Archive for the ‘Editorial Page’ Category

Corporations are People Too !

Saturday, January 28th, 2012

by Joe Cobb

Corporations are people too, but as Stephen Colbert says, “only people are people.” Good point, but is a corporation like a house or a car? Anyone you talk to at a corporation, like a customer service representative, is a human being. They may not be as educated as you, so they may be slow in helping you with a customer service problem. But, after all, they are people.

Corporations are people too. The customer service representative will try to help you. The government public employee will insult you, as happened to me last week in Glendale. I was calling to get an inspection to my newly installed solar voltaic system. I bought the panels myself from a supplier in California. I hired an unlicensed guy to mount them on my roof according to specifications. I hired a professional (high priced) solar company to make drawings for me. I paid those paperwork guys my entire subsidy from SRP for those drawings, about $1,200.

But I got no working solar panels because the damned City of Glendale inspection departent is very inefficient. I have been personally jerked over for more than two years, since I first bought my broken down house, and spent $450,000 renovating it. It now appraises for $100,000 with a $193,000 mortgage (flex rate can go up to 12.5%).

I am sticking with my house; we love it. It was my dream to build the inside of a house; the exterior is mostly the same. We tore out walls and rebuilt stairs and bathroom, dissolving two small bedrooms in the process to make a giant, walk-in spa area.

I don’t care if my house is appraised at only $100,000. That is good because it keeps my real estate taxes low. The Federal Reserve keeps my mortgage down, by purchasing bonds.

People need to own bonds, to save for pension funds and life insurance. Mutual of Omaha is a big owner of government bonds. It is a big corporation. Warren Buffett lives there.

Humans Organize: Ask the labor unions.

A corporation always begins as a few friends with an idea, and turns into a project to recruit specialist helpers. That is how a business begins. Then it becomes important to make a “corporate identity.” Tom+Jerry+Sylvester becomes the TJS Corporation.

What does that mean? Did a new human person get born by the joint sex of Tom+Jerry+Sylvester? Ha Ha.

The efficient purpose of corporate personhood is to allow those who hate those guys to sue them in their corporate name, instead of having to name them individually on a petition for tort relief. [Use my number, not my 10,000 individual names (shareholders)].

Once a corporation has achieved “perceived wealth” in the market, its shares of stock are almost as liquid as money itself. Warren Buffett is offering to buy BSNF with shares of his own Berkshire Hathaway. This is not a merger; it is an investment by Buffett. But he will pay for it with his own money – shares of his company. He is not a bank, but he has become a “bank of issue.”

I am not critical of someone offering a form of barter, even a form of financial barter. It is very good that our legal and social system permits the enforcement of long term contracts, like debts and investments. So cheers to Warren Buffet for initiating one more step toward true free asset banking.

Free Asset Banking

The simple idea that you should be able to spend your money anywhere or any time when a seller is satisfying your requests. You should be able to offer any price and he should be able to decline a too low offer. But then you negotiate, like equals.

I can save my money any way I want to do. Most people cannot save because they are undisciplined, but those who can save or who have won the lottery, or who chose their parents well, can think about managing savings and even checkbook money.

It is easy today to open an account at a discount brokerage, like Scottrade, and put a few thousand in an account. Why should you put your money there instead of in Wells Fargo?

The banks want you as a customer because, on the average, most of you leave a surplus of your money in your bank accounts. You know you always want your bank account to be big enough for next week. But the banks invest your money while you are paying no attention to it. This is actually a good thing, because they know better how to invest your money. They will just keep it safe for you.

Corporations are People Too

The choice is between letting the investment departments of the big banks choose how to invest your money? Or perhaps look at some ways to invest it yourself, very safely, in some direct commodity or bond purchases.

People will be helping you. You can see in someone’s face whether they are honest. Trust your feelings.

The financial corporation you choose will open an account for you and accept a deposit. With a bank, you deposit and they say ‘Thank You.’ You spend it from their Visa or MasterCard. Good system.

Another tactic is to cut out the middleman. If you have some money to save, you should also think about directly investing it. A brokerage account at a company like Scottrade would do you well. I “bank” at Scottrade; my Visa card and checkbook spend from that account. It is money. I like to invest in gold exchange traded funds. Just like money, but in gold.

I have no “set up” like other libertarian writers. I am an advocate of free competion in currencies, and this is an example of how the full freedom of money and banking will be emerging.

Corporations are people too for (1) the convenience of plaintiffs; and (2) because customer service representatives are the face of a corporation, and senior executives are the generals and admirals of the business. We understand the value of generals and admirals. Sometimes they make mistakes. Then they lose money and go broke.

Corporations are people organized to follow a business plan. It has an organization chart, like Captains and Seargents in the army. And it gets the job done. Customers are happy – they come back repeatedly.

Customers come back to their service corporations when they have problems or questions and get some satisfaction. So, why do we criticize “corporations”?

Corporations are made up from all the people who are working as a team to satisfy customers. It is systematic. It is like rowing a skiff down a river race. All pull together.

But in reality those are people who are choosing to work as a team, inder the direction of their generals and admirals.

The “Fair” Tax – A Socialist Idea

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

Everybody hates the IRS during tax season, except for the 85 percent of Americans who get a refund.

In fact, 47 to 51 percent of people who file income tax returns do not even pay income tax, according to the Tax Foundation in Washington, D.C. They file tax returns to get the generous Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and the Child Tax credit for households with children. A worker with three children and an income of $12,750 can get a refund of $8,751 from these credits, and without any payroll withholding.

In essence, the income tax has become one of America’s largest welfare programs.

Bribed with Our Own Money

The payroll withholding system was created in 1942 to make working families pay for the war against Japan and Germany. Milton and Rose Friedman’s autobiography has an excellent story about how “pay as you go” was set up to make sure workers paid the higher war taxes.

Before the war, only wealthy people had to file tax returns, because most people’s incomes were less than their personal exemptions. But Congress and the War Department needed more money, so tax collections expanded. Collecting the money in advance, with payroll withholding, was a quick solution.

Today, since most people live on narrow budget margins, with little surplus from week to week, it can be stressful to owe the IRS a balance due on April 17. To avoid that stress, your paycheck tax withholding can be a bit larger each payday, and the surplus is returned in the form of a tax refund the following February. Some people use this refund as a form of a savings account, by splurging on something they normally wouldn’t with the unexpected money.

However, what many do not realize is that the payroll withholding tables published by the IRS for employers are actually tilted to give workers a refund. So, if a family of four chose four allowances on the W-4 form, which employers use, the formula the payroll department uses will guarantee a surplus, and thus, a refund next February.

This means that the withholding system bribes taxpayers with their own money to file tax forms on time, even early, to get their money back.

The EITC and the Child Tax Credit cause a mania among the lowest income Americans, who come to H&R Block and other tax companies as soon as their W-2 forms are released – because the refunds that include those tax credits are very generous.

The FairTax “Prebate” Is Worse

You might have heard of the FairTax, as its popularity was expanded during the brief presidential campaign of Herman Cain in the Republican debates, when he proposed his “9-9-9” version. Radio talk show host Neal Boortz also wrote on the subject in books that were on the New York Times best-seller list for several months in 2005 and 2008. And there has been legislation introduced in the Senate and House of Representatives to enact such a national sales tax—and many Congressmen are co-sponsors. It is a cheap thing for a member of Congress to co-sponsor such a bill, since it is very unlikely to pass. FairTax.org and Boortz are based in Georgia, and the legislation’s chief sponsors are from that state.

FairTax.org and popular writers like Neal Boortz have promoted the FairTax as a way to get rid of the IRS and liberate Americans from the oppressive tyranny of government tax collections. However, take a closer look and you’ll find it is almost exactly the opposite kind of scheme than it claims to be.

If enacted, the FairTax would require every American to be registered with the IRS and keep a current address and bank account information on file with the government to receive regular tax “prebates.”

The FairTax is a national retail sales tax. And a national retail sales tax is a flat tax. Sales tax rates, which most states impose, are flat rates on all transactions subject to the tax. Some states tax goods and services; other states only tax goods sold at retail and exempt wholesale and intermediate products. A value-added tax is a sales tax that does not exempt intermediate products, but allows a rebate on subsequent sales for producers, so the tax is not compounded over many stages of production.

The FairTax is supposed to be a tax only on final sales, although it is sometimes not clear when a sale is “final” and not part of a continuing series of production steps.

The problem with a flat tax, in today’s political society, is that most people believe “the rich” should pay more and “the poor” should get tax credits and exemptions, particularly if they have children.

But a flat tax is the same rate for everyone.

Another problem with a retail sales tax is that it only taxes items purchased for consumption. It does not tax savings. Higher income families have savings for retirement and college funds, while lower income families are always in debt. The sales tax would exempt savings and collect taxes even when a family borrows money to buy a new TV or repair an old car.

So if you believe a family’s “income” is the proper way to think about tax rates, a sales tax is “regressive.”

The solution proposed by advocates of the FairTax is a rebate. They call it a “prebate” because the plan would give a rebate in advance to every American family. The families would be paying the national sales tax every day, at the grocery store and the gas station, so it would be hard for them to wait until next year to get a rebate. Since the “prebate” is paid in advance, Americans will have enough money to give to a cashier for the tax when they go shopping. The “prebate” would be received as a check in the mail, or deposited to a bank account, each month – similar to how Social Security payments are made, or how food stamps are distributed on debit cards.

It’s a frightening thought that every American would depend on the automatic gift of money each month from the government.

It is surprising to me that Neal Boortz, who calls himself a “libertarian,” would promote this idea. Recall that Libertarians are opposed to taxes, and they oppose the idea that people should become dependent on the government. But, clearly, after such a system of “prebate” payments was created, the main issue among voters would be how much political candidates would promise to increase the monthly payments when running for office. If any politician suggested cutting the payments, it would be like getting caught on Twitter with lewd photos. Nobody today proposes cutting Social Security benefits, not even Ron Paul or Gary Johnson.

Sound Familiar?
George McGovern’s “Demogrant” Proposal in 1972

The idea of a “prebate” for the FairTax is very similar to an idea that presidential candidate George McGovern proposed in 1972. He suggested that every American should be given a $1,000 tax credit, which would be refunded to poor people. This idea was widely criticized, not least by Sen. Hubert Humphrey who used it against him in the California primary election. Even liberals in the Democratic Party thought it was too “left wing” for prime time.

The Earned Income Tax credit was then enacted in 1975, and it has increased continually with each new tax law. The Republican administration joined with the Democratic Congress to enact a variation of the McGovern idea, because “fairness” in the tax system is always a political football. “Fairness” is commonly defined as taxing someone else who is not “paying a fair share,” and getting a tax cut for yourself and your friends. The McGovern idea of giving tax credits is at the center of the FairTax idea of a “prebate.” The tax is not “fair” if it is really a flat tax, as most people think about these things.

