Monday, November 30, 2009

President Obama's West Point Speech on War in Afghanistan--Cadet Honor Code--Generals Marshall and MacArthur Speeches--Duty, Honor, Country

 

Cadet Honor Code

“A cadet will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do.”

http://www.usma.edu/committees/honor/info/main.htm

“…Yours is the profession of arms, the will to win, the sure knowledge that in war there is no substitute for victory, that if you lose, the Nation will be destroyed, that the very obsession of your public service must be Duty, Honor, Country.

Others will debate the controversial issues, national and international, which divide men’s minds. But serene, calm, aloof, you stand as the Nation’s war guardians, as its lifeguards from the raging tides of international conflict, as its gladiators in the arena of battle. For a century and a half you have defended, guarded and protected its hallowed traditions of liberty and freedom, of right and justice.

Let civilian voices argue the merits or demerits of our processes of government. Whether our strength is being sapped by deficit financing indulged in too long, by federal paternalism grown too mighty, by power groups grown too arrogant, by politics grown too corrupt, by crime grown too rampant, by morals grown too low, by taxes grown too high, by extremists grown too violent; whether our personal liberties are as firm and complete as they should be.

These great national problems are not for your professional participation or military solution. Your guidepost stands out like a tenfold beacon in the night: Duty, Honor, Country.

You are the leaven which binds together the entire fabric of our national system of defense. From your ranks come the great captains who hold the Nation’s destiny in their hands the moment the war tocsin sounds.

The long gray line has never failed us. Were you to do so, a million ghosts in olive drab, in brown khaki, in blue and gray, would rise from their white crosses, thundering those magic words: Duty, Honor, Country. …”

General Douglas MacArthur’s, Farewell Speech Given to the Corps of Cadets at West Point, May 12, 1962

http://www.usnews.com/articles/opinion/2009/04/09/truman-firing-of-macarthur-hurt-approval-rating-but-saved-war-with-red-china.html

 

Obama prepares to announce Afghan surge

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pIAxyFEYT_M

 

Will Obama’s Afghanistan speech persuade skeptical Americans?

President Obama has a well deserved reputation for being a habitual liar.

Barack Obama – The Lying Fascist

The American people and West Point cadets do not tolerate liars very well.

What must the cadets and American people be thinking as they listen to the President explain his strategy and course of action in Afghanistan?

Will they even believe a word he says?

The vast majority of the American people no longer believe or trust President Obama.

I suspect the speech will not be about victory in Afghanistan, but a set of milestones or a timetable for orderly withdrawal within three years.

If it is, then the time has come to pull all the troops out of Afghanistan now.

There is no substitute of victory.

Obama’s speech will be compared to other important speeches about war and peace.

Two come to mind.

One was given by then Secretary of State George C. Marshall at Havard on June 5, 1947 that eventually lead to the Marshall Plan:

“…The truth of the matter is that Europe’s requirements for the next three or four years of foreign food and other essential products – principally from America – are somuch greater than her present ability to pay that she must have substantial additional help or face economic, social, and political deterioration of a very grave character.

The remedy lies in breaking the vicious circle and restoring the confidence of the European people in the economic future of their own countries and of Europe as awhole. The manufacturer and the farmer throughout wide areas must be able and willing to exchange their products for currencies the continuing value of which is not open to question. …”

Secretary of State George C. Marshall Commencement address at Harvard University

Cambridge, Massachusetts, June 5, 1947

http://www.usaid.gov/multimedia/video/marshall/marshallspeech.html

Audio mp3 of Address

The other speech was  given by General Douglas MacArthur:

“…On May 12, 1962, Five Star General Douglas MacArthur accepted the Sylvanus Thayer Award and delivered a remarkable speech to the corps of cadets at the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York.  Since 1958, the Association of Graduates of the United States Military Academy has presented the Sylvanus Thayer Award to an outstanding citizen of the United States whose service and accomplishments in the national interest exemplify personal devotion to the ideals expressed in the West Point motto, “Duty, Honor, Country.” 

http://www.keytlaw.com/Greatwords/macarthur.htm

General Douglas MacArthur

Sylvanus Thayer Award Acceptance Address 

“Duty, Honor, Country”

http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/douglasmacarthurthayeraward.html

The irony is that General MacArthur was fired by President Truman for insubordination and George C. Marshall after reviewing MacArthur’s statements agreed with President Truman that General MacArthur should be fired.

“If we lose the war to Communism in Asia the fall of Europe is inevitable, win it and Europe most probably would avoid war and yet preserve freedom…. There is no substitute for victory.”

Korean War – PART 20, MacArthur is Fired, 6.25

Even with a teleprompter, I seriously doubt that President Obama’s speech will have the impact that either General Marshall’s or General MacArthur’s.

I am affraid the speech will only embolden those who attacked America on September 11, 2001 and their allies the Taliban.

Women Marines: U.S. Employs Secret Weapon in … 

Women Marines: U.S. Employs Secret Weapon in …

Background Articles and Videos

 

Taliban

“…The Taliban (Pashto: طالبان ṭālibān, meaning “students”), also Taleban, is a radical Sunni Islamist movement that governed Afghanistan from 1996 until late 2001, when all of its members were removed from power by NATO forces during Operation Enduring Freedom. It has regrouped since 2004 and revived as a strong insurgency movement governing at the local level and fighting a guerrilla war against the governments of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF).[4] The movement is made up of members belonging to different ethnic Pashtun tribes,[5] along with a number of volunteers from nearby Islamic countries such as Uzbeks, Tajiks, Chechens, Arabs, Punjabis and others.[6][7][8] They operate in Afghanistan and the Frontier Tribal Areas of Pakistan, mainly around the Durand Line border.[9]

The Taliban movement is headed by Mullah Mohammed Omar, who is still in hiding. Mullah Omar’s original commanders were “a mixture of former small-unit military commanders and madrasah teachers,”[10] and the rank and file made up mostly of Afghan refugees who had studied at Islamic religious schools in Pakistan. The Taliban received valuable training, supplies and arms from the Pakistani government, particularly the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI),[11] and many recruits from madrasahs for Afghan refugees in Pakistan, primarily ones established by the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI).[12]

Although in control of Afghanistan’s capital (Kabul) and much or most of the country for five years, the Taliban regime, which called itself the “Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan”, gained diplomatic recognition from only three states: Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. It has gained some amount of political control and acceptance in Pakistan’s border region, but recently lost one of its key leaders, Baitullah Mehsud, in a CIA assassination.[13]

The Taliban is today classified by security analysts as an “alternative government” in Afghanistan. It operates fifteen Sharia law courts in the country’s southern provinces handling civil and commercial cases and collects taxes on harvests in farming areas. The Taliban implemented one of the “strictest interpretation[s] of Sharia law ever seen in the Muslim world”, yet still occasionally updates its code of conduct.[14] In mid-2009, it established an ombudsman office in northern Kandahar, which has been described as a “direct challenge” to the ISAF.[15] …”

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taliban

Truman Firing of MacArthur Hurt Approval Rating but Saved War With Red China

“…The decision was a long time coming. MacArthur, a former Army chief of staff, Medal of Honor winner, had commanded the Southwest Pacific Theatre in World War II, accepted Japan’s surrender, and oversaw that country’s occupation in the postwar years. When the Korean War broke out, MacArthur was put in command of United Nations forces against the North. MacArthur had mixed sometimes brilliant military strategy with public pronouncements that often bordered on (or flat out were) insubordination, issuing his own foreign policy dictates and trying to push the United States into a broader war with Red China.

Matters came to a head on April 5, 1951. House Minority Leader Joe Martin read a letter he had received weeks earlier from MacArthur discussing the situation in Asia. “Virtually all that he said was bound to provoke Truman,” the historian David McCullough later wrote. Chinese nationalist forces under Chiang Kai-shek should be committed to the Korean war, MacArthur wrote. “Here [in Asia] we fight Europe’s war with arms while the diplomats there still fight it with words,” MacArthur had written. “If we lose the war to Communism in Asia the fall of Europe is inevitable, win it and Europe most probably would avoid war and yet preserve freedom…. There is no substitute for victory.”

http://www.usnews.com/articles/opinion/2009/04/09/truman-firing-of-macarthur-hurt-approval-rating-but-saved-war-with-red-china.html

Charlie Rose – U.S. MILITARY ACADEMY AT WEST POINT,…

United States Military Academy, West Point

http://www.usma.edu/about.asp

Cold War: Marshall Plan – part 1/5

Cold War: Marshall Plan – part 2/5

Cold War: Marshall Plan – part 3/5

Cold War: Marshall Plan – part 4/5

Cold War: Marshall Plan – part 5/5

Marshall Plan 60th Anniversary – VOA Story

Europe in Ruins and the Marshall Plan

The End of Douglas Macarthur

“There is no substitute for victory.”

~General Douglas MacArthur

Related Posts On Pronk Palisades George C. Marshall–An American Hero and Leader

[Via http://raymondpronk.wordpress.com]

Another bloated comment reply: Indigenous people, conquest, and violence

This started out as a comment reply, but I’ve brought it over into a short post. Both shiva–the author of the original comment–and I are referring to a post by Xiphias Gladius, The mythology of the day.

This is probably really choppy, so please bear with me!

I’m not sure what was going on in Massachusetts in that time period. There was the Little Ice Age, and years of a bad combination of cold and serious drought in Virginia (and probably also further up the coast). The climate change did apparently affect things nearby:

Native American tribes such as the Iroquois relocated their villages to escape the cold. These migrations stirred up political conflict among tribes, leading to the creation of nonaggresssion pacts like the famous League of the Iroquois, adopted in the 1500s.

(Actually, Barbara Mann and Jerry Fields very plausibly dated the Confederacy to 1142, but that would have been during a period of warming and droughts!) The French had already started poking around and destablizing things slightly to the north, as well.

My initial impulse was that the “the whole Patuxet region would be open, and SOMEONE would take it over” might be projection, but it’s hard to tell, given the context. If there were plenty of resources to go around, I wouldn’t expect a lot of squabbling; if there were a bunch of displaced people and poor food conditions, it’s hard to tell what would happen. I’m fairly sure that New England Algonquian speakers also had similar peacekeeping procedures going to what John Mohawk describes; a lot of non-Iroquoian nations did similar, including AFAICT Southern Algonquians. That’s how most federations got going.

After Contact and encroachment, things changed more than a little. Mercenaries egged on by British Divide and Conquer tactics became a problem (along with Jesuit-employed thugs further north). Some of the mercenaries where I’m from were Cherokee. Due to mutual-protection alliances and forced migrations, my maternal family became Tutelo/Cherokee instead of just Tutelo.

I have no trouble whatsoever believing that Massasoit liked the idea of having friendly Europeans nearby, in hopes that would keep others from bothering them, much like when some Pennsylvania Seneca speaking through Kaintwakon (Cornplanter) allowed Quakers to settle much later. “Cornplanter’s strategy was to use the Quakers as advocates in the halls of state and national power in Philadelphia (the capital of both Pennsylvania and the United States), as buffers against those elements of European-American society inclined to prey upon Indians, and as deterrents to scheming land speculators.” The Cherokee had better luck with Daniel Ross and his son John, among others. I would be amazed if the later-mentioned case of Mahanaim** were not similar.

Writing my last post, I totally forgot one entry in the “same people causing problems” file: John Smith and his “resource assessment”/slaving missions up the Eastern North American coast.

