clinton

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.

Read the full article →

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.

Read the full article →

Rep. Mike Honda: Cents and Sensibility: The Economic Case Behind Immigration Reform

February 7, 2011

House Speaker John Boehner’s recent selection of Rep. Elton Gallegly of California over Rep. Steve King of Iowa to head the Judiciary Committee’s immigration subcommittee is one step closer to the kind of reform for which past administrations, including those of former Presidents George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Ronald Reagan, had long called. Both Republican congressmen may be opposed to the kind of reform that House Democrats call for. But Gallegly seems inclined to take a more reasoned approach. Especially if Democrats can explain the economic advantages to reform. And there are many. Immigration brings formidable fiscal implications. Keeping immigrants here or sending them home can save or cost taxpayers dearly. Just count the ways that reform, which puts undocumented immigrants on the path to legalization, could foot our country’s finances. First, any deportation plan for undocumented immigrants would cost our country’s gross domestic product a whopping $2.6 trillion over the next 10 years, according to a study by Raul Hinojosa-Ojeda, a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. Conversely, if we embrace comprehensive immigration reform, we could add $1.5 trillion to the U.S. GDP over the next 10 years. The economy could also benefit from a temporary worker program, Hinojosa-Ojeda projected,by raising GDP by $792 billion. Second, immigrants who become U.S. citizens consistently pursue higher-paying jobs and higher education, spend more and provide higher tax revenue. Just imagine what 12 million newly documented Americans could do for the economy. The legalization process also brings economic benefits — like the retention of remittances. Workers send substantial portions of their salary to family members abroad, but reform could reunite families separated by our immigration system and keep monies in the U.S. For example, total U.S. remittances to Latin America was almost $46 billion in 2008. Of that, Mexico received almost $24 billion. Reducing remittances offers obvious cash infusion for our economy, since billions of dollars now sent overseas would be spent instead on U.S. businesses — creating jobs and helping to revive our economy. Third, by giving 2.1 million American students the opportunity to pursue higher education or military service, our government could collect $3.6 trillion over the next 40 years. The DREAM Act, which failed in the Senate in December but remains a bipartisan effort, offers a conditional six-year path to permanent, legal U.S. residence for immigrant youth who demonstrate good moral character and complete at least two years of higher education or U.S. military service. Without the DREAM Act, about 65,000 students a year — honor-roll scholars, star athletes, talented artists and aspiring teachers — will graduate high school and then hit a roadblock. Instead of upward mobility and higher education, they will be forced to live in the shadows and work low-paying jobs. Fourth, the Reuniting Families Act, which I plan to reintroduce this Congress, would allow all Americans to be reunited with their families — including gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender “permanent partners.” The economic benefits of this policy cannot be overstated. American workers, with their families by their side, are happier, healthier and more able to succeed than those living apart from loved ones for years on end. By pooling resources, families can do together what they can’t do alone — start small businesses, provide care for the young and old, create U.S. jobs and contribute more to this country’s welfare. Healthier communities have more expendable income and place a lower burden on government social services. This correlation is well substantiated — but it is up to us to make it a reality. We understand that during tough economic times, the natural reaction is to close borders and look inward. Yet the irony of an anti-immigration sentiment, which fears job losses for Americans if more workers enter the U.S., is that it is fiscally prudent to legalize, insure, employ, reunite and educate our immigrants than to keep families apart. This is a time when we must use every available resource to stimulate our economy and control government spending. To my fiscally conservative Republican colleagues, the onus is on you. Left to future Congresses, the number of undocumented immigrants will only increase and the visa waits will only get longer. Meanwhile, we will lose an opportunity to do what’s economically right. The fiscal case is clear: reform now. California Rep. Mike Honda serves on the Appropriations and the Budget Committees and is the Democratic senior whip. Follow Rep Honda on Facebook and Twitter .

Read the full article →

Investigators Accused Of ‘Malpractice’ In Report On For-Profit Colleges

February 2, 2011

A lobbying group representing the for-profit college industry filed a lawsuit today accusing federal government investigators of “professional malpractice” after issuing a report last summer that documented aggressive and misleading recruitment at several for-profit institutions. The undercover investigation by the Government Accountability Office, which involved four investigators posing as fictitious prospective students, found numerous examples of deceptive statements made by admissions officers and other employees at 15 for-profit colleges. The findings included overstated promises of potential salaries after graduation and high-pressure tactics that pressed applicants to enroll before receiving information about financial aid. The for-profit college industry in recent months has seized on revisions made to the report in November – changes that in many cases represent technical tweaks and elaborations, but that the industry says have “cast serious doubt on the credibility and objectivity of the GAO’s analysis.” The report garnered great attention when it was released last August, causing stock prices to plunge at many of the publicly-traded corporations that own for-profit schools. The for-profit college sector includes a diverse array of schools, ranging from specialized institutions such as ITT Technical Institute to mostly-online colleges such as the University of Phoenix and Kaplan University. Chuck Young, a spokesman for the GAO said the revisions in no way undermine the overall message of the report, and that the agency stands by its findings. According to Young, an independent GAO review team examined the report after it was published and “found no material flaws in the evidentiary support for the overall message.” The lawsuit — filed by the Coalition for Educational Success, represented by Washington lobbyist Lanny Davis — is the latest example of an intense campaign the for-profit colleges are waging against new federal regulations that could restrict their access to lucrative federal student aid dollars. Industry groups have filed a flurry of lawsuits against the Department of Education and conducted an advertising blitz accusing the government of trying to prevent students from going to college. Davis, a former special counsel to President Bill Clinton, began representing the for-profit college sector last year. He has faced criticism in recent years over his paid representation of controversial international figures, including Laurent Gbagbo, the Ivory Coast dictator who refused to step down after losing an election last year. Davis dropped Gbagbo as a client soon after taking him on in December, following complaints from human rights groups. The for-profit college industry faces increased scrutiny as evidence mounts of its students leaving with debts they cannot afford to pay, given the low-wage jobs they tend to attain after graduation. For-profit schools enroll about 12 percent of students nationwide, yet the sector takes in nearly 25 percent of all student aid dollars and is responsible for 43 percent of student loan defaults. A number of the alterations to the GAO report cited in the lawsuit involved wording changes and statements made by recruiters to the fictitious students that were omitted from the first report. For example, in the original report, the GAO noted how a representative at a two-year college in California told the undercover applicant getting a job is a “piece of cake” and graduates of the computer drafting program could make more than $120,000 per year. The revised report added that the employee also said in the current economic environment, the job applicant could expect a job earning $15 per hour, if lucky. However, during the same interview, the representative also encouraged the student to falsely fill out a federal student aid form in order to qualify for Pell Grants. There were no revisions to that conclusion. In another case, the original report said a recruiter at a publicly-traded four-year college in Pennsylvania told an applicant she “should” take out the maximum in federal student loans, even if she didn’t need all of the money for tuition. The revised version of the report changed the wording to “could.” The lawsuit names a series of other tweaks made to the report, suggesting that “pervasive and one-sided errors resulted from the intentional bias driving the investigation, in violation of the GAO’s protocols.” GAO has not discounted any of the conclusions of its report, and the vast majority of the findings required no tweaks or revisions. Some of the more misleading statements included a recruiter in Washington, D.C., telling an applicant a barber can earn between $150,000 and $250,000 per year, even though the Bureau of Labor Statistics pegs 90 percent of barbers’ salaries below $43,000 per year. Another employee at a college in Florida sat coaching an undercover applicant while she took a proficiency test. The same recruiter implied a student did not have to pay back student loans, even though federal student aid is a debt that often cannot be discharged even in bankruptcy. The lawsuit notes that the GAO’s “malpractice and negligence” with the report forced the group to take on “substantial costs and expenses” to set the record straight. The Coalition for Educational Success has been pursuing a separate lawsuit against the Department of Education over access to e-mail records discussing proposed industry regulations. Another group representing the industry, the Association for Private Sector Colleges and Universities, filed a lawsuit last month against the Department of Education seeking to undo consumer protection regulations approved last fall. The disputed rules included guidelines meant to prevent misleading and deceptive pitches by recruiters and measures prohibiting bonuses awarded to recruiters based on the number of student enrollments they secure.

Read the full article →

Howard Schweber: Laffer Curves and Tax Cuts: What Does It Take to Kill a Zombie?

January 31, 2011

I. The Theory: Laffer Curves, Supply Side Tax Cuts, and Demand Side Tax Cuts We are hearing a lot these days about the lessons of the Reagan tax cuts. We are also being treated to a revival of the Laffer Curve. Which is… interesting. There are two basic arguments for using tax cuts to stimulate the economy. One is the supply-side version: that’s the argument that cutting taxes for high earners will cause them to invest more in the economy, which will ultimately produce more jobs. You may recall this as the “trickle down” theory, later rebranded as the “rising tide lifts all boats” ideal. This argument makes sense so long as two things are true: that the economy is being held back by a shortage of capital available for investment, and that high earners are being held back from investing because they do not have the money to do so. Given that we are currently in a situation in which corporations are sitting on record amounts of uninvested capital and have just recorded the most profitable quarter in all of American history, it’s a little hard to see how those descriptions apply. The demand-side approach to tax cuts favors cuts for low and middle earners, in the hope that they will spend the extra money and thus stimulate the economy; this is essentially using tax cuts as a form of Keynesian stimulus. That argument makes sense so long as two things are true: that the economy is being held back by a lack of demand, and that there are lots of people who would buy more things if they had the money to do so. In the current economic climate, that seems like a fairly plausible pair of assumptions. But! The Laffer Curve provides supply-siders with a different explanation for why tax cuts for high earners will stimulate the economy. Laffer’s curve describes a theory about human motivation. It goes like this. Suppose you have someone earning $100 a year and paying 25 percent in taxes. That is, he gets to keep $75 out of that $100. Now suppose he has an opportunity to earn $120 next year, but the tax rate on that next $20 will be 35 percent. Laffer argued that a certain number of people would rather not earn that extra $20 if they only got to keep $13 of it — they would rather earn $100 and take home $75 than earn $120 and take home $88, maybe because there is extra work or risk involved in earning that next $13. As tax rates get higher, the number of people who are unwilling to earn more money if they will have to pay higher rates on that additional income goes up. At a certain point — the tipping point in the curve — cutting tax rates at the top of the scale will persuade enough people to be willing to make more money who otherwise would have refused to do so that the total tax revenues received will go up. Laffer never claimed that tax cuts will always result in increased revenue — it all depends on where you start on the curve. (To see the theory explained in Laffer’s own words, go here .) George H.W. Bush called this “voodoo economics,” and it’s not hard to see why (not that liberals talking about health care reform are above engaging in a bit of voodoo economics of their own.) On the one hand, it’s hard to quibble with Laffer’s contention that many people would decline to earn more money if it were going to be taxed at a rate of 100 percent — it’s what happens at other levels that becomes a matter for speculation, and perhaps some historical evidence. II. What Are Actual Tax Rates? There is something very strange about the way both Democrats and Republicans have been framing the conversation about tax cuts. The question a month ago was whether to retain all of the Bush tax cuts (the GOP’s position), or only those affecting income below $250,00 for a household and $200,00 for an individual. Here’s the strange part. Both sides were framing this in terms of distinguishing among persons, as in “we want a tax cut for the middle class but they want a tax cut for the rich.” But that is simply not true. We are talking about marginal tax rates here. That is, it is not the case that a household making more than $250,000 would pay the old, pre-tax cut rate on all their income, only on income above the $250,000 cap. On all their income up to that limit they would pay the same rate as everyone else. When we say that the top federal income tax rate is 37 percent, we don’t mean that the taxpayers who are in that bracket pay 37 percent in taxes on all their income, only on the income that the earn above the cut-off. The effective tax rates are quite different. Then, of course, there is the matter of the relentless focus on federal income taxes. Leaving aside state and local taxes (a significant omission given the importance of property taxes, state sales taxes, licensing fees, and so on). Focusing only on federal taxes, here are the effective rates as of 2005, according to the Congressional Budget Office. For each of several categories of households, I include the effective rates for all federal taxes, individual income taxes, payroll taxes, and corporate taxes. (I am not including federal excise taxes, which are not significant.) Note that these categories overlap, as the top 1 percent is included in the top 5% percent and so on. – top 1%: all taxes, 31.2%; income tax, 19.4%; payroll taxes, 1.7%; corporate tax, 9.9% – top 5%: all taxes, 28.9%; income tax, 17.6%; payroll taxes, 3.5%; corporate tax, 7.4% – top 10%: all taxes, 27.4%; income tax, 16.0%; payroll taxes, 4.8%; corporate tax, 6.1% – top 20%: all taxes, 25.5%; income tax, 14.1%; payroll taxes, 6.0%; corporate tax, 4.9% – everyone: all taxes, 20.5%; income tax, 9.0%; payroll tax, 7.6%; corporate tax, 3.1% That’s just the effective federal tax rates. A different question is what share of federal tax revenues, in each categories, come from each of these segments of the population? Again, these are 2005 data from the CBO: – top 1%: all taxes, 27.6%; income tax, 38.8%; payroll taxes, 4.0%; corporate tax, 58.6% – top 5%: all taxes, 43.8%; income tax, 60.7%; payroll tax, 14.4%; corporate tax, 74.9% – top 10%: all taxes, 54.7%; income tax, 72.7%; payroll tax, 25.8%, corporate tax, 81.6% – top 20%: all taxes, 68.7%; income tax, 86.3%; payroll tax, 43.6%; corporate tax, 87.8% (Source: Historical Effective Federal Tax Rates, 1979 to 2005 (Congressional Budget Office, December 2007), here . What about fairness? Don’t the highest earners pay more than their share in taxes? The answer is, “yes, by a little bit,” but not nearly as much as most people tend to think. Here is a look at the distribution of wealth, divided into all wealth, non-home wealth (known as “financial wealth”), and income. These data come from a study of 2007 Survey of Consumer Finance conducted by the Federal Reserve: – top 1%: all wealth, 34.6%; non-home wealth, 42.7%; income, 21.3% – top 5%: all wealth: 61.9%; non-home wealth, 71.4%; income, 36.9% – top 10%: all wealth, 73.1%; non-home wealth, 81.5%; income, 46.8% – top 20%: all wealth, 85.1%; non-home wealth, 91.6%; income, 61.4% (Source: Edward N. Wolff, “Recent Trends in Household Wealth in the United States: Rising Debt and the Middle-Class Squeeze–an Update to 2007,” Levy Economics Institute of Bard College working paper, March 2010.) So, for example, in 2006 (located neatly between the two years of the data presented above), the top quintile of households earned 55.7 percent of pretax income and paid 69.3 percent of federal taxes, while the top 1 percent of households earned 18.8 percent of income and paid 28.3 percent of taxes. But note that these last numbers are distorted by the fact they compare income to all taxes, not just taxes on income — If you look at the overall distribution of only federal taxes, the system is slightly progressive, and if you factor in the regressive effects of state and local property and consumption taxes, the entire system is even less progressive than that. III. What Did the Reagan Tax Cuts Actually Do? Historical discussions often lead into an impossible maze of information. For starters, there is the correlation-causation problem (if a tax cut is followed by growth, does that show that the tax cut caused the growth?) Nonetheless, we can at least look at some of the claims being made and try to focus more precisely on the areas of ambiguity. There are four major periods of tax cutting in modern history: the 1920s, the Kennedy administration, the Reagan administration, and the George W. Bush administration. I will focus primarily on the Reagan administration, with a few comments about the very large tax increases that were signed into law by Franklin Roosevelt. We frequently forget that in addition to several tax cuts focusing on income taxes, Reagan also signed off on about a dozen tax increases, primarily on payroll and excise taxes. Measured in dollar value, the tax increases were about half as large as the tax cuts. In one way, this complicates the picture: What if there had been no tax increases? (Or, conversely, what if there had been no tax cuts?) If our question is “what is the effect of tax cuts on economic growth,” this makes things complicated. On the other hand, if our focus is on the effects of tax rates on federal tax revenues — the Laffer Curve claim — we have a genuine experiment: by tracking the tax revenues that flowed in from the increased taxes and the decreased taxes, operating under the same economic conditions, we have an actual empirical test. Another question is how we separate the effects of tax cuts or increases from changes in the overall economy. Again, the fact that these cuts and increases occurred simultaneously helps solve that problem. It is also the case, however, that economists measure the effects of tax rates on revenues in terms of a percentage of GDP rather than in gross dollar amounts. During periods of growth, this begs a very large question: what if economic growth would not have occurred but for the tax cuts in question? On the other hand, Reagan approved both tax cuts and tax increased during a recession. I’ll come back to both of these points in a minute. A. Tax Cuts and Tax Revenue: the Reagan Case The main Reagan tax cut was the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981. That law had a number of elements that were phased in over time, reaching full implementation in 1983. By a nice coincidence, 1983 was also the year in which the most important tax increases took effect (the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility of 1982, raising payroll taxes and certain excise taxes) took effect. Those and other Reagan tax increase were seriously regressive : In 1980, according to Congressional Budget Office estimates, middle-income families with children paid 8.2 percent of their income in income taxes, and 9.5 percent in payroll taxes. By 1988 the income tax share was down to 6.6 percent — but the payroll tax share was up to 11.8 percent, and the combined burden was up, not down. To test the effects of the two laws, I looked at the average for the four years following complete implementation (1983-1986), and compared that to the average for the preceding four years (1979-1982), using data compiled by the Tax Policy Center. The results : – income tax revenues: 1979-82, 9.075% of GDP; 1983-86, 8.05% of GDP (down 11.29%) – payroll tax revenues: 1979-82, 5.925% of GDP; 1983-86, 6.275% of GDP (up 5.5%) – corporate tax revenues: 1979-82, 2.125% of GDP; 1983-86, 1.375% of GDP (down 35%) But actually, the corporate tax cuts took effect in 1982. If we shift the years to that 1982 is included in the post-tax-cut category, the results are even more stark: the average corporate tax revenues from 1979-81 were 2.33% of GDP; from 1982-86 that average falls to 1.4%. And just for comparison, for the four years from 2006-2009, the averages are: – Income tax revenue: 7.65% of GDP – Payroll tax revenue: 6.275% of GDP – Corporate tax revenue: 2.125% of GDP To repeat the point, during the very same years, in the very same economy, tax cuts resulted in a decrease in tax revenues measured as a portion of GDP while tax increases resulted in an increase in tax revenues measured in exactly the same way. Which, of course, leaves the question of the relationship between tax cuts and overall economic growth. B. Tax Cuts and Growth Here, we can range a bit more widely, recognizing that the larger the historical sweep of the discussion the more we are certainly omitting critical variables. Nonetheless, this exercise may be useful as an antidote to the kind of monocausal, ahistorical claims that are sometimes made on behalf of cutting taxes, such as this statement from the Heritage Foundation : There is a distinct pattern throughout American history: When tax rates are reduced, the economy’s growth rate improves and living standards increase…Conversely, periods of higher tax rates are associated with sub par economic performance and stagnant tax revenues…President Hoover dramatically increased tax rates in the 1930s and President Roosevelt compounded the damage by pushing marginal tax rates to more than 90 percent. The preceding discussion was premised on the idea that we should look at tax revenues as a share of GDP. What if, instead, we look at the average annual change in tax collections? Here I do not have data breaking everything down by specifics, but on the other hand we have some long-term historical data which is potentially informative: – FDR 121.3% – Truman, 3.7% – Eisenhower, 2.4% – Kennedy, 4.8% – Johnson, 6.9% – Nixon, 0.3% – Ford, 6.4% – Carter, 3.0% – Reagan, 2.4% (Source: U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Historical Table 2.1, Budget for FY 1997.) That figure for FDR is not a misprint — over 13 years, the total increase in tax revenues was 1,865%. FDR raised the top rate from 25 percent to 91 percent (that rate had been lowered in the 1920s from 75 percent). What about general rates of economic growth? Here are the figures for increase in real GDP during the key years of FDR’s administration, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis: – 1934,+10.9%; – 1935,+8.9%; – 1936, +13.0%; – 1937, +5.1%; – 1938, -3.4%; – 1939,+8.1%. What makes that 1938 figure so interesting is that in 1937, under pressure from conservatives in Congress, Roosevelt cut back on stimulus spending programs. Looking across a range of administrations , we get the following figures for overall economic growth: Kennedy-Johnson (49 percent over eight years), followed by Clinton (34 percent), followed by Reagan (32 percent), Nixon-Ford (24 percent) and Eisenhower (21 percent). IV. Conclusions(?) Actually, there are no clear affirmative conclusions to be drawn here except that we have overwhelming reasons to reject the claims being made by supply-side tax cut enthusiasts. The data certainly do not show that tax cuts never stimulate economic growth, nor even that they never stimulate economic growth enough to pay for themselves — the data on the Kennedy tax cuts suggest that this is exactly what happened. But those were primarily demand-side tax cuts, similar to the tax cuts that were the largest element in Obama’s stimulus package. The supply-sided, Laffer-curved theory of tax cuts as stimulus started out as voodoo economics 30 years ago. Today, Paul Krugman calls them ” zombie ” theories. Which brings us to the question that has been plaguing Hollywood and cable television lately: Just what does it take to kill a zombie?

Read the full article →

Massey Energy To Be Sold To Alpha Natural Resources

January 30, 2011

NEW YORK — Massey Energy Co., struggling with losses after an explosion that killed 29 workers at a West Virginia coal mine last spring, agreed Saturday to be taken over by Alpha Natural Resources Inc. Alpha is paying $7.1 billion in cash and stock for Massey, the nation’s fourth-largest coal producer by revenue. Massey operates 19 mining complexes in Virginia, West Virginia and Kentucky including the Upper Big Branch mine where the April 5 disaster occurred. Alpha is offering 1.025 share of its stock for each share of Massey, plus $10 per share in cash. Together, that represents a bid of $69.33 per share, a 21 percent premium over Massey’s closing share price Friday. In an interview, Alpha CEO Kevin Crutchfield said the acquisition will offer greater access to international markets. Shortages of coal for making steel have driven up prices around the world, a trend Alpha hopes to capitalize on. “We sell into 20-some countries now and that will increase significantly,” Crutchfield said. Asked about safety concerns at Massey’s operations, Crutchfield said, “We try to let our performance speak for itself. Nobody is perfect, but we have a very good record regarding safety and a good working relationship with regulators.” He added, “Massey has a lot of great people who want to do the right thing.” A sale of Richmond, Va.-based Massey was expected even before the sudden retirement last month of Don Blankenship, the company’s CEO. He was the strongest advocate for remaining an independent company on Massey’s board. The company’s losses since the disaster were another factor leading to its sale. Massey lost a total of $130 million in the second and third quarters of last year. It has not yet released fourth-quarter results. Alpha expects the deal will help the combined company cut costs by at least $150 million a year. Recent reports have suggested Massey was also being sought by global steel conglomerate ArcelorMittal SA. Alpha, based in Abingdon, Va., is the leading U.S. producer of metallurgical coal – the kind used to make steel as opposed to electricity – while ArcelorMittal already owns several metallurgical coal mines in Appalachia. Demand from steelmakers allows coal producers to charge premium prices of $200 or more a ton, more than double the price of Appalachian coal sold to power plants. About 1.3 billion tons of Massey’s 2.9 billion tons of coal reserves is metallurgical coal. Under Blankenship, the company increased coal exports and opened important inroads to India, which is seen as the next big industrial market by some in the coal industry. Massey has faced questions about its safety practices since a fire killed two miners at it Aracoma Alma No. 1 mine in West Virginia in January 2006. The fire helped persuade Congress to pass sweeping safety changes that year. Alpha, on the other hand, has faced few questions about its safety practices and Crutchfield has been an invited speaker at industry safety conference. It has avoided major disasters, though several miners have died at its operations. Most notable was a roof collapse that killed two miners in Cucumber, W.Va., in January 2007. The April explosion, the worst U.S. mining disaster in 40 years, is the subject of civil and criminal investigations. On Friday, Massey rejected nearly every part of the federal government’s theory on what caused the deadly explosion. The company doesn’t believe that broken equipment or an excessive buildup of coal dust contributed to the blast. Instead, Massey argues there was a sudden inundation of natural gases from a crack in the floor that overwhelmed what it insists were good air flow and other controls that should have contained the blast. It acknowledged the shearing machine that cuts the coal may somehow have ignited the gas but said the company’s own investigators haven’t determined how. Massey won’t issue its own report on the explosion until after state and federal investigators release theirs. The proposed sale won’t affect the investigation into the explosion, said J. Davitt McAteer, who was asked by former West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin to conduct a separate investigation. “It doesn’t impact the investigation since the investigation looks at a moment in time and what lead up to that,” said McAteer, who headed the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration during the Clinton administration. “Hopefully the purchase by Alpha would be helpful in adopting a new culture that would establish safer operating procedures at these mines operated by Massey,” he said. The explosion is also being investigated by MSHA and the West Virginia Office of Miners’ Health Safety and Training. Miner Clay Mullins, who lost his brother Rex in the Upper Big Branch explosion, said it’s a surprise anyone would want Massey. “I really don’t care what happens to them as long as there’s men and there’s families that need to make a living, I understand that, but Massey needs to be held accountable for the 29 men they murdered,” Mullins said. The companies said the deal is expected to close by mid-year. It must be approved by regulators and Alpha and Massey shareholders. If approved it will create a company with combined annual revenue of roughly $7 billion and more than 12,000 employees. Massey’s stock closed Friday at $57.23. The stock had tumbled from its close of $54.69 the day of the explosion to a low of $26.31 on July 2. Investors sensing the possibility of a takeover have bid the stock higher since then. Investors profited under Blankenship, but the former CEO alienated neighbors of his company’s mines over environmental issues. His staunch defense of the company after the explosion raised more anger. A statement from Alpha executives and Massey’s current CEO, Baxter F. Phillips Jr. did not mention the disaster. Coal broker A.T. Massey created the company bearing his name in 1920. Massey was sold in 1974 to St. Joe Minerals, which later formed a partnership with Royal Dutch/Shell Group in 1980. A year later, Massey Coal Partnership was purchased by Fluor Corp. Massey Energy was created in 2000 when Fluor spun off its coal holdings. Alpha was founded in 2002 and went public three years later. It has grown to one of the industry’s largest with a series of smaller acquisitions and the $1.4 billion takeover of rival Foundation Coal Holdings in July 2009 ___ Huber reported from Charleston, W.Va. AP Writer Brian Farkas in Charleston also contributed to this report.

