Late Night Drift
Posted: January 19, 2011 | Author: bostonboomer | Filed under: Barack Obama, U.S. Economy, U.S. Politics | Tags: Barack Obama, Christina Romer, jobs, Larry Summers, New York Times Magazine, Obama economic team, U.S. Economy, U.S. Politics, unemployment | 16 CommentsI’ll bet Dakinikat can’t wait to start plowing through the New York Times Magazine’s cover story this week: The White House Looks for Work: Inside Obama’s Struggle to Bring Down Unemployment, by Peter Baker.
Who knew Obama was involved in a struggle over jobs? As far as I can tell jobs are about the last thing on Obama’s mind. But what do I know? Apparently, there has been a life and death struggle going on within the President’s economic team over jobs.
Let me just buy them a clue: the answer isn’t cutting the deficit and wiping out the social safety net. Anyway, back to the Caucus blog’s preview of the upcoming NYT mag story and some of the “surprisingly newsy nuggets” we can look forward to reading on Sunday morning.
Mr. Baker writes that the president’s economic team “fractured repeatedly over philosophy (should jobs or deficits take priority?) and personality (who got to attend which meetings?), resulting in feuds that ultimately helped break it apart.”
Wait…that’s news?
The most sensible “tidbit” in the article comes from Christina Romer.
“In Washington, she said, ‘you’re not supposed to say the obvious thing, which is that in retrospect of course it should have been bigger. With unemployment at 10 percent, I don’t know how you could say you wouldn’t have done anything different. Of course you would have made it bigger.’”
— In the article, Ms. Romer said the Obama administration should have gone back to Congress for more stimulus money to bolster the economy when it was clear how bad things really were.
He writes: “‘In my mind,’ she said, ‘the problem was not in the original package; it was in not adjusting to changed circumstances.’ Once it was clear that the situation was deteriorating, she said, the White House should have gone back to Congress for more stimulus money. ‘That was where we could have been bolder,’ she said.”
Duh. For that kind of truth-telling, you get sent to Siberia UC Berkeley.
There’s a supposedly funny story about Larry Summers that I don’t understand. Can someone explain it to me?
Mr. Baker offers this fun tidbit about Mr. Summers: “Tan from a holiday in Jamaica and trying to get his bearings again at Harvard, where he plans to teach a course on Obama’s economic policy and write a book, Summers sat at a corner table and ordered bisque and — from the lighter-fare menu — a steak ‘as rare as your chef will make it.’”
On second thought, maybe Dak should skip the NYT mag article. If these are the highlights, it sounds like a crashing bore. And I didn’t see anything about jobs in there either.
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Shorter Hu: Just shut up and buy our stuff because we’ve manipulated our currency to the point you have no choice
Posted: January 19, 2011 | Author: dakinikat | Filed under: Barack Obama, China, Foreign Affairs, Live | Tags: China's Human Rights Violations, FOREX manipulation China, Hu Jintao state visit, Human Rights, Human Rights Violations and China, Obama/Hu presser | 33 CommentsIf you’re not watching the joint Hu/Obama presser you should be .
2.06pm ET: A Bloomberg journalist asks Hu directly why he didn’t answer the first AP question about human rights – and follows up with a query about the reaction from congressional leaders, as mentioned below.
Hu says he didn’t hear the question about human rights for technical reasons, saying it was a question directed at President Obama, but says he will answer it now:
“President Obama and I have already met eight times. each time we met we had an exchange of views in a candid manner … in the issues we covered we also covered human rights. China is always committed to the protection and promotion of human rights. In terms of human rights China has made enormous progress.”
“Chinese is a huge country with a huge population,” Hu reminds us, and it “still faces challenges in terms of reform”.
2.05pm ET: “We want to sell you all kinds of stuff. We want to sell you planes, we want to sell you cars, we want to sell you software,” says Obama in response to a question about the growth of China.
Joint asskissing session here on CPSAN2.
