The "Land is Ours" is a slogan with many different meanings. For some it is a claim to the right to an affordable small holding, for others it is a challenge to the rich (who can in all honestly claim "the land is ours"), but for few does it mean what it should mean: that the land of this place is for, and is the responsibility of, the people of this place. Perhaps the reason that notions of egality struggle to find place in the land rights debate is that the process of developing political awareness in a world that is so convoluted in its dishonesty is like peeling an onion. Not only does it make you cry, there is always a point of deeper understanding beneath another false assumption.
In our age one of the great lies of the western world is that pensions can provide most people with twenty years of relative comfort in old age, one generation after the next. This point does not apply to the basic state pension paid for by current contributions from workers, but to the idea that most people can and should pay into a savings scheme and so gain a right to bigger cut of the world's productivity. Few reflect that the billions paid into pensions are the same billions that bought privatised utilities, the same billions that financed Private Finance Initiatives, the same billions that bought securitized mortgages, invested in hedge funds and private equity companies and the same billions that have been systematically defrauded by the finance industry to pay for massive bonuses. Governments and the finance industry have known for years that pension funds were a problem. Over and again governments have looked for ways of passing tax money and inflated returns to pension funds. They could have financed hospitals and schools and trains much more cheaply with direct investment, but by borrowing from the pension funds they were able to ensure that tax payers money would flow into these funds for years to come. They sanctioned high rail fares and utility bills for the same reason. The sad truth is that there are very few investment opportunities that can realistically be so wonderful that they can fulfil the promises made to investors. Pensions are more like a tax paid to the finance industry.
All this constitutes a great miss-selling of investments. It has been the process through which disposable income has been channelled away from giving people a real choice about their future. On the one hand it has taken the money they might have deployed more usefully and on the other it has created an urgent need for big business and governments to create investment opportunities that at least appear to be viable. Ultimately though the promises of the pension funds can only be fulfilled by exploiting low paid workers, both at home and around the world and by exploiting the environment and natural resources. It makes a complete nonsense of any idea of sustainability and social and economic fairness.
Looking back in history, the transition from the exploitation and unjust power distribution of the feudal system and imperialism did require benign state intervention. When the large majority of people are oppressed by poverty there is only limited scope for self help without government support, but that does not mean that there is much positive about replacing subservience to capitalist exploitation with dependence on the state. When, however, people are easily persuaded to relinquish that part of their income not needed for basic survival to a combination of frivolous consumption, excessive tax and false promise investments they become complicit in their own enslavement. The high returns on investment needed to sustain this deceit require that nations like the UK maintain large aggressive military systems as an explicit threat in international relations. They require establishing a network of secret, unregulated tax havens to serve as a system of financial piracy, channelling wealth from developing countries to the City of London. Maintaining the stable power hierarchy is more the aim of policy than the enrichment of the few, although the two are hardly in conflict. This objective is served by high tax on middle income workers and the channelling of some of this money to agricultural subsidies that ensure that land prices are high and that most of the land is held by a wealthy and powerful minority who identify strongly with both state and corporate interests.
This reality invites a very practical revolution. People should stop paying into their pension funds and start to invest in making their own lives more sustainable, more ethical and more secure. This requires a self-help land reform revolution at the end of which we could say with honesty "the Land is Ours".
Even in an age where individualism appears to have triumphed as the corporate world's unit of consumer vulnerability, the household remains in reality the basic unit of society and it is action at a household level that is required. Food, water, energy and to some extent clothes and entertainment are purchased and consumed by households, as too, by definition, are houses themselves. It is therefore households that take action to be greener, to buy fair trade, grow their own vegetables, prepare food and so on. There are though quite serious practical, cultural and financial limits on how far most households, particularly those with school age children, can change the way they source the things they need and how they live so as to live more cheaply and with less negative impacts. As anyone who has tried to live in a small town or village without a car will know, it is easy to feel that you are an anti-social lift bludger who selfishly deprives their children of access to their friends and more distant out of school activities. Not buying from supermarkets can be an expensive luxury. Turning your front garden into an allotment can test the understanding of neighbours. Even getting house insulation up to standard can be a squeeze on tight family budgets, let alone fitting solar thermal panels on the roof. When these factors flow together it can be easier to just accept the guilt, do the recycling (even when you know that some items don't really get recycled or re-used) and to console ourselves that others are not changing their lives either. However, if hundreds of households in the same area were to embark on a journey of change together then things might really start to change.
