1. The world is a dangerous place to live — not because of the people who are evil but because of the people who don't do anything about it. — Albert Einstein

2. The quickest way of ending a war is to lose it. — George Orwell

3. History teaches that war begins when governments believe the price of aggression is cheap. — Ronald Reagan

4. The terror most people are concerned with is the IRS. — Malcolm Forbes

5. There is nothing so incompetent, ineffective, arrogant, expensive, and wasteful as an unreasonable, unaccountable, and unrepentant government monopoly. — A Patriot

6. Visualize World Peace — Through Firepower!

7. Nothing says sincerity like a Carrier Strike Group and a U.S. Marine Air-Ground Task Force.

8. One cannot be reasoned out of a position that he has not first been reasoned into.

Showing posts with label economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economy. Show all posts

2016-10-08

Only In America!

No. 10 — Only in America ... Could politicians talk about the greed of the rich at a $35,000.00 per plate Obama campaign fund-raising event.

No. 9 — Only in America ... Could people claim that the government still discriminates against black Americans when they have a black President, a black Attorney General and roughly 20% of the federal workforce is black  while only 14% of the population is black, 40+% of all federal entitlements goes to black Americans: 3 times the rate that go to whites, and 5 times the rate that go to Hispanics!

No. 8 — Only in America ... Could they have had the two people most responsible for our  tax code, Timothy Geithner (the head of the Treasury Department) and  Charles Rangel (who once ran the Ways and Means Committee), BOTH turn out to be tax cheats who are in favor of higher taxes.

No. 7 — Only in America ... Can they have terrorists kill people in the name of Allah and have the media primarily react by fretting that Muslims might be harmed by the backlash.

No. 6 — Only in America ... Would they make people who want to legally become American citizens wait for years in their home countries and pay tens of thousands of dollars for the privilege, while they discuss letting anyone who sneaks into the country illegally just 'magically' become American citizens. (probably should be number one)

No. 5 — Only in America ... Could the people who believe in balancing the budget and sticking by the country's Constitution be called EXTREMISTS.
   
No. 4 — Only in America ... Could you need to present a driver's license to cash a check or buy alcohol, but not to vote.

No. 3 — Only in America ... Could people demand  the government investigate whether oil companies are gouging the public because the price of gas went up when the return on equity invested in a major U.S. Oil company (Marathon Oil) is less than half of a company making tennis shoes (Nike).

No. 2 — Only in America ... Could you collect more tax dollars from the people than any  nation in recorded history, still spend a Trillion dollars more than it  has per year - for total spending of $7 Million PER  MINUTE, and  complain that it doesn't have nearly enough money.

No. 1 — Only in America .... Could the rich people—who pay 86% of all income taxes—be  accused of not paying their "fair share" by people who don't pay any income taxes at all.

IS THIS A GREAT COUNTRY OR WHAT!

2016-05-08

Trump Could Cause An Unprecedented Global Financial Crisis

Donald Trump Just Threatened To Cause An Unprecedented Global Financial Crisis

There's a big difference between government debt and private debt.

Matthew Yglesias
CNBC
Friday, 6 May 2016

In an interview Thursday on CNBC, Donald Trump broke with tired clichés about the evils of federal debt accumulation. "I am the king of debt," he said. "I love debt. I love playing with it."

But he replaced fearmongering about debt with an even more alarming notion — a bankruptcy of the United States federal government that would incinerate the world economy.

"I would borrow, knowing that if the economy crashed, you could make a deal," Trump said. "And if the economy was good, it was good. So therefore, you can't lose."

With his statement, Trump not only revealed a dangerous ignorance about the operation of the national monetary system and the global economic order, but also offered a brilliant case-study in the profound risks of attempting to apply the logic of a private business enterprise to the task of running the United States of America.

Trump is a businessman, and in terms of thinking like a businessman his idea makes sense.

The interest rate that investors currently charge the United States in order to borrow money is very low. A smart business strategy under those circumstances would be to borrow a bunch of money and undertake a bunch of big investment projects that are somewhat risky but judged to possibly have a huge payoff.

You now have two possible scenarios.

In one scenario, the investments work out and you make a ton of money. In that case, you can easily pay back the loan and everyone wins.

In another scenario, the investments don't work out and you don't make much money. In that case, you objectively can't pay back the loan. You either work out a deal with the people you owe money to in which they accept less than 100 percent of what you owe them (this is called a "haircut") or else you go to bankruptcy court and a judge will force them to accept less than 100 percent.

This is how businesspeople think — especially those who work in capital-intensive industries like real estate. And for good reason. This is the right way to run a real estate company.

Applying this idea to the United States would destroy the economy.  The United States of America, however, is not a real estate development company. If a real estate company defaults on its debts and its creditors lose money, that's their problem. If a bank fails as a result, then it's the FDIC's responsibility to clean it up.

The government doesn't work like that. Right now, people and companies all around the world treat US government bonds as the least risky financial asset in the universe. If the government defaults and banks fail as a result, the government needs to clean up the mess. And if risk-free federal bonds turn out to be risky, then every other financial asset becomes riskier. The interest rate charged on state and local government debt, on corporate debt, and on home loans will spike. Savings will evaporate, and liquidity will vanish as everyone tries to hold on to their cash until they can figure out what's going on.

Every assessment of risk in the financial system is based on the idea that the least risky thing is lending money to the federal government. If that turns out to be much riskier than previously thought, then everything else becomes much riskier too. Business investment will collapse, state and local finances will be crushed, and shockwaves will emanate to a whole range of foreign countries that borrow dollars.

Remember 2008, when the markets went from thinking housing debt was low-risk to thinking it was high-risk, and a global financial crisis was the result? This would be like that, but much worse — US government debt is the very foundation of low-risk investments.

