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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:00,110 2 00:00:00,110 --> 00:00:03,159 How the economic machine works, in 30 minutes. 3 00:00:03,159 --> 00:00:06,680 The economy works like a simple machine. 4 00:00:06,680 --> 00:00:09,390 But many people don't understand it 5 00:00:09,390 --> 00:00:11,490 โ€” or they don't agree on how it works 6 00:00:11,490 --> 00:00:15,150 โ€” and this has led to a lot of needless economic suffering. 7 00:00:15,150 --> 00:00:18,249 I feel a deep sense of responsibility 8 00:00:18,249 --> 00:00:22,049 to share my simple but practical economic template. 9 00:00:23,049 --> 00:00:25,320 Though it's unconventional, 10 00:00:25,320 --> 00:00:30,150 it has helped me to anticipate and sidestep the global financial crisis, 11 00:00:30,150 --> 00:00:32,460 and has worked well for me for over 30 years. 12 00:00:32,460 --> 00:00:34,260 Let's begin. 13 00:00:34,260 --> 00:00:39,520 Though the economy might seem complex, it works in a simple, mechanical way. 14 00:00:39,520 --> 00:00:43,930 It's made up of a few simple parts and a lot of simple transactions 15 00:00:43,930 --> 00:00:47,260 that are repeated over and over again a zillion times. 16 00:00:47,260 --> 00:00:51,460 These transactions are above all else driven by human nature, 17 00:00:51,460 --> 00:00:54,800 and they create 3 main forces that drive the economy. 18 00:00:55,800 --> 00:00:58,120 Number 1: Productivity growth 19 00:00:58,120 --> 00:01:01,650 Number 2: The Short term debt cycle 20 00:01:01,650 --> 00:01:04,400 and Number 3: The Long term debt cycle 21 00:01:04,400 --> 00:01:07,770 We'll look at these three forces and how laying them on top of each other 22 00:01:07,770 --> 00:01:11,530 creates a good template for tracking economic movements 23 00:01:11,530 --> 00:01:13,590 and figuring out what's happening now. 24 00:01:13,590 --> 00:01:16,830 Let's start with the simplest part of the economy: 25 00:01:16,830 --> 00:01:18,860 Transactions. 26 00:01:19,340 --> 00:01:23,840 An economy is simply the sum of the transactions that make it up 27 00:01:23,840 --> 00:01:26,570 and a transaction is a very simple thing. 28 00:01:26,570 --> 00:01:28,360 You make transactions all the time. 29 00:01:28,360 --> 00:01:31,760 Every time you buy something you create a transaction. 30 00:01:31,760 --> 00:01:35,240 Each transaction consists of a buyer 31 00:01:35,240 --> 00:01:37,150 exchanging money or credit 32 00:01:37,150 --> 00:01:42,550 with a seller for goods, services or financial assets. 33 00:01:42,550 --> 00:01:45,150 Credit spends just like money, 34 00:01:45,150 --> 00:01:49,280 so adding together the money spent and the amount of credit spent, 35 00:01:49,280 --> 00:01:52,160 you can know the total spending. 36 00:01:52,160 --> 00:01:55,560 The total amount of spending drives the economy. 37 00:01:55,560 --> 00:01:57,590 If you divide the amount spent 38 00:01:57,590 --> 00:01:59,990 by the quantity sold, 39 00:01:59,990 --> 00:02:01,290 you get the price. 40 00:02:01,290 --> 00:02:04,380 And that's it. That's a transaction. 41 00:02:04,480 --> 00:02:07,110 It is the building block of the economic machine. 42 00:02:07,110 --> 00:02:12,019 All cycles and all forces in an economy are driven by transactions. 43 00:02:12,019 --> 00:02:14,469 So, if we can understand transactions, 44 00:02:14,469 --> 00:02:16,569 we can understand the whole economy. 45 00:02:16,569 --> 00:02:19,510 A market consists of all the buyers 46 00:02:19,510 --> 00:02:20,510 and all the sellers 47 00:02:20,510 --> 00:02:22,910 making transactions for the same thing. 48 00:02:23,110 --> 00:02:25,540 For example, there is a wheat market, 49 00:02:25,540 --> 00:02:26,840 a car market, 50 00:02:26,840 --> 00:02:27,640 a stock market 51 00:02:27,640 --> 00:02:29,550 and markets for millions of things. 52 00:02:31,050 --> 00:02:33,470 An economy consists of all of the transactions 53 00:02:33,470 --> 00:02:34,670 in all of its markets. 54 00:02:34,670 --> 00:02:37,550 If you add up the total spending 55 00:02:37,550 --> 00:02:39,450 and the total quantity sold 56 00:02:39,450 --> 00:02:40,430 in all of the markets, 57 00:02:40,430 --> 00:02:42,030 you have everything you need to know 58 00:02:42,030 --> 00:02:43,630 to understand the economy. 59 00:02:44,530 --> 00:02:45,960 It's just that simple. 60 00:02:46,560 --> 00:02:49,430 People, businesses, banks and governments 61 00:02:49,430 --> 00:02:53,730 all engage in transactions the way I just described: 62 00:02:53,730 --> 00:02:58,530 exchanging money and credit for goods, services and financial assets. 63 00:02:59,030 --> 00:03:01,500 The biggest buyer and seller is the government, 64 00:03:02,600 --> 00:03:04,040 which consists of two important parts: 65 00:03:04,040 --> 00:03:07,690 a Central Government that collects taxes and spends money... 66 00:03:07,690 --> 00:03:09,669 ...and a Central Bank, 67 00:03:09,669 --> 00:03:12,269 which is different from other buyers and sellers because it 68 00:03:12,269 --> 00:03:15,989 controls the amount of money and credit in the economy. 69 00:03:16,689 --> 00:03:19,650 It does this by influencing interest rates 70 00:03:19,650 --> 00:03:21,020 and printing new money. 71 00:03:21,020 --> 00:03:23,620 For these reasons, as we'll see, 72 00:03:24,020 --> 00:03:27,200 the Central Bank is an important player in the flow 73 00:03:27,700 --> 00:03:28,700 of Credit. 74 00:03:29,400 --> 00:03:31,629 I want you to pay attention to credit. 