Throwing People to the Wind and the Dogs of Profit
Posted: April 4, 2011 Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign, Economy, Voter Ignorance, We are so F'd | Tags: budget, Federal Budget, Paul Ryan 24 CommentsPaul Krugman has a disturbing blog post up. Republicans have been moving to throw the public interest to their corporate masters for some time while collecting their own federal subsidies and benefits. Their privatization fetish is doing in all kinds of things. They’ve been turning prisons, schools, and a bevy of national resources to businesses who are only in it for the short-run boost to their bottom line. These decisions are being made on a purely ideological basis. They have nothing to do with the safety and solvency of the assets involved or the fact that things like national forests belong to the country and the country should have some say in what happens there. Krugman links to articles discussing the privatization of Medicare and then links to an op-ed that argues that the real test of Obama’s meddle will be how well he stands up to these privatization schemes.
The funny thing is that the entire arguments made for this kind of thing are how much more efficient the private sector supposedly is at service delivery and cost containment. This is a charade. We’ve seen everything from the botched student loan program that thankfully, just got pulled back into the Department of Education. This can be observed is in Medicare Advantage where we’ve had private companies enrich themselves more than provide benefit. We keep subsidizing inefficient private corporations with no demands they cut cost and deliver things as asked efficiently. Medicare Advantage was set up to enrich Republican constituencies.
Privatizing and voucherizing Medicare does nothing whatsoever to control costs. We’ve seen that from the sorry history of Medicare Advantage. I’m sure that the Republicans will claim savings — but those savings will come entirely from limiting the vouchers to below the rate of rise in health care costs; in effect, they will come from denying medical care to those who can’t afford to top up their premiums.
Ryan is calling for draconian changes that have no basis in anything other than ideology. His obsession with starving the beast in the name of fiscal discipline is insanity. The man should be declared a public menace and put on an island some where. If Ryan’s way were the correct one, we’d have never had most of the major assets and infrastructure that made 20th century America a powerhouse. That would include things like the interstate system, Hoover Dam, rural electrification, and World War 2. All of these projects were huge, have paid off tremendous benefits in the long run, and were done on borrowed money. I guess World War 2 would’ve not be worth fighting–had Ryan been around–or farmed out to mercenaries because little Paul’s had such a bad life over the last 4 decades due to the debt burden which we still carry in many ways. This is insanity. People actually believe him too. This is exactly how dumbed down and selfish many of our citizens have become. The propaganda campaign on efficient private businesses has been so effective that many don’t seem to notice that their lives have been made much worse off by the excesses put into law over the last ten or so years. I have yet to meet any one–other than a fat cat–employed by a private business that doesn’t have nightmare stories about stupid and bad management practices. They’re more plentiful in the private than public sector. I’ve seen and heard many of them in my years working and consulting with both sectors.
Notice that Ryan is avoiding the wrath of the senior citizen vote with the trick of letting every one 55 and over go into the current program. He’s only throwing certain people to the Dogs of Profit. Ryan’s hypocrisy knows no bounds. As long as your part of the Republican base, you get to keep your government largess. He’s out to delivery windfall profits to insurance companies, not efficient health care delivery to people.
Recognizing the political risk of significant changes in Medicare and Medicaid, the health care program for poor Americans, Mr. Ryan emphasized that such spending would continue to rise under the Republican budget plan, just not as sharply as it would have otherwise.
He also sought to clarify that any Medicare changes, which would include requiring more affluent Americans to pay a larger share of their Medicare costs, would not amount to a voucher program — an approach that has been heavily criticized by Democrats.
Mr. Ryan said his plan was more like the Medicare prescription drug program and would allow patients to pick from a menu of insurance plans. The federal government would direct the subsidy to the plan, not to the consumer.
“It doesn’t go to the person, into the marketplace,” Mr. Ryan said. “It goes to the plan. More for the poor, more for people who get sick, and we don’t give as much money to people who are wealthy.”
Americans who are now 55 or older would go into the current program to prevent a sudden change in their health insurance coverage, he said.