What's especially troubling about Trump's proposal is that there is genuinely no conceivable circumstance under which this kind of default would be necessary. The debt of the federal government consists entirely of obligations to pay US dollars to various individuals and institutions. US dollars are, conveniently, something the US government can create instantly and in infinite quantities at any time.

Of course, it might be undesirable to finance debts by printing money rather than raising taxes or cutting spending. In particular, that kind of money printing could lead to inflation, and even though inflation is very low right now there's no guarantee that it will always be low.

But a little bit of inflation is always going to be strictly preferable to destroying the whole American economy, especially because a debt default would cause a crash in the value of the dollar and spark inflation anyway.

Trump doesn't know what he's talking about.  This is the second time this week that Trump has revealed a profound ignorance of an issue related to government debts.

The early instance in which he kept proposing that Puerto Rico declare bankruptcy even though doing so is illegal was on a question that's very important to Puerto Ricans but not so important to everyone else. It is, however, important to pay attention to how presidential candidates approach issues across the board — and what we saw with Puerto Rico is that Trump approached the issue by simplistically applying business logic without bothering to check whether it applies to the actual situation.

Now in the CNBC interview he's done the exact same thing on a matter of more consequence — not the debt of Puerto Rico but the debt of the United States of America. It's understandable that a real estate developer might assume that what works in real estate would work in economic policy, but it's not true. And Trump hasn't bothered to check or ask anyone about it.

2014-09-15

Wal-Mart vs. The Idiots

1. Americans spend $36,000,000 at Wal-Mart Every hour of every day.

2. This works out to $20,928 profit every minute!

3. Wal-Mart will sell more from January 1 to St. Patrick's Day (March 17th) than Target sells all year.

4. Wal-Mart is bigger than Home Depot + Kroger + Target + Sears + Costco + K-Mart combined.

5. Wal-Mart employs 1.6 million people, is the world's largest private employer, and most speak English.

6. Wal-Mart is the largest company in the history of the world.

7. Wal-Mart now sells more food than Kroger and Safeway combined, and keep in mind they did this in only fifteen years.

8. During this same period, 31 big supermarket chains sought bankruptcy.

9. Wal-Mart now sells more food than any other store in the world.

10. Wal-Mart has approximately 3,900 stores in the USA of which 1,906 are Super Centers; this is 1,000 more than it had five years ago.

11. This year 7.2 billion different purchasing experiences will occur at Wal-Mart stores. (Earth's population is approximately 6.5 Billion.)

12. 90% of all Americans live within fifteen miles of a Wal-Mart.

You may think that I am complaining, but I am really laying the ground work for suggesting that MAYBE we should hire the guys who run Wal-Mart to fix the economy.

This should be read and understood by all Americans: Democrats, Republicans, EVERYONE!!

To President Obama and all 535 voting members of the Legislature:

It is now official that the majority of you are corrupt and ineffective:

a. The U.S. Postal Service was established in 1775. You have had 237 years to get it right and it is broke.

b. Social Security was established in 1935. You have had 77 years to get it right and it is broke.

c. Fannie Mae was established in 1938. You have had 74 years to get it right and it is broke.

d. The War on Poverty started in 1964. You have had 48 years to get it right; $1 trillion of our money is confiscated each year and transferred to "the poor" and they only want more.

e. Medicare and Medicaid were established in 1965. You have had 47 years to get it right and they are broke.

f. Freddie Mac was established in 1970. You have had 42 years to get it right and it is broke.

g. The Department of Energy was created in 1977 to lessen our dependence on foreign oil. It has ballooned to 16,000 employees with a budget of $24 billion a year and we import more oil than ever before. You had 35 years to get it right and it is an abysmal failure.

You have FAILED in every "government service" you have shoved down our throats while overspending our tax dollars.

AND YOU WANT AMERICANS TO BELIEVE YOU CAN BE TRUSTED WITH A GOVERNMENT-RUN HEALTH CARE SYSTEM?

Folks, keep this circulating. It is very well stated. Maybe it will end up in the e-mails of some of our "duly elected' (they never read anything) and their staff will clue them in on how Americans feel.

AND We have lost our minds to "Political Correctness."

We're "broke" & can't help our own Seniors, Veterans, Orphans, Homeless, etc.

In the last months we have provided aid to Haiti, Chile, Japan and Turkey .... and Pakistan ..... previous home of Bin Laden. Literally, BILLIONS of DOLLARS!

Our retired seniors living on a 'fixed income' receive no extra aid nor do they get any special breaks --- nadda --- beyond shopping discounts.

Now, it is estimated that 90,000 illegal alien children under the age of 16 will be in our country by the end of the year.  We will feed them, provide health and education and they will get everything a hard working American citizen gets — just for crossing the border illegally.

Obama is proposing we give millions of dollars to El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala to "help" the children. Do you really think this money is going to get to the children that really need it?

Meanwhile, Mexico is charging for allowing them to pass through Mexico to get to the US border, paid for by the drug cartels. They are keeping the Border Guards busy changing diapers while the drug lords funnel tons of drugs into the 
US to turn our children into zombies.

In GITMO, the 147 Muslim terrorists have one doctor for every prisoner, a state-of-the art hospital system, are provided Korans and prayer rugs, food approved by the Koran, exercise and additional perks.

Our Veterans die waiting to see a VA doctor while the directors get bonuses.

AND Congress wants to freeze Social Security payments...

You do  know that Congress voted themselves a pay raise for 2013? Google this--it's true!



2013-12-10

How and Why the Government Caused the 2008 Financial Crisis

FOREWORD: The 2008 financial crisis cost the U.S. economy more than $22 trillion according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office.


