Advice From Russia, Dmitry Orlov Offers It Up.
I don't have much inclination to offer up many
comments other than note that this is a cold, hard look from one who has been
there.Additional articles
here:Part
1Part
2Part
3
Published on Monday, December 4, 2006 by
Energy Bulletin Closing the
'Collapse Gap': the USSR was better prepared for collapse than the
US
By Dmitry Orlov
Good
evening, ladies and gentlemen. I am not an expert or a scholar or an activist. I
am more of an eye-witness. I watched the Soviet Union collapse, and I have tried
to put my observations into a concise message. I will leave it up to you to
decide just how urgent a message it
is.My talk tonight is about the lack of
collapse-preparedness here in the United States. I will compare it with the
situation in the Soviet Union, prior to its collapse. The rhetorical device I am
going to use is the "Collapse Gap" – to go along with the Nuclear Gap, and
the Space Gap, and various other superpower gaps that were fashionable during
the Cold
War. Slide
[2] The subject of economic collapse is generally a sad one. But I am an
optimistic, cheerful sort of person, and I believe that, with a bit of
preparation, such events can be taken in stride. As you can probably surmise, I
am actually rather keen on observing economic collapses. Perhaps when I am
really old, all collapses will start looking the same to me, but I am not at
that point yet. And this next one
certainly has me intrigued. From what I've seen and read, it seems that there is
a fair chance that the U.S. economy will collapse sometime within the
foreseeable future. It also would seem that we won't be particularly
well-prepared for it. As things stand, the U.S. economy is poised to perform
something like a disappearing act. And so I am eager to put my observations of
the Soviet collapse to good use.
Slide
[3] I anticipate that some people will react rather badly to having their
country compared to the USSR. I would like to assure you that the Soviet people
would have reacted similarly, had the United States collapsed first. Feelings
aside, here are two 20th century superpowers, who wanted more or less the same
things – things like technological progress, economic growth, full
employment, and world domination – but they disagreed about the methods.
And they obtained similar results – each had a good run, intimidated the
whole planet, and kept the other scared. Each eventually went
bankrupt. Slide
[4] The USA and the USSR were evenly matched in many categories, but let me just
mention four.The Soviet manned space
program is alive and well under Russian management, and now offers first-ever
space charters. The Americans have been hitching rides on the Soyuz while their
remaining spaceships sit in the shop.
The arms race has not produced a clear
winner, and that is excellent news, because Mutual Assured Destruction remains
in effect. Russia still has more nuclear warheads than the US, and has
supersonic cruise missile technology that can penetrate any missile shield,
especially a nonexistent one. The Jails
Race once showed the Soviets with a decisive lead, thanks to their innovative
GULAG program. But they gradually fell behind, and in the end the Jails Race has
been won by the Americans, with the highest percentage of people in jail
ever.The Hated Evil Empire Race is also
finally being won by the Americans. It's easy now that they don't have anyone to
compete
against. Slide
[5] Continuing with our list of superpower similarities, many of the problems
that sunk the Soviet Union are now endangering the United States as well. Such
as a huge, well-equipped, very expensive military, with no clear mission, bogged
down in fighting Muslim insurgents. Such as energy shortfalls linked to peaking
oil production. Such as a persistently unfavorable trade balance, resulting in
runaway foreign debt. Add to that a delusional self-image, an inflexible
ideology, and an unresponsive political
system. Slide
[6] An economic collapse is amazing to observe, and very interesting if
described accurately and in detail. A general description tends to fall short of
the mark, but let me try. An economic arrangement can continue for quite some
time after it becomes untenable, through sheer inertia. But at some point a tide
of broken promises and invalidated assumptions sweeps it all out to sea. One
such untenable arrangement rests on the notion that it is possible to
perpetually borrow more and more money from abroad, to pay for more and more
energy imports, while the price of these imports continues to double every few
years. Free money with which to buy energy equals free energy, and free energy
does not occur in nature. This must therefore be a transient condition. When the
flow of energy snaps back toward equilibrium, much of the US economy will be
forced to shut
down. Slide
[7] I've described what happened to Russia in some detail in one of my articles,
which is available on SurvivingPeakOil.com.