75 00:03:31,629 --> 00:03:34,659 Credit is the most important part of the economy, 76 00:03:34,659 --> 00:03:36,539 and probably the least understood. 77 00:03:37,039 --> 00:03:40,319 It is the most important part because it is the biggest 78 00:03:40,319 --> 00:03:42,100 and most volatile part. 79 00:03:42,600 --> 00:03:45,100 Just like buyers and sellers go to the market to make transactions, 80 00:03:47,100 --> 00:03:49,969 so do lenders and borrowers. 81 00:03:49,969 --> 00:03:53,569 Lenders usually want to make their money into more money 82 00:03:53,569 --> 00:03:57,260 and borrowers usually want to buy something they can't afford, 83 00:03:57,260 --> 00:03:59,059 like a house or car 84 00:03:59,059 --> 00:04:02,319 or they want to invest in something like starting a business. 85 00:04:03,019 --> 00:04:04,599 Credit can help both lenders 86 00:04:04,599 --> 00:04:07,799 and borrowers get what they want. 87 00:04:08,099 --> 00:04:11,560 Borrowers promise to repay the amount they borrow, 88 00:04:11,560 --> 00:04:12,719 called the principal, 89 00:04:12,719 --> 00:04:15,419 plus an additional amount, called interest. 90 00:04:15,419 --> 00:04:17,560 When interest rates are high, 91 00:04:17,560 --> 00:04:20,560 there is less borrowing because it's expensive. 92 00:04:20,560 --> 00:04:22,540 When interest rates are low, 93 00:04:22,540 --> 00:04:25,040 borrowing increases because it's cheaper. 94 00:04:25,040 --> 00:04:27,930 When borrowers promise to repay 95 00:04:28,330 --> 00:04:29,959 and lenders believe them, 96 00:04:29,959 --> 00:04:31,059 credit is created. 97 00:04:31,659 --> 00:04:35,170 Any two people can agree to create credit out of thin air! 98 00:04:35,770 --> 00:04:39,210 That seems simple enough but credit is tricky 99 00:04:39,210 --> 00:04:40,499 because it has different names. 100 00:04:40,499 --> 00:04:43,599 As soon as credit is created, 101 00:04:43,599 --> 00:04:45,029 it immediately turns into debt. 102 00:04:46,229 --> 00:04:48,670 Debt is both an asset to the lender, 103 00:04:48,670 --> 00:04:50,770 and a liability to the borrower. 104 00:04:51,370 --> 00:04:52,540 In the future, 105 00:04:52,540 --> 00:04:56,240 when the borrower repays the loan, plus interest, 106 00:04:56,240 --> 00:04:58,549 the asset and liability disappear 107 00:04:58,549 --> 00:05:00,949 and the transaction is settled. 108 00:05:01,749 --> 00:05:04,629 So, why is credit so important? 109 00:05:05,229 --> 00:05:07,619 Because when a borrower receives credit, 110 00:05:07,619 --> 00:05:09,719 he is able to increase his spending. 111 00:05:09,719 --> 00:05:13,349 And remember, spending drives the economy. 112 00:05:13,349 --> 00:05:15,699 This is because one person's spending 113 00:05:15,699 --> 00:05:17,099 is another person's income. 114 00:05:17,499 --> 00:05:22,189 Think about it, every dollar you spend, someone else earns. 115 00:05:22,189 --> 00:05:25,279 and every dollar you earn, someone else has spent. 116 00:05:25,279 --> 00:05:29,149 So when you spend more, someone else earns more. 117 00:05:29,149 --> 00:05:32,649 When someone's income rises 118 00:05:32,649 --> 00:05:34,649 it makes lenders more willing to lend him money 119 00:05:34,649 --> 00:05:37,629 because now he's more worthy of credit. 120 00:05:37,629 --> 00:05:40,929 A creditworthy borrower has two things: 121 00:05:40,929 --> 00:05:43,519 the ability to repay and collateral. 122 00:05:44,319 --> 00:05:48,319 Having a lot of income in relation to his debt gives him the ability to repay. 123 00:05:49,079 --> 00:05:55,749 In the event that he can't repay, he has valuable assets to use as collateral that can be sold. 124 00:05:55,749 --> 00:06:00,340 This makes lenders feel comfortable lending him money. 125 00:06:00,440 --> 00:06:03,960 So increased income allows increased borrowing 126 00:06:03,960 --> 00:06:05,680 which allows increased spending. 127 00:06:05,680 --> 00:06:09,920 And since one person's spending is another person's income, 128 00:06:09,920 --> 00:06:13,360 this leads to more increased borrowing and so on. 129 00:06:13,360 --> 00:06:17,350 This self-reinforcing pattern leads to economic growth 130 00:06:17,350 --> 00:06:21,640 and is why we have Cycles. 131 00:06:21,640 --> 00:06:25,620 In a transaction, you have to give something in order to get something 132 00:06:25,620 --> 00:06:28,830 and how much you get depends on how much you produce 133 00:06:29,330 --> 00:06:31,430 over time we learned 134 00:06:31,430 --> 00:06:34,680 and that accumulated knowledge raises are living standards 135 00:06:34,680 --> 00:06:36,930 we call this productivity growth 136 00:06:37,430 --> 00:06:40,430 those who were invented and hard-working raise 137 00:06:40,430 --> 00:06:43,540 their productivity and their living standards faster 138 00:06:43,540 --> 00:06:46,950 than those who are complacent and lazy, 139 00:06:48,850 --> 00:06:49,710 but that isn't necessarily true over the short run. 140 00:06:49,710 --> 00:06:54,340 Productivity matters most in the long run, but credit matters most in the short run. 141 00:06:54,340 --> 00:06:58,370 This is because productivity growth doesn't fluctuate much, 142 00:06:58,370 --> 00:07:01,480 so it's not a big driver of economic swings. 143 00:07:01,480 --> 00:07:06,750 Debt is โ€” because it allows us to consume more than we produce when we acquire it 144 00:07:06,750 --> 00:07:11,050 and it forces us to consume less than we produce when we pay it back. 145 00:07:11,050 --> 00:07:14,770 Debt swings occur in two big cycles. 146 00:07:14,770 --> 00:07:20,830 One takes about 5 to 8 years and the other takes about 75 to 100 years. 