You Will Never Retire, Here's Why... - How Money Works - YouTube

Channel: How Money Works

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You pay attention at school, you study hard, get a good job, work diligently throughout
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your career all so that one day you can kick back and enjoy a nice pleasant retirement.
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That’s the story anyway.
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But it’s not one that always lives up to reality.
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There are countless stories of people with good jobs, and diligent savings patterns still
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needing to work well into their twilight years.
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This is to say nothing of people that unfortunately never have the privileges of higher education
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or a stable career.
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Recent reports have found that less than 30% of American workers are on track to retire
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at all, and even fewer think they will have a comfortable retirement and they might be
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right.
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I know you didn’t want to hear this, but there are a few BIG factors at play in the
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world today that are going to act to keep most younger generations in the workforce
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indefinitely.
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This is all before considering the major hiccup that the covid 19 pandemic has been.
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A global event that has actually worked to widen the gap between younger generations
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with fewer assets and more precarious employment, versus older generations which tend to be
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more secure.
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Now you might think you are different, you contribute to your 401k, save diligently,
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subscribe to How Money Works and even invest regularly into the stock market.
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Well that’s all great, but I might still have some bad news for you.
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There are lot’s of issues at play here

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Housing, the stock market and a series of broader economic conditions which might threaten
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the general assumptions we make about indefinite growth.
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So it’s time to learn how money work’s to find out why we will all be on that grind
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until we are 120 years old.
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So the obvious first culprit is housing.
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Affording a home has become a major challenge for most workers in the USA.
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I know this problem is nothing new, but there ARE still a few very important factors that
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people don’t consider.
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Even very high-income earners that graduate top universities and go into fields like banking
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or big tech tend to be moving to equally high cost of living areas like New York, Chicago,
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or San Francisco.
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Pew research recently reported that a majority of young adults between the ages of 18 and
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30 are now living at home with their parents.
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The median age of a first home buyer in 2019 was a 34 and experts agree it’s almost inevitable
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that figure will be pushed even higher by the pandemic.
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What’s more is that young buyers tend to be purchasing smaller dwellings like apartments
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and townhouses rather than traditional free standing family homes.
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Not because they don’t want to, but because they can’t afford it.
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This is a real issue because as most financially secure people will tell you their house is
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their biggest asset.
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This doesn’t just mean it’s the asset that they own that’s worth the most money
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either.
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Owning a house means that you don’t have rental expenses and even if you are paying
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a mortgage those payments will at least partially be building equity in the home itself.
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What’s more is that once that mortgage is paid off you have somewhere to live with very
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little ongoing costs.
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Retiring with a home, means that even modest retirement savings or a pension can go a very
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long way when compared to someone who will need to stretch those payments to cover rent.
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If a homeowner is running low on cash in retirement it could be a simple as downsizing their family
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home, a luxury not possible for someone who hasn’t fully paid off their home, or doesn’t
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own one at all.
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Now let’s be generous and take this median age of 34 to buy a first home, stick a 30
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year mortgage on top of it, and suddenly even this generous assumption of a regular young
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worker is in their mid 60’s still paying off a home loan.
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This is assuming that this person never upgrades their home, or renovates, or does anything
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to increase their mortgage from the original one they take out over thirty years.
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The particularly morbid amongst you might think, well the boomers have to die and leave
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us their homes eventually right?
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And
 well
 yeah I guess so as unpleasant as that may be it is a reality.
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The problem is this will likely only exarcerbate the issue.
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We saw this in our video on why family fortunes disappear, inheritance’s that could actually
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fund a retirement tend to go to people that are already pretty old and wealthy themselves.
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Now again the unaffordable housing issue is a debate as old as modern capitalism, but
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maybe this isn’t an issue anyway, maybe you are still unconcerned because you have
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plans to fun your retirement even without a house to call you own, well ok, let’s
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put those plans to the test

