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US Economy

Mark Steyn:

http://www.ocregister.com/articles/president-outraged-aig-2341488-don-bonuses

Mark Steyn: AIG execs the new 'enemy combatants'
The first two months of the Age of the Hopeychange have been unexpectedly inept.
Mark Steyn

Syndicated columnist
Comments 29 | Recommend 30

Are you outraged by these AIG bonuses?

No, no. For Pete's sake, you're an A-list congressional big shot. Try to get a bit of feeling into "outraged." The president's teleprompter puts it in italics, bold, capitalized and underlined: OUTRAGED !

That's better. Don't forget to furrow your brow and fume. No, not like a camp waiter when you send back the arugula salad drizzled in an aubergine coulis. We're looking for primal, righteous anger: You're outraged, OUTRAGED that bonuses are being handed out at companies the American taxpayer is bailing out. Yes, to be sure, the bonuses were specifically provided for in the legislation, but, like all busy senators and congressmen, you don't have time to read every footling trillion-dollar bill before you vote in favor of it. And yes, true, the specific passage addressing these particular bonuses was, in fact, added to the bill in your name, but that was nothing to do with you – you just did that because the White House asked you to, and just because their people called your people and some intern in your office drafted some boilerplate with your name on it is no reason for you to be denied 10 minutes of grandstanding on MSNBC. It's an outrage to suggest you're anything other than outrageously outraged!

To his credit, the hopeychanger-in-chief has had some difficulty doing the outrage kabuki with a straight face. In the middle of his press conference the other day, he got a tickle in his throat and departed from his telepromptered script to joke: "Excuse me, I'm choked up with anger here." How the assembled hacks laughed! Why, it was almost as funny as his gag on "The Tonight Show." Referring to his 129 score at the White House bowling alley, the president cracked that "it was like the Special Olympics." Ha-ha! What a card that Obama is when he unplugs the prompter and kicks loose a little. Maybe next time he can toss in that the Dow Jones has got "Down" syndrome – geddit? Oh, come on! Don't be so uptight and politically correct!!! And besides, anyone who says the president shouldn't be doing crip jokes is a racist.

Frank James of the Chicago Tribune criticized the president's bon mot more in sorrow than in anger: "Obama seems to be a fairly sensitive and compassionate man who wouldn't purposely set out to offend the disabled."

Are you sure about that? He might be "a fairly sensitive and compassionate man." Alternatively, he could be a mean, self-absorbed S.O.B. who regards anyone other than himself as intellectually disabled. The truth is we don't know, because in the course of the presidential campaign the press declined to do even the most elementary due diligence on him. And, like Congress with the stimulus, the electorate didn't bother to find out what's in there before they voted for it.

Still, on the basis of its first 60 days, this is a very odd presidency. In between appearances on Jay Leno and his "March Madness" picks, Barack Oprompta also found time to compare AIG executives to suicide bombers:

"Even though it makes you angry because you're thinking I was responsible, and these folks are irresponsible, and somehow I'm paying for them, it was the right thing to do to step in. The same is true with AIG. It was the right thing to do to step in. Here is the problem. It's almost like they've got, they've got a bomb strapped to them, and they've got their hand on the trigger. You don't want them to blow up, but you've got to kind of talk them, ease that finger off the trigger."

Right. It's like you're at the Jay Leno post-show party and suddenly you notice this AIG vice-president has wandered in, with six figures of bonus strapped to his waist, and he's yelling "Allahu akbar!," which is Arabic for "I'd like to deposit this in my Cayman Islands account."

Maybe Obama's teleprompter had a wild night on the tiles and inserted his terrorism speech into the middle of his bonus outrage. But, if not, we now know why the White House announced that they'll no longer be using the term "enemy combatants" for the Gitmo crowd. They're reserving that designation for AIG execs, most of whom will shortly be extraordinary-renditioned to Saudi Arabia where a touch of the old electric cattle-prods should soon have their bowling scores heading south.

Any sentient being dumb enough to fall for this AIG huffin' an' a-puffin' from Barry, Barney, Doddy and the gang is a fool who deserves the vaporization of his assets that the national political class is lining up for him. As Charles Krauthammer pointed out, the $165 million in bonuses is less than 1/18,500th of the $3.1 trillion budget. The massive expansion of government the president is planning is forever, and will ensure you that end your days in what Peggy Noonan calls "post-prosperity America." More immediately, what message do you send to the world when legal contracts can be abrogated by retrospective confiscatory bills of attainder? You think that's going to get anyone investing in America again?

The investor class invests in jurisdictions where the rules are clear and stable. Right now, Washington is telling the planet: In our America, there are no rules. Got a legally binding contract? We'll tear it up. Refuse to surrender the dough? We'll pass a law targeted at you, yes, you, Mr. Beau Nuss, of 27 Plutocrat Gardens, Fatcatville. If you want a banana republic on steroids, this is great news. So cheer on thuggish grandstanding by incompetent legislators-for-life like Barney Frank if you wish. But, in any battle between the political class and the business class, you're only fooling yourself if you think it's in your interest for the latter to lose.

The first two months of the Age of the Hopeychange have been an eye-opener. I expected it to be ideologically distasteful to me, but I didn't expect it to be so inept. Not because I had any expectations of President Obama's executive skills. But I assumed he'd have folks around him who could take care of details like governing, while he pranced around as the smiley-face hopeychange frontman. But the bench is still empty save for a handful of mediocrities. And the disconnect between the smoothly scripted mush and what's actually happening makes the telepromptered cool look even more ridiculous.
 
Given the vastly increasing reach the US government seeks for itself, (including unconstitutional "Bills of Attender"), we will see much more of this in North America:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123698646833925567.html

The Rise of the Underground Article
By PATRICK BARTA

Economists have long thought the underground economy -- the vast, unregulated market encompassing everything from street vendors to unlicensed cab drivers -- was bad news for the world economy. Now it's taking on a new role as one of the last safe havens in a darkening financial climate, forcing analysts to rethink their views.