I still have to question some of xiphias’ take on the political situation in that area at the time. A lot of people just assume that territorial squabbling is universal, as is emphasis on a scarcity ethic. It’s not hard to see why, looking around these days, and looking at what especially people in North America get taught about this. Official History circa 1920 (search for CHAPTER IV) is still mostly what one gets to hear: the thuggish League Iroquois, Cherokee, and sometimes Shawnee spent so much time trying to Build Empire and killing everybody who got in their way that huge areas of land were uninhabited and free for the taking. Hey, even the Haudenosaunee, frequently still compared to Romans, conveniently disappeared–hilarious piece! Frequently it’s expressed in a way that casts this “savage”, truculent behavior as ultimately inexplicable.

I’ll go ahead and quote from that hideous old history book, History of Kentucky Edited by Judge Charles Kerr, pub. 1922:

When the English founded the settlement at Jamestown in 1607, that portion of the royal grant which was to become Kentucky was probably uninhabited, but remained at the disposition of the Lenape and the Mengwe as the result of the conquest they had made of the Alligwi or Tallegwi. If any tribes actually dwelt there, their presence was by per-mission of the conquerors, who had laid ruthless hands upon it 500′ years before. In the reconquest of the Ohio country by the Iroquois in 1650 to 1700, their campaigns had been largely or altogether on the north side of the Ohio River. The final battle, the bloody climax of the half-century struggle, was at the Falls of the Ohio and on the north bank of the stream, one evidence of which being the great quantities of human bones there when the whites first came into that region. This was almost an extermination, and it extended the Iroquoian empire south to the Tennessee…

That the Six Nations had good title to the country south of the Ohio River to the Tennessee River by right of conquest there can be no doubt. John Lederer set down in 1669 in his General and Brief Account of the North American Continent of the Indians inhabiting the western parts of Carolina and Virginia that, “The Indians now seated in these parts are none of those which the English removed from Virginia, but a people driven by an enemy from the Northwest, and invited to sit down here by an oracle about four hundred years since, as they pretend.”- These were the Cherokees…

Civil and Political History of Tennessee, John Haywood, p. 30. Haywood adds :

“The Six Nations claimed the soil by conquest, not as the aboriginal owners, and this is the traditionary account of their nation. Who were the aborigines, and whether

they were all destroyed or driven from their possessions, and when these events happened, are left unfixed. But in 1750 they rested upon tradition, which at that time had lost the circumstantial details which belong to recent transactions. Certain it is, the whole country which they claimed was depopulated, and still retained the vestiges of an ancient and very numerous population.”

At best this is very strange mishmash of questionable legend–set 500 years in the past, rather than many thousands–and a sprinkle of post-Contact conflict. (“Oracle”?! As Kahentinetha Horn wrote, I’m “almost tempted to ask where the brown Baby Jesus in the cradle was.”) It purposely minimizes how long the people in question had been where they were, or even in existence, again by thousands upon thousands of years. It is also what largely passes for history, still; they were giving us similar tripe to read in school in the ’80s and early ’90s!

I’d recommend reading Barbara Mann’s Iroquoian Women, for a rather different interpretation of Haudensaunee “conquest” and “annihilation” –including of her own Ohio Erie (Western Seneca) people by the “thuggish” NY Seneca. “Utterly destroying” their cousins in this case apparently meant chasing them down the road after a multiple-day stickball game, with meal and rest breaks! This makes no sense at all, outside the cultural context. It’s easier to think of the Roman Empire. Not that it makes any more sense to have the Haudenosaunee as absentee landlords-by-conquest over ostensibly uninhabited lands!

I was interested to see that Lederer, at the time, readily admitted that the English “removed” Indians from Virginia–then, comprising the coastal fringe. Now we’re supposed to believe they just sort of mysteriously and conveniently disappeared. Oops, so did we people further west. To take a page from Kahentinetha Horn, “colonial reports about our death and disappearance are premature and should not be taken seriously”.

Very close to home, indeed*, the theme of belligerent Shawnee wandering around and killing people for no reason at all got concentrated in a truly hateful outdoor drama: The Long Way Home. (This article offers precious little context, either.) Thank goodness, that is no longer produced, but it ran for almost 30 years. The Shawnee were presented as violent, irrational baby-killing monsters. I am sticking another good example of this in the endnotes**, not to clutter things as much. The Mary Draper Ingles case, not surprisingly, gets a large section in that History of Kentucky, since those Shawnee took her there. It’s reported with just about as much neutrality as one would imagine.

Another warfare-related point to clarify, which explains rather a lot of the presented-as-inexplicable: just because the locals promised to deal peacefully with certain settlers, that does not mean that other Nations were bound by this agreement in any way. It doesn’t even mean that, should the settlers in question become sufficiently irksome and/or dangerous, the locals would not pass along word that it would be a shame if these people got run off and maybe the men killed if they’d shown violent enough behavior. (wink wink) In the Mahanaim case**, “The Delawares warned them, that they could not protect them there” should be interpreted as “Here’s fair warning: you have behaved so disrespectfully that we want you gone. If you don’t go away quickly, whatever happens is on you”. And some Mohawks eventually came a-calling. This is a rather extreme case of the same kind of subtlety not being recognized that some of us still run into.

Most of the time, the violent depictions are convenient BS, used to justify conquest in a “they were as bad as we are, if not much worse”*** way. It’s also understandable, given the political ideologies most of these folks have grown up with. Hint: that’s not pragmatism and anarchism. As Jack Forbes mentions many times, the wétiko psychosis depends upon people believing that human nature is bad, and that greed and conflict are only to be expected–and are, therefore, normalized. Everyone else must be as bad, or we’d have to admit that our own behavior qualifies as such.

Louis Proyect has done some interesting posts on this sort of thing, including this one on Violence and indigenous peoples. Hint: it’s not what a lot of people, including Jared Diamond, would like us to think.

Xiphias did not go all out with this theme, but it’s hard to avoid being raised on it in the U.S. If that’s most of what you’ve learned, that will influence how you interpret things. Overall, the original piece was refreshingly sympathetic, showing how difficult some choices must have been.

In that piece, I couldn’t help but spot a bit of a misconception about political organization continuing, in examples such as “Tisquantum was a Patuxet Indian, and therefore a subject of the Wamponoag Confederacy,” and the references to the Pokanoket Nation as “Massasoit” (very similar to “Powhatan”). The Wampanoag did not have “subjects”. This is understandable mistake, given that empire is still the prevailing Western interpretation of a very different kind of system. I wrote about similar earlier:

The seemingly hierarchical setup elsewhere may very well have been down to faulty interpretation by European observers, who were expecting to see some kind of hierarchy. That’s the kind of social system they were used to living under, and later interpretations are based on what these primary sources thought they were looking at. This is how the man Powhatan (Wahunsunacock) got to be an emperor, accompanied by his many “wives”–i.e., the women’s council for whom he was serving as diplomatic speaker, as part of his job as sachem! Note that “Much of a sachem’s leadership depended on establishing consensus”. Barbara Mann goes pretty deeply into this kind of misinterpretation based on completely clashing worldviews, in her Iroquoian Women, which I keep pushing for good reason. :)Here’s some discussion of “rank” in Mississippian societies: “The living Maya seems very much as a people not unlike what Wilma Mankiller describes of the Cherokee. The egalitarian, spiritual, and general cultural framework of the present day Maya does not fit well with a society that once was structured and hierarchical.” I still suspect that there were some people who got power hungry, with some limited success at trampling over others during the Mississippian period–and that some of them tried to use religion as a bludgeon, then as now.

In that vein, I ran across an interesting (if long and involved!) piece a few days ago, An Anarchist Study of the Iroquois.

From what I’ve learned, Eastern Woodland people didn’t have a lot of reason to fight over resources and territory until there was real scarcity, brought on by encroachment. (Nor did they have a lot of reason to wander off in long migrations, for no apparent reason.) When you’ve got a social system going that tries to make sure that there’s enough to go around– and strongly encourages people to work out their problems through lacrosse and similar stickball games if they can’t talk things out–fighting over crumbs is unlikely to be desirable nor necessary. That doesn’t mean they never fought about anything! The Wampanoag may well have been wrangling over resources, but it doesn’t really fit.

_____________

* Directly across the New River from some of my family’s previous land holdings, in fact. Some other holdings were where the Trigg Site was excavated. There photos of some tools and jewelry from that site here.

** Dunkard’s Bottom was the (now-inundated) bit of rich river-bottom land where my grandfather was born. A German religious group was allowed to settle there “beyond all settlements” in 1745, on “a water which is running toward the Mississippi, called New River, beyond all Christian government. There they made their home among riffraff, the dregs of human society who spend their time murdering wild creatures. With such people they had communion instead of their Brethren whom they left.” (Quoted from the chronicles of the Cloisters, and indicating nicely the levels of respect involved from that side.) These folks promptly decided they owned 900+ acres, sold some of it along to other Dunkards, and “In 1756 they built a fort for protection against Indians.”

Some of the founders had already become so afraid of attack that they moved further inland, along the Monongahela in 1751, where “The local Delaware Indians gave them rich bottom land on the stream called Dunkard Creek.” How did they appreciate this? “In 1753, Samuel purchased 1180 acres, and the next year received a grant of 5000 acres (Samuel was a ‘doctor’).” It’s highly doubtful that this “purchase” was from the Lenape who let him use it. In 1757, Samuel and Israel Eckerlin got captured by some Mohawk, and eventually ended up in France. Gee, I wonder why they’d irk anyone.

Still on my family’s land:

In 1754 George HOOPAUGH, one of the Dunkard’s, said that the previous May 60 “Norward Indians” came to his house and burned it and the stable. Before that, the Indians had threatened him, burned his corn and killed his best dogs. In May of 1755 Henry ZINN was killed on the New River by the Indians. This was probably one of the reasons for the sudden and premature dispersal of the remaining Dunkard’s.

The reader’s sympathy is obviously supposed to be with the poor old Dunkards. Even now, officially, they were the only residents there, with insane groups of Indians passing through to attack them.

*** I actually got to hear that one, word for word, from my (Indian Descendant) uncle, as part of a rant on how immigrants ought to learn to speak English. I wasn’t sure whether to start hollering, cry, or just go ahead and have the stroke that threatened. As it was, I opted for pained silence.

[Via http://urocyon.wordpress.com]

Friday, November 27, 2009

Yuletide economics

“At least the Christmas stimulus strengthens the economy, right? Wrong, says Waldfogel. If all spending justified itself, we would pay people to dig holes and then refill them — or build bridges to unpopulated Alaskan islands. Spending is good if the purchaser, or the recipient of a gift, values the commodity more than he does the money it costs. Otherwise, there is a subtraction from society’s store of value.”

Perhaps we should spread George Will’s message, before Christmas shopping begins.

[Via http://firstordergoods.wordpress.com]

Dubai World Collapse: The "Non-Thai" Government Propaganda Version

I wonder if my Siamese cat, Korn, is all about propaganda

By Pooky, this blog economic journalist

Korn Not Phased:

Korn, that financier Thai finance minister, says Dubai World collapse will not impact Thailand much, and the stock market, that tanked close to 20 points earlier, rebounded. Korn said Dubai World collapsed because of over expansion, but that Thailand has no such problems.

So it looks like everything is back to business as usual in Thailand, with the Dubai World crisis, just another mosquito bite that really means nothing.

Deadly Decease:

The problem is that sometimes the mosquito carries with it, a deadly decease.

What Dubai World represents is nothing less than the panicle of Middle East oil riches, that went on a global investment drive. In Thailand, if you follow the newspapers, before the Dubai World collapse, it was filled with news of Middle Easter business coming to invest in Thailand.

One such investment, is in supporting the Thai Muslims Bank, in a major expansion drive in Thailand. Then there are a string of Middle East investments in food, hotel and office building investments in Thailand.