But the really important question we need to ask is about taxes in general. Is it “fair” to take money from some people, who earn it or receive it by trading with others voluntarily for a profit, and give it to others?

The question is never asked.

Ron Paul and Gary Johnson

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

by Joe Cobb

Some Thoughts about the Election

Some people have heard about a new political party, “Americans Elect,” that is getting on the ballot in several states. It is on the ballot for the 2012 election in Arizona and California, and 11 other states so far. I understand it is trying for a 50-state presence.

According to their web site, AmericansElect.org, you should join “to pick a president, not a party.” Yet, of course, they have no candidate for president – not until later this year. Who will it be? And why should we care?

It has occurred to me this new political party is some kind of front group for some rich person, like George Soros or Michael Bloomberg or Donald Trump. There is also another possibility – that the whole thing might be hijacked by the Ron Paul movement, which is very active on the Internet. The backers of the Americans Elect party might not expect to be hijacked, but the way they describe themselves, they are spreading their legs for it.

Nominate a candidate on the Internet? This sounds so “pie in the sky” like something a child might believe. Can anyone not really think there are some back office people running the show? Smoke filled rooms in the 19th century had nothing different from this. It is a new Internet version of Tammany Hall, in my opinion, but with a cover story that looks like Bob LaFollette. I don’t believe it. I never believed “the Progressive Movement” was any kind of sincere reform – just another example of the charlitans manipulating the fools, which is a pretty good description of popular democracy, as H.L. Mencken wrote about it.

However, what if the Ron Paul supporters who know how to create “money bombs” were able to take over this new political party? Would that be a good thing? I don’t think so.

The Libertarian Party is a Better Vehicle

I wrote this commentary in reply to a question from a friend who is very active in the Ron Paul “R3VOLution” and who sometimes shows up at meetings with a Guy Fawkes mask (from the movie, “V for Vendetta”). He asked why not support Ron Paul regardless of his party?

I think it is important to have some strategic thinking about elections, what messages they send, as well as the actual opportunity to elect people. I wrote an essay some years ago, “The Purpose of a Libertarian Party.” I believe working for the LP is an honorable way to dissent politically and stand for something idealistic. The alternative is just voting negatively for the lesser of two evils. Even though the LP never elects anyone on its ballot line, it does elect dozens if not hundreds of people on other ballot lines, who are libertarians in every sense except “partisan.” Ron Paul is actually a good example of such a person.

One flawed “strategic” view is that electing Libertarians should be a prime objective. I don’t agree with that; it is flawed. It would be wonderful, of course, to get a true libertarian into office, but if doing so means what often needs to be done to get votes from people who don’t understand the principles of non-initiation of force, then I would not recommend “winning” as a higher priority over “standing clearly for liberty.”

I refer you to the video [here] that my friend produced of me in the 2010 campaign. At the debate with Rep. Ed Pastor, at the handicapped center in Phoenix, the moderator asked me what I was going to do for the handicapped if elected?. (Short answer: not mandates nor tax money.)

Even if a true libertarian were elected, how would he govern if he has to make so many compromises with his fellow members of a legislature or be frustrated as an executive? Gary Johnson actually has a pretty good record as a successful veto-wielding governor.

The LP exists as a beacon. It sends out a clear signal about Right vs. Wrong in political principles and government. It is perfectly understandable that excellent GOPers like Ron Paul do some compromising things, like equivocate about human rights under the excuse of “States Rights,” in order not to answer questions about abortion or marriage, but it is not something I want a truly Libertarian Party to do. Ron Paul has a pretty funny way of explaining why he pushes earmarks for Galveston, and then votes against the appropriation bills that give the city the money anyway.

Ideas and Personality Politics

Ron Paul is an example of “personality politics” even as he does speak out for principles, like Anti-war and Anti-Fed and Cutting Spending and Cutting Taxes. It is the combination of his personality and his principles that has made him the phenomenon he has become. This is good, because most people do not think about ideas at all. They think about people. Humans were ruled by tribal chiefs, pharoahs, and kings long before anyone elected a leader – and even then Caesar was elected.

I believe 76-year-old Ron Paul is on his final campaign. I understand this. I worked with him in 1984, in Washington, DC, when he also was on his “final campaign” and looking for a way to quit the House of Representatives without being “a quitter.” I talked with him in the privacy of his office, as his loyal employee, about how he really felt about coming to Washington every week to run around and put up with the nonsense. He was glad to get out of there, and running against Phil Gramm for Senate in Texas in 1984 gave him an opportunity to be defeated (with 20% of the vote) and go out as “a fighter.”

That is what he is doing again this year. And, I say, good for him. Fight the good fight. Make your good arguments and good points in debate. Then take the defeat gracefully and go home – he will leave the battle to his son, Sen. Rand Paul, who will keep on fighting in the Senate and around the country. Ron Paul is leaving both a legacy and an heir.

But you might want to believe that we live in a democracy and not a republic (remember that slogan?). It is not the number of votes that will be important. It is how the American public opinion will shift over the next several years as a consequence of the campaign, and one candidate’s vote totals will not be what matters. The Electoral College also has an interesting way of making popular vote totals ineffective, like in Florida 2000.

Gary Johnson is going to get the Libertarian Party nomination and will be on the ballot in all 50 states. He is a younger man, with some years ahead of him in politics. I think the GOP has delivered a nasty rebuke to him, just as they did to Ron Paul in 2008. But, like Ron Paul, he will come back and keep on fighting. The Libertarian Party nomination will be exactly such a vehicle for keeping on – just as it was when Ron Paul decided to do it in 1988.

Yet, if Ron Paul’s supporters – I don’t think the man himself would want to do it – decided to seize the Americans Elect Party ballot line, and get him nominated on the Internet (assuming the whole thing is not already rigged for Bloomberg or Trump), all those people who have discovered our good ideas because of Ron Paul truly would “waste their vote.” Gary Johnson on the Libertarian ballot line in 50 states, with votes from Ron Paul supporters who won’t vote for Romney or Gingrich, which could really make a difference sending a message about corruption in politics and the hollow shell of the Republican Party that Romney, Gingrich, and Santorum represent. Johnson would do a lot better than Ron Paul in 1988.

I would like very much for Ron Paul to choose graceful retirement, after making a strong showing at the GOP convention in August, and then let Gary Johnson earn the votes from all the diehards in the GOP who will refuse to vote for Romney or Gingrich. The way the Electoral College works, it is very unlikely that any State will fall to Obama on a plurality due to supporters of Ron Paul voting for Gary Johnson. But if they chose to vote for Americans Elect instead of the Libertarian Party in November, it could squander an opportunity to send the libertarian message even if they are voting for Ron Paul in the process. What message was sent by Ross Perot’s voters? Personality politics is a wasted vote.

It is the future of the movement for limited government and the original constitution, not the “horse race” of candidates, that we need to think about strategically. One person is not the point of our movement. We have spokesmen but not “leaders.” AmericansElect.org has it exactly backwards: pick a party, not a personality.

Government Bailouts:
Debate at Phoenix College

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

Can government spending help repair the current economic recession? This is a debate sponsored by Phoenix College, March 10, 2009. The short video segments here are my presentations.

Opening Remarks, “What can we do to get out of the problem?”

Follow up, “What can any government do to solve a macroeconomic problem?”

Misinformation about the Euro Crisis

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

As someone who knows a little about monetary theory, banking, and government finance, it is frustrating to listen to the news reports and to read about the Euro crisis. Let me set out some observations.

First, the Euro was created as a credit unit managed by the European Central Bank. The governments of 17 European countries adopted it as their legal tender and discontinued their previous legal tender systems. The European Central Bank (ECB) was incorporated with a charter that made monetary value stability, in terms of what the Euro can buy in the future, its only objective. The ECB does not have additional political mandates, like the U.S. Federal Reserve, such as to promote economic growth or employment.

There are four distinct problems today in the “eurozone,” which does not encompass all of the European Union, but certainly affects all of the others, like Britain and Poland, which continue to use their older national currencies.

Distinguish among

  1. The accounting unit itself, “Euro.”
  2. Maintenance of the payments system using the Euro as a medium of exchange.
  3. The solvency of banks, which are central to the payments system, that unwisely invested in the government bonds denominated in Euros.
  4. The solvency of governments that issued bonds in Euro units. Those governments must somehow continue to borrow, both to keep on financing deficits and to pay off maturing bonds.

These are four entirely distinct issues, although the news reports do not make any distinctions. Because of the “money illusion” between credit markets, government accounting, and payments for goods and services, with banks at the center, the news reporters focus on the crisis as if the problem were the single currency instead of the foolishness of governments and bankers.

The crisis in Greece made the news when it became clear that government was insolvent. It has bonds maturing soon and it cannot pay principal and interest. Because of the distortion based on the Basel III Accords, designating government bonds as risk-free assets, not requiring any capital reserves, it was quickly discovered that major banks all over Europe and in the United States faced a massive solvency crisis as well.

One of the first victims was Jon Corzine and MF Global, which had invested heavily in the bonds of fiscally weak EU governments, because they paid higher yields. Those bonds were understood to be weak and were selling at slight discounts – as junk bonds ought to do – except former Governor and Senator Corzine, a man of great faith in the power of governments, believed his investments were safe and sound. After all, did not the Basel III Accords make them solid investments? Would governments allow them to fail?

At least MF Global was not linked into the EU payments system, as most major European banks seem to be. The failure of the payments system would be a major crisis for the entire world, and a disaster for Europe, so the European banks, and politicians, are working very hard for a massive bail out.

The German chancellor is not quite willing simply to coerce the ECB to bail out the banks, as the Federal Reserve chairman did do. The ECB was not given any charter to be a bail out agency, but the Federal Reserve since 1913 has always been a bail out agency; it was founded for that explicit purpose. (The corruption of Corzine and his managers, embezzling funds, is not the issue.)

The Fallacy of “Fiscal Union”

There is confusion in the news reports about items 3 and 4 in the list above. In a classical economic system that used gold coins as money, and both taxes and government bonds were denominated in gold coins, the integrity of the coins, and banks that operated with gold coins as accounting units, was never threatened when a government could not collect sufficient taxes to pay off maturing bonds. (The crude method of debasing or clipping coins is another story.)

Any banker who owned such bonds would, of course, take a hit, but like any other bad debt, it would be written off. The bank might become insolvent and have to close. The banker, like Jon Corzine, might go to jail for losing depositors’ money; customers might be shafted, like MF Global’s customers, but the payments system based on the coins would not be jeopardized.

