The
advantage of looking at geophysics on the web is that the data is relatively reliable. It is the interpretations and predictions you
need to watch for, but even those tend to be cautious. The volcanoes, earthquakes and actual weather
events have their own uncertainties for the future but you know what you have
in the present.
Currently,
the volcano scene looks relatively quiet; Ijen in East
Java is on high alert and may become livelier but may not. The earthquakes occurring seem to be a little
different from the usual patterns and the run close to Puerto
Rico was a worry, but this often occurs without a big one hitting
hard in urbanised areas.
In the
Atlantic area, though, it is looking as though the hurricane season may become
more active. A depression has been over
The Bahamas but Tropical Storm Ernesto is on its way towards Jamaica and somewhere into The
Gulf.
How big or
bad it will become will emerge in the next couple of days or so. On the other side of the Atlantic Tropical
Storm Florence is also on its way west at present following in the path of
Ernesto. There have been damaging
typhoons already in the Pacific and China
Seas .
But in the USA the weather
has turned nasty causing large areas to be declared as disaster areas with
drought, storms and other problems impacting on crops and the general
economies. This will be costly and are not
the sort of thing politicians want in election years. The bad news could get worse.
But when we
turn to the economics, something that you might expect humans to be able to
deal with and influence the way things are done and the consequences we are in
a tunnel without apparently any exits.
We do not know clearly why or how we got there nor how to get out nor in
which direction to go.
The latest
major concern, substantially ignored by the main media because it is difficult
to understand is the bond markets. Here
the data is far from reliable, we think we know the patterns but they can
change rapidly without warning and we have theories to address the issues which
compared with our theories in geophysics amount to wishful thinking and voodoo
practices.
The
politicians roam around from conferences to the media and back again assuring
us that they will be able to come up with effective political solutions if only
the banks and the public will behave and do what they are asked. The economists look in their toolboxes and
discover their tools are the wrong ones and do not fit.
While this
is going on a variety of interested parties and experts are proclaiming their
own views. As very many of these are
self serving, based on data which is old, related to past events in different
circumstances and plagued by a reliance on equations which no longer have a
solution, it is difficult to understand or predict.
Amongst all
this is the suggestion that with all the money flushed into the systems and all
the governments and their major agencies buying each others bonds the system is
reaching break point. As these bonds also
have been used for bolstering the work of bust banks there are very serious
problems here.
Add to that
all the pension schemes relying on such bonds as a critical basis for their existence. Then there are the raft of others who have
bought into them, notably in many countries, local authorities using them as
reserves.
As an
extra, if the bond markets do go into free fall, all the low interest rate
policies, forced on economies to stimulate them will fail and the rates could
move up very sharply. As many of the
“investments” made from this money are far from that and could become money
drains in the near future it does not look good.
So which
are the best guesses to follow? Would
you bet on the markets or the geophysics?
Above is a
statue from the ancient Hittite Empire, where did they get to? And why is he looking puzzled?
He's wondering how he ended up taped to a wall?
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