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Sen. Scott Brown (R- Mass.) denounced House Republicans for rejecting a payroll tax cut deal on Tuesday, and accused his colleagues of putting politics before the needs of American families. “It angers me that House Republicans would rather continue playing politics than find solutions,” Brown said in a statement released shortly after the House voted to block the bipartisan bill. “Their actions will hurt American families and be detrimental to our fragile economy. We are Americans first; now is not the time for drawing lines in the sand.” The Senate bill would have prevented the payroll tax cut from expiring on January 1, 2012 by ensuring a two-month extension. Republicans in the House opposed to the bill argued in favor of a year-long extension or no extension at all, claiming that approving a bill for just two months would create uncertainty. Brown’s criticism followed harsh comments he made on Monday, when he called the GOP’s refusal to compromise “irresponsible and wrong.” Brown — who is up for re-election in 2012 — is preparing for what will likely be a challenging race against Democratic Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren. A recent poll spelled good news for Warren, showing her leading Brown 49 to 42 .

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Scott Brown: House GOP Would Rather Play Politics Than Find Solutions

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Gloria Takla had just eight days before the bank was going to evict her from her home. But this afternoon, about 30 Occupy Redwood City, Occupy San Jose and other Bay Area residents marched from Takla’s foreclosed home to the Chase Bank across Courthouse Square to demand that the banks extend her loan. After an hour-long negotiation during which protesters occupied the bank’s interior, the bank agreed to extend the loan expiration from Dec. 14 to Feb. 14, 2012, a loan she first took in February 2010.

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Occupy Protesters Successfully Save Retired Woman’s Home

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Tire Company Accused Of Unfair Labor Practices During Lockout

December 8, 2011

TOLEDO, Ohio — Factory workers who have been locked out for over a week accused Cooper Tire of unfair labor practices, accusing the company of asking them to approve a contract without knowing how much money they would be making. Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. locked out about 1,000 workers at its plant in Findlay on Nov. 28, a day after union members voted down a tentative three-year agreement. The company has brought in temporary workers to keep the plant operating and prevent a work stoppage at its factory in Texarkana, Ark. Members of the United Steelworkers filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board on Tuesday, saying the company isn’t being upfront about the contract being offered. A message seeking comment was left with Cooper Tire on Thursday. Cooper Tire, which is based in Findlay, makes replacement tires for cars and trucks. Company officials have said they need a competitive agreement to keep operating and have blamed union leaders for not accepting offers to extend the current contract. The company said it couldn’t reach agreement with the union on a new, long-term deal or a one-year extension. The union would only accept a 30-day extension, Cooper Tire said. The sides have been talking to each other since the lockout began. Union workers want to regain some concessions they accepted in 2008 in hopes of saving their jobs. That contract included wage and benefits cuts that cost workers $30 million over three years, union officials said. That agreement came at a time when Cooper Tire said it planned to close one of its four U.S. plants because of slumping demand for tires and higher production costs. It later closed its factory in Albany, Ga. Cooper Tire announced Thursday that it has agreed to buy a tire plant in Krusevac, Serbia, that it said will give it an opening into Russia and Europe.

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Naomi Klein: Best of TEDTalks 2011, #13: Addicted to Risk

December 8, 2011

As a culture we have been far too willing to gamble with things that are precious and irreplaceable.

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Super Congress Failure Could Mean ‘The Worst Of All Worlds’

November 20, 2011

WASHINGTON — If the deficit-cutting supercommittee fails, Congress will face a crummy choice. Lawmakers can allow payroll tax cuts and jobless aid for millions to expire or they extend them and increase the nation’s $15 trillion debt by at least $160 billion. President Barack Obama and Democrats on the deficit panel want to use the committee’s product to carry their jobs agenda. That includes cutting in half the 6.2 percent Social Security payroll tax and extending jobless benefits for people who have been unemployed for more than six months. Also caught up in what promises to be a chaotic legislative dash for the exits next month is the need to pass legislation to prevent an almost 30 percent cut in Medicare payments to doctors. Several popular business tax breaks and relief from the alternative minimum tax also expire at year’s end. A debt plan from the supercommittee, it was hoped, would have served as a sturdy, filibuster-proof vehicle to tow all of these expiring provisions into law. But after months of negotiations, Republicans and Democrats were far apart on any possible compromise, and there was no indication of progress Saturday. Failure by the committee would leave lawmakers little time to pick up the pieces. And there’s no guarantee it all can get done, especially given the impact of those measures on the spiraling debt. Instead of cutting the deficit with a tough, bipartisan budget deal, Congress could pivot to spending enormous sums on expiring big-ticket policies. If lawmakers rebel against the cost, as is possible, they would bear responsibility for allowing policies such as the payroll tax cut, enacted a year ago to help prop up the economy, to lapse. Last year’s extensions of jobless benefits and first-ever cut in the payroll tax were accomplished with borrowed money. The 2 percent payroll tax cut expiring in December gave 121 million families a tax cut averaging $934 last year at a total cost of about $120 billion, according to the Tax Policy Center. Obama wants to cut the payroll tax by another percentage point for workers at a total cost of $179 billion and reduce the employer share of the tax in half as well for most companies, which carries a $69 billion price tag. “The notion of imposing a new payroll tax on people after Jan. 1 in the midst of this recession on working families is totally counterproductive,” said Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate. Letting extended jobless assistance expire would mean that more than 6 million people would lose benefits averaging $296 a week next year, with 1.8 million cut off within a month. Economist say those jobless benefits – up to 99 weeks of them in high unemployment states – are among the most effective way to stimulate the economy because unemployed people generally spend the money right away. “We will have to address those issues,” Durbin said. Extending benefits to the long-term unemployed would cost almost $50 billion under Obama’s plan. Preventing the Medicare payment cuts to doctors for an additional 18 months to two years would in all likelihood cost $26 billion to $32 billion more. Lawmakers also had hoped to renew some tax breaks for business and prevent the alternative minimum tax from sticking more than 30 million taxpayers with higher tax bills. Those items could be addressed retroactively next year, but only increase the uncertainty among already nervous consumers and investors. This time, Obama wants them to be paid for. But a move by Democrats to try to finance jobs measures with hundreds of billions of dollars in savings from drawing down troops in Iraq and Afghanistan has gotten a cold shoulder from top Republicans. “I’ve made it pretty clear that those savings that are coming to us as a result of the wind-down of the war in Iraq and the war in Afghanistan should be banked, should not be used to offset other spending,” said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. He did not address whether war savings could be used to extend expiring tax cuts. Those savings are the natural result of national security strategies unrelated to the federal budget. Deficit hawks say tapping into them is simply an accounting gimmick. “It’s just the worst of all worlds if that were to happen,” said Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. But without the war money at their disposal, lawmakers simply can’t pay for the payroll tax cut and jobless benefits. Liberals such as Durbin are fine with employing deficit financing, especially if the alternative is playing Scrooge just before the holidays. “Many people will hate to go home for Christmas saying to the American people, `Merry Christmas, your payroll taxes go up 2 percent Jan. 1 and unemployment benefits are cut off.’”

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David Coates: Banker Power Trumping Democratic Power: The Crisis on Two Continents

November 18, 2011

We live in troubled and ironic times. The times are certainly troubled. The IMF’s Managing Director has recently spoken with some justification of a looming “lost decade” for the global economy — warning of “dark clouds” blocking the capacity of the world’s leading economies to deliver a renewed bout of economic growth and generalized prosperity. The times are also deeply ironic: since the governing solution to those dark clouds — in countries as substantial as Italy and Greece, and in institutions as powerful as the IMF — would currently appear to be the replacement of elected leaders by appointed technocrats. The solution favored by the powerful is the transfer of state authority from democratically chosen leaders to governors drawn predominantly from the ranks of the very bankers whose inadequate supervision of their own industry darkened the skies in the first place. In this manner, a global financial crisis that initially discredited bankers has incrementally morphed into one to be settled on terms directly specified by bankers themselves. A crisis of economics has been turned into a crisis of democracy. It is an outrage. The only thing challenging that morphing is the explosion of popular protest which has accompanied it. In key cities in Europe now, the battle lines are being drawn between the technocrats in the ministries and the protesters on the streets. In key cities in the United States, similar lines exist between those who control Wall Street and those who occupy it. If the next decade is not to be lost, it is absolutely vital that, in the clash between money and the people, the people win. But will they? Only if, inspired by the occupation of Wall Street, a wider political constituency in the United States comes to recognize the force of four truths that the conservative media work endlessly to deny. 1. It was behavior by key privately-owned financial institutions, and not action by federal agencies, that caused the economic crisis of 2007-8, even though leading figures within those financial institutions have yet to be held accountable for that behavior. Wall Street, not Pennsylvania Avenue, made this mess . A lot of ink is spilt these days blaming our existing economic problems on excessive government spending and the over-regulation of private industry, particularly private banking. Nothing could be further from the truth. It was a deregulated set of major privately-owned financial institutions , each seeking profit growth by speculating with other people’s money, that triggered the credit bubble of the Bush years and which brought the global banking system to temporary gridlock in September 2008. In the first years of the new millennium, ” Goldman envy, ” as it was reportedly termed, drove investment banking into a frenzy of risk taking for which later even Goldman Sach’s Lloyd Blankfein publicly apologized. People complain now about anarchist elements in the OWS movement damaging property. They are right to be critical; but if they are to be consistent, they must also recognize the vastly greater scale of damage to property (and to human happiness) inflicted by Wall Street excess prior to 2008. According to later IMF calculations, the toxic assets released into the global banking system by Wall Street institutions cost that system at least $4.1 trillion; and it cost the rest of us maybe 50 million jobs world-wide. Anarchist-inflicted damage on shop windows and parked cars is as nothing compared to the scale of factory closures and community destruction inflicted by a deregulated banking sector. Far from being punished for their anarchy, those financial institutions then received huge quantities of public assistance. For all the claims now that government profligacy is our problem, without major injections of public money into the U.S. and European banking systems in 2008-9, the recession would have been deeper and many of those privately-owned financial institutions would have collapsed. Until recently, “the scope of the Fed’s private lending had…only been guessed at, but figures obtained under the Freedom of Information Act… show the nation’s central banker issued loans to more than 30 institutions between August 2007 and April 2010, including over 100 loans of1 billion or more.” At the peak of the crisis, in December 2008, the Fed had1.2 trillion of loans outstanding to major U.S. and European financial institutions, and that was just part of “9 trillion in low-interest overnight loans to banks and other Wall Street companies [made by the Fed] during the crisis .” “The data reveal banks turning to the Fed for help almost daily in the fall of 2008 as the central bank lowered lending standards and extended relief to all kinds of institutions,” with the biggest users of the Fed lending programs being “some of the world’s largest banks, including Citigroup, Bank of America, Swiss-based UBS and Britain’s Barclays.” Action by public authorities saved Wall Street in 2008-9. Bankers were not so quick to label such spending as profligate when they themselves were the recipients of the public money being spent. Moreover, major financial institutions have regularly of late made modest settlements with regulatory agencies: trading a degree of repayment of profits acquired by dubious means for freedom from further federally-initiated legal action. “Deferred prosecution” is the euphemism used, as companies make very small financial settlements and very big promises of reformed behavior. So JPMorgan Chase settled with the SEC for $228 million in July, the same month the Federal Reserve fined Wells Fargo a mere $85 million . (Wells Fargo’s revenues in the last quarter before the fine exceeded $20 billion! ) Thus far no major financier has been jailed for any wrong-doing during the run-up to the worst financial meltdown the global economy has experienced since 1932, and the Obama administration has not yet sought damages in any way commensurate with the scale of the damage inflicted. Other agencies and individuals are still seeking recompense through litigation, including the Federal Housing Finance Agency and the Attorney Generals of both California and New York — so bigger settlements may yet be made: but even someone as centrally involved in subprime lending as Angelo R. Mozilo of Countrywide Financial currently remains at liberty, the bulk of his personal wealth intact. So too does Joseph J. Cassano , head of Financial Products at A.I.G. 2. The resulting recession continues to cause widespread economic misery, but it has not prevented key financial institutions from renewed profit-taking and sustained resistance to their tighter regulation. Wall Street has gone on its merry way, declining to help clean up any part of the mess that its excess made. Main Street continues to struggle. What economic recovery has occurred remains largely jobless in nature, with companies reluctant to hire and banks reluctant to lend. The money that reconstituted them has yet to be passed on in equal measure to the small and medium size enterprises that are so heavily dependent, for their capacity to function at all, on a regular flow of easily-available bank credit. Currently the top 20 banks in the United States, the very banks bailed out in 2008-9 by taxpayer largesse, “devote only 18 percent of their commercial loan portfolio to small business.” Profit levels and employment levels in the rest of the U.S. economy remain low. Poverty levels remain high, and the distribution of income and wealth remains unusually unequal. All this at the very time when American banks are quietly raising the fees they charge, and when both in the U.S. and in Europe the biggest companies are now excessively cash-rich, poised to engage in a frenzy of mergers and acquisitions that will create ever larger companies without any commensurate increase in employment. Indeed the banking sector has lately made its own contribution to America’s high level of long-term unemployment. It is worth noting that Bank of America’s decision to lay off 30,000 of its employees was the largest single culling of staff by any single private company in the United States in the whole of 2011, and Bank of America is not the only major financial institution currently culling the lower ranks of its staff . Senior figures in leading Wall Street institutions, by contrast, have rapidly returned to their old and personally profitable ways. As John Cassidy put it, “on Wall Street, the Great Depression didn’t last very long.” The bonuses of senior figures, curtailed in 2008 and 2009 under a gale of public criticism, quickly returned to pre-recession levels as public attention shifted elsewhere. “In New York City, the average Wall Street salary last year grew 16.1 percent, to361,330, which [was] more than five times the average salary of a private-sector worker in the city .” Profit margins in the financial sector have similarly bounced back, as have practices roundly condemned in the immediate wake of the 2008 meltdown as financially destabilizing. The largest financial institutions in particular have flourished well in the wake of the recession that their misjudgments generated: “Since December 31, 2008, the largest banks — those with more than $100 billion in assets — have increased their total combined assets by about 10 percent .” The top four U.S. banks held 32 percent of total bank deposits before the recession. They now hold 40 percent. Not that most of what large Wall Street institutions do is in any way useful. “Socially useless activity ” is how the chairman of the UK’s financial watchdog, the FSA, famously characterized it. But the lesson is clear: being useful is not the way to grow rapidly rich in our crazy casino economy. Resistance by financial institutions to tighter regulation under Dodd-Frank and through Basle III has now intensified. Working closely with Republicans in Congress, the banking lobby effectively blocked the appointment of Elizabeth Warren as head of the Consumer Financial Protection Agency created by the new legislation. Together they slowed down the development and introduction of the regulations required by Dodd-Franks: by June 2011, just 24 rules had been completed, out of 385 required . In spite of the Obama administration’s persistent willingness to moderate the new regulations, Wall Street firms spent $52 million on lobbying in the first quarter of 2011 alone: more than they spent on lobbying when the new financial legislation was being debated and passed in 2010. In September, Jamie Dimon (the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase) even went so far as to condemn the modest new requirements of Basle III for higher capital ratios as ” anti-American ,” earlier saying that attempts at tighter regulation were the cause of the prolonged recession: that financial reform legislation was, as he put it, ” holding us back at this point .” As Sony Kapoor, managing director of Re-Define, a financial think tank, told the Financial Times in October: “big banks are seeking to moderate progress that has been made, using as an excuse the very crisis they helped trigger.” It is not just Wall Street profits that have rebounded. So too has Wall Street arrogance and self-confidence. 3. The sovereign debt crisis now bedeviling the Eurozone economies is a direct consequence of similar errors of judgment by European financial institutions. It is one compounded by public spending decisions made to counter the effects of a 2008 financial meltdown imported into Europe through trans-Atlantic banking networks. Wall Street institutions helped spread the mess from here to there. Arrogance and self-confidence has been evident too in the lending practices of leading European banks. With the establishment of the Eurozone in 1999, money flowed from northern European banks into Mediterranean economies which were then thought to be fully protected by their Eurozone membership. The U.S. investment bank Goldman Sachs proved to be a key player here, helping the Greek government maintain this damaging illusion by obscuring its scale of indebtedness. As The Financial Times reported as early as February 2010, “outright anger” was growing in Europe long before the current crisis: anger “about the role played by western investment banks and hedge funds,” anger about “the role that Wall Street titans such as Goldman Sachs have played in helping Greece and other Eurozone countries to massage their debt data over the past decade to meet European limits, and thus to mask some of the fiscal woes that have now come back to haunt international markets.” Government debt may now be the issue in parts of the Eurozone, but even in those troubled economies public debt was not the prime driver of economic growth after 1999. That role was played by private debt — flows of money from northern banks financing private consumption along the Mediterranean coast, particularly the consumption of housing. In 2010, “the ratio of private to public debt in Spain, Portugal and Greece [was] respectively 87:13, 85:15 and 58:42. The bulk of fresh debt created in the course of EMU [was] private, while public debt [fell] proportionately.” It was the recession of 2008-9 which then “boosted public debt, turning it into the pivot of the Eurozone crisis .” Government debt in the Eurozone as a percentage of GNP declined from 72 percent in 1999 to 67 percent in 2007. Spain, for example, cut its government debt from 60 to 40 percent in the decade before 2008, and its public finances were in surplus immediately before the 2008 Wall Street implosion. Pre-2008, Irish public finances were also in solid order — Ireland had a balanced budget — balanced, that is, until the private banking system in Ireland collapsed and the Irish government moved in to bail it out. The Portuguese story is not qualitatively different. Greece alone was the outlier — with a debt ratio of 100 percent of GDP when it joined the euro in 2001 – its sins obscured for a decade with help from Goldman Sachs . So let no one claim that it is the big welfare states of Europe and the big public spenders who are now most in trouble. They are not. The big welfare spenders are the Scandinavian economies, not the Mediterranean ones: and yet it is with the viability of Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain that foreign investors are now the most concerned. The problem of sovereign debt is currently being compounded by the terms which financial institutions inside and outside the Eurozone are now demanding as proof of the ultimate reliability of the loans they have made/are making. The terms are austerity terms – demands for huge and immediate cuts in public spending of the sort normally only inflicted on third world economies in receipt of an IMF bailout. The casualties of those requirements are not bankers. They are European workers and the European poor. By hitting both, so lowering consumer demand, the terms set as new loan guarantees will inevitably push economy after economy into stagnation/recession, lowering the level of GDP and perversely increasing the debt burden. As Martin Wolf put it, “the Eurozone has decided that the losses of private sector creditors should be socialized and the ultimate burden fall on the taxpayers of deficit countries. The latter will then suffer first a slump and then years of fiscal austerity.” How then can we be surprised that Eurozone unemployment is now at record heights — some 15.7 million people were out of work across the zone as a whole in September — and that sane voices, in the European labor movement and beyond, are now arguing strongly for a jobs and growth strategy rather than an austerity one, begging European leaders not to compound a banking crisis with a self-inflicted recession. It is a call that major European political leaders — particularly those in Berlin and Frankfurt — are not yet heeding, to their immediate discredit and to our future discomfort. 4. Financial institutions were the conduit through which the original U.S. crisis crossed into Europe; and they may yet be the conduit by which the resulting Eurozone crisis flows back into the U.S. We are still living with the consequences of one banking crisis and may yet have to endure the consequences of another. This banking crisis might yet return to bite us a second time. It is a mistake to think that the adverse consequences of the 2008 meltdown have now been entirely washed out of the global financial system. They have not. Major European banks remain dangerously exposed to the long-term consequences of the U.S. housing crisis, many of them still sitting on large quantities of “credit-market assets dating back to the first round of the financial crisis in addition to sovereign debt from struggling Eurozone countries.” The Wall Street Journal reported the Royal Bank of Scotland with €79.6 billion of credit-market assets currently on its books but only €10.4 billion of sovereign debt. The reported ratios were similar for HSBC: 54.3:14.6; Deutsche Bank 51.9:12.8; and ING 36.0:11.2. It is true that some European banks are ratioed the other way, heavily over-exposed to sovereign debt. The ratio of credit-based assets to sovereign debt for the Italian bank UniCredit, for example, is 7.2:51.8; and Dexia, the Franco-Belgian finance house that came close to collapse in October, reportedly had 21 billion euros of Greek, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese bonds on its books when its flow of credit dried up. But whichever way the ratio goes, one thing is abundantly clear. Major European banks have toxic assets on their books that straddle the Atlantic and leave them vulnerable to meltdown in the event of a sovereign debt default by any major Eurozone economy. Even the kind of settlement proposed for the Greek economy – a voluntary mark-down of 50 percent of the value of existing Greek debt – is bound to establish so powerful a precedent, and to give European banks so severe a ” haircut ,” as to seriously threaten their capacity ever to grow a full scalp again. This is not just Europe’s problem. It is also ours. U.S. banks remain similarly exposed to both the on-going U.S. housing crisis and the Eurozone debt crisis. Bank of America’s share price fell dramatically in August because of the Bank’s need to take additional write-offs on bad mortgages acquired with its 2008 purchase of Countrywide Financial; and the U.S. banking system as a whole is currently holding in total “about 700 billion of government debt from the five shakiest Eurozone economies.” “Among Dexia’s biggest trading partners [were] several large United States institutions, including Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs ;” and the CBO recently estimated that U.S. bank exposures to “German and French banks are in excess of1.2 trillion, equivalent to about 10 percent of total commercial bank assets in the United States.” The Geneva-based Bank for International Settlements similarly reported that “at mid-year banks in the United States had757 billion in derivatives contracts and650 billion in credit commitments from European banks .” In the second quarter of 2011, if The Financial Times data is correct, that included a gross exposure to French banks by the big American Five of nearly180 billion: Goldman Sachs108.5 billion, Morgan Stanley28.1 billion, JPMorgan Chase22.8 billion, Citigroup8.9billion and Bank of America/Merrill Lynch also8.9 billion. That should not surprise us because it is hard to overstate the degree of integration of the two regional economic blocs. “The European Union and United States economies are the two biggest in the world and their financial institutions are deeply intertwined. They have the single largest bilateral trade relationship in the global system, together accounting for nearly a third of global trade flows .” The danger of contagion from the Eurozone crisis back into the United States is now unavoidably real. The cumulative effect is an already visible tightening of U.S. lending volumes and terms. As Roger Altman noted: ‘for the American and western European economies to decline again, when unemployment levels are already so high, would be disastrous.” And yet the danger signs are thickening daily: that the European banking crisis might creep back into the U.S. through Wall Street institutions, just as once the U.S. crisis crept out into the Eurozone through a similar set of relationships. We are now in the fourth year of an ongoing financial crisis. It is one characterized by bank failures at the beginning (the crisis of toxic assets), bank failures in the middle (the failure to release investment funds), and now, more than likely, bank failures at the end (this time, slipped in from Europe). If a second recession is in our future, it is important that we learn the lessons of the first. If once more these grotesquely over-large and over- arrogant financial institutions begin to fail, they should not be bailed out with endless tax dollars. They should be taken directly into public ownership, so that their investment decisions can be dictated by long-term reconstruction needs rather than short-term profit-taking, and so that their senior figures can be paid public-sector wages. And then, if these wayward financial institutions are ever returned to private ownership, they should first be broken down and sold in smaller units, with their future size capped and their functions separated by a modern version of the Glass-Steagall Act. The only force keeping this case for financial control alive and well in the United States is the Occupy Wall Street protest movement. Bernie Sanders is quite right: “the Occupy Wall Street protests are shining a national spotlight on the most powerful, dangerous and secretive economic and political force in America.” In the wake of the Citizens United Supreme Court ruling, the bulk of the American political class has been bought. In the wake of the Eurozone crisis, the Greek and Italian political classes have been dismissed. On both continents the people doing the buying and the dismissing are ultimately senior bankers. “Why are so many people protesting against Wall Street?” John Wells asked. “Because it has become stronger than our democratic state and if unrestrained will take us down the dark road to political dictatorship to join the economic tyranny it currently enjoys.” Republicans are quick to tell us these days that when we protest against Wall Street excess, we introduce class warfare into American politics. But if this long financial crisis tells us anything, it is that class warfare was fully embedded in the American political system long before any of us decided to protest. As https://editorial.huffingtonpost.com/mt.cgi?__mode=view&_type=entry&id=1101305&blog_id=3#Dean Baker said: “When Wall Street rules, we get Wall Street rules.” Politics in a class-ridden society is always ultimately a zero-sum game. It is time therefore — in contemporary America — for class warfare by the economic elite to be superseded by class warfare by the working people: and not just time, but time that is long overdue. First posted with full academic citations at www.davidcoates.net

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Occupy Wall Street Protesters Clash With Police Outside Courthouse

November 6, 2011

NEW YORK — Hundreds of Occupy Wall Street protesters clashed with police in front of the New York Supreme Court building Saturday afternoon, after they and thousands others marched across to Foley Square from Zuccotti Park. At first, police officers stationed along the route largely stood by and watched as protesters marched up Broadway, playing tambourines, drums and harmonicas and chanting slogans like “How do you fix the deficit? Stop the wars, tax the rich!” As the protest swelled near Foley Square, New York Police Department motorcycles and cars began blocking off intersections. Stranded drivers honked — angrily, as they impotently inched forward towards the protesters, or in support, cheering and sticking thumbs ups and peace signs out the windows of their vehicles. The protesters were met on the steps of the courthouse by a line of officers, and more soon arrived, armed with plastic ties and rolled up orange barricades. Before moving in, a group of officers coordinated. One, holding a rolled piece of paper, told the group, “We’re saying it’s blocking a pedestrian walkway.” “Let’s go,” another officer shouted at his colleagues waiting with zip ties and barricades. “Get up there!” “Let’s stand fast there, huh?” a female officer encouraged, as other officers began saying through megaphones: “Right now, it’s illegal to be on the sidewalk, it’s a hazard.” Protesters began questioning the NYPD’s actions, citing their right to peacefully assemble. They paced the sidewalk in an effort to defend against the argument that the crowd was an obstruction. Several got in the faces of officers forming a human barricade on the courthouse steps. “You’re supposed to be our nation’s finest,” they shouted. “You’re the ones blocking the sidewalk!” Physical altercations began, with several officers roughly shoving protesters and protesters refusing to move, shouting in the faces of officers narrowing the sidewalk space behind the orange net barriers. “We don’t want nobody to get hurt!” an officer shouted on the megaphone. Officers provided several different reasons for the courthouse crackdown. “It’s our jobs, it’s taxpayer money,” a plainclothes man standing with the officers on the steps shouted at protesters. “It’s the rules.” An Officer Vance described the space as a “frozen zone” and said the officers’ actions were “securing the area.” “You can see I’m having a bad day here,” Vance said, asking HuffPost to keep moving. “They asked me to clear it and I cleared it out,” said Officer Birmingham beside him, confirming that the NYPD had “deemed it unsafe.” According to witnesses, one woman was caught between advancing cops and protesters and dragged across the barricade. She was taken up the courthouse steps and cuffed with zip ties against a courthouse column. Desiree Frias, 18, cried as two cops brought her down the steps toward squad cars. “I just want to go back to college,” she said, gasping. She tried to spell her name between sobs, asking for someone to tell her fiance what had happened as the arresting officers urged her to calm down. Activist and former New Jersey city councilman Jim Keady, 40, tried to advise Frias of her rights before officers took her. “It’s going to be okay,” he said. “You might not make it back to class on Monday, but this is going to be one of the most important lessons you’ll ever learn, in exercising your rights.” One officer said she was to be taken to One Police Plaza and likely processed back at the courthouse. “They just handed her to me, I have no choice,” said the female officer on her right. The number of officers present swelled to about one hundred but only an estimated half-dozen protesters were arrested, according to witnesses. Officers declined to comment or stated they didn’t know the number arrested. Despite physical altercations and heated exchanges, there are no known injuries at this time. Pepper spray did not appear to be used to push back the crowd. The standoff between protesters and police lasted several hours before protesters dispersed, many headed back to Zuccotti Park. After they had cleared out, several dozen officers remained stationed on the courthouse steps. Later on Saturday night, several hundred protesters marched to One Police Plaza, where the arrested protesters were due for arraignment, in a show of solidarity. The march organizers interrupted a meeting of the General Assembly in Zuccotti Park to recruit support. Several dozen police officers responded by accompanying the protesters from Zuccotti Park on foot and by vehicle. Motorcycles formed a barrier in front of the courthouse steps. The protesters stopped in front of the courthouse on the corner of Hogan and Centre streets, where officers also blocked the steps. “They say this shit can’t happen,” said a speaker on the steps via the “people’s mic,” while officers looked on. Rumors have swirled in recent days that officers will attempt a clean-up or clear-out of the park this weekend, but those rumors are as of yet unconfirmed. An officer standing near City Hall Saturday afternoon additional authorities had been mobilized for the night to perform duties beyond a nightly counterterrorism check of the city’s most iconic sites. Nearly 30 additional cars were out beyond the usual 100. “We’re on standby in case anything goes on downtown,” the officer said, clarifying, “at Zuccotti.” UPDATE: 9:45 p.m. — Desiree Frias is being charged with assaulting an officer, a felony, and obstructing government administration and resisting arrest, both misdemeanors, according to the clerk’s office at One Police Plaza. According to witnesses, Frias was caught between officers trying to clear the area in Foley Square and protesters trying to hold their ground. It remains unclear what type of assault was allegedly committed by Frias, who was wearing a purple knitted cap and long blue skirt at the time of her arrest. Court clerk Joe Simon said he could not provide information about the other protesters who were arrested, and he said he believed Frias would not come before a judge Saturday night. He expected the protesters would be arraigned no sooner than 1:00 p.m. Sunday, which is when the courthouse is scheduled to open. It typically takes at least 24 hours to process the paperwork, Simon said, but he noted that at least 350 people were awaiting processing at the 5th precinct where Frias was being held. Frias’s fiance Hector Asavedo said he had not been able to reach her and had not been given any information, though the clerk said she would have access to a phone at the precinct and could consult legal aid once her paperwork was processed. The lawyer would then stand with her before the judge “once she’s physically brought up.” Moira Meltzer of the New York office of the National Lawyers Guild contacted this reporter in search of information about Frias’ charges. Meltzer said her office had so far had difficulty obtaining information from the authorities. The Lawyer’s Guild Is representing all the protesters arrested at the demonstration in front of the court building and associated protests Saturday. Meltzer said she has 21 names, but doesn’t know if that list includes all who were arrested.

