back to index2022-07-14_Thoughts_on_the_World_Today
00:00:00.000 |
Are you ready to make your next pro basketball, football, hockey, concert or live event unforgettable? 00:00:05.440 |
Let Sweet Hop take your game to the next level. 00:00:08.080 |
Sweet Hop is an online marketplace curating the best premium tickets at stadiums, arenas and amphitheaters nationwide. 00:00:14.800 |
Sweet Hop's online marketplace makes it easy to browse and book the best seats. 00:00:19.360 |
With no hidden fees and a 100% purchase guarantee, you can feel confident when you book your premium LA tickets with Sweet Hop. 00:00:30.560 |
Welcome to Radical Personal Finance, a show dedicated to providing you with the knowledge, skills, insight and encouragement you need to live a rich and meaningful life now, 00:00:38.000 |
while building a plan for financial freedom in 10 years or less. 00:00:41.080 |
My name is Josh Rasheeds, I'm your host and I am back, back from a very nice summer vacation. 00:00:49.240 |
You know, for years I have believed in the Dan Sullivan model of time management for entrepreneurs. 00:00:56.520 |
If you're unfamiliar with his concept and his teaching that he teaches, 00:01:01.120 |
basically the idea is that entrepreneurs need to view themselves as, in a way, artists or performers, rather than as kind of line workers. 00:01:14.800 |
The traditional model from the industrial age of time management is that in order for you to maximize your productivity, 00:01:22.680 |
you work, work, work, work, work, work, work, work, work, work, work, work, work and then finally when you're tired out and you're worn out, 00:01:30.400 |
then you can deserve a vacation and so then you deserve that vacation. 00:01:34.360 |
You go and you take it, you rest, recharge a little bit from vacation and then you go ahead and get back to work. 00:01:39.680 |
And that's the model that many of us are accustomed to simply because of what's normal. 00:01:45.760 |
And even though we live in the information age, a lot of us still take a lot of our lifestyle from the industrial age. 00:01:53.080 |
But Dan Sullivan teaches that entrepreneurs, it doesn't work for entrepreneurs because being an entrepreneur is much more, 00:02:00.960 |
your output and your productivity depend much more on your making the right decisions, 00:02:08.480 |
depend much more on your emotional state, depend much more on your insight, etc. 00:02:13.000 |
than it does on your kind of being at the machine, pushing the lever on a daily basis. 00:02:18.360 |
And that one of the best things that, one of the worst things that entrepreneurs do is work, work, work, work too much and that harms their results. 00:02:25.760 |
One of the best things an entrepreneur can do is intentionally schedule times of rest and rejuvenation 00:02:32.640 |
so that an entrepreneur is always functioning at his highest capacity where his brain is sharp, his ideas are sharp, his motivation is sharp, etc. 00:02:41.840 |
And I have believed that for a number of years but as is probably common to all of us, 00:02:46.680 |
my practice of that has not been as excellent as I would like. 00:02:50.920 |
And that's one of the things that I'm changing and seeking to do is to make that more of my practice, 00:02:57.000 |
to more intentionally take time off, more intentionally take focused periods of rest and rejuvenation. 00:03:03.440 |
Because it really does make a big impact, even for me as someone who speaks for a living. 00:03:08.640 |
I find that it's very difficult for me to create coherent and compelling podcasts or coherent and compelling course outlines, etc. 00:03:21.360 |
And often it's during those times of rest and rejuvenation that everything gets crystallized for me. 00:03:28.360 |
I don't write, for example, podcast outlines. 00:03:32.200 |
I don't write them generally very well sitting in front of the computer. 00:03:37.240 |
I write them while standing in the shower or walking in the fields or something like that. 00:03:42.920 |
And so I'm back. I'm back from a very nice and resting and rejuvenating summer vacation. 00:03:50.240 |
I've been off for about a month and have been not really connected at all, a little bit. 00:03:55.960 |
I haven't been in a technological disconnected sense but I haven't really been doing any work. 00:04:00.640 |
But I'm happy to be back and I have got a lot to talk about. 00:04:04.320 |
Boy, nothing's gotten better in the last month, has it? 00:04:09.040 |
Nothing has really improved in the last month. 00:04:12.600 |
And that's part of what I'll start by talking about today. 00:04:19.040 |
Numbers this morning came out over 9% inflation rates in the United States, higher in other parts of the world. 00:04:25.800 |
We continue to face major supply line disruptions, shortages in many places, 00:04:36.680 |
People are hurting all around the world, all around the United States, all around the world, people are hurting. 00:04:43.200 |
And unfortunately, I don't have any great news to say that I don't have any real reason to think that it's going to get better, 00:04:51.400 |
The issues that we are facing, I think, in many ways are the issues that we've been preparing to face for many years. 00:04:57.840 |
And while I wish it weren't the case, I wish it weren't true and I wish they weren't here, 00:05:03.120 |
my logical brain tells me I don't see any solutions yet on the horizon as to how things are going to magically be better. 00:05:11.040 |
And so my hope and my prayer and my desire for you is that you are not being hurt as significantly as so many of our 00:05:21.840 |
fellow human beings all around the world are being hurt right now. 00:05:25.360 |
There is already, I mean, the problems that we're complaining about in the United States and in Europe and the Americas broadly, 00:05:35.600 |
they are real and I think it's important not to minimize them. 00:05:39.360 |
But they are not as life changing as some of the problems that so many of our fellow human beings are already facing all around the world. 00:05:49.600 |
In many parts of the world that are not commonly reported on the news, we have major famines already. 00:05:55.760 |
There's people in my network who are dying of starvation and it's no laughing matter and I don't see an end in sight. 00:06:06.560 |
So what I want to do in today's show is partly just talk. 00:06:14.160 |
So I'm just going to kind of shoot from the hip here and share with you some of the things that are happening, 00:06:19.000 |