I don't see why what happens to the United States should be entirely dissimilar,
at least in general terms. The specifics will be different, and we will get to
them in a moment. We should certainly expect shortages of fuel, food, medicine,
and countless consumer items, outages of electricity, gas, and water, breakdowns
in transportation systems and other infrastructure, hyperinflation, widespread
shutdowns and mass layoffs, along with a lot of despair, confusion, violence,
and lawlessness. We definitely should not expect any grand rescue plans,
innovative technology programs, or miracles of social
cohesion. Slide
[8] When faced with such developments, some people are quick to realize what it
is they have to do to survive, and start doing these things, generally without
anyone's permission. A sort of economy emerges, completely informal, and often
semi-criminal. It revolves around liquidating, and recycling, the remains of the
old economy. It is based on direct access to resources, and the threat of force,
rather than ownership or legal authority. People who have a problem with this
way of doing things, quickly find themselves out of the game.
These are the generalities. Now let's
look at some
specifics. Slide
[9] One important element of collapse-preparedness is making sure that you don't
need a functioning economy to keep a roof over your head. In the Soviet Union,
all housing belonged to the government, which made it available directly to the
people. Since all housing was also built by the government, it was only built in
places that the government could service using public transportation. After the
collapse, almost everyone managed to keep their place.
In the United States, very few people
own their place of residence free and clear, and even they need an income to pay
real estate taxes. People without an income face homelessness. When the economy
collapses, very few people will continue to have an income, so homelessness will
become rampant. Add to that the car-dependent nature of most suburbs, and what
you will get is mass migrations of homeless people toward city
centers. Slide
[10] Soviet public transportation was more or less all there was, but there was
plenty of it. There were also a few private cars, but so few that gasoline
rationing and shortages were mostly inconsequential. All of this public
infrastructure was designed to be almost infinitely maintainable, and continued
to run even as the rest of the economy
collapsed.The population of the United
States is almost entirely car-dependent, and relies on markets that control oil
import, refining, and distribution. They also rely on continuous public
investment in road construction and repair. The cars themselves require a steady
stream of imported parts, and are not designed to last very long. When these
intricately interconnected systems stop functioning, much of the population will
find itself
stranded. Slide
[11] Economic collapse affects public sector employment almost as much as
private sector employment, eventually. Because government bureaucracies tend to
be slow to act, they collapse more slowly. Also, because state-owned enterprises
tend to be inefficient, and stockpile inventory, there is plenty of it left
over, for the employees to take home, and use in barter. Most Soviet employment
was in the public sector, and this gave people some time to think of what to do
next. Private enterprises tend to be
much more efficient at many things. Such laying off their people, shutting their
doors, and liquidating their assets. Since most employment in the United States
is in the private sector, we should expect the transition to permanent
unemployment to be quite abrupt for most
people. Slide
[12] When confronting hardship, people usually fall back on their families for
support. The Soviet Union experienced chronic housing shortages, which often
resulted in three generations living together under one roof. This didn't make
them happy, but at least they were used to each other. The usual expectation was
that they would stick it out together, come what
may.In the United States, families tend
to be atomized, spread out over several states. They sometimes have trouble
tolerating each other when they come together for Thanksgiving, or Christmas,
even during the best of times. They might find it difficult to get along, in bad
times. There is already too much loneliness in this country, and I doubt that
economic collapse will cure
it. Slide
[13] To keep evil at bay, Americans require money. In an economic collapse,
there is usually hyperinflation, which wipes out savings. There is also rampant
unemployment, which wipes out incomes. The result is a population that is
largely penniless.In the Soviet Union,
very little could be obtained for money. It was treated as tokens rather than as
wealth, and was shared among friends. Many things – housing and
transportation among them – were either free or almost
free. Slide
[14] Soviet consumer products were always an object of derision –
refrigerators that kept the house warm – and the food, and so on. You'd be
lucky if you got one at all, and it would be up to you to make it work once you
got it home. But once you got it to work, it would become a priceless family
heirloom, handed down from generation to generation, sturdy, and almost
infinitely maintainable.In the United
States, you often hear that something "is not worth fixing." This is enough to
make a Russian see red. I once heard of an elderly Russian who became irate when
a hardware store in Boston wouldn't sell him replacement bedsprings: "People are
throwing away perfectly good mattresses, how am I supposed to fix
them?"Economic collapse tends to shut
down both local production and imports, and so it is vitally important that
anything you own wears out slowly, and that you can fix it yourself if it
breaks. Soviet-made stuff generally wore incredibly hard. The Chinese-made stuff
you can get around here – much less
so. Slide
[15] The Soviet agricultural sector was notoriously inefficient. Many people
grew and gathered their own food even in relatively prosperous times. There were
food warehouses in every city, stocked according to a government allocation
scheme. There were very few restaurants, and most families cooked and ate at
home. Shopping was rather labor-intensive, and involved carrying heavy loads.