147 00:07:20,830 --> 00:07:25,160 While most people feel the swings, they typically don't see them as cycles 148 00:07:25,160 --> 00:07:29,490 because they see them too up close -- day by day, week by week. 149 00:07:29,490 --> 00:07:32,950 In this chapter we are going to step back and look at these three big forces 150 00:07:32,950 --> 00:07:37,000 and how they interact to make up our experiences. 151 00:07:37,400 --> 00:07:42,340 As mentioned, swings around the line are not due to how much innovation or hard work there is, 152 00:07:42,340 --> 00:07:46,240 they're primarily due to how much credit there is. 153 00:07:46,240 --> 00:07:50,070 Let's for a second imagine an economy without credit. 154 00:07:50,070 --> 00:07:53,810 In this economy, the only way I can increase my spending 155 00:07:53,810 --> 00:07:55,480 is to increase my income, 156 00:07:55,480 --> 00:07:59,080 which requires me to be more productive and do more work. 157 00:07:59,080 --> 00:08:03,020 Increased productivity is the only way for growth. 158 00:08:03,020 --> 00:08:05,250 Since my spending is another person's income, 159 00:08:05,250 --> 00:08:10,430 the economy grows every time I or anyone else is more productive. 160 00:08:10,430 --> 00:08:13,530 If we follow the transactions and play this out, 161 00:08:13,530 --> 00:08:16,910 we see a progression like the productivity growth line. 162 00:08:16,910 --> 00:08:20,780 But because we borrow, we have cycles. 163 00:08:20,780 --> 00:08:23,900 This isn't due to any laws or regulation, 164 00:08:23,900 --> 00:08:27,660 it's due to human nature and the way that credit works. 165 00:08:27,660 --> 00:08:32,270 Think of borrowing as simply a way of pulling spending forward. 166 00:08:32,270 --> 00:08:37,479 In order to buy something you can't afford, you need to spend more than you make. 167 00:08:37,479 --> 00:08:41,460 To do this, you essentially need to borrow from your future self. 168 00:08:41,460 --> 00:08:44,610 In doing so you create a time in the future 169 00:08:44,610 --> 00:08:48,690 that you need to spend less than you make in order to pay it back. 170 00:08:48,690 --> 00:08:51,950 It very quickly resembles a cycle. 171 00:08:51,950 --> 00:08:55,400 Basically, anytime you borrow you create a cycle.? 172 00:08:55,400 --> 00:08:59,950 This is as true for an individual as it is for the economy. 173 00:08:59,950 --> 00:09:01,850 This is why understanding credit is so important 174 00:09:01,850 --> 00:09:04,590 because it sets into motion 175 00:09:04,590 --> 00:09:08,790 a mechanical, predictable series of events that will happen in the future. 176 00:09:08,790 --> 00:09:11,570 This makes credit different from money. 177 00:09:13,470 --> 00:09:14,580 Money is what you settle transactions with. 178 00:09:14,580 --> 00:09:18,120 When you buy a beer from a bartender with cash, 179 00:09:18,120 --> 00:09:20,800 the transaction is settled immediately. 180 00:09:20,800 --> 00:09:22,630 But when you buy a beer with credit, 181 00:09:22,630 --> 00:09:24,730 it's like starting a bar tab. 182 00:09:24,730 --> 00:09:27,530 You're saying you promise to pay in the future. 183 00:09:27,530 --> 00:09:32,070 Together you and the bartender create an asset and a liability. 184 00:09:32,070 --> 00:09:35,250 You just created credit. Out of thin air. 185 00:09:35,250 --> 00:09:38,900 It's not until you pay the bar tab later 186 00:09:38,900 --> 00:09:41,250 that the asset and liability disappear, 187 00:09:41,250 --> 00:09:42,550 the debt goes away 188 00:09:42,650 --> 00:09:44,090 and the transaction is settled. 189 00:09:45,090 --> 00:09:50,250 The reality is that most of what people call money is actually credit. 190 00:09:50,250 --> 00:09:55,510 The total amount of credit in the United States is about $50 trillion 191 00:09:55,510 --> 00:09:59,680 and the total amount of money is only about $3 trillion. 192 00:09:59,680 --> 00:10:02,040 Remember, in an economy without credit: 193 00:10:02,040 --> 00:10:05,200 the only way to increase your spending is to produce more. 194 00:10:05,400 --> 00:10:07,280 But in an economy with credit, 195 00:10:07,280 --> 00:10:10,780 you can also increase your spending by borrowing. 196 00:10:10,780 --> 00:10:14,120 As a result, an economy with credit has more spending 197 00:10:14,120 --> 00:10:18,090 and allows incomes to rise faster than productivity over the short run, 198 00:10:18,090 --> 00:10:19,890 but not over the long run. 199 00:10:20,090 --> 00:10:21,360 Now, don't get me wrong, 200 00:10:21,560 --> 00:10:25,660 credit isn't necessarily something bad that just causes cycles. 201 00:10:25,660 --> 00:10:30,900 It's bad when it finances over-consumption that can't be paid back. 202 00:10:30,900 --> 00:10:34,490 However, it's good when it efficiently allocates resources 203 00:10:34,490 --> 00:10:37,690 and produces income so you can pay back the debt. 204 00:10:37,690 --> 00:10:40,980 For example, if you borrow money to buy a big TV, 205 00:10:40,980 --> 00:10:43,879 it doesn't generate income for you to pay back the debt. 206 00:10:44,079 --> 00:10:47,880 But, if you borrow money to buy a tractor โ€” 207 00:10:48,380 --> 00:10:51,560 and that tractor let's you harvest more crops and earn more money 208 00:10:51,560 --> 00:10:53,090 โ€” then, you can pay back your debt 209 00:10:53,090 --> 00:10:56,490 and improve your living standards. 210 00:10:56,490 --> 00:10:57,600 In an economy with credit, 211 00:10:57,600 --> 00:10:59,600 we can follow the transactions 212 00:10:59,600 --> 00:11:01,300 and see how credit creates growth. 