At the heart of the household is food. Taking food under household control is the key issue that unlocks the rest. Delegating food to corporate interests is perhaps the single most dis-empowering thing that people do and taking food back is the way to get the power to make other empowering changes. Food requires land and labour and these are the resources that households with working adults are usually lacking, but rather than using savings to address this most people give their savings for corporate investment. They need a sensible, practical and viable way to direct their savings to where the money can give them the benefit of the land and labour they don't have without losing responsibility and control over the food supplies they depend on. Thy also need ways of saving money on other areas of household expenditure so that they can afford the additional costs that good, local food usually incurs.
This can not be done alone. Households need to work together. This can be very difficult, because inter personal relationships are rarely easy and many have learnt the hard way not to mix friends and money, however this is largely because when time, money and effort are involved there is a need for the right structures to help us manage. This points to a need for working on a large scale.
Working on quite a large scale is also required for other practical reasons. If someone is earning a living growing vegetables, keeping poultry, or dairy or growing cereals, how much do they need to produce to be viable even if they are getting a retail price? The answer to this is obviously variable. Growing vegetables for one hundred households can support one family of growers, but to grow cereals or maintain a dairy would not be viable without a market of nearer five hundred households, even if the work were divided between a number of farmers, due to the cost of capital equipment. It would therefore not be unrealistic to think in terms of five hundred households needing to work together to purchase the land that they would need to meet most of their household food needs. The amount of land involved would need to be about an acre per household or five hundred acres.
Large farms under a single management are however not a good idea. People don't like working as farm labourers as much as they like to be responsible for their own farms. A five hundred acre farm producing a wide diversity of seasonal products and with on-farm processing would require a large amount of skilled and knowledgeable labour. It would not be realistic to ask those involved to commit themselves to this work, but that they had the freedom and security that goes with running your own holding. To produce the food required would involve the work of upwards of twenty people, including such processing as the making of dairy products, jams, juices, beer, cider wine and bread. A farm managed for this purpose would therefore best be divided into at least ten smaller holdings.
Making a living from small farms is notoriously difficult. Three particular problems are common: the farms are under-capitalised and so difficult to manage, they struggle to secure markets for their produce at a fair price and they lack economy of scale. In addition the work and location can be very solitary making it that much harder if things are not going well. There is a large amount of regulation, particularly for livestock and this brings both expense and a pressure to conform to what often is pointless, irrelevant interference. A strong cluster of holdings with access to a secure committed market and the necessary capital investment could avoid these problems or at least be better able to cope.
Imagine then that five hundred household in or around a rural town were to embark on a revolutionary adventure. Following meetings and parties to build a shared vision, they commit themselves to a promise: Each household commits to either invest £10,000 or to make monthly payments so as to repay a loan of this amount off over ten years. This raises £5 Million. This money is then used to purchase the five hundred acre farm. The local council responds to the community commitment and vision by granting all the necessary planning permissions, enabling the construction of a new eco-hamlet with the newly recruited tenant farmers being involved and contributing their own investment into the project. The tenants and the householders develop a contract that involves the householders agreeing to purchase produce at a fair price, the tenants contracting to supply and the householders agreeing a peppercorn rent and making available very low cost loans for the farmers to develop their enterprises. It is then up to the tenants to work out how they will co-ordinate their activities to meet the goal of providing for as many of the needs of the householders as they reasonably can. Meanwhile the householders get on developing other enterprises to meet needs they have in common. A large barn is converted into a store with frozen and refrigerated areas. Bulk purchase of common items enables the co-operative to negotiate good prices on everything from toilet paper, to rice, lentils, coffee and pasta. All the products, including those from the farm are listed on-line where households can place their orders. Each household is supplied with a secure drop off box where a delivery vehicle can place the orders that are all paid for by debit card. The supplying partner is instantly credited, so there is no delay on payment. Once the main food enterprise is established, the co-operative focuses on other ways to save households money. Using the existing expertise in the community, a household maintenance company is formed that also conducts a survey of all the homes. This includes a plumber, electrician and general builder. Again the households undertake to use this business as needed and in return the new business agrees to give its best rates. With a secured bank loan (secured against the farm land) the co -op is able to provide each household with low cost loans to make the houses more energy efficient. Following the purchase of land for a community biofuel woodland many households use the loans to put in combined heat and power pellet burner generators. Discussion on car use needs results in the co-operative purchasing a small fleet of vehicles for shared use. This enables some households to stop owning a car and others to reduce to one vehicle. The co-operative in due course develops its own insurance company that reduces car and household insurance significantly by agreeing to pay the first £3,000 of any claim. After three years the co-operative calculates that as a result of savings that the return on the £10,000 invested is over 15%pa. In addition the households benefit from improved community life and have benefited from access to the farm,s camping and leisure opportunities. Most members feel that they have gained improved social status, with friends, neighbours and family envious of their improved quality of life.
