I just finished, well I almost finished reading, an article about another bailout of another bank in Portugal. I got so pissed off I decided to rant for a minute here.
The article published by Zerohedge also sites articles in the Wall Street Journal, Reuters and Bloomberg about the bailout of or "rescue" of Madeira-based bank Banif.
Why the F&%@ do these governments keep bailing out banks? It is plain and obvious that the elites that run the financial world have the governments in their pockets. They keep getting bailed out over and over with billions upon billions of citizens money while said citizens struggle to stay ahead of the "non-existent" inflation that consistently runs ahead of their purchasing power.
Since when are governments bound to consistently bail out capitalist enterprises. Capital sloshing around the world exceeds income for crying out loud! There is plenty of it. If a business is worth rescuing, capital will rescue it. Otherwise, it should die. That is the brutalism of capitalism period. To bail out owners of capital when they have made an investment that goes sour smacks in the face of the entire capitalist logic. To allow capital to be gambled with recklessly, when the gambling involves citizens hard earned money, is where governments are failing globally. Then bailing out financial institutions that fail after sanctified reckless gambling with citizens money puts governments in the same soup as legalized gangsters.
When a bank "fails" there is a simple process. Dissolve the bank, pay the depositors with the insurance in place and move on!! What the hell is so hard about this? If there is a desire in the economy for that bank's services to exist, another will rise, simple as that. The capital is there and the capitalist are there to fill the void. If the bank's services were no longer needed, then it wouldn't be missed!
When are citizens going to say "enough" and just mow over the idiots that keep doing this and start over? Because until that happens, they are going to get screwed again and again while capital and the capitalists keep getting richer and richer on their backs. It's pathetic and to see how it plays out in the "emerging" economies around the world, esp. China for example, it is down right sickening. The established "democracies" with established capitalist "economies" should be setting and example of how things work, instead they are setting examples of how things fail over and over again.
We are told a bunch of sand monkeys with guns mowing over innocent people are evil. Well the real crime on the citizens of the planet are being played by their governments and the capitalist that keep stealing from them while giving nothing in return. I personally am totally and utterly pissed and tired of reading how capitalist are bailed out with every tool of every government and every tool of every central bank. It is time, high time, to stop this madness!
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
The President's Speach on Terror Threat... Re-Written with some Rational Socio-Economic Observations
THE
PRESIDENT (And me): Good evening. On Wednesday December 2nd, 14 Americans were
killed as they came together to celebrate the holidays. They were taken
from family and friends who loved them deeply. They were white and black;
Latino and Asian; immigrants and American-born; moms and dads; daughters and
sons. Each of them served their fellow citizens and all of them were part
of our American family.
Tonight, I want to talk with you about
this tragedy, the broader threat of terrorism, and how we can keep our country
safe.
Here
is what we know. The victims were brutally murdered and injured by one of
their coworkers and his wife. It is clear that the two of them had
gone down the dark path of radicalization, embracing an Ideology that is
attempting to counter the ideology perpetrated by the global super powers and
corporate interests of the West.
Our nation has been at war with these
people since al Qaeda killed nearly 3,000 Americans on 9/11. In the
process, we’ve spent over a decade and nearly two trillion of your hard earned
tax dollars, on two pointless wars in two nations, largely against people who
live in mud huts. And it has not worked. However, our military and counterterrorism
professionals continue to relentlessly pursue all counter-ideology networks
overseas. Meanwhile, at home, we have
turned our airports and financial centers into fortresses to ensure the best
possible protection for the elites. Our
local law enforcement agencies have been handed exceedingly lethal surplus
military hardware designed primarily to provide a show of force against any
organized resistance to the corporatization of our nation and the world,
admittedly while many areas of our nation remain essentially un-policable and
violent.
For seven years, I’ve confronted this
evolving threat each morning in my intelligence briefing. And since the day I took this office I’ve
authorized U.S.
forces to assassinate all of these leading opposing ideologies abroad precisely
because I know how real the danger is. In fact, on any given day we have a
small arsenal of un-manned assassination drones used to regularly kill anyone
our counter terrorism networks tell us is involved at a management level in any
non-western aligned organization. We do
not grant these targets any rights to due process of the law that you are
entitled to. We just eliminate
them.
Many of you are familiar with
“scorched earth” agriculture, where we kill everything in the soil from plants
to pests in order for a genetically engineered seed to grow; or you may be
aware of the application of cocktails of pharmaceuticals pumped into our farm animals
to make them grow faster, while supplementing their weakened immune system
against deadly strains of bacteria. Well
those pesticides, herbicides and pharmaceuticals are akin to our corporate
driven ideology to dominate and control everything on the planet -- while
counter ideologies like the one we currently face -- are like the weeds that
refuse to submit to herbicides or bacteria that refuse to be squashed by the
pharmaceuticals. And over the last few
years these organizations have morphed, changed shape, reorganized and grown
stronger amidst the back door we created from our pointless wars where we
managed to destroy pretty much everything except the will to keep a counter
ideology alive.
Meanwhile, these organizations have conducted
less complicated acts of violence against us, taking a cue from our own home
grown pharma-laced mass murders that are all to common in our society. As new counter ideology groups grow stronger
in the void left by failed states, largely orchestrated by our military
adventures and incompetence, we face new challenges. As Commander-in-Chief, I have no greater
responsibility then the security of the corporate elites that put food on your
table, bring energy for your automobile or the infotainment that sedates you,
because our global oligopoly networks rely on the downtrodden people of the
planet to deliver your consumer goods as cheaply as possible. And we must
protect these exploitative networks.
As a father of two young daughters who
are the most precious part of my life, I know that we see ourselves with
friends and coworkers living a very good life of consumerism and comfort on the
backs of these people. I know we see
our kids in the faces of the young people killed in Paris.
And I know that after so much war, many Americans are asking whether we
are confronted by a cancer that has no immediate cure and exactly which side is
the cancer and which side is the cure.
Well, here’s what I want you to know; we are the cancer and
the cure. These counter-ideology people are like the weeds, the survivors of
scorched earth capitalism. Any
organization that tries to counter us will be met with a newly formulated
strategy to defeat them.
Here’s how: First we know that these people are organized
in a part of the world with virtually no industrial capacity. Since they have
absolutely no means of production of weapons; they don’t produce guns, or
tanks, or rockets, mortars, or planes or submarines etc. we know they are
completely spineless without weapons supplied by nations or corporations that
do.
Since the attacks in Paris,
our closest allies – including France,
Germany and the UK – have
agreed to form a global network to track each and every weapon we find in the
hands of our opposition, track down its maker and distributor and shut them
both down immediately. In addition, we
will work together to ensure no money flows to the opposition from outside
their territory – no financial transfers of any kind via sales of oil, or any
other commodity, will be allowed which will help us accelerate our effort to
destroy their networks.
Second: Instead of creating walls and fences around EU
nations to stop human beings fleeing the violence, we will create walls and
fences around the territory controlled by our opposition, allowing citizens
fleeing the death and destruction out and letting any fool crazy enough to join
them in. We will be deploying Special
Operations Forces who can man these security efforts and to ensure no resources
are entering their territory.
Third: We know, based on the vast
number of people fleeing their controlled territory, rational people have no
interest in living under the twisted madness that now prevails within this current
iteration of counter ideology. Hence,
the ultimate outcome can be achieved without any direct military intervention.