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Blake Fleetwood: How Hillary Clinton Can Create 1.3 Million Jobs at Zero Cost To Taxpayers

October 21, 2011

Despite our desperate need for jobs, 16 million unemployed, the U.S. is ignoring a surefire way to create 1.3 million good, no-cost jobs and add $390 billion to U.S. exports in the next decade. The world travel market grew by 60 million annual visitors in the last decade — a virtual worldwide gold rush — but the U.S. welcomed essentially the same number of travelers as it did in 2000. Our market share of international tourism has declined from 17% to 12% in less than a decade. Millions of qualified would-be tourists, who want to travel to our great country, are being frustrated and turned away by cumbersome, bureaucratic State Department procedures, which discourage and reject bona fide tourists — (foreign millionaires) — denying them visas to visit and spend their money in the U.S. Recapturing our lost share of this tourist market would result in 98 million more visitors, $390 billion in additional exports and $859 billion in total economic output by 2020, according to a recent U.S. Travel Association authoritative study : “Ready for Takeoff” No U.S. destination has been hit harder by the drop in foreign visitors than Las Vegas, and, predictably, a bill recently introduced by Congressman Joe Heck (R-NV), (H.R. 3039), hopes to remedy some of these issues by mandating 12-day visa processing standard and the implementation of a video-conferencing pilot for interviews. Currently the wait for visas to be acted upon is more than 145 days in some countries. It is no surprise that a recent survey of 1,500 travelers from Brazil, China and India demonstrated that an overwhelming majority of travelers found the U.S. a difficult place to visit. Inbound foreign travel is the single largest opportunity to increase exports and jump-start job creation immediately, according to Lawrence Summers, former Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers. Indeed, this graph shows the current complexities travelers from those countries experience when applying for a U.S. visa. The relative decline in inbound tourists represents a “Lost Decade” for the U.S. Travel industry. As a nation, we keep putting up “Keep Out” signs to the rest of the world. There is a widespread perception that America has become less welcoming to foreign visitors Indeed there is a visa waiver program for 36 countries, but there is no visa waiver program for high spending visitors from China ($6,243 average spend), India ($6,131), and Brazil ($4,940). Many are discouraged from even applying. There are 153,000 millionaires in India, 535,000 millionaires in China, and 126,000 millionaires in Brazil. Many of them cannot get visas to visit the United States or don’t want to go through the bureaucratic hassles. A traveler from India spends twice as much ($6,131) as a visitor from the United Kingdom ($3,001), Germany ($3,347) or France ($3,047), according to U.S. Department of Commerce figures. We must break down the self-imposed trade and visa barriers that have caused the United States to lag behind the rest of the world, amid a worldwide global travel boom over the last decade. For example, an international traveler from Brazil — 126,000 millionaires — is almost twice as likely to travel to Western Europe (52%) as to go to the U.S. (29%). Paris is awash with cash from the wealthy foreign visitors that we keep out. The average Chinese tourist at the Galleries Lafayette spends over $7,000 at the luxury store. Travel is America’s largest industry export sector by far, bringing in $134.4 billion annually, nearly 25% of services exports alone. Inbound travel is the equivalent of an export outpacing Business and Professional services ($128.3 billion), Machinery ($125.9 billion), Basic Chemicals ($124.3 billion), based on 2010 data from the Department of Commerce. Each $5,000 spent by an inbound tourist is the equivalent of selling a $5,000 worth of Caterpillar tractor parts or a Harley-Davidson motorcycle or $5,000 in bushels of wheat. Increasing travel to the United States would be the quickest and most effective form of economic stimulus, and a cost-free path to quickly increasing our exports. Increased foreign inbound travel would revitalize hundreds of tourist communities, inject billions into the U.S. economy and create millions of new jobs in restaurants, bars, hotels, retail trade, and entertainment. Many of these new jobs would go directly to semi-skilled and unskilled workers: maids, waitresses, bartenders, guides, who are currently being laid off by the recent recession. Each overseas visitor spends an average of $4,500 at hotels, restaurants, retail and other U.S. businesses. International Travel supports 1.8 million American jobs. The heart of the new plan is to increase staffing, reduce visa interview wait times and expand the Visa Waiver Program. This cost-free stimulus can kick in immediately by reforming an antiquated visa process that often drives wannabe international travelers from the U.S. to other countries, who are all too eager to welcome the foreign tourists and their bulging wallets. And dramatically increasing the number of consular officers would not cost taxpayers any monies. In fact each consular officer generates fees in excess of $1.68 million (at $140 per foreign application), which is a profit center of $1.4 million per officer for the State Department. While security should be a priority for the US State Department, some of the self imposed visa barriers are absurd. “We can become neither economic protectionists nor political isolationists” according to former Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge. “With new security measures…we can manage the risk of a lawful entry for unlawful purposes better than ever…It is an acceptable risk.” In Brazil, for example, the wait time for a typical 3 minute visa interview is 142 days. Tourists have to pay a $140 application fee, up front, just to get the interview. Of course, not everyone is qualified to enter the country under U.S. laws, but millions of qualified people are being turned away by the bureaucratic hassles and archaic procedures. In the last decade the U.S. lost the opportunity to host 78 million visitors and generate $606 billion in direct and downstream spending – enough to support more than 467,000 additional U.S. jobs annually over these years. This is just reverting to the status quo of ten years ago. If we were to further liberalize visa requirements, these figures might double. David Rowell, a travel blogger, recently wrote about a reader who lives in China, who is frustrated at being refused a US visa. Rowell describes her : “She is in her mid forties. She is divorced and has an adult daughter, currently studying at university in Oxford, UK. She has her own successful business, (i.e. more than five). She earns about 500,000 Yuan a year (over US$80,000). She owns her own apartment (possibly a second apartment too) and her own imported car and has substantial deposits in her bank account (in excess of $50,000). She has no criminal background. Other ties to China include her support to her elderly father, and the simple fact that she would have no chance of earning anything like the amount she does if she were to overstay and remain in the US, due to poor English skills and non-transferable employment skills. She has no relatives living in the US. She is paying for her daughter’s college tuition in Oxford. She has traveled to various other countries regularly…, including the UK, and has always complied with the terms of her visas. She was recently granted a tourist visa to travel to Canada (without needing a visa) and decided to add a side trip briefly down to the US….. So she paid the fees, filled out the forms, and flew thousands of miles to be interviewed in your Beijing visa issuing section. Surely she fits into as gilt edged a category of intending visitors as exist – successful affluent tourists who have previously demonstrated compliance with visa requirements in other western countries, with money, income, and good reason to return to China? Her visa application was refused. Her application paperwork was scarcely glanced at, her ‘interview’ (which she flew thousands of miles for, requiring overnight stays in Beijing and substantial cost for airfare, taxis, and accommodation) comprised no more than the briefest of cursory exchanges which could have been done by phone if at all, and her refusal was almost immediate and without any clear explanation or recourse for appeal, but these “Keep Out” policies are self defeating to our safety and well being.” Rather than being thanked for her interest in visiting the US and her willingness to spend thousands of dollars on touring, on flights, on hotels, on meals, and on sundry other expenses in the U,S., this would- be legitimate visitor was treated in a rude and pre-emptory fashion. It happens every day to tens-of-thousands of qualified visitors. In these brutal economic times, the U.S. can’t afford these self-defeating policies. We must accept the economic reality of globalization: our manufacturing jobs are never coming back. But we can reinvent ourselves as a tourist and cultural Mecca, just as many cities like New York, San Francisco and Miami have done. America is still the most sought after tourist destination in the world: if we don’t continue to screw it up. We need to focus on our service industries, with tourism being the largest, and only then can we jump-start the creation of millions of good jobs, to take up the slack from the jobs that are forever lost. This is one area where our government can play a large role in making this happen. The vast majority of foreign tourists return to their homes impressed by our values and way of life. They become ambassadors for this country, something we sorely need in these times of worldwide distrust of the U.S. Perhaps more importantly, at a time when America’s reputation is at an all time low, these exclusionary policies deprive us of the chance to show the world who we are, what our values are, and what our culture represents. Write to: jfleetwood@aol.com

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Charles Kolb: Atrial Fibrillation

October 3, 2011

The current price of a share of publicly traded stock reflects the discounted net present value of that company’s expected future earnings. That’s how an economist explains the value of a publicly traded American company. The company’s aggregate value — its market capitalization — is the total value of all those outstanding shares, which reflect the stock market’s value of the company’s future earnings. That amount is discounted, of course, because a dollar’s worth of future earnings is worth less than a dollar in hand today. Within recent weeks, the U.S. stock market, particularly the Dow Jones Industrial Average, has been behaving like a patient with a severe case of atrial fibrillation: down 300 points one day, up 250 points the next day, down the next by over 500 points only to close higher with a loss of, say, only 175 points. What’s going on? What explains this remarkable and unprecedented period of extreme volatility? Surely the value of America’s businesses and what they produce cannot be subject to that much day-to-day fluctuation. There’s a one-word answer: uncertainty. And that uncertainty has two sources: at home and abroad. The former we have more control over; the latter is subject to events beyond our control: economic turmoil (Greece, the Eurozone, and OPEC), political developments (Mideast tensions, terrorist threats, China). We have waning influence, of course, over some of these external variables. For instance, we can urge the Chinese to stop manipulating their currency and respect U.S. patents, and we can try to bring together the Israelis and the Palestinians. We can try to reduce and prevent terrorist attacks. There are also acts of God — natural disasters like earthquakes, tsunamis, and cyclones — that we cannot escape. But when it comes to U.S. domestic economic policy, we are our own masters, and in the last three years — under both administrations — our record has been dismal. We may have averted a total financial meltdown by the emergency measures taken in the fall of 2008 and in early 2009, but we have yet to provide assurances that we have the know-how to calm jittery financial markets, reassure today’s non-consuming consumers, and coax businesses into investing the reported $2 trillion in cash they are holding. The problem is that for more than three years, we have had too much economic policy churning: first there was the Troubled Asset Relief Program that was chartered to purchase toxic assets on the balance sheets of troubled financial institutions. Because those assets were difficult to value, TARP then became a bank-liquidity provider with direct capital infusions into shaky banks. Through temporary government takeovers, the taxpayer rescued Chrysler, General Motors, and insurance giant AIG. Bank of America swallowed up both Merrill Lynch and Countrywide Financial — much to its current detriment and ongoing corporate acid reflux. There were tax breaks for first-time home buyers and a “cash for clunkers” giveaway. The Federal Reserve pursued two rounds of quantitative easing (essentially purchasing Treasury notes and flooding the world with dollars) and is now doing a new “Twist” designed to bring down long-term interest rates. In short, our monetary policy has been ad hoc rather than rules-based. Likewise, when it comes to fiscal policy, our leadership has consistently fallen short. A Republican administration expanded Medicare, continued farm subsidies, and began two wars without caring about how these commitments were funded. We went from a budget surplus in 2001 to today’s massive deficits. President Obama pledged on March 5, 2009, that his approach to health care reform — the single biggest driver of our budget deficits — would first get costs under control and then expand coverage to the millions of uninsured Americans. He signed a bill that did the precise opposite and left in place a program structure that we can no longer afford. Health care costs for family plans rose 9 percent in 2011, and entitlement spending on Medicare and Medicaid is unsustainable. President Obama appointed a deficit-reduction commission co-chaired by former Clinton White House Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles and former Republican Senator Alan Simpson. The Commission produced an excellent set of recommendations, and the president ignored their work. Now President Obama is lecturing the new Super Committee on how to reduce the deficit but refuses to fix Social Security, which is the easiest structural problem to solve. The mantra now is that we have to put it aside until there can be a bipartisan approach. That’s looney. Why not pick the low-hanging fruit first to restore a sense of accomplishment among Americans who have all but given up on the Congress’s ability to do anything? On the evening of September 19, 2011, President Obama was in New York City raising money for his re-election. His time would have been better spent attending another dinner at the Hilton New York where the Economic Club of New York presented its first Leadership Excellence Award to former Secretary of State George Shultz. George Shultz is one of the few Americans whose government service includes four Cabinet-level positions: the Office of Management and Budget, Labor, and Treasury, as well as State. As moderator-questioner Glenn Hubbard from Columbia Business School quipped, Secretary Shultz has enough Cabinet chairs in his home to make up a small dinette set. At 90 years of age, Shultz sat in a chair on the dais before several hundred guests and without notes or teleprompter — his hands folded gently on his lap, his legs crossed, and his voice calm and firm — proceeded to explain how we had gotten into our current economic mess and what we needed to do to end it. You may not agree with everything he said, but there is no questioning that he spoke with conviction plus considerable experience and authority. Secretary Shultz began with tax reform, especially lowering the corporate tax rate, and reforming the Code’s overall structure to achieve lower rates and, most likely, more revenue. This approach is not raising taxes, Grover, but eliminating all of the rent-seeking preferences that Democrats and Republicans have stuck in to reward their PAC contributors since the last wave of tax reform in 1986. As for Social Security, Secretary Shultz suggested one simple change: from wage-indexing to price-indexing. Americans over 55 would not see any changes in their benefits, but he added that he would also like to see voluntary private accounts as part of the program. As for spending, Shultz expressed skepticism about the ongoing effort to deal with the deficit over a 10-year period. He paraphrased a Democratic president when he said, “Ask not what a Congress 10 years from now will spend. Ask what you will spend this year and next year.” For a Congress that cannot even pass annual appropriations bills, his skepticism is, perhaps, warranted. And he added, “These multitrillion dollar things leave me cold.” George Shultz’s most important point was to end the policy churning, and he described in some detail the efforts in the early Reagan years to put in place a set of programs that he described as “steady as you go with policies consistent with prosperity without inflation.” He also noted how Ronald Reagan provided political “cover” for Fed Chairman Paul Volcker to wring out inflation from the American economy. Schultz’s remarks struck me as a tour de force, and he received a standing ovation. Finally, an adult with wisdom, judgment, and experience. My heart was calm — until I regained Sixth Avenue and headed back to my hotel. _______________________________________________________________________ Charles Kolb is president of the nonpartisan, business-led Committee for Economic Development in Washington, D.C. He served in the George H.W. Bush White House as Deputy Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy. The above views are solely the author’s.

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Malcolm Levene: 9 Ways To Be A Self Leader

September 17, 2011

Over a number of years, I’ve worked with and for male and female business leaders. The individuals I both respect and admire tend to lead with humility, a reined-in ego, a healthy dose of self belief and passion. They also self-lead by making difficult decisions, taking risks and owning everything they do. In essence, they take full responsibility for their actions and the impact they may have. This type of person began their journey into leadership long before the role seemed possible. They led themselves carefully into the position they have attained. Self leadership entails being the person you envision being, long before you think it likely. In my coaching practice, I work with numerous men and women who are hoping to find a purpose in their lives. One way to access this aspiration is to contemplate specifically what it is we want. A recent female client, after three telephone coaching sessions, told me she realized her goal was to be happy. She said this, yet was uncomfortable admitting it, as it might show her in a “fluffy” light. I believe that a desire to being happy is a very worthy aspiration. Knowing that you want to be happy gives you clarity and purpose, two very valuable commodities. When we have discovered our purpose, be that commercially minded or otherwise, we have the opportunity to lead ourselves to the outcomes we require. I’m reminded of shopping and customer service. Customer service here in the U.K, generally speaking, is not as good as we would like it to be. My former retail establishment garnered a reputation for providing the gold standard in customer service for a large number of years. Each member of my sales team ‘owned’ their responsibility. They took care of my business as if it were their own. They chose to lead themselves to being the best they could be. Today, for the most part, leading yourself to the future you want, rather than being led to the future someone else sees for you, is less common. When you are not being seen to self-lead, the message you send is that you need guidance, help and direction. The people I’m talking about never send that message, although they are willing to ask for help, when and if they need it. They tend to be highly aware of the impact they make, both to customers, co-workers, their boss and anyone who will see them in action. Their reputation is all-important to them — and this is the mark of a good leader. They care deeply about how they are perceived, thereby taking full responsibility for their behaviours and actions. Whether you work in a retail establishment, run a charity or sit behind a computer all day, you’ll either be seen as someone who has leadership potential or not. You’ll be noticed in ways that can serve you and your purpose. The effort you make to go the extra mile is vital, as it will enable you to stand out from the crowd. Customers want the person who is offering a service or a product, be that a doctor or a flight attendant, to provide them with the kind of attention that ‘knocks their socks off.’ Giving your all to establish yourself and leave your mark in the best way possible will entail effort, sacrifice and an ability to let go of anything that doesn’t serve your purpose. Here are nine tips to help you to self-lead: 1. Establish your purpose. 2. Focus on what makes you happy. 3. Take full responsibility for all your actions. 4. Be passionate, optimistic and brave. 5. Make efforts to continually improve yourself. 6. Envision your future as specifically as you can. 7. Be enthusiastic, even when you don’t really feel it. 8. Never, ever give up. 9. Carry a healthy self belief. To learn more about Malcolm Levene, visit www.malcolmlevene.com .

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Jerry Chautin: It’s Construction, Stupid! It’s Home Building, Stupid!

September 5, 2011

In Thursday’s address to Congress, I want President Barack Obama to emphasize that fixing the home-building and construction industries is necessary to jump-start our lame economy. That is because, in my recollection, home building and construction have led us out of every recession since the 1960s, when I financed land acquisition, development and construction of tract homes. “It’s the economy, stupid.” That was Senator Bill Clinton’s mantra in 1992, when he was vying for the presidency. His opponent, the incumbent George H. W. Bush, danced around the edges of our country’s economic woes and lost the election. More recently, Clinton offered his suggestions to fix the economy . But resolving the loss of construction and home-building jobs was not front and center. Unless Obama gets specific and tells the American people that he knows how to fix the foundering construction and home-building industries, he will also lose — and so will we. “The history is that housing has led the country out of recessions until this one,” said John Wieland , the award-winning founder of John Wieland Homes and Neighborhoods, a major Southeastern residential developer, in an interview with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution . “It didn’t happen this time because of the air coming out of the housing bubble.” He continues: “We have this tremendous amount of resale homes, short sales, that just flooded the market.” So the sooner we solve the housing problem and get the building trades back to work, the sooner our economy will be off life supports. Wieland told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the lack of new “housing has kept us in this recession.” Obama has to tell Congress how to resolve the shadow inventory of homes being dumped on the market. He needs to address the two-year backlog of houses in the foreclosure process and the groundswell of litigation against lenders. In a March presentation to Congress, David Crowe , chief economist of the National Association of Home Builders, said, “Without access to credit, the residential construction industry will lose more small businesses and experience more job losses, with these impacts being widely spread across the nation.” That is because housing represents a huge part of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product. “When you consider the enormity of the total number of jobs attached to housing, a sector that accounts for 15 percent of our nation’s GDP,” Crowe says, “now is hardly the time to step back from our nation’s long-standing commitment to homeownership.” Although Congress is not stepping back from its commitment to homeownership, there is serious talk going on about reducing or eliminating the homeowner interest deduction . “A rollback of the mortgage interest deduction as proposed by the commission would have a devastating impact on both present and future homeowners in this country,” said Michael Berman , chairman emeritus of the Mortgage Bankers Association of America. “It would immediately stop in its tracks any stabilization we are seeing in the housing market and would effectively increase the cost of homeownership for millions upon millions of people.” Furthermore, if implemented at this time, provisions of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act could exacerbate the tight credit markets, as well. Even though the legislation was intended to prevent future real estate debacles and financial abuses by the lending industry, the same financial institutions that got us into this mess can help get us out of it. More specifically, Berman says that the requirement for mortgage-backed securities issuers to retain a five-percent stake against potential losses to investors will keep private capital on the sidelines — just when we need it most. He is also concerned that Dodd-Frank will cause borrowers to flock to the Federal Housing Administration’s low down-payment loans because they will not be able to cough up 20 percent for the conventional alternatives. The Mortgage Bankers Association “is concerned that the FHA programs will be over-utilized,” he says . Advanced reports of Obama’s Thursday speech suggest that he will tinker around the edges by asking Congress to increase spending on infrastructure projects, extend unemployment benefits and provide tax incentives for businesses to hire more employees. “The executive branch has certain things it can do,” White House spokesman Jay Carney says without being specific. “I don’t want to ruin the surprise.” But unless the surprise includes stimulating the home-building and construction industries, the unemployment rate will remain untenably high for an extended time. Jerry Chautin is a volunteer SCORE business counselor, business columnist and SBA’s 2006 national ” Journalist of the Year ” award winner. He is a former entrepreneur, commercial mortgage banker, commercial real estate dealmaker and business lender. You can follow him on Twitter @JerryChautin .

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Winslow T. Wheeler: Chitchat With Leon and Hillary on the Defense Budget

August 19, 2011

The invitation came to me from Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta’s Public Affairs Office to attend a “conversation” with Panetta and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at the prestigious National War College in Washington. Although I knew it wasn’t me they wanted to talk to, I sat in the audience to hear Panetta and Clinton in action, especially on the subject of my prime interest: the defense budget. The “conversation,” it turns out, was with Frank Sesno, the former CNN personality and currently the Director of the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University. Sesno took the “conversation” assignment seriously; although he boldly said that it was important to “ask the tough questions” — just like a journalist — he did no such thing. Lofting over shallow dinner-talk queries, Sesno chummed it up with Panetta and Clinton and permitted them to say anything they wanted without fear of challenge. Clinton tended toward impromptu speeches on whatever she was asked about — well articulated and forceful, much like she did as a senator at hearings where, rather than conduct oversight asking informed questions and following up, she would express her political points and neither seek nor reveal any new or deeper information. Panetta was more subtle and single-minded. Although he comes from the same political background — White House insider and Congress — his answers were shorter and more softly stated, but they were directed at one and only one objective: defending the Pentagon’s budget. Sesno started the “discussion” asking about budget cuts beyond the $350 billion the Pentagon has already committed to over the next ten years — saying “What’s really at stake?” Panetta whacked the softball question hard: “Very simply, it would result in hollowing out the force,” and “it would break faith with the troops and with their families,” and finally “it would literally undercut our ability to provide for the national defense.” The bureaucrat moguls at the Pentagon, who currently preside over the largest defense or non-defense agency budget since the end of World War II, must have been delighted. After four years of sometimes tough guy Robert Gates, who fired senior officials for not toeing his line, DOD’s high spenders must be elated to have at the top someone who has leaped so quickly and with such eagerness to defending their agenda. The $850 billion cut that Sesno was referring to does sound like a lot — if you are ignorant about the background and budget history. He offered no pushback and did nothing to probe Panetta’s budget preserving agenda, to question Panetta’s assumptions, and or even seek the data behind them. Things didn’t get any better when Sesno allowed the audience a grand total of one question on DOD budget issues. The individual Sesno selected asked about funding for foreign language training. Panetta dutifully said it was important and that he wanted to look for “creative ways” to protect it. Clinton gave a speech about it, and the remaining 99.9 percent of the national security budget went unaddressed. Instead of this feather-stroking chitchat, consider the following: If the Pentagon’s “base” (non-war) budget were to be cut $850 billion, or so, over ten years, it would go down to about $472 billion annually , the approximate level of the base DOD budget in 2007. (This, not coincidently, is about the same level of a new round of defense budget cutting hysteria circulating in Washington in response to a just released memo from OMB Director Jack Lew.) Using the Pentagon’s “constant” dollars that adjust for the effects of inflation, that $472 billion level would be more than $70 billion higher than DOD spending was in 2000, just before the wars. Over ten years, base Defense Department spending would be almost three quarters of a trillion dollars above the levels extant in 2000 . And, none of the additional monies to be spent on the wars would be eliminated. At $472 billion per year, the Pentagon budget would be almost $40 billion more than we averaged, in inflation adjusted “constant” dollars, during the Cold War when we faced an intimidating super-power, the Soviet Union, its Warsaw Pact allies and a hostile, dogmatically communist China. At the 2007 $472 billion level our defense budget would remain more than twice the defense spending of China, Russia, Iran, Syria, Somalia, Cuba and any other potential adversary — combined. The problem is not money. Under this so-called worse case scenario, the Pentagon would be left quite flush with money, plenty of it in historical terms. The problem is that the Pentagon, as it exists under its current leadership, is incapable of surviving with less money. They quite literally do not understand how to face a future where the DOD budget exceeds any and all potential enemies by a multiple of only two. Many — including Obama’s bipartisan 2010 National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, a separate task force put together by congressmen Barney Frank (D-MA) and Ron Paul (R-TX), yet another commission headed by former budget leaders Senator Pete Domenici (R-NM) and OMB Director Alice Rivlin, and two alternative budget proposals from Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) — have itemized how to save about $900 billion from the National Defense budget. The political landscape is littered with competent recommendations to remove many of the thick layers of hydrogenated fat from the Pentagon. These proposals hit on many of the same soft spots in the DOD budget, such as the unaffordable, underperforming, years behind schedule F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. The implied consensus on such ideas and on the approximate amount (roughly $900 billion) suggest that the slightly lesser $850 billion in Pentagon savings is not “doomsday” (Panetta’s word) but quite endurable — and would actually leave DOD quite flush with money. But, it is unthinkable to Secretary Panetta, as it is to those who perform the enabling chitchat.

