One of the things that many people go through their entire lives without ever realizing is that conditions haven’t always been the way they remember them to be. Due to the length of a typical lifetime and the number of those years that individuals are productive, it’s reasonable to think that someone in their mid-60s could retire today and look back at the last 40 years only to conclude that what they just experienced was normal.
But, what if the last 40 years were anything but normal?
What if, in the world of finance and economics, it was all just a big bubble?
One look at the chart below from this recent Wall Street Journal story and it becomes instantly clear that stock market valuations over the last twenty years have been nowhere near normal. In fact, what were deemed “generational lows” for valuations at the peak of the financial market crisis a year ago look like nothing of the sort over the broad sweep of time.

And when you consider what happened in the natural resource sector in the 1970s and then what followed in Japan in the 1980s, it’s quite easy to come to the conclusion that, since the world left those last vestiges of sound money when Nixon closed the gold window in 1971, we live in a radically different world.
While some quickly dismiss ideas like this, reminding anyone who will listen that “correlation is not causation” while citing technological advances made during this time as just cause for the changes we’ve seen in financial markets, breakthroughs such as railroads and electricity a hundred or more years ago likely had a bigger impact on the world than computers, communication, and medical technology more recently.
The sad possibility that so few consider is that, what has happened in the last 40 years probably has much more to do with the financial system, credit, and debt than the technological advances themselves.
A brief stroll through recent history might be helpful in seeing just how accustomed we’ve become to bubbles and, as if we don’t know it already, how dangerous the financial world has become.
The Era of Disco and Inflation
Having survived World War II and emerged as the only superpower in the West, the U.S. navigated the early years of the Cold War with aplomb before embarking on Great Society spending in the 1960s and then positioning themselves for defeat in Vietnam only to go stumbling into the 1970s with, perhaps, its best years already behind it.
The decisions made in the 1960s set off the first series of financial market bubbles during the previous secular bull market in the natural resource sector, an incompetent Arthur Burns at the helm of the Federal Reserve bending to political will and feeding an extended bout of inflation never before seen in the U.S.
As U.S. energy demand was soaring and U.S. oil fields were peaking, crises in the Middle East caused multiple oil price spikes and, by the end of the decade, a full-blown commodities bubble was in process.
The oil price moved from an inflation-adjusted $15 or $20 a barrel to $100 a barrel or more late in the decade and the gold price rose from its former $35 peg to a peak of over $800 just after the decade came to a close.
This was the first of many recent financial market bubbles in a new era of pure fiat money all around the world where rising and collapsing asset prices became an increasingly dominant theme, interrupted only briefly by the early-1980s “tough love” by a new, stern Fed chairman.
Not the Reagan Revolution You Thought
Many think that the main force behind the “Reagan Revolution” in the early-1980s was the embrace of free markets and a tilt toward conservatism, but, this only tells part of the story. Aided by the advancement of computer technology, credit markets in the U.S. and in other parts of world expanded by leaps and bounds and both public and private debt began to grow more quickly, bolstering economic growth.
Fed chairman Paul Volcker induced two debilitating recessions during Reagan’s first few years, breaking the back of wage-driven inflation that came before the waves of cheap foreign imports and the removal of actual costs of homeownership (replaced with the nefarious “owners’ equivalent rent”) in the consumer price index that would forever distort the government’s measure of inflation.
Bond markets saw their first large-scale excesses and the stage was set for a two-decade long bull market in U.S. stocks. Meanwhile, a housing “warm-up” bubble inflated in some parts of the country, aided by a Savings and Loan crisis that now looks almost quaint in comparison to the more recent banking crisis.
But, the real action in the 1980s was in Japan where both real estate and stock prices rose to heights that, even in comparison to recent events, are still quite impressive. As always seems to be the case, too few questions were asked during the inflation of the bubble and too few lessons were learned after it burst.
By the end of the decade, people everywhere were already becoming conditioned to expect financial market bubbles – periods of rapid price increases and heady economic growth that would only accelerate in the decades ahead.
Another “New Economy” Era
Major changes in retirement planning driven by the growing use of 401k plans, ongoing advancements in personal computing, and a rapidly growing financial services industry led to the greatest expansion in stock ownership in history during the 1990s and the U.S. was primed for a major stock market bubble of its own.