By restricting weapon flow and financial means to those people governing this
territory, the result would be a territory of themselves, which would likely
resemble a 6th century, impoverished and depraved wasteland; not
unlike the situation many people stuck behind the Iron Curtain faced in the
last century. If that is their vision of
modernity, they will be free to live that way, but it is unlikely they will
have much willing company. Besides,
after a decade of wars against nations with no industrial capacity whatsoever,
we pretty much look like the biggest fools that history has ever known, with
nothing to show for our efforts but a huge balance sheet of debt. So a new strategy is in order.
Fourth,
with American leadership, the international community has begun to establish a
process -- and timeline -- to pursue ceasefires and a political resolution to
the Syrian war. Doing so will allow the Syrian people and every country,
including our allies, but also countries like Russia, to focus on the common
goal of eliminating opposition to our global capitalist oligarchy. This is our strategy to destroy ideological
opposition and it is designed to be supported by our military advisors and
counter-ideology experts, together with 65 countries that have joined an
American-led coalition. That’s why I am
here today, to ask for your support in our new strategy because as I said in my
1st campaign for president, it is “we”, all of us, who need to
engage in the challenges facing America “together”.
Now, here at home, we have to work
together to address the challenge. I call upon you who work in the
military industrial arena to pressure your bosses to refrain from selling any
weapons anywhere in the world where they may find their way into the wrong
hands, including at home and abroad. I
urge you to write and call your legislators and insist we take this non-military
approach to win this ideological battle against those who threaten our way of
life.
If you hail from any of the
surrounding nations, please contact your embassies and leaders and tell them,
earning a few dollars by selling weapons or buying oil or otherwise supporting
these bandits is not worth the long term effect on humanity and threatens their
place in the new world order.
What we can do – and must do – is make
it harder for them to kill. We cannot
stop every motivated bacteria, every surviving weed or every resilient insect
from disrupting our attempt to control every facet of existence on the planet
but with your help and organized resistance to the military industrial
complex’s need to find an enemy to deploy their death and destructive forces,
together we can win. I think it’s time
for congress to vote to demonstrate that the American people are united, and
committed, to this strategy.
My fellow Americans, these are the
steps that we can take together to defeat the ideological threat. Let me now say a word about what we should
not do.
We should not be drawn once more into
a long and costly ground war in Iraq
or Syria.
The strategy that we are using now -- airstrikes, Special Forces, and working
with local forces who are fighting to regain control of their own country – is
dead in the water and not working. They also know that we no longer have the
stomach to occupy foreign lands. Our nation’s obesity and epidemic rise in
associated diseases like diabetes springing out from our industrial food supply
has turned us into sick guinea pigs. In
addition, with nearly a third of our nation regularly taking various cocktails
of pharmaceuticals, all of which attempt to force us into compliance with some
kind of esoteric ideology of what is correct and acceptable behavior, has
turned many of us into zombies glued to tiny plastic screens, unable to deal
with any of the kind of reality associated with physical interaction with other
human beings of a different ideology or lifestyle, let alone in a hostile war
zone.
Here’s what else we cannot do.
We cannot turn against one another by letting this fight be defined as a war
between America and Islam because we know this is really an ideological
backlash against the emerging global order where the corporate entities you
work for and support increase their coverage of the entire earth with our
products, our vision, our ideology and our sense of righteousness.
The vast majority of ideological
victims around the world may be Muslim, but that’s because these people have
not entirely embraced our soulless mantra of corporatism, individualism,
consumerism and mercantilism.
That does not mean denying the fact
that an extremist ideology has spread most effectively in these impoverished,
corrupt, and often despot run nations. Leaders
of these nations need to get on board and decisively and unequivocally reject
the ideological opposition to the new world order now or risk loosing their
power and billions in their bank accounts.
To speak out against not just acts of violence, but also those interpretations
of ideology that are incompatible with the values of the industrial rulers of
this planet.
But just as it is the responsibility
of all people around the world to root out misguided ideas that lead to
radicalization, it is the responsibility of all Americans to reject this
counter ideology as well. I have over
the last 7 years employed all resources possible to ensure you do because when
you travel down that road you will lose. Betrayal of our values plays into the
hands of opposition ideologies and if we are to dominate the global order in
the future, the last thing we need is opposition at home. Our men and women in
uniform are willing to ensure this does not happen. We have to remember that.
My
fellow Americans, I am confident we will succeed in this mission because we are
on the right side of history. Even though we were founded upon a belief
in human dignity -- that no matter who you are, or where you come from, or what
you look like, or what religion you practice, you are equal in the eyes of God
and equal in the eyes of the law, the need to control every facet of human
existence on the planet in the name of profit has superseded these fundamental
beliefs.
In
this political season, even as we properly debate what steps I and future Presidents
must take to keep our country safe, let’s make sure we never forget what makes
us exceptional. Let’s not forget that freedom is more powerful than fear; and
our brand of freedom is the one that must reign -- whether war or depression,
natural disasters or counter-ideology -- by coming together around our common
ideals as one nation, as one people, with one common ideology, I have no doubt
America will prevail.
Thank
you. God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America.
Labels:
Corporatism,
Economics of War,
Military Industrial Complex,
Presidential Address on Terror,
terrorism,
War Profit
Monday, November 30, 2015
Japanese Getting Poorer Yet Again...
I wrote earlier this year about Japan: http://econ4beginners.blogspot.com/2015/02/printing-money-against-all-economic.html
I was sharing my thoughts on how destructive the monetary policies were at the time. Now today I read how destructive the policies of Japan's Government Pension Investment Fund were when they sold all those government bonds to the Central Bank and turned them over to stocks, creating a stock run up that was quite impressive until...
According to this article in Marketwatch, Japan's Pension Fund just got $68 billion poorer in one quarter. Yep those are the pensions of everyday citizens being recklessly squandered by government driven "policies" that keep unraveling leading nowhere fast.
Shame.
I was sharing my thoughts on how destructive the monetary policies were at the time. Now today I read how destructive the policies of Japan's Government Pension Investment Fund were when they sold all those government bonds to the Central Bank and turned them over to stocks, creating a stock run up that was quite impressive until...
According to this article in Marketwatch, Japan's Pension Fund just got $68 billion poorer in one quarter. Yep those are the pensions of everyday citizens being recklessly squandered by government driven "policies" that keep unraveling leading nowhere fast.
Shame.
Monday, May 18, 2015
My Own Summers vs. Bernanke Rebuttal, With Some Colorful Rants
I have been holding on to this long rant deciding whether to include my substantial rants that are quite out... In the simple desire to move on I decided to just put it all out there...
This writing is a response to the publicized back and forth between Larry Summers and Ben Bernanke through their respective blogs which I firs read about here:
Summers: The
essence of secular stagnation is a chronic excess of saving over investment. Check
Summers: In
situations where target saving is important, reductions in rates may increase
rather than decrease saving, exacerbating imbalances. Check
Summers: I think
that it will be hard to escape the conclusion that household debt grew at an
unsustainable pace in the decade before the great financial crisis and that
this was an important spur to growth.
Check
Mind you Summers, another lifelong academic with no real
world experience operating in any industry outside of education (or non-profit
“think tanks” that seek to directly influence legislation by hiring high
profile and Ivy League academics to “vilify” their agendas), was an Integral
Player and heavily influential in the deregulation game. During his entire tenure with the Treasury,
he became Wall Street’s whipping boy. Within less then a decade in the early
2000’s deregulation, which is arguably the core reason for the bubble /
unsustainable credit / derivative expansion that ensued, actually picked up
steam under advice from people like Larry Summers. He was instrumental in further influencing a
hands off approach towards “managing” the explosive growth in unregulated derivative
products built directly on the backs of individual borrowers in the US and
elsewhere (wherever “offloading risk” became the core ideology of “lenders” the
world over) and not unsurprisingly, after the collapse of credit markets around
the world, ended up back at government service in 2008 to make sure no branch
of the government, regulatory or
otherwise engaged in ANY reigning in of the “regulated” financial industry nor
sought to disband, regulate or otherwise force under regulatory framework the
multi-trillion dollar “unregulated financial industry”.
