As we watch the US banking system totter and begin to collapse, like the proverbial Jenga stack, we need to consider the implications this has for the global financial system and its supply chains.
I’ll begin with the stellar work of David Korowicz published on
Overview
“This study considers the relationship between a global systemic banking, monetary and solvency crisis and its implications for the real-time flow of goods and services in the globalised economy. It outlines how contagion in the financial system could set off semi-autonomous contagion in supply-chains globally, even where buyers and sellers are linked by solvency, sound money and bank intermediation. The cross-contagion between the financial system and trade/production networks is mutually reinforcing.”
“It is argued that in order to understand systemic risk in the globalised economy, account must be taken of how growing complexity (interconnectedness, interdependence and the speed of processes), the de-localisation of production and concentration within key pillars of the globalised economy have magnified global vulnerability and opened up the possibility of a rapid and large-scale collapse. ‘Collapse’ in this sense means the irreversible loss of socio-economic complexity which fundamentally transforms the nature of the economy. These crucial issues have not been recognised by policy-makers nor are they reflected in economic thinking or modelling.” Financial system supply-chain cross contagion – a study in global systemic collapse
“Last year, vials of the decades-old chemotherapy drug fludarabine could be purchased for a wholesale price of around $110. Not so much anymore.”
“This year, one company—Areva Pharmaceuticals—has jacked the figure up to $2,736, Stat News reports.”
“What’s going on with the aging chemotherapy used to prepare patients for cancer treatment?
It all comes down to supply chain problems triggering shortages that affect the only other two suppliers of the drug in the United States—Teva and Fresenius Kabi.” Drug shortages aren’t going away any time soon, supply chain expert warns
The link above courtesy of David Ferraro author of the The Collapse Chronicle
In the video discussion below, recorded seven years ago between Professor Guy McPherson and myself we discuss the tenuous state of the supply chain.
Edge of Extinction: Disruption of Supply Chain

“By 2027 the world could be facing a 214 trillion calorie deficit, says Sara Menker, founder and chief executive of Gro Intelligence, an agricultural data technology company.”
Published in 2018, do the math: We Have Five Years To Save Ourselves From Climate Change, Harvard Scientist Says”
So which goes first? The Supply Chain or the Food?
When not if Industrial Civilisation collapses we lose the “Aerosol Masking Effect” as pointed out by one of my readers in the comments section below, hence this edit on March 15th.
“The impact of the aerosol masking effect has been greatly underestimated, as pointed out in an 8 February 2019 article in Science. As indicated by the lead author of this paper on 25 January 2019: “Global efforts to improve air quality by developing cleaner fuels and burning less coal could end up harming our planet by reducing the number of aerosols in the atmosphere, and by doing so, diminishing aerosols’ cooling ability to offset global warming.”
From the post: “Global Dimming keeping the planet habitable”
How long before we see contagion?
Below via Pye Ian, esq.
(22) Digital Asset Investor on X: “Bitcoin was deployed out of the Financial Crisis strategically. 1. Financial Crisis 2. Government takes Bitcoin Off The Shelf 3.Spend a decade making it look like the government wasn’t behind it. 4.Implement regulations 5.Tokenize all markets making them liquid to prevent another https://t.co/CE9VJq2aJi” / X
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A fascinating analysis of the chaotic Greenback.
The Dollar Reset Has Begun: U.S. Is Quietly Engineering Its Own Devaluation | Hibbard & Schectman
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Brace for impact”:
A Once in a Lifetime Crash Is About to Hit — WORSE Than 2008 | wolff responds
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From the 17m mark a woman discusses people not getting payments for their anti-psychotic medication.
The crazies will get crazier
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Danielle brings up the issue of Contagion in the banking system, it’s a clear and present danger.
Unemployment ‘Exhaustion’: 40% Have ‘Literally Nothing’ Left | DiMartino Booth
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