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China Suggests Time Is Right For New Global Reserve Currency

August 6, 2011

PRESS ASSOCIATION — China’s state-run news agency says America’s ‘debt-addiction’ is threatening the world economy and that Washington must slash its defence and social welfare spending. The commentary published by China’s official Xinhua News Agency is Beijing’s first official response to the downgrading of US debt. The commentary says that if Washington fails to rein in spending, there would be more “devastating” credit rating cuts to come and global financial turbulence. It demands international supervision over US dollar issues and suggests a new global reserve currency is needed. See also: US suffers first-ever credit rating downgrade.

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Alec Baldwin: It’s Time to Suck It Up and Pay Our Bill

July 30, 2011

Working here in Rome the last two weeks has been a welcome break from the heat back home in New York, not to mention the sound of alarms going off throughout the U.S. media about the impending debt ceiling debacle. Reading websites and blogs about the possibility of the US defaulting on its debts for the first time in history, I’m reminded of the Clinton impeachment fiasco, which I also watched through the prism of overseas media while I was in South Africa for an extended trip in 1998. In the short 13-year period since Clinton’s great troubles, little of that partisan disgrace has figured much in the lives of its principal players. Hillary Clinton went on to soar in her own career as a senator, a vigorous combatant for her party’s presidential nomination and secretary of state. Her husband is still a political figure of enormous influence in the world, still admired nearly everywhere he goes and still married to his wife. Monica Lewinsky is a footnote, as most sex scandal femme fatales usually become (Christine Keeler, Donna Rice). The Clinton impeachment, when moral compasses like Henry Hyde, Newt Gingrich and Bill Bennett wanted us to relocate our outrage, was the last great rumble in the Beltway schoolyard, other than the bloodshed of an actual election, until now. Now, partisan hatred is viewed a sidearm everyone should have the right, if not the need, to carry. And on the Hill, everyone seems to be packing. However, did Americans really believe that this day would never come? Not the day of the Next Rumble. I mean the day America went broke. Americans are, by any reasonable measure, extraordinarily giving people. We have given trillions upon trillions of dollars of our nation’s wealth to the world’s poorer people. And not always with strategic military or economic goals attached. Here at home, we provide government assistance to flood victims. Americans beset by fire damage, tornados and hurricanes. You can smoke all of your life and walk into a government-funded hospital and ask your fellow Americans to save your life. You can make the poorest nutritional choices known to mankind and get diabetes medication paid for by the government. You can go hiking in some crazy-ass, remote part of some national park and certain, caring fellow Americans will attempt to find you. People pay a lot of money in taxes here in America, but still find ways to give billions privately every year to help fight disease, care for the elderly, teach painting and dance, conserve precious open spaces, give scholarships on behalf of their alma mater, or send Girl Scout cookies to the troops. Americans are caring. And what those who are opposed to raising the debt ceiling are essentially attempting to do is insist that we stop caring. That we stop doing one of the primary things that make this country what it is. That makes us who we are. This bill was coming and you knew it. And if you didn’t see it coming, then you should be very worried. Because you have a real problem. The war, brave men and women in the armed services aside, has been a disgraceful waste of this country’s time, spirit, blood and money. They used to call it “Guns and Butter.” Today, it’s drones and frappuccinos. And guess what? Both of those choices on opposite ends of that axis cost a hell of a lot more money than they used to. So we want to circumnavigate the globe in the most tricked-out military gear, sticking our energy-sucking straw into every oil reserve we can buy or battle over, and not raise the funds necessary here at home to pay for that? We want to defer the exorbitant, latter-day costs of all that energy binging, masquerading as democracy “preachifying”? Do you still actually believe that a gallon of gas costs you what it says at the pump? If so, why don’t you put a tooth under your pillow, and when you wake up, your tank will be full. How long did you think this could last? How much longer did you think a cadre of fully compromised, ethically bankrupt public officials would allow you to play in traffic before you got hit by the Reality Bus? We… owe… the money. We elected incompetent fools/rapacious petrogarchs to high office. We gave them a credit card. They maxed it out. They got several more and maxed those out, too. And we are the co-signers. Raise the debt ceiling, like every president has bitten the bullet and done. Raise taxes and take your medicine. You cared, innocently, about helping others. No shame in that. But simultaneously, you got married to a couple of idiots who blew all your money and left the whole family with nothing to show for it. Saddam’s dead? Osama’s dead? Is that gonna help you get a job? Pay your rent? Buy your kid some sneakers for school this fall? Wake up. We gotta suck it up. Pay this bill. And have loooooong talk about how we never get here again, while still maintaining our identity as a great country made up of great, caring people.

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Boehner Debt Ceiling Bill Faces House Vote

July 28, 2011

WASHINGTON — House Republicans are pressing ahead with a vote on a newly modified plan to stave off an unprecedented government default next week even though the legislation faces a White House veto threat and unanimous opposition among Senate Democrats. As the House prepared to vote Thursday, investor worries that a dysfunctional Congress might remain gridlocked sent stocks plunging. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped almost 200 points Wednesday, on top of a 92-point drop the day before. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, made headway with balky conservatives unhappy that the measure contains smaller spending cuts than a more stringent debt measure that passed the House last week. The new measure depends on caps on agency budgets to cut more than $900 billion from the deficit over the coming decade while permitting a commensurate increase in the nation’s borrowing to allow the government to pay its bills. Boehner acknowledged that the measure was hardly perfect but represented “the best opportunity we have to hold the president’s feet to the fire. He wants a $2.4 trillion blank check that lets him continue his spending binge through the next election. This is the time to say no.” Boehner made the comments Wednesday to conservative radio host Laura Ingraham. The White House threatened a veto, saying the bill did not meet President Barack Obama’s demand for an increase in the debt limit large enough to prevent a rerun of the current crisis next year, in the heat of the 2012 election campaign. Instead, Obama supports an alternative drafted by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., that contains comparable cuts to agency operating budgets but also claims savings from lowball estimates of war costs. Reid’s plan would provide a record-breaking $2.7 trillion in additional borrowing authority, enough to tide the government over through 2012. Reid, however, is plainly short of the votes needed to overcome a GOP filibuster. While Boehner holds out hope that the Senate will pass his measure, a more likely outcome is a last-ditch effort to find a compromise. In fact, Boehner’s plan has enough in common with Reid’s – including the establishment of a special congressional panel to recommend additional spending cuts this fall – that Reid hinted a compromise could be easy to snap together. “Magic things can happen here in Congress in a very short period of time under the right circumstances,” Reid told reporters. Unless Congress acts by Tuesday, administration officials say, the government will not be able to pay all its bills. They include $23 billion in Social Security benefits due Aug. 3, an $87 billion payment to investors to redeem maturing Treasury securities and more than $30 billion in interest payments that come due Aug. 15. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and other officials warn that a default could prove catastrophic for an economy still recovering from the worst recession in decades. But some skeptics, including conservative Republicans like Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, say Geithner can manage Treasury’s cash flow to avoid a catastrophe if Congress fails to act. House Republicans tweaked their measure Wednesday to enhance its prospects of passage after a worse-than expected cost estimate from congressional budget analysts on Tuesday. The changes were modest, but under arcane budget conventions, they brought projected savings for 2012 to $22 billion, part of a 10-year cut of $917 billion. That would trigger a $900 billion increase in the debt limit. While the Boehner and Reid measures differed in key details, they also shared similarities that underscored the concessions made by the two sides in recent days. Reid’s bill does not envision a tax increase to reduce deficits, a bow to Republicans. But neither does the House measure require passage of a constitutional balanced budget amendment for state ratification, a step in the direction of Obama and the Democrats. For Boehner, the vote shaped up as a critical test of his ability to lead a fractious majority that includes 87 first-term lawmakers, many of them elected with tea party support. Passage also was imperative to maximize Boehner’s leverage with Obama and Reid in a fast-approaching endgame. Boehner showed fire in a meeting Wednesday with the Republican caucus. “Get your ass in line,” Boehner told the rank and file. “I can’t do this job unless you’re behind me.” But one such first-term Republican said again Thursday he likely would oppose the measure. “Right now, I can’t” vote for it, Rep. Joe Walsh of Illinois told CBS’s “The Early Show.” He did give Boehner credit for working hard on the problem and called the speaker’s proposal “a step in the right direction.” Walsh said that Congress is “too obsessed” with the Aug. 2 default deadline, saying chances of getting more meaningful deficit-reduction right would be better if lawmakers weren’t wedded to that drop-dead date. “We’ve got plenty of revenues in August to service our debt,” he said. If House conservatives torpedo the bill, any follow-up probably would require Democratic votes to pass. That, in turn, would mean smaller spending cuts than Republicans are seeking in exchange for raising the nation’s $14.3 trillion debt limit.

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GOP Tries To Set Stage For Short-Term Debt Deal

July 24, 2011

WASHINGTON — Republicans tried to set the stage for a short-term agreement to raise the debt ceiling on Sunday, even as Democrats continued to insist that a long-term deal needed to be worked out. “I understand why they’re saying they won’t sign a short-term [deal], but I think they won’t have any choice, and I think that’s the only answer right now,” Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” In a briefing with the Republican conference on Saturday, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) announced that he would press for a short-term deal — with major spending cuts paired with longer-term deficit-reduction strategies — as a way around the current impasse. This new focus was apparent in the statements of Republicans who appeared on the Sunday morning public affairs shows. They accused President Obama of trying to push the date for the next debt ceiling increase beyond 2012 because he doesn’t want to have to deal with it before his reelection. “It’s interesting that since 1972, Congress has raised the debt ceiling for six months or less 38 times. So we can surely extend it for five or six months — have this committee of Congress come back and report on the way to continue to reduce our deficit, and in that way avert the disaster and make forward progress,” said Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) on CBS’s “Face the Nation.” “The problem, I think, is that the single most important thing to President Obama is extending this beyond his reelection campaign. He just doesn’t want to have to deal with it again.” “I know the president is worried about the next election. But my god, shouldn’t we be worried about the country ?” added Boehner on “Fox News Sunday.” Democrats, however, made clear they are still against a short-term deal, arguing that a debt ceiling raise should not be clouded by the politics surrounding the 2012 elections. On “Face the Nation,” White House Chief of Staff Bill Daley reiterated that the administration is opposed to a short-term raise. And a Democratic official familiar with negotiations told The Huffington Post that at a 50-minute-long White House meeting on Saturday morning, the president “said he would not accept a short term extension because it could lead to a downgrade” of the United States’ credit rating. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), also appearing on CBS, said that a short-term deal could potentially harm the credit rating of the country. “We absolutely do not want to default,” he said. “But this notion that we’re going to replay this movie in four or five months — that we’re going to face this whole thing all over again — the American economy is too fragile at this point in recovery for us to allow that to happen. “We’ve been warned — not by political advisers,” said Durbin. “I hear the Republicans. They want to make this a campaign issue. Ignore the political advisers for a moment. Listen to the economists who are telling us — all of them together — do not lurch from one five-month period to another when it comes to the credit rating of the United States of America. Not at this moment in history.”

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U.S. Credit Downgrade Could Spark ‘Turmoil’

July 14, 2011

Major credit rating agencies have called the reliability of American government debt into question, warning that they could issue a punishing series of downgrades if Congress does not increase borrowing authority by early August. A downgrade of U.S. credit, unthinkable not long ago, is now a real possibility. Even a brief debt default would prompt Moody’s Investors Service to dock the government’s sterling rating, the agency said Wednesday in a release. Another warning, issued privately to lawmakers by Standard & Poor’s and reported widely , was perhaps even more chilling: Even if the government stays current on its debt payments but halts spending on other items due to the lack of a timely debt deal, the agency might issue a downgrade. It’s a prospect that has left economists and financial executives wringing their hands, sketching out scenarios that involve widespread panic, a freeze in markets and even a return to a 2008-style recession. The pronouncements of credit rating agencies, despite their battered reputations in the wake of the housing boom and bust, influence global markets on a daily basis. If the United States government, whose creditworthiness has long been the lynchpin of the global financial system, gets its rating downgraded, the consequences could be disastrous, experts said. “Forget a recovery in housing,” said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist of the economic research firm IHS Global Insight. “You’d get a sell-off probably in U.S. bonds. It’s not a trivial matter. That would then influence corporate borrowing costs, it would influence consumer borrowing costs, it would influence mortgage rates.” Washington lawmakers remain locked in a debate over the terms of a debt ceiling increase, with Republicans insisting they will not vote to give the government more borrowing authority unless their demands for deficit-reduction are satisfied. Democrats and top economic officials, including Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke , have criticized that approach, arguing that it is irresponsible to threaten the full faith and credit of the U.S. as a means to trim the nation’s budget. If Congress does not raise the limit by Aug. 2, the nation will be forced to abruptly freeze spending, which could prompt a default, the Treasury has said. “We have no way to give Congress more time to solve this problem,” Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner said in remarks Thursday. Following through on a pledge it made in early June, Moody’s placed the triple-A bond rating of the U.S. government “on review for possible downgrade” Wednesday, saying the probability of a default is no longer “de minimis.” With negotiations seeming to grow only more contentious, the nation might not be able to do something as simple as pay its bills, thereby tarnishing its top rating. A downgrade, which would imply that U.S. debt is no longer “risk-free,” would likely send interest rates soaring as yields on Treasury securities would rise, economists said. That could freeze the flow of cash through the economy, as borrowing would likely be constrained. Worse, it’s not just the U.S. government’s rating that would be downgraded. The ratings of thousands of borrowers are tied to the federal government’s rating. Bonds issued by U.S. municipalities, the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and even by the governments of Israel and Egypt could have their ratings threatened, Moody’s said. Moody’s would dock the ratings of at least 7,000 municipal credits if it slashes the U.S. government’s grade, Bloomberg News reported . “There is madness in Washington,” David Kotok, chairman and chief investment officer of Cumberland Advisors, said in a recent note. “These fools and idiots we elect to represent us passed the programs and budgets that spent the money. The controversy over future spending has nothing to do with the existing debt ceiling.” Economists expressed exasperation at what some have called an “artificial” or “self-created” crisis. Although Moody’s noted in its report that it was concerned about the absence of a long-term plan to reduce the federal deficit, the more pressing need — the one that could prompt a downgrade if not done on time — is raising the debt ceiling, the agency said. “At this point, what we’re waiting to see is an actual raising of the debt limit, regardless of how they get there,” Steven Hess, lead U.S. analyst at Moody’s, told the Wall Street Journal . Despite the ongoing drama, Treasury securities seem to be hardly affected. Yields on 10-year U.S. debt are around 2.9 percent, roughly equal to the lowest value this year, which was reached in late June, according to Bloomberg data . An array of worrisome macroeconomic risks, including the sovereign debt crisis in Europe, has investors taking refuge in U.S. government debt, pushing down yields and increasing the value of their investments. “Despite everything that’s happened in Washington in the last day or two, most investors still think a settlement is coming and default will be avoided,” said John Richards, head of strategy at Royal Bank of Scotland in the Americas. But some investors are betting on default. The price of insurance contracts on U.S. debt rose nearly 8 percent on Thursday, reflecting an increased demand for those derivatives, the Wall Street Journal reported . Some economists said a U.S. sovereign downgrade ultimately would not cripple the economy, as markets would adjust. There’s no equivalent to Treasury securities, which serve a central role in the world’s economy, said Kevin Logan, chief U.S. economist at HSBC. For that reason, investors would eventually learn to live with a lower rating, Logan said. But in the short term at least, a downgrade could still cause disruptions, he said. Some entities are required to hold highly-rated securities, often to comply with regulations. “If the triple-A government debt is suddenly double-A one day to the next, what does the entity do?” he asked. “Sell all it has? And if it does, what does that do to interest rates on all that debt?” “It could create turmoil,” he said, “as everyone tries to figure out what’s the correct pricing for all this stuff.”

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Robert Creamer: Growing Economic Inequality the Root Cause of Economic Stagnation

July 11, 2011

Last Friday’s jobs numbers showed a net growth of only 18,000 new jobs nationwide — while the economy must produce 150,000 jobs each month just to absorb population growth. Clearly the economic recovery has stalled and Republicans are pointing to the slowdown as evidence that American economic policy must once again turn sharply to the right. Trouble is, rather than being a solution to our country’s economic woes, the growing economic inequality their policies have caused was the root cause of the 2008 economic collapse and the economic stagnation that America has experienced since. That burgeoning economic inequality must end if we are to restore the American middle class — and give our children an opportunity for a prosperous future. The chief characteristic of private sector economic activity is that it is incredibly responsive to consumer demand. At its best, that’s what makes it such an innovative, efficient and powerful engine of economic growth. If private sector entrepreneurs and businesses can identify even a glimmer of consumer demand for some new product or service, someone will figure out how to provide it. But there’s a hitch. The consumers who want the product or service need to have the money to pay for it. So the private sector’s greatest strength is also potentially its greatest weakness — its Achilles Heel. If, for whatever reason, consumers as a group don’t have the money to buy a growing number of products and services, the private sector economy will stagnate. Right now there are plenty of people out there who desperately need all sorts of products and services that they don’t have the money to buy. The problem isn’t that businesses don’t have the capital to meet the demand. Corporations are sitting on almost two trillion dollars in cash. They are looking for somewhere to deploy that money where it can earn them a return — where consumers have the money to buy some new product or service. The problem is that there aren’t enough consumers with money in their pockets. But that is not simply a problem that has resulted from the financial crash and subsequent loss of eight million jobs. This problem has been developing for many years. The bottom line is that most of the considerable economic growth of the last several decades has gone into the pockets of a tiny percent of the population. As a result, wages and consumer buying power have stagnated, and consumers don’t have the money to buy the new products and services upon which economic growth depends. This generates a vicious cycle — laid-off workers, lower wages, less consumer demand, less economic growth and so on. You can’t fundamentally break this cycle without addressing the root cause — the increased concentration of wealth that is strangling economic growth and destroying the American middle class upon which long-term economic growth completely depends. Let’s look at this process in a little more detail. The incomes of the middle class Americans, and those who aspire to be middle class — 90% of Americans — have been stagnant for almost three decades . This trend, which was briefly interrupted during the Clinton Administration, is the chief defining characteristic of our recent economic history. The stagnation of middle class incomes has not happened because our economy has failed to grow over this period. In fact, real (adjusted for inflation) per capita gross domestic product (GDP) increased more than 80% over the period between 1975 and 2005. In the last ten years, before the Great Recession, it increased at an average rate of 1.8% per year. That means that if the benefits of economic growth were equally spread throughout our society, everyone should have been almost 20% better off (with compounding) in 2008 than they were in 1998. But they weren’t better off. In fact, median family income actually dropped in the years before the recession. It went from $52,301 (in 2009 dollars) in 2000 to $50,112 in 2008. And, of course it continued to drop as the recession set in. How is that possible? Was it — as the right likes to believe — because of the growth of the Federal Government? Nope. In fact, the percentage of GDP going to federal spending actually dropped during the last four years of the Clinton Administration. When Bush took office it began to increase again as the Republicans increased spending on wars. Over the last 28 years, federal spending has averaged about 20.9% of the GDP and varied within a range of only about 5%, with the high being in 1983 (in the middle of the Reagan years) and the low in 2000 before Bush took office. It has never even come close to the 43.6% of GDP that it consumed during World War II in 1943 and 1944, or the 41.9% it consumed in 1945. The percent of GDP that goes to Federal spending went up in 2009 and 2010 — but that was mainly because the economy shrunk on the one hand, and a major, temporary stimulus bill was need on the other to prevent another Great Depression. Was it because taxes have skyrocketed? No again. In fact, according to the Census Bureau , the median household tax burden actually dropped from 24.9% in 2000 to 22.4% in 2009. Was it that labor became less productive? No. In fact, there has been a major gap between the increase in the productivity of our workforce and the increase in their wages. Even when wages were improving at the end of the Clinton years, productivity went up 2.5% per year and median hourly wages went up only 1.5%. From 2000 to 2004, worker productivity exploded by an annual rate of 3.8% but hourly wages went up only 1% and median family income actually dropped .9%. The bottom line is that people who work for a living (most of us) are getting a smaller and smaller slice of the nation’s economic pie. In August of 2006, the New York Times reported that a Federal Reserve study showed that “(w)ages and salaries now make up the lowest share of the nation’s gross national product since the government began recording data in 1947; while corporate profits have climbed to their highest shares since the 1960′s.” So the answer to the question is simple. Virtually all of the increase in our gross domestic product over the ten years before the Great Recession went to the wealthiest 2% of the population. These changes in income distribution are not the result of “natural laws.” They are the result of systems set up by human beings that differentially benefit different groups in the society. Economist Paul Krugman has summarized the history of income distribution in America. At the beginning of the Great Depression, income inequality, and inequality in the control of wealth, was very high. Then came the great compression between 1929 and 1947. Real wages for workers in manufacturing rose 67% while real income for the richest 1% of Americans fell 17%. This period marked the birth of the American middle class. Two major forces drove these trends — unionization of major manufacturing sectors, and the public policies of the New Deal. Then came the postwar boom, 1947 to 1973. Real wages rose 81% and the income of the richest 1% rose 38%. Growth was widely shared, but income inequality continued to drop. From 1973 to 1980, everyone lost ground. Real wages fell 3% and income for the richest one percent fell 4%. The oil shocks, and the dramatic slowdown in economic growth in developing nations, took their toll on America and the world economy. Then came what Krugman calls “the New Gilded Age.” Beginning in 1980, there were big gains at the very top. The tax policies of the Reagan administration magnified income redistribution. Between 1980 and 2004, real wages in manufacturing fell 1%, while real income of the richest one percent rose 135%. The single largest contributor to this stagnation of middle class incomes has been the corporate attack on organized labor. The percentage of private sector workers in unions has shrunk from 35 % to 7%. The exception has been the public sector, where 35% of teachers, firemen and public service workers now have access to collective bargaining. What is the economic effect of this growing inequity? Economies are in balance if productivity gains result in commensurately higher salaries for employees that allow them to buy the larger number of products and services that those productivity increases allow corporations to manufacture and sell. If they don’t have increased buying power — if all of the income growth goes to the top 2% — then a demand deficit will inevitably develop that will lead to stagnation, recession — or depression. That gap in buying power can be filled for a while — as it was in the early 2000′s — with greater consumer debt. But after a while the bubble bursts and the house of cards comes tumbling down. And of course this isn’t all about cold economic theory. Growing economic inequality directly impacts million of lives and destroys millions of dreams. It’s not just about economic policy. It’s about right and wrong. The growing inequality can be seen in the explosion of the ratio of average worker salaries and the compensation paid to corporate CEO’s. In 1980 the average CEO made 42 times more than the average worker. Today he (or sometimes she) makes 262 times as much as the average worker. New numbers just came out showing that CEO pay last year skyrocketed by a whopping 23%. The new top earning CEO is Gregory Maffei of Liberty Media Corporation who was compensated $87,493,565 for his services. That’s about $42,064 per hour. Of course that’s nothing compared to hedge fund manager John Paulson. According the Wall Street Journal he made $5 billion last year. That’s $2.4 million dollars an hour — or $40,064 per minute. So Mr. Paulson made as much as a minimum wage worker every 23 seconds. Note also that Mr. Paulson and all hedge fund managers paid Federal taxes at only 15% instead of the 35% due to a special tax break. What do people like Mr. Paulson and Mr. Maffei do with their massive incomes? Like many executives they might choose to purchase a Rolex Oyster Perpetual Submariner Date Watch for about $8,000. You might remember that many of the CEO class have spent a good deal of time lately telling America that we have to trim back Social Security benefits. The average Social Security benefit for retirees is the princely sum of $14,160 per year — $38.79 per day (for all 365 days per year). It would take the average beneficiary 206 days of benefits to pay for that Rolex watch. It would take Mr. Maffei 11.4 minutes of his compensation. In order to generate new jobs and get the economy moving over the long haul, America needs to assure that everyday Americans receive the fruits of productivity growth. Otherwise our economy will continue to stagnate. That means more unionization, trade and tax policies that encourage higher wages, and right now it requires a massive jobs program to put America back to work. The Republican notion that we can’t burden the “job creators” like Maffei or Paulson with new taxes is mortally dangerous for our economy and our future. Just the opposite is true. The “job creators” are the everyday consumers that have to have money in their pockets to create the demand to make our economy grow. But this is not just bad economics. It’s morally wrong. The idea of asking Social Security recipients or people on Medicare or Medicaid to sacrifice a part of their meager income to assure that people like Gregory Maffei can afford to buy a new Rolex watch every 11 minutes — or get a taxpayer subsidy to ride in a corporate jet — is simply obscene. The outcome of the current budget debate can be judged by only one central criteria. What will a budget deal do to create new jobs and get the economy moving again? That is not mainly about giving “confidence” to the markets or cutting the ratio of long-term debt to GDP. To truly address the root problems of our economy, a budget deal must help increase the incomes of the middle class and reduce the swelling economic inequality that is a cancer growing on our society and our economy. You don’t do that by cutting Social Security or Medicare benefits — or by slashing Medicaid as the Republicans have proposed. You, as President Obama has proposed, by asking the new economic aristocracy to dip into their vast stores of wealth and help pay their fair share for the society from which they have so richly benefited. Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and author of the book: Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win, available on Amazon.com . He is a partner in the firm Democracy Partners . Follow him on Twitter @rbcreamer.