The case for repealing Dodd-Frank


PETER J. WALLISON holds the Arthur F. Burns Chair in Financial Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute. Previously he practiced banking, corporate, and financial law at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher in Washington, D.C., and in New York. He also served as White House Counsel in the Reagan Administration. A graduate of Harvard College, Mr. Wallison received his law degree from Harvard Law School and is a regular contributor to the Wall Street Journal, among many other publications. He is the editor, co-editor, author, or co-author of numerous books, including Ronald Reagan: The Power of Conviction and the Success of His Presidency and Bad History, Worse Policy: How a False Narrative about the Financial Crisis Led to the Dodd-Frank Act.

The following is adapted from a speech delivered at Hillsdale College on November 5, 2013, during a conference entitled “Dodd-Frank: A Law Like No Other,” co-sponsored by the Center for Constructive Alternatives and the Ludwig Von Mises Lecture Series.

The 2008 financial crisis was a major event, equivalent in its initial scope—if not its duration—to the Great Depression of the 1930s. At the time, many commentators said that we were witnessing a crisis of capitalism, proof that the free market system was inherently unstable. Government officials who participated in efforts to mitigate its effects claim that their actions prevented a complete meltdown of the world’s financial system, an idea that has found acceptance among academic and other observers, particularly the media. These views culminated in the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act that is founded on the notion that the financial system is inherently unstable and must be controlled by government regulation. 

We will never know, of course, what would have happened if these emergency actions had not been taken, but it is possible to gain an understanding of why they were considered necessary—that is, the causes of the crisis. 

Why is it important at this point to examine the causes of the crisis? After all, it was five years ago, and Congress and financial regulators have acted, or are acting, to prevent a recurrence. Even if we can’t pinpoint the exact cause of the crisis, some will argue that the new regulations now being put in place under Dodd-Frank will make a repetition unlikely. Perhaps. But these new regulations have almost certainly slowed economic growth and the recovery from the post-crisis recession, and they will continue to do so in the future. If regulations this pervasive were really necessary to prevent a recurrence of the financial crisis, then we might be facing a legitimate trade-off in which we are obliged to sacrifice economic freedom and growth for the sake of financial stability. But if the crisis did not stem from a lack of regulation, we have needlessly restricted what most Americans want for themselves and their children.

It is not at all clear that what happened in 2008 was the result of insufficient regulation or an economic system that is inherently unstable. On the contrary, there is compelling evidence that the financial crisis was the result of the government’s own housing policies.  These in turn, as we will see, were based on an idea—still popular on the political left—that underwriting standards in housing finance are discriminatory and unnecessary. In today’s vernacular, it’s called “opening the credit box.” These policies, as I will describe them, were what caused the insolvency of the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and ultimately the financial crisis. They are driven ideologically by the left, but the political muscle in Washington is supplied by what we should call the Government Mortgage Complex—the realtors, the homebuilders, and the banks—for whom freely available government-backed mortgage money is a source of great profit. 

The Federal Housing Administration, or FHA, established in 1934, was authorized to insure mortgages up to 100 percent, but it required a 20 percent down payment and operated with very few delinquencies for 25 years. However, in the serious recession of 1957, Congress loosened these standards to stimulate the growth of housing, moving down payments to three percent between 1957 and 1961.

Predictably, this resulted in a boom in FHA insured mortgages and a bust in the late '60s. The pattern keeps recurring, and no one seems to remember the earlier mistakes. We loosen mortgage standards, there’s a bubble, and then there’s a crash. Other than the taxpayers, who have to cover the government’s losses, most of the people who are hurt are those who bought in the bubble years, and found—when the bubble deflated—that they couldn’t afford their homes.

Exactly this happened in the period leading up to the 2008 financial crisis, again as a result of the government’s housing policies. Only this time, as I’ll describe, the government’s policies were so pervasive and were pursued with such vigor by two administrations that they caused a financial crisis as well as the usual cyclical housing market collapse. 

Congress planted the seeds of the crisis in 1992, with the enactment of what were called “affordable housing” goals for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Before 1992, these two firms dominated the housing finance market, especially after the federal savings and loan industry—another government mistake—had collapsed in the late 1980s. Fannie and Freddie’s role, as initially envisioned and as it developed until 1992, was to conduct what were called secondary market operations, to create a liquid market in mortgages. They were prohibited from making loans themselves, but they were authorized to buy mortgages from banks and other lenders. Their purchases provided cash for lenders and thus encouraged home ownership by making more funds available for more mortgages. Although Fannie and Freddie were shareholder-owned, they were chartered by Congress and granted numerous government privileges. For example, they were exempt from state and local taxes and from SEC regulations. The president appointed a minority of the members of their boards of directors, and they had a $2.25 billion line of credit at the Treasury. As a result, market participants believed that Fannie and Freddie were government-backed, and would be rescued by the government if they ever encountered financial difficulties.

This widely assumed government support enabled these GSEs to borrow at rates only slightly higher than the U.S. Treasury itself, and with these low-cost funds they were able to drive all competition out of the secondary mortgage market for middle-class mortgages—about 70 percent of the $11 trillion housing finance market. Between 1991 and 2003, Fannie and Freddie’s market share increased from 28 to 46 percent. From this dominant position, they were able to set the underwriting standards for the market as a whole; few mortgage lenders would make middle-class mortgages that could not be sold to Fannie or Freddie. 

Over time, these two GSEs had learned from experience what underwriting standards kept delinquencies and defaults low. These required down payments of 10 to 20 percent, good credit histories for borrowers, and low debt-to-income ratios after the mortgage was closed. These were the foundational elements of what was called a prime loan or a traditional mortgage, and they contributed to a stable mortgage market through the 1970s and most of the 1980s, with mortgage defaults generally under one percent in normal times and only slightly higher in rough economic waters. Despite these strict credit standards, the homeownership rate in the United States remained relatively high, hovering around 64 percent for the 30 years between 1964 and 1994.  

