Most 20th-century nations experienced an "economic apocalypse" (communism, hyperinflation). The US, Canada, and Australia are rare exceptions. This long-term stability has created a cultural blind spot, making the American population uniquely unprepared for systemic financial crises.
Financial and political systems can unravel at an exponential pace. The collapse of SVB took two days to trigger a $300B printing, while the USSR went from superpower to non-existent in just two years. This highlights the danger of slow reaction times, where waiting for clear signals means it's already too late.
Drawing from his time at the US Treasury, Amias Gerety explains that recessions are about slowing growth. A financial crisis is a far more dangerous event where fundamental assumptions collapse because assets previously considered safe are suddenly perceived as worthless, causing a "sudden stop" in the economy.
When facing economic ruin, humans don't become conservative. They enter a psychological 'lost domain' where they become risk-seeking, making high-stakes gambles like meme stocks or crypto in a desperate attempt to recover their losses in one move.
Core components of today's financial landscape, including FDIC insurance, Social Security, and even the 30-year mortgage, were not products of gradual evolution. They were specific policies created rapidly out of the financial ashes of the Great Depression, demonstrating how systemic shocks can accelerate fundamental structural reforms.
Contrary to popular belief, the 1929 crash wasn't an instantaneous event. It took a full year for public confidence to erode and for the new reality to set in. This illustrates that markets can absorb financial shocks, but they cannot withstand a sustained, spiraling loss of confidence.
During profound economic instability, the winning strategy isn't chasing the highest returns, but rather avoiding catastrophic loss. The greatest risks are not missed upside, but holding only cash as inflation erodes its value or relying solely on a paycheck.
The feeling that today's economy is uniquely precarious is misleading. While recessions and inflation have always existed, the 24/7 news cycle creates an unprecedented intensity of negative information, leading to paralysis. The solution is to manage information consumption and focus on long-term strategy.
The trauma of the 1929 crash created a lasting aversion to stock market investing. Andrew Ross Sorkin notes his grandfather witnessed the crash as a boy and never bought a stock in his life. This shows how crises can shatter a nation's financial psyche for generations, impacting wealth creation.
The underlying math of U.S. debt is unsustainable, but the system holds together on pure confidence. The final collapse won't be a slow leak but a sudden 'pop'—an overnight freeze when investors collectively stop believing the government can honor its debts, a point which cannot be timed.
In the face of a true systemic collapse and hyperinflation, traditional financial assets become unreliable. The most effective long-term strategy is having a plan for physical relocation to a more stable economic region, preserving not just wealth but personal safety and opportunity.