213 00:11:01,400 --> 00:11:03,680 Let me give you an example: 214 00:11:04,080 --> 00:11:08,190 Suppose you earn $100,000 a year and have no debt. 215 00:11:08,390 --> 00:11:11,540 You are creditworthy enough to borrow $10,000 dollars 216 00:11:11,540 --> 00:11:13,040 - say on a credit card 217 00:11:13,040 --> 00:11:15,250 - so you can spend $110,000 dollars 218 00:11:15,250 --> 00:11:18,250 even though you only earn $100,000 dollars. 219 00:11:18,750 --> 00:11:21,460 Since your spending is another person's income, 220 00:11:21,460 --> 00:11:24,460 someone is earning $110,000 dollars. 221 00:11:25,060 --> 00:11:27,670 The person earning $110,000 dollars 222 00:11:27,770 --> 00:11:31,429 with no debt can borrow $11,000 dollars, 223 00:11:31,429 --> 00:11:34,070 so he can spend $121,000 dollars 224 00:11:34,070 --> 00:11:38,170 even though he has only earned $110,000 dollars. 225 00:11:38,170 --> 00:11:40,640 His spending is another person's income 226 00:11:40,640 --> 00:11:43,430 and by following the transactions 227 00:11:43,430 --> 00:11:45,430 we can begin to see how this process 228 00:11:45,430 --> 00:11:47,430 works in a self-reinforcing pattern. 229 00:11:47,830 --> 00:11:51,600 But remember, borrowing creates cycles 230 00:11:51,600 --> 00:11:55,809 and if the cycle goes up, it eventually needs to come down. 231 00:11:56,009 --> 00:11:59,710 This leads us into the Short Term Debt Cycle. 232 00:12:00,810 --> 00:12:04,380 As economic activity increases, we see an expansion 233 00:12:04,380 --> 00:12:06,840 - the first phase of the short term debt cycle. 234 00:12:06,840 --> 00:12:10,720 Spending continues to increase and prices start to rise. 235 00:12:10,720 --> 00:12:15,230 This happens because the increase in spending is fueled by credit 236 00:12:15,230 --> 00:12:17,450 - which can be created instantly out of thin air. 237 00:12:17,450 --> 00:12:22,680 When the amount of spending and incomes grow faster than the production of goods: 238 00:12:22,680 --> 00:12:23,880 prices rise. 239 00:12:23,880 --> 00:12:28,000 When prices rise, we call this inflation. 240 00:12:28,000 --> 00:12:32,500 The Central Bank doesn't want too much inflation 241 00:12:32,500 --> 00:12:35,010 because it causes problems. 242 00:12:35,010 --> 00:12:38,250 Seeing prices rise, it raises interest rates. 243 00:12:38,250 --> 00:12:42,959 With higher interest rates, fewer people can afford to borrow money. 244 00:12:42,959 --> 00:12:45,600 And the cost of existing debts rises. 245 00:12:45,600 --> 00:12:50,100 Think about this as the monthly payments on your credit card going up. 246 00:12:50,100 --> 00:12:54,459 Because people borrow less and have higher debt repayments, 247 00:12:54,459 --> 00:12:58,720 they have less money leftover to spend, so spending slows 248 00:12:58,720 --> 00:13:02,779 ...and since one person's spending is another person's income, 249 00:13:02,779 --> 00:13:06,589 incomes drop...and so on and so forth. 250 00:13:06,589 --> 00:13:10,800 When people spend less, prices go down. 251 00:13:10,800 --> 00:13:12,689 We call this deflation. 252 00:13:12,689 --> 00:13:17,460 Economic activity decreases and we have a recession. 253 00:13:17,460 --> 00:13:20,060 If the recession becomes too severe 254 00:13:20,060 --> 00:13:22,440 and inflation is no longer a problem, 255 00:13:22,440 --> 00:13:27,060 the central bank will lower interest rates to cause everything to pick up again. 256 00:13:27,060 --> 00:13:29,650 With low interest rates, 257 00:13:29,650 --> 00:13:30,650 debt repayments are reduced 258 00:13:30,650 --> 00:13:33,250 and borrowing and spending pick up 259 00:13:33,250 --> 00:13:35,450 and we see another expansion. 260 00:13:35,450 --> 00:13:39,450 As you can see, the economy works like a machine. 261 00:13:40,250 --> 00:13:44,160 In the short term debt cycle, spending is constrained only by the willingness of 262 00:13:44,160 --> 00:13:47,140 lenders and borrowers to provide and receive credit. 263 00:13:47,140 --> 00:13:52,510 When credit is easily available, there's an economic expansion. 264 00:13:52,510 --> 00:13:56,090 When credit isn't easily available, there's a recession. 265 00:13:56,090 --> 00:14:00,450 And note that this cycle is controlled primarily by the central bank. 266 00:14:00,450 --> 00:14:05,120 The short term debt cycle typically lasts 5 - 8 years 267 00:14:05,120 --> 00:14:08,410 and happens over and over again for decades. 268 00:14:08,410 --> 00:14:10,410 But notice that the bottom and 269 00:14:10,410 --> 00:14:12,400 top of each cycle finish 270 00:14:12,400 --> 00:14:16,670 with more growth than the previous cycle and with more debt. 271 00:14:16,670 --> 00:14:18,040 Why? 272 00:14:18,040 --> 00:14:20,740 Because people push it 273 00:14:20,740 --> 00:14:25,530 โ€” they have an inclination to borrow and spend more instead of paying back debt. 274 00:14:25,530 --> 00:14:27,480 It's human nature. 275 00:14:27,480 --> 00:14:29,380 Because of this, 276 00:14:29,380 --> 00:14:30,680 over long periods of time, 277 00:14:30,680 --> 00:14:33,470 debts rise faster than incomes 278 00:14:33,470 --> 00:14:36,670 creating the Long Term Debt Cycle. 279 00:14:38,070 --> 00:14:39,670 Despite people becoming more indebted, 280 00:14:40,170 --> 00:14:44,030 lenders even more freely extend credit. 281 00:14:44,030 --> 00:14:45,030 Why? 282 00:14:45,030 --> 00:14:48,670 Because everybody thinks things are going great! 283 00:14:48,670 --> 00:14:51,970 People are just focusing on what's been happening lately. 284 00:14:51,970 --> 00:14:55,650 And what has been happening lately? 