There are some Democratic politicians still fighting against these unnecessary and draconian budget and program cuts. It doesn’t look like a robust fight, however and the President has been slow to engage. Senator Chuck Schumer did the Sunday news talk show circuit yesterday arguing the idiocy of throwing people off programs that work and keep them out of much more expensive trouble. Not only do these things work to keep people out of desperate situations, they create jobs. Many small population states actually rely heavily on state and federal jobs for revenues and services. I’d hate to live someplace like Wyoming if Republicans have their way. The Republicans want to cut the people programs and the programs that invest and sustain our resources. It’s all about delivering short term profits to whatever business pops up over night to abuse the program. Republicans still balk at cutting war programs, corporate welfare programs, and the types of subsidies and tax loopholes that line their own pockets.
Mr. Schumer said Democrats were urging Republicans to consider reducing some of the automatic annual spending in Agriculture, Treasury and Justice Department programs to reach a target of about $33 billion in cuts rather than insisting that it all come out of what is known in budget parlance as discretionary accounts.
A Democrat involved in the negotiations, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said alternative spending cuts from the White House and Senate Democrats would range up to $8 billion. But to the Democrats’ dismay, not only were Republicans resisting those cuts, they were also proposing more spending than the Pentagon wants for military and homeland security programs.
“If you just cut from domestic discretionary, you’ll have to cut things like helping students go to college; you’ll have to cut scientific research, including cancer research,” Mr. Schumer said on the ABC News program “This Week.” “These things have created millions of jobs through the years.”
It’s completely disingenuous but they don’t care. They’re willing to ax the meager federal spending on Planned Parenthood
which covers basic reproductive health for poor people to give farm subsidies to Tea Party Buddy Michelle Bachmann. Why keep pouring money into inefficient private sector ventures other than they turn around and donate to your campaigns? This leads me to the other link provided by Krugman to an op ed E. J. Dionne JR at WAPO.
This week, Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) will announce the House Republicans’ budget plan, which is expected to include cuts in many programs for the neediest Americans.
The Ryan budget’s central purpose will not be deficit reduction but the gradual dismantling of key parts of government. Remember that Ryan wants both to preserve the Bush tax cuts and, over the long run, to enact more breaks for the wealthy, including the elimination of the capital gains tax.
Ryan’s plan reportedly will include steep Medicaid cuts, disguised as a proposal to turn the program into a “block grant” to the states. The net effect would be to leave even more Americans to the mercies of the private insurance market.
In deference to the GOP’s success in turning last year’s health-care law into “Obamacare,” let’s call this proposal Ryancare — and let’s make sure we look carefully at its impact on the elderly and the disabled, the main beneficiaries of Medicaid.
Put the two parts of the Ryan design together — tax cuts for the rich, program cuts for the poor — and its radically redistributionist purposes become clear. Timid Democrats would never dare embark on class warfare on this scale the other way around.
Paul Ryan is the anti-Robin Hood. He steals from working Americans and subsidizes the already rich. Who is going to stand up to this complete disconnect between Ryan’s dogma and the reality that was the healthy US economy prior to all this enabling of inefficient oligopolies and monopolies at the cost of the Treasury? Both Krugman and Dionne are correct in this assessment. The President kicked off his re-election bid today. Whose side will he be on? Will he mouth his campaign themes from 2008 while doing the Republicans’ worst for them? From Krugman:
This will be Obama’s defining moment. Will he stand up for the principle that society takes care of those in need? Or will he cave in? I wish I had confidence in the answer.
I’d say the odds on favorite is that we’re going to continue to give away every one’s American Dream to the bonus class. The Republicans may be removed from reality, lying, and bat shit crazy, but what do you say about Democratic officials that enable them?
TGIFriday Reads
Posted: March 25, 2011 Filed under: commercial banking, Corporate Crime, Economy, Egypt, financial institutions, Foreign Affairs, morning reads, U.S. Politics, unemployment, Women's Rights | Tags: austerity, budget, Federal deficits, Michelle Bachmann is nuts, Paul Krugman 16 CommentsThere’s been quite a few economists weighing in on the debate going on in congress about the budget. Paul Krugman’s op-ed is on “The Austerity Delusion”. Krugman’s appalled that more policymakers aren’t concerned with the high rate of unemployment which is contributing to the deficit in several ways. First, it decreases tax revenues. Second, it increases state and federal expenditures. Solve the jobs problem and the deficit will decrease. He’s worried that all this austerity will just bring on another economic slowdown.