Summers argues
governments can expand debt “indefinitely”: “As long as a public investment project yields
any positive return it will generate enough revenue to service the associated
debt.”
Yet Summers completely ignores the exceptional debt burden
currently held by nearly all the major industrial economies including China,
which though not a fully “developed” industrial economy, is vastly influential
in global economic reality due to its sheer population size and explosive
government orchestrated “growth” over the past several years. As Bernanke goes on to retort, this is
important as the money printing and excessive spending shows declining rates of
return over time.
Summers again on debt
spending: The case for expansionary fiscal policy in economies with very
low real interest rates is of course magnified if there are reasons to doubt
that the central bank can act on its own to raise inflation expectations.
It may well be that in situations where the interest rates are trapped near
zero – such as those prevailing in Japan and Germany – expansionary
fiscal policy reduces real rates by raising inflationary expectations.
So do you REALLY want this kind of inflation? Fiscal spending increases, ie; government
spending be it infrastructure or otherwise, is not sustainable long term, esp.
if the government already carries very high debt burden. So ramping up inflation via monetary and
fiscal policies with NO resulting increases in private investment in the
economy will create the worse kind of inflation, not unlike that currently
happening in Brazil. So Really?
Do you want the kind of inflation by printing money and government
spending with no private investment and or increases in productivity? You are in for a real mess… So someone here
needs to explain the different types of inflation and what kind of inflation is
or would be considered “normal” or “desirable” vs. inflation for the sake of
inflation!!!!
Summers back to “secular stagnation”:
Indeed, the lower level of rates, the greater tendency
towards deflation, and inferior output performance in Europe and Japan suggests that the spectre of secular
stagnation is greater for them than for the United States.
Now, any person with some understanding of the economic
reality of Europe and Japan
vs. the US
would be able to understand right away why the “spectre of secular stagnation”
is greater in the former. Demographics,
labor market flexibility, immigration dynamics, capital flows (real and
financial) and competitive markets all greatly differ in the US vs. Japan/Europe. It simply does not matter how much money they
print in Japan or Europe, this money will not solve problems that are /
were not based on money in the first place.
Devaluing their currencies against the Dollar has run it’s course and
China is about to go through a major currency adjustment as they get killed by
their indirect dollar peg which in the end, with Brazil, Russia and several
other mid-tier industrial producers all trying the same game will result in
nothing more then an across the board debasement of currencies everywhere in a
race to the bottom NOBODY has a clue where or how it will end.
Summers pointless statement: Global mechanisms that
concentrate on causing borrowing countries to adjust without seeking to shrink
the surplus of surplus countries will tend to push the global economy towards
contraction.
This statement is straight from the mouth of an Academic for sure. What on EARTH are you going to do to “shrink the surplus of surplus countries”? Tell them to spend money? The ONE THING that is in the process of happening, China’s lead on creating the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (Remember the US was a the only major nation with an undestroyed economy and a major creditor back when the IMF and World Bank were created and virtually dominated by the US from their inception, even though the US is no longer a major creditor nation), leads to headlines like this one from the Guardian: “China's growing support to lead multilateral lending bank worries US”. Why doesn’t Mr. Summers recognize directly how important it is for the nations around the world that have built up massive foreign reserves through “excess savings” start putting this money to use around the world instead of having Washington look like it’s being run by the complete idiots it is!!!
Summers does recognize the futile exchange rate policies:
Policies that seek to stimulate demand through exchange rate changes are a
zero-sum game, as demand gained in one place will be lost in another.
Secular stagnation and excess foreign saving are best seen alternative ways of
describing the same phenomenon.
Yet Summers only uses the “demand” argument here, failing to
estimate the various other negative repercussions of competitive exchange rate
reductions. Calling every country’s
attempt to debases it’s currency so it can “export” it’s way out of economic
malaise (thinking increased exports will lead to further investment) while at
the same time boosting inflation with the intent of devaluing their current
debt burdens, a “zero sum game” is being VERY generous to what is likely to be
a global economic disaster!
Summers Final lack of solution: So, I continue to urge that
it is worth taking seriously the possibility that we face a chronic problem of
an excess of desired saving relative to investment. If this is the case,
monetary policy will not be able to normalize, there will be a continuing need
for expanded public and private investment, and there will be a need for global
coordination to assure an adequate level of demand and its appropriate
distribution.
This is Summer’s final academic statement that just blows me
away! “Chronic excess saving” is
hilarious thought. Watching corporate America take
huge amounts of their “earnings and cash flows” and plow that money into buying
back their stock instead of investing it is heartening. This is a major transfer of wealth, the money
spent on buying products generating ever larger profits as the oligopolization
of the American economy continues to increase prices (under the radar as the
official inflation numbers are massively distorted, go buy a gallon of paint
and tell me why it is $30 vs. $10 fifteen years ago…) and profits are simply
used to buy back stock which gets plowed back into the stock market. Meanwhile, nearly free money exacerbates this
problem as central banks mop up a huge chunk of government issued debt leaving
“investors” looking anywhere for yield.
Companies not only use their current cash flows to buy back stock, but
literally leverage their companies by borrowing ever increasing amounts of nearly
free money to buy back their stock at elevated prices. While great for the upper echelons of
corporate management who get ever richer by cashing in on their stock options
pocketing billions of dollars a year in personal “profit”, the average “saver”
gets zero return on their money, resulting in the fact that they are actually
saving MORE to counter the loss in earnings they would have from interest.
In a “perfect” economy, based on pure economic theory,
people would be spending all their money today as they get NOTHING from saving
it. But economic theory be-dammed,
because in reality, the aging populations of the developed world have been
saving MORE since they are playing a loosing game against the push by central
banks to increase inflation while their cash savings yield them zero return
nominal return. Now tell me, supposedly
“savers” participate in investing when the institution with which they place
their “savings” lends it out and at positive rates and pays them interest
earnings for using their money. But this
rationale is completely broken, it simply does not happen any longer!! The
banks just keep all the profits, including the profits from their 15% credit
cards, fee generating income, investment banking, mortgage lending etc. Want a yield, you better to buy their stock
and hope they don’t go belly up or another financial crisis does not wipe out
your investment. Then there are always
the crowdcube.com models where you can invest directly in small businesses with
your own money.
The thinking goes, in a zero rate environment corporate
entities would be happy to borrow and invest in nearly anything able to earn return
higher then ZERO. Well, the financial
industry is taking the trillions of newly “created” money and buying nearly
anything with positive yield with abandon, meaning lots of worthless paper can
float around at exceptionally low yields right now. Yet, the average Joe does not participate
directly in this game as his “investment holdings” are more than likely tied up
in some retirement account where he has no idea how much of it is chasing
yields in a new debt bubble that is likely to burst taking whatever he managed
not to loose or regain since the last financial collapse and wiping it out
again along with whatever he contributed since then.
Where is the investment?