So what happens when Dubai World, “The Shining Star” of Middle East global wave collapse? Obviously, it send a signal to all the other investments group, not to be so aggressive. That likely less aggressive expansion, will probably mean a cut-back in investments that seem like “A Bridge Too Far.”

Young Man in the Middle East:

Thailand’s prime minister, Abhisit, just visited the Middle East, most likely, to indicate to Taksin, that he will not let Thailand be isolated globally by Taksin. But as Al Jazerra reported the visit, any Middle Eastern reader, will come away seeing Thailand as just another “Problem Child.” Worse, in the Middle East, the culture is very conservative, where elders are greatly respected by the young crowd.

The picture of Abhisit, smiling like there is no problem in the world, standing in a group of elderly Middle Eastern statesman, which was probably published in the entire Middle East, indicates to most Muslim who saw it, as a country run by a “Young Man.”

Taksin Scored Points:

Then right on the heels of the Middle East visit, Malaysia is heading to Thailand for talks with Abhisit, particularly on Southern Thailand. Yet Taksin, through Chaovalit, has earlier proposed a the concept of an independent City-State in Southern Thailand. That move, was widely reported in the Middle East, and it played extremely well with the Globe’s Muslim audiences.

The Dubai World collapse, will likely still see many Middle Easter business heading to Thailand for investments, however, the trend is now in the retreat, and it is no-longer Thailand that is attracting them, but the particularities of the investments.

Blue Ocean Turns Muddy:

In the mean time, Thailand sees the Middle East as a blue ocean market, or new emerging market with great potential. And Middle Eastern tourist is becoming important to Thailand, particularly in the medical tourism area.

The wider cultural and economic message gave in the Middle East, with the collapse ot Dubai World, is that even a cutting edge investment empire in the center of the globe oil trade can fall. Clearly, the message is against taking risks and to be cautious. In this environment, the consumers in the Middle East, will likely need time to evaluate their plans.

Global Reacts:

Globally, initial reaction was a severe stock market retreat. That indicates, the level of fear in the market. All in all the collapse of the Dubai World, tantamount, to knocking off another major bright spot in global economic recovery. If Dubai World can collapse, the argument is, what else are there?

For Thailand’s finance minister, Korn, to say the collapse, has no impact for Thailand, could be both right and wrong. It is right, because what we are talking about is the future. But it is wrong, because Thailand will have to exists, in that future.

Bubble Anyone?

In the mean time, as Korn says proudly that Thailand has no bubble, as far as a bubble is concerned, the World Bank had warned Thailand that a bubble situation might be developing in Thailand. Even with China, many now speculate that it is a bubble in the making. The Japan, after registering great growth in the third quarter, now sees its currency hardened to the point that a central bank intervention is close.

The bottom-line, is that the fall of Dubai World, had hit the globe. And obviously, Thailand is part of the globe. For Korn, to say nothing to worry about, is like saying let the mosquito bite because it is nothing much.

[Via http://thaiintelligentnews.wordpress.com]

To Create Jobs and Win the War - Obama Should -

The last 6 posts describe Obama’s mentors and how he is destroying America by following their radical plan. 

THIS POST WILL OUTLINE WHAT OBAMA SHOULD DO TO: 

  1. INCREASE EMPLOYMENT
  2. PROTECT THE COUNTRY  AND WIN THE WAR

EVERYTHING OBAMA IS DOING, SO FAR,  IS 100% OPPOSITE OF WHAT HE SHOULD DO TO ENCOURAGE US EMPLOYMENT GROWTH AND WIN THE WAR ON TERRORISM. 

WHAT OBAMA SHOULD  DO?   

FOR THE ECONOMY:

  1. Stop promoting a crisis atmosphere as an excuse to spend  billions to stimulate the economy. He has increased the deficit by over 400% in   10 months.  This is a prescription for disaster.
  2. Lower taxes on income and capital gains
  3. Renew the Bush tax cuts set to expire in 2010
  4. Stop federal spending  (The US is so broke, that Communist China that used to buy most of our debt is lecturing Obama on fiscal responsibility and spending too much $.  They are worried that we are going broke and their loans to the US are at risk.   They are right). 
  5. Stop promoting a 2000 + page national health care bill that no one in Congress has or will read, which will increase spending by $1.0 trillion over 10 years.  The real cost is $2.5 trillion. (Spending money we do not have)
  6. Loose the notion that by spending $1 trillion we do not have will reduce the federal deficit.  That thinking is delusional.
  7. Stop the democrat proposal to  reduce  Medicare Benefits to seniors by $500 billion over 10 years to help pay for the proposed health care program.
  8. Stop pushing the $800 billion cap & trade carbon tax program. By creating a global warming crisis mentality that the oceans will rise because of man caused increases of carbon emissions, the Marxist left proposes and passes through the House,  a new carbon tax, supposedly to “help the world”.  This is a fraud and a hoax.  See:  http://america-wake-up.com/2009/11/21/global-warming-scientists-cover-up/
  9. Encourage US energy independence which would save $800 billion a year which we pay to foreign oil producers.  Liberals  oppose coal production, oil & gas drilling, extraction of oil from shale & tar sands, and nuclear energy. They favor solar & wind, so-called clean energy.  These energy sources will not even come close to making us energy independent.  The major benefactor of solar & wind energy production will be Chinese jobs producing solar & wind hardware.  The political expedient slogan of green jobs being created by investment in solar & wind energy programs is a terrible fraud on the American public.
  10. Stop the appointment of  czars (now 33 of them), who along with Obama and the liberal Congress oppose profits.  They think any one making a profit is making too much $.  These folks are anti-capitalists.  Where do they think investment that creates new jobs and the income that is taxed to provide for government revenue come from?  See the Category:  “Obama’s Czars”.
  11. Encourage Congress to stop inventing new programs to make home ownership affordable for all.  This do-good philosophy is the mentality that got us into this mess in the first place.  See the Category:  “Cause of the Meltdown” and click here:   http://america-wake-up.com/2009/10/11/fanny-and-freddie-doing-it-again/
  12. A reduction in taxes will encourage all employers to increase capital spending & create jobs.

  _____________________________________________________

To Win The War?

  1. Increase, not decrease,  the defense budget, to a necessary level
  2. Accept your self-appointed,  General McChrystal’s 90 page detailed request for  troop increase recommendations in Afghanistan.
  3. Re-instruct the military to not read “Miranda Rights” to all terrorists captured on the battlefield.  Does he really expect the soldiers to tell captured terrorists:  “You have the right to remain silent,  etc., etc.”? 
  4. Stop the Attorney General (The Top Cop in the country) from perusing criminal prosecution of CIA agents who captured and interrogated the terrorists.  These CIA agents are  heros who saved America from further attacks because of rough tactics like waterboarding,  sleep deprivation and growling dogs.  If the liberals don’t like waterboarding they could declare it illegal.  But they can’t do that because that would mean it was legal when it was done under the Bush presidency.  This is also ironic, because Obama takes credit for the three Navy seals shooting the three pirate kidnappers in the head after they hijacked the Mirsk Alabama off the coast of Sudan.  What is more humane, a bullet in the head for hijacking a boat or waterboarding for the 9-11 massacre?
  5. Oppose liberals propose a sur-tax to pay for the Afghan war.
  6. Keep Gitmo open and instruct Attorney General, Erik Holder, to  hold  ”military tribunals”  at Gitmo and to cancel the proposed  trials in federal court in New York.  (Since none of the 5 terrorists being tried in New York were read their “Miranda rights”,  and their lawyers will claim their confessions were coerced,  they legally have a very good chance of  being let free)
  7. Stop actions make it very clear that he despises the military and is “going through the motions”, like showing up  in the middle of the night for a photo-op in front of our dead heros soldiers being taken off aircraft at Dover Airforce Base.
  8. All these actions would show the world that he is not putting the politics of  bashing the Bush administration ahead of the national security.

[Via http://america-wake-up.com]

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

The President is Losing Independents

The Gallup Poll today shows massive defection from President Obama from among non-whites.

There is plenty of evidence in this poll that many Blacks voted for President Obama and continue his support simply because he is Black (unless you believe that Blacks and Whites have different brains), but the REAL story in this Gallup Poll is this sentence:

“Independents’ approval of Obama has declined (compared to Republicans) nearly as much (down 18 points), whereas support among Democrats is down only 6 points.”

In a nation almost evenly divided independents hold the key to elections, and the Gallup identified loss of independents by 18% mirrors the loss of independents in the actual elections in North Carolina and Virginia.

The losers in polls always discount polls, but all Presidents and each political party use daily tracking polls of their own.

In the end, polls may make mistakes but they are good guideposts along the way to elections, and elections are the ultimate poll. Already we see President Poll moving to the right on deficits and spending as elections loom and we will see it further in President Obama’s speech at West Point. (It is unlikely that President Obama will go to WooPoo  to announce an Afghanistan  surrender.)

The President will try to manage to have it both ways – feeding more men into war and accepting the Nobel Peace Prize.

The polls will continue to plunge…except among Blacks (and President Obama’s support has declined there as well). President Obama is a national example of the former New York Mayor David Dinkins.

http://www.gallup.com/poll/124484/Obama-Approval-Slide-Finds-Whites-Down-39.aspx

[Via http://usna1957.wordpress.com]

Democratic Planning - Climate Change

Introduction:

(For previous parts in the series, see here)

I’ve written before about the climate change bill that passed the House in June from an environmental standpoint, but it’s also true that the climate change bill is both an expression of our faith in economic planning and an incredible test of our ability as a democratic society to determine our economic future.

So as we follow the progress of the climate change bill through the five remaining Senate committees, we must pay attention not only to how the different elements of the legislation function as environmental regulation, but also how they work as economic planning – and be ready to apply these lessons to the future.

Background:

One of the curious elements of the history of the environmental movement is that, even though it emerged onto the political stage at the same time that the Keynesian consensus was crumbling and the very idea of economic planning was under assault from monetarists, supply-siders, rational-choicers, and all the other neoclassical sects, the environmental movement was from the outset a hotbed of economic planning.

Especially if you look at the Clean Air, Clean Water, and Environmental Protection Acts, you can see an abiding belief that the government could establish and enforce emissions limits on American industry. For the next thirty years, a debate raged over how the government should engage in environmental economic planning between those who favored a command and control approach that sought to regulate emissions directly and those who saw this as an inefficient interference with the free market and preferred instead mechanisms that created market incentives to reduce pollution.

The balance of power has swung back and forth between the two poles, with the market-based proponents gradually winning the upper hand in policy circles, even as command and control has had something of a renaissance as the growth of environmental economics had lead to the reinterpretation of environmental regulations (backed up by fines) as functional equivalent to taxes on pollution favored by the pro-market contingent. This shift is one of the reasons why we’re talking about cap and trade and pollution permits rather than simply reductions mandates, and why the issue of giving or keeping the EPA’s authority to regulate greenhouse gases is such a politically fraught issue.

And yet, the Waxman-Markey bill and its Senate equivalent cannot be said to be wholly of one camp or the other.

Climate Change Broken Down:

Indeed, if we take the various elements of the legislation apart and consider them individually, we can see the influences of multiple different schools of  planning.

Permits and Auctions: “cap and trade” has been the major focus of the legislation, and for all that the right has painted the effort to limit CO2 emissions as an radical attack on the free market (and a massive tax hike, and probably taking people’s guns and turning them gay as well), it’s actually one of the more conservative elements of the bill. Essentially, cap and trade is a grand experiment in market-based solutions. The idea is that by setting a price on carbon, the market will respond by becoming more efficient and lowering its emissions, which shows a deep belief in the power of the free market.