285 00:14:55,650 --> 00:14:57,650 Incomes have been rising! 286 00:14:57,650 --> 00:14:59,250 Asset values are going up! 287 00:14:59,250 --> 00:15:01,550 The stock market roars! 288 00:15:01,550 --> 00:15:02,480 It's a boom! 289 00:15:02,480 --> 00:15:06,690 It pays to buy goods, services, and financial assets 290 00:15:06,690 --> 00:15:08,390 with borrowed money! 291 00:15:08,390 --> 00:15:11,770 When people do a lot of that, we call it a bubble. 292 00:15:11,770 --> 00:15:14,640 So even though debts have been growing, 293 00:15:14,640 --> 00:15:18,110 incomes have been growing nearly as fast to offset them. 294 00:15:18,110 --> 00:15:21,970 Let's call the ratio of debt-to-income the debt burden. 295 00:15:21,970 --> 00:15:25,210 So long as incomes continue to rise, 296 00:15:25,210 --> 00:15:27,040 the debt burden stays manageable. 297 00:15:27,040 --> 00:15:30,230 At the same time asset values soar. 298 00:15:30,230 --> 00:15:33,230 People borrow huge amounts of money 299 00:15:34,030 --> 00:15:35,060 to buy assets as investments 300 00:15:35,060 --> 00:15:37,660 causing their prices to rise even higher. 301 00:15:37,660 --> 00:15:40,260 People feel wealthy. 302 00:15:40,260 --> 00:15:43,260 So even with the accumulation of lots of debt, 303 00:15:43,260 --> 00:15:49,490 rising incomes and asset values help borrowers remain creditworthy for a long time. 304 00:15:49,490 --> 00:15:52,530 But this obviously can not continue forever. 305 00:15:52,530 --> 00:15:54,250 And it doesn't. 306 00:15:54,250 --> 00:16:00,520 Over decades, debt burdens slowly increase creating larger and larger debt repayments. 307 00:16:00,520 --> 00:16:05,400 At some point, debt repayments start growing faster than incomes 308 00:16:05,400 --> 00:16:08,240 forcing people to cut back on their spending. 309 00:16:08,240 --> 00:16:12,200 And since one person's spending is another person's income, 310 00:16:12,200 --> 00:16:14,500 incomes begin to go down... 311 00:16:14,500 --> 00:16:19,020 ...which makes people less creditworthy causing borrowing to go down. 312 00:16:19,020 --> 00:16:22,020 Debt repayments continue to rise 313 00:16:22,020 --> 00:16:24,440 which makes spending drop even further... 314 00:16:24,440 --> 00:16:27,140 ...and the cycle reverses itself. 315 00:16:27,140 --> 00:16:30,960 This is the long term debt peak. 316 00:16:30,960 --> 00:16:34,150 Debt burdens have simply become too big. 317 00:16:34,150 --> 00:16:38,830 For the United States, Europe and much of the rest of the world this 318 00:16:38,830 --> 00:16:40,760 happened in 2008. 319 00:16:40,760 --> 00:16:45,430 It happened for the same reason it happened in Japan in 1989 320 00:16:45,430 --> 00:16:48,750 and in the United States back in 1929. 321 00:16:48,750 --> 00:16:51,980 Now the economy begins Deleveraging. 322 00:16:51,980 --> 00:16:56,500 In a deleveraging; people cut spending, 323 00:16:56,500 --> 00:16:59,540 incomes fall, credit disappears, 324 00:16:59,540 --> 00:17:02,700 assets prices drop, banks get squeezed, 325 00:17:02,700 --> 00:17:06,339 the stock market crashes, social tensions rise 326 00:17:06,339 --> 00:17:09,708 and the whole thing starts to feed on itself the other way. 327 00:17:09,709 --> 00:17:13,849 As incomes fall and debt repayments rise, 328 00:17:13,849 --> 00:17:17,989 borrowers get squeezed. No longer creditworthy, 329 00:17:17,990 --> 00:17:22,359 credit dries up and borrowers can no longer borrow enough money to make their 330 00:17:22,359 --> 00:17:23,599 debt repayments. 331 00:17:23,599 --> 00:17:28,439 Scrambling to fill this hole, borrowers are forced to sell assets. 332 00:17:28,440 --> 00:17:31,550 The rush to sell assets floods the market 333 00:17:31,550 --> 00:17:36,370 This is when the stock market collapses, 334 00:17:36,370 --> 00:17:39,740 the real estate market tanks and banks get into trouble. 335 00:17:39,740 --> 00:17:44,940 As asset prices drop, the value of the collateral borrowers can put up drops. 336 00:17:44,940 --> 00:17:48,280 This makes borrowers even less creditworthy. 337 00:17:48,280 --> 00:17:50,200 People feel poor. 338 00:17:51,300 --> 00:17:55,010 Credit rapidly disappears. Less spending โ€บ 339 00:17:55,010 --> 00:17:55,890 less income โ€บ 340 00:17:55,890 --> 00:17:57,890 less wealth โ€บ 341 00:17:57,890 --> 00:17:58,590 less credit โ€บ 342 00:17:58,590 --> 00:18:00,800 less borrowing and so on. 343 00:18:00,800 --> 00:18:03,000 It's a vicious cycle. 344 00:18:03,000 --> 00:18:06,530 This appears similar to a recession but the difference here 345 00:18:06,530 --> 00:18:10,160 is that interest rates can't be lowered to save the day. 346 00:18:10,160 --> 00:18:14,590 In a recession, lowering interest rates works to stimulate the borrowing. 347 00:18:14,590 --> 00:18:18,570 However, in a deleveraging, lowering interest rates doesn't work because 348 00:18:18,570 --> 00:18:20,530 interest rates are already 349 00:18:20,530 --> 00:18:25,310 low and soon hit 0% - so the stimulation ends. 350 00:18:25,310 --> 00:18:29,210 Interest rates in the United States hit 0% during the deleveraging of 351 00:18:29,210 --> 00:18:30,840 the 1930s 352 00:18:30,840 --> 00:18:33,440 and again in 2008. 353 00:18:33,440 --> 00:18:35,840 The difference between a recession 354 00:18:35,840 --> 00:18:40,270 and a deleveraging is that in a deleveraging borrowers' debt burdens have 355 00:18:40,270 --> 00:18:41,930 simply gotten too big 356 00:18:41,930 --> 00:18:45,050 and can't be relieved by lowering interest rates. 