The bankrupt government would keep on collecting taxes in gold coins and paying soldiers and police salaries, although it would not be able to run a fiscal deficit because nobody would trust it to sell honest bonds.

The irony of the situation is that if Greece had a government running a fiscal surplus, it could repudiate all its bonds and laugh at the bankers who had bought them. But Greece has to keep on borrowing because it runs a fiscal deficit.  Beggers cannot be choosers.

If Greece had had its own national currency, based on a gold standard, it would already have “gone off” and devalued. But there is no way Greece can go off the Euro standard and start now to issue a new fiat currency. Who would use it, even in Greece? Who would buy Greek government bonds promising only to repay in those new, politicized accounting units?  According to the news, even now in Athens people are bank-running to have Euros under their beds.  Trust in the ECB is greater than their trust in the Greek government. 

What is different in Europe today is the Euro payments system is jeopardized because it is a pyramid of bank credit based on government bonds. Saving the payments system is the really important task since all economic activity and growth depends on it.  Modern society can not be maintained on barter.

To save the payments system, saving the banks seems to be necessary.  The political drama is all about preserving the ability to borrow for the governments of Greece, Italy, Spain, and Portugal, and to pay off their bonds as they mature.  This is basic for saving the banks, who own the bonds. 

The fallacy of “fiscal union” is that it confuses the Euro, the accounting unit, with the overspending (or under-taxing) of the governments whose bonds are exposed as junk. The complaint about lacking a “fiscal union” is that Greece has no power to increase taxes in Germany or France to pay its debts. With the Euro, like the gold standard case above, the insolvent governments cannot resort to printing-press inflation to keep going. “Fiscal union” is a fancy name for a systemic “Robin Hood” solution.

The German chancellor and French president are trying to devise a way to bail out the insolvent governments because they want to save their own banks. They need to save their banks in order to save the payments system, and themselves. The common Euro currency itself is not a problem – the Euro is just the accounting unit. The “problem” is that it cannot be debased to make the junk bonds payable, as some hypothetical national Greek currency could have been ["coin-clipped"].

The Proposal for Joint EU Bonds

Since Greece cannot tax Germans, and since Germans do not feel like taxing themselves to bail out the Greek government, the gimmick in the news is for (1) the entire European Union to issue bonds and (2) give the money to the Greek, Italian, Spanish, and Portugese governments, but only if (3) those irresponsible politicians give up their “sovereignty” to bureaucrats in Brussels and submit to fiscal austerity.

This would bail out the banks, which is why it is the preferred political solution. It would preserve the payments system, which is why it is necessary. But the cries about “democracy” and “sovereignty” are loud and emotionally attractive. What is at stake is 100 years of European social welfare and labor union dominance, finally crashing into the stone wall of economic reality.

Consider the alternatives, which nobody wants to discuss because millions of innocent people would suffer and the EU, as well as much of the world, would probably face a massive credit collapse. Since the world is a single capital market, neither the United States nor Brazil/Russia/India/China would get out of it unharmed.

Let the bonds default?
Assume the banks could be compensated separately, or penalized separately, which is a huge political assumption. In the defaulting countries, pensioners and government workers then would not be paid more than tax collectors could gather at the point of a gun. Civil disorder might follow, and economic activity would certainly be disrupted. Thousands of people would try to emigrate. Ayn Rand fans might look approvingly at the logical consequences of the collapse of a parasite state, which might describe Greece and others, but the other European countries would not welcome large-scale immigration by economic refugees.

Compensate the Banks Separately?
There might be no justice in compensating the bankers who made stupid investments under the rules of the Basel III Accords in junk government bonds, but depositors and creditors of those banks are not to blame, and the payments system is administered by the banks. Perhaps the banks could be taken over by their governments and merged with the postal savings (giro) system.

The bank bail out in Ireland a few years ago tried something like this, but the debts almost overwhelmed the Irish government. It was given some assistance by the EU and Ireland seems to be recovering. But the problem in Ireland pales in comparison with the banking crisis in the rest of Europe if Italy and Spain go under – and the fear this problem might expand has caused the capital markets to choke. The United States is enjoying a flood of frightened capital, which is one reason U.S. government bonds are paying negative real interest rates.

Break Up the Euro Zone, or At Least Expel Greece and a Few Others?
This idea solves no problem, and is not different in substance from either of the two previous suggestions. Hyperinflation would hit Greece within a day of the attempt to introduce a new currency there, and no Greek government bonds would be purchased by any private investor.  The bank runs in Greece show what the people think about it.

Was the Single Currency a Mistake?

There is an interesting question in economics about what might be the size of an “optimal currency area,” and how it would work with floating exchange rates among regional currencies – not just “national” currencies. Much of this analysis looks at labor markets and natural resource markets and considers how local conditions might make different circumstances work better. An exchange rate that devalues can make labor cheaper, due to money illusion, and an economy mostly based on exports of natural resources might want some local immunity from shifts in world demand or supply conditions that can cause wide price swings in commodity markets.

In macroeconomics, if central banks can control money and credit, and national governments can finance deficit budgets without depending on free international capital markets, sometimes a serious social crisis can be manipulated to create different winners and losers. Politicians and socialists love this idea because it gives so much power to the governing elite.

The real question, of course, in any social crisis is why the situation needing “management” arose in the first place? And why are the losers almost always the weakest and least powerful in society – as the politicians and fat cats get away with it?

In the Euro crisis, it would be good if a result can be found to cushion the punishment of the innocent, and instead ruin the lives of the political leaders who created the insolvent governments in the first place. The most likely result, however, will be the opposite. The bad judgment of the European bankers will probably become as profitable as the bad judgment on Wall Street did when the housing bubble collapsed.

Of course, Wall Street a century ago created the Federal Reserve to ensure that happy outcome. We shall see if the European Central Bank holds fast, or caves under the pressure to pollute the Euro.

Money Illusion

Friday, November 25th, 2011

by Joe Cobb

The concept of “money illusion” was identified by John Maynard Keynes in his masterly book on the Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919), and the brilliant American economist, Irving Fisher, also wrote a book with that title (1928). Economists have used the term to describe the tendency for people to think of money in terms of its face value. Money, of course, does not have any fixed value since what money can buy depends on what prices producers and sellers ask for real things. [ See this discussion from Wikipedia for a general introduction to the ideas of economists on money illusion. ]

Money illusion was famously described by Thomas Mann in a story about a friend in Germany, after the first World War, who had borrowed 10,000 marks from the famous author before the war. After the great German inflation of the 1920s had begun, Mann’s friend gave him a nearly worthless 10,000 mark note. That the paper money could not possibly repay the debt he owed he failed even to understand.

John Maynard Keynes seriously proposed using inflation as a way to reduce unemployment in his General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936) because he believed workers would be too stupid to figure out that nominal wages, even after pay increases, could be lower in real terms if the pay increases did not keep up with inflation. Cutting the wages of labor is one prescription for reducing unemployment, since with lower wages employers can find it economical to hire more workers or to forego layoffs.

Keynes knew a major cause of the massive unemployment in Britain in the 1920s was due to the deflationary collapse of the money supply, which also happened in the United States in the 1930s. The purchasing power of a U.K. pound and the American dollar skyrocketed. The U.S. consumer price index in 1929 was 53.1 but by 1933 it had deflated to 38.8 and didn’t return to its pre-Depression level until 1943. Anyone who had money could buy a lot more with it in 1933.

Since there was a national effort under presidents Hoover and Roosevelt not to reduce wages paid, it is no surprise unemployment skyrocketed in that decade. A worker receiving $1.00 per hour in 1929 enjoyed a 37 percent real wage increase, if he still had his job in 1933 at the same $1.00 per hour. Keynes understood if you double the prices a worker has to pay for food and rent, it is a real pay cut. Cutting wages by inflation could get the unemployed back to work. Keynes was not a friend of the working class. Karl Marx, by contrast, supported the gold standard as did other famous socialists like George Bernard Shaw.

A Different Form of Money Illusion

Yet a more serious form of money illusion has seldom been noticed by economists due to one of the most useful things about money itself: You can add it up. Money (and credit) have a mathematical property that apples and oranges do not have. You cannot add up apples and oranges. If an accountant combines the dimes and quarters in a bag of coins with the Federal Reserve notes in his wallet, he can calculate his money supply. Adding apples and oranges does not create a “fruit supply.” Accountants will disregard the differences between the coins and paper money, although it might be impossible to spend the coins to buy many things in the market. Some things require different forms of payment.

When a market system operates smoothly and many people are willing to trade different forms of money at zero or minimal expense it is easy to disregard this essential difference between the forms of money. But consider the example of someone offering to sell a bag of pre-1964 silver dimes and quarters. Most people would immediately recognize the greater value of the old coins, but it took more than a decade after 1964 for people no longer to receive old silver coins in change as most retail cashiers failed to understand the difference between copper clad quarters and old silver quarters.

One of the primary services banks provide in a modern economic system is to provide what seems to be a par value payments system. Indeed, one of the primary requirements of the National Banking Act of 1863 was to establish a uniform currency, issued by private banks. Other national banks had to accept deposits of the “national currency” at face value. Prior to the Civil War, it was common for money issued by private banks to be discounted when it was used in trade or deposited in banks a few miles away.

It is of course very useful not to have to worry about different forms of money circulating in a “floating exchange rate” system, but since 1971 this is exactly what has changed in the world economy. Under the broken Bretton Woods Agreement, national governments were supposed to keep their money units fixed for international trade and finance, just as the National Banking Act did for trade between different cities and states in America.

Today it might seem to be more complicated to make international payments, exchanging between yen and euro and dollar (often requiring derivative contracts to hedge against exchange risk) but the system is also more transparent now. When a currency grows weaker, buyers and sellers immediately see the change in the market. Sellers of the weak currency have to pay more to buy stronger valued money.

The attempted ideal of a par value payments system is the source of this more subtle form of money illusion. Under par value payments, weakness of a currency is only seen – after a delay – in rising retail and wholesale prices. The delay is eliminated by arbitrage in basic commodities, as prices of gold and oil in different currencies reflect the strengths and weakness of currencies themselves under flexible exchange rates.

The Changing Role of Banks

The popular idea of a bank is symbolized by the bank vault. Children are taught you deposit your money in a bank and it will be there when you want to take it out. Banks have always solved the problem of robbery or forgery by offering people a more secure way to save their money. But savings is not the most important service the banks perform. Only a child would believe a bank will take his deposit and keep the money in its vault, like a toy chest, and give it back when the child demands it.

The banker does not operate a warehouse for money.

Bankers are “community bookkeepers” who make it easier for people to make payments to each other and to keep track of how much different parties owe each other (measured in terms of accounting units).