Sometimes it resembled hunting – stalking that elusive piece of meat
lurking behind some store counter. So the people were well-prepared for what
came next.In the United States, most
people get their food from a supermarket, which is supplied from far away using
refrigerated diesel trucks. Many people don't even bother to shop and just eat
fast food. When people do cook, they rarely cook from scratch. This is all very
unhealthy, and the effect on the nation's girth, is visible, clear across the
parking lot. A lot of the people, who just waddle to and from their cars, seem
unprepared for what comes next. If they suddenly had to start living like the
Russians, they would blow out their
knees. Slide
[16] The Soviet government threw resources at immunization programs, infectious
disease control, and basic care. It directly operated a system of state-owned
clinics, hospitals, and sanatoriums. People with fatal ailments or chronic
conditions often had reason to complain, and had to pay for private care –
if they had the money.In the United
States, medicine is for profit. People seems to think nothing of this fact.
There are really very few fields of endeavor to which Americans would deny the
profit motive. The problem is, once the economy is removed, so is the profit,
along with the services it once helped to
motivate. Slide
[17] The Soviet education system was generally quite excellent. It produced an
overwhelmingly literate population and many great specialists. The education was
free at all levels, but higher education sometimes paid a stipend, and often
provided room and board. The educational system held together quite well after
the economy collapsed. The problem was that the graduates had no jobs to look
forward to upon graduation. Many of them lost their
way.The higher education system in the
United States is good at many things – government and industrial research,
team sports, vocational training... Primary and secondary education fails to
achieve in 12 years what Soviet schools generally achieved in 8. The massive
scale and expense of maintaining these institutions is likely to prove too much
for the post-collapse environment. Illiteracy is already a problem in the United
States, and we should expect it to get a lot
worse. Slide
[18] The Soviet Union did not need to import energy. The production and
distribution system faltered, but never collapsed. Price controls kept the
lights on even as hyperinflation
raged.The term "market failure" seems to
fit the energy situation in the United States. Free markets develop some
pernicious characteristics when there are shortages of key commodities. During
World War II, the United States government understood this, and successfully
rationed many things, from gasoline to bicycle parts. But that was a long time
ago. Since then, the inviolability of free markets has become an article of
faith. Slide
[19] My conclusion is that the Soviet Union was much better-prepared for
economic collapse than the United States
is.I have left out two important
superpower asymmetries, because they don't have anything to do with
collapse-preparedness. Some countries are simply luckier than others. But I will
mention them, for the sake of
completeness.In terms of racial and
ethnic composition, the United States resembles Yugoslavia more than it
resembles Russia, so we shouldn't expect it to be as peaceful as Russia was,
following the collapse. Ethnically mixed societies are fragile and have a
tendency to explode.In terms of
religion, the Soviet Union was relatively free of apocalyptic doomsday cults.
Very few people there wished for a planet-sized atomic fireball to herald the
second coming of their savior. This was indeed a
blessing. Slide
[20] One area in which I cannot discern any Collapse Gap is national politics.