Why invest? The developed world
has nearly zero population growth and a massively aging bulge in their
population while the rest of the world, where populations are rising rapidly,
people are still poor, their countries still lack industrial capacity,
infrastructure investment, technology and or any of the other factors needed to
participate in “development” while most of them are still having their natural
resources stolen from them for pennies on the dollar with no secondary industry
even in existence to turn these recourses into finished goods at higher value
and thus raise the incomes of their populations. Where
are Summers tangible recommendations on how to remedy this situation?
Screw trying to force feed investment in mature economies
where underlying demographics and consumption trends are declining! How does the world get growth, investment,
consumption and inclusion into the global economic machine in the 3/5 of the
population of the world that has been left to rot? Where are the models that state explicitly
that the global economic “norm” that we have lived under for to long is broken? The planet is at its wits end ecologically
and economically. Growth and Consumption
models are broken. Corruption rules far too great a number of the planet’s
population (inclusive of many “developed” nations). The global elite are
increasing their hold on resources while directing puppet governments they
control to abandon their responsibilities to their citizens and spend great
amounts of resources and lives on militaries to protect them and move forward
their agenda, which has absolutely no productive value. Most of the war currently happening is a
direct result of policies of the developed world which supported corrupt
governments for political purposes, exploited their resources, oversaw almost
no productive investment purposefully so they could force feed their global
brands and products down the throats of the increasingly impoverished people
while exploiting their corrupted neo-colonial governments. You want investment? You want growth? You want a return to a “market based” economy
where supply and demand work without massive intervention by the wheels of
central banks with their capacity to “print” massive amounts of money in the
name of “stimulus”? Then the developed
world needs to STOP trying to instigate growth where it is not organically
present!! The developed world needs to
start the process of sharing / transporting / instigating development in the
underdeveloped world. Of all nations, China is taking
a lead with the new AIIB and this is a good step in that direction. China, a nation who’s “growth” has been
completely orchestrated not unlike the communist / socialist governments rapid
growth after WWII; State led, state driven and state directed with spectacular
results for a short period, extended of course by China also taking over near a
quarter of the global dirty manufacturing with disastrous ecological and
environmental results (But that is just fine for an expendable few hundred
million people so the developed world elites can have their huge profit margins
and their citizens cheap junk to feel rich right?).
Meanwhile, it’s time to the stagnant developed nations’
corrupt governments start recognizing that the “profits” made from corporations
either are put to good use or confiscated for the public good i.e.; to pay off
the massive debts the irresponsible corrupt governments have accumulated while
creating policies to ensure social stability, security and equal deliverance of
government services and investment. The
debts government have accumulated, especially since the global financial
failure, is directly on the backs of the citizens who are on the hook for
trillions after bailing out the financial elites while for the most part the
“productive” corporate entities also had a free ride, many having been bailed
out themselves! It’s time this all gets
restructured NOW.
Recognize people that excessive profits, i.e.; profits that
are not put to good use, invested etc, are nothing more than a “tax” on the
citizens who purchase those products with which the public is NOT seeing any
social benefit or “welfare” as economists like to say. Will you hear Summers or Bernanke say out
loud that the models are broken? That we
need a massive rethink of what it means to allow unfettered consolidation and
profits from fewer and fewer players who are enjoying massive rewards on the
backs of the vast majority of citizens who are NOT seeing the benefits spelled
out by so many economists in their pretty little models of how society will
benefit over time as capital increases productivity allowing workers higher
wages and more leisure etc…
If we don’t do something now or very soon, trust me, there
will be backlashes from society and elements of society who will propose far
more drastic measures and far more destructive proposals in the future if the
current “institutions” on all sides of the debate don’t start coming up with
tangible solutions now!! (I would argue
this is at the core of most global conflict since at least 2001.)
I would propose a global developed world corporate tax
rate that is collectively agreed upon, that no nation is able to undercut and
that completely eliminates the incentive for corporate entities to skirt their
responsibility to pay taxes on the profits they make. It should be a crime for any corporate entity
to use gimmicks and supply chain accounting to hide, transfer or otherwise
manipulate their profits to avoid paying tax in any given jurisdiction. Corporate entities should be made to realize
they operate via corporate charters that are granted by legal entities in
jurisdictions they operate and that part of their allowance to do business and
answer to shareholders and the like is an understanding that they have a social
obligation to operate their business ethically, pay wages directed by law, pay
tax on their profits and understand that the responsibility of the governments
they operate under are not free, that caring for the social welfare of the
population and investing in the infrastructure that benefits both the corporate
entity, their workers and the people they “serve” are all connected. To act in any way that is contrary to the
good of the citizenry where they operate is criminal activity and they risk
loosing their corporate charter to operate.
This is to be a rebalancing of the responsibility of corporate entities
who operate with the blessing of the state / citizens of the world they operate
in with the needs of the citizens governments to finance the social welfare of
those citizens.
I would criminalize extraction exploitation on a global
scale. Institute a minimum royalty for
all resource extraction including agriculture that would be to the benefit
citizens of the nation where the extraction is taking place. In addition, global environmental /
ecological rules would be enforced on any an all companies operating in the
extraction industry. Global resource
accounting would identify in real time all resources that exist and
international agencies would work proactively with local governments to manage
the proper extraction of resources, helping to set up local legal structures
and monitoring systems to make sure compliance is universal.
I would set up a global database of every hectare of arable
land on the planet and begin working with every government on the planet to establish
best use guidelines and practices for the land, encourage the application of
agricultural technologies suitable for each region, outlaw the use of any genetically
altered seed or product that involves the use of mass pesticides and instead
focus on local varieties of agricultural
production that takes advantage of that regions soil, environment, available
technology and resources. For the McDonalds or the world that rely on homogenized
agricultural products on a global scale, this would be allowed no longer. Diversity in Agricultural output would be the
rule and global homogenization of global food sources no longer encouraged or
allowed to be dictated by any one or group of corporate entities for the
benefit of their “business model”.
I would create a global arable land database, inclusive
of potential for fisheries and livestock, for every nation / common geographic
area taking in consideration of the population of every nation and use all
resources available from international agencies to plan and coordinate a
strategy to make sure every person on the planet has access to a minimum daily
calorie / nutritional allowance of food, with all priorities directed toward
efficient local production vs. cheap developed nation subsidized products
undercutting the local market’s production.
In this effort, food would be sourced locally as possible, with
strategies to manage the import / growth of food sources, emphasis on
accomplishing the daily nutritional needs, focus on plant based nutrition vs.
animal nutrition and vast application of the best known irrigation / organic
fertilization / farming techniques known and applicable for the specific
region. The effort would be coordinated
with local governments and composed entirely of local citizens who would be
trained, financed and supplied with all the necessary inputs needed to
successfully operate i.e.; technology transfer and technological expertise on
the ground. Ideas like the patenting of
seed that is not recyclable through the use of seed from the crop grown would
be strictly outlawed and everything possible would be done to ensure continued
success of all initiatives to meet global nutritional standards. This initiative would include developed
nations where for all intensive purposes, the food abundance and massive waste of
the “food industry” that takes place in the developed economies (not to mention
the massive “throw away” of food by individual citizens) would be accounted for
either financially or otherwise and direct fines would be imposed as a
financial penalty that would be used to finance agricultural and nutritional
needs in deprived parts of the world.
Every vehicle sold for “personal use” that does not meet
a pre-set qualified global standard of emissions, fuel economy, recyclability
etc. would be subject to a direct and immediate “tax” that would be used to
dramatically expand renewable, non-fossil fuel energy the world over. This “tax” would also apply to the
construction of housing, commercial facilities and be imposed on corporate entities
in the business of physical productive activities who do not meet a global
environmental standard. The era of
cheap disposable products would be declared OVER. Every durable good must be repairable,
recyclable and meet minimum life cycle requirements, period.