Bankers fundamentally perform accounting as a free public service, while managing investments for their own account – like an insurance company.

A bank customer comes to do business not by “depositing” but by “purchasing” from his banker a line of credit. A customer may not know the difference when he pays $100 cash in exchange for a $100 line of credit, but the difference between what bankers do for the economic system and what government coins and paper money do are very different. A bank offers its credibility as a payor, and it will pay your bills when you ask – if you buy its line of credit.

One of the truly misleading ideas from the British Neo-Classical School of economics, which dominates economic journalism and universities worldwide today, is the idea that bank credit, coins, and government money can be added up like “the fruit supply” to measure M-1, M-2, etc. In the past 30 years, this idea has proven less and less useful in making economic forecasts. In the United States today, even our understanding of what causes price index inflation is seemingly disconnected from “money supply,” mostly because credit has entirely displaced money and the “supply” of credit defies measurement.

By servicing the payments activity of millions of customers, bankers perform one of the essential roles in our modern economy. A banker is always the largest debtor in town, because he owes every one of his customers the nominal value of their bank balance. He does not owe them “money”; he maintains for them lines of credit, which they can switch among themselves in the market for goods and services. When you buy gasoline with your debit card, the banker switches some amount he formerly owed to you and now he owes it to the oil company. Nothing changes hands, except a bookkeeping entry is switched in the bank’s ledgers.

These bank services are not free, of course. Even though bank customers may enjoy fixed exchange rates between different bank services, the bankers are covering their costs in different ways. For merchants, accepting your debit card will mean paying a fee to the bank for the transaction. Logically the bank could charge you, the spender/buyer, for the service, but Congress has passed laws since the 1960s to make the use of cards, checks, and electronic payments look like free services to most bank customers. The banking industry requested these legal restrictions in the early days because introducing credit cards was difficult in the 1960s when store keepers wanted to charge the bank fee to the customer, like a sales tax, on top of the prices marked on goods. Even today one can sometimes see a sign at a cash register that says “Discount for Cash” but it is against the law to say openly your price will be higher for payment by credit card.

The Banker as an Investment Manager

The modern banker operates like a money market mutual fund. Banks own specific assets with less than perfect liquidity and perform “community bookkeeping” for customers with abstract units of credit providing superior liquidity. Liquidity can be understood as the narrow degree of the bid/ask price spread for an asset.

It is a common misconception to say that “banks create money when the make loans.” The standard illustration in economics textbooks will have a bank accept a deposit for, say, $100 and with the magic of the “money multiplier” turn around and expand that amount to $1,000 by making loans to other customers.

If you model the business of a bank like an insurance company, you can understand this model of a bank, but it doesn’t fit today’s banking system.

What banks do is to invest in less-than-perfectly liquid assets and create more-nearly-perfectly liquid liabilities for others to use as assets in payments.

An insurance company is an example of a fractional reserve institution. It takes your deposits and promises to pay you back under certain conditions, like an accident or your death. The insurance company knows all its customers will not have accidents or die on the same day, so it keeps reserves on hand for daily payments and invests the rest.

A banker keeps enough cash in his vault to make daily payments and invests the rest. To the extent that a government requires a certain level of reserves, it might appear to make the bank safer, but actually when reserves are sterilized, they are no longer available to make daily payments. Bankers used to invest only with borrowers, who pledged mortgages or inventories, but the communications revolution has built financial markets that make it possible for banks to invest in any asset of value. Arrangements among banks permit efficient operations with nearly zero reserves for daily cash payments. When governments enforce central banking monopolies they substitute regulations for private agreements, and expose the system to “crony capitalism.”

Under the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates, governments enforced controls on international capital payments to try to hold back pressures to devalue or revalue, which nevertheless happened frequently. Following the abandonment of the Bretton Woods Agreement in 1971, the newly freed international financial markets allowed much more fluid movement of capital among different economies around the world. Flexible exchange rates unmasked and destroyed protection from competition that had profited bankers for centuries.

Under the guise of safety and consumer protection, interest rates and bank costs had been regulated to restrict competition. During the 1970s, however, regulated interest rates were not able to keep up with the rapid depreciation of government money. The non-bank investment community was less severely regulated.

Mutual funds had operated for a century by pooling small investors and buying a portfolio of assets. A mutual fund would issue and redeem its own shares and manage its assets for profit. Wall Street entrepreneurs discovered the trick of investing in high grade, liquid government bonds and issuing shares for a fixed price of $1.00 each. As their bonds went up in value, the mutual funds would issue new “stock dividends” at $1.00 face value.

This looked exactly like what banks called “paying interest on savings,” and indeed the only difference was how each type of company was regulated. There was no economic difference. The regulated bankers begged for deregulation so they could compete, and government changed the rules.

The Payments System

In fewer than 30 years, the banks have been transformed from conservative community bookkeepers who made nearly risk free investments within their own local regions, like credit unions, to an international assets trading system. The old “legal tender” idea that money comes from governments is misleading.

Today you have to ask what is “money”?

Although there are many ongoing regulations imposed by governments regarding banks and what people can use to pay taxes, the old idea that governments “print money” is simply not true today. Governments print bonds. And banks turn them into liquidity.

The crisis in Europe over the debt of Portugal, Italy, Greece, and Spain highlight the fallacy that governments can leverage their power to tax and issue risk free bonds. It was an international government regulation, the Basel III Accord, that set the stage for the current Eurozone crisis. The Basel agreement designated all government bonds as risk free and encouraged banks to buy them. Now it is clear the PIGS bonds will probably default, and the banking system is threatened with collapse. Unfortunately the important role the banks play, as agents in the payments system, is also jeopardized.

Modern society cannot survive a disintegration of the payments system, since prices are the information data that makes worldwide division of labor possible. What is occuring in the Eurozone is a crisis threatening the payments system because too many banks hold questionable government bonds.

The governments that operate central banks, like the Federal Reserve, could impose a drastic reform that would stabilize and preserve the payments system, but even to describe it shows why it is not desirable: The government could take over every bank and make it a branch office of the Federal Reserve. Like the old postal savings system, so popular in Europe and even in Japan today, it could function with checking accounts and debit cards effortlessly. Private banks would still work as mutual funds or investment managers, but they would no longer be connected with the payments system – and bailing out banks from bad investments would not be a public policy issue.

Of course, to make the government the monopoly for payments would open the door for the Treasury printing press to cover the Federal deficit, and the next question in everyone’s mind would be a situation like Thomas Mann’s story in 1923 Germany. Before that, the French Revolutionary government had also tried to finance itself by establishing a payments system based on seized church land (assignats), and it failed with a massive inflation.

Some people who want to abolish the Federal Reserve think replacing Fed chairman Ben Bernanke with Treasury secretary Timothy Geither would be an improvement. [see H.R. 6550] They don’t see there is no example of monopoly government banking, even with legal tender laws, that has succeeded in providing a stable payments system.

The solution for monetary and economic stability has to be found in the other direction, more deregulation and freedom for banks to transform assets into liquid payments media.

Escaping the Money Illusion

The money illusion that dominates the world financial crisis is the mistake that money issued by governments – the government accounting system itself – provides a stable basis for private accounting systems. The illusion is sustained by the legal institutions of a par value payments system within countries, even though such a system does not exist between countries.

The crisis in Europe is rooted in the mistake of attempting to manage a single unit of accounting for both payments and investments, as well as for each government’s tax and accounting system. In the early days of the European Union, discussions of how to coordinate currency exchange rates were set upon the idea of creating a common currency.

The British Treasury, which wisely kept the U.K. out of the Eurozone, proposed an alternative. John Major, head of the Treasury under Margaret Thatcher, proposed a parallel currency in which the Euro would serve as a transnational unit for financial assets but not as a unit for local and consumer transactions. The legal tender status of the Franc, Mark, Lira, Peseta, and Drachma would have remained unchanged. In retrospect, it is a sad result the proposal didn’t command wider respect among European finance ministers.

Consider again the example of apples and oranges. An asset is something of value and it can have a market price. A financial asset is denominated in accounting units, but financial assets often do not sell at their nominal face value. Many financial assets do not have a face value. Since many financial assets in today’s market are worth less than their value at maturity – and their value at maturity is uncertain due to flexible exchange rates in currency markets – the concern about what information is actually conveyed by bank balance sheets is quite well placed. Government regulations don’t help to give clear information, and bank and bond rating agencies are growing more important in the role of economic policemen.

The Eurozone crisis is based on the uncertainty about the value of government bonds, which used to seem like nuggets of gold in portfolios of rising and falling private equity values. Private promissory notes and bonds were always at some risk, and their nominal yields reflected the risk, as well as discounts in the market from their face value. But now more than ever, it is clear that financial assets are more like apples and oranges and government bonds are more like Ponzi or Madoff investments.

The more distrust the common man can come to accept in his view of the payments system, the healthier the system will become.

Free Banking as a Model for the Future

Conventional wisdom changes slowly, and the system of central banks, national currencies, par value payments, and fixed exchange rates is still very recent in historical and social memory – only a few hundred years old. Flexible exchange rates are new.

The world as a whole does not have a central bank or a single currency. Par value payments and fixed asset values are impossible to create by governments, even by international regulations.

There is a reasonable case to make about preventing fraud and deception in financial markets, but looking at the Eurozone today it is clear that governments cannot be the source of those reasonable expectations against deception and fraud.

In a banking system that is not organized as a cartel, not based on a government central bank with a government monetary unit to defend, the model of free banking described in Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations (1776) offers more stability. If all banks were private investment institutions, trading assets in a global market and offering “community bookkeeping services” in more than one legal tender unit of accounting, ordinary people as well as larger players would be able to look critically at what the exchange rates in the market are telling them about economic values and the risk of assets.

The private payments system has already developed the technological network, with the debit and credit card. A single card can make payments in any currency a merchant might want, and a bank customer could still keep his line of credit denominated in something else, or even multiple units of accounting.

Some card issuers hold liquid non-monetary assets instead of government money for customers, which might be how we escape from the curse of government bonds. Scottrade manages my assets and I can spend from my account using a Visa card or checkbook – in any and every monetary unit currency on earth, wherever I travel. “What’s in Your Wallet?”

The key to a more stable payments system is more information. Government regulation and government accounting are sources of disinformation. Protestors may stage publicity stunts decrying “crony capitalism,” but the real problem is the centuries-old relationship between bankers and the government, with its power to offer favors for funds. The story Adam Smith tells about the original charter of the Bank of England in 1694 is an illustration of what has evolved in 300 years (the bankers gave King William a deal in exchange for a monopoly charter).