In a sense, government backing of the GSEs and their market domination was their undoing. Community activists had kept the two firms in their sights for many years, arguing that Fannie and Freddie’s underwriting standards were so tight that they were keeping many low- and moderate-income families from buying homes. The fact that the GSEs had government support gave Congress a basis for intervention, and in 1992 Congress directed the GSEs to meet a quota of loans to low- and middle-income borrowers when they acquired mortgages. The initial quota was 30 percent: In any year, at least 30 percent of the loans Fannie and Freddie acquired must have been made to low- and moderate-income borrowers—defined as borrowers at or below the median income level in their communities. Although 30 percent was not a difficult goal, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) was given authority to increase the goals, and Congress cleared the way for far more ambitious requirements by suggesting in the legislation that down payments could be reduced below five percent without seriously impairing mortgage quality. In succeeding years, HUD raised the goal, with many intermediate steps, to 42 percent in 1996, 50 percent in 2000, and 56 percent in 2008.

In order to meet these ever-increasing goals, Fannie and Freddie had to reduce their underwriting standards. In fact that was explicitly HUD’s purpose, as many statements by the department at the time made clear. As early as 1995, the GSEs were buying mortgages with three percent down payments, and by 2000 Fannie and Freddie were accepting loans with zero down payments. At the same time, they were also compromising other underwriting standards, such as borrower credit standards, in order to find the subprime and other non-traditional mortgages they needed to meet the affordable housing goals.

These new easy credit terms spread far beyond the low-income borrowers that the loosened standards were intended to help. Mortgage lending is a competitive business; once Fannie and Freddie started to reduce their underwriting standards, many borrowers who could have afforded prime mortgages sought the easier terms now available so they could buy larger homes with smaller down payments.

Thus, home buyers above the median income were gaining leverage through lower down payments, and loans to them were decreasing in quality. In many cases, these homeowners were withdrawing cash from the equity in their homes through cash-out refinancing as home prices went up and interest rates declined in the mid-2000s. By 2007, 37 percent of loans with down payments of three percent went to borrowers with incomes above the median. 

As a result of the gradual deterioration in loan quality over the preceding 16 years, by 2008, just before the crisis, 56 percent of all mortgages in the U.S.—32 million loans—were subprime or otherwise low quality. Of this 32 million, 76 percent were on the books of government agencies or institutions like the GSEs that were controlled by government policies. This shows incontrovertibly where the demand for these mortgages originated. 

With all the new buyers entering the market because of the affordable housing goals, housing prices began to rise. By 2000, the developing bubble was already larger than any bubble in U.S. history, and it kept growing until 2007, when—at nine times the size of any previous bubble—it finally topped out and housing prices began to fall.

Housing bubbles tend to suppress delinquencies and defaults while the bubble is growing. This happens because as prices rise, it becomes possible for borrowers who are having difficulty meeting their mortgage obligations to refinance or sell the home for more than the principal amount of the mortgage. In these conditions, potential investors in mortgages or in mortgage-backed securities receive a strong affirmative signal; they see high-yielding mortgages—loans that reflect the riskiness of lending to a borrower with a weak credit history—but the expected delinquencies and defaults have not occurred. They come to think, “This time it’s different”—that the risks of investing in subprime or other weak mortgages are not as great as they’d thought. Housing bubbles are also pro-cyclical. When they are growing, they feed on themselves, as buyers bid up prices so they won’t lose a home they want. Appraisals, based on comparable homes, keep pace with rising prices. And loans keep pace with appraisals, until home prices get so high that buyers can’t afford them no matter how lenient the terms of the mortgage. But when bubbles begin to deflate, the process reverses. It then becomes impossible to refinance or sell a home when the mortgage is larger than the home’s appraised value. Financial losses cause creditors to pull back and tighten lending standards, recessions frequently occur, and would-be purchasers can’t get financing. Sadly, many are likely to have lost their jobs in the recession while being unable to move where jobs are more plentiful, because they couldn’t sell their homes without paying off the mortgage balances. In these circumstances, many homeowners are tempted to walk away from the mortgage, knowing that in most states the lender has recourse only to the home itself. 

With the largest housing bubble in history deflating in 2007, and more than half of all mortgages made to borrowers who had weak credit or little equity in their homes, the number of delinquencies and defaults in 2008 was unprecedented.

One immediate effect was the collapse of the market for mortgage-backed securities that were issued by banks, investment banks, and subprime lenders, and held by banks, financial institutions, and other investors around the world.

These were known as private label securities or private mortgage-backed securities, to distinguish them from mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie and Freddie. Investors, shocked by the sheer number of mortgage defaults that seemed to be underway, fled the market for private label securities; there were now no buyers, causing a sharp drop in market values for these securities.

This had a disastrous effect on financial institutions. Since 1994, they had been required to use what was called “fair value accounting” in setting the balance sheet value of their assets and liabilities. The most significant element of fair value accounting was the requirement that assets and liabilities be marked-to-market, meaning that the balance sheet value of assets and liabilities was to reflect their current market value instead of their amortized cost or other valuation methods. 

Marking-to-market worked effectively as long as there was a market for the assets in question, but it was destructive when the market collapsed in 2007. With buyers pulling away, there were only distress-level prices for private mortgage-backed securities. Although there were alternative ways for assets to be valued in the absence of market prices, auditors—worried about their potential liability if they permitted their clients to overstate assets in the midst of the financial crisis—would not allow the use of these alternatives. Accordingly, financial firms were compelled to write down significant portions of their private mortgage-backed securities assets and take losses that substantially reduced their capital positions and created worrisome declines in earnings. When Lehman Brothers, a major investment bank, declared bankruptcy, a full-scale panic ensued in which financial institutions started to hoard cash. They wouldn’t lend to one another, even overnight, for fear that they would not have immediate cash available when panicky investors or depositors came for it. This radical withdrawal of liquidity from the market was the financial crisis.