At the Manek Chowk market, in this Indian city's congested center, vendors peddle everything from beans to brass pots from a row of derelict stalls as monkeys scramble overhead. One man sharpens nails using a spinning blade attached to a moving bicycle wheel.

Their wages are pitiful by Western standards. But there are no layoffs at the Manek market. All anyone has to do to work there is show up and start hawking -- something more and more people are doing these days.

Without this job, "we'd have nothing," says Surajben Babubhai Patni, a 58-year-old vendor selling tomatoes, corn and nuts from under a makeshift cloth tarp. She makes as much as 250 rupees a day, or about $5, but it's enough to feed her household of nine, including her son, who recently lost his job as a diamond polisher.

Ms. Patni and millions like her are part of the "informal," or underground, economy, an enormous, vital and poorly understood segment of world commerce. It is becoming a lot more important now, as the global financial meltdown casts millions of people out of steady-paying jobs. Especially in developing economies, many of those people are landing in the informal sector, which has become a critical safety net as the economic crisis spreads.

Economists have stressed the negative aspects of informal trade for decades. Informal businesses often don't pay taxes, and they routinely lack the capital and expertise to be as productive as big enterprises, leading to less innovation and lower standards of living. Since informal workers lack health benefits and other safeguards, they have to save more for emergencies, resulting in less casual spending that further drags down growth. Having a big underground economy "is not something to be cheerful about," says Nancy Birdsall, an economist at the Center for Global Development, a Washington think tank. "When everybody is selling apples to each other, you're not creating new wealth -- it's not a sign that things are OK." (Interpolation: If you are at home collecting welfare you are consuming wealth. Being economically active creates wealth, but since the investment is very tiny, the resulting increase in wealth creation is also tiny)

The frightening scale of the current recession is forcing some analysts to reconsider. As many as 52 million people could lose their jobs from the economic crisis world-wide, says the International Labour Organization, an agency of the United Nations. Without the informal sector, many of them will have nowhere to go.

Informal jobs "will absorb a lot of people and offer them a source of income" over the next year, says W.F. Maloney, an economist at the World Bank in Washington. Indeed, the jobs are "one reason that the situation in desperately poor countries isn't as bad as you'd think," says Simon Johnson, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund.

Until late December, Pilaporn Jaksurat, 33, was working full-time on a cotton spinning machine in a textile mill in Bangkok. She made about $7 a day and her benefits included bonuses of $30 a month for good attendance and a severance package worth about $800.

Then she was laid off when her factory, which sells fabric to clothing manufacturers in Europe, said it had to cut costs to cope with the global economic crisis. Finding a similar job wasn't an option, since other local factories were also dumping staff due to a massive decline in orders from buyers across Europe and North America. She decided to start her own business, selling shots of medicinal wine to truck drivers and motorcyclists on the highway by her home -- an adult version of the neighborhood lemonade stand. With help from friends, she fashioned a makeshift bamboo stand on vacant grass by the roadside. The start-up cost was about $275, she says, paid for with money from her severance package.

A few weeks later, shouting to be heard over the roar of oncoming trucks, Ms. Pilaporn says she's making a profit of about $10 a day after expenditures for ingredients, including herbs and wine. That's better than the $7 or so she made at the garment factory. She likes being her own boss, she says, and the income allows her to keep sending money home every month to help support her parents and 2-year-old child, who live together in a rural area in northern Thailand.

"It's a bit noisy here, but you get used to it," she says. If business "keeps up like this, I'll be fine."

Defining what makes a job informal isn't easy. Generally it includes any work outside the traditional "formal" sector, in which companies register with the government, pay taxes and provide jobs with fixed salaries and benefits like pensions or health care. It includes self-employed street vendors in Cairo, tortilla sellers in Mexico City, rickshaw drivers in Kolkata and scrap collectors in Jakarta.

There are also some informal workers in the U.S. and other wealthy countries, including off-the-books maids, gardeners and "gypsy" cab drivers, though the phenomenon isn't nearly as widespread as in the developing world. Analysts say it may add up to as much as 10% of the overall U.S. economy, and probably is growing now that employers are slashing staff, forcing more people to try their own small-scale businesses or make do with part-time contract work.

Before the Industrial Revolution, the difference between formal and informal employment was largely meaningless. With the rise of factories and trade unions, labor markets became more efficient and specialized. Workers increasingly entered into contractual relationships with employers that set benefits, while governments passed laws establishing minimum wages, social security plans and other protections. By the latter part of the 20th century, most American and European workers were in these formal arrangements.

Economists assumed developing countries would follow. With the spread of industrialization and wealth, they thought, underground endeavors would be replaced by factory and office jobs. Rickshaw drivers would get replaced by big transport companies, while street-cart vendors would give way to restaurants that paid taxes and observed health codes.

That isn't always happening. One-half or more of the developing world's nonagricultural workers are employed in the underground informal sector, according to the International Labour Organization. In India, 83% of workers are informal, while in sub-Saharan Africa, about 72% are.

The percentage of workers in informal trades has even increased in some developing countries at times in recent decades. According to the ILO, informal activities accounted for about 90% of the new jobs created in Africa over a roughly 10-year period in the 1990s. In Mexico, informal employment rose to about 54% of all jobs in 1997, from about 50% in 1990. Venezuela and Brazil saw similar increases.

Some researchers are starting to argue the informal economy is becoming a permanent fixture in some poorer countries -- in good times and bad -- as population growth outstrips job creation. The current recession, which is pressuring companies to cut labor costs, could intensify that process by pushing companies to ditch expensive formal workers in favor of cheaper part-time employees without benefits. Many laid-off workers may never be re-absorbed by the formal economy, as companies grow more accustomed to the flexibility of their informal counterparts.

Despite India's rapid growth of recent years, economists believe the bulk of new jobs created were in the informal sector, not the flashier salaried positions of corporate titans like Infosys Technologies Ltd. and Reliance Industries.