Every vehicle transportation system in the world would be
reworked. There would no longer be
millions of miles of roads that allow any two vehicles to travel at high rates
of speed towards each other in opposite directions with nothing but a painted
line between them. The idea that a
supposed intelligent race of beings would allow such a thing to happen is
bazaar and obscure. To continue to propagate such ignorance is beyond
comprehension. It should have been
reconsidered the moment a motorized vehicle came into the hands of a citizen
for common use.
There are additional global initiatives I would begin
working on and will embellish on later…
Now on to Bernanke’s remarks:
Bernanke Comment
on Summers Solution: Larry’s proposed solution to this dilemma is to turn to
fiscal policy—specifically, to rely on public infrastructure spending to
achieve full employment. I agree that increased infrastructure spending would
be a good thing in today’s economy. But if we are really in a regime of persistent
stagnation, more fiscal spending might not be an entirely satisfactory
long-term response either, because the government’s debt is already very large
by historical standards and because public investment too will eventually
exhibit diminishing returns.
Well Bernanke puts this well enough. Now where are the alternative solutions?
Bernanke Learning MIT: As Larry’s uncle Paul Samuelson
taught me in graduate school at MIT, if the real interest rate were expected to
be negative indefinitely, almost any investment is profitable. For example, at
a negative (or even zero) interest rate, it would pay to level the Rocky
Mountains to save even the small amount of fuel expended by trains and cars
that currently must climb steep grades.
Of course this is true when and if it is expected the
investment you make is going to have some utility!! Hello! The word “almost” is a VERY big word
here. Just because the government could
borrow at zero percent vs. say two percent does not clear return on investment
make!
So why is investment at historically low rates? Clearly, companies operating at the duopoly
or oligopoly level, the majority of sectors in the American economy, see the reality. They are already making or importing products
on such a large scale at such a low cost and selling it at increasingly
profitable prices, that there is little left for them to do to sell more, thus
they just buy back their stock with their earnings (there are plenty of
economic models for this phenomena). Since
the collapse of the oil price, not even high energy prices are encouraging them
to invest in say plant or energy efficiency right now… Outside of the technology area, where very low
levels of “physical” investment can result in very high valuations and profit
margins, and large scale production industries such as Aerospace and
Automobiles and for a while areas like oil drilling, shipbuilding and mining,
investment is on the decline.
Not enough of the general population have come to realize
how much damn money the companies are making selling nearly everything to them
at increasingly high developed world prices while their cost of production lies
in the underdeveloped world (one of a few emerging exceptions is beer, thank
God). Once people figure out how cheap
machine tools are (thank you Alibaba), and how much money they could make producing
and selling everything from underwear to peanut butter to house wears without
going through the oligopoly retail industry, more people may start investing
and producing. There are already cottage
industries all over the US
making and selling everything from organic and gourmet foods like ice cream,
chocolate and other delectabl's to soap, lotions and other consumables. These
people are investing, producing and in some cases growing and building
sustainable businesses. They figured it
out. Perhaps they will make higher
quality products and sell for a premium and perhaps their consumers will spend
more on quality and less on quantity and this shift will create tens of
thousands of cottage industry producers of high quality goods sold directly to
consumers who will be happy knowing that consumption of quantity vs. quality
was futile and wasteful and degrading to the environment… Who knows? But it is worth governments putting money and
resources behind this initiative.
Education, training, cooperative business starting rules and
regulations, flexible labor laws and tax incentives are all worth while. This might sound pie in the sky like but the
potential is there and is happening and has happened on some levels already. In addition, these cottage industries are
“making a living” i.e.; beating the “ wage trap” created by corporate America
that limits one’s earn-able income, where lacking a secondary education, being
unable to pass the on-line corporate drone psychology test, or being one of the
65 million Americans with an arrest record, means attaining a decent salary is
becoming a remote reality.
Bernanke Note on equilibrium negative real interest rates: I
concede that there are some counterarguments to this point; for example,
because of credit risk or uncertainty, firms and households may have to pay
positive interest rates to borrow even if the real return to safe assets is
negative. Also, Eggertson andMehrotra (2014) offers a model for how credit constraints can lead to
persistent negative returns. Whether these counterarguments are quantitatively
plausible remains to be seen.
Bernanke on bubble instigated full employment: They note
that the bubble in tech stocks came very late in the boom of the 1990s, and
they provide estimates to show that the positive effects of the housing bubble
of the 2000’s on consumer demand were largely offset by other special factors,
including the negative effects of the sharp increase in world oil prices and
the drain on demand created by a trade deficit equal to 6 percent of US output.
It’s a crazy idea that only at the end of a cycle do we have
a “bubble” hence the cycle is not a “bubble” cycle… Let’s just say that with
any idiot with no formal economic education could see the severity of cycles in
the economy over the last 30 years or so were all financial in nature, driven
by Wall Street gamblers and speculators, and all involved bubbles in various
sectors of the economy. The latter part
of the 1980’s, 1990’s and 2000’s were all cycles that at the end of each,
resulted in massive transfers of wealth to the top, exaggerated more intensely
each time, with each cycle involving ever increasing amounts of debt held by
both households and industry (and government with the exception of the late
1990’s balanced budget on the Federal level, a gift horse for an aging nation
that was quickly squashed by the reckless and mindless policies of the Bush
presidency) and ever more drastic measures taken by the central banks to
“smooth” over the excess without allowing or forcing structural change. In fact more effective regulation, resulting in ever
larger bubbles and collapses.
The time has long since come for the trillions of dollars in
unregulated financial capital sloshing around the world looking for “yield” to
be reined in, shut down, regulated and or completely disbanded and forced into
productive use. The money being printed
by the central banks is pointless. There
is plenty of money, it is all highly levered into “financial instruments”,
being recycled through the revolving buybacks and subsequent stock purchases
and being used to gamble and speculate. The Trillions of “wealth” tied up in
pointless paper and derivatives instead of being put to productive use is at
the core of the lack of investment on a global scale. Using money to make money without ever
producing anything tangible never ends well.
What the central banks did during and after the credit
crises and continue to do today will be marked as the biggest mistake in human
history. The global credit “reset” had
started back in 2007-09. This was badly
needed. The ONLY money central banks
should have printed was that which was lost through the insolvency of nearly
all major banks by actual individuals and companies who had stored money in
insured bank accounts. The bailing out
of money markets, which nearly all had been so mismanaged they were essentially
on their way to offering an unprecedented “haircut” of several percentage
points or even more to the individuals and institutions who kept trillions of
dollars stored there was a huge mistake.
Recapitalizing insolvent overly levered banking conglomerates was a huge
mistake. Handing trillions of dollars to
bank and non-bank institutions with explicit instructions to provide liquidity
to the multi-trillion dollar unregulated hedge fund and private equity markets
was a huge mistake. Allowing dozens of insolvent non-bank financial companies,
from credit card issuers, to Wall Street institutions to commercial and
individual credit companies to become bank holding companies to give them
access to Fed funds was a huge mistake. All the Central Banks have accomplished, is to
allow trillions of dollars in levered “financial paper products” to remain in
circulation, then allow the debt bubble to inflate even further along with the
derivative markets. Printing ever more
money is only aiding and abetting the continued accumulation of non-productive
leverage for no good reason!