Thus, the crisis was not caused by insufficient regulation, let alone by an inherently unstable financial system. It was caused by government housing policies that forced the dominant factors in the trillion dollar housing market—Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac—to reduce their underwriting standards. These lax standards then spread to the wider market, creating an enormous bubble and a financial system in which well more than half of all mortgages were subprime or otherwise weak. When the bubble deflated, these mortgages failed in unprecedented numbers, driving down housing values and the values of mortgage-backed securities on the balance sheets of financial institutions. With these institutions looking unstable and possibly insolvent, a full-scale financial panic ensued when Lehman Brothers, a large financial firm, failed.

Given these facts, further regulation of the financial system through the Dodd-Frank Act was a disastrously wrong response. The vast new regulatory restrictions in the act have created uncertainty and sapped the appetite for risk-taking that had once made the U.S. financial system the largest and most successful in the world.

What, then, should have been done? The answer is a thorough reorientation of the U.S. housing finance system away from the kind of government control that makes it hostage to narrow political imperatives—that is, providing benefits to constituents—rather than responsive to the competition and efficiency imperatives of a market system. This does not mean that we should have no regulation. What it means is that we should have only regulation that is necessary when the self-correcting elements in a market system fail. We can see exactly that kind of failure in the effect of a bubble on housing prices. A bubble energizes itself by reducing defaults as prices rise. This sends the wrong signal to investors: Instead of increasing risk, they tend to see increasing opportunity. They know that in the past there have been painful bubble deflations in housing, but it is human nature to believe that “this time it’s different.” Requiring that only high quality mortgages are eligible for securitization would be the kind of limited regulatory intervention that addresses the real problem, not the smothering regulation in Dodd-Frank that depresses economic growth. 

The Affordable Care Act, better known as ObamaCare, has received all the attention as the worst expression of the Obama presidency, but Dodd-Frank deserves a look. Just as ObamaCare was the wrong prescription for health care, Dodd-Frank was based on a faulty diagnosis of the financial crisis. Until that diagnosis is corrected—until it is made clear to the American people that the financial crisis was caused by the government rather than by deregulation or insufficient regulation—economic growth will be impeded. It follows that when the true causes of the financial crisis have been made clear, it will become possible to repeal Dodd-Frank.

This has happened before. During the 1930s, the dominant view was that the Depression was caused by excessive competition. It seems crackpot now, but the New Dealers thought that too much competition drove down prices, caused firms to fail, and thus increased unemployment. The Dodd-Frank of the time was the National Industrial Recovery Act. Although it was eventually overturned by the Supreme Court, its purpose was to cartelize industry and limit competition so that businesses could raise their prices. It was only in the 1960s, when Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz showed that the Depression was caused by the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy, that national policies began to move away from regulation and toward competition. What followed was a flood of deregulation—of trucking, air travel, securities, and communications, among others—which has given us the Internet, affordable air travel for families instead of just business, securities transactions at a penny a share, and Fedex. Ironically, however, the regulation of banking increased, accounting for the problems of the industry today.

If the American people come to recognize that the financial crisis was caused by the housing policies of their own government—rather than insufficient regulation or the inherent instability of the U.S. financial system—Dodd-Frank will be seen as an illegitimate response to the crisis. Only then will it be possible to repeal or substantially modify this repressive law. 

AFTERWORD:  Elizabeth Warren has stated that if Dodd-Frank were in place in 2007, it would NOT have prevented the 2008 financial crisis. 

2013-03-27

Obama Is Robbing You Blind!

How's this for Big Government!

 
http://www.snopes.com/politics/obama/maliamexico.asp


  Spring Break for the "First Child"
Malia on break in Mexico

After driving the U.S. more deeply into debt than any other President,
this should make you shake your head. If George Bush's daughters or
Bill Clinton's daughter had done this, it would have been all over the
news and the voter's would have been calling for heads to roll 24/7.
But with the chosen one, you hear nothing on the major media.

Want to know where Obama's 13 year-old daughter went with 12 friends?
On "spring break" in Oaxaca Mexico, on your dime.
She took two jets, 12 friends and 25 secret service men.
A thirteen year-old? What the?
Why haven't you heard about it?

The Obama Administration has had the Secret Service scouring the web
ordering that any website mentioning this be taken down because letting
the travel plans out could have endangered the president's daughter's
security.

Nonsense, the "royal couple" just want to hide the way they are ripping
off the U.S. taxpayer. Only a few Canadian Web-sites still have it up.
(both below)

The Obama's are laughing at the "suckers" who are funding their
Imperial Lifestyle.

This trip cost more than most Americans make in their entire lifetimes

http://www.edmontonjournal.com/travel/Obama+daughter+spends+spring+break+Mexico/6323773/story.htmlhttp://www.snopes.com/politics/obama/maliamexico.asp

PLEASE PASS THIS ON IT NEEDS TO GO VIRAL!!!



  

2013-01-29

Economic Armageddon


AS THELMA SAID TO LOUISE, "THERE IS A POINT BEYOND WHICH WE CANNOT RETURN."

AHEAD OF THE CURVE
Last Update: 29-Jan-13 08:58 ET
Free Trial of Briefing In Play

The Real Battle In Washington
The real battle in Washington is not the debate over the debt ceiling. Everyone knows that it will be raised eventually. The real battle is whether the deficit is important – or not. 