357 00:18:45,050 --> 00:18:50,240 Lenders realize that debts have become too large to ever be fully paid back. 358 00:18:50,240 --> 00:18:55,310 Borrowers have lost their ability to repay and their collateral has lost value. 359 00:18:55,310 --> 00:18:59,370 They feel crippled by the debt - they don't even want more! 360 00:18:59,370 --> 00:19:03,490 Lenders stop lending. Borrowers stop borrowing. 361 00:19:03,490 --> 00:19:07,020 Think of the economy as being not-creditworthy, 362 00:19:07,020 --> 00:19:09,000 just like an individual. 363 00:19:09,000 --> 00:19:12,600 So what do you do about a deleveraging? 364 00:19:12,600 --> 00:19:17,540 The problem is debt burdens are too high and they must come down. 365 00:19:17,540 --> 00:19:20,790 There are four ways this can happen. 366 00:19:20,790 --> 00:19:24,489 1. people, businesses, and governments cut their spending. 367 00:19:24,489 --> 00:19:28,409 2. debts are reduced through defaults and restructurings. 368 00:19:28,409 --> 00:19:34,139 3. wealth is redistributed from the 'haves' to the 'have nots'. 369 00:19:34,139 --> 00:19:37,980 and finally, 4. the central bank prints new money. 370 00:19:37,980 --> 00:19:42,999 These 4 ways have happened in every deleveraging in modern history. 371 00:19:45,699 --> 00:19:47,779 Usually, spending is cut first. 372 00:19:47,879 --> 00:19:52,129 As we just saw, people, businesses, banks and even governments tighten their belts and 373 00:19:52,129 --> 00:19:54,869 cut their spending so that they can pay down their debt. 374 00:19:54,869 --> 00:19:58,559 This is often referred to as austerity. 375 00:19:58,559 --> 00:20:01,830 When borrowers stop taking on new debts, 376 00:20:01,830 --> 00:20:06,769 and start paying down old debts, you might expect the debt burden to decrease. 377 00:20:06,769 --> 00:20:10,720 But the opposite happens! Because spending is cut 378 00:20:10,720 --> 00:20:14,610 - and one man's spending is another man's income - it causes 379 00:20:14,610 --> 00:20:19,029 incomes to fall. They fall faster than debts are repaid 380 00:20:19,029 --> 00:20:23,210 and the debt burden actually gets worse. As we've seen, 381 00:20:23,210 --> 00:20:26,330 this cut in spending is deflationary and painful. 382 00:20:26,330 --> 00:20:29,389 Businesses are forced to cut costs... 383 00:20:29,389 --> 00:20:32,779 which means less jobs and higher unemployment. 384 00:20:32,779 --> 00:20:37,139 This leads to the next step: debts must be reduced! 385 00:20:37,139 --> 00:20:41,149 Many borrowers find themselves unable to repay their loans 386 00:20:41,149 --> 00:20:44,299 โ€” and a borrower's debts are a lender's assets. 387 00:20:44,299 --> 00:20:48,749 When borrowers don't repay the bank, people get nervous that the bank won't 388 00:20:48,749 --> 00:20:50,309 be able to repay them 389 00:20:50,309 --> 00:20:54,909 so they rush to withdraw their money from the bank. Banks get squeezed and 390 00:20:54,909 --> 00:20:55,590 people, 391 00:20:55,590 --> 00:21:00,080 businesses and banks default on their debts. This severe 392 00:21:00,080 --> 00:21:03,570 economic contraction is a depression. 393 00:21:03,570 --> 00:21:08,649 A big part of a depression is people discovering much of what they thought 394 00:21:08,649 --> 00:21:11,089 was their wealth isn't really there. 395 00:21:11,089 --> 00:21:13,490 Let's go back to the bar. 396 00:21:13,690 --> 00:21:17,619 When you bought a beer and put it on a bar tab, 397 00:21:17,619 --> 00:21:23,570 you promised to repay the bartender. Your promise became an asset of the bartender. 398 00:21:23,570 --> 00:21:28,129 But if you break your promise - if you don't pay him back and essentially default 399 00:21:28,129 --> 00:21:29,309 on your bar tab - 400 00:21:29,309 --> 00:21:32,649 then the 'asset' he has isn't really worth anything. 401 00:21:32,649 --> 00:21:35,779 It has basically disappeared. 402 00:21:35,779 --> 00:21:39,710 Many lenders don't want their assets to disappear and agree to debt 403 00:21:39,710 --> 00:21:40,759 restructuring. 404 00:21:40,759 --> 00:21:44,320 Debt restructuring means lenders get paid back 405 00:21:44,320 --> 00:21:48,049 less or get paid back over a longer time frame 406 00:21:48,049 --> 00:21:52,330 or at a lower interest rate that was first agreed. Somehow 407 00:21:52,330 --> 00:21:56,889 a contract is broken in a way that reduces debt. Lenders would rather have a 408 00:21:56,889 --> 00:21:59,419 little of something than all of nothing. 409 00:21:59,419 --> 00:22:03,450 Even though debt disappears, debt restructuring causes 410 00:22:03,450 --> 00:22:06,559 income and asset values to disappear faster, 411 00:22:06,559 --> 00:22:09,679 so the debt burden continues to gets worse. 412 00:22:09,679 --> 00:22:12,950 Like cutting spending, debt reduction 413 00:22:12,950 --> 00:22:16,009 is also painful and deflationary. 414 00:22:16,009 --> 00:22:21,940 All of this impacts the central government because lower incomes and less employment 415 00:22:21,940 --> 00:22:27,049 means the government collects fewer taxes. 416 00:22:27,049 --> 00:22:30,210 At the same time it needs to increase its spending because unemployment has risen. 417 00:22:30,210 --> 00:22:33,960 Many of the unemployed have inadequate savings 418 00:22:33,960 --> 00:22:36,419 and need financial support from the government. 419 00:22:36,419 --> 00:22:39,999 Additionally, governments create stimulus plans 420 00:22:39,999 --> 00:22:43,879 and increase their spending to make up for the decrease in the economy. 421 00:22:43,879 --> 00:22:47,509 Governments' budget deficits explode in a 422 00:22:47,509 --> 00:22:51,059 deleveraging because they spend more than they earn in taxes. 