Widespread use of the internet by corporations early in the decade led to a similar adoption for residential users and the great broadband infrastructure roll-out provided high speed internet access to a growing number of individuals. Meanwhile, NASDAQ stocks began to climb at a dizzying pace.
Fed chairman Alan Greenspan, who had set the tone early in his tenure through both word and deed following the 1987 U.S. stock market crash, retreated from mid-decade “irrational exuberance” warnings to embrace the “New Economy” along with its new, higher stock prices.
After being credited with “saving the world” during the 1997 Asian financial crisis, the man once referred to as “the greatest central banker ever” watched as a new century was ushered in and NASDAQ stocks soared past the 5,000 mark only to find that this bubble too would finally meet its pin.
In what would soon become a recurring nightmare, many retirement dreams were dashed as investors of all stripes reflected on what they had just seen. Though Japan had experienced much the same thing the decade before, this was the first time that the American people participated broadly in the inflation and bursting of a major asset bubble and many of them were chastened. Unfortunately, many others were emboldened.
Bursting Bubbles Everywhere
In a previous era or under different circumstances, the 2000 stock market crash might have been followed by a long period of bubble-free reflection on what had just transpired as millions of Americans looked back at how they were so caught up in such ridiculous ideas as Pets.com, but, that was not to be.
In a system of money and credit where there is virtually no limit on how much of the stuff can be created, there was a natural remedy for the economic downturn that followed the bursting of the internet bubble and the attacks that are now forever referred to as simply 9/11.
All through the 18-year bull market in stocks, the nation’s housing market had been just sitting there waiting to be goosed, experiencing only short-lived, localized bouts of irrational exuberance and disappointment in such places as Houston during the U.S. oil boom and parts of California and Massachusetts later on.
Under the guiding hand of a revered Fed chairman, interest rates were slashed and a refinancing boom was kicked off only to be followed by some of the most outrageous excesses in mortgage lending the world has ever seen.
Despite signs that were obvious to many as early as 2002 and 2003, the housing bubble morphed into a broader credit bubble and the two proceeded to inflate to ever more dangerous levels as banks, hedge funds, governments, and the real estate industry joined forces to create the biggest and most dangerous bubble yet.
Beginning in 2006 and culminating with the global financial market crash in late-2008, another massive financial market bubble met its fate and, now, the world sits and waits.
Where to from Here?
No one’s quite sure where we’ll go from here, but an increasing number of people are beginning to wonder if this is the end of the road. That is, if the last forty years were all just one big money and credit bubble, temporarily misinterpreted as prosperity, that can produce no more bubbles except for the one that is most feared – another massive bubble in natural resources as a relatively fixed supply of goods meets up with an unlimited supply of paper money.
It’s no coincidence that the almost non-stop sequence of financial bubbles over the last forty years followed the abandonment of anything resembling a system of sound money.
Contemporary economic thought posits that money is simply a “unit of account” and that there is no longer any need for it to maintain an intrinsic value of any sort. They say it’s just “notations on paper” and that the world’s economic and financial wizards, though set back a bit by their latest failure, have things squarely under control.
If you’re anything like me, you don’t believe that for a second.
In the fullness of time, the last forty years will likely be seen as an aberration – just one big bubble – as theories are abandoned and a more enlightened approach ultimately prevails.
Unfortunately, between now and then, things are likely to get worse before they get better.












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Nicely done Tim – nice new blog too!
Hello,
I own a real estate investment company in Southern California. We buy and/or fund about six million dollars of property a month. We have a radio show and I just interviewed Robert Samuelson. He authored a book entitled The Great Inflation and It’s Aftermath, the Past and Future Influence of America.
It’s a very worthwhile read.
Bruce Norris
I think it’s called The Great Inflation and Its Aftermath
What amazes me the most is how many different opinions there are as to the proper way to view the current situation and, therefore, the most likely future developments. I think the most confounding aspect is predicting the timing accurately. Saying that something may – or even will – happen EVENTUALLY is not very practical because one is unable to act on that. For all the history and data and people studying this subject with the utmost motivation it’s amazing to me how so many different conclusions can be drawn, all but one (or none) of which will be wrong.
The median baby boomer was born in 1955. By age 25, 1980, his wages were going into either pension plans, mutual funds, and direct investing. This increased demand on equities was a positive inducement to their pricing. This will begin to be backed out as the baby boom is now turning 55 this year.