Read the full article →

Marcus Samuelsson: Marcus Samuelsson: A Dispatch From Davos

January 29, 2011

I’m so excited to be here in Davos. I was here many years ago as a student cook. It was the same principle of hard work and trying to not get yelled at in Swiss-German. I’m excited about the discussions here. I heard Medvedev, Clinton, and ran into Bill Gates, and Michael Dell came to one of my sessions. Best food? It’s a tie between the Canadian beaver tails with chocolate and the Indian Pavilion. I love the swiss cheese but can’t make a meal out of it. The hotel where I was part of a dinner had a small explosion the next morning — nobody got hurt but kind of a scary moment. The weather here has been fantastic — I find myself looking at the mountaintop often, but no skiing for me this time. I have now shared my views on food safety, cooking for the State Dinner, cooking from a diversity point of view, food in Harlem, and talked about foodrepublic.com — our site that we will launch in the next month. It’s been such a pleasure being here and I hope I get to come back next year. Gruezi as they say here in Davos, Graubünden. See you in Harlem!

Read the full article →

Video: Rubin Says U.S. Having `Tough Time’ on Response to Egypt

January 28, 2011

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — James Rubin, co-executive editor of Bloomberg View and a former assistant secretary of state under President Bill Clinton, talks about the unrest in Egypt and the U.S. response to the situation. Clashes erupted as Egyptian authorities tried to prevent demonstrations in Cairo, where protesters chanting “liberty” and “change” assembled to demand the end of President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule. Rubin speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Nancy F. Koehn: Davos Diary: Day Three

January 28, 2011

The day dawned clear and cold in Davos, but most participants in the World Economic Forum here had little bandwidth for the weather. Typically, Thursday and Friday are the days when some of the most powerful leaders come to town. This means larger entourages (and bigger traffic jams to accommodate convoys), higher energy levels in the Congress Center, the Forum’s main hall, and greater attention to who’s who in formal sessions and those behind closed doors (I, for one, could not help staring when former U.S. president Bill Clinton walked by as I was standing at one of the two coffee bars). During the lunch break, the substantive buzz was about French president Nicolas Sarkozy’s morning address and his unflagging support for the European single currency in the wake of Greece and Ireland’s pressing fiscal problems and broader mass protests. Over a cheese sandwich, I eavesdropped on an animated conversation about how important it was (or was not) for Sarkozy to send such a signal at this moment. I left this debate midstream to scurry on to an interactive session on Shakespeare’s lessons for leadership. For more than an hour, about 50 men and women analyzed several passages in the Bard’s plays, looking for insights and assorted “takeaways” to apply in our respective lives. The arts, our discussion leader explained, appeal to the heart as well as the head, so the lessons we glean from understanding literature and other similar pursuits stick (“Here, here,” I said under my breath, relieved to find myself in a professional setting without PowerPoint slides). I have long been drawn to Shakespeare’s stories, particularly the characters that shape and drive these stories. In my leadership work with MBA students and executives, I often use examples from Shakespeare, finding that these instances resonate with most people. As our discussion leader said, we “learn best from stories.” The conversation in the afternoon about three Shakespeare excerpts had a number of takeaways. The passage from Hamlet , for example, in which Polonius, a courtier in Hamlet’s uncle’s court, sends his son, Laertes, off to school in France, is full of important lessons for business and life, including: listen more than you speak; make friends carefully and keep those you have close; be careful with your personal finances; dress well, but do not be flashy; and perhaps most significant, “to thine own self be true.” A second excerpt, from Julius Caesar , between two angry Roman leaders, Brutus and Cassius, dealt with conflict management. Avoid getting personal in stressful encounters, don’t assume another person’s motivations, and be mindful of outside influences were several of the insights from this dramatic exchange. The final, and most famous excerpt, was the St. Crispin’s Day speech that Henry V delivers near the end of the play named after him. The short speech, intended to rally the English king’s troops before the Battle of Agincourt, is elegant and moving. Behind the power and unforgettable language are a number of lessons for those trying to motivate others in difficult situations: appealing to a worthy mission that is bigger than any one individual, instilling pride in colleagues and comrades, bringing the future into the present to help others understand the broader impact of what they are doing, offering one’s team a choice about whether to invest in a particular undertaking, and fostering a sense of collective enterprise. I left the session engaged and heartened, not only by what I had learned from the session but by how I had learned it. Late in the afternoon, I filed into the largest auditorium in the Congress Hall to hear a conversation between Bill Clinton and Klaus Schwab, the founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum. For 45 minutes, Clinton answered a range of questions about Haiti, the global economy, job creation, U.S. politics, and the shifting geopolitical order. He looked thinner–by some measure–than he has and as a result perhaps a bit less robust. But his answers were thoughtful, confident without being arrogant, and consistently supported by relevant facts. At several moments during his remarks, I marveled at his speed and breadth of thinking, all powered by great engagement. Unconstrained by the limits imposed on officeholders, Clinton talked about the mistakes the Democratic Party made in the midterm elections by not offering up another narrative to that told (relentlessly) by the political right. When asked for his advice to leaders, he said individuals should not just talk about particular challenges; they should go out and do something, no matter how small, about these challenges. The world, he continued, is “so hungry for examples of things that work.” I was most struck by Clinton’s implicit call for a revised version of capitalism, one that accounted for the interconnectedness of our global village, that no longer regarded aspects of economic activity such as environmental concerns as externalities but rather as critical parts of a viable business model, and that recognized a broader breadth of stakeholders than do older, narrower conceptions of free markets. Late in the evening, a friend in Boston sent me a text message about a small explosion here in a Davos hotel. It was the first I had heard of this although the blast, which happened in an underground storage area of the Morosani Posthotel, occurred about 9 a.m. Blessedly, no one was injured, and authorities are saying little about causes or circumstances. Security will no doubt be very tight for the remainder of this gathering. Yesterday, U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Timothy Geithner is speaking in the morning. And in the afternoon–in what was the Forum highlight for me–so did Bono. Coming up: Stay tuned for my World Economic Forum recap on Monday and keep following my tweets live from the event.

Read the full article →

Eboo Patel: Davos: The Global Village and the Local Community

January 26, 2011

The World Economic Forum — like the Clinton Global Initiative, the TED Conference, the Aspen Ideas Festival and other such global confabs — is a carnival of ideas, opportunities, dreams and confessions. It’s less manic than CGI, not quite as laid back as TED, but definitely part of the same family. And it has the added distinction of being, as far as I can tell at least, the Mothership — the event that launched the pattern in which the global meritocratic elite would gather together face-to-face to discuss a wide-ranging, even eclectic agenda. Clinton very definitely shaped his conference to be Davos-like (with the added layer of the attendees making “commitments” to do good works in the world), and while TED began life with a smaller and quirkier dream, it has morphed under Chris Anderson’s leadership to rival (in talent and ideas at least) any other gathering on the planet. Other major conferences tend to gather a narrower range of people to talk about a single subject (the World Health Organization) or have become so unwieldy as to be impossible to navigate (most UN gatherings). The World Economic Forum and its close cousins are different, and professor Klaus Schwab, the founder, knows it. In his introductory session for Davos newbies, he explained the big idea and how it came about. As a Management Professor, he advanced something called “stakeholder theory” – the idea that companies are not just responsible to their shareholders but to a broader range of stakeholders. If such stakeholders gathered to discuss issues, shape a common agenda and find resonances, not only would the company be stronger, but society would be better. Schwab wrote a book about the idea in 1970, and then decided that he wanted to build a platform to try putting it into practice. The first World Economic Forum took place in 1971. The result, 40 years later – a conference that CEOs, presidents and prime ministers feel like they have to come to, and that some happily pay literally hundreds of thousands of dollars to attend – is nothing short of astonishing. The people who come to the World Economic Forum are segmented into different communities – government leaders, media leaders, strategic partners (which are basically Fortune 500 companies, and are the ones who pay the big bucks to attend). Over time, Schwab has added other key communities — technology pioneers, young global leaders, social entrepreneurs, global growth companies (which are going to be the future Fortune 500 and are largely in China). The list of communities shows that he’s a man who is on the cutting edge without being faddish. All in all, it’s a reasonable representation of many of the groups who make things happen at the global level in our world. The more I thought about it, the more I realize that the core idea — and this is not a criticism, simply an observation — is quite old and simple: a healthy social ecology gathers its various segments every so often to bat around ideas, address recurring problems and shape a to-do list for the year or ten ahead. It’s old-school community development really, something that good alderman do in their neighborhoods and good mayors do in their cities: gather the shopkeepers and real estate developers and homeowners and cops and kids and teachers and say, “So what’s this neighborhood going to be about next year?” The fact that Professor Schwab came out of the management world simply means that his scope was global and his network was CEOs. Comparing Davos to a local community development meeting will inevitably bring up local/global issues. The image is so crystal clear it begs to be said out loud. Isn’t it quaint that a slice of the world’s ecology gathers in a Swiss hamlet to engage face-to-face. It makes that global village metaphor feel so, well, real. I wish. In a smart Atlantic piece, Chrystia Freeland explains the rub: “Today’s global super-rich are increasingly a nation unto themselves.” They move their companies where their customers are (increasingly Asia), they can’t find their way around their hometowns because they are so infrequently at home. If lifting people into the middle class in India with jobs and goods means someone has to fall out of the middle class in Indiana, well, that’s globalization. One of the reasons for the increase in the number of World Economic Forum-type events is because the group that gathers here likes to be together. The down-low on Davos is that the really exciting events – the soirees, the nightcaps, the endless-discussion dinners — happen after 10 p.m., like in a college dorm. Leading up to the World Economic Forum, I got dozens of e-mails advertising various late-night social events, and almost nothing touting the formal agenda during the day. These people like to socialize with each other. This is their community. Look, nobody expects the CEO of Citi to walk to work, become president of the PTA and support the neighborhood Little League team. But there was a time that great companies were proud of the cities they were based in. That meant something for jobs, neighborhoods, art museums, local charities. Are those days numbered? Interesting that a stakeholder-driven, community-development-like approach to shaping an agenda for a globalized world could hold such dangerous consequences for local communities. (This piece is re-posted from the Washington Post .)

Read the full article →

Robert Reich: The President Ignored the Elephant in the Room

January 26, 2011

The president’s new emphasis on the importance of investing in education, infrastructure, and basic research in order to build the nation’s long-term competitive capacities is appropriate. For the last three decades the federal government’s spending on these three essentials has declined as a percentage of its total spending, arguably threatening America’s technological and economic leadership. But the president’s failure to address the decoupling of American corporate profits from American jobs, and explain specifically what he’ll do to get jobs back, not only risks making his grand plans for reviving the nation’s “competitiveness” seem somewhat beside the point but also cedes to Republicans the dominant narrative. The address he gave last night could have been given (indeed, was given) by Democrats in the 1980s when Japan seemed to threaten America’s preeminence. Bill Clinton’s 1992 campaign manifesto, “Putting People First,” laid out the case. Only now the competitive threat comes from China. A similar call for economic patriotism and public investment emerged in the 1950s and 1960s, when the competitive threat was the Soviet Union. John F. Kennedy challenged America to get to the moon ahead of the Soviets. Before him, Republican president Dwight Eisenhower committed the nation to building the interstate highways system — forty-one thousand miles of four-lane (sometimes even six-lane) freeways to replace the old two-lane federal roads that meandered through cities and towns — in order to speed troops, tanks, and munitions across the nation in the event of war. And a National Defense Education Act to educate a generation of mathematicians and scientists to catch up with the Soviets in space. President Obama made the parallel explicit: Half a century ago, when the Soviets beat us into space with the launch of a satellite called Sputnik, we had no idea how we’d beat them to the moon. But after investing in better research and education, we didn’t just surpass the Soviets’ we unleashed a wave of innovation that created new industries and millions of new jobs. This is our generation’s Sputnik moment. Reviving these ideas, and the feelings they provoke, is politically astute. A call for national unity and economic patriotism is places the President above partisan rancor, and gives him a rationale for a strong and effective government at a time when Republicans want nothing so much as to shrink it. But the new theme also poses a danger of appearing to ignore the elephant in the room — the nation’s continuing scourge of high unemployment that shows little sign of abating any time soon. It’s one thing to challenge the nation to reembark on the equivalent of a race to the moon when most people feel confident about their own family finances, but quite another when economic security is as endemic as now. The president understandably wants Americans to feel upbeat about the economic recovery — “two years after the worst recession most of us have ever known, the stock market has come roaring back Corporate profits are up. The economy is growing again,” he said — but little of this has yet trickled down to ordinary people who continue to be plagued by a huge debt load, business’s unwillingness to create full-time jobs, and a still fragile housing market. The Great Recession wasn’t due to America’s loss of “competitiveness” relative to the Chinese or anyone else. In fact, American corporations are now enormously competitive, racking up some of their highest profits in history. But much of their success is occurring outside the United States. GE, whose CEO, Jeffrey Immelt, was just tapped to head Mr. Obama’s new advisory council on jobs and competitiveness, has more foreign employees than American. General Motors now sells and makes more cars in China than at home. Republicans and their supply-side economists say the nation got into trouble because government became too large, and the answer is therefore to cut spending, cut taxes, and shrink the deficit. The president, having apparently given up on Keynesian pump-priming, has no retort except to invest for the long term. What the president should have done is talk frankly about the central structural flaw in the U.S. economy — the dwindling share of its gains going to the vast middle class, and the almost unprecedented concentration of income and wealth at top — in sharp contrast to the Eisenhower and Kennedy years. Although the economy is more than twice as large as it was thirty years ago, the median wage has barely budged. Most of the gains from growth have gone to the richest Americans, whose portion of total income soared from around 9 percent in the late 1970s to 23.5 percent in 2007. Americans kept spending anyway by using their homes as ATMs but the bursting of the housing bubble put an end to that – leaving them without enough purchasing power to reboot the economy. So the central challenge is put more money into the pockets average Americans. This narrative would be politically risky (opening Mr. Obama to the charge of being a “class warrior”) but at least honest. And it would allow him to connect the dots — explaining why his new health-care law is critical to reducing medical costs for most working families, why tax reform requires cutting taxes on the middle class while raising them on the rich, why the Bush tax cuts shouldn’t be extended for the wealthy, why deficit reduction must not sacrifice education and infrastructure (both important to rebuilding middle-class prosperity) and why any cuts in Social Security or Medicare must be on the backs of the wealthy rather than average working families. Importantly, it would give him a convincing counter-narrative to the Republican anti-government one. Government exists to protect and advance the interests of average working families. Without it, Americans have to rely mainly on big and increasingly global corporations, whose only interest is making money wherever it can be made. Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future , now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

Read the full article →

Robert E. Scott: Exports and Jobs: Less Than Half the Story

January 26, 2011

President Obama talked about doubling exports in the State of the Union Address last night as a strategy to create jobs. It’s a great sound bite, but woefully incomplete economics. While exports support American jobs, imports displace them ; when imports grow faster than exports, our trade deficit expands and American jobs are lost. Between 2001 and 2007 (both business cycle peaks), we lost 3.4 million U.S. manufacturing jobs, and the fact that the trade deficit as a share of GDP rose by roughly one third is a key reason why. Lately, when the President has talked about jobs and trade, he mentions the jobs associated with exports but ignores those lost due to growing imports. It’s like watching baseball, but only counting runs scored by the home team — lots of fun but it won’t tell you anything about how well they are doing. Last week, the President talked a lot about expanding exports to China . But he rarely mentioned imports or the trade deficit. We heard a lot about unfair trade and job losses during Obama’s primary campaign, but those words disappeared after the election. One reason may be that President Obama has surrounded himself with advisors from multinational companies, who have more to gain from outsourcing than from domestic job creation. For example, just this week, the President appointed GE CEO Jeffrey Immelt to head his new Council on Jobs and Competitiveness. Our exports to China did increase rapidly last year — by about $23 billion, and this did support job creation. But imports increased about three times as fast, by $71 billion, which cost the U.S. many more jobs than exports supported. On balance, the growth in our trade deficit with China cost the United States at least one half million jobs in 2010 . We have huge trade deficits with China because of massive currency manipulation and many other unfair trade practices. Currency manipulation acts like a subsidy on all of China’s exports to the United States, and puts an identical tax on U.S. exports to China, and to every other country in the world where we compete with China, which is our most important trade competitor. The U.S. could recover at least a million jobs by forcing China to revalue its currency now . We will have a record trade deficit of nearly $275 billion with China in 2010. President Obama is unlikely to acknowledge that trade with China cost us a half million jobs in 2010; the U.S. China trade deficit is growing rapidly and job displacement will worsen in the future unless something is done to end China’s currency manipulation and other unfair trade policies. The Obama administration’s trade policies are failing because corporate executives are designing them. Many key staff members have close ties to multinational corporations and Wall Street, such as new White House Chief of Staff Bill Daley (former executive of JPMorgan Chase), former Treasury official Gene Sperling, recently appointed head of the National Economic Council in the White House (formerly worked for Goldman Sachs); and recently departed NEC director Lawrence Summers, who received $5.2 million from a Wall Street hedge fund between stints in the Clinton and Obama administrations. Summers, Sperling and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner (also from Wall Street) played key roles in opposing efforts within the Obama administration to impose tariffs on Chinese goods if the Chinese Government continued to manipulate their currency. Multinational corporations are responsible for outsourcing millions of U.S. jobs. What’s good for their corporate profits (and executive pay) often conflicts with the national interest of the United States to maximize job creation and production in this country. Even U.S.-based MNCs sometimes profit enormously from China’s unfair trade and industrial policies and currency manipulation. China spent $199 billion last quarter alone buying foreign currency reserves (primarily treasury bills) in order to keep its currency artificially low. They now hold $2.85 trillion in foreign currency reserves. The best estimates suggest that the Chinese yuan (RMB) is at least 30-40% undervalued. That amounts to a subsidy of 30%-40% on all the goods imported by GE and other MNCs from China. These companies would lose billions in profits if China revalued the yuan (RMB) and made these goods more expensive, so they are actively opposing efforts to compel China to revalue. Multinational corporations don’t need government assistance — they are sitting on $2 trillion in cash that they are investing in financial securities, rather than real capital that would create new jobs. They have all the cash they need to invest in R&D and to expand their factories. They can also afford to file trade cases to protect their fair trade and patent rights, which can cost millions of dollars for a single case. Instead, however, while they hoard their cash at home, they are investing abroad. China is giving hundreds of billions in subsidies to MNCs to move factories from the U.S. and other countries and locate them in China. For example, Evergreen Solar announced last week that it will close its solar cell factory in Massachusetts , which opened in 2008 with $43 million in state subsidies. Chinese banks offered Evergreen financing for two-thirds of the cost of its new plant at rates “as low as 4.8 percent” with no principal payments or interest payments due until the end of the loan in 2015. Even cheap labor is beside the point. U.S. clean energy loan guarantees can’t compete with the Chinese loan subsidies. This is another reason why MNCs will oppose (overtly or covertly) efforts to enforce fair trade laws by the Obama Administration. Americans who work for a living should be outraged that the President has appointed an executive of a firm that has offshored tens of thousands of jobs to serve as one of his key advisors. G.E.’s Immelt, the President’s newest CEO advisor, says that he wants to create jobs in the United States. But as Scott Paul of the Alliance for American Manufacturing showed last week , Immelt and GE have been leading the charge of the outsourcers. He notes that GE has “slashed their American workforce to fewer than 150,000, [and] dramatically expanded its global presence, now employing over 300,000 workers worldwide.” The President visited Immelt at a GE Plant in Schenectady, New York, last week where they celebrated $45 billion in new trade deals with China, like the joint venture GE just signed with China AVIC, an avionics firm that supplies components to both civilian and military jet makers in China. GE claims that the deal will create jobs in the US, but they are giving away the keys to their kingdom by transferring key avionics technology to China AVIC. GE put $200 million and its technology in the deal and the Chinese partner is putting up $700 million. GE is effectively selling its treasure for beads and trinkets. This is supposed to be a 50 year deal, but the way these deals usually work, the Chinese partner will appropriate GE’s technology and then kick them out in a few years. Within ten years China AVIC will be a global leader in avionics, and GE will be out of the business. This, in essence, has been the result of China’s indigenous innovation policies, which have forced foreign companies to transfer technology to Chinese firms, according to the National Association of Manufacturers . The deal may boost short term profits and Jeffrey Immelt’s bonuses, but thousands of American jobs will disappear. Who in our government is representing those workers? The deal will supposedly be limited strictly to domestic avionics, but it would be unwise to blindly trust the Chinese partner — this deal will give their military aircraft access to cutting edge US technology; two weeks ago, when Defense Sectary Gates visited China, their military conducted the first test flight of a new stealth fighter — they are catching up fast. Small and medium sized manufacturers create most of the jobs in the U.S. — not the giant corporations. Unlike the big companies, small and medium sized firms cannot get access to enough capital to finance working capital or expansion needs. President Obama should have appointed someone like Laurie S. Moncrieff — President, Adaptive Manufacturing Services and Schmald Tool & Die, Inc., a dynamic business leader who speaks for small and medium sized firms. (Moncrieff appeared at an EPI currency forum last March ). She would make an outstanding Chair for the new White House Council on Jobs and Competitiveness. In his State of the Union Address last night, the President proposed some new investments in infrastructure and measures designed to boost competitiveness. We do need to invest hundreds of billions of public and private dollars each year for the next few years to rebuild our aging infrastructure and lay the foundations for new clean energy industries and for conservation. And those investments can support millions of new jobs. But their effectiveness will just be blunted if we shy away from fixing our trade problems with China and other countries that use unfair trade policies to take away jobs and production from U.S. workers and domestic companies. Without effective trade policies, too much of the boost to U.S. jobs that can be gained from our rebuilt highways and railroads will leak away in the form of rising imports. The President needs to address both imports and exports. He needs to tell us how he plans to end currency manipulation this year, and his plans for ending unfair trade. Eliminating the U.S. non-oil trade deficit would support over five million U.S. jobs, and generate hundreds of billions of dollars in new tax revenues and reduced spending on unemployment and other social services over the next few years. It’s time to end illegal currency manipulation and unfair trade practices, and to do that the President needs a new crop of advisors who care more about American job creation than outsourcing and MNC profits.

