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The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS
If you
feel like things are rumbling out of control and that something big and
important is happening, well, then, you’re not alone. But what does
all of it mean for gold, for the dollar, for oil, for America? In fact,
is there more at stake than just the price of oil? Dan Denning
explores…
When
I got back from my excursion to the Far East in late 2004 and sat down
at my desk in London to write up the story, I emphasized three major
trends that would create danger and opportunity for investors. First,
the bull market in energy (oil, gas, electric, nuclear) was going to be
one of the longest and strongest you and I would see in our investment
lifetimes.
The
big drivers are the growth in demand from China and India. Since then,
of course, through the work of Whiskey & Gunpowder editor Byron
King, we’ve seen how Peak Oil - the exhaustion of all the world’s
cheap, easily recoverable oil - is driving up energy prices even higher
and faster than I thought, and also has complicated things
geopolitically.
Second,
the general rise of Asia into the developed world was causing huge
demographic and economic dislocations - and creating enormous investment
opportunities as Asian economies began to consume as well as produce, to
spend as well as save.
Third,
I wrote that the rise of the East was accompanied by the simultaneous
collapse of the ruling currency regime of the last 30 years, the dollar
standard. This last point is still so inconceivable to many people that
they refuse to entertain the possibility. Too much would have to change.
Too much wealth would be destroyed. Too many vacations would have to be
canceled. Yet the inexorable rise of gold shows that this revolution in
money is slowly but surely eroding the dollar’s status.
Iran
Nuclear Threat: Possible Effects
The
current situation with Iran doesn’t change any of those three main
trends. It accelerates them, however, and adds the dangerous new element
of nuclear holocaust to the table. Let’s be clear about one thing,
though: Even if Iran developed a nuclear device tomorrow, it would not
likely be the sort of thing they could put on a missile and fire off to
Tel Aviv…or Rome…or London. It would be a large, unwieldy thing that
they might be able to put on a jetliner. (Incidentally, Iran recently
announced the resumption of commercial flights to the United States.)
Still,
it’s not a secret anymore what Iran is trying to do. The question is,
can anyone stop it? Another question is does everyone really want to
stop it? I would argue that both China and Russia, though they might be
deeply uncomfortable with having a nuclear Iran, see it as an enormous
strategic blow to the United States and a key element of their
respective energy alliances with Iran. China and Russia, in other words,
are more than willing to let the world’s nuclear club expand.
Doubtless, they feel like they’d have some measure of control over
Iran, especially since both countries have helped Iran with its weapons
program. Whether they will have any control or not remains to be seen.
Let’s
leave aside all the speculating about if the United States or Israel can
or will attack Iran. I have no idea. Nobody does. In analyzing the whole
situation, I found it useful to head to the bookshelf and dust off a
copy of Paul Kennedy’s The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers: Economic
Change and Military Conflict from 1500–2000. I’m going to quote from
a few sections that I think help explain how what’s playing out across
the globe today is a result of both globalization and Peak Oil.
Unfortunately,
if we follow Kennedy’s analysis, it’s very bad news for America and
for Americans who fail to understand what’s motivating our main
economic and strategic competitors. Emphasis added is mine. In the
introduction, Kennedy writes:
“The
triumph of any one Great Power in this period, or the collapse of
another, has usually been the consequence of lengthy fighting by its
armed forces; but it has also been the consequence of the more or less
efficient utilization of the state’s productive economic resources in
wartime, and, further in the background, of the way in which that
state’s economy has been rising or falling relative to the other
leading nations, in the decades preceding the actual conflict. For that
reason, how a Great Power’s position steadily alters in peacetime is
as important to this study as how it fights in wartime.”
Iran
Nuclear Threat: The War on Terror
If
you date the war on terror to its beginnings, you could conceivably go
back to the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979–80. But let’s use Sept.
11 as our start date. Since that time, how efficient has the United
States been at using its productive economic resources? Not very, as I
have mentioned ad nauseam. That’s because America continues to consume
more than it produces. Debt has driven a boom in American consumption
right alongside a war that doesn’t seem to interrupt the daily life of
many Americans. If countries rise or fall based on the efficient use of
productive economic resources, then China, with its 9.9% growth, is
rising and America, with GM’s $8.6 billion loss last year, is not.
America has been falling relative to China and India for the last 10
years. Kennedy continues:
“The
relative strengths of the leading nations in world affairs never remain
constant, principally because of the uneven rate of growth among
different societies and of the technological and organizational
breakthroughs which bring greater advantage to once society than to
another. For example, the coming of the long-range gunned sailing ship
and the rise of the Atlantic trades after 1500 was not uniformly
beneficial to all the states of Europe - it boosted some much more than
others. In the same way, the later development of steam power and of the
coal and metal resources upon which it relied massively increased the
relative power of certain nations, and thereby decreased the relative
power of others.”
My
first essay for Whiskey & Gunpowder, “The Birth of Cultural Siege
Engines,” made the simple observation that nuclear proliferation would
alter the world’s political structure by making it nearly impossible
for one country to invade another. Such as it is, this might actually
reduce the incidence of war. It might also mean a very nasty but
realistic situation where dictators and tyrants are free to terrorize
their populations without fear of being toppled by invasion. After all,
King Jong Il is around because he has nuclear weapons. Saddam Hussein
will be executed sometime this year because he did not.
Iran
Nuclear Threat: Economic Strategy
In
historical context, nuclear weapons are the long-range gunships of the
Atlantic. They are the great military equalizers. With the technological
breakthroughs on the nuclear black market, you can expect more nations
to get them. In a strange way, their spread might also dilute their
leverage. Once everyone has them, there will be no urgency to get them.