Also in the background is the increasing concentration of capital in stronger hands, especially after the 1980s tax changes. The FICA payer was overtaxed starting in 1983 while the wealthy power-earners saw more and more of their income accumulate, obviously faster than they could spend it as their control of the wealth of this country continued to increase.
The richest 10 percent of families own about 85 percent of all outstanding stocks. They own about 85 percent of all financial securities, and 90 percent of all business assets.
Real Estate will always be the biggest bubble-maker. Unless you live on a boat or a blimp you need land to make a living and enjoy life, and consumer demand for lebensraum is immeasurable greater than the fixed supply that physics gives us. We, collectively, will always push real estate to the point of unaffordability. It is the source, and the sink, of all our wealth.
Real Estate is a giant sponge for inflation. Once saturated the sponge leaks water (money) back into the streets. The FED brings out the emergency money hose and forces the money back into the property.
Make natural drugs legal and bring home the troops and all of a sudden the paper dollars reflect their intrinsic value. Guns, Oil, Drugs and Real Estate are the sponges. It’s only proper to speak about the real estate. Novus Ordum Seculorum.
[...] What if It Was All Just a Big Bubble? [...]
We still have one more bubble ahead. Last weekends vote on Demo-care (no it isn’t Obamacare, POTUS doesn’t enact legislation) will bring in a whole new influx of GDP money churn. It is ALL about churn.
It won’t last more than a few years at most.
If you don’t own real estate outright, kiss it good bye. Aren’t we all happy our most benevolent government has limitted the amount of real estate available by ending homesteading decades ago?
Profits = taxable income.
Erik: “If you don’t own real estate outright, kiss it good bye.”
Quite right. However, even though we own our place outright, we still have to figure out a way to pay our property taxes when the s**t hits the fan. If we can’t, we lose everything — 100-percent of market value — unlike mortgage holders, whose only loss is the marginal amount of equity they may, or may not, have put down on the loan. F***ed if we do, f***ed if we don’t.
Worked all my life, turning 55 in a few weeks, and boy, am I screwed. I wish I could buy a boat to live on…
The banking system is under under control, (by the banksters-particularly the ROTHSCHILDS who control the FEDERAL RESERVE) who knew exactly what they were doing when they intentionally crashed our economy!
I also have to add that the political prostitutes for these Banksters knew about this and enabled the banksters to do their worst AND these politicians and the prez signed these Bankster bailouts twice (without reading the bills & loaded with earmarks).
The polticians (if they cared) should immediately reinstate GLASS-STEAGALL and put these Banksters in jail with Madoff and revoke every one of those ill-gotten bonuses!
We are comming to the end of the WW2 bubble, clear and simple to me. I sure enjoyed my life during the glory years of 1941 to 2000. Now sadly it is over. Eventually the people will rise up and demand a re-redistribution of the money stolen from them and it will get messy.
Any society based on lending money at interest will always fail. I love all the financial people in the world who think that they are entitled to take someone elses money in the form of interest. What useful work have they done for society? The answer is none. None at all. Parasites all.
The bubbles go way further back than the 1800s or 1700s, try 500 BC!
Read up on Solon, and his financial reforms. The same game has been going on for ever.
I’ll be 52 in a couple months. Worked 22 years for a Fortune 500 company until I got downsized as they moved all production to lands of much cheaper labor. Some of my money used to go into investments. With the good job went benefits like health insurance, etc. For the past 9 years haven’t made more than $13,000 per year for the past nine years. Used what was left of my assets to start a business but it failed in the economic meltdown of late 2008. No assets left & filing bankruptcy soon. But there’s no shame in it, I know many in similar dire circumstances. The politicians & business “leaders” don’t care because they continue to enrich themselves feeding on the carcass of a once-great nation. The U.S. economic depression is as permanent as the wars.
Why are you only going 40 years back? We’ve had the Federal Reserve banking system since 1913. Why should I care if it was all just a bubble?
THE DIFFERENCE ETWEEN CURRENCY AND MONEY IS THE CRUX OF THESE ISSUES:
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article7235.html
BETWEEN
“… an increasing number of people are beginning to wonder if … the last forty years were all just one big money and credit bubble, temporarily misinterpreted as prosperity.”
That is why, in order to gauge real prosperity, it is essential to look at fundamentals such as industrial and agricultural production, and the balance of trade. They tell the real story.