Worldwide competition in the financial markets has the power to restore the stability of dynamic equilibrium to financial markets, but only if a transition away from government accounting and fictional financial assets (such as PIGS bonds) is allowed to evolve.

Any government guarantee of purity should be the signal of secret toxic ingredients.

Climate Catastrophe Cancelled

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

[ Transcript in English ]

Finnish Broadcasting Co. YLE, TV1, Nov 11th 2009 at 8.00 pm.

[LINK HERE] to Finnish Broadcasting Web Site to view pictures of graphs shown on the broadcast.

Voiceover (VO), reporter Martti Backman: Governments around the world are preparing for a grand climate conference, which should decide how humanity responds to the threat of a climate catastrophe. Negotiations are under way to replace the Kyoto treaty with a new treaty of Copenhagen.

VO: The threat is based on assessments by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the IPCC. According to the panel, the Earth is going through an unprecedented period of temperature increase, caused by man and his carbon dioxide emissions from burning coal and oil.

(Pictures from An Incovenient Truth)

The Earth’s climate has always been changing. But now we are told that warming is happening faster than ever. The view is based on this figure.

(Picture: The global warming hockey stick graph. Music: Electric organ sounds from an ice-hockey game)

VO: This ten-year-old figure, dubbed as the hockey stick, was meant to revolutionize the dominant view of global climate history. The stick’s handle stretches for almost a thousand years, creating an impression of a steady climate, and its’ rising blade in the late 1900′s is proof of sudden, strong warming, which is caused by man.

According to the older view, climate has naturally varied considerably over the past millennium, and in the middle ages it was clearly warmer than today. But in the hockey stick graph, the Medieval Warm Period and the little ice age after it have disappeared. The hockey stick was promoted to honorary status in the IPCC’s third assessment report’s cover. It became the logo of catastrophic climate change. The stick was used to back up the claim that, 1998 was the warmest year of the millennium.

Steve McIntyre: ”At the time I was doing mining exploration business and I just wondered, in the most casual possible way, how they knew that. So that led me start looking at the data and six years later, I’m still doing it”.

VO: The Canadian statistician Steve McIntyre had doubts about the scientific strength of the hockey stick graph, and he decided to unravel the numbers behind it, with the diligence of an auditor. The father of the hockey stick, professor Michael Mann resisted McIntyre’s efforts to get hold of his research data, and it wasn’t until 2003 that McIntyre succeeded in getting access to the data.

McIntyre: ” It turned out that he had modified a principal components method incorrectly and the modified method produced hockey stick-shaped graphs ninety-nine percent of the time. It also emphasized a class of proxies, strip-bark bristlecone pines that previous authors had said were not actually a temperature proxy”.

VO: Temperature records measured by thermometers are at most 150 years long. Earlier histories have to be reconstructed with so-called proxies, or surrogate thermometers. Past climates are deduced for example from tree rings and lake sediments or varves.

The shape of the hockey stick was to a large extent caused by tree rings from a few North American bristlecone pines. McIntyre succeeded in deconstructing the stick. The United States National Academy of Sciences set up a committee to investigate his findings. The committee found that, McIntyre had been right to question the temperature reconstruction and announced that, bristlecone pines should no more be used as proof of climate change.

Steve McIntyre, an outsider in climate science, had succeeded in breaking Mann’s hockey stick, the icon of the climate change movement. But the story was not over. A whole factory started to produce new sticks to replace the broken one.

McIntyre: “There was another class of study, which used a series of tree rings from a scientist called Keith Briffa, from Northern Russia, from a site called Yamal, and this had an even bigger hockey stick-shape than the Michael Mann -hockey stick and this one – - has been used in multiple studies as well and so, over the past few years I’ve been trying to get information about how this particular series was constructed”.

VO: Keith Briffa is one of the big names in climate research. He is a professor in the IPCC’s scientific stronghold in Britain, the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia. He is also a lead author of the past climate chapters of the IPCC’s assessment reports.

McIntyre had to fight for three years to get Briffa’s Yamal data under his microscope. But a lot happened before that.

The well-known medieval warmth was disturbing to the scientists close to the IPCC, the so-called hockey team. In the mid 1990′s the American geologist David Deming received an astonishing e-mail, in which one prominent climate researcher announced to his colleagues:

Actor’s voice: “We have to get rid of the medieval warm period.”

(Picture of Deming’s written statement from the Senate Environmental committee website)

VO: Deming testified about the e-mail at hearings in the United States congress.

Soon after this e-mail, Keith Briffa published a study, where the millennial temperature history looked like this: (the upper curve appears on screen)

VO: The Briffa study was based on a very limited number of tree ring samples from the so-called Polar Urals region in Siberia. With the help of just three short tree ring series he claimed that the year 1032 in the middle of the balmy middle ages, had been the coldest in the millennium. And the modern period appeared to be very warm. A real hockey stick.

A couple of years later, Briffa’s colleague returned to Siberia to drill new tree ring samples. When they were added to Briffa’s original data, the curve looked surprisingly like this: (lower curve appears on screen, the curves merge).

The hockey stick had disappeared, and the medieval warm period had been reinstated as warmer than the present.

McIntyre: “Unfortunately, this updated Polar Urals result was never published and Briffa, in his works since 2000, has made no – - reference to this updated study”.

VO: The updated Polar Urals series was forgotten. Instead, Briffa replaced his original weak Polar Urals data in 2000 with new tree ring series drilled from the Yamal peninsula hundreds of kilometers away. With this data, the climate reconstruction looks like this: (lower curve appears).

VO: The blade of the hockey stick rises at the end of the millennium stronger than ever and the medieval warm period is clearly shadowed by it, if not made to vanish completely.

Yamal data became the most important temperature proxy for all later hockey sticks, and it was used in at least seven temperature reconstruction studies.

But McIntyre knew something about the construction of hockey sticks, and he could not believe in the Yamal curve. The contradiction to established paleoclimatic knowledge was simply too big.

McIntyre: “And the question is just, why was the Polar Urals update not reported? And if the Yamal series was going to be used rather than Polar Urals, that should have been clearly explained to readers. The criteria for preferring one rather than the other should have been also clearly explained”.

VO: Finnish Lapland lies at the same latitudes as Yamal, and there are plenty of Finnish studies on past climates based on tree rings. These studies are considered to be among the best in the world, for their sample quality as well as methodologically. What kinds of hockey sticks have been found in them?

Kari Mielikäinen, professor of forest research (Metla, Finland): “We have this long series going back over 7,000 years, and there’s no hockey stick there.”

VO: Briffa’s Yamal hockey stick was published in the prestigious journal Science. McIntyre asked for a copy of the raw data from Yamal.

McIntyre: ”Briffa refused. The editors of Science refused to require Briffa to provide the measurement data…”

VO: It took McIntyre three years to get hold of the data, although one of the most important rules in science is that, raw data should be made available to anybody who is interested in checking and replicating a study.

Finally Briffa made a “mistake”. He published yet another article based on the Yamal data in a journal of the British Royal Society. The prestigious scientific society held on to the principle of data transparency and forced Briffa to make his raw data public. In September this year, the Canadian climate auditor had his forebodings confirmed.

McIntyre: ”So after, after sort of, three years of frustration and trying to examine the data that Briffa had used and probably four years of people saying that this data supported the Michael Mann -work on other grounds, it was really quite frustrating to find that it was built up on ten trees that had been not randomly selected”.

VO: So the Yamal data included only ten living trees from the 1990′s, and the rapid growth of these individuals caused the steep rise of the hockey stick blade. In Finnish dendrological studies, hardly anything would be said based on just ten trees. What’s demanded is at least 50 trees for each year, and several other quality criteria as well. How have these criteria been observed in the Yamal data?

Kari Mielikäinen (professor of forest research, Finnish Forest Research Institute Metla): “Rather weakly it seems. It looks like there are problems with both cohort structure and also the regional distribution (of the sample).”

VO: McIntyre conducted a simple statistical exercise. He replaced the 10-tree Yamal sample by a larger 34-tree sample collected from the same area. (In this figure) the added material is depicted with the black curve, and the combination of both data sets as a green curve.

VO: The hockey stick blade disappears, or actually turns downwards. And the medieval period is again warmer than the present.

McIntyre: ”I think that the preferential selection of Yamal, rather than Polar Urals, biases the result that’s presented to the public”.

VO: All good proxy-based climatic reconstructions should compare the results with adjacently located measurements from thermometers. When this is done in the Yamal area, it emerges that none of the near-by weather stations have recorded warming that would explain the hockey stick graph. In other words, if those ten trees have grown abnormally fast in the 1990′s it is due to something else than heat.

Mielikäinen: “If you choose one convenient series just to prove a point, be it a hockey stick or anything, you are definitely on a wrong track.”

VO: Problems with tree ring studies will be addressed next summer in an international scientific congress chaired by Mielikäinen in Rovaniemi (Finnish Lapland).

(pause)

VO: The author of the Yamal reconstruction, Keith Briffa, has disputed the criticism aimed at his study, but it still draws heated debate.

Briffa’s employer, the IPCC-affiliated climate research unit CRU maintains a global database of temperature measurements from weather stations. This database is central to the conclusion that global temperatures have risen to a worrying extent during the past 40 years. The CRU has combined thermometer readings into a global average with a method which it refuses to disclose, but which allegedly has brought added value to the raw data. McIntyre has requested the data from CRU director Phil Jones, but he has been turned down, and others as well.

McIntyre: “An Australian named Warwick Hughes had asked for the data and Warwick Hughes had published some articles that had been critical of how the temperature histories had been prepared, and Jones said ‘Why should I send – we have twenty-five years invested in this, why should I send the data to you when your only objective is to find anything wrong with it?”, which is a very unscientific statement.”

VO: The CRU database is the most important scientific justification for the demands that the most ambitious treaty in mankind’s history should be finalized in Copenhagen in December. In spite of this, there is no way to replicate its’ validity.

Recently the CRU director Phil Jones has announced that the original measurement data does not exist anymore because of data storage difficulties. A dog ate the world’s most important scientific measurement homework.

(Pause, move to Korttajärvi, central Finland.)

VO: Materials for the hockey stick factory have also been collected from Finland.

Reporter Backman, standing on a jetty: “This small Korttajärvi in Jyväskylä has become a focal point in the international climate debate. Based on samples taken from its’ bottom sediments, some foreign researchers claim that, an unprecedented warming occurred at the end of the 20th century. Finnish researchers, on the other hand, have used the lake to show that climate has always changed, even more than recently, and irrespective of human influence.”

VO: Five years ago, one of the Korttajärvi researchers responded to MOT’s question about the IPCC’s claim that recent temperatures are highest in a thousand years.

