Friday Night Festivities!!!
Posted: November 19, 2010 Filed under: Festivities, just because, open thread | Tags: blogging, open thread 79 CommentsTonight, we’re celebrating 21 days of the little blog that could!
First, Saturday night Treats will feature BostonBoomer and some New England Recipes that sound great for a chilly autumn eve. Be sure to come and share!!! I think I’m going to have to work up to sharing my best gumbo recipe just to keep the seafood competition up!!!
Second, we were adopted this week !!!! I’m so happy that some of my fellow New Orleans Bloggers have decided to give Sky Dancing a try!!! Thank you Editilla!!!
~EPluribusPiem American Pie Party~Good Mornin’ America & Happy Hump Day! Today’s Humping Pie Party Adopt-A-Blog-rrr: @SkyDancer66http://bit.ly/aNqsoX#justdesserts#vajrapie
Third, the move from file cabinet to active community has increased our Alexa status! We’ve broke the 10 million mark!! We started in the top 18 million blogs so that’s quite a bump! We’ve had some great link backs from HuffPo, Corrente, and this fun one from the WSJ (via Technorati)!
WSJ.com: Real Time Economics
Recent Influential Reactions
Inflation: Not a Problem
Sky Dancing — Authority 439
economists as “William Kristol, Editor, The Weekly Standard“. Actually, the signatories aren’t distinguished economists at all. They’re mostly political hacks and conservative policy ideologues.
Look at that Team!! We’re ‘influential”!!! (It must be that 9,915,575 ranking, daggummit!!!)
Another shout out goes to Sima’s wonderful post on S.510: Food Safety Modernization Act. Sima got a link back from opencongress.org/bill/111-s510/show/ as well as a shout out on some other blogs. As you know, Sima’s venture into blogging is going well and we’re glad she’s joined the team!!! She provides an important voice to one more important set of issues!
Any more frontpagers in waiting in the wings out there? Let us know!!! Again, we interested in discussing issues here and any one with an important issue that they follow closely and would like to post on would be more than welcome!!!
So,we’re #9,915,575 and WE try harder!! We’re hoping to go under 1 million in less than 3 months!!
(Hey, it’s a start!!! Right?)
This is an open festivity thread because you’re an important part of the little blog that could!!! Keep on bringing up and commenting on real issues!!!
Here there be busy little lame ducks
Posted: November 19, 2010 Filed under: legislation | Tags: web censorship 26 Comments
Wired has the latest atrocity passed in a Senate Committee during the lame duck session. Women can’t get fair pay practices but we can sure get more violations of our civil rights.
On Thursday, the Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously approved a bill that would give the Attorney General the right to shut down websites with a court order if copyright infringement is deemed “central to the activity” of the site — regardless if the website has actually committed a crime. The Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act (COICA) is among the most draconian laws ever considered to combat digital piracy, and contains what some have called the “nuclear option,” which would essentially allow the Attorney General to turn suspected websites “off.”
COICA is the latest effort by Hollywood, the recording industry and the big media companies to stem the tidal wave of internet file sharing that has upended those industries and, they claim, cost them tens of billions of dollars over the last decade.
The content companies have tried suing college students. They’ve tried suing internet startups. Now they want the federal government to act as their private security agents, policing the internet for suspected pirates before making them walk the digital plank.
No one says that stealing people’s creative and intellectual effortss isn’t wrong and bad for artists, musicians, and writers. It is illegal in most places outside of China. However, do we have to go as far as shutting down people’s websites–as Wired calls it–“based upon a vague and arbitrary standard of evidence, even if no law-breaking has been proved”?
Wired provides a list of sites that could potentially go dark. They include:
… Dropbox, RapidShare, SoundCloud, Hype Machine and any other site for which the Attorney General deems copyright infringement to be “central to the activity” of the site, according to Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group that opposes the bill. There need not even be illegal content on a site — links alone will qualify a site for digital death. Websites at risk could also theoretically include p2pnet and pirate-party.us or any other website that advocates for peer-to-peer file sharing or rejects copyright law, according to the group.
In short, COICA would allow the federal government to censor the internet without due process.
Sounds like we need to start writing Congress Critterz again.
Friday Reads
Posted: November 19, 2010 Filed under: morning reads | Tags: Antimatter breakthrough, Ben Bernanke, Bobby Jindal the Terrible, China, Closure Votes, Conservatives attack FED, Coporate Governance, Currency Manipulation, DADT, incentive pay, Lucian Bebchuk, Luigi Zingales, Middle Class Tax Cuts, moral hazard, NPR funding, Pew Quiz on political and economic knowledge, starships, Steny Hoyer, Trade Deficits, University of New Orleans 50 Comments
Good Morning!