Read the full article →

Immelt To Head Obama Economic Advisory Board

January 21, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is restructuring his economic advisory board to place an emphasis on job creation, and he is naming General Electric CEO Jeffrey Immelt as its new head. The new board, called the President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, will replace the former Economic Recovery Advisory Board that had been chaired by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker. Obama announced late Friday that Volcker was ending his tenure on the panel when its mandate expires on Feb. 6. The change signals Obama’s intention to shift from policies that were designed to stabilize the economy after the 2008 financial meltdown to a renewed focus on increasing employment, a vexing task that could affect his re-election prospects. Obama, in a statement released after midnight, said the board’s mission will be to help generate ideas from the private sector to speed up economic growth and promote American competitiveness. “We still have a long way to go, and my number one priority is to ensure we are doing everything we can to get the American people back to work,” the president said. The advisory board has included past government officials and representatives from labor and the corporate world. Volcker has been a regular White House adviser, though the board itself has met infrequently with the president. “Since my campaign for president, I have relied on Paul Volcker’s counsel as we worked to recover from the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression,” Obama said in a statement late Thursday. “Paul Volcker is not only one of the wisest economic minds in our country, he’s an individual who has for decades fought for policies that help American families and strengthen our economy.” “I have valued his friendship and skill over the years, and I will rely on his counsel for years to come,” Obama said. Immelt was to join Obama in Schenectady, N.Y., Friday for an economy-related visit to a General Electric plant, where the president will showcase policies that have aided the multinational conglomerate. GE is a diversified technology, media and financial services company. Immelt, a member of the economic recovery advisory panel, spelled out his goals for the reconstituted board in an opinion piece Friday in The Washington Post. In it, he called for a focus on manufacturing and exports, trade and innovation. “The president and I are committed to a candid and full dialogue among business, labor and government to help ensure that the United States has the most competitive and innovative economy in the world,” he wrote. His appointment adds another corporate insider to the White House orbit, underscoring the White House’s efforts to build stronger ties to the business community. Earlier this month, Obama named former commerce secretary and JPMorgan Chase executive William Daley as chief of staff. Immelt has been a White House ally since the start of Obama’s presidency, though his political contributions tend to be bipartisan and he financially supported Hillary Rodham Clinton and Republicans John McCain, Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney during the 2008 presidential elections. General Electric employees and their spouses, however, supported Obama over any other presidential candidate.

Read the full article →

Former Treasury Advisor Starting Company That Could Help Small Banks

January 20, 2011

In an effort to restore a crucial segment of the economy that was wounded in the financial crisis, a former government official is starting a company aimed at helping small banks. Lee Sachs, a former advisor in the Treasury department, is teaming with John Delaney, former chief executive of the bank CapitalSource, to launch a firm designed to allow small banks to make loans that otherwise would have been out of their league, the Wall Street Journal reports. By giving small banks opportunities to extend portions of big loans, the firm, called BancAlliance, will attempt to help revitalize the small bank industry. Focusing on banks with assets between $200 million and $10 billion, BancAlliance will serve as a middleman, finding big loans and then allowing banks to underwrite pieces of them, the WSJ says. By collaborating, these banks could, in theory, compete with the giants of the banking industry. Small banks have traditionally shared a close relationship with small businesses, making small lenders a key ingredient in a healthy economy. Small businesses crave the personal attention a small bank can provide. Especially now, with many banks shell-shocked from the crisis, small business owners, who might not have much concrete proof of reliability, can benefit from working with bank executives who trust them. Small businesses contribute about 70 percent of the nation’s jobs, according to the Obama administration’s estimate. New businesses , which often rely on bank loans to get going, contribute about 20 percent of new jobs, according to a recent Bank of America Merrill Lynch study. The health of small banks, then, is essential in a functioning economy. Late last year, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which currently guarantees the savings parked at about 7,665 American banks, revealed that the number of banks it considers troubled swelled to 860 from 829 during the summer months. The vast majority of these additions to the “problem” list are small banks. In theory, BancAlliance would help strengthen small banks by giving them access to loans outside their traditional sphere. While small banks typically have much of their assets tied to the local economy — in commercial real estate, for instance — this new company would theoretically let them expand their reach. “This is designed to give large-bank capabilities to small banks,” Sachs said, according to the WSJ . It remains to be seen, though, whether BancAlliance would spur lending to small businesses. Sachs is a Treasury veteran, having served as assistant secretary under Robert Rubin, during Clinton’s second term. Under Rubin’s watch, lawmakers rolled back Depression-era regulation, paving the way for banks to grow larger, a development that experts say contributed to the financial crisis less than a decade later.

Read the full article →

William K. Black: Obama Embraces the "Economic Philosophy That Has Completely Failed"

January 20, 2011

President Obama’s Executive Order on regulatory review was originally set in motion by his February 3, 2009 direction to OMB to create an improved regulatory review process. The fundamental principles and structures governing contemporary regulatory review were set out in Executive Order 12866 of September 30, 1993. A great deal has been learned since that time. Far more is now known about regulation — not only about when it is justified, but also about what works and what does not. Far more is also known about the uses of a variety of regulatory tools such as warnings, disclosure requirements, public education, and economic incentives. Years of experience have also provided lessons about how to improve the process of regulatory review. In this time of fundamental transformation, that process–and the principles governing regulation in general — should be revisited. September 30, 1993 is an interesting date. I was the deputy director of the National Commission on Financial Institution Reform, Recovery and Enforcement (NCFIRRE). We issued our report in July 1993 on the causes of the S&L debacle. Our report was based on an extensive investigation of what worked and what failed in regulation. In particular, we found that the deregulation and desupervision created an environment in which at “the typical large failure” “fraud” was “invariably present.” By fall 1993, the Office of Thrift Supervision had learned the lessons and developed extremely effective rules, supervision, enforcement, and support for the criminal justice system. Congress passed the Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) law in 1991. The regulators had removed the abusive regulatory accounting rules designed to cover up the scale of the debacle. Administration officials had falsely used this cover up of losses through accounting gimmickry to claim that the S&L crisis had been “resolved” at no cost to the taxpayers. The PCA was based on the finding that such accounting cover ups and “forbearance” greatly increased the eventual cost to the taxpayers. By fall 1993, a well-functioning partnership of the OTS and the Justice Department had produced over 1,000 felony convictions of “major” S&L frauds — it remains to this day the greatest success against elite criminals in history. The Justice Department and the OTS ensured that the prosecutions were prioritized properly by creating the “Top 100″ list. The OTS (which was created in 1989) had brought over 1,000 serious enforcement actions. The OTS secured over $1 billion in settlements from top tier auditors and brought hundreds of successful civil actions against the elite frauds. The reregulatory effort was so successful that for the next 15 years every U.S. Treasury Secretary flew to Tokyo and urged Japan’s leaders to stop relying on dishonest accounting to cover up their main banks’ losses and to instead adopt the regulatory policies that prevented the S&L debacle from becoming a catastrophe. By September 1993, the S&L regulators had written extensively of our research findings about the role of accounting control fraud in driving the crisis and the regulatory and accounting lessons we had learned. My papers, collectively roughly 500 pages, had been circulated among many finance economists. Our work explained why econometric studies produced exceptionally erroneous findings in the presence of accounting control fraud and financial bubbles. Three of the nation’s leading white-collar criminologists, Henry Pontell, Kitty Calavita, and Robert Tillman had published several journal articles on these same topics. George Akerlof and Paul Romer formally presented their paper on accounting control fraud — “Looting: the Economic Underworld of Bankruptcy for Profit” at the Brookings Conference on September 9, 1993 before many of the nation’s most prominent finance specialists. The NCFIRRE report notes that key elements of the Reagan administration — particularly Treasury and OMB, actively opposed our vital reregulation of the S&L industry. That reregulation was essential to containing a raging epidemic of accounting control fraud in the mid-1980s. Only the fact that the Federal Home Loan Bank Board was an independent regulatory agency prevented OMB from blocking S&L reregulation. President Obama is correct that white-collar criminologists and a few non-theoclassical economists have continued to add to the useful understanding of regulation since 1993. However, his 2009 direction to OMB is not candid. By September 1993, we not only knew how to regulate effectively — financial regulation was exceptionally effective — and employment and growth were surging. The perverse (Gresham’s) dynamics that the accounting control frauds had caused that destroyed wealth and jobs had been eliminated or minimized. Even the most elite frauds and their elite political allies were held accountable. Bank Board Chairman Gray led the successful reregulation in late 1983-mid-1987 over the intense opposition of the Reagan administration, a majority of the House of Representatives, Speaker Wright, and the five U.S. Senators that became known as the “Keating Five.” Paul Volcker was Gray’s sole powerful ally. Wright and the Keating Five intervened on behalf of the two worst control frauds in America. S&L regulators had their careers destroyed, but continued to buck the frauds and their political patrons and do their duty to the public. In 1991-1992, the OTS’ West Region used its supervisory powers to squash a fast-developing trend among a number of California S&Ls to make “liar’s” loans. We recognized that such loans were inherently unsafe and unsound and frequently fraudulent. Our efforts were so effective that Long Beach Savings gave up its federal charter to escape our regulatory authority. It became a mortgage banker and rebranded itself as Ameriquest — the most notorious of the early non-federally regulated lenders specializing fraudulent and predatory nonprime loans. What happened after September 1993 is that OMB and Treasury, in alliance with Fed Chairman Greenspan and Senator Gramm, lost the accurate understanding of why vigorous financial regulation is essential and how one makes regulation effective. OMB, Treasury, Greenspan, and Gramm adopted anti-regulatory policies that were intensely criminogenic. We had to reregulate without the benefits of the criminology studies by Pontell, Calavita and Tillman and Akerlof & Romer’s economic studies. The Clinton and Bush administrations had the advantage of all our research and our demonstration of which financial regulatory policies succeed and which fail. (They also had the benefit of the public administration scholars’ books and articles that studied used our reregulation and concluded that it was an exemplar of effective regulation.) Unfortunately, the “completely failed” economic dogma that the Clinton and Bush administrations, Greenspan and Bernanke, and Senator Gramm shared led them to ignore our successes and adopt anti-regulatory policies that were so perverse that they were intensely criminogenic. The recent epidemics of accounting control fraud, the creation of the largest bubble in history, and the Great Recession could not have occurred if the Clinton and Bush administrations had actually learned a great deal about what works and what fails in regulation. The Clinton and Bush anti-regulatory policies created the “three des” — deregulation, desupervision, and de facto decriminalization. In late 2008, however, then-Senator Obama proclaimed that he had learned the correct regulatory “lessons” from the resulting economic collapse. From the Washington Post : “John McCain has spent decades in Washington supporting financial institutions instead of their customers,” [Obama] told a crowd of about 2,100 at the Colorado School of Mines. “So let’s be clear: What we’ve seen the last few days is nothing less than the final verdict on an economic philosophy that has completely failed.” Senator Obama was correct — the Clinton and Bush anti-regulatory policies were a catastrophic failure that permitted the epidemics of fraud that drove the Great Recession and the loss of over 10 million jobs. OMB was among the most virulent opponents of vigorous financial regulation because it has long been dominated by anti-regulatory economists embracing the “economic philosophy that has completely failed.” Bush selected financial regulatory leaders on the basis of the strength of their anti-regulatory zeal. President Obama was incorrect, therefore, in his February 3, 2009 directive to the OMB about the improved understanding of regulation. “Years of experience” have not taught the theoclassical economists “far more” “about what works and what does not” in regulation. The theoclassical economists know vastly less about effective regulation now than did OTS in 1993. The University of Chicago economists that President Obama appointed to senior positions related to regulatory policy scorned financial regulation. Austan Goolsbee, now Chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors poured scorn on those who warned of the urgent need to regulate nonprime loans. In a March 29, 2007 op-ed in the New York Times , Goolsbee derided those warning that nonprime loans were a “time bomb.” This column shows why the reasoning and methodology that Goolsbee employed “completely failed” because it relied on anti-regulatory dogma rather than sound economics and white-collar criminology. The column also shows that Obama’s regulatory review policy embraces Goolsbee’s “completely failed” anti-regulatory dogma and methodology and ignores the sound findings and methodologies employed by successful regulators, economists, and white-collar criminologists. Obama is correct that white-collar criminologists and non-theoclassical economists have learned “far more” “about what works and what does not” in regulation. He is incorrect that his economic team has learned these “lessons.” Goolsbee loves financial innovation and “consumer choice.” He began his defense of nonprime loans by decrying the “very old vein of suspicion against innovations in the mortgage market.” Goolsbee premised his argument upon the findings of an econometric study of home lending innovations. He argued: These innovations mainly served to give people power to make their own decisions about housing, and they ended up being quite sensible with their newfound access to capital. [T]he mortgage market has become more perfect, not more irresponsible. People tend to make good decisions about their own economic prospects. Of course, basing loans on future earnings expectations is riskier than lending money to prime borrowers at 30-year fixed interest rates. That is why interest rates are higher for subprime borrowers and for big mortgages that require little money down. Sometimes the risks flop. Sometimes people even have to sell their properties because they cannot make the numbers work. And do not forget that the vast majority of even subprime borrowers have been making their payments. Indeed, fewer than 15 percent of borrowers in this most risky group have even been delinquent on a payment, much less defaulted. When contemplating ways to prevent excessive mortgages for the 13 percent of subprime borrowers whose loans go sour, regulators must be careful that they do not wreck the ability of the other 87 percent to obtain mortgages. For be it ever so humble, there really is no place like home, even if it does come with a balloon payment mortgage. It’s hard to get something more wrong than Goolsbee (and the economists that conducted the study he relied upon) got this wrong. Theoclassical economics assumes that market participants are rational, informed, and utility-maximizing. It follows that expanding choices is always the correct policy. Some individuals who find the new option desirable will take it and be better off. Individuals that can expect to be worse off if they select a new option will not select it. Anyone who criticizes relying on consumer choice is paternalistic and is demeaning less-affluent consumers’ decision-making skills. The econometric study he relies and topic he discusses are perfect foils to illustrate Goolsbee’s opposition to regulation. The problem is that the study Goolsbee relied upon illustrates why fraud makes econometric studies fail. I have explained (and these explanations can be found in my 1993 NCFIRRE papers and Akerlof & Romer’s 1993 article) why accounting control fraud epidemics can hyper-inflate financial bubbles. Bubbles allow accounting control frauds to refinance bad loans and delay delinquencies and defaults. The regional real estate bubbles had begun bursting before Goolsbee wrote his op-ed — the delinquencies, defaults, and foreclosures lag the collapse of the bubble. A 13% delinquency rate would kill most subprime lenders, but the eventual default rate was likely to be far higher. Goolsbee ignores the loss to the consumer of purchasing a home with substantial negative equity. Goolsbee stresses that many of the subprime borrowers are relatively poorer minorities. The predatory lenders that induced them to take out loans they could not repay created reverse Pareto optimality — both parties to the nonprime loans made in 2006 and 2007 typically suffered a serious financial loss. Nonprime loans in 2003-2007 hyper-inflated the bubble and the markets increasingly less efficient (not ever more “perfect”). When one considers the endemic mortgage fraud by lenders and their agents and resultant negative expected value of the transaction we see that the frauds also cause negative externalities to the public. The nonprime borrowers included some speculators, but the typical borrower was the prey and the typical nonprime borrower lost wealth. The three key elements that Goolsbee relied upon to give the worst possible policy advice on how regulators should respond to the nonprime loans (do nothing, all is well, the lenders are making the nonprime borrowers friends) are (1) a presumption that financial innovation is good and that financial regulation is bad if it reduces innovation, (2) greater consumer choice is good and financial regulation is bad if it reduces choice (note the innovation increases choice), and (3) the scientific means of choosing between alternative regulatory policies is to rely on econometric studies. Obama’s Executive Order revising regulatory review policy enshrines each of these three elements even though Goolsbee demonstrated that they lead to the most destructive regulatory policies if control fraud or bubbles are present. Obama’s Wall Street Journal letter adopted this Republican talking point about “innovation.” Sometimes, those rules have gotten out of balance, placing unreasonable burdens on business–burdens that have stifled innovation and have had a chilling effect on growth and jobs. There are doubtless some contexts where this unsupported assertion could be true, e.g., the various bans on stem cell research, but in the financial context “innovation” frequently poses systemic risks, is devoid of social utility, and has no demonstrated advantage to anyone but the seller. Paul Volcker has made this point forcefully : I hear about these wonderful innovations in the financial markets, and they sure as hell need a lot of innovation. I can tell you of two — credit-default swaps and collateralized debt obligations — which took us right to the brink of disaster. Were they wonderful innovations that we want to create more of? You want boards of directors to be informed about all of these innovative new products and to understand them, but I do not know what boards of directors you are talking about. I have been on boards of directors, and the chance that they are going to understand these products that you are dishing out, or that you are going to want to explain it to them, quite frankly, is nil. I mean: Wake up, gentlemen. I can only say that your response is inadequate. I wish that somebody would give me some shred of neutral evidence about the relationship between financial innovation recently and the growth of the economy, just one shred of information. President Obama’s Wall Street Journal letter directed regulators not to interfere with consumer choice. [C]reating a 21st-century regulatory system … means using disclosure as a tool to inform consumers of their choices, rather than restricting those choices. We tried this “economic philosophy” and it “completely failed.” Goolsbee’s op-ed was typical of theoclassical dogma: regulations that restrict consumer choice are inherent illegitimate. The predatory lender pushing the loan that the borrower cannot repay is the borrower’s true friend. The regulator is the paternalistic bureaucrat. The FDIC tried to use disclosure plus consumer education to make this anti-regulatory dogma sound more attractive — and disclosure and consumer education failed to protect the nonprime borrowers. Obama’s directive is a radical, dangerous assault on regulation and consumers. It would require us to get rid of “suitability” requirements — your 85 year old grandmother’s financial advisor could hand her a “disclosure” page explaining the risks investing in the mezzanine tranche of CDOs and proceed to advise her to put her entire savings in the CDOs. We could not ban “liar’s” loans. We would have to get rid of many of the food and drug safety laws. We cannot “restrict” the consumer’s “choices.” The drug companies can hand out a “disclosure” page about the risks of a drug that has not been FDA approved for safety and efficacy and it’s up to you to decide whether to buy it. We cannot restrict the consumer’s “choice” so there cannot be any limits on usury or default fees. Your friendly payday lender can hand you their disclosure sheet and then when you are delinquent on a $50 loan they can charge you a $500 fee. We cannot restrict choice, so everybody you contract with can take away your right to sue for torts they commit by disclosing that they have a mandatory arbitration clause and you agree that their maximum liability is $10. Under this logic we couldn’t make prostitution unlawful. The OMB Director (implicitly) explained the import of the new regulatory review standard for econometrics: “Regulations must be guided by objective scientific evidence.” OMB decides whether the rules are guided by “objective scientific evidence.” OMB is dominated by neoclassical economists who believe, in the economic context, that only econometric studies are “objective scientific evidence.” Econometric studies, however, will show that accounting control frauds are reporting record income in the short-term and that whatever asset is used in the frauds has a strong, positive relationship with income. The regulators could not provide the necessary econometric studies to, for example, stop liar’s loans until the true “sign” (negative) of the relationship between making liar’s loans and income emerged — after the fraud and the bubble collapse. Any proposed rule that would restrict the nonprime lenders’ use of liar’s loans would be contradicted by the “objective scientific evidence” (the econometric study). The administration is adopting the “completely failed” economic philosophies that rendered regulation ineffective and allowed the epidemics of accounting control fraud that caused the Great Recession. Senator Obama knew that it was imperative that we junk that failed philosophy. President Obama is adopting key aspects of the completely failed philosophy that he condemned. Bring back Senator Obama. Bill Black is an Associate Professor of Economics and Law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, a white-collar criminologist, and a former senior financial regulator. He is the author of The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One.

Read the full article →

David Isenberg: Outsourcing War and Peace: Part 1

January 7, 2011

It’s a new year so it’s time for a new book on private military contractors. Out later this month is Outsourcing War and Peace: Preserving Public Values in a World of Privatized Foreign Affairs by Laura A. Dickinson. She is a law professor at Arizona State University. I’m in the process of writing a review and don’t want to give anything away but there is a lot of useful information here. So with the permission of her publisher, Yale University Press, I am going to post three excerpts from the book. Here is the first part. Privatization of Defense Department Operations It was not until the presidency of Bill Clinton that privatization began to penetrate deeply into the corridors of the Pentagon and other foreign policy agencies. Through the reinventing government program of Vice President Al Gore, the Clinton administration accelerated the privatization pace across all governmental sectors. But what is significant for our purposes is that in this period the foreign policy sector was also part of the privatization trend. At the DOD, Secretary William Cohen was a key figure. Caught between escalating price tags for weapons systems and political pressure to cut costs in the post-Cold War era without weakening the military’s capabilities, Secretary Cohen turned to the private sector for advice. During the summer of 1997 he assembled a committee that included leading executives from private industry to offer their wisdom about the road ahead. Cohen then proceeded to pursue a reform path that aimed to modernize defense by embracing the rhetoric, practices, and methodologies of American businesses.39 This embrace is perhaps most apparent in his Defense Reform Initiative, which he launched in the fall of 1997 as an effort to “aggressively apply to the Department those business practices that American industry has successfully used to become leaner and more flexible in order to remain competitive.” The four pillars of the initiative included the following practices: “(1) reengineer by adopting the best private sector business practices in defense support activities; (2) consolidate organizations to remove redundancy and move program management out of corporate headquarters and back to the field; (3) compete many more functions now being performed in-house, which will improve quality, cut costs, and make the Department more responsive; and (4) eliminate excess infrastructure.” To further these goals, Secretary Cohen proposed reductions of 33 percent in the number of employees in the Office of the Secretary of Defense, 29 percent in the Joint Staff, 10 percent in military headquarters, 21 percent in defense agencies, and 36 percent in departmental field activities. He also sought to make at least thirty thousand DOD positions subject to competition with the private sector each year for five years, outsourcing those that the private sector could perform better–dwarfing any previous outsourcing efforts. Thus, he sought to implement the troika of practices that had become the buzzwords of American industry in the 1980s and 1990s: downsize, compete, and outsource. While Secretary Cohen cut many civilian employees, Pentagon officials downsized troops and closed military bases, replacing uniformed soldiers with contractors for certain support roles. In the words of one senior DOD official, “The peace dividend requirement forced us to downsize. We had to reduce Army divisions from 18 to 10. But we didn’t cut all types of troops proportionally. We didn’t want to take the risk on the combat side. We took the risk on the support side. In 1991 we had 56 combat brigades. We cut the number down to 46. But if we had taken I down proportionally, we would have taken it down to 36.” Thus, the Pentagon increasingly came to rely on contractors to supply food, build bases, deliver latrines, and perform other support roles. Yet, at the same time, DOD cut its acquisitions staff by 38 percent. As a senior DOD official later noted, “Where we screwed up was not to cut the guys who buy the tanks and the big equipment; instead, we cut the guys who do nuts, bolts, supplies and so on–these were the guys who we were going to need as we turned more and more to service contractors. Thus, at the very moment that the military was turning increasingly to contractors to provide support services to troops, the Pentagon, under pressure from Congress, cut back severely on the acquisitions workforce that would become increasingly necessary to manage those contractors. Yet such cuts were politically much easier to make because, as Steven Schooner has argued, there is no natural political constituency for the acquisitions workforce.

Read the full article →

Holiday Shoppers Came Back In Force In 2010

December 25, 2010

NEW YORK — Shoppers came back in force for the holidays, right to the end. After two dreary years, Christmas 2010 will go down as the holiday Americans rediscovered how much they like to shop. People spent more than expected on family and friends and splurged on themselves, too, an ingredient missing for two years. Clothing such as fur vests and beaded sweaters replaced practical items like pots and pans. Even the family dog is getting a little something extra. “You saw joy back in the holiday season,” said Sherif Mityas, partner in the retail practice at A.T. Kearney. A strong Christmas Eve augmented a great season for retailers. The National Retail Federation predicts spending this holiday season will reach $451.5 billion, up 3.3 percent over last year. That would be the biggest increase since 2006, and the largest total since a record $452.8 billion in 2007. The holiday season runs from Nov. 1 through Dec. 31, so a strong week after Christmas could still make this the biggest of all time. Spending numbers through Dec. 24 won’t be available until next week and final numbers, through Dec. 31, arrive next month. The economy hasn’t improved significantly from last year. Unemployment is 9.8 percent, credit remains tight and the housing market is moribund. But recent economic reports suggest employers are laying off fewer workers and businesses are spending more. Consumer confidence is rising. “I was unemployed last year, so I’m feeling better,” said Hope Jackson, who was at Maryland’s Mall in Columbia on Friday morning. Jackson bought laptops and PlayStation 2 games for her three daughters earlier in the season but was at the mall on Christmas Eve to grab $50 shirts marked down to $12 at Aeropostale. Some spending growth online has been driven by free shipping offers and convenience. From Oct. 31 through Thursday, about $36 billion has been spent online, a 15 percent increase over last year, according to MasterCard Advisors’ SpendingPulse. Taubman Centers and Mall of America have reported strong clothing sales, which was a hard sell last year. Jewelry sales sparkled throughout the season. Stores expect solid profits because they didn’t have to slash prices as Christmas neared, analysts say. Some habits adopted during the recession lingered. Shoppers used cash more and credit cards less. The final six days of the holiday shopping season are Sunday through next Friday. They’re only 10 percent of the 61 holiday shopping days but can account for more than 15 percent of spending. For the economy, the key question is whether strong spending this holiday season will continue into the new year. Still, stores were encouraged by what they saw in the final stretch of the holiday season. Even pets made it back onto gift lists this year. Three Dog Bakery, a pet-supply chain in Clinton Township, Mich., whose specialties include $15.99 jars of banana-nut dog cookies, opened three years ago at the start of the recession. “We opened at the worst possible time in the world. Everyone was pulling back,” owner Chad Konzen said. Wednesday, the store had its best day ever. “Gourmet, all-natural dog treats are not a necessity,” Konzen said. “But now people are feeling more comfortable. You can only be thrifty for so long.” ___ AP Retail Writers Ellen Gibson in Columbia, Md., and Mae Anderson in Atlanta; and AP Writers Jessica Gresko in Washington; Barbara Rodriguez in Miami; and Holly Ramer in Concord, N.H., contributed to this story.