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European Union Cracks Down On Mobile Roaming Charges To Spur Competition

July 6, 2011

(AP) BRUSSELS — The European Union is introducing new rules that would make it cheaper to use mobile and smartphones abroad. The proposals from the EU’s executive Commission Wednesday seek to spur competition among providers and put new caps on roaming charges. For the first time, the EU is slapping caps on the price individuals have to pay for going online from a smartphone or tablet computer when moving from one country to another. The EU is made up of 27 countries. The European Commission also said that from July 2014 operators will have to open their networks to providers from another EU state, which would give consumers more providers to choose from. At the same time, consumers will be able to sign a separate roaming contract, allowing them to take advantage of cheaper offers when moving about. The new rules will kick in when the bloc’s existing regulation on mobile roaming expires at the end of June next year. While the current rules have forced the price of making calls down to 35 euro cents (about 50 U.S. cents) a minute when traveling in another EU country and kept a lid on the cost of receiving calls and sending text messages, the Commission believes that charges remain way too high. The Commission’s goal is to bring roaming prices in line with national ones by 2015, an important step in getting the 27-country bloc closer together and spurring business and freedom of movement in the EU’s internal market. The new rules would also apply in non-EU states Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway. “This proposal tackles the root cause of the problem – the lack of competition on roaming markets – by giving customers more choice and by giving alternative operators easier access to the roaming market,” Neelie Kroes, who is in charge of the EU’s digital agenda, said in a statement. For the first time, the rules would also cap the price of going online from a smartphone or tablet computer. Using mobile Internet in another EU country can quickly drive up phone bills, with prices for downloading one megabyte of data averaging euro2.23 ($3.22) but sometimes going up to euro12 ($17.35), according to the Commission. One megabyte is equivalent to about 100 e-mails without attachments or a few seconds of streaming video online. Under the new proposal, charges for data roaming would have to come down to 90 cents a megabyte by July next year and sink to 50 cents by 2014. By that date, the price of making calls would be capped at 24 cents a minute, while incoming calls and text messages would cost 10 cents. At the center of the Commission’s proposals are efforts to increase competition between providers. From July 2014, operators will have to open their networks to providers from another EU state, which would give consumers more services to choose from. At the same time, consumers will be able to sign a separate roaming contract, allowing them to take advantage of cheaper offers from a different provider while keeping their regular number and SIM card. The Commission believes that more competition is the best way of forcing operators to bring down prices and stop price ceilings from effectively becoming price floors. The new rules still have to be approved by EU states and the European Parliament.

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Harlan Green: Starving the Beast of Government Starves U.S.

June 30, 2011

Bloomberg Businessweek recently highlighted under the banner, “The Most Feared Man in Washington is…” a profile of Grover Norquist, the chief “Enforcer” of the ‘no new taxes’ pledge taken by 233 of the 240 House Republicans crafted during House Speaker Newt Gingrich’s era of the Contract for America. The pledge binds all of its takers to oppose “any and all efforts” to increase marginal income tax rates and to protect tax deductions and credits, according to Businessweek . But in fact this pledge has not succeeded in its stated goal of lowering government spending. In fact it has mainly succeeded in starving the main engine of economic growth, consumer spending. For each time Republican administrations have cut taxes in the name of shrinking government, this has instead shifted wealth from the lower and middle income classes to the top income brackets, which lowers the overall demand for goods and services. As former Reagan Budget Director David Stockman said in an April 23 New York Times op-ed : While not the stated objective of policy, this reverse Robin Hood outcome cannot be gainsaid: the share of wealth held by the top 1 percent of households has risen to 35 percent from 21 percent since 1979, while their share of income has more than doubled to around 20 percent. Why hasn’t the ‘no new taxes’ pledge succeeded? Because Republicans are no better at cutting government spending than Democrats — in fact, worse. Republican administrations since Ronald Reagan have chosen to borrow to pay for their hot and cold wars, rather than sharing the sacrifice, driving us ever deeper into debt. There are other reasons for slower growth, of course. A slower growing population with more seniors and saturated consumer markets (more than 2 cars in a garage?) are two of the reasons. But during the period 1951-63, when marginal rates were at their peak — 91 to 93 percent — the American economy boomed, growing at an average annual rate of 3.71 percent. “The fact that the marginal rates were what would today be viewed as essentially confiscatory did not cause economic cataclysm — just the opposite”, wrote Eliot Spitzer in Slate , “Whereas during the past seven years, during which we reduced the top marginal rate to 35 percent, average growth was a more meager 1.71 percent.” Which brings us back to the federal deficit, the reason we are debating methods to starve the beast of government spending, in the first place. The latest surge in deficit spending was caused first and foremost by the Bush-era tax cuts to the highest marginal tax rates, and on dividends and capital gains earned by the investor class. This in addition to the 2 wars has cost us more than $3 trillion in borrowed money to date, and the reason our deficit is still growing. Grover Norquist is not an economist, though he has a Harvard MBA business degree. So he chose to do his economic jousting without even the most basic knowledge of economics, it seems. Macroeconomic demand theory teaches that taking money from the pockets of those who spend most of it and transferring it to those who save most of it doesn’t increase demand for products. Economic historians in particular know that tax cuts without spending cuts do not lower deficits, since it chokes off the revenues needed to pay down the deficit. The two largest expansions of debt as a percentage of GDP were during the Reagan and GW Bush presidencies — from a low of 47 percent in the 1970s to its current some 80 percent. They were also the administrations that would not make comparable spending cuts. Nor do tax cuts — particularly to the highest marginal tax rates — stimulate more growth. In fact, we have seen a historical drop in GDP growth since the decline in highest marginal rates that prevailed during the Eisenhower administrations. Whereas, the only time we have seen a real decline in the federal budget deficit was during the Clinton presidency, when Clinton and Congress agreed to maintain Pay as You Go budget rules that said spending had to match revenues. The highest marginal tax rate was raised to 39 percent while government spending as a percentage of GDP fell, so that the annual deficit was actually erased from 1997 to 2001. Alas, President Reagan wanted to outspend the Russian military, while GW Bush wanted to invade Iraq without spreading the pain. Instead, he made the call after 9/11 for everyone to go shopping. The problem was that shifting so much wealth to the wealthiest shortchanged consumers, who had to borrow beyond their means to take his advice. When will we learn the lessons of history? Grover Norquist may be “the most feared man in Washington…” only because we are doomed to repeat our historic mistakes, if we do not begin to understand how and why the federal deficit was created. This post originally appeared in Popular Economics Weekly .

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Michele Bachmann Hasn’t Always Walked The Walk On Federal Aid

June 26, 2011

Rep. Michele Bachmann has been propelled into the 2012 presidential contest in part by her insistent calls to reduce federal spending, a pitch in tune with the big-government antipathy gripping many conservatives.

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Richard (RJ) Eskow: If the President Won’t Do Something About Jobs, Who Will?

June 10, 2011

When it comes to jobs, sometimes it seems as if the White House is from Mars and the middle class is from Venus. And Republicans act like they’re from the Death Star, patrolling the economy in their Imperial Cruisers directing laser blasts at every job initiative they can find. The resulting political paralysis has left millions of Americans trapped in geographical or demographic pockets of full-blown depression. Unlike Wall Street’s America, theirs is a bleak economic landscape from which there seems to be no escape. The administration’s mishandling of jobs has become a Rorschach test for those who understand that more needs to be done. Is the White House following a misguided political strategy, thinking people want lower deficits more than they want jobs? Has it been “captured” by the conservative thinking of ex-Republican Tim Geithner? Are the president and his advisors too reluctant to propose measures they know will fail in the Republican House because they want success stories? Ask anyone these questions and the answers will tell you a lot about them, but very little about the White House (unless they have inside information, of course.) But the answers doesn’t really matter. The president’s staunchest supporters and his harshest liberal critics have the same work cut out for them. St. Louis Blues Sometimes I’d rather hammer nails into my skull than look at the latest job figures. But my toolbox is in the garage and it’s raining, so here I am reading some new reports from the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank. We already know about our ongoing and staggeringly high overall unemployment. We know about sky-high youth and minority joblessness and record levels of long-term un- and under-employment. Now, thanks to the St. Louis Fed’s data, we also know that we lost more than one million retail jobs between 2007 and 2009. That’s the result of lost demand, which in turn comes from joblessness, fewer working hours for people with jobs, and a lot more money tied up in real estate than it’s worth. The St. Louis numbers also show that the average number of hours worked declined by nearly an hour per week. As the states shed jobs, we need between 300,000 and 400,000 new jobs each month to make up for unemployment and for young people and others entering the work force. The number of new private-sector jobs last month was 38,000. The government needs to put people back to work, and quickly. Friendly Fire A lot of people think the White House wants to spend more to create jobs, but doesn’t want to propose anything that won’t make it through John Boehner’s House. That argument was undercut by the administration’s actions this week. Democrats in the Senate proposed an additional $600 million in public works spending over a three year period. That’s a very small number — our Citizens’ Commission on Jobs and the Deficit recommended much more investment in jobs and growth, as did the EPI and others — but it’s a move in the right direction. Predictably, Republican Jim DeMint attacked the measure as “another failed job stimulus” idea — a line of attack that’s only made possible because the White House chose to ask for less stimulus money in 2009 than was actually needed, rather than let Republicans shoot down the right number. That approach would have allowed Democrats to explain clearly why the economy’s still stagnant. It’s also exactly the approach Harry Reid was using when he labeled the Republican House a ” big black hole ” from which nothing escapes except “their ideas on how to kill Medicare.” At last! Finally, a Democratic strategy for underscoring the difference between Democrats and Republicans and the need to invest in job creation. How did the White House respond? ” White House says Senate Dems’ jobs bill is too expensive ,” read the headline in The Hill . “…(T)he bill would authorize spending levels higher than those requested by the president’s Budget,: the Administration wrote, “and the administration believes that the need for smart investments that help America win the future must be balanced with the need to control spending and reduce the deficit.” Aaaargggh . Instead of explaining that we spent too little on stimulus rather than too much, the president and his advisors have allowed Jim DeMint’s assertion to go unchallenged. Added DeMint, “We’ve already wasted hundreds of billions of tax dollars on a misguided stimulus that left us with record high unemployment, and we don’t need to repeat the mistake.” Come together… over jobs Whatever his reasons, we now know that president isn’t about to use his “bully pulpit” to contradict Republicans like DeMint. So if the White House won’t step up to the plate, who will? Somebody needs to take action. To paraphrase Al Franken, why not you? Public pressure has persuaded the White House to change course before. In the run-up to the president’s State of the Union address, advanced reports said he planned to announce Social Security cuts. A lot of people raised the alarm, call-ins and other actions were organized, and in the end no cuts were announced. Those of us who supported these actions got a lot of pushback from people who consider themselves the president’s supporters. This kind of comment from Democratic Underground was typical. “Don’t buy the Hype. Obama will not announce cuts to Social Security or Medicare. Once again this phantom has been blown up into a major sh*tstorm by those who oppose Obama on the Right and the Left. Once again it will fail to materialize. When the dust settles, Obama will have only reiterated what he has said before… (there will be) no big scary cuts after all. Just another false alarm.” That’s exactly the kind of friend the White House doesn’t need. As the Wall Street Journal later reported , the administration “considered offering specific benefit cuts and tax increases to shore up Social Security’s finances, but ultimately decided to back off.” The Journal added: “The decision to hold off was made as the White House came under pressure from Democrats and liberal interest groups who oppose any cuts to Social Security benefits.” That pressure didn’t just save American seniors from needless hardship. It also prevented the White House from committing political suicide. Later, additional grassroots activity forced the White House to hold the line on Medicare cuts. That allowed Democrats to draw a clear distinction between themselves and the GOP — exactly what they can’t do right now on jobs, thanks to the White House — and the resulting backlash against Republicans led to an upset Democratic victory in New York’s special Congressional election last month. Now the administration needs to be rescued by its friends again — this time on jobs. Citizen action is needed that will force the administration to draw a clear distinction between its policies and those of the Republicans. The public needs to hear an honest and open debate about what the economy needs. It’s not small-”d” democratic of the White House to deny them that debate. And it’s not big “D” Democratic to allow the president’s party to be labeled the party of joblessness. We had eight years of the Republican approach to jobs, tax cuts, and deregulation. The result is a broken and devastated economy. For reasons we can’t know, the administration has embraced deficits over putting America back to work. It will continue down this path until its friends and its critics come together and demand that it stop. There will be more opportunities to call the White House, sign petitions, and send a message in other ways. These tactics work. The White House’s staunchest supporters and its fiercest progressive critics share a common goal. They both need to persuade the president and his advisors to make the case for creating jobs. Whether the administration wants it or not, right now it needs a little help from its friends.

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Hillary Clinton In Discussions About Leaving Job For New Role

June 9, 2011

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been in discussions with the White House about leaving her job next year to become head of the World Bank, sources familiar with the discussions said on Thursday. The former first lady and onetime political rival to President Barack Obama quickly became one of the most influential members of his cabinet after she began her tenure at State in early 2009. She has said publicly she did not plan to stay on at the State Department for more than four years. Associates say Clinton has expressed interest in having the World Bank job should the Bank’s current president, Robert Zoellick, leave at the end of his term, in the middle of 2012. “Hillary Clinton wants the job,” said one source who knows the secretary well. A second source also said Clinton wants the position. A third source said Obama has already expressed support for the change in her role. It is unclear whether Obama has formally agreed to nominate her for the post, which would require approval by the 187 member countries of the World Bank. The White House declined to comment. A spokesman for Clinton, Philippe Reines, denied she wanted the job or had conversations with the White House about it. Revelations of these discussions could hurt Clinton’s efforts as America’s top diplomat if she is seen as a lame duck in the job at a time of great foreign policy challenges for the Obama administration. However, the timing of the discussions is not unusual given that the United States is considering whether to support another European as head of the World Bank’s sister organization, the IMF. The head of the IMF has always been a European and the World Bank presidency has always been held by an American. That unwritten gentleman’s agreement between Europe and the United States, is now being aggressively challenged by fast-growing emerging market economies that have been shut out of the process. The United States has not publicly supported the European candidate for the IMF, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde, although Washington’s support is expected. Neither institution has ever been headed by a woman. If Clinton were to leave State, John Kerry, a close Obama ally who is chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, is among those who could be considered as a possible replacement for her. Clinton’s star power and work ethic were seen by Obama as crucial qualities for her role as the nation’s top diplomat, even though she did not arrive in the job with an extensive foreign policy background. She has embraced the globe-trotting aspects of the job, logging many hours on plane trips to nurture alliances with countries like Japan and Great Britain and to visit hot spots like Afghanistan and countries in the Middle East. She has long been vocal on global development issues, especially the need for economic empowerment of women and girls in developing countries. She has made that part of her focus at State. Her husband, Bill Clinton, has also been involved in these issues through his philanthropic work at the Clinton Global Initiative. The World Bank provides billions of dollars in development funds to the poorest countries and is also at the center of issues such as climate change, rebuilding countries emerging from conflict and recently the transitions to democracy in Tunisia and Egypt. (Editingby Kristin Roberts and David Storey) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Scott Bittle: Fiscal Follies: The Debt Ceiling and the 48 Percent Solution

May 27, 2011

With the debate over the nation’s debt ceiling continuing to rage, research conducted by our organization, Public Agenda , shows a real chasm between Washington and the rest of the country. Two-thirds of Washington leaders say we need to raise the debt limit , while surveys of the public show that most Americans continue to oppose it. But there is a crucial detail in the public opinion polls that is not getting the attention it deserves. When the Washington Post and Pew Research Center surveyed Americans about raising the debt ceiling, nearly half of Americans (48 percent) admitted that they didn’t have a good understanding of what would happen if the government didn’t raise the debt limit. When that many citizens freely acknowledge that they don’t have a solid grasp of the risks to the country if the debt ceiling deal-making goes south, that’s a wake-up call for leadership. Real leadership, that is, that’s focused on the best interests of the country as opposed an obsession with elections and politics. There are times when elected officials should follow public opinion and pay careful attention to the public’s concerns and priorities. And there are times when elected officials need to lead — they need to be stewards for the country’s future. When public understanding is limited, when people don’t grasp the consequences of a major governmental decision, the time for genuine leadership has come. Technically, the United States passed the $14.3 trillion debt limit earlier in May, and now the federal government can’t borrow any more money until Congress raises the limit. Thanks to some clever accounting at the Treasury, the government can keep going until Aug 2, but at that point, the government wouldn’t have enough money to cover its bills. Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressional Budget Office, has a low-tech, but riveting 60-second version of what it would really mean up on YouTube. The country would have money coming in. After all, we’ll all still have taxes withheld from every paycheck. But what’s coming in would only cover about 60 percent of our expenses, which wouldn’t be enough to cover even what most Americans consider a very “small government.” We have to at least pay the interest on the debt, otherwise we’ll risk unleashing an unpredictable, perhaps uncontrollable meltdown in the international bond markets. (We may not be safe from financial disruptions even if we pay the interest.) Once we’ve done that, there’s simply not enough money to go around. We wouldn’t have enough money to cover all the bills for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, although surely we’d use what is left of the country’s revenues to pay a good chunk of each one. The real problem comes later; after paying for interest and entitlement spending, there won’t be any money left for anything else. As Holtz-Eakin puts it, “no money for the troops, no money for procurement or transportation of materials.” And the Defense Department is just the first casualty. There would be no federal money for public schools, college loans, highways, the Centers for Disease Control or just about anything else most of us expect from government. The truth is that most Americans just don’t realize what not raising the debt ceiling really means. Former President Bill Clinton may have hit on something when asked why polls showed opposition to raising the ceiling at the Fiscal Summit sponsored by the Peterson Foundation this week. “Because they’ve never lived through it,” he said. “No one knows what will happen.” It is true that another common element of leadership is to use a deadline and potential crisis to force a balky group of people to sit down and get a solid deal done. One reason why the debate in Congress is stalled is because many political leaders see the debt ceiling as an opportunity to force change in the federal budget — change that surely has to come. If we actually get sensible, practical change as a result, then we can give our leaders credit for doing their job. If they get an attack of bipartisanship and willingness to compromise, we might even be able to give them credit for a job well done. But if elected officials in Washington allow the United States to slide into a potential economic disaster by blindly following what they think the polls are telling them, then history will heap on them the censure and condemnation they will so richly deserve. Indeed, the American people themselves may take a different view once the results of the decision become evident. If they think that voters are going to reward them for putting the entire country through the wringer, they’re likely to be very disappointed.

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Robert Scheer: Access Journalism: The Movie

May 25, 2011

It is not true, as a Wall Street Journal reviewer claimed, that the HBO movie version of Andrew Sorkin’s book Too Big to Fail was “Too Boring to Watch.” On the contrary, the problem with the film, featuring excellent acting and taut direction, as with the richly anecdotal book, is that it is all too effectively misleading. Fortunately, if viewers have already watched Inside Job , the spot-on Academy Award winner, they will not be led too far astray by this film’s adulation of the likes of Henry Paulson and Timothy Geithner. Paulson is portrayed as an eminently decent man, troubled by the imperfections of the TARP bailout, and when he throws up off camera in one scene it is not at all suggested that perhaps he could be disgusted that the misery he brought to the world had left him a billionaire. When he resigned his position as head of Goldman Sachs to become treasury secretary, he cashed in $485 million in Goldman stock and was saved from a $100 million tax liability because he was entering government “service.” The film barely mentioned that Paulson was the head of Goldman Sachs when his company deceptively packaged and sold the collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) based on the subprime and Alt A mortgages that proved so toxic. As Paulson concedes in his memoir, after George W. Bush appointed him treasury secretary, the president asked plaintively as the economy was crumbling: “How did this happen?” In Sorkin’s book, it is stated that the treasurer “disregarded the question, knowing that the answer would be way too long.” But in his memoir, Paulson provides a clearer insight: “It was a humbling question for someone from the financial sector to be asked — after all, we were the ones responsible.” No such honesty has yet emerged from Geithner, who was an undersecretary of the treasury during the Clinton years, when he worked closely with his bosses, first Robert Rubin and then Lawrence Summers, to pass the radical deregulation hinted at but never fully explained in either the Sorkin book or the film. There is scant reference to the obliteration of the Glass-Steagall Act, a repeal that permitted the too-big-to-fail merger of companies such as Travelers and Citicorp, which became Citigroup — a company that had to be bailed out with $50 billion in taxpayer money. Nor is there any reference in the film to the fact that Rubin, mentor to both Summers and Geithner, went on to help run that new megabank at a salary of $15 million a year. Geithner, who later became head of the New York Fed, a job obtained with the effusive recommendations of both Rubin and Summers, worked to salvage Citigroup from the mess its packaging of toxic mortgages had created. Geithner is lionized in both Sorkin’s book and the film version. As Nancy deWolf Smith put it in the Wall Street Journal : “Some viewers who remember the book may be galled again by the portrayal of certain characters. For instance, Timothy Geithner (Billy Crudup), then president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, still comes across as a blameless saint and Wunderkind with a compassionate finger on the pulse of the victimized ordinary man.” The fawning in the book is embarrassing, as in the description of Summers and his treasury assistant in the Clinton years going off to tennis camp, with Sorkin noting, “Geithner, with his six-pack abs, had a game that matched his policy-making prowess.” Not to be overlooked is “his usual firm, athletic handshake.” That policy prowess must extend to the destructive CDO deregulation that Geithner and Summers pushed through Congress and that, in an image in the movie, we see Bill Clinton signing into law. That legislation, not specifically referenced in Sorkin’s book, was called the Commodity Futures Modernization Act (CFMA). It banned the application of any existing regulation or regulatory agency authority to the emerging market in CDOs that turned out to be disastrous. These were the same CDOs that AIG backed with phony insurance “swaps,” resulting in the Geithner-led $170 billion bailout of the company with the money passed through to Goldman and the other banks covered by AIG. Neither the CFMA nor the heroic and incredibly prescient Brooksley Born, then chief of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, whose dire warnings about the new financial gimmicks were effectively silenced by the CFMA, are mentioned in the index of Sorkin’s book. At the end of HBO’s film about how skillfully Henry Paulson, Ben Bernanke and Timothy Geithner managed to force the top banks to accept $700 billion in bailout money, the question is posed as to whether the banks so saved would turn around and lend money to save the homes of ordinary folks. The outcome was quite the opposite. The economy remains in deep trouble thanks in considerable measure to the “bankers-first” priorities that Geithner and Summers brought with them to the Barack Obama presidency. The housing industry is deeply depressed, new home construction starts this year are expected to match the lowest point since records first were kept in 1963, housing values are predicted to decline at least 5 percent more this year, and without an improvement in housing there will be no significant increase in consumption or jobs. Further, on the day HBO premiered the film, the New York Times reported that the top banks now have an inventory of foreclosed homes that is twice as high as when the crisis began four years ago, and, “In addition, they are in the process of foreclosing on an additional one million homes and are poised to take possession of several million more in the years ahead.” The film and the book, by centering on TARP, make that bailout the big deal, and when the bailout money was paid back to free the bankers’ bonuses from regulation, it was celebrated by Geithner as “the most effective government program in recent memory.” Rubbish! As Paul Atkins and two other members of the Congressional Oversight Panel on TARP wrote in a blistering WSJ column exposing the TARP settlement: “It hides the full story of the government’s financial crisis effort, of which TARP is but a minor part”; the major part being the $1.1 trillion in toxic mortgages that the Fed purchased from the banks, the $380 billion bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac, and the loan guarantees of “other Fed and FDIC programs [that] added another $2 trillion of taxpayer money at risk to the 19 stress tested banks alone.” And then there is the 50 percent run-up in the national debt, thanks to the banks’ savaging of the economy that will haunt us for decades to come. Perhaps the main value of the book and film is the instruction they provide on the limits of mainstream journalism in the decade that led up to the meltdown. Sorkin, who rose to be a business editor at the Times , covered Wall Street deal-making in exquisite detail, relying on an access journalism that has often proved deeply flawed in traditional business news coverage. What was largely ignored as it was unfolding was the story of the unbridled power of Wall Street financiers over the political process that caused this tragedy for so many tens of millions who have lost jobs and homes.

