters,, is the good deeds, we’ve done in life. Let the elite scum come to their end with the world’s possessions only to find, they cannot take it with them, and all that wealth means nothing in the end, that they are as the bible calls them ‘the chaff’, ie; the “inhuman garbage” of this world.
    While those whom have done their best, those whom cared, helped, gave, created, the humankind, worthwhile and true, they are the golden wheat, the harvest worthy, these are the best of humanity, that will create the new world, truly a new world order based in human to human relationships and caring for one another. Remember, once we were all different tribes, now, we are one tribe, the human tribe.

    That’s the truth, and It’s time to decide, what your role, and your remembrance, perhaps even your karma after this life, will be. What will your part be, in this new world, will you help shape it, or be inhuman garbage, that will be left on the refuse pile.
    That’s my thoughts on this.

    • Thanks, Tye. Your concepts align with the basic truths of what is happening and ahead for humans on Earth. Already living in the manner you suggest, I am alert for others of like mind with whom to form a community spirit. It’s always encouraging to read opinions expressing these thoughts, bringing hope and light into the present upheaval. Thanks again for speaking up. Lorisa

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