So, this first item I dug up is kind’ve bothersome. It’s a Pew Poll with a self quiz attached on economic and other news. You can go take it yourself if you’d like!
Nearly eight-in-ten (77%) say correctly that the federal budget deficit is larger than it was in the 1990s and 64% know that in recent years the United States has bought more foreign goods than it has sold overseas. As in recent knowledge surveys, about half (53%) estimate the current unemployment rate at about 10%.But the public continues to struggle with questions about the Troubled Asset Relief Program known as TARP: Just 16% say, correctly, that more than half of the loans made to banks under TARP have been paid back; an identical percentage says that none has been paid back. In Pew Research’s previous knowledge survey in July, just 34% knew that the TARP was enacted under the Bush administration. (See “Well Known: Twitter; Little Known: John Roberts,” July 15, 2010
The new survey finds that an overwhelming percentage (88%) identify BP as the company that operated the oil well that exploded in the Gulf of Mexico earlier this year. But as in the past, the public shows little awareness of international developments: 41% say that relations between India and Pakistan are generally considered to be unfriendly; 12% say relations between the two long-time rivals are friendly, 20% say they are neutral and 27% do not know.
Steny Hoyer is promising congressional Dems that they will have a chance to vote to extend the middle class tax cuts. I wonder if he’s spoken to the President who is already indicating he’ll negotiate with the Republicans.
The move indicates that House Dems are growing more resolved to draw a hard line on the Bush tax cuts, forcing Republicans to choose between supporting Obama’s tax plan and opposing a tax cut for the middle class. However, the way forward still remains murky. Even if such a measure were to pass in the House, it’s unclear whether the Senate will agree to such a vote, and the White House has not endorsed the approach.
What’s more, the vote could conceivably go down, or alternatively, Republicans might successfully mount a procedural response, known as a “motion to recommit,” that could also force a House vote on the high end cuts. I have not been able to determine how House Dems might respond to such a move.
For all these reasons, this House move does not preclude a deal being reached in the end on a temporary extension of all the cuts. And plans could still change: The House Dem leadership has yet to publicly endorse this plan
The House failed us on pay equity, extension of unemployment benefits, and the food bill that Sima wrote about yesterday. One bright spot is that NPR will still get federal funding.
House Democrats on Thursday shot down a G.O.P. attempt to roll back federal funding to NPR, a move that many Republicans have called for since the public radio network fired the analyst Juan Williams last month.
Republicans in the House tried to advance the defunding measure as part of their “YouCut” initiative, which allows the public to vote on which spending cuts the G.O.P. should pursue. But their push was blocked, 239 to 171, with only three Democrats voting with a united bloc of Republicans.
Representative Eric Cantor of Virginia, the No. 2 House Republican who is set to become majority leader in the next Congress, said the vote showed Democrats had failed to learn the lessons of this month’s midterm elections.
“Today’s vote was just the latest common sense YouCut to cut spending and save taxpayer dollars, and again Democrats showed that they just don’t get it,” Mr. Cantor said in a statement.
It’s beginning to look like Congress may get rid of DADT. Boxer and Feinstein will be pushing for the effort during the lame duck session. Lisa Murkowski has indicated she will support the effort. Lieberman told The Advocate that the Senate has the required 60 votes for closure.
Sen. Joe Lieberman said Thursday that repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell” as part of the National Defense Authorization Act is no longer a question of votes; it’s a question of process.
“I am confident that we have more than 60 votes prepared to take up the defense authorization with the repeal of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ if only there will be a guarantee of a fair and open amendment process, in other words, whether we’ll take enough time to do it,” Lieberman told reporters at a press conference, naming GOP senators Susan Collins and Richard Lugar as yes votes. “Time is an inexcusable reason not to get this done.”
Lieberman, an independent, was flanked by 12 of his Democratic colleagues — a core group that seemed intent on urging the Democratic leadership to allow enough room in the Senate schedule for a debate that would be acceptable to Republicans. The senators talked about working over the weekends, and Sen. Mark Udall offered to go straight through until Christmas Eve.
There is supposedly an Antimatter Breakthrough that could lead to Starships. All the Trekkers out there will sure to be
excited.
