by Grant Williams via Mauldin Economics,
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In 1920, a year AFTER the Treaty of Versailles, a Russian economist called Nikolai Kondratieff founded something he named The Institute of Conjuncture, at which he and a team of fellow economists studied, yes, conjuncture â or business cycles, with a particular focus on the long waves they identified within those cycles.
Over the years since Kondratieff first laid out his theory on long-wave cycles, a tremendous debate has ensued as to the usefulness of such long-term prognostication; but there is one very good reason why I (and many others) believe there to be a significant advantage gained through the study of long-wave cycles...
- (Wikipedia): Long-wave theory is not accepted by most academic economists.
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Kondratieff, being a Russian, of course took the long view.
He took Schumpeterâs four stages (expansion, crisis, recession, and recovery) and equated them to the four seasons in a year. Once he had identified what he felt to be the length of each âSpring,â âSummer,â âAutumn,â and âWinter,â Kondratieff had his âWave;â and, as it turned out, that Wave ran for approximately 53 years.
In 1925, when he published his book The Major Economic Cycles, using existing data, Kondratieff overlaid his wave on world history and projected it forward â meaning that everything for the 89 years that followed was conjecture on his part...
Howâd he do? Well, as it turns out, surprisingly well. Kondratieff nailed far too many major turns to have his work simply dismissed, and his most recent turn into Winter occurred in 2000 or, for those of you who measure the passing of time by such things, precisely at the bursting of the tech bubble.
The blue shaded area shows how far into the current Kondratieff downwave we are and â far more importantly â how much farther we have to go before things are supposed to turn around.
But what do the inner workings of a Kondratieff Winter look like? And are we in the middle of one, as a nearly 90-year-old forecast would have us believe?
Like Schumpeterâs cycles, the four seasons in a Kondratieff Wave are broken down and characterised by the phenomena usually seen during each specific phase of the full cycle.
I wonât go through all four seasons now, as we donât have time, but rather weâll focus on the longest phase â Winter â as itâs the one we find ourselves mired in.
And as Grant Williams goes on to describe, Kondratieff is still doing particularly well to this day...
Read the full presentation below (or via HTML here)