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Second Great Depression?

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  • #16
    Re: Second Great Depression?

    I think most analyst and "magic" types underestimate is the impact of the revolutionary digital influence on economy, person, and war.

    We are experiencing a shock that has no Historical analog (no pun intended).

    Basic protocols have been shattered.

    Everyone is guessing.

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: Second Great Depression?

      Originally posted by LargoWinch View Post
      I am not a military buff or anything, but these clips seem to agree with what you are saying jtabeb:

      Part 1:





      Part 2:






      PS: Just to clarify; jtabeb, you are in the US military full time am I correct?
      Unfortunately yes, (I wish I was part-time);)

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: Second Great Depression?

        Originally posted by goadam1 View Post
        No magical thinking over here. No Elliot waves. No astrology. No second coming.
        It's the nature of web call/response protocol to crush your more reasonable point of view when it does not completely repudiate the original post. You're simply wrapped in that first crazy linear measurement blanket of reality. By the way, I've enjoyed some of your posts. Hope you're resilient and willing to step out and sometimes get stepped on. I expect to see Jesus hitch hiking on my way to work before Elliot Wave Theory or the Kondratieff Cycle has any meaning. I've been wrong before so I'll let everyone know if I see him. By the way, it's pronounced Hay-sus around here.

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: Second Great Depression?

          Originally posted by goadam1 View Post
          BTW. Based on rumors I hear in the ad business and banking in New York, I would say that January will be the worst drop in employment in the modern history.
          This is some very interesting information. Could you elaborate?
          Cowards die many times before their deaths; the valiant never taste of death but once.

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: Second Great Depression?

            Originally posted by jtabeb View Post
            Yeah, it's classified now because it "doesn't work" according to the army.

            Funny how you classify something that "doesn't work" AND allow the DV's who visit in theater to wear this stuff for "testing purposes".

            It's like 4x as expensive as our SAPI plate shit (the 1 hit wonder and then you're done under), and from everything I've seen, worth it's weight in gold if you are being shot at.
            AFAIK the problem with the Dragon Scale armor was that it didn't hold up well to long periods of time in the field (the stuff that holds the plates in position degrades, plates get loose, and when shot at bullets can still be deflected into you instead of stopped), that and the expense is why the Army is dropping it.

            I don't know much about the current plates that are being used by the Army but if they suck they can be made better, this stuff seemed pretty good.

            http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=abd9bp...eature=related

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: Second Great Depression?

              Originally posted by ASH View Post
              My insight is that in order to make a timing prediction based upon an oscillation, the oscillation has to be harmonic (meaning its frequency is fixed), and in order for an oscillating system to be harmonic, its boundary conditions need to be fixed. Since the boundary conditions which constrain the economy are obviously not fixed, you shouldn't expect oscillations with a fixed frequency, and you shouldn't be trying to time anything based upon economic wave theories. In my view, the people who read the most detail into economic wave theories are those most susceptible to numerology. Some of the big picture stuff about why there are economic cycles seems valid enough to me (basically a statement of what the boundary conditions and restoring forces are), but it is a huge mistake to read too much into them from the standpoint of timing.
              It can be quasi-periodic as I believe Kondratiev waves are supposed to be. This does not mean there is no predictive value. I think Kondratiev waves explain the credit cycle quite well and I wouldn't call it magic. Although there are many magicians who incant it as there are many magician who incant science.

              ASH, as you're an engineer, I won't hold back. If you do an FFT of log daily price series, and plot the power spectrum on log-log plot, a purely lognormal returns time series would have a slope of -2. I have done this. Large cap indices like the S&P or FTSE conform pretty well except for the very low-frequency components, corresponding to long economic cycles. Smaller cap co.s, emerging mkt indices and commodities all have different signatures indicating long-range order.

              This is not particularly new - Mandelbrot (who as a sideshow invented fractals) found the same thing for cotton prices for his PhD thesis.

