Wednesday, August 19, 2009

August 19 2009: A credit crunch on crack


Dorothea Lange Cotton June 1935
Somewhere in California. "Motherless migrant children. They work in the cotton."


Ilargi: Shanghai stocks are taking a whoopin’. China's exports are down 23% from a year ago. Direct foreign investment in the country decreased by 35.7% over that same timeframe. Much of the downside has been papered over so far in 2009 by massive amounts of government stimulus and government-ordered lending by the banking system. But those sorts of policies are extremely costly and it looks like they may have already seen their peak. To wit: bank lending in China was down 77% from June to July.

And sure, it is -even- easier for Beijing to nationalize banks then it is for the Oval Office. However, those banks have a longstanding reputation for carrying far too many bad loans on their books, and very few people outside of the Forbidden City would believe that the giant lending wave of the first half of this year was based on substantially sounder principles. In fact, it's far more likely that the 77% decline is due to the highest leaders ordering a halt to -much- more of the same.

The question is justified, therefore, where China can go from here. It needs an estimated 8% growth rate in its GDP just to prevent unemployment from rising. Beijing keeps proudly announcing just such a number, which seems implausible in the face of plummeting exports But even if it is just a little bit true, it can only be for the same reason the US has managed to keep its GDP from tumbling double-digit wise.

That is, by assuming debt. By pumping money, one way or another, into companies that would otherwise fail. By creating and maintaining jobs that provide no realistic contributions to the economy. China has done it for half a year. Now the lending frenzy has been stopped short. So once more, the question is: where can China go from here?

In the end and down the line, Beijing's and Washington's policies are based on the same underlying assumptions, the same hopes and the same faith. The return of growth and the resumption of trade. And both face the same dire consequences if growth and trade don't make a come-back, soon. Like all the other countries, just about every single one, that refuse to prepare for the possibility that trade and growth won't be back, at least for a long time.

And that is not just some remote possibility. no matter how desperate the denials are. These days, all of a sudden, people all over are waking up to the option of deflation. Many don't yet seem to understand what it is, or what it will mean once it grabs a hold of an economy, as evidenced by a Bloomberg pundit, among others, singing the praises of deflation.

For them, it means prices will come down, and that seems a good thing. What they don't see is that what deflation really means is they won't have a penny left in their pockets to buy any of the cheaper goods. Over the past 20 months or so we've had a first glance at the effects of contracting credit, and the job losses and foreclosures it has caused. Deflation will be just like that, only many times faster and stronger, a credit crunch on crack.

Though they're generally not recognized as such, and denied where they are, the first steps of deflation are very much already here, the signs are everywhere. And there's no reason to presume that it will be gentler on China than it will be on the US or any other country.







Deflation or Inflation?
The one question I seem to get more than any is on (Hyper) Inflation versus Deflation. As previously noted, we clearly are in a Deflationary party of the cycle now.

While inflation may occur ion the future, and the possibility exists for Hyper-Inflation, these are merely potential issues down the road. As  these two charts show, we now have Deflation, are likely to see it continue for some time into the future:
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Near Record Deflation Rates At All Levels

cpi-ppi
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US capacity utilization leads core inflation by about a year

cap-util-leads-core-inf

Chart source: Albert Edwards, Society General





More Evidence of Deflation
The Bureau of Labour Statistics released data Tuesday morning that confirms my previous premise that deflation is indeed active in the economy and accelerating. From the BLS:
From July 2008 to July 2009, prices for finished goods fell 6.8 percent, the index for intermediate goods decreased 15.1 percent, and crude goods prices dropped 44.8 percent, all of which are record 12 month declines.

  • The consumer price index is down 2.1% year over year.
  • The Federal Government current receipts are down negative 10+%; the rate of fall has not been this great in almost 60 years.
  • Federal tax receipts on corporate income is down 40+% year over year; not since 1930 has the collapse been this great.
  • State and local government sales tax receipts are negative for the first time since the beginning of World War II.
  • Corporate profits after tax have experienced the most severe collapse in history.
  • Net corporate dividends again have an historic collapse.
  • Compensation of employees wages and salaries accruals - go back to 1949 to find the same level!
  • Personal income is negative 2.5%, as is disposable personal income year over year.
  • Personal consumption expenditures continue to dive off the cliff, as does personal consumption for durable goods.
  • Total personal consumption expenditures is negative for the first time in modern history!
  • Final sales to domestic purchasers, negative for the first time in modern history!
  • Final sales of domestic products is, you guessed it, negative for the first time in modern history.
  • Personal savings rate continues to skyrocket, now approaching $600 billion, as the general populace continues to deleverage at a feverish pace.

Now, speaking just for myself, I DO NOT see any indication of inflation being present in the above statistics and facts. What I do see is the start of a wage/price deflation spiral.




Hello, Deflation
Yes, inflation will eventually be a problem, when the economy or stagflation ignites and Bernanke waits too long to peel off the stimulus for fear of triggering a 1937-like relapse.

But now the problem is the opposite: Deflation.

Check out the Producer Price Index, courtesy of Asha Bangalore at Northern Trust:

ppi.jpg

On a year-to-year basis, the PPI was down 6.8% in July, the largest drop on record. The price index for intermediate goods decreased 15.1% and the crude goods prices dropped 44.8%, both of which are also record 12-month declines.

The core PPI of finished goods, which excludes food and energy, edged down 0.1%, putting the year-to-year gain at 2.6%. The highlights of price declines of core items includes lower prices for cars and light trucks. The intermediate and crude goods prices fell 0.2% and 4.5%, respectively, in July. The core intermediate and crude goods prices moved up in July. The main take away from this report is that the threat of deflation at the wholesale level is valid. 

ppi intermediate.jpg





Is Deflation Winning the Economic War?
This remains one of the hottest topics among the pundits. We saw another little bull move in the markets yesterday as the DOW rallied closing up 83 points. Futures are down after HP's earnings which met expectations. Despite yesterday's little rally, I still believe that sentiment is slowly changing back to doom and gloom. Investors are tired of hearing about earnings beats that were basically achieved as a result of companies slashing costs. Investors now want real growth!

Less bad is no longer cutting it anymore because the markets have moved up 50% from the lows. In order for the markets to continue and rally, earnings and top line revenue growth must start growing. If they don't, stocks are going to start to look highly overvalued because they got way ahead of themselves after a 50% relief rally based on nothing. Let's get real here: We all know there is ZERO chance for sustainable growth because the consumer remains suffocated in debt. There is no reason to believe that an economic recovery is coming anytime soon.

Signs of economic destruction are everywhere. Commercial real estate, job losses, housing foreclosures, underfunded pensions, massive state deficits, massive USA deficits... Need I go on? Whats been startling to me lately is the price destruction that's starting to pop up everywhere around me. I see it in restaurants, housing, and consumer products(I still can't believe I paid $360 for a computer the other day). What I am starting to wonder is this: Is the government starting to lose its battle versus deflation? The chart below says yes:



My Take: As you can see above, we are seeing the largest bout of deflation in our economy since WWII. Seeing inflation below zero is a rare occurrence in the history of this nation folks. What we need to be concerned about given the most recent data is a Japanese style deflationary collapse. I have discussed this subject many times before. The powerful deflationary forces that we are currently witnessing have to make you wonder if the Fed might be starting to lose the war with deflation.

My biggest fear here is how the Fed reacts to the obvious signs that deflation is beginning to overwhelm the economy. Do they react by doing something reckless like devalue the dollar in a desperate attempt to inflate their way out of this? Let's hope they aren't that stupid. As you can see in the chart above, the last deflationary death spiral seen in the US was The Great Depression. It was a long and painful 10 years before WWII came along and pulled us out of it. If the war hadn't created millions of new jobs who knows how long this could have lasted. Japan STILL hasn't recovered from their deflationary death spiral and that began about 30 years ago! Their stock market peaked at around 38,000. It now sits at 10,000 today.

The Bottom Line: The Fed is praying for inflation but so far its not happening folks. If these trends continue, your investment strategy should be refocused on shorts and hoarding as many US dollars as you can. I still plan on holding my metals because I am worried that the Fed might be stupid enough to destroy our currency in an attempt to stave off deflation.
The jury is still out, but a deflationary depression could very well be in the cards.




Canada Annual Consumer Prices Fall Most Since 1953
Canada’s consumer prices last month fell the most since 1953 on an annual basis, giving the Bank of Canada scope to honor its commitment to keep the benchmark lending rate unchanged at a record low. The consumer price index fell 0.9 percent in July from a year earlier, its second consecutive decline on lower gasoline prices, and was down 0.3 percent from the previous month, Statistics Canada said today. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expected a 0.8 percent decline from a year ago and a 0.2 percent drop from June, based on the median of 23 estimates.

The Bank of Canada cut its rate to 0.25 percent in April and said it would leave it there through June 2010 because of spare capacity in the economy and a weak inflation outlook. Falling prices may now give policy makers ammunition to hold off on rate increases even after the conditional commitment expires in June, said Derek Holt, an economist at Scotia Capital in Toronto. "The risk is that the Bank of Canada is on hold longer than the market is expecting," Holt said. "It shows enough broader-base weakness in pricing power to put the hawks at bay." The bank runs monetary policy with the goal of keeping inflation at 2 percent annually.

The Canadian currency, nicknamed the loonie, weakened 0.7 percent to C$1.1092 per U.S. dollar at 9:22 a.m. in Toronto, from C$1.1011 yesterday. One Canadian dollar buys 90.16 U.S. cents. The yield on the bankers’ acceptance contract due in June 2010 fell 9 basis points to 0.95 percent today on the Montreal Exchange, indicating investors are paring bets that interest rates will rise. There are 100 basis points in a percentage point. Most economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect the Bank of Canada to start to raise its lending rate in the third quarter of next year. The bank’s next announcement date is on Sept. 10.

The bank projected in July that the consumer price index will fall at an annual pace of 0.7 percent during the third quarter of this year, and that inflation will not return to the bank’s 2 percent target before the second quarter of 2011. The annual inflation rate excluding gasoline and seven other volatile items -- the so-called core rate that the central bank watches closely -- decelerated to 1.8 percent from 1.9 percent in June. The median forecast by economists was that the rate would stay at 1.9 percent. Core prices were unchanged on a monthly basis, compared with economists’ forecast of a 0.1 percent rise.

July’s annual decline in the overall index was led by lower transportation costs, mainly a 28 percent drop in gasoline prices and lower prices for cars, Statistics Canada said. Falling prices for fuel oil and natural gas, along with a drop in homeowner’s replacement costs, led to a 2 percent annual decline in shelter costs, which account for 27 percent of the consumer basket. The 0.9 percent decline was the largest drop since the index fell 1.4 percent in July 1953, the Ottawa-based statistics agency said. Food prices were up 5 percent in July from a year earlier, the statistics agency said.




German Producer Prices Drop at Steepest Rate Since 1949
Germany's producer prices fell 1.5% in July from the previous month, and 7.8% in annual terms, the sharpest yearly decline since 1949, German statistics agency Destatis said Wednesday. Both declines were steeper than anticipated by the market. According to a survey by Dow Jones Newswires, analysts had expected prices to ease just 0.2% in July from June, and to drop 6.6% from a year earlier. Excluding energy, producer prices declined 0.2% from the previous month and 3.6% on a yearly basis, the statistics office said.

"Even excluding some oddities in energy prices, the trend in non-energy prices is weak," said Dominic Bryant, economist at BNP Paribas in London, adding that the 3.6% fall is the fastest year-to-year pace of decline going back to at least the early 1960s. Economists expect the downward pressure on prices to remain, although it will ease. "Overall, the figures are a reminder that, while activity data is looking a little more upbeat, the German economy is operating with a large excess of capacity, which will put downward pressure on prices for a prolonged period," said Mr. Bryant.

UniCredit economist Andreas Rees said that, given very low inventories, companies are virtually "forced" to work off the incoming orders flow rapidly. "Accordingly, the price pressure will ease regardless of which direction the oil price will go," he said. "We think that both in terms of producer and consumer prices, the yearly rates hit their trough in July 2009," he added.




Germany braces for second wave of credit crunch
Germany's economics ministry is drawing up a raft of special measures with the Bundesbank to head off a fresh financial crisis, fearing that a loan squeeze by struggling banks will set off a serious credit crunch early next year. "The most difficult phase for financing is going to be in the first and second quarter of 2010," said Hartmut Schauerte, the economic state secretary. "We are working as a government to create instruments that can offset a feared credit crunch or any credit squeeze in sectors of the economy," he said. Mr Schauerte said firms with weak balance sheets may struggle to roll over loans as they come due in coming months. Negotiations with banks could prove "very difficult".

State support is likely to be concentrated on boosting the capital base of German firms and providing credit insurance for exporters, perhaps to the tune of €250bn to €300bn (£256bn). "If this service fails, we are going to see dozens of credit collapses," he said. Axel Weber, Bundesbank chief and a key figure at the European Central Bank, said over the weekend that the economy remained fragile fundamental problems in the credit system had not been resolved. "I must warn that it is too early to talk about the end of the financial crisis. Unemployment is going to rise as 'Kurzarbeit' expires, and that could hurt consumption," he said, referring to the state scheme that subsidises firms to keep idle workers on their books.

German politicians have tended to blame the credit crisis on excesses in the US, which exported toxic debt to incompetent Landesbanken through collateralised debt obligations (CDOs) and other exotica of the sub-prime era. But Mr Weber said German has a home-grown problem of its own that has yet to manifest itself. "The first round of disruption in the bank balance sheets from structured credit products is behind us. Now we are threatened by stress from our domestic credit industry through the rise in the insolvency of firms and households," he told the Suddeutsche Zeitung "All the banks, even the biggest, must strengthen their defences. They need higher capital buffers, greater liquidity cushions, and better risk management."

While Mr Weber said Germany was resilient enough to withstand another shock, his comments are a surprise. The Bundesbank has in the past played down suggestions of an incipient credit crunch, despite warnings from the German banking association and the Mittelstand core of engineering and exporting companies. The revelation that key government agencies are drawing up relief plans overshadowed news that the ZEW index of financial confidence has soared to the highest level in three years. The headline index jumped from +39.5 to +56.1, although it is unclear whether this gauge tells us anything that cannot be gleaned from the ups and downs of the DAX index of Frankfurt stocks. The ZEW jumped the gun by signalling recovery much too early during the dotcom bust in 2002.

The latest surge reflects the general mood of optimism in the markets and the rebound in industrial production. The problem for Germany is that car scrappage schemes and pent-up orders for German goods built up during the freeze in global trade finance over the Winter may have disguised the underlying weakness of the economy. Unemployment is expected to rise by another million to 4.5m by late next year.
Hans Redeker, currency chief at BNP Paribas, said the credit contraction was eclipsing recovery in Europe's bond market. "At the end of the day, there is not going to be any durable recovery until we see a revival in credit," he said.




Euro-zone trade surplus increased in June
The 16 countries that use the euro posted their biggest trade surplus in two years in June, but levels of trade remained low compared with last year. The euro zone's nonseasonally adjusted trade surplus widened to €4.6 billion ($6.5 billion) in June from a surplus of €2.1 billion in May, according to data released Monday by Eurostat, the European Union's statistics agency. That is the largest surplus since the €6.7 billion trade gap in June 2007. Economists were expecting a €3.5 billion surplus, according to a survey last week. May's surplus was revised up from the €1.9 billion reported last month.

Ben May of Capital Economics said the data suggested trade may have added a full percentage point to second-quarter gross domestic product. "While the latest trade figures do suggest that the worst of the downturn is over, there is little evidence that exports are set for a robust pickup," he said in a note. "With a significant near-term improvement in domestic demand unlikely, it is too soon to conclude that the region is about to embark on a sustained recovery."

The data showed that trade remains substantially weaker than last year after the credit crisis plunged the economies in the euro zone and many of its trading partners into their deepest recessions since World War II. Euro-zone exports were €106.1 billion in June, down 22% from June 2008, while imports came to €101.5 billion, a 26% drop. Trade did, however, pick up from May, when the euro zone had €98.6 billion in exports and €96.5 billion in imports. Trade among the 16 euro-zone member states grew to €111.3 billion in June from €101.2 billion in May, but remained 20% lower than a year earlier.

Seasonally adjusted figures showed euro-zone exports totaled €101.5 billion in June, their lowest level since July 2005, while imports were unchanged from May at €100.5 billion, the weakest level since June 2005. For the first half, the euro zone posted a trade deficit of €1.6 billion, compared with a deficit of €13.3 billion over the first six months of 2008. Exports were 23% weaker than last year, while imports fell 24%. The euro zone's trade surplus with the U.K., its biggest export market, was narrower in the first five months of the year than for the year-earlier period, as exports fell 27% and imports dropped 29%. The surplus with the U.S. shrank by more than half, as exports in January to May were 21% weaker than the 2008 period, while imports fell only 9%.




The Highest P/E Ever!
Chart Of The Day observes that we've broken another record...

recordhighpe.png

Why shouldn't we panic?  Because the reason the PE is so high is that earnings are near a cyclical low.  This chart actually illustrates why it's silly to use P/E ratios based on a single year of earnings--because they can be wildly misleading.

On normalized earnings, stocks are about 10%-15% overvalued (see Robert Shiller's chart below).  That's a far cry from the record overvaluation shown in the chart above.

shillerpeaug4.jpg

Of course, just because we're not at a record normalized PE doesn't mean the market won't crash.





China Stocks Slump, Briefly Enter Bear Market on Loan Concern
China’s stocks tumbled, briefly driving the benchmark index into a so-called bear market, on concern economic growth will falter as banks rein in lending. The Shanghai Composite Index lost 4.3 percent to 2,785.58, as Citic Securities Co., the nation’s biggest brokerage, slumped 7.8 percent and China Vanke Co., the largest developer by market value, fell 5.6 percent. The gauge has slumped 19.8 percent since Aug. 4, after more than doubling from November, as China rolled out a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package. A plunge in new bank loans in July, disappointing earnings and concern the government will seek to damp property speculation has sapped confidence, driving losses close to the 20 percent threshold for a bear market.

"It’s irrational selling that has shattered market confidence," said Larry Wan, Shanghai-based deputy chief investment officer at KBC-Goldstate Fund Management Co., which oversees about $583 million in assets. "Some mutual funds have been reducing their stock holdings as they are pessimistic about the economic outlook." China Everbright Securities Co., which had the smallest first-day gain of any new stock in Shanghai this year, slumped by the 10 percent daily limit today. About 10 stocks fell for each that rose on the benchmark index.