Why not slash deficits immediately? Because tax increases and cuts in government spending would depress economies further, worsening unemployment. And cutting spending in a deeply depressed economy is largely self-defeating even in purely fiscal terms: any savings achieved at the front end are partly offset by lower revenue, as the economy shrinks.
So jobs now, deficits later was and is the right strategy. Unfortunately, it’s a strategy that has been abandoned in the face of phantom risks and delusional hopes. On one side, we’re constantly told that if we don’t slash spending immediately we’ll end up just like Greece, unable to borrow except at exorbitant interest rates. On the other, we’re told not to worry about the impact of spending cuts on jobs because fiscal austerity will actually create jobs by raising confidence.
Politico features a series of Former CEA members who signed a letter of concern on the deficit and unsustainable US Budgets. Too bad that people like Greg Mankiw–advisor to Dubya–didn’t speak up when the spending problems were originated. They mostly trace to Reagan and Bush administrations. They all suggest using the Cat food commission report as the focus of discussions. Hang on to your social security, folks! It’s going to be a bumpy ride.
As former chairmen and chairwomen of the Council of Economic Advisers, who have served in Republican and Democratic administrations, we urge that the Bowles-Simpson report, “The Moment of Truth,” be the starting point of an active legislative process that involves intense negotiations between both parties.
There are many issues on which we don’t agree. Yet we find ourselves in remarkable unanimity about the long-run federal budget deficit: It is a severe threat that calls for serious and prompt attention.
While the actual deficit is likely to shrink over the next few years as the economy continues to recover, the aging of the baby-boom generation and rapidly rising health care costs are likely to create a large and growing gap between spending and revenues. These deficits will take a toll on private investment and economic growth. At some point, bond markets are likely to turn on the United States — leading to a crisis that could dwarf 2008.
“The Moment of Truth” documents that “the problem is real, and the solution will be painful.” It is tempting to act as if the long-run budget imbalance could be fixed by just cutting wasteful government spending or raising taxes on the wealthy. But the facts belie such easy answers.
I suppose you know the professional insane Republican Michelle Bachmann is forming an exploratory committee for a possible presidential run. I’d vote for any one’s dog before I’d consider Bachmann who doesn’t appear to have paid attention to any course she ever attended in school. I’ve never in my life heard any one outside of maybe a grade school that has such a bad grasp of American History, law, and politics. I think she should’ve just gotten a mail order degree. Education appears to have been wasted on her.
CNN has exclusively learned that Rep. Michele Bachmann will form a presidential exploratory committee. The Minnesota Republican plans to file papers for the committee in early June, with an announcement likely around that same time.
But a source close to the congresswoman said that Bachmann could form the exploratory committee even earlier than June so that she could participate in early Republican presidential debates.
“She’s been telling everyone early summer,” the source told CNN regarding Bachmann’s planned June filing and announcement. But the source said that nothing is static.
“If you [debate sponsors] come to us and say, ‘To be in our debates, you have to have an exploratory committee,’ then we’ll say, ‘Okay, fine…I’ll go file the forms.'”
Speaking of Republicans, a former aide to Sen. John Ensign has just been indicted for violating conflict of interest laws.
The Justice Department announced the indictment late Thursday, which charges Doug Hampton with seven counts of violating criminal conflict of interest laws for allegedly engaging in unlawful communication with Ensign’s office, violating the Senate’s “revolving door” policy.
According to the indictment, after Hampton left Ensign’s office in 2008 he “knowingly and willfully made, with the intent to influence, communications to staff members of the U.S. senator” on behalf of an energy company he was employed by at the time.
Hampton is alleged to have sought the assistance of Ensign and other staff members for help in moving forward a proposal to build a power plant in eastern Nevada.
Hampton, if convicted, could face up to five years in prison for each of the seven counts in the indictment. He is set to be arraigned in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. on March 31.
Ensign is retiring. Probably because of all the scuttlebutt around his affairs and possibly what may come out of this prosecution. Maybe Tom Delay will have a new cell mate on the way.
Glenn Greenwald has written an excellent piece in Salon on withering Miranda rights under the Obama administration. You may want to check it out.