(Interview footage from MOT archive, 2004)

Ojala: “Based on these studies it seems that this claim is not quite true, at least for the Northern hemisphere, at least for Scandinavia. We’ve clearly had much warmer winters here in the Nautajärvi and Korttajärvi area, than what we are experiencing now.”

Question by Backman: “What’s your estimate, how much warmer was the medieval period in Finland, compared to the present?”

Ojala: “It is difficult to say exactly. But we may speak of half a degree (Celsius), even a whole degree based on several European studies.”

VO: At least two research teams close to the IPCC added the sediment data collected by Finnish researchers as part of their own paleoclimatic model reconstructions. This was done with agreement, but the Finns were surprised to see that in a study published this September, their data and interpretation of its’ meaning had been turned upside down. Here is the millennial temperature reconstruction from Korttajärvi done by the Finns:

VO: And here we have the same data presented by the hockey team:

VO: A nice hockey stick has emerged from the Korttajärvi mud. What in the Finnish study signified cold, had been turned into warmth in the IPCC science and vice versa. This interpretation passed the scientific peer review.

Dr. Atte Korhola, professor of environmental change at the University of Helsinki, is an expert in lake sediment studies.

Atte Korhola: “Some curves and data have been used upside down, and this is not a compliment to climate science. And in this context it is relevant to note that the same people who are behind this are running what may be the world’s most influential climate website, RealClimate. With this they are contributing to the credibility of science – or reducing it. And in my opinion this is alarming because it bears on the credibility of the field, and if these kinds of things emerge often – that data have been used insufficiently or even falsely, or if data series have been truncated or they have not been appropriately published (for replication), it obviously erodes the credibility, and this is a serious problem.”

VO: The author of the September study, Darrell Kaufman, admitted his mistake two weeks ago and sent a correction to the journal Science. But the main author of a previous study, Michael Mann, the father of the original hockey stick, still sticks to the claim that a hockey stick was found at the bottom of lake Korttajärvi.

(Pause)

VO: The climate studies used by the UN affiliated IPCC are usually computer simulations, based on models emulating the behavior of global climate. Some traditional researchers have criticized studies based on just computer simulations, calling it “playstation climatology”.

According to the most prominent computer models, human activity should cause global warming that looks like this:

(Graph showing rising projections to 2100.)

But the measurements show that, real temperature has so far varied like this:

(Graph showing land and satellite based measurements of global temperature until 2009 – clearly below the model simulations.)

VO: A poorly known fact is that, global climate stopped warming after a two-decade period (in the late 1900′s). Since 1998 there has been no statistically measured global warming. Instead, the climate has slightly cooled for several years. Not one of the climate models used by the IPCC was able to predict this turn of events.

Some new studies predict the cooling phase to continue longer, maybe for a couple of decades. In spite of that, many leading scientists affiliated with the IPCC still claim that global warming continues, even faster than predicted.

Meanwhile, some of the catastrophic consequences predicted by the models have been revealed as overblown. The Arctic sea ice has started to recover from its’ minimum area recorded two years ago, Antarctic melting has slowed down to a minimum during measured history, sea level rise has not accelerated from its’ previous rate, and hurricane seasons have been mild. Nature has not obeyed the manuscript.

Korhola: “In late summer 2008 I was in England, where all newspapers ran a front-page story about a scenario predicting the total disappearance of Arctic sea ice by that summer. And these predictions were distributed by two leading researchers of the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado, Mark Serreze and Jay Zwally. Well, what happened was that these predictions did not come true, but that 2008 was clearly a better year than 2007 with the collapse in ice extent, which was apparently caused by anomalous atmospheric pressure and wind conditions in the Arctic regions.”

VO: Richard Lindzen is a professor of climate science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technololy, one of the world’s most prestigious science universities. He is one of the few scientists who do not study climate by simulating it with computer models. He studies observations from the real natural world.

Richard Lindzen: “This field is completely sick in that way, I mean, you have models you know that they don’t work, you know they don’t reproduce a – phenomenon, but you bend data to fit the model. I don’t think this can go on for long without being embarrassing”.

VO: In September, Lindzen published a study that hit the core of the climate debate. Based on radiation measurements, he calculated how much the doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration could really warm up the Earth.

The Earth is protected from cosmic freezing by the atmospheric gas blanket. According to the catastrophic warming theory, the CO2 emitted from burning oil and coal thickens the blanket and thus causes the temperature to rise dangerously.

An undisputed scientific fact is that, a doubling of CO2 in itself is enough to cause a one degree (Celsius) of atmospheric warming, which would not be a problem. But the climate models have been fed with the assumption that the warming caused by CO2 increased the concentration of water vapor, which in turn would further thicken the blanket and multiply the total warming a couple of times, up to a fateful six degrees.

Lindzen: “The models do exactly what they are supposed to, given their sensitivity. They all show the blanket thickens and it thickens by the amount consistent with the sensitivity of the models do of doubling of CO2. Do the same thing to nature, and it does exactly the opposite, and it does it more powerfully. So you have all the models agreeing with each other, and all of them wrong compared to nature.”

VO: The question of water vapor feedback is the key in determining the threat of a climate catastrophe. The climate models assume that, the higher the surface temperature rises, the thicker the warming blanket gets. But is this really happening?

Lindzen and his team compared sea-level temperatures with the satellite-based measurements of incoming and outgoing radiation in the upper atmosphere. While all computer models show that, as the surface temperature rises, less radiation escapes to space:

(Graph of 11 model simulations with downward sloping lines)

VO: The reality measured from nature is exactly diametrical:

(The 12th diagram ‘ERBE’ by Lindzen added to the graph set, showing a rising curve)

VO: It turned out that, cloud cover changes as the surface warms, but it was not getting thicker; it was thinning. In this way, nature prevents the atmosphere from excessive heating. The cloud cover reacts to temperature changes like an eye’s iris to changes in light, by contracting or expanding. Lindzen calls this thermostatic behavior the Iris-effect.

And what is the significance of this effect to the estimates of human-caused climatic warming?

Lindzen: “It’s saying that, instead of the one degree being magnified, it should be shrunk by at least a half.”

Question by Backman: “And how much would this sensitivity be in degrees of Celsius?”

Lindzen: “Now, in terms of degrees of Celsius it says that we shall expect doubling the CO2 might contribute in the order of half a degree to the global mean temperature anomaly.”

Backman: “And how big a problem is that?”

Lindzen: “None. We see that from month to month, year to year all the time. I mean the truth is, we have seen already two thirds, three quarters of a degree. This is not the period when the world is falling apart. It’s a period when the population has grown, when famine has been defeated, when people live longer than ever and there is large number of people that are supposedly terribly warming the earth, are living better for the most part.”

VO: Lindzen’s study shows with measurements that the assumption of an impending climate catastrophe is basically wrong. The IPCC camp has reacted to the study with complege silence.

Lindzen: “I think it’s because it’s so simple and obvious, and I think even the alarmist groups know that the better part of wisdom is not to publicize this.”

VO: Professor Atte Kohola is not skeptical of the potential threat of climatic warming like his colleague in Boston, but both scientists are worried about the politicizion of climate science.

Korhola: “Especially now with the Copenhagen conference approaching, one gets the impression that also among scientists, many have lost control. Especially when you compare original studies to how they are presented to the public, in the mass media, there is a huge gap in what comes out. We get a lot of material with terms like dramatic, catastrophic, unprecedented, and among some researchers there is even talk of planetary doom and saving the planet.”

Lindzen: “The real question is, why the last few years have seen this huge boost with all these crazy movies – “Inconvenient truth” – nonsense spewed out, hysteria? We are all going to die, if we don’t change our light bulbs immediately. I can only say, somebody must have noticed that the temperature has stopped increasing and they had all these agendas by now to make billions of dollars, and do this and do that, get people to pay taxes and feel happy about it, because they are saving the earth and so on. So you have the politicians, the bureaucrats, the scientists and so on, and all felt you know that if the temperature continues this way, this is finished if we don’t get it through immediately so the volume has increased.”

VO: MOT asked for an interview with the director of the Finnish meteorological institute, Dr. Petteri Taalas, who is sympathetic to the IPCC’s main line. He refused.

END.
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The Big-Spending, High-Taxing,
Lousy-Services Paradigm

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

by William Voegeli

In 1956, the economist Charles Tiebout provided the framework that best explains why people vote with their feet. The “consumer-voter,” as Tiebout called him, challenges government officials to “ascertain his wants for public goods and tax him accordingly.” Each jurisdiction offers its own package of public goods, along with a particular tax burden needed to pay for those goods. As a result, “the consumer-voter moves to that community whose local government best satisfies his set of preferences.” In selecting a jurisdiction, the mobile consumer-voter is, in effect, choosing a club to join based on the benefits that it offers and the dues that it charges.

America’s federal system allows, at the state level, for 50 different clubs to join. At first glance, the states seem to differ between those that bundle numerous high-quality public benefits with high taxes and those that offer packages of low benefits and low taxes. These alternatives, of course, define the basic argument between liberals and conservatives over the ideal size and scope of government. Except for Oregon, John McCain carried every one of the 17 states with the lowest tax levels in the 2008 presidential election, while Barack Obama won every one of the 17 at the top of the list except for Wyoming and Alaska.

It’s not surprising, then, that an intense debate rages over which model is more satisfactory and sustainable. What is surprising is the growing evidence that the low-benefit, low-tax alternative succeeds not only on its own terms but also according to the criteria used by defenders of high benefits and high taxes. Whatever theoretical claims are made for imposing high taxes to provide generous government benefits, the practical reality is that these public goods are, increasingly, neither public nor good: their beneficiaries are mostly the service providers themselves, and their quality is poor. For evidence, look to the two largest states in the nation, which are fine representatives of the liberal and conservative alternatives.

One out of every five Americans is either a Californian or a Texan. California became the nation’s most populous state in 1962; Texas climbed into second place in 1994. They are broadly similar: populous Sunbelt states with large metropolitan areas, diverse economies, and borders with Mexico producing comparable demographic mixes. Both are “majority-minority” states, where non-Hispanic whites make up just under half of the population and Latinos just over a third.

According to the most recent data available from the Census Bureau, for the fiscal year ending in 2006, Americans paid an average of $4,001 per person in state and local taxes. But Californians paid $4,517 per person, well above that national average, while Texans paid $3,235. It’s worth noting, by the way, that while state and local governments in both California and Texas get most of their revenue from taxes, the revenue is augmented by subsidies from the federal government and by fees charged for governmental services and facilities, such as trash collection, airports, public university tuition, and mass transit. California had total revenues of $11,160 per capita, more than every state but Alaska, Wyoming, and New York, while Texas placed a distant 44th on this scale, with revenues of all governmental entities totaling $7,558 per person.