some of the things that I see as they relate to the global condition, geopolitics, 00:06:25.040 |
what I'm expecting and preparing for over the next few years and what that means for finances. 00:06:31.360 |
This is not going to be a tight focused podcast on any one specific thing because there's really nothing new that can be said. 00:06:38.560 |
That's as I've analyzed these things and thought about them and observed, 00:06:44.000 |
the best takeaway that I come away with every time is something I've said here on the microphone so many times, 00:06:50.240 |
which is simply that the basics work and the basics of personal finance matter more during the difficult times than they do in the non-difficult times. 00:07:01.920 |
And so I'm not here to say that there's anything new but just simply to talk about what to expect and hopefully to encourage you in the basics. 00:07:22.840 |
Right now, I think probably the place I need to start is certainly with inflation. 00:07:28.920 |
You can see in virtually all of the major economies around the world, we see the pressures of inflation. 00:07:40.680 |
Now, the bad news is simply that we are not in normal inflationary times. 00:07:49.480 |
My own metrics, these are not the metrics of an economist, so I'm going to define my terms. 00:07:55.840 |
I'm not an economist. I'm not going to make economic predictions and I'm not qualified to do that. 00:08:01.520 |
But the terms I use is basically normal inflation is anywhere from zero to five percent per year of inflation rates broadly across an economy. 00:08:14.240 |
That's basically, in my understanding, what most central bankers really shoot for, is that central bankers would really love to see a three percent inflation rate per year. 00:08:24.640 |
Under the prevailing monetary theory, the idea as I understand it is that this is the inflation rate that is ideal to maximize employment and to maximize economic productivity without getting into dangerous inflationary periods. 00:08:40.240 |
So I define zero to five percent inflation as kind of normal inflation. 00:08:45.400 |
Then we get into the world of mass inflation and mass inflation, as I use the term, would be somewhere between five to 15 percent per year of inflation. 00:08:59.080 |
So if an economy is experiencing a 20 percent inflation rate, I'm OK. 00:09:03.440 |
That's a mass inflation as far as I'm concerned. 00:09:05.880 |
But I just think of it in that like five to 15 percent per year. 00:09:09.160 |
Beyond mass inflation is where you start to tip towards that word that we all don't quite know what it means, but it's really scary, called hyperinflation. 00:09:19.720 |
And so hyperinflation could really be anything from, I would say, a couple dozen percent, 20 percent. 00:09:26.000 |
I don't think that I'd be pretty worried about using the term hyperinflation for 20 percent per year inflation. 00:09:37.040 |
Anything up to, you know, you can get hundreds of percent inflation per year, thousands or even a million percent inflation per year. 00:09:44.920 |
There was a an article from Venezuela a couple of years ago that Venezuela had had a million percent inflation in the previous year. 00:09:52.600 |
And so I my personal outlook that is on the record here in the podcast in the archives has been that I expect mass inflation in the United States where we are now. 00:10:04.360 |
But I don't personally expect hyperinflation or kind of the hardcore scenario. 00:10:12.080 |
I think it's illuminating that the current inflation rates are basically the highest that the United States has experienced since the 1970s. 00:10:20.440 |
And I think that the 1970s were a pretty good glimpse into the into in some ways what we are experiencing right now and or what we may experience in coming months and years in the United States, 00:10:35.760 |
which is basically significant inflation rates, significant increases in cost and all of the knock on effects can lead to rationing, can lead to disruptions. 00:10:46.720 |
It leads to a very frustrated and volatile social climate where everyone knows that everything is harder, nothing is going well. 00:10:55.920 |
Everyone is frustrated by that. And that leads to to social volatility, at least to political volatility, etc. 00:11:03.280 |
But all things considered, I don't think that that goes into, I don't think it gets worse, worse from here to the point where we're shooting each other in the streets, or at least not in most of the Western nations that we're from. 00:11:21.160 |
So I hope that you'll hear anything that I have to say through that commentary. 00:11:25.320 |
Well, I think it's, of course, possible, right, we can see that in any case that it's possible that things can go very bad very quickly and there's no reason to think that it couldn't happen here, wherever here happens to be for you. 00:11:40.320 |
Just that it's not there. I think there are good reasons to think that it's not likely. So we'll see. Hope that I'm not wrong about that. 00:11:50.080 |
But the inflation costs are significant and different parts of the economy are being affected differently. 00:11:58.600 |
And this is causing a significant, it's causing the effects of inflation to be felt differently by different people, depending on where each one is on the socioeconomic scale and depending on the lifestyle of each individual person. 00:12:14.960 |
Let me take a minute and go through the press release from July 13 from the Bureau of Labor Statistics in the United States. 00:12:23.000 |
And I'll go through a few of the categories. So we have the non-seasonally adjusted inflation rate from June 2021 to June 2022 is for all items is 9.1%. 00:12:35.840 |
For food, 10.4% across the entire food category. Food at home, 12.2%. Food away from home, 7.7% increase over the last year or rate increase measuring over the last 12 months. 00:12:52.360 |
Energy up 41% on a category. Fuel oil, 98% increase. All items less food and energy, 5.9%. We could go through some of the most hard hit ones. 00:13:06.800 |
Some of them, energy commodities, again, 50%. Used vehicles, 26% one year increase. Energy services, 11%. New vehicles, 10%. Tobacco, 8.5%, etc. 00:13:18.840 |
And then those are the highest ones. So as always, one of the things that happens with inflation is simply that it hits certain sectors of the population harder than others. 00:13:32.560 |
So somebody who has a very tight budget, who drives a lot, which is very common in the United States. It's common that vehicle, because the United States is a very spread out country and it's a very vehicle intensive country. 00:13:43.760 |