The number of instances in which Obama has violently breached his own alleged principles when it comes to the War on Terror and the rule of law are too numerous to chronicle in one place. Suffice to say, it is no longer provocative or controversial when someone like Yale Law Professor Jack Balkin writes, as he did the other day, that Obama “has more or less systematically adopted policies consistent with the second term of the George W. Bush Administration.” No rational person can argue that or even tries to any longer. It’s just a banal expression of indisputable fact.
Today, the Obama DOJ unveiled the latest — and one of the most significant — examples of its eagerness to assault the very legal values Obama vowed to protect. The Wall Street Journal reports that “new rules allow investigators to hold domestic-terror suspects longer than others without giving them a Miranda warning, significantly expanding exceptions to the instructions that have governed the handling of criminal suspects for more than four decades.” The only previous exception to the 45-year-old Miranda requirement that someone in custody be apprised of their rights occurred in 1984, when the Rehnquist-led right-wing faction of the Supreme Court allowed delay “only in cases of an imminent safety threat,” but these new rules promulgated by the Obama DOJ “give interrogators more latitude and flexibility to define what counts as an appropriate circumstance to waive Miranda rights.”
Just hope you never get classified as a terrorist or you’ll disappear down some rabbit hole. You should also read William Grieder over at The Nation on How Wall Street Crooks Get Out of Jail.
Instead of “Old Testament justice,” federal prosecutors seek “authentic cooperation” from corporations in trouble, urging them to come forward voluntarily and reveal their illegalities. In exchange, prosecutors will offer a deal. If companies pay the fine set by the prosecutor and submit to probationary terms for good behavior, perhaps an outside monitor, then government will defer prosecution indefinitely or even drop it entirely. The corporation thus avoids the stigma of a criminal trial and the bad headlines that depress stock prices. More to the point, the “deferred prosecution agreement,” as it’s called, allows the company to escape the more severe consequences of criminal conviction—the loss of banking and professional licenses, charters, deposit insurance or other government benefits, including eligibility for federal contracts and healthcare programs. In other words, the punishment prescribed in numerous laws.
“With cooperation by the corporation, the government may be able to reduce tangible losses, limit damage to reputation, and preserve assets for restitution,” the Justice Department’s authorizing memorandum explained in 2003. “A deferred prosecution or non-prosecution agreement can help restore the integrity of a company’s operations and preserve the financial viability of a corporation that has engaged in criminal conduct.”
The favored argument for the more conciliatory approach was that criminal indictment may amount to a death sentence for a corporation. The fallout will destroy it, and the economy will lose valuable productive capacity. The collateral consequences are unfair to employees who lose jobs and stockholders who lose wealth. Corporate defenders cited Arthur Andersen, the giant accounting firm that imploded after it was convicted in 2002 of multiple offenses in Enron’s collapse. But was it the firm’s indictment or its criminal behavior that caused clients, accountants and investors to abandon it?
A better name for the Justice Department’s softened policy might be “too big to prosecute.”
Wanna rob a bank? Don’t do it with a gun. Just become its President and do what you want to do.
Here’s a disturbing headline from Egypt (h/t to Minx):Secret shame of Egypt’s army: Women protesters were forced to have ‘virginity checks’ after being arrested in Tahrir Square,
Women arrested by the Egyptian police during protests in Cairo’s Tahrir Square were subjected to forced ‘virginity tests’, according to Amnesty International.
Eighteen demonstrators were detained after army officers cleared the square on March 9 at the end of weeks of protest.
Amnesty today said that the women had been beaten, given electric shocks and then subjected to strip searches while being photographed by male soldiers.
They were then given ‘virginity checks’ and threatened with prostitution charges if medics ruled they had had sex, according to the charity.
Just when you think things will get better, something comes along that just makes things look worse.
So, what’s on your reading and blogging list today?
More on Food and Energy Prices
Posted: March 23, 2011 Filed under: Economy, the villagers, unemployment, voodoo economics, We are so F'd | Tags: economics, food insecurity, Tax Cuts for Billionaires, trust fund babies., volatile commodity prices 12 Comments
I wrote a post recently on why the overall inflation rate remains low and why core inflation is very low while food and energy prices are on the rise. I know this seems baffling. Research Economist Daniel Carroll from Fed Cleavland has some more details and analysis on this so I thought I’d take the opportunity to share it with you. I also have a bit of rant, so be patient with me.