Proponents of the market-based approach point to the existing cap-and-trade system for sulfur dioxide (the main agent in acid rain) that has shown encouraging results: a 50% drop in SO2 levels from their 1980 levels by 2007, and some have argued an 80% improvement in the cost of enforcement. Critics points to the fact that cap and trade’s impact on pollution can be greatly weakened by issuing too many emissions credits for free instead of auctioning them, that the accounting on emissions is extremely murky (especially when trying to determine the quality of “carbon offsets”), and that such programs have little influence on the differential impact of changing emissions standards.

Renewable Portfolio Standards/Efficiency Standards for Buildings, Appliances, and Vehicles/Emissions Targets: by contrast, the requirements for utilities to raise the percentage of their electricity generated from renewable sources, for manufacturers and builders to increase the energy efficiency of buildings, appliances, and vehicles, and the overarching objective of lowering greenhouse gas emissions by a set target are much more in line with the “command and control” school of thought.

Very similar in many ways to raising CAFE standards on cars, this part of the bill involves direct regulation by the government on industry, with industry paying the full freight for the costs of transition. At the same time, the idea that you can set global standards for greenhouse gas emissions is a dramatic statement. Given that greenhouse gas emissions roughly correspond to levels of economic activity, the idea that the government can plan what they are going to be for decades into the future is quite radical, suggesting a high degree of influence over both the volume of economic activity and the structure of energy use at the foundation of the economy.

Subsidies and Investments: in addition to the cap and trade and standards, the climate change bill also includes an enormous amount of subsidies and investments into energy and energy research including “$90 billion in state programs to promote renewable energy and energy efficiency; $60 billion in carbon capture and sequestration technologies; $20 billion in electric and other advanced technology vehicles; and $20 billion in basic research and development into clean energy and energy efficiency” in the first fifteen years alone, as well as $7.5 billion for incentives for private investors, and money towards a “smart grid.”

In terms of planning, this part of the bill (in conjunction with the portfolio standards) resembles most closely the Tennessee Valley Authority in its early years. By acting as the “venture capitalist of last resort” for a vast variety of green investments, and by using subsidies to alter the calculations of competitiveness between solar, wind, and other renewable sources and traditional oil/natural gas/coal-derived power. The major difference here would be the heavy research focus of these investments, which shows a not unwarranted belief that advances in technology can well change the entire climate change debate.

Conclusion:

While the data is somewhat mixed, the fact is that Europe is more or less meeting its Kyoto protocol targets, despite a rocky launch, suggesting that it is indeed possible to deal with climate change, at least in the developed world, which has shown much slower rates of emissions growth over the last few years. Given that momentum in China and India seem to be moving in the direction of emissions targets, I believe there is reason for cautious optimism on the climate change front.

For the United States, however, the issue is as much one of democratic sovereignty as it is about survival. It’s all very well to profess a sacred regard for the free market, but when the free market threatens to completely overthrow the basic order of life on the planet, there’s a point at which one has to re-assert public control over one’s world.

[Via http://realignmentproject.wordpress.com]

Spiegel on Obama: "Nice Guy Act Gets Him Nowhere"

When he entered office, US President Barack Obama promised to inject US foreign policy with a new tone of respect and diplomacy. His recent trip to Asia, however, showed that it’s not working. A shift to Bush-style bluntness may be coming.

Obama visited a new China, an economic power that is now making its own demands. America should clean up its government finances, and the weak dollar is unacceptable, the head of the Chinese banking authority said, just as Obama’s plane was about to land.

Even the president seems to have lost his faith in a genial foreign policy. The approach that was being used in Afghanistan this spring, with its strong emphasis on civilian reconstruction, is already being changed. “We’re searching for an exit strategy,” said a staff member with the National Security Council on the sidelines of the Asia trip.

via US Foreign Policy: Obama’s Nice Guy Act Gets Him Nowhere on the World Stage – SPIEGEL ONLINE – News – International

Seriously, though? Obama is not our king. When did the executive branch take charge of monetary policy? Of foreign policy? This isn’t to say that the president isn’t de facto in charge of those things — Congress has surrendered far too many of their constitutional responsibilities to him. The office of President is a distraction: it’s the Congress who is ultimately responsible for our woes. And when it comes right down to it, we can hardly even blame Congress. It is the people who elect them.

[Via http://ordolibertate.wordpress.com]

Monday, November 23, 2009

LTD Approaches S&L Debacle Levels

setting up a treacherous exit strategy for the Fed as banks load up on record low coupons amid record supply when they are the most negatively gapped.  This will play a big role in our head fake scenario…

(apologize for weak chart skills)

source Federal Reserve

[Via http://theexantefactor.wordpress.com]

Gold at new high as dollar slides, stocks gain

LONDON (Reuters) – Gold powered to another record high on Monday as the dollar sank, while higher commodity prices lifted world equities.

MSCI's all-country world stock index (.MIWD00000PUS) was up 0.9 percent, led by European and emerging market shares that are sensitive to commodities.

Gold hit a record high at $1,167.35 an ounce before slipping back a bit, bringing this year's gains to around 32 percent.

The main catalyst for gold's rise has been the falling dollar, which makes the metal more attractive to non-dollar investors and encourages others to hedge.

The U.S. currency was down nearly three-quarters of a percent against at basket of competitors (.DXY), closing in on 15-month lows. It is being battered by expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve will keep interest rates low for some time.

"The Fed is sounding like they mean it about keeping rates low for an extended period — way into 2010 if not 2011," said a trader at an Australian bank.

Such a backdrop has driven large numbers of investors into gold, which also benefits from a reputation as a safe haven in times of economic uncertainty.

"You've got more high-profile hedge funds visibly investing in gold. That's yet another factor encouraging moves into gold by the wider investor community," said David Barclay, commodity strategist at Standard Chartered in Hong Kong online cash advance.

Gold's gain lifted other precious metals, while oil gained 90 cents to $78.36 a barrel and commodities such as copper also gained.

Copper was up 1.7 percent, aluminum was half a percent higher and nickel rose 1.6 percent.

STOCKS UP

European shares were one of the main beneficiaries of the rise in commodity prices.

The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 (.FTEU3) index of top shares was up 1.4 percent, snapping a four-day losing streak.

Energy stocks were in demand because of the oil price gain. Among big movers were Heritage Oil (HOIL.L), which sold its Ugandan interests to Italy's Eni (ENI.MI).

BG Group (BG.L), BP (BP.L), Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa.L) and Total (TOTF.PA) all also rose.

Miners also featured among the top performers as metal prices gained, including Anglo American (AAL.L), Antofagasta (ANTO.L), BHP Billiton (BLT.L), Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation (ENRC.L), Rio Tinto (RIO.L) and Xstrata (XTA.L).

Despite this, there is a general tone of caution from investors at the moment, with many interested in locking in their 2009 gains before the year end.

(Additional reporting by Jan Harvey, Joanne Frearson and Lincoln Feast; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

Gold at new high as dollar slides, stocks gain

[Via http://finbel.wordpress.com]

Confessions Of A Seventeen-Year-Old Girl

I’ve grown up my whole life in the state of Michigan, so I’ve seen firsthand what it’s like to struggle. I’ve seen others struggle and I’ve witnessed it in my own family. In the past, I’ve seen my dad become an unemployment statistic several times. Most recently, back in November. This time was the hardest (for me anyways). I was at the age now where I could fully understand the gravity of the situation. I remember my mom telling me after school and I broke down in the hallway, I knew how much it meant to my dad to be working and providing for our family and now all of a sudden he couldn’t. My immediate (selfish) thought was “What are we going to do about Christmas.” Quickly, I realized that this Christmas was going to have to be about what I needed not necessarily about what I wanted. Christmas was scant this year, but I wasn’t disappointed. I learned a valuable lesson during this time: thankfulness. It’s a shame something like my dad losing his job had to happen for me to realize all that God has blessed my family with. Not once was my family without food or shelter. God provided for our needs and he has continued to provide for them.

That’s the first paragraph of the first article written by the teen-aged girl (Jackie) who beat down Nora O’Donnell and has suddenly found her fifteen minutes of international fame. And the hits just keep coming from there. If you don’t have her in your blogroll or your “must read” list by now, put her there. She’s the future of Conservatism.

[Via http://truthbeforedishonor.wordpress.com]

Friday, November 20, 2009

November 19, 2009

I’m making money again, and I’m just short of $100,000. Yesterday we didn’t loggin to the stock market yesterday so it wouldn’t surprise me if I was over $100,000 and came back down.  Wells Fargo is finally down again but I bargain on them gaining money in the near future. Walgreens is down and is losing me money, which is a first so hopefully they will gain a lot of money in the near future. As usual, Coca-Cola is still doing quite well.

Counterfactual thought of the week: this <i>isn't</i> an unprecedented debt burden

I promised, without any reason, not to talk too much about what was said at the Financial Times party.  But surely Martin Wolf’s speech doesn’t count?  I mean, he was talking to a room full of journalists. And I thought it was a speech worthy of one of his million-click articles, and contained many points that Martin he might well make in print, about the future of macroeconomics, the unsustainable size of finance, whither the world, etc.

It is one statement in particular that I want to pick up on, however.  This is that the cost of the financial crisis lies behind only the Napoleonic War, First World War, and Second World War. Now, I think these statements are important, because they inform the social-justice debate that will break around our heads during the next ten years.  Who pays for this mess? is not going away. But I want to take issue with Martin’s statement.  It’s not true that this episode sticks out in such an obvious way.

First, look at this graph.  You will want to call me a fool.

Just eyeballing, the various 1776-1815 wars added about 150% of GDP debt.  WWI added over 110%.  WWII, before we had recovered from that, stuck another 140% on.   And now, sure enough, we look like going from 35% or so to 95% or so – 60%.  A clear fourth place?

But hold it a mo. Imagine your friend has told you they’ve just taken on debt of 2 times their salary.  Are they mad?  Well, it depends on the terms.  If its a morgage at 4%, then no problem.  If they have maxed out credit cards at 25%, then it’s a big problem.

The same applies to historical increases in debt – and taking into account the higher interest rates that other episodes have left us with, I think the various crises from the mid 1970s actually rank with this one.  The reason is that Dennis Healey (clearing up after Barber) and Howe (clearing up after Healey) had to pay really high rates for borrowing – well over 13%.   Furthermore, they did it at the same time as inflation was about to be beaten.  This last factor is of enormous importance – because by beating inflation, you also decimate your ability to harvest big revenues from booming nominal GDP.  An economy with NGDP rising at an average rate of 16% (like late 1970s) finds debts much less burdensome than one with the rate cratering down to 5%.

Here is how I have done my calculations.   I look at how much debt will have increased over the crisis period.  For 1975-83, debt went up from £52 to £132bn, or £80bn in total.  I estimate the average interest incurred: 12% in the case of that period.  Then I assume that the government repays that debt in a straight line over 15 years – around £5bn per year.    I then work out the net present value of the debt, discounting the future payments using a discount rate equal to the average growth rate of NGDP over the next 15 years.  For 1983-1998, I make this 8%.    I then calculate how much the discounted future burden of payments related to this debt compare to the GDP in 1983.

This is what I get:

Outstanding amount of inherited debt Interest cost Capital repayment Disc fac NPV of this £80 £9.60 £5.33 1 £14.93 £75 £8.96 £5.33 1.08 £13.23 £69 £8.32 £5.33 1.17 £11.71 £64 £7.68 £5.33 1.26 £10.33 £59 £7.04 £5.33 1.36 £9.09 £53 £6.40 £5.33 1.47 £7.99 £48 £5.76 £5.33 1.59 £6.99 £43 £5.12 £5.33 1.71 £6.10 £37 £4.48 £5.33 1.85 £5.30 £32 £3.84 £5.33 2.00 £4.59 £27 £3.20 £5.33 2.16 £3.95 £21 £2.56 £5.33 2.33 £3.39 £16 £1.92 £5.33 2.52 £2.88 £11 £1.28 £5.33 2.72 £2.43 £5 £0.64 £5.33 2.94 £2.03 £0 £0.00 3.17 £0.00

The net result?  The cost of the seemingly paltry £80bn incurred during the shambles that followed the government losing control of its finances in the 1970s was about 35% pf 1983’s GDP, if you assume that from 1983 things were back under control.