I think the biggest destabilizing factor is of course the food and the fuel. Is that fuel affects Americans' budgets very significantly and it affects the lower earning Americans' budgets much more significantly than the higher earning Americans, the normal budget for higher earning. 00:14:01.000 |
And for food as well. If you look across a population, those who don't earn very much money spend a very high percentage of their income on food and transportation and housing. Those who earn a lot more don't generally spend a very high percentage of their income on food, fuel, and housing. 00:14:21.360 |
And so these significant categories of food and fuel are really hurting a lot of people in a very, very deep way. And yet, if we look at the way that incomes are distributed across a population, because you always have 20% of the population earns 80% of the money and 80% of the population earns 20% of the money, right? 00:14:43.200 |
You have a normal standard Pareto principle, a Pareto distribution across virtually all categories, especially including income. Then you can see that if you have 80% of the population, certainly 20% of the money, and that 80% of the population is experiencing very high inflation to the categories that are a significant component of their normal monthly budget, that's a recipe for significant social unrest and very quick social change. 00:15:11.360 |
A lot of hurting people all around the country and all around the world. 00:15:17.040 |
And then of course, what's the causal reason, right? You can argue about the causal reasons, it really doesn't matter, but we can see that the impact of these things are much more serious. 00:15:26.000 |
I've been reading German news, been working on my German and so part of, we're doing a Sheetz family German project, trying to help the children learn German. 00:15:37.600 |
So as part of that, I read the news direct from Germany and in German every day using a translation software. 00:15:45.520 |
And so I'm kind of clued in right now on the situation in Germany and it's tough right now with the shortages, the increasing costs, the major electricity costs. 00:15:56.880 |
And it has the potential this winter to get very, very serious with energy rationing, very high prices, people quite literally may be very cold this winter across Germany and other parts of Europe due to the issues with the gas supply from Russia, etc. 00:16:16.880 |
So who knows, I don't want to make this show too timely in the sense that I don't want to comment too much on specific events, I want to keep this broad, but things are looking difficult on many of those factors. 00:16:32.560 |
The good news is if you apply the basic principles that I seek to hammer on here on a regular basis, then hopefully you'll be fairly well protected against some of those things. 00:16:47.360 |
Number one, you always want to put your focus, and here we're just going down the Radical Personal Finance framework of wealth, you always want to put your focus on your income. 00:16:55.760 |
If your income is low, then these issues of inflation hurt quite a lot. 00:17:02.560 |
If your income is higher, then they hurt less. 00:17:05.920 |
And so you want to be focusing diligently on earning as much as you possibly can and on maximizing your income. 00:17:12.640 |
And the audience of Radical Personal Finance here tends to skew to a very high income as compared to the broad scale. 00:17:20.000 |
And so I think that that's good and you want to keep on focusing on that. 00:17:25.840 |
When you have times of disruption, disruption generally affects those who are ambitious and who are flexible less than it affects those who are really locked in. 00:17:38.800 |
The best metaphor I can give for this is imagine, let's say you grew up in a Pennsylvania coal town. 00:17:47.440 |
There's a big difference between the economic situation that a guy who is say 50 years old who is a lifelong coal miner, who all of a sudden the whole coal industry just disappeared, of his options versus a guy who was 20 years younger and who was much more ambitious and who was heading for where the money was. 00:18:07.760 |
And so you want to always recognize that you always have the choice to go after something new or to increase your income in some way. 00:18:16.560 |
And so sometimes that means taking on side work. 00:18:19.280 |
Sometimes that means picking up extra hours or extra shifts. 00:18:25.840 |
Sometimes it means doing the hard work to retrain, go after a new credential, a new skill, go into a new industry, go to a new place. 00:18:34.240 |
Remember that these factors, and let me pause for a quick thing. 00:18:39.760 |
What I'm going to seek to do as always is to provide ideas and inspiration of how things can get better. 00:18:47.520 |
I don't wish to be Mr. Doom and Gloom and talk about how bad things are without working on solutions. 00:18:53.920 |
I think that in every situation, no matter how bad your current situation is, you want to always be focused on searching for ways to make it better. 00:19:04.320 |
That is a healthy and important life skill because if you're looking for ways to make your situation better, you may fail. 00:19:16.560 |
But you're more likely to find ways not to fail than if you simply accept what is. 00:19:22.480 |
There's the old quote, I'm not great with reciting it as funny as the original people was, but basically, if somebody gives you a terminal diagnosis, then go find another doctor. 00:19:33.040 |
If that doctor gives you a terminal diagnosis, go find a quack. 00:19:36.480 |
And go find someone who's going to tell you what you want to hear and encourage you in a proper point. 00:19:42.880 |
Now, the reason that breaks down is that sometimes you need to know, hey, this is terminal. 00:19:46.880 |
I need to put my affairs in order and you want to be realistic. 00:19:49.440 |
So a proper balance of realism and optimism is important. 00:19:54.800 |
But there were an optimistic mindset, a mindset of looking for solutions to my problems rather than simply sitting back and accepting that they're unchangeable and just griping and complaining about them. 00:20:05.440 |
It's much better to be the optimistic person who's searching for solutions. 00:20:09.600 |
And in fact, that's one of the things that if you look throughout human history, I've been thinking a lot about kind of global geopolitical history. 00:20:15.840 |