If The Debt Ceiling Is Not An Issue 

The debt ceiling seems like it would be an important issue, but only if you embrace the idea that deficit spending is both dangerous, at excessive levels, and should be minimized, at least over time. 
If, for example, a core belief is that deficit spending can continue indefinitely, then the debt ceiling is simply a matter of paperwork. 
This seems to be the negotiating position of President Obama currently, on the deficit ceiling. 
The Republicans have been trying to use the impending debt ceiling as a negotiating bargaining chip. 
However, President Obama has realized that the Republicans have virtually no negotiation leverage with the debt ceiling. 
After all, if President Obama refuses to negotiate spending issues as part of raising the debt ceiling, it is virtually certain that the Republicans would be blamed for any default that the US might incur on unpaid debt. 
President Obama, with the help of the media, would be able to position any default as one that would be the Republicans fault. He might even be willing to let the US default if it could be clearly blamed on the Republicans. After all, the default would likely be temporary. 
If so, President Obama might be able to use this as leverage against Republicans in the 2014 elections. 
In fact, President Obama has little to lose in refusing to make spending reduction an issue in Washington.  
The Republicans have been slow to realize this, but that is because President Obama, who was once critical of the Bush administration’s deficit spending, actually does not seem to feel that deficit spending is a problem to be addressed. 


If Deficit Spending Is Not A Problem  

Who believes that deficit spending is not an issue? 
The leading public advocate of the benefits of deficit spending is Paul Krugman, Nobel Prize winning economist and a devote supporter of the Obama administration. 
Mr. Krugman has argued for a long time that the solution to the slow economy is even more deficit spending than has been done before. His main criticism of the stimulus spending of 2009 and 2010 has been that it was far too small. 
The question of how such spending is necessary to actually produce economic growth never seems to be brought up, but Mr. Krugman is adamant that the stimulus spending to date has not been enough. 


President Obama’s View 

The real question in the deficit spending debate is whether President Obama views the deficit as a problem. 
In the past, he was a vocal critic of the Bush administration’s deficit spending. 
In 2006, then Senator Obama made the following statement, when a vote on raising the debt ceiling: 
“The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies. … Increasing America’s debt weakens us domestically and internationally. Leadership means that ‘the buck stops here. Instead, Washington is shifting the burden of bad choices today onto the backs of our children and grandchildren. America has a debt problem and a failure of leadership. Americans deserve better.”
However, today, President Obama has been encouraging increased investment in education, infrastructure, without any reductions in spending for persons who receive government aid. 
This essentially could be interpreted to mean that President Obama does not really care about deficit spending, but without any recent  clear statements on whether he views deficit spending as an issue or not it is hard to speculate. 
We tend to think that President Obama is now more concerned with leaving his own personal lasting imprint upon the Presidency – and America – than he is with bring financial disciplines to Washington. 
If anything, President Obama probably believes that increased taxes are enough to keep deficit issues at bay. 
This was certainly his rallying call during the election process, when he repeatedly stressed the idea that the “rich should pay their fair share.” 
While such a viewpoint was a powerful campaign issue, as it aroused emotions, from a financial perspective, it was relatively minor. 
As we pointed out in an Ahead of the Curve column dated December 5, 2012 “The Absurdity Of The Fiscal Cliff Debate”, the argument over taxation of incomes over $250,000 only amounted to $42 billion worth of revenue in 2013 (assuming no change in behavior by taxpayers due to the new rates). 
What this meant is that the issues of deficit spending got swept under the rug of financially insignificant emotional issues during the campaign. 
This leaves the question of President Obama’s view on deficit spending largely unknown right now. 
It certainly doesn’t seem to be of the same importance as it is to Republicans.  
What this all means for the budget negotiations in the upcoming year is unpredictability. 


Does It Matter? 

So far, the markets have seemed to tolerate unpredictability in Washington’s fiscal direction, but we wonder how long such a patience will last. 
It is beyond the scope of this single article to discuss why deficit spending is an issue that must be addressed somehow. 
We have long argued that both new revenues and spending cuts must be addressed in order to avoid a runaway financial situation. 
The real problem is that deficit spending becomes an important issue when the purchasers of US debt begin to make demands on the social structure of the US. 
This is what has caused the turmoil  in Greece in recent years.  
There is an argument that the US could never become Greece, but if purchasers of US debt began to demand 7% interest rates, as purchasers of Greek debt did several years ago, the US might well lose control of the financial future.  
To rescue Greece, the European Union began to make demands on Greece to bring the annual deficit spending to a “realistic” level of 3% of GDP. 
The US currently has run a deficit spending of almost 10% of GDP for four years. 
The long term future of the US depends upon the credibility of the US dollar in the rest of the world. 
Extensive deficit spending slowly weakens that position over time. While we haven’t reached the critical point were confidence collapses, and a shift to some other global currency as the standard occurs, we are headed in that direction.  
How far away from the point we are, is unknown. 
The problem, of course, is that once the critical point of confidence in the US dollar is breached, it cannot be easily recovered. We can only hope that the political divisiveness in Washington doesn't bring us so close that we slip over the edge without intention from either side of the political argument. 
Comments may be emailed to the author, Robert V. Green, at aheadofthecurve@briefing.com 