India's basic problem -- as with much of Africa, Asia and Latin America -- is that its economy can't create enough steady, salaried positions to absorb the millions of people entering the labor force each year. Between 2000 and 2005, the most recent year for which data are available, the number of formal jobs in India stayed flat at about 35 million, while informal jobs grew 17% to 423 million, according to the Indian government. Creation of new formal jobs has probably picked up since 2005, but not by enough to dramatically change the situation, economists say.

To alter that equation, the Indian economy would have to maintain stellar growth rates for years, says Jeemol Unni, an economist at India's Gujarat Institute of Development Research, a research center. It costs a lot more to hire full-time employees than take on temporary workers, so big corporations in India only add them when they're really flush, economists say.

As a result, much of India is now embracing the underground economy. That includes Ahmedabad, where informal jobs have played a crucial role in keeping the economy afloat in recent years.

For decades, this city of roughly five million people, where camels still amble down city streets, was known as the "Manchester of India," after the city in England famous for textiles. In the early 1980s, it had more than 60 giant mills employing 150,000 people or more, most of them with generous pension packages and other benefits. The industry trade union, started by Mahatma Gandhi himself (he kept an ashram by the city), was one of the most powerful institutions around and even ran a bank and hospital.

Then the mills entered a long and disastrous decline. More efficient operations were opening in other places, including China, and most of Ahmedabad's factory owners refused to make investments to become more efficient.

The mills became uncompetitive and shut down, dumping their workers and leaving scores of rotting mills and smokestacks that still loom ominously over the city. Today there are only about 10 mills left in operation. Membership in the trade union has fallen to about 9,000 people, and its bank and hospital have closed.

In many American or European cities where major industries died, like Buffalo, N.Y., urban centers fell into decay because there was nothing left to replace them. But Ahmedabad remains a thriving city. Most of the laid-off employees were able to find work in street vending, rickshaw driving, day-wage construction or other informal jobs, and as a result, the percentage of people employed in the underground economy increased. Today, Ahmedabad has some 55,000 rickshaw drivers, 70,000 street vendors, 70,000 construction workers and 45,000 roving trash collectors and recyclers.

As the sector has boomed, it also has become more sophisticated. It spawned its own trade unions, including one called the Self-Employed Women's Association, which began in Ahmedabad in the 1970s and has grown to a million members across India. The group provides training to teach women how to lay bricks and even started its own bank.

It also has a research staff of 22 women who study the underground economy and compile data to bolster the group's advocacy efforts, which include filing court cases to prevent government officials from kicking street vendors out of public areas. "The reality is that this sector is there and it's going to grow, so you have to deal with it," says Reema Nanavaty, director of economic and rural development at the group.

Despite the long demise of its signature industry, Ahmedabad today "is vibrant, it has life," says Martha Chen, a lecturer at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government who has studied the city. Based on Ahmedabad's experience, "I think we should see the informal economy as the solution" to urban decay and unemployment, she says, "not the problem."

The jobs aren't pretty. The trash collectors, known as rag pickers, live in squalid slums amid rotting piles of garbage. Street vendors have endured beatings by police who don't want them to clog thoroughfares; in some cases, they say, corrupt officers demand bribes to let them stay.

The workers aren't immune to the global economic slowdown, either. At one rag-pickers' slum by an abandoned mill, residents say traders are now paying as little as half what they shelled out a few months ago for plastic bags, steel scraps and animal bones. Some residents have started stockpiling waste in the hopes prices will recover, adding to the stench.

Another problem is that with more people losing their formal jobs, the informal sector is getting more competitive. At the Manek market, for instance, there are now about 500 vendors, from 325 six months ago. More informal jobs also means more lost tax revenues. I.P. Gautam, the local municipal commissioner, says 30% of the city's residents pay no taxes at all, a figure that could rise further if the informal sector keeps growing.(Interpolation: This is only an issue if you believe government is entitled to the wealth and income of the workers. If you view government as a service which should be paid a competative wage to provide certain services, then this should spur local governments to become more focused and efficient in their core "business" [primarily law enforcement and protective services])

Yet Mr. Gautam believes the underground economy is essential to Ahmedabad's future. He says that while Ahmedabad has attracted a smattering of good jobs in financial services and the chemical trade in recent years, they weren't nearly enough to meet the overall labor needs in the city. Worse, big companies are quick to ditch workers when business slows, he says.

In cities like Ahmedabad with lots of informal jobs, "per capita income is less, and growth is slow, but you get your bread and butter," he says. The existence of a big underground economy is "why we are going to survive" the downturn. He says the city is now shifting to try to create more informal jobs, including setting aside new space for public markets at bus stops.

In the streets, many workers say they're just happy to have work. Ms. Patni, the tomato vendor at Manek market, says she would be happy to have a better job with a real salary, but finding one would be impossible. With little education, and few solid jobs to go around, "we can't get something like that," she says.

Kavitaben Uttambhai Parmar, 25, says she had one of the better jobs in the city until recently, stitching pants and other clothes in one of the few remaining major textile factories. During her five years there, her salary more than tripled to 115 rupees per day; she recently dreamed of buying a refrigerator. Then one day in November, she was laid off with one of her best friends, 30-year-old Jayshree Kantilal Makvana.

"That was a bad day for us," says Ms. Parmar, whose income helped support a household of five, including her mother, brother, sister and grandfather. "I went home crying."

Both later found informal work, doing stitching for a smaller textile company that pays only by the piece, allowing each woman to earn about 50 rupees per day. They also are making bracelets in their spare time to sell at festivals for about five rupees per 12 dozen.

Ms. Parmar says she is cutting back on electricity. Ms. Makvana says she's using city buses to get around instead of more expensive rickshaws. But they're happy they're still earning something.

"At least we're surviving," Ms. Makvana says.

—Wilawan Watcharasakwet and Vibhuti Agarwal contributed to this article.
Write to Patrick Barta at patrick.barta@wsj.com

Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page W1
 
Somehow.... I think India might be able to show us a thing or two.
However, the rules and regulations laid down by 1st world governments makes an informal economy a lot more difficult to promote and sustain.
 