Please leave your thoughts and comments below and email 21stCenturyPeasant@gmail.com if you are interested in this idea. If there is enough interest and offers of help it can be a reality.
Friday, April 27, 2012
The Edge of Tyranny
In this essay I outline the crisis we are
in, describing the way we got here and my fear for what happens next
In the 1930’s the collapse of a credit
bubble resulted in a strong enough economic collapse that there was radical
reform of the finance industry. The
reforms aimed to give government stronger control of credit, so that it was
used to finance productive investment, rather than speculation on asset values
and projected returns. These systems of credit control were steadily eroded
from the mid 1950’s on, in large part because they were based on control of
capital flows between countries. In practice it was unrealistic to have
controls on the primary trading currencies. As the offshore banking of US
dollars, in particular, expanded, so too did the opportunity to undermine the controls
on credit put in place in the 1930’s and consolidated at Bretton Woods. This in
effect gave rise to the low tax, low regulation, high secrecy jurisdictions
often based on former colonial islands. This was no accident, but was actively
supported by the Bank of England as a means of stemming the decline of London
as a financial centre as finance became dominated by the US. In due course this
led to the collapse of the Bretton Woods controls on credit, followed by the
end of controls on the movement of capital. By the end of the twentieth century
all remaining controls on banks were effectively removed as the US and the UK
competed for dominance in global financial markets by offering lower and lower
standards of regulation.
As regulation declined, speculation increased,
particularly in asset values where speculative investment itself was the driver
for higher values. The increased availability of credit enabled real wages to
stagnate as workers were encouraged to use their income to finance debt to
improve their lives, rather than financing expenditure only from income.
Combined with other work place changes, this facilitated the decline of
unionised labour. The result was a win for capitalism as more people consumed
more while feeling richer if they had property investments. In the background
however was the need to keep expanding production and consumption in order to
enable the credit to be repaid. As the relationship between savings and credit
became uncoupled, assessment of risk, rather than the banks’ capital reserves
became the factor limiting the expansion of credit. The systems for evaluating
the risks associated with financial institutions and their products had been
set up when there was a high degree of effective bank regulation. They were and
are, not fit for purpose, with the result that the liabilities held by the
world’s leading financial institutions are a time bomb.
After the start of the crisis in 2008 there
was a push to get banks into a safer condition by insisting on larger reserves
on the grounds that governments and their taxpayers could not withstand
covering more losses. There was not however a reintroduction of controls on the
banks’ ability to extend credit for speculation rather than for productive
investment. Once their economies appeared stable most governments affected by
the crisis began introducing austerity measures to decrease government spending
so as to repay debts, primarily accrued through bailing out banks and providing
an economic stimulus to avoid collapse in the early stages of the crisis. The
resulting decrease in demand as jobs were lost and wages were pushed down
created an environment where investment in production offered low returns. This
effectively has left a vast amount of capital and credit capacity, both in the
banking system and the predominantly offshore based shadow banking system
looking for a home.
Despite the emergence of China, India,
Russia and Brazil as rapidly growing economies, there has to-date been no
serious alternative to the US dollar as a reserve and trading currency.
Investment in US treasury bonds has therefore remained strong, as they provide
the only secure and tradable investment for countries running trade surpluses.
The high price of oil and gas, in part driven by speculation, has resulted in
vast sovereign wealth funds. Together with the funds of other winners from the
bubble and its burst this has created a concentration of power within the
financial markets that has no morality and no interest in the lives of people.
The institutions involved in the management of this money, together with some
of the wealthy individuals, appear to be very deeply involved in manipulating
the decisions of political leaders throughout the developed world democracies. In
the US this has resulted in the formation of highly militarised state with the
most obscenely powerful war machine that has ever existed and a vast network of
slave prisons incarcerating a greater proportion of the population than any
other regime, either now or in the past. The UK is closely bound to this
emerging tyranny. With fears that some countries can not meet the costs of
their sovereign debts, particularly in the Euro zone where the tools of
economic management are restricted, the effect is to undermine totally the
ability of our politicians to take steps to write off debts that can never be
repaid and to return the economies involved to proper functionality.
