Truther follow-up
Before commenting on the economic news, a brief follow-up to last week’s comments about the 9/11 Truthers. It provoked, if not a flood, more than a trickle of emails and bloggy complaints, about evenly divided between the patronizing and the hostile. Perhaps my favorite was an email from someone signing him or herself a variant on Sky, who counseled me to learn patience, and disclosing that 9/11 is a spiritual matter. Nothing makes me want to scream more than being told to be patient; I hate it, for example, when instead of apologizing for a subway delay, the MTA asks us to “please be patient.” Well, no, I don’t feel like it, actually.
And as for “spiritual,” I’m not sure what that means—I grew up under the influence of the Catholic Church, which has left me with an antipathy towards religion of all kinds, and I take spirituality to be some sort of Religion Lite, but I don’t get how obsessing pointlessly over something that happened almost a decade ago is spiritual. But I have been impressed over the years by how often spirituality is often a mask for dissimulated vanity. Its possessors often seem to think themselves more enlightened than the rest of us benighted materialists. Of course, I think I’m more enlightened than most, but I’m out front about that—no false modesty for me.
Anyway, I’ll drop this topic after this. But aside from the details of the 9/11 obsession—the melting point of steel-type arguments—I really don’t get the political point of it. Is American imperial power just a ruse? A trick by a small cabal of plotters? Or something that permeates the structures of global politics, economics, and culture—even the insides of our minds?
And doesn’t it work with some degree of our own acquiescence, even cooperation? As Michel Foucault famously put it, “fascism [is] in us all, in our heads and in our everyday behavior, the fascism that causes us to love power, to desire the very thing that dominates and exploits us.” I’m not comfortable with that use of “fascism,” but certainly the prevailing order derives a lot of its power from the way we’ve internalized it—something that these sorts of conspiracy stories try to avoid, by externalizing everything into neat little plots. Get rid of the plotters, and presumably everything will sort itself out. Well, Dick Cheney is gone, and things go on pretty much as before, folks. Or do the plotters enjoy seamless and leakless transitions of power?
productivity notes
Ok, onto the mundanities of the dismal science. On Thursday morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that productivity rose 3.6% in the first quarter of the year. Productivity is a measure of how much output—measured in the form of inflation-adjusted money—workers can create in an hour of labor. Growth in productivity is what makes possible a rising standard of living over time—though it’s no guarantee of that. That depends on how the gains of productivity are distributed. During the troubled years of the 1970s, productivity growth slowed to a crawl in the U.S., which contributed to the stagflation of the time. Then, sometime around 1996, productivity growth accelerated dramatically, and it’s kept growing at a fairly rapid clip ever since. But aside from a few years in the late 1990s, when there were broadly distributed gains in real wages, most of the gains of that productivity acceleration have gone to the upper orders—CEOs, stockholders, venture capitalists, and the like, and not the workers who actually make and do stuff.
Moreover, the productivity acceleration of the late 1990s was driven by high levels of corporate investment in high-tech capital goods. After the dot.com bubble burst in 2000, however, corporations really cut back on their investment. Since then, productivity gains have mainly come from squeezing the workforce harder while keeping a lid on pay. Normally, productivity growth falls in a recession, as output falls faster than employment. Not this time. Productivity stayed strong in the recession and initially accelerated with the economy’s weak recovery. In fact, productivity growth in the second half of 2009 was some of the strongest on record—but employment was falling, and real wages were stagnant. As a consequence of all this, profits held up remarkably well in the recession and have recovered nicely with only a modest upturn in growth.
Can this continue? Corporations remain very tight-fisted about investing in equipment. You can only increase the rate of explotiation so much before you run out of room to squeeze. The whole profit-maximizing strategy of U.S. capital—of starving the public sector, underspending on education, letting the infrastructure rot—doesn’t have the look of long-term sustainability about it. But it must be conceded that this approach has worked pretty well for the U.S. ruling class over the decades. As long as things don’t start flying apart, and as long as the population continues to play along with the game instead of breaking into open rebellion, they have no incentive to change their approach. Maybe the sense that the approach will turn and bite them in the butt someday is just a form of wish-fulfillment. But it does seem like it’s going to bite them in the butt someday. Too bad it will take more than a few pounds of nonelite flesh, too.
Grecian update
But the big crisis on the world scene these days isn’t in the U.S.—it’s in Europe. The EU and the IMF announced a large joint rescue package for Greece—€110 billion, or almost $150 billion. Calling it a rescue package is more than a little misleading—it’s designed to rescue Greece’s creditors from default, and allow the country to keep borrowing in the coming months while it slashes its budget and drives Greece into a deep recession. This is standard IMF medicine—squeeze everyone so that the financial markets can emerge more or less whole.
But despite that pricey package, the markets have been panicking in recent days on fears that it just won’t do the trick. Many participants are rightly asking how Greece can service its debts if its economy is collapsing. Many are also wondering how the crisis can be kept from spreading to other countries on the periphery of Europe—like Portugal and Spain. If a small country like Greece can cause this much trouble for global finance, what would a much bigger one like Spain do? One doesn’t want to think about that.
At one point on Thursday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 1,000 points, or 10%, an enormous hit. Some of that decline may have been the result of hedge funds selling assets to cover sour bets on Europe—meaning that several hundred points of that 1,000 could have been market technicals, and not true economic panic. But there’s plenty of reason for economic panic as well. While I think the U.S. economy is gradually recovering from its two years of crisis, we’re hardly off to the races. There are some serious structural problems that haven’t really been addressed.