              Steve Keen's models all have quasi-periodic behavioural regimes (which apparently we are leaving into a debt-deflationary crash absent money printing).

              Turbulent fluid flow displays cyclic behaviour but is not harmonic.

              So it doesn't have to be harmonic to be quasi-periodic or cyclic. I would propose that the economy comes under such a heading. Ie. history rhymes but does not repeat.
              Last edited by *T*; December 11, 2008, 08:13 AM. Reason: misplaced my log again
              It's Economics vs Thermodynamics. Thermodynamics wins.

              Comment


              • #22
                Re: Second Great Depression?

                Originally posted by mesyn191 View Post
                AFAIK the problem with the Dragon Scale armor was that it didn't hold up well to long periods of time in the field (the stuff that holds the plates in position degrades, plates get loose, and when shot at bullets can still be deflected into you instead of stopped), that and the expense is why the Army is dropping it.

                I don't know much about the current plates that are being used by the Army but if they suck they can be made better, this stuff seemed pretty good.

                http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=abd9bp...eature=related
                DragonSkin has the advantage of being able to wrap around body.

                Trauma plates can be better if it directly in the chest or back, but what about the sides of your body? Shoulders? Arms? Also, we need to keep in mind that weight and mobility is quite important.

                DragonSkin can be made to cover a much larger area of your body, is less bulky and heavy than top trauma plates, hence providing overall superior protection.

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: Second Great Depression?

                  Originally posted by *T* View Post
                  It can be quasi-periodic as I believe Kondratiev waves are supposed to be. This does not mean there is no predictive value. I think Kondratiev waves explain the credit cycle quite well and I wouldn't call it magic. Although there are many magicians who incant it as there are many magician who incant science.

                  ASH, as you're an engineer, I won't hold back. If you do an FFT of log daily price series, and plot the power spectrum on log-log plot, a purely lognormal returns time series would have a slope of -2. I have done this. Large cap indices like the S&P or FTSE conform pretty well except for the very low-frequency components, corresponding to long economic cycles. Smaller cap co.s, emerging mkt indices and commodities all have different signatures indicating long-range order.

                  This is not particularly new - Mandelbrot (who as a sideshow invented fractals) found the same thing for cotton prices for his PhD thesis.

                  Steve Keen's models all have quasi-periodic behavioural regimes (which apparently we are leaving into a debt-deflationary crash absent money printing).

                  Turbulent fluid flow displays cyclic behaviour but is not harmonic.

                  So it doesn't have to be harmonic to be quasi-periodic or cyclic. I would propose that the economy comes under such a heading. Ie. history rhymes but does not repeat.
                  *T*, pretty advanced stuff there. I wonder if all these models take into account all of the world CBs printing in unisson?

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: Second Great Depression?

                    Originally posted by *T* View Post
                    It can be quasi-periodic as I believe Kondratiev waves are supposed to be. This does not mean there is no predictive value. I think Kondratiev waves explain the credit cycle quite well and I wouldn't call it magic. Although there are many magicians who incant it as there are many magician who incant science.

                    ASH, as you're an engineer, I won't hold back. If you do an FFT of log daily price series, and plot the power spectrum on log-log plot, a purely lognormal returns time series would have a slope of -2. I have done this. Large cap indices like the S&P or FTSE conform pretty well except for the very low-frequency components, corresponding to long economic cycles. Smaller cap co.s, emerging mkt indices and commodities all have different signatures indicating long-range order.

                    This is not particularly new - Mandelbrot (who as a sideshow invented fractals) found the same thing for cotton prices for his PhD thesis.

                    Steve Keen's models all have quasi-periodic behavioural regimes (which apparently we are leaving into a debt-deflationary crash absent money printing).

                    Turbulent fluid flow displays cyclic behaviour but is not harmonic.

