Happenings | News | Show | Sports | Tech | Guide
 SUN 14 MARCH 2010 
 
  ELECTRIC COLUMNISTS
The economics of RUNNING ON EMPTY
As demand for resources outstrips supply, future generations face a tough life
By Larry Haverkamp (Doc Money)
mail@AskDrMoney.com
July 01, 2008 Print Ready   Email Article  

SURPRISINGLY, there are only two ways to invest: You can own or you can lend. That's it.

Click to see larger image
-- TNP Photo Illustration: SIMON ANG

Owning is called 'buying equity'. Examples are stocks and property.

It earns about 12 per cent a year with lots of ups and downs. You could lose some sleep.

Lending is called 'buying debt'. Examples are fixed deposits and bonds.

It earns about 3 per cent a year and lets you sleep soundly.

An age-old truth of investments is that equity earns more than debt. I guess it's obvious since 12 per cent is more than 3 per cent.

A WHOLE NEW WORLD

But now, everything has changed. The world is entering a new era of shortages that could turn the old rules on their heads.

Stocks would follow the economy down, leaving fixed deposits as the top money-earner.

The story begins with the higher prices for natural resources like food, fuel and minerals.

High prices, however, are only a symptom. Chronic shortages are the problem.

You can imagine, for example, the difficulty of building a house without steel or cement.

We saw something like this in 1973 and again in 1982. The US was hit with an oil shortfall, which resulted in both recession and inflation, called stagflation. It spread to Singapore and around the world.

In hindsight, it seems overblown, since everything turned out okay. Prices shot up, then they came down. Growth slowed, then it picked up.

Prosperity returned, as it always does. If it didn't, you would have a permanent recession. The notion is so absurd that no economist in their right mind would even consider it. So I will.

In a worse-case scenario, permanent recession hits and each generation becomes poorer than the last. Gross domestic product (GDP) declines continuously. It eventually hits zero and we return to subsistence living, like our cavemen ancestors.

We may be seeing the beginning of that now.

Demand is out-pacing the world's limited supplies, pushing prices higher.

NEW OIL RECORD

Last Friday, oil hit another new high of US$142 a barrel. It is exactly double the price of one year ago.

The demand comes from a rising middle class in China, India and the Middle East. This is new. We didn't have it in 1973 and1982.

When Li Yong, Ramesh and Abdullah buy their first motorbikes, they love it. They find it hard to go back to peddling bicycles.

The US Department of Energy expects energy use in 30 developed countries to increase 25 per cent by 2030. In developing countries, it will increase 95 per cent.

As high prices persist for one, two, three and then 10 years, people will grow to understand that this is more than just a speculative bubble. (Sorry, Fat Cat.)

A permanent shortage of input (resources) produces a continuous decline in output (GDP). That, by the way, is the definition of a permanent recession.

To drive the point home, try this experiment:

Fill up your car or motorbike with one tank of gas and drive to Kuala Lumpur. When you run out of petrol, walk the rest of the way. It shouldn't take more than a week.

You'll be tired, but you will gain insight into a life without natural resources.

The shortages will sneak up on us gradually. A tank of petrol will soon cost some drivers a full day's wages. After that, it will take a month's wages and then a year's.

Finally, availability will cease altogether and the lights will go out.

Future generations will sit around the campfire and tell fantastic stories about hollow trees with wheels that took people from Yishun to Orchard Road in less than an hour.

 Back to Columnists
 
More Dr Money Stories
Machines you can bank on
Gambler loses $1m in 20 years
Big bounce unlikely to happen again
Global warming is costing us dearly
What you need to know about your CPF
Down that road again?
Which bank offers best fixed deposit rate?
How to spot a fake certificate
How to save on home loans
SEIZE THE RATES
Want to save some money?
Mistakes to avoid in hard times
Beware of hidden charges
WHAT LIES AHEAD?
Which CPF retirement plan is best for you?
New technology means less fraud?
Is it time to get back into the stock market?
Massaging the numbers
What to do about costly car insurance
Forget the fast money
More credit card fraud if consumers less liable?
WHAT'S THE BEST DEAL?
Back to basics to grow money
TRUE RISK NOT DISCLOSED
The real problem? Underwriters hiding product's risk
Stuck in recession despite market rally
Beware of 'pump & dump' spam scam
S'pore's the place to live in
Home is where your money is
Creating something from nothing
Splurge or hide under your bed?
Who is watching the watchdogs?
Here's where you can invest
Lower returns don't mean investments safer
H1N1 hurting stimulus plans
Who really knows when recession will end?
Does it pay to throw cash at sports teams?
US investors conned by smooth 'acting'
Do you know 43% of all taxpayers pay nothing?
Why give banks more money to lend?
Anger over Arrogance Ignorance Greed
10 quick and easy tax tips
Spread the wealth
What's so great about private banking?
Will we survive the recession?
How to get a job
What's fair: BIG MONEY or small money?
More transparency from life insurers?
When money-go-round is not so merry
How to fix the world's economies
Forget market-forecasting
Obama makes a journalist's life tough
5 myths banks want you to believe
Mental recession becomes reality
How to get out of recession in two steps
How they zapped you & I
Buyer beware? It's not always possible
What banks don't say about buybacks
Latest structured product SCANDAL
What banks don't disclose can hurt you
How to fix a recession
Hidden costs a drag on returns
Are structured products risky or safe?
Why US bank bailout's a must
One down, two saved
Super-leverage: Contra Trading
Good vs Bad Leverage
Invest less, earn more: What's the catch?
What happens when the dung runs out? No, really
Oil at US$1,000 a barrel?
Is there such a thing as TOO MUCH HEALTH COVERAGE?
HOW TO S-T-R-E-T-C-H YOUR DOLLAR
A SICK ECONOMY
Play 'crazy money' games with kids
GENEROUS
Investments pay off
The New Economics
See if you're getting a GOOD DEAL
A wonderful low-risk, high-return investment
Get ready for hard times
COMPANIES vs CONSUMERS
Battle of the Titans
How to fight inflation...
Honesty is really the best policy
Refinance your home loan now
The big picture
Who's who in the credit crisis
Are private shield plans really better?
10 tips to save you money
Are markets headed for BIGGER TROUBLE?

 
 
Copyright © 2010 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Co. Regn. No. 198402868E. All rights reserved.
Privacy Statement and Conditions of Access