Time to “Go Kondo” on the economy? It might depend who you ask.

It’s a good idea in theory. Few would probably argue with the idea that sometimes it just feels like our world has become needlessly complex – what, with all the technology, “always on” media, political & cultural discord, social tension, and of course things like credit default swaps and collateralized debt obligations. What happened to the simple things that the “everyman” could understand and appreciate?

The problem is, like most things in life, once you start to peel it back, you realize even “simplicity” might not be so simple. Why? Because we don’t all value the same things. For some, eliminating “stuff” and creating a more “Zen” like atmosphere at home might fit the bill. For others, it might be the choice between “having it all” (i.e. career, family, friends) vs. having to pick and choose in order to focus on one direction at the expense of another. For yet others, it could be a simple case of better time management. And for some, literally, it would be the seemingly simple question of “why can’t everyone else just agree with me and live the way I think they should? Then everything would be just fine.” (we’ll digress on that point).

Simplicity might be in the eye of the beholder. What if I wanted to keep all my stuff, but “Kondo” all the moral hazard in our system that makes it harder for responsible savers & investors to buy the stuff they want via the fruits of their hard work and prudent risk-taking?

What if the simple ability to open & operate a small business in my preferred small town so I could serve the local population with the simple goods & services they want is all I aspired to do in order to live out my values? And what if I had played by all the rules, worked hard “roughing it” at jobs I didn’t particularly care for along the way, sacrificed the expensive, exotic vacations and debt-fueled purchases of big homes and cars, all so I could save up enough money to buy myself that independent lifestyle using the simple math of profit/loss and price/earnings? (well, as long as these guys didn’t show up first…)

Never mind all the complexity associated with trying to “value” an asset in the first place in this crazy Fed-manipulated age we live in, but as a small business owner, imagine trying to navigate the process of getting a PPP loan while you’re at it? Probably not the definition of simplicity.

Nonetheless, the below is a good, relevant piece written by @andreaskluth via Bloomberg Opinion. As you read through, think about whether your economic system is “sparking joy” for you.

Bloomberg Opinion: This Pandemic Is an Opportunity For Radical Simplification

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-04-25/coronavirus-pandemic-is-an-opportunity-for-radical-simplification

“A reset to what? My guess is that it’ll amount to a great simplification. A simplification of our lives, priorities, schedules, memberships, finances, relationships and maybe even world views. But also a simplification of our societies. That’s because one of the side effects of Covid-19 is to expose the accumulation over decades — at least in the wealthy West — of untenable complexity in the individual, political and economic spheres of life. “

“The proof includes the stunning success of somebody like Marie Kondo, a Japanese lifestyle guru who promises to help unclutter your home.  In practice, Kondo wants you to look at all your stuff and keep asking: “Does it spark joy?” Usually, the answer is no, and out it goes. “

“Collapse isn’t necessarily as scary as it sounds, by the way. It’s merely a society’s rapid and involuntary simplification. “

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A gut-check on values with Chris Cuomo.

A silver lining of being stricken with COVID-19, it seems, is an opportunity to take a step back and re-evaluate those “bigger questions” – you know, the ones whose answers we tend to take for granted. Whatever your politics (or whatever your opinion of Chris Cuomo’s) the man brings up some of our favorite points below – whether he intended to or not.

While the recent actions of the Fed might force him to re-think that last part about his “saved money”, all other things being equal (if only), we couldn’t agree with him more.

Of course, it all comes down to values.

Cuomo for next Fed chair? Or Treasury secretary, maybe?

NY Post: Coronavirus-stricken Chris Cuomo trashes CNN gig during radio show meltdown

https://nypost.com/2020/04/13/chris-cuomo-trashes-cnn-gig-during-covid-19-meltdown/

“I don’t want to spend my time doing things that I don’t think are valuable enough to me personally,” Cuomo said. “I don’t value indulging irrationality, hyper-partisanship.”

“I’m basically being perceived as successful in a system that I don’t value,” he continued. “I’m seen as being good at being on TV and advocating for different positions … but I don’t know if I value those things, certainly not as much as I value being able to live my life on my own terms.”

“That matters to me more than making millions of dollars a year … because I’ve saved my money and I don’t need it anymore,” he said.

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Emptiness into Fullness – a timely Easter metaphor?

Speaking to a (literally) empty congregation at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City (but virtually streamed), Cardinal Timothy Dolan earlier today gave his annual Easter Sermon.

Drawing a metaphor between the “empty tomb” that was found by Mary Magdelene that morning and the “fullness of Christ” it allowed to emerge, and the feeling of “emptiness” we feel on this particular Easter Sunday vs. the “fullness” that Easter normally represents, Cardinal Dolan may have hit on a profound point that’s even more relevant to the moment than even he might have intended.

In other words, it’s the idea that “emptiness” might lead to “fullness” if we turn away from what has gone empty – whether it be Jesus’ dead body in the tomb, or the daily activities of our lives in the age of COVID19 (i.e. going out to eat, commuting to the office, taking that ride to the mall, taking that vacation, buying that new car, buying that second house, going to that cocktail party) – and instead, use the opportunity to fill ourselves with a new, perhaps better, sense of purpose and renewal. What may have once filled our lives with “purpose” (or at least filled the time) might well be dead (at least for now) but will we bother to take the opportunity to re-evaluate if we were filling it with the right things in the first place?

Well, we know the Federal Reserve for one hasn’t been thinking that way, for any “dead bodies” (at least the well-connected ones) always manage to be kept alive through bailouts and QE, even if just as zombies, before they ever have a chance to actually die. Therefore, much like the “market” itself, true renewal is never allowed to actually happen. A seemingly eternal cycle of propping up the dead bodies, and crowding out the new ideas and investment, has been the rule of our era.

That said, if we want to learn from the lesson of Easter – a pivotal point in history, that led to the branching off of what would become the world’s largest religion (whatever you think of the institution itself, think about the millions who follow it, and for a reason) – we might take a moment to think if this could be a turning point for our economy and society. At least, it might be a moment to take a critical look at our economic system – is it truly serving the needs, wants, morals, values of its people? Or are Jay Powell, Steve Mnuchin (and the likes of Janet Yellen, Ben Bernanke, Tim Geithner, Hank Paulson, Alan Greenspan, etc… before them), along with all the connected Wall Street insiders & lobbyists, playing the modern-day role of Pontius Pilate & the Romans in a world that’s thirsting for a better way forward?

There’s been a palpable feeling of emptiness out there, especially since 2008, when it comes to our current system of money & finance. Perhaps this Easter Sunday might mark the subtle beginning of a new way of thinking that, hundreds of years from now, we might look back on and celebrate as “year zero” of a more enlightened existence.

Hope & faith.

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Have we all become “sloths” to our system?

Catholic San Francisco: Complaining, inertia are seeds of the devil, pope says

https://www.catholic-sf.org/news/complaining-inertia-are-seeds-of-the-devil-pope-says

The sin of sloth, marked by careless indifference, apathy and self-pity, is a poison, a fog that envelops the soul and doesn’t let it live”

“The sin of sadness is the seed of the devil, that inability to make a decision about one’s own life, but OK with looking at other people’s lives in order to complain about that, not to criticize them but to lament about oneself”

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