As of this writing the amount of outstanding bond debt of
American Corporations has literally doubled since 2008 making total corporate
debt now nearly 80% of US GDP, the value of non-revolving debt held by
Americans has gone up by over 2/3rds, the approximate value of financial
derivative products has grown by at least 1/3rd bring the total
global exposure to over $700 trillion! Meanwhile the debt burden assumed by the
non-presumptive citizen pawns through their irresponsible governments as they
protect the “wealth” of the elites has grown exponentially as well (8 trillion
or up 80% from 10 to 18 trillion in the US alone).
It is 2015 and the global financial system functions more
like the 19th century from the perspective of capitalistic games
between gambling men who wield their financial power from the small financial
centers of the world, where nobody is held accountable, money floats around
with no national allegiances or responsibility to any citizens on the planet
and where humanity is just considered fodder for making as much money as
possible. Crash a currency, sure,
inflate a commodity, sure, crash a commodity, sure, flood a market with short
term cash, sure, suck the cash out overnight, sure, it simply does not matter what
destruction these actions wrath on humanity as long as the global elites make
their desired 8-10-15-20-25-30% or whatever they can on the backs of whoever
they can for whatever reason. God forbid any nationality try to tax them for
what they do! Meanwhile “economists” sit around trying to recreate economic
models by studying the behavior of people in villages in remote areas of Thailand. Yea, a whole lot of good this does the global
economic system!
Bernanke Academic statement is not worth salt. He says, “The
foreign exchange value of the dollar is one channel through which this could
work: If US households and firms invest abroad; the resulting outflows of
financial capital would be expected to weaken the dollar, which in turn would
promote US exports.” What a load of
academic hogwash. Is he aware that the
entire global financial system is currently rigged? To go back to some academic economic model
that assumes a “normal” functioning economic system, where the “exchange value”
or the dollar would be affected by his suggested actions is INSANE. He is talking out of the side of his mouth!
The EU and Japan
are both highly manipulating their exchange rates through massive monetary
policies. Does he really think “US households”
are capable of anything other then borrowing as much money as humanly possible
at very low rates and consuming as much as possible now? This is exactly what the central banks are
encouraging!! They are not encouraging “saving and investing”!! Besides, for
the last 30 years or so, all US firms have done is invest abroad! They have built or shipped wholesale
factories and production “abroad”. They
have expanded their operations, purchased companies, transferred their monopoly
rents, outsourced massive amounts of their production (Boeing anyone?), moved
wholesale their customer service operations… basically every possible way under
the sun American companies have “invested abroad”, many times to the detriment
of the local economy (telecom companies buying assets around the world with
their monopoly rents while the biggest thing to ever hit the telecom world grew
like mushrooms in their back yards in the 1990’s, hello!). And what is
happening to the dollar? Does this man
even know that the dollar is a “reserve currency” where it really does not
matter what the US Fed reserve thinks it can do to “manage” the economy. The reality is there is no measurable amount
of fiat currency that can be printed to bail out the global debt bomb that
burst for a minute in 2008/9 and will burst again imminently. There are almost no policies that can be
“initiated” that will have predictable effects on exchange rates / investment /
consumption etc. when every “developed” nation’s central bank is pursuing the same
reckless debt expansionary policies.
Just forget about it!
And this is Bernanke’s hilarious example: “For intuition
about the link between foreign investment and exports, think of the simple case
in which the foreign investment takes the form of exporting, piece by piece, a
domestically produced factory for assembly abroad. In that simple case, the
foreign investment and the exports are equal and simultaneous.”
(WTF? If exported our
factories as “investment abroad” what good would it be to have a lower exchange
rate? We would not be producing anything
any more to make the lower exchange rate work for the good of the
economy!! We would be importing finished
products made in foreign countries with the factory we exported to be purchased
by people making a dwindling amount of money from shitty retail wages. Sound
familiar? Where do these guys get their
common sense?).
Irrespective of whether the company is a US company or not
(think Apple making $600 phones overseas and importing them to the US instead
of making them here, keeping both the profits and production out of the US) we have
been gutting our economy for decades while at the same time exporting our
technological know-how (and even our lower productive factory machinery as
Bernanke suggests) and now every nation in the world is “exporting” everything
back to the US, which is just churning the same money over and over, bubble to
bubble, debt to debt, to buy the products with ever dwindling amounts of income
allocated to the largest historically economically strong segments of the economy
while each churn turns over another huge chunk of that pie to the richest 10%
who are in the position to benefit from the debt/churn machine. I truly love when academics set up “examples”
that expose how clueless they are to what they are saying or how inappropriate
their examples are.
Notes:
1) How
many more people would care to drive through the Rocky
Mountains if they were leveled for a road through? Would there be any increase in productivity
from the mountain pass? Would the
savings on fuel actually lead to any social benefit that is measurable or would
it just leave a little more money for the person driving to be able to buy a
hot dog and coffee on the way? How would
the government ever see a return on such expenditure? Would the expenditure’s short term multiplier
effect have any lasting benefit?
2) per
year: 35,000 average shares exercised, 7425 exercises, $24.88 average
profit/share 1996-2003
- On a Side Note:
Time preference reflects the relative valuation
placed on goods at an earlier date versus a later date. While current
goods (including cash) should always have a higher valuation than future goods,
time preference declines as an economy becomes wealthier, i.e. the proportion
of income devoted to current consumption falls versus that devoted to
saving/capital accumulation.
On one hand, their policies seek to increase current
consumption, at the expense of long-term saving & capital accumulation, in
an over-leveraged world. This increases time preference and
would normally equate with higher interest rates, shortening time horizons and
diminution in wealth.
However, by forcing down interest rates, the substitution of
savings (real wealth) by cheap credit and by supporting financial markets, they
have created an impression that time preference is lower than it really
is. This lengthens time horizons, implies that current/rising
consumption levels are more easily sustainable and induces incorrect spending
decisions. (Basically creating a “new
normal” in expectations)
Labels:
Bernanke,
Bernanke Summers Debate,
Excess Saving,
Lack of Investment,
Secular Stagnation,
Summers,
US Economy
Sunday, April 19, 2015
Do the Central Banks want Inflation? Maybe Brazil can bottle it up and sell it to them!!
A hilarious article on Marketwatch quotes some Wells Fargo “senior economist” named Bill Adams saying, “Brazil’s expansionary monetary and fiscal policy in the aftermath of the global recession caused it to lose policy credibility, and that’s why Brazil has high interest rates and high inflation today”. The article also notes:
“As the financial crisis rippled through global
financial markets, the Central Bank of Brazil slashed its benchmark
short-term SELIC rate from 13.75 in December 2008 to 8.75 by July 2009. Lower
rates produced a surge in wage growth, which pushed prices higher. But as wage
growth has slowed, prices have continued to rise, compounded by the
depreciation of the real.
The Central Bank of Brazil said Thursday that it
expects inflation to hit 7.9% in 2015, while it expects economic growth to
contract by 0.5%.”
Besides the fact that this typical economist simply fails to fill in the reality on the ground in Brazil, where for over a decade their economy enjoyed growth and praise as one of the pillars and models of growth for the 21st century, absorbed huge amounts of investment from outside investors, was a key member of the so called BRIC countries that experienced a boom in growth partially thanks to the global commodity price surge (indirectly from the Chinese pumped up government orchestrated “growth” model) along with billions in controversial stimulus spending after the credit crises related to preparing for the 2014 World Cup, which essentially completes the "dream scenario" talked about by economist, he is a complete Hypocrite!!