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Partners, Not Adversaries: The Federal Reserve’s Role In The Financial Collapse

May 24, 2011

This is an adaptation from “Reckless Endangerment”, an exploration of the origins of the recent financial crisis, by Gretchen Morgenson and Joshua Rosner. The book will be published today by Times Books. This excerpt examines the cozy relationship between Alan Greenspan’s Federal Reserve and the banks the Fed was charged with regulating. This is the second of three excerpts . To regulators at the Federal Reserve Board , the financial crisis of 1998 and the collapse of the giant hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management had been an undeniably terrifying event. Officials at the prestigious New York Fed knew how extraordinary it had been for them to help the hedge fund; they were sensitive to the fact that they had aided in a speculator’s rescue and worked hard to downplay their role. In the months and years after the rescue, many Fed officials spoke publicly of the lessons to be learned from the disaster. Chief among them were the dangers of increasingly interconnected world markets and economies and the threats of institutions that had grown so large that their failures could imperil the entire financial system. “It was a humbling and enlightening experience for us all,” said Roger Ferguson , a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, in a 1998 speech touching on the Long-Term Capital rescue. “It should cause all of us to reassess our practices and our views about the underlying nature of market risks.” But this advice appears to have been for public consumption only because it went unheeded, especially within Ferguson’s own organization. Indeed, the Fed seemed to have conducted precious little soul-searching as the 1998 crisis receded into the mists of investors’ memories. One big reason everyone felt they could move on from the LTCM mess was the stupendous performance of the stock market, especially the technology sector. It is an investing truth that rising markets create complacency and in late 1998, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average marching inexorably to the never-before-scaled 10,000 level, investors were especially unfazed. The index of 30 industrial stocks had started off the 1990s at 2,753, but in March 1999 it closed above 10,000 for the first time. It was a bubble that would create tens of billions in losses and considerable angst when it popped in 2000. But while the good times were rolling, top financial regulators like Alan Greenspan exulted over the wonders of technological advancements. Although it was obvious to many that the technology stock mania would end badly, Greenspan and his colleagues at the Fed refused to tamp down the euphoria. They could have raised margin requirements, for example, increasing the amount of their own money investors had to put up to buy stock using borrowed funds. Even as they ignored the stock market bubble, these very regulators were laying the groundwork for a subsequent, far more virulent mania in the credit markets — which helped finance, among other things, mortgages and home ownership. Regulators did this by siding with the banks that wanted to loosen the capital strings that bound them, too tightly they thought, in this brave new world. Unfettered capitalism coupled with the ownership society— where individuals were invited to participate in the wealth creation engine of the financial markets— had become a potent combination. It had produced riches for corporate executives and considerable wealth for individuals, and had replaced federal deficits with an unheard-of government surplus, generated largely from taxes paid by investors on their market gains. The belief that the free market could police itself better than any government regulator had already taken hold. So, even as Ferguson and other Federal Reserve officials paid lip service to the important lessons of the 1998 crisis, their actions showed that they ignored those lessons. Instead of heightening the scrutiny of risky practices among the big banks they oversaw, the Fed backed these institutions’ desires to reduce capital requirements and increase their leverage and profits. Instead of reining in financial institutions in areas that could result in losses, Fed officials loosened them. In other words, the Fed was busy becoming a pushover, not a policeman. “It was explicit in those years, if you worked inside the Fed, that you were partners with the banks,” said a former Fed official. “You were not adversaries.” One of the banks’ crucial partners at the Fed, albeit behind the scenes, was Ferguson, the vice chairman. From 1997, when he joined the Federal Reserve as a governor, until he resigned to return to the private sector in 2006, Ferguson was a strong advocate for the banks among global financial regulators. President Clinton appointed Ferguson vice chairman of the Fed in 1999. He began his career as a lawyer at Davis, Polk & Wardwell, advising some of the nation’s largest banks on mergers and acquisitions, initial public offerings, and syndicated loans. Davis, Polk was closely linked to the Fed; years later, during the financial maelstrom of 2008, the firm would advise the New York Fed on its various bailouts. Ferguson was also the Fed’s point man on the Basel Committee, the group of central bankers and international financial regulators that met regularly to discuss and hammer out international banking standards. And according to those who interacted with Ferguson in this capacity, he consistently pushed for rule changes requested by the nation’s largest banks and that were beneficial to them. In 1998, when the Fed governors voted 5-0 to approve the mega-merger of Citibank and Travelers , Ferguson abstained. His wife, Annette Nazareth , was a managing director at Smith Barney, a Travelers unit, when the application was being considered. In a speech in October 1999 to the Bond Market Association in New York City, Ferguson outlined his preference for less, not more, regulation. “Heavier supervision and regulation of banks and other financial firms is not a solution, despite the size of some institutions today and their potential for contributing to systemic risk,” he said. “Increased oversight can undermine market discipline and contribute to moral hazard. Less reliance on governments and more on market forces is the key to preparing the financial system for the next millennium.” A belief had arisen during the late 1990s that bankers had so improved their risk-management and loss-prediction techniques that regulators could rely on the banks to decide how much extra funding they needed to keep in their coffers in case of a financial downturn — a surplus guided by regulatory measurements known as “capital standards.” Not everyone agreed that it was prudent to rely on the banks themselves for guidance — certainly the FDIC rejected the notion. But the Fed was among those regulators who were more than willing to put the bankers in the driver’s seat. Others were the Office of Thrift Supervision , which oversaw savings banks, and the Comptroller of the Currency , which scrutinized large national banks. Executives at the big banks knew that their profits would be bolstered if they could reduce the amount of money regulators required them to set aside for problem loans. Smaller set-asides meant more money to be deployed in lending or purchases of income- producing securities. Banks also recognized that higher profits meant loftier executive pay. But reducing capital requirements would also leave the banks in a more perilous position if their loans and investments went bad. And thanks to the elimination of Glass-Steagall , banks were now allowed to extend and expand their operations almost without limit. Such expansion increased the likelihood of losses in the years ahead. The Fed bought into the banks’ argument that because losses and bank failures had been rare during the mid-to-late ’90s, this was evidence that these institutions had become better at managing their risk taking. Top Fed officials ignored one of the most basic lessons in economics — that even though the sun may be shining today, you should set aside money for the inevitable rainstorm. Others, such as Chairman Greenspan, seemed to have consciously decided that because it rained so infrequently, it wasn’t worth discussing such an outcome. In a 2000 speech, he said: “We have chosen capital standards that by any stretch of the imagination cannot protect against all potential adverse loss outcomes. There is implicit in this exercise the admission that, in certain episodes, problems at commercial banks and other financial institutions, when their risk-management systems prove inadequate, will be handled by central banks.” In a May 2002 speech in Lexington, Va., Ferguson weighed in: “Any regulatory capital standard must, of course, require banks to hold an amount of capital sufficient to get them through, not the worst imaginable, but nevertheless rough times. Competition within the industry and among banking systems of different countries often presses for less. Such pressures must be resisted.” But internally, at meetings in which the new standards were discussed among regulators and market participants, granting the banks’ wishes seemed to be the Fed’s priority, according to a regular attendee. The Fed concluded that regulators could use banks’ own risk metrics to devise capital requirements because the regulator started from the position that these institutions had learned to estimate losses more reliably than they had in the past. To some outside the Fed, relying on banks’ figures represented, at best, a delegation of an important oversight task and, at worst, a dereliction of duty. “They were going to the industry to get a lot of the data,” the fellow regulator said. “They were calibrating their formulas off the banks’ data. The Fed would have been hard-pressed to even come up with the estimates because only the banks really had the data.” Some regulators argued that instead of relying on banks’ estimates of future losses, a better approach would be to determine capital requirements using actual losses that the banks had experienced in the 1980s and 1990s. Applying those real and painful losses to the equation, officials at the FDIC concluded that the new capital requirements left little room for error if banks experienced losses outside their own estimates. “The Fed’s worldview was dominated by the big banks,” the fellow regulator said. “If you look back at all the things that were done, all the rulemaking was in the same direction — that the banks knew what they were doing and we needed to rely more on their internal systems.” This view came through loud and clear in meetings at the New York Fed’s wood-paneled boardroom where regulators and the big banks discussed the new capital requirements. According to a regulatory official who attended these meetings, the message transmitted to the banks was to fear not, the Fed was on their side. “At one of the first meetings I went to,” this official said, “there were people from the highest levels of all the regulatory agencies, both policy and staff, along with chief risk officers at the top 10 banks. The banks were told point-blank the changes were going to be attractive from a capital standpoint.” Although after the financial crisis occurred Ferguson denied that he and others at the Fed had transmitted a dual message, its existence could not have been clearer to participants in these meetings. In public speeches, at congressional hearings, Fed officials insisted it had no interest in reducing capital requirements. But behind the scenes, the message to the banks was an emphatic “we understand where you are coming from” and “we’re on your side,” one participant said. The Fed also angered its fellow regulators by maintaining a disturbing secrecy about the figures and formulas it was using to come up with the new capital requirements. According to people involved in the discussions, the Fed repeatedly pushed back against the FDIC’s desire to publish tables showing the range of effects that capital changes would have on different institutions. These tables showed how the big banks benefited from the proposed rule changes far more than small banks did. “When you publish a bunch of formulas with a lot of Greek letters it’s hard to understand what that means,” said one regulator involved in the battle. “They did not want to risk having the small banks get wind of the differences and raising a stink on Capitol Hill.” The FDIC prevailed, however, and the tables were included. As it happened, the credit crisis hit before many of the changes suggested by the Basel Committee and backed by the Fed could be implemented. But as banks wrote down hundreds of billions in bad loans and sought on-the-fly ways to press for accounting changes that would protect them from writing down hundreds of billions more, it was evident that relying on the banks’ loss estimates to reduce capital requirements would have been a disastrous decision. It would have made the crisis even more devastating than it was. The Fed’s determinedly bank-centric approach in the years leading up to the 2008 financial crisis meant banks were dangerously undercapitalized just when they most needed large cash cushions to protect against losses. But even after it had become clear that the Fed had been wrong to push for relaxed capital standards, the regulator continued to take a pro-bank worldview in its various rescues of big banks hobbled by bad credit decisions.

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Dean Baker: Peter Peterson and the Deficit Ostriches

May 23, 2011

Last spring, Wall Street investment banker Peter Peterson hosted a lavish daylong conference devoted to the budget deficit. One of the highlights was an appearance by President Clinton. Clinton boasted of how he had wanted to cut Social Security back in the mid-90s but congressional leaders from both parties wouldn’t let him. The cut he had wanted would have reduced the annual cost of living adjustment by 1 percentage point annually. This would have left seniors in their 70s, 80s, and 90s with Social Security benefits today that are about 15 percent lower than their current level. How great would that have been? Peterson is back with Round II this week, another lavish affair devoted to the deficit. President Clinton will be again be playing a starring role, although it is not clear whether he will still be boasting about his wish to cut Social Security benefits. What is clear is that Peterson is using his vast fortune to push an agenda that has little to do with deficit reduction, and everything to do with cutting Social Security, Medicare and other programs that are vital to ordinary working people. This fact is apparent from the list of attendees. This is supposed to be a group seriously committed to deficit reduction, yet one of the highlights will be a talk by Representative Paul Ryan, the Republican Chairman of the Budget Committee. Mr. Ryan is best known for a budget proposal that calls for $3 trillion in individual and corporate tax cuts over the next decade. These cuts are supposed to be offset by the elimination of tax deductions, except Ryan does not identify a single tax deduction that he wants to eliminate. All he identified is $3 trillion in tax cuts , most of them going to the wealthy. In Peter Peterson’s world giving up $3 trillion in revenue is deficit reduction. The remarkable part of this story is that there are people who are talking about the budget deficit in a serious way. They are proposing solutions that enjoy the support of the American people, and they are right in front of Peterson’s nose, but he is doing his best to ignore them. While Ryan will be touting his plan for adding another $3 trillion to the debt with more tax cuts for the wealthy, and increasing the cost of Medicare to the American people by $34 trillion , at least one of the groups at the conference will be presenting a budget plan that is much more in accordance with the views of the American people. There are several important principles guiding the EPI plan. First, it focuses on jobs and growth as the immediate problem facing the economy. It is ridiculous to be spending so much time yelling about the deficit at time when 25 million people are unemployed, underemployed or out of the work force altogether. It is especially absurd when everyone knows that the economic crisis caused by the collapse of the housing bubble is the main reason that we have large deficits today. The main reason the budget went from deficit to surplus in 90s was the unexpected drop to 4 percent unemployment at the end of the decade, not deficit reduction measures by President Clinton and/or the Republican Congress . Once the economy is back near full employment, the EPI plan gets most of its revenue from increasing taxes on the wealthy, the big winners in the economy over the last three decades. It also includes a tax on Wall Street financial speculation; taxing the folks whose recklessness brought on this economic disaster. The cuts focus on the military budget. It protects Social Security and Medicare, which are vital programs to the country’s workers and their families, and actually increases spending on infrastructure, education, and other areas that will foster long-term growth. What is striking is that this program is broadly consistent with extensive public opinion polling on the budget. People don’t want to see Social Security and Medicare cut. They think the rich need to pay more and they see the military as the major area of spending most amenable to cuts. The Progressive Caucus, the largest caucus in Congress, put out a budget proposal along these lines last month. Even Peterson’s own America Speaks project came to similar conclusions. This project subjected groups of people at 19 sites across the country to 6 hours of Peterson designed deficit rants. In spite of badly biased presentations, the story was the same. Don’t cut Social Security and Medicare. Tax Wall Street and the rich and cut military spending. The basic problem is that the country is entirely prepared to deal with the deficit in a reasonable and responsible way. However, the people’s vision does not include Peterson’s goals of gutting Social Security and Medicare. Rather than being “deficit hawks,” in denying the obvious path forward on the economy and deficit, Peterson’s gang can best be described as “deficit ostriches.”

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Michael A. Siegel: A Decade Later "New Markets" Continues to Build Opportunity in an America Left Behind

May 18, 2011

The idea, in it’s purest form, was called “community capitalism” as think tanks along with many of the nation’s top economists began pushing a revolutionary idea that began to take hold in late 1990s — the solution for economic revival in impoverished America stretched beyond traditional anti-poverty programs. The answer, they maintained, to creating sustainable and measurable economic opportunity throughout these regions “left behind” rested in private investment. With national unemployment at 4% and the federal surplus continuing record gains, as America had all but erased it’s national debt, President Clinton signed the Community Renewal Tax Relief Act into law in December 2000 including a critical provision to help bring opportunity to severely distressed low-income urban, older suburban and rural communities which had failed to enjoy in the prosperity boom of the 1990s: The New Markets Tax Credit . Working closely with then-Speaker Dennis Hastert and GOP Senate leadership, the Clinton administration crafted this business-based solution designed to stimulate private economic growth in neglected regions throughout the nation. At the time of its introduction, the program marked a decidedly different and bold approach to helping “America’s forgotten neighborhoods” replacing models of the past that relied exclusively on federal grants with a commercially oriented plan to direct private dollars into areas where employment was scarce; investment non-existent. A decade later the innovation behind the “New Markets” public system/private sector approach has become a policy standard and continues to enjoy Republican and Democrat support based on its record of success as recently evidenced by the latest joint effort of Senators Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME) who urged Congress to renew the program last week introducing S996: a five year extension of the program. How it Works At its core, “New Markets” is designed to encourage private investments from corporations and individuals who might never consider buying into so-called “high-risk areas” of America where unemployment and poverty rates can soar by as much as twice the national average. As both Senators Rockefeller and Snowe have attested, the program is geared to provide much needed capital so that all qualifying locals — from urban to rural — can benefit, consequently improving the quality of life and building employment opportunities for people in these areas through lasting investments in local businesses. Administered by the Department of Treasury, investors receive a seven‐year, 39 percent federal tax credit for New Markets investments: a five percent credit in each of the first three years, six percent annually in the last four years. These investments are made to spur community and economic revitalization. The statute requires that investments be located in census tracts where the individual poverty rate is at least 20% or median income does not exceed 80%. Today, $50 billion of capital is flowing in under-served communities in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. Yet unlike many other tax credit programs the “New Markets” program has required renewal during each session of Congress since its introduction. New Markets Success There are and will always remain those who will attempt to discredit the “New Markets” program by delving into what some call “the less than 2%” arena — pointing to a handful of projects out of some 3,000 which, while approved and in qualified areas, may not seem worthy of recognition. But taken on the whole, the “New Markets” program has made significant improvements in distressed communities throughout the country, creating opportunity and jobs while defraying costs to the taxpayer and federal government. In fact, The New Markets Tax Credit Coalition conducted an independent audit of the program as it reached its 10th Anniversary. Some of the key findings include: Between 2003 and 2009 the New Markets Tax Credit leveraged $8.00 in private investment for every $1.00 of cost to the government. Demand for funds far exceeds availability. To date, community enterprises have requested a total of202 billion in allocation authority since 2003, a demand of more than seven times the credit available. The vast majority of “New Markets” investments (89.5%, of the dollars invested) have been made in communities with at least one factor of higher economic distress than required by law (unemployment rates at least 1.5 times the national average, poverty rates greater than 30%, median income less than 60% of area median). And then there is this: According to the website for the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act , the cost to taxpayers to create one job requires approximately $90,000 in federal dollars. In contrast, “New Markets” programs — fusing public incentives with private funds — have created nearly 500,000 jobs at a cost to the federal government of less than $12,000 per job. By any definition the New Markets program has exceeded expectations. Not only has it created a successful model of for-profit, business-driven expansion of investment, job creation and economic opportunities in distressed communities with government and the community partnerships playing key supportive roles — it has done so in tough times when private capital has been hard to find due to the credit crunch and slowing economy. Continuing this program is in the best interest of businesses, taxpayers and communities hit hard by recent economic conditions. Let’s hope Congress agrees.

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Fred Rotondaro: On Taxes

May 13, 2011

House Speaker John Boehner said again this week, tax increases are off the table. He and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell have used the same language hundreds, perhaps thousands of times. You can’t tax the job creators in a recession, they say. They pound it home time and again. It’s the wealthy who create jobs in America, leaving the clear implication they’re defending tax cuts for the wealthy and for corporations because it’s good for America. McConnell and Boehner either have very incompetent staffs or they are deliberately misleading American voters. There is in fact no clear evidence that tax cuts for the wealthy create jobs. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office last year analyzed fourteen approaches to creating jobs in America. Tax cuts for the wealthy came in 14th — dead last . Some Republican spokesmen say that history proves them right, arguing that Ronald Reagan cut taxes and had job gains in his administration. They don’t mention that after Reagan cut taxes, he raised them again. The most obvious comparison is of course the eight-year administrations of Bill Clinton and George Bush. Clinton had a tax rate of 39 percent and created some 22 million jobs during his administration. He left George Bush with a surplus and a roaring economy. Bush’s first move was to use the surplus as an excuse to drop tax cuts to 35 percent for the richest Americans. There is no doubt this was good for the rich who from 2001 to 2007 increased their assets by 10 percent every year. During that same period middle Americas actually lost eight percent of their net assets. And importantly, in 2008 and 2009, the last years when Bush policies were in full effect, America lost a total of 8 million jobs. Higher taxes under Clinton and a net gain of 22 million jobs. Reduced taxes under Bush and a two-year loss of 8 million jobs . How does this equate into lower taxes being good for America? In addition, recent studies using CBO figures estimate that six trillion of our current debt stems from the Bush tax cuts in 2001, 2003 and 2004. McConnell and Boehner know the above figures quite well. They have good staffs as befits their important roles. But telling the truth about taxes would not suit their political agendas. Republicans leaders for the last 30 years have promoted lower taxes for three main reasons, each interlinked. First, Republicans do believe in lower taxes. This goes with their theories about smaller government and with their distaste of such programs as Medicare and social security. Second, it is the very rich and corporations who contribute the most to Republican politicians. It is circular giving for the rich and corporations get substantial largess from the government in many forms — contracts, advantageous government policies, etc. Third, the beneficiaries of Republican tax benefits are well organized and well funded. The Club for Growth and Americans for Tax Reform are two corporate funded groups based in Washington that in effect monitor Republicans on tax policy. The ATR boasts openly that it extracts pledges from members of Congress that they will never vote for any sort of tax increase. ATR says it has over 40 pledges from senators and more than 200 from representatives. Failure to follow the pledge has often meant well-funded primary opponents. Politicians like Boehner and McConnell know full well the implications of their no new tax policy. But sadly, like so many politicians like them, they put power and money above the inter of the average American. And they don’t stop for a moment in deceiving Americans in their pursuit of their political goals.

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Kyle Westaway: The Top Four Startups At The Summit Series Conference

April 25, 2011

It’s been called “The Next TED” and “Davos for Generation Y.” President Bill Clinton has called it “A gift to the United States and the world.” But, honestly, the only way to describe the Summit Series is… Epic. Summit Series engages the world’s most dynamic dreamers and doers through curated events, such as this year’s Summit at Sea, in order to make the world a better place. The Summit Series team believes what’s good for business should be good for the world, and is working to inspire the millennial generation to redefine what success looks like in business and in life. To that end, earlier this month a boat carrying the next generation entrepreneurs, artists and activists set sail from Miami for a weekend of inspiration, connection and, of course, revelry. The weekend was filled with inspiring content from Richard Branson, Russell Simmons, Gary Vaynerchuck and Jaqueline Novogratz. The party was set to the music of The Roots, Imogen Heap, Pretty Lights, Axwell and Eclectic Method. You couldn’t wait in line for a drink at the bar without meeting a 20-30 something that is crushing it in their respective field. The atmosphere was very open, and every conversation was both humbling and inspiring. In the closing session one of the founders of the Summit Series said, “If you want to be a fast runner, spend time with sprinters.” Well, in the world of entrepreneurship and social good, this boat was full of world-class sprinters. Out of this group there were four exceptionally innovative startups from members of the Summit Series community that have the potential to be incredibly disruptive… in a good way. SKILLSHARE What is Skillshare? from Skillshare on Vimeo . The learning revolution is on! Skillshare is redefining what an education is by challenging the assumption that learning only occurs within the four walls of a classroom. Skillshare is a platform to learn anything, from anyone. Think of it as the “Etsy for Learning”. Want to learn how to compost food, win at scrabble, or bake the perfect cupcake from the folks at Magnolia Bakery? You’ll be able to take a class on these interesting topics through the Skillshare community. Skillshare is flipping the traditional notion of education on its head and democratize learning by tapping into existing communities and networks, which we believe are the world’s largest universities. Skillshare is in Beta. THE ADVENTURE PROJECT What’s the best way to create access to water in rural India, clean cookstoves to Haiti, or irrigation in Uganda? The Adventure Project believes it’s by encouraging investment in social entrepreneurs in the developing world. Rather than giving charity, which is so often ineffective, inefficient and destructive, The Adventure Project seeks to empower local entrepreneurs on the ground to meet the biggest challenges in their community. The Adventure Project accesses microphilanthropy — donations of $100 or less — from their grassroots network of donors in America and invests those donations in innovative, low cost solutions in developing communities across the globe. Every quarter they focus on a different project. The Adventure Project transforms philanthropy into investment. The vision is simple. The Adventure Project believes that we can end extreme poverty in our lifetime by reinventing how we give. Ways that spur economic opportunity, promote dignity and save lives. The Adventure Project launched in December 2010. Check them out at http://theadventureproject.org ZAARLY Zaarly Introduction from Team Zaarly on Vimeo . Say you’re on a deadline at the office and you’re totally craving Chicken Tikka Masala from that one Indian restaurant across town, but there’s no way you can get out to grab it. You think to yourself, “Man, I’d pay $30 to get that Tikka Masala right now.” Well, that’s exactly what Zaarly does. Zaarly is a proximity based, real-time buyer powered market. Buyers make an offer for an immediate need and sellers cash in on an infinite marketplace for items and services they never knew were for sale. It’s the perfect marketplace to facilitate division of labor, so that users can spend their time focusing on the best use of their time. Additionally, it’s creating a solution to the languishing unemployment problem. Anybody can run errands in their free time and make a decent amount of money. Zaarly is in stealth mode. BRE.AD Do we really need another link shortener? That was my initial thought when I heard about bre.ad. But Bre.ad is the first innovator in this space because its patented technology enables users to promote their personal brands and causes. Here’s how it works: say you send me a link to a Harvard Business Review article. When I click on the link I will be directed to a 5 second billboard of your choosing, perhaps a page promoting Pencils of Promise, then it will automatically take you to the HBR article. The first bre.ad link was used by Lady Gaga to promote her new album on Twitter and Facebook. The company is working with online personalities, brands and charities to help them gain more exposure across social media while letting their audiences know what they care about most. Bre.ad is currently in stealth mode To sign up for their beta, visit http://bre.ad These four startups are changing the way we learn, give, share and get stuff done. But there are sure to be more innovative startups coming out of conversations that happened at the Summit at Sea. With all the talent, ambition, positive vibes, great music and inspiration on the ship, there’s sure to be dreamers and doers that are bold enough to ask the question, “What if…?” Whatever the answer to that question is, the world is bound to be a better place because of it.

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Scott Bittle: Fiscal Follies: S&P, Groucho Marx, and the Bond Vigilantes

April 21, 2011

Admittedly, we may have an odd sense of humor when it comes to the federal budget. But after an initial shiver of fear, our first reaction to the news that Standard & Poor’s had issued a “negative outlook” for the U.S. national debt was: “Oh, no. Mrs. Teasdale has finally made her move.” You may not know who Mrs. Teasdale is, but she’s the oblivious dowager played by Margaret Dumont who starts the action rolling in the classic Marx Brothers political satire, Duck Soup . That movie starts with a government financial crisis, and Mrs. Teasdale may be the world’s first “bond vigilante.” Some say the term “bond vigilante” dates from the 1980s, while others say it was coined during the Clinton administration. Either way, it describes what happens when the traders who deal in government securities start to get nervous about a nation’s deficits and debt load, and threaten to dump their bonds unless a government changes its policies. That’s what S&P is starting to do with its “negative outlook,” and that’s what Mrs. Teasdale does in Duck Soup . Duck Soup takes place in the fictional nation of Freedonia, which is broke. Mrs. Teasdale, who has more money than sense, agrees to lend $20 million to Freedonia’s government, but only if it will appoint Rufus T. Firefly (Groucho) as prime minister. Things only get worse, and more ridiculous, from there. But while it’s an absurd situation, it’s also an indispensible lesson: when you’re in debt and need to borrow, the people with the cash on hand hold the cards. You might not think the United States and Freedonia have much in common. Now that we know we can’t fix this thing by axing agricultural subsidies and National Public Radio, we face some truly unpleasant choices — cutting spending on things that matter to people and hiking taxes in an economy that’s still sputtering. Right now we’re borrowing to get by, and we can only continue to do that as long as the world’s investors continue to loan us money. Right now, the United States relies on borrowed money that we get by issuing Treasury bonds. We have about $9.66 trillion in Treasury bonds outstanding, and we’ve got another $4.6 trillion in intergovernmental debt (mostly borrowed from the Social Security Trust Fund), which also has to be repaid. U.S, Treasuries are owned by investors around the world ranging from the People’s Bank of China and the “Caribbean Banking Centers” (The Bahamas, Cayman Islands, and the like) to state and local governments to individual bond holders like Mrs. Teasdale. For years, the United States has been in the catbird seat in the world bond market. Both here and abroad, investors have always seen U.S. Treasuries as a prudent, trustworthy investment in a dangerous, changeable world. Government bonds in general are considered one of the safest investments out there, no matter which government you’re talking about, because governments (a) can always raise taxes to pay their bills and (b) rarely go out of business. But sometimes governments get in too deep and then drag their feet on getting their fiscal houses in order. Then bondholders start wondering whether the government is actually good for the money. That’s what has happened to Greece, Ireland, Portugal, and Spain over this past year. The world’s bond markets had their Mrs. Teasdale moment when they started to see these countries as risky financial bets. That’s the reason behind the wave of budget-cutting sweeping over Western Europe right now, as Britain and France try to head off trouble. It’s important to remember: the United States is a wealthy, powerful country, the biggest economy in the world. We’re also the sole superpower, so it’s unlikely any of our creditors would impose a leader like Rufus T. Firefly on us. (We’re not saying he might not get elected on his own.) But it’s risky to think that we’re invulnerable to the power of the bond markets. They know we’re good for the money, if we tax ourselves more and/or spend less. But what S&P and others are really saying is that they don’t think we’ve got the political will to do either one. S&P said there was “significant risk that Congressional negotiations could result in no agreement on a medium-term fiscal strategy until after the fall 2012 Congressional and presidential elections,” and S&P said there’s a one-in-three chance it would actually lower our bond rating in the next two years. Is it fair that the bond market has this much power? Not really. Did the bond ratings agencies behave as dimwittedly as Mrs. Teasdale when they missed the looming financial crisis in 2008? Sure. Does that change anything? Not at all. We’ve been safe from the Mrs. Teasdales of the world so far, but with new red flags appearing every day, how long can that last? The cold fact is that the federal budget is on an unsustainable path , because as the population ages and our health care costs continue to go up, the costs for Medicare and Social Security are going to skyrocket. In a little more than a decade, our national debt could be as big as our entire economy, and nearly the entire federal budget could be taken up by Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and interest on the money we’ve already borrowed. If we don’t start getting our deficits down and reining in our long-term spending, someday Mrs. Teasdale will come to call, and she’ll be able to make demands, and we’ll have to listen, and it won’t be funny. At that point, every single one of us could be in duck soup.