What you see is that when things get bad, people go looking for solutions. 00:20:21.440 |
And yet often you need to be at the early wave of going and looking for solutions. 00:20:30.640 |
They move to another place where there is more food. 00:20:35.200 |
People pick up and go to a country where there isn't a collapse. 00:20:38.320 |
And those who do usually face a very, very difficult time in making that transition. 00:20:44.480 |
But once the transition is through, they're in a better place than if they just simply sat still and resigned themselves to their fate. 00:20:52.160 |
The guy who said, "Hey, Pennsylvania coal industry is not looking so great. 00:20:57.120 |
I need to go to Atlanta and try for something new." 00:21:01.440 |
Even if it took him a very difficult time period of years of difficulty and work, etc. 00:21:07.040 |
At the end of it, he's got a solution that might work and probably would be better off than if he sat back and said, 00:21:12.960 |
"I'm just going to settle for the collapse around me and do nothing." 00:21:16.880 |
So I always want to be one to search for solutions and try to inspire you with ideas that can help you with solutions. 00:21:25.200 |
So the first thing you want to focus on is, how can I increase my income? 00:21:32.720 |
The best ways being sometimes increasing the number of hours that you work, 00:21:36.800 |
sometimes increasing the amount of work that you do per hour, 00:21:39.840 |
sometimes increasing and doing more valuable work. 00:21:44.080 |
What you want to do is during times of economic crisis, 00:21:48.080 |
you want to make sure that if at all possible you retain your job, 00:21:51.920 |
or you retain your income, or you keep your business afloat. 00:21:57.280 |
Because if you have an income, yes, that income may be worth less and less because of inflation, 00:22:06.960 |
Inflation hurts, but it hurts especially badly if you are unemployed. 00:22:16.400 |
And so ideally what you want to do if you're going to be building wealth 00:22:20.560 |
is generally keep your expenses significantly below your overall level of potential spending. 00:22:27.360 |
And we see in difficult times that that works out better. 00:22:33.520 |
and let's just say it was that you had a 10% increase in your cost of living. 00:22:37.680 |
Well, again, if you have an annual income of $100,000, 00:22:43.600 |
a 10% cost of living immediately starts to lead to you're going into debt. 00:22:48.000 |
And if not corrected quickly, that can lead to financial catastrophe. 00:22:53.120 |
If on the other hand, you have $100,000 income, 00:22:59.360 |
a 10% increase in the level of your expenses increases your expenses to $66,000. 00:23:09.760 |
You may not be getting as wealthy as you would like to be. 00:23:12.880 |
You may not be saving as much as you formerly were, but you're not wiped out. 00:23:19.200 |
So keeping your expenses significantly below your income 00:23:22.400 |
always keeps you with wiggle room, with the ability to adjust. 00:23:26.000 |
And then exercising those muscles of frugality, 00:23:29.440 |
understanding how to change categories in your spending when you want to, 00:23:34.000 |
or when you need to, is also really, really important. 00:23:39.360 |
We see by the Bureau of Labor Statistics data here 00:23:45.280 |
that food at home has increased in the last year 10.4%. 00:23:53.120 |
But even though the category of food at home has increased by 10.4%, 00:23:58.080 |
that doesn't mean that your type of food has... 00:24:02.240 |
Your personal food costs have to have increased by 10.4% 00:24:05.840 |
because you have the ability to make different choices. 00:24:11.280 |
Steak gets more expensive, so they buy ground beef. 00:24:13.360 |
Ground beef gets more expensive, so they buy rice. 00:24:18.560 |
food is widely available, and you may be able to adjust it. 00:24:29.600 |
It can simply be an adjustment that you can make. 00:24:31.600 |
And so with expenses, one of the skills that we always want to flex 00:24:43.840 |
Maybe you don't need this now, but it's good to say, 00:24:46.480 |
"How could I live on a grocery bill that was 30% less 00:24:51.600 |
For the vast majority of us, and I mean that, 00:24:54.720 |
the vast majority of us, we could overnight, with good skill, 00:24:59.520 |
cut our grocery bill in half without hurting as a family, 00:25:10.160 |
It's just that most of us make choices that are, 00:25:20.640 |
And that's what, again, I feel silly giving this advice 00:25:22.880 |
because you know this, it's something you already do. 00:25:25.200 |
But it's the same thing that we do in every category. 00:25:40.000 |
there's a lot of people who if going fishing, 00:25:45.840 |
we were just in the Keys a couple of weeks ago, 00:25:48.240 |
with gas at the marina being six bucks a gallon, 00:25:58.880 |
and go fishing in the flats or go near shore fishing 00:26:00.800 |
or just putter out to the island and do less. 00:26:06.720 |
People are making these choices all across the country 00:26:08.720 |
with minimizing road trips, high cost of fuel, 00:26:12.640 |
let's minimize the amount of money that we spend 00:26:17.520 |
And so, and again, I don't wanna sound tone deaf, right? 00:26:25.040 |
that stinks that have to make them for many people, 00:26:29.040 |
compared to people who may be very cold this winter. 00:26:38.720 |
And so investing wisely during times of economic uncertainty 00:26:44.080 |
can often take on different, can look differently. 00:26:47.920 |
Number one, in during times of economic uncertainty 00:27:18.000 |
about thinking about the term of investments broadly. 00:27:32.080 |
And yet there are many other ways of investing 00:27:44.720 |
beyond simply stocks, bonds, and mutual funds. 00:27:47.680 |
The example that I use to demonstrate this point 00:28:01.120 |
and you go to many of the poorest parts of the world, 00:28:04.400 |
you will see that at least every culture I've been to 00:28:12.960 |
In the Philippines, it might be a Sari Sari store 00:28:26.480 |
And if you go to very poor places in the world, 00:28:29.040 |
you will see that people will work for the day 00:28:32.960 |
and they'll buy small quantities of possessions. 00:28:39.280 |
that doesn't really exist is the United States. 00:28:41.120 |
Because of the high level of wealth in the United States 00:28:45.600 |
the local stores, yeah, they've got Dollar Tree 00:28:49.200 |
and those kinds of stores that do some of this, 00:29:05.200 |