What is happening instead is very alarming.
Governments fear unrest at home and their loss of power and influence overseas
at a time when access to food, energy and other commodities is becoming
increasingly competitive. They are not speaking out against the US, but are
keen to be seen as on the same side. They are finding common cause with
corporations keen to protect intellectual property assets vulnerable to free
distribution on the internet (never mind that the value of these assets has
been inflated by copyright protection that is not in the public interest) as
they explore how to control the explosion of self education that the internet
is enabling. To control unrest governments are engaging in inventing enemies and
threats so that they can bring in restrictive laws. This abuse of the law
reflects the shift of power away from ordinary people and to those who control
wealth.
So what happens next? Will the sand castles
of finance be washed away by waves of worthless debt and in the chaos that
ensues will order be maintained at the end of a gun with the millions of CCTV
cameras managing curfews. Will the views and networks we described ourselves by
on Facebook become the evidence for our confessions in night courts. Will our
release onto cold streets with our clothes stinking of our own piss and shit
and our bodies and minds battered be the expression of how benign is the new
regime. Will our young people find some pride in their recruitment to serve the
nation either in some overseas horror or in creating order through terror at
home as we adjust to the new dark age. And God help you if you are different
for the compliance of the masses requires the “thank God its not me” sacrifice of
some vilified others.
Or are we better than that. Can the meaning
of being educated include the ability to challenge this emerging tyranny? Can
we make it clear that this future is not and can not ever be an option? Not for
you. Not for me. Not for brown people with beards or for people who protest.
Not for anyone. Our politicians must understand that they must turn on the rich
and their institutions, not on us. We can cope with the hardship, but only if
we know that the power is coming back to us and that the systems that are then
put in place are the systems we need to be able to look to our future with
hope, confidence and pride.
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
WHY THE NHS IS BEING PRIVATISED
When governments used their borrowing capacity to bail out the banks they mortgaged themselves. Those, like the UK that already had large debts were more vulnerable, but those with only limited borrowing capacity (Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Greece) were particularly vulnerable to the kind of experience anyone who has taken on a mortgage that is too big will be familiar with. Just like many of us use a credit card to get today what we hope we can afford tomorrow, so do governments use their borrowing capacity as part of budgeting. Whereas we have to accept high interests rates though, governments expect to borrow cheap. When the ability to borrow cheap is under threat, governments are in big trouble. They need that AAA rating from the credit rating agencies. Without it they are in danger of being unable to pay public service wages. They know that if that happens they become a distressed creditor, and that the country will have to accept what ever terms bankers demand.
As is the way these things work, shrewd governments don't wait for this to happen. They try to buy off the bankers before the trouble begins. That is the UK strategy. They ask the bankers what they want. What the bankers want is what bankers always want; low risk investment opportunities. The UK is therefore playing the banks at their own game. By enabling as much government expenditure as possible to pass to the private sector the UK is trying to make itself (from the banks perspective) too big to fail. This is why there is such a push to privatise the delivery of the NHS. If the banks are heavily invested in UK public expenditure they will be less likely to threaten the UK government with higher interest rates,
Gordon Brown can be credited for this discovery, although his intention was quite different. In taking the view that he needed to take the debts for government infrastructure projects "off balance sheet" so as to avoid increasing the costs of government borrowing for revenue commitments, Brown developed the Private Finance Initiative. In practice PFI enabled private contractors to obtain the short term finance for the construction phase, before the debts were sold on to banks who used the "backed by the Bank of England" service contracts as leverage assets or sold them on to private equity companies. They effectively became, along with companies in the defence and utility sectors, the assets that underpinned the shadow banking system. When the crisis came in 2008, PF| was the UK insurance policy.
There are two types of insurance. There is insurance that you take out because you want to protect yourself against random events. There is also insurance that you have to take out because if you don't the insurer is promising to break your legs. Turning public expenditure into private contracts very much smacks of the second. Dressing it up as political dogma doesn't alter the equation: tax money is being given to organizations who will add their bung to the costs of delivering the service that we already have without their involvement. The people delivering the service will be the same, the wages and conditions will become gradually worse, while the quality of service will depend on how weak the government was when it signed the contracts.