Scientists at CERN, the research facility that’s home to the Large Hadron Collider, claim to have successfully created and stored antimatter in greater quantities and for longer times than ever before.
Researchers created 38 atoms of antihydrogen – more than ever has been produced at one time before and were able to keep the atoms stable enough to last one tenth of a second before they annihilated themselves (antimatter and matter destroy each other the moment they come into contact with each other). Since those first experiments, the team claims to have held antiatoms for even longer, though they weren’t specific of the duration.
While scientists have been able to create particles of antimatter for decades, they had previously only been able to produce a few particles that would almost instantly destroy themselves.
“This is the first major step in a long journey,” Michio Kaku, physicist and author of Physics of the Impossible, told PCMag. “Eventually, we may go to the stars.”
For now, scientists are interested in producing antimatter in these relatively large quantities because it could lend insight into fundamental physical laws. It’s generally believed in the scientific community that at the universe’s creation, both matter and antimatter existed but not in the same quantity, so when the two annihilated each other, only matter remained. That could be because antimatter behaves differently than the regular variety.
“It’s a fundamental tenet of physics that antimatter and matter behave very similarly although not exactly,” said Lawrence Krauss, physicist and author of The Physics of Star Trek, in an interview. “And in order to really test that, you need anti-atoms. Being able to test the properties of antimatter at a whole new level of precision is obviously important.”
Further into the future, Kaku believes we may be able to use antimatter as the “ultimate rocket fuel,” since it’s 100 percent efficient – all of the mass is converted to energy. By contrast, thermonuclear bombs only use about 1 percent.
“One of the main uses of antimatter would be a starship,” said Kaku “Because you want concentrated energy. And you can’t get more concentrated than antimatter.”
Sarah Palin has fallen directly into the trap I spoke about yesterday in my thread on inflation. I guess she thinks that a few home economics courses are enough to qualify someone to talk on the country’s economy. TNR has a great article up about how conservative Republicans are going after the FED with fallacies and ideology instead of facts. If you read me yesterday, you will know how woefully wrong this is.
Last week, in between leading a graduate seminar on Proust and delivering a long-scheduled lecture on mass spectrometry, former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin ventured a few ticks beyond her acknowledged area of expertise and reflected on monetary policy at a convention in Phoenix. The occasion for her unexpected soliloquy—I’m actually serious about the economics speech—was the Fed’s decision to buy some $600 billion in long-term government securities, a practice known as quantitative easing. “We shouldn’t be playing around with inflation,” Palin said, in a typically Delphic pronouncement. She helpfully added that “everyone who ever goes out shopping for groceries knows that prices have risen significantly over the past year or so.”
There’s a great series called The Rules of the Game over on Project Syndicate by two superheroes of economics and finance –specifically corporate governance–Lucian Bebchuk and Luigi Zingales. They leap out with a great series of questions and answers for reform for Wall Street and big public corporations.
Were over-compensated and unaccountable bosses to blame for the Great Recession? Are bankers and financial managers overpaid? Which reforms must be adopted to save capitalism – above all from its practitioners?
The series is updated ever-so-often and if you get a chance to read any of them, you should. One of my favorites is ‘How to Pay a Banker’ by Bebchuk.
Insulating executives from losses to stakeholders other than shareholders can be expected to encourage them to make investments and take on obligations that increase the likelihood and severity of losses that exceed the shareholders’ capital. In addition, such insulation discourages the raising of additional capital, inducing executives to run banks with a capital level that provides an inadequate cushion for bondholders and depositors. The more thinly capitalized banks are, the more severe these distortions – and the larger the expected costs rising from insulating executives from potential losses to non-shareholder stakeholders.
Compensation schemes for executives should provide disincentives to moral hazard. What we have now is nothing but encouragement. Here’s another quote from ‘Politics and Corporate Money’, from the same author and series.
In expanding corporations’ rights to spend money on politics, the US Supreme Court relied on “the processes of corporate democracy” to ensure that such spending does not deviate from shareholder interests. Clearly, however, such processes can have little effect if political spending is not transparent to public investors.
For such disclosure to be effective, it must include robust rules with respect to political spending via intermediaries. In the US, for example, organizations that seek to speak for the business sector, or for specific industries, raise funds from corporations and spend more than $1 billion annually on efforts to influence politics and policymaking. While the targets of these organizations’ spending are disclosed, there is no public disclosure that enables investors in any public corporation to know whether their corporation contributes to such organizations and how much. Investors deserve to know.