Looking down the road, how the potentially hyperinflationary US economy can be rapidly fixed post 2012 (Note, regular inflation or stagflation can be fixed with a tight monetary policy and massive tax cuts. Politicians will also need to have matching spending cuts; the one piece of the puzzle that President Reagan, Prime Minister Thatcher or Premier Harris could not or would not do):

http://business.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090323.wrzimbabwe23/BNStory/Business/home

How Zimbabwe slew the dragon of hyperinflation
GEOFFREY YORK

From Monday's Globe and Mail

March 23, 2009 at 3:53 AM EDT

HARARE — Zimbabwe's wily street hawkers have finally found a use for the worthless 100-trillion-dollar banknotes that were issued here in January. They sell the bizarre banknotes as souvenirs to foreign tourists for $2 each.

The currency with the never-ending string of zeroes is quickly fading into history, just two months after the latest notes were printed by the inexhaustible central bank. Also disappearing is Zimbabwe's phenomenal level of hyperinflation, which last year reached a stunning 89.7 sextillion per cent (a number expressed with 21 zeroes), making it the most extreme hyperinflation crisis of any country in modern times.

Zimbabwe's new coalition government has cracked both problems with an absurdly simple solution: It has abruptly switched to foreign currencies, allowing customers to pay for products with U.S. dollars or South African rand or Botswana pula.

The entire economy, almost overnight, has switched to a unique system of multiple foreign currencies.

Equally swiftly, hundreds of Zimbabwe's long-closed shops and groceries have reopened, retail licence fees have been slashed, and the new competition has reduced prices to stable levels.

The dollarization (and rand-ization and pula-ization) of the Zimbabwean economy has finally slain the dragon of hyperinflation, providing the first fragile signs of hope for a devastated country. While the junking of the Zimbabwean dollar was a blow to the ego and power of Zimbabwe's bloated central bank, the radical move to adopt foreign currencies is still one of the fastest ways to kick-start any economy that is ruined by inflation and money-printing excesses.

Empty shelves have been filled. Prices of staples such as milk and eggs are still twice as expensive as in neighbouring South Africa, but they are half as expensive as they were in January. People are shopping again, and merchants are stocking their inventories again.

Those goods are still unaffordable for many people, of course. The unemployment rate is estimated at 94 per cent, wages are often unpaid, and the vast majority of people are dependent on donated food rations.

Not surprisingly, there is a severe shortage of the foreign money. Shops don't have enough foreign cash to provide change to customers, so they issue "credit notes" on little bits of paper - or persuade their customers to accept change in candies.

Investors, including Canadians, are watching closely. Toronto-based Caledonia Mining Corp., which suspended production at its Blanket gold mine in Zimbabwe last October, is considering a reopening of the mine within the next few weeks because the new government is promising that producers can export a much higher percentage of their production. The mine could produce up to 40,000 ounces per year.

"We welcome the new government policies, and we're working to get the necessary approvals," said a spokesman for the Canadian company. "We remain cautious and skeptical. But it would be a shame to miss this opportunity."

The first twitches of economic recovery can already be seen on Harare's streets. In the industrial district, dozens of men and women are waiting at the gates of the factories, having heard that a few people are actually being hired on occasion.

"Before, there wasn't any hope at all," says Coffee Musiya, 37, an unemployed man who has joined a crowd of about 50 job-seekers outside the gates of the National Foods factory in Harare. The crowd has been waiting for weeks, and a few have gotten temporary jobs at the factory. "It's a little bit improved now," he says. "Maybe four or five people might get a day job."

Many factories are still operating at less than 10 per cent of capacity, despite the political agreement that led to the coalition government between President Robert Mugabe and his foes last month. The total market capitalization of the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange has dropped by more than 50 per cent in the past month, to less than $1.3-billion (U.S.), and volumes are so low that the exchange is open for only an hour per day.

But at least the stock exchange is open now. Until Feb. 19, it had been closed for three months.

As recently as the early 1990s, Zimbabwe was one of Africa's leading economies. Its decaying infrastructure could be still be revived, especially if the government is able to halt the invasions of the dwindling white-owned commercial farms that have plagued the agricultural sector for the past nine years.

One study has predicted that the country could be self-sufficient in agriculture within a year if the invasions were reversed.

The new government is seeking $5-billion (U.S.) in financing from foreign lenders to forestall another collapse in the economy. The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank are in the midst of a mission to Zimbabwe - their first since 2006 - to decide whether they might offer financing.

Western lenders have been insisting that Zimbabwe must fire the central bank governor, Gideon Gono - the man who printed all those $100-trillion (Zimbabwe) banknotes, and reputedly the personal paymaster to Mr. Mugabe himself.

So far Mr. Gono has managed to keep his job. But the new government has eliminated or reduced a host of taxes and retail licence fees that were previously funnelled to the central bank - including heavy taxes on retail turnover and export revenue.

Government elites had profited from preferential rates on foreign exchange, allowing them to obtain U.S. dollars at rates far below the street value. The dollarization of the economy has wiped out those perks as well. And the new government is working hard to separate Mr. Gono and Mr. Mugabe from their traditional control of the money flow.

"The process of change is irreversible," said John Robertson, an independent economist in Harare. "The wedge will be driven harder and harder."
 
You have to consider that by switching to foreign currency, Mr Mugabe is no longer capable of controling his own economy.... which is a good thing.
 
So what foreign currency are you anticipating US citizens will employ?  And what will be the impact on a global economy predicated on the US dollar as a replacement for the gold standard?

The Zimbabwe solution has worked for many small economies in the past (and some big ones).

But the US is in a different league.....It is the league.



Now there is the prospect that we might be forced back on to a fixed standard, like gold........or silver.......or oil.........or CARBON.
 
Kirkhill,
I don't think that the US has any need to devalue or freeze their currency.
Their economy is large enough that it will "bounce back" at some point in time.
If there is a little bit of inflation, the only thing that will do is depreceate the real value of foreign owned US debt.  From the US Gov't point of view, this is probably a good thing.
 