Returning to our current figures, what has been the cost?  Well, debt was projected to increase from about £600bn in 2008 to about £1400bn in 2014.   Some of this is held against assets: banking equity etc, but I’ll take £800bn as the debt that we were forced to take on as a result of the crisis*.  The interest costs I estimate at 4.5%, and nominal GDP growth for the next 15 years to be 5.5%.  At the end of the period, NGDP will be about £1800bn.

Here are the workings:

Outstanding debt (bns) Interest cost Capital repayment Disc fac NPV of this £800 £36.00 £53.33 1 £89.33 £747 £33.60 £53.33 1.06 £82.40 £693 £31.20 £53.33 1.11 £75.95 £640 £28.80 £53.33 1.17 £69.95 £587 £26.40 £53.33 1.24 £64.36 £533 £24.00 £53.33 1.31 £59.17 £480 £21.60 £53.33 1.38 £54.35 £427 £19.20 £53.33 1.45 £49.86 £373 £16.80 £53.33 1.53 £45.70 £320 £14.40 £53.33 1.62 £41.83 £267 £12.00 £53.33 1.71 £38.25 £213 £9.60 £53.33 1.80 £34.92 £160 £7.20 £53.33 1.90 £31.84 £107 £4.80 £53.33 2.01 £28.98 £53 £2.40 £53.33 2.12 £26.34 £0 £0.00 2.23 £0.00

The net present value of the debts works out at £793bn, or about 42% of the GDP we will have to help us pay for it.

What do I conclude from this? (the clock is ticking, so sorry for the rush).

  • the ‘cost’ of the increased debt we will have to bear from around 2015 when it might hopefully be stable can only be partially understood with reference to the absolute amount
  • Once you take into account that foolish Bennite debts were incredibly expensive in the light of subsequent NGDP growth slowing down (I like to use Tony Benn as the proxy for every overspending minister in the mid 1970s.  Throw in Barber if you find the partisanship offensive), the cost of us really losing control from that period was approximately the same as the loss of control now.
  • BUT – and I hope this is a ‘but’ that Martin Wolf would agree with – this time the debt has had a purpose.  We have had public sector debt increases in order to support a necessary, inevitable** and potentially calamitously chaotic private sector deleveraging.  This time, the debt has produced a return: a level of future GDP that would have otherwise been much lower (see Richard Koo on Japan) . . .
  • whereas what did we get for that loss of control in the 1970s?  A government really crowding out business; state ownership of catastrophically inefficient enterprise; the putting-off of necessary structural reform.

Government spending cost us money in the 1970s, and made the economy less effective.  It did not support spending, because we were closer to supply capacity – it was not a demand-recession.   It was incurred at massive cost to future generations -10-13%.

This time, it has stopped our economy collapsing, and in that sense has been a wonderful investment.   So, while we will be having headaches in Westminster for years and years to come, no-one should regard our future debt burden in the same light as that one in the past. If you were to pick periods of mismanagement to rank above this one, I would definitely choose the 1970s (and the unnecessary 1st world war).

Though we still have a lot to blame the City for: on the subject of which, I need to read Martin Wolf’s latest column.

Apologies for the rushed nature of this column: it was conceived of and written in 1 hour, exactly.

*of course, debt was projected to rise anyway to £800-900bn  but since I can’t find similar projections in a rush from the mid 1970s I will take all the increase as what matters.

Interstellar Anthropologist, Part 5: A Different Place

Dr. Fortis Plimick hesitated a moment at the doorway of the tent, blinking. There was artificial lighting inside, but it still took a moment for his eyes to adjust. His attention was drawn to the odd luminescence in patches on the inside face of the sloping tent roof.

“Our eyes seldom encounter direct light on Misty, so we are quicker to adjust to to low light conditions. When you feel comfortable, please have a seat.” The shadowy form waited for Fortis to sit first. The chair was some sort of fabric stretched over a hard frame. It gave just enough, and seemed slightly springy, yet altogether comfortable in conforming to his own shape. It held his weight easily, but the frame was obviously very light. His hand touched something rare among places he had visited — natural wood grain. He would have to pay at least a month’s salary for such a chair back home, if it were available at all.

As Elder George Manley eased into a matching seat almost facing him, Fortis saw a man somewhat older than himself. Unlike the almost generic olive-toned skin of blended races he was used to seeing, the lanky robed man was naturally quite pale where his skin was exposed. George composed himself slowly, then turned to face Fortis.

“I suppose your ship can find it’s way out of this cloud envelope?”

Fortis half smiled. “The computers say they can’t see anything, but would have no trouble reversing the last maneuver, which should be safe, since it was above the orbital plane of your star system.”

George’s eyes sparkled merrily in the light spilling through the tent doorway. “Isn’t it strange how we continue to apply the ancient Terran standards of polarity? Technically, we sit at the very bottom of Misty, but it could as easily be the top. Then it would seem our rotation was normal, instead of retrograde.”

Fortis nodded his recognition.

George continued. “I suppose your ship told you something about Misty?”

It took only a few seconds for Fortis to recount the few details, noting it was just a bit more than what he already knew.

George shook his head with what Fortis felt was exaggerated humor. Suddenly, the elder’s face went rather serious, with a wrinkled brow. “I dare say, your automated systems didn’t really read that from the planet itself.” Fortis raised his eyebrows in question. “You are aware at one time it was necessary to plant beacons for interstellar navigation?”

“Yes; my ship noted one just outside your star system,” Fortis replied.

George half-smiled. “Just before the last war started, a military survey ship stopped by, warning us things were heating up. He also told us he would update the beacon’s records of nearby inhabited worlds. In those days it was considered highly encrypted. I suppose, given the nature of things, such encryption has been long broken.”

Fortis wasn’t even aware of any encryption schemes, but noted his ship’s computers had no trouble reading the ancient beacon. He was surprised it still functioned.

“And I suppose you didn’t perform any directed scanning, but simply allowed the automated system to do its work?” George seemed to be on the verge of delivering a punch line for a joke.

“No. I’m not even sure I would know how,” Fortis replied with a shrug.

George nodded sagely. “I’m willing to wager your ship simply told you what it had collated from the beacon.” He waited a moment, then stared directly into the eyes of Fortis. “Aside from the visible light spectrum, nothing penetrates Misty’s clouds. Nothing. Your energy weapon is utterly useless here. Feel free to carry it, but you wouldn’t need it.”

For just a moment, butterflies tickled Fortis’s stomach. But his fascination with the subject pushed them aside. “You can’t even transmit radio waves?”

“We once tested a visible light transmitter system, but it won’t bounce off the clouds. The lack of range, and lack of usefulness, didn’t justify what for us was a high investment in materials we can’t obtain natively.” He allowed that to hang in the air.

Fortis was able to capture a moment with his intuition. “Then you don’t have much metal and petroleum here?”

Gesturing with his hands around the tent, George replied, “What you see here is some of our highest technology. It won’t appear much immediately, but we have several centuries of careful development of what little we do have.” He paused a moment, shifting forward, resting his elbows on his knees. “I feel certain your questions will be answered best by the narrative of how we came to colonize Misty.”

George stood, a fluid motion, unhurried, yet somehow quick. “Let me offer you some tea. I have a special blend which seems to please visitors from off planet.”

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

And who's fault is that?

FOXNews:

The United States’ climbing national debt could drag the country into a “double-dip recession,” President Obama warned in an interview with Fox News Wednesday from China, though he said he’s still considering additional tax incentives for businesses to reverse the rising unemployment rate.

Well, maybe it’s time to take the hint, and STOP SPENDING OUR GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN’S MONEY! Guess what? You guys won the election, this is your problem now, and all you have done is increase spending, and increase the debt, and then lie about the results. You have done nothing to reduce the debt, and are now trying to do even more to expand it. You seem to realize this is a problem, SO STOP IT.

The Proposal

It’s a wonderful feeling to be asked out by someone, but even better perhaps, when you do it yourself.

Kinzal accepted, and we’re so very happy. At least now she wont crib about sharing her graph book since we’re together and all. We still have our ground rules though.

Each individual is on her own and free to do whatever the hell she wants to, gawk at other men, hit on them even. It’s more like an open market policy, this whole thing, laissez faire.

No strings attached, and that’s the only way I can handle something, anyway. You do your own thing, I’ll do mine and when we’re together, we’ll be together and have an awesome time.

Mrs R: Where is your work?
Me: *Snatches Kinzal’s book* Here.
Mrs R: Where’s the statistical analysis?
Me: Oh, well. I didn’t bring that book today.
Mrs R: Aah, okay, make sure you do later.
Kinzal: *After Mrs R walks away* Maan, she really must have a crush on you. She spares you all the time! (of course in lesser words.)

I will hold your hand through thick and thin, (and those of others too ), KJ. In any case, I’m always there so let’s not get all sappy.

x EdgyShark x

P.S. This entire post was a pun intended too.

 

Against a Value Added Tax

Over at Investor’s Business Daily, Wayne Crews and I make the case against a Value Added Tax. Policy makers have been flirting with the idea as a way to reduce the $1,400,000,000,000 budget deficit.

We argue that a VAT is:

-Complex; it would require roughly doubling the size of the IRS.

-Untransparent; most VATs don’t show up on receipts the way sales taxes do. Taxpayers are clueless as to how much tax they actually pay.

-Vulnerable to special-interest tinkering. Politically incorrect goods are routinely penalized with higher rates. Politically favored goods are granted exemptions.

-Prone to increases. 20 out of 29 OECD countries with a VAT have increased their rates since implementing a VAT.

A point we didn’t make is that VATs affect industrial organization. VATs are applied at each stage of the production process. That gives companies an incentive to reduce the number of taxable steps. That means more vertical integration than would otherwise occur. This can decrease the efficiency of the manufacturing process. Which means higher prices and fewer goods. Plus the tax.

Monday, November 16, 2009

GM's 'solid foundation' of increasng debt

GM will start repaying it’s $6.7 billion loan from the US taxpayer with a payment of $1.2 billion to US coffers in December, thanks to the carmaker’s ’solid foundation.’

That ’solid foundation?’ Announced debt of $1.2 from July 10 to September 30.

There is a lot that is confusing about auto manufacturing and high finance. In the good old days that kind of debt might have been thought of as … well, troubling. But not today. It’s a ’solid foundation.’

Of course, in the good old days GM shareholders owned GM. Now it is owned 61% by US tax payers.

And to US taxpayers, a lousy $6.7 billion is chump change.

The BBC story is here.

A Smart China

by Kevin Connors

Let’s say you’re in middle school. You were awkward for a few years, maybe even got picked on towards the end of elementary school. But once 6th grade came up you suddenly got some swagger in that step. You started wearing Abercrombie. You got some cool boot-cut jeans and $99 Airmaxs your mom bought for you at Footlocker.

Now you got some confidence, right? At least more than before, that’s for certain. So you wanna start talking to girls. Before, you’d always have to go through your friend–the good looking one who’s good at b-ball and the fly 6th grade honeys are always crushing on. Usually you’d call him up on your iPhone (also purchased by your mom) and tell him you were trying to hollerrrrr at a fly honey.