Read the full article →

Rebecca Solnit: Iceberg Economies and Shadow Selves: Further Adventures in the Territories of Hope

December 22, 2010

Crossposted with TomDispatch.com . After the Macondo well exploded in the Gulf of Mexico, it was easy enough (on your choice of screen) to see a flaming oil platform, the very sea itself set afire with huge plumes of black smoke rising, and the dark smear of what would become five million barrels of oil beginning to soak birds and beaches. Infinitely harder to see and less dramatic was the vast counterforce soon at work: the mobilizing of tens of thousands of volunteers, including passionate locals from fishermen in the Louisiana Oystermen’s Association to an outraged tattoo-artist-turned-organizer, from visiting scientists, activist groups, and Catholic Charities reaching out to Vietnamese fishing families to the journalist and oil-policy expert Antonia Juhasz, and Rosina Philippe of the Atakapa-Ishak tribe in Grand Bayou.

Read the full article →

Kevin Connor: Celebrating Ten Years of Derivatives Deregulation

December 21, 2010

Today marks the tenth anniversary of President Clinton’s signing of the Commodity Futures Modernization Act (CFMA). At passage, the bill was said to establish “legal certainty” for derivatives. In other words, the bill assured bankers that they wouldn’t face any legal consequences in the United States when they manipulated, defrauded, and colluded their way to billions in profits using financial derivatives that no one understood. The CFMA led to serious consequences for the rest of us, including the exacerbation of the housing bubble and the subsequent bank bailouts and foreclosure crisis; the California electricity crisis; periodic food and energy price spikes that have hit consumer pocketbooks hard; and, of course, the continued reign of an unaccountable shadow banking sector over the economy. The legislation was a bipartisan effort, but Clinton Treasury Secretary Larry Summers — who will soon be leaving the Obama White House — deserves the bulk of the credit for its passage. Summers, along with Robert Rubin and Alan Greenspan, had prevailed over CFTC chair Brooksley Born two years earlier when she attempted to subject derivatives to regulatory oversight. Born was essentially forced out by Summers & co, who then went to work putting together the deregulatory gift basket that later became known as the CFMA. Summers worked Congress in the year preceding the bill’s passage, and testified in June 2000 that it was his “very great hope” that the bill should pass. Democrats have blamed Republican Senator Phil Gramm for one of the more controversial measures in the bill, the so-called “Enron loophole,” which has enabled destructive energy speculation of the sort that caused California’s electricity crisis and the fuel price spikes of 2008. The story goes that Gramm used an extraordinary legislative maneuver to slip the loophole into the bill at the last minute, unbeknownst to other Senators or the Clinton Treasury. During the 2008 presidential race, the Obama campaign suggested that Gramm, a McCain adviser, was the creator of the loophole. Journalists ran with that story. This version of events is extremely far-fetched. Summers and his lieutenants deserve just as much of the credit, if not more, for the inclusion of Enron’s language in the final bill. As early as August 2000 — four months before the passage of the CFMA — Summers lieutenant Lee Sachs , who handled energy negotiations for Summers, indicated to Enron lobbyists that Treasury would support the Enron language, which appeared in the House bill (but not the Senate bill). Here is Enron lobbyist Chris Long describing the meeting to higher-ups in an email from the Enron archive: I told Lee that we shared his desire to move the legislation as long as it contains a full exclusion for all non-agriculture commodities (including metals). He said that we would have a difficult time defending the metals provision politically. But, Lee said “we would not find Treasury opposition to the House Commerce Committee language” (which includes favourable language on energy and metals). This is a positive development, because it isolates the CFTC from its key defenders and I hope ensures no veto threat on our issues. However, I do not expect Treasury to be vocal in support of our position. Enron spent much of the next several months strategizing to get Gramm — whose wife sat on Enron’s board — to recognize how important the legislation was to Enron, support it, and ensure its passage. Gramm was opposed to the bill on the grounds that it didn’t go far enough to deregulate banking products unrelated to Enron’s business. The Clinton administration’s support was never in question. The plan, all along, was to go with Enron’s language despite some opposition in the Senate. It helped that the Clinton Treasury was very cozy with Enron. Just four days before Congress passed the CFMA, Summers awarded Enron lobbyist Linda Robertson — formerly an assistant secretary in the Summers Treasury — Treasury’s highest honor, the Alexander Hamilton award. Summers had recommended Robertson, who now works at the Federal Reserve, for the lobbyist job at Enron. Enron CEO Ken Lay later offered Summers a seat on the board of Enron, as he had done with the previous Treasury Secretary, Robert Rubin, at the close of the Clinton administration; Summers turned it down in light of his appointment as president of Harvard. Summers had also famously assured Lay that “I’ll keep my eye on power deregulation and energy market infrastructure issues” shortly after becoming Treasury Secretary, in hand-written scrawl at the bottom of a letter. Enron lobbyist Robertson later recommended Lee Sachs — who served in the Geithner Treasury from 2009 to 2010 — for a spot on Enron’s advisory committee in an email to Lay assistant Steve Kean and lobbyist Richard Shapiro. The email is worth printing in full (she also mentions the Summers board appointment at the beginning): As you know, Ken has talked to Larry Summers about serving on Enron’s Board of Directors. Larry told Ken that in light of his selection to head Harvard, he wants to hold off going on any corporate boards for now. My understanding is that Larry will most likely accept Ken’s offer at the end of the year. In the meantime, let me suggest a candidate for Enron’s Advisory Committee. Lee Sachs was Assistant Secretary of Treasury for Financial Markets under Bob Rubin and Larry. Lee coordinated the energy negotiations for Larry at the end of the Clinton Administration. You probably met Lee at those meetings. Lee is brilliant. He was a Managing Director at Bear Sterns before joining the Treasury team. He is a huge fan of Enron and is constantly telling me how extremely well positioned Enron is for the future. He has done considerable research on our business model and is constantly talking to his buddies on Wall Street about us. Lee will undoubtedly be a significant player in any future Democratic Administration. I know he would be an invaluable addition to this Committee. He has not decided what he is going to do next, but has several extremely good offers on the table from large investment firms and hedge funds. None of these would conflict with this type of activity. I thought I would plant this suggestion with you not knowing exactly how these things are done. [emphasis mine] Sachs went on to work for Perseus LLC , a private equity firm run by top Democratic insiders Jim Johnson, Richard Holbrooke, and Frank Pearl. He later joined the hedge fund Mariner Investment Group , where he sold toxic CDOs to investors . In 2009 he became Geithner’s right-hand man at Treasury, but left in March 2010 in the wake of controversy surrounding those CDOs, and landed on his feet at Brookings. When he leaves the Obama administration, Summers will inevitably slip out the revolving door and land some lucrative consulting contracts with investment firms that he helped bail out. The deep corporate consensus in this age of deep corporate capture will be the same as it was when Summers last exited a presidential administration — that he did a heckuva job, in Obama’s words. The markets are modernized! the bailouts are booking profits! — and other such nonsense. It’s enough to make one hope for another data dump in the style of the Enron email archive, one that would contain insider communications between bank executives and government officials, thereby further illuminating the wholly captured and compromised state of our political system, where individuals like Larry Summers and Lee Sachs are ascendant, and corporations are able to secure legislation like the CFMA on the strength of powerful friends and bottomless pockets. One can hope… *** I’d like to share one last email from the archive, in case you were still on the fence about whether the Summers Treasury was completely captured by Enron. The following email, from Enron lobbyist Linda Robertson to her higher-ups in the summer of 2001, recounts a conversation between Lee Sachs and NYT reporter Jeff Gerth in which Sachs defends Enron’s favored regulatory exemptions and answers questions related to Enron’s influence of the bill: Lee Sachs was contacted for a second interview by Girth [sic]. Lee concluded from this interview that Girth is going down the “Enron influence” path. Girth did not probe the question of whether derivatives drive the physical commodity market, which as noted below was a big part of the first interview. Girth asked Lee extensive questions about Enron’s involvement in the legislation and who talked to whom and when. Girth said that he had talked to the CFTC who said they got steamrolled on the energy exemption by the Hill. Lee reminded Girth how the CFTC got themselves into this bind when they first issued the “Concept Release” paper, which the President’s working group immediately denounced. Lee said that the Working Group constantly told the CFTC that they should work out the issue with the Hill and to do so quickly because the CFTC had made a massive mistake with the Concept Release document. Lee reminded Girth that while the Working group did not get into the specifics of the energy exemption, that in fact energy was already exempted prior to reauthorization and that it continued to meet the criteria laid out in the President’s report. I can go into that part of the discussion more thoroughly, but just suffice it to say Lee meticulously walked Girth through the safe harbor test and the background of the issue. Girth asked Lee if I had talked to Lee about the issue after leaving Treasury, to which Lee said we talked but not about this subject and that he instead talked to Chris Long. Girth asked if Ken Lay had talked to either Summers or Phil Gramm. Lee said he did not think Ken talked to Summers about the CFTC reauthorization (but mentioned Ken’s very constructive engagement on the Calif energy talks) and that as far as Ken talking to Gramm, Lee had no idea but assumed two Republican Texans would have lots of reasons to talk to each other. Girth told Lee he would soon go on vacation and that they story would come after Labor Day.

Read the full article →

David Isenberg: Will the Real Hillary Clinton Please Step Forward?

December 18, 2010

It appears that the old Hillary Clinton, the one who ran for president of the United States has managed to travel forward in time and merge with the current Hillary Clinton, the one who is Secretary of State. For those who don’t remember, the old Clinton vowed to ban the use of private security contractors. As perennial PMC critic Jeremy Scahill of The Nation reported back in July, “”These private security contractors have been reckless and have compromised our mission in Iraq,” Clinton said in February 2008. “The time to show these contractors the door is long past due.” Clinton was one of only two senators to sponsor legislation to ban these companies. Scahill was upset that Clinton had since moderated her views and that she was “presiding over what is shaping up to be a radical expansion of a private, US-funded paramilitary force that will operate in Iraq for the foreseeable future–the very type of force Clinton once claimed she opposed.” But on Wednesday the State Department and the US Agency for International Development (AID) unveiled the much-awaited Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review entitled ” Leading Through Civilian Power .” The report seeks to put some distance between State and the private sector. • Fundamentally change our management approach by turning to the expertise of other federal agencies where appropriate –before engaging private contractors. This will help all federal agencies build lasting relationships with foreign counterparts and reduce our reliance on contractors. (p. vi ) As obligations in the frontline states expanded and overall staffing levels stagnated, the State Department and USAID increasingly came to rely on outside contractors to supplement their ranks. While grants and contracts do have certain benefits, we need to restore government capacity and expertise in mission critical areas. We will: • Create a more balanced workforce to ensure we have the appropriate mix of direct-hire personnel and contractors, so the U.S. government has the capacity to set priorities, make policy decisions, and properly oversee grants and contracts. • Leverage the experience and expertise of other agencies with the skills to advance U.S. objectives, before turning to outside contractors. • Ensure that our approach to procurement advances America’s development objectives and saves money by fostering more competition for our contracts and using host-country businesses and NGOs where possible. ( p. xvii) More specifically, State will enter into interagency agreements, consistent with existing law, to draw on the skills, expertise and personnel of other federal agencies before turning to private contractors where State determines that building in-house government capability or promoting bilateral working relationships furthers our foreign policy priorities. ( p. 33) In particular, given the national security implications of security sector assistance, State will look first to the Department of Justice, the Department of Defense, and the Department of Homeland Security to implement State programs involving counterterrorism capacity building, foreign law enforcement, or strengthening justice and interior ministries. State and USAID will similarly look to the Department of Health and Human Services to build on existing long-term relationships with ministries of health in partner countries. State will use private contractors for non-governmental functions when other agencies lack appropriate skills or are otherwise unwilling or unable to provide the services needed in an effective manner. In the long-term, partnering with and building on the assets of other agencies will offer net policy gains to the U.S. government and reduce overall program implementation costs. This is a significant departure from current practice, one that we believe will save money, improve the U.S. government’s ability to advance American interests, and strengthen State’s engagement across the interagency. (p. 34) While those recommendations are for State they also apply to AID. USAID must expand its human resource talent to include more experts in evaluation, planning, resource management, and research. And it must rebalance its workforce to build internal capacity, reduce its dependency on contractors, improve oversight and accountability, and expand engagement with other development stakeholders. (p. 108) And although there is more, let me finish with this quote; particularly relevant, given the perennial contractor claims of cost-effectiveness over their public sector counterparts: In-source positions more appropriately performed by direct-hire personnel. Creating a more balanced workforce at State and USAID is necessary to ensure that both agencies are supported, not supplanted by contractors. To this end, State will build on the results of its Office of Management and Budget pilot projects, which developed a framework that will be replicated in other bureaus within the Department. The framework identifies which functions are inherently governmental, critical, or essential to the mission of each organization. In our pilots conducted within two select offices from one regional and one functional bureau, we identified nearly a quarter of the contractor workforce performing work that was closely associated with inherently governmental or mission-critical functions. We also found that another 10 percent should be in-sourced for cost efficiencies. The average estimated cost savings in these pilots was $33,000 per position.

Read the full article →

Robert Teitelman: Joseph Stiglitz on Gordon Brown

December 13, 2010

Joseph Stiglitz is a brilliant economist — arguably the best of his generation. He is also a brave soul. For years he warned about the dangers of hot money ricocheting around the world. And he took a stand in support of the Asian model in the late ’90s in opposition to the powerful Washington Consensus, jousting with his own employer at the World Bank. But as the after-effects of our own financial crisis unfold, Stiglitz has opted to delve more deeply into the political half of the old concept of the political economy. And like many economists, left and right, he does his economic half — his economic brilliance — no good service for indulging. This weekend, Stiglitz published a review of former U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s new memoir-cum-policy tract, Beyond the Crash: Overcoming the First Crisis of Globalization in both the Financial Times and Slate. Stiglitz likes and admires Brown, and there’s a rough correspondence between Stiglitz’s left-progressivism and Brown’s Labour credentials. Brown, he says, unlike many “other people,” particularly those “who were responsible for the creation of the crisis,” instantly recognized the significance of it all. “As soon as Northern Rock began to teeter, he realized there were deep structural problems with the financial sector and he tried to act on what he saw. He grasped immediately that the problem was not just one of liquidity but of a weakness in the financial sector built on years of mismanagement, lax regulation and reckless speculation. He also saw early on that unless a government recapitalisation was accompanied by requirements that banks continue lending to businesses, the crisis in the financial sector would spread to the broader economy.” Now it’s a little hard to tell whether Stiglitz knows all this because it’s in the book or from conversations with Brown. In either case, Stiglitz displays no skepticism about Brown’s sudden, and startling, epiphany — or indeed that he was somehow far more advanced than others in power. In fact, Northern Rock was the U.K.’s Bear Stearns Cos. Both were runs (one by depositors, the other by counterparties and lenders) that forced the hands of policymakers to engage in a bailout. And once those moves were made, both countries found themselves spiraling down into deeper crisis. The U.S. ended up nationalizing Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG and injecting money into the largest banks; the U.K. essentially nationalized its largest banks, with the exception of Barclays. Both countries remain mired in post-crisis malaise, with incomplete recoveries and demands to reduce deficits. The U.K., now under a coalition government led by Tory David Cameron, is involved in a fierce cost-cutting campaign that is sparking widespread social tensions. The U.S. may be marginally better off only because of its entrenched advantages – its size and status as home of the world’s reserve currency — and perhaps because the Obama administration has avoided severe austerity measures. So where does Brown fit into all this? First, Brown served as chancellor of the exchequer (and heir apparent) under Tony Blair beginning in 1997; he became prime minister when Blair resigned in 2007, just as the crisis was beginning. Stiglitz manages to ignore the fact that Brown presided for a full decade over the very mismanagement and structural flaws he so quickly identified when it blew up. This makes Henry Paulson, Tim Geithner and Ben Bernanke look like latecomers to the party. Stiglitz manages to spread the blame around to the usual suspects; one of the pleasures of reading this is wondering when he’ll get to Brown’s own complicity. And finally he does. “Brown also shares the disappointment that more wasn’t done in the aftermath of the east Asian economic crisis in 1998. To him, that episode showed how interconnected the global economy was. He expresses disappointment with the Financial Stability Board. But he doesn’t reveal who was on the other side of the battles — one can only guess that it might have been some of the same people who had fought in the U.S. against derivatives regulation.” Notice the recurrence of “disappointment” in others. See how easily Stiglitz slides from Brown to others. And what’s that “one can only guess”? So Robert Rubin, Larry Summers and Alan Greenspan — two of three gone from office by 2001, while Brown continued to preside — were responsible not only for beating up Brooksley Born on derivatives, but for somehow battling Brown to silence over issues that included the size of London’s financial center, the leveraging up of U.K. banks, deregulation and the overheating of real estate. You can blame the Committee to Save the World for a lot of stuff, but you can’t blame them for what occurred after George W. Bush took office. Maybe that’s why Brown doesn’t single them out. Stiglitz, however, is eager to give Brown a pass. “He doesn’t dwell, however, on the mistakes of the past,” he writes of Brown, “either those that led to the crisis or the more recent one [presumably post-crisis economic responses]. What he tries to do is learn the lessons — as different as they may be from the conventional wisdom that prevailed before the crisis.” Ah, the old conventional wisdom. Perhaps Brown realizes what Stiglitz chooses to forget: The blame game is a kind of contagion; few are immune. It’s one thing for Brown to ritually blame Margaret Thatcher for everything — “We needed to overturn 30 years of policymaking,” he declares, 10 of which occurred under Labour — but anything closer than the ’90s poses a threat to his own reputation. After all, the Clinton New Democrats, including Summers and Rubin (who were Stiglitz’s great antagonists in the Asia crisis debates) and Tony Blair’s New Labour generally shared a centrist governing philosophy that gave a large role to finance as the engine. What was not to like? Labour continued to win elections, and the U.K. seemed to prosper, particularly the City. Let’s face it: Brown missed the bubble just like everyone else. Brown today is a sad figure — a man who waited all those years for ultimate power, only to get it just as everything was collapsing around him. That sadness, of course, is diluted by the fact that he had oversight over the very economy that swept him under — unlike Obama who inherited the mess. Brown did act with dispatch and focus, and he was a voice calling for harmonization of policies around the globe, culminating in the London G-20 meeting in 2009, perhaps his finest moment. As for his bank nationalization policies, it’s a little hard to discern whether they were clearly superior to steps taken in the U.S. Stiglitz certainly believes they were, though he offers no evidence. “The U.S. strategy of letting the banks continue with the same practices, including credit card abuses, was doomed economically and politically,” Stiglitz writes. The British public obviously did not agree. Making these kinds of glib national comparisons is fraught with difficulties. The crisis, alas, still has a way to go before it’s firmly placed in history. Comparing Brown to Rubin, Bush, Paulson or Obama involves far more than simply resorting to the conflicts and the clash of ideas and politics from over a decade ago. It involves issues that are far more nuanced and ambiguous than economic doctrines, whether left or right. And indeed, we may never know for certain whether Brown was the great and magnanimous hero of Stiglitz’s telling or a figure brought low by forces he failed to foresee. Robert Teitelman is editor in chief of The Deal

Read the full article →

Larry Summers: If Tax Deal Goes Down There’s A ‘Significant Risk’ Of A Double Dip Recession

December 8, 2010

Senior White House officials significantly raised the stakes on congressional Democrats in their efforts to get a deal passed on the Bush tax cuts, warning on Wednesday that inaction would “significantly increase the risk” of a double dip recession. It wasn’t quite the metaphorical flare of mushroom cloud imagery, but outgoing senior economic adviser Larry Summers offered a fairly dire assessment of the stakes in the tax cut debate. “If they [Democrats] don’t pass this bill in the next couple weeks it will materially increase the risk that the economy would stall out and we would have a double dip,” he told a gathering of reporters at an off camera briefing. A double dip recession? “What I said it would significantly increase the risk,” Summers replied. The message was hardly subtle. But it certainly was debatable. Summers himself, downplayed the significance of continuing the Bush tax cuts back in September — though he was speaking, then, about the rates for the rich and the tax cut deal, at that point in time, did not include money for a 13-month extension of unemployment insurance or other tax incentives to help lower income workers. Asked whether the country would find itself dipping towards the economic doldrums if Congress waited a month or two to get a tax cut package passed, Rob Shapiro, a former commerce official in the Clinton White House and a proponent of the current tax cut deal, offered more sober-minded analysis. “The wait would not cause a double dip,” he said. “A double dip would come out of the reality of a relatively contractionary fiscal policy… I do think the deal that they announced is stimulative. And it ought to boost growth by some increment… But the issue is, that the deal certainly is not enough to lift the economy to a different place. Will we see what happened with the large stimulus happen here, which is once the stimulus is over the economy returns to slow growth? That’s the danger. And I keep on saying this, the single most important thing they can do to avert that is to stabilize housing prices.” Stabilizing the housing market, however, is not on the current congressional docket. And on Wednesday, the White House began a robust process of selling the deal to Democrats — skeptical, as they are, about an extension of Bush tax cuts for the wealthy and a generous revision of the estate tax. There were few carrots to go along with the sticks. Asked, for instance, if the White House would be willing to revise the informal compromise to bring more Democratic lawmakers on board, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said any changes would be fine, so long as they didn’t result in decreased support. Then he cautioned: “The physics and the blood and the sweat that might be involved in that, I’m not entirely sure I would put it quite as simply as that.” If anything, the pitch being offered from the administration to the rest of the party was: take the package now or risk being blamed for an economic downturn. “I guess the question back for those who ask [why not fight for more] is where does this go, what is the end game and what are the consequences of playing it?” said senior adviser David Axelrod. “Do they have a sense of how this ends and how long will that take, because as Larry said there are real consequences to that. Just as the forecasts went up on the basis of this agreement they will go down if this agreement fails. That we know. We know that on January 1 people’s taxes will go up, we know that at the end of this month 2 million people will lose their unemployment insurance. And so there are real consequences to that decision. We, I think we all stipulate, the president did, no one likes those provisions that they dislike but on the other side of the ledger are significant things that will help people and help the economy. And what we know for sure is that without any of it we are facing a really difficult situation.” Added Gibbs: “I think you would really have to ask somebody who says… lets have some eight week fight and on February the 15th come in and say, alright, now we are ready to make a compromise, who on earth, who on earth thinks that that is somehow going to be a fundamentally better agreement than the one we are looking at right now? No one I have ever talked to.”