423 00:22:51,059 --> 00:22:55,720 This is what is happening when you hear about the budget deficit on the news. 424 00:22:55,720 --> 00:23:01,320 To fund their deficits, governments need to either raise taxes 425 00:23:01,320 --> 00:23:06,059 or borrow money. But with incomes falling and so many unemployed, 426 00:23:06,059 --> 00:23:09,789 who is the money going to come from? The rich. 427 00:23:09,789 --> 00:23:14,580 Since governments need more money and since wealth is heavily concentrated in 428 00:23:14,580 --> 00:23:17,109 the hands of a small percentage of the people, 429 00:23:17,109 --> 00:23:20,379 governments naturally raise taxes on the wealthy 430 00:23:20,379 --> 00:23:24,450 which facilitates a redistribution of wealth in the economy - 431 00:23:24,450 --> 00:23:29,279 from the 'haves' to the 'have nots'. The 'have-nots,' who are suffering, begin to 432 00:23:29,279 --> 00:23:30,970 resent the wealthy 'haves.' 433 00:23:30,970 --> 00:23:36,309 The wealthy 'haves,' being squeezed by the weak economy, falling asset prices, 434 00:23:36,309 --> 00:23:39,940 higher taxes, begin to resent the 'have nots.' 435 00:23:39,940 --> 00:23:43,890 If the depression continues social disorder can break out. 436 00:23:43,890 --> 00:23:47,280 Not only do tensions rise within countries, 437 00:23:47,280 --> 00:23:52,200 they can rise between countries - especially debtor and creditor countries. 438 00:23:52,200 --> 00:23:56,040 This situation can lead to political change 439 00:23:56,040 --> 00:23:58,840 that can sometimes be extreme. 440 00:23:58,840 --> 00:24:02,630 In the 1930s, this led to Hitler coming to power, 441 00:24:02,630 --> 00:24:08,080 war in Europe, and depression in the United States. Pressure to do something 442 00:24:08,080 --> 00:24:10,070 to end the depression increases. 443 00:24:10,070 --> 00:24:14,950 Remember, most of what people thought was money was actually credit. 444 00:24:14,950 --> 00:24:18,400 So, when credit disappears, people don't have enough money. 445 00:24:18,400 --> 00:24:23,190 People are desperate for money and you remember who can print money? 446 00:24:23,190 --> 00:24:27,370 The Central Bank can. 447 00:24:27,370 --> 00:24:30,309 Having already lowered its interest rates to nearly 0 448 00:24:30,309 --> 00:24:34,090 - it's forced to print money. Unlike cutting spending, 449 00:24:34,090 --> 00:24:37,299 debt reduction, and wealth redistribution, 450 00:24:37,299 --> 00:24:42,190 printing money is inflationary and stimulative. Inevitably, the central bank 451 00:24:42,190 --> 00:24:43,210 prints new money 452 00:24:43,210 --> 00:24:47,150 โ€” out of thin air โ€” and uses it to buy financial assets 453 00:24:47,150 --> 00:24:52,260 and government bonds. It happened in the United States during the Great Depression 454 00:24:52,260 --> 00:24:56,010 and again in 2008, when the United States' central bank โ€” 455 00:24:56,010 --> 00:24:59,940 the Federal Reserve โ€” printed over two trillion dollars. 456 00:24:59,940 --> 00:25:04,179 Other central banks around the world that could, printed a lot of money, too. 457 00:25:04,179 --> 00:25:07,440 By buying financial assets with this money, 458 00:25:07,440 --> 00:25:11,679 it helps drive up asset prices which makes people more creditworthy. 459 00:25:11,679 --> 00:25:15,820 However, this only helps those who own financial assets. 460 00:25:15,820 --> 00:25:21,840 You see, the central bank can print money but it can only buy financial assets. 461 00:25:21,840 --> 00:25:24,900 The Central Government, on the other hand, 462 00:25:24,900 --> 00:25:29,580 can buy goods and services and put money in the hands of the people 463 00:25:29,580 --> 00:25:34,520 but it can't print money. So, in order to stimulate the economy, the two 464 00:25:34,520 --> 00:25:35,650 must cooperate. 465 00:25:35,650 --> 00:25:40,470 By buying government bonds, the Central Bank essentially lends money to the 466 00:25:40,470 --> 00:25:41,190 government, 467 00:25:41,190 --> 00:25:44,909 allowing it to run a deficit and increase spending 468 00:25:44,909 --> 00:25:48,650 on goods and services through its stimulus programs 469 00:25:48,650 --> 00:25:53,080 and unemployment benefits. This increases people's income 470 00:25:53,080 --> 00:25:56,240 as well as the government's debt. However, 471 00:25:56,240 --> 00:25:59,540 it will lower the economy's total debt burden. 472 00:25:59,540 --> 00:26:05,429 This is a very risky time. Policy makers need to balance the four ways that debt 473 00:26:05,429 --> 00:26:06,590 burdens come down. 474 00:26:06,590 --> 00:26:13,050 The deflationary ways need to balance with the inflationary ways in 475 00:26:13,050 --> 00:26:14,710 order to maintain stability. 476 00:26:14,710 --> 00:26:18,130 If balanced correctly, there can be a 477 00:26:18,130 --> 00:26:21,479 Beautiful Deleveraging. 478 00:26:21,479 --> 00:26:25,359 You see, a deleveraging can be ugly or it can be beautiful. 479 00:26:25,359 --> 00:26:28,839 How can a deleveraging be beautiful? 480 00:26:28,839 --> 00:26:33,429 Even though a deleveraging is a difficult situation, 481 00:26:33,429 --> 00:26:37,549 handling a difficult situation in the best possible way is beautiful. 482 00:26:37,549 --> 00:26:42,210 A lot more beautiful than the debt-fueled, unbalanced excesses of the 483 00:26:42,210 --> 00:26:45,940 leveraging phase. In a beautiful deleveraging, 484 00:26:45,940 --> 00:26:51,089 debts decline relative to income, real economic growth is positive, 485 00:26:51,089 --> 00:26:56,889 and inflation isn't a problem. It is achieved by having the right balance. 