To Get Poor is Glorious
How your sacrifices can make a better world... for your elite overlords
(Source: Getty Images)
Bill Bonner, reckoning today from Paris, France...
You can’t always get what you want.
~ The Rolling Stones
“I can’t believe it, there’s no mustard in the shops,” said Elizabeth this morning.
“Huh? No moutarde… en France?”
“I don’t know… but the shopkeeper told me that since the government outlawed pesticides… and with the higher price of fuel… they can’t afford to make mustard anymore.”
The explanation wasn’t very satisfying. But a lot of things don’t add up.
Here’s another voice from the elite ‘Davos Summit.’ CNBC:
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte told CNBC on Wednesday that "you cannot help everyone so ... we in the West will be a bit poorer because of the high inflation, the high energy costs."
Inflation hit 9.6% in the Netherlands in April, according to the Dutch statistics body CBS.
Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Rutte told Steve Sedgewick that the Dutch government would help people on lower and lower-middle class incomes with their rising energy bills.
However, he added that "you cannot help everyone so ... we in the West will be a bit poorer because of the high inflation, the high energy costs."
Inflation and high energy costs didn’t rise on their own. They were pushed up by public policies – shutdowns, war, and money-printing. But don’t fret, poverty will be good for you. The Hill:
Is the spike in gas prices good for America?
…in the long run, an inflated price for gasoline is, I would argue, good for the environment. It may encourage people to take carpools to work, to bicycle and walk more. This will improve health and welfare.
The price spike may further spur the development of battery-driven cars. Both Ford and General Motors have said they will be manufacturing all-electric fleets by 2030. I never thought I would live to see the day.
Hallelujah…we won’t have any mustard. And we’ll all be poorer. But in a good way.
Beginning to Buckle
As expected, those once-sturdy legs of the American middle class – jobs (for earnings) and houses (for net wealth) – are beginning to buckle. MarketWatch:
Sales of new homes in the U.S. fell in April for the fourth month in a row to the lowest level since the pandemic owing to high prices and soaring mortgage rates.
New sales slowed to a 591,000 annual rate from 709,000 in the prior month, the government said Tuesday.
Mortgage rates have nearly doubled in the last 6 months. And house prices are much higher. So fewer people can afford to buy.
Also, many homeowners have locked-in mortgages at the lowest rates in history. They’re lucky. But they can’t afford to sell!
Fewer new home sales mean fewer commissions for real estate agents, less money for movers, fewer remodeling jobs for builders, and less work for the people who make refrigerators, carpets, beds and all of the other items people want when they buy a new house.
Altogether, it means fewer jobs, less income, a smaller GDP and more poverty.
And here comes even more good news from 24/7 Wall Street:
The microchip shortage that has battered the industry prompted Toyota to say it will cut global manufacturing by 100,0000 down to 850,000. That will affect company earnings and the financial health of dealers, and it may push consumers to put off new car purchases for months, if not years.
Two years ago, it was unimaginable that a global car company would cut production.
And Business Insider:
A wave of layoffs is sweeping the US.
Lately, we’ve been kvetching about the plight of the working class. Who will bear the brunt of the coming stagflation? Who will lose their jobs? Who will have to change their summer vacation plans? Who will switch from sirloin to hamburger?
No Room for Error
Will President Biden announce that he’s going to fire a few empty suits? Will the Fed cull its 400+ Ph.D. economists… perhaps those that told us that inflation would not go over 2% this year? Or, how about the generals who botched a 20-year war in Afghanistan? Or Dr. Anthony Fauci… whose plan for dealing with the Covid 19 turned out to be medically ineffective and economically catastrophic; or any of the 2 million other federal employees – some more useless than others?
No?
Alas, as you go down the socio-economic escalator, the pain rises. At the top, people can flub trillion-dollar programs and still live well (Ben Bernanke… who probably did more damage than any Fed chief other than Jerome Powell… is still quoted in the press as an authority on the economy!)… but at the bottom, there’s no room for error.
Higher prices and joblessness… those are problems for the working class, not the elite.
But now we know. These are good things. We will make less and consume less. We will put on our sweaters, with holes in the elbows, and turn down our thermostats. We will go into our supermarkets, find the shelves half empty, and we will be happy. We will listen to our elites – speaking to us from Davos and Aspen – and nod our heads in agreement.
‘To get poor is glorious,’ they will tell us.
And we will save the planet.
Or… at least we will save the elite.
Regards,
Bill Bonner
As an optimist (not), I prefer to think of the shelves as half full.
‘To get poor is glorious,’ say our leaders. The Chinese leaders once said, 'To get rich is glorious.
Being poor sucks. It is stressful. Being rich has some drawbacks, too, of course. But I still prefer to have enough of what I need and some of what I want. (No need to be a glutton.)
Work hard, save your money only to watch it evaporate due to inflation caused by the rascals at the Fed and too much spending by the government.
The whole damned house of cards seems ready to fall. The poor will feel it most. Followed by the middle classes (if there still are any by then). The rich will lose big time in the markets. But they will be OK. The elite very rich will prosper and buy more properties and send the kids to good schools and they will have great medical care. They will might just move to one of their many off shore homes.
When things become really bad for Americans, will they rise up and demand change? Some will.
But most will adjust to the hardship as best they can...until they can't any longer.
Pensioners and the weak and disenfranchised and the poor will need to up their game if they hope to keep from eating out of dumpsters or at the back of restaurants. The very poorest will take what they need from where ever they can. Mobs storming D.C.? I doubt that will happen.
We the dispossessed will need to work together in groups like AARP to demand change. Old geezers unite! Burning down buildings and fighting the police are not going to make the change needed.. It will just create an excuse to step on the poor's necks with new curfews and laws.
Band together. That is the power that shakes the jerks in D.C. All the lobbyists and other parasites are no match for millions upon millions of voters screaming for change. Sitting back and hoping for change is not a plan and is not effective.
And if all our voices have no effect, then it is time for more direct action.