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The New Yorker: Has Obama Given Up On Inequality?

April 18, 2011

All this suggests, not for the first time, that the President might be a better tactician than his critics. But outmaneuvering his political opponents is not the same thing as achieving a country that, as he said last week, “values fairness.” The most persistent and corrosive feature of American life over the past three decades is income inequality: it rose steeply during Clinton’s first term, and, despite his budget victory, it continued to go up in his second.

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Obama Team Hopes To Coax Back Online Donors

April 14, 2011

NEW YORK — If the grass-roots energy that fueled President Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign proves hard to duplicate as he seeks re-election, so too could the Internet-powered small donor base that helped him shatter all fundraising records. The weak economy, lack of a Democratic primary challenger and no clear front-runner in the Republican field may delay or prevent small donors from opening their wallets, strategists say, forcing a greater dependence on wealthy contributors for a re-election campaign that could cost more than $1 billion. Many Web-based activists also contend that Obama has let them down, from extending Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy to breaking his pledge to close the U.S. military prison for terrorist suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. That’s dampened the ardor of many online donors, says Peter Daou, who was Hillary Rodham Clinton’s Internet director in her 2008 presidential campaign but now backs Obama. “I will make the unequivocal statement: It will not be what it was,” Daou said. “There’s a sense of promises not kept, too much solicitousness of the Republican position. Many, many people are saying, ‘I’m not going to send him a dollar.’” Obama launches a series of fundraising events this month, beginning Thursday in his hometown of Chicago, before heading to California, New York, Texas and elsewhere. He will mingle with contributors who give as much as $35,800 or as little as $25. “There’s real power at the grass roots that is still there,” Obama adviser David Axelrod said. “Now, obviously, we are contending with a lot of forces out there that are well-heeled.” “I don’t know what the mix will be, but grass roots will be a major part of it,” Axelrod added. “But we have to be prepared to defend ourselves.” The online army that texted and tweeted Obama to victory in 2008 also helped the old-fashioned way. Some 54 percent of Obama’s $750 million haul came in contributions of $200 or less. His record fundraising allowed Obama to become the first presidential candidate to reject federal money in both the primary and general elections. The president’s 2012 re-election effort began last week in an email announcement to supporters. Aides said the campaign received 23,000 contributions in the first two days, 96 percent of which were less than $200. They declined to say how much came later in the week but insisted the early results were positive. “The response we got was much more robust than we anticipated,” Axelrod said. “But we don’t believe in treating our supporters like an ATM machine. We want them to help build the campaign. That comes first.” Persuading online supporters to contribute money is a more labor-intensive effort than simply including a solicitation page on the campaign website. Small donors typically are engaged through web activism, such as signing Internet petitions or watching and emailing videos to friends. They might then attend a local campaign event or two before deciding to make a donation. And grass-roots donors often wait until relatively late to contribute. They were slow to send checks to the Obama campaign through much of 2007, only beginning to engage early the next year when his primary battle with Clinton got under way. They also contributed heavily at the peak of the general election campaign, when Obama faced off against Republican John McCain. Some Obama advisers have played down the notion of a $1 billion fundraising goal, noting that in 2008, Obama raised more than $300 million during the protracted Democratic primary fight alone. With no credible primary challenger, they say, Obama may not be pushed to spend heavily until a Republican rival emerges. Still, advisers concede an overall lack of grass-roots enthusiasm could affect the high-dollar donor base as well. The president acknowledged the diminished excitement in a conference call with supporters last week, saying, “We may not have the exact same newness that we had.” Re-engaging major donors and fundraisers is another challenge the Obama team faces as it ramps up the campaign. Dozens of the campaign “bundlers” who collected checks from big donors in 2008 have been given ambassadorships and other government jobs and are therefore precluded from raising campaign money this time around. Some Wall Street donors, unhappy with the president’s efforts at financial regulation following the 2008 economic collapse, have indicated they may withhold support. And Obama himself will have less time to spend on the fundraising circuit than he did in 2008, as the demands of the presidency consume most of his time. That could make it harder to engage mid- and high-level donors who want to see him at fundraising events and won’t settle for a stand-in. The Obama team also will have to contend with the emergence of independent conservative groups like American Crossroads that are expected to raise and spend heavily to defeat the president. Crossroads and other groups were significant players in the 2010 election after the Supreme Court eased restrictions on political spending by corporations, unions and others. Several Democratic strategists have announced plans to launch their own independent groups to support Obama’s re-election and help Democratic Senate and House candidates in 2012, but those efforts are just starting to take shape. “He’ll need a lot of help from larger donors, but I think they will do very well on their small-donor program too,” said Peter Buttenweiser, a Philadelphia-based Obama bundler. “Once things pick up again, over six to nine months, the Internet will come into play.”

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‘Tax Freedom Day’ May Overstate Middle-Class Tax Burden

April 12, 2011

One hundred and one days. That’s how long it will take Americans to earn enough income to pay off their total 2011 tax obligation to the U.S. government, according to the Tax Foundation, the fiscally conservative think tank that will celebrate April 12 as the day of completion, labeling it Tax Freedom Day. The Tax Foundation’s calculation, however, doesn’t account for America’s richest citizens paying taxes at significantly higher rates than middle- and low-income taxpayers. Instead, they simply divide total taxes collected ($3.628 trillion) by the net national product of the country ($13.107 trillion). But while this year’s tax revenue as a percentage of national income is higher than 2010 (26.9 percent) and 2009 (26.6 percent), it remains lower than any other year since 1966. This recent trend toward earlier Tax Freedom days largely results from declining tax revenues since the recession, the study’s author, economist Kail Padgitt, said in an interview. Tax Freedom Day has sparked debate over middle-class taxes, with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities arguing , the Tax Foundation figures exaggerates the tax obligations of “typical middle-income workers. Only the richest 20 percent of Americans pay taxes at or above the level indicated by the Tax Foundation, CBPP notes, while the other 80 percent pay a considerably lower percentage, citing the most recent data available from the Congressional Budget Office: Still, the Tax Foundation says their Tax Freedom Day is a useful indication of the state of the country’s overall tax burden. The calculations, the foundation notes, don’t account for Americans’ estimated future obligations to the nation’s $14 trillion deficit . Here’s a Tax Foundation chart on the gap between the deficit and tax revenue. What Tax Freedom Day also doesn’t take into account, though, is that the U.S. has also seen a rapid rise in the amount of income that is exempted from taxation. Over the last 50 years, non-taxable annual U.S. income per capita has grown by 600 percent to $12,528 from $2,007. Taxable income has only doubled in that span — to $31,303 from $15,368 — placing an additional strain on the federal deficit. Some, including University of Maryland political science professor Robert Stoker, argue that the Tax Foundation’s indicator builds an unfair bias against progressive income taxes and other taxes that actually lift the tax burden off of middle-class households. “As [long as] income [becomes] more and more concentrated at the top, Tax Freedom Day will fall later and later in the year,” Stoker says. “That is, unless we shift the tax burden on to working Americans. Among the states, Connecticut (May 2) has this year’s latest Tax Freedom Day, while Mississippi (March 26) has the earliest. Of course, how states and cities obtain revenue for governments differs drastically by region. As explained in Taxing the Poor , a 2011 book by Katherine Newman and Rourke O’Brien, the South tend to rely on sales tax (a regressive tax) while the Northeast is dependent on revenue from income taxes (more often progressive): The largest percentage of income ever dedicated to taxes was 33.0 percent, recorded during the Clinton administration. President Bill Clinton, who benefited from a surging dot-com economy, balanced the budget from 1998-2001.

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L. Randall Wray: Budgetary Impasse: Is There an Alternative to Hoovernomics?

April 7, 2011

I don’t know if I can stomach much more of the posturing in Washington. We know it is all about politics. And Congressman Ryan has yet again said that budget cutting is about “morality”, not economics. The possibility that a sovereign government might be shut-down this weekend because its elected representatives will not extend a self-imposed debt limit just boggles the mind. I’m so fed up I really cannot write about that nonsense any more. Yet, the insanity has seeped outside the beltway. Even economists — who should know better — are weighing-in in favor of Washington’s budget-cutting. And not just any economists — even those with Bank of Sweden-awarded “Nobels” (mind you, not real Nobel prizes) and assorted other distinctions have come to the support of the craziest Tea Party ideas. Cutting government spending is good for growth! The fiscal stimulus package cost us jobs! Worker pensions caused the fiscal shortfall facing states! Keynes and Roosevelt are responsible for all our current problems! Time to bring back Hoovernomics! For example, in a Wall Street Journal article this week three Hoover Institute economists (Gary Becker, George Schultz and John Taylor) endorsed Republican efforts to make large federal government budget cuts. I will not address all the arguments made in defense of a “Hooverian” approach to economics. Instead I want to focus on the two main points made. These are arguments that any student of Econ 101 from 1950 up to the present day would have been able to destroy with both argument and evidence. Here are their arguments: When private investment is high, unemployment is low. In 2006, investment–business fixed investment plus residential investment–as a share of GDP was high, at 17%, and unemployment was low, at 5%. By 2010 private investment as a share of GDP was down to 12%, and unemployment was up to more than 9%. In the year 2000, investment as a share of GDP was 17% while unemployment averaged around 4%. This is a regular pattern. In contrast, higher government spending is not associated with lower unemployment. For example, when government purchases of goods and services came down as a share of GDP in the 1990s, unemployment didn’t rise. In fact it fell, and the higher level of government purchases as a share of GDP since 2000 has clearly not been associated with lower unemployment. They then supply a graph showing investment and government spending as a share of GDP to demonstrate these two points. Based on that data, these Hooverians argue that the solution is to cut federal spending and then to hold its growth rate below that of GDP. This will allow the share of government spending to fall — while economic growth will let tax revenues rise a bit faster so that the budget will move toward balance. (Indeed, tax revenue does tend to grow much faster than GDP in a boom — increasing as a percent of GDP — which is how we got the Clinton-era budget surpluses.) By framing their argument in terms of ratios to GDP, the authors provide a misleading characterization of cause and effect. It is true that high investment spending tends to increase GDP while lowering unemployment — that is the Keynesian “multiplier” at work. High growth of GDP, in turn, lowers the ratio of government spending to GDP so that we will observe a correlation between falling unemployment and a falling government share of GDP — but that is a correlation of no causal significance. When an investment boom collapses — as it did in 2006-2007 — GDP growth then falls and the government share of a smaller GDP will rise. Our Hooverians interpret that as “proof” that a rising government share does not help to fight unemployment. In fact, however, relatively stable government spending over a cycle helps to cushion a private sector “bust”. While it is hard to prove the counterfactual — how bad would things have been without sustained government spending? — it is hard to believe their argument that a loss of 8% of GDP due to reduction of private spending would not have led to a much deeper recession (or depression) without the stabilizing force of our government spending. Simply arguing that we did not get recovery in spite of the Obama stimulus ($800 billion over two years, or well under half the loss of private sector spending) will not do — it does not tell us how high unemployment would have gone in the absence of stimulus. Let us take a look at the components of GDP over the past two decades. Recall from your Econ 101 course that the aggregate measure of a nation’s output of goods and services (GDP) is equal to the sum of consumption, private investment, government purchases, and net exports (for the US that is of course negative). We can further divide investment into residential (housing) and nonresidential (investment by firms). Finally, we can divide government spending between federal government and state and local government. The following chart graphs the domestic components of GDP (net imports are left out), indexing each component to 100 in 1990. (This makes the scale easier to show in the graph, and simplifies comparison of growth by component. For example, if consumption spending doubles between 1990 and 2000, its index increases from 100 to 200.) What we see in this graph is that the slowest growing component over the two decades was federal government spending — it actually did not grow much until the term of President George W. Bush. (A substantial portion of federal government growth since 2000 can be attributed to our multiple wars, as well as to domestic spending on security in the aftermath of 9-11.) By 2010, federal government spending was just over 2.3 times bigger (in nominal terms) than its spending in 1990. This graph certainly does not appear to show that federal government spending has been growing so fast that it is “crowding out” private spending on investment. Indeed, it was only after President Bush’s spending increases for foreign wars and domestic security that we see obvious outsized booms in residential and nonresidential investment. There is no evidence that government purchases crowded out private investment spending. Private consumption as well as state and local government spending grew steadily, increasing by about 267% before the deep recession led to some retrenchment. Note that the fiscal crisis now facing cities and states will lead to continuing cutbacks in state and local government spending–the “perfect fiscal storm” I wrote about last time. And while consumption appears to be recovering by 2010, the jury is still out. Still, the overriding picture one gets is that consumption as well as state and local government spending have been growing relatively steadily, and at a pace considerably faster than growth of federal government spending. By contrast, residential investment boomed in the real estate bubble, growing 350% by 2005. It then collapsed so that it stood at an index of just 150 in 2010 (fifty percent higher than in 1990). Nonresidential investment shows a clear cyclical nature, and it too collapsed in the aftermath of the global financial collapse. Viewed in this light, it is not at all surprising that when total investment (residential plus nonresidential) is growing rapidly, unemployment tends to fall; but when investment spending collapses we lose jobs at a stupendous pace. In a small government economy, it is investment that dominates, through the Keynesian multiplier: when firms and households are optimistic, we get residential and nonresidential investment, growth, and jobs; when they are pessimistic we get recession and unemployment. This has long been the concern of Keynesian economists: investment by its very nature is highly cyclical, subject to what J.M. Keynes called “whirlwinds of optimism and pessimism”. That is not all bad. J. Schumpeter referred to the “creative destruction” that makes capitalism dynamic — waves of innovation generate new investment, wiping out firms that get left behind. But if an entire economy is whipped about by unstable investment, we oscillate between the extremes of boom and bust. That is why we need some spending that is more stable — better yet, we need a source of spending that can act in a countercyclical manner to offset the swings of investment. And that is precisely what we created in the aftermath of the Great Depression. First, we grew the federal government — from about 3% of GDP in 1929 to above 20% after WWII. As Hyman Minsky used to say, government needs to be at least as big as investment to ensure it can offset swings of investment spending. As the chart above shows, federal government spending is not subject to the wild swings that afflict investment, so it helps to stabilize GDP and jobs–if it is big enough. Second, we put in place a variety of federal government programs that help to stabilize household consumption (unemployment benefits, Social Security retirement, and “welfare” for households, firms, and farms). That is, again, reflected in the chart above–even when the financial sector crashed and unemployment exploded, consumption dipped only slightly, thanks in large part to government “transfer” payments like unemployment benefits. Note that transfer payments are not explicitly included in the chart above. Rather, payments like unemployment benefits and Social Security show up in consumption — helping to stabilize it over the course of the cycle. Our modern Hooverians would like to return to the “good old days” of President Hoover, when the government was smaller and both unwilling and unable to offset the swings of private investment spending. Back then, when investment collapsed unemployment did not go to 9 or 10 percent, it went all the way to 25 percent. When people lost their jobs, there was no “welfare” to fall back on. Hence, consumption would collapse — feeding through to lost retail sales, and on to farm products, and thence throughout every corner of the economy. That is why GDP fell in half, and why the Great Depression was so “great”. Government was far too small to stabilize spending and incomes. Sure, we got the New Deal programs that helped a bit. Unfortunately, President Roosevelt lost his nerve in 1936 in the face of budget deficits. He raised taxes and constrained spending in an attempt to reduce the deficit. In fact, the following crash in 1937 was the sharpest in US economic history — even worse than the 1929 crash. The New Deal programs, by themselves, would never have generated recovery, because they were too small–just like the Obama stimulus. Instead it was WWII that ramped up government, increased budget deficits to 25%, and increased production to the full employment level. The rest, as they say, is history. Or, at least it was. Until modern Hooverians decided to return to the completely discredited economics of the distant past. Hoovernomics would turn back the clock to ring in another Great Depression with the same old pre-Keynesian ideas that failed us in the 1930s. As I have been arguing for years, we actually have it much better than the Keynesian-New Dealers of the 1930s had: we gave up gold and fixed exchange rates. We adopted a sovereign currency. Our government faces no financial constraints. Except those that are self-imposed by inside-the-Beltway thinking. Cross-posted from Benzinga . A shorter version of this was posted earlier at New Economic Perspectives from Kansas City. I thank James Felkerson for producing the graph. L. Randall Wray is a Professor of Economics, University of Missouri–Kansas City. A student of Hyman Minsky, his research focuses on monetary and fiscal policy as well as unemployment and job creation. He writes a weekly column for Benzinga every Tuesday. He also blogs at New Economic Perspectives, and is a BrainTruster at New Deal 2.0. He is a senior scholar at the Levy Economics Institute, and has been a visiting professor at the University of Rome (La Sapienza), UNAM (Mexico City), University of Paris (South), and the University of Bologna (Italy).

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Ian Fletcher: Review: Thom Hartmann’s Rebooting the American Dream

March 31, 2011

Thom Hartmann is famous as a liberal commentator on the radio, on TV, and in over a dozen books. But he has written here a book that is of far more than partisan value. Rebooting the American Dream: 11 Ways to Rebuild Our Country will please liberal readers, but it will also challenge them to revisit some of their own lazy beliefs. It will annoy conservatives, but the smarter ones will take notes and absorb some of his trans-partisan insights into their own politics. Chapter 1 , “Bring My Job Home!” squarely identifies the root of America’s jobs problem in its trade problem. Unlike most commentators on the issue, who remain stuck in the “born yesterday” mentality of most contemporary economics, Hartmann understands that this problem cannot be understood without recourse to economic history. So he goes into considerable depth explaining the original Hamiltonian (after founding father Alexander Hamilton, principal economist among the founders) design of America’s tradition of broadly-shared prosperity. Hartmann shows how nations like China are applying the same winning principles even today, and why we must return to them. If we don’t, we’ll get an inexorably shrinking middle class, a bloating plutocracy, and a polity poisoned by class division. Chapter 2 , “Roll Back the Reagan Tax Cuts,” will annoy the living daylights out of conservatives. Hartmann’s well-documented contention is that the Reagan tax cuts didn’t really benefit anybody but the very rich, didn’t stimulate the economy, and didn’t even reduce the size of government in the end. (They thus failed by both liberal and conservative standards.) Back in the day of thieving Marxist goons like, say, President Eisenhower (that’s sarcasm, people, lest I be bombarded), America had tax rates on the rich peaking at around 90 percent–and did very well economically, thank you very much. Even the rich were happy in those days. So why not go back, rather than gutting public services and piling up deficits? Chapter 3 , “Stop Them From Eating My Town,” is about a number of issues. First is the visible decimation of America’s once diverse and vibrant local retail landscape by national chains–a trend evaded only in a few special places like Vermont (and, I might add, my hometown of San Francisco). This raises, in turn, the underlying issue of the increasing oligopoly in many American industries, which is quite the opposite of the “free” markets that conservatives claim to believe in. Trustbuster (and Republican!) Teddy Roosevelt got this one right; the villains here are Ronald Reagan and every president since, who have let antitrust enforcement slide. Real competition is indispensible discipline for the excessive power of corporations. Chapter 4 , “An Informed and Educated Electorate,” looks at the decay in the quality of the news media due to the abandonment of the FCC’s old fairness doctrine and related provisions like the equal-time requirement for political candidates. As a result, our media have increasingly degenerated into self-referential ideological boutiques, with Fox News being the one most likely to annoy Hartmann’s fans. What’s wrong with just letting the marketplace make these decisions? The fact that information about public affairs is largely a public good, i.e. it doesn’t benefit me very much if I’m better informed about public affairs, but it benefits all of us if all of us are better informed and thus more rational voters. Prior to 1980 or so, this was well understood by Republicans and Democrats alike. Chapter 5 , “Medicare ‘Part E’–for Everybody,” is Hartmann’s suggestion of an easy way for America to take advantage of one of the biggest dirty secrets in all of economics: socialized medicine actually works . (Factoid: the Veterans Administration is its most efficient practitioner in the U.S.) The international data on this are fairly plain, but instead, in America we have a staged debate on whether the world is round or flat. So we go on spending twice as much per person on health care as other developed nations while enduring medical bankruptcies and health insecurity unknown elsewhere. Why can’t workers have a raise? Because all the money available for one went to health insurance. If the private sector really is better, let it face the competition of a Medicare system that anyone can buy into at cost. Chapter 6 , “Make Members of Congress Wear NASCAR Patches,” is, in a sense, about why all Hartmann’s other ideas aren’t likely to go anywhere any time soon. (Sorry, but that’s the standard drawback of most good books full of good ideas.) Despite the pretence of genuine policy debate in this country, we often have in Congress a disingenuous auction, made possible by the fact that the U.S. stands virtually alone among developed nations in basically legalizing political bribery. We call it “lobbying” and congratulate ourselves that we, unlike, say, Indonesia, do not live under crony capitalism, but the hard data on corporate contributions say otherwise. Campaign finance reform thus underlies reform of every other issue. Chapter 7 , “Cool Our Fever,” is about America’s energy addiction. Hartmann supports a cap-and-trade system of carbon emissions taxes and subsidies for electric cars and energy research. He points to Germany and China as nations that either already have gotten, or are starting to get, serious about alternative energy. Interesting fact: they don’t have huge domestic oil industries lobbying in the opposite direction. Chapter 8 , “They Will Steal It!” hits the nail on the head about the central flaw in the Clinton-Bush-(and now apparently)-Obama agenda to impose democracy on the rest of the world at the point of a gun. If American-style democracy is so good for all these people around the world, why don’t they voluntarily figure this out themselves and go grab it? After all, we didn’t have to bomb the world to get it to drink Coca-Cola or buy Apple computers. Sure, we’ve knocked over a few dictators, but foreign peoples have shown time and again they’re quite capable of doing this for themselves. And the very act of our shoving democracy down people’s throats tends to make them gag–frequently in favor of quite nasty alternatives that look good largely because they shake a fist at Dirty Yankee Imperialism.” Chapter 9 , “Put Lou Dobbs Out to Pasture,” is the chapter that will shock a lot of lazy-thinking liberals. Hartmann’s point here is that immigrant rights , i.e. civil rights that should be non-negotiable for anybody in a civilized society, are an entirely different question from immigrant numbers , i.e. how many people we should let into the country each year. And the latter is mainly about one thing: cheap labor for big business . Think it’s an accident that right-wing union busting presidents like Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush both pushed for amnesty for illegals so hard? (Reagan got his in 1986; Bush failed in 2007.) Humanely cutting off the flow of cheap labor, mainly by enforcing the laws against employing illegals, is, in fact, America’s best shot for ending poverty. When these people go home, they’ll have a shot at building up the economies of their own countries and prospering there. Chapter 10 , “Wal-Mart is Not a Person” goes right to the legal heart of the problem discussed in Chapter 6: the fact that American law curiously confers all the rights of actual people upon the legal constructs we call corporations. But if corporations are people, why should they enjoy limited liability, which people don’t and which was a major purpose of inventing corporations in the first place? The key Supreme Court decision here is Santa Clara County vs. Southern Pacific of 1886; as a result of this philosophically ludicrous doctrine, courts have found it impermissible to restrain the “right” of corporations to spend as much as they please to manipulate our political process. Hartmann suggests a Constitutional amendment. Chapter 11 , “In the Shadow of the Dragon,” is about one of the most interesting economic organizations in the entire world: the Mondragon cooperative in Spain. This worker-owned co-op (that’s right, just like your local organic grocery) is a $24.4 billion dollar corporation that employs over 90,000 people in industries ranging from banking to the manufacture of home appliances. It is proof positive that we have choices other than the underperforming, crisis-racked, corrupting and plutocratic version of capitalism promoted as our only choice by the Wall Street Journal . Our best move may not be to imitate these people per se, but we need to wake up to the vast possibilities in economic organization open to us. Use your imagination, America. Just so the reader can know I’m not in Mr. Hartmann’s pay, I’ll confess a few reservations about this book. He seems to endorse (I’m not sure) the so-called Gaia hypothesis about the world being a giant living organism–one of the most notorious pieces of feel-good pseudo-science in living memory (p. 131). He also wants a universal military draft, albeit one with a strong civilian-service option (p. 143). He casually tars all border-control Republicans as racist, when the actual evidence only convicts a few (p. 159). But on the whole, this is an excellent book on substance, and nicely written to boot. Above all, it gives off that rare and somewhat old-fashioned aroma of genuine concern for the country’s good , as opposed to the pie-in-the-face partisanship or ax-grinding agenda mongering most political books these days consist of. When I visit the local bookstore, I’m afraid to pick half of these books up; the reader should not be afraid to pick up this one. Minor note: the 2011 edition of my own book Free Trade Doesn’t Work is now available .