The ideologies may be different, but the blind adherence to them couldn't be
more similar.It is certainly more fun to
watch two Capitalist parties go at each other than just having the one Communist
party to vote for. The things they fight over in public are generally symbolic
little tokens of social policy, chosen for ease of public posturing. The
Communist party offered just one bitter pill. The two Capitalist parties offer a
choice of two placebos. The latest innovation is the photo finish election,
where each party buys 50% of the vote, and the result is pulled out of
statistical noise, like a rabbit out of a
hat.The American way of dealing with
dissent and with protest is certainly more advanced: why imprison dissidents
when you can just let them shout into the wind to their heart's
content?The American approach to
bookkeeping is more subtle and nuanced than the Soviet. Why make a state secret
of some statistic, when you can just distort it, in obscure ways? Here's a
simple example: inflation is "controlled" by substituting hamburger for steak,
in order to minimize increases to Social Security
payments. Slide
[21] Many people expend a lot of energy protesting against their irresponsible,
unresponsive government. It seems like a terrible waste of time, considering how
ineffectual their protests are. Is it enough of a consolation for them to be
able to read about their efforts in the foreign press? I think that they would
feel better if they tuned out the politicians, the way the politicians tune them
out. It's as easy as turning off the television set. If they try it, they will
probably observe that nothing about their lives has changed, nothing at all,
except maybe their mood has improved. They might also find that they have more
time and energy to devote to more important
things. Slide
[22] I will now sketch out some approaches, realistic and otherwise, to closing
the Collapse Gap. My little list of approaches might seem a bit glib, but keep
in mind that this is a very difficult problem. In fact, it's important to keep
in mind that not all problems have solutions. I can promise you that we will not
solve this problem tonight. What I will try to do is to shed some light on it
from several
angles. Slide
[23] Many people rail against the unresponsiveness and irresponsibility of the
government. They often say things like "What is needed is..." plus the name of
some big, successful government project from the glorious past – the
Marshall Plan, the Manhattan Project, the Apollo program. But there is nothing
in the history books about a government preparing for collapse. Gorbachev's
"Perestroika" is an example of a government trying to avert or delay collapse.
It probably helped speed it
along. Slide
[24] There are some things that I would like the government to take care of in
preparation for collapse. I am particularly concerned about all the radioactive
and toxic installations, stockpiles, and dumps. Future generations are unlikely
to able to control them, especially if global warming puts them underwater.
There is enough of this muck sitting around to kill off most of us. I am also
worried about soldiers getting stranded overseas – abandoning one's
soldiers is among the most shameful things a country can do. Overseas military
bases should be dismantled, and the troops repatriated. I'd like to see the huge
prison population whittled away in a controlled manner, ahead of time, instead
of in a chaotic general amnesty. Lastly, I think that this farce with debts that
will never be repaid, has gone on long enough. Wiping the slate clean will give
society time to readjust. So, you see, I am not asking for any miracles.
Although, if any of these things do get done, I would consider it a
miracle. Slide
[25] A private sector solution is not impossible; just very, very unlikely.
Certain Soviet state enterprises were basically states within states. They
controlled what amounted to an entire economic system, and could go on even
without the larger economy. They kept to this arrangement even after they were
privatized. They drove Western management consultants mad, with their endless
kindergartens, retirement homes, laundries, and free clinics. These weren't part
of their core competency, you see. They needed to divest and to streamline their
operations. The Western management gurus overlooked the most important thing:
the core competency of these enterprises lay in their ability to survive
economic collapse. Maybe the young geniuses at Google can wrap their heads
around this one, but I doubt that their stockholders
will. Slide
[26] It's important to understand that the Soviet Union achieved
collapse-preparedness inadvertently, and not because of the success of some
crash program. Economic collapse has a way of turning economic negatives into
positives. The last thing we want is a perfectly functioning, growing,
prosperous economy that suddenly collapses one day, and leaves everybody in the
lurch. It is not necessary for us to embrace the tenets of command economy and
central planning to match the Soviet lackluster performance in this area. We
have our own methods, that are working almost as well. I call them
"boondoggles." They are solutions to problems that cause more problems than they
solve.Just look around you, and you will
see boondoggles sprouting up everywhere, in every field of endeavor: we have
military boondoggles like Iraq, financial boondoggles like the doomed retirement
system, medical boondoggles like private health insurance, legal boondoggles
like the intellectual property system. The combined weight of all these
boondoggles is slowly but surely pushing us all down. If it pushes us down far
enough, then economic collapse, when it arrives, will be like falling out of a
ground floor window. We just have to help this process along, or at least not
interfere with it. So if somebody comes to you and says "I want to make a
boondoggle that runs on hydrogen" – by all means encourage him! It's not
as good as a boondoggle that burns money directly, but it's a step in the right
direction. Slide
[27] Certain types of mainstream economic behavior are not prudent on a personal
level, and are also counterproductive to bridging the Collapse Gap. Any behavior
that might result in continued economic growth and prosperity is
counterproductive: the higher you jump, the harder you land. It is traumatic to
go from having a big retirement fund to having no retirement fund because of a
market crash. It is also traumatic to go from a high income to little or no
income. If, on top of that, you have kept yourself incredibly busy, and suddenly
have nothing to do, then you will really be in rough
shape.Economic collapse is about the
worst possible time for someone to suffer a nervous breakdown, yet this is what
often happens. The people who are most at risk psychologically are successful
middle-aged men. When their career is suddenly over, their savings are gone, and
their property worthless, much of their sense of self-worth is gone as well.