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K Street Apologia
Posted: January 18, 2011 | Author: dakinikat | Filed under: Bailout Blues, Barack Obama, Voter Ignorance, We are so F'd | Tags: externalities, K Stree Lobbying, Regulations, social costs | 46 CommentsThe President has written a WSJ op-ed and an executive order to declare war on ‘unnecessary’ regulation while looking
for necessary regulation. He’s evidently a little bit pregnant.
This must be the new and improved, more business friendly President. (Like he wasn’t business friendly enough already? What about bailing out GM, Chrysler, and most of the finance industry?) This is the one that needs to raise $1 billion in campaign funds for re-election and knows it won’t come from unemployed and financially struggling voters.
This order requires that federal agencies ensure that regulations protect our safety, health and environment while promoting economic growth. And it orders a government-wide review of the rules already on the books to remove outdated regulations that stifle job creation and make our economy less competitive. It’s a review that will help bring order to regulations that have become a patchwork of overlapping rules, the result of tinkering by administrations and legislators of both parties and the influence of special interests in Washington over decades.
When is the last time you read a Democratic politician that suggested something like “remove outdated regulations that stifle job creation and make our economy less competitive”? There’s something even more weird and ironic about this sudden urge to op ed for the WSJ. This is an interesting day for the release of a new improved middle path that’s sounds like something the Club for Growth can really sink its teeth into. On this very same day, “The Financial Stability Oversight Council on Tuesday released its six-month study into the Volcker rule and held its third public meeting.” according to FT Alphaville. This group has just made it very clear that removing what several administrations thought was “outdated regulations that stifle job creation and make our economy less competitive” caused the biggest financial melt down and global recession since The Great Depression. They want more regulation not less.
At the moment, banks are playing musical Special Purpose Vehicles; a delightful accounting parlor game that does nothing to get rid of systemic risk. According to the FT article, this includes “creatively shuffling their more obvious proprietary trading operations internally (for example, into asset management and ETF desks) and externally into spun-off funds”. Sure, like that saved ENRON all that nasty embarrassment of bad decision making.
While this report is trying to pick up the pieces of nuclear financial meltdown by suggesting which gaps in regulation need to be filled, the President is chatting up the CEO set on the WSJ op-ed page. There are not even any code words or in-between the lines nudge, nudge wink, winks in these statements. He’s just pandering away.
As the executive order I am signing makes clear, we are seeking more affordable, less intrusive means to achieve the same ends—giving careful consideration to benefits and costs. This means writing rules with more input from experts, businesses and ordinary citizens. It means using disclosure as a tool to inform consumers of their choices, rather than restricting those choices. And it means making sure the government does more of its work online, just like companies are doing.
Does this mean the bidding window is open on which regulations the K street minions want thrown out next? That worked so well with looking the other way for the shadow banking industry and letting the commercial banking industry run a virtual casino, didn’t it? There’s a list of ten major regulatory blueprints coming from The Financial Stability Oversight Council. Are investors, holders of 401ks, pension plans, and savers expected to take any of this seriously given the Wall Street missive?
Regulations reflect the social cost of private consumption and private production of goods and services that have bad side effects. (See this Wikipedia entry on market externalities for more information.) Markets with externalities have bad side effects that do not fall completely on the private producer or the private consumer. This leads to market inefficiency. Goods and services with negative externalties get overproduced, they are under priced, overconsumed and the side costs hit all of us with some of us suffering more than others. Usually, the ones that suffer the most are those least able to get out of the way or stop the problem. The experiences of Hinkley California, people that get lung cancer from secondary smoke, and any of us that were invested in financial or housing assets in the last five years suggests that you cannot just let people and businesses run amok and hope they’ll do right by the people they hurt. Without an effective and accessible judicial system and a vigorous system of sticks and regulatory oversight, you get all kinds of social costs that we get to manage without having any of the fun of buying and using the product or service. Ask me. I’ve spent the last five years living with the results of badly built levees and dealing with the first year of a BP Oil disaster. Let’s point to my 403(B) and my home price that are still in a recovering state from the shadow banking boys run amok. I’m sure you can list a boatload of the ones that the Federal Government ignored recently to give business a more ‘competitive environment” too that have cost you more than they’ve been worth. Sure, they’re now creating more jobs along the Gulf Coast right now but would you seriously let one of your children on to a fishing boat or deep water drilling rig? Do you seriously want your child sitting next to a chain smoker day in and day out?
