Inescapable Realities of Prosperity

Dear Ladies and Gentlemen
 
One of my readers sent me a link to an article he published on LinkedIn. I think the article is fundamentally sound, proposes some of his very personal interesting ideas and assumptions and is well written. I have thus asked him permission to publish his article or the link to his article in my weekly mail and was granted that. Thank you very much for sharing your knowledge and thoughts, Anton!
 
Now, the original title of the article is: “Energy, Productivity & Debt – Inescapable Realities of Prosperity” and the original article with some illustrating charts and graphs can be found under the following link:
 
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/energy-productivity-debt-inescapable-realities-anton-f-balint/
 
I highly recommend reading the original article. However, one or the other passage may need some second reading especially for non-native English speakers, I think it is worth it.
 
What is your opinion, Ladies and Gentlemen, as Anton did, please share your thoughts, ideas and/or experiences with me and my readers, but please don’t forget (instead of hitting the reply button) to send your messages to:
 
smk@incrementum.li
 
Many thanks, indeed!
 
And now, Ladies and Gentlemen I wish you a great day and weekend.
Kind regards.

Yours truly,

Stefan M. Kremeth
Wealth Management
Incrementum AG

Who hinders growth, hinders prosperity

Dear Ladies and Gentlemen

Long-term investing seen from a slightly different angle that was what my last weekly was all about. I received many questions for pension fund investment pros and am happy that my friend Andy Haeberli, Profond’s CIO, one of Switzerland’s largest collective foundations, agreed to be interviewed by me. I will hopefully be able to do the interview next week and publish it in my next edition of “Stefan’s weekly”.

Today I would like to have a look at what politics can do to help their people to prosper. I am a firm believer of the vision that politicians should primarily act in the public’s interest, however I do get the impression that some of them are primarily acting in their own interest.

First of all I determine that 10 years after the great financial crisis the global economy doesn’t look all that bad. No matter what you hear or see, it is a fact that GDP in most countries is higher and unemployment lower than before the great financial crisis. Total debt on the other side went up massively but so far did not hit economies with high inflation rates as foreseen wrongly by so many (including me).

During and after the great financial crisis, governments and central banks across the globe worked together and made it possible that we didn’t fall into a deep, deep recession followed by hyper-inflation. I believe one of the success factors was the common vision of implementing concentrated and collective action to prevent worse.

What changed in the last roughly two to years? There is this feeling of negativity and that sound of negativity and you know what? I don’t like that sound of negativity! This is the sound of populists to the right and of populists to the left and it can’t be expected to lead to anything positive! Some of those people would like to bring back “the good old days”, why? Because these were the days when children died of influenza or days of no cancer treatment or days of wars in Europe or days of countries without voting rights for women or days of exclusion of minorities, days of apartheid, days of no central heating, etc, this can’t be the goal.

Anyway, I believe that weak politicians take weak decisions and I believe that protectionism represents a risk to global economic prosperity and I believe that we have to settle for cultural and socio-economic adaptation, because not even the most powerful governments and/or central banks can perform well in a socio-economic vacuum and I believe our political leaders and also the general public need to start immediately to detoxify the current public political discourse. This is important because this negativity hinders growth and thus prosperity. It is our responsibility to elect the political leaders that can do the job.

What is your opinion?

Ladies and Gentlemen, please try one thing for yourself and please let me know if it did have an effect on you. Please spend every morning right after getting up 30 to 60 seconds thinking about something positive or about various positive things. As always, I encourage you to send me your feedback but please don’t forget (instead of hitting the reply button) to send your messages to:

smk@incrementum.li

Many thanks, indeed!

And now, Ladies and Gentlemen I wish you a great day and weekend.

Kind regards,
Yours truly,

Stefan M. Kremeth
Wealth Management
Incrementum AG