Since Congress has not passed Cap and Trade, the Administration is planning to implement it by fiat. Last December, Environmental Protection Agency administrator Lisa Jackson classified carbon dioxide as a dangerous pollutant and asserted her authority over it under the Clean Air Act. In April, the EPA issued rules limiting greenhouse gases in automobile emissions and is preparing to do the same for power plants. Ultimately, however, the Supreme Court, which is loathe to allow any of three branches of government to impinge upon the powers of another, except for themselves of course, will stop the IPA’s coup d’état.
In the meantime: “Badges? We don’t need no stinkin’ badges.”
(Background info from Investor’s Business Daily, August 12, 2010, p. A1)
Friday, August 13, 2010
Thursday, August 12, 2010
The problem with polygamy
An advisor to the prime minister of Turkey has published a book in which he admits to a polygamous relationship with three women. His father-in-law, or at least one of them, Suat Kilic is a leading member of the Justice and Development Party who introduced a bill legalizing polygamy which was defeated. It is not known how he feels about his son-in-law’s espousal of his principles.
The problem with polygamy is that Nature has so ordered human life that there is an approximately the same number of men and women in every population. To make polygamy work, a man should eliminate another man of marriageable age for each additional wife he takes. This could be done by stirring up wars, of course.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/11/world/europe/11briefs-TURKEY.html
The problem with polygamy is that Nature has so ordered human life that there is an approximately the same number of men and women in every population. To make polygamy work, a man should eliminate another man of marriageable age for each additional wife he takes. This could be done by stirring up wars, of course.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/11/world/europe/11briefs-TURKEY.html
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Americans buy more treasuries
“NEW YORK — For the first time since the start of the financial crisis in August 2007, US investors own more Treasuries than foreign holders.
Mutual funds, households, and banks had boosted the domestic share of the $8.18 trillion in tradable US debt to 50.2 percent as of May, according to the most recent Treasury Department data.” http://www.boston.com/business/markets/articles/2010/08/10/us_investors_buy_up_treasuries
This reflects higher domestic savings.
Mutual funds, households, and banks had boosted the domestic share of the $8.18 trillion in tradable US debt to 50.2 percent as of May, according to the most recent Treasury Department data.” http://www.boston.com/business/markets/articles/2010/08/10/us_investors_buy_up_treasuries
This reflects higher domestic savings.
Singapore economic miracle accelerates
Second quarter GDP was 18.8% yoy. Government now expects 13%-15% growth this year. Unit labor costs were down 8.8% yoy.
Portugal: 45% of electricity from renewables; national electric car recharging grid
And they said it couldn't be done. 60% of electricity from renewables by 2020. Article in NYT: http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/xFBkqGpHkHbNkryAahdnvMalUyNl?format=standard
Monday, August 9, 2010
Greek government bonds
The Wall Street Journal says the following today:
"What does Greece have to do to get a little credit from investors? Greek bonds, while off their lows, showed virtually no reaction to recent praise dished out by the International Monetary Fund. A combination of illiquidity, technical factors and binary valuation arguments are stifling the market.
"This is despite seemingly juicy returns on offer. The 30-year Greek bond hit a low on June 23 at 47% of face value, according to Tradeweb, offering a chunky 10.4% yield. The small rise since then, to 56% of face value, translates to an 18.5% capital gain. Even bonds maturing in three or four years yield 10% to 11%.
"There are good reasons, though, for the lack of action. First, for many investors, Greece is off-limits: Ratings downgrades have removed it from key European bond indexes, but it doesn't qualify to join emerging-markets indexes.
"Second, the market is illiquid. Trading volume on Greece's HDAT electronic platform was just €1.6 billion ($2.13 billion) in June, down from €27.8 billion a year earlier, according to the Bank of Greece. Buyers may fear pent-up selling pressure from banks still holding Greek debt.
"And third, shorter-dated bonds trading at prices of 70% to 80% of face value mightn't be attractive enough if an investor fears a debt restructuring. While there are good arguments that a restructuring wouldn't make sense and Greek officials rule it out, investors are concerned by the scale of potential write-offs if a default occurred, given the debt-to-GDP ratio of 130% or more.
"Niche funds with strong risk appetite may be able to take advantage. But the big money will stay away for some time yet."
Comment: I am reminded of the saying of Hecataeus of Miletus, ca. 500 BC: “What I write here is an account that I believe to be true. For the stories told by the Greeks are many and in my opinion ridiculous.”
"What does Greece have to do to get a little credit from investors? Greek bonds, while off their lows, showed virtually no reaction to recent praise dished out by the International Monetary Fund. A combination of illiquidity, technical factors and binary valuation arguments are stifling the market.
"This is despite seemingly juicy returns on offer. The 30-year Greek bond hit a low on June 23 at 47% of face value, according to Tradeweb, offering a chunky 10.4% yield. The small rise since then, to 56% of face value, translates to an 18.5% capital gain. Even bonds maturing in three or four years yield 10% to 11%.
"There are good reasons, though, for the lack of action. First, for many investors, Greece is off-limits: Ratings downgrades have removed it from key European bond indexes, but it doesn't qualify to join emerging-markets indexes.
