Ray Dalio on Chinese Human Rights

The whole “strict parent” metaphor is wrong. Regardless of whether they were strict or not, a good parent would protect their children from abuse, not “disappear” them and suppress legitimate cases of abuse.

Ray Dalio: Debt Monetization

00:00
another one of your publications is
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carry with me is principles for
00:04
navigating the big debt crisis we follow
00:06
debt levels here we do debt reports debt
00:08
accumulation port set aside some
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statistics this morning are you worried
00:11
about where we are in debt accumulation
00:13
at the household sovereign or global
00:16
level or are we near tipping points as
00:20
you look in debt accumulation around the
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world are you concerned I’m I look at
00:26
things in a very mechanic mechanical way
00:29
and so what concerns me about debt we’re
00:33
in a new world now and what concerns me
00:36
about debt is the nature of the dynamic
00:42
in which you don’t have to service debt
00:45
and what I mean by that is to a larger
00:48
extent than ever before this debt growth
00:51
the maturity of the debt has been
00:53
extended a lot the interest rate becomes
00:57
negative or or near negative so the debt
01:00
service payments for the interest rate
01:02
go down a lot and it’s almost the
01:06
situation where there’s guaranteed debt
01:09
rollovers so principle does not have to
01:12
be rolled over in a number of cases and
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there’s low covenants and so when you
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start to look at this the thing you say
01:20
what is going to cause a debt service
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problem in 2007 we calculated that we
01:27
would have the 2008 financial crisis by
01:29
doing those pro-forma numbers and then
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when we’re dealing now in this seemingly
01:34
crazy or odd other reality in which the
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you don’t have to pay interest and you
01:42
don’t have to rollover your debt and and
01:45
that and then you play with negative
01:47
interest rates you say how do how will
01:50
that work okay and so if we look at
01:53
periods of time in history and we’re
01:55
somewhat those types of things happen
01:58
maybe for example of war years one if we
02:00
look at the war years and we look at ya
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let’s call year-old yield curve
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targeting with the low interest rates
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and the mechanics of that that produces
02:11
a different
02:12
mechanics now so when I look at what’s
02:15
ahead and I think about that and my
02:18
stretches my imagination because I I
02:21
know even beyond that we will have much
02:24
larger deficits so if we not only do we
02:27
have the debts that you’re referring to
02:28
right and their maturities but we have
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will have larger deficits which will
02:34
grow and in addition we have pension
02:37
liabilities and healthcare liabilities
02:39
and other forms of liabilities that will
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come at us
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they’re very cashflow driven because
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you’ll have to make those types of
02:47
payments and so they’re coming at us at
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the same time and then you deal with
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okay how will that be dealt with and
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funded so you have to go through the
02:56
imagination of the fact that they will
03:00
probably be monetized and in other words
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they’ll have debt
03:04
central banks will be in a position that
03:06
they’ll have to buy the debt and so as
03:08
we go from other countries let’s say if
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we go from Japan which 46% of it’s very
03:13
large debt is owned by the Bank of Japan
03:16
and we keep moving that up that’s the
03:19
mechanics that we have in place and so
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when I extend that and I look at that I
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think we are in the last stages or the
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less end of last stages of what is
03:30
currency what is a reserve currency how
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does that monitor that our Fiat monetary
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system work because let’s say currency a
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bond is an asset that is a promise to
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receive a lot of currency okay now how
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do much do I want that and and because
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I’m going to have let’s say a negative
03:53
interest rates are close to a negative
03:55
interest rate so you know then you start
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to think of the arbitrage as do I want
04:00
the paper currency in the thing do I
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want gold do I want some other
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alternative type of currency and then
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increasingly there will de facto be
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taxes on owning that asset because tax a
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negative interest rate is a form of
04:14
taxes and as we go more and more to
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digital currencies the arbitrage between
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putting cat paper in a vault will be
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increasingly eliminated
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so we’re at the when I talk about the
04:27
long-term debt cycle
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I mean that there’s in in the history
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you know you wipe out the debts and then
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you don’t have debts but and then you
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can create the stimulation and that
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happens and you always hit it with a
04:41
jolt of stimulation until then you get
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to interest rates hitting zero or close
04:47
to zero and then they don’t work so
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that’s monetary policy one is interest
04:53
rates monetary policy two is then when
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that doesn’t work you print money and
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you buy it when that doesn’t work you
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have this phenomenon that we’re in we’re
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at the end of the long term debt cycle
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and you have the dynamic so the classic