But now…oh man. Now YOU can just talk to the girls yourself. You put your buddy on the backburner and now HE has competition because your balls dropped, you picked up your skirt, and you just went with it.

Now insert some players here. Your friend is the US, You are China, and them fly chics are the rest of the world.

Let’s take a step back. China’s got some momentum. It’s on the front page of the New York Times or the Wall Street Journal everyday. It’s the world’s 3rd largest economy and Obama even said himself China is of the highest priority of the American people.

But China (You) is like maaaan. I don’t need you Obama. I run this…so they do. They start doing whatever the hell they want. They’re officially atheist so they run around closing churches that become a bit too popular. They manipulate their currency so their goods are cheaper abroad and everyone snatches them up at stores across the Western world. They violate every human rights law in the book. They essentially finance the US wars in the Middle East via purchasing of US treasuries. And after all this they sit back and drink tea because there’s nothing anyone can do about it.

One of the cool things China  is also doing–and the point of this post–is it puts its currency, the Renminbi–in the hands of other countries. Why would they want to do this? And how do they do this?

First, they want to do this because if you’re buying stuff from China you probably want to pay them in Chinese currency. Basically, it’s easier for you if you can just hand China Renminbi when you buy them new Nike Airmax kicks made for $1 and sold for $99. Before, you’d have to go to a bank, exchange your local currency into dollars, then dollars into Renminbi. But China’s got some balls now. So basically they’re slapping the US in the face and being like, “Our country is pretty sweet too, the time of American world economic domination is coming to an end.” And the sad things is…they may be right. Back to our example, you don’t need your friend to hook you up with girls anymore because you got that Abercrombie zip up. You’re cool on your own.

A bit more technical, but HOW they are doing this is pretty cool too. They’re engaging in currency swaps, or more specifically central bank liquidity swaps. China is handing over billions of Renminbi to countries like Argentina, South Africa, and South Korea in exchange for those countries’ own currencies in equal value (so for example, China hands you 10 billion Renminbi, and you hand them the equivalent of that in your local currency). This essentially provides liquidity to these countries so they can now purchase Chinese goods using the Chinese currency–which makes things much easier. Plus, the other half of the swap agreement is that in 10 years, after your country buys a ton of stuff from China and you can self sufficiently provide liquidity in Chinese currency, you swap back with China the same amount at today’s exchange rate. Basically, you’re borrowing Chinese Renminbi, interest free, for ten years at a predetermined exchange rate.

It also makes the Chinese goods cheaper because it subtracts the transaction costs related to going to banks and exchanging currency. Finally, it also insulates the local country (Argentina, South Africa, South Korea, etc.) from fluctuations in the US Dollar–which lately has been getting railed by the global economy.

Strategically, this is really smart on China’s part. When other countries are running around trying to find the definition for a collateralized debt obligation, China’s making it easier for other countries to buy its stuff and, as a byproduct, undercutting the US Dollar’s role in the global economy.

You (China) are now providing your friend (the US) with some competition. How will your friend react? Will he tell all the girls you’re a loser? Will he help you out? Will he act like he’s cool with it but behind the scenes sabotage your ascent to stardom? And the only real question left to ask is, when YOU (China)–the new cool 6th grader–finally sack up and ask an 8th grade fly honey (the rest of the world) to the dance, and your friend (the US)  does at the same time, who will she say yes to?

Is Gen Y the Dumbest Generation?

Mark Bauerlein argues in The Dumbest Generation [Amazon] that Facebook, Twitter, and the internet in general has made Generation Y “uniformed, illiterate, and self absorbed”. Demagogues like him also add impossible to manage and educate to that list. Is it true that Facebook has made Gen Y incapable of focusing at work, that Twitter reveals inability to craft a paragraph, and that Youtube comments illustrate a stark decline in analytical reasoning?  No.  Although I wont go deep into the arguments, we can look at books like like Grown Up Digital [amazon] ($4.5 million dollars of research money).

If anything, Generation X should be worrying about the reverse: that their skills are rapidly becoming antiquated in an age of digital necessity. There are two powers at work here. First, some of the practices Gen Y utilize might be outright better than the Gen X practice. Grown Up Digital cites online collaboration and scrutinization of streaming information as examples. Sure, we might not all need to know everything about your favorite celebrity on a day to day basis. However, look at the case where a Gen Y gets live RSS updates on relevant research papers (e.g. from Arxiv, SSRN, combined with Mendelev). Then that is combined with up-to-the-minute sentiment and opinions off the blogosphere. That can trigger the Gen Y’er to pull up relevant books on the Kindle, and then start an forum or chat based conversation about it. This, all over the course of 15 minutes. We can see how Gen X might potentially become frightfully behind.

The second power at work is the inherent network effects [wiki] generated by these technologies. Print media erodes, the TPS report fades into oblivion, alternative information sources gain in popularity. Even if a blog is inherently less refined when placed in comparison with a Boston Globe article, the blogs may soon win out due to purely market forces. Before long (or already) they will be better for many forms of information.

This is not to say that Gen X practices are to be thrown away en masse. Of course, practices will need to be integrated. Just as those who manage to adopt starfish management within established command and control frameworks will thrive compared to those married to either ideology.  So OK, we need to learn from both the old and the new. So what? Corporations, Political Groups, and Educational Institution are all already working on it. It will be easy to integrate new information-rich pedagogies into existing organizations once the Net-Gen grows older, right?

Wrong.  And this is even more wrong for established western societies like the United States. It may take massive political/shareholder will to affect these sort of fundamental changes from the top down (just look at healthcare technology). In other cases, we may look towards disruptive technologies/processes to foster from the bottom up. In either case, young people will need to take responsibility and ownership over future drivers of their economies.

Think back to that disinterested, uninterested 20-something year old editing her blog at work, making a new YouTube video between projects, and keeping in touch with 50 friends over blogs and AIM when her boss is being a pain. Think about how much positive change that person could affect if her skills were appreciated and she felt like she had more stake in work success. That’s what Gen X should be worrying about.

Friday, November 13, 2009

When you see these signs - do you get the joke? (Hint: Seen vs. Unseen)

Part of me laughs, and part of me cringes whenever I see these signs….because they are absolute rubbish. This sign is based on the assumption that we the public are either too lazy, or just too ignorant to think beyond what we immediatly see.

Whenever we are presented with this concept: that the government can “put people to work,” the question must be asked, “How?” 

When a non-state entity creates a job, it does so either by taking out a loan on the investment bet that the job created will produce enough value to repay or exceed the loan taken, or by reinvesting its own existing capital with a similar goal.

The State “creates jobs” or “puts people back to work” either with existing tax revenues, or by taking on debt to be funded through future tax revenues. I used quotes above because anyone with a grasp of elementary mathematics would realize that this is neither “creating jobs” nor “putting people back to work.” It is nothing more than shifting work around.

Ask yourself, what would the tax revenues taken by the state to ‘put Oregon back to work’ have been used for otherwise? What of the things the tax-payers would have invested their money in, had it not been taxed away?

The answer is: jobs.

Perhaps the tax-payer was planning on buying some new shoes (a shoe salesman’s paycheck), going out for an extra nice dinner (a restaurant worker’s wages and tip), a kitchen remodel project (construction material producers, contractors, cabinet makers, plumbers, etc) planning to add to their payroll at work to hire a new employee, or even donating money to their favorite charity. But these things will never be seen because some politician had the nice, though deceptive and false idea that they had the ability to “put Oregonians back to work.”

It is important at this point to understand that money is nothing more than a representation of labor, or work. We choose to work and earn money because money allows us to trade the value of something we are good at (in my case, web developement), for something we value that we aren’t good at, or couldn’t possibly create on our own (e.g. a ticket to football game. I neither play football, nor do I have the knowlege or ability to coach a team, let alone build a football stadium. Heck, I even suck at Madden…).

The point is that the sign above is clearly hogwash. It is based on the flawed notion that governments create things. To accept this idea, is to throw out the economic concept of opportunity cost. Government is force. The government is the only entity that we allow the power to involuntarily take our money and re-appropriate it. In this case – it is the opportunity for the tax dollars to have been spent elsewhere – that the government is forgoing so they can be assigned to this road project. If the sign was actually honest it would read: Taking a portion of your work, and directing it to someone or something else. Or perhaps simply, Making Oregonians pay for this road project.  

But telling the truth doesn’t matter to politicians because when there is a problem (such as a down economy) they must be seen as doing something to fix the problem. The perception that they are doing something to ‘put Oregon back to work’ is far more important politically than the actual truth, that they just moved work to a project that the voters will see. What the voters won’t see is all of the jobs that were sacrificed to make that particular road project possible.

It is important for me to mention that here, I am not necessarily arguing against road or other government projects. I am however calling out the hack politicians who think that tax-payers are dumb enough to fall for the ludicrous idea that government can create jobs by simply spending them into existence. From here, you can draw your own conclusion on whether the ’stimulus’ bill will actually stimulate anything, other than some politician’s delusion of grandure.

Oh, and here’s the real irony of ironies: This sign is on a road leading up to the city Amtrak station. Amtrak is in business today, and its employees have jobs, only because they are subsidized with money taken from tax-payers. I suppose a sign for that could have read: Putting Amtrak back to work – which of course actually means, Forcing you to pay for Amtrak, rather than whatever else you valued more. 

 

“In the department of economy, an act, a habit, an institution, a law, gives birth not only to an effect, but to a series of effects. Of these effects, the first only is immediate; it manifests itself simultaneously with its cause – it is seen. The others unfold in succession – they are not seen: it is well for us, if they are foreseen. Between a good and a bad economist this constitutes the whole difference – the one takes account of the visible effect; the other takes account both of the effects which are seen, and also of those which it is necessary to foresee. Now this difference is enormous, for it almost always happens that when the immediate consequence is favourable, the ultimate consequences are fatal, and the converse. Hence it follows that the bad economist pursues a small present good, which will be followed by a great evil to come, while the true economist pursues a great good to come, – at the risk of a small present evil.”

-That Which is Seen, and That Which is Not Seen -Frédéric Bastiat, 1850

 

Posted via email from Andrew Colclough

Spread the Wealth

A new twist on a chilling phrase.

Last night I had the good fortune to attend a book launch for a new book entitled Spread the Wealth, authored by Mr. David R. Breuhan (The title is ingenious, sure to attract many of today’s coercive spreaders and spreadees).  I’ll have more details on the event later.  In the meantime, peruse the site and pick up the book.  Mr. Breuhan offers a prescription for our economic ills.  And you’re part of the medical team.

Quick Links

Some useful reading… 

 

  • George Will on America’s debt

 

  • Stephen Spruiell on the SEIU

 

 and viewing…

 

  •  Bill Whittle being excellent and sharp as always.

 

Health-care…

 

  • faulty figures

 plus

  • tax increases

 equals an

  • historical achievement

 that will prove

  • ultimately disasterous

 

 

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

is a lazy person necessarily a lazy person ?

There’s an old adage that I just made up that says, “if you have no where to go then there is no reason to move.” This ties in to the concept of hope vs hopelessness.

Hope is easily understood from the point of view of a person born in cave but yet realizing/believing that there is a way out. Hopelessness is to be unaware of even the concept of an exit from the cave.

For the person with hope, there is an instinctive ambition to move in order to improve his situation, from dark to light.

But for the hopeless person, what could his instinct say … ‘move from dark to dark’?

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

The point is that since a hopeless person has no where to go, he therefore does not move, and to a naive observer he appears lazy.

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

Healthcare. Pelosi. Horror. A plan to destroy the US healthcare system.

Above the fold link to a great article, by someone who actually read the bill!