They tend to drink themselves to death and commit suicide in disproportionate
numbers. Since they tend to be the most experienced and capable people, this is
a staggering loss to society.If the
economy, and your place within it, is really important to you, you will be
really hurt when it goes away. You can cultivate an attitude of studied
indifference, but it has to be more than just a conceit. You have to develop the
lifestyle and the habits and the physical stamina to back it up. It takes a lot
of creativity and effort to put together a fulfilling existence on the margins
of society. After the collapse, these margins may turn out to be some of the
best places to
live. Slide
[28] I hope that I didn't make it sound as if the Soviet collapse was a walk in
the park, because it was really quite awful in many ways. The point that I do
want to stress is that when this economy collapses, it is bound to be much
worse. Another point I would like to stress is that collapse here is likely to
be permanent. The factors that allowed Russia and the other former Soviet
republics to recover are not present
here.In spite of all this, I believe
that in every age and circumstance, people can sometimes find not just a means
and a reason to survive, but enlightenment, fulfillment, and freedom. If we can
find them even after the economy collapses, then why not start looking for them
now?Thank
you.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Editorial
Notes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Energy
Bulletin published an excerpt from this talk yesterday (Dec 3), and Dmitry
reported that his small webserver was overwhelmed with requests. Although it's
good news that his writing has such a following, PLEASE don't access the
document on his web server (Club Orlov). The same content is here, on Energy
Bulletin's heavier duty
webserver.---Orlov
has many penetrating insights, couched in his dark humor. Particularly striking
is the strong case he makes that the peoples of the USSR were actually better
prepared for a collapse because
• they had learned to be more
self-reliant
• many crucial functions (like
housing and transportation) were taken care of by the state sector which was
more stable than a private sector would have
been.Orlov's cynicism about the
possibility of intelligent government action was probably justified in the case
of the Soviet Union, but I think it would be a tragic mistake to abandon efforts
to change the direction of the U.S. The Soviets had little chance to make
democratic institutions work. We do have that chance.
-BAUPDATE:
Dmitri Orlov writes on March 4,
2007:You wrote that "The Soviets
had little chance to make democratic institutions work." That's not entirely
true. Perestroika and Glasnost were all about democracy, and in my opinion it
had the same chance of success as the hopelessly gerrymandered system that
passes for democracy in the US, (although much less than any proper, modern
democracy, in which the Bush regime would have been put out of power quite a
while ago, after a simple parliamentary vote of no confidence and early
elections). The problem is that, in a collapse scenario, democracy is the least
effective system of government one can possibly think of (think Weimar, or the
Russian Interim Government) - a topic I cover in Post-Soviet Lessons.
Lastly, I don't think
calling me a cynic is exactly accurate: I've been in the US a long time,
watching the system become progressively more dysfunctional with each passing
political season. It seems to me that it is not necessarily cynical to be able
to spot a solid trend, but that it could be simply
observant.UPDATE (October
30, 2007):We've noticed an
influx of visitors to Dmitry Orlov's article, since its mention on several
websites. Dmitry writes that his new book, "Reinventing Collapse," is due from
New Society Publishers in the
springtime.Article
found at : http://www.energybulletin.net/newswire.php?id=23259
Posted: Wed - November 7, 2007 at 12:03 AM
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Published On: Nov 08, 2007 01:53 AM
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