And while many market moralists are presenting the Euroopean problem as one of Mediterranean profligacy, there’s a much more fundamental problem with the whole project of European economic unification. As I’ve said here before. putting poorer countries like Greece and even Spain into the same economic zone as Germany is a recipe for disaster. (Here’s what I said in 1998 on the topic [“Europe’s fateful union”]; it holds up pretty well.) Germany is far more productive than just about any other country in the world, and few can prosper in direct competition with it. Aside from their tremendous productivity advantage, German industry has also kept the lid on German wages, making it an even more formidable competitor for countries on the periphery. It’s hard to see how the eurozone can stay intact, really. But who would buy Spanish or Italian bonds if you thought the whole thing was about to fly apart?
Our own economic and financial crisis was in large part a crisis of the whole neoliberal, hypercapitalist model, which has squeezing the working class at the core of it. But so too is the European crisis. The creation of the euro was a very deliberate neoliberalizing strategy for what the European elite saw as a creaky old system that needed a series of hard kicks to wake up to American and Asian competition. They’ve gotten the kicks, but now the recipients are kicking back (not so much in a conscious, political way, though there’s some of that coming out of Greece, but mostly in a financial crisis sort of way). This should be the terminal crisis of neoliberalism, but neoliberalism doesn’t seem to have gotten the message yet.
April employment
And now a special update prepared for the KPFA and podcast audiences. On Friday morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released the employment report for April. It was surprisingly strong, with hardly a blemish hidden under the surface.
A reminder: the monthly employment report is based on two very large surveys—one of about 300,000 employers, called the establishment or payroll survey, and another of 60,000 households, called, unsurprisingly, the household survey.
The payroll survey showed an increase of 290,000 jobs in April, the best in four years. About a quarter of that gain came from temporary Census jobs, but even allowing for that, there were healthy gains throughout the economy. Most encouraging, perhaps, was a strong gain in manufacturing—its best showing since 1998, and the third-best showing since the factory sector’s strong recovery in 1984. The breadth of gains by industrial sector over the last few months is far more impressive than what we saw in the jobless recoveries of the early 1990s and early 2000s. We’ve now added well over half a million jobs since the December low. Over the previous four months, we’d lost almost that many.
The unemployment rate increased from 9.7% to 9.9%—but even that cloud has a silver lining. (A reminder: to be counted as unemployed you have to be actively looking for work. If you’re not, you’re not counted as unemployed.) The breakdown of the reasons for unemployment in April was interesting. The number of people losing their jobs fell—but apparently enough people were encouraged by the recent improvement in the job market to enter or re-enter the labor force, and start searching for work. And workers are even quitting voluntarily when they don’t yet have another job, another sign of confidence.
I’m not about to strike up “Happy Days Are Here Again,” though. There was no wage growth during the month, which is pretty unusual. And not only is the unemployment rate close to 10%, but long-term unemployment—people who are without work for 27 weeks or more—scored another all-time high in April. The economy is still in a very deep hole, and it’s going to take a long time before we make a dent in these long-term numbers. The improving tone of the job market will reduce what little pressure there is for a public jobs program—but this is exactly wrong, because the chonically jobless need help badly.
Of course, the U.S. economy still suffers some serious structural problems, and there’s a lot of damage still to be repaired. We’ll see in the coming months how well this still-fragile economy reacts to the withdrawal of all the fiscal and monetary stimulus that’s been applied to it. (Parenthetically, though, the next time someone tells you that the stimulus package didn’t work, punch him in the nose.) But longer-term worries aside, it’s good to get some good news out of the monthly employment report for a change.
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Posted on May 12, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Radio commentary, May 8, 2010
Truther follow-up
Before commenting on the economic news, a brief follow-up to last week’s comments about the 9/11 Truthers. It provoked, if not a flood, more than a trickle of emails and bloggy complaints, about evenly divided between the patronizing and the hostile. Perhaps my favorite was an email from someone signing him or herself a variant on Sky, who counseled me to learn patience, and disclosing that 9/11 is a spiritual matter. Nothing makes me want to scream more than being told to be patient; I hate it, for example, when instead of apologizing for a subway delay, the MTA asks us to “please be patient.” Well, no, I don’t feel like it, actually.
And as for “spiritual,” I’m not sure what that means—I grew up under the influence of the Catholic Church, which has left me with an antipathy towards religion of all kinds, and I take spirituality to be some sort of Religion Lite, but I don’t get how obsessing pointlessly over something that happened almost a decade ago is spiritual. But I have been impressed over the years by how often spirituality is often a mask for dissimulated vanity. Its possessors often seem to think themselves more enlightened than the rest of us benighted materialists. Of course, I think I’m more enlightened than most, but I’m out front about that—no false modesty for me.
Anyway, I’ll drop this topic after this. But aside from the details of the 9/11 obsession—the melting point of steel-type arguments—I really don’t get the political point of it. Is American imperial power just a ruse? A trick by a small cabal of plotters? Or something that permeates the structures of global politics, economics, and culture—even the insides of our minds?