So, my next question is did I just read that every regulation is now going up to the highest bidder? Maybe, at least, if we get them off the books, we won’t have the moral hazard of thinking any one pays attention to them anymore. If that’s the case, we should all be trial attorneys litigating hazard suits. From where I sit–in a city reeling from the social costs of externalities–our biggest problem is that no one takes regulations or regulators seriously any more because the federal government prioritizes the bottom lines of the perpetrators and not the suffering and the well being of the victims.
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An Obituary for New Deal Liberalism
Posted: January 17, 2011 | Author: dakinikat | Filed under: Bailout Blues, Barack Obama, Populism, The Bonus Class, U.S. Economy, U.S. Politics, Voter Ignorance | Tags: Looting Social Security, The End of New Deal Liberalism, The Nation, William Grieder | 5 CommentsIf you haven’t read William Grieder’s powerful piece ‘The End of New Deal Liberalism’ at The Nation, you really should.
Let me give you a taste.
In these terms, the administration of Barack Obama has been a crushing disappointment for those of us who hoped he would be different. It turns out Obama is a more conventional and limited politician than advertised, more right-of-center than his soaring rhetoric suggested. Most Congressional Democrats, likewise, proved weak and incoherent, unreliable defenders of their supposed values or most loyal constituencies. They call it pragmatism. I call it surrender.
Obama’s maladroit tax compromise with Republicans was more destructive than creative. He acceded to the trickle-down doctrine of regressive taxation and skipped lightly over the fact that he was contributing further to stark injustices. Ordinary Americans will again be made to pay, one way or another, for the damage others did to society. Obama agrees that this is offensive but argues, This is politics, get over it. His brand of realism teaches people to disregard what he says. Look instead at what he does.
Greider outlines the goals of the plutocracy so clearly that you wonder when he’ll be put up for trumped up espionage charges or at least some made-up sex scandal. His opening paragraphs on the capture of our government by corporate interests are just about the most compelling and apt description I’ve read recently. He’s awakened some how to the spokesmodel-in-chief. (h/t to Cinie wherever she may be)
Government has been disabled or captured by the formidable powers of private enterprise and concentrated wealth. Self-governing rights that representative democracy conferred on citizens are now usurped by the overbearing demands of corporate and financial interests. Collectively, the corporate sector has its arms around both political parties, the financing of political careers, the production of the policy agendas and propaganda of influential think tanks, and control of most major media.
What the capitalist system wants is more—more wealth, more freedom to do whatever it wishes. This has always been its instinct, unless government intervened to stop it. The objective now is to destroy any remaining forms of government interference, except of course for business subsidies and protections. Many elected representatives are implicitly enlisted in the cause.
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Late Night Drift
Posted: January 17, 2011 | Author: dakinikat | Filed under: American Gun Fetish, Anti-War, Barack Obama, Foreign Affairs, Haiti | Tags: Ezili Danto, gun violence, haiti, Papa Doc's return, semiautomatic weapons gun control | 19 Commentsfrom The Economist:
Opportunists who seek to gain political advantage by blaming the shootings on words would do America better service if they focused on bullets. In no other decent country could any civilian, let alone a deranged one, legally get his hands on a Glock semi-automatic. Even in America, the extended 31-shot magazine that Mr Loughner used was banned until 2004. As the Brady Centre, established after the Reagan shooting to commemorate one of its victims, has noted, more Americans were killed by guns in the 18 years between 1979 and 1997 than died in all of America’s foreign wars since its independence. Around 30,000 people a year are killed by one of the almost 300m guns in America—almost one for every citizen. Those deaths are not just murders and suicides: some are accidents, often involving children.