On the other hand the Chinese seem to be of a similar opinion : See this?

China calls for new global currency
Article  Comments (38)  JOE MCDONALD

The Associated Press

March 24, 2009 at 12:32 PM EDT

BEIJING — China is calling for a new global currency controlled by the International Monetary Fund, stepping up pressure ahead of a London summit of global leaders for changes to a financial system dominated by the U.S. dollar and western governments.

More on link.

And no, I didn't read the article before I posted above.  ;)

Hmm.......

IMF mediated Carbon economy......Not impossible.

"A Conservative Sceptic's Defence of Carbon Credits"

And some potential for unintended consequences
 
geo said:
Kirkhill,
I don't think that the US has any need to devalue or freeze their currency.
Their economy is large enough that it will "bounce back" at some point in time.
If there is a little bit of inflation, the only thing that will do is depreceate the real value of foreign owned US debt.  From the US Gov't point of view, this is probably a good thing.

The US is explicitly devaluing it's currency through the inflationary TARP, Stimulus package and Omnibus spending bill, as well as the various actions the Treasury is taking with the sale of US Treasuries. The Chinese, as owners of a trillion dollars of Treasuries is taking action to discourage the devaluation of their assets. You can also look at the administrations stated priorities and think of how these programs have affected wealth creation and the economies of other nations to imagine how the US economy will "bounce back".

Given the Obama administration has massively increased the deficit in just 60 days (and is promising to double that again), is sitting on a $12 trillion dollar debt and rapidly escalating unfunded liabilities in the form of Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid, they can either inflate their way out of the problem or go nuclear and default.

Since either option will effectively collapse the global economy through hyperinflation or massive deflation (destroying @ 23% of the book value of the stock of wealth of the United States [est $52 trillion dollars]) some sort of "third option" is needed. The 2012 administration will have to look at a lot of different options (yes, even the Amero, revaluing the USD, going back to the Gold standard, or the Carbon standard, "free banking" or something no one has even thought of yet).
 
In spite of the usual naysaying about the current POTUS, and the usual reluctance to believe the MSM, do any of you think that this is a sign that the economy is picking back up sooner than expected?  ;)

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090325/ap_on_bi_go_ec_fi/economy

Durable goods orders rise unexpectedly in February
   
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer Martin Crutsinger, Ap Economics Writer – 39 mins ago
WASHINGTON – Orders to U.S. factories for big-ticket manufactured goods unexpectedly rose in February after a record six straight declines, but economists said the gains were unlikely to last as the recession persists.

The Commerce Department said Wednesday that orders for durable goods — manufactured products expected to last at least three years — increased 3.4 percent last month, much better than the 2 percent fall economists expected. It was the first advance since July and the strongest one-month gain in 14 months.

Last month's strength was led by a surge in orders for military aircraft and parts, which shot up 32.4 percent. Demand for machinery, computers and fabricated metal products also rose.

Still, the rebound may be temporary. Upticks in retail sales and housing starts last month, along with a private sector group's index of leading economic indicators dropping less than expected were welcomed, but none were viewed as sustainable given all the problems facing the economy. And a large drop in orders to factories in January was revised even lower, bolstering estimates that February data represented a blip.

"Durable goods was firmer than expected but with the caveats of downward revisions and the bounce ... coming on the heels of several months of weakness ... and we don't see an effort to interpret it as a sign the economic bottom is in," RBS Greenwich Capital analyst David Ader wrote in a note.

Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, agreed. Noting the steep downward revisions in January and that half of last month's gains came from defense, he said the rise in orders was welcome, but "much less impressive than it looks at first sight and it cannot possibly last."

"The underlying state of industry is still deteriorating," Shepherdson wrote in a research note.

But Wall Street rose on the better-than-expected results. The Dow Jones industrial average added about 120 points in morning trading and broader indicators also gained.

Manufacturers have been battered by the current recession — already the longest in a quarter-century — as demand for cars, airplanes, household appliances, furniture and other large goods shrinks both in the U.S. and overseas.

The government is scheduled to report Thursday on the overall economy. Economists believe that data will show the economy falling at an annual rate of 6.5 percent in the final three months of last year, even deeper than the 6.2 percent drop in the gross domestic product reported a month ago.

Economists believe the GDP fell just as sharply in the current quarter and likely will keep contracting until the second half of this year.

Still, orders for durable goods excluding the volatile transportation sector rose 3.9 percent last month, easily beating the 2-percent drop that economists expected.

But despite the big surge in demand for military aircraft, overall orders for transportation products fell 0.8 percent in February. Demand for commercial aircraft plunged 28.9 percent after a huge increase in January. Orders for autos and auto parts dipped 0.6 percent as that industry's struggles persist.

Detroit's General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC are restructuring operations in hopes of securing billions more in federal aid.

In areas of strength, orders for heavy machinery surged 13.5 percent in February, demand for computers rose 10.1 percent and orders for fabricated metal products edged up 1.5 percent.
 
Several possible interpretations:

1. One of the key items was an 32% increase in orders for military parts and aircraft. The government is directly spending (this is also the argument for "infrastructure" spending), but the effects only last so long as the purchases continue. If the USAF were to get another 500 F-22 Raptors by Congressional fiat, that sort of purchase would have more prolonged effects due to the complex nature of the aircraft and wide spread of the economy that would be targetted (F-22 components come from @ 44 US states) but even that would end when the last plane rolled off the assembly line.

2. Consumers are buying durables because they expect very bad economic times ahead. Rather than try to service an old piece of kit, get something that will last until the economic downturn ends. Many dealers and service depots may be closed.

3. Anti inflationary stockpiling. Get it now while it is still affordable. In hyper inflationary environments, this is also a survival mechanism since you can barter valuable real goods vs worthless paper script. (Note, only early adopters will be thinking seriously along these lines yet).
 