Read the full article →

Leo W. Gerard: Mourning in America: Death of the Middle Class

November 16, 2010

The deficit commission report issued last week is another Saturday Night Special pressed to the temple of the American middle class. “Turn over your money and your benefits or your country will die,” the report screams at workers. “You want your country to go bankrupt? No? Then you gotta delay retirement, get less from Social Security, pay more for health insurance and lose your precious few income tax breaks like the one that helps pay your mortgage while the banker is breathing down your neck right now.” For 30 years, rich conservatives have successfully threatened the American middle class this way, ever since that rich conservative Ronald Reagan converted the White House into a castle. The result is a country with greater income inequality than during the age of corporate robber barons at the turn of the 20 th century. It is a country whose 21 st century robber barons, the richest 1 percent of Americans, take nearly a quarter of all income and demand that politicians relieve them of their obligations. The rich — hedge fund owners who rake in billions, Wall Street banksters handed bonuses in the millions, CEOs paid eight-figure golden parachutes after they mess up — insist that politicians place government debt burdens on the middle class, the unemployed, the elderly, the struggling young, people whose income has stagnated for three decades. The co-chairmen of the deficit commission complied with that mandate from the flush when they recommended the middle class bear the brunt of the cost of reducing the deficit. Simultaneously, conservatives in Congress are acquiescing by insisting on extending tax breaks for the nation’s wealthiest. Those are the very tax breaks that contributed dramatically to creating the debt – the one that the deficit commission now wants heaped on workers’ backs. This will be the death of the nation’s strength — its successful working class. Without the slightest regret or hesitation, the rich are killing the great American middle, rendering it a casualty of their shirked social responsibilities. Their campaign has been abetted by Republicans since Ronald Reagan. The Gipper contended slashing taxes for the wealthy would increase revenues for the government. Republican George H. W. Bush rightly ridiculed Reaganomics as voodoo. In the GOP years between the beginning of Reagan in 1981 and the end of Bush II in 2009, the federal deficit exploded as Republican presidents failed to control spending and repeatedly cut taxes for the rich. Reagan reduced the rate on the richest first down to 50 percent, then to 28 percent. The resulting budget deficit converted the U.S. from the world’s largest international creditor to its largest debtor. And now, the deficit commission sends the bulk of the bill for voodoo economics to the middle class, not the rich. While Reagan gave the rich those breaks, income inequality increased. The share of total income taken by the richest 5 percent grew from 16.5 percent the year before he took office to 18.3 percent the year before he left. In that same time, the share of total income that went to the poorest 20 percent of households fell from 4.2 to 3.8 percent. Democrat Bill Clinton fulfilled a campaign promise by increasing taxes on the rich — to a 39.6 percent marginal rate. He balanced the federal budget and left Bush II with a surplus. Then Bush II squandered it. He gave the rich more tax breaks, accumulated debts larger than all those created by previous presidents combined and worsened income inequality. During his administration, from 2002 to 2007, the pretax income of the richest 1 percent increased 10 percent every year. Over that same period, the median income for working Americans declined and the poverty rate rose. From Reagan through Bush II, more than four-fifths of the total increase in U.S. income went to the richest 1 percent. Hedge fund owners, whose income is literally in the billions, pay income taxes at 15 percent — lower than the rate paid by their secretaries, who earn far less in a year than any of the top 10 hedgers do in half an hour. Wall Street recklessness crashed the U.S. economy, throwing millions of middle income earners out of their jobs and their homes. The banksters went to Washington and got politicians to hand them bailout billions, and now those Wall Streeters plan to increase their bonuses — while unemployment remains stuck at 9.6 percent in the Main Street economy. It is those guys, bankers grabbing year end bonuses totaling two and three times what middle class earners get for a year’s labor; it is the five-home wealthy demanding that the foreclosed-on middle class suffer for the deficit. The rich, who have received the greatest benefits from this society, have no intention of paying their share of this national responsibility. The deficit, the Social Security shortfall, difficulties with Medicare — they could all be solved if the nation returned to taxing policies that existed under Republican President Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, when the rate on top earners was 91 percent. That was not even the high point. In the mid-1940s it was 94 percent. Generally it fluctuated between 81 percent in 1940 and 70 percent when Reagan began slashing it in 1981. Those rates may sound confiscatory now, but it’s not like the rich actually paid them after they subtracted out all of their exemptions, deductions, loopholes, special deals, tricks and wiles. The dozen years in the 1950s and 1960s when the rate on the richest officially was 91 percent is a time considered by many Americans to be among the nation’s greatest for the middle class, a period when American workers could afford to buy homes, send their kids to college and travel across American on vacation. There’s no talk of that now. Raising taxes on the rich now is considered ludicrous. Ridiculous. The whole Social Security shortfall could be solved if the rich paid taxes on their entire incomes, not just the first $110,000, a break that means the wealthy pay a smaller percentage if their income toward Social Security than the impoverished. But the deficit commission didn’t propose that. No, the rich have succeeded in eliminating as a possibility their paying an increased tax share. Now, the only consideration is cutting their taxes. They didn’t hold an actual Saturday night special to anyone’s head. The rich are snake oil salesmen slick, Bernie Madoff-style schemers. They sold voodoo economics to America, and now they’re intent on making the middle class pay for what that policy has wrought in deficits. Reagan’s re-election ad was wrong. He didn’t institute “Morning in America.” It was mourning for the once great American middle class.

Read the full article →

Mark Engler: Tax Cuts and Trade: Is Obama Triangulating?

November 13, 2010

It was about this far into his first term, back in late 1994 and early 1995, when President Bill Clinton truly fell under the spell of malevolent strategist Dick Morris. Stung by the heavy losses brought on by the “Republican Revolution” in the 1994 midterms, Clinton began to believe that his only route to reelection was to tack to the right and steal some of the conservatives’ thunder on issues like welfare reform and federal deficits. Morris, who was only forced out of the White House after a sex scandal and who has since exposed his true political stripes as a Fox News commentator , thought triangulation both a brilliant political strategy and a generator of fine public policy. The remaining liberals in the Clinton administration disagreed. As the Economist notes, George Stephanopoulos incisively labeled it “a fancy word for betrayal.” Not yet two weeks after the 2010 midterms, and just two years after Obama’s campaign of “hope” and “change,” there are troubling signs that the current president might be tempted to follow the same path as Clinton. Obama’s first move after the midterms, already much criticized by progressives, was to express his willingness to cave on Bush tax cuts for the rich. This one felt to me more like a gutless compromise than a calculated shift to the right. And, on the hopeful side, the White House is now backpedaling , indicating that the story was overblown and Obama’s pre-midterms position hasn’t changed. There’s no detectable silver lining, however, to the president’s drive to push forward the Bush-negotiated, NAFTA-style trade agreement with Korea. While it appears the deal has stalled for the time being, the denunciations of the neoliberal “free trade” program that Obama once used to attack rival candidate Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primaries are now long gone . Given the composition of the administration’s economics team, this flip-flop is not surprising. There were signs of it already back in 2008, when Obama quickly tried to moderate his earlier stances during the general election campaign. Nevertheless the maneuver is a sad one. While triangulation arguably worked for Clinton (he was reelected at any rate), rightward moves promise few benefits for Obama. A too-small stimulus meant that unemployment remained higher and anger about the economy greater than might otherwise have been the case going into the midterms. It also produced an uninspired Democratic base, resulting in a low-turnout election that favored Republicans. Likewise, the trade deals on deck with Korea, Colombia, and Panama are bad not only because they seek to expand a flawed economic model, but also because “free trade” is a political loser. The Democratic base is firmly in the “fair trade” camp, disenchanted with neoliberal policies, and an anti-NAFTA message also resonates with the wider electorate. As Public Citizen has documented , “House Democrats that ran on fair trade platforms in competitive and open-seat races were three times as likely to survive the GOP tidal wave than Democrats who ran against fair trade.” Global Trade Watch Research Director Todd Tucker has gone so far as to call compromising with the Republicans on pending trade deals a ” political death wish ” for a president who will soon be seeking reelection. After Obama’s first year in office, I gave the administration a “B” on trade policy, on the grounds that no news is good news. As long as unfinished “free trade” deals remained bogged down in negotiations and are not an administration priority, I am willing to judge the situation as no harm, no foul. But it’s a different story if the White House starts investing any real political capital in advancing these deals. Even worse would be if Obama keeps his backbone as well hidden from public view as it has been since the midterms and turns to triangulation, imagining that moving right on trade would be politically beneficial. Cross-posted from the “Arguing the World” blog at Dissent magazine.

Read the full article →

Robert Reich: Obama’s First Stand

November 10, 2010

The president says a Republican proposal to extend the Bush tax cuts to everyone for two years is a “basis for conversation.” I hope this doesn’t mean another Obama cave-in. Yes, the president needs to acknowledge the Republican sweep on Election Day. But he can do that by offering his own version of a compromise that’s both economically sensible and politically smart. Instead of limiting the extension to $250,000 of income (the bottom 98 percent of Americans), he should offer to extend it to all incomes under $500,000 (essentially the bottom 99 percent), for two years. The economics are clear: First, the top 1 percent spends a much smaller proportion of their income than everyone else, so there’s very little economic stimulus at these lofty heights. On the other hand, giving the top 1 percent a two-year extension would cost the Treasury $130 billion over two years, thereby blowing a giant hole in efforts to get the deficit under control. Alternatively, $130 billion would be enough to rehire every teacher, firefighter, and police officer laid off over the last two years and save the jobs of all of them now on the chopping block. Not only are these people critical to our security and the future of our children but, unlike the top 1 percent, they could be expected to spend all of their earnings and thereby stimulate the economy. Conservative supply-siders who argue the top 1 percent will stop working as hard if they have to return to the 39 percent marginal rate of the Clinton years must be smoking something (probably an expensive grade). Their incomes of the top are already soaring (Wall Street is reading a 5% boost in bonuses, executive salaries and perks are back on the trajectory they were on before the collapse, and the stock market is booming), so it’s hard to argue much hardship. Besides, only earnings over $500,000 would be affected because — remember — we’re talking about the marginal tax rate. In addition, the Clinton years weren’t exactly bad years, economically, for the top 1 percent. Finally, the Bush tax cuts didn’t trickle down anyway. To the contrary, between 2001 and 2007, the median wage dropped. And Bush’s record on jobs was pitiful. The politics are even clearer. Over the next two years, Obama must clarify for the nation whose side he’s on and whose side his Republican opponents are on. What better issue to begin with than this one? The top 1 percent now takes in almost a quarter of all national income (up from 9 percent in the late 1970s), and its political power is evident in everything from hedge-fund and private-equity fund managers who can treat their incomes as capital gains (subject to a 15 percent tax) to multi-million dollar home interest deductions on executive mansions. If the President can’t or won’t take a stand now — when he still has a chance to prevail in the upcoming lame-duck Congress — when will he ever? Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future , now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

Read the full article →

Timothy Karr: Who Will Head MSNBC if Comcast Takes Over?

November 9, 2010

And Why That Poses an Even Bigger Threat to Keith Olbermann Keith Olbermann is back, and for his many fans, including the 300,000 who petitioned MSNBC to reinstate him, it would seem a return to form. But Olbermann’s dispute with the brass at MSNBC may only serve as a prelude to more troubled times. MSNBC’s parent company, NBC Universal, is likely to be taken over by cable giant Comcast, should regulators sign off on the $30 billion deal. If history is any guide, this merger poses an even bigger threat to the future of MSNBC personalities like Olbermann and Rachel Maddow than the recent dustup that temporarily sidelined the host. That’s why tens of thousands have already urged the Federal Communications Commission and Department of Justice to stop the merger. They cite a multitude of reasons the takeover would bring them harm, including higher prices and fewer choices in programming and services. Indeed, such concentration of media power leads to a less vigilant news media, a muted marketplace of ideas and fewer consumer options at a time when are demanding more. Add to this the dim but real prospect that MSNBC’s new boss will be even less welcoming than the current one to commentators that rock the boat. Just consider the candidates in line to take over MSNBC: Steve Burke, Comcast’s Chief Operating Officer According to The Street , Steve Burke will take NBC’s CEO spot from Jeff Zucker should the merger be approved. In an e-mail to colleagues , Zucker said: “Comcast will be a great new steward, just as GE has been, and they deserve the chance to implement their own vision.” That vision – in the hands of Burke – might not be to the liking of MSNBC’s stable of talent. Burke has deep ties to the Republican Party. According to Public Citizen , Burke raised at least $200,000 for the Bush-Cheney re-election campaign. Prior to that, he served on the President’s Council of Advisers on Science and Technology under Bush, at a time when the administration was undermining scientific consensus on topics including climate change, stem-cell research, and even the relationship between corn syrup and rates of diabetes in children. As a top science adviser to President Bush, did Burke condone administration efforts to bury scientific findings that challenged official policy? What would he do when comments or reporting by Olbermann or Maddow challenge Comcast’s corporate dogma? Peter A. Chernin, Former Second in Command at News Corp. Peter Chernin was a major fundraiser for Sen. Hillary Clinton, according to the New York Times , which also reports that he may be on the short list to take over NBC operations should Comcast get the nod. For years, Chernin has co-owned a restaurant on Martha’s Vinyard with Comcast Chief Executive Brian Roberts. More recently, he was tapped by Roberts to become a “special adviser” to Comcast on the potential merger. Chernin’s close ties to Clinton, Roberts and Rupert Murdoch indicate his biases may be more corporate than political. But it was during his tenure at Fox that the network looked the other way as many of its personalities actively — and financially — supported Republican candidates and Tea Party causes. Chernin once asked Roberts whether he planned to interfere in editorial content at MSNBC — a question that Roberts refused to answer. Eileen Dolente, Senior Director, Comcast Multimedia Content Development Odds are slim that Eileen Dolente would be picked to head MSNBC programming. But her record at Comcast offers a disturbing glimpse into the cable company’s mindset regarding speech that interferes with business as usual. As director of programming for Comcast’s news division, CN8, Dolente fired host Barry Nolan. His crime? Nolan had protested a major award being given to Fox News Channel’s Bill O’Reilly. Nolan was “appalled” that an award would be given to O’Reilly. He dashed off e-mails stating that O’Reilly’s “indiscretions, inaccuracies, and prejudices disqualify him for such a lofty honor.” Dolente was appalled that one of her hosts would share such an opinion, and within a week of the award ceremony, she showed Nolan the door. Documents filed in a subsequent lawsuit revealed that the mutual business interests of Comcast and News Corp., which employs O’Reilly, were a major factor in Nolan’s firing. What position would Comcast take should MSNBC personalities launch a similar attack on a valued business partner? If Dolente takes the helm, past may become prologue for MSNBC.

Read the full article →

David Isenberg: We Don’t Need No Stinking Democracy

November 1, 2010

One of the perennial assumptions in the never ending debate about outsourcing and privatization is that doing so is more cost-effective. Don’t believe me? Try searching online for “cost-effective AND outsourcing” I just tried and received 1,210,000 hits on Google. But, to paraphrase Bill Clinton, it all depends on what you mean by cost-effective. There is more to it than just the lowest monetary cost. It appears that the very act of outsourcing creates a bureaucratic version of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle , which in the social sciences is often taken to mean that the very act of observing a phenomenon inevitably alters that phenomenon in some way. This bring us to the article published in the Spring 2010 issue of the University of Chicago Law Review , titled ” Privatization’s Pretensions ” by Jon D. Michaels, Acting Professor of Law at the UCLA School of Law. Prof. Michaels writes, “For decades, policymakers have been privatizing government responsibilities for the customary, and ostensibly exclusive, objective of providing the public with the same goods and services more efficiently. It is becoming increasingly apparent that these policymakers are also doing something different: they are using that purportedly technocratic process to substantively alter the very policies they are supposed to be neutrally administering. And, it is working: these privatization “workarounds” can directly change the content of public education, health, and social welfare programs, the outcome of regulatory enforcement and rulemaking proceedings, and the trajectory of police and national security operations.” Well, why is that bad, you ask. Because, as Michaels writes: Workarounds provide outsourcing agencies with the means of accomplishing distinct policy goals that–but for the pretext of technocratic privatization–would either be legally unattainable or much more difficult to realize. In short, they are executive aggrandizing. They enable Presidents, governors, and mayors to exercise greater unilateral policy discretion–at the expense of legislators, courts, successor administrations, and the people. In plain English that means a gutting of the democratic process, or as Dick Cheney so fervently supported, a strengthening of the unitary executive theory of government. Or, to paraphrase the famous line from The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, we don’t need no stinking democracy. I am tempted to note that those who advocate for PMSC on efficiency grounds might remember that Italy’s Benito Mussolini also said that Italian fascism should have been welcomed because it made the trains run on time. As that is a popular myth I won’t belabor the point; at least not for now. Note that Michaels is not arguing against privatization per se. But he does note that we don’t even have the proper language and metrics to understand it: To care about workarounds, we need not be skeptical of executive authority, nor need we be hostile to privatization. We must simply appreciate that this powerful, potentially transformative phenomenon (1) raises novel questions that sound in separation of powers, intergenerational sovereignty, and democratic theory, and (2) has been overshadowed by the dominant, but analytically orthogonal, efficiency versus accountability debate. Because workarounds are undertheorized as well as underdeveloped as a regulatory matter, we currently lack the vocabulary, the data, and the tools to make thoughtful analytical and legal interventions. Michaels examines various agencies and scenarios. But with respect to PMSC here is the key section: Though concerns about military contracting typically sound in terms of oversight difficulties, cost overruns, and encroachments on inherently governmental responsibilities, increasing attention is being paid to an additional concern. As noted in the Introduction, out sourcing conceals the true scope and human costs of war efforts by understating the size of deployments and diluting casualty counts. A large percentage of our troop commitment in Iraq and Afghanistan is comprised of contractors. For example, a 2007 estimate had 180,000 contractors supporting roughly 160,000 troops in Iraq; to the extent official numbers list just the 160,000 military personnel, the government can give the impression that our footprint is only half its actual size. As Charles Tiefer has written, the Pentagon “ardently desired . . . to keep the illusion of a low number of troops.” The illusion was certainly enhanced by efforts, intentional or not, to conceal military contracts by routing them through civilian agencies, to refer to contract services in official documents in generic and arguably misleading terms (such as “information technology” specialists rather than as “interrogators”), and to complicate the contracting processes such that the federal government still has trouble providing an accurate contractor headcount. Private contractors are politically valuable insofar as they neither enter into official head or body counts–nor, it appears, into our hearts. That is to say, the nation identifies with its troops to a far greater extent than its contractors: “Americans are accustomed to hearing the military death toll . . . . But largely absent from the public consciousness are the thousands of civilians putting their lives on the line as contractors in Iraq.” Combining US military personnel and contractors in combat zones thus allows for contractors to lighten the troops’ share of long tours, injuries, and other physical and emotional hardships. But even more importantly, the aggregate loss of life (and quality of life) is discounted by the fact that we neither hear as much about nor, evidently, care as much about homesick or fallen contractors. This misperception of the war effort generates tangible effects that redound specifically to the executive’s benefit. Concealing these costs, the people are less sensitive to the President’s handling (or mishandling) of the military campaign. In turn, the executive has more political capital and thus more maneuverability in conducting the war. Indeed, without contractors: (1) the military engagement would have had to be smaller–a strategically problematic alternative; (2) the United States would have had to deploy its finite number of active personnel for even longer tours of duty -a politically dicey and short-sighted option; (3) the United States would have had to consider a civilian draft or boost retention and recruitment by raising military pay significantly–two politically untenable options; or (4) the need for greater commitments from other nations would have arisen and with it, the United States would have had to make more concessions to build and sustain a truly multinational effort. Thus, the tangible differences in the type of war waged, the effect on military personnel, and the need for coalition partners are greatly magnified when the government has the option to supplement its troops with contractors. Note, too, that the public may well catch on. As contractors become fixtures on the national security landscape and as the public starts demanding numerical accountings, will workarounds diminish in strategic value? And, if so, does that mean the executive as an agent of the people will be on a tighter leash? Obviously, one cannot draw any causal connection between growing calls for reducing America’s military presence in Iraq and greater awareness of contractors. But given how much we now know about contractors–compared to how little was known before the invasion and occupation of Iraq–one might query whether contractors will ever be used for such politically strategic purposes in future engagements. To me Michael’s most important point is to point out that the concern we should have is not about contractor’s being unaccountable. Rather it is that they are too accountable to the policymakers in the executive branch–yes, we are talking about the White House–who set the policy. For its part, the academic community has largely zeroed in on the government delegating sovereign authority to contractors–and those contractors’ frolics and detours. Concerned that the regulatory framework does not do enough to deter rogue contractors, or to bolster agencies’ efforts to limit contractor manipulations, scholars have sought to introduce, among other things, constitutional and administrative law norms into the privatization paradigm, and to have the contractors treated as state actors for legal purposes. However effective these approaches might be in reining in wayward contractors, there are important differences between (1) contractors who exploit the discretion afforded to them as proxies of the government and (2) agency officials directing workarounds through these proxies. With contractor abuse, the concern is unaccountability–a breakdown in the traditional principal-agent relationship. With workarounds, the contractors are not necessarily disloyal; indeed, they may be too accountable to their governmental counterparts–too willing to facilitate their policy altering agendas. Instead, it is the executive as unaccountable agent that changes the substance or the temporal duration of a policy in a manner potentially inconsistent with the expectations of its co-principals (namely, the coordinate branches, future administrations, the bureaucracy, and the people). In other words let’s not blame Xe Services etc etera for bad things that happen in war zones. Let’s blame U.S. policymakers who create those wars in the first place.

Read the full article →

Robert Teitelman: Michael Hirsh’s "Capital Offense"

October 18, 2010

There is a long and distinguished literature on what’s known, in the sniffy French, as “la trahison des clerics” – the betrayal of the intellectuals. In “Capital Offense: How Washington’s Wise Men Turned America’s Future Over to Wall Street,” former Newsweek, now National Journal writer Michael Hirsh makes his own contribution to that genre. “Capital Offense” has a broad, sometimes canvas-busting, scope: He examines the wise men, most of them buzzing in and around the great honey pot of Washington, who provided much of the intellectual architecture for what became the great financial crisis of 2008. The book features many characters and ideas, but if there is a single, unifying theme, it’s the fallibility of economic thinking, and of ambitious economists and their fellow travelers, in creating the bubble, and the failure to anticipate its consequences. For devotees of the crisis, and you wouldn’t be reading this if you weren’t, much of Hirsh’s story is known. But Hirsh has generated some fresh reporting and, more importantly, he has constructed a narrative to try to make sense of it all. There are, inevitably, conflicts and confrontations – at the heart of the book Hirsh features the struggle between Larry Summers and Joe Stiglitz for both preeminence in academic economics and in policymaking – that inevitably morphs into a bad guy (Summers) vs. good guy (Stiglitz) stereotype. But despite that, and despite the fact that Hirsh is never shy about making his own opinions known, these portraits break from the caricatures that too-often substitute for analysis. Hirsh recognizes that these are complex personalities, driven by complex motivations, both good and bad. There is sadness to the ambition and drive of the eternally brilliant Summers; a modesty and realism to Milton Friedman; an endearing goofiness to Stiglitz (who for all his absentmindedness, notes Hirsh, seems to have a way with women). Hirsh gives us a sense about why these folks, to a person, were successful enough to influence events. Robert Rubin’s quiet political surefootedness. Alan Greenspan’s mastery of data. Stiglitz’s ability to listen. Summers’ ineradicable sense that the world was one long debating society. And then there is the technocratic Tim Geithner, less a disciple of Rubin and Summers in Hirsh’s view than a man married to saving the status quo. And at bottom, Hirsh is asking a question many others have tried to answer: How could these wise men, the best and the brightest, have failed to see this coming? How could economics have failed to predict the disaster? And given that failure, what are its components and how are they weighed against each other? Hubris, ignorance, greed, self-interest, ambition, self-satisfaction and probably the most insidious, pride all jostle with each other. If there’s an omission here, it’s that Hirsh does not really ever step back and ponder the limitations and uncertainties of all economic thinking, which renders prediction a fool’s game (for a crisis book that handles that subject quite well, see Yves Smith, “Econned: How Unenlightened Self Interest Undermined Democracy and Corrupted Capitalism”). Stiglitz is lionized in part because his analysis turned out to be at least partly on target. Summers is condemned to the darkness of those who failed history’s test: He supported a financial regime that broke down. But what Hirsh doesn’t say is that, given the ambiguities and perplexities of predicting human economic behavior, the game could as easily have swung the other way – and did for a very long time. Summers’ zest for arguing both sides of any economic issue may well be rooted in a profound realization: There are no (or very few) absolute truths in economics. Sophistry is always a temptation. That said, where’s the betrayal? That sense of betrayal begins when skepticism gives way to certainty, when possibilities congeal into formulaic ideology. From Friedman to Greenspan to Rubin to Summers, they all traded their doubts at one point or the other for a soaring confidence and a deep, nearly utopian belief. The way to the bountiful future involved market liberalization, free trade, deregulation, privatization, integration. A mighty finance sector bursting with innovation and complexity was a good, not a bad, thing. Size was important; speculation provided liquidity; the markets were self-correcting and self regulating. The Anglo-Saxon model, the Washington Consensus, had been proven far superior to other alternatives, whether the smoking ruins of Soviet communism or the Asian Model, with its crony capitalists. Free-market finance was the veritable engine of liberal internationalism. Finance trumped politics. What Hirsh doesn’t do is to confuse errors of policy or theory with criminality. There is no smoking gun here, no indictable offenses that I can find. Although he begins with the famous defenestration of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission’s Brooksley Born, who sought derivatives regulation, at the hands of Greenspan, Rubin and Summers, what he presents here is less dramatic declarations and more the steady construction of a shaky consensus, part free-market economics, part Wall Street reality, part Washington realpolitik. (After all, many of these folks, including Bill Clinton, were liberal Democrats, who needed convincing.) The fact was, for all the 20-20 hindsight, the ideas that supported the system were steadily confirmed by reality, with a few exceptions, throughout the ’90s and into the new century. Of course, those “exceptions” were quite serious – in real life and intellectually — notably the Asia crisis and the failure of Long-term Capital Management. But the very fact that we survived them, that contagion spread only so far, provided more fodder that the Washington Consensus was correct. There was, indeed, a bubble being born – both in the markets and in economics. Each step forward was a further descent into dogmatic orthodoxy. Debate was increasingly stilled; critics, like Stiglitz, were lampooned and ignored. Regulators were captured. The media was quiescent (Hirsh himself occasionally admits his own failures to see the future.) Shareholders were partying. The public was clueless. Those who questioned any of the underpinnings of the system, like economist Raghuram Rajan who warned of risk at Greenspan’s Jackson Hole valedictory in 2005, were dismissed, sometimes politely, sometimes brutally (a job Summers seemed to revel in). Well, we know how it turned out. An entire orthodoxy was upended the weekend Lehman Brothers failed. Economics, like Wall Street, was caught out by reality. But it’s not as if the entire discipline, with its roots in Adam Smith and the physiocrats and its tradition of rational inquiry, has been debunked; rather it was the predictive aspect of the field, with its all-seeing, all-knowing markets and its powerful grip on policymaking, that has taken the most knocks. How can anyone who has suffered through 2008 ever trust an economic forecast again? Well, apparently a lot of folks. Economics and economists continue to busily predict and advise, often with the kind of bullying certitude Summers mastered (and Summers, of course, has himself been busy, not only as Barack Obama go-to economics adviser, but before that, as a much-cited columnist during the crisis in the Financial Times). The depth of the crisis and recession, in fact, has sent economists opining not only on technical questions but also on broader, political and social questions, like latter-day John Stuart Mills. Economics, and its sidekick prediction, apparently remains a drug we cannot live without. The question that needs to be asked – and it’s one that is larger than just this crisis – is whether error represents a larger betrayal, not just a mistake of the intellect, but a conflict, a sellout, a failure of moral rectitude, at its most extreme, a crime. Now there are clear tests for criminality, which are adjudicated in the courts; the rest are judgments, guesses, opinions. It is becoming clear that one of the great problems of economics evolving from an indeterminate, philosophically based inquiry to a discipline with pretension to a science and thus the raw material of policy, is that making the wrong call is more than just a mistake, it’s a moral transgression. Economists then, like Greenspan or Summers, are thus strapped to the table and analyzed. Where does the flaw lie? What combination of weakness deep in their opaque hearts led them into the corruption of error? Hirsh is a sophisticated observer, sensitive to the inevitable crooked timbers of humanity. But many others are not as subtle. Journalism, punditry, even movie-making has, in its earnest attempts at analysis, labored to establish patterns and motivations and attempted to penetrate souls they can never truly enter. The analysis that wins is the one that accumulates the most votes, which may be the way retail politics and the box office works, but isn’t exactly intellectually rigorous. Hirsh does, I think, occasionally fall for the fallacy of hindsight, suggesting that these great minds should have seen this coming but did not, or chose not to look. But this is where we get to what’s often presented, perhaps unfairly, as the treason of the intellectuals: a kind of willful blindness, for whatever reason, a retreat into dogma and faith for their own selfish reasons. This is where Stiglitz is so vital to this story; not because he was omniscient, but because he raised contrarian issues that were systematically ignored by policymakers. Perhaps these wise men were in the bag to Wall Street, as a thousand bloggers insist, or ripe with hubris. Or perhaps they truly believed. Like Dick Fuld, if they could see what was coming, why would they not have acted? Still, the charge of bad faith sticks to them because we have already decided they were smarter and more far seeing than the rest of us on a subject as foreign to the Average Joe as nuclear physics; in fact they’ve briefed us over the years (through a willing media) on the reality of their brilliance: the Committee to Save the World. If the best and the brightest, the Nobelists and the market geniuses, failed to see the future, what hope do the rest of us have? They told us it was safe. – Robert Teitelman Robert Teitelman is editor in chief of The Deal.