and then will cut it down into very small packages. 00:29:15.920 |
But the cost there for that is very, very high 00:29:20.960 |
It's small in terms of the total cost outlay, 00:29:32.400 |
from buying small portions to buying larger portions. 00:29:52.320 |
And this continues on up through the pricing factors. 00:29:56.240 |
For individuals, it gets to the point of Costco 00:30:00.560 |
"I'll go ahead and have a couple of bulk oil tanks 00:30:03.440 |
so that I can buy all of my oil two years in advance." 00:30:10.480 |
and purchase a year's worth of fuel contracts 00:31:52.240 |
car insurance, homeowners insurance, et cetera. 00:32:04.480 |
and I say, what is the extreme form of protection? 00:32:20.800 |
if there's actually not food in the grocery store? 00:33:18.800 |
and we just reach out and turn the thermostat 00:33:41.600 |
And if you were to go back a few hundred years, 00:33:43.520 |
you find that even if you heated a home with wood, 00:33:46.240 |
it was generally pretty inefficient to do that. 00:34:16.880 |
if you, and if you take the most efficient thing, 00:34:26.720 |
for you to go out and gather wood to heat your home. 00:34:34.720 |
excuse me, warm all day and all night by wood 00:34:37.520 |
because it's a tremendous investment of energy. 00:34:41.360 |
You'll go back and you see the classic example 00:34:45.120 |
Why did, why do all the old pictures of Scrooge 00:34:54.960 |
and you have a long, warm robe to keep you warm. 00:35:01.040 |
Well, it's a four poster bed or a cabinet bed 00:35:26.480 |
by needing to warm a smaller space with your body. 00:35:32.400 |
And if you go to bed with a nightcap and a nightgown 00:35:35.120 |
and a nice bed that has thick curtains around it 00:35:39.600 |
and you put some hot water bottles in the bed, right? 00:35:41.520 |
Another classic thing that has been used for millennia. 00:35:45.280 |
Then you have the ability to stretch your heat out 00:36:12.960 |
and you have to do without power for two weeks, 00:36:15.040 |
then one of the most important things you can do 00:36:23.840 |
and then pile everyone close together for body heat 00:36:39.680 |
and extra things on the windows to increase insulation. 00:36:49.280 |
how can you avoid the catastrophe that may come 00:36:54.000 |
What do you need to do today to prepare for that? 00:37:07.040 |
You want to do it with the normal financial lens 00:37:09.280 |
and you want to do it with the non-financial lens. 00:37:18.320 |
is the global disruptions due to major food shortages 00:37:24.400 |
I've been worried about this for eight months, a year, 00:37:30.640 |
something like that, really worried about it. 00:37:32.240 |
Nothing has gotten better over the last month. 00:37:41.600 |
I was reading some of the UN reports from their, 00:37:44.320 |
I can't remember the name of it, the Food Security Division. 00:37:46.320 |
And right now, there are regions of the world 00:37:51.040 |
And there is a very good chance that will continue to spread. 00:37:54.400 |
I hope that it's not as intense in the kinds of places 00:38:20.320 |
and trying to make sure that we have what we need 00:38:28.640 |
And I continue to be deeply, deeply concerned. 00:38:35.920 |
and notice I'm somewhat reserved in my comments. 00:38:39.920 |
But I hope you can hear the concern that I have 00:38:43.680 |
and that I feel and then take action as appropriate. 00:39:00.880 |
Optimizing lifestyle is something that can always be done. 00:39:06.160 |
I say, listen, if you can earn $50,000 a year 00:39:10.000 |
and you can earn $50,000 a year to job you hate, 00:39:11.920 |
just changing a job can make a big improvement 00:39:15.680 |
You can spend $4,000 a month living on a place that you love 00:39:25.600 |
will make a big difference in your lifestyle. 00:39:31.440 |
you can optimize your lifestyle in good times 00:39:36.320 |
And sometimes I think you can do it more easily in bad times. 00:39:39.520 |
Not that the actual lifestyle changes are difficult, right? 00:39:56.180 |
Especially with the increase in mortgage rates, 00:40:03.600 |
sometimes it's easier to optimize your lifestyle in bad times 00:40:18.080 |
that involves lots of driving and lots of commuting. 00:40:27.200 |
but there are many people who have built for themselves 00:40:30.720 |
unconsciously a lifestyle that is very vehicle dependent. 00:40:40.960 |
They drive a vehicle that is not particularly efficient 00:40:46.080 |
And when gas is cheap, it's not really that big of a deal. 00:40:52.320 |
because generally speaking, the United States, 00:40:54.880 |
we have big distances, low fuel costs, and big vehicles. 00:41:01.520 |
and you see that the fuel costs being much higher 00:41:04.400 |
naturally leads people making different decisions. 00:41:10.480 |
but I think it's silly to spend tons and tons of money 00:41:14.320 |
paying for fuel to drive a vehicle that is inefficient 00:41:25.840 |
I think it's silly for you to spend lots of time 00:41:28.800 |
working, especially if it's work that you don't really love 00:41:33.600 |
just to feed a vehicle to maintain an inefficient lifestyle. 00:41:48.480 |
sell a car, and get into walking or biking distance 00:41:56.480 |
A guy who walks to work or who bicycles to work 00:42:18.960 |
Well, now if that lifestyle isn't so comfortable, 00:42:23.040 |
you can optimize lifestyle and move closer to your job 00:42:31.680 |
Maybe your industry is really being hit hard by recession 00:42:38.160 |
but you've always wanted to go to another industry. 00:42:40.560 |
If your industry is doing well and you're earning well, 00:42:43.920 |
it's hard to convince yourself that you should make a move 00:42:49.120 |
you're not sure that what you're going to is better 00:42:53.200 |
And as human beings who fairly naturally assess risk, 00:42:57.920 |
we look at that and say, "Yeah, this is pretty good. 00:43:05.600 |
where your industry starts to face difficulties, 00:43:35.440 |
"How can I go to something that's really, really great? 00:44:14.240 |
sometimes you can put a whole bunch of things in order 00:44:35.120 |
And right now, there are probably many people 00:45:02.000 |
And then one day, he was eliminated from his job 00:45:10.320 |
and he was struggling to get another job quickly. 00:45:14.160 |
And I remember just seeing the fear in his eyes 00:45:20.720 |
from the local private school that they were enrolled in. 00:45:26.800 |
And as far as I can tell, I've lost contact with him. 00:45:30.720 |
But sometimes, if you have to look your children in the eye 00:45:37.120 |