If left alone the economy can recover - a big if. More likely we could see a double dip recession. It all depends on the other extreme policies Obama gets enacted. Cap and trade would be a killer. Indications are they may hold off on this and focus on universal health care. What is worrisome is that there are 17 top level jobs at Treasury that havent been filled and Obama is in no hurry to fill them. Makes me wonder why ?
 
First China, now the EU weigh in against the US economic plans:



EU presidency: US economic plans 'a road to hell'
Czech premier, currently European Union president, calls US economic measures 'a road to hell'
Raf Casert, Associated Press Writer
Wednesday March 25, 2009, 11:13 am EDT

      STRASBOURG, France (AP) -- The president of the European Union slammed President Barack Obama's plans to have the U.S. spend its way out of recession as "a road to hell," underscoring European differences with Washington ahead of a crucial summit next week on fixing the world economy.

Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek, whose country currently holds the rotating EU presidency, told the European Parliament on Wednesday that Obama's massive stimulus package and banking bailout "will undermine the liquidity of the global financial market."

Other European politicians kept their distance from the blunt remarks, with some reproaching the Czech leader for his strong language and others reaffirming their good diplomatic ties with the U.S.

European governments, led by France and Germany, say the focus should be on tighter financial regulation, while the U.S. is pushing for larger economic stimulus plans -- but nobody has so far escalated the rhetoric to such strident levels.

Topolanek's remarks are the strongest criticism so far from a European leader as the 27-nation bloc sticks to its position that its member countries are already spending enough to stimulate demand.

The remark highlights the difficulties leaders may face coming up with a common approach at the April 2 summit in London among leaders of the Group of 20 industrialized and leading developing countries.

The host of the summit, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, praised Obama on Tuesday for his willingness to work with Europe on reforming the global economy in the run-up to the G-20 summit.

The United States plans to spend heavily to try and lift its economy out of recession with a $787 billion economic stimulus plan of tax rebates, health and welfare benefits, as well as extra energy and infrastructure spending.

To encourage banks to lend again, the government will also pump $1 trillion into the financial system by buying up treasury bonds and mortgage securities in an effort to clear some of the "toxic assets" -- devalued and untradeable assets -- from banks' balance sheets.

Topolanek, whose government lost a vote of confidence Tuesday but who will remain EU president until a new Czech government is established, bluntly said that "the United States did not take the right path.".

He slammed the U.S.' widening budget deficit and protectionist trade measures -- such as the "Buy America" policies included in the stimulus bill, although Obama has said he opposes protectionism in principle.(Interpolation: Do you believe that? Remember how he openly talked out of both sides of his mouth on NAFTA...)

Topolanek said that "all of these steps, these combinations and permanency is the road to hell."

"We need to read the history books and the lessons of history and the biggest success of the (EU) is the refusal to go this way," he said.

"Americans will need liquidity to finance all their measures and they will balance this with the sale of their bonds but this will undermine the liquidity of the global financial market," said Topolanek.

Since the EU presidency is expected to always to take the sensitivities of the member nations into account, the statement was daring and alarmed other European leaders, who moved quickly to mend fences with Washington.

Martin Schulz, leader of the Socialist group in the European parliament, said it was "not the level on which the EU ought to be operating with the United States."

"You have not understood what the task of the EU presidency is," he told Topolanek in the debate.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso also weighed in with a tribute to trans-Atlantic cooperation.

"I really believe it is not a helpful debate, as I see sometimes, to try to suggest that Americans and Europeans are coming with very different approaches to the crisis," he told legislators. "On the contrary, what we are seeing is increased convergence."

Although German Chancellor Angela Merkel has warned against a spending race and said that ever bigger bailouts would create too much of a budgetary risk, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Tuesday he is prepared to support the economy with a new spending package that may go down well in Washington.

Obama insisted Tuesday that his massive budget proposal is moving the nation down the right path and will help the ailing economy grow again. "This budget is inseparable from this recovery," he said, "because it is what lays the foundation for a secure and lasting prosperity."

Obama also claimed early progress in his aggressive campaign to lead the United States out of its worst economic crisis in 70 years and declared that despite obstacles ahead, the U.S. is "moving in the right direction."

AP Business Writer Aoife White in Brussels contributed to this report
 
tomahawk6 said:
I..... there are 17 top level jobs at Treasury that havent been filled and Obama is in no hurry to fill them. Makes me wonder why ?

He's got all the answers?

Or:

His primary economic advisers are giving him advice for free so that they can dodge the limelight.
 
Right and wrong. Tax relief will spark the recovery, but the "tax relief" that the administration is selling isn't tax relief at all, but rather welfare payments (since many of the recipients pay no tax at all).

The tax relief the Republicans champion are an extension of the current tax regime, and if the Administration and Congress were to scroll back on government spending to accomodate the actual productivity of the American people, then the underlying problem (outragious debt/equity ratios) can be addressed.

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/business/taxes/more_voters_than_ever_say_tax_cuts_help_the_economy

More Voters Than Ever Say Tax Cuts Help the Economy
Thursday, March 26, 2009 Email to a FriendAdvertisement
Democrats in the Senate are talking of cutting back President Obama's pledge of tax cuts for most Americans in the face of record deficits. But 63% of U.S. voters now say tax cuts would help the economy, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey.

That’s up from 56% in February and marks the highest level found in years of tracking this question. Scott Rasmussen has posed this polling question regularly since the mid-nineties and Rasmussen Reports now tracks it on a monthly basis.

Only 13% say tax cuts would hurt the economy, down from 16% a month ago.

Most voters (51%) believe increasing taxes would hurt the economy, the highest reading on this question since early January. Just under a quarter (23%) of voters say tax increases would help the country's economic situation.

Republicans are more enthusiastic about the benefits of tax cutting, while Democrats are more likely to believe that tax increases are beneficial to the economy.

(Want a free daily e-mail update? If it's in the news, it's in our polls.) Rasmussen Reports updates also available on Twitter.

One-in-three voters (33%) say taxes will go up under the Obama administration, up from 31% in the last survey. The plurality (42%) say taxes will stay about the same. Only 14% think taxes will go down.