What might interest Tiebout is that while California and Texas are comparable in terms of sheer numbers, their demographic paths are diverging. Before 1990, both states grew much faster than the rest of the country. Since then, only Texas has continued to do so. While its share of the nation’s population has steadily increased, from 6.8 percent in 1990 to 7.9 percent in 2007, California’s has barely budged, from 12 percent to 12.1 percent.

Unpacking the numbers is even more revealing—and, for California, disturbing. The biggest contrast between the two states shows up in “net internal migration,” the demographer’s term for the difference between the number of Americans who move into a state from another and the number who move out of it to another. Between April 1, 2000, and June 30, 2007, an average of 3,247 more Americans moved out of California than into it every week, according to the Census Bureau. Over the same period, Texas saw a net gain, in an average week, of 1,544 people. Aside from Louisiana and Mississippi, which lost population to other states because of Hurricane Katrina, California is the only Sunbelt state that had negative net internal migration after 2000. All the other states that lost population to internal migration were Rust Belt basket cases, including New York, Illinois, New Jersey, Michigan, and Ohio.

As Tiebout might have guessed, this outmigration has to do with taxes. Besides Mississippi, every one of the 17 states with the lowest state and local tax levels had positive net internal migration from 2000 to 2007. Except for Wyoming, Maine, and Delaware, every one of the 17 highest-tax states had negative net internal migration over the same period. Conservative researchers’ technical explanation for this phenomenon is: “Well, duh.” Or, as Arthur Laffer and Stephen Moore wrote in the Wall Street Journal earlier this year: “People, investment capital and businesses are mobile: They can leave tax-unfriendly states and move to tax-friendly states.”

Summarizing the findings of a report they wrote for the American Legislative Exchange Council, Laffer and Moore pointed out that between 1998 and 2007, the states without an individual income tax “created 89 percent more jobs and had 32 percent faster personal income growth” than the states with the highest individual income-tax rates. California’s tax and regulatory policies, the report predicts, “will continue to sap its economic vitality,” while Texas’s “pro-growth” policies will help it “maintain its superior economic performance well into the future.” The clear implication is that California should become more like Texas.

At this point, defenders of the high-benefit, high-tax paradigm push back. Remember the other half of Tiebout’s equation, they say. There’s no need for a state to be like Texas if its high taxes and extensive regulations are part of a package deal that yields more and better public goods and an attractive quality of life.

But that, it turns out, is a big “if.” It’s true that many people are less sensitive to taxes and more concerned about public goods, and these consumer-voters will congregate in places with extensive services. But it’s also true, all things being equal, that everyone would rather pay lower than higher taxes. The high-benefit, high-tax model can work, but only if the high taxes actually purchase high benefits—that is, public goods that far surpass the quality of those available to people who pay low taxes.

And here, California is decidedly lacking. The biggest factor accounting for California’s loss of population to the other 49 states, bond ratings that would embarrass Chrysler or GM, and state politics contentious and feckless enough to shame a banana republic, has to be its public sector’s diminishing willingness and capacity to fulfill its promises to taxpayers. “Twenty years ago, you could go to Texas, where they had very low taxes, and you would see the difference between there and California,” Joel Kotkin, executive editor of NewGeography.com and a presidential fellow at Chapman University in Southern California, told the Los Angeles Times this past March. “Today, you go to Texas, the roads are no worse, the public schools are not great but are better than or equal to ours, and their universities are good. The bargain between California’s government and the middle class is constantly being renegotiated to the disadvantage of the middle class.”

Similarly, the CEO of a manufacturing company in suburban Los Angeles told a Times reporter that his business suffered less from California’s high taxes than from its ineffectual services. As a result, the company pays “a fortune” to educate its employees, many of whom graduated from California public schools, “on basic things like writing and math skills.” According to a report issued earlier this year by McKinsey & Company, Texas students “are, on average, one to two years of learning ahead of California students of the same age,” though expenditures per public school student are 12 percent higher in California.

State and local government expenditures as a whole were 46.8 percent higher in California than in Texas in 2005–06—$10,070 per person compared with $6,858. And Texas not only spends its citizens’ dollars more effectively; it emphasizes priorities that are more broadly beneficial. In 2005–06, per-capita spending on transportation was 5.9 percent lower in California than in Texas, and highway expenditures in particular were 9.5 percent lower, a discovery both plausible and infuriating to any Los Angeles commuter losing the will to live while sitting in yet another freeway traffic jam. With tax revenues scarce and voters strongly opposed to surrendering more of their income, Texas officials devote a large share of their expenditures to basic services that benefit the most people. In California, by contrast, more and more spending consists of either transfer payments to government dependents (as in welfare, health, housing, and community development programs) or generous payments to government employees and contractors (reflected in administrative costs, pensions, and general expenditures). Both kinds of spending weaken California’s appeal to consumer-voters, the first because redistributive transfer payments are the least publicly beneficial type of public good, and the second because the dues paid to Club California purchase benefits that, increasingly, are enjoyed by the staff instead of the members.

Californians have the best possible reason to believe that the state’s public sector is not holding up its end of the bargain: clear evidence that it used to do a better job. Bill Watkins, executive director of the Economic Forecast Project at the University of California at Santa Barbara, has calculated that once you adjust for population growth and inflation, the state government spent 26 percent more in 2007–08 than in 1997–98. Back then, “California had teachers. Prisoners were in jail. Health care was provided for those with the least resources.” Today, Watkins asks, “Are the roads 26 percent better? Are schools 26 percent better? What is 26 percent better?”

The steady deterioration of California’s public services hasn’t gone unnoticed. Shortly after his stunning ascension to the governor’s office in 2003, Arnold Schwarzenegger established an advisory commission, the California Performance Review (CPR), to recommend ways to make governance in California smarter, cheaper, and better. The commission labored through 2004 before delivering a doorstop report with more than 1,200 recommendations for streamlining this and consolidating that, along with an assessment that implementing the full list of changes could save California $32 billion over the first five years.

And then . . . nothing, really. The 2,500-page report was “dead on arrival,” according to Bill Whalen of the Hoover Institution, “because it was too complicated for voters to rally behind and legislators didn’t want to see it enacted.” Citizen Schwarzenegger may have assumed that his personal star power and the CPR recommendations’ plodding good sense would make a politically irresistible combination. Such reckoning failed to account for the formidable ability of even the most obscure and otiose governmental body to hunker down, defend its turf, and outlast mere politicians.

The CPR, for example, recommended abolishing dozens of California’s commissions and advisory boards, either outright or by folding their activities into a simpler and more rational organizational structure. Five years later, few of these vestigial organs have been removed. The many that remain include the Commission on Aging, whose lead accomplishment for 2009 is getting the legislature to declare a Fall Prevention Week (which began on the first day of autumn, naturally); the Apprenticeship Council, “which has been in place since the 1930s,” according to the CPR, and “is no longer needed to perform regulatory and advisory responsibilities”; the Board of Barbering and Cosmetology; the Court Reporters Board; and the Hearing Aid Dispensers Bureau.

The point is not that turning a flamethrower on every item in the Museum of Governmental Anachronisms would have saved California a great deal of money. It is, rather, that abolishing these boards and commissions, whose names are talk-radio punch lines, would have been the easy calls, the obvious first steps toward giving California’s taxpayers a decent return on their surrendered dollars. Yet even the low-hanging fruit proved out of reach. The path of least resistance was to do the same old thing, not the sensible thing.

The resistance comes from the blob of interest groups, inside and outside government, that like California’s public sector just fine the way it is and see reform as a threat to their comfortable, lucrative arrangements. It turns out, for example, that all the pointless boards and commissions are bulletproof because they provide golden parachutes to politicians turned out of the state legislature by California’s strict term limits. In the middle of the state’s most recent budget crisis, State Senator Tony Strickland proposed a bill to eliminate salaries paid to members of boards and commissions who, despite holding fewer than two formal hearings or official meetings per month, had received annual compensation in excess of $100,000. The bill died in committee.

James Madison would have to revise—or possibly burn—Federalist No. 10 if he were forced to account for the new phenomenon of the government itself becoming the faction decisively shaping its own policy and conduct. (See “Madison’s Nightmare” in City Journal’s 2009 special issue, “New York’s Tomorrow.”) This faction dominates because it’s playing a much longer game than the politicians who come and go, not to mention the citizens who rarely read the enormous owner’s manual for the Rube Goldberg machine they feed with their dollars. They rarely stay outraged long enough to make a difference.

Take entitlements and public-employee pensions, which are, Watkins says, “the real source of the state’s fiscal distress.” A 2005 study by the Legislative Analyst’s Office (California’s version of the Congressional Budget Office) found that pensions for California’s government employees “surpassed the other states—often significantly—at all retirement ages.” California government workers retiring at age 55 received larger pensions than their counterparts in any other state (leaving aside the many states where retirement as early as 55 isn’t even possible). The California Foundation for Fiscal Responsibility periodically posts a list of retired city managers, state administrators, public university deans, and police chiefs who receive pensions of at least $100,000 per year. The latest report shows 5,115 lucky members in this six-figure club. The state’s annual bill for polishing their gold watches is $610 million.

Again, the most vivid part of the problem is not the most important. California would move only slightly closer to regaining fiscal health if it scraped the gilding off the pensions and health benefits of its most lucratively retired employees. But when even a flagrant example of a government’s serving its workforce better than its citizens is politically unassailable, it’s hard to be hopeful about the mundane reforms needed to change the rest of the economically debilitating public-employee retirement system. The California Performance Review suggested the sensible thing: gradually substituting defined-contribution for defined-benefit pension plans. (According to a report by the Pew Center on the States, just 20 percent of the nation’s private-sector employees are enrolled in a defined-benefit pension plan, compared with 90 percent of public-sector employees.) To no one’s shock, the state legislature has rejected all proposals to curb the state’s financial obligations to its retired and retiring employees.

If California doesn’t want to be Texas, it must find a way to be a better California. The easy thing about being Texas is that the government has a great deal of control over the part of its package deal that attracts consumer-voters—it must merely keep taxes low. California, on the other hand, must deliver on the high benefits promised in its sales pitch. It won’t be enough for its state and local governments to spend a lot of money; they have to spend it efficiently and effectively.

The optimistic assessment is that things are going to get worse in California before they get better. The pessimistic assessment is that they’re going to get worse before they get much worse. As is often the case, hanging around with the pessimists is less fun but more instructive. The current recession has driven California’s state government into what amounts to a five-month budget cycle, according to Dan Walters of the Sacramento Bee. He estimates that the budget deal tortuously wrought in July should start falling apart in October, because it was predicated on pie-in-the-sky revenue estimates and because so many of its spending cuts are being challenged, often successfully, in the courts.