So here in a nutshell is why the NHS bill will go through. Here also is an explanation as to why Nick Clegg is threatening the bill's real purpose. Cameron wants to be able to go to the thugs from the banks and say how it isn't easy, that they are asking too much, that he is doing his best, but he is up against real opposition. This is part of the negotiation. The bill has to go through giving the banks the opportunity to buy the NHS contracts in the end and this stage is all about enabling the eventual contracts to not be an open cheque book that will enable the gangsters to raid the UK treasury for evermore as a condition for having a health service.
We are in that stage of a game of Monopoly where the player with hotels on Mayfair, Park Lane and the orange set on the other side of the board is slowly and painfully getting all the other players to demolish their hotels and houses and surrender everything they have. The difference between this and Monopoly is that here the government and the people are the losers. The government has the right to change the rules to stop it happening, but is so deluded by its own dogma and so scared of facing reality that it would rather pretend that somehow it is its duty to sell us all out.
As is the way these things work, shrewd governments don't wait for this to happen. They try to buy off the bankers before the trouble begins. That is the UK strategy. They ask the bankers what they want. What the bankers want is what bankers always want; low risk investment opportunities. The UK is therefore playing the banks at their own game. By enabling as much government expenditure as possible to pass to the private sector the UK is trying to make itself (from the banks perspective) too big to fail. This is why there is such a push to privatise the delivery of the NHS. If the banks are heavily invested in UK public expenditure they will be less likely to threaten the UK government with higher interest rates,
Gordon Brown can be credited for this discovery, although his intention was quite different. In taking the view that he needed to take the debts for government infrastructure projects "off balance sheet" so as to avoid increasing the costs of government borrowing for revenue commitments, Brown developed the Private Finance Initiative. In practice PFI enabled private contractors to obtain the short term finance for the construction phase, before the debts were sold on to banks who used the "backed by the Bank of England" service contracts as leverage assets or sold them on to private equity companies. They effectively became, along with companies in the defence and utility sectors, the assets that underpinned the shadow banking system. When the crisis came in 2008, PF| was the UK insurance policy.
There are two types of insurance. There is insurance that you take out because you want to protect yourself against random events. There is also insurance that you have to take out because if you don't the insurer is promising to break your legs. Turning public expenditure into private contracts very much smacks of the second. Dressing it up as political dogma doesn't alter the equation: tax money is being given to organizations who will add their bung to the costs of delivering the service that we already have without their involvement. The people delivering the service will be the same, the wages and conditions will become gradually worse, while the quality of service will depend on how weak the government was when it signed the contracts.
So here in a nutshell is why the NHS bill will go through. Here also is an explanation as to why Nick Clegg is threatening the bill's real purpose. Cameron wants to be able to go to the thugs from the banks and say how it isn't easy, that they are asking too much, that he is doing his best, but he is up against real opposition. This is part of the negotiation. The bill has to go through giving the banks the opportunity to buy the NHS contracts in the end and this stage is all about enabling the eventual contracts to not be an open cheque book that will enable the gangsters to raid the UK treasury for evermore as a condition for having a health service.
We are in that stage of a game of Monopoly where the player with hotels on Mayfair, Park Lane and the orange set on the other side of the board is slowly and painfully getting all the other players to demolish their hotels and houses and surrender everything they have. The difference between this and Monopoly is that here the government and the people are the losers. The government has the right to change the rules to stop it happening, but is so deluded by its own dogma and so scared of facing reality that it would rather pretend that somehow it is its duty to sell us all out.
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Pension Funds Fuel Finance Corruption
Ever wondered what happens to that money that you never see that is marked on your pay slip as "pension contribution"? Its so easy not even to think about it. How much is it? £122 or £166 it doesn't matter, but if you think you are average, times that by twelve and times that again by fifteen million and you are in the right sort of ballpark for UK pension contributions. Now think about that year on year. Now think about what happens to the profits that you give oil and gas producers when you heat and light your home and fill up your car. All these add up to some of the biggest funds of concentrated wealth that the world has ever seen. You hear on the news about hedge funds and private equity funds. This is where your money is ending up. Sometimes the same money, particularly from oil and gas, is in sovereign wealth funds, but either way it all becomes the chips used in the great global finance casino. Every day about $4Trillion is exchanged on the foreign exchange markets. Most of this is gambling on small currency movements. This amount of money is equal to over $5000 for every person on earth. Whose money is this? Most of it doesn't really exist, its created based on risk assessment, but behind the fantasy its the money paid as pensions, its the oil and gas profits and its the money held by governments of countries like China that are winning on the balance of trade.