First, you can see the underlying volatility in recent energy prices in the nifty graph to the right. This volatility is one of the reasons that many economists prefer the core inflation measures to something like the CPI. People adjust their driving and car buying habits when gas prices are high and the CPI doesn’t catch the corresponding buying shifts because it’s based on a fixed basket of purchased goods and services thought to represent a typical urban consumer at that time. People will drive more when gas prices are low and they’ll cut out unnecessary trips when prices are high at the pump. Also, commodity prices tend to have seasonality and they experience a lot of shocks that make them have higher than normal price variations. Think weather, political unrest, and other uncontrollable black swan events.
You can also see from the graph a lesser degree of volatility in food prices coupled with the underlying, increasing trend. The job of economists is to try to run models that look at the trend that has occurred over time and to search for corresponding explanatory variables. The other analysis that is frequently done is finding out who is impacted by these changes. I mentioned that food and energy inflation hurts poor people the most because it represents a big portion of their budgets and incomes. Carroll’s analysis includes some specifics on that .
It should not come as a surprise that people are particularly concerned about increases in food and energy prices, whether the increases are large or small. Not only do energy prices pass through to other prices, but household expenditures on food and energy make up a significant fraction of total household expenditures. Data from the BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey show that on average from 1999 to 2009, energy (including motor fuel) and food at home accounted for more than 15 percent of total expenditures and 13 percent of after-tax income.
The importance of food and energy prices to households’ bottom lines is not evenly distributed across the income distribution either. For the median household, food and energy are roughly 17 percent of both expenditures and after-tax income. Households in the top 20 percent of the income distribution spend 11.6 percent of total expenditures on food and energy, which adds up to 7.9 percent of disposable income. For the bottom 20 percent these shares rise to 20.4 percent of expenditures and a whopping 44.1 percent of after-tax income!
For those astutely wondering why food and energy expenditures are a larger fraction of total expenditures than of total income for the bottom 20 percent, there is a much higher fraction of households in this quintile which may be using savings and credit markets to consume above their annual income. Likely categories are the unemployed, business owners with temporary losses, students living on loans, and retirees drawing down their nest eggs.
There are two other nifty graphs at that site that show the impact of food and energy prices on the bottom twenty percent–quintile–of all households in terms of their incomes and budgets. It’s really disturbing to see the impact in bright red and blue. Increased prices in key budget items force many of these people over the edge. Because many poor people have no control over the amount of money they earn, these people are more likely to run up credit cards, decrease contributions to retirement savings, or sell off assets. They can also end up on the street and on public programs. Increases in food and gas basically drive the poor further into the ground.
This brings me to the policy implications. First, any state with a huge proportion of poor or elderly that derives income from sales taxes on these items is basically creating and perpetuating its own underclass. It is much more likely they will see increases in populations needing state assistance under these circumstances. This situation gets worse as it continues. Second, attempts to remove subsidies for the poor and elderly for their home heating and air conditioning costs will do the same thing or worse. It’s really difficult for me to understand why we subsidize large banks using bad lending practices to stop them from bankruptcy but some policy makers tout cuts in programs helping the poor pay outrageous gas and light bills or providing increased subsidies to programs like WIC. Republicans–you know, the fetus fetishists?–want to cut WIC by 10%.
At this point, I could even justify cutting rebate checks of $300-$500 for all those households with incomes in the bottom income quintile just to help them with food and energy bills. I know this is unlikely to happen. It would also provide a slight boost to local economies since this is the income group that is least likely to save and most likely to spend the money on basics. I’m not a big supporter of tax rebates because they generally just go to pay down debt and have very little economic impact. This would be different since it’s aimed solely at people who need to spend the money. It’s also aimed at helping a few people stay in their situation long enough to avoid perpetual dependency on state largess.
This brings me to one more item for you to discuss. There were two articles recently pushing the canard that lower taxes for rich people increase revenues to governments (false) and that low taxes are ?good” for the overall economy(false too). One was a WSJ editorial by trust fund baby Steve Forbes that once again tries to resurrect the much discredited Laffer curve and empirically challenged view of Reaganomics. You already know the antics of trust fund baby David Koch who feels persecuted because of the blowback on his war on nonbillionaires. The other baby of privilege wrecking havoc in Republican political circles is Grover Norquist. All three of these guys come from very rich parents, breezed into ivy league educations as legacies with parents who could buy them in regardless of grades and inherited enough money and gave them ready made businesses run by competent others. Now, they can spend their useless lives undermining any policy that takes anything from their pockets and boosts their cred on the Forbes 50 list. There are also some op ed pundits–Thomas Friedman comes to mind–with similar set ups. Here’s how they spend their lives and their daddies’ money.