A separate survey released earlier today found that 66% of voters think the president is likely to raise taxes on those who make less than $250,000 per year. On the campaign trail and since, Obama has promised a tax cut for 95% of Americans and a tax increase only for those who earn more than a quarter-million dollars a year. However, his tax cut pledge has been put at risk by senators worried about the amount of new spending in his $3.6 trillion budget and propose phasing out those cuts unless other savings are found.

Voters are evenly divided over whether the president's budget is good or bad for the economy.

Seventy-two percent (72%) of Republicans say tax cuts would help the economy, as do 68% of unaffiliated voters and 52% of Democrats. Eighteen percent (18%) of Democrats think tax cuts would hurt the economy, a view shared by nine percent (9%) of GOP voters and 10% of unaffiliateds.

The plurality of Democrats (41%) think tax increases would be a benefit to the economy, but only eight percent (8%) of Republicans and 16% of unaffiliated voters agree. Seventy-six percent (76%) of GOP voters and 58% of unaffiliateds say tax increases would hurt the economy, but just 27% of Democrats feel the same way.

Sixty-eight percent (68%) of voters overall see government spending going up under the new president, down from 72% earlier in the month. Only 10% say the level of government spending will go down, while 16% think it will stay about the same.

Most voters (52%) think they pay more than their fair share of taxes. That’s up from 48% in February but equal to the level found in earlier January. Thirty percent (30%) don’t think they pay enough.

Voters remain fairly evenly divided as to what is more important in a candidate when it comes to taxes. While 43% say they would rather vote for a candidate who opposes all tax increases, 42% say they would support one who raises taxes only on the rich. Earlier in the month, voters preferred the latter by a 44% to 40% margin.

The majority of voters (54%) say a tax policy that helps the economy grow is more important than one that makes everyone pay their fare share. Thirty-nine percent (39%) take the opposite viewpoint. Those results have remained fairly consistent since July of last year.

Please sign up for the Rasmussen Reports daily e-mail update (it’s free)… let us keep you up to date with the latest public opinion news.

See survey questions and toplines. Crosstabs are available to Premium Members only.
 
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/politics/On-Spending-and-the-Deficit-McCain-Was-Right-41936467.html

Barack Obama used to get very upset about federal budget deficits. Denouncing an "orgy of spending and enormous deficits," he turned to John McCain during their presidential debates last fall and said, "We have had, over the last eight years, the biggest increases in deficit spending and national debt in our history…Now we have a half-trillion deficit annually…and Sen. McCain voted for four out of five of those George Bush budgets."
That was then. Now, President Obama is asking lawmakers to vote for a budget with a deficit three times the size of the one that so disturbed candidate Obama just a few months ago. And Obama foresees, for years to come, deficits that dwarf those he felt so passionately about way, way back in 2008.

Everywhere you go on Capitol Hill, you hear echoes of the last campaign's spending debate. So on Thursday morning, as the budget fight raged, I asked McCain about the president's seemingly forgotten concern about deficits. McCain doesn't like to rehash the campaign -- "The one thing Americans don't like is a sore loser," he told me -- but when I read him Obama's quote from the debate, he said, "Well, there are a number of statements that were made by then-candidate Obama which have not translated into his policies."

That's an understatement. The deficit issue could be one of the most, if not the most, consequential of Obama's unkept campaign promises. Just how consequential was made clear last week in a little-noticed conference call featuring Budget Director Peter Orszag. Orszag was trying to explain to reporters how the Obama administration calculated its rather rosy forecasts for economic growth. Near the end of the call, he was asked whether deficits along the lines of those predicted by the Congressional Budget Office are sustainable."

Orszag at first dodged the question, saying he was sure the final Obama budget will "reflect a fiscally sustainable path." But the questioner persisted: Are those deficits sustainable? Relenting, Orszag said such deficits, in the range of five percent of the Gross Domestic Product, "would lead to rising debt-to-GDP ratios in a manner that would ultimately not be sustainable."

The simple version of that is: If the Congressional Budget Office projections are correct, we're headed for hell in a handbasket.

I asked McCain what might happen if Obama and Orszag get their way. First, the U.S. could have to print a lot of new money, "running the huge risk of inflation and returning to the situation of the 1970s, only far worse," McCain said. The second option is to raise taxes.

Just this week, former Clinton budget director Alice Rivlin conceded that Obama's budget could present a "scary scenario" that would "raise deficits to unsustainable levels well after the economy recovers." The solution, she wrote, is higher taxes, and not just for the richest of the rich.

Of course, that's what McCain said during the campaign. And it's what the much-maligned Joe the Plumber said, too. Remember when he took so much flak for objecting to Obama's plan to raise taxes only on those Americans making more than $250,000 a year? Joe didn't make anything near that, the critics said, so why was he worrying?

The point was not that Joe made that much, or that anybody at McCain's rallies made that much -- the vast majority didn't. The point was that Obama was promising so many things that to pay for them he would eventually have to raise taxes on people making far less than $250,000. Look out, McCain warned -- someday he'll come after you.

And now that's where we appear to be headed. At some point, Obama will likely have to bow to those in his party who say he must raise taxes if he wants to pay for health care and other expensive initiatives.

Some skeptics believe that was the plan all along. McCain wouldn't go that far, but when I brought up the idea, he did sound a bit suspicious. "Well, you set up a situation that puts spending at an unprecedented amount of GDP, and then you turn around and say, 'Of course we're going to have to raise taxes to pay for this,'" McCain told me. "I'm not saying it was their plan, but it certainly was inevitable."
 
The US is loosing the moral high ground as this Congress and administration goes off the rails:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/25/AR2009032502226.html?referrer=emailarticle

OUTLOOK PREVIEW
Re-emerging As an Emerging Market

By Desmond Lachman
Sunday, March 29, 2009; Page B01

Back in the spring of 1998, when Boris Yeltsin was still at Russia's helm, I led a group of global investors to Moscow to find out firsthand where the Russian economy was headed. My long career with the International Monetary Fund and on Wall Street had taken me to "emerging markets" throughout Asia, Eastern Europe and Latin America, and I thought I'd seen it all. Yet I still recall the shock I felt at a meeting in Russia's dingy Ministry of Finance, where I finally realized how a handful of young oligarchs were bringing Russia's economy to ruin in the pursuit of their own selfish interests, despite the supposed brilliance of Anatoly Chubais, Russia's economic czar at the time.