Does this matter? Of course it does. Behind this headline lies a whole chain of investments. Investments in food futures that drag up the price of food, putting hundreds of millions of people into risk of starvation. Investments in securitized mortgages fuelled the house price boom that has left millions with debts they can not repay and millions of others who can't afford to buy a home. Investments in pharmaceuticals and weapons and copyright creative products need secrecy laws and patents to protect them. There are countless investments in products that are the result of manufactured demand such as cloths fashion and bottled water and so much other nonsense.
The truth is that there is far more investment money looking for a home than there are proper opportunities to invest it profitably. When oil prices went up in the 1970's the oil rich countries put their money on deposit with the big western banks. The banks didn't know what to do with the money so they lent it to developing countries fuelling an extravaganza of arms sales, engineering white elephants and corruption while leaving the poorest countries with debts they could never repay.
By the late 1990's the same problem was arising from the pensions and savings that people were making. There was simply not enough places that needed investment that could pay it back. At first the finance industry pinned its hopes on the dot com shares. They made a fortune in fees selling shares in companies they knew were rubbish. The market collapsed.
Then came 911 and the investment in all the military and security needed for a fake war on terror. Still this was not enough to swallow the constant flow of pension cash pouring into the casino. Meanwhile in the UK and the US the governments stripped out the safeguards to stop the finance industry from stealing from the pension funds. It became easier for money to be moved around the world as electronic cash. The gamblers worked out new ways to cream off fees and commissions and to pass their trading losses onto pension funds, dumping the loot in offshore accounts or paying it out as bonuses. They covered the holes in pension funds by inflating the value of property assets. Mortgages were bundled up and sold to pension funds as near zero risk investments. Then they laid bets that householders and governments would default.
What we have is too much money chasing opportunities that don't exist and corrupting everything it touches. It has corrupted democratic politics, making so that only the money matters not the vision for our future. It has corrupted international relations, making war part of arms sales investments. It has corrupted our civil society as utilities and railways have been sold to big money investors while tax payers subsidize these industries. Governments have become scared of people losing faith in their pensions and have spent tax cash to boost the profits of pension fund (and other) investors in railways, hospitals and schools.
In this climate of unreality our bankers have become out-right crooks. manipulating the law and politics to create an environment that favours short term greed over all other interests. They borrow money for nothing and lend out at high interest rates. They are too large to fail. They pay their senior people fortunes. They are holding governments to ransom while the national economies sink.
Meanwhile the United States calculates it can not win a commercial war with China and so has armed itself to be the most powerful fighting force in the history of man.
What does this all mean to you? If you are of fighting age or have children of that age be concerned. If you are paying money into a pension think: there are not enough good investment opportunities for you to be able to live comfortably for twenty odd years doing no work. If the value of your fund looks like it is holding value despite the greedy fees that its managers have taken, then it is probably because they money has been used to inflate asset values. House prices have not risen because of supply and demand, but because banks have agreed to lend more money. House prices have gone down in the last few years because banks have agreed to lend less money because governments have insisted they build bigger reserves. There is no real market.
Nor is there a real terror threat to justify war in Afghanistan or the restrictions on our liberty. We are far more likely to have our security disturbed by the police or by corporations and banks charging extortionate prices or taking possession of our homes than of being victims of non-state political violence. The real threat is from the state and from big corporations. We can't trust and believe the view of the world from the BBC and commercial news stations as they tell us what governments want us to think. They are very clever at this and can sound plausible unless you are also getting your news from more reliable sources and can compare
So what should we do to protect ourselves from the failure of the systems that we were told we could rely on? Firstly it is critical that we stop giving the finance industry our money in return for a promise of a comfortable retirement that they will default on. Pension funds are not going to pay out for most people at anything near what they might expect. Worse than that, the money is being used against our interests. We need to invest our savings for the future where we know the money is doing good, real and worthwhile things and that means investing it locally where we can see and benefit from what it is doing and where we can know the people involved.
Don't invest in the future, invest in what is needed now. Invest in land that feeds you, invest in joint buying groups to cut out supermarkets. Invest in other local mutuals for savings and loans and insurance. Invest in local businesses that support your household, like energy saving engineers and plumbers. Invest in other local businesses that you know are needed and make sense. What ever you do stop paying money into the monster that is the financial system. It has failed and will destroy our society if it is not put back into it's cage. Do not feed it!
