The promises cannot be met, and so society decays into warring
elites and competing constituencies.
There is a grand, majestic tragedy in the inevitable collapse of
once-thriving states and empires: it all seemed so permanent at its peak, so godlike in its
power, and then slowly but surely, too many grandiose, unrealistic promises
were made to too many elites and constituencies, and then as growth decays to
stagnation, the only way to maintain the status quo is to appear to meet all
the promises by creating money out of thin air, i.e. debauching the currency.
This political expediency works
most wonderfully for a time: people don't realize the silver content of their coinage
is being cut to near-zero, or there's nothing holding up the value of their
currency but trickery and vague allusions to past glory.
Trust in the state/empire's
currency suddenly collapses in a phase shift: all seems well until the moment the
avalanche sweeps it all away.
It's a simple progression: during the
permanent-growth-is-our-birthright phase of self-reinforcing virtuous cycles,
when everything is expanding rapidly--credit, resources, jobs, capital,
profits, state tax revenues, etc.--promises are made to elites and constituencies
that look easy to meet as the economy is projected to expand rapidly
essentially forever.
But virtuous cycles decay to
unvirtuous cycles of bureaucratic sclerosis and corruption, systemic
friction, declining productivity and resource depletion, and the rise of
parasitic elites who contribute nothing but skim plenty saps the surplus
available for productive reinvestment.
Every elite under pressure to satisfy the demands of those who were
over-promised in the good times reverts to the same two financial fixes: debt
and currency debasement. First the state borrows and borrows and borrows, all under
the belief that "the government can't go broke because it issues its own
money."
Any
rationalization will do in the phase of stagnation, but the reality is it's all
political expediency: lacking the resources to pay all the promises, the state
borrows from the future to maintain the illusion of stability.
Alas, the future arrives, and
the interest on the debt begins stripmining tax revenues needed to fund the
essential responsibilities of the state/empire. At this point,
the ruling elites pursue two equally fatal fixes: they raise taxes on the
remaining productive class while the parastic elites pay little or nothing, and
they devalue the currency so they can continue to pay the promised sums with
less actual wealth.
The productive class either
escapes to other climes, goes underground or opts out. As tax revenues
fall, the ruling elites turn in desperation to debauching the state currency,
in effect issuing 10 units of currency for every 1 unit of actual purchasing
power.
This
maintains the fiction that the promises are being met, but the purchasing power
of the currency erodes so drastically that the parasitic elites and the
constituencies eventually catch on and demand a full payment of what was
promised back in good times.
This demand cannot be met, and
so society decays into warring elites and competing constituencies. The only real
solution--to make severe sacrifices in order to live within the modest means
available and jettison the parasitic elites--is politically and culturally
unpalatable to a citizenry steeped in a belief that good times should be
forever and it's the fault of the ruling party of the moment rather than a
failure of the entire system.
Then the "free" distribution
of bread and circuses ramps up and the silver shipped to phantom legions
defending the borders ends up in the quartermasters' pockets. The delusional
state of the ruling elite infects the general populace, and magical thinking
abounds, as do vague claims to future greatness based on the mythologies of
previous eras that had earned prosperity with sacrifice and thrift.
The entire global status quo is
in the stagnation phase, and the promises that cannot be met are looming large. And so the
politically expedient ruling elites turn to debt and financial trickery to
stave off the reckoning. This works for a few years but it guarantees the
coming collapse.
Expansion, maturation, stagnation and collapse:
Pathfinding our Destiny: Preventing the Final Fall of Our Democratic Republic ($6.95 ebook, $12 print, $13.08 audiobook): Read the first section for free in PDF format.
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