Here are some important passages in the 2,000 page legislation. What the Pelosi Health-Care Bill Really Says

They are cheering. What are they cheering about?

Quality, Affordable Healthcare for All. Are they kidding?

I guess they haven’t read the bill. If few members of Congress read it, who wrote it?

Here’s a link to a really good article.

Government Force at Heart of ObamaCare

President Obama has gone to great pains to deny that his proposed health-care reform is a government takeover of the health-care system.

“Nothing could be further from the truth,” he has said.

Yet it’s hard to see the 1,994-page bill that the House passed last night as anything else. After all, the bill uses the command “shall” — as in “you shall do this,” “businesses shall do that” and “government shall do some other thing” — 3,345 times.

Not a great deal of choice or options there.

To make sure that we obey these “shalls,” the bill would create 111 government agencies, boards, commissions and other bureaucracies — all overseen by a new health-care czar bearing the Orwellian title “commissioner of health choices.”

All this would come at a true cost of more than $1.3 trillion over 10 years. And virtually every aspect of health care would be subject to federal regulation.

For example, the government would force every American to buy health insurance and would control what benefits those policies must include. Even those who now have health plans and are happy with them would have to switch to policies that include the government-required benefits — insurance that might well be more expensive, thanks to the new benefits you won’t get to choose.

We don’t get freedom to choose?

No. Not even close.

Here are some important passages in the 2,000 page legislation. What the Pelosi Health-Care Bill Really Says

Quality, affordable healthcare for all! Yay! Right?

Sec. 224 (p. 118) provides that 18 months after the bill becomes law, the Secretary of Health and Human Services will decide what a “qualified plan” covers and how much you’ll be legally required to pay for it. That’s like a banker telling you to sign the loan agreement now, then filling in the interest rate and repayment terms 18 months later.

The bill doesn’t specify these things, it would never pass if they told anyone what their plans are.

Pelosi: My! You are looking very Congressional today! Just sign here. Atta boy.

Sec. 303 (pp. 167-168) makes it clear that, although the “qualified plan” is not yet designed, it will be of the “one size fits all” variety. The bill claims to offer choice—basic, enhanced and premium levels—but the benefits are the same. Only the co-pays and deductibles differ. You will have to enroll in the same plan, whether the government is paying for it or you and your employer are footing the bill.

One size fits all, as determined by central planning. That has never succeeded, so why do they think it will work this time?

An individual earning $44,000 before taxes who purchases his own insurance will have to pay a $5,300 premium and an estimated $2,000 in out-of-pocket expenses, for a total of $7,300 a year, which is 17% of his pre-tax income.

Affordable? WTH?

A family earning $102,100 a year before taxes will have to pay a $15,000 premium plus an estimated $5,300 out-of-pocket, for a $20,300 total, or 20% of its pre-tax income.

Just a cotton-picking minute! Affordable???

If I like my insurance I can keep it, president Obama said so.

Sec. 202 (p. 91-92) of the bill requires you to enroll in a “qualified plan.” If you get your insurance at work, your employer will have a “grace period” to switch you to a “qualified plan,” meaning a plan designed by the Secretary of Health and Human Services. If you buy your own insurance, there’s no grace period. You’ll have to enroll in a qualified plan as soon as any term in your contract changes, such as the co-pay, deductible or benefit.

So we can’t keep the plan we have, we must go to “a qualified plan.”
We will be told what plan we must purchase??? WTF? No freedom of choice?

Sec. 412 (p. 272) says that employers must provide a “qualified plan” for their employees and pay 72.5% of the cost, and a smaller share of family coverage, or incur an 8% payroll tax. Small businesses, with payrolls from $500,000 to $750,000, are fined less.

So I can kiss my job goodbye.

Sec. 59b (pp. 297-299) says that when you file your taxes, you must include proof that you are in a qualified plan. If not, you will be fined thousands of dollars. Illegal immigrants are exempt from this requirement.

Ah-ha! Become a Mexican citizen, sneak into the US, get “in state” tuition rates, the whole 9 yards!!!! OK. That’s silly. I’m cynical.

Here are some important passages in the 2,000 page legislation. What the Pelosi Health-Care Bill Really Says

Quality, affordable healthcare for all! Yay! Right?

PelosiBarryHarryCarey Care must be stopped.

Well, even though president Obama keeps talking about “his plan,” he has never submitted one for Congress to consider. A “healthcare” bill just passed in the House, and Pelosi is the House Speaker. I’ll call that bill “Pelosicare.”

If 3 people have voted ‘no’ instead of ‘yes,’ it would not have passed. That’s 1990 pages with 40 pages of amendments.

There is another version of the bill that they are working on in the Senate. Let’s call that “Harrycare.”

(We are committing HarryCareY! HAHAHAHAhahaha!!!)

If that ever passes, they merge Pelosicare and Harrycare together and get to vote on it again before it goes to the President.

Altogether, it’s Obamacare – a plan to destroy the US healthcare system. Call me cynical!

http://wp.me/pFeEj-5U

Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)
  • PelosiScare: This is Nothing But a Power Grab and Redistribution of Wealth …

Monday, November 9, 2009

What Is Inflation and How Do You Measure It?

What Is Inflation and How Does One Measure It?

by Michael Shedlock

To understand inflation, one must first understand what money is and how to measure it. Please read What is Money and How Does One Measure It? before attempting to understand what follows.

Unfortunately there is no general agreement as to the definition of inflation. Here are some of the widely used definitions as noted in Inflation: What the heck is it?

Commonly Used Definitions

  1. Decline in purchasing power of the currency held
  2. Rising prices in general (essentially the same as #1 although some might disagree)
  3. Rising consumer prices (CPI)
  4. Rising producer prices (PPI)
  5. Rising prices due to expansion of money supply
  6. Rising prices due to expansion of money supply and credit
  7. Expansion of money supply
  8. Expansion of money supply and credit

Four of those definitions refer to money supply. That brings up another issue. When one refers to “money supply” are they talking about M1, M2, MZM, Money AMS (Austrian Money Supply), or simply the amount of money they have in their bank account or wallet at the time of the conversation?

Definitions 5 and 6 refer to “rising prices” yet fail to distinguish between consumer prices, producer prices, or simply prices in general. It seems we could easily add a lot more definitions.

Furthermore, some people make no distinction between money and credit but others do as noted by choices 5 thru 8.

Still others insist than in the fiat world we are in, the web is so tangled between money and credit that this mess is not even worth bothering to figure out. Those folks simply hold gold and wait for “The Crash”.

However, it is simply impossible to have a debate about inflation (or anything else) unless the parties can agree on a definition.

Like it or not, we live in a fiat world. Therefore we must attempt to have sound definitions that best describe the fiat world we are in.

The definition I adhere to is: Inflation is a net expansion of money supply and credit, where credit is marked to market. Deflation is the opposite: a net contraction of money supply and credit, where credit is marked to market.

Popular View

The most common definition of inflation is rising prices.

Moreover that is the definition central bankers want you to believe. That definition allows central bankers to print money at will, generally inflating prices everywhere (until asset prices crash as they just did), all the while proclaiming they are “inflation fighters”.

Austrian economists see things differently. They understand that rising prices are a possible “result” of inflation, not a measure of it. While all Austrian economists would agree with that statement most I believe would ignore credit and simply state that inflation is an expansion of money supply (again with many different interpretations of what “money” is, even amongst Austrian economists).

Theoretical Stance Yields Poor Results

While I am sympathetic to the theoretical notion that inflation is an expansion of money supply, such a definition leads to impractical results. Take the idealized case of a country on a gold standard. The true amount of money is the measure of gold.

However, prices can soar if more credit is extended on the gold than there is physical gold. This happened in spades in the prelude to the great depression (and many other credit bubbles as well, all of which ended in deflation).

Prices can also soar or collapse for other reasons such as a change in time preference (the desire to hold money vs. spend it), shortages caused by crop failures, rising productivity, new deposits (or lack thereof) of natural resources, and what other central bankers are doing in regards to printing money.

It is complete silliness to think the Fed is in control of (or can even properly measure) prices, especially asset prices. The Fed ignored asset bubbles twice recently with disastrous consequences. Yet, there is no good way to judge why stock prices are rising. Stock prices can rise as as a result of increasing productivity, falling or rising commodity prices, or simply because of central bank printing.

Merriam Webster Definition Of Inflation

It is virtually impossible to measure why prices are what they are and the “why” is what is important. Thus a focus on prices is misguided. The 1957 Merriam Webster definition of inflation was “An Increase in money supply and credit”.

The definition now found in the Merriam Webster online dictionary puts the cart before the horse, but it at least still has the cart and the horse in the definition. Most commonly used definitions don’t.

Main Entry: in·fla·tion
Pronunciation: \in-ˈflā-shən\
Function: noun
Date: 14th century

1 : an act of inflating : a state of being inflated: as a : distension b : a hypothetical extremely brief period of very rapid expansion of the universe immediately following the big bang c : empty pretentiousness : pomposity
2 : a continuing rise in the general price level usually attributed to an increase in the volume of money and credit relative to available goods and services

It is by design of the Fed and bankers that the definition has morphed into common usage to something that removes the Fed from its role in causing inflation.

Cause Of The Great Depression

I believe it safe to say that Austrian economists in general would agree that the cause of the great depression was the massive runup in credit that preceded it. Of course the policies of the Fed and Government in attempting to fight deflation made matters much worse.

Clearly then, credit has a role in the boom, and credit had a role in the bust, so one must take credit into consideration.

Making matters worse, in a fractional reserve system, it can be very difficult to distinguish between what is credit and what is money. The prime example of this is the debate as to whether savings accounts are a measure of credit or money.

A strong theoretical case can be made that in a credit-based fiat regime that the proper measure of money is simply base money supply and that everything else is credit.

Indeed, as I have pointed out most “money” in checking accounts is not really there at at. It has been lent out, redeposited, and lent out again. In other words it is imaginary.

Let’s take another look at three measures of money supply.

Base Money Supply

M Prime

True Money Supply

Wide Difference Of Opinion About What Money Is

The above three charts depict “money”, each with their proponents. There is also M1, M2, MZM, and M3, also with their proponents.

Those measuring money as Money AMS or M Prime would have money supply at something like $2,500 Billion. Those sticking with TMS would come up with money supply at $5,500 billion. While base money supply is $1,800 billion. That is quite a difference.

The TMS explanation on Mises says “The True Money Supply (TMS) was formulated by Murray Rothbard and represents the amount of money in the economy that is available for immediate use in exchange.”

The above statement is false. If everyone were to go and withdraw money tomorrow there would be a massive systemic crash and bank failures because the money simply isn’t there. The deposits are imaginary.

Please consider this Rothbard snip about savings accounts from The Inflationary Boom: 1921-1929

In recent years, more and more economists have begun to include time deposits in banks in their definition of the money supply. For a time deposit is also convertible into money at par on demand, and is therefore worthy of the status of money. Opponents argue (1) that a bank may legally require a thirty-day wait before redeeming the deposit in cash, and therefore the deposit is not strictly convertible on demand, and (2) that a time deposit is not a true means of payment, because it is not easily transferred: a check cannot be written on it, and the owner must present his passbook to make a withdrawal.

Yet, these are unimportant considerations. For, in reality, the thirty-day notice is a dead letter; it is practically never imposed, and, if it were, there would undoubtedly be a prompt and devastating run on the bank.[2]

Everyone acts as if his time deposits were redeemable on demand, and the banks pay out their deposits in the same way they redeem demand deposits.

The necessity for personal withdrawal is merely a technicality; it may take a little longer to go down to the bank and withdraw the cash than to pay by check, but the essence of the process is the same. In both cases, a deposit at the bank is the source of monetary payment.