And doesn’t it work with some degree of our own acquiescence, even cooperation? As Michel Foucault famously put it, “fascism [is] in us all, in our heads and in our everyday behavior, the fascism that causes us to love power, to desire the very thing that dominates and exploits us.” I’m not comfortable with that use of “fascism,” but certainly the prevailing order derives a lot of its power from the way we’ve internalized it—something that these sorts of conspiracy stories try to avoid, by externalizing everything into neat little plots. Get rid of the plotters, and presumably everything will sort itself out. Well, Dick Cheney is gone, and things go on pretty much as before, folks. Or do the plotters enjoy seamless and leakless transitions of power?
productivity notes
Ok, onto the mundanities of the dismal science. On Thursday morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that productivity rose 3.6% in the first quarter of the year. Productivity is a measure of how much output—measured in the form of inflation-adjusted money—workers can create in an hour of labor. Growth in productivity is what makes possible a rising standard of living over time—though it’s no guarantee of that. That depends on how the gains of productivity are distributed. During the troubled years of the 1970s, productivity growth slowed to a crawl in the U.S., which contributed to the stagflation of the time. Then, sometime around 1996, productivity growth accelerated dramatically, and it’s kept growing at a fairly rapid clip ever since. But aside from a few years in the late 1990s, when there were broadly distributed gains in real wages, most of the gains of that productivity acceleration have gone to the upper orders—CEOs, stockholders, venture capitalists, and the like, and not the workers who actually make and do stuff.
Moreover, the productivity acceleration of the late 1990s was driven by high levels of corporate investment in high-tech capital goods. After the dot.com bubble burst in 2000, however, corporations really cut back on their investment. Since then, productivity gains have mainly come from squeezing the workforce harder while keeping a lid on pay. Normally, productivity growth falls in a recession, as output falls faster than employment. Not this time. Productivity stayed strong in the recession and initially accelerated with the economy’s weak recovery. In fact, productivity growth in the second half of 2009 was some of the strongest on record—but employment was falling, and real wages were stagnant. As a consequence of all this, profits held up remarkably well in the recession and have recovered nicely with only a modest upturn in growth.
Can this continue? Corporations remain very tight-fisted about investing in equipment. You can only increase the rate of explotiation so much before you run out of room to squeeze. The whole profit-maximizing strategy of U.S. capital—of starving the public sector, underspending on education, letting the infrastructure rot—doesn’t have the look of long-term sustainability about it. But it must be conceded that this approach has worked pretty well for the U.S. ruling class over the decades. As long as things don’t start flying apart, and as long as the population continues to play along with the game instead of breaking into open rebellion, they have no incentive to change their approach. Maybe the sense that the approach will turn and bite them in the butt someday is just a form of wish-fulfillment. But it does seem like it’s going to bite them in the butt someday. Too bad it will take more than a few pounds of nonelite flesh, too.
Grecian update
But the big crisis on the world scene these days isn’t in the U.S.—it’s in Europe. The EU and the IMF announced a large joint rescue package for Greece—€110 billion, or almost $150 billion. Calling it a rescue package is more than a little misleading—it’s designed to rescue Greece’s creditors from default, and allow the country to keep borrowing in the coming months while it slashes its budget and drives Greece into a deep recession. This is standard IMF medicine—squeeze everyone so that the financial markets can emerge more or less whole.
But despite that pricey package, the markets have been panicking in recent days on fears that it just won’t do the trick. Many participants are rightly asking how Greece can service its debts if its economy is collapsing. Many are also wondering how the crisis can be kept from spreading to other countries on the periphery of Europe—like Portugal and Spain. If a small country like Greece can cause this much trouble for global finance, what would a much bigger one like Spain do? One doesn’t want to think about that.
At one point on Thursday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 1,000 points, or 10%, an enormous hit. Some of that decline may have been the result of hedge funds selling assets to cover sour bets on Europe—meaning that several hundred points of that 1,000 could have been market technicals, and not true economic panic. But there’s plenty of reason for economic panic as well. While I think the U.S. economy is gradually recovering from its two years of crisis, we’re hardly off to the races. There are some serious structural problems that haven’t really been addressed.
And while many market moralists are presenting the Euroopean problem as one of Mediterranean profligacy, there’s a much more fundamental problem with the whole project of European economic unification. As I’ve said here before. putting poorer countries like Greece and even Spain into the same economic zone as Germany is a recipe for disaster. (Here’s what I said in 1998 on the topic [“Europe’s fateful union”]; it holds up pretty well.) Germany is far more productive than just about any other country in the world, and few can prosper in direct competition with it. Aside from their tremendous productivity advantage, German industry has also kept the lid on German wages, making it an even more formidable competitor for countries on the periphery. It’s hard to see how the eurozone can stay intact, really. But who would buy Spanish or Italian bonds if you thought the whole thing was about to fly apart?
Our own economic and financial crisis was in large part a crisis of the whole neoliberal, hypercapitalist model, which has squeezing the working class at the core of it. But so too is the European crisis. The creation of the euro was a very deliberate neoliberalizing strategy for what the European elite saw as a creaky old system that needed a series of hard kicks to wake up to American and Asian competition. They’ve gotten the kicks, but now the recipients are kicking back (not so much in a conscious, political way, though there’s some of that coming out of Greece, but mostly in a financial crisis sort of way). This should be the terminal crisis of neoliberalism, but neoliberalism doesn’t seem to have gotten the message yet.
April employment
And now a special update prepared for the KPFA and podcast audiences. On Friday morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released the employment report for April. It was surprisingly strong, with hardly a blemish hidden under the surface.
A reminder: the monthly employment report is based on two very large surveys—one of about 300,000 employers, called the establishment or payroll survey, and another of 60,000 households, called, unsurprisingly, the household survey.