At the time, I could not imagine that anything remotely similar could happen in the United States. Indeed, I shared the American conceit that most emerging-market nations had poorly developed institutions and would do well to emulate Washington and Wall Street. These days, though, I'm hardly so confident. Many economists and analysts are worrying that the United States might go the way of Japan, which suffered a "lost decade" after its own real estate market fell apart in the early 1990s. But I'm more concerned that the United States is coming to resemble Argentina, Russia and other so-called emerging markets, both in what led us to the crisis, and in how we're trying to fix it.

Over the past year, I've been getting Russia flashbacks as I witness the AIG debacle as well as the collapse of Bear Sterns and a host of other financial institutions. Much like the oligarchs did in Russia, a small group of traders and executives at onetime venerable institutions have brought the U.S. and global financial systems to their knees with their reckless risk-taking -- with other people's money -- for their personal gain.


Negotiating with Argentina's top officials during their multiple financial crises in the 1990s was always an ordeal, and sparring with Domingo Cavallo, the country's Harvard-trained finance minister at the time, was particularly trying. One always had the sense that, despite their supreme arrogance, the country's leaders never had a coherent economic strategy and that major decisions were always made on the run. I never thought that was how policy was made in the United States -- until, that is, I saw how totally at sea Treasury Secretaries Henry Paulson and Timothy F. Geithner and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke have appeared so many times during our country's ongoing economic and financial storm.

The parallels between U.S. policymaking and what we see in emerging markets are clearest in how we've mishandled the banking crisis. We delude ourselves that our banks face liquidity problems, rather than deeper solvency problems, and we try to fix it all on the cheap just like any run-of-the-mill emerging market economy would try to do. And after years of lecturing Asian and Latin American leaders about the importance of consistency and transparency in sorting out financial crises, we fail on both counts: In March 2008, one investment bank, Bear Stearns, is bailed out because it is thought to be too interconnected with the rest of the banking system to fail. However, six months later, another investment bank, Lehman Brothers -- for all intents and purposes indistinguishable from Bear Stearns in its financial market inter-connectedness -- is allowed to fail, with catastrophic effects on global financial markets.

In visits to Asian capitals during the region's financial crisis in the late 1990s, I often heard Asian reformers such as Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew or Japan's Eisuke Sakakibara complain about how the incestuous relationship between governments and large Asian corporate conglomerates stymied real economic change. How fortunate, I thought then, that the United States was not similarly plagued by crony capitalism! However, watching Goldman Sachs's seeming lock on high-level U.S. Treasury jobs as well as the way that Republicans and Democrats alike tiptoed around reforming Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae -- among the largest campaign contributors to Congress -- made me wonder if the differences between the United States and the Asian economies were only a matter of degree.

On Wall Street there is an old joke that the longest river in the emerging-market economies is "de Nile." Yet how often do U.S. leaders respond to growing signs of economic dysfunctionality by spouting nationalistic rhetoric that echoes the speeches of Latin American demagogues like Peru's Alan Garcia in the 1980s and Argentina's Carlos Menem in the 1990s? (Even Garcia, currently in his second go-around as Peru's president, seems to have grown up somewhat.) But instead of facing our problems we extol the resilience of the U.S. economy, praise the most productive workers in the world, and go on and on about America's inherent ability to extricate itself from any crisis. And we ignore our proclivity as a nation to spend, year in year out, more than we produce, to put off dealing with long-term problems, and to engage in grandiose long-term programs that as a nation we can ill afford.

A singular characteristic of an emerging market heading for deep trouble is a seemingly suicidal tendency to become overly indebted to foreign creditors. That tendency underlay the spectacular collapse of the Thai, Indonesian and Korean currencies in 1997. It also led Russia to default on its debt in 1998 and plunged Argentina into its economic depression in 2001. Yet we too seem to have little difficulty becoming increasingly indebted to the tune of a few hundred billion dollars a year. To make matters worse, we do so to countries like China, Russia and an assortment of Middle Eastern oil producers -- none of which is particularly well disposed to us.

Like Argentina in its worst moments, we never seem to question whether it is reasonable to expect foreigners to keep financing our extravagance, and we forget the bad things that happen to the Argentinas or Hungarys of the world when foreigners stop financing their excesses. So instead of laying out a realistic plan for increasing our national savings, we choose not to face up to the Social Security and Medicare crises that lie ahead, embarking instead on massive spending programs that -- whatever their long-run merits might be -- we simply cannot afford.

After experiencing a few emerging-market crises, I get the sense of watching the same movie over and over. All too often, a tragic part of that movie is the failure of the countries' policymakers to hear the loud cries of canaries in the coal mine. Before running up further outsized budget deficits, should we not heed the markets that now see a 10 percent probability that the U.S. government will default on its sovereign debt in the next five years? And should we not be paying close attention to the Chinese central bank governor's musings that he does not feel comfortable with the $1 trillion of U.S. government debt that the Chinese central bank already owns, let alone adding to those holdings?

In the twilight of my career, when I am hopefully wiser than before, I have come to regret how the IMF and the U.S. Treasury all too often lectured leaders in emerging markets on how to "get their house in order" -- without the slightest thought that the United States might fare no better when facing a major economic crisis. Now, I fear time is running out for our own policymakers to mend their ways and offer real leadership to extricate the United States from its worst economic calamity since the 1930s. If we insist on improvising and not facing our real problems, we might soon lose our status as a country to be emulated and join the ranks of those nations we have patronized for so long.

Desmond Lachman, a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, was previously chief emerging market strategist at Salomon Smith Barney and deputy director of the International Monetary Fund's Policy and Review Department.
 
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