Quote from brettman9:
I take it, from your clear and entertaining sarcasm, that you feel the longer term picture is now so concretely bleak that a true period of organic and healthy expansion, even one that begins years from now, is difficult to imagine.
I would only say that I'm sure this is another bullet point that could be added to the list in the opening post of this thread that pointed out similarities between the current state of affairs and those of 1938 and 1975.
Of course we don't know what it is now. Hence the uncertain and tumultuous market behavior.
But, if I had to venture a not-unreasonable guess, it would have something to do with the fact that "good ideas" are now approximately infinitely more potent than they were just 25 years ago in that, no matter where they occur, or when, they are suddenly available to billions of other people for collaboration and integration into their own good ideas, methods, and practices instantly due to the productive overhang of the last secular bull: namely: a global fiber optic information infrastructure. This has got to have some major second- and third-order implications that are yet to be understood or, indeed, fathomable.
But that's beside the point. Everytime we focus on what we can foresee, we, by definition, leave out what we can't. It seems to be the case that, in times such as these, the problem is that certain themes are so visible, so forceful on the intellect, so easy to articulate, that it's almost impossible to see anything else. And, every time a new age of growth develops, it is based on a reorganization of ideas and capital that could not have been foreseen from the fog-of-war of the preceding consolidation phase.
Hence, the abstract principle is that we will probably find a way to work out the seemingly insurmountable problems and get on with improving our lot. The point of the chart is that we seem to go through periods when we doubt that this is plausible. And that that doubt seems to have a relatively identifiable structure when seen from a bird's eye view.