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A Jobless world? The new normal?

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The problem is that technology has probably reached the limit where its role is supportive and increases individual productivity; it is now starting to replace jobs in their entirety.

We’re all brought up to believe that you cannot have your cake and eat it. You can’t have both loads of family time and a stellar career; you can’t be wealthy unless you work for yourself; both parents have to work – or their children won’t be given the best education. In the past, this has often been true, but, just maybe, things are changing.

Change happens around us all the time, most of the time we hardly notice it, and only when we compare the life of 10 years ago to today do we actually realise just how radical that change has been. There are times, though, that change happens uncomfortably fast, and we try with all our might to stop it, usually only postponing the inevitable. This rapid change too will pass, and our lives go back to a new normal, in the interim though it may leave mayhem in its tracks.

The credit crisis precipitated a new normal in economic cycles, and now, 10 years down the line (it started in the second half of 2007), very few people have changed their expectations and adjusting to this new normal of low growth, low-interest rates and very low inflation. As a financial advisor, one of my biggest challenges is managing those expectations, especially if asset allocation and the fund mix has to be changed to protect a long-term investment.

The rise of populism in politics around the world is an idea that has been dying to break through for a long time now. Ironically it has been nurtured by the low growth era in the last decade, and the growing disparity between the ‘one percent’ and the ‘others’. The ‘others’ are sick to death of politicians pandering to that one percent, or even worse, using politics to leapfrog into that one percent. Unfortunately for those wanting the ‘good’ change in politics and politicians, they have had to hold their noses and accept the ‘bad’. To get that political change you may have to swallow nasties like right-wing fascism, rampant and confiscatory socialism, racism and xenophobia. It makes my hair curl even to write that sentence. The Americans held their noses on some (most?) of the above to get the populism Trump promised (whether or not he will deliver remains to be seen). The Dutch, however, came out in droves to make sure the right wing did not prevail. There was a substantial element of xenophobia in Brexit and very little change in the bureaucracy. The EFF [Economic Freedom Fighters] is another ‘hold your nose’ populist (and make no mistake, the ANC [African National Congress] will try and woo them back into their ranks). The low economic growth is feeding into this desire for change. Whether you like it or not, technology is behind much of this change. For decades we have used technology happily to make our jobs more productive. Occasionally that might put you out of a job, but it has been fairly easy to for people to find jobs elsewhere – even if it is not the job they want. Farms, for example, use a fraction of the workforce they did 50 years ago. The problem is that technology has probably reached the limit where its role is supportive and increases individual productivity; it is now starting to replace jobs in their entirety and those people may not be able to find alternative employment. Without increasing productivity, economies cannot grow. The rise in stock markets, despite the lack of productivity growth, is based on hope rather than expectation. It is being driven by those ‘animal spirits’ which will disappear once reality sets in.

However, even though core beliefs are not situation-specific, they will typically point a person’s thinking in a negative direction consistent with them in specific situations. For example, a person will be prone to having thoughts of being worthless in relationships, at work and in other situations if they have the core belief, “I am worthless”. Someone will likely think that people cannot be trusted in various situations in which they interact with people if they have the core belief, “People cannot be trusted”. Similarly, they will be prone to thinking that the world is unfair in many situations if their core belief is that the world is unfair.

So, if machines can do jobs cheaper, faster and with no vacation days or benefits – what about the threat of growing unemployment? Finland has just introduced what may be the answer in the future – Universal Basic Income. At the moment this is only available to the ‘unemployed’ – but what is the difference between unemployment benefits and Universal Basic Income? The philosophy is that with machines doing the ‘production’ and thus ‘freeing up’ human capital, humans should be paid a basic living wage, whether or not they decide to ‘work’. This is different to ordinary unemployment benefits that usually require the claimant keep looking for a job. What are the implications if everyone gets a basic income? Who will choose to work? One would assume that the basic income is going to be very basic and will have little room for luxuries. I guess it will boil down to ambition to do better and to have more. The rise in the ‘Gig’ economy plays into this – One could ‘top-up’ one’s income without becoming a full time employee in the traditional sense.

Post-2008, growth has never been able to get back to the same level again, and a decade on, it may never get there. It has yet to get above 3% (global average). Even China’s growth is down to mid-single digits. Growth has to come from increased productivity, and that is going to depend on technological developments and Artificial Intelligence. The old assumptions of CPI plus 1, 3, 5 or 7% may be gone forever. All the assumptions that have gone into your retirement planning will have to be reworked, and you will have no option to put away more. Here in South Africa, we are luckier than the West with higher CPI and stock exchange growth, but it is still way off what we are used to. When you have less growth to work with, your asset manager has to get smarter. One of the reasons ETFs and Trackers in this country haven’t taken off is because asset managers can hide behind the nominal positive growth, knowing that most of the public doesn’t think in ‘real growth’ (after inflation) terms. That is changing. Unit trust fees are going to have to fall or die. A unit trust cannot justify 3-4% fees when it is only making you 8-9% before inflation. Look at the maths: 8% growth, less 6% inflation gives you 2% real growth. Subtract 3% fees and you get -1% real growth.

Single asset class ETFs (like pure equity trackers), unit trusts or share portfolios are under the most pressure. To even get CPI plus 3% you have to have a blended portfolio at the moment, and it has been like that for at least two years. Forget passive investing, unless you’re watching the market all the time you need an asset manager who will blend the asset classes without charging an arm and a leg.

The unit trusts that charge those high fees will still be around for a while yet because the pension funds and advisors are still advising clients to stay in them since they are ‘safe’ and ‘well known’. It is CYA (Cover Your Asset) which is doing those millions of small investors no favours. What about ‘guarantees’? These come at a price of at least 2% of the investment, sometimes more. If you get a provider who will guarantee a certain income in the future, have a very hard look at the assumptions. What if inflation goes back up to 15-18-20%? That will make a guaranteed income using today’s inflation mean nothing. The only guarantee that matters is a real return or income linked to inflation.

If this lower growth environment persists, you are going to have no choice but to increase your retirement savings. How can you do that? Firstly cut through the pick me cacophony from investment advisors, brokers, advisors etc. and have a comprehensive look at your entire wealth ecosystem. The amount you are spending on ‘risk’ is one of those low hanging fruit. Medical aid premiums are taking a huge chunk out of your income – is there a smarter way to do the same thing? Are you spending too much on life cover to leave your kids something and ignoring the possibility of having to depend on them financially in your retirement?

  • Issue 43 (1 of 2017)The Financial Planner
    • The Financial Planner "A Jobless world? The new normal?"

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