There's smart, and then there's "super smart." With five degrees (a B.A., M.B.A., and M.S. from Harvard and an M.A. and Ph.D. from Princeton), Dr. H. Woody Brock is clearly the latter. In a stark speech heavy on humor and academic theorems at the 2012 Strategic Investment Conference jointly hosted by alternative investment firm Altegris and Millennium Wave Investments in Carlsbad, Cailf., Brock set out Thursday morning to tell attendees "how to get out of the economic mess we're in."
The session, tilted "Wither Capitalism, and Liberal Democracy," posited the question of whether or not Americans would prefer to live in a government-controlled, centrally planned version of capitalism, or a true liberal democracy.
"It's no longer about capitalism versus communism, it's about liberal capitalism versus statist capitalism," Brock (left) said of the current debate in Washington.
Citing everything from Game Theory to his teacher and mentor John Nash, subject of the 2001 biopic "A Beautiful Mind," Brock, who is founder of Strategic Economic Decisions, explained the underpinnings of the current debt debate, which he said "is becoming boring."
"The deficit justifies austerity and gets bonds involved," he explained. "Everyone is now worried about the rise of inflation, and not by hundreds of basis points, but by thousands, which is now common in some countries."
He added that the question of whether debt and deficits matter is moot; it's whether or not it is "good debt or bad debt."
"If you want good debt, it wise to use it at the intersection of Keynesian indicators and those of economist Kenneth Arrow," he continued. "Keynesian indicators involve low private sector growth, which is then stimulated with public debt, but it's critical not to abuse it. Arrow's equation about rates of return demands that we improve public sector infrastructure. Unlike the Japanese, who constantly update their infrastructure, we will experience a high rate of return on such projects because we have not done so for 50 years."
That, he said, is an example of good debt, but unfortunately he claimed 97% of our current spending is "unproductive."