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2013-01-02

Fiasco Summary


THE BIG PICTURE
Last Update: 02-Jan-13 13:36 ET
Congress Strikes a Deal That Isn't Done
You have probably heard by now that Congress reached a deal to avert the fiscal cliff. The process of getting there wasn't pretty, which was no surprise, and the end result was less than expected, which was also no surprise. The stock market's initial response to the deal has been decidedly bullish. Again, that is not a surprise.
While we typically post The Big Picture on Monday, the developments in Washington have mandated a post today.
To be succinct, we understand why the stock market is rallying today even if we don't exactly understand what all of the hoopla is about. The deal that got done was another silly, last-minute drama scripted by Congress that dealt with tax rates, but essentially kicked the can down the road with respect to needed spending cuts and entitlement reform.
Deal Provisions 
The main provision of the deal calls for the income tax rate to go up to 39.6% for individuals making more than $400,000 a year and households with a combined income of more than $450,000. The lower tax rates below those income thresholds will be made permanent. Other provisions include:
  • A bump in the capital gains and dividend tax rates from 15% to 20% for individuals making more than $400,000 a year and households making more than $450,000 a year 
  • A one-year extension of unemployment benefits for the long-term unemployed
  • A two-month delay in the $109 bln sequestration, which forced discretionary and non-discretionary spending cuts
  • A permanent fix for the alternative minimum tax
  • An increase in the estate tax from 35% to 40%, with the first $5 mln exempt for individual estates
  • A five-year extension of the child tax credit, the earned income tax credit, and the tax credit up to $2500 for college tuition
  • A one-year extension of the tax credit for R&D costs and the tax credit for renewable energy 
  • A one-year provision that allows businesses to write off 50% of new investments immediately
  • A one-year deferral of the 27% cut in Medicare payments to doctors 
It is estimated that $600 bln in new revenue will be raised over 10 years.  According to the non-partisan Tax Policy Center, $199 bln in new tax revenue will be collected in 2013.
First, the Good News
The good news, economically speaking, is that income tax rates are not going to increase for 99% of taxpayers.  That realization is at the heart of today's stock market rally.  All else equal, it is a compromise component that will prevent the economy from slipping back into a recession.
Things rarely turn out to be equal, though, so we can't categorically rule out the possibility that the US economy will slip into a recession this year.
We digress.
The other good news, relatively speaking, is that the maximum capital gains and dividend tax rates for high-income earners only went from 15% to 20% (it will end up being 23.8% after the surcharge to help pay for the Affordable Care Act).  There were concerns the dividend tax rate could be set at the highest tax rate for high-income earners, or 43.4% after the surcharge is included.
There are two benefits, therefore, tied to the capital gains and dividend tax rates: (1) there is the certainty of knowing what the rate will be and (2) the rate is not nearly as high as some participants feared it might be.
The latter consideration in particular should be regarded as a positive for dividend-paying stocks.
The accelerated depreciation and the extension of the tax credit for R&D costs were added bonuses for businesses.
...And Now the Bad News
Even though income tax rates will not be going up for the vast majority of taxpayers, all private-sector workers will see the rate on their Social Security payroll tax revert to 6.2% from 4.2%.   For a worker making $50,000, that amounts to $1,000 more coming out of his or her paycheck this year versus last year.
Another negative is that we don't think businesses are necessarily going to feel inspired to start spending liberally and hiring more aggressively. 
The tax rate headlines might sound good, but the fact of the matter is that the expiration of the lower Social Security payroll tax and the imposition of higher tax rates for high-income earners will be a drag on the economy by reducing personal consumption.  That's one issue. 
The other issue is that Congress and the White House are going to be battling again very soon on spending cuts, entitlement reform, and the debt ceiling.  They shouldn't be intertwined, yet they will be since the debt ceiling is going to be used as leverage by the GOP for extracting spending cuts. 
President Obama has already said he won't negotiate around the debt ceiling, so it is pretty clear that battle lines are being drawn and that the next few months in Washington could be a bloody mess on the legislative front.
That means political uncertainty will continue to act as a deterrent, or simply a convenient excuse, for businesses to defer spending decisions.   At the same time, it will pose a real risk of another downgrade to the US credit rating that could roil capital markets.
Bad Is Better than Worse
With the deal that got done, the prospect of a worst-case recession scenario was reduced to a bad scenario of lower economic growth.  Accordingly, the equity risk premium has come down in response to the tax rate compromise since bad is better than worse.  It's a relative assessment, yet all things are relative for equity market participants.
In that regard, longer-dated US Treasuries are getting clipped pretty good today, but perhaps not as much as one might think if there was a sense that Congress provided market participants with a true solution versus a shotgun compromise on the political chip every voter can relate to -- income tax rates. 
The 10-year Treasury note is down 21 ticks.  It's a notable drop, but it's not a head-for the-safe haven exit kind of move.
There is more work to be done in Washington to reduce our deficit and debt -- a lot more work.  That is a daunting thought for a variety of reasons and it is a sobering reminder to keep one's enthusiasm in check over the deal that got done, which was really only a half deal that garnered 167 "No" votes in the House of Representatives.
What It All Means 
The equity market has started the new year on a banner note, but the next few months could be fairly turbulent as fourth quarter earnings are reported and as the debate over spending cuts unfolds in public fashion.
The battle over spending cuts is setting up to be even more acrimonious than the battle over tax rates.
With that in mind, we feel compelled to reiterate our view that a blended investment strategy for the equity component of one's portfolio could make sense entering 2013. 
That is, don't overweight or underweight cyclical and countercyclical sectors exclusively. 
Maintain a balanced mix, as that will allow for participation in upside moves like the one seen today and help mitigate losses in down markets that might be seen in the near future if partisan politics takes us to the brink again of possibly defaulting on our debt, which is at $16.3 trillion and counting.

2012-12-18


Obama and Boehner, Both Reckless Spenders

In negotiations over the so-called fiscal cliff, U.S. President Barack Obama is calling for $1.4 trillion in new tax revenue over the next decade.
The Republican opposition, led by House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, has signaled that the Republicans could stomach generating as much as $800 billion in new revenue over the next decade, or half of Obama’s number.
Such a large difference obscures a more fundamental agreement: Neither side is interested in addressing the central role federal spending plays in creating persistent deficits and, more important, damping economic growth.
The deficit for fiscal 2012, which ended on Sept. 30, came in at about $1.1 trillion, marking the fourth consecutive year that the nation has posted a trillion-dollar-plus spending gap. Contrary to what Dick Cheney said when he was vice president, deficits do matter.
Under the most recent budget plans of House Republicans and Obama, the federal government will spend from $40 trillion to $47 trillion over the next decade. Yet in the current negotiations, Boehner has called for only $800 billion in spending cuts and Obama $400 billion, most of which would be pushed off until 2022 or later -- tantamount to saying they won’t happen at all. Neither side’s long-term spending plans envision a balanced budget in the next 10 years.