"It’s scary," Xu Xuehong, a 64-year-old retired worker in Shanghai who had about 300,000 yuan invested in shares, said in an interview at a branch of Shenyin & Wanguo Securities Co. "The decline is too rapid; I am not going to make new investments." The market slump follows the lifting in June of a nine- month moratorium on initial shares sales that triggered about $1 billion worth of IPOs by eight companies including China Everbright, China State Construction Engineering Corp. and Sichuan Expressway Co.

The Shanghai index, the world’s best-performing major market from Jan. 1 to Aug. 4, remains 59 percent below its record level on Oct. 16, 2007. Of the so-called BRIC group of emerging economies that includes India and Brazil, only Russia is in a bear market. Chinese stocks are "extremely frothy" and investors should have an "underweight" position in the country’s shares, said Devan Kaloo, who oversees $11.5 billion as head of global emerging markets at Aberdeen Asset Management Ltd. "I’m worried about a correction in a market that has been driven by cheap money," said Kaloo, whose Aberdeen Emerging Markets Fund has beaten 98 percent of peers this year.

A slump in China’s July lending to less than a quarter of June’s level and disappointing earnings from companies including Yunnan Copper Industry Co. have weighed on shares. "The current correction is reflecting the tightening in lending," said Andy Xie, a former Asian chief economist at Morgan Stanley, who correctly predicted in April 2007 that China’s equities would tumble. "We’ve seen the peak of this market cycle."

An estimated 1.16 trillion yuan of loans were invested in stocks in the first five months of this year, China Business News reported on June 29, citing Wei Jianing, a deputy director at the Development and Research Center under the State Council, China’s Cabinet. The market may fall a further 10 percent, Xie said Aug. 17. The Shanghai index is trading at 30.3 times reported earnings, against 17.5 times for shares on the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, and remains 53 percent higher than at the start of this year.

The economy expanded 7.9 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier, rebounding from the weakest growth in almost a decade. Still, exports last month fell 23 percent from a year earlier, while urban fixed-asset investment and industrial output both expanded less than economist estimates. China Construction Bank Corp. President Zhang Jianguo said that the nation’s second-largest bank will cut new lending by about 70 percent in the second half to avert a surge in bad debt. "We noticed that some loans didn’t go into the real economy," Zhang, 54, said in an Aug. 6 interview. "I feel that some industries are expanding too rapidly. For example, housing prices are rising too fast."

Real estate developers led today’s decline, with the China Se Shang’s Property Index falling 7.5 percent. China Vanke fell 5.6 percent to 11 yuan. Poly Real Estate Group Co., the second- biggest, dropped 5.6 percent to 23.76 yuan. "The Chinese market is very trend-oriented because there are many individual investors," said Philippe Zhang, chief investment officer at AXA SPDB Investment Managers in Shanghai, which oversees about $220 million. "It can rally very quickly and go down strongly as well." Maanshan Iron & Steel Co. fell 7.5 percent, the most in nine months, after posting a first-half net loss. Jiangxi Copper Co., China’s biggest producer of the metal, lost 8.4 percent as the metal slumped to its lowest in more than two weeks.

Everbright Securities tumbled by the maximum after yesterday advancing 30 percent on its debut. The first-day gain for the Shanghai-based brokerage trailed the average 109 percent of the seven other companies to list shares in China since the moratorium on IPOs ended. "The rally is over," Wu Ruiling, a 70-year-old retired teacher in Shanghai, said at the Shenyin & Wanguo branch. "All we heard is funds are exiting the market as the government tightens bank loans. If I sell, I will have big losses." The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, which measures Hong Kong-listed shares of Chinese companies, dropped 1.6 percent today to 11,260.83.




The China Bubble’s Coming — But Not the One You Think
Financial commentators are obsessively debating whether the recent rise in the Chinese stock market means there’s a bubble — and if so, when it’s going to burst.  My take? Who cares! What happens to the broader Chinese economy is what we should really be watching. It will have a far-reaching impact on the rest of the world — much more far-reaching than a decline in stocks.

Despite everything, the Chinese economy has shown incredible resilience recently. Although its biggest customers — the United States and Europe — are struggling (to say the least) and its exports are down more than 20 percent, China is still spitting out economic growth numbers as if there weren’t a worry in the world. The most recent estimate put annual growth at nearly 8 percent. Is the Chinese economy operating in a different economic reality?  Will it continue to grow, no matter what the global economy is doing?

The answer to both questions is no. China’s fortunes over the past decade are reminiscent of Lucent Technologies in the 1990s. Lucent sold computer equipment to dot-coms. At first, its growth was natural, the result of selling goods to traditional, cash-generating companies. After opportunities with cash-generating customers dried out, it moved to start-ups — and its growth became slightly artificial. These dot-coms were able to buy Lucent’s equipment only by raising money through private equity and equity markets, since their business models didn’t factor in the necessity of cash-flow generation.

Funds to buy Lucent’s equipment quickly dried up, and its growth should have decelerated or declined. Instead, Lucent offered its own financing to dot-coms by borrowing and lending money on the cheap to finance the purchase of its own equipment. This worked well enough, until it came time to pay back the loans. The United States, of course, isn’t a dot-com. But a great portion of its growth came from borrowing Chinese money to buy Chinese goods, which means that Chinese growth was dependent on that very same borrowing.

Now the United States and the rest of the world is retrenching, corporations are slashing their spending, and consumers are closing their pocket books. This means that the consumption of Chinese goods is on the decline. And this is where the dot-com analogy breaks down. Unlike Lucent, China has nuclear weapons. It can print money at will and can simply order its banks to lend. It is a communist command economy, after all. Lucent is now a $2 stock. China won’t go down that easily.

The Chinese central bank has a significant advantage over the U.S. Federal Reserve. Chairman Ben Bernanke and his cohort may print a lot of money (and they did), but there’s almost nothing they can do to speed the velocity of money. They simply cannot force banks to lend without nationalizing them (and only the government-sponsored enterprises have been nationalized). They also cannot force corporations and consumers to spend. Since China isn’t a democracy, it doesn’t suffer these problems.

China’s communist government owns a large part of the money-creation and money-spending apparatus. Money supply therefore shot up 28.5 percent in June. Since it controls the banks, it can force them to lend, which it has also done.

Finally, China can force government-owned corporate entities to borrow and spend, and spend quickly itself. This isn’t some slow-moving, touchy-feely democracy. If the Chinese government decides to build a highway, it simply draws a straight line on the map. Any obstacle — like a hospital, a school, or a Politburo member’s house — can become a casualty of the greater good. (Okay — maybe not the Politburo member’s house).

Although China can’t control consumer spending, the consumer is a comparatively small part of its economy. Plus, currency control diminishes the consumer’s buying power. All of this makes the United States’ TARP plans look like child’s play. If China wants to stimulate the economy, it does so — and fast. That’s why the country is producing such robust economic numbers.

Why is China doing this? It doesn’t have the kind of social safety net one sees in the developed world, so it needs to keep its economy going at any cost. Millions of people have migrated to its cities, and now they’re hungry and unemployed. People without food or work tend to riot. To keep that from happening, the government is more than willing to artificially stimulate the economy, in the hopes of buying time until the global system stabilizes. It’s literally forcing banks to lend — which will create a huge pile of horrible loans on top of the ones they’ve originated over the last decade.

But don’t confuse fast growth with sustainable growth. Much of China’s growth over the past decade has come from lending to the United States. The country suffers from real overcapacity. And now growth comes from borrowing — and hundreds of billion-dollar decisions made on the fly don’t inspire a lot of confidence. For example, a nearly completed, 13-story building in Shanghai collapsed in June due to the poor quality of its construction.

This growth will result in a huge pile of bad debt — as forced lending is bad lending. The list of negative consequences is very long, but the bottom line is simple: There is no miracle in the Chinese miracle growth, and China will pay a price. The only question is when and how much. Another casualty of what’s taking place in China is the U.S. interest rate. China sold goods to the United States and received dollars in exchange.

If China were to follow the natural order of things, it would have converted those dollars to renminbi (that is, sell dollars and buy renminbi). The dollar would have declined and renminbi would have risen. But this would have made Chinese goods more expensive in dollars — making Chinese products less price-competitive. China would have exported less, and its economy would have grown at a much slower rate.

But China chose a different route. Instead of exchanging dollars back into renminbi and thus driving the dollar down and the renminbi up — the natural order of things — China parked its money in the dollar by buying Treasuries. It artificially propped up the dollar. And now, China is sitting on 2.2 trillion of them. Now, China needs to stimulate its economy. It’s facing a very delicate situation indeed: It needs the money internally to finance its continued growth.

However, if it were to sell dollar-denominated treasuries, several bad things would happen. Its currency would skyrocket — meaning the loss of its competitive low-cost-producer edge. Or, U.S. interest rates would go up dramatically — not good for its biggest customer, and therefore not good for China. This is why China is desperately trying to figure out how to withdraw its funds from the dollar without driving it down — not an easy feat.

And the U.S. government isn’t helping: It’s printing money and issuing Treasuries at a fast clip, and needs somebody to keep buying them. If China reduces or halts its buying, the United States may be looking at high interest rates, with or without inflation. (The latter scenario is most worrying.) All in all, this spells trouble — a big, big Chinese bubble. Identifying such bubbles is a lot easier than timing their collapse. But as we’ve recently learned, you can defy the laws of financial gravity for only so long. Put simply, mean reversion is a bitch. And the longer excesses persist, the harder the financial gravity will bring China’s economy back to Earth.




Have the Chinese Become the World's Greatest Capitalists?
by Ellen Brown

"I don't care if it's a white cat or a black cat. It's a good cat so long as it catches mice."
-- Deng Xiaoping, who opened China to foreign investment after 1978

China is being called a "miracle economy." It seems to have decoupled from the rest of the world, preserving an 8% growth rate while the rest of the world sinks into the worst recession since the 1930s. How is that phenomenal growth rate possible, when other countries relying heavily on exports have suffered major downturns and remain in the doldrums? Economist Richard Wolff skeptically observes:
We now have a situation in the world where we have a global capitalist crisis. Everywhere, consumption is down. Everywhere, people are buying fewer goods, including goods from China. How is it possible that in that society, so dependent on the world economy, they could now have an explosive growth? Their stock market is now 100 percent higher than at its low -- nothing remotely like that hardly anywhere in the world, certainly not in the United States or Europe. How is that possible? In order to believe what the Chinese are saying, you would have to agree that in a matter of months, at most a year, no more, they have been able to transform their economy from an export-based powerhouse to a domestically focused industrial engine. Nowhere in the world has that ever taken less than decades.

Perhaps, and the United States has certainly failed to pull that result off with its own stimulus plan; but there is a notable difference between its stimulus plan and China's. What Wolff calls a "global capitalist crisis" is actually a credit crisis; and in China, unlike in the U.S., credit has been flowing freely again to businesses and industry. State-owned banks have massively increased lending, with local governments and state enterprises borrowing on a huge scale. The People's Bank of China estimates that total loans for the first half of 2009 were $1.08 trillion, 50% more than the amount of loans Chinese banks issued in all of 2008. The U.S. Federal Reserve has also engaged in record levels of lending, but its loans have gone chiefly to bail out the financial sector itself, leaving Main Street high and dry.

The Secret of China's Success

Samah El-Shahat is a presenter for Al Jazeera English who has a doctorate in developmental economics from the University of London. In an August 10 article titled "China Puts People Before Banks," she writes:
China is the one leading economy where the divide -- the disconnect between its financial sector and the world normal Chinese people and their businesses inhabit -- doesn't exist. Both worlds are booming again and this is due to the way the government handled its banks. China hasn't allowed its banking sector to become so powerful, so influential, and so big that it can call the shots or highjack the bailout. In simple terms, the government preferred to answer to its people and put their interests first before that of any vested interest or group. And that is why Chinese banks are lending to the people and their businesses in record numbers.

In the U.S. and the U.K., by contrast:
[T]he financial sector is booming, while the world of normal people seems to be going from bad to worse, unemployment is high, businesses are folding and house foreclosures are still taking place. Wall Street and Main Street might as well be existing on different planets. And this is in large part because banks are still not lending money to the people. In the UK and US, banks have captured all the money from the taxpayers and the cheap money from quantitative easing from central banks. They are using it to shore up, and clean up their balance sheets rather than lend it to the people. The money has been hijacked by the banks, and our governments are doing absolutely nothing about that. In fact, they have been complicit in allowing this to happen.

Cracks in the Dike?

The Chinese economy is not perfect. Chinese workers are now complaining of too much capitalism, since they are having to pay for housing, health care and higher education formerly picked up by the State. The push to make profits, particularly from foreign investment capital, has encouraged speculative ventures, with a great deal of money going into high-rise apartments and other real estate developments that most people cannot afford. And state-owned businesses and large corporations are still getting most of the loans, because the banks have been told to tighten their lending standards, and these larger entities are safer credit risks. But efforts are being made to make more loans available to medium-sized and small businesses, and China's stimulus plan seems to be working well overall.

Wolff thinks China's "miracle" is a bubble that is about to burst, with catastrophic consequences. But historically, when bubbles have collapsed suddenly, it has generally been because they were punctured by speculators. When the Japanese stock market bubble burst in 1990, and when other Asian countries followed in 1998, it was because foreign speculators were able to attack their currencies with exotic derivatives. The victims tried to defend by buying up their own national currencies with their foreign currency reserves, but the reserves were soon exhausted. Today, China has accumulated so much in the way of dollar reserves that it would be very difficult for speculators to do the same thing to the Chinese stock market. A gradual stock market decline due to natural market forces is something an economy can take in stride.

Economic Role Reversal

To the extent that China's stimulus plan is working better than in the U.S. and the U.K., this seems to be because the government is using the banks for public ends, rather than allowing the banks to use the government for private ends. The Chinese government can operate the banks' credit mechanisms in a way that serves public enterprise and trade because it actually owns the banking sector, or most of it. Ironically, that feature of China's economy may have allowed it to get closer to the original American capitalist ideal than the United States itself.

Politically, China is often referred to as communist, although it has never really been communist as defined in the textbooks and is far less so now than formerly. As Deng Xiaoping famously pointed out, the name isn't as important as whether the job gets done; and China's economy today provides a framework that effectively encourages entrepreneurs. Jim Rogers is an expatriate American investor and financial commentator based in Singapore. He wrote in a 2004 article titled "The Rise of Red Capitalism":
Some of the best capitalists in the world live and work in Communist China....No matter how long China's leaders persist in calling themselves Communists, they seem quite intent on creating the world's dominant capitalist economy.

Five years later, the Chinese have evidently succeeded in this endeavor; and they have done it by keeping a brake on irresponsible bank speculation and profiteering by keeping a leash on their banking sector. While the Chinese have been busy perfecting their own brand of capitalism, the U.S. has sunk into what Rogers calls "socialism for the rich." When ordinary businesses go bankrupt, they are left to deal with the asphalt jungle on their own. But when banks considered "too big to fail" go bankrupt, we the taxpayers pay the losses while the banks' owners keep the profits and are allowed to continue speculating with them.

The bailout of Wall Street with taxpayer money represents a radical departure from capitalist principles, one that has changed the face of the American economy. The capitalism we were taught in school involved Mom and Pop stores, single-family farms, and small entrepreneurs competing on a level playing field. The government's role was to set the rules and make sure everyone played fair. But that is not the sort of capitalism we have today. The Mom and Pop stores have been squeezed out by giant chain stores and mega-industries; the small private farms have been bought up by multinational agribusinesses; and Wall Street banks have gotten so powerful that Congressmen are complaining that the banks now own Congress. Giant banks and corporations have rewritten the rules for their own ends. Healthy competition has been replaced by a form of predator capitalism in which small fish are systematically swallowed up by sharks. The result has been an ever-widening gap between rich and poor that represents the greatest transfer of wealth in history.

The Best of Both Worlds

The Chinese solution to a failed banking system would be to nationalize the banks themselves, not just their bad debts. If the U.S. were to follow that example, we the people could get something of value for our investment -- a stable and accountable banking system that belongs to the people. If the word "nationalize" sounds un-American, think "publicly-owned and operated for the benefit of the public," like public libraries, public parks, and public courts.

We need to get our dollars out of Wall Street and back on Main Street, and we can do that only by taking the punch bowl away from our out-of-control private banking monopoly. We need to reclaim "the full faith and credit of the United States" as a monopoly of the people of the United States. If the Chinese can have the best of both worlds, so can we.




States Shed Reinsurance and 'Run Naked' Through Storm Risks
Several states prone to natural disasters are measuring the odds on a mega-bet. Concerned observers say those calculations are based on "Lady Luck" and "rolling the dice." Public insurance programs in some coastal states are flirting with the notion of saving millions of dollars every year by shrinking or canceling the coverage they buy from private reinsurers -- the deep-pocketed companies that insure insurers whose exposure to loss exceeds the budgets of some nations.

States are the insurers in this case. And they are either tired of paying piles of cash for reinsurance policies that are rarely needed, or too broke financially to maintain coverage that has saved state residents from paying billions in hurricane damage claims. In the parlance of the insurance business, without coverage or a hedge against their expensive risks, they are "running naked." Here's the bet: Save hundreds of millions with no disaster, or pay perhaps billions with one.

"It's actively discussed every year," John Golembeski, president of Massachusetts' public insurance program, said of discontinuing the state's reinsurance policy. The price this year was $80 million. In return, the reinsurer promises to pay $900 million in claims if a storm sweeps ashore. Golembeski makes sure those decisions, made by money-counting legislators, are accompanied by a weather warning: "We don't know when it's going to hit."

Other states are more muscular in their movement away from reinsurance. Texas let its policy die at the end of May, less than a year after reinsurers paid $1.5 billion in claims related to Hurricane Ike. That's not a bad return on the state's investment. Texans paid $180 million for the policy. Texas will buck this hurricane season with no reinsurance. California is also looking to reduce its coverage. The state's public earthquake insurance program has paid $2.3 billion total for reinsurance since 1997 -- almost half of all its revenue. In return, it has collected $250,000 in claims. California wants to save its money and pay the claims on its own.

"Forty percent of all that California policyholders have paid in for their [earthquake] coverage, we've paid out the door by way of reinsurance premium," explained Glenn Pomeroy, president of the California Earthquake Authority. "It's time to reduce our heavy reliance on reinsurance." It's a challenging time for state insurance programs. They are designed to be a safety valve, providing last-gasp coverage to residents who can't find -- or afford -- private catastrophe insurance. But the punishing hurricane seasons in 2004 and 2005 helped redefine these programs.