486 00:26:56,889 --> 00:27:00,159 The right balance requires a certain mix 487 00:27:00,159 --> 00:27:04,229 of cutting spending, reducing debt, transferring wealth 488 00:27:04,229 --> 00:27:09,149 and printing money so that economic and social stability can be maintained. 489 00:27:09,149 --> 00:27:13,639 People ask if printing money will raise inflation. 490 00:27:13,639 --> 00:27:18,879 It won't if it offsets falling credit. Remember, spending is what matters. 491 00:27:18,879 --> 00:27:24,249 A dollar of spending paid for with money has the same effect on price as a dollar 492 00:27:24,249 --> 00:27:25,969 of spending paid for with credit. 493 00:27:25,969 --> 00:27:31,299 By printing money, the Central Bank can make up for the disappearance of credit 494 00:27:31,299 --> 00:27:33,080 with an increase in the amount of money. 495 00:27:33,080 --> 00:27:38,509 In order to turn things around, the Central Bank needs to not only pump up 496 00:27:38,509 --> 00:27:39,519 income growth 497 00:27:39,519 --> 00:27:43,849 but get the rate of income growth higher than the rate of interest on the 498 00:27:43,849 --> 00:27:45,099 accumulated debt. 499 00:27:45,099 --> 00:27:48,379 So, what do I mean by that? Basically, 500 00:27:48,379 --> 00:27:52,309 income needs to grow faster than debt grows. For example: 501 00:27:52,309 --> 00:27:56,080 let's assume that a country going through a deleveraging has a debt-to- 502 00:27:56,080 --> 00:27:58,580 income ratio of 100%. 503 00:27:58,580 --> 00:28:03,659 That means that the amount of debt it has is the same as the amount of income the 504 00:28:03,659 --> 00:28:05,799 entire country makes in a year. 505 00:28:05,799 --> 00:28:09,009 Now think about the interest rate on that debt, 506 00:28:09,009 --> 00:28:11,159 let's say it is 2%. 507 00:28:11,159 --> 00:28:15,029 If debt is growing at 2% because of that interest rate and 508 00:28:15,029 --> 00:28:15,690 income 509 00:28:15,690 --> 00:28:20,230 is only growing at around only 1%, you will never reduce the debt burden. 510 00:28:20,230 --> 00:28:24,809 You need to print enough money to get the rate of income growth above the 511 00:28:24,809 --> 00:28:25,950 rate of interest. 512 00:28:25,950 --> 00:28:30,720 However, printing money can easily be abused because it's so easy to do and 513 00:28:30,720 --> 00:28:33,049 people prefer it to the alternatives. 514 00:28:33,049 --> 00:28:36,200 The key is to avoid printing too much money 515 00:28:36,200 --> 00:28:41,110 and causing unacceptably high inflation, the way Germany did during its 516 00:28:41,110 --> 00:28:43,129 deleveraging in the 1920's. 517 00:28:43,129 --> 00:28:48,269 If policymakers achieve the right balance, a deleveraging isn't so dramatic. 518 00:28:48,269 --> 00:28:51,340 Growth is slow but debt burdens go down. 519 00:28:51,340 --> 00:28:54,470 That's a beautiful deleveraging. 520 00:28:54,470 --> 00:28:59,830 When incomes begin to rise, borrowers begin to appear more creditworthy. 521 00:28:59,830 --> 00:29:02,999 And when borrowers appear more creditworthy, 522 00:29:02,999 --> 00:29:08,509 lenders begin to lend money again. Debt burdens finally begin to fall. 523 00:29:08,509 --> 00:29:13,499 Able to borrow money, people can spend more. Eventually, the economy begins to 524 00:29:13,499 --> 00:29:14,399 grow again, 525 00:29:14,399 --> 00:29:18,009 leading to the reflation phase of the long term debt cycle. 526 00:29:18,009 --> 00:29:22,490 Though the deleveraging process can be horrible if handled badly, 527 00:29:22,490 --> 00:29:26,279 if handled well, it will eventually fix the problem. 528 00:29:26,279 --> 00:29:29,580 It takes roughly a decade or more 529 00:29:29,580 --> 00:29:33,669 for debt burdens to fall and economic activity to get back to normal 530 00:29:33,669 --> 00:29:37,899 - hence the term 'lost decade.' 531 00:29:37,899 --> 00:29:42,720 Of course, the economy is a little more complicated than this template 532 00:29:42,720 --> 00:29:43,639 suggests. 533 00:29:43,639 --> 00:29:48,850 However, laying the short term debt cycle on top of the long term debt cycle 534 00:29:48,850 --> 00:29:52,629 and then laying both of them on top of the productivity growth line 535 00:29:52,629 --> 00:29:55,919 gives a reasonably good template for seeing where we've been, 536 00:29:55,919 --> 00:29:58,919 where we are now and where we are probably headed. 537 00:29:58,919 --> 00:30:03,019 So in summary, there are three rules of thumb that I'd like you to take away 538 00:30:03,019 --> 00:30:03,720 from this: 539 00:30:03,720 --> 00:30:08,220 First: Don't have debt rise faster than income, 540 00:30:08,220 --> 00:30:11,429 because your debt burdens will eventually crush you. 541 00:30:11,429 --> 00:30:16,059 Second: Don't have income rise faster than productivity, 542 00:30:16,059 --> 00:30:19,159 because you will eventually become uncompetitive. 543 00:30:19,159 --> 00:30:24,000 And third: Do all that you can to raise your productivity, 544 00:30:24,000 --> 00:30:29,029 because, in the long run, that's what matters most. 545 00:30:29,549 --> 00:30:34,080 This is simple advice for you and it's simple advice for policy makers. 546 00:30:34,080 --> 00:30:38,470 You might be surprised but most people โ€” including most policy makers โ€” don't pay enough attention 547 00:30:38,470 --> 00:30:39,509 to this. 548 00:30:39,509 --> 00:30:44,059 This template has worked for me and I hope that it'll work for you. 549 00:30:44,059 --> 00:30:46,380 Thank you. 45271

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