The payroll survey showed an increase of 290,000 jobs in April, the best in four years. About a quarter of that gain came from temporary Census jobs, but even allowing for that, there were healthy gains throughout the economy. Most encouraging, perhaps, was a strong gain in manufacturing—its best showing since 1998, and the third-best showing since the factory sector’s strong recovery in 1984. The breadth of gains by industrial sector over the last few months is far more impressive than what we saw in the jobless recoveries of the early 1990s and early 2000s. We’ve now added well over half a million jobs since the December low. Over the previous four months, we’d lost almost that many.
The unemployment rate increased from 9.7% to 9.9%—but even that cloud has a silver lining. (A reminder: to be counted as unemployed you have to be actively looking for work. If you’re not, you’re not counted as unemployed.) The breakdown of the reasons for unemployment in April was interesting. The number of people losing their jobs fell—but apparently enough people were encouraged by the recent improvement in the job market to enter or re-enter the labor force, and start searching for work. And workers are even quitting voluntarily when they don’t yet have another job, another sign of confidence.
I’m not about to strike up “Happy Days Are Here Again,” though. There was no wage growth during the month, which is pretty unusual. And not only is the unemployment rate close to 10%, but long-term unemployment—people who are without work for 27 weeks or more—scored another all-time high in April. The economy is still in a very deep hole, and it’s going to take a long time before we make a dent in these long-term numbers. The improving tone of the job market will reduce what little pressure there is for a public jobs program—but this is exactly wrong, because the chonically jobless need help badly.
Of course, the U.S. economy still suffers some serious structural problems, and there’s a lot of damage still to be repaired. We’ll see in the coming months how well this still-fragile economy reacts to the withdrawal of all the fiscal and monetary stimulus that’s been applied to it. (Parenthetically, though, the next time someone tells you that the stimulus package didn’t work, punch him in the nose.) But longer-term worries aside, it’s good to get some good news out of the monthly employment report for a change.
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Posted on May 12, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Remarkable winning streak
So the trading desks of four big investment banks—Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan Chase—made money every working day last quarter, a 63-day streak. Goldman never made less than $25 million a day, and over $100 million on 35 days.
There is no way that anyone could do this just by being clever—it’s mathematically impossible. There’s too much short-term randomness even in strongly trending markets. And they’re probably not just making it up, Bernie Madoff-style. How are they doing it? Maybe Congress, if it’s interested in more than grandstanding to entertain and divert the masses, could launch a follow-up to the Goldman inquiry. You can do a lot with subpoena power. Inquiring minds await…
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Posted on May 12, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Demonstrate against JPMorgan Chase!
A bunch of good orgs, including the excellent NEDAP, are planning a demonstration against JPMorgan Chase, for all the usual reasons, at their shareholders’ meeting. If you can, please come and be righteous:
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Posted on May 7, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Fresh audio
Just updated my radio archives. The April 22 and 29 shows were available to podcast subscribers, but the web page wasn’t updated. And the May 8 show (yes, that’s tomorrow) is freshly uploaded. Guests: Emily Gould, Rob Weissman, Enrique Diaz-Alvarez, Kert Davies, Mark Weisbrot, Steve Early.
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Posted on April 30, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Radio commentary, April 30, 2010
March on Wall Street
The WBAI studios are on Wall Street, of all places, so I was able to catch a glimpse of the anti-bank demonstration sponsored by the AFL-CIO and a coalition of community groups organized by National People’s Action (Showdown in America). It’s inspiring, but I’m afraid there’s just not the level of popular mobilization necessary to overcome the lobbying power of big finance. The unions are blowing off some steam today, but tomorrow they’ll go back to writing big checks to Democratic politicians and apologizing for their failings. And, I’ve got to say that it was entertaining to see those Goldman guys in the Congressional hotseat the other day, but I’m afraid it was little more than a ritual sacrifice designed to appease an angry electorate. Goldman will probably go on pretty much as before. I hope I’m wrong, of course.
Of course, given the conventions of modern protest, the cops wouldn’t let anyone onto Wall Street—everyone was safely penned onto Broadway, sparing the New York Stock Exchange any unpleasant passersby. A commentary from my 4-year-old son Ivan, who went along: “Why didn’t they go into the banks and yell at the bad people? And no one could see the signs or costumes unless they were looking out the window. And they’d only see their sides!” He’s onto something.
Recovery watch
In the economic news, the recovery continues, with a couple of decent reports coming out of the housing market. Sales of both existing and especially new houses were up nicely in March. Much of the life, it’s hard to say just how much, came from the tax credit for first-time buyers—you do have to wonder if the market can survive the withdrawal of that stimulus. Prices aren’t recovering so quickly. The best measure of house prices we have, the S&P/Case-Shiller index, is up not quite 1% over the last year (though it’s most recent figure is for February, ancient history in these precincts). But much of the gain happened last year; prices in recent months have been pretty flat.
But the trend I’ve noted here over the last few weeks continues—people are buying again. The weekly chain store sales numbers are showing their best gain in years. Appropriately enough, the consumer confidence numbers from the Conference Board are showing an improving mood among the masses—mostly for the future, but perceptions of improvement in the job market were also impressive. It’s hard to say how much of that perceived improvement comes from personal experience and how much from hearing some more upbeat news in the media. But it does look like a recovery is underway. Or so the financial markets believe—at least until the bad news out of Europe (on which much more in a few moments) inspired more prudent sorts to put the champagne back in the chiller for now.