Private insurers gasped at the rising number of storms and destruction inflicted on the United States beginning in the mid-1990s. Scientists, meanwhile, began warning of stronger hurricanes spurred by rising temperatures related to greenhouse gases. Insurers reduced their exposure by vanishing from risky coastlines and raising rates. Policyholders crowded into the public programs, elevating the states' financial risk. In turn, reinsurers responded to the rising risk of loss by charging states more. At the end of this June, premiums were up 15 percent from a year ago, according to the brokerage firm Guy Carpenter & Co. LLC.

That is vexing state insurance programs. And some of them hope the federal government will replace private reinsurers. Four states -- California, Florida, Louisiana and Texas -- are pushing Congress to pass a bill that would make the federal government a co-signer for states that borrow money to pay damage claims after natural catastrophes. That would mean the states could replace reinsurance with debt. The savings might be big. Millions normally paid for reinsurance could be stashed away into reserve accounts, used later to pay claims and service loans.

It could also backfire. One major storm could strap a state with debt for decades. Policyholders would have to pay it back through fees on all sorts of insurance policies, from auto coverage to inland property insurance. "It's typical of governments today to not be willing to make the hard decisions that are necessary to face up to the true risks and the true costs of the policies that they've undertaken," said Robert Hartwig, president of the Insurance Information Institute, an industry group.

"Most of the people who will be paying that [debt] aren't homeowners, probably aren't Florida residents right now, and some aren't even born," he added, noting that those states would be "rolling the dice." Critics warn that Texas, and perhaps other states, is following in the path of Florida. Residents there are paying fees, also called assessments, on every type of insurance policy except workers' compensation and medical malpractice from past hurricanes.

Florida hasn't had private reinsurance for years. Instead, it has a public program to reinsure its public insurance program. The Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund, the public reinsurance program, has failed to issue enough bonds needed to cover its exposure. Washington's signature guaranteeing those loans would make it easier. It would also provide a more attractive interest rate. Florida's insurance commissioner, Kevin McCarty, has been pushing the legislation, introduced by Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.), among members of Congress and other states.

"It's going to be a difficult lift," McCarty acknowledged. "We're competing with national health care, systemic risk and a number of other things that President Obama has on his agenda." If the federal legislation passes, it could prompt more states to create their own reinsurance funds to save up-front money on the cost of private reinsurance. "That would make it politically much easier for us to step up and do something like this at the state level," said Massachusetts state Sen. Robert O'Leary (D), a longtime supporter of a state fund.




Reluctant Shoppers Hold Back Recovery
Major retailers reported that American consumers are continuing to hunker down, casting a cloud over the durability of the U.S. recovery and underscoring the importance of overseas demand in restoring the world economy to health. Retailers across the spectrum provided foreboding reports. Discounter Target Corp. reported that sales at stores open at least a year were down 6.2% from a year earlier in the quarter ended Aug. 1, while luxury purveyor Saks Inc. reported a 15.5% drop in same-store sales over the past quarter as shoppers stuck to buying basics. Building-supply chain Home Depot Inc. saw total sales drop 9.1% in the quarter ending Aug. 2, and it reaffirmed expectations of a 9% sales drop this year.


Retail executives said they don't expect conditions to improve until next spring. Some stores are girding for slow back-to-school and Christmas seasons by cutting inventories. Home Depot Chief Executive Frank Blake told investors Tuesday that he didn't expect a year-over-year increase in same-store sales until the second half of 2010. "We remain concerned by the high level of foreclosure activity, which we believe continues to put pressure on the housing markets," he said.

The cuts in inventories, as well as reined-in expenses, are helping some retailers bolster profit margins. Hoping to avoid the massive markdowns of last year, retailer Neiman Marcus said it has cut its purchases 25%. Such steps played well with investors Tuesday: Target shares jumped 7.6% and Saks rose 6.9% after each reported a smaller profit decline than expected. Target shares are up 28% this year and Saks is up 30.6%.

American consumers appear so shaken by the worst recession since the Great Depression -- and so pinched by unemployment, stagnant wages and stingier lenders -- that they are reining in spending on all but basics. Economists also see an upturn in U.S. household saving as the beginning of a prolonged period of thrift. The retailers' reports serve as a reminder that it will be consumers, foremost, who will fuel a sustained U.S. recovery. Consumer spending accounts for about 70% of all demand in the U.S. economy.

Most economists expect growth to resume in the second half of this year at a modest pace, as U.S. businesses rebuild depleted inventories and the housing market stabilizes. Economists who see a second-half rebound point to a global-manufacturing revival and recent reports that the economies of France, Germany and Japan managed to expand in the second quarter. The Commerce Department said earlier this month that U.S. exports in June rose 1.9% from May after rising 1.6% the month before.

But U.S. consumers could be the counterweight. In a survey of economists this month, The Wall Street Journal asked if a substantial increase in consumer spending was needed for sustained growth. Of the 43 economists who responded, 60% said yes. "Not only has employment fallen, but a lot people are facing salary freezes or other cutbacks," said Lou Crandall, chief economist of financial-research firm Wrightson ICAP. "That is going to have a significant drag on consumer spending going forward."

One of the few bright spots is the revival of auto sales, helped by the government's "cash for clunkers" program. General Motors Co. said Tuesday that it plans to add 60,000 vehicles to third- and fourth-quarter production plans, following announced increases at Ford Motor Co. last week. Meanwhile, TJX Cos., which operates the T.J. Maxx chain, said sales rose 4% over the quarter. Tuesday's results come on the heels of Wal-Mart Stores Inc.'s disappointing report last week that same-store sales in the U.S. slid 1.2%. Also last week, the Commerce Department said July sales, encompassing a wide swath of retailers, fell after two months of gains.

In Dallas, Ellen Berent, 56 years old, plans to go shopping this week to take advantage of Texas tax-free shopping days, a back-to-school tradition in many states. But Ms. Berent, who was laid off from a computer-parts company in May, says she will be more restrained than in the past. "I won't buy anything that I don't have the money for in hand," she said. In Los Angeles, Lucy Inedzhyan, 22, said her spending habits changed after receipts at her family's dry-cleaning business fell 30%. "When I spend, it takes away from the family," she said. Instead of heading to Nordstrom or Bloomingdale's two or three times a month, she says she shops for less-expensive clothes -- on the Web site of chain Forever 21, or using coupons to Victoria's Secret. "I don't splurge anymore."

But slimmer inventories and less-aggressive discounting can backfire if customers are disappointed by a lack of choice or have been conditioned to wait for discounts before buying. Target's chief executive, Gregg Steinhafel, told investors Tuesday that consumers have become "more promotionally sensitive" -- responding to advertised discounts and using coupons -- a dynamic he says is working against the company. Tighter consumer credit has also hurt. Target, which says about one-third of its overall sales come from credit cards, believes that tightening credit standards on its proprietary cards may have contributed as much as half a percentage point to its same-store sales declines.



Earlier this week, the Federal Reserve said a July survey of banks found continued tightening of lending standards as well as a diminished appetite for borrowing among consumers. About a third of banks said they tightened lending standards on credit cards and other consumer loans since April. No banks reported relaxing them. U.S. households are also reckoning with a large drop in wealth during the past two years. Between the second quarter of 2007 and the first quarter of 2009, the most recent for which Fed data are available, household net worth contracted by 22% amid drops in home prices and the stock market.

That gives Americans a greater incentive to save to make up for their paper losses. Economists expect business spending to bolster the economy's recovery in the coming month, in light of extreme inventory-paring. "That wild plunge for production [and] inventories can reverse, because it went well beyond the kind of declines that would be necessary in reaction to weakening consumer spending," said Robert Barbera, the Investment Technology Group's chief economist. "The second half will be the beneficiary of a handsome pop in simply inventory restocking."




Corporate Bonds Top $1 Trillion Mark
Global corporate bond volumes, excluding banks and other financial institutions, surpassed the $1 trillion mark for the first time as tight bank lending has forced companies to seek funding elsewhere. Bond volumes passed $1 trillion July 15 as French energy group Éléctricité de France SA sold bonds worth €3.3 billion ($4.6 billion), data compiled by data provider Dealogic showed Tuesday. The volumes have since risen to $1.10 trillion, up 22% from the previous record high of $898.3 billion set in 2007, with more than four months left in the year.

The utility and energy sector has made the largest contribution to the rise, according to Dealogic, with $188.4 billion issued so far this year. In Europe, where companies have traditionally preferred loans from banks over bonds, the volume of non-financial bond issuance totaled $426.5 billion in the year to date, up 47% from the $290.4 billion raised in 2008, Dealogic said. Meanwhile, loans have fallen dramatically. The volume of high-value, syndicated loans issued to European borrowers has declined to €235 billion so far this year from €651 billion in 2008, figures from Dealogic showed. On a global basis, loan volumes have dropped to $1.1 billion year to date in 2009, compared with $3 billion in 2008.

A shift to bond financing from loans was already underway in 2006 and 2007 as corporations sought to diversify and looked for longer-term funding, said Jean-Marc Mercier, head of syndicate Europe at HSBC Holdings PLC. Typically, bonds have a longer maturity than loans. "Even when bank-market conditions ease, corporates may continue to tap the capital markets for new cash," said Mark Lewellen, head of European corporate debt capital markets at Barclays Capital. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. is the lead bookrunner globally of all corporate bonds, excluding those sold by financial institutions, this year with a share of 8%. Citigroup Inc. is ranked second with a 7.3% share, according to Dealogic.




Morgan Stanley issues alert on corporate bonds after explosive rally
Corporate bonds have seen the most explosive rally in nearly a hundred years since the markets touched bottom last winter, but, according to a report by Morgan Stanley, they look increasing vulnerable as they pull far ahead of equities. Andrew Sheets, the bank's European credit strategist, has advised clients to beware signs of creeping angst in the credit options markets, where volatility has been flashing an early warning signal for some weeks. "The pace of the recent rally has, for the first time, begun to show signs of over-extension," he said.

The September option contracts have seen a "sustained rise in implied volatility" yet the interest spreads on corporate bonds have continued to drop sharply. Bond investors ignore this sort of divergence at their peril. Morgan Stanley said none of the previous bond recoveries going back to 1925 had been as dramatic as this. "Credit rallies are historically fast and fierce, but this one has become unusually rapid. Levels are almost back to where they were in the first quarter of 2008, but equities are still a long way off that," said Mr Sheets.

Analysts say the current dividend yield on the German utility RWE is 7.7pc while the interest return on a five-year bond issued by RWE is 3.2pc, and the credit default swaps have dropped to just 50 basis points. These markets are clearly out of alignment. They appear to be reflecting an assumption of a prolonged 'bond-friendly' form of gentle deflation, which is at odds with assumptions in the rest of the market. The credit euphoria undoubtedly reflects the emergency measures by governments around the world to stabilize the financial system, but the wash of liquidity should be an equally good tonic for stock markets.

Credit rallies usually anticipate stocks by about 3 months, but we are well past that stage of the cycle. The two should be converging by now. Either stock markets will have to rise sharply to close the gap - an outcome in doubt after poor confidence date in the US and jitters in the Shanghai markets as the Chinese authorities restrain lending - or credit spreads must start to widen again to reflect the risk.

Spreads on non-financial grade BBB-rate bonds in Europe have dropped backed to the long-term average of around 200 basis points above benchmark government bonds, a fall from over 548 earlier this year. This may prove "rich" given the spate of defaults expected by the rating agencies over the next two years. It has taken just eight months for spreads to recover fully in this rally. It typically takes almost three years, and sometimes much longer. The credit markets seem to be telling us that the Great Recession of 2008-2009 was much ado about nothing.




Scholes, Merton Says Banks Should Value Assets Better
Myron Scholes and Robert Merton shared the 1997 Nobel price for economics, and they are now united in calling for banks to give more accurate valuations on their illiquid assets. Financial institutions should use mark-to-market accounting or list the hard-to-value securities on public exchanges whenever possible, Scholes said in a Bloomberg Radio interview yesterday. Scholes, winner of the Nobel with Merton for helping invent a model for pricing options, said investors need better data on prices to accurately value the debt and equity securities of banks.

"I’d like to see us encourage many more securities held on the books of the banks be migrated to exchanges if possible," he said. Doing so would "allow for market discovery and market pricing as much as possible," Scholes added. Banks that oppose new accounting standards on asset values want to conceal depressed prices, Merton wrote in the Financial Times yesterday. He composed the column with Robert Kaplan, a professor at the Harvard Business School along with Merton, and Scott Richard, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. "This is not the way forward," they wrote. "While regulators and legislators are keen to find simple solutions to complex problems, allowing financial institutions to ignore market transactions is a bad idea."

The Financial Accounting Standards Board said Aug. 13 that it will consider expanding fair-value rules to loans, a step that might accelerate banks’ recognition of losses and trigger lower earnings and book values. Accounting rules now let companies recognize most loan losses only when management judges them probable. Applying fair value to loans would require earlier recognition of losses.
Banks would benefit if some of their debt automatically converted to equity during a crisis, reducing the need to unload assets in frozen markets, Scholes said yesterday.

"That would mean the price to the banks and other financial institutions would increase accordingly, and the necessity of bailouts would be reduced and the necessity to sell assets at times of shock would also be reduced," he said. "We have to think about market mechanisms that actually reduce the costs associated with adjusting capital structures." Regulators need to "blow up or burn" the private over- the-counter derivative markets to help solve the financial crisis, Scholes said on March 6. Because markets had frozen, investors weren’t getting timely prices to inform their decisions, he said then, speaking at New York University’s Stern School of Business.

Scholes and Merton, together with the late Fischer Black, developed the Black-Scholes model of pricing options, or contracts that give the buyer the right to purchase a security or commodity at a later date for a specified price. Black died in 1995. Platinum Grove Asset Management LP, the Rye Brook, New York-based hedge fund where Scholes is chairman, was forced to freeze investor withdrawals in November after a surge in redemptions. He was a partner in Long-Term Capital Management LP, whose $4 billion loss in 1998 set off a near panic in financial markets and prompted the Federal Reserve to orchestrate a bailout by 14 lenders.




Why we need to regulate the banks sooner, not later
by Kenneth Rogoff

When in doubt, bail it out," is the policy mantra 11 months after the September 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers. With the global economy tentatively emerging from recession, and investors salivating over the remaining banks’ apparent return to profitability, some are beginning to ask: "Did we really need to suffer so much?"

Too many policymakers, investors and economists have concluded that US authorities could have engineered a smooth exit from the bubble economy if only Lehman had been bailed out. Too many now believe that any move towards greater financial regulation should be sharply circumscribed since it was the government that dropped the ball. Stifling financial innovation will only slow growth, with little benefit in terms of stemming future crises; it is the job of central banks to prevent bank runs by reacting forcefully in a potential systemic crisis; policymakers should not be obsessed with moral hazard and should forget trying to micromanage the innovative financial sector.

This relatively sanguine diagnosis is tempting, but dangerous. There are three basic problems with the view that the costs of greater bank regulation outweigh the benefits, and that the whole problem was the botched Lehman bail-out.

First, the US economy was not exactly cruising along at warp speed in the run-up to September 2008. The National Bureau of Economic Research has the US recession beginning at the end of 2007. Financial markets had begun to exhibit distress from the subprime problem by the summer of 2007. The epic housing bubble had begun to burst six months earlier. Given that the US consumer had been propelling the global economy for a quarter of a century, was it reasonable to think that the inevitable collapse of the US housing market would be a non-event? As Carmen Reinhart and I argue in our forthcoming book This Time is Different: Eight centuries of financial folly, by most quantitative measures, the US economy was heading towards a deep post-war financial crisis for several years before the subprime crisis. Indeed, in related papers, we argued the case long before Lehman hit.

Second, the view that reining in the financial sector jeopardises future growth needs to be nuanced. Certainly enhanced financial development is integral to achieving greater growth and stability. But economists have less empirical evidence than we might care to admit on which financial sector activities are the most helpful. In general, the links between growth and financial development are complex. Mortgage "innovation" in the US was supposed to be helpful by lowering interest rates to homebuyers. Yet, as the crisis revealed, innovation was also a mechanism for levering implicit taxpayer subsidies. More generally, financial innovation was supposed to bring diversification and stability. But in a system-wide breakdown, it also fuelled contagion.

Third, it is dangerous to point to the nascent restoration of profits in the financial sector as clear evidence of a corresponding benefit to the economy. There is an element of arbitrage, as banks borrow at low rates against the implicit guarantee of a government bail-out in the event of a crisis. Do people really believe, as some argue, that moral hazard is a non-issue? Why should large systemically critical financial institutions be allowed to heavily leverage themselves with short-term borrowing? What would be lost if regulators placed stricter capital requirements to discourage arbitrage activities that excessively expose too-big-to-fail banks to systemic risk?

Certainly economists have models of why it can be efficient for lenders to keep borrowers on a short leash. Yet these models do not explain why the leash has to be wrapped around borrowers’ necks three dozen times, as in the case of a highly leveraged bank. The fact is that banks, especially large systemically important ones, are currently able to obtain cash at a near zero interest rate and engage in risky arbitrage activities, knowing that the invisible wallet of the taxpayer stands behind them. In essence, while authorities are saying that they intend to raise capital requirements on banks later, in the short run they are looking the other way while banks gamble under the umbrella of taxpayer guarantees.

If the optimists are wrong, does this mean that the pre-Lehman financial system was one big Sodom and Gomorrah, inevitably condemned to doom? We will never know. Again appealing to my work with Ms Reinhart, theory and history both tell us that any economy that is excessively leveraged with short-term borrowing – be it government, banking, corporate or consumer – is highly vulnerable to crises of confidence. Accidents that are waiting to happen usually do, but when?

Neither statistical analysis of history, nor economic theory offer tight limits on the timing of collapses, even to within a year or two. Certainly the US and global economy were already severely stressed at the time of Lehman’s fall, but better tactical operations by the Federal Reserve and Treasury, especially in backstopping Lehman’s derivatives book, might have stemmed the panic. Indeed, with hindsight it is easy to say the authorities should have acted months earlier to force banks to raise more equity capital.

The March 2008 collapse of the fifth-largest investment bank, Bear Stearns, should have been an indication that urgent action was needed. Fed and Treasury officials argue that before Lehman, stronger measures were politically impossible. There had to be blood on the streets to convince Congress. In any event, given the system’s manifest vulnerabilities, and the impending tsunami of the housing price collapse, it is hard to know if deferring the crisis would have made things better or worse, particularly given the obvious paralysis of the political system.