The tragedy is that gun control is moving in the wrong direction. The Clinton-era ban on assault weapons expired in 2004 and, to his discredit, Mr Obama has done nothing to try to revive it. In 2008 the Supreme Court struck down Washington, DC’s ban on handguns, and in 2010 Chicago’s went the same way; others are bound to follow. In state after state the direction of legislation is to remove restrictions on gun use (those footling bans on bringing weapons into classrooms or churches or bars), rather than to enhance them.
It is fanciful to imagine that guns will ever disappear from America; they are too deeply embedded in its founding myths and its culture. But that does not mean that more effective checks on the mentally unstable are impossible, or that restrictions on the killing power of what can be sold are doomed to failure. Neither of these will happen, though, unless the blame is directed to where it belongs.
(Via Phoenix Woman tweet ) from Haitian Blogger Ezili Dantò in a post called: Obama’s change in Haiti: the Return of Dictator, Jean Claude Duvalier:
Air France flew Jean Claude Duvalier back into Haiti today. A coup for France who saw its influence diminishing as the US took over with the Interim Haiti Reconstruction Commission and the UN occupation. (Ousted president Jean Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier returns to Haiti unexpectedly ; Jean-Claude ‘Baby Doc’ Duvalier, ex-Haiti dictator, makes surprise return to country Sunday ).
Why would the world’s most powerful nation, the United States, allow this?
Well, their pillage of poor Haiti is butt-naked right now. At the one-year anniversary of the Haiti earthquake, even the conservative media is talking about the failure of US aid, the UN and the NGO poverty pimping business in Haiti. Thus, the UN, as US proxy, needs to justify its job in Haiti. These folks think of us-Haitians as simplistic animals, so why not set up what’s worked for them in other parts of the world? The bringing back of Jean Claude Duvalier, Haiti’s bloody dictator, is, in their plantation minds, sort of like setting up a Hutu/Tusti thing (Duvalier/Lavalas), a civil war in Haiti, an insecurity to bring “order” to.
Bill Clinton, the poverty-pimp-NGOs, the repugnant UN and the foreign-imposed-IHRC need to distract the world from the donation dollars that’s being pocketed or not collected, so hey, let’s rack up the colonial narrative – remind everyone of those “anti-democratic Haitians not ready for the same standards” as the rest of the “civilized” world. Those infighting, violent, illogical Haitians in love with dictatorship! Why not set up the chess board, right before Feb. 7th – the 25th anniversary of the ouster of Jean Claude Duvalier, bring him back to push the two OAS/Duvalierist candidates – Manigat and Martelly (Sweet Mickey), so everyone can forget about the masses wishes, their total disenfranchisement, the 300,000 dead in 33 seconds and those 1.5million still homeless without sanitation, shelter, clean water; the return of President Aristide; the international fraud since 2004; these imposed UN/US elections. and the UN-imported cholera…We’re just puppets the International community , led by the U.S., are moving around their own battlefield. Haiti is not in control. Haitians are not in control. Air France and American Airlines can land anyone in Haiti.
If Air-France wanted to bring in Osama bin Laden into Haiti, how could Haitians stop it? Still, we-Haitians will be blamed, as usual, for all the outrageous acts the wealthy powers-that-be do in Haiti. The “Friends of Haiti” continue with their macabre plan to further destabilize and exacerbate Haiti’s already agonizing sufferings.
and a tweet from Mac McClelland from Mojo:
MacMcClelland Mac McClelland
Baby Doc is back in Haiti! Our pics, chats w/ people cheering for a rapey murdery ex-dictator
You know, I’m kinda thinking the one thing that we still do export onto the global market in a significant way is our thing for violence.
Discuss amongst yourselves …
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