The recession will eventually end and California’s finances will improve, say the optimists. Given the state’s pervasive political bias against efficient and effective public services, however, the question is whether its finances will ever get truly well. States that have grown accustomed to thinking of the engine that drives their economies as an inexhaustible resource—whether it’s Michigan and the auto industry, New York and Wall Street, or California and the vision of the sunlit good life that used to attract new residents—find it tough to compete again for what they thought would be theirs forever, and to plan budgets for lean years that turn into lean decades. Instead, they invest their hopes in a deus ex machina that will rescue them from the hard choices they dread.

For California’s governmental-industrial complex, a new liberal administration and Congress in Washington offer plausible hope for a happy Hollywood ending. Federal aid will replace the dollars that California’s taxpayers, fed up with the state’s lousy benefits and high taxes, refuse to provide. Americans will continue to vote with their feet, either by leaving California or disdaining relocation there, but their votes won’t matter, at least in the short term. Under the coming bailout, the new 49ers—Americans in the other 49 states, that is—will be extended the privilege of paying California’s taxes. At least they won’t have to put up with its public services.

William Voegeli is a contributing editor of The Claremont Review of Books and a visiting scholar at Claremont McKenna College’s Salvatori Center. His book on the American welfare state will be published by Encounter in 2010.

This article is reprinted from The City Journal, Autumn 2009. Copyright The Manhattan Institute

Poetry is an Example of Free Will

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

by Joe Cobb

Materialists since Thomas Hobbes have questioned the idea of free will in human agents. Everything has a cause, and the efficient cause, like billiard balls, is what most people think about.

Billiard ball (1) hits Billiard ball (2) and (1) stops or slows down; (2) begins to roll at some angle from (1). You know that, basic mechanics.

The problem is you don’t ask whether that is the only way “things” can happen. There are more ways that things can happen.

“Free will” as a claim (assumption) in human psychology was challenged by Harvard professor B.F. Skinner in the 1950-70s. Skinner was a behaviorist, and perhaps the most extreme one although Karl Marx was not much different, with his materialism theory and his slander about “class” as it would influence ethical conclusions. This is determinism applied to the human mind and the whole idea about individualism.

Free Will Obviously Exists

This is not a claim anyone really needs “to prove.” If you don’t agree, it makes no difference because you were just determined to disagree with me, who (in your view) was just determined to hold an absurd position. Good bye. Have a nice day.

But, aside from trumping the argument, let me offer an example of free will. Poetry is an art form. We have all understood the beauty of some poetry (not all of it!), and we have all tried it – with limited success.

My high school English teacher in 10th grade emphasized that poetry was the art of placing the words, in harmony, rhyme, etc. as well as the choosing of words to make the best use of metaphor and visualization by the reader.

Sandburg writes, “The fog comes on little cat feet.” You know what that means, although the words do not specify it; they suggest it.

Knowledge is an interesting thing, in the human mind, and poetry is evidence that human free will exists. One might get the same, one idea out to others with different words. And some might be as lovely as Sandburg.

To take a single concept or proposition, like fog rolling in, and put it into words could have been done many different ways. The beauty of Sandburg’s formula, however, is unique. I claim it is superior, without claiming some universal super-duper. It is at the top, relatively.

Even to suggest the idea of “relative” good is another example of Free Will in our affairs, and in our minds. People disagree over economic values, and often also we disagree over moral values, like “fairness” or “happiness.” Interesting disagreements like these cannot just be determined like billiard-ball motion.

Neuroscience is an interesting new field of study. I do not expect it to bring us to some Skinner box of determinism. Science will instead bring more evidence of how individual human agency works. Some writers, generalizing, say this is like quantum mechanics with statistics. Free will is randomness. But that would not produce logical deduction or analysis. Most people live fairly successful lives by using practical wisdom, which is systematic because it needs “objective reality” to work. Behaviorism doesn’t answer that, and again, why do they care? Only we, who want to use free choice to decide questions, really want to know different answers.

So, go out tomorrow and make some totally free choice and ask yourself, “why?”

Audit the Fed? Why?

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

I have been watching with amusement the progress Ron Paul has been making with cosponsors on his bill (HR 1207). The cosponsors tactic was one that I used in the mid-1980s to get the gold coin bill adopted (PL 99-185), in the face of Treasury opposition. Those assholes were so anti-gold they didn’t even want a bullion coin to compete in the market with Krugerrands and Maple Leafs! Our key success in 1985 was to enlist the Black Caucus, chaired by Rep. Julian Dixon (D-CA) and his good friend Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-CA).

Questioning the Federal Reserve “Church”

I think it is true that the “audit the Fed” issue is just a publicity stunt, as Forbes points out. But it is a useful publicity stunt because it has focused a lot of attention on the Fed and its position in American society.

Until very recently, the Fed was treated as some kind of church. Its pontiffs were treated as spokesmen for the Mystery, and every member of Congress was very shy of criticizing the Fed, except for a few old populists like Henry Gonzalez who would have abolished the Fed and replaced it with the Treasury issuing fiat paper money in order to push interest rates down to zero, etc. William Jennings Bryan exercised pernicious influence back in 1913 to convert what would have been a fairly benign private clearing house that issued banknotes (just as every other National Bank also in those days did) – into a government agency that issued “obligations of the United States.” Thus the Fed was born. Rosemary’s baby.

I say Ron Paul’s bill (HR 1207) is a “useful” publicity stunt, but it could backfire if

    (1) the concerns Bernanke highlighted came true, namely that the Fed felt pressured by Congress to inflate; and
    (2) some kind of “audit” is conducted and the Fed is whitewashed and the whole issue becomes covered up with a new cloak of pseudo-democratic appearances.

Certainly, if a government is going to enforce a monopoly currency, the monopoly agency should *NOT* be under popular or democratic control. It should focus strictly on maximizing profit. For a monopoly currency that means only sustaining and stabilizing the purchasing power of the monetary unit. If a central bank can do that, it will rule forever in its narrow sphere.

The business side of the Fed is already audited. The current “Tax on Federal Reserve Notes” (so called; not really accurately named), which is a line item in the Fed’s annual income statement, is a 100% tax on the Fed’s nominal monetary profits. The money goes directly to the U.S. Treasury, just as the coinage seigniorage from the Mint also goes. (Of course, the Fed gets “to skim” because it pays its operating expenses before remitting to the Treasury – but that is revealed in the audits already conducted and published.)

The three areas where the Fed is not today audited are all justified, in my view, under the system we have.

  • First, transactions with foreign central banks and IMF, Bank for International Settlements, etc. are secret because the foreigners want it done that way. The Fed acts as a fiscal agent for a lot of foreign governments, particularly the smaller ones.
  • Second the Federal Open Market Committee and the games it plays under the rubric, “monetary policy,” do have the power to move the stock and bond markets in powerful swings. If anyone had insider knowledge of what the FOMC were doing on any particular day, your profits from day-trading would be gigantic. A hedge fund manager’s dream come true.
  • Third, the FOMC operations, buying and selling to impact the Fed Funds rate, would also be an area that should not be allowed to become something of daily, transparent knowledge. The claim that these things should be kept non-political and out of sight of speculators and day traders makes sense to me.

The Monopoly Problem

But, the real issue is WHY should the Fed be a monopoly, and WHY should the United States government even want to use an undefined F.R.A.U.D. monetary system? [Note acronym: "Federal Reserve Accounting Unit Dollar"]

The answer is because the British Neo-Classical School of economics, which developed under the Victorian era regime following Peel’s Act of 1844, had neglected and lost track of the debates among – yes, amateur for the most part – economists from 1800-1844. Lawrence H. White’s book on this history, “Free Banking in Britain,” is very informative. Even Milton Friedman changed his mind after reading about free banking.

The British Economists

The Briish economists after 1844 came to the conclusion that “scientific management” of a monetary monopoly would be superior to whatever crippled market process occurred under a “pseudo-gold-standard” (Milton Friedman’s label).

Yet, of course, the whole appeal of “scientific management” of an economic system ought to have passed away with the fall of the Soviet Union.

The observation that fewer business cycle downturns occurred after 1913 than before the Fed ignores a lot of economic history. First, it ignores the stupid regulations imposed by the National Bank Act of 1863 that forced banks to operated as undercapitalized agencies, because they were forced to buy government bonds in order to issue currency (but not demand deposits). This crippled the banking system and led to many more runs on banks and contractions than would have occurred without such rules.

Comparing the Canadian experience with the U.S. experience shows how much more stable the Canadian system was, with a more pure system of free banking. Canada didn’t create the Bank of Canada until the late 1930s, and by that time it was the mania of every government on earth to have its own central bank – and there was no longer any international gold payments system.

Second, although there was no Federal Reserve prior to 1913, there was the Bank of England, which acted like a global central bank for all the “gold standard” countries. And the Bank of England was very incompetent in running monetary policy, which is one reason the British Neo-Classical School economists were so critical of the classical pseudo-gold-standard. As the Bank of England induced expansion and contractions in the London financial markets, those markets affected all the rest of the world, New York in particular because of America’s close links with the British Empire. See Walter Bagehot, “Lombard Street” (1873) on “the unnatural system of centralization” and the mismanagement of the Bank of England. Bagehot was the editor of The Economist magazine.

Moreover after 1935, monetary policy was deliberately conducted with a bias never to allow a contraction and to promote a mild and gradual inflation. If you look at a graph of monetary expansion since WW2, many of what would have been contractions before 1913 are just flat spots on a rising chart. This is why Milton Friedman emphasized that it is the 2nd derivative (change in the rate of change) in monetary expansion that affects the growth of nominal GDP after a 6-18 month lag.

So, the bottom line is that I much prefer Ron Paul’s bill (HR 2779) to relax legal tender laws. If I could go all the way to utopia, I would urge a law having Congress make appropriations, budgets, and to assess taxes using the gram of gold as the government’s official unit of account, with a floating rate of exchange between the [thereafter] non-legal-tender F.R.A.U.D. units, which would continue to circulate and probably continue to dominate the financial markets. The U.S. national debt could still be payable in “dollars” but at a floating exchange rate with gold grams.

This might be the way to conform with the 14th Amendment, Section 4, and to pay off the national debt (in “dollars,” but not in gold grams).

Optimal Currency Areas

Indeed, in the literature of “optimal currency areas” it is not clear the whole United States should be a single currency area, much less all of Europe under the Euro. Labor markets in particular could operate more efficiently if wages were paid in local currencies. Michigan right now could experience a currency devaluation and that would help with unemployment.

Financial markets would probably operate more efficiently if prices were quoted in a global currency independent of national governments (e.g., gold grams).

And with floating exchange rates among them all.