Does this matter? Of course it does. Behind this headline lies a whole chain of investments. Investments in food futures that drag up the price of food, putting hundreds of millions of people into risk of starvation. Investments in securitized mortgages fuelled the house price boom that has left millions with debts they can not repay and millions of others who can't afford to buy a home. Investments in pharmaceuticals and weapons and copyright creative products need secrecy laws and patents to protect them. There are countless investments in products that are the result of manufactured demand such as cloths fashion and bottled water and so much other nonsense.
The truth is that there is far more investment money looking for a home than there are proper opportunities to invest it profitably. When oil prices went up in the 1970's the oil rich countries put their money on deposit with the big western banks. The banks didn't know what to do with the money so they lent it to developing countries fuelling an extravaganza of arms sales, engineering white elephants and corruption while leaving the poorest countries with debts they could never repay.
By the late 1990's the same problem was arising from the pensions and savings that people were making. There was simply not enough places that needed investment that could pay it back. At first the finance industry pinned its hopes on the dot com shares. They made a fortune in fees selling shares in companies they knew were rubbish. The market collapsed.
Then came 911 and the investment in all the military and security needed for a fake war on terror. Still this was not enough to swallow the constant flow of pension cash pouring into the casino. Meanwhile in the UK and the US the governments stripped out the safeguards to stop the finance industry from stealing from the pension funds. It became easier for money to be moved around the world as electronic cash. The gamblers worked out new ways to cream off fees and commissions and to pass their trading losses onto pension funds, dumping the loot in offshore accounts or paying it out as bonuses. They covered the holes in pension funds by inflating the value of property assets. Mortgages were bundled up and sold to pension funds as near zero risk investments. Then they laid bets that householders and governments would default.
What we have is too much money chasing opportunities that don't exist and corrupting everything it touches. It has corrupted democratic politics, making so that only the money matters not the vision for our future. It has corrupted international relations, making war part of arms sales investments. It has corrupted our civil society as utilities and railways have been sold to big money investors while tax payers subsidize these industries. Governments have become scared of people losing faith in their pensions and have spent tax cash to boost the profits of pension fund (and other) investors in railways, hospitals and schools.
In this climate of unreality our bankers have become out-right crooks. manipulating the law and politics to create an environment that favours short term greed over all other interests. They borrow money for nothing and lend out at high interest rates. They are too large to fail. They pay their senior people fortunes. They are holding governments to ransom while the national economies sink.
Meanwhile the United States calculates it can not win a commercial war with China and so has armed itself to be the most powerful fighting force in the history of man.
What does this all mean to you? If you are of fighting age or have children of that age be concerned. If you are paying money into a pension think: there are not enough good investment opportunities for you to be able to live comfortably for twenty odd years doing no work. If the value of your fund looks like it is holding value despite the greedy fees that its managers have taken, then it is probably because they money has been used to inflate asset values. House prices have not risen because of supply and demand, but because banks have agreed to lend more money. House prices have gone down in the last few years because banks have agreed to lend less money because governments have insisted they build bigger reserves. There is no real market.
Nor is there a real terror threat to justify war in Afghanistan or the restrictions on our liberty. We are far more likely to have our security disturbed by the police or by corporations and banks charging extortionate prices or taking possession of our homes than of being victims of non-state political violence. The real threat is from the state and from big corporations. We can't trust and believe the view of the world from the BBC and commercial news stations as they tell us what governments want us to think. They are very clever at this and can sound plausible unless you are also getting your news from more reliable sources and can compare
So what should we do to protect ourselves from the failure of the systems that we were told we could rely on? Firstly it is critical that we stop giving the finance industry our money in return for a promise of a comfortable retirement that they will default on. Pension funds are not going to pay out for most people at anything near what they might expect. Worse than that, the money is being used against our interests. We need to invest our savings for the future where we know the money is doing good, real and worthwhile things and that means investing it locally where we can see and benefit from what it is doing and where we can know the people involved.
Don't invest in the future, invest in what is needed now. Invest in land that feeds you, invest in joint buying groups to cut out supermarkets. Invest in other local mutuals for savings and loans and insurance. Invest in local businesses that support your household, like energy saving engineers and plumbers. Invest in other local businesses that you know are needed and make sense. What ever you do stop paying money into the monster that is the financial system. It has failed and will destroy our society if it is not put back into it's cage. Do not feed it!
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