                    So it doesn't have to be harmonic to be quasi-periodic or cyclic. I would propose that the economy comes under such a heading. Ie. history rhymes but does not repeat.
                    Thanks for the commentary, T. I agree with you. That's why I was pretty careful in my post to talk specifically about the problem of timing. All it takes to get cycles is some kind of "mass" and a "restoring force", and the last part of my post was a nod to there being economic cycles -- just not harmonic economic cycles. The whole point of my post was that although the idea of economic cycles can help with the analysis of the big picture, the cycles can't be used for timing because they aren't harmonic.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: Second Great Depression?

                      Originally posted by LargoWinch View Post
                      *T*, pretty advanced stuff there. I wonder if all these models take into account all of the world CBs printing in unisson?
                      The CBs printing in unison is an example of the boundary conditions changing, which is one of the reasons economic cycles are not harmonic.

                      By the way -- the FFT to which T alludes is a method of calculating the Fourier transform of a data series. In my opinion, the Fourier transform (and its inverse) is one of the most useful concepts out there. And, being at heart a nerd, I am now going to subject you to much enthusing about a mathematical operation.

                      At one level, the Fourier transform is how you go looking for periodic patterns in a data set. Any arbitrary data set can be decomposed into a sum of harmonic waves, albeit with different weighting for each frequency -- the Fourier transform is how you do this. If the data isn't really periodic, then the different frequency components will have pretty equal weighting, and nothing will leap out at you. On the other hand, if the data conceals hidden cycles, then those frequency components will pop out in the Fourier transform. Of course, there are a number of mathematical caveats that limit how you can use the Fourier transform -- for instance, if the data set you are studying is of limited duration (e.g. economic data only goes back so far, and we obviously don't know what it will be in the future) or if it is sampled with finite resolution (e.g. do you have daily, weekly, monthly, etc. stock prices?) then you have to be somewhat careful to ignore the artifacts created by these limitations. Anyway, things that are periodic but not perfectly harmonic will show up as such in a Fourier transform, and T is alluding to the fact that approximate economic cycles and their relative strength (accuracy?) can be found by these means.

                      At another level, which I find more interesting, the Fourier transform is the basis for how a lot of subtle stuff works. For instance, the Heisenburg uncertainty principle from quantum mechanics is really just a consequence of the Fourier transform (and its inverse). When I take an x-ray diffraction pattern in lab, I am really just taking the Fourier transform of a physical piece of material -- that's an experimental way of performing the mathematical task. The Fourier transform also explains how you can get "white" light out of a supposedly monochromatic laser, if you pulse it fast enough, and lots of other neat stuff.

                      So, if you want to understand why things work, I highly recommend Mr. Fourier.... him and J. Willard Gibbs.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: Second Great Depression?

                        Good posts ... I think the Mathematical way you are trying to answer ASH would be that once you examine a power spectrum all the phase information is destroyed and phase and time correlate here. You can characterize a system with a power spectrum but you can't control it with one. In other words there is structure in the market than can be measured and charectorized but can only be used to predict qualitative behavior.

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: Second Great Depression?

                          Originally posted by FRED View Post
                          Fred,

                          I took the Am I a Doomer survey, but the last two questions were blank so my survey was incomplete. I got the following message:
                          Required questions were not answered.
                          (Don’t know which answers to select when don’t have the question :confused So, I don’t know how I would have scored. Would like to know though, so if you get the survey fixed let me know and I’ll retake it.

                          The question Are You a Doomer, and the thread comments were quite thought provoking. Your comment regarding America’s Bubble Economy
                          Originally posted by Fred
                          Neither America's Bubble Economy nor iTulip are about doom. They are about the nature of the next inevitable financial market and economic setback, how one might reasonably prepare for and deal with it, including not buying into the press coverage that will appear during the event to give everyone the impression that things will never get better. iTulip additionally explores the social implications, as those bear not only upon the experience of the period but also the form that the recovery is likely to take, the opportunity in the crisis.
                          could be easily applied to Beckman’s Downwave. Contrary to doom, he points out positive aspects of depression periods, as well as how to anticipate, prepare for and benefit from same. Also, opportunities and prosperity to follow.