Read the full article →

Alan Krueger, Top Treasury Economist, Returning To Princeton

October 18, 2010

Alan Krueger, a top economics official at the Department of Treasury, will leave his post next month to return to academia, becoming the latest in a string of departures from the Obama administration’s economic team. A spokesman for the Treasury confirmed that Krueger, assistant secretary for economic policy, would return to Princeton University, where he previously served as a professor of economics. The Wall Street Journal first reported the news late Friday. Krueger has served as the top adviser to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner since the administration took power last year. News of Krueger’s departure comes after several other high-profile announcements of Obama economic advisers resigning amid concerns over the sluggish pace of the recovery. With unemployment remaining stuck at painfully high levels, Democrats are bracing for heavy losses in the upcoming congressional elections. Peter Orszag, Obama’s budget director, and Christina Romer, head of the president’s Council of Economic Advisers, resigned earlier this summer. And last month Lawrence Summers, the president’s top economist, announced he would return to Harvard University at the end of this year. Secretary Geithner is the only member of Obama’s top-tier economic advisers to remain with the administration. Krueger’s published work focuses on the economics of education, unemployment, social insurance and other policy decisions. He previously served as the Department of Labor’s chief economist during the Clinton administration.

Read the full article →

Seniors Brace For Social Security Freeze

October 12, 2010

BOCA RATON, Fla. — Seniors prepared to cut back on everything from food to charitable donations to whiskey as word spread Monday that they will have to wait until at least 2012 to see their Social Security checks increase. The government is expected to announce this week that more than 58 million Social Security recipients will go through a second straight year without an increase in monthly benefits. This year was the first without an increase since automatic adjustments for inflation started in 1975. “I think it’s disgusting,” said Paul McNeil, 69, a retired state worker from Warwick, R.I., who said his food and utility costs have gone up, but his income has not. He lamented decisions by lawmakers that he said do not favor seniors. “They’ve got this idea that they’ve got to save money and basically they want to take it out of the people that will give them the least resistance,” he said. Cost-of-living adjustments are automatically set by a measure adopted by Congress in the 1970s that orders raises based on the Consumer Price Index, which measures inflation. Social Security benefits will remain unchanged as long as consumer prices remain below the level they were at in 2008, the last time a COLA was awarded. Still, seniors like McNeil said they’ll be thinking about the issue when they go to vote, and experts said the news comes at a bad time for Democrats already facing potentially big losses in November. Seniors are the most loyal of voters, and their support is especially important during midterm elections, when turnout is generally lower. “If you’re the ruling party, this is not the sort of thing you want to have happening two weeks before an election,” said Andrew Biggs, a former deputy commissioner at the Social Security Administration and now a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. At St. Andrews Estates North, a Boca Raton retirement community, seniors largely took the news in stride, saying they don’t blame Washington for the lack of an increase. Most are also collecting pensions or other income, but even so, they prepared to tighten their belts. Bette Baldwin won’t be able to travel or help her children as much. Dorcas Eppright will give less to charity. Jack Dawson will buy cheap whiskey instead of his beloved Canadian Club. “For people who have worked their whole life and tried to scrimp and save and try to provide for themselves,” said Baldwin, a 63-year-old retired teacher, “it’s difficult to see that support system might not sustain you.” Baldwin and her husband mapped out their retirements, carefully calculating their income based on their pensions and Social Security checks. Trouble is, they expected an annual cost-of-living increase. “When we cut back, we’re cutting back on niceties,” Baldwin said. “But there are other people that don’t have anything to cut back on. They’re cutting back on food and shelter.” Many at St. Andrews said the cost-of-living decision won’t affect who they vote for next month. But seniors tied the Social Security issue to what they see as a larger societal problem with debt, entitlements and hopefulness for the future. “I’m kind of glad in a way,” Stella Wehrly, an 86-year-old retired secretary, said of the freeze. “One thing depends on the other and when people aren’t working there’s not enough people feeding into the Social Security system.” Wehrly and her husband, Hank, said curtailing government spending is necessary to maintain the Social Security system. “We have a generation now that we’re not going to leave a very good legacy for,” she said. Jack Dawson, 77, said the freeze is the right move considering the state of the government and the American economy. “Who would be surprised what’s happened?” he asked. “I feel this is the right decision in light of the malaise.” More than 58.7 million people rely on Social Security checks that average $1,072 monthly. It was the primary source of income for 64 percent of retirees who got benefits in 2008; one-third relied on Social Security for at least 90 percent of their income. At the Phoenix Knits yarn shop in Phoenix, 73-year-old owner Pat McCartney said she already worries about paying for utilities, groceries and gas. Not having the increase makes her worry even more. “If I have any major expense, I don’t know what I’ll do,” McCartney said while helping customers with their knitting. “I live on Social Security.” In Kansas City, Mo., Georgia Hollman, 80, said Social Security is her sole source of income. She would have liked a bigger check, but said she’s grateful for what she gets. “There isn’t nothing I can do about it but live with it,” she said. “Whatever they give us is what we have to take. I’m thankful we get that little bit.” Advocates for seniors argue the Consumer Price Index doesn’t adequately weigh the costs that most affect older adults, particularly medical care and housing. “The existing COLA formula does not account for the economic reality of the true costs that most seniors faced,” said Fernando Torres-Gil, director of UCLA’s Center for Policy Research on Aging and the first person appointed to the governmental post of assistant secretary for aging, during the Clinton administration. Still, Torres-Gil said the political reality is different, and many feel seniors are lucky to have their checks determined by the CPI, instead of some new formula that might make it even harder to secure a raise. “We may be just lucky to keep the current index,” he said. __ Associated Press writers Michelle Smith in Providence, R.I., Terry Tang in Phoenix, Heather Hollingsworth in Kansas City, Mo., and Stephen Ohlemacher in Washington contributed to this report. (This version CORRECTS Corrects final quote to include word ‘be’. This story is part of AP’s general news and financial services. AP Video.)

Read the full article →

Video: Reich Favors U.S. Tax Policy That Bolsters Middle Class: Video

October 11, 2010

Oct. 11 (Bloomberg) — Robert Reich, a professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley who served as labor secretary in the Clinton administration, talks about his book “Aftershock: the Next Economy and America’s Future,” the U.S. economy, tax policy and the housing market. He speaks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Robert Kuttner: Trade War Is Here — and We’ve Disarmed

October 4, 2010

Last Wednesday, by a wide bipartisan margin of 348-79, the House passed a bill giving the executive branch authority to impose retaliatory tariffs on a wide range of Chinese exports. The bill was intended to give the Obama Administration leverage (which the White House seems quite disinclined to use) in continuing talks with Beijing about China’s manipulation of its currency. The usual suspects made alarmed clucking noises about jingoism and impending trade war. Writing in the New York Times op-ed page , Steven Roach, a senior executive with Morgan Stanley, contended that the real problem is the low US savings rate, which supposedly leads America to over-consume and pull in imports. This has been used as an alibi for decades, but the fact is that our savings rate bounces around while our trade deficit with China moves only in one direction. Global mega-banks like Morgan Stanley profit from the US China trade, even if America gets rolled. Even the Financial Times , usually pretty sensible, warned against a more assertive stance. In truth , a trade war already exists, and it is being unilaterally waged by China. The entire Chinese industrial system uses a wide range of subsidies that violate both the letter and the spirit of the World Trade Organization. As the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission has long documented, China subsidizes exports, provides bank loans to industry at zero or negative interest rates, and either bribes or coerces US industry to locate production in China for export but not for China’s internal market. All development land in China is owned by the government, which means that China can subsidize favored projects at will. Supposedly, state socialism failed, but the Chinese have created an improbable combination of a one-party socialist state and predatory capitalism. American industry is so far into the tank with the Chinese and the U.S. government is so heavily dependent on the Chinese to buy our bonds that the administration can’t imagine taking a hard line against Beijing. Our diplomats behave more like a client power genuflecting before the might of the imperial master than the dominant nation that the U.S. is supposed to be. The Chinese system has succeeded in giving China a growth rate in excess of ten percent a year. It has created a new capitalist class, a burgeoning middle class, and an urban proletariat that lives relatively better in sweatshop conditions than in rural destitution. The system works, sort of, for China. But it doesn’t work for China’s leading trading “partner” — the United States. It would be far better if China focused more in its own internal market, and paid its people wages commensurate with their rising productivity, so that they could import more from the rest of the world. Wages count for only about 32 percent of total GDP in China — in most of the West, the figure is double that. So the Chinese governments keeps its own people poor and uses the fruits of their labor to invest in expansion, including many billions of dollars in illegal subsidies to industry, and then lends America the money to buy subsidized products. An artificially cheap currency, which has gotten most of the attention, is only one part of Chinese mercantilism. It gets the focus, because even the free-market crowd find it hard to defend. But China could let its currency values be set by market forces tomorrow morning and the rest of its mercantilist system would remain intact, as a real menace to what’s left of US manufacturing. Interestingly, some improbable commentators, like the Washington Post ‘s Robert Samuelson , usually a defender of the free-trade orthodoxy, are recognizing that we have a real problem. Much of the fault lies with our own leaders, and the fault is bipartisan. Both parties have refused to commit the US to an industrial policy of its own. The Democrats under Clinton (Bob Rubin, to be precise) let China into the WTO without asking for any serious reforms in return. The indulgence of Beijing continued under Bush, and continues to this day under Obama. The Chinese make vague noises about currency revaluation, and the administration immediately backs off. These people are cleaning our clock. The one card we have to play is that they desperately need the big US consumer market. For the moment, there is a two-way codependency. It’s not in China’s interest for America to go broke. But in another few years, we will have squandered whatever leverage we still have left. For once, Congress did the right thing. The administration should follow. If China wants the benefits of an open trading system, it should start playing by the rules. And our own executive branch should pay more heed to jobs for our people, and less to profits for corporations that move work offshore and banks that profit from alliance with China’s mercantilism. Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect and a senior fellow at Demos . His latest book is A Presidency in Peril .

Read the full article →

Aron Cramer: Streamlining the Millennium Development Goals for More Impact

September 29, 2010

In New York City last week, government, civil society, and business leaders converged to assess progress on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and raise additional funds at the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) to meet them. Despite a still sluggish economy, CGI managed to generate an impressive $2.5 billion in pledges from its participants. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon added to this with a pledge of $40 billion over the next 5 years to catapult progress toward the 2015 finish line, particularly targeting aid for women and girls. Great work, Bill! At the halfway mark towards the deadline for meeting the MDGs in 2015, progress is being made, but it is likely that most of the goals will go unmet. Progress on MDG-5, for example, focused on improving maternal health, has been strong,, yet achievement of the goal, a two-thirds reduction in maternal mortality by 2015, is unlikely at this point. With five years to go, it is clear that the MDGs have played a powerful catalytic role in reducing poverty, by providing a powerful (and previously absent) way to measure progress on many of the most important development challenges. It is equally clear that there is no overarching roadmap to get to the finish line. In our view, three things need to be done in the final five years to optimize the impact of the Goals: (1) Develop a more holistic approach to achieving the goals, (2) Create better measurement of progress, and (3) Get business more involved. First, a more holistic approach to progress on the MDGs is needed. At present, donor coordination around the MDGs is scattered, with donors honing in on specific topics (HIV/AIDS, girls’ education, or agricultural markets) rather than the full MDGs ecosystem. Sustainable progress on the goals requires recognition of the linkages between them, i.e. steps forward on environmental protection are integrally linked to economic development. One solution might be for bilateral donors and recipients to join forces to develop coordinated action plans that address all the goals in the specific context of a single nation’s needs and circumstances. Second, better measurement is also essential. As we know from our work at BSR on return-on-investment metrics, collecting data to assess MDG progress in developing countries can be incredibly challenging given resource and capacity constraints. We need country-specific measurements, in addition to global assessments, to ensure that we stay attentive to poor results in smaller countries, even as progress in large countries creates good results. To put a fine point on it, the significant progress in China to improve maternal health risks masking a lack of progress in a country like Uganda. We need to vigilantly measure both. Finally, the private sector can and should play an expanded role in reaching the MDGs. Even during the depths of the recession, governments and communities have looked to the private sector to generate the investment and innovation that’s needed to help marginalized communities grasp new economic opportunities. And while a great deal of attention lately has been on social entrepreneurship, neither the capacity nor the conditions are present to make this the answer to massive development needs. Filling the interim gap between the present and a future ripe for entrepreneurship would be both a noble and profitable endeavor for companies–and an important development strategy. Hopefully the first ten years of the MDGs were the hardest. Now that the world has finally taken note of the Goals as a measure of development progress, the time is now to accelerate progress toward the 2015 deadline and ensure momentum and progress behind the goals that are met–and those that are not–continues.

Read the full article →

Gregory Unruh: Green Jobs: Promise, Progress and Potential

September 28, 2010

I led a session at the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) last week entitled “Green Jobs: Preparing for the Green Economy” and can summarize the outcome in three areas: promise, progress and potential. Promise Most agree that a green economy – and sustainable development more broadly – are society’s best hope for reconciling the world’s need for poverty-alleviating economic growth with the planet’s need for life-giving ecological vitality. And there is great promise in a green economy. Traditional industrial development has been incredibly wasteful of materials and energy. The typical coal-fired power plant, for example, loses over half the input energy as waste heat before the first electron zips out of the facility. To produce one ton of pharmaceutical pills requires over 100 tons of input materials, making a 99 percent waste rate on average. The good news is that we already have the know-how and technology to tackle most of this waste. What’s missing is a supportive economic, social and political context, along with trained and knowledgeable workforce to get the job done. Given the 9 percent unemployment rate in the U.S., the fact that dollar-for-dollar the green economy produces more jobs than traditional development makes it a no-brainer. Progress We have seen progress. The Commerce Department reports that there is already a $1 trillion green economy up and running in diverse business sectors like construction, recycling and forestry. Countries as different as China, Germany and India have shifted their policies and incentives to support and stimulate more green growth. Here in the U.S., there has also been bi-partisan support for environmentally friendly economic development. In 2007, for example, the Bush Administration included $125 million for green jobs in the Energy Bill. And last year, the Obama Administration made green jobs an important part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Some pundits, like The New York Times’ Tom Freidman, see the green economy as the next field of economic competition and are gaining the publics’ and politicians’ attention. Potential Despite the progress, it is clear that there is still vast untapped potential in the green economy. Official statistics show green business accounts for only about 1-2 percent of all economic activity. That’s a tiny sliver of the overall economic pie. But we know that this can grow rapidly. Germany, for example, was able to grow its green industries four fold in just a decade. Even business-as-usual projections show the green economy tripling to $3 trillion by 2020. Our CGI discussion highlighted innovation and experimentation in building the green economy going on in such disparate places as the inner city New York, rural India and Native American reservations. Despite the apparent differences, the challenges are surprisingly similar: supportive policies; capable workforces; attractive business infrastructures; community support. The commonalities give optimism that shared learning might be able to accelerate green economic development and allow us to capture the potential that the green economy promises. Cross-posted from Forbes

Read the full article →

Danny Schechter: After Larry Summers, What? Will We Continue to Go Down Hill?

September 26, 2010

Summers Packs His Bags As The Recession is Said To Be Over And Media Buries Reports on Financial Crime As the November election approaches, the White House seems to be ending its Rip Van Winkle-like slumber and has begun crawling out of the bubble of its own making. Many fear it’s a bit late. The shakeup of President Obama’s economic team is long overdue. As Larry Summers slithers back to Harvard to save his tenure and write his book, he is likely to be replaced by exactly the wrong kind of person — a business executive, appointed to try to appease the Repugs and the Right. (Summers was paid $586,996-a-year at Hahvard and picks up all kinds of consulting deals on the side from Wall Street.) This maneuver won’t work of course because nothing Obama does will ever please them because they need him as their piñata, and a symbol of failure. He claims to see that but just can’t seem to get his appeasement gene in check. Notes the Naked Capitalism blog, “As much as some will be pleased to see Larry gone (he was a leading advocate of bank-friendly policies), his replacement is certain not to represent a change in philosophy… he has made the cardinal mistake of trying to please everyone and has succeeded in having no one happy with his policies.” Journalist Robert Scheer hopes “Summers will have time to reflect on the dismal arc of his split tenure in government service. Thanks to the banking debacle he did so much to initiate back in the Clinton years, the nation now has more people living in poverty, 43.6 million of them, than ever in our history. Americans have witnessed the disappearance of $11 trillion of their net worth, $1.5 trillion in the second quarter; the debt has risen alarmingly; unemployment is stuck at 9.6 percent; and trillions of dollars in toxic pools of housing stock are still held by the banks to be thrown into the housing market fire sale anytime home prices promise to edge upward. Behold what brilliance has wrought.” Financial journalist Michael M. Thomas believes that Summers like a gunslinger hired to clean up a town did what he was hired to do arguing, “Summers is leaving because he made sure real reform was discussed–but not accomplished.” “Larry Summers was tasked with making sure the kind of backlash that in 1933 unleashed Ferdinand Pecora on Wall Street didn’t happen in 2009. I think Larry Summers was tasked with marginalizing Paul Volcker, who could thus serve the new administration as moral window-dressing without actually causing trouble. I think it was understood from the outset that any meaningful economics program must involve taking Wall Street to the woodshed, and that this must not be allowed to happen.” Bob Woodward’s book on Obama focuses on an internal war over policy for the Afghan war. That may be mild compared to the revelations to come on the debates over what to do about the economy. (Woodward offers one telling detail about Obama’s approach describing how he laid out his plan in the form of a financial terms sheet used on Wall Street.) To “balance” his appointment of Elizabeth Warren, the President has nominated Jack Lews to head the Office of Management and Budget. Bernie Sanders says he will not support him because “I found too many echoes of the failed policies of the past in his responses to my questions on trade policy, Social Security, deregulation of banks and other issues.” Even as the rats jump ship. The National Bureau of Economic Research which took a year to admit that the country was in recession now says the Recession is over, a conclusion that is not widely shared especially because the structural, systemic and political problems that caused the crisis have not been remedied. The respected Chilean Economist Manfred Max-Neef says the US economy is “underdeveloping.” Others still fear a total collapse. But now that recovery has been pronounced — even if there has been no job creation — the media has a good excuse to move off the subject, to assume the best, and avoid investigating how the crisis happened, who benefited and who lost and is still losing, The issues I have been raising about the crimes of Wall Street have been brushed under the rug, even by filmmaker Oliver Stone from whom one might have expected a deeper critique in his new Wall Street Film, Money Never Sleeps . The Village Voice , who you would expect would welcome it, says Stone lets the “bad Guys off the hook?’ “If barely prosecuted, the real players in our last crash face a long pop-culture pillorying. That is not, however, how Stone works; regarding power, his conclusions are best summed up by the hippie chick at the Lincoln Memorial in Nixon: “You can’t stop it, can you? Even if you wanted to. It’s not you. It’s the system.” Floating off on a faux-naïve happy ending this time, one takes the lesson that there are no villains–or that villains are all there are.” So a generic indictment of “the system” substitutes for any exploration of the way that system actually worked, not just to make greed good but to hurt millions of people worldwide who lost jobs, homes and hope, plunging millions worldwide and here at home into deepening poverty. I personally gave Stone a copy of my investigative film Plunder The Crime of our Time months ago, but he seems to have brushed it off focusing instead on a miasma of slick Hollywood production values. (Disclosure: I made a documentary, Beyond JFK , for Oliver’s company and he was in it, that was back in 1992.) I have been getting some visibility for my DVD and companion book The Crime of our Time but not in mainstream media. Earlier this week, at a book launch, A Tea Party activist showed up for my spiel and took me to task loudly for being dismissive of her movement. But after we talked, I was pleased that she became open to my concerns and even, get this praised me as “fair and balanced.” I was surprised. You can hear some of our exchanges and a storm of debate on Between The Lines radio that I was also broadcasting over during my talk. The Tea Party people, by and large, don’t seem very angry with Wall Street. And as for the Republicans, Huff Post reports, “The Republican Party’s 21-page blueprint, “Pledge to America,” was put together with oversight by a House staffer who, up till April 2010, served as a lobbyist for some of the nation’s most powerful oil, pharmaceutical, and insurance companies, including AIG.” Short of a major deepening of the crisis in the next few weeks, the election will soon constitute all the news all the time. While voters are said to be angriest about the economy and Obama’s failures to stem the tide, the media will not devote much time or energy to educating the public about the deeper issues. Not when so many pundits and election insiders are fighting for face time on TV. Political blather and polls are back. Economic crime is downplayed. Unfortunately, one of the most important stories of our time is about to be buried again. News Dissector Danny Schechter made Plunder The Crime Or Our Time and wrote the companion book The Crime of our Time . See Plunderthecrimeofourtime.com . Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org.