Economists will conduct post-mortems of the crisis for decades. In the meantime, common sense dictates the need for stricter controls on short-term borrowing by systemically important institutions, as well as regularly monitored limits on oversized risk positions, taking into account that markets can be highly correlated in a downturn. Better macroprudential action is needed, particularly in reining in sustained, large current account deficits. While such deficits can sometimes be justified, prolonged imbalances fuel leverage and can give the illusion that high growth and asset prices are sustainable. There should also be more international co-ordination of financial supervision, to prevent countries using soft regulation to bid for business and to insulate regulators from political pressures.

It is good that the economy appears to be stabilising, albeit on the back of a vast array of non-transparent taxpayer subsidies to financial institutions. But this strategy must not be relied on indefinitely because it risks compromising the fiscal credibility of rich-country governments. The view that everything would be fine if Hank Paulson, then US Treasury secretary, had simply underwritten a $50bn bail-out of Lehman is dangerously misguided. The financial system still needs fundamental reform, and not just starting in five years.




Fitch Ratings Steps Up Probe into Commercial Mortgage Exposure
Fitch Ratings expanded its analysis of commercial real estate (CRE) as the performance metrics "deteriorate at an unprecedented pace." As part of the broader analysis, Fitch issued surveys to more than 75 US bank and thrift institutions it rates, requesting more details on the firms’ exposure to CRE. Details sought include collateral type, geography, internal risk rating and performance, according to a Fitch Ratings statement Tuesday.

CRE loans, excluding construction and development portfolios — which Fitch says tends to present more problems — represent more than 125% of total equity for the 20 largest banks Fitch rates. That risk is higher for banks with less than $20bn of assets, where average CRE exposure represents more than 200% of total equity.

This substantial exposure to CRE loans is only more risky considering the degree of deterioration among CRE loans, Fitch says. The rating agency released analysis last week detailing the 3.04% delinquency rate among commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS), which is on track to rise above 5% delinquency by year-end. The exposure to this CRE debt and its deteriorating performance lends "major concern" to the current outlooks on large institutions. Fitch currently keeps negative outlooks on nearly half of the 20 largest US banks and thrift institutions it rates.

"While the relative size of the CRE portfolio is smaller for some of the very large banks Fitch rates, the recent performance trends, expectations for continued economic weakness and the uncertain availability of the CMBS market increases the concern regarding CRE exposure and makes it a likely rating driver as we look out over the next few quarters," says James Moss, managing director and co-head of Fitch’s North America financial institutions group. The Federal Reserve and US Treasury Department on Monday responded to this uncertain availability of CMBS, extending the deadlines of major liquidity programs through the Term Asset-Backed Loan Facility (TALF) aimed at stimulating CMBS issuance.




Credit card companies make changes midstream
Harry Lopez of Stockton knew he had a clean borrowing record: making payments on time, never exceeding his credit limit - he'd even taken out a consolidation loan in 2008 and paid off all his credit cards. Then he got a Chase Bank credit card that promised a zero percent interest rate for six months. Imagine his shock when Chase suddenly broke that promise and imposed interest on his outstanding balance and any cash advances, then later announced it was closing the account and would accept no further charges.

Lopez acknowledged he unknowingly hurt his credit by closing all his old charge accounts and that his credit report - which he checked only after Chase shut off his new card - contained erroneous negative information. Still, he feels he was treated unfairly. "Do you really want, as an unknowing public, to walk into a bank like this and do business with them thinking they're going to give you zero interest, then two months later jack you up to 18 percent and 23 percent. ... And then find some excuse later on and just close your account on you before you even know what's happened?" A Chase spokeswoman, responding in an e-mail, said bank is constantly monitoring its credit account, as a regular part of doing business.

"When necessary, we make changes to pricing, terms or credit lines based on borrower risk, market conditions and the costs to us of making loans. These are factors we have always monitored and processes we have consistently followed," she said in an e-mail. But Bill Hardekopf, chief executive of the credit card comparison Web site www.LowCards.com, said Chase and other lenders have greatly increased restrictions on credit card accounts in the midst of the credit market meltdown and recession. "Issuers in general are trying to cut their risks," he said.

Banks had been generous in granting credit, both in issuing cards and in providing high credit limits, Hardekopf said. "Then a year or so ago, the economy goes into the tank and ... life for the issuers suddenly changed," he said. "They started to show all these losses, and they realized, 'Oh, my gosh. We need to make some changes.'" As a result, a significant number of credit card customers have had their credit limits slashed, and issuers are also closing many accounts that are seen as risky or have been largely inactive, Hardekopf said.

It's a dramatic shift, according to banking analyst Meredith Whitney. She predicted in March that lenders would cut about $2 trillion in available credit card lines by year's end and $2.7 trillion by the end of 2010. That's half of the roughly $5 trillion in credit card lines that were available to consumers in the spring. That will affect many credit customers, said Joseph Ridout, consumer services manager with Consumer Action. "It's an enormous ratcheting down of credit availability for individual card holders," he said from his San Francisco offices.

Consumers may want to take steps to preserve and protect their credit lines should a card issuer decide to lower their credit limits, Ridout said. That's because the so-called "utilization ratio" - the total amount of a borrower's debt divided by total available credit - accounts for roughly 30 percent of an individual credit score, he said. So while Harry Lopez did fine in paying off his credit card debt, Ridout said, "Where he went wrong was in actually closing the accounts." It also lowered the average age of his accounts, a factor that contributes about 10 percent to individual credit scores.

"It behooves you to think twice about closing existing credit card accounts," Ridout said. ... "The trend is lower credit lines and fewer credit cards to borrowers. There's no guarantee you'll get that back." Consumers with more than one credit card might also seek higher credit limits on their other accounts, but they should be careful not to trigger a credit check or "inquiry" by the lender. Too many such inquiries in a short amount of time can be another negative mark, Ridout said.

"Another thing people can do to minimize their exposure to these kinds of unfair credit line changes ... is to make sure your credit report is accurate and dispute any incorrect information," he said. Consumers may request a free credit report once a year from each of the three national credit bureaus, Equifax, Experian and TransUnion. Requests may be made online at www.annualcreditreport.com; by downloading a form from that Web site and mailing it in; or by calling (877) 322-8228.

People may simply order all three forms once a year or, if they want to check more frequently, order a report from one credit bureau, in rotation, every four months. "Credit card banks are closing many accounts. Even accounts of customers who have never paid late and been model customers," Ridout said. "The reality is there will be fewer cards and lower limits available in the near term than they have been in the past."




Why Budget Deficits Matter: Government at a $1.26 Trillion Budget Deficit for the 2009 Fiscal Year. Three Times as Large as Last Year and we still have Two More Months of Data

The notion that deficits do not matter is a widely held and deeply ingrained economic philosophy.  This line of thought took a stronghold in the 1980s and has seemed to stick to our ever-growing dismay.  Yet budget deficits do matter if we are looking at an economic horizon that is longer than one fiscal year.  You need to put this into context of your own household.  If you as an average American spend more than you make, it will eventually catch up to you.  In a more distant past, the American consumer did not have access to debt as they do now.  So they in effect had the ability to run localized deficits.  Americans took this notion of spending more than you earn to heart.  Many bought homes, cars, entertainment systems, and other consumer goods that simply did not jive with their income.  This can last for a few years but eventually it will catch up.  Now we are seeing the housing bubble burst and bankruptcies soaring.

Now I want to bring this to a more micro level because similar rules apply to larger systems.  Many Americans have had their access to credit cutoff.  The U.S. Government for many years has been relying on cheap money fuel from foreigners to keep our deficit engines going.  This will only work if we can eventually get the revenue side of the equation up.  Otherwise, foreigners will do what many credit card companies are doing to consumers and that is pulling away that easy debt.  It probably helps to see the actual cash flow sheet of the United States:

federal government expenses and revenues

This chart is so important because it strikes at the root of our current dilemma in that we are spending more than we are bringing in.  So what would this ratio look like if we apply it to an easier example?  Let us use a simple example to understand this ratio.  This is like the $50,000 American household spending $80,000 a year.  How long can that go forward?  Sure you can have the artifacts of wealth like a leased Lexus and a new McMansion giving the appearance of wealth but once the access to credit runs out, it is a sudden freefall.  People quickly realize who owns the underlying asset when they are unable to make the debt payment.

For Q2 of 2009 the government spent on a seasonally adjusted annual rate $3.5 trillion.  In Q1 of 2009 (the latest point on the chart) the government brought in $2.2 trillion in tax revenues.  We have never run such deep deficits so we are in uncharted territory here.

It will help to look at the monthly data since we still have two more months left for this historic fiscal year:

treasury-taxes-and-spending

For the 2008 fiscal year, we ran a $454 billion budget deficit.  That is deep but nothing compared to our current deficit.  This fiscal year we are running a $1.26 trillion budget deficit and we still have two more months of data.  Keep in mind the recent improvement in GDP is largely due to massive amounts of government spending, bailouts, and taxpayer subsidies.  The so-called recovery didn’t occur naturally.  Now we all understand that the government has been spending to support the economy.  Yet one factor that is being largely ignored is the revenue side of the equation.  The 2008 fiscal year saw $2.5 trillion in tax receipts and this year we have seen only $1.74 trillion.  Depending on the next two months, we are looking at a $600 to $700 billion short fall in income from last year.  Keep in mind that 2008 was already a battered year so this is significant.

Moreover, this is not something that only applies to tough times like this extraordinarily painful recession.  In Q1 of 2007, our highest tax revenue quarter we brought in $2.66 trillion on a seasonally adjusted annual basis.  Even during this supposedly good quarter, we managed to spend $2.88 trillion on a seasonally adjusted annual rate.  This stems from the pervasive mentality that deficits simply do not matter.  If they do not matter during good times or bad times then we have to conclude that the entire policy is based on believing that deficit spending is okay under any circumstance.  This has been going on for 30 years.

The U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve are spending as if nothing has changed during this recession.  Let us look at where all the money is going:

government spending

For all the talk about certain agencies, there are four major expenses here:

(1)  Department of Defense

(2)  Health and Human Services

(3)  Treasury Department

(4)  Social Security

And the cost for each is increasing.  The only one we seem to be talking about is healthcare but the dialogue is being sidetracked.  The other three seem to be off limits or a third rail of politics.  Yet anyone looking at this chart realizes this is unsustainable unless one thing happens.  Revenues increase.  How can we increase revenues?  There are a couple of ways.  The economy improves and incomes pick up naturally or we raise taxes.  Yet that may not help.  Let us look at the tax structure:

taxes

Source:  Federal Reserve, St. Louis

The top 10 percent of taxpayers already pay 54 percent of income taxes.  Drop down to the top 25, and you have 83 percent of all taxes.  This is a question that we need to seriously explore.  In terms of the economy improving, most are hoping that it does improve with job losses abating and growth occurring.  That has not been happening.  The economy will improve when it finds an equilibrium.  The root of our problem dealt with spending more than we earned.  Yet here we are offering people money to purchase cars.  Why give tax rebates for people to purchase homes subsidizing their purchase on the backs of non-homeowners?  I think many can understand spending money on modernizing roads or building new schools but rebates for cars?  Yet increasing taxes is something that probably will occur and with such massive deficits, this is something that will be on the table.  The question is, will this help the overall economy?

The U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve are going to realize in the next few years that deficits do matter.  Publicly our officials keep saying that they do care about deficits and the world seems okay with this for now.  Yet the massive bet here is that the income side of the equation will improve.  But, what if it doesn’t?





Getting the show on the road
When global equities fell out of bed on Monday, they cast an interesting verdict on the policy response to the financial crisis. On Wall Street concern about a lack of consumer confidence in the US prompted the slide. In Shanghai, where the damage was notably worse, those same fears were exacerbated by a worry that the Chinese authorities would curb bank lending. There are a number of problems here. But first, a reprise is in order. To escape from the global imbalances that are at the root of this financially induced recession, creditor countries need to stimulate their economies while the mainly Anglophone debtor countries moderate their excesses.

Japan, China and Germany, the biggest surplus countries, have, in the event, embarked on greater domestic stimulus than some had expected. Yet the US stimulus remains disproportionately large, while investors are looking to the already heavily indebted American consumer to do more to drag the world out of recession. This does not amount to a sustainable exit strategy and in policy terms looks curiously like a re-run of the early 1930s in reverse. Then, countries that adhered to the Gold Bloc matched deflation in the US with their own deflationary response. Today, an exchange rate regime where many Asian currencies are pegged to the dollar means that asset price inflation in the US is being matched by asset price inflation in Asia.

Driving asset prices higher this year has been quantitative easing, whereby governments purchase assets, mainly bonds, from the private sector. Because households in the Anglophone economies are so indebted, this has done little to stimulate consumption. Instead, it has put money into the hands of the investment institutions from which central banks have purchased bonds. This has been recycled into equities and commodities. Many Asian countries have imported this loose monetary policy via their dollar pegs, while engaging in broader fiscal and monetary stimulus. In a half-market economy such as China, this entails extensive lending by banks to the state-owned corporate sector, which invests heavily in sub-optimal manufacturing projects while also pumping funds into the stock market and property. In effect, the currency peg creates an in-built tendency towards bubbles and busts. While better than deflation, this outcome far from optimal in terms of putting the global economic show back on the road.

Creditor countries are not blameless. Their accumulation of current account surpluses and official reserves produced damagingly cheap finance that fuelled the Anglophone debt binge. Without the Anglophone readiness to borrow and spend, these countries would also have been plunged into depression. By treating the Anglophone economies as a dumping ground for their artificially cheap exports, they invited a protectionist backlash from voters whose children and grandchildren will inherit a huge debt burden as a consequence of today’s fiscal emergency measures. Yet there are formidable historical, psychological and cultural obstacles to different behaviour. This is most obviously true in Germany, where memories of inflation in the last century endure, and where the finance minister recently shocked Anglophone economists by declaring that Germans consumed too much and invested too little.

Equally important is the way a narrow and short term view of national interests tends to prevail in international monetary relations. The conflict between debtors and creditors subverts efforts to secure international cooperation. There is an echo here of the debate at Bretton Woods, where the postwar international financial architecture was thrashed out in 1944. In the negotiations, John Maynard Keynes for the UK tried to secure an international adjustment mechanism that was as tough on countries that ran persistent surpluses as on countries that ran persistent deficits. Such was the weakness of the UK’s economic position that Harry Dexter White, the US Treasury secretary, prevailed.

The US was the world’s biggest surplus country and expected to continue that way. So the Bretton Woods agreement incorporated no sanctions on surplus countries and no real incentives for adjustment by countries that persistently piled up reserves. Bretton Woods did not last very long. Current exchange rate regimes look no more durable. Meantime, the risk that mercantilist exchange rate policies will prompt trade retaliation remains high, as does the risk of investor disappointment if US consumers choose to continue to rebuild their savings. They have no obligation, after all, to embark on a further binge purely to justify share prices that have run ahead of events.




Bank of England Governor outvoted on money printing plan
The Governor of the Bank of England wanted to pump an extra £75 billion directly into the economy via the Bank's scheme of quantitative easing but was outvoted by six members of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) who favoured a more modest £50 billion expansion. Minutes of the Bank's meeting, held this month, show that Mr King, Tim Besley and David Miles favoured increasing quantitative easing by a further £75 billion to take the total to £200 billion. It is the third time Mr King has been outvoted by his committee, following rate-setting meetings in August 2005 and in June 2007.

Today’s minutes revealed that both the Bank's deputy Governors and four other members voted against the move, preferring a more modest £50 billion of extra stimulus. Sterling fell more than half a cent against the dollar to $1.6402 on the announcement, with investors taking the split as a signal that more quantitative easing could be on the cards. The committee was united in its view that quantitative easing needed to be expanded if inflation was to head back to the 2 per cent target in the medium term. The minutes show that members had concerns that failure to do so could "harm public confidence in the recovery" as inflation lingered at 1.8 per cent, below the 2 per cent target.

The minutes also showed members were concerned that "confidence in the efficacy of monetary policy might also be damaged, limiting policymakers' ability to stimulate the economy in the future". But, while some committee members argued that doing too much rather than too little was preferable, because the interest rate could be increased if inflation started to rise, others said that the expansion of quantitative easing should be "moderate" given that some of the downside risks to the economy had receded.

The minutes come after stronger than expected inflation data yesterday that showed that the Bank's target rate for CPI inflation remained at 1.8 per cent in July, confounding expectations that it would continue to slide. But many economists said that it would soon resume its downward path. Vicky Redwood, UK economist at Capital Economics, said: "If, as we expect, that turns out to have been a blip and the economic recovery is weaker than the MPC expects, there is a good chance that the MPC will extend the QE programme again in November." Mr King was first outvoted in August 2005 when members voted 5-4 for an interest rate cut.

Minutes for the meeting revealed that Mr King stuck to his view that interest rates should remain unchanged while the majority voted for a quarter-point cut to 4.5 per cent. Charles Bean, the Bank's chief economist and all four external members of the MPC voted against Mr King. In 2007, minutes of the MPC June meeting revealed that Mr King was among the four who voted for an increase in the interest rate — the committee held the rate at 5.5 per cent.




U.K. Government Swaps Rise After Cameron Warns of Default Risk
The cost of hedging against losses on U.K. government debt rose to the highest in a month after David Cameron, the leader of the opposition Conservative Party, said high borrowing levels put the country at risk of default. Credit-default swaps tied to Britain rose 2 basis points to 62, according to CMA DataVision prices at 11:22 a.m. in London. That compares with contracts on Germany at 26.5 basis points and Portugal at 63.5 basis points, CMA prices show. The U.K.’s debt burden is the highest since 1976, when it sought an emergency loan from the International Monetary Fund to keep up overseas payments. The Treasury said in April it will borrow 269 billion pounds ($440 billion) more than previously forecast as the recession cuts tax revenue.

"You run the risk of not being able to meet your obligations," Cameron said at an event in London yesterday with Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of "Black Swan." "I’m not predicting that it’s going to happen, but as government borrowing goes up and up and up, you start running that risk." A basis point on a credit-default swap protecting $10 million of debt from default for five years is equivalent to $1,000 a year. The contracts pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a country fail to adhere to its debt agreements.




Spain: Flimsier footings
Joaquín Sorolla, the sometimes audacious Spanish impressionist whose work is on show now at Madrid's Prado museum, portrayed his country for the New York headquarters of the Hispanic Society of America nearly a century ago in oils depicting traditional, even clichéd, scenes of regional life: dancers and bullfighters in Andalucía, a bagpipe player in rural Galicia, a festival with oranges in Valencia.