Reduced Growth

In a paper released this year, economists Carmen M. Reinhart, Vincent R. Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff said that periods of debt overhang -- when accumulated gross debt exceeds 90 percent of a country’s total economic activity for five or more consecutive years -- reduce annual economic growth by more than one percentage point for decades.
Over 20 years, the authors write, there can be a “massive cumulative output loss” that reduces gains by 25 percent or more. The U.S. went over the 90 percent threshold after the 2008 financial crisis. At $16.3 trillion, our current gross federal debt represents more than 100 percent of 2012’s total economic activity or gross domestic product.
Obama hasn’t explained precisely how higher tax rates on a small fraction of the population will do much to improve the country’s balance sheet. According to the Congressional Budget Office, increasing taxes on the wealthiest Americans to Clinton- era levels will raise $220 billion over four years -- $55 billion a year on average through 2016, the last year of Obama’s presidency.
Over that same period, the White House Office of Management and Budget estimates federal spending at $15.8 trillion, or almost $4 trillion a year on average, and annual deficits of $700 billion.
A little history: 2000 was about the best year ever for federal revenue since 1950. The government raked in slightly more than $2 trillion in nominal dollars and $2.3 trillion in inflation-adjusted (fiscal year 2005) dollars. When measured as a percentage of GDP, revenue reached 20.6 percent, the highest fraction ever recorded in peacetime. Although it’s true that receipts in 2006 and 2007 topped the $2.3 trillion mark in constant 2005 dollars, those totals represent smaller fractions of GDP, 18.2 percent and 18.5 percent, respectively. So it’s fair to call the $2.3 trillion in constant dollars a high-water mark. All these figures are drawn from the 2013 Historical Tables generated by the OMB; see table 1.3.
The high level of revenue -- both in constant dollars and as a percentage of GDP -- was reached in a roaring economy. And all Americans were taxed at significantly higher levels than they are now.

Income Pyramid

Whatever you think about the decline of rates under President George W. Bush, it made the U.S. tax system more progressive by reducing the burden on middle- and lower-income people. That’s one reason that singling out high-income earners for increases this time will yield such little revenue: All of us paid higher taxes then. It wasn’t just the swells at the top of the income pyramid.
Even if government could attain the revenue levels of seven years ago, it wouldn’t come close to covering spending, which crossed the $3 trillion mark, in inflation-adjusted dollars, in 2009. Neither Republicans nor Democrats are suggesting reducing total year-over-year spending.
The OMB estimates that annual government spending from 2013 to 2016 will average $3.25 trillion in 2005 dollars, or 22.7 percent of GDP. Whether measured in constant dollars or as a percentage of the economy, the government has never once reached that level of revenue, much less sustained it for a number of years.
Given low estimates for economic growth over the coming years, any attempt to reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio before Obama leaves office will thus require significant spending cuts in the near term.
Both the president and members of Congress worry that rapid spending cuts would cause a new recession or slow down the recovery. Such fears are overstated.
In the 1990sCanada, for instance, reduced debt-to-GDP ratios through an aggressive combination of actual, year-over- year spending cuts and higher taxes. The result wasn’t malaise but a burst in activity.
The same happened in the U.S. right after World War II. In 1944 and 1945, annual government spending (in 2005 dollars) averaged about $1 trillion and represented more than 40 percent of GDP. By 1947, it had plummeted to $345 billion in 2005 dollars and 14 percent of GDP. Even facing the demobilization of millions of soldiers, the economy soared and unemployment fell despite almost universal fears that the opposite would happen.
Such outcomes are not flukes. Research by economists Alberto F. Alesina and Silvia Ardagna underscored that fiscal adjustments achieved through spending cuts rather than tax increases are less likely to cause recessions, and, if they do, the slowdowns are mild and short-lived.

Spending Reductions

What’s more, when spending reductions are accompanied by policies such as the liberalization of trade and labor markets, they are more likely to have a positive impact on growth.
While many economists -- and certainly all politicians -- worry that turning off the spigot of public spending will shrink an economy (and anger constituents receiving the cash), the opposite is likely to be true.
In an October 2012 study published in the National Bureau of Economic Research, Alesina and Ardagna point to Canada (1993- 1997), Sweden(1993-1998) and the U.K. (1994-2000). In these cases, spending cuts had a positive effect on private investment while improving consumer and business confidence by reducing the expectation of higher taxes.
Obama said in September that he would cut $2.50 in spending for every new dollar of tax revenue -- what he has called a “balanced approach.” Yet his proposal for dealing with the fiscal cliff -- $1.4 trillion in new tax revenue and $400 billion in spending cuts -- represents a $3.50 increase in taxes for every $1 of cuts, assuming the reductions take place.
As the history of deficit-reduction frameworks (including those signed by Republican Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush) has shown, when immediate rate increases were “balanced” by spending cuts down the road, the spending cuts are never made.
In any case, recent experience shows that even if Obama’s 2.5-to-1 ratio of spending cuts to revenue increases came to pass by some miracle, it is far too timid. Economist David Henderson estimates that during the 1990s retrenchment in Canada, the government cut spending by $6 to $7 for every new dollar of revenue it raised.
Obama and Boehner have been largely silent on the specifics of their cuts, though both seem bent on slicing off parts of old-age entitlements such as Medicare and Social Security long after they are out of office.
The best holiday gift the president and Congress could give the country is to spend the final weeks of 2012 working on an honest plan to cut spending here and now.
(Nick Gillespie is the editor in chief of Reason.com and the co-author of “The Declaration of Independents: How Libertarian Politics Can Fix What’s Wrong with America.” Veronique de Rugy is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. The opinions expressed are their own.)