Moreover, a public company’s political spending decisions should not be solely the province of management, as they often are. Independent directors should have an important oversight role, as they do on other sensitive issues that may involve a divergence of interest between insiders and public investors. And these directors should provide an annual report explaining their choices during the preceding year.
Fed Chair Ben Bernanke criticized China’s currency manipulation in what seems to be a ramped up U.S. effort to stop trade deficits through rhetoric. He actually didn’t say China, but the implication is really there in his words.
While Bernanke didn’t identify China, he took aim at “large, systemically important countries with persistent current-account surpluses.” Bernanke’s comments come a week after leaders of the Group of 20 developed and emerging nations meeting in South Korea failed to agree on a remedy for trade and investment distortions. At the summit, President Barack Obama attacked China’s policy of undervaluing its currency.
Bernanke said that the “sense of common purpose has waned” after officials around the world united to fight the financial crisis. “Tensions among nations over economic policies have emerged and intensified, potentially threatening our ability to find global solutions to global problems,” he said.
China has tied the yuan to the dollar to promote exports that helped produce the fastest gains in gross domestic product of any major economy. China, which surpassed Japan’s GDP to become world No. 2 in the second quarter, recorded 9.6 percent annual growth in the three months through September. It holds about $2.6 trillion in foreign reserves, the most in the world.
So, it appears that the pending Thanksgiving weekend has slowed things down a bit. I did want to share something with you concerning my University here in New Orleans and what Jindal the terrible has left to our students here. (You know he was actually on Scarborough this week bragging how he’d cut taxes and balanced the state budget.) This is a University with around 15,000 students and quite a good sized campus with many buildings.
Students at the University of New Orleans did their part on Thursday to help clean up what they believe is a broken funding system for higher education.
Before Hurricane Katrina, there were 87 members of the custodial staff at UNO. There are currently only 31 due to a combination of layoffs and positions that were never filled as people left or retired.
Students said they’re tired of the dirt, and they’re doing something about it.
“It means when we have trash in between classrooms, dust, even roaches, it becomes noticeable (and) very distracting,” said UNO Student Government President John Mineo. “To be honest, I don’t want to go to a classroom like that and sit down.”
Since 2009, UNO has lost $16 million in state support and 150 positions. The move has sparked protests schools across the state, like one at UNO in September, when what was supposed to be a peaceful rally turned violent.
Last week, hundreds of students from around the state rallied on the state capitol, and earlier this week at Louisiana State University, some questioned where the funding for higher education was going by throwing fake money with a picture of Gov. Bobby Jindal on it.
However, Thursday night was the first time that students literally cleaned up the mess they said state leaders have left behind by not prioritizing education.
About 50 students showed up at Thursday’s clean up at Milneberg Hall. They said they chose the building because it’s used for freshmen orientation, and they said dirty classrooms are an embarrassing way to introduce new students to the school.
Louisiana public colleges and universities have had about $300 million in budget cuts since 2008.
There are two janitors left in the 4 story CBA building. It opened just after Katrina and now a good portion of it reminds me of a ghost town. There are plenty of students so that’s not the problem. Our governor is really. really bad news. He shouldn’t be in charge of anything that could impact any living, breathing being. He’s ruthless and cruel and every decision he makes has to do with moving him up the next step on the ladder.

This is a picture of President Clinton that I took at UNO a few months after Hurricane Katrina. I was the only person teaching on the main campus at that time and had 5 students in my class. Clinton's listening to the first President Bush. They came to present the universities here with checks to help us get through the Hurricane damage. Who will help us overcome the damage wrought by Jindal the Terrible?
What’s on you reading and blogging list today?
Censure for Rangel?
Posted: November 18, 2010 Filed under: Breaking News | Tags: Charlie Rangel, congressional censure, ethics committee 17 Comments
The Ethics Committee just voted 9-1 that Congressman Charles Rangel be Censured this is via NPR.
A censure is the strongest penalty that could have been issued short of expulsion. Rep. James Traficant, an Ohio Democrat, was expelled by the House for bribery and other crimes in 2002.
The last members of the House to be censured were Gerry Studds (D-Mass.) and Dan Crane (R-Ill.), who were punished in 1983 for sexual misconduct with underage congressional pages. Crane was defeated for re-election in 1984; Studds continued to win until he retired in 1996.