This folkloric vision of Spain and its distinctively different parts still has the power to charm Spaniards and foreigners alike. But three decades of devolution, following the death of the dictator Francisco Franco in 1975 and the launch of a democratic constitution three years later, have added an intensely political and sometimes bitter flavour to Spanish discussions about their regional differences. With the national economy in deep recession, Spain's devolution debate seems to be coming towards a head. Although there is no imminent risk of a split such as the one that divided Czechoslovakia, the arguments are more intense than in just about any other nation state of western Europe.

The economic crisis has helped to expose the high costs - to businesses and to taxpayers - of Spanish devolution and the multiple regional and local bureaucracies it has spawned, costs previously obscured by the piles of cash from property taxes during the country's housing boom. It points to problems that may grow more acute for other countries including the UK, with its debates over devolved government in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.

Spain's Socialist government urgently needs to cut spending to stop the budget deficit rising above 10 per cent of gross domestic product this year but is finding its room for manoeuvre severely limited by the country's regional structure. The regions absorb about half of all public spending. A further 30 per cent of the budget goes towards non-discretionary social security payments, leaving only about one-fifth of outgoings under the direct control of the centre.

As in most large nation states - from the US to China, India, Nigeria and Brazil - there has long been a tension between the wishes of the centre and the demands of the various regions. Spain is remarkable, however, for the extent of the powers peacefully devolved over the past 30 years. Yet some Spanish regions are demanding even more than the substantial autonomy already achieved - and a few regional politicians do talk of outright independence - while Spaniards in the Castilian heartland have started to fret about a creeping fragmentation of the nation.

Luis María Anson, a conservative writer, called this month for a joint defence of Spanish unity by the main parties of left and right, saying they should start reversing the process of granting autonomy to the regions and "hispanify" the increasingly assertive region of Catalonia, centred on Barcelona. Writing in the daily El Mundo, he accused José Luis Rodrí-guez Zapatero, Spain's prime minister, of fecklessly "laying the foundations for Catalonia to become an independent state within a few years".

Fernando Savater, a philosopher and campaigner for Spanish unity, is not quite so alarmed about the country's future, although he agrees that the spread of autonomous powers has gone too far. "It would be too much to speak of disintegration, but it's true that Spain is becoming progressively less cohesive," he says. Regional nationalist attitudes "began as a reaction to Francoism and have now been converted into a sort of obligation".

Recent weeks have brought reminders of Spain's most extreme manifestation of separatism. Eta, the Basque group that has waged a long campaign of violence and murdered more than 820 people, detonated bombs in Burgos in the north and on the holiday island of Mallorca, killing two civil guards and injuring more than 40 people. Eta's violent tactics, however, are not popular among the Basques of the Spanish-French border region.

But there are other, equally significant parts of Spain where some of the inhabitants regard Madrid as a colonial power and are waging peaceful campaigns for greater autonomy or, occasionally, independence. In addition to the Basque country, two regions known for their autonomous leanings are Catalonia in the north-east and Galicia in the north-west. Cultural separatism can be seen in the promotion of local languages in schools and other areas of public life, particularly in Catalonia. Such policies - inevitably implemented at the expense of Castilian, the Spanish language - spark occasional heated protests from Spanish nationalists.

Language, though, is only the most visible sign of the centrifugal forces at work in modern Spain. The 17 autonomous communities already control most aspects of government, including health and education. Catalonia has gone further than the rest, opening representative offices abroad and approving by a referendum in 2006 an autonomy statute to give itself even greater powers. The statute's validity has been contested by the conservative opposition Popular party (PP) and is still awaiting a ruling from Spain's constitutional court.

Catalan nationalists will resist any attempts to erode the autonomy they have already gained. They argue that they have not only succeeded in developing a vibrant Catalan culture and economy after the trauma of Franco but as one of the richest regions have heavily subsided poorer parts of Spain and so contributed to the country's rapid postwar growth.

The more obscure regional identities, Spanish unionists argue, are an unintended consequence of democracy. As soon as the dictator died, it was inevitable that the Basques, Catalans and Galicians who had been repressed by his centrist regime would reassert themselves. But the authors of the 1978 constitution deemed it unfair to give rights to these three regions that would not be granted to, say, Andalucía or Murcia, so Spain chose a policy of café para todos - coffee for all.

"There's been a contagion with the rest of the country, like swine flu," says Prof Savater. "The language and attitudes of nationalism have now extended to all regions of Spain, including those that were never nationalist. Anyone who talks of Spanish unity is frowned upon." Even so, a combination of economic necessity and public weariness of incumbent nationalist politicians may be starting to turn the tide in favour of the Spanish unionists, at least in the Basque country and Galicia.

In elections in the two regions in March, the PP ousted a coalition of Socialists and Galician nationalists, while moderate Basque nationalists lost power for the first time since the end of the Franco era to an unusual Socialist-PP alliance whose only obvious shared belief is loyalty to Spain. Although the shifts in voting patterns were small, the new regional governments have begun modifying language policies and otherwise deemphasising regional exceptionalism. That will please investors irritated by regional regulations - advertisers and hotel chains are among those that complain of varying standards applied across Spain. Mariano Rajoy, the PP leader, has made a law on the unity of the Spanish market a prominent part of his election programme.

For his part, Mr Zapatero has continued to deliver more fiscal stimulus spending to create jobs and has promised an extra €11bn ($15.5bn, £9.4bn) to the regions, especially Catalonia, over the next four years because he needs the support of regional politicians in the national parliament. To make matters worse, both the numbers and the wages of civil servants have continued to rise inexorably in spite of the crisis and price deflation. International credit rating agencies, anxious about the lack of fiscal discipline, have begun to downgrade the growing debt not only of Spain but also of its component regions.

"In the past, the institutional framework has proved to be supportive for the Spanish regions at a time when the national economy was growing quickly and continually," said a report from Moody's shortly before the rating agency downgraded Catalonia's debt at the end of last month. "In the new environment of an economic downturn, the past system strengths turn into weaknesses."

So for the first time in years, there are signs that the process of devolution might stall or even go into reverse. That would in theory be more likely if the PP, strongly committed by ideology and history to Spanish unity, came to power in the next general election due by 2012. But politicians of the PP have proved as eager as their leftwing rivals to construct regional and local power bases and to enjoy the hitherto abundant financial fruits of Spain's devolved political system. Nor, as elsewhere in Europe, will regional nationalists lightly abandon terrain won over decades.

Sir John Elliott, the British historian who is a leading expert on Spain, put it recently like this: while 21stcentury Europe is unlikely to splinter into mini-states, regions that saw themselves as nationswill probably enjoy more freedom of action than they had during most of the 19th and 20th centuries. But without dialogue, compromise and good leadership, he warned, "the possibility exists that Spain will end up fragmented into its component parts, just as a similar possibility exists in the case of Great Britain".




Is Nouriel Roubini a False Prophet?
Psychics and prophets have been in business since that other oldest profession. Like the more commonly referred to oldest profession, the secret to success for psychics and prophets is to turn many tricks.

As a lawyer by training, I have been rigorously conditioned to see the logical techniques employed in everything I hear and read the same way Neo from The Matrix sees the 1’s and 0’s underlying superficial reality. So, I am concerned when I watch self-proclaimed psychics and prophets use the equivalent of logical black magic to seduce their prey.

Wall Street has a laundry list of such charlatans. They tend to capture the spotlight during the heat of emotional peaks in the markets because emotion and reason tend to maintain an inverse relationship. During times of crisis we need something, sometimes anything, to reduce our pain and restore order to an uncomfortable new chaos.

During the height of the most recent economic crisis, the media offered the center-stage spotlight to NYU Economics Professor Nouriel Roubini to comfort us with his soma. At the peak of the crash, Roubini was as ubiquitous as Coca-Cola and cellphones. He was the go-to guy because his PR team branded him as “The Prophet of Doom.” A perfect fit when you need someone to call at an overwhelmingly bullish place like Wall Street.

Roubini is clearly an intelligent fellow who has produced some interesting works. However, just as clearly, he is not a prophet or anything close. More accurately, Roubini has disingenuously promoted himself as nailing the crisis, when truthfully he was wrong until other hard working analysts fixed his broken crystal ball.

Like any lawyer preparing to argue in front of the Supreme Court (of public opinion, in this case), I made sure to do my homework and collect my evidence boxes of smoking guns. Rather than bore you with a full recount, I have pulled the most important comments from each source and linked to the original material for your due diligence pleasure. So, without further ado, I respectfully address the court:

As we can see, in March 2005 Roubini started by predicting a crisis caused by Foreign Central Banks diversifying out of US Dollars. (See: ‘Does Overseas Appetite for Bonds Put the U.S. Economy at Risk?’) In February 2006, Roubini still solely focused on foreigners diversifying out of US Treasury debt and further incorrectly predicted that “our current patterns of spending above our incomes” would cause a crisis by 2013. (See: ‘Taste of the Future‘.) Given that the credit markets (which Roubini never mentions until others show him the light) imploded recently, I think we can conclude that “spending above our incomes” doesn’t have to do the crisis perp walk. During the same month as The Washington Post article, Roubini’s press releases peppered the New Yorker with his message: “Roubini is among those who fear that America’s profligacy will eventually create a crisis of confidence on the part of its creditors, leading to a run on the dollar, an upward spike in interest rates, and a deep recession.” (See: ‘Moneyman’ and ‘Ominous Warnings and Dire Predictions of the World’s Financial Experts’.)

At a transition point in August 2006 (most likely when Roubini realized he picked the wrong causes), he threw the entire kitchen sink into the center of the causation ring. The USA Today reported, “He [Roubini] spells out a long list of potential risks that could push the country into trouble. Among them: unregulated hedge funds, housing, foreign trade uncertainty, the need to finance the nation’s huge trade deficit, Middle East unrest and the potential for terrorism.” In another article, Roubini added to his laundry list by adding just about everything under the sun: “Among other factors, Roubini cites ‘trade protectionism and asset protectionism; hedgy and trigger-happy investors and rising geopolitical risks; the risk of a disorderly fall in the U.S. dollar; a slush of financial derivatives that are a black box that no-one understands … frothy markets where years of too easy money have created bubbles galore – the latest in housing – that are ready to burst; a bubble of thousands of new hedge funds with inexperienced managers … a housing market whose rout may trigger systemic effects …’” (See: ‘Is Economy Headed to a Soft Landing?’ ‘Surprise: Bears still growling about 1987′ and ‘Recession Isn’t My Greatest Fear’.) How about adding to that list butterflies flapping their wings on the other side of the world, or an attack of the flying space monkeys?

This specific tactic — expanding the “prediction” data set of possibilities — may be the most popular for false prophets and psychics. Usually, there will be a group willing to hang on to the one correct cause out of the many incorrectly asserted. Then, afterward, the charlatan works tirelessly to rewrite history or distract his victims from what was exactly said in the past. It’s like a fake shaman warning the villagers of rain (an inevitable fate) by means of angry gods when in fact the true cause was heavy cloud droplets. Yet, once the rain falls he quickly raises his voice about how he “predicted” the rain. Yes, rain followed the shaman’s warning, but this is not a “prediction” for obvious reasons.

Moving along, in September 2006, Roubini spontaneously switched his focus onto a new cause: the housing market. However, as we can see, he still completely misses the most important detail that the cause of the crisis was the funding of houses in the credit markets — not basic economic fundamentals of the underlying housing market. (See: ‘The Descent’.) But can you really blame an economics professor for getting pigeon-holed by his lifelong macroeconomic framework? If Roubini were to have actually found the afikomen (Hebrew translation “dessert”), he would have needed an ear to the extremely niche, real-world Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO) markets which he had no reason to follow at NYU.

Clearly, the evidence above indicates Roubini never understood that the CDO market was the largest buyer of Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS). Moreover, he never mentioned that once the Fed took away the punchbowl with consecutive rate increases, the ability to refinance crap loans would disappear like a breath in the wind. Rather, Roubini incorrectly attempted to predict that the collapse of the US Dollar would cause the Fed to raise rates, thereby causing “a sharp slowdown of the US and global economy.” (See: ‘Does Overseas Appetite for Bonds Put the U.S. Economy at Risk?’) So, we are left to conclude that Roubini was simply tossing generalities into the press as not to miss the call until too long after the media found another darling.

By this point it must be noted that other bright yet less media friendly economists and fund managers were chattering about the true details of what would ultimately cause the crisis. Thus, Roubini was at liberty to take others’ research and repackage it as his own to a journalist at the New York Times who did not do his fact-checking, Fourth Estate duties. (See: ‘Dr. Doom’.) Once Roubini was legitimized by The New York Times, subsequent journalists assumed the original facts were checked and lazily relied on The Times’ reputation rather than double-check.

I am not writing this article because I care about Roubini. Like countless others, he is a talking-head trying to make money in a capitalist system. I am writing this article because it is time to give out the medals to the true heroes who put their careers in jeopardy to uncover truths no one wanted to hear — especially the general plasma-screen engorged public, prospective clients, bonus-induced professionals on Wall Street and at real estate/housing related companies, and politicians with record tax collections in their purses.

So, this piece serves two purposes: 1) mainstream journalists need to start fact-checking before allowing one bit of bad journalism to become a false truth heard ’round the world, and 2) I am laying the groundwork and sweeping the streets for the true heroes’ parade. Stay tuned



96 comments:

Hombre said...

El G - My apologies if you think I sent a cheap shot. I used poor wording. I was trying to be funny, which I am not good at.

Actually, if you recall yesterday I texted my interest in the subject before our host stopped things. I do respect your opinion on everything, even though I may not agree (yet).

Ahimsa, please... I AN NOT... AM NOT... what is referred to as an American exceptionalist. I see nothing exceptional, nor unexceptional about any people, culture, or tradition. I hope you don't try to put me in a box that I do not want to be in, nor do I agree with!

Greenpa said...

One of the options for China not too far down the road would be another revolution.

They utterly hate and are embarrassed by the memory of the Cultural Revolution- but that would not stop them from trying again.

They have plenty of 1st rate minds who notice that they are starting rapidly down the paths that have led to the collapse of the US and Europe- and they just might decide to go back to a stricter form of socialism; restricting the robber-chieftain capitalism they've been encouraging.

"China’s fortunes over the past decade are reminiscent of Lucent Technologies in the 1990s. "

This one totally cracked me up. Excuse me? This vast, incomprehensible, unknowable ancient civilization resembles some dinky corporation?

You know you're talking to a nincompoop when someone says "sure, I understand China..."

Mellowg said...

I have been living for the last 20 years in the boom-docks of Costa Rica (I mean away from everything) therefore I think I have adapted myself to a rather limited lifestyle. Granted down here we have socialized medicine and the nurse comes around on his scooter every six months to keep all immunisation up to date, and we have the doctor that shows up to the village clinic once a month for the heavy stuff.

My question to you kind folks is two fold.

How do you see healthcare being administered when TSHTF? Surely when the debacle is upon us, the pharma-industrial complex will be ravaged and it will not be able to provide nor produce the necessary “pills” to cure our aches, or for that matter the numerous small pieces of the cod indispensable in the modern surgery theatre.

Secondly, to the hardy souls that are preparing for “independent” living, what may I ask are your preparations for your health care, how do you intend to proceed on this subject.

As for myself I am trying to catalogue the local medicinal plants (fortunately there are many around here) and I am pursuing friendly terms with the local “shaman” and his recipes

Did you know for example, that you can get a very potent “liquid” anesthetic from palm trees? It will never taste as good as my favourite cognac as it is an acquired taste, but it will keep me warm during our long cold winters

jal said...

@ Ed_Gorey
Nice summary from yesterday
jal

bluebird said...

Mellowg said "Did you know for example, that you can get a very potent “liquid” anesthetic from palm trees? "

Unfortunately, in Ohio, we are not able to grow palm trees. OTOH, I have been stocking up on ibuprofen, acetaminophen, aspirin and bandaids.

Does anyone see the healthcare and medical system collapsing quickly, or devolve slowly over the next few years?

Sam Dug said...

(from the previous comments)

All of these activities can and will be curtailed sharply. Taxes and fees at all levels can be raised. All of this can and will be done in order to satisfy interest payments on the debt. Will it be done all at once? No, of course not. It will be instituted gradually.

Ed gorey, your analysis is spot on and well thought out. The govt really has no other alternative. Their new *challenge* will be devising ways to levy taxes while lowering services and benefits. We know there are endless diversion scenarios that can (and will) be used if dissent becomes overwhelming.

el gallinazo said...

Coy Ote

That post was not directed at you. And I think your posts contribute a lot to this site and I look forward to reading them.

Rats and Monkeys said...

bluebird sings:

"OTOH, I have been stocking up on ibuprofen, acetaminophen, aspirin and bandaids."




You probably already know this, but chewing willow twigs can apparently be an asprin substitute. I've always wanted to test this but never have headaches and am rarely sick enough to need asprin.

I do know from personal experience that slippery elm bark (inner bark)is effective for relieving throat problems and can be very effective for acid reflux atacks. (but best to prevent the acid reflux before it happens through diet modification!) Unfortunately elm trees in NA are dying. I have several of these ulmus rubra kept pruned low and mixed in with other species. There are no native elm within miles of my planting site so I hope I can avoid dutch elm disease. (BTW, I call the slippery elm "tree slime"; it is not magic or mysterious in action; it turns to goo and coats your innards with a protective layer)

I know most medicines have an expiry date, but how realistic are these expiry dates? I assume it would depend on the product chemistry, whether it has been opened, exposed to oxygen, etc. I doubt stocking up for the rest of your life is an option if you are under 70.

Ventriloquist said...

China is the nexus of our denouement.

The Ancient Realm plans slow and long for all its enemies demise.

It can wait.

It has patiently waited for 6000 years.

It can wait for a measly 6 more.

Kimo said...

"Do they react by doing something reckless like devalue the dollar in a desperate attempt to inflate their way out of this?"

What would the procedural steps needed to accomplish a devaluation. ie, do they declare a banking holiday, double the dollars in every bank account, or what?

el gallinazo said...

Tuscaloosa News

TUSCALOOSA | Social Security could face a deficit within two years, according to U.S. Rep. Spencer Bachus who met with The Tuscaloosa News editorial board Tuesday.

Congressman Spencer Bachus, who represents Alabama's 6th Congressional District, visited the Tuscaloosa News on Tuesday morning for an editorial board meeting. Bachus answered questions from associate editor Tommy Stevenson and executive editor Doug Ray

“The situation is much worse than people realize, especially because of the problems brought on by the recession, near depression,” said Bachus, R-Vestavia Hills, in an interview with the Tuscaloosa News editorial board.