"Second, the market is illiquid. Trading volume on Greece's HDAT electronic platform was just €1.6 billion ($2.13 billion) in June, down from €27.8 billion a year earlier, according to the Bank of Greece. Buyers may fear pent-up selling pressure from banks still holding Greek debt.
"And third, shorter-dated bonds trading at prices of 70% to 80% of face value mightn't be attractive enough if an investor fears a debt restructuring. While there are good arguments that a restructuring wouldn't make sense and Greek officials rule it out, investors are concerned by the scale of potential write-offs if a default occurred, given the debt-to-GDP ratio of 130% or more.
"Niche funds with strong risk appetite may be able to take advantage. But the big money will stay away for some time yet."
Comment: I am reminded of the saying of Hecataeus of Miletus, ca. 500 BC: “What I write here is an account that I believe to be true. For the stories told by the Greeks are many and in my opinion ridiculous.”
McMansions In The Sky
McMansions In The Sky
Currency debasement and inflation have ultimately been bad news for men of modest means. Lincoln Rathnam learns lessons from the history of Emperor Diocletian on why our present penchant for McMansions may point to an Appalachian future
According to Gavin Menzies interesting book 1434 when a Chinese fleet sailed up the Adriatic in that year, they passed by the Dalmatian coastal retirement palace of the Roman Emperor Diocletian, who reigned from 284 AD to 305 AD. I was surprised to learn that the palace had lasted for 1000 years and even more surprised to know that it is standing today. Diocletian’s palace is a largish building, about the size of Versailles. Both palaces are real, long-lasting monuments to their designers, not the fragile, pre-packaged McMansions we have recently been building.
Diocletian was a cruel but effective emperor who ended the Crisis of the Third Century, fended off barbarian hordes, and, after proclaiming himself related to the god Jupiter, launched the tenth and most brutal persecution of the Christians by the Romans. To finance these achievements he produced hyperinflation in the empire by regularly buying up coins, melting them down, and producing many more new coins with reduced precious metal content, eventually reducing the silver content of the “silver” antoninianus to 2%.
Diocletian expanded the army from 300,000 to 500,000 men and increased the size of the bureaucracy, but he protected the state and its favoured few from the negative effects of inflation by effectively tying revenues to real commodities and making annual tax reassessments. The population grew more impoverished, and many free men were reduced to serfdom as they agreed to be tied on a hereditary basis to the great estates in order to survive.
Inflation increases income inequality. Wage earners and salarymen are always playing catch-up until inflation begins to decline, when they have a chance to move ahead again. This is not a conspiracy; it is simply how the world works. Still, Diocletian’s policies allowed the empire in the West to stumble on for a couple hundred more years and in the East for another one thousand. Not bad.
So what have the life and good times of Diocletian taught us? First, I think, that inflation impoverishes everyday people or, as the chairman of BP PLC so charmingly calls them, “the small people.” (Of course, the chairman is a Swede, a very tall race, so the sobriquet may well apply from his perspective.) If we are to have big government and inflation, then it’s a good thing to be an emperor or one of the few others with pricing power, but it is in the long run worse for everyone else.
Some people might buy McMansions, but they won’t last as long as Diocletian’s, and they might find them hard to keep up. After all, we have just learned that one-in-twelve mortgages in the USA is non-performing while the delinquency rate for mortgages over $1 million is one-in-five.
Despite recent hard times, US CPI is up 27% in the past ten years using the Clinton era calculation and twice that using the pre-Clinton calculation. In this period, US GDP increased 17% in real terms while median household income was basically flat. Price rises have been persistent and insidious. Eventually, however, people become aware. This is why President Lula of Brazil has been so popular with the small people there; he has dramatically reduced inflation so they could catch up and afford to have chicken twice a week. Lula put prices and real income more in sync.
“Tarnation” is an old New England and Appalachian slang term meaning “eternal damnation.” A recent neologism has come across my desk: “intarnation”. This is when a middle class person dies and comes back as a hillbilly. It is, I believe, clearly established in history that inflation results in intarnation for the 99% of the population that does not have pricing power. It is worrisome that governments around the world engage in monetary debasement on a scale that would have impressed even Diocletian. With monetary inflation, 99% of the population is faced with “intarnation.”
Economists such as Irving Fischer and Keynes have written about the “money illusion,” which comes when people mistake changes in nominal income or costs for real changes. For example, if inflation rises 5% and wages rise in 3%, wage earners think that they are 3% richer even though they are 2% poorer, and they expand their consumption accordingly. Inflation is like the drug “soma” in Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World: it creates a false feeling of euphoria. The soma of inflation makes people feel richer and able to buy McMansions they cannot afford.
Today various experts, such as Paul Krugman, are urging further debasement of the currency through Diocletian-like monetary expansion while others, mainly in Europe, are worried about the debacle that such expansion will inevitably produce. If the former prevail, we may be in the last days of our Roman Empire. Either way, of course, life will go on, even if only through our intarnation in the next generation. Tarnation for us…too bad for them.
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