that can be hard unless you have a good alternative. 00:45:42.560 |
"I have to unenroll you from this private school 00:45:45.280 |
and we have to put you into local government school," 00:45:52.240 |
But I've had other clients who have used it and said, 00:46:16.240 |
By the way, I'm not recommending that in many cases 00:46:22.160 |
it's not an obvious and clear-cut path to saving money. 00:46:29.120 |
"How can we take this money that we don't have 00:46:43.920 |
let's go from one good thing to a different good thing 00:46:47.440 |
that also has these other features and attributes 00:46:55.760 |
There are people who have always dreamed of going 00:47:02.960 |
Well, one way to do that is to simply sell everything 00:47:08.480 |
That's for many people or some other version of that, 00:47:19.600 |
"How can I trade in my $10,000 a month lifestyle 00:47:25.440 |
and I'll use it as an opportunity to sell the house, 00:47:30.240 |
sell my car that is worth a lot of money right now 00:47:42.000 |
and then stabilize and move into something else." 00:47:44.000 |
So I hesitate to encourage too much the travel options, 00:47:50.000 |
especially given my realistic experiences with travel, 00:47:56.080 |
But it is the best solution that I see to say 00:48:16.480 |
and this is why I didn't know exactly how to title this show 00:48:43.600 |
My biggest concerns are not currently hyperinflation 00:48:53.840 |
to not expect this mass inflationary environment 00:49:10.160 |
But even in terms of the geopolitical situation, 00:49:50.800 |
I've watched people make disaster predictions 00:50:18.880 |
and I came across all these cool SAS survival manuals 00:51:03.920 |
and protected the necessary infrastructure from 00:51:09.840 |
And then I watched all of the egg on the face 00:51:23.600 |
and paying attention to that sector of the marketplace, 00:51:28.720 |
and the massive government overspending, etc. 00:52:01.520 |
And it seems like there's virtually no limit. 00:52:03.280 |
Consumption, global consumption has increased. 00:53:15.920 |
"Jonah, I am going to destroy the city of Nineveh 00:53:29.840 |
I want you to go and wander through the streets 00:54:10.400 |
And I've committed this great sin against God." 00:54:21.360 |
So they heave Jonah over the side of the ship. 00:54:49.200 |
But three days later, Jonah repents of his sin. 00:55:42.880 |
You said you were going to destroy the people, 01:05:18.720 |
I mean, just imagine this, for example, okay? 01:05:48.320 |
There would certainly be radioactive fallout, 01:05:56.320 |
it's not like the whole country is wiped out. 01:06:25.440 |
and then you kind of get used to a new normal 01:06:32.480 |
well, what would you do if Russia invades Ukraine? 01:06:40.560 |
Well, now pretty much we've all gotten comfortable 01:06:43.040 |
with the idea that Russia has invaded Ukraine 01:06:45.600 |
and not at top of the news much in most cases. 01:06:53.280 |
And so my point is I hesitate to predict bad situations 01:07:03.200 |
am I really certain in what would really happen? 01:07:07.920 |
And am I really going to commit myself to bad situation? 01:07:14.960 |
I was saying like, "I don't know how to analyze this. 01:07:18.480 |
I just don't know how to talk about this in the right way 01:07:28.960 |
The third thing is personal to me and not personal to others. 01:07:42.560 |
called "The End of the World is Just the Beginning, 01:07:47.680 |
Sorry, yeah, "Mapping the Collapse of Globalization." 01:07:51.520 |
I think it's on the New York Times bestseller list right now. 01:07:53.520 |
And I started reading it the day it came out. 01:07:58.800 |
and I will probably do more content on it in the future, 01:08:03.520 |
because I think it's important to factor some of what he comes to. 01:08:11.520 |
But one of the things that he quoted in that book, 01:08:22.720 |
and for context, Zyhan is a geopolitical analyst, 01:08:31.760 |
and basically plotting what's happened in geopolitics. 01:08:51.920 |
the United States basically made an agreement with the world and said, 01:08:57.680 |
you know, we've engaged in this huge military action, 01:09:02.160 |
we're not going to occupy all these countries. 01:09:09.200 |
we're not going to occupy all these countries." 01:09:20.000 |
But what we are going to do is we are going to establish a new order, 01:09:25.040 |
a new world order of basically American security 01:09:31.920 |
And a lot of this comes out of the Bretton Woods Agreement, 01:09:36.880 |
"Okay, we're going to make sure that the world is at peace." 01:09:42.560 |
especially with the rise of the Soviet Union, 01:09:44.800 |
they said, "If you will be on our side against the Soviet Union during the Cold War, 01:09:50.800 |
we'll basically guarantee the security of the world." 01:10:01.280 |
They have kept the world's oceans free of attack, 01:10:07.120 |
with a few limited exceptions of localized piracy 01:10:12.160 |
Basically, security has not been an issue on the high seas 01:10:17.440 |
since the United States instituted the new world order 01:10:25.680 |
"We're going to keep all of the conflicts tamped down as much as possible." 01:10:29.520 |
So, from time to time, that has resulted in unfortunate military actions 01:10:34.240 |
and bombings in Kosovo and invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan and whatnot. 01:10:40.640 |
"We're going to keep everyone from fighting with each other, 01:10:47.760 |
is simply that the United States is no longer committed to that policy. 01:10:56.000 |
and I need to go back and find if he's written about it, 01:10:58.800 |
but his basic opinion is the United States is retrenching. 01:11:02.800 |
The United States is pulling back from that position. 01:11:06.000 |
And because the United States is pulling back from that position, 01:11:11.520 |
because that global sense of security and safety 01:11:14.240 |
is not going to be guaranteed by the United States. 01:11:17.680 |
There's very little political will in the United States 01:11:25.920 |
The average American just says, "Why are we there? 01:11:32.560 |
And so, if that's the case, then what happens? 01:11:37.200 |
And so, Zayin goes in that book, he goes through all the risks 01:11:41.200 |
and outlines what are some of the potential impacts. 01:11:48.480 |
about where we are and what we have lived through 01:11:55.520 |
And he starts his book with a detailed discussion of demographics, 01:12:01.920 |
because I thought I was clued in on the question of demographics 01:12:05.360 |