Rangel was easily elected to his 21st term earlier this month with about 80 percent of the vote
Today’s Christian Science Monitor has an interesting story of Rangel’s problems. Staff Writer Peter Grier reviews how Rangel has defended himself by pleading ignorance rather than corruption. This evidently did not fly with the panel of Rangel’s Congressional peers.
That is why at his punishment hearing on Tuesday Rangel admitted that he had done wrong in such matters as failing to pay taxes on rental income earned from his Dominican Republic beach villa, and soliciting donations for the Charles Rangel Center for Public Service – but that his actions had been inadvertent.
“I had no intent to evade or avoid the law,” Rangel told a hearing of the full House Ethics Committee.
He hadn’t known the details of his own tax returns, he said. Officials from the City College of New York, site of the Rangel Center, had come to him and suggested that he would be the best person to raise needed cash for the institution, according to Rangel.
In brief remarks to the committee he reminded them that the panel’s own chief counsel, Blake Chisam, under questioning early in the week, had said he saw no evidence of corruption per se in Rangel’s actions.
The more questionable charges concerned Rangel’s handling of donations for the Rangel Center although many believed that in his position on the Ways and Means Committee that it was unlikely he wasn’t aware that the income from his condominium in the Dominican Republic was taxable.
And some panel members questioned Rangel’s assertion that he is not corrupt. They noted that he had failed to pay taxes on his beach villa for 17 years, and that he indeed reaped personal gain from that, in the form of a lower tax bill.
After all, Rep. James Traficant, the Ohio Democrat expelled from the House in 2002 after felony convictions on bribery and other charges, only failed to pay taxes for two years.
“Failure to pay taxes for 17 years. What is that?” said Rep. Michael McCaul (R) of Texas.
Rangel targeted donors for the Rangel Center who had legislative business before the House Ways and Means Committee, which he chaired at the time, according to Mr. McCaul.
“Is that not corruption?” said McCaul. “I guess it is how you define corruption here. I think reasonable people may disagree on that interpretation.”
This is a study in how one powerful and popular congressman has fallen from grace if there ever was one.
Inflation: Not a Problem
Posted: November 18, 2010 Filed under: The Media SUCKS, U.S. Economy | Tags: CPI, inflation, logical fallacies, PCE, PPI, stupid conservative idealogues 36 Comments
Core Inflation: the Japanese Stagnation compared to the U.S. Great Recession via the SF Fed and Mary Daly.
This is one of the posts that I want to use to debunk that stupid cartoon that I keep seeing on Facebook. That cartoon also brought on many comments that come under the classification of ‘fallacy’. A fallacy is a type of error in reasoning. I have to identify the common ones we see when folks discuss economics when teaching economics. The fallacy associated with comments I see about inflation recently come under the heading of unrepresentative samples. People make hasty generalizations that because one thing they experience is true, they can generalize that experience to everything.
These inflation fallacies pretty much fall into line. It’s like, I went to the grocery store, I’ve been keeping track of what I’ve been paying for meat and that’s going up. Therefore, inflation must be a problem. (The other one I’ve been hearing is about rising taxes which I’ll debunk in another post. Let me stick to this one first.) So, first, inflation is not just the increase in one or two prices, it’s the increase in the average price levels in a country. That means everything. Not only the meat at the grocery store in your town, but the average prices every where in the country for the price of meat and everything else. While, your meat is going up, I’ll raise you that pound of brisket and tell you how cheap it is to buy a HD TV or a normal pair of jeans these days, or for that matter any apparel. But then, I’d just be engaging in the same fallacy. So, instead I’ll go with defining inflation, showing you how we measure it as economists, and then letting you look at the numbers. That graph top left is a good illustration of the average prices in the country as measured by the CPI or Consumer Price Index through September. Average Prices as measured by this index–which is the index quoted in that silly cartoon–show a distinct downward trend. This indicates deflation not inflation.
That’s just the CPI which actually tends to overstate prices which is why economists and the FED don’t use the CPI to gauge inflation. It’s been discredited since the 1980s as having distinct biases. Part of this is because it only applies to retail prices. Another part is that it uses a basket of typically purchased consumer goods and until the basket is changed, the weights of each price in the index reflect the basket. For example, if the basket still had VCR players in it, that would be a problem. The basket has to be re-arranged ever so often or it doesn’t reflect the actual buying patterns or budgets of typical U.S. consumers in the top 40 cities where the prices are collected by the BLS. The Fed doesn’t even collect the inflation numbers, the BLS does. The BLS also collects the unemployment and jobs market information. The FED reports them in addition to the BLS and uses them for their studies.