Of course finance is just a bunch of numbers. And they can be tweaked to support any point of view. Yet we’ve all fallen into the habit of focusing on accounts and balance sheets to form our views of the economy. This is the case whether one is optimistic (irrationally exuberant?) or pessimistic.
A better measure of economic health is to make a list of, say, the top 100 crops, raw materials and manufactured items we use, and count how many of these we are self-sufficient in.
Hi,
would be interesting to know average valuation if you exclude the period from 1991-2010?
How has the bubble effected long-time average?
Br,
Anders
You’re right…We’re waiting with our collective breath held to see what happens next. It’s the debt stupid! Never in world history have all these countries gone into such deeeep debt. Japan may be the clue for us, or maybe Germany post WW1? Ultimately, currencies will become worthless and even China with their hord of foreign cash will be holding nothing. At this point there is no magic bullet, except as Edgar Casey predicted, a new world order arises. Incidentally, his original definition of a NWO is nothing like the one paranioa bugs are talking about currently.
Property in Australia is out of control compared to USA and Uk…have sold all investment property and just hold shares where I can recoup money in 4 days …a far better feeling…cheers all and good luck,avoid bankers at all costs…now , how does one do that?
The price of gold and silver have been actively supressed for years. Would this be called a negative bubble?
fiat currencies have no value, but the make believe value the people give it.
when the people stop believing the currency has value and put their labor and/or wealth into materials of worth and money, an actual store of value, the currency crisis’ will arise and rip through countries and the world creating innumerable domino effects, thanks to the bretton woods agreements making the USD the world reserve currency, and then removing all gold and silver backing, making it utterly worthless.
when the people learn and understand what is the difference between ‘make believe delusionism’ and ‘true reality’, this snowball will start rolling down the hill (others already are, and are plowing into this house of cards capitalistic-fascist-socialist-economic-casino system).
this financial crisis……..is just the beginning…..of the unraveling.
and how will they get out of this one, like they did the last one…..
with another world war.
its already on the horizon…..it is inevitable.
this is the nature of the human being, because it wont willfully control itself, the body overruns the mind, and people act more like animals than human beings, a human-being, being human, existence with intentional and purposeful thought manifest in action with respect to its and others existence.
history has already shown us the answers to the questions we ask here and now….for those who care to look, yet some cant see, some wont see, some refuse to see.
perception management and information warfare.
[...] What if It Was All Just a Big Bubble? | The Mess That Greenspan Made. March 27th, 2010 | Category: Uncategorized | Comments are closed | [...]
Fractional reserve banking is akin to organized thieving. Labor is the only real value in an economy. Nothing happens without it, transportation or production. When a central bank can create money in the form of loans it is like stealing your labor for whatever purpose they desire. Modern warring is a result of this system. Federal Reserve loses trillions yet money for war is bottomless. Good news is everything is cyclical and the end of central banks everywhere is eminent. They shall fall by their own weight.
there seems to be a measured beat to the catastrophes occurring around the world….so that, after a specific time, I begin to “wait” for
the next disaster…..I guess the one that worries me most is –
when China decides to call in its chips for the several trillion borrowed by Bush to pay for the Iraqi and Afghan wars, all losses no gains that I can see, do we then become the United States of China?
Ultimately, we can’t pay them back. If you think we are going pay China back with Government buildings, Monuments, the White House, or even land then you’re mistaken.
We will either go into a full scale war or China will forgive our debt. We will be shamed by our bankruptcy like the common man is when he defaults. There have been many nations that have failed before us. Man will survive but will you and I ? — that remains to be seen
A lot of negative talk going on here. Why don’t we vote these people out of office? Learn about the real economy and how it works. Learn about how to abolish the FED. We can change our reality rather than endure the punishment of our ignorance. Come on people, wake up. We don’t have to put up with this.
One way to abolish the FED is to start using gold/silver to buy things. Businesses should start accepting gold/silver in exchange for goods/services.
There are no laws against what you use to trade goods/services.
The FED would lose a good amount of influence if we stopped using dollars. The best way is to quickly convert out of dollars into gold/silver. Ask your employer to pay you in gold/silver.
Get the wheels spinning and in no time we will be humming along.
The financial system has gotten out of hand, because money has last all real value, it is completely abastract. This article on the abstraction of money is a must read.. http://www.thecactusland.com/2010/03/myth-of-abstract-money.html