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The stock market is the other major vehicle by witch people fund their retirment.
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Even fixed income pension funds ultimately rely on the growth of these markets to provide
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incomes to their members in retirement, but this assumption of endless returns may be
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under threat.
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To understand why consider a simple example.
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10 lumberjacks are working at a sawmill that creates frames for residential homes.
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At the moment the lumberjacks are only using basic hand tools, but if they all work hard
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and nobody slacks off they will meet their quotas.
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One particularly astute lumberjack takes a portion of his paycheque and over time uses
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it to fund research into motorized tool’s.
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His money was well spent because he eventually invents the table saw.
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He then saves up a bit more of his money to buy the materials needed to built 9 copies
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of his new contraption.
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He then gives these 9 table saws to his colleagues who had previously been using those hand tools.
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This boosts their productivity enough that they can still meet their quota even if the
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first lumberjack doesn’t show up to work at all.
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This is what we call capital investment, and it’s how (at least in theory) we can sustainably
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fund peoples retirements.
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The same amount of frames are made, the other 9 lumberjacks don’t need to work longer
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and harder, and the first lumberjack has been properly rewarded for his creation with a
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nice cushy retirement.
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Of course this is a very crude example but in reality most people do the same thing just
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through the medium of the stock market.
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Companies raise money and then use that money to purchase capital equipment which will allow
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their worker to effectively and efficiently produce goods and services for the economy.
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But lets go back to our oversimplified example.
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Problems start to arise when more of these lumberjacks get the same bright idea.
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One might invest into a forklift to make the work of nine men possible with just eight,
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and then another might do the same with nail guns to make the work of the remaining 8 men
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possible with just seven and so and so on

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But every time this happens it get’s a fair bit harder to find that next thing.
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Eventually you are going to need an almost fully automated production line and even then
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you are probably going to want at least one worker there to oversea this operation.
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Every human you take out of the equation and replace with a piece of capital becomes more
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and more expensive, especially when compared to some other alternative investments.
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Let’s say lumberjack 5 will need to invest Millions of dollars into a robotic arm in
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order to effectively retire while still ensuring the quota of the lumbermill is met.
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He might just say it, what I’ll do instead is just buy the factory and require the remaining
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four workers to work an extra 10 hours a week to pick up my slack while I go and retire.
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Now this guy sounds like an____, but just think, how many hours a week are you working
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in your job just to cover your rent?
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This investment into non productive assets (as in assets that don’t actually assist
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in adding value) is a major hurdle.
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Now the classic example of a non-productive asset is something like gold, bitcoins, pokemon
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cards and of course real estate.
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Now real estate is weird because unlike these other non-productive assets it does produce
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income without needing to be sold.
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It does this through rent.
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Investing into real estate has been a particularly attractive investment for a lot of people
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which does two things, it increases the price of real estate, causing more of this issue
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we saw in the first part of this video, but it takes away from investments into the types
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of productive assets that CAN sustainably fund retirements.
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There is one other problem beyond this as well
 the overinflation of ALL asset markets.
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Let’s look at our original example of those table saws.
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They were machines that made cut up pieces of wood, lets say they can chop up 20 pieces
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each a day.
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Now let’s replace those table saws with shares, these are effectively machines for
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making money in the form of dividends.
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Lets say each share makes 20 dollars a day.
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In both examples the lumberjack would need to own 9 of each to be able to fund their
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retirement, 180 pieces of wood would replace their job at the lumber mill, and 180 dollars
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a day would replace their income, so either works just fine.
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Now counterintuitively problems arise when these assets become more expensive.
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Most people think stocks getting more expensive is a good thing, and it is 
 for the people
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that already own them

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Imagine each share was trading for $10,000

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Saving up $90,000 is a pretty tall order for a lumberjack on $180 per day but it is certainly
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possible over a working career.
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Now imagine those same shares were trading for $100,000 while still paying the same $20
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daily dividend.
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If you already owned these shares you would be feeling great because your on paper net
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worth has grown handsomely, but our lumberjack now has to buy $900,000 worth of shares to
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fund his retirement, which is just no realistically possible within his working career.
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Now this might sound like a farfetched example but it isn’t! it’s exactly what is happening
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today.
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To see this let’s look at the price to earning’s ratio of the s&p 500 (a collection of the
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500 largest public companies in America).
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Historically it has hovered around a multiple of 15, this means that on average it would
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take the earning on these shares 15 years to pay for the share itself.
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Today, that multiple is sitting just under 50 years, which is the second highest it’s
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been in history, falling only behind late 2008, which as you all know was a time of
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widespread economic prosperity
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In plain English this means people are going to either need to invest 3 times as much to
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fund their retirement’s ooorrrr rely on the next biggest idiot to buy their shares
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off them in retirement for a 100 times multiple, 200 times multiple, 1,000 time multiple