The three main inflation indexes most people hear about are the CPI(the Consumer Price Index), the PPI (the Producer Price Index) and the GDP Deflator. The CPI only tracks retail prices. The PPI tracks whole sale prices. The GDP Deflator tracks and weights all prices by what they represent of the current period GDP. It’s the most broad-based and least biased because of that weighting system instead of the basket. It reflects “average prices” of everything in the country. Most economists use the GDP Deflator unless they are specifically interested in how prices impact households.
The FED uses the PCEPI or Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index to measure inflation for households. It is less volatile than the CPI and looks at ‘core inflation’. It is also a chained index which means there is no fixed base and it looks at inflation from quarter to quarter. The other indexes use base years which is why you typically see things like REAL (meaning it’s deflated) GDP in 1984 dollars or 1991 dollars. That means those measures are tied to the purchasing power of the base year of the index.
The FED uses the PCE–and has since 2000-which has indicated about 1/3 less inflation than the CPI. This is because of those statistical biases we mentioned above in the way the CPI is calculated (not a chain index) and in the way it uses a basket. The reason that the FED pays attention to “core” prices is because of seasonality that is present in things like food prices and gas prices. Food prices tend to change based on season for obvious reasons and people will substitute in and out of products that are lower in price and ‘in’ season. The CPI does not reflect this because of its use of the constant basket. It has a ‘substitution’ bias.
Economists detect and detrend series like these for seasonality. The biggest example of seasonality is in retail sales which typically peak extensively in November and December. It’s not part of an overall trend in the series. It’s just a recurring blip that we can account for by figuring out what magnitude it tends to be each season.
So let me go back to FedViews and an article over at Mark Thoma’s Economist’s View and talk about why inflation is not a problem, even though the meat prices at your market may be. Then there’ this from the Clelevand FED’s expectations of future inflation today.
The Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland reports that its latest estimate of 10-year expected inflation is 1.50 percent. In other words, the public currently expects the inflation rate to be less than 2 percent on average over the next decade.
The FT puts this in perspective.
Expected inflation over every time horizon longer than six years is now at its record low in the period since 1982 that the series covers. Expected inflation over the next ten years is now down to 1.5 per cent per annum.
The Cleveland Fed index is not the last word on inflation expectations but it is certainly reason to think that those QE2 = hyperinflation fears are somewhat misplaced…
Mark Thoma responds to an outrageous letter by a bunch of miscreants at the WSJ that have the audacity to scare people with inflation fears. It links to this “Open Letter To Ben Bernanke” and includes such ‘distinguished’ economists as “William Kristol, Editor, The Weekly Standard“. Actually, the signatories aren’t distinguished economists at all. They’re mostly political hacks and conservative policy ideologues.
I doubt the invisible inflation vigilantes will change their tune, but it’s hard to find evidence of inflation worries in the data. If anything, markets are reassessing the Fed’s ability to stop disinflation.
You can also see that Paul Krugman has disinflation concerns and he has a nifty graph up also. There is no inflation, there is deflation or disinflation.
The people who put out that cartoon also fall under the heading of ideologues and miscreants. The cartoon uses cute little funny speaking creatures to lead you into logical fallacies. You watch them and think, why yes this must be true because I just paid more for a pack of pork chops last week when the price most likely reflected the hog cycle. (Yes, hogs have gestational periods and some times even the best farmers don’t plan pig pregnancies at opportune times for household demand.)
So, I hope this gives you enough information on inflation to know that it is not a problem for the country. You really don’t want me to make you do the underlying calculations to all these indexes, but if you want to torture yourself, any Principles of Economics textbooks will put you through the paces. Oh, and don’t buy used cars or the Brooklyn Bridge from any of the shiesters who signed that WSJ editorial or any of them that put out that silly cartoon.
Update: Here’s some data on State Revenues from taxes even though I said I’d wait for another post to debunk that portion of that silly little cartoon. I’ve already explained how quantitative easing is not printing money, but I’ll do it again shortly because the blasted cartoon is getting more steam. It’s like some stupid chain letter now!
The data is from The Nelson Rockefeller Institute of Government at NYU-Albany and it shows how revenues from taxes are way down from the pre-recession period although slightly up this year from last. That includes all forms of taxes taken in at the state level. You can see if your state’s tax revenues are up or down in a Table 3.






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