And, in the accurate words of Mohamed El-Erian, head man at Pimco, the world’s largest bondholder:
Aside from the use of the tired “Main Street,” which would never appear on here except in a quote, this formulation can hardly be improved upon. It’s striking to see one of the royalty of finance show more concern about social safety nets than just about anyone in political life.
As I keep pointing out, the history of economies after financial crises is bleak; it typically takes years to mount any kind of sustained recovery. For now, we’re being lifted by tax breaks and deficit spending. But tax breaks expire and the deficit spending is set to be reversed within a year. (And Obama’s deficit commission is getting ready to bring out the really big and sharp knives—though there could be some political obstacles to realizing the agenda.) Our credit system is still a mess, and it would be insane to go back to the model of the 2001–2007 expansion, when debt grew nearly twice as fast as GDP, the most lopsided ratio in modern business cycle history—and despite all that credit juice, it was also the weakest of all the expansions. The tailwinds are pleasant at the moment, but without any serious structural reforms, it’s hard to see how the headwinds won’t be back.
Pacifica idiocy
And now, closer to home. A “member” of Pacifica, one Christopher Bayard Condon (like an assassin, he’s got three names), has proposed a resolution to the Pacifica National Board that would essentially require programmers to take 9/11 conspiracies seriously. It would increase airtime for Truthers, and deem those of us who don’t buy this paranoid nonsense in violation of the Pacifica mission. The KPFK local board has already passed such a resolution, but no one’s paid any attention to it, thank god. In fact, a KPFK producer told me that he wasn’t even aware of it. He, sensibly, has been broadcating critiques of this nuttery. All this Pacifica resolution needs is a board member to introduce it and it’s up for a vote.
First of all, it’s appalling that anyone would contemplate forcing Pacifica producers to embrace a party line. I’d sooner give this all up than obey such a thing. But it’s even worse that there are so many people who take this toxic waste seriously. Not only is it nonsensical in content, it destroys the mind. Obsessions about the melting point of steel and the shape of the nonexistent hole in the Pentagon take on a life of their own—as a commenter on my blog put it, this sort of reasoning becomes quite literally like a paranoid’s pathological mental processes.
We—the political left in general, and Pacifica specically—already have some serious credibility problems among the broad population The last thing we need is further marginalization, especially of the self-imposed kind. As damaging as this sort of nonsense is, it’s also politically destructive.
Don’t take my word for it. Connoisseurs of conspiracy might want to check out a 1998 report on Defense Department declassification procedures, prepared by the consulting firm Booz Allen & Hamilton, posted to the Federation of American Scientists website. They recommend that “[t]he use of the Internet could reduce the unrestrained public appetite for ‘secrets’ by providing good faith distraction material.” As an example of such material, they suggest “Diversion: List of interesting declassified material—i.e. Kennedy assassination data.”
So, consider this, conspiracy theorists: instead of analyzing all the rich material about capitalism and empire on the public record, you’re doing the Pentagon’s work for it by pursuing “distractions.” You’d almost think it’s a conspiracy.
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Posted on April 28, 2010 by Doug Henwood
The Wal-Mart suit revisited
Allow me to plug another fine article by my beloved spouse:
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Posted on April 27, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Frontiers of moral reasoning
Asked by Sen. Tester if Goldman had done anything “wrong” in selling CDOs, Goldman’s Sparks evades the question, saying that wrong “conveys some qualitative sense of doing something inappropriate.” They just made some business decisions that look bad in retrospect.
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Posted on April 27, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Idiocy at Pacifica
This piece of idiocy is about to be voted on by the Pacifica National Board. It’s only going to make me intensify my on-air criticisms of 9/11 nuttery and conspiracism in general.
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Posted on April 23, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Perceptions
Greenberg Quinlan Rosner—a Dem polling firm run by a former Marxist, so it always asks good questions with a strong class angle—reports that public perceptions of the U.S. economy are improving significantly, but with no political impact yet:
http://www.citizenopinion.com/wp-content/files/co04152010-ectrack-FINAL.pdf
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Posted on April 23, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Radio commentary, April 22, 2010
financial “reform”
Our president gave a speech on Thursday in the Great Hall at Cooper Union, the site of Abraham Lincoln’s rather conservative 1860 speech on slavery. Obama’s speech was on a much less elevated topic—financial regulation. He made a lot of appealing sounds, and the financial execs in the front row mostly sat on their hands, but while he was talking, Congress was busy working out compromises—with Wall Street’s army of lobbyists at their sides.
So I’m going to reserve commentary until we see what’s actually in the thing. Will there be a consumer protection agency, or will that be sacrificed on the altar of bipartisanship? And how strict will the regulations on derivatives be—will there be custom-crafted loopholes already pre-written into the legislation? My guess is that the consumer protection agency will at best be notional, and the loopholes will be wide enough to fit a truckload of custom derivatives through—otherwise the Republicans and moderate Dems wouldn’t be going so quitely along with the negotiations. Perhaps I’m being too cynical. We’ll see soon enough.
One of the controversial bits in the prospective legislation is the idea of imposing a special tax on big banks to build up a fund to pay for the next bailout. (The idea has been endorsed by no less orthodox an authority than the IMF.) This does sound in some sense like the routinization of disaster, when instead the emphasis should be on preventing disaster—but I guess it never hurts to be prepared. The Republicans hate the idea, and so does the Obama administration, so word is that this may be the “public option” of financial reform—something for the sacrificial altar.
bailout profits
But, surprisingly, the government looks to be spending a lot less on all the bailouts than initially feared. GM has now paid back its government loans—early. And the Federal Reserve has just turned over almost $50 billion in profits from its 2009 operations to the U.S. Treasury.