Bachus, the ranking member of the House Committee on Financial Services, said most people seem unaware of the impending crisis. He initially said Social Security could face "default" within two years, but his staff responded later saying the Congresssman intended to say "deficit."
__________________________________

Interesting that the ranking member of the House Committee on Financial Services is confused between a default and a deficit. Perhaps the Jack Daniels was flowing freely at the interview.

I paid a special visit to my SS Office well before my 62nd birthday. It was my advanced training in mathematics where I learned that 80% of something was much bigger than 100% of nothing. Since I was still working, I took a big tax hit on the benefits. But I have a special compartment in my mattress labeled SS Benefits - Serve before expiration.

Sam Dug said...

The Chinese solution to a failed banking system would be to nationalize the banks themselves, not just their bad debts. If the U.S. were to follow that example, we the people could get something of value for our investment -- a stable and accountable banking system that belongs to the people. If the word "nationalize" sounds un-American, think "publicly-owned and operated for the benefit of the public," like public libraries, public parks, and public courts.

We need to get our dollars out of Wall Street and back on Main Street, and we can do that only by taking the punch bowl away from our out-of-control private banking monopoly. We need to reclaim "the full faith and credit of the United States" as a monopoly of the people of the United States. If the Chinese can have the best of both worlds, so can we.



The bailout was never intended to *save* the economy. We needed to nationalize the banks and instead poured buckets of taxpayer money into private investment firms (that are still insolvent)!

*****

El G,
You're a wise man for taking your SS early.

Ilargi said...

Sam,

The Ellen Brown piece is no highlight, she has weird ideas indeed. I included it for "curiosity" reasons.

Anonymous said...

Well, Britain certainly is thinking ahead at 'health-care' scenarios.

Mass graves could be used in autumn bout of swine flu

I wonder if the Obama administration is thinking 'outside the box' on this one as well.

Healthcare in the UK and US is probably every bit as insolvent as the banking system, upon which it dearly depends on for financing.

Let's see, Healthcare sweezed by massive deflation during a once in a century pandemic.

Hmm, I wonder if it will perform better than the financial sector, it is after all run by professionals who studied science rather than voodoo economics.

We'll see.

el gallinazo said...

Kimo

That's a good question. Was a lot easier for FDR when we were on the gold standard. The other question that people seldom ask is devalue it against what? Other currencies? Commodities?

Ed Gorey

That was a good piece of analysis. One thing that I might add is that you may see some very strange things in the yield curve, with interest rates very low for less than two years and quite high in the 10 and 30. Da Boyz, including China, may become nervous regarding basic liquidity in longer term bonds.

Actually, since I wrote this I have been Googling historical yield curves for half an hour, which (I guess) makes me an expert. Today's 30 year bond yield is over 2500% of the 3m bill. I believe that there is no previous historical precedent for this steep a curve between the 3m and 30 y rate, so we may already be in virgin territory. Perhaps a real expert could clarify this.

Also FYI

Postings on the subject that must not be named has moved to VK's blog at:

http://tinyurl.com/mq5syy

Anonymous said...

I admire Dmitry Orlov's comparisons between collapse in the US vs USSR.

He has lived in both places.

It would probably be unfair to ask him to give an opinion about how China would deal with collapse, I don't think he ever lived there.

However, certain generalities might hold.

China faces natural resource limits and has way more people than the carrying capacity of the land it occupies.

Russia has far more land and natural resources for the size of it's population.

I don't know if the Chinese would lose their housing during a collapse like people in the U.S.

Or their utilities and healthcare, like those in the U.S.

A tradition of strong central authority exists in China and would seem to be in a better position to provide food and shelter for it's people than in the U.S.

Katrina is the U.S. model of central government compassion and expertise.

Not a comforting thought.

VK said...

Unhappiness: The Price we have paid for Civilization.

It strikes me as odd, the number of people I meet who have an intense desire to always be happy and on a high. To them unhappiness just shouldn't be there, when it comes, it strikes fear and anger rather quickly.

Go to any bookshop and there's a whole section on self improvement and self help. Be a millionaire, a brilliant chef, pick up ladies, make him love you forever and create the next google.

We are stuck on this hedonic treadmill, where we must always be happy, the other half of our emotional spectrum is utterly wrong. Most people are quite optimistic and consider themselves quite happy.

The reality is as always much darker. Civilization at it's heart is about the exploitation of resources and human beings. We mine, we bomb, we pollute, we steal, we kill, we poison and we destroy - Forests, oceans, lakes, mountains, land, the air and our very souls.

Everytime we go to shop, fill up our cars with gas, use any convenience that we associate with modern life. There is a price to be paid, someone will die or has died due to you your consumption. Think of the rivers of blood that have been spilt over land, water, power and oil. And the rivers of blood that will be as we begin our climate descent. Today's consumption and gratification means that someone, somewhere else will suffer and probably die.

Large parts of the world have been built on the backs of slave labour, including America and resource exploitation and the decimation of local/indigenous peoples.

Civilization is inherently brutal and being a 'civilized person' is actually being complicit in mass murder - genocide and ecocide. We deny this reality though, people choose to ignore this reality, absolve themselves of any blame, blame the banksters, the governments, the idiots in charge, anyone but themselves.

When you stone a child, does it matter whether you have thrown a smaller stone? Because this is exactly what we do, on a day to day basis. It is the root cause of the evils that we face in the world, the scars of death and murder, the trail of blood we leave is palpable in our very souls. It rots us from within.

No wonder then that denial is such a wonderful option. Living in our bubble is much better then ever admitting our role in civilization. We are a rapacious and greedy species, with an infinite blood lust. So remember this when you have your next meal, your next dose of medication, the next movie you watch or the next time you surf the web - Your existence has led and will lead to the deaths of many - take a pause and reflect.

Many times at night, this keeps me awake. I drown my sorrows over large amounts of whisky. Their is a madness in this world, one I can not relate too. We all like to think we are better, good, kind, generous. In reality, I am just a cold blooded killer. I don't even know who I've brought suffering too, I just carry on though, as a hypocrite and a charlatan.

So the next time you are happy from consumption or think you are happy? Ask yourself this - what blood price had to be paid to cause that happiness? Suffering brings us a deep connection - to the reality of our world and to ourselves. The unhappiness, the existential torment and emptiness is a sign from the earth - why do you kill me child? Why do you destroy that which bore you, why do you lust for your brother's heart?

:(

Anonymous said...

Jim Kunstler's book the Long Emergency, still has a very good title to describe what we are in for.

I would ammend it to the Endless Emergency because conditions will go downhill for so long, no one will be around to remember what it was like in the heyday of cheap oil.

Sliding from 7-8 billion down to .5 billion is going to erase a lot of memories. At an equilibrium point of around .5 billion, with everyone living with very, very little energy per capita, it will not resemble anything we in the former industrialized world would consider home sweet home.

Hey, less isn't more, it's just less, leave it at that.

Sam Dug said...

VK,

Many times at night, this keeps me awake. I drown my sorrows over large amounts of whisky. Their is a madness in this world, one I can not relate too. We all like to think we are better, good, kind, generous. In reality, I am just a cold blooded killer. I don't even know who I've brought suffering too, I just carry on though, as a hypocrite and a charlatan.

That is me. I think in this very same mode and it is daily torment! My family thinks I am just dark and “unhappy”, but I know that for every material object we have and consume that someone or some being was killed or injured in pursuit of it. With that in mind it is impossible to see anything civilized about our current civilization.

NZSanctuary said...

@scandia:
"Last winter I took a Critical Thinking class at the university. It was transformative and I recommend it to others. The downside is that it has been isolating."

Yep. A part of thinking critically means a willingness to question assumptions. Questioning things people believe in appears to be a greater sin than attacking their mammas, judging by many people's reactions...

Re: Australasian economies
I would be interested to hear anyone's opinion on likely economic scenarios for NZ and Aussie over the next year or two...

Taizui said...

VK,

You speak well for me also. I used to feel disgust when a SUV pulled up beside my tiny car at a light. But then I realized that we're all on a continuum, from the ascetic in his cave to Lloyd Blankfein in his opulent office. And you don't have to trace far up that continuum to reach the cut-off point of a sustainable population.

Perhaps Lloyd will find no more satisfaction with his future than will I with mine?

It may be comforting to consider that many on the "low end" of the continuum may hardly notice any difference as this pyramid scheme deflates.

Your post sounds like a person still in the "advanced" world, but no doubt your surroundings make our plight all the more vivid.

jal said...

Re.: Community garden & gime generation

Since we are organizing a BBQ for the weekend and inviting the municipal authorities for donating the land and services, I had gathered and organized the 29 varieties of potatoes into containers with labels for a display.
They were in the locked greenhouse of which municipal employees and gardeners have the key.

As a lesson of things to come, our area is not aware of or feeling the depression. Everything feels and looks normal.

Someone from the gime generation took the potatoes and left the labels.

What will the gime generation do when they get hungry?

jal

Anonymous said...

Coy Ote,

I did not put you in a box. You did it yourself by belittling those of us who question the official conspiracy theory regarding the "unmentionable."

Anonymous said...

The governments and private agencies that print fiat dollars have a vested interest in keeping the public confused as to the nature of dollar dilution. So if some homeowner borrows 50k against the value of his home and buys 50k worth of Chinese crap, his defaulting on a heloc doesn't vaporize fifty thousand dollars. The fifty thousand is sitting in a Chinese bank, and the securitized heloc loan was bought by the fed at par. There's a doubling of dollars right there. Just because it's sitting in two different banks doesn't mean it doesn't exist. Pretending the government will be paid back through a repurchase agreement once house prices return to psychotic levels doesn't make it so.

The JP Morgans of this world exist to keep a lid on gold prices and a bid on treasuries. It will keep going until it doesn't.

Jim R said...

VK,

Nice rant. You're sounding like Ahimsa :-)

Yes, we are all equally responsible for the mass destruction. But I like to think some of us are more equal than others.

Greenpa said...

VK- "I don't even know who I've brought suffering too, I just carry on though, as a hypocrite and a charlatan."

I think you are a little hard on yourself. And not quite at the end of this analysis; which is a very good one.

Remember- you, too- do have a right to exist; just as that child you insist on being responsible for does.

Ah, responsibility. Pietists cop out; and say "all responsibility belongs to god (whichever) - so nothing is actually your doing."

Your analysis is more advanced than that. Yes, we are responsible for our choices; and our neighbor's welfare.

This is your world. You really had no control on where and how you were born into it. Some things, as a result, are truly beyond any control you could ever exercise.

But, you have put your finger on why I live in voluntary flamboyant poverty, and work for the future.

It's all I can do. And I sleep reasonably well.

Anonymous said...

VK, Ahimsa: Get over yourselves. I thought your kind of sad gothic angst was largely outgrown after freshman college year. No one is responsible for the suffering of children in other countries except their parents and their leaders.

Anonymous said...

Ilargi:

I have to say this was a particularly exceptional blog today.

Anonymous said...

If you have a deep connection to animals, nature and your own personal 'soul' you need no other form of 'artificial happiness'.

The problem is that the majority of people ( in the west) are completely diconnected from anything of value, from anything real. Thieir lives are focused around television (reality t.v - cheap entertainment), strip malls, fast food, money, cars, shopping), it's all about 'me, me, me'. Shallow and meaningless.
It is well known that those who live in some of the most remote and undeveloped countries are some of the happiest people on earth (Bhutan for example) and I am not discussing the poor and completely dispossessed.

That is the destiny of the majority of mankind (living in a disconnected, distacted, unhappy state). It takes a rare and inquisitive being to step outside the box and walk the road less travelled -
look within and start to live life on a deeper level of connection. Live life with a childlike sense of awe and newness every day (living in the present moment) and serve others (instead of constantly focusing on 'yourself') - happiness will come your way effortlessly.

Greenpa said...

"No one is responsible for the suffering of children in other countries except their parents and their leaders."

Just a little clueless there. When you choose to consume "mass quantities" of, say, gasoline- by owning a pointless SUV, and a snowmobile, and an ATV, and a motorboat, and a jetski, and traveling to ski and scuba-

the DIRECT result is- gasoline becomes a bit less available- and a bit more expensive. Multiply by say 400 million genuine "consumers", in the US and all the places watching US television.

Then- the parents of that child cannot get, or afford, a little bit of gasoline. That they might use to motor out in the ocean to where some fish are left; after your sushi was stolen from their ocean; or their small fish taken to feed shrimp in Bangladesh. Or to power a motorbike, so they could take their extra fruit to a bigger town, where it would sell for a little more money.

Yes- you are responsible for that chain. No one else.

Greenpa said...

Anon 11:10: we are in substantial agreement.

I have long pondered the possibility that I should write a book; entitled "The M World."

M for masturbation. Increasingly, all the activities of western culture amount to only that; a momentary and fruitless pleasure; bringing value to no one.

Erin Winthrope said...

@VK
Excerpts from my favorite speech by David Foster Wallace:
There are these two young fish swimming along and they happen to meet an older fish swimming the other way, who nods at them and says "Morning, boys. How's the water?" And the two young fish swim on for a bit, and then eventually one of them looks over at the other and goes "What the hell is water?"..........
As I'm sure you guys know by now, it is extremely difficult to stay alert and attentive, instead of getting hypnotized by the constant monologue inside your own head (may be happening right now). Twenty years after my own graduation, I have come gradually to understand that the liberal arts cliché about teaching you how to think is actually shorthand for a much deeper, more serious idea: learning how to think really means learning how to exercise some control over how and what you think. It means being conscious and aware enough to choose what you pay attention to and to choose how you construct meaning from experience. Because if you cannot exercise this kind of choice in adult life, you will be totally hosed. Think of the old cliché about quote the mind being an excellent servant but a terrible master........
here's something else that's weird but true: in the day-to day trenches of adult life, there is actually no such thing as atheism. There is no such thing as not worshipping. Everybody worships. The only choice we get is what to worship. And the compelling reason for maybe choosing some sort of god or spiritual-type thing to worship -- be it JC or Allah, bet it YHWH or the Wiccan Mother Goddess, or the Four Noble Truths, or some inviolable set of ethical principles -- is that pretty much anything else you worship will eat you alive. If you worship money and things, if they are where you tap real meaning in life, then you will never have enough, never feel you have enough. It's the truth. Worship your body and beauty and sexual allure and you will always feel ugly. And when time and age start showing, you will die a million deaths before they finally grieve you. On one level, we all know this stuff already. It's been codified as myths, proverbs, clichés, epigrams, parables; the skeleton of every great story. The whole trick is keeping the truth up front in daily consciousness........the insidious thing about these forms of worship is not that they're evil or sinful, it's that they're unconscious. They are default settings.
They're the kind of worship you just gradually slip into, day after day, getting more and more selective about what you see and how you measure value without ever being fully aware that that's what you're doing.And the so-called real world will not discourage you from operating on your default settings, because the so-called real world of men and money and power hums merrily along in a pool of fear and anger and frustration and craving and worship of self. Our own present culture has harnessed these forces in ways that have yielded extraordinary wealth and comfort and personal freedom. The freedom all to be lords of our tiny skull-sized kingdoms, alone at the center of all creation......
The really important kind of freedom involves attention and awareness and discipline, and being able truly to care about other people and to sacrifice for them over and over in myriad petty, unsexy ways every day.
.......the real value of a real education, which has almost nothing to do with knowledge, and everything to do with simple awareness; awareness of what is so real and essential, so hidden in plain sight all around us, all the time, that we have to keep reminding ourselves over and over:

"This is water."

"This is water."

Greenpa said...

Ed Gorey: "There is no such thing as not worshipping. Everybody worships. The only choice we get is what to worship."

Hm. You know, I don't think I've ever heard it put that way.

I'm pretty sure what I worship is: Children. And their future.

Greenpa said...

Hm. Well- worship. Kind of.

Those things ARE sacred to me. Truly, sacred.

Erin Winthrope said...

@ Greenpa,

Reading Wallace's speech had a pretty big impact on me. It's too bad Wallace committed suicide only 5 years after writing it. It seems he lost the battle in his own head.

I've interpreted it in a fairly selfish way. For me, the "This is Water" revelation is the fact that I'm alive, and it's pretty amazing that I even have the opportunity to ponder the world's dilemmas.

I'm only here (alive) for a short time, and I probably won't ever be coming this way again. So, why waste so much of my precious time getting angry and/or sad and frustrated about things that are way beyond my control. I try to exercise control over what I think and enjoy the ride while it lasts.

ric said...

The unhappiness, the existential torment and emptiness is a sign from the earth...

Thank you, VK, for putting what you're going through in such heartfelt words. I believe many of us here know what you speak of. Greenpa is right. Your analysis is more advanced. In my world, what you describe is the Night of the Senses, where we become acutely aware of the absence of any real virtue anywhere. It's a dark, dark place. But it's also like a seed germinating (in the dark) because seeing it through is an opportunity to see a little more clearly. Greenpa's story is to the point. Those who live on the margin and work as best they can for others do so for a reason. This is true, I believe, of many here.

Anonymous said...

So the auto earth seems heavily in the Deflation camp.

As a mere human being I see:
1) food prices the same
2) my rent hasn't gone down
3) energy prices haven't retreated
4) Phone and Internet fees the same
5) shoes, clothes...I don't see any changes downward
6) taxes...Nope
7) women... they still seem to want me treat them as princesses and pour money into keeping them

Perhaps your tarot cards and charts show deflation, now if only it would transfer into my reality.

Also... "oil products too expensve for joe sixpack in 5 years"?

In that case our present worries are moot because hell in a handbasket will soon be on our doorstep ... (in which case...perhaps I should indulge the ladies now).

Anonymous said...

Anon @10:59 said:

"No one is responsible for the suffering of children in other countries except their parents and their leaders."

The way we choose to live each moment has a direct impact on other sentient beings in our homes, our neighborhood, our country and our world. Our individual and collective actions and/or omissions have a ripple effect throughout the planet. Our interconnectedness is real.

Anonymous said...

regarding 'this is water'

I recall reading somewhere once upon a time, about someone asking Emily Dickinson, something to the effect, if she had any pastimes.

She replied,

"To live is so starling it leaves little time for anything else."

Anonymous said...

Over the years, all my precious beliefs have been shattered. All of them.

Conclusion: Earthlings just devour each other. It's automatic, thoughtless instinct. That's all there ever has been on this planet; we humans ultimately prove that we are no exception to that principle. We are the worst of all the species, committing a vast ecocide with our voraciousness. Our species is so doomed.

And so there will be no evolving to god-liness after all.

Perhaps after we are long gone, the earth will rejuvenate and some other species will attain a higher evolution that we so-called 'primates' could not.