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Radiation Fears Threaten To Deepen Japan’s Economic Struggles

March 28, 2011

NEW YORK — Still reeling from a devastating earthquake and tsunami, Japan must also contend with a force that could further stall its delicate economy : fear. The disaster that struck Japan’s northeast coast earlier this month crippled the country’s trade, as ports, roads and factories were destroyed. Failures at nuclear reactors caused rolling blackouts, further complicating production. In the days after the earthquake, the value of Japan’s currency experienced a historic rise, which threatened to make the products the country did manage to export less attractive to foreign buyers. And now, in the wake of the reactor problems, many consumers and even governments have attached a stigma to Japanese goods amid mounting concerns of radiation poisoning. Fears take a variety of forms. Concerns of widespread nuclear contamination have caused some buyers to shun Japanese agriculture. Meanwhile, worries about supply chain disruptions have prompted others to buy certain niche products in large quantities, and a reworking of widely used “just in time” manufacturing methods to account for those shifts could raise prices globally. Such fears will likely strain the country’s economy, and potentially those of other countries, for months to come, or for as long as the full implications of the Japanese disaster remain unknown, economists say. “There’s a huge, huge fear factor involved here. Some of it is justified, some of it is not justified,” said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist of IHS Global Insight, an economic and financial analysis firm. “For Japan, it’s one more negative in terms of long-term growth.” In Asia, shoppers are already avoiding Japanese-grown foods, Bloomberg News reported . Unlike industrial products, food is grown outdoors and cannot always be easily cleaned if it comes into contact with radiation. Reports have emerged of abnormal radiation levels detected in milk, spinach, sweet potatoes and water. On Friday, authorities in Taiwan detected radiation in the paper packaging of udon noodles, Nikkei News reported . These reports are tempered by reminders that the detected radiation levels remain safely within their legal limits. At this point, fears of radiation poisoning in food are probably overblown, according to Arthur Alexander, an economist at Georgetown who specializes in Japan. “There’s a lot of nervousness around. They see there’s radiation in the air,” Alexander said. “Consumers react in a highly emotional way.” But whether such fears are justified seems not to matter. Already, nervousness has caused world powers to shut out Japanese products. Thailand’s Food and Drug Administration has announced that it will destroy a shipment of Japanese sweet potatoes that, it says, contain radioactive iodide. China has banned imports of certain Japanese food products. South Korea has forbidden food imports from the Japanese prefectures affected by the nuclear crisis. The European Union is imposing strict tests on Japanese food products. The United States will prevent all milk, fruit and vegetables from four Japanese prefectures from entering the United States, the Food and Drug Administration said in a statement. Japan’s economy already faces challenges. The week after the earthquake, Wells Fargo cut its forecast for Japan’s second-quarter economic output, now predicting that the economy will slip into recession until the second half of the year. Moody’s Analytics predicts a gross domestic product growth rate of 1 percent for this year, down from the firm’s pre-earthquake forecast of 1.4 percent. That outlook includes a recession projected to continue until the second half of the year. And the strain could become greater. “Consumers and importers everywhere are going to err on the side of caution,” said Jeffrey Garten, a professor of international trade and finance at Yale and a former undersecretary of commerce for international trade in the Clinton Administration. “They simply don’t know how bad this situation could be, and they don’t trust anyone enough to make a definite assessment.” “I think we’re in the early innings of a much longer game,” Garten added. Just as oil investors are making trades based on fears of unknowns, purchasers of Japanese goods seem to be playing it safe. And such a stance strains Japan’s economy, even though food exports accounted for less than 1 percent of the nation’s total exports last year. Such exports have become more important in recent weeks, experts say, as trade in other goods has suffered. The real risk, moreover, isn’t about food. It’s that the stigma now placed on food could spread to other goods as well. Jay Bryson, an economist at Wells Fargo, outlined a potential worst-case scenario. “If there really is a nuclear meltdown there and it contaminates hundreds of squares miles of area in Japan, all those factories cannot produce any more for a long, long period of time,” Bryson said. “You can rebuild a factory, but that takes years.” The effects of Japan’s economic struggles on the rest of the world remain unclear. Certain global manufacturers have been forced to halt production due to shortages of essential components made in Japan. Anticipating more such shortages, some companies have gone on buying sprees. And the current system is generally short on redundancy. One particular type of videotape is only produced by Sony, which has closed a crucial Japanese plant, The New York Times reported . That supply limit has prompted film industry suppliers to buy as much of the film as possible. Such scenarios could easily lead to higher prices as goods become scarce, economists say. “The global trading system over the last 20 years has evolved into very complex and very attenuated supply chains, where if one thing goes wrong in one country you can have reverberations all through the logistical system,” Garten said. “I think that that’s the one thing that you know is going through the minds of CEOs around the world.”

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GOP Senator Questions Costs Of Libya Conflict

March 27, 2011

WASHINGTON — On Sunday, Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) raised questions about the economic costs of U.S. involvement in Libya. Speaking on NBC’s “Meet The Press,” Lugar insisted that the U.S. has no vital national security interest in Libya and argued that additional military spending will exacerbate the nation’s budget deficit. “There have to be objectives and a plan and an agreement that we’re prepared to devote the military forces but also the money,” Lugar said. “It makes no sense in the front room, where in Congress we are debating seemingly every day the deficits, the debt ceiling situation coming up, the huge economic problems we have — but in the back room we are spending money on a military situation in Libya.” President Obama committed U.S. forces in Libya amid escalating violence, in which Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi pledged to show “no mercy” to those opposing his regime. Other members of Congress have been critical of Obama’s Libya decision, presenting arguments that many congressional Democrats had used to critique President George W. Bush’s handling of the Iraq war. But in recent years, Lugar has developed a record of questioning U.S. military efforts that other top Republicans have supported. After initially supporting the Iraq invasion, Lugar broke with President Bush and his party in 2007 by calling for a reduced American role in Iraq. He has also criticized continued U.S. involvement in Afghanistan over the past year, noting the costs of the operation and unclear military objectives . Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) introduced legislation last week to immediately halt military action in Libya unless the president receives authorization from Congress. Rep. Bruce Braley (D-Iowa) has also pressed the administration for a full accounting of the costs of U.S. involvement , saying he has not yet received a straightforward answer from the White House. Administration officials are not planning on asking Congress for a supplemental bill to pay for the military intervention in Libya, which National Journal estimated cost more than $100 million in Tomahawk missiles alone in its first day. “The operation in Libya is being funded with existing resources at this point. We are not planning to request a supplemental at this time,” Office of Management and Budget spokesman Kenneth Baer said Monday. In an interview with Jake Tapper on ABC’s “This Week,” Defense Secretary Robert Gates refused to estimate the length of the U.S. commitment in Libya. When asked by Tapper whether American troops would be withdrawn by the end of the year, Gates responded, “I don’t think anybody knows the answer to that.” Gates was also cautious about defining American objectives in Libya, noting that “regime change is a complicated business,” and suggesting that a full ouster of Gaddafi may not be a final goal of the U.S. mission. In a separate interview for “Meet the Press,” Gates acknowledged that Libya does not represent a clear threat to U.S. national security interests, but said that other considerations make the military mission important. “I don’t think it’s vital interest of the United States, but we clearly have interests there,” Gates said. “And it’s a part of the region which is a vital interest for the United States.” Sens. Jim Webb (D-Va.) and Edward Markey (D-Mass.) have both suggested the U.S. implemented its no-fly zone out of concerns over the stability of oil prices. Rising oil prices are crimping American consumers amid a fragile economic recovery. But Lugar questioned whether the money being spent on military operations in Libya would be better spent elsewhere. “Estimates are that about $1 billion has already been spent on an undeclared war in Libya, some would say only hundreds of millions, and that that will diminish in the days ahead,” Lugar said. “But [who] knows how long this goes on? And furthermore, who has really budgeted for Libya at all? I have not really heard the administration come forward saying that, ‘We’re going to have to devote these funds, folks, and therefore it’s something else we’ll have to go or it simply adds to the deficit.’” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also made the Sunday talk show rounds with Gates. In an interview on ABC, Clinton insisted that international cooperation made the U.S. mission in Libya a more manageable operation than the war in Iraq, and one that does not need the same level of congressional approval. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) made similar statements on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “There was no U.N. support in Iraq. It made a big difference,” Levin said. “We’re part of an international coalition which has been supported now by U.N. resolution, the support of Arab countries, to prevent the slaughter of civilians in Libya.” When Tapper asked why President Obama chose to intervene in Libya, after declining to commit U.S. troops to unrest in other Middle East nations, Clinton said the severity of the violence in Libya had touched a particular humanitarian nerve in the international community. “Each of these situations is different,” Clinton responded. “But in Libya, where a leader says ‘spare nothing, show no mercy’ and calls out air force attacks on his own people, that crosses a line.”

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Dr. Philip Neches: AT&T and T-Mobile: Back to the Future

March 24, 2011

Many analysts complain, with justification, that the proposed merger of T-Mobile into AT&T would create a duopoly in domestic cell phone service. The combined company would have roughly 42% market share; Verizon, the current leader, would come in second at 32%; Sprint would be a poor third at 17%; other carriers divide up the remaining 9%. ( GAO 2009 data ) After three decades of invention, growth, and consolidation, we would be back to 1982. That’s when the FCC granted the first commercial license for cellular service to Advanced Mobile Phone Service, Inc. — a subsidiary of AT&T. The license came with a hard-fought condition: the FCC would license a second carrier in each city. The cell phone, like so much of the technology we take for granted today, was invented at Bell Labs . A 1947 paper by D. H. Ring (that’s really his name!) described the idea of using many low-power transmitters, each serving a relatively small “cell”. The cells would be arranged in a hexagonal “honeycomb” pattern. The paper described a hand-off of a call from cell to cell as the caller moved around. It also described how the same frequency could be re-used in different cells, allowing far more calls to be handled. The concept was far beyond what even Bell Labs could implement in those days of relays and vacuum tubes. It sat on the shelf until the 1960s, when Richard Frenkiel and Joel Engel took up the challenge by applying integrated electronics and computers. President Clinton recognized their work with the National Medal of Technology in 1994. In 1971, AT&T proposed the first cellular service concept to the FCC. Years of hearings followed. The two-carrier decision emerging along the way to first field trials in 1978 in Chicago and Newark. By 1982, it was ready for to go commercial. The same year, AT&T broke up into seven “Baby Bell” regional operating companies and “Ma Bell”: long distance, Bell Labs, and Western Electric. The FCC’s earlier decision to require at least two cell phone carriers per city proved prescient. While the Baby Bells lumbered into the cell phone business, literally hundreds of entrepreneurs stormed out of the gate, each building out service in a single city. A few years earlier, the same thing happened with cable television service. Entrepreneurs wired cities and towns. Then a few entrepreneurs started consolidating local operations into larger and larger regional, and ultimately national, providers. A few, like Comcast in cable and McCaw in wireless, became giants. At the same time that local systems were consolidating into regional and national systems, both cable television and cellular phone service started to replace their original analog technologies with digital. Digital expanded the capability of both services by factors of 10 to 100 (number of channels for cable, number of calls for cellular), while lowering the cost. Plus, digital meant entirely new kinds of wireless services became possible: text messaging, mobile e-mail, mobile Internet, and so on. Demand exploded, and in less than a decade, cellular went from relative luxury to everyday necessity. The United States was the first nation to have cell phones, and was the first market to saturate: today 96% of Americans have cell phones . Market saturation means that carriers have less motivation to innovate to win new customers, because there are few unserved customers left to win. Competition among cellular carriers devolved into a stark battle to retain customers and margins. That’s hard enough to do when you have strong differentiation: it’s very, very hard when there is little difference in the nature, quality, or price of the service. Innovation is still very important in a late-stage market. But it’s more difficult, because the new product or service must fit into the existing base. Old customers will not abandon everything they are used to even for a very compelling innovation. That is why products like Apple’s iPhone and iPad are so hot: they make existing services easier to use and provide a platform for applications that provide new utility on top of existing services. Thus AT&T was willing to concede so much to Apple to be the exclusive provider of cellular service for iPhones. It may have been a Faustian bargain for AT&T, however. While the iPhone got existing AT&T users to upgrade their service and won customers away from other carriers, iPhone users put far more stress on AT&T’s network, driving up their costs. While good for AT&T’s top line, it is not entirely clear that it was good for their bottom line. The cellular industry adopted so-called “friends and family” plans as a way to retain customers (reduce “churn”). These pricing plans offer reduced monthly rates for keeping several phones active with the same carrier. They also eliminate per-minute charges for calls to selected phone numbers, and, more important, to any cell phone served by the same carrier. The larger the user base of a carrier offering a “friends and family” plan, the better the economics turn out for both the carrier and the customer. The customer benefits from access to more cell phone numbers for which per-minute charges are waived. The carrier benefits from having the contract be “stickier” to more customers: fewer customers are likely to give up the benefits of the family plan by switching to another carrier, thus saving the carrier the marketing costs of acquiring another customer or re-acquiring the same customer. Why is this so important? Because of a dirty little secret of the telecommunications service business: it costs more to market to customers than to handle their calls. Thus, the T-Mobile acquisition by AT&T could be particularly bad for Sprint. Ironically, Sprint was the first large carrier to offer “friends and family” pricing, starting in their long-distance business. If Sprint and T-Mobile combined, the resulting carrier would still be third, but a close third (32% Verizon, 30% AT&T, 29% Sprint/T-Mobile). The carriers would be more closely matched on the criterion that could have the most influence on buying decisions: the number of other users your calling plans could access at reduced rates. Three well matched competitors would be better than two giants, a runt, and a crowd of pygmies, some say. Thus, it is conceivable, although perhaps not likely, that the FCC or DOJ will reject the deal out of hand, giving Sprint another shot. The larger story is that the US cell phone business has matured. It is no longer the wild rush of rapidly advancing technology and raw entrepreneurship in pursuit of new users. To find those conditions, one now has to look to the developing world. And indeed, that’s where most of the innovation is happening. But for the US, we could be headed for an effective duopoly of two giant carriers. Back to the future. The author was a senior officer of AT&T and a member of the Bell Labs Executive Council from 1992 to 1996. He also served on the Board of Directors of Evolving Systems, Inc. , a supplier of telecommunications software, from 2005 to 2011.

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Dave Johnson: Cutting Government Creates Jobs Like Cutting Taxes Increases Revenue

March 18, 2011

A ” report ” from Republican staff of the Joint Economic Committee says that the path to job creation is cutting … the very things that create jobs. This is like saying that cutting taxes increases revenue. We know how that worked out, and the job-consequences of budget cuts are going to be just as disastrous. Sometimes you can cut through ideology by looking at what actually happens in the real world. Reagan cut taxes: huge deficits resulted. Clinton raised taxes, the deficits went away. Bush cut taxes, we went back to huge deficits. And you can see the same thing when you look at government spending and jobs. England and Greece are trying austerity, and their economies are sinking as a result. In 1937 the United States learned this lesson, succumbing to deficit cutting which choked off the recovery from the depression. On the other hand, the “stimulus” boosted the economy, held off a depression and created millions of jobs — but not enough jobs to overcome the Bush years. Here is the chart — note the obvious effect of the stimulus and of the end of the stimulus on the jobs picture: Cut Cut Cut To Grow Grow Grow? Republicans say that cut cut cut leads to grow grow grow. Their prescription is to cut taxes to “reduce uncertainty” which they say will result in job creation. Never mind that Clinton raised taxes and then the economy boomed. Then Bush cut taxes and then gave us the worst job-creation record in decades, even before the recession started! From The Hill, GOP study backs ‘cut and grow’ but says new jobs could take time , House Republican leaders on Tuesday released a study that they said shows their “cut and grow” strategy will boost the economy. 
The study argues that reducing uncertainty about future taxes will increase household spending and business investment, spurring growth and hiring. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) said the report shows “less government spending means more private sector jobs.” Just how will “certainty” about tax cuts create jobs? The study argues that “non-Keynesian effects” result from government budget cuts. It says households expecting future taxes to pay for government spending will purchase more homes and durable consumer goods once uncertainty about future taxes is erased. Right, knowing that taxes will be lower, people will go out an “purchase more homes.” The people funding the Republicans will just go buy an 8th house with their tax savings. And maybe a Maybach or two. Plutonomy in action! No Path To Jobs Laying off teachers and firefighters is not the path to jobs. Cutting government cuts the very things that nurture the soil in which business can thrive. We need a modern infrastructure to compete in world markets, bu t they are cutting back on infrastructure spending. We need a well-educated population to grow the economy, but they are cutting back on education. Cutting is clearly not the path to more people having better-paying jobs: Congress takes aim at jobs program , Becky Thompson of Sioux Falls turns 72 next month, and she is quietly grateful that she has a job working in the computer lab at Experience Works, an agency that helps older workers find employment. . . . But now she and other older workers are worried that all this – the training, the support, the camaraderie – will disappear in the next round of budget cuts. That’s because more than 60 percent of Experience Works’ budget comes from the Senior Community Service Employment Program, the only federally funded job training program for low-income seniors – and one of many programs targeted for reduction in the Republican spending bill that passed the House last month. Economists, Analysts, Everyone Says Budget Cuts Will Kill Growth Isaiah Poole summed it up in, More Than 300 Economists Repudiate Right-Wing “So Be It” Economics , Today the Economic Policy Institute and the Center for American Progress jointly released a statement signed by nearly 320 economists from around the country, including Nobel Prize winners Kenneth Arrow and Eric Maskin, former Vice Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Alan Blinder, and former Chair of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers and Director of the National Economic Council Laura Tyson. That comes a day after Mark Zandi of Moody’s Analytics released a report that estimated the House budget cuts would result in a loss of 700,000 jobs by 2012. That finding evoked a “so what?” from House Majority Leader Eric Cantor that was remarkably in line with the dismissive “so be it” comment that House Speaker John Boehner made earlier in February in response to concerns that budget cuts would result in job losses. If people had good jobs that paid well the deficit would be a heck of a lot lower than it is. People would be paying taxes instead of collecting unemployment. Cutting the things that create jobs is certainly not a path to creating jobs. England is learning this, our Congress is not. No Job Creation Programs At All Republicans have held the Congress for months but have not introduced a single job-creation program. In GOP Bait And Switch On Jobs , Anne Thompson lays it out, , The House Republicans have developed a track record of bait and switch when it comes to their approach to job creation. Last week, House Republican leadership released a PowerPoint by Congressman Paul Ryan that they are using to educate the Republican Caucus on their top policy priorities. Ryan laid out the “Jobs Deficit” as the number one challenge facing America in his very first slide. Yet he failed to focus on jobs until the very last slide, which reads: “Keep taxes low; spur job creation and growth.” Not quite the robust plan we need to put millions of Americans back to work. Is There At Least A Secret Plan? It appears — and this kook “study” confirms — there is no real plan for jobs. But is there at least a secret plan in operation? Secret plan? When they said that cutting taxes increases revenue they knew it wouldn’t — they had a hidden agenda . They knew better than to actually believe that cutting taxes would actually increase revenue to fund the government. They said so. The r esulting deficits were the agenda. The plan was to ” cut their allowance ” and ” starve the beast ” to create a debt crisis , then demand that government cut back the things it does to protect and empower We, the People. What is the agenda behind this job-destruction agenda? If there is a secret agenda behind destroying so many American jobs — and the ability to create new jobs that pay well — then what is it? They can’t be crazy enough to destroy the economy just to increase their 2012 electoral odds, can they? On the other hand, no one has ever finished the sentence, “Republicans aren’t crazy enough to …” without being proven wrong. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary . This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture . I am a Fellow with CAF.

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At California Nuclear Plant, Emergency Response Plans Don’t Include Earthquakes

March 16, 2011

As the world’s attention remains focused on the nuclear calamity unfolding in Japan, American nuclear regulators and industry lobbyists have been offering assurances that plants in the United States are designed to withstand major earthquakes. But the emergency plan for the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant on the California coast, which sits less than a mile from an offshore fault line, does not include a ready response for an accident triggered by an earthquake. Though experts warned from the beginning that the plant would be vulnerable to an earthquake, asserting 25 years ago that it required an emergency plan as a condition of its license, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission fought against making such a provision mandatory as it allowed the facility to be built. As Americans absorb the spectacle of a potential nuclear meltdown in Japan — one of the world’s most proficient engineering powers — the regulatory review that ultimately enabled Diablo Canyon to be built without an earthquake response plan amplifies a gnawing question: Could the tragedy in Japan happen at home? Experts who recall how the California plant came to be erected offer a disconcerting answer: Yes. And some are calling for more urgent government action to review safety at nuclear plants across the country. “What they’re displaying now is exactly what was wrong in the past with the nuclear establishment, which is that they didn’t have their priorities right,” said Victor Gilinsky, who served on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission during the Diablo Canyon debate and agreed with the call for greater attention to earthquakes in emergency plans. “They’re more concerned about the protection of the plants, and installation of further plants, than they are about public safety. The president should be saying, ‘I want every single plant reviewed.’” Back when the California plant was being finalized in the mid-1980s, local activists and environmental lawyers sued the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in an effort to slow the project, arguing that the clear risks from earthquakes nearby required additional planning. The case made its way to the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., where a 5-4 majority — including current Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and former Clinton independent counsel Kenneth Starr — ruled that earthquakes did not have to be included in the plant’s emergency response plans. The underlying theory was that the plant’s design, which came after years of planning and geological studies, could withstand any foreseeable earthquake in the area — the same assumption that guided thinking in Japan. Emergency response plans at the Diablo Canyon plant still do not take an earthquake-induced nuclear release into account. “What they’re saying is that there could be an earthquake, but in no way could it ever cause a radioactive release at the same time,” said Rochelle Becker, who led the San Luis Obispo, Calif., group that first sued the Nuclear Regulatory Commission over earthquake preparedness in the 1980s. “I’m pretty sure we now have evidence that it does.” A spokeswoman for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission confirmed that the emergency response plans at Diablo Canyon do not have an earthquake contingency plan because the commission is satisfied that the plant’s structure will be able to withstand an earthquake in the area — calculated as a maximum magnitude of 7.5. But officials at Tokyo Electric Co., the operator of Japan’s stricken Fukushima Daiichi plant, said over the weekend that the strongest earthquake they had anticipated was much lower than the magnitude-9.0 quake that struck last Friday. “That’s a lesson that we ignore at our own peril, because we could be wrong, too,” said Joel Reynolds, the attorney who originally brought the case against the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and who is now a senior attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council in California. “It is a story as old as science that we’re always learning new things. We’re always discovering the unexpected.” Critics have raised particular questions about how a standard emergency response to a nuclear disaster could be complicated if it had been caused by an earthquake, where roads and other surrounding infrastructure would also be impaired. So far, the commission has not specifically recommended any changes to safety regulations or emergency response procedures at nuclear plants in the United States. “All our plants are designed to withstand significant natural phenomena like earthquakes, tornadoes and tsunamis,” the commission’s chairman, Gregory B. Jaczko, said earlier this week. “We believe we have a very solid and strong regulatory infrastructure in place now.” He added that the commission would “continue to take new information and see if there are changes that we need to make with our program.” Michael Mariotte, the executive director of the Nuclear Information and Resource Service, a group critical of the nuclear industry and the regulatory process, said the pushback on response planning reflects an environment where the industry is helped along by regulators. “That’s the logic behind a lot of our nuclear regulation, unfortunately, is that it’s designed to accommodate the operation of a plant, and not necessarily the protection of the public,” Mariotte said. “If they acknowledged that an earthquake occurred that damaged the plant, then they’re also acknowledging that an earthquake has damaged the transportation infrastructure, that you can’t get people out properly, that the plant doesn’t work, and then it can’t be approved.” At the time the Diablo Canyon case was being litigated in the mid-1980s, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the electric utility looking to build the plant had been dealing with more than a decade’s worth of federal and state reviews for the facility. Federal regulators were comfortable with their seismic reviews of the remote coastal area between Los Angeles and San Francisco. Comments made during closed meetings, later released to the public, showed that some NRC commissioners were concerned that additional public hearings surrounding the emergency response plan and earthquakes would slow the process further. “One of the things that I think makes me shy away often from hearings is because as soon as we hear the word ‘hearing,’ you see so much time elapse that it maybe over-influences one,” then-NRC Chairman Nunzio J. Palladino, who has since passed away, said at the time. “I do feel that at this late stage, requiring a delay while we wait for a hearing is not in the best national interest.” When the case involving earthquake response was eventually litigated all the way to the federal appeals court in D.C., which ultimately sided with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the five-member majority noted that there had already been extensive review of seismic activity around the plant. “We can think of no potential natural or unnatural hazards, regardless of their improbability, that the Commission would not be required to consider,” failed Reagan Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork wrote in an opinion for the appellate court. “That is a prescription for licensing proceedings that never end and plants that never generate electricity.” The four dissenting judges, including current Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, noted: “The very purpose of the exercise is to plan for the unthinkable eventuality that the design safeguards will not prevent an accident.” “It defies common sense to exclude evidence about the complicating effects of earthquakes from a proceeding dealing with how to respond to a nuclear accident at a plant located three miles from an active fault, a plant in which seismic concerns dominated the design and construction proceedings for well over a decade,” the justices wrote. In recent years, the utility that operates Diablo Canyon, Pacific Gas and Electric Company, has recently found another fault line less than a mile from the plant after conducting research with the U.S. Geological Survey. The plant’s original design had accounted for a fault that was farther offshore — about three miles from the plant. The spokeswoman for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Lara Uselding, said the utility has not found evidence that the newly discovered fault line would pose a risk to the plant. The commission is currently reviewing the company’s geological report.