The shallow tone of the article and shallower coverage of reality on the ground in Brazil can only cause one to be cynical about these so called economists views when at the same time Brazil is being criticized for their monetary policies EVERY “developed” economy in the world has their central banks printing trillions of “dollars” while doing everything in their power to keep interest rates at virtually zero without loosing credibility!?! Yet when Brazil attempts the SAME policies, they are quoted as “loosing credibility”? Yea, global imperialism is still alive and well and if you don’t have a “reserve currency” you are still F%&#@d in the world of global capitalism.
Monday, March 30, 2015
Stephen Roach Should Know Better, so should US policymakers...
I just read this paragraph
inside of this article about China’s
growth and challenges:
This is from Stephen Roach, a senior economist for some 30 years at Morgan Stanley Asia. Now to make a statement like this about a nation with as many people STILL living on $2.00 a day as there is in the entire population of the US is almost unconscionable and shows the level of disconnect between those who are supposed to know what is going on in places like China and those who actually know what is going on in places like China.“The best way to measure how far China still has to go is to consider the development of its services sector — the infrastructure of consumer demand in an economy. The good news is that services are now growing faster than any other sector, having reached 48% of gross domestic product in 2014 (thus surpassing the end-2015 target of 47% well ahead of schedule). The tough news is that this remains significantly lower than the 60% to 65% share typical of a more “normal” economy.”
Really! Just because China has gone through a massive transition of manufacturing something like 25% of the global goods output followed and coincided with/by the largest government led “development” of everything from housing to roads to rail, power, telecom etc., all inside of one generation, does NOT in any stretch of the imagination mean “senior economists” anywhere in the world should start to compare China with mature developed economies that have been built over 4 times that long!! Yet there it is, in Black and White from someone who should know better.
Fair enough, there is mention of “at least another decade” to “complete” structural adjustment, but I would say a fair number in this category is 25 years+ to accomplish anything near what is insinuated in this article as “complete”.
In addition, the article goes on about America’s paranoia about China and the “Cold War” mentality in dealing with the “rise” of China. Yea, America will bury itself “worrying” about something that is complete nonsense. China is as fragile as any nation in history right now and all the US is doing is playing a card that supports massive additional deficit spending on pointless weapons production and support of the Military Industrial Complex. Nothing good will or can come of this ignorant policy mentality.
Meanwhile, you give me ONE example in history of a country that developed as rapidly as China has in the last 30 years with anywhere near the population they have managed to do this with. Then give me ONE example of any nation that comes anywhere close to comparison and tell me if some 60% of the wealthiest people in that nation have hedged their bets by transferring literally Billions of Dollars out of the country, buying foreign property, secondary visas, and sending their children out of the nation in mass at the same time!! Go ahead, show me! Then tell me what a “threat” China is anywhere in the world!
More and More Wealthy Chinese Want to Emigrate Percentages of Rich People Who Leave the Country: Source
Friday, March 20, 2015
The Day The Economy Died...
I was reading today an article on the proposed merger of Sysco and US Foods (currently owned by private equity groups KKR & Co. LP and Clayton Dubilier & Rice LLC.) about the FTC's opposition to the merger. Hurray for the FTC! Well really is there any question in anybody's mind in the US who is a restaurant owner that this should not happen? Really?
The plain fact is, the chains that have built a considerable business serving Americans low grade industrial food via corporate restaurant "brands" have been the biggest cheerleaders of having national distributors to serve their hundreds or thousands of restaurants nationally. The lazy MBA's they hire and the corporate managers who hire them have only the lowest cost corporate structure and highest profit in mind when making decisions like buying food for their restaurants. They like nothing more then to deal with one source for all their food needs. The national restaurant chains buy large volumes from Sysco, have standardized menus (often items on the menu are actually "created" by Sysco to meet certain cost/price thresholds and certain theme/ethnic branding needs based on available ingredients and cost factors out there) and are able to wield some influence over pricing. Given their size, they can negotiate with the national food wholesalers and even hedge against food costs if necessary. Essentially the dominance of national food chains and the habit of fat America not to cook any longer but to eat out has over time created these mega distributors and essentially put everyone else out of business.
However, there are still thousands of "non-corporate" restaurant chains who have absolutely NO barganing power against these distribution behomeths and are faced with a scereno like this: It's Tuesday. Sysco arrives at about 10:00 am Tuesday and Friday, portable order tablet in hand quoting the latest "prices" for your food needs. "Oh, Tomatoes are up 12% from last Friday?" you ask why, Salesperson answers, "Yea, we had price hikes in X, Y, Z of over 10% and A, B, C of 15% due to the 'blizzard, storm, flood, drought, port delay, latest bug infestation yada yada' so these are the prices today, what will you buy?" Total BS and you know what, unless that restaurant owner happens to have a true independent restaurant supply wholesale ware house or another batch of independent suppliers he can check prices with on a regular basis, then he just has to eat the Sysco price and deal with it.
Oh, so what happened to all the other thousands of local supply companies that used to exist? They went the same way as the "markets" that used to exist. All food chain supply in the US is controlled by national grocery chains, national distributors and national franchise wholesalers. Even regional supply chains have disappeared. The oligopoly economy is rapidly moving to a monopoly economy (which though not controlling 100% of the market everywhere, the Sysco / US Food merger would still enjoy monopoly privilege over price setting and other variables if allowed to happen along with controlling 75%+ of the market over much of the US) which basically means, well, who cares any more? I mean What's the difference?
America you have the "Office Supply Store", the "Construction Supply Store", the "Food Store", the "Buy all your other imported plastic junk here Store" and soon "get your home plumbing, HVAC etc. here" service...
It is so funny to hear Conservative politicians in the US spout about the more liberal party members and the current president being "socialist" when in fact the conservative side, in their support of ever larger corporate entities, national oligopolies and the like are the ones actually "creating" socialism. There is nothing more socialist then 3 or fewer companies controlling the sale and distribution of nearly everything America buys (Thank God for Independent Brewery's!). Just get on the phone and try to contact a real person in some of these behemoths, it's like calling the Kremlin! Oh, well, actually we are becoming the Kremlin, a nation of oligarchs running the show while everyone else lives like, as Putin himself put it, "serfs". And the US government? A big fat drain on what "wealth" may have been left in the hands of it's citizens to the Defense Department and for Profit Health Industry.
So kudos to the FTC for overseeing the VERY END DAYS of a dynamic economy in America. The last wave of mergers will be the last wave cause there is almost no consolidation left to happen... All that's left is Monopoly. Unfortunately, corporate America is not only consolidating like mad, but doing everything they can to avoid paying their fair share of taxes, essentially gutting the government (hence the influence of the public under constitutional law), while raking in ever larger "profits", often left overseas, which under an oligopoly and monopoly economy may be redefined as "tax" since it increasingly sucks the welfare out of the consumer in favor of the corporation operating in a high price environment without fair competition leaving the citizen with no choice but to pay.
NOTE: The comical thing about the habits of corporate America are when doing business in other parts of the world, even though the corporate entities do everything to avoid paying fair taxes, as soon as they are hit by some cartel or other "unfair" practice in other lands, they try to use the "taxpayer funded" and "constitutionally backed" US legal system to seek justice. But as Motorola recently found out, TOUGH LUCK cause you can't come home and cry to Mama Liberty when you get screwed by the big boys who operate in kleptocracies with no legitimate legal system or constitutional protections they can turn to when they get screwed!!