                          Also noted in reading Gary’s Crusade article:
                          Originally posted by Gary Alexander
                          By the way, Nikolai Kondratieff was proved right: The 1979-82 depression came exactly 50 years after the 1929-32 depression...
                          Maybe there is something to those wave theories after all

                          Back to Am I a Doomer? I am pretty optimistic on a personal level. However, I do not like much of what is going on in our country, which leaves me pretty pessimistic in several big areas. I believe in a system of just weights and measures and resent the private banking cartel run "Fed" fiat money system. I am against theives as well as those who violate individual freedom, so dislike the government with all of its confiscatory and regulatory schemes. I am opposed to monopolies and fascism, so abhor such entities as the FDA, who work with the medical/drug monopoly to keep cures from people and jail or otherwise destroy the efforts of those who are actually healing people. I hate lies and believe very little of what the mainstream media, historians, academics and politicians are disseminating. Consequently, I avoid their rhetoric as much as possible and discount the latest fear fads they are promoting to keep us all malleable. Am I paranoid? Some would say so. I would say that to the extent that I am, it is not without reason.

                          The optisism I do have does not necessarily stem from believing that good times are ahead, but rather from a belief in the amazing tenacity of the individual people who make up the back bone of this great nation. (Oh, and I am able to decern the difference between the American people and the US government! Not an exactly PC observation ;)) I am also optimistic because I was brought up in an entrepreneurial can-do family. On the otherhand, my dad, having been on his own as a teen during the early 30's, did have an impact on my propensity toward individualist self-preparedness. I admit to being pretty obsessive in that direction.

                          Originally posted by Eric Janszen
                          iTulip is about seeing our financial and economic world for what it is, rather than as what we'd like it to be, and that includes discounting one's unconscious doomer fears/wishes.
                          Sounds good to me.

                          Now, as to the discussion of a depression. My understanding is that we are currently in a deflationary recession. And that an economic depression is defined as:
                          Originally posted by Wikipedia
                          A severe or prolonged recession...
                          Severity or duration aside, I guess my interest here lies in learning more about deflation vs. inflation scenarios. I will read your book America's Bubble Economy ASAP. Perhaps then I can understand/discuss the current issues better. The bottom line is that I am a truth seeker. It is my hope that with the itulip community’s collective brainstorming, I/we can determine in advance the turning point between deflation and inflation and be prepared to act appropriately.

                          Hopefully,in the process my psychological foibles won’t get in either my or anyone else’s way.

                          Appreciate the feedback.

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: Second Great Depression?

                            Originally posted by ASH View Post
                            At another level, which I find more interesting, the Fourier transform is the basis for how a lot of subtle stuff works.

                            Yep. Good stuff. You should check out Optics and Imaging in general. Fourier Optics is super cool. It is how all imaging is really "understood". A lense is just a FT. A slit is the simplest lense.

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Re: Second Great Depression?

                              Originally posted by powersown View Post
                              I will read your book America's Bubble Economy ASAP. Perhaps then I can understand/discuss the current issues better.
                              Hi powersown. In my opinion, reading America's Bubble Economy will not be of much benefit to you. Most of it was not written by Erik Janszen, and it is written at a much lower level than what EJ publishes on iTulip. In other words, it seems "dumbed-down" to me, and very light on analysis -- not characterstic at all of EJ's usual work.

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Re: Second Great Depression?

                                "Both writers anticipated the onset of another big depression at that time. Here we are over 20 years later and it looks like it may have finally started. I am wondering what happened between then and now? Why the delay?"

                                Sorry, I haven't read the intervening thread. But I find it interesting how you're interrogating reality for its 'delay' in not conforming to a wave on a Powerpoint chart. This reminds me of the Kafka aphorism: "a cage went in search of a bird." This may be sacrilege but perhaps the arm on the printer was misaligned?

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