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debt crisis that we’re looking at is
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doesn’t look like the ones that I’ve
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seen in the past it looks more like the
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ones in the like and at one late-30s
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what we’re at the end of that cycle
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because in the past the way they would
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happen would be you know do you have a
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certain amount of debt central and the
05:30
economy’s overheating central bank
05:32
tightens monetary policy or even that
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you run through and you say what’s the
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debt rollover problem right so we’re not
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going to have the classic debt rollover
05:41
problem we’re not going to have the
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classic tightening of monetary policy so
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when we think about those things and say
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oh we’re going to have a debt problem we
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have things to be concerned about in the
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way I’m describing but they’re not going
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to be the classic ways that this has
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come to an end if we can’t afford the
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liabilities and I agree that if you look
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at the net present value of the US
06:02
government’s entitlement programs that
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the gap the net present value is about
06:06
35 trillion and add to that 20 trillion
06:09
and federal debt and we’re adding a
06:11
trillion a year so huge sums of money if
06:14
to your point that we end up cancelling
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or reducing those liabilities for every
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liability that’s an asset so someone
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who’s holding that asset is going to be
06:21
poor and there could be a distributional
06:23
piece of that so making to your point if
06:26
we simply write off the debt we’re
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destroying a tremendous amount of growth
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so the way that it’ll be done is by
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printing it and evaluating the currency
06:35
because that’s the very subtle way and
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it’s also
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looks it looks good because when you
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have a currency depreciation first of
06:44
all it’s very hidden tax right let’s put
06:46
a negative interest rate it’s not like a
06:47
tax rate change that’s a that’s
06:49
controversial you just have a negative
06:51
interest rate and okay that’s one that
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form of tax and when you have a currency
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depreciation it causes one’s assets to
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go up
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it’ll be inclined to make the stock
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market go up depreciate the currency I
07:03
was one of my great lessons I was
clerking on the floor of the New York
Stock Exchange in 1971 when the August
15 1971 Sunday night
Nixon floated the dollar right and I
went on the floor of the New York Stock
Exchange that clerking and I thought wow
we have a real crisis here and the stock
market rose the most in my lifetime
because a currency depreciation also
tends to raise asset prices in various
ways so the the if you’re in that
position the hidden way the effective
way to do that is to monetize the debt
and have the depreciation as distinct
from like you write it down and like you
say somebody’s assets that doesn’t work
we cover these things in that book by
the way that book if you’re interested
principles for navigating big debt
crisis is available free online at
08:03
economic principles calm but it’s so
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these things have happened over and over
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again
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I think mechanistically it means that we
08:12
will print the money that doesn’t mean
08:15
necessarily inflationary okay like in
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the 1930s we had a series of currency
08:21
depreciations a lot of printing of money
08:23
but you also had the other forces that
08:26
meant that and so the Dinah I think
08:28
it’ll be kind of seemingly hidden but
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it’ll but we’re still right close to the
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point where nobody that you may not want
08:37
to own those bonds okay and you’ll look
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for what else and the question is what
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else what is that else okay that’s the
08:47
environment I think that will be it and
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you know there’s a
08:50
that gold is the only asset you can have
08:52
that’s not somebody else’s liability so
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anyway I don’t know what those
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alternatives are but I would say if more
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gold is more likely than the

Ray Dalio: History Teaches us that Inequality is Dangerous

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45:36
the references you make here goes to 30s
and referencing cow you know the top 1%
in the 30s versus today you know you
showed this that the top 1% in the 30s
versus today you know top 1% income
share has the same amount as the bottom
90% in the last time it was like that in
the authorities are you kind of
suggesting that we may be facing what
happened in the 30s years or no yes I’m
saying you so that is why I’m saying
there are three major divisions okay
three major forces and that force which
i think i emphasized the opportunity gap
not just the wealth gap but they both
matter if you look at history across
countries across timeframes
and you say when there’s a large income
and wealth gap and you have an economic
downturn you have a dangerous fight on
your hands you have a dangerous set of
circumstances history has taught us that
you said in April income inequality is
the biggest crisis we have in America on
60 minutes and I think in recent a
couple months ago you said wealth
inequality those are the two main things
that we ought to become I’m not saying
an even more fundamental those are the
outcomes and even more fundamental is
opportunity in quality and production
inequality because at the end of the day
just like you said we have to find how
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