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Friday, Dec 30, 2011 6:00 PM UTC2011-12-30T18:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

World on the verge of a nervous breakdown

Capitalism's ceaseless quest to cut costs made us more jittery in 2011, and there's no relief in sight.

An electronic board showing the FTSE MIB Index for the Italian equity market

Italian equities shape American realities  (Credit: Tony Gentile / Reuters)

For those looking for signs of how globalization has woven the world into a web of unexpected vulnerability, 2011 offered a bumper crop.

An earthquake in Japan sent the global auto manufacturing industry into a conniption.

A flood in Thailand drastically reduced supplies of computer hard drives, forcing even a titan like Intel to swiftly reduce revenue forecasts.

State-subsidized solar panel production in China crushed a U.S.-subsidized solar start-up, thereby igniting a Washington political scandal.

It is child’s play to find further examples. The underlying reality is that unexpected consequences make everyone nervous. Sensibilities are on hair trigger. Just two weeks ago, the New York Times captured the new jitteriness in a single quote. In a story reporting how U.S. stock traders were increasingly setting their alarm clocks for the middle of the night, in order to absorb the latest news from Europe as soon as it started to break, one stock analyst, Michael Mayo, complains in a tone of bemused wonder: “Who would have thought we would have to be looking at Italian sovereign debt yields to figure out what Morgan Stanley’s stock will do?”

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Andrew Leonard

Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21.  More Andrew Leonard

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