Military competition will turn back to economic competition.
For
America, this means that we are less likely to be able to use our
military as a means to achieve our economic strategy. True, aircraft
carriers and long-range bombers still give America the unique ability to
project force anywhere in the world. But a nuclear weapon and the means
to deliver it, that’s really an army of one isn’t it? How well will
America compete now that its great growth is behind it? And what about
China and India? They will be boosted, in Kennedy’s terms, by the
proliferation of nuclear weapons to the extent that global competition
will be more economic than military. And of course, resource-rich
countries will enjoy the greatest rates of growth and have the largest
advantages of all:
“Once
their productive capacity was enhanced, countries would normally find it
easier to sustain the burdens of paying for large-scale armaments in
peacetime and of maintaining and supplying armies and fleets in wartime.
It sounds crudely mercantilistic to express it this way, but wealth is
usually needed to underpin military power, and military power is usually
needed to acquire and protect wealth.”
Here
we just find more somber questions for America. America’s productive
capacity is being systematically dismantled and shipped to China. If you
don’t make anything, how can you sell it? And if you can’t sell it,
what will you use to pay for your military? Without the means to
generate wealth, how will America maintain its power? By selling bonds
to our strategic adversaries? Come again?
In an
energy-scarce, nuclear-abundant world, the surest ticket to wealth, and
thereby to power, is energy. Those who have it - Russia, Iran, Venezuela
- have tremendous leverage - provided they can survive as nation-states.
Those who don’t - America, the United Kingdom, Western Europe - will
find themselves not only less wealthy but less powerful. The free ride
to power, luxury, and apathy that the Peak Oil age provided the West is
emphatically, undeniably over.
Kennedy
writes of this weakening of national power, “If, however, too large a
portion of the state’s resources is diverted from wealth creation and
allocated instead to military purposes, then that is likely to lead to a
weakening of national power over the longer term.” You might add that
if states’ resources and capital and their creative energies are
diverted and devoted to buying and selling houses and filling them with
trinkets bought on eBay, national power is weakened. The consumption
lifestyle to which America has grown addicted does not produce capital.
It does not produce wealth. It does not produce power:
“In
the same way, if a state overextends itself strategically - by, say, the
conquest of extensive territories or the waging of costly wars - it runs
the risk that the potential benefits from external expansion may be
outweighed by the great expense of it all - a dilemma which becomes
acute if the nation concerned has entered a period of relative economic
decline.”
If
there have been benefits to the war in Iraq, cheap oil is not one of
them. The war is not paying for itself with Iraqi oil exports. That war
is not paying for itself at all. It has become a major and costly
national undertaking, at just the time when America finds itself on the
wrong side of the wealth = energy = power equation and in the fight of
its economic life with rising powers India and China.
Kennedy
writes:
“The
strengths and the weaknesses of each of the leading powers are analyzed
relatively, in light of the broader economic and technological changes
affecting Western society as a whole, in order that the reader can
understand better the outcome of the many wars of this period.”
In
the last few years, we’ve seen how the broader “economic and
technological changes” of globalization are making the world more
competitive and changing social structures everywhere. Indeed, many of
the great social and economic institutions on which the postwar world
was built are falling like dominoes…GM, the pension system, the United
Nations, the dollar standard…the beat goes on. In fact, about the only
thing preventing this migration of wealth and power IS the dollar
standard.
It
allows America to fund its wars and consumption with a depreciating
currency. It is a tremendous advantage Kennedy does not ignore:
“Since
the cost of standing armies and national fleets had become horrendously
great by the early 18th century, a country which could create an
advanced system of banking and credit (as Britain did) enjoyed many
advantages over financially backward rivals.”
England
survived its many wars with France largely because of the creation of a
funded national debt, the issuance of bonds whose interest was paid by
the efficient collection of taxes. The modern warfare state is simply
not possible without “an advanced system of banking and credit,” and
that, for now, is exactly what is keeping America afloat. The world
still wants our bonds. China has nearly $800 billion in currency
reserves, its resource war chest.
But
how long will this advantage last? I suspect a lot will have to do with
the price of oil. As oil rises in dollar terms - whether from
geopolitical tension or the growing realization that Peak Oil is real -
the run on the dollar will grow. Hard assets like gold won’t just be
fashionable: They will be indispensable to wealth preservation.
Soaring
gold and oil prices will be accompanied by soaring interest rates and
inflation. The convenient fantasy world where prices don’t rise and
the dollar doesn’t lose purchasing power will collapse. One day,
Americans will wake up and find that the money in their wallets buys
three-quarters or half as much as it did the day before. The dollar will
have lost status. America will have lost power. And in the new world
that emerges, possession of energy, not a printing press, will be the
key to wealth.
Regards,
Dan
Denning
for The Daily Reckoning

© 2006 Dan Denning
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Dan
Denning is the editor of Strategic Investment, one of the most respected
"big-picture" investment newsletters on the market. A former
specialist in small-cap stocks, Dan has been at the helm of Strategic
Investment since 1999 - where, drawing from his network of global
contacts, he has designed an investment strategy that takes into account
global political and economic trends. The
above essay has been adapted from this month’s issue of Strategic
Investment. To learn more about this highly-regarded investment
newsletter, see here: Strategic
Investment You
can sign up for a free subscription to the Daily Reckoning here: http://www.dailyreckoning.com.
This
essay was originally published in The Daily Reckoning.
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