TMS adds in savings accounts because they “act” as if the money is there available on demand, even if it is not. However Shostak does not add in savings accounts for precisely the same reason. I side with Shostak.

The irony is that most of those claiming to only count money and not credit in their definitions are doing anything but.

Moreover, even Shostak’s Money AMS or M Prime includes the results of credit transactions because money from checking accounts has been swept into savings accounts and lent out. (See the discussion of sweeps in What is Money and How Does One Measure It?).

The fact that savings deposits have no reserve requirements at all makes matters even worse.

Practically Speaking, Both Money AMS and True Money Supply Contain Credit

As long as one is embarking down a “practical path” one may as well have a completely practical model.

My practical model as defined in Fiat World Mathematical Model says that credit and credit marked to market dramatically effect the way the economy works.

In a fiat world, money is printed into existence by the central bank – in the United States the Fed. Given there is nothing backing up this money, it is inherently worthless. However, one can think of as real. It was printed (even if only electronically), therefore it exists.

In addition to the previously mentioned money supply, fractional reserve lending allows credit to be extended by banks and financial institutions on top of that inherently worthless money. Indeed, banks and financial institutions have leveraged credit to base money at ratios of 30-1, 50-1 or even higher.

It’s pretty amazing if you think about it: Credit is extended with 30-50 times leverage on inherently worthless paper.

Ponzi Financing

Borrowers have to pay interest on the amount borrowed. However, the interest and the debt cannot possibly be paid back except by an ever expanding Ponzi scheme of lending. That scheme can last only as long as everyone believes the debt can be paid back and the market value of that debt keeps rising.

It’s a faith based system in which banks extend loans and hold the credit on the books (or in many cases off the books in various structured instruments). The banks are thought of as being well capitalized as long as the value of credit on the books in relation to their reserves meets some ridiculously low minimum set by the Fed.

This is how the system works, using the term “works” loosely.

Day of Reckoning

The day of reckoning comes when asset prices start falling, defaults soar, and the value of credit on the books starts plunging. That day of reckoning has arrived.

And if leverage is high enough, as it was with Bear Stearns and Lehman, the institutions are wiped out overnight. Citigroup (C), Bank of America (BAC), Fannie Mae (FNM), Freddie Mac (FRE) and AIG are essentially in the same position of Lehman except the taxpayers via the Treasury are funding the bailouts.

Practically speaking, the process of wiping out that credit (or even marking that credit to market) has a profound affect on the way asset prices react, the way corporate bond yields react, and the way treasury yields react.

Practically speaking we are in deflation by many measures of credit, as well as symptoms such as treasury yields, falling home prices, the CPI, rents, credit card rates and usage, etc, while those looking only at Money TMS (or even money AMS) say we are not in deflation and never will be.

One can define inflation and deflation however one wants. However, a true test of the model is how well it predicts behavior of people and asset prices in comparison to stagflationary periods in the 70s as well as a universally recognized deflationary period like the Great Depression

Valid Measures Of Inflation?

Money AMS (which M Prime tries to mimic) may be a good measure of “Monetary Inflation”, with True Money Supply (TMS) is a fair second-best choice. However, neither properly accounts for the real world effect of what happens to the economy when bank lending and credit falls off the cliff.

This “recovery” we have seen is based on a mirage, that the debts on the books of banks is not as bad off as everyone thought. This is what happens when a Fed and Congress throw $trillions around in bailouts and various stimulus plans.

Did the Fed stimulus temporarily produce inflation causing marked to marked credit on lenders books rise? Yes that is possible, perhaps even likely given the reaction to the stock market.

However, given that true mark to market accounting is not taking place and banks and lenders are playing shell games with the Fed and investors, it is not possible to know.

What we do know is that banks are not lending.

Total Bank Credit

Total bank credit is in uncharted territory at -5%. The series has never gone below 0 before. We can also see excess reserves piling up at banks.

Excess Reserves At Depositary Institutions

The Fed has printed but the money is just sitting there. Is that inflation?

Please consider this audio with Austrian Economist Frank Shostak on Mises on September 30, 2008 discussing recent actions by the Fed.

Will this printing create [price] inflation? This is dependent very much on what money will do next. If banks will not lend and banks sit on that cash forever and ever like the great depression because the risk is too high and the banks do not know if the lending will end up in good assets or bad assets, and because banks are in so many bad assets now they probably will not lend at all.

That is the observation that Murray Rothbard made, that during the Great Depression that banks have chosen not to lend because the risk of accumulating bad assets was far to high. So they were sitting on massive reserves. That is what is developing right now.

A good example is what happened in Japan in 2001-2002 where the Bank of Japan pumped 300% at one stage and lending continued to collapse. I expect similar things to happen here. If lending will not increase we can conclude this will not be inflationary.

Why Aren’t Banks Lending?

Inquiring minds might be asking “Why Aren’t Banks Lending?”

1) There are no credit-worthy businesses that want to borrow.

2) Consumers are tapped out and do not want to borrow.

3) Banks are scared to death of pending commercial real estate losses, credit card losses, residential real estate losses, home equity lines of credit losses, and losses in general.

4) Asset prices are simply too high (and banks know it) and the securitization market has dried up

Number three above is the most critical one. Banks need those reserves to cover future writeoffs.

Assets at Banks whose ALLL exceeds their Nonperforming Loans

ALLL stands for allowances for loan and lease losses.

Allowances for loan losses will decrease as charge offs increase. However, the above charts are in relation to non-performing loans.

Because provisions for loan losses are a direct hit to earnings, and because allowances are at ridiculously low levels, bank earnings have been wildly over-stated. That is one indication of optimistic forward earnings.

Another indication of optimistic forward earnings is that banks have not yet gone to a mark-to-market model on assets. Factor both together and financial earning estimates are wildly optimist.

Not only are forward earnings estimates ridiculous, future writeoffs are poised to soar.

Square Pegs And Round Holes

It is important to understand that all of us are attempting to model our own interpretations of how to apply an Austrian economic model in a fiat credit-based world.

Measuring inflation solely by Money AMS or True Money supply while ignoring credit even though both measures contain credit transactions is attempting to put a square peg into a round hole.

As a practical matter, I could see a deflationary credit bust coming and called for all time record low yields in treasuries on January 20, 2008 in Time To Short Treasuries?

Kass: The bond market is in a bubble that is reminiscent of (and quite possibly as extreme as) other bubbles during previous eras. From my perch, the only issue is the timing of this trade.

Mish: Timing is indeed everything and perhaps there is a temporary selloff. But the primary trend is for lower yields. Perhaps much lower yields. There is no bubble in bonds. Not yet.

Those who want to see how low treasury yields can get and stay there, need to look at Japan. Yields in the US are going to go far lower and stay lower longer than nearly everyone thinks.

Right near the tip top of the commodity bubble on June 26, 2008 when everyone thought yields were going to the moon and the dollar would crash I asked: Is The Inflation Scare Over Yet?

Those focused on the CPI failed to see any chance of the Fed Fund’s Rate at 2.00 again. On the other hand, those focused on the destruction of credit from an Austrian economic perspective got this correct. That is just one reason why it makes more sense to watch the credit markets than the CPI. The second is the CPI is so distorted it is useless.

In my opinion, it is very likely new all time lows in the 10-year treasury yield and 30-year long bond are coming up.

Tuesday, January 06, 2009: Reflections On 2008, Themes For 2009

It is quite possible the lows in treasury yields are in. Unlike 2008 where I was constantly beating the drums for lower yields, 2009 could be different.

Well 2009 was different and the reason is the massive amount of stimulus. However, that stimulus has not produced any meaningful results as can be seen by jobs and by bank lending.

As a practical matter this looks like the false bounce in Spring of 1930.

Humpty Dumpty On Inflation

Assuming we can all agree that the US was in deflation in the 1930’s, then let’s discuss the conditions at the time as well as what happened to cause those conditions.

Please consider Humpty Dumpty on Inflation

Practical Definitions Of Inflation And Deflation

Most know my definitions by now but here they are again for convenience.

  • Inflation is a net increase in money supply and credit.
  • Deflation is a net decrease in money supply and credit.

In both cases credit must be marked to market to make any practical sense out of what is happening. Those who focus solely on money supply cannot easily explain stock markets that have fallen in half (this does not happen in disinflation), TIPs yields, a global race to ZIRP, or many other events that are happening.

Humpty Dumpty Defines Inflation

Unfortunately there are many definitions of inflation and deflation strewn about. Some play the role of Humpty Dumpty changing meanings at whim, switching from commodity prices, to consumer prices, to expansion of base money or M3 or whatever measure of money seems to be expanding at the fastest rate.

Some do the inflationista two-step to avoid admitting that we are indeed in deflation, choosing instead to call it “disinflation”


In short: “We are going to have a period of deflation that we will instead call disinflation.”

‘When I use a word,’ Humpty Dumpty said, in a rather scornful tone,’ it means just what I choose it to mean, neither more nor less.’

‘The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things.’

‘The question is,’ said Humpty Dumpty, ‘which is to be master – that’s all.’

A Practical Look At “Flation”

Here is a table of conditions and whether or not one would expect to see those conditions in inflation, deflation, stagflation, hyperinflation, and disinflation. Some expectations are debatable so I left those blank.

click on chart for sharper image

That chart is from December 11, 2008 thus some may disagree with where a few of the marks are.

Still others might suggest that treasury yields are now rising and the bottom in treasury yields is in. Certainly at 0% the short end of the curve has bottomed, and perhaps the long end has too.

However, as a practical matter, the 10-year treasury yield at 3.40% as of November 2, 2009 is amazingly low, especially in light of the fact that hard-core inflationists expected yields to do be soaring to 10% based on misconceptions about the CPI and/or money supply.

Symptoms vs. Definition

Bear in mind the above table is a table of symptoms one would expect to see in deflation. A practical test of a good definition inflation and deflation is whether or not one would have predicted those symptoms based on their model of inflation and deflation.

Those following money supply or the CPI certainly could not have reasonably expected a simultaneous massacre in both the stock market and treasury yields in conjunction with rising corporate bond yields.

Those who could see and understand what a collapse in credit would do, had no such problems.

Where To Now?

Corporate bond yields have fallen since I wrote about Humpty Dumpty. And certainly the stock market has risen. However, underlying credit conditions have not improved.

Marked-To-Market valuations have likely improved, but given the underlying fundamentals have not changed, I see no reason to change my model just yet.

Credit (and credit problems) dwarf monetary concerns at the present.

Until something happens to disrupt that model (far more likely from Congress than the Fed at this point) I see little reason to change my model. In fact, it will likely not be the model that changes, but rather changing conditions will give the model a different forecast.

Right now, I still expect the US to slip in and out of deflation and recession for years to come just as happened in Japan. I also expect we will suffer through a Decade of Lost Jobs.

Those focused on money supply alone, the CPI, the stock market, so-called leading indicators, or any other factors are likely to miss the boat unless their forecast just happens to be in alignment with credit conditions.

Unfortunately, I cannot state a precise measurement of inflation or deflation given the shell games at the banks and the Fed regarding mark-to-market accounting.

However, the hard data shows banks aren’t lending, consumer credit is contracting, credit writeoffs are likely to exceed monetary printing, and symptoms like treasury yields are in generally in agreement. That to me is good enough.

Given that credit conditions and bank lending have not changed and treasury yields are still near historic lows, fears over run away prices and soaring interest rates are misplaced. You can choose to call this environment “inflation” or “stagflation” if you want. No one can stop you. However, practically speaking, there is far more “stag” than “flation” and the proper prefix is still “de”. The stage is set for another market crash.

Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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