I recently sat down with Steve Keen to explore a deeply uncomfortable truth: the global economic system is far more fragile than mainstream economics admits.
In the resulting conversation, we explained why supply chains are not resilient, why energy underpins everything, and why even small disruptions can trigger systemic collapse, which we think might be coming our way, soon.
This is not a temporary shock. It is a structural failure, and the policies we rely on may be making things worse.
As a result, the question we addressed was, " What can we do now?"
This is the audio version:
There is no transcript for this podcast; it would be too long. The following is, instead, a summary of what we discussed:
I recently recorded a podcast with Steve Keen, and the core message we explored is both simple and deeply unsettling: the global economic system is far more fragile than most economists are willing to admit, and the assumptions that underpin mainstream thinking are not just wrong, but are now dangerous.
We began from what might sound like a technical issue, but which is anything but: the importance of double-entry bookkeeping in understanding the economy. Steve and I share the view that if you do not think in terms of balance sheets, flows, and the consequences of every transaction, you cannot properly understand economic reality. Economics, at its core, should respect the principle that every action has a consequence. That idea has been lost in much of modern theory. 
From there, the discussion moved quickly to the current global crisis, particularly the disruption in the Strait of Hormuz. What Steve emphasised, and I strongly agree with, is that what we are witnessing is not a single catastrophic event, but something more insidious: a “death by a thousand cuts”. Each disruption, whether to oil, gas, fertiliser, helium and more, might seem manageable in isolation. But taken together, they create systemic breakdown.
This is where the critique of conventional economics becomes crucial. The dominant model assumes perfect competition, infinite substitutability, and resilience within markets. Remove one supplier, and it is assumed that others step in. That is the theory. But the real world does not work like that. Supply chains are complex, interdependent, and often highly time-sensitive. If fertiliser does not arrive at the right moment in the planting cycle, it is useless. If helium supplies are disrupted, semiconductor production falters. And if energy supply is constrained, everything else follows.
What is most striking is that these interdependencies were once better understood. As Steve pointed out, earlier economic modelling using input-output analysis at least attempted to map how sectors depended on one another. Today's dominant models, obsessed with equilibrium, have largely abandoned that realism. The result is a profession that has, in many ways, become less capable of understanding the real economy over time.
I added to this by pointing out how these same flawed assumptions have infected not just economic policy but military planning. The United States, for example, appears to have run its war capacity on a just-in-time basis, with minimal redundancy or resilience. That might work in a world of stable supply chains, but it is wholly unsuited to conflict, where disruption is inevitable. The idea that capacity can simply be switched back on when needed has proven false. Production capability has been lost, skills have disappeared, and stockpiles have been depleted.
The deeper issue, which we returned to repeatedly, is that time matters. Markets do not adjust instantly. Infrastructure takes years to build. Lost capacity cannot be replaced overnight. Yet much of modern economics behaves as if time does not exist, or as if it has no meaningful consequences.
Steve then introduced what I think is one of the most important insights of the conversation: the relationship between energy and economic output. Drawing on both empirical data and thermodynamic reasoning, he argued that global GDP and energy consumption are tightly linked. The correlation is extraordinarily strong. In simple terms, economic output is fundamentally about transforming energy into useful work.
This has profound implications. It means that a reduction in energy supply, even by a relatively modest percentage, is likely to produce a comparable reduction in economic output. That is not a marginal adjustment; it is a systemic shock. And it is one that cannot be wished away by market mechanisms.
From this follows an unavoidable conclusion: we are heading into a major global economic disruption. The question is not whether this will happen, but how we respond.
At present, the default response is to rely on the price mechanism. But that simply means rationing by income. The rich continue to consume; the poor go without. In a crisis of this magnitude, that is not just unjust, it is socially and politically destabilising. As Steve put it, you cannot allow a situation where people are starving on the streets while others carry on as normal. That is a recipe for societal breakdown.
The alternative, which we both endorsed, is deliberate intervention: rationing, planning, and redistribution. This is not a radical idea. It is precisely what was done in the UK during the Second World War. Keynes himself recognised that if resources are constrained, consumption must be managed to ensure fairness and survival. Taxation, in that context, is not about raising revenue, but about reducing excess consumption and preventing the accumulation of power and privilege during a crisis.
What makes this particularly challenging today is the ideological environment. Neoliberalism has conditioned policymakers to reject precisely the kinds of interventions that are now required. The belief that markets will solve all problems is deeply embedded, even when the evidence clearly shows otherwise.
We also discussed the failure of institutions. The global bodies that might once have coordinated a response, including the United Nations, the World Trade Organisation, the IMF and the World Bank, are all either weakened or discredited. At the same time, the number of actors in the global system has increased, making coordination more complex. The result is a world that is less capable of managing systemic crises than it was in the past.
Despite all this, there are still possibilities. As I pointed out, there is enough food in the world to feed everyone. The problem is distribution and waste. Around 30% of food is lost or discarded. With proper planning, redistribution, and intervention, it would be possible to mitigate the worst effects of supply disruption. But that requires a willingness to challenge market outcomes and to prioritise human need over profit.