The Fed is a curious institution for a government body: it’s entirely self-financing. It buys up government bonds using money it creates out of thin air and pockets the resulting interest payments. Banks who want currency get it from the Fed by turning over valuable interest-earning assets and getting pieces of paper that cost pennies to print in return. The Fed spends whatever it wants on its own operations—it’s never audited—and then hands over what’s left to the Treasury every spring. It never has to ask Congress for money, and its internal workings remain mostly opaque. Nice for them.
In recent years, the Fed’s annual profits have averaged around $25 billion. Last year, it made almost twice that—mainly by buying up mortgage-backed securities in the heat of the financial crisis at beaten-down prices when no one else wanted them. Now that things are recovering, the Fed was able to sell these securities at a profit.
And it looks like the government is spending far less than was initially offered on capital injections to bolster the financial system. (See the IMF document linked to above for details.) Only a bit over half of the announced amount has actually been spent—and, if present trends continue, a lot of what has been spent will be recovered. That’s good news. The bad news is how little has changed. Wall Street is back to its old tricks; it’s not outlandish to assume they’re already cooking up the next crisis.
Goldman in the dock
I’m coming late to this, such are the limitations of a weekly show, but how satisfying it is to see the SEC’s complaint against Goldman Sachs. As everyone probably knows by now, the SEC is accusing Goldman of tricking clients into buying some crappy mortgage securities, ones that were handpicked as likely to go under by another of its clients, hedge fund hotshot John Paulson. To bet against these securities, Paulson needed someone to take the other side of the trade; basically, Goldman brokered a deal so that the buyer’s almost-certain losses would be the source of Paulson’s almost-certain gains. It all worked out for Paulson, or so the SEC says. But Goldman can afford the best lawyers in the world, among them a former top Obama advisor, and the SEC is staffed by civil servants, so it’s quite likely that Goldman will get off lightly or better.
Still, it’s deeply satisfying to see this immensely rich and well-connected firm take a few hits. One wonders, though, why anyone would continue to do business with Goldman if this is how they allegedly treat their clients. It wasn’t all that long ago that Goldman chair Lloyd Blankfein described his firm as doing God’s work. I’m about as secular as they come, but I don’t see that sort of thing in any god’s job description that I know of.
to hell with the Tea Party
Moving on, Jonathan Martin and Ben Smith of Politico.com posted an article on Thursday saying, as Smith put it in his Facebook status update, enough already with the Tea Party. The media is obsessed with these nutters even though their actual numbers are quite small. They even quote Cindy Sheehan as pointing out that they’re getting far more coverage than the antiwar movement ever got, even though that movement was able to turn out hundreds of thousands of people, a hundred or more times as many as the Tea Party has been able to mobilize. Something similar with demos in defense of immigrants’ rights—a recent one in DC turned out many times more people than a Tea Party action ever did, but it was mostly ignored. As a friend points out, a rally in Springfield, Illinois, on Wednesday to protest likely budget cuts in education and social services turned out 15,000—about 15 times as many as a Tea Party a week earlier that got far more media attention.
The TPers represent a fervent minority of Americans, a brand of hard-right anti-government sentiment that is as old as the hills, but is treated as an exciting new phenomenon. Politico.com often publishes some fairly debased political gossip and horserace-type speculation, but thanks to Martin and Smith for doing this. Let’s hope the rest of the media follow suit.
A footnote: liberals have done their fair share of puffing up the Tea Party. They love nothing more than getting hot and bothered over the fascist threat as a way of scaring people into voting for Democrats as our last line of defense against the brownshirts. Yeah, the TP is awful, and a lot of people hate Obama for all the wrong reasons, starting with his skin color, but he’s earned plenty of criticism for the way he serves money and empire.
Oxfam: cowards or hypocrites?
Finally, a quick word about Oxfam America. I got an email the other day from Anuradha Mittal, the excellent director of The Oakland Institute, pointing to an open letter that her institute and several other groups wrote to Oxfam America, protesting Oxfam’s stance in favor of genetically modified foods.
I’m actually more sympathetic to bioengineering than Mittal or, probably, many in the audience, but that’s not what I want to talk about. I invited Oxfam to provide a representative to debate Mittal on this show. Oxfam declined in a rather haughty and dismissive way (press officer Laura Rusu: “Thanks for thinking of us. However, we are not interested in debating Ms. Mittal on her views on GMOs.”). And Rusu sort of denied that they’re promoting genetic engineering. While they don’t have an official position, she said in an email that they think it diverts attention from investment in other, more fruitful areas.
Well, it turns out they’ve got an application into the Gates Foundation for a grant to support their work on the application of biotech in Africa—I’ve seen the document, so I’m not relying on hearsay. So if you’re going to take that position, why not have the nerve to defend it publicly, instead of dissimulating? Huh, Oxfam?
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Posted on April 16, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Fresh audio!
Just posted to my Radio archives:
Links to relevant bios and articles at archive site.
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Posted on April 16, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Letter to the editor
Financial Times – April 16, 2010
Republicans are in the White House
From Mr Doug Henwood.
