That set of rackets had a limited life span

Industrial economies are still at the mercy of peak oil. This basic fact of life means that we can’t expect the regular cyclical growth in productive activity that formed the baseline parameters for modern capital finance – meaning that we can’t run on revolving credit anymore because growth simply isn’t there to create real surplus wealth to pay down debt. The past 20 years we’ve seen the institutions of capital finance pretend to create growth where there is no growth by expanding financial casino games of chance and extracting profits, commissions, and bonuses from the management of these games – mortgage backed securities, collateralized debt obligations, credit default swaps, and all the rest of the tricks dreamed up as America’s industrial economy was shipped off to the Third World. But that set of rackets had a limited life span and they ran into a wall in October 2008. Since then it’s all come down to a shell game: hide the giant pea of defaulted debt under a giant walnut shell.
The sad truth of the matter is that we face the need to fundamentally restructure the way we live and what we do in North America, and probably along the lines of much more modest expectations, and with very different practical arrangements in everything from the very nature of work to household configurations, transportation, farming, capital formation, and the shape-and-scale of our settlements. This is not just a matter of re-tuning what we have now. It means letting go of much of it, especially our investments in suburbia and motoring – something that the American public still isn’t ready to face. They may never be ready to face this and that is why we may never make a successful transition to whatever the next economy is. Rather, we will undertake a campaign to sustain the unsustainable and sink into poverty and disorder as we fight over the table scraps of the old economy… and when the smoke clears nothing new will have been built.
James Howard Kunstler Forecast 2010