Read the full article →

David Isenberg: The State Department Takes Charge: Be Afraid, Be Very Afraid

September 24, 2010

Yesterday the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform held an important and under covered hearing entitled “” Transition in Iraq: Is the State Department Prepared to Take the Lead? ” The question is simply whether the State Department is up to the job as duties formerly performed by the U.S. military are transferred to the State Department. As Committee Chairman Edolphus Towns asked in his opening statement . The State Department will take over many functions that are inherently military and for which State has little or no expertise. This raises important, practical questions. Who will provide security for State Department employees? Who will recover personnel who are wounded or killed? Who will provide convoy security? Who will provide counter-fire in rocket, artillery, and mortar attacks? Who will recover damaged vehicles and downed aircraft? Who will provide explosives disposal? Indeed, Iraq has not stopped being a dangerous place. IED are still going off. Firefights still happen. Just this past Sunday six car bombings in Baghdad and a suicide bombing in Fallujah killed 37 people and wounded more than 100 others. Is there reason to be concerned ? Yes, according to the witnesses. Consider what Michael Thibault, Co-Chairman and Grant Green, Commissioner, of the Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan, said in their statement: Commissioner Green’s concern for the Defense-to-State transition in Iraq was validated by our June 21, 2010, Capitol Hill hearing, “Private Security Contractors in Iraq: Where are we going?” Among the troubling testimony we heard that day were these data points: (1) The Department of State estimated that, without U.S. military support, it would need to raise its private-security contractor force in Iraq from 2,700 to between 6,000 and 7,000 people; (2) Under Secretary of State Patrick Kennedy had written to the Department of Defense on April 7, 2010, to request a substantial amount of military equipment, plus continued access to the Army’s LOGCAP logistics contract and continued food-and-fuel supply through the Defense Logistics Agency; and (3) DoD’s Joint Staff had not yet forwarded that request with a recommendation to the Office of the Secretary of Defense. These facts troubled us for several reasons. First, even if State could obtain the funds for more than doubling its private-security force, it is not clear that it has the trained personnel to manage and oversee contract performance of a kind that has already shown the potential for creating tragic incidents and frayed relations with host countries. Second, Ambassador Kennedy’s request highlighted the enormous reliance that State was obliged to place on the U.S. military in a wartime setting–14 critical security-related functions, logistical support, food and fuel, and about 1,000 other detailed tasks. Third, any DoD delay in processing State’s request could prolong uncertainties, promote reliance on contractors for work previously performed by the U.S. military and DoD, and potentially create unacceptable safety risks to American government and contractor personnel as military capabilities disappear in the drawdown process. As we reviewed the results of our hearing and the supplemental information that flowed in afterwards, our concerns rose. On July 12, 2010, the Commission released a unanimous, bipartisan Special Report #3, “Better planning for Defense-to-State transition in Iraq needed to avoid mistakes and waste.” We submitted the report to Congress, distributed it widely to interested parties within and outside of government, discussed its findings with print and broadcast media, and posted it on the Commission’s Internet site, www.wartimecontracting.gov. We have included a copy of the report with this statement, and we respectfully request that it be made part of the record of today’s hearing. Unfortunately, the advent of autumn has not eased the concerns we reported in the summer. We appreciate that the transition issues in Iraq are vast, complicated, and not amenable to quick and easy fixes. We are aware of and assured that working groups have been busy here and in theater discussing these issues. Lieutenant General Kathleen Gainey, the Director for Logistics, J4 of the Joint Staff, tells us that a decision package has been forwarded to the Office of the Secretary of Defense through the Under Secretary for Policy. Nonetheless, it is now nearly six months since Ambassador Kennedy’s formal request for assistance to the Department of Defense. When we checked earlier this week, no decision had yet been communicated. Specifically, State Department leadership informed us two days ago that their request for DoD support remained outstanding and that they have been compelled to pursue two separate contracting strategies simultaneously–one that assumes the requested DoD support, while the other develops a separate and greatly expanded contractor workforce to replace functions previously performed by DoD. The need to develop two separate plans is simply the result of the Department of Defense’s reluctance to articulate where and how they can best support the Defense-to-State transition in Iraq. What are the implications for private military and security contractors? This transition limbo has other deep implications. It raises the serious risk that State will be required to undertake a very large, hurried, expensive, and unprecedented exercise in contracting unless some change is negotiated in the Security Agreement or unless the Government of Iraq demonstrates serious capability and intent to provide the normal array of host-nation security and commercial services. Further, even if State meets the resource and funding challenge of greatly enlarging its security contractor forces, it still risks the policy and political consequences of having private companies performing potentially inherently governmental functions that have been previously performed by the U.S. military. Another significant implication is that the great, lingering uncertainty about the Defense-to-State transition indicates a failure to take a “whole-of-government approach” to contingency operations. Activities in Iraq and Afghanistan involve hundreds of thousands of U.S. military and federal civilian employees from Defense, State, the Agency for International Development, Treasury, Justice, Agriculture, and other departments; American, host-country, and third-country contractors; and a variety of non-governmental and international organizations. But as we and other organizations have observed, a lack of transparency, visibility, and basic data–not to mention the lack of a lead coordinating agency for contingency operations–has caused or contributed to duplication, gaps, and cross-purposes, and has permitted unnecessary incidents of waste, fraud, and abuse. Perhaps the other witness had a more optimistic view? Alas, only in our dreams. Here is an excerpt from the testimony of Stuart W. Bowen, Jr., Inspector General, Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction My office’s previous reporting on State’s management practices in large Iraq programs raises concerns about whether State will be able to effectively manage both the very significant life support and security tasks (many of which have been provided by the Department of Defense (Defense)) and the diverse ongoing assistance programs, without risking the loss of taxpayer dollars to waste. I do not have in mind simply the potential losses that could arise from weak program, contract, or grant management, which SIGIR audits previously uncovered. It may prove wasteful to keep civilian employees in Iraq and fund assistance programs simply because, if security conditions prevent civilian travel, then oversight of assistance programs could become impossible. We recognize that State is relatively new to large-scale program, contract, and grant management. The projects it has undertaken in Iraq – and the projects it will inherit from other agencies, as they leave – are many times greater than those it has traditionally managed. It takes time to nurture an organizational culture that respects the need for planning and to develop a workforce with appropriate skills. State needs to promptly address this issue. It does seem clear that a relatively modest adjustment of State’s budget priorities could make an enormous difference in the quality of State’s project, contract, and grant administration. That is, spend more on oversight. … As discussed by the Commission [on Wartime Contracting} in its report, the U.S. Embassy in Iraq has been relying on the Defense Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (LOGCAP) contract to provide its employees necessary life support. The contract is a U.S. Department of the Army (Army) program that preplans for the use of private resources in support of worldwide contingency operations. In the event that U.S. forces deploy, contractor support is available to commanders on a cost-plus-award-fee basis. As SIGIR reported in October 2007, LOGCAP is a contingency contract and thus is considered “a contract of last resort” for customers (because of the potential additional costs arising from its noncompetitive aspects). We noted that contingency contracts are primarily designed for areas where emerging requirements are the norm, rapid response is required, and/or conditions are such that normal sustainment contracts are not competitively available. We noted that, once conditions stabilize and a reasonable determination can be made as to the quantity and type of contract work that will be required to support a mission, customers should transition from contingency contracts to a more normal, cost-effective contract. We recommended that, when security conditions in Iraq allow, the Department should consider transitioning from the Army’s LOGCAP contract for life support of the U.S. Embassy-Iraq mission to a State-managed life support contract. Such a change would allow for more competitive contracting in the longer term and may be desirable from the standpoint of cost effectiveness. We believe that when security conditions permit, State should take the step we recommended. However, at this time, for the reasons that the Commission recommends, State and Defense should continue to employ the LOGCAP contract to support State in Iraq; if Congressional action is needed to facilitate this eventuality, it should be taken. We have not analyzed the question of how State would acquire the range of security services the Commission believes may be necessary for Iraq, but our review of other aspects of State’s business practices raises concerns about capacity. In broad terms, State’s contract administration and enforcement efforts need strengthening. State should plan to expand its efforts by employing the most qualified contracting professionals in government for help on these acquisition projects, at least in the near term. We may be waiting a long time before security conditions allow what Mr. Bowen recommends. At my request I asked Robert Young Pelton, author of Licensed To Kill , one of the better books on security contracting in Iraq, his thoughts. He emailed me back that: The chatter behind the scenes is that Baghdad is not the place you want to be posted to next year. Triple Canopy is allegedly 30 percent undermanned and DynCorp according to scuttlebutt has yet to get anything in the air. The current push to double hired guns also comes after Blackwater was dropped and others were asked to fill the gap. The turmoil in protection services began not because Blackwater gunned down 17 Iraqis, but because the State Dept was frozen by the Iraqi government. Condi thought it would be cute to flush BW down the drain but was wise enough to keep them in place under different names. But Hillary nuked them ten days after the inauguration. The irony in all this is that HIllary Clinton who once sponsored legislation to ban PMC’s and specifically Blackwater finds herself at the head of the largest mercenary army in America’s history. We have yet to actually see if the U.S. government can operate in Baghdad without Erik Prince and Blackwater. Triple Canopy tried and failed before, resulting in a massive influx of BW in April of 2005 until 2009. We know from Leon Panetta the CIA can’t operate without Blackwater, I doubt the State Department is going to magically double their protection overnight without some serious teething problems. Now that Erik has packed up and taken his toys with him. My advice to HIllary….don’t go to Baghdad.

Read the full article →

Video: Clinton Says Education of Women Boosts Economic Growth: Video

September 23, 2010

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) — Former President Bill Clinton talks about the Clinton Global Initiative’s efforts to improve access to education, jobs and the political process for women and girls around the world. Clinton speaks in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital With Al Hunt.” Bloomberg’s Matt Miller also speaks. (This report is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Clinton Bemoans Scant Hedge-Fund Support for Initiative: Video

September 23, 2010

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) — Former President Bill Clinton talks about the role of women in business and government, financial regulation, U.S.-China relations and involvement by hedge funds in philanthropy. Clinton speaks in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital With Al Hunt.” Bloomberg’s Matt Miller also speaks. (This report is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Zem Joaquin: CGI Commitment Brings World One Step Closer to Safer Products for Future Generations

September 23, 2010

This year’s Clinton Global Initiative Annual Meeting (CGI) has been all about commitments that will make a positive difference around the world. Yesterday, during the Market-Based Solutions for Protecting the Environment session at CGI, the Cradle to Cradle Products Innovation Institute (formerly the Green Products Innovation Institute ) joined industry and NGOs on stage to contribute its own global commitment to train at least 100 assessors and certify 1,000 products by 2015. This is part of the Institute’s effort to jumpstart a market for new product development that will protect human health and the environment while growing the economy. The Institute is developing comprehensive metrics and standards for every day products that are safe and healthy for our environment and our children based on the Cradle to Cradle certification protocols. When training begins early next year, assessors will learn how to help companies develop these safer products, which can then go through the process of receiving the Cradle to Cradle certification mark. “The Cradle to Cradle Products Innovation Institute is proud to make such a vital pledge to bring healthy products to citizens across the globe,” said Bridgett Luther, president of the Institute, about its commitment. “With the support of governments, industry, academia and non-governmental organizations, we can turn the Cradle to Cradle certification into a worldwide standard in developing safe and sustainable consumer products.” Numerous influential industry and NGO stakeholders participated in yesterday’s session and were there for the announcement, including Mindy Lubber, president of Ceres; Matt Kistler, senior vice president of sustainability for Wal-Mart, Jeffrey Swartz, president and CEO of The Timberland Company; and M. Sanjayan, lead scientist for The Nature Conservancy. While not present on stage, several of the nation’s leading manufacturers joined the Institute in its commitment, including Shaw Industries and Steelcase. Shaw Industries, Inc., the world’s largest carpet manufacturer announced its commitment to moving toward increasing the number of ‘wholly’ Cradle to Cradle certified products by 2015 so more of its product line will be safer for human and environmental health. “Over 50 percent of our commercial products are now Cradle to Cradle certified, but we are not stopping there,” said Vance Bell, CEO of Shaw. “We plan to increase that percentage over the next several years as we work closely with the Cradle to Cradle Products Innovation Institute.” Steelcase, the world’s largest office furniture manufacturer, announced that its first seating product for the education sector, “node,” will also be certified under the Cradle to Cradle protocol. These types of industry commitments will be crucial to the Institute’s success in bringing safer products to market. It will also require collaboration with countries like China who manufacture products for citizens all over the world. On that front, the Institute just last week signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the Shanghai Yangpu District Government, which Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger witnessed during his trade mission to Asia . The MOU solidified Shanghai’s commitment to working with the Institute to promote an innovative model for eliminating toxic chemicals and other negative environmental impacts. The Clinton Global Initiative is a catalyst for change and challenges industry leaders and NGOs to implement solutions that will have a lasting effect on the world’s environmental and human health. Through commitments from nonprofits like The Cradle to Cradle Products Innovation Institute, this vision can become reality.

Read the full article →

Larry Summers Replacement: Progressive Economists Offer Their Suggestions, ‘No More Rubinites’

September 23, 2010

Progressive economists have one piece of advice for President Barack Obama when it comes to replacing top economic adviser Larry Summers: No more Robert Rubin disciples. Summers, who served as head of the White House’s National Economic Council, a position created by former President Bill Clinton and first filled by Rubin, was a key architect of the administration’s various economic policies to combat the biggest financial crisis and economic downturn since the Great Depression. Those policies — the bailout of Detroit automakers, an $814 billion stimulus package, subsequent programs under TARP, Cash for Clunkers and the administration’s unlimited backstop of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac — arguably saved an economy that many considered to be on the verge of collapse. But while the recession officially ended last year, it hasn’t for most American households. The unemployment rate has risen nearly two percentage points since Obama took office, Labor Department figures show. Private-sector job creation is anemic. Growth has stagnated. Incomes have barely risen. Unpaid debts are being written off. And household wealth is lower today than where it was last December, according to Federal Reserve data through June. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner refused to say Wednesday during a Congressional hearing whether the U.S. is officially out of the recession. Large banks and corporations, on the other hand, are thriving. Corporate profits have risen to pre-crisis levels, according to the Commerce Department. Company balance-sheets haven’t been this strong since 1956, Fed data show. Firms with access to the capital markets are taking advantage of record-low interest rates and refinancing expensive debt, and pocketing the difference. Last month, IBM sold three-year notes to investors, offering 1 percent interest . On Wednesday, Microsoft Corp. sold three-year notes at 0.875 percent interest to help fund share buybacks and increased dividends for shareholders. It’s reportedly the lowest interest ever offered by a company looking to sell three-year debt. A key lieutenant to Rubin after the former Goldman Sachs head and Citigroup chairman became Treasury Secretary under Clinton, Summers eventually succeeded him in that post. Together, the two men advocated for the repeal of Glass-Steagall, a Depression-era law that separated commercial banking activities from investment banking, and fought to deregulate the derivatives market. They aggressively fought back against other regulators who wished to rein in risky derivatives activities. During this administration, Summers fought back against against more aggressive financial reform measures, people familiar with the discussions say. Armed with an opportunity to get other points of view into a White House whose economic agenda has been derided by both the left and the right, progressive economists and other market participants want to see someone in Summers’s role who will pursue policies that will clean up the toxic assets lying dormant on bank balance sheets, restart lending and allow for robust job creation. Dean Baker, co-director of the Washington-based Center for Economic and Policy Research, said he’s like to see economists like James K. Galbraith, a former executive director of the Joint Economic Committee and presently a professor at the University of Texas at Austin; Robert Pollin, an economics professor at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and co-director of the Political Economy Research Institute; Eileen Appelbaum, an economist at Baker’s CEPR and a former professor at Rutgers University, where she led the Center for Women and Work researched labor and employment issues; and Heidi Hartmann, president of the Washington-based Institute for Women’s Policy Research and a professor at The George Washington University. Baker acknowledges that his candidates “would never be considered,” adding that “I don’t want to think about who we will actually get.” Robert Johnson, director of financial reform at the New York-based Roosevelt Institute and a former managing director at Soros Fund Management, said he’d like to see Jon S. Corzine, chairman and CEO of MF Global Holdings and a former head of Goldman Sachs and governor of New Jersey; J. Bradford DeLong, an economics professor at the University of California at Berkeley and a former top Treasury official during the Clinton administration; Leo Hindery, Jr., chairman of the Economic Growth/Smart Globalization Initiative at the New America Foundation and a HuffPost blogger; and Donald W. Riegle, Jr., a former U.S. senator and chairman of the Senate Banking Committee and current chairman of APCO Worldwide’s government relations team. Johnson also endorsed Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Thomas M. Hoenig. The Fed chief, who serves on the Fed’s policy-making body that sets interest rates, has advocated breaking up megabanks and forcing banks to shed their risky derivatives-dealing operations. The longtime regional Fed president has served in his current role for 19 years. Like others, Johnson said, “No more Rubinites.” Simon Johnson, former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund who presently serves as a professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management and as a contributing editor to The Huffington Post, said he’d like to see Joseph Stiglitz, former chief economist at the World Bank and a former chairman of the White House’s Council of Economic Advisers under Clinton; Paul Krugman, a Nobel Prize-winning economist and columnist for the New York Times ; and Alan S. Blinder, a Princeton professor and former member of Clinton’s CEA and a vice chairman of the Fed’s Board of Governors. Market participants added other recommendations. Andrew Busch, global currency and public policy strategist at BMO Capital Markets in Chicago, said he’d like to see two veterans of the Clinton administration: Robert Reich, former Labor Secretary, or Gene Sperling, who held Summers’s job under Clinton and now works as a counselor to Geithner. “Anything that sounds or looks like Krugman will be a disaster,” Busch added. Richard Bove, one of Wall Street’s top banking analysts, told clients in a Wednesday note that the failure of Summers and the rest of the Obama team was a fundamental misunderstanding of the causes of the financial crisis. Bove, of Rochdale Securities, said the crisis was a result of years of over-consumption and underproduction in the West which caused money to flow to Asia and other big exporters, which caused debt accumulation in the U.S. and a desire for higher-yielding securities — like subprime mortgage-backed securities — elsewhere. “Larry Summers and his group failed to grasp the simple point that the U.S. must sell things to get the flow of funds to reverse back to the United States,” Bove wrote. “Instead they continued to believe that consumers should buy things. “This was a mistake that neither Germany nor Switzerland made. Thus, those economies, which emphasize production rather than consumption, expand while ours flirts with a new recession.” Bove titled his note, “Mr Summers’ Failure.” David A. Rosenberg, chief economist and strategist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates in Toronto, shared a note with clients Wednesday that he received regarding Obama’s policies which he agreed with: “With respect to the failure of White House economic policies to turn things around (we don’t accept that the grading should be done on the premise that ‘oh, well, things would have been worse without all the government incursion and intervention’ — isn’t the jobless rate supposed to be at 7 percent by now?), we received this little ditty yesterday from a reader on the West Coast that resonated with us: Dave, You pointed out that FDR worked out the WPA at lunch one day and put Americans to work, paying them to build the Golden Gate Bridge, while Obama is mailing Americans 99 weeks of unemployment checks — the modern soup line. Well, it’s worse than that. Think about it: FDR borrowed that money, mostly from Americans, and sent it to American workers who bought American goods. Today Obama is borrowing money from China and sending it to Americans entitled to 99 weeks of no-work-pay, I mean unemployment insurance, and they are taking it over to Wal-Mart and sending it to Chinese workers. Go figure…. Regardless of whom Obama picks, Galbraith said that the “essential thing is not a shift in ideological perspective.” “It would be having a broader and more open group at the top,” Galbraith wrote in an e-mail. “I’d guess Summers took a number of positions inside the administration (we’ve seen an example with Steve Rattner’s account of the auto bailout) that were progressive by his own lights. But on certain critical issues — and especially banking, so far as I understand it — the alternatives he didn’t like were simply frozen out.” The administration, though, reportedly is keen on bringing in someone with significant business experience, like a CEO. Anne M. Mulcahy, the former CEO of Xerox who’s been lauded for her leadership atop the company, is said to be a leading contender, despite the fact that Xerox’s share price dropped 16 percent during her tenure. Other candidates include Laura D. Tyson, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley who separately headed both the National Economic Council and the Council of Economic Advisers under Clinton. Tyson is a longtime member of Morgan Stanley’s board of directors, a position she’s held since 1997. Joshua Rosner, managing director at independent research consultancy Graham Fisher & Co., told the Roosevelt Institute’s blog New Deal 2.0 that it’s critical for Obama to pick someone who will clean out the financial system. “While I can’t question Summers’ intent or interest in being part of the solution to this economic crisis his departure, on the eve of a double dip, demonstrates what some of us have known for a while. “Yes, the government needed to act, but the kick-the-can policies of the Obama administration have mired us more deeply in a structural morass. Hopefully the President will replace Summers and Geithner with a team that recognizes that sweeping problems under the rug undermines confidence in our economy and markets and doom us to a long contraction driven by a weak banking system. It’s time to address the troubled assets that remain on our banks balance sheets so they can be healthy enough to lend and have confidence that they will again lend.” ************************* Shahien Nasiripour is the business reporter for the Huffington Post. You can send him an e-mail ; bookmark his page ; subscribe to his RSS feed ; follow him on Twitter ; friend him on Facebook ; become a fan ; and/or get e-mail alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 646-274-2455.

Read the full article →

Video: Ted Turner Sees UN Foundation Progress Against Polio: Video

September 23, 2010

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) — Ted Turner, philanthropist and founder of CNN, and Tim Wirth, president of the United Nations Foundation, discuss the work of the foundation, which was established to disburse the $1 billion Turner pledged to the UN. Turner and Wirth talk to Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” They speak at the Clinton Global Initiative in New York. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Paul Abrams: The Politics and Economics of Tax Cuts: Make Each Bracket a Separate Bill, and a Separate Vote

September 20, 2010

It is very important for the Democrats to cut taxes for 98% and allow taxes to rise (4.6%) for the top 2%. To do that, they should write a separate tax bill for each bracket. They should bring each bracket, starting with the lowest, to a vote. This should be done in both Houses of Congress. The economic recovery depends upon both ends — providing more income to the 98% of the people to help repair their home balance sheets so they can feel comfortable about spending prudently again, and increasing revenues from the top 2% to build confidence in domestic and world financial markets that we can make some tough decisions. Republicans’ bitching and moaning would not get them very far. They would get a vote on the top 2%, and see how it fared. That process would shine klieg lights on the tax cuts, and debates and arguments could be advanced for each bracket. In the Senate, a filibuster of the lower rates would be a god-send to Democrats’ political fortunes, especially since Republicans can hardly argue that they will not get their vote for the wealthy, the people George Bush called “his base”. It would position the President to sign the cuts for each of the lower brackets, and defer deciding on the top 2% until the deficit commission reports in December whether the top 2% cut passes or not. The economic recovery that occurred under Reagan and under Clinton did not begin until each President raised taxes. That was not a coincidence. It had little to do with economic theory and everything to do with psychology: by biting the bullet, these Presidents showed domestic and world markets they were serious about deficits. Confidence grew and that led to investments and job growth. Cutting taxes for the top 2% would, on the other hand, very likely tank the stock market, send the dollar into a nose-dive, cause gold prices to soar and, through the lost-wealth effect, cause even further economic contraction. Why? Because it would show domestic and world markets that the United States of America is incapable of making tough fiscal decisions. Confidence in the United States would plummet and a vicious cycle could be triggered. It would also be a political disaster. It would portend even more draconian spending cuts in essential services down the road and, by causing a further economic decline, exacerbate the deficit even further. Republican extremists would like it, the Koch Boys would declare victory, but not everyone has the spare billions they do to ride it out. Republicans exist primarily for one purpose: to provide tax cuts for their wealthy paymasters like the Koch Boys and to allow as much economic anarchy as possible, each in the name of “limited government” that, curiously, does not seem to apply to staying out of peoples’ bedrooms, or end of life decisions, or lying us into wars, or voter intimidation. Of the two, tax cuts are much more important, since they can always pay their way out of regulations. That’s it. Everything else they do can be related directly back to these core imperatives. Of course, it is difficult to sell tax cuts for the wealthy alone, since 98% of the country is not financially wealthy. So, they drag in claptrap about lowering taxes for the wealthy creating more jobs (demonstrably false, and the worst alternative for stimulating growth) or “paying for themselves” (a canard dropped now even by rightwing economists who cannot sustain professional credibility by promoting it). So, it will be up to the Democrats to do the heavy lifting. Positioned properly, it will demonstrate to the mid-term electorate just who is on whose side. And, it will enable the economic recovery to pick up a bit of steam. “Class warfare”, you say? Such as that Republicans have been waging against the middle class? Well, it takes two sides to have a “war”. It is time our side showed up.

Read the full article →

Kenneth Kales: Apple, Pear, Banana. Bush, Madoff, Enron.

