The Timeless Investor Show
In 541 AD, the Roman Empire was on the brink of a historic restoration. Under Emperor Justinian, North Africa and Italy had been reconquered, the Hagia Sophia stood as a marvel of the world, and a unified legal code was being established across the Mediterranean. Then, a single grain ship arrived in Egypt carrying an invisible passenger: Yersinia pestis. In this episode, we explore why the Plague of Justinian is the most important historical case study for anyone managing capital over a long time horizon. We dive deep into the "capacity decay" that follows massive shocks—where labels like "The Roman Empire" remain the same, but the underlying ability to tax, defend, and govern is permanently hollowed out. Key Insights Covered: * The Labor Repricing: Why pandemics naturally end serfdom and force a new market clearing price for labor that no emperor can legislate away. * The Fiscal Trap: How states under stress reach for a predictable toolkit of currency debasement, "survivor liability" taxes, and forced extractions. * The Strategic Vulnerability: Why the true danger isn't the shock itself, but the "apparent recovery" period where rivals strike a weakened system. * Label vs. Capacity: Why the most reliable source of investment loss is failing to see when an institution (a bank, a currency, or a nation) no longer has the capacity to fulfill its name. Don't just build for fair weather. Learn how to identify the structural shifts that allow an investor to compound across a regime change rather than being destroyed by it. 3. Article Link Read the full written analysis here: The Plague of Justinian [https://www.google.com/url?source=gmail&sa=E&q=https://thetimelessinvestor.substack.com/p/the-plague-of-justinian%3Fr%3Dd424h]
60 episodios
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