Sir, Clive Crook’s call (April 12) for a revival of an old-style GOP opposition is a little strange, since Barack Obama himself is a liberal Republican. Or maybe not so liberal a Republican.
Consider the healthcare bill. The individual mandate has its origins in the Nixon administration’s response to Teddy Kennedy’s single-payer bill in the early 1970s. The insurance marketplace has its roots in the American Enterprise Institute’s response to Bill Clinton’s healthcare scheme. Speaking of Mr Clinton, wasn’t it he who said “we’re all Eisenhower Republicans here”? And he wasn’t too happy about it.
The not-so-liberal Republican part is most visible in education policy. President Obama has continued George W. Bush’s “No child left behind” emphasis on testing and charter schools, and has even taken up attacking teachers’ unions.
Arne Duncan, his education secretary, has declared in terms indistinguishable from Milton Friedman’s that Hurricane Katrina was the best thing that ever happened to the New Orleans school system because it furthered that quasi-privatisation agenda.
Who needs “moderate” Republicans in opposition when they’re already in power?
Doug Henwood,
Left Business Observer,
Brooklyn, NY, US
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Posted on April 16, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Radio commentary, April 15, 2010
Recession fatigue (cont.)
I said last week that the preliminary reports on March shopping showed Americans rediscovering their lust to buy, following almost two years of born-again prudence. Those early returns, which were based on sales numbers coming from the major chain stores, have now been confirmed by the official word from the Census Bureau, compiler of the monthly retail sales figures. The Census stats are based on a much broader survey of the retail universe, which includes not only big national names like Target and Wet Seal, but also local chains, Mike’s Main Street Housewares, online retailers, and even museum gift shops. And the Census Bureau tells us that sales rose a strong 1.6% in March—or 0.6% if you leave out autos, which had a very good month. Total sales were up 7.6% from a year earlier—or 6.4% excluding autos. This is a very substantial recovery. It may not be sustainable—on which more in a sec—but for now it looks like Americans have now had enough of austerity.
One reason I wonder how sustainable this is is because I can’t figure out where the money is coming from. The job market, while picking up, is still quite weak, and it looks like people continued paying off more on their credit cards than they took out in new credits in March. So if it’s not fattening paychecks or bigger VISA balances that’s funding this little binge, what is it?
Here’s one possibility. I post these opening commentaries to a blog [i.e., here]. When I asked this question last week, after mulling over the preliminary shopping reports, a reader offered this comment: “Regarding the rebound of consumer spending from my own experience — I spent most of 2009 worried about getting laid off and subsequently saving every penny I could. After it became clear that I wasn’t going to get laid off, I let out a little pent-up demand. I suspect that that a lot of still-employed people did the same — redirecting some would-be savings toward spending.” Could be. The savings rate rose, though not as much as it might have, throughout 2009. Let’s see if it starts heading down again.
And then there are rich folks. In the chain store survey, published I should say by the International Council of Shopping Centers, purveyors of luxury goods had been clocking higher-than average gains since last December. They widened their lead in March. That may be a function both of really rich people opening up their wallets further and the would-be rich indulging their aspirations.
Further evidence of economic recovery: the Naitonal Association of Homebuilders’ monthly survey of builder sentiment put in a sharp rise in April, exceeding expectations. All its components—current sales, expected future sales, and foot traffic from prospective buyers—gained. The index is still deep in the basement, and its latest gain just takes it back to where it was last fall, but this is some of the best news coming out of the housing market in ages. We’ve never had an economic recovery without a housing recovery, so it would be nice if this prerequisite finally fell into place.
Claims hiccup
But not such good news coming out of the job market. There’s much debate over whether the rather strong gain in employment in March was a fluke, or the beginning of a new trend. My guess is that the job market is starting to turn around, but it won’t be a smooth or particularly happy path. One disappointing piece of evidence was released on Thursday morning—the weekly jobless claims numbers, filed by people who’ve just lost their jobs and signed up for unemployment benefits. Those rose last week by a surprising 24,000, the second consecutive weekly increase. These numbers are volatile—for example, it’s not easy to adjust for the effects of the Easter holiday. But even if you take the four-week average, which smooths out the volatility, there was also a second consecutive increase—though much smaller in magnitude. I don’t think this is a sign that the labor market is starting to fall apart again—but it is a sign that this won’t be an easy road to recovery.
Finally, in honor of April 15, a few words on some work by the excellent folks at Citizens for Tax Justice. The Tea Partiers are all in a rage by the alleged tax increases imposed by Obama and the Democrats. Aand they’re not the only ones, since over half of Americans think that taxes have gone up over the past year. The truth is exactly the opposite: as CTJ points out, the current regime has cut taxes for 98% of working families and individuals—by an average of $1,158. For a change, those in the top 1% are not the biggest beneficiaries. Fewer than 1 in 3 of them got any cut at all, and their cut was smaller in dollar terms than the next 19% of the income distribution. The tax cuts were skewed towards the middle and bottom of the income distribution. Why does almost no one know that?
Tea, anyone?
Speaking of the Tea Partiers, a couple of polls out this week (one, two) confirm what we already knew: TP activists, meaning people who’ve gone to rallies or donated money, tend to be whiter, righter, better off, more pious, and more male than the rest of the population. One of the things that set them off: they think that Obama is taking their money and giving it to the poor and the black. As we know, he’s not. Theirs is a resentment of the privileged, not an expression of working class anger. In other words, they’re not the good guys, or even reachable by the good guys, as some folks on the left have suggested.