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Geithner: U.S. Must Help ‘Nurture’ Emerging Markets

March 9, 2011

WASHINGTON (By Glenn Somerville and Lesley Wroughton) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner urged lawmakers on Wednesday to approve capital increases for global lending institutions and warned that failure to do so could harm U.S. influence abroad. “We live in a dangerous world, the world isn’t standing still,” he told a House of Representatives Appropriations subcommittee where he sought backing for a $1.24 billion budget increase to $3.36 billion for international programs that Treasury oversees. “Other countries like China are ready to fill any vacuum left by a receding America and we have to take a very careful look when we’re going to cut back things like this to make sure we’re not undermining our core interests,” Geithner said. Geithner cited specific areas in which the United States might lose clout if it failed to be generous. “At the World Bank, failure to finance the capital increase would lead to the loss of U.S. power to veto changes to the World Bank’s government agreement,” he said. “At the Asian Development Bank, if the U.S. does not support this capital increase, we will fall behind countries like China and India.” The Obama administration has been at pains to highlight the need to protect the United States’ ability to project its influence in a world in which conflicts are springing up nearly overnight, as evidenced by unrest in the Middle East and North Africa. Amid uncertainty about the attitude that new regimes may adopt toward the West and with competition for key resources fierce in many regions of the world, U.S. officials want to keep as many channels open as possible for exerting global sway. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee a week ago that it needed to beware the consequences of cutting the U.S. foreign affairs budget. “If anybody thinks that our retreating on these issues is somehow going to be irrelevant to the maintenance of our leadership in a world where we are competing with China, where we are competing with Iran, that is a mistaken notion,” she said. Geithner said increasing U.S. support for global lenders such as the World Bank could lead to more sales abroad of U.S.-made goods. “America needs the (Multilateral Development Banks) to nurture the next group of emerging markets for our exports, to foster peace in countries facing conflict or on the brink of collapse, and to advance our shared values in the world,” he said. In response to questions, Geithner said the administration was working closely with strife-torn countries like Egypt and Tunisia to make sure that assets are protected, and seized if necessary for future return to them. “It is very important as we think about how best to support the political transition underway, (that) we recognize those new governments are going to face enormous economic challenges,” he said. Countries such as Tunisia and Egypt are considered middle-income nations so they would not quality for debt cancellation under existing international debt relief schemes overseen by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. (Reporting by Glenn Somerville and Lesley Wroughton; Editing by Kenneth Barry) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Daniel M. Cofall: Dangerous Games

March 1, 2011

Just a quick show of hands… how many of you have discussed the internal conflicts in the Middle East with your friends? Now, how many of your friends have concluded that this conflict in Egypt is good because they are pro-democracy and that this will be good for equities as even more of the world opens up to free trade? I have heard this same discussion over and over but it’s just not true. To quickly bring you up to date, there are now demonstrations beginning in Oman. The Chinese Premier Wen Jaibao just pledged to punish the abuse of powers within China and to close the growing wealth gaps just as he limited any news of the Middle East protests from entering China. South Korea is dropping leaflets into North Korea telling the North Koreans of the revolts in the Middle East and suggesting that they control their own destiny and can over throw Kim Jong Il’s regime. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is reaching out to folks in Libya from various anti-Quaddafi movements and has pledged US support. Activists in Saudi Arabia are now demanding increased political rights and a movement toward a constitutional monarchy. The Tunisian Interim Prime Minister just resigned. Unions and other sympathetic organizations spread their protests across America. Did you think that only Egypt is unstable? I believe that events of this magnitude are neither random nor spontaneous. I also believe that these are not pro-democracy rallies because students of history know that democracies are not stable. And there are plenty of groups opposed to any form of republic or democracy and these forces are not sitting on the bench. If these demonstrations are the product of experimental social engineering, we must accept that we can’t know what will emerge. Promoting instability is a tricky avocation, much like a professional water balloon catcher. We assume that it is a good thing to support Libyan anti-governmental protesters but is it possible that those that have contempt for both Quaddafi and the West will ultimately see us as merely interventionists? We may be welcomed as some transitional facilitators but will continued intervention result in anything more that more Mubarak-like governments? Of even greater concern is amount of change the world can tolerate at one time. This is the reason that I have great concern that many financial assets are currently significantly over-priced. Two huge risk factors are not being priced into the markets… uncontrolled instability and inflation… neither of which is easily modeled. We do know that returns based upon historically low interest rates do not reflect inflationary realities and these low returns completely ignore the unintended consequences of waves of protests and instability. There was an interesting article by Chris Mayer last week discussing economic forecasting tools and their accuracy and relevance. He quoted the famous investor Peter Lynch as saying, “If you spend more than 13 minutes analyzing economic and market forecasts, you’ve wasted 10 minutes.” Yet, at the extremes, mal-investments are more likely to happen. Financial assets are currently priced with exceptionally large presumed growth rates, low interest rates and low inflation rates. I cannot think of a time in recent memory where there was a worse matching of risk to return. In a world of real turmoil (with no clear-cut direction or winners in sight), we blithely accept forward Price to Earning’s of 20+. We think all sectors are just about as likely to expand (OK, excluding retail). We compare actual performance to “expectations” without ever asking whose expectations are being used. We use data we know to be erroneous generated by the Treasury, the Fed and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Mayer went on to critique the use of performance statistics and their presumed accuracy. I have these discussions with folks all the time suggesting that no one can precisely measure expected returns, upon which all valuations are based, because contained within these returns are risk factor estimates, generally the product of our own governmental reporting and, yet, we must make an attempt. Erring on the side of conservatism would seem natural yet today we continue to seek justifications for higher prices and solace in low metrics and low volatility. I would say it reminds me of the tech wreck in 2000 or the real estate bubble in 2007-8 but that would be unfair, as both of those “corrections waiting to happen” were not surrounded with worldwide political uncertainties. The short answer is that you cannot truly measure inflation or unemployment month to month any more than you can put a specific risk factor on political turmoil. But you can say that these two factors are likely greater than the “official” reports and that worldwide turmoil at least deserves “a few hundred basis points” of consideration. I continue to see much more risk than the market is pricing in. If this is true, then a correction cannot be far behind.

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Ian Fletcher: Trade Solutions That Won’t Work

February 28, 2011

Americans in recent decades have not, of course, been entirely unaware that America has a trade problem. This has drawn into public debate a long list of proposed solutions. Unfortunately, many will not work, some are based on analytical confusions, and a few are outright nonsense. If we are to understand the true scope of our problem and frame solutions that will work, these false hopes must be debunked forthwith. For example, since the early 1990s it has been repeatedly suggested that the U.S. is on the verge of an export boom that will erase our trade deficit and produce a surge of high-paying jobs. Bill Clinton was fond of this idea, and Barack Obama proposed in 2010 that America double its exports in five years. The possibility looks tantalizing when we observe that America’s exports have indeed been growing rapidly — just not as rapidly as our imports. (Between 1992 and 2008, our exports more than doubled, from $806 billion to $1,827 billion.) This seems to imply that we are not uncompetitive in world markets after all, and that if only our export growth would climb just a few points higher, the whole problem would go away. Unfortunately, our deficit is now so large that our exports would have to outgrow our imports by two percent a year for over a decade just to eliminate the deficit — let alone run the surplus we need to start digging ourselves out from under our now-massive foreign debt. This doesn’t sound like much, but it is, in fact, a very strong export performance for a developed country, and unlikely in the present international economic environment, where every other nation is also trying to expand its exports. Much of our recent export growth has been hollow anyway, consisting largely in raw materials and intermediate goods destined to be manufactured into articles imported back into the U.S. For example, our gross (i.e., not net of imports) exports to Mexico have been booming, to feed the maquiladora plants of American companies along the border. But this is obviously a losing race, as the value of a product’s inputs can never exceed the value of a finished product sold at a profit. Not only is America’s trade deficit the world’s largest, but our ratio between imports and exports (1.28 to 1 in 2010) is one of the world’s most unbalanced. Given that our imports are now 17 percent of GDP and our entire manufacturing sector only 11.5 percent, we could quite literally export our entire manufacturing output and still not balance our trade. Import-driven deindustrialization has so badly warped the structure of our economy that we no longer have the productive capacity to balance our trade by exporting more goods, even if foreign nations wanted and allowed this (which they don’t, anyway). Therefore, the solution will have to come from import contraction one way or another. Exporting services won’t balance our trade either, as our surplus in services isn’t remotely big enough, compared to our deficit in goods (in 2010, $148 billion vs. $652 billion). Neither will agricultural exports balance our trade (a prima facie bizarre idea for a developed nation). Our 2010 surplus in agriculture was only $28 billion — about one eighteenth the size of our overall deficit. 2010 was also an exceptionally good year for agricultural exports; our average annual agricultural surplus from 2000 to 2010 was a mere $15 billion. It is sometimes suggested that to solve our trade mess, America merely needs to regain export competitiveness through productivity growth. Comforting statistics, showing our productivity still comfortably above the nations we compete with, are often paraded in support of this idea. Unfortunately, those figures on the productivity of Chinese, Mexican, and Indian workers concern average productivity in these nations. They do not concern productivity in their export industries, the only industries which compete with our own. These nations are held to low overall productivity by the fact that hundreds of millions of their workers are still peasant farmers. But American electronics workers compete with Chinese electronics workers, not Chinese peasants. It is narrowly true that if foreign productivity is as low as foreign wages — an easy claim to make with aggressively free-market theory and cherry-picked statistics — then low foreign wages won’t threaten American workers. But a problem emerges when low foreign wages are not balanced by low productivity. It is the combination of Third World wages with First World productivity, thanks largely to the ability of multinational corporations to spread their technology around, that has considerably weakened the traditional correlation of low wages with low productivity. For ex-ample, it takes an average of 3.3 man-hours to produce a ton of steel in the U.S. and 11.8 man-hours in China — a ratio of nearly four to one. But the wage gap between the U.S. and China is considerably more than that. In any case, productivity is not in itself a guarantee of high wages. U.S. manufacturing productivity actually doubled in the two decades from 1987 to 2008, but inflation-adjusted manufacturing wages rose only 11 percent. From roughly 1947 to 1973, productivity and wage growth were fairly closely coupled in the U.S., but since then, American workers have been running ever faster simply to stay in place. Wage-productivity decoupling has been even starker in some foreign countries: in Mexico, for example, productivity rose 40 percent from 1980 to 1994, but following the peso devaluation of 1994, real wages were down 40 percent. As I’ve been saying for a while now, a tariff is the real solution.

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Disgraced Money Manager: ‘I’m Not A Sexual Predator, I’m An ‘Offender,”

February 25, 2011

Disgraced billionaire money manager (and former Bill Clinton associate) Jeffrey Epstein is back in New York City after 13 months of jail time for soliciting a minor for prostitution — and he appears far from repentant. In an interview with the New York Post , Epstein was breezy about his conviction. “I’m not a sexual predator, I’m an ‘offender,’ he said . “It’s the difference between a murderer and a person who steals a bagel.” Last month, a New York judge ruled Epstein a Level 3 sex offender — the most dangerous kind. Back in July, the Daily Beast shone a light into some of the less savory aspects of Epstein’s lifestyle with a detailed report of the financier’s “sex den,” in Florida which, according to police reports, displayed how he “organized his life around this sexual compulsion in an open and methodical way that suggests he felt he was beyond the law.” The details included, but were not limited to, nude images of young girls scattered around the house, genital-shaped bathroom soap, and house staff who would routinely troll for fresh bodies to keep up with Epstein’s schedule of two or three “massage” appointments each day. These are far from the only excruciatingly personal details that have surfaced about Epstein. In a disposition from September 2009, he was forced to answer the following question from the opposing counsel: “Is it true that you have what’s been described as an egg-shaped penis?” Epstein doesn’t come up in a ZIP code search of New York’s sex-offender database. The Post reports: That’s because Epstein’s Upper East Side home is considered “temporary.” By state law, he is required to provide only his permanent address to the database, and Epstein listed his Florida home.

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States Ignored Years Of Warnings On Unemployment Insurance

February 19, 2011

WASHINGTON — State officials had plenty of warning. Over the past three decades, two national commissions and a series of government audits sounded alarms about the dwindling amount of money states were setting aside to pay unemployment insurance to laid-off workers. “Trust Fund Reserves Inadequate,” federal auditors said in a 1988 report. It’s clear now the warnings were pretty much ignored. Instead, states kept whittling away at the trust funds, mostly by cutting unemployment insurance taxes at the behest of the business community. The low balances hastened insolvency when the recession hit, leading about 30 states to borrow $41.5 billion from the federal government to pay unemployment benefits to their growing population of jobless. The ramifications will be felt for years. In the short term, states must find the money to pay interest on the loans. Generally, that involves a special tax on businesses until the loan is repaid. Some states could tap general revenues, making it harder to pay for schools, roads and other state services. In the long term, state will have to their replenish unemployment insurance programs. That typically leads to higher payroll taxes, leaving companies with less money to invest. Past recessions have resulted in insolvencies. Seven states borrowed money in the early 1990s; eight did so as a result of the 2001 recession. But the numbers are much worse this time because of the recession was more severe and the funds already were low when it hit, said Wayne Vroman, an analyst at the Urban Institute, a liberal-leaning think tank based in Washington. The Obama administration this month proposed giving states a waiver on the interest payments due this fall. Down the road, the administration would raise the amount of wages on which companies pay federal unemployment taxes. Many states probably would follow suit as a way of boosting depleted trust funds. Businesses pay a federal and state payroll tax. The federal tax primarily covers administrative costs; the state tax pays for the regular benefits a worker gets when laid off. The Treasury Department manages the trust funds that hold each state’s taxes. Each state decides whether its unemployment fund has enough money. In 2000, total reserves for states and territories came to about $54 billion. That dropped to $38 billion by the end of 2007, just as the recession began. Over the next two years, reserves plummeted to $11.1 billion, lower than at any time in the program’s history when adjusted for inflation, the Government Accountability Office said in its most recent report on the issue. Yet benefits have stayed relatively flat, or declined when compared with average weekly wages. “If you look at it from the employers’ standpoint, they’re not going to want reserves to build up excessively high because then there’s an increasing risk that advocates for benefit expansion would point to the high reserves and say, ‘We can afford to increase benefits,’” said Rich Hobbie, executive director of the National Association of State Workforce Agencies. A review of state unemployment insurance programs shows how states weakened their trust funds over the past two decades. In Georgia, lawmakers gave employers a four-year tax holiday from 1999-2003. Employers saved more than $1 billion, but trust fund reserves fell about 40 percent, to $700 million. The state gradually has raised its unemployment insurance taxes since then, but not nearly enough to restore the trust fund to previous levels. The state began borrowing in December 2009. Now it owes Washington about $588 million. Republican Mark Butler, Georgia’s labor commissioner, said his state had one of the lowest unemployment insurance tax rates in the nation when the tax holiday was enacted. “The decision to do this was not really based upon any practical reason. It was based on a political decision, which I think, by all accounts now, we can look back on and say it was the wrong decision,” Butler said. “Now we find ourselves in a situation where we’ve had to borrow money and that puts everyone in a tight situation.” In New Jersey, lawmakers used a combination approach to deplete the trust fund. The Legislature expanded benefits and cut taxes, as well as spending $4.7 billion of trust fund revenue to reimburse hospitals for indigent health care. The money was diverted over a period of about 15 years and helps explain why the state’s trust fund dropped from $3.1 billion in 2000 to $35 million by the end of 2010. The state has had to borrow $1.75 billion from the federal government to keep the program afloat. “It was a real abdication of responsibility and a complete misunderstanding of how you finance an unemployment insurance fund – to make sure you have sufficient money in bad economic times,” said Phillip Kirschner, president of the New Jersey Business and Industry Association. “In good economic times you build up your bank account, but in New Jersey, they said, ‘Well, we have all this money, let’s spend it.’” California took its own road to trust fund insolvency. Lawmakers kept payroll tax rates the same, but gradually doubled the maximum weekly benefit paid to laid-off workers to $450. The average benefit now is about $300 and is paid for about 20 weeks. Loree Levy, spokeswoman for the California Employment Development Department, said lawmakers were warned of the consequences. “We testified at legislative hearings that the fund would eventually go broke and would become permanently insolvent if legislation wasn’t passed to increase revenue,” Levy said. California has borrowed $9.8 billion to keep unemployment insurance payments flowing. It owes the federal government an interest payment of $362 million by the end of September. In Michigan, unemployment insurance tax rates declined from 1994 through 2001. The trust fund prospered during those years because of the healthy economy and low unemployment rate. Then the recession arrived and reserves plunged. In response, Michigan lawmakers passed legislation that lowered the amount of wages subject to unemployment taxes from $9,500 to $9,000. They increased the maximum weekly benefit from $300 to $362. The trust fund dropped from $1.2 billion to $112 million over the next four years. In September 2006, Michigan was the first state to begin borrowing from the federal government. Other states held their trust funds purposely low as part of an approach called “pay-as-you-go.” Texas is a nationally recognized leader of this effort. Its philosophy is that, in the long run, it’s better for the economy to keep the maximum level of dollars in the hands of businesses rather than government. Texas had to borrow $1.3 billion in 2009. State officials have no regrets about their policy. “By keeping the minimum in the (trust fund), Texas is able to maximize funds circulating in the Texas economy, allowing for the creation of jobs and stimulation of economic growth,” said Lisa Givens, spokeswoman for the Texas Workforce Commission. The pay-as-you-go approach goes against the findings of a presidential commission that looked into the issue of dwindling trust funds in the mid-1990s. “It would be in the interest of the nation to begin to restore the forward-funding nature of the unemployment insurance system, resulting in a building up of reserves during good economic times and a drawing down of reserves during recessions,” said the Advisory Council on Unemployment Compensation, which President Bill Clinton appointed. Hobbie, from the association representing state labor agencies, said there’s no way to tell which approach is better over the long haul. He acknowledged that keeping reserves at the minimum in good times goes against one of the original aims of the program – to act as an economic stabilizer in bad times. That’s because businesses are asked to pay more in taxes, which leaves them less money to invest in their company. A survey from Hobbies’ organization found that 35 states raised their state unemployment taxes last year. Hobbie said he suspects that some states allowed reserves to dwindle out of complacency. “I think we just got overconfident and thought we wouldn’t experience the bad recessions we had in, say the mid ’70s, and then this big surprise hit,” he said. ___ Online: Treasury Department accounting of trust funds: http://tinyurl.com/6783qjj Government Accountability Office 1988 report: http://tinyurl.com/5t855fl GAO 2010 report: http://tinyurl.com/69mfc9f National Association of State Workforce Agencies: http://www.workforceatm.org/

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Chris Weigant: Budget Season Overview

February 15, 2011

It’s “Budget Season” once again in Washington, and since it’s going to be a particularly contentious and complex one this year, it’s worth taking a moment at the beginning to provide an overview of the entire process which is about to play out over the next two or three months. There are, at this point, three main budget battles to be fought. One of these isn’t strictly a budget battle, but will likely devolve into one, hence its inclusion in the list. Two of these have hard and fast calendar deadlines. All three of them are going to be major political battles, and it’s unclear what the outcome of any of them is going to be at this point. Let’s look at these three items, in the order they’re going to be fought on Capitol Hill, and then we’ll take a look at some of the political constraints on each side of this fight.

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‘Death Panel’ For Elmo?

February 12, 2011

House Republicans called for cuts in hundreds of programs across the face of government Friday night in a $61 billion savings package toughened at the last minute at the demand of tea party-backed conservatives. From education to job training, the environment and nutrition, few domestic programs were left untouched – and some were eliminated – in the measure, which is expected to reach the floor for a vote next week. Among the programs targeted for elimination are Americorps and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. In contrast, spending on defense and veterans’ programs were protected. U.S.News & World Report notes that liberal groups, along with public radio and television stations, are preparing for a showdown with House Republicans over the budget cut proposal. “Fans of Big Bird and All Things Considered ” are reportedly readying for battle as well. “They probably think that no one will notice these cuts in the midst of so many others. But the millions of listeners and viewers who rely on public broadcasting for Sesame Street, All Things Considered, and independent journalism will notice,” said MoveOn.org in an urgent E-mail just sent out. “We need to tell Republicans that cutting off funding was unacceptable last time they were in charge, and it’s unacceptable now,” said MoveOn. The New York Times reports : It blocks the spending of about $2 billion in unused economic stimulus money and seeks to prevent the Internal Revenue Service from enforcing the new health care law. The measure also cuts financing directly from the office of the president. The measure marks an initial down payment by newly empowered Republicans on their promise to rein in federal deficits and reduce the size of government. In a statement, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., called the measure “a historic effort to get our fiscal house in order and restore certainty to the economy. .This legislation will mark the largest spending cut in modern history and will help restore confidence so that people can get back to work.” Democrats harshly criticized the bill within moments of its formal unveiling, signaling the onset of weeks of partisan struggle over spending priorities. House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi issued a statement calling the bill irresponsible, adding that it would “target critical education programs like Head Start, halt innovation and disease research, end construction projects to rebuild America and take cops off the beat.” But first-term Republican conservatives claimed victory after forcing their own leadership to expand the measure after rejecting an earlier draft as too timid. “$100 billion is $100 billion is $100 billion,” said Rep. Tim Scott R-S.C., referring to amount the revised package would cut from President Barack Obama’s budget request of a year ago. That was the amount contained in the Republican “Pledge to America” in last fall’s campaign, and when party leaders initially suggested a smaller package of cuts this week, many of the 87-member freshman class who have links to the tea party rebelled. In fact, even some Republicans acknowledged privately the legislation will cut about $61 billion from current spending on domestic spending. Some of the largest cuts would be borne by WIC, which provides nutritional support for women and infants, cut by $747 million, and training and employment grants to the states, ticketed for a $1.4 billion reduction. In addition, Republicans proposed a 43 percent cut in border security fencing and a 53 percent reduction in an account used to fund cleanup of the Great Lakes. The measure also asserts Republican priorities in several contentious areas. It prohibits the Nuclear Regulatory Commission from terminating plans for a nuclear waste site at Yucca Mountain in Nevada – a direct challenge to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. Reid dissented quickly, issuing a statement that said, “Any attempt to restart the Yucca Mountain project will not happen on my watch as Senate majority leader.” The Environmental Protection Agency would be banned from regulating greenhouse gases, linked to global warming, from fixed sources such as factories. The District of Columbia could not use federal funds to run a needle-exchange program for drug users. While a 48-hour revolt by tea party-backed conservatives roiled the party this week, its conclusion could mean an easier path to passage for the spending cut bill when it reaches the House floor. “The leadership responded to the concerns of those who are far to the right of the middle,” said Scott. The cuts will become part of a spending bill that is needed to keep the government in operation through the Sept. 30 end of the fiscal year. The current funding authority expires on March 4. Passage in the Republican-controlled House would send the bill to the Senate, where Democrats control a majority and are certain to support more generous funding levels. Barring a compromise before March 4, the two houses will be under pressure to agree on a short-term bill to keep the federal government operating without interruptions. Even that could prove difficult, though, and Democrats assert that Republicans will resort to a government shutdown to get their way. “It is time for the House Republicans to stop with the games and finally rule out a government shutdown once and for all,” said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. “Stop being coy about it and take it off the table.” Congressional Republicans were damaged politically in 1995 when a protracted dispute over funding with President Bill Clinton led to a government shutdown.

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Wendell Potter: The Insurers’ Real Agenda for Change

February 12, 2011

The media had lots of health care news to obsess about last week. A federal judge ruled the health care reform law unconstitutional, and Senate Republicans tried in vain to repeal the law. But most of the press paid virtually no attention to a potentially much more important development — a multi-pronged effort by five major insurers to strip from the law key regulations and consumer protections that aren’t to their liking. The insurers do not want the bill repealed or declared unconstitutional. Congress gave them exactly what they wanted by including in the legislation a requirement that all Americans not eligible for Medicare or Medicaid buy coverage from a private insurance company. That provision alone will result in hundreds of billions of dollars in revenue and profits the insurers otherwise would never see. Officially, the insurers are maintaining neutrality on the court challenges to the law and the repeal efforts. They understand that Republican attorneys general who filed the lawsuits and the Congressional Republicans who voted to repeal the law — most of whom received campaign contributions from the insurers’ political action committees — must go through the motions to satisfy “the base.” The court challenges and repeal efforts are, in reality, a useful smokescreen for the big insurers, whose real agenda is to gut the law while preserving the mandate. Expect a big lobbying and PR campaign — financed by our insurance premiums — to persuade us that the new regulations and consumer protections will make those premiums skyrocket. The story much of the press missed was the revelation that the CEOs and lobbyists for the five biggest for-profits — UnitedHealth, WellPoint, Aetna, CIGNA and Humana — have been meeting frequently to plot their attack on the law. Bloomberg’s Drew Armstrong reported that three committees formed by the group have been meeting almost weekly. While Armstrong didn’t indicate what those committees are doing, I can speculate from previous experience as an insurance company executive that the committees are developing strategies in these areas: lobbying, strategic communications the formation of alliances with other political and business groups and the creation of fake grassroots, or “Astroturf” organizations. Bloomberg and the the National Journal also reported that the for-profits have solicited proposals from three big PR firms that have done extensive work for the industry: APCO WorldWide, Weber Shandwick and Public Strategies. It sounds familiar. While I was serving as head of corporation communications at CIGNA, I hired APCO and Weber Shandwick to help direct similar efforts and to enhance CIGNA’s reputation. The for-profits reportedly formed the new coalition — as yet unnamed — because they were upset that America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), their umbrella trade association, had been unsuccessful in keeping the new regulations and consumer protections out of the law in the first place. So they’re going back to a familiar and successful playbook. Over the past two decades, the big insurers have formed such coalitions to defeat reform initiatives or to persuade the public and lawmakers to see things their way. When the Clinton reform plan was being debated in 1993 and 1994, Aetna, CIGNA, Prudential and United formed the Alliance for Managed Care (AMC) to argue for a “market-based” solution — managed competition, as it came to be called — as an alternative to broader government involvement in health care. The AMC described itself as “a private-sector approach to health care system reform that uses the marketplace and the power of informed consumer choices to achieve better coverage, while improving quality and cutting costs.” The AMC later joined a broader coalition that included the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers to defeat the Clinton plan. A few years later, within weeks of being named as defendants in two massive class-action lawsuits, the for-profits formed a new group, America’s Health Insurers (AHI), designed to redirect scrutiny away from them and toward the trial lawyers behind the suits. Attorney Richard “Dickie” Scruggs alone cost the companies billions of dollars in market capitalization when the Wall Street Journal reported on Sept. 31, 1999, that Scruggs was planning to file charges against the insurance firms. On that day, stock prices of Aetna and United alone had plunged nearly 20 percent by the time the closing bell rang at the New York Stock Exchange. I was CIGNA’s main representative to America’s Health Insurers. My counterparts from other big insurers and I met secretly in hotel conference rooms in Washington and elsewhere with APCO to plan the PR strategy. The idea was to “reframe the debate” — shift attention away from the reasons the insurers were being sued — onerous policies and cheating doctors out of payments — and toward those trial lawyers who were getting filthy rich filing “frivolous” lawsuits. The lawyers — not the insurers — were the real villains. APCO reactivated the front group it had created for the tobacco industry — the Coalition Against Lawsuit Abuse — to generate letters-to-the editor and op-ed pieces in cities where the lawsuits had been filed – particularly Miami, where suits were eventually consolidated. The intent was to influence both the federal judges and potential jurors. (The suits were ultimately settled, with the defendants agreeing to change many of their practices and to pay the plaintiffs hundreds of millions of dollars.) I was also CIGNA’s representative to yet another organization — the Coalition for Affordable Quality Healthcare (CAQH) — that the big insurers created later. We mounted a huge PR and advertising campaign designed to restore Americans’ faith in managed care, which had taken a beating in the press for such well-publicized practices as “drive-through mastectomies” and “drive-though deliveries.” So this new grouping is just the latest variant on an oft-used tactic to influence public opinion and public policy. This time, however, the stakes are even higher, for both the insurers and for consumers. What don’t the companies like? Well, for starters, the rules that now require insurance firms to devote at least 80 percent of what we pay in premiums for actual medical care. But their sights are also on other provisions of the law that might impair profits. AHIP spokesman Robert Zirklebach provided a glimpse of what insurers really want when he told a reporter last week that industry lobbyists have embarked on a campaign to “educate” members of Congress about ‘flaws’ in the law. For instance, the industry will be trying to persuade lawmakers that young people, many of whom are being charged too much already, will see their premiums go sky high. How do you fix that? The insurers, of course, have an answer: get rid of the requirement that insurers can only sell policies that meet minimum benefit requirements and jettison the prohibition against charging older Americans any more than three times as much as young people. They want to charge them five to ten times as much. If the latest coalition of big for-profit insurance firms meets its objectives, many of us will eventually be convinced — through sophisticated, behind-the-scenes PR campaigns — that those protections are not in our best interests after all. If those campaigns help the big insurers eliminate such protections, that would be ideal for their bottom lines — but devastating for consumers. This also appeared on the Center for Public Integrity ‘s website.

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Chris Martenson, Ph.D.: Egypt’s Warning: Are You Listening?

February 10, 2011

One day, a fruit and vegetable seller was arrested in Tunisia, sparking social unrest, and a few weeks later the government of Egypt was set to topple.

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