But I think I know what was the design flaw: elevated testosterone levels!

Anonymous said...

Life is energy.

So what is energy?

"Energy is Eternal Delight"

~~William Blake~~

If that is so, then it would seem that Life, at least on Earth, is merely a narcissistic, sadomasochistic form of Energy, endlessly pursuing Itself at all costs in an evolving hedonism of mindless Motion.

ogardener said...

Anonymous Anonymous said...
August 20, 2009 12:03 AM

7) women... they still seem to want me treat them as princesses and pour money into keeping them

Pssst! You're dating the wrong kind of women.

Bryan McNett said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

VK

We all like to think we are better, good, kind, generous. In reality, I am just a cold blooded killer.

Gee, and here we thought you were such a lovely little guy when you were a toddler, what happened? Come on now, we have not been wading all this time through the ignorance of ages for you to throw up your hands and think you can get off with a mia culpa, not this close to home chum!

;)


-mudlark-

snuffy said...

Anoni-mouse

Some would say your description of life"hedonistic,mindless motion" describes us pretty good...


Some believe a killer-ape that evolved a bit too much...became a bit too efficient at clawing its way up the food chain....

Others see a godly,inspired,creature of flesh waiting for a transformation to a pure being of spiritual pureness..

YMMV.

I am a creature of the place I was born too,of the life I have lived,of the choices I make...

I have heard it describes as your free will is as golden thread turning and twisting itself thru the matrix of fixed events we all call "reality".

I do not feel the need to carry the shame of my governments actions,or those of other mens.I am responsible for the choices [I]
make.No others.My actions are in good faith that I live as most would consider a "good citizen"and I expect the same from those around me.There are actions my government takes that offend my good sense,but I am not willing [at this time] to do other than lawful actions as a citizen to change that reality.
America has a terrible lesson in payback coming.I hope my nation survives it


We ,as a species,have done a admirable job of screwing up the ecosystem.We probably have permanently damaged it.

The first actions of a truly mature human civilization will be to begin mitigation of the damage we have done,by overpopulation.

I made the personal choice not to pee in the gene pool This will make my old age liable to be short and abbreviated,as I have a step daughter and step grands that most likely wont be into caring for me at that time.So be it.I see our future as having a whole lot of dieing in it for most older folks...I have no special claim on life..I am not wealthy,nor have I made any contribution to the betterment of mankind that would warrant special care and feeding.....We all "wear out"around 70-80 so I expect I will take my place in the food chains,and do as the book of dao recomends"as a man goes to bed after a long days work"

speaking of which,I am bone tired...night


snuffy

Bryan McNett said...

>Perhaps after we are long gone,
>the earth will rejuvenate and some
>other species will attain a higher
>evolution that we so-called
>'primates' could not.

evolution is amoral - it merely describes adaptation of a species to its environment over generations.

if you meant to say "progress," i regret to say that mankind never progressed.

for one thing, there has never been as many starving people as there are today.

the "progress" that you and i enjoy has always been a bubble, created with and sustained by human suffering and environmental destruction.

to wish for more progress is to wish for more suffering and destruction - of others.

Anonymous said...

@Bryan:
"to wish for more progress is to wish for more suffering and destruction - of others."

Progress or change could be possible towards a more sustainable green-tech society instead of our Western resource-devouring high-tech bubble?

IMHO the problem is that the cure might kill the patient.

Anonymous said...

Greenpa 11.19,

Yes we are in substantial agreement (about the M part too!) and most will never see the error of their ways. Connecting deeply with nature, animals, and volunteering in some way to help others will bring happiness and fulfillment.

Despite all of the negatives out there, there is still much beauty in the world if one open's one's eyes. You are what you eat and think. Spend your time wisely and joy will follow.

cd

Anonymous said...

NEW YORK, Aug 20 (Reuters) - Large banks active in the $28 trillion credit default swap market have gained market share, which has concentrated counterparty risk in the contracts, according to a market survey released by Fitch Ratings on Thursday.

Fitch surveyed 26 banks in 11 countries that are active in the CDS market and found that as a group, they had sold protection on around $13.8 trillion of debt as of the end of 2008 and bought protection on $13.9 trillion in debt.

The top 10 counterparties in the survey accounted for 67 percent of total exposures in terms of the number of times they were cited as counterparties in the survey, up from 62 percent at the end of 2006, when Fitch last did the survey.

"This, when combined with the top five institutions providing 88 percent of the total notional amount bought and sold, is a reflection of the increasing concentration and counterparty risk within the (CDS) market," Fitch said.

Counterparty risks in the market have also become more concentrated among fewer players since the collapse of Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers (LEHMQ.PK).

The failure of these banks increased concerns over losses on the contracts if a counterparty fails.

JPMorgan (JPM.N) leapfrogged Goldman Sachs (GS.N) as the largest CDS counterparty in 2009, with Goldman the second largest, Fitch said. They are followed by Barclays (BARC.L), Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE) and Morgan Stanley (MS.N), respectively.

http://tinyurl.com/lvdsyl

Tic-Tic-Tic.......

Anonymous said...

HARARE, Aug 20 (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's central bank governor Gideon Gono on Thursday proposed the introduction of a gold-backed local currency, which was destroyed by hyperinflation and replaced by multiple foreign currencies in January.
http://tinyurl.com/kok8lm

Taizui said...

VK, Ed Gorey, Greenpa, Snuffy, Ahimsa,

Thanks for consciousness-inspiring posts, summoning me briefly back from full-time "preparation" (which often seems ultimately futile anyway).

Overgrown egos, perched in "tiny skull-sized kingdoms," easily shred consciousness into the sound bites and bullet points on which we "consumers" seem to thrive. I fear that bubble implosion may only contract consciousness for most, but perhaps contrarians like you can lead some through these Mines of Moria.

Frank said...

@VK & Ahimsa

While y'all are beating [yourself/anyone not a sanctimonious ascetic] up, you might reflect that the same civilization you despise is what made it possible for there to to be 7 billion people, rather than a tenth as many, in the first place.

You actually have to take the good with the bad.

el gallinazo said...

The late, great sci fi author Frank Herbert, based many of his novels on the premise that the greatest acts of social creativity occur when creative people find themselves in lethal, stressful predicaments. We are about to test his thesis.

Also, there must be some sort of common ground between immobilizing self condemnation for being what Orlov would refer to as a "lunch eater," and the no nothing idiocy of A 10:59 PM. Despair is both unproductive and unpleasant. The great spiritual leaders of the ages rarely gave into despair, and when they did, they emerged stronger from the crises.

Anonymous said...

"So the auto earth seems heavily in the Deflation camp."

We are experiencing Deflation right now and it will intensify as we go forward. The inflationistas usually cite all of the stimulus spending and printing as factors that will work to counteract deflation and in the short term that is the case.

But these factors will, before long, prove to be not harbingers of inflation but instead they will be seen as actually contributing to and intensifying the deflation.

The stimulus packages and bailouts enacted by various countries are mainly going into stock and commodity speculation, real estate development and channel stuffing inventory (in the case of China) to pump up reported GDP.

All this is doing is serving to temporarily prop up asset prices, employment and final demand in the face of record unused capacity. Once the spending stops (either voluntarily or forced by the markets) this illusory demand will evaporate leaving us with even more goods and services, and even more unused capacity that nobody wants or can afford.

So the very factors that the inflationistas are citing now as proof that we will NOT experience deflation are the factors that will actually be intensifying the coming deflation and making it even worse than it would have been without all of the extra borrowing and spending.

Once this final stimulus/debt bubble bursts we will be in the midst of a global deflationary hurricane that will take your breath away IMO.

How that translates into everyday prices, however, remains to be seen but I suspect prices will drop, although your income will be dropping as well.

Andrew

Pentronicus said...

Greenpa @11:15

I don't totally agree with your argument. The same economic dynamo that drove up the price of gasoline for the fisherman also provided his motorbike and his outboard motor and possibly the roads he rides on. There is also a good chance that if the economic dynamo had never existed, then neither would he. How populated would the Middle East be if not for our thirst for oil? How many owe their lives to modern medicine and food surpluses from the US and Europe? We may make the fisherman's trip more expensive, but we made his day possible.

I don't mean to trivialize the problems of the poor, nor say that profligate waste is good. Theft of resources is always evil. I'm just pointing out that in the big picture, although our developed countries have big appetites, we have done some good in the world, balancing much of the bad.

scandia said...

I just have to raise my contrarian voice on the thought about exceptionalism. Of course there is no exception to our biological vulnerability,to the laws of nature.
That as a given I do encounter exceptional people frequently. I'd say Ilargi and Stoneleigh are exceptional people who have earned a place on Hoffman's forming list of heroes/heroines in financial reporting.I suspect there are more than a few exceptions to the rule that post on TAE.
One of my favorites is "Starcade" who I find exceptional for his ability to walk on the hot coals of injustice while simultaneously keeping an eye on the macro-economic big picture.
History is a story of exceptional people who influenced the current of events.

el gallinazo said...

Change we can't believe in:

http://tinyurl.com/m7anxl

thethirdcoast said...

@ ogardener:

Pssst! You're dating the wrong kind of women.

I would argue that Anon's description is pretty apt in current Western culture.

Anonymous said...

The great horned owls that live in the woods behind me have been breeding there for decades. I don't know if they are all related in a direct bloodline but they seem like a succession.

Female owls have to have a certain body weight/ body fat or they can't conceive. I don't know if low body weight/fat effects the male's viability but the female's fertility is definitely the show stopper.

The low body weight is a cumulative measurement of environment resources, a leading indicator as they say in finance, that the conditions for successful raising of offspring are not there.

Unlike some animals that just keep cranking out babies, even as the parents are starving and malnourished, only to have the babies starve. Sounds like humans. So humane they are.

If the owls have a feedback loop on reproduction that spares generations of little owls from miserable, short, starving existences, how come humans can't get their shit together with their Big Fat Brains?

I'm not even vaguely interested in cheap, shallow rationalizations as to why it is what it is now.

Lame excuses doesn't even begin to explain this lack of self control in a species that arrogantly presumes that it is the Crown of Creation. Ya, fer sure.

The fact that the owls don't consciously restrain their numbers just means that humans have even less excuse for not getting their sad, pitiful ass-clown consciousnesses in gear.

Human overpopulation is the Keystone to many problems.

Too many people on a little planet is like the old WWII expression Blivet, "ten pounds of manure in a five pound bag".

That's what humans have become on the LGPE (Late Great Planet Earth), a big sack of sh*t.

Unknown said...

VK and Ed Gorey especially, Greenpa and others as well,

This has been an exceptional day for introspective posts, and my thanks to you all. Once in a while I need thoughtful folks such as yourselves to re-ground me in the emotion of simply being alive and in what matters most. You touched me today, and thanks for it.

Anonymous said...

Greenpa said:

"You know you're talking to a nincompoop when someone says "sure, I understand China..."

That is not only spot on, but it's the exact same thing we've seen over and over and over again over the past 100 years, when Americans have worked in China.

100 years ago, the China experts called themselves "old China hands". And I can't think of a single thing these so-called experts did that was successful.

The only real success that I can think of off the top of my head was during WWII. And that was explicitly because anyone who called themselves an "Old China hand" was rejected.

Punxsutawney said...

I have to laugh at MarketWatch’s headline this morning “Data Clearing Recovery Path”, and then right under that:

Mortgage Delinquencies Hit Another Record
US Jobless Claims rise 15,000 in latest week.
David James: Not so sure the recession’s over.


Kudo’s to all the eloquent and thoughtful posts this morning.

scandia said...

Joe Bageant has a new post, (The Entertainment Value of Snuffing Grandma) on the Healthcare " debate". It causes me to conflate the whole discussion to a political concern for the health of corporations, not citizens.
Rather obvious to all now....

el gallinazo said...

Henry Blodgett P/E article

"Why shouldn't we panic? Because the reason the PE is so high is that earnings are near a cyclical low. This chart actually illustrates why it's silly to use P/E ratios based on a single year of earnings--because they can be wildly misleading."

Yes we are at the end of history once again into a brave, new world. P/E ratios are now without substance or meaning.

Anonymous said...

The corporate morons flying the economy into the side of the mountain really and truly don't realize they and their extended families are on the plane to.

Big Pill Pushing Pharma (BPPP) and health/disease care corporations will lose their franchise as the middle-class dies the death of a thousand premium increases. Health/disease care for the mass of working people will be a distant memory.

As they line up around the block at their favorite emergency rooms for 'last rites' medical treatment, after their conditions are pretty much terminal or financially untreatable, I still don't think any light bulb will go on in their sad little Sheeple heads.

They will just throw their hands up and bleat in unison, "Who could've Known!"

Oh the Humanity of it!

thethirdcoast said...

How glad am I didn't vote for the sock puppet currently residing at 1600 Pennsylvania?

This glad:

Health Care - The Young and the Wealthy Subsidize Everyone Else in Obama's PPIP for Heathcare Proposal

So Barry's healthcare plan for people just starting out in life that take care of themselves is basically:

BOHICA

Someone remind me why I continue to live in this country.

Anonymous said...

The Ministry of Propaganda is instructed to discredit any stats that start 'acting erratically'.

P/E ratios are now considered 'aberrant behavior' by the MoP and will be summarily euthanized.

It some point so will unemployment.

The Party line will be that unemployment is approaching a historic 80 year low cycle and you shouldn't be reading something 'abnormal' into ten of millions of people without job.

They obviously wanted to 'spend more time with their families'.

Hey, it's All Good.

Anonymous said...

Loved Joe Bageant subtitle today:

"A nation of children roots for the Mafia"

His only hope for breaking the voodoo spell on the Sheeple is "...maybe collision with a giant asteroid. Or that Garth Brooks will be barred from making a fifth comeback tour."

Hahaha, that should do the trick.

Anonymous said...

Well, England sure has it 'under control'

A record July deficit of "Public-sector net borrowing was £8.016bn – much worse than analysts' forecasts of a £500m shortfall"

And July is normally a 'fat' month for tax receipts.

Gee, I thought the U.S deficit was bad.

If our budget shortfall in one month was SIXTEEN times worse than projected, it would be time to stick a fork in it.

Imagine California coming in sixteen times worse than expected in tax receipts in one month.

Even the Terminator couldn't fix that Baby.

Unknown said...

I went back and reread Matt Taibbi's article about the AIG bailout in March of this year, and this passage still sticks out to me as one of the most brilliant and concise pieces written so far about the debt crisis:

The mistake most people make in looking at the financial crisis is thinking of it in terms of money, a habit that might lead you to look at the unfolding mess as a huge bonus-killing downer for the Wall Street class. But if you look at it in purely Machiavellian terms, what you see is a colossal power grab that threatens to turn the federal government into a kind of giant Enron — a huge, impenetrable black box filled with self-dealing insiders whose scheme is the securing of individual profits at the expense of an ocean of unwitting involuntary shareholders, previously known as taxpayers.

It seemed worth sharing again.

Erin Winthrope said...

Re: Weekly Jobless numbers

Weekly jobless claims so far in August have been worse than July's weekly jobless claims.

At this point, it is likely that August's unemployment numbers (reported the 1st week of Septeber) will be worse than the 250000 job losses from July (reported the 1st week of August).

The last time monthly unemployment numbers increased (June's numbers reported the 1st week of July), the market fell substantially (~5% from final week of June to 1st week of July).

I'm currently pondering a bet with SH on Tuesday or Wednesday of next week in anticipation of next Thursday's unemployment numbers. If those numbers are bad (560,000 or greater), then August will certainly surpass July for job losses, and the 1st week of September will be ugly for equities. Discussion of the need for a second stimulus will resume.

Brian M. said...

I also frequently am right where VK describes, and it is what has driven me philosophically for years (rather than what I "should" have been working on.)

In our society the very act of "eating lunch" is morally contaminated because the lunch will have been created by a process with lots of morally dubious components, and odds are high that the money you earned to buy the lunch was earned in a morally contaminated way too.

So the big issue in moral philosophy in our day is I think, how do you live with moral contamination? and there are 5 main answers I see, and I can write way too much here (and have before, an may again over at my blog)

1) Be as pure as you can - This is the route of Kant, or the Amish,or the Pietists, or most intentional communities I've seen. Its attractive, but you need a fair bit of wealth to set up the "pure" life in the first place, and you never wind up as pure as you hoped, so all the serious reflection about the nature of moral compromise sneaks back in anyway.

2) Take the good and the bad together - As Frank points out this same system has also allowed many billions to survive. This is the utilitarian line, and is very pro-moral compromise, if the agreggate good, outweighs the aggregate bad, you just eat the morally contaminated lunch and feel good about doing the right thing.

3) Nietzsche's route - Give up on a morality of righteousness, and use a morality of "nobility" instead, in which the exceptional, and high-class traits are valued even if others might describe them as evil. Eliminate the distinction between heroes and villians, but retain the distinction between the elite and the little people. This route is actually a lot subtler than it looks, and is popular among thoughtful capitalists.

4)Allow moral contamination in some cases and not others - less permissive than Kant, but more than the utilitarians, both Catholic thought and Muslim thought are based around looking for a middle way here, the Aquinan doctrine of double effect for the Catholics, and the notion of the Makruth in Islam. In think the best Pragmatists are struggling to build something here too, and other compromises might be possible.

5) Do the best wrong you can - This is my own answer isn't quite like any of the main routes. I think that moral purity is the wrong goal (vs route 1), but that just because it's the best you can do doesn't make it morally right (vs route 2). Sometimes none of your options are morally right, but you should still strive to do the best wrong thing that you can (vs route 3). (I have sympathies with route 4, but think none of those compromises quite work).

So my line on the problems VK describes, which I feel every week, and probably about half of all days goes like this. Feel the guilt of doing wrong, even just for "eating lunch" rather than the retreats of denial or self-righteousness, or intellectual self-justification. But do the best you can despite the guilt, and struggle psychologically not to let the emotion of guilt to interfere with your ability to act within the situation as best you can. Guilt like physical pain, helps us to detect problems, but also helps to insistently remind us of the severity of problems we might like to play down. But the goal is for guilt, like pain, to help us to act well, not to interfere overly with our ability to act well.

That's my take.

Brian M. said...

@ El galliziano

Actually great spiritual leaders have a long history of despair, and they don't always get past it. Mother Theresa's struggles with despair are a classic example that has been spun many different ways. Gandhi is another good case, spending his last years in despair over his failure to prevent the division of the subcontinent into India and Pakistan, and his inability to heal the growing rifts between them. There is every indication that this troubled him spiritually not just politically.