September 15, 2010

Bless the souls lost on 9/11 and those of our soldiers and allies who have sacrificed their lives to defend the free world. A related catastrophic casualty has also been suffered by us, though it cannot measure in any way to the loss of innocent lives, and the grief their families feel to this day and likely will for their entire lives. President Bush’s repeated false warnings about security breaches, which were manipulated for his political advantage, each time sidelined our economy. Much deeper though is the psychology of the man himself. He was floundering at the beginning of his tenure so much so that his true self was apparent ― incompetent and shallow. However, as a result of 9/11, President Bush found an identity he could hold on to and so constructed a persona as a “war president.” I believe Mr. Bush was asleep at the wheel on September 11. Anybody with his security clearance would have been aware of al Qaeda. President Clinton personally briefed him during the transition. That summer’s NSC memo, “Al Qaeda Determined to Strike,” briefed him. Let’s not continue to participate in a cover-up still a year and a half since he left office because we don’t want to hurt Mr. Bush’s feelings or the prospects of his supporters. Those who lost their lives and those still risking their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan deserve better. George Bush was asleep at the wheel. Rather than admit this, he overreacted with measures to throw us off the scent of an utterly indefensible vulnerability he had placed the country in. He overcompensated for his lacking similarly to how a bully over-compensates for deep insecurities. Included in this over-compensation was a deliberate broadening of Al Qaida’s impact by emptying our consumer driven economy to rev-up a war economy for his pre-determined invasion of Iraq. Even though the economy showed early signs of bouncing back within weeks of 9/11, instead he kept his foot on the economic brake to hold the nation lurching, then stopping, lurching, then stopping again and again while he staged a personal makeover. He broke our economic engine and it is still in repair in our deep recession now. We all know Wall Street is controlled by emotions as much if not more than by the underlying economic fundamentals. So too it is the case for our national economy as a whole. To beef up his charade as a “war president,” he had to beef up not only the impact of 9/11, but also the future risks. Thus, for nearly eight years he perpetrated an economic sham more cunning than a Bernie Madoff or an Enron. I intend no minimization of the devastation the 9/11 attacks caused our country and the world, nor the threats that still remain to us. But even his father can’t cover up the deliberate manipulation to bring down our economy as a mechanism to lift up George Bush’s personal standing. One lesson in life I have learned is that when you get knocked off your horse, get back in the saddle as soon as you can. The more you linger, the harder it is to finally do the inevitable of getting back on your horse. It is sensitive though and we must not equate the lives lost and their families’ sufferings, with economic suffering. They are on two entirely different scales and of two entirely different mindsets. 9/11 will remain with us in our hearts. How we respond to it now though is our choosing. To start with, let’s have the courage to expose the national tragedy of George Bush’s malicious attack on our economic well-being. Understanding this is central to understanding our national character, to recovering from the recession, and on which the upcoming elections will largely be based. With love, respect, and honor to those fallen on 9/11 and its aftermath, many people are hurting badly economically. Relief won’t happen over night, but we need to continue to steady ourselves a little more each day. One day at a time.

Read the full article →

Jonathan Bernstein: The C-Factor: How Credibility Plays a Role in Crisis Management

September 13, 2010

Imagine your organization: becoming the target of a class action lawsuit alleging fraudulent marketing practices; or, being accused of creating a hostile workplace environment; or, learning, without advance notice, that it is the target of an investigation by a state attorney general. Not a great worry yet, you say, because there are two sides to every story, right? No. Issues don’t have only two sides, and no matter how well crafted the message, the credibility of the messenger — what I call the “C-Factor” — is as or more important in terms of impacting your stakeholders. Let’s look at some of the potential stakeholders for any of these situations: Organization’s executive team (and their families) Other employees (and their families) Shareholders Board of directors Customers/clients Vendors Municipalities that depend on revenue from and/or interact with your organization in some significant way Residents of municipalities that depend on revenue from and/or interact with your organization in some significant way Competitors (yes, they definitely have a stake in what happens to you, albeit a “reverse stake”) All of them have their own points of view on your crisis situation, and all of them are going to be expressing their points of view to everyone they know . In the absence of issues-specific information from you, each of your stakeholder groups is likely to come up with its own conclusions and opinions about what is actually happening. And each of them, as groups or as individuals, have their own “C(redibility) Factor.” Like the famous “Q-Factor” associated with recognizable celebrities, I’m suggesting that everyone has a C-Factor — the degree to which they are credible to others. When any stakeholder speaks about an issue, his/her/their C-Factor impacts the extent to which their messages are believed. I will leave it to the research and statistic experts to quantify C-Factor, but I can offer some experiential and subjective observations about the importance of considering the C-Factor: Matching the C-Factor to the audience . Who’s going to be most believable speaking to employees? Is it the CEO? In some organizations it might be, in others it might be a lower-level manager. Who should speak to shareholders? The chairman of the board? The CFO? There must be a situation-specific analysis of their C-Factors. In a consumer versus business complaint/issue, the consumer always starts with a higher C-Factor in the court of public opinion. In the wake of everything from Enron to Worldcomm, Toyota to Tiger Woods, even once-lauded Johnson & Johnson, and many others, suspicion of business motives and practices are high. If a consumer sounds credible, and is already starting with a higher default C-Factor, the business has to do a lot of work to balance perception. If the consumer sounds like he or she is ranting, they lower their own C-Factor. If the consumer hires a reputable law firm, his/her C-Factor goes up. If a law firm known to take “just about anything” on a contingency basis takes the case, the consumer’s C-Factor may go down. C-Factors can combine or be enhanced through association. . If an organization or individual with a high C-Factor endorses a business’ honesty or products, the business’ C-Factor is raised. On the other hand, if those opposed to the organization or individual have their complaint supported by a high C-Factor organization (e.g., Sierra Club, ACLU), then the opponents’ C-Factor gets a bump up. C-Factors are not necessarily based in reality. Some individuals, because of their personal charisma, have a high C-Factor, sometimes even after they have committed publicly known “sins.” Witness Bill Clinton or Marion Barry. Ditto for some organizations, such as the Better Business Bureau, whose fact-checking is, in my extensive experience, woeful, and whose record-keeping is often inaccurate and dated. Yet if there are “BBB complaints” against your business, consumer reporters automatically think that you’re in the wrong. We, as crisis managers, must consider C-Factors when deciding “who should talk to whom” and whether certain strategies should be employed. Real or not, they play an important role.

Read the full article →

Larry Gellman: Let’s Be Honest: About Jobs and the Economy

September 8, 2010

As many of you know, I have been obsessing lately about the way in which truth and facts have seemingly become irrelevant and missing from the public conversation of politicians and our news media. It’s not about whether one agrees or disagrees with the point of view of another. It’s about the way issues are framed in a way that often has nothing to do with the truth and, more often than not, in a way that makes no sense. This will be the first in a series of articles entitled “Let’s Be Honest.” Each article will deal with an important issue which our news media and political leaders are framing in a way that is so dishonest and misguided that it makes rational discussion impossible. For example, reasonable people can disagree about whether Barack Obama is doing a good job as president. But they can’t disagree about whether he is a Muslim (more than 30 percent of Republicans believe he is) or was born outside the U.S (more than 40 percent of Republicans believe he was). Those are simply lies. The same would seem to apply to any reasonable assessment of where our economy and job situation stand right now and whether our president’s policies have helped or hurt. Reasonable people can disagree about the wisdom and long-term impact of Obama’s policies but, as with so much else these days, the news media and politicians have chosen to make rational conversation almost impossible by filling the airwaves and print with so many lies and distortions that useful give-and-take can’t even get started. We are constantly hearing about the horrible condition of the U.S. economy and how Obama’s socialist preoccupation with redistributing wealth and taxing us to death is killing business . But let’s be honest. When Obama became president the economies of the world were in an American-induced death spiral. We were drowning in debt that could not be repaid. Stock markets and commodities prices were in free-fall, our economy was shedding 800,000 net jobs a month, credit was not available to most companies at any price. General Electric and Goldman Sachs had to pay Warren Buffett 10 percent interest and provide an equity kicker just to get a loan which should give you an idea how impossible it was for mere mortals to borrow. There was a very real risk that hundreds of major companies and financial institutions would disappear. Many actually did. We still face enormous economic challenges, but let’s be honest. It is now 18 months later and the stock markets in the U.S. and around the world are 50 to100 percent higher. With federal help, General Motors and many other companies staved off bankruptcy and are now able to sell stock to new investors. Millions of jobs that were thought to be at risk were saved. Commodities prices have recovered broadly and credit is widely available to a broad range of credible borrowers. We have enormous debts to repay once we get the economy on better footing and we face lots of other challenges. But the sequencing of the “experts” is backwards. We already had the economic crisis they are predicting for the future and it had nothing to do with Obama, taxes, or socialism. It was due to good old American greed and free-market capitalism run amok. We are also told that making the richest Americans pay the same level of income tax as they did during the boom times in the ’90s would kill the recovery in its tracks. But let’s be honest. How many millionaires do you know who are putting off purchases and denying themselves stuff that they would run out and buy if they only had an extra few grand? Most people are buying less because they are worth less than they used to be, their homes have gone down in and value, they are earning nothing on their savings, and/or they are heavily in debt. And most others are just nervous about the future–in part because they are told all day in the media and by politicians that they should be outraged and afraid. It has nothing to do with uncertainty about a proposed small increase in taxes for a handful of the wealthiest Americans. The one problem that remains very real for far too many people is jobs. Most companies downsized their work forces during the economic meltdown but now that business has come back–in many cases stronger than ever–they are not hiring new workers. In most cases, they haven’t even hired back the ones they laid off during the crisis. The U.S. unemployment rate is hovering just below 10 percent and the number of people who are holding jobs that pay and require skills far below their qualifications is at least as high. We are told by financial “experts” and politicians that Obama is to blame for reasons that make no sense. They claim that corporate CEOs are not hiring more workers, even though many of their companies are doing great business and are flush with cash, because they are “uncertain” about the impact of health care reform and tax increases they fear may be coming in the near future. These paralyzing uncertainties are simply the icing on the Obama anti-business, anti-America socialist cake which is yet another reason why the Republicans will take over both houses of Congress in a couple months. Or so the story goes. But let’s be honest. Back during the Clinton years when taxes were much higher and when health care costs were going through the roof each and every year, companies were hiring like crazy. Many, like my employer, offered big bonuses to any employee who referred a prospect who ended up being hired by our firm. It had nothing to do with certainty about the future or tax rates or socialism or health care costs. It was all about our CEO’s belief that we were missing out on a lot of business because we didn’t have enough people. So our company hired more people. Today many companies that survived the financial crisis are flush with cash and very profitable. But instead of hiring back the workers they laid off, they are investing in new equipment and productivity technology that will enable them to do more business with even fewer employees in the future. They are also using their huge cash hordes to buy other companies so they can lay off even more workers in the future and become even more profitable–at least in the short run. And when companies make more money, their CEOs (the same ones who decide whether to hire or fire more workers) make lots of money. A recent report issued by the Institute for Policy Studies shows that the 50 companies that laid off the most workers last year saw their profits go up an average of 44 percent. And (surprise surprise) the CEOs of those companies made an average of $12 million last year–almost 50 percent more than average CEO pay at America’s 500 largest companies. So let’s be honest. There’s not a thing that Obama or any other politician can do to lower unemployment in the private sector as long as CEOs and shareholders of our largest companies are getting richer and richer because of mergers, productivity gains, and layoffs. And our free market capitalist system–which I heartily support and have earned my living managing for more than 30 years–guarantees them the right to do that. So, if we’re going to be honest there is a lot to talk about and figure out. It will be tough and it will be complicated. It is so much easier to create villains and phony issues to keep people busy being outraged and afraid. Maybe that’s why so many of our politicians and media celebrities are going that route instead of giving us the facts and trying to help America.

Read the full article →

Robert Scheer: It’s the Mortgages, Stupid

September 8, 2010

This week’s proposals by the Obama administration to deal with the persistent economic crisis will be, as with previous plans that involved trillions of taxpayer dollars, little more than salt in the wounds. Once again the strategy is to stimulate the economy by funding projects and tax cuts while ignoring the root cause of the problem: a housing foreclosure meltdown that has chilled the spending of a majority of American consumers. With 11 million homeowners underwater on their mortgages and 3 million more already foreclosed, we have to assume, given the average household size, that some 40 million Americans are feeling mighty strapped. The numbers grow to an overwhelming majority when you take into account the distress of all homeowners, who have watched the value of the family nest egg dwindle even if they substantially paid down or paid off their mortgage debt. And this very widespread feeling of being suddenly much poorer is a nationwide scourge that has dramatically cut the appetite for consumption that drives the economy. That fact is recognized even by the very business people who are supposed to be inspired to new investment and hiring by Barack Obama’s proposal on Wednesday of an accelerated tax break on business investments. As William Dunkelberg, chief economist for the National Federation of Independent Business, told The Wall Street Journal, “If you give a small business guy $20,000 he’ll say, ‘I could buy a delivery truck but I have nobody to deliver to.’” Although Dunkelberg’s members would be happy with a tax cut, he said the most important help would be to “finally address the most important person in the economy — the consumer.” The anger of wannabe consumers who no longer feel they have the wherewithal to feed that most important of American passions is what is fueling the widespread rage against elected officials. The Democrats, being the party in power, are the most popular target, but they are in deep denial when they blame their pending electoral plight on the demagoguery of their Republican opponents. Of course the Republicans and their deep-pocket sponsors are being outrageous hypocrites when they blame others for the horrid consequences of their decades of lobbying for radical financial deregulation. Ever since the “Reagan Revolution,” their mantra has been “get government off the back of big business,” and once that was accomplished and Wall Street crumbled under the weight of its own greed they supported George W. Bush in bailing out the knaves. But the fault is clearly bipartisan. It was Bill Clinton who signed off on the radical deregulation legislation, and it is Obama who continued Bush’s practice of bailing out the bankers while ignoring the anguish their toxic mortgage packages caused the rest of us. That is why the Fed has gifted the banks with interest-free money to finance their new acquisitions while making them whole again by purchasing more than $2 trillion in toxic mortgage-backed securities and other dubious assets. Not surpassingly the bankers pocketed that enormous gift from the taxpayers but did precious little in return by way of lending and investment that would bring down unemployment. Which brings us to the current disastrous moment. The president who inherited a deep recession that began 13 months before he took office is now viewed as a big “socialist” spender because he followed in Bush’s footsteps, blackmailed by the notion that the entire system would go kaput if the bankers were not accommodated. The amount of money now available for him to spend without freaking everyone out about an increase in the debt is paltry. The commitment of $50 billion to a national infrastructure program to be phased in over the next decade would prove to be too little too late. It is chump change compared with the $350 billion in loans and guarantees to one bank alone, Citigroup, which still cannot stand steadily on its own feet. There is only one course left for Obama, and it is to do now what he should have done at the start of his term: abandon the hope that banks will voluntarily aid desperate homeowners and instead push for new government regulations and changes in the bankruptcy law to force the banks to make deals to keep people in their homes. There is precious little else to talk about, for if the housing market — the bedrock of not only the American dream but more important the financial security of a nation of consumers — is not restored, we are in for one long, dreary period of economic stagnation at best, or a severe downturn and a society in dangerous turmoil.

Read the full article →

Eve Tahmincioglu: Dumb Labor Day advice to workers: Roll over

September 6, 2010

The headline in my local newspaper today reads: “Jobless must set sights lower.” I wouldn’t be surprised if your local newspaper or radio station has a similar story today. This is the kind of sensational angle the media loves to focus on during all types of holidays. For example, a Christmas day massacre or a Halloween candy poisoning will get endless attention by editors, especially in this Internet age where all most media care about is how many times you guys click on a story. But on this Labor Day , a time when we’re supposed to be celebrating the advances workers have achieved in the workplace, let’s not just roll over and accept what has become the standard employer line — you have to take less money for more work — and let’s concentrate on what needs to be done to bring back a job market with better quality jobs for the working stiff. Today, President Obama is expected to announce a series of steps to stimulate the economy. Yes, the pundits will be tearing him apart today, saying it’s just a government bailout and the free market needs to do its thing. But if we look back in history, these types of measures the administration is touting are what brought workers back from the brink during another bad economic down turn, the Great Depression. During that time there was a segment of society doing quite well while the regular guys and gals suffered, and during this recession many of those telling workers to accept less and do more are also doing quite well. This from a great opinion piece in the New York Times last week called “How to End the Great Recession,” by Robert Reich , the former labor secretary under Clinton: Where have all the economic gains gone? Mostly to the top. The economists Emmanuel Saez and Thomas Piketty examined tax returns from 1913 to 2008. They discovered an interesting pattern. In the late 1970s, the richest 1 percent of American families took in about 9 percent of the nation’s total income; by 2007, the top 1 percent took in 23.5 percent of total income. It’s no coincidence that the last time income was this concentrated was in 1928. I do not mean to suggest that such astonishing consolidations of income at the top directly cause sharp economic declines. The connection is more subtle. Reich has some suggestions how to make things better: THE Great Depression and its aftermath demonstrate that there is only one way back to full recovery: through more widely shared prosperity. In the 1930s, the American economy was completely restructured. New Deal measures — Social Security, a 40-hour work week with time-and-a-half overtime, unemployment insurance, the right to form unions and bargain collectively, the minimum wage — leveled the playing field. In the decades after World War II, legislation like the G.I. Bill, a vast expansion of public higher education and civil rights and voting rights laws further reduced economic inequality. Much of this was paid for with a 70 percent to 90 percent marginal income tax on the highest incomes. And as America’s middle class shared more of the economy’s gains, it was able to buy more of the goods and services the economy could provide. The result: rapid growth and more jobs. By contrast, little has been done since 2008 to widen the circle of prosperity. Health-care reform is an important step forward but it’s not nearly enough. That’s where Obama’s proposals may come in. This news alert just in from Politico.com , according to a White House spokesman: “The president will work with Congress to enact a new up-front investment in our nation’s infrastructure – an investment that would help jump-start additional job creation, while also laying the foundation for future growth. This initial investment would fund improvements in the nation’s surface transportation, as well as our airports and air traffic control system.” The measures include the “establishment of an Infrastructure Bank to leverage federal dollars, and focus on investments of national and regional significance that often fall through the cracks in the current siloed transportation programs,” and “the integration of high-speed rail on an equal footing into the surface transportation program.” It’s hard to tell whether such measures will be enough, and a lot of smart and dumb people will surely be debating this today. But the bottom line is, just encouraging workers to accept a worse lot in life will not reinvigorate the middle class, and it won’t help the economy at large, right? The answer could lie in renewed organizing efforts. Amy B. Dean , co-Author of “A New New Deal: How Regional Activism Will Reshape the American Labor Movement,” in a Huffington Post piece today outlines how unions can help: It takes the organized efforts of working people to reverse these trends toward exclusion and to ensure that each new epoch will bring a shared prosperity. During the transition to the industrial economy, it was not preordained that the auto, steel, or textile industries would provide living wages, health care, pensions, and other benefits that allowed for a stable, thriving middle class in this country. Rather, employees needed to use the institution of collective bargaining to come together, negotiate with their employers, and demand the conditions that would provide a healthy quality of life for working people. Clearly the quality of work life is suffering. The story telling workers to shoot low in my local paper today quoted a worker, Sue Fritz, 49, who works at a state facility helping care for people who have developmental disabilities. “We’re working shorter with less people, and more is being expected of us. It’s a very strenuous day. To have to get up and go back in every morning…you have no choice.” There are choices, and things do change if workers want them to. Let’s go back in time to the first Labor Day. Washington Post blogger Valerie Strauss offers a history lesson : It was first celebrated in this country in the 1880s — at a time when people commonly worked 12-hour days. The first Labor Day rally, in 1882, was in support of an eight-hour workday.

Read the full article →

Dave Johnson: America Is Strong When Our Unions Are Strong

August 30, 2010

This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture as part of the Making It In America project. I am a Fellow with CAF. America was formed as a government of, by and for We, the People . It says so right in the first words of our Constitution. To get that Constitution we rebelled against the King and England’s aristocracy and their corporations, with their concentrated wealth and power. And we continued that fight and over time we extended our system of one-person-one-vote, adding women and minorities to that equation. The fight has gone back and forth. When our democratic government works, it pushes for increasing the protections and benefits of a strong economy for We, the People. This has included, for example, the mandated 40-hour workweek and minimum wages to fight exploitation, both pushed by labor. But at other times our government was “captured” by the power of concentrated wealth and working people are not well-represented. Even then we’re still not necessarily each on our own. During those times we have depended on labor unions to push back against that power of concentrated wealth. Working people can organize into labor unions to bargain for higher wages and better treatment than workers could obtain individually. What difference can unions make? In 1945 labor unions represented about 1/3 of all workers. When American unions were strong working people got the minimum wage, the 40-hour week, weekends off, paid vacations, health insurance, pensions, dignity and respect. This was when America built the middle class that everyone has been taking for granted since. Even the wealthy benefited greatly over the long run as more consumers with more money to spend lifted the whole economy. But what has happened to us since the Reagan Revolution , when concentrated power of the big corporations weakened America’s unions? Since the days of FDR membership in unions has fallen, but in 1980 unions still represented 24% of American workers. The Reagan administration famously launched an all-out assault on organized labor, resulting in membership falling to 16.4% by 1989. And the trend continued: by 1998 union membership fell to 13.9 percent. By 2009 that had decreased to 12.3%, but only 7.6% in the private sector. And here are the results: This is a chart of working people’s share of the benefits from our economy. Note the brief return to normal under Clinton, erased by Bush II. But the assault on working people has recently been bipartisan. Clinton pushed to pass the Bush I-negotiated NAFTA treaty which hammered the bargaining position of workers, while Bush II consolidated the practice of “outsourcing” labor competition from non-democratic countries where workers didn’t have rights or protections. As we all know, since the Reagan Revolution weakened the negotiating power of working people, wealth and income have concentrated at the top, our country’s debt has massively increased, household debt as well, the country is crumbling and everyone except the wealthy few and big corporations is generally worse off. Unions still make a difference . According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, “In 2009, among full-time wage and salary workers, union members had median usual weekly earnings of $908, while those who were not represented by unions had median weekly earnings of $710.” Union members also often have paid vacation, paid sick leave, health insurance and other benefits that non-union workers do not. The difference is dramatic. In March 2009 , 78 percent of union workers were covered by health insurance through their jobs, compared with only 51 percent of nonunion workers. Seventy-seven percent of union workers participate in defined-benefit pension plans, compared with 20 percent of nonunion workers. When you hear someone complain about unions and complain that people in unions are paid better than the rest of us, let them know that they are reaching the wrongest conclusion . They shouldn’t resent union members and complain about their pay, they should join a union and support unions , so they they and everyone else can come out ahead. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary .

Read the full article →

Auto-tune The Financial Crisis: ‘Bankers’ Song’ Takes On The Financial Crisis (VIDEO)

August 27, 2010

Ever heard of Commissioner Rouglas Scholtz-Tweakin of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission? Neither had we. To go along with their new expose on banks’ self-dealing, NPR and ProPublica collaborated with “reporters” at Auto-tune the News to bring us exclusive footage of the “eleventh commissioner” at the private hearings. (Hence, the reference to commissioner Douglas Holtz-Eakin.) In “Bankers’ Song – We Didn’t See It Coming,” we get to see how the FCIC’s top investigator gets some real answers out of Goldman Sachs chief Lloyd Blankfein, Bank Of America CEO Brian Moynihan and former Clinton administration Treasury Secretary Robert Rubi, albeit with tambourines and key-tars. WATCH the video here:

Read the full article →

Robert Reich: Tax Jujitsu: Why Democrats Should Propose a "People’s Tax Cut"

August 24, 2010

Republicans are calling the Democrat’s proposal to end the Bush tax cuts on the richest 3 percent a “tax increase,” and demagoging that it will hurt the economy and small business. This is baloney, to put it politely. Let me count the ways: Bush’s ten-year tax cut was designed to end this year, so it’s not a tax increase. Ending it for the rich simply returns them to the Clinton tax rate, which was hardly confiscatory (reminder: the Clinton years were damn good for business). Small businesses would barely be affected. Only 3 percent of small business owners earn over250,000. And because it’s a “marginal” tax, the Clinton rate would apply only to the portion of their incomes over250,000. Yet extending the Bush tax cut to the richest Americans would give them a36 billion bonus next year. (31 billion of this would go to billionaire households.) And that36 billion would be added to the budget deficit. And it wouldn’t even stimulate demand and jobs, because the very rich save (rather than spend) more of their disposable income than the rest of us. Finally, ending the Bush tax cut for the top is fair. Income inequality has become so grotesque that the top 3 percent of households rake in almost a third of total income (the highest portion since 1928). But by the time Democrats explain all this, it’s too late. The Republican furor over a “tax increase” has framed the debate. Republicans understand the art of tax demagoguery: Put the other side on the defensive by forcing them to explain why a “tax increase” is warranted and they lose regardless. So instead of playing defense, Democrats should go on the attack. Accuse Republicans of being shills for the rich. And don’t stop there. Do tax jujitsu. In addition to ending the Bush tax cut for the rich, put forward another proposal for growing the economy that cuts taxes on lower-income Americans. Democrats should propose eliminating payroll taxes on the first $20,000 of income, and making up the revenue loss by applying payroll taxes to incomes above $250,000. This would give the economy an immediate boost by adding to the paychecks of just about every working American. 80 percent of Americans pay more in payroll taxes than they do in income taxes. And because lower-income people would get most of the benefit, it’s likely to be spent. It would also give employers an extra incentive to hire because they’d save on their share of the payroll tax. And most of the incentive would be directed toward hiring lower-income workers — who have taken the biggest hit on jobs and pay during the recession. It wouldn’t add to the deficit. Lost revenues would be made up by applying payroll taxes to income exceeding $250,000. This is certainly fair. As it is now, the Social Security payroll tax doesn’t apply to any income over $106,000. Having the tax kick in again at $250,000 would draw on the top 3 percent of earners, who (as noted) now rake in a larger portion of total income than they have in more than 80 years. Call it the People’s Tax Cut, and let Republicans explain why they’re against it. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

Read the full article →