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which BTW certain investor are already doing for some stocks.
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Now you might say, oh well shares aren’t like table saws with fixed outputs.
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These dividends can and likely will increase in the future, right?
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And sure, that’s almost guaranteed, buuuuttt it’s still unlikely we will ever see widespread
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PE ratio’s under 20 again for 2 reasons.
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1. if a company DOES start paying out a consistently high dividend relative to it’s market price,
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well then investors will buy it which will push up the price, meaning that it won’t
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a great deal anymore.
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Market forces are a bitch.
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The second reason is a bit more complicated, but it’s one that has some leading economists
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genuinely concerned

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Robert J Gordan is an American economist who published this paper with the National Bureau
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of Economic Research.
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Is US Economic Growth Over?
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Faltering Innovation Confronts The Six Headwinds.
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It’s a fantastic paper that is surprisingly readable even to people without a strong economic
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background.
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But spoiler alert, Gordon basically argues that the past 200 years of innovation and
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economic growth were more or a exception rather than the rule that we should continue to expect
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indefinitely into the future.
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Limitless growth in a finite world
 you do the maths.
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Gordon basically argues that this generation is the 5th lumberjack, all the easy innovations
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that drastically improve productivity have already been made, and even gradual improvements
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from here on out will either be very expensive, or just rent seeking in nature.
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Working more to shift value around in new and creative way’s more so than working
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to actually create any.
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If this rather bleak outlook wasn’t enough Gordan argued that this would coincide with
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what he described as the 6 economic headwinds.
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These are forces that will act to slow growth in economies around the world for at least
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the next 100 years.
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These headwinds are,
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The loss of the demographic dividend – Basically the economy saw a huge boost when women started
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to move into the workforce between the 1960’s and the 1990’s.
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Now most women in developed countries work a professional career similar to their male
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counterparts but that’s just the status quo now.
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We aren’t ever going to be able to double the workforce again, unless well
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we make people work later and later in their lives.
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The second headwind is the loss in educational attainment particularly in the USA.
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Education is becoming more expensive, less comprehensive and increasingly irrelevant
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to the requirements of the modern work force.
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A 3 year degree simply does not mean as much as it did 50 years ago, not to an individual
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or to the economy as a whole.
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The third headwind is rising inequality, a touchy subject at the best of times, but Gordan
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was surprisingly pragmatic about his approach to the issue.
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The paper noted that incomes were on average increasing by around 1.3 percent per year.
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But that growth was heavily focused in the top 1%, the remaining 99 percent only actually
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saw income growth of around 0.75% year over year.
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Not even enough to keep up with inflation.
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That means that if this trend continues it will be inevitable that larger and larger
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pools of workers simply won’t have the financial means to save for retirement.
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However if you are in the top 1% congratulations, you can say nananana your video title is wrong
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in the comments section.
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The fourth headwind is the impact of globalisation.
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Now in theory globalisation should make everybody wealthier, and on “average” it does, but
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averages have outliers, and those outliers in this case will be national workforces that
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have historically enjoyed high incomes relative to the rest of the world, like say say probably
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YOU watching.
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The other side of this equation is that it should equalise global wages, meaning it is
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great for people in countries that have typically had low incomes compared to the global average,
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oh and of course the business owners that can profit from the pool’s of cheap labor
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along the way.
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The fifth headwind is energy and the environment.
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The growth of the past century was driven by fossil fuels.
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A cheap, easily transportable incredibly efficient source of energy that could power everything
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from automobiles to jetliners.
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But of course they are a finite resource that have come at a cost.
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This cost will now be paid by younger generations either in the form of environmental regulations
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that slow down industrial output, or from complete environmental collapse that will
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also slow down production.
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The final headwind is debt.
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Household debt, government debt, corporate debt, it’s all been growing steadily over
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the years and eventually this needs to be paid back, this is ultimately going to result
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in the requirement for more income or less spending.
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For the government producing more income is easy, they just tax more, but for individuals
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and businesses the only option they might have is spending less.
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If someone is already running on a tight budget then those regular contributions to a retirement
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account might be what ends up getting sacrificed.
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Gordon did present a likely outcome to alleviate this sixth issue for all parties, and you
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might be able to guess what it is.
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Yup, push back retirement ages

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Now if this has all been a bit bleak for you and you still think you are going to make
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millions overnight then good on you, I will have to work harder at crushing your spirit
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next time.
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But until then you should learn what to do with your overnight fortune by watching our
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video on exactly what you should do if you suddenly make a lot of money.
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Of course step one will always be to like and subscribe to keep on learning how money
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works.