and the demographic collapse and the population collapse 01:12:10.000 |
And yet, his numbers blew me out of the water, 01:12:12.000 |
and I haven't found any error in his numbers yet. 01:12:14.320 |
But again, that at least will be for a different show. 01:12:27.440 |
all the world's internationally wired systems 01:12:34.480 |
relatively early in their demographic transitions. 01:12:42.480 |
to catastrophic reductions in the number of young workers. 01:12:45.600 |
These countries were ravenous and not just for food. 01:12:54.080 |
That's the life window when people are buying cars and homes 01:12:56.880 |
and raising children and seeking higher education. 01:13:02.960 |
and this bucket of countries had consumption to spare. 01:13:05.440 |
The countries in bucket number two were further along. 01:13:13.200 |
After all, these countries had generally begun 01:13:15.280 |
their industrialization a few decades earlier, 01:13:17.920 |
but the drops in their birth rates had also begun earlier 01:13:20.640 |
and the dearth of children in their demographic profiles 01:13:28.640 |
needed to be expended upon child rearing and education, 01:13:31.920 |
while more could be splashed out on cars and condos. 01:13:37.680 |
enabling more money to be saved and invested. 01:13:40.480 |
These aging societies did not become less dynamic, 01:13:44.960 |
because they were able to develop and implement technologies 01:13:52.000 |
while the products became more sophisticated. 01:13:56.080 |
was enough young people to consume what they produced. 01:13:58.560 |
In this, the Americans accidentally provided the solution. 01:14:05.680 |
that the American market would be open to all, 01:14:10.480 |
to holding up the world's collective civilizational ceiling 01:14:18.560 |
could access consumer markets the world over. 01:14:26.480 |
The Americans' seeing to the world's security concerns 01:14:33.680 |
But there is nothing about it that was normal. 01:14:39.600 |
upon the Americans' commitment to the global order, 01:14:42.480 |
and that order hasn't served Americans' strategic interests 01:14:48.720 |
Without the Americans riding herd on everyone, 01:14:53.920 |
before something in East Asia, or the Middle East, 01:14:57.120 |
or the Russian periphery, like, I don't know, say, a war, 01:15:03.120 |
assuming that the Americans don't do it themselves. 01:15:08.240 |
holding up the world's collective civilization, 01:15:12.560 |
there was nothing about the heyday of globalization 01:15:22.880 |
that began across the developed world in the 1960s 01:15:53.280 |
while simultaneously avoiding a collapse in birth rates. 01:16:10.160 |
even if everyone's hearts were in the right place, 01:16:12.560 |
even if all the Americans and French and Argentines 01:16:19.600 |
the sheer scale of humanity's demographic turning 01:16:22.480 |
means all of them combined would not comprise 01:16:32.800 |
wealth, and health, globalization has been great, 01:16:41.600 |
assumed as the normal, good, and right way of living, 01:16:48.160 |
is a historic anomaly for the human condition, 01:17:02.480 |
blessed moment in time, a moment that has ended, 01:17:13.040 |
So we'll save the rest of his catastrophic predictions 01:17:42.080 |
especially in the wake of the last two years with COVID. 01:17:49.280 |
The problem I face is that my entire lived experience, 01:18:00.800 |
that period that he refers to as the Halcyon days 01:18:13.120 |
on every single, on almost every single metric. 01:18:42.480 |
and here's why you should ignore the doom and gloom, etc. 01:18:50.560 |
my entire lifespan and all of my personal experience 01:19:00.320 |
That during all of the recorded history that we have, 01:19:18.880 |
has been new cities planted, new cities demolished. 01:19:25.360 |
in expansions in food supply and then major famine. 01:19:39.920 |
My grandfather grew up during the Great Depression 01:19:48.080 |
And so as all people, he was shaped by his era 01:19:55.440 |
to articulate and believe that anything can get worse. 01:19:59.680 |
If I were, you know, just simply a month ago, 01:20:08.560 |
may not be able to keep their houses warm this winter, 01:20:11.040 |
that would sound like crazy talk a month ago. 01:20:35.760 |
but never in my life have I felt it more important 01:20:44.640 |
"And I think that there are very good reasons 01:21:20.160 |
where right now people are literally starving. 01:21:27.120 |
would be quite insulated from many of those things 01:21:37.840 |
So if there's something in your financial life 01:22:17.280 |
Work as hard as you can to see to your own success 01:23:10.400 |
So part one is mainstream financial planning. 01:24:31.920 |
The best way, it's called the alpha strategy. 01:25:35.760 |
I don't live in the United States at present, 01:26:07.280 |
now's the time to get that stuff squared away 01:26:52.320 |
these are things that I have been discussing. 01:27:12.640 |
while also sharing the best solutions that I have. 01:27:34.480 |
I also want to put on my doom and gloom glasses regularly. 01:28:06.480 |
But we do need to spend time preparing for it. 01:28:23.200 |
there's a good chance that it's a combination. 01:28:37.200 |
"The Rational Optimist, How Prosperity Evolves." 01:29:08.080 |
but he was focused a lot on the United States 01:30:21.200 |
we'll have created a new model that will work. 01:30:42.080 |
You and I still face individual personal risks 01:31:34.320 |
So if you prepare for a difficult next decade, 01:31:39.360 |
I still think you should spend 80% of your time 01:32:24.960 |
There were people that started new businesses. 01:32:29.760 |
their children and found a wonderful new thing. 01:32:31.600 |
There were people who their business grew massively 01:32:34.560 |
because they were able to access people in a new way. 01:32:50.320 |
but you still needed that defensive management. 01:32:58.400 |
we're living in a world of deglobalization going forward, 01:33:12.480 |
and talk about what happened on the macro level. 01:33:14.560 |
But for the individual who's aware, who's clued in, 01:33:19.200 |
the individual will still face plenty of opportunity. 01:33:21.920 |
There will always be opportunity for individuals 01:33:50.080 |
that have come out of COVID, many good things. 01:33:53.280 |
The most relevant one here, at the beginning of COVID, 01:33:58.480 |
said your biggest opportunity is to get to remote working. 01:34:02.080 |
Many of you have said you've got it from remote work, 01:34:08.960 |
and it's an amazing life improvement for many people. 01:34:21.440 |