Steve added another critical dimension: the need for self-sufficiency, particularly in energy. The idea of comparative advantage assumes stable and reliable trade. That assumption is now in question. Renewable energy, by contrast, offers a degree of resilience that fossil fuels do not. Sun and wind cannot be blockaded in the same way as oil shipments.
The conversation concluded on a sombre but honest note. We are not dealing with a temporary disruption that will quickly resolve itself. We are confronting a systemic crisis rooted in flawed economic thinking, fragile supply chains, and environmental limits, as well as war. The danger is not just the crisis itself, but the possibility that ideological commitment to a failed paradigm will prevent us from responding effectively.
If there is one message I would emphasise, it is this: the system that got us into this situation cannot get us out of it. We need a different approach; one that recognises constraints, values resilience, and prioritises survival and wellbeing over abstract notions of market efficiency.
That is the reality we now face.
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Interesting to see whats happening in Ireland
Guardian report here
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/apr/10/fuel-price-protests-chaos-ireland-norway
Discussion with some reports ‘on the ground’
https://www.railforums.co.uk/threads/irish-republic-road-transport-network-practically-closed-down.300930/
Now I might suggest that there must be questions about who exactly is behind some of it and there is the usual element of Socialism for the rich but its easy to see what we might be facing
According to Dr Rob Johnson, director of the Changing Character of Conflict Centre at Oxford University, we are on the brink of much wider, catastrophic conflict, and it’s too late to do much to resist it. The Government is ignoring him too. Sky News are carrying a report about him on their website today. Worth a look, if somewhat depressing.
To what report from them are you referring?
https://news.sky.com/story/warning-lights-for-a-coming-war-are-flashing-red-and-britain-is-not-prepared-13530330
This one. I hope the link works.
When all you do is look for signs of war, that’s all you see, I suggest.
I am a long way from agreeing with him. Russia is in no position to act. CHina can wait.
It all goes back to this issue of ‘redundancy’ I think that you made the other day – a technical term for ‘slack’ or ‘spare capacity’ to deal with ‘extra stuff’ or stuff that ‘happens’ that is not very well understood these days. Every input or asset is so tightly controlled – a sort of bare minimum – that any system’s ability to cope with (say) a surge in demand or variety seems to be compromised.
In a way and paradoxically, the just in time system for fighting a war has stopped some of it in this case and hopefully allowed saner heads to get involved. However, the nightmare scenario is that this will just change the nature of war which will just become a start-stop operation with no real conclusion and even more chaos, worse decisions.
The other point you/Steve make to me is about the aggregate effects of war on the rest of the economic system. This to me as systems thinker relates to the concept of ‘flow’ in integrated/joined up systems and this has not been considered at all in the push for ‘globalisation’. Finance and markets may have a nice global market to play in and exploit and the Third Way philosophy. But human relations are still messy and ‘the political’ (reality) has been ignored because the world we have allowed to be made is one essentially made to hoover up and move money/value around quickly and conveniently around the world for the elite to hoard.
[…] extension of this idea into supermarkets is, however, what truly worries me. As Steve Keen and I discussed today in our podcast/video, the risk of potential famine, including in the UK, is high right now. Our politicians might be in […]
I really appreciate the audio version, suits my adhd brain to do visual puzzles or knit or doodle while I listen. Written, visual with graphics and audio – you are covering all bases on learning styles. Thank you Team Murphy.
Thanks
Many years ago, I found the idea of economics as double entry bookkeeping on this very blog, and was instantly struck by its rightness. Having kept books for a small shop, I was familiar and comfortable with the concept, and saw how it fitted. Just now, reading this, I thought of an expansion of the concept to increase its strength.
Following the money, from issue to cancellation, indeed gives the big picture, but lit from one side. Instead, the concept would be more powerful, if financial ledgers were combined with inventories tracking the opposite flow of goods and services, production to consumption, construction to depreciation, performance to expiry of effects, as the case may be. You then have a pretty complete view of what is going on, from which to develop prescriptive ideas for what should be going on.
Interesting, but hard. What is the common denominator? It would, of course, be money and that would create noise in the signals
A campaign against a prospective local solar farm prompted me to research.
Apparently roughly 6% of the UK land mass is deemed ‘built environment’ which includes roads and all man-made structures. For the UK to be energy self sufficient from solar would require 0.8% of the land mass to have solar panels.
What an amazing employment opportunity if we decided that our ‘built environment’ should meet the bulk of our energy needs by hosting solar panels. Infinitely de-centralised and immediately accessible to current networks.
I’m not technical enough to address the issues of variable supply and storage but they cannot be insurmountable surely and must, I believe, be an avenue worth exploring when our current situation leaves us so painfully vulnerable.
Batteries are now addressing variability issues, as do other uses e.g, using excess supply for fertiliser production to reduce imports.