According to a report in The Hill newspaper, Americans for Tax Reform president Grover Norquist has received assurances from Republican leaders in Congress that under no circumstances will they vote for any tax increase, either as part of deficit reduction or tax reform. Apparently, the only permissable deficit reduction is spending cuts and the only permissable tax reform is tax cuts. Given that Grover has succeeded in getting all but a small handful of Republicans to sign his no-new-taxes pledge, he essentially controls tax policy by being the sole arbiter of what constitutes a violation of the pledge and what does not. And given the power of the Tea Party to upset incumbent Republicans in primaries when they are viewed as insufficiently loyal to its agenda, it would take a very confident and courageous Republican to risk being accused of violating Grover’s pledge whether he or she signed it or not, since it would guarantee primary opposition from a well financed Tea Party candidate — the Club for Growth will see to that.
What really bothers me is that some how the Krewe of Trust Funds has managed to convince many–mostly white–working class Americans that government is using their hard earned wages to subsidize permanent vacations for the underclass. None of these leisure class propogandameisters have known a hard days work or food insecurity in their lives. They popped out of their mother’s uterus with automatic access to food, education, multiple, very large roofs, power, and access to speechifying nonsense on some of the world’s most circulated newspapers and TV channels. They’re absolute prime examples of the anti-meritocracy they purport to desire. They think people don’t work because they themselves don’t work at anything. It’s pure projection.
I’m going to throw one more nifty graph at you. This time it’s from the FED in San Francisco. Notice how the World’s Industrial Production and Commodity Prices are following each other closely. Now, read this description of the stylized facts.
Commodity price swings have a direct impact on headline inflation through higher costs of energy and food, which account for 14% of overall consumer spending. However, commodity price swings—even double-digit changes—historically have had only a small effect on underlying inflation, which excludes spending on volatile energy and food components. To some extent, this reflects decisions by businesses to adjust profit margins rather than pass through higher costs to customers, particularly when demand is weak. A more important reason is that for many consumption goods, commodities and raw materials account for only a small part of the overall cost of production, particularly compared with the costs of labor, distribution, and retailing. Moreover, roughly three-fourths of consumer spending is on services such as housing and medical care that do not involve many commodities in production.Over the past 12 months, overall headline inflation as measured by the personal consumption expenditures price index has risen 1.2%, while core PCEPI has risen 0.8%. We expect recent commodity and energy price surges to raise headline inflation temporarily. We foresee relatively little pass-through to core inflation in 2011 and 2012. The slowly recuperating economy, excess capacity, and well-anchored long-term inflation expectations will keep labor costs low. In fact, with labor productivity continuing to rise, unit labor costs have actually been falling recently.
Let me point out some things here. I bolded that last part because I want to turn it into plain English for you. The last sentence means that no one is getting any kind of raise, even though they are working harder. The prior sentence means to expect more of the same. Prices on the core items will still be moderate while prices on commodities like food and oil are expected to increase. The graph itself shows that world demand is driving a lot those price increases. There is some increased “steepness’ in the price series which implies there are most likely other factors at play too. Chances are the uncertainty around MENA, some bad weather, and speculation has added to food and oil prices increasing at quicker increasing rate. I haven’t run any regressions on it so I can’t say that for certain, but it’s highly likely.
This should be a signal to policy makers to act appropriately. Instead, policy makers are acting inappropriately. That Bruce Bartlett quote about Grover Norquist seems to indicate they are listening to the temper tantrums and following the money of the trust fund babies. We need economic policy that helps all people. Instead, we’re getting Paris Hilton lifestyle maintenance programs. We need well paying jobs in this country, not more tax cuts for billionaires. Why do these guys ‘deserve’ to keep their daddies’ hard earned cash while poor people ‘deserve’ to starve and die of exposure?
update: Mark Thoma tweeted a link to Econbrowser that has a lot more nifty graphs on the inflation in food and oil prices including ones that show the parts of the country suffering most.








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