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Posted on April 14, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Fresh audio
Just posted to my radio archive:
April 8, 2010 Diane Ravitch, former conservative educational reformer turned critic of the privatization agenda and author of The Death and Life of the Great American School System, on the awfulness of the now-bipartisan scheme of testing, charters, union-busting, etc.
April 3, 2010 (KPFA version) Ann Harrison, labor economist at Berkeley, on the effects of the anti-sweatshop campaign on Indonesian footwear workers (paper here) • Steven Hill, author of Europe’s Promise, on the Old World as an economic model for the U.S.
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Posted on April 11, 2010 by Doug Henwood
Radio commentary, April 8, 2010
Just one guest up on today’s show, Diane Ravitch, the former conservative educational reformer turned critic of the whole testing and privatization agenda that is now not only the province of the Republican party, but the Obama administration as well.
economic news
Since I want to say a few words about Ravitch and education before playing the interview, only a few brief comments on the economic news. One, it looks like American consumers are going back to their freespending ways. They haven’t yet reached the point of irrational exuberance, but the preliminary reports on shopping in March suggest that it was one of the best months in a decade. How people are funding this is beyond me. The job market is still weak, with poor prospects for serious recovery. Household blaance sheets still stink, with the asset side down for most middle-income families (their principal asset is typically their house, whose price may well still be sinking) and the liability side still high (mortgage and credit card debt, shrinking mildly but from a very elevated level). It’s a little scary, actually. I’ve been sounding off a lot about how our elite has learned nothing from the crisis; now it’s looking like everyone else is in the same boat.
Oh, and Greece is back in trouble again. A couple of weeks ago, the EU announced some sort of rescue package for Greece, but aside from an austerity program to be imposed on the Greek masses, there wasn’t much substance to it. Now the markets are back to selling Greek bonds and making life miserable for that country. It looks like Greece, unlike the USA, doesn’t have the luxury of learning nothing from crisis—though my guess is that the U.S. exemption won’t last forever.
education
Ok, now to Diane Ravitch. Diane Ravitch is a historian of eduation, and an education policy specialist. She got famous for her conservative ties—she served in the George H.W. Bush adminsitration and found herself signing on with the whole Republican schools agenda: choice, testing, and privatization. Several years ago, she had a change of heart and mind of the sort that’s very rare in public life. She realized that the policies she’d been promoting were not only ineffective, they were destructive.
She’s now out with a new book, The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education, published by Basic. It’s a very good book. It’s a detailed, smart, yet very readable analysis of the controversies around public education today, written with a historian’s sense that all this didn’t begin the day before yesterday.
Before playing the interview, recorded earlier in the week, I want to underscore a couple of points. First, while the whole testing and choice agenda, one that ultimately tends towards the privatization of the public school system, was once a Republican obsession, it’s now become a bipartisan affair. The Obama administration hasn’t merely continued the Bush education agenda—in many ways, they’ve intensified it. With the Republicans, it’s all-too-easy to be scandalized by the notion of eduation policy being set by absolute yahoos, who not only don’t read books, but are suspicious of those who do. (And by that I don’t mean to deny that there are serious conservative intellectuals—there are. I’m thinking srrictly of politicians like George W. Bush and his cabinet, and most of the Republican Congressional delegation.) But Obama is far from a yahoo, and so too most of the people who surround him. So why are these non-yahoos pursuing such a yahoo agenda?
Though not yahoos, they are a bunch of centrist technocrats. Technocrats are usually obsessed with what they like to call “metrics,” but they’re pushing policies, like school choice, charter schools, and vouchers, that have absolutely no support in experience. There’s no evidence that they imrpove educational outcomes. The only reasons I can think of for this now bipartisan consensus is that privatizing schools is a way of saving money, and that the whole notion of choice and competition fits in nicely with reigning bourgeois ideology. Note that the business and political elite that is pushing this agenda doesn’t, for the most part, send its own kids to these public schools. They send their kids to private schools, with rigorous traditional curricula, and, in many cases, a “progressive” approach to education. A regime of basic skills and military discipline isn’t good enough for their kids—just for the masses. Maybe that’s another reason for this agenda: producing better cogs for the economic machine. But it’s going to make us dumber.
During the interview, I mention the similarity of Education Secretary Arne Duncan’s comments on Hurricane Katrina’s beneficial effects on the public school system to those of right-wing icon Milton Friedman’s. I’m not exaggerating. In January, Duncan called Katrina “the best thing that happened to the education system in New Orleans.” That’s because it forced charter schools and the rest of the agenda onto the city. And here’s what Milton Friedman wrote in the Wall Street Journal in December 2005: “Most New Orleans schools are in ruins, as are the homes of the children who have attended them. The children are now scattered all over the country. This is a tragedy. It is also an opportunity to radically reform the educational system.” Well, Friedman posthumously got that opportunity. Who could have guessed that a Democratic administration would be so enthusiastically pushing the program. Obama has erased what was one of the surviving major differences between the two parties, education policy.
And second, Ravitch writes and talks about the central role played by a handful of very rich foundations in pushing this agenda. The sinister role of foundations, unaccontable bodies run by rich people and their hired hands, in public life, is rarely talked about. Part of the reason for that is that many of the people who might talk about them, and many of the forums that might publicize their talk, are on the foundation dole, or would like to be. I’m not. And I’ll never miss an opportunity to point out how toxic these things are.
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