The plain fact is, the chains that have built a considerable business serving Americans low grade industrial food via corporate restaurant "brands" have been the biggest cheerleaders of having national distributors to serve their hundreds or thousands of restaurants nationally. The lazy MBA's they hire and the corporate managers who hire them have only the lowest cost corporate structure and highest profit in mind when making decisions like buying food for their restaurants. They like nothing more then to deal with one source for all their food needs. The national restaurant chains buy large volumes from Sysco, have standardized menus (often items on the menu are actually "created" by Sysco to meet certain cost/price thresholds and certain theme/ethnic branding needs based on available ingredients and cost factors out there) and are able to wield some influence over pricing. Given their size, they can negotiate with the national food wholesalers and even hedge against food costs if necessary. Essentially the dominance of national food chains and the habit of fat America not to cook any longer but to eat out has over time created these mega distributors and essentially put everyone else out of business.
However, there are still thousands of "non-corporate" restaurant chains who have absolutely NO barganing power against these distribution behomeths and are faced with a scereno like this: It's Tuesday. Sysco arrives at about 10:00 am Tuesday and Friday, portable order tablet in hand quoting the latest "prices" for your food needs. "Oh, Tomatoes are up 12% from last Friday?" you ask why, Salesperson answers, "Yea, we had price hikes in X, Y, Z of over 10% and A, B, C of 15% due to the 'blizzard, storm, flood, drought, port delay, latest bug infestation yada yada' so these are the prices today, what will you buy?" Total BS and you know what, unless that restaurant owner happens to have a true independent restaurant supply wholesale ware house or another batch of independent suppliers he can check prices with on a regular basis, then he just has to eat the Sysco price and deal with it.
Oh, so what happened to all the other thousands of local supply companies that used to exist? They went the same way as the "markets" that used to exist. All food chain supply in the US is controlled by national grocery chains, national distributors and national franchise wholesalers. Even regional supply chains have disappeared. The oligopoly economy is rapidly moving to a monopoly economy (which though not controlling 100% of the market everywhere, the Sysco / US Food merger would still enjoy monopoly privilege over price setting and other variables if allowed to happen along with controlling 75%+ of the market over much of the US) which basically means, well, who cares any more? I mean What's the difference?
America you have the "Office Supply Store", the "Construction Supply Store", the "Food Store", the "Buy all your other imported plastic junk here Store" and soon "get your home plumbing, HVAC etc. here" service...
It is so funny to hear Conservative politicians in the US spout about the more liberal party members and the current president being "socialist" when in fact the conservative side, in their support of ever larger corporate entities, national oligopolies and the like are the ones actually "creating" socialism. There is nothing more socialist then 3 or fewer companies controlling the sale and distribution of nearly everything America buys (Thank God for Independent Brewery's!). Just get on the phone and try to contact a real person in some of these behemoths, it's like calling the Kremlin! Oh, well, actually we are becoming the Kremlin, a nation of oligarchs running the show while everyone else lives like, as Putin himself put it, "serfs". And the US government? A big fat drain on what "wealth" may have been left in the hands of it's citizens to the Defense Department and for Profit Health Industry.
So kudos to the FTC for overseeing the VERY END DAYS of a dynamic economy in America. The last wave of mergers will be the last wave cause there is almost no consolidation left to happen... All that's left is Monopoly. Unfortunately, corporate America is not only consolidating like mad, but doing everything they can to avoid paying their fair share of taxes, essentially gutting the government (hence the influence of the public under constitutional law), while raking in ever larger "profits", often left overseas, which under an oligopoly and monopoly economy may be redefined as "tax" since it increasingly sucks the welfare out of the consumer in favor of the corporation operating in a high price environment without fair competition leaving the citizen with no choice but to pay.
NOTE: The comical thing about the habits of corporate America are when doing business in other parts of the world, even though the corporate entities do everything to avoid paying fair taxes, as soon as they are hit by some cartel or other "unfair" practice in other lands, they try to use the "taxpayer funded" and "constitutionally backed" US legal system to seek justice. But as Motorola recently found out, TOUGH LUCK cause you can't come home and cry to Mama Liberty when you get screwed by the big boys who operate in kleptocracies with no legitimate legal system or constitutional protections they can turn to when they get screwed!!
Labels:
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oligopolies,
Sysco,
Sysco Merger,
US Foods,
US Industrial Consolidatoin,
US Mergers
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Printing Money Against all Economic Logic: Japan
I spend to much time trying to figure out why supposedly
smart people at central banks around the world are unable to grasp any
semblance of “reality” when it comes to monetary policy and a seeming lack of
understanding of what humanity really needs to “save capitalism” before a
global backlash threatens the best system we have collectively come up with to
sustain life as we know it today. Japan is the
most wondrous example of the “me to” policies perpetuated by major central
banks around the world irrespective of the reality on the ground. See some graphics below.
This is what happens when you print money against all
economic logic, when interest rates were already at historic lows but your
demographics are working against you.
Where does the money go?
Speculation, Yes! Investment?
Consumption? No.
Demographics can’t be ignored:
With the extremely low interest rates, aging population, declining
workforce participation and practically zero interest rates, saving rates have turned negative as of December
2014…
Savers in Europe face the same dilemma, also with aging
populations and zero return on savings, the elderly are just getting poorer,
and when they are the largest segment of the population, where is all the money
printing going to go?
Neither can economic reality of this effect when looking at Japan vs Rest
of World GDP
So where has all the debt spending been going? Where are the
growth numbers? Most importantly, where
would Japan
be without all this debt spending / money printing? Once again… you can see
where the money goes below.
But unfortunately for the Japanese population, they are not
participating in this “faux wealth creation” as shown by the low percentage of
stocks held by individuals:
As this article from the Future Tense blog illustrates:
Until late 2012, the Japanese stock
and real estate markets experienced 23 years of declines. Imagine stocks and
real estate peaking this year in the United States and declining for the
next 23 years. What percentage of their assets would Americans hold in stocks
and real estate in 2037? Probably close to 0%. Just like the Japanese today.
The sad part of this story is just as the Japanese have put their entire life savings into cash, the Bank of Japan (their central bank) has declared war on those savings. Most of their citizens will see the purchasing power of their savings decimated in the years ahead. The Bank of Japan has promised to unleash an unlimited amount of QE (and have kept their promise so far) until inflation reaches 2% and beyond.
The sad part of this story is just as the Japanese have put their entire life savings into cash, the Bank of Japan (their central bank) has declared war on those savings. Most of their citizens will see the purchasing power of their savings decimated in the years ahead. The Bank of Japan has promised to unleash an unlimited amount of QE (and have kept their promise so far) until inflation reaches 2% and beyond.
And what of the earnings at Japan’s largest corporations doing
business around the world? With the
above demographics, Japanese nationals are getting poorer by the month as they
frantically try to keep their cash savings from declining instead of spending
it, resulting in lackluster spending at home. So it’s clear what the corporate
sector is doing with their earnings. As
stated in Bloomberg article, they are holding it or investing abroad:
Private companies’ cash and
deposits rose 5.8 percent from a year before, to 225 trillion yen ($2.4
trillion) -- an amount in excess of the size of Italy’s
economy or the liquid assets held by American firms, Bank of Japan data showed
in Tokyo.
Businesses held 55 trillion yen in direct investment abroad.
The report underscores the appetite for
manufacturers to ramp up operations in faster-growing economies as they await
evidence for Abe’s growth agenda opening new opportunities at home.
“The corporate sector is not going to take that
money and suddenly start investing, start increasing wages or hiring more
workers if it doesn’t see a more optimistic future.”
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