Great ambitions and great despair go together, and spiritual leaders are precisely those folk willing to work hard for spiritual ambitions beyond those of others, and sometimes they succeed and sometimes they don't.

I have argued many times that despair is not always such a bad thing. There are counter-productive forms of despair, but despair, like guilt or physical pain, has a point and can be a right-functioning, good thing that helps us act well. Here is a link to a fuller argument on the value of despair
http://selfreferentialcollapse.blogspot.com/2009/04/value-of-despair.html

VK said...

Thanks for the many replies and thoughtful opinions posted on the board today.

One topic I would like to expand upon is the fact that civilization creates two basic roles, one of the exploiter and one of the exploited. There is a broad spectrum where both exploited and exploiter co-exist along a continuum.

By that I mean, many on this board no doubt are shocked at the level of exploitation that the financial system has subjected them too. They have stolen your money and your children's in broad daylight.

Less well expressed is the role that many commenter's play in exploiting others, by that I mean today there exist global supply chains of exploitation for eg Cocoa farmers and Coffee farmers make a few cents for every bar of chocolate or coffee you consume. The sneakers you buy from your local store are probably made in China along the Yangtze river to someone whose paid very low wages and whose exposure to carcinogens and pollution is very high. Children are twice as likely to develop defects if they live along the Yangtze then anywhere else in my China (If I remember that National Geographic program correctly)

Also today's energy consumption, the desire to live 'lavishly' like the gods (we don't see it as such, but if you think about it, we do) is going to impoverish billions later on to a life of poverty and hardship. Britain uses about 125KWH per person per day and renewables can only ever hope to power around 15-20% of that. For a few decades of luxury we have condemned the rest to millennia of energy poverty.

In today's world around 4-5 billion people barely subsist and get by. These are the mainly exploited people's by big business and political groups for cheap labour and they are landless and without many rights.

I have two questions for the board,

1) There were a few posts on how we should live in the 'now', connect with the earth, how to control our thoughts and be aware and such. I have no arguments with such things as I am well aware of them BUT this is the thought process of a person who is the exploiter side of the exploiter-exploited dual role of civilization.

Why?

Simply because a man who needs to spend 12 hours a day scrapping by for a few cents just to feed himself and his family is not going to have much time to control his thoughts and carefully deconstruct the world. His world his simple - of harsh survival.

It is only the exploiters who have time and the money to reflect on the inner workings and finer nature of man. So isn't that hypocrisy? To proclaim to be happy and to be at peace and connect with the world when you are a beneficiary of a system that is based on exploitation at it's core?

2) How do we reconcile this contradiction? How can we knowingly choose to be happy, to detach from the world and choose joy and awareness as many countless spiritual books suggest when we have brought suffering to countless others? Is that not living in delusion and denial?

Sometimes I feel that suffering is the only real thing that exists. It is the only thing that we hold on to. To suffer is to be alive, to be truly alive. And once we accept our suffering, then just maybe we can begin the path of reconciliation but that is at best speculation and hyperbole on my part.

Unknown said...

Following on VK's last post, it's difficult to escape the conclusion that life requires exploitation and therefore one must always suffer or cause suffering, or of course both. So what does this say about our moral devils, which so passionately afflict VK and which he so eloquently expresses, which demand that we should not cause suffering even though it seems that we must or cease to exist?

Not everyone is subject to these devils, of course, and while most who are not are freed by virtue of ignorance or avoidance, some simply are unburdened even with something approaching the full knowledge of the consequences of their existence. So what purpose do these moral devils serve those that have them? Should we do without them? If so, can we even accomplish that, or is our conscience a product out of our control?

Bigelow said...

Word regarding aforementioned guilt and culpability for modern living...

Guilty, however if stuff like modern dentistry, refrigeration or sanitation require people's deaths to produce, I'm saddened, but lets keep doing it.

Dr J said...

This from CNN.com today:

"Rep. Allen Boyd was asked at a health care town hall if reform would let the government access bank accounts."

It must be demoralizing to have to deal with this level of stupidity day in, day out. I see that Fox News has greater viewership than MSNBC and CNN combined. This perhaps begins to explain why the ignorance is so pervasive and venal. Faced with this, I think I would be tempted to throw in the towel, too.

thethirdcoast said...

@ Dr. J:

It is a grim comment on society that the questioner is apparently unaware that the IRS could make a "mistake" tomorrow at dawn and seize 100% of his assets by sundown.

Bigelow said...

“U.S. commercial real estate activity in the second quarter slowed to its lowest level in 15 years as demand for office and retail space collapsed amid the severe recession, a real estate trade group said Wednesday.”
Commercial Real Estate Activity Hits 15-Year Low

el gallinazo said...

People with a finely tuned moral and spiritual sense certainly find themselves in quite a pickle. Evolution involves selective breeding, and selective breeding involves selective survival. While humans lay less eggs than oysters, equilibrium populations maintain that the average female have no more than two offspring that reach breeding age. So the master plan involves a lot of "selfish genes" that have little room for empathy beyond some close genetic relatives.

While some animals, wolves for example, show a lot of loyalty to their pack and alpha, heaven help a member of another pack that might stray into its territory. Do wolves lie awake at night tortured by thoughts of the neighbor they ripped apart earlier in the day for straying into their hunting grounds? I think not.

So where do a substantial percentage of people come up with these universal ethical dilemmas? It seems counterproductive and adverse to survival and breeding. Would an alpha male wolf get a vasectomy?

As I said, the more sensitive among us (buzzards are not known for their sensitivity, so I exclude myself) are born into quite a pickle.

I have my own religious ideas of why this "was set up" this way, but I won't impose them on you on this occasion.

Re Brian M.

I guess I am a number 5 type of guy. I tried to find a balance between exploitation and physical deprivation. I basically gave different styles the smell test to decide. Did the corporate life in my 30's, but didn't pass the smell test. Finally settled into a spot where I made a living as a tradesman with no employees to exploit. Perhaps a freeman in the feudal society. Far from pure, but I have considered myself an idiot for allowing myself to be born into this planet anyway.

P.S.

I just learned that my freight consolidator for my stuff to Miami didn't quite tell me the whole truth about the ETA of my stuff, which now it turns out will not reach Miami until Sept 10, so I am stuck in paradise for an extra two weeks I was not counting on. Even if you don't love it, it ain't easy to leave it :-)

The Good Person said...

VK,

I agree with all you say and am impressed that you dared bring it up. As Captain Von Trapp said

To refuse them would be fatal for all of us. And joining them would be -- unthinkable.

Unfortunately there is no mountain pass to Switzerland for most of us and we are left with the choice: the fatal or the unthinkable. Since we are here we have so far joined the unthinkable so go ahead and trade in that clunker for cash. As the song says, don't worry, be happy.

Climb every mountain,
Ford every stream,
Follow every rainbow,
Till you find your dream

Ventriloquist said...

El G said:

Do wolves lie awake at night tortured by thoughts of the neighbor they ripped apart earlier in the day for straying into their hunting grounds? I think not.

For Life to go on, something else must also die.

All living things on this planet live by devouring other living things

And the longer one lives, the more living things one consumes.

Humans are animals, just like other animals on this planet. We may have a superior intellect to other animals, but we still must consume other living things to survive.

And, as with other animals, some of what we consume (indirectly) are others of our own kind.

Brian M. said...

@ VK
First, I posted a long answer over on my blog.

1) What is the point of "exploiters" feeling guilt over exploiting? - Well, here's an early guess. Exploiters NEED the exploited, and can endanger them by over-exploiting. So long-term successful exploiting requires powerful structural bars to minimize the dangers of over-exploitation. The two classic cultural responses have been balance-of-power political systems where some parts of the exploiting classes keep other parts of it in check as long as possible, and systems of morality and guilt to help restrain the exploiters from within. That's the explicit point of Li in Confucianism, for example. A system of parasites, can slowly over time evolve into a symbiotic situation, especially if the parasites are successful in learning self-restraint. Perhaps that can happen even faster in cultural contexts...

2) Joy amid suffering is a theme many philosophers and religious thinkers have explored. Look at Buddha's take, for example, that all life is suffering but that with much spiritual work it is possible to achieve a cessation of suffering. Or consider Nietzsche's position that the myth of eternal return seems like an endless punishment at first, but that once one has really drunk down the point of his work Thus Spoke Zarathustra, it becomes a source of joy. We could give other examples.

For my part, I just feel both joy and guilt together. I feel joy at the things I enjoy, because they seem joyful to me. I feel the sadness and shame of guilt because I know the things I enjoy hurt others in the process of bringing joy to me. Joy and guilt are just normal parts of my moral sensory apparatus. Just like I see light and darkness with the same eyes, and both are part of making sense of my visual field and navigating the world. Maybe its the Goth in me, but I just don't experience this as a contradiction, but as a both/and situation, suffering and joy just plain coexist.

Let's but it another way. Suppose you died in a car wreck and one of your organs was used to save someone else's life. Would you rather that that person feels survivor guilt that their survival was bought at the cost of your death, or would you rather that they get as much joy out of your organs as they possibly can? I'd rather they were as happy as possible, so that as much good comes from my death as possible. From a certain perspective, it looks like a DUTY for the exploiters to enjoy the spoils as much as they can given the price paid by others for the spoils! Now the organ donor case, is a little different from the exploiter case because it wasn't really the organ recipient's FAULT that the donor died, whereas there is usually a lot more fault involved in the enjoying of other kinds of spoils. But even there I'm a fan of "bring as much good outta a bad situation as you can."

Anonymous said...

Shakespeare says it in the speech by Prospero:

Our revels now are ended. These our actors,
As I foretold you, were all spirits, and
Are melted into air, into thin air:
And like the baseless fabric of this vision,
The cloud-capp'd tow'rs, the gorgeous palaces,
The solemn temples, the great globe itself,
Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve,
And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,
Leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff
As dreams are made on; and our little life
Is rounded with a sleep.
The Tempest Act 4, scene 1, 148–158


And besides there being no reason to get excited, what kind of play would it be without a villain ... or the hero? Maybe just fodder for the Rapturist or the heroin addict?

BTW Shakespeare also mentions horse stale somewhere in The Tempest, and that produced great joy in us callow grade nine youths.

-mudlark-

Anonymous said...

@Dr J:

"if reform would let the government access bank accounts."

That's not stupidity at all. It's called experience.

Some wag might suggest it would be an extension of the current system, where they check your wallet before they check your health.

Nelson said...

Longtime lurker, rare poster here:

I've spent only a few months in Asia over the past three years, but in that time I've traveled in Guandong, Sichuan and Yunnan provinces in China, as well as the major cities Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou. I've also been to Tokyo and Seoul several times recently.

Until you've witnessed South Asia firsthand, there is absolutely no way that you can grasp the sheer numbers, the utter crush of humanity, that is squozen into every square meter of those lands. The statistics aren't just unimaginable, they're impossible: 18 million in Shanghai, 13 million in Seoul, 12 in Guangzhou,....

I live in Oregon, where there are 3.8 million people in a quarter-million square kilometers of forest and farmland that is 2.4% fresh water. We here have no idea what in blue blazes we're talking about when we extol the China model of local food and passive solar hot water heaters. They are so pushed to the edge, so right at the brink that even in the best of times it takes all the Chinese government can manage just to keep the masses fed and the ball in play a little longer. And the riots continue to get worse.

There is no future for South Asia, not until they have "uninstalled" the vast majority of the mouths they have to feed. And it will take only the tiniest tremble of their enormously complex systems to set the cascade in motion. It could start with a germ, a typhoon, a depression, a war, or a tsunami, but that tremble is coming, sooner or later.

No one will watch his family starve without putting up a fight, and the starving masses couldn't care less about preserving the remnants of their system for some imagined future rebirth.

As bad as it will be in my homeland, with its heavily armed Fundamentalists steeped in a culture of selfish entitlement, I'll take it any day over the stark numbers that IMO point to a 10:1 dieoff in China, and probably all across South Asia.

Erin Winthrope said...

Re: Bond Market Analysis:

Here is a great site for analyzing movements in the bond market:

Across the curve


The author is a well versed in the bond market. He began his career at the Open Market Desk for the Federal Reserve and spent later years trading Treasuries for several primary dealers.

In a recent post, he made several points that I've discussed over the past few days.
----------------------
"Sources tell me that there has been a sea change in the thinking of some large insurance companies,pension funds and others who manage liabilities.

Weak retail sales last week as well as the slippage in consumer confidence piqued the interest of these folks. Weak initial claims data today sparked another round of excitement from this crowd. This week is the survey weak for the payroll data. With claims weakening many now believe that the August employment report will manifest greater weakness than was evident last month. The economy will still be shedding jobs at an alarming pace and at a pace not consistent with current inventory replenishment levels.

These investors piled into the long end of the market today. They were large buyers of Long Bonds.....
there is a gigantic disconnect between stocks and bonds. Stocks continue to rally and buyers emerge on every dip.

Thirty year bonds and stocks should not move in tandem for an extended period (to coin a phrase). I will put my money on the bond market in this battle."

el gallinazo said...

@ Brian M

"From a certain perspective, it looks like a DUTY for the exploiters to enjoy the spoils as much as they can given the price paid by others for the spoils! Now the organ donor case, is a little different from the exploiter case because it wasn't really the organ recipient's FAULT that the donor died, whereas there is usually a lot more fault involved in the enjoying of other kinds of spoils.'

Perhaps a better analogy would be to have the organ recipient take out a Credit Default Swap on the donor, and then pay a trucker to run him off the road. Always nice to bring a little fiscal meltdown into the thread.

Anonymous said...

No more easy participation for the lesser classes?

Form 8-K for DB COMMODITY INDEX TRACKING MASTER FUND
Other Events
Item 8.01. Other Events.
On August 14, 2009, DB Commodity Services LLC ("DBCS"), the managing owner of PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund and DB Commodity Index Tracking Master Fund (the "Master Fund"), was informed by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the "CFTC") that effective October 31, 2009, the CFTC will withdraw the no-action relief with respect to certain positions in CBOT corn and CBOT wheat, previously granted to DBCS by CFTC Letter 06-09 dated May 5, 2006 (the "Revocation").

Effective October 31, 2009, the Master Fund will be subject to the current limits set by CFTC Regulation 150.2 of 13,500 CBOT corn contracts in any single non-spot month and 5,000 CBOT wheat contracts in any single non-spot month. The Master Fund will also continue to be subject to all-months-combined limits of 22,000 contracts for CBOT corn and 6,500 contracts for CBOT wheat, as well as to applicable spot month limits.

Anonymous said...

“Political control of the US Fed and therefore of monetary policy is in the cards.

China as spokesman for the BRICs has publicly stated their desire for the institutions of a Super Sovereign Currency. This is not an intended as an immediate substitute for the dollar as a reserve currency but rather an alternative in new commitments.

Only the misinformed assume the desire for an SSCI is a desire for a total exchange of dollar reserves.

The desire of the BRICs and in truth all other major trading nations is for dollar diversification in order to break away from the dollar dictating their futures. It means a significant decrease in purchases of US dollar denominated instruments.

Selling is not required for substantial depreciation in a major currency.

Momentum collapse in buying is all that is required for a severe depreciation in any major currency.


The USA in all probability will not be able politically to deliver support for the SSCI, however political control of monetary policy is CERTAIN as the Fed cannot win this contest against the Administration in the form of the US Treasury.”

The Countdown To The Implosion Of The Dollar

ric said...

Sometimes I feel that suffering is the only real thing that exists.

I believe what you're talking about, VK, is what I've heard described as "right suffering." Can suffering be transformative? What is the nature of the transformation? Is truth found in suffering? Such questions lead to further questions that are not appropriate here, such as questions about the nature of self, divine, being, and consciousness. My experience is that most such discussions, even among close friends, are mostly sophistry because while we may have encountered an answer that satisfies does not mean it is complete or can be communicated. Each of us has slightly unique orientations to these questions anyway. That said, we can commiserate, which is why I respect your question.

I'm not saying the asking is useless--but as you know, it's really a private asking. Most throw the towel in at some point--some retreat into denial, or cynicism, or booze. Some kill themselves. Many give up. Others continue further and may find many wondrous things, but many of these too throw in the towel when they've reached what they believe is the end of what can be known or experienced. I've always thought the impetus behind the question is the one thing I can actively contribute to the matter, the rest reveals itself.

You may be setting on a wrong foot, though, when you say:

Simply because a man who needs to spend 12 hours a day scrapping by for a few cents just to feed himself and his family is not going to have much time to control his thoughts and carefully deconstruct the world. His world his simple - of harsh survival.

Grappling with such questions is not one of mental effort. It requires the whole being. A suffering of yearning that seems boundless, never-ending. If you're intellectual, it may start with a lot of cogitation, but it isn't strictly necessary. This is how Viktor Frankl, the Nazi conentration camp survivor, is able to find meaning and truth in the camps.

Ruben said...

@VK, Taizui et al

Thank you for yoyur strong words and clarity. I sometimes feel insane at my thoughts and I find it helpful to know that I am not alone.

re: exploitation and suffering--while I agree concerns of connecting to the earth and living in the now are the province of the privileged, ie: exploiters, I still think being an exploiter is only possible in a state of disconnection. Both exploitation and suffering are conceivable only by those who are disconnected from the ecosphere. If you are a part of the ecosphere you are not exploited, even if your role is to be lunch.

@ Brian re:despair-- see Terminator 3 "Anger is more productive than despair"

Gravity said...

A body of law is naturally bent and curved by capital because the substance of law and capital are similar in composition, being reactive to similar forces.

Arbitrary jugdment concerning moral value is then not dissimilar from one concerning monetary value.

Conversely, capital can find no boundary in law, since justice is a monetized commodity, exessive demand should increase the price of justice proportionately to the purchasing power of corporate entities.

ogardener said...

Blogger thethirdcoast said...
August 20, 2009 9:44 AM

I would argue that Anon's description is pretty apt in current Western culture.

I chose to no longer participate in Western cultural philosophy during the early nineteen seventies.

jal said...

Every time that I buy a product made in Asia, I shake my head in disbelief. Such low prices.

I appreciate, in the same thought, the luck of my birth place and the fact that I'm not lower in the pecking order.

I also, realize that I cannot do anything to change the situation "out of sight slavery".

If I was higher in the pecking order, I would be in a better position to spend my disposable income for more expensive locally produced items.

On the other hand, if I cannot afford, (example), a health plan why should I help the local extortionist cause my local supplier to add his cost of his health plan onto the price of the product that I need.

Damm! That probably makes me a "closet capitalist"
jal

Ilargi said...

New. Post. Up.