will always be able to access a global marketplace 01:34:39.520 |
a doubling of homeschoolers in the United States. 01:34:41.600 |
That fills me with, that is to me, my biggest thing. 01:34:48.880 |
There's been a major change in the schooling system 01:34:53.440 |
in the United States over the last two years. 01:34:55.360 |
And I think a big influence was that so many schools 01:35:01.280 |
sent their children home to do remote learning. 01:35:05.600 |
in the education marketplace in the United States. 01:35:16.800 |
a lot of their children were being subjected to 01:35:38.400 |
And I think that probably largely came out of COVID. 01:35:46.480 |
is higher than at least I'm ever aware of it being. 01:35:59.840 |
of bright, intelligent, engaged, smart learners 01:36:04.480 |
who can chart out new and innovative solutions 01:36:11.760 |
And where there's a doubling of homeschoolers, 01:36:18.400 |
I mean, already with the relatively low numbers 01:36:25.600 |
If we got to say 5% of students in the United States 01:36:54.640 |
Realism, I think, would say that I don't know the future 01:37:15.760 |
putting in place a good and robust backup system. 01:37:19.200 |
Do it financially, good cash reserves, insurance. 01:37:23.040 |
Do it physically, good physical preparations, 01:37:37.200 |
in terms of the costs and the investment, et cetera. 01:37:39.440 |
Now, there are big questions that I haven't covered. 01:38:14.880 |
Let me just give you about a few minutes on this topic. 01:38:21.360 |
What if I'm trying to live on the investments 01:38:35.840 |
and almost certainly will be many economic challenges, 01:38:38.800 |
I don't see at its core why there is any kind 01:39:22.000 |
he makes the point about how the global insurance-- 01:39:28.000 |
would almost collapse because of basically one event. 01:39:35.520 |
but I don't see any reason to change the fundamentals. 01:39:39.680 |
I'm not calling to say, sell all your stocks and buy gold. 01:39:42.720 |
But by the same token, I think good, prudent diversification 01:39:50.560 |
You want to live in a place that gives you a good lifestyle. 01:39:54.400 |
You want to-- especially as your wealth increases, 01:39:57.120 |
you want to be prudent, and you want to eliminate debt 01:40:01.680 |
Beating the market is not an intelligent financial goal. 01:40:05.760 |
Providing yourself with what you need and your family needs 01:40:12.160 |
buying a house, paying it off-- that still works. 01:40:15.520 |
I think stocks, mutual funds still fundamentally work. 01:40:21.440 |
to think that basing most of your investments in the United 01:40:33.200 |
But one of the things that I have been very clued in on 01:40:36.480 |
over the last three years of my being outside of the United 01:40:39.760 |
States is I now appreciate the United States much more 01:40:43.280 |
And most of my issues with the United States have been-- 01:40:51.440 |
And I think that it's an error to discount the United States 01:41:02.000 |
have money in another country, in other currencies. 01:41:16.560 |
to believe that the United States will continue 01:41:18.320 |
to be powerful, will continue to be a leader, 01:41:32.480 |
is that you should then continue to diversify 01:41:40.880 |
and, say, a half a dozen rental houses probably 01:41:48.320 |
got $4 million in stocks and no rental houses. 01:41:50.720 |
I wouldn't worry if I had $4 million in stocks 01:41:55.120 |
sleep better at night if you've got some physical property, 01:41:57.680 |
some physical property, some physical assets, 01:42:05.360 |
that you have all of those basic preparations of things 01:42:13.280 |
this is the classics throughout human civilization, 01:42:21.360 |
in a safe part of the world that my family loves to go to. 01:42:24.640 |
I myself don't want to be a farmer on a daily basis, 01:42:28.960 |
And I want to have people who work on the farm 01:42:31.760 |
And that's part of our family's portfolio of retreats. 01:42:34.400 |
And so we have a good foundation for a family property 01:42:42.000 |
The reason I refer to a farm is you always want food security. 01:42:45.440 |
At its core, you want to have a safe piece of land 01:42:48.240 |
in a safe place in the world where you have food, 01:42:52.560 |
You have those basic things of human existence 01:42:55.200 |
to gather your family together in a time of crisis. 01:43:01.680 |
I want to have a family business that provides us 01:43:09.680 |
so that we can contribute to the society around us, 01:43:12.160 |
that provides us with the opportunity to give opportunity 01:43:23.520 |
family is always becomes more and more important. 01:43:28.480 |
In the United States, those of us from an American culture, 01:43:41.840 |
And that has meant that we have relied less on family 01:43:46.320 |
and on relationships than many other cultures. 01:43:49.280 |
If the US society faces significant challenges, 01:43:54.960 |
then we will naturally do what societies always do, 01:44:00.480 |
which is to rely back upon family, extended family, 01:44:11.760 |
And so simply having that, building the classics, 01:44:20.400 |
in terms of the normal ambitions of a normal guy like me. 01:44:28.160 |
The ambitions in 2022 are not that much different 01:44:33.040 |
than they were in 1922 than they were in 1822. 01:44:35.920 |
We may be able to get around the world a little bit more. 01:44:40.480 |
but at its core, the basic needs of humankind 01:44:44.960 |
Roof over our heads, food on the dinner table, 01:44:47.760 |
being surrounded by loved ones who are flourishing, 01:44:55.200 |
And these things, regardless of what the future holds, 01:45:00.000 |
or be it a future of difficulty and scarcity, 01:45:03.040 |
these things are eminently achievable by diligent people 01:45:19.760 |
I honestly don't even know what the title of this show, 01:45:30.080 |
And I try to not talk too much about the news of the day, 01:45:38.880 |
As I go, I will plug the international escape course 01:45:42.880 |
that I mentioned, internationalescapeplan.com. 01:45:47.120 |
while I think there's a good chance I'll wind up 01:45:49.280 |
moving back to the United States in the coming years 01:45:56.000 |
Because today, I can move back to the United States 01:46:00.640 |
knowing that I'm not stuck there like I was a few years ago. 01:46:03.280 |
And so if you're interested in how to make a plan 01:46:07.760 |
whether you're from Pakistan or from the United States, 01:46:10.400 |
whether you're from Argentina or from Germany,