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Wednesday, February 28, 2007
Indian Equivalent of Bum Fights? Slum Tours
Here is info on one company, including a price list, less than $7 for a 2.5 hour tour and about $15 for a 4.5 hour tour.
Here is a newspaper article about slum tours in New Delhi.
Interesting Fact of the Day III
Carpe Diem from Bangalore!
Interesting Fact of the Day II
Between 2003 to 2005, in a period of only two years, U.S. exports to Inida tripled from $5 billion to $15 billion, and in 2006, it is estimated that exports to Inida will exceed $19 billion!
We hear a lot about outsoucring TO India, but hear as much about our exploding exports of U.S. merchandise and services TO India.
For example, in "The World is Flat," Thomas Friedman describes the "24/7 Call Center," a typical call center in Banglaore (where I am currently visiting):
"All the computers are running Microsoft Windows, with chips designed by Intel. The phones are from Lucent (now Alcatel-Lucent). The air-conditioning is by Carrier, and even the bottled water is by Coke. In addition, 90% of the shares in 24/7 are owned by U.S. investors. So even with the outsourcing of some service jobs from the U.S. to Inida, India's growing economy is creating a huge demand for many more Amercian goods and services."
Interesting Fact of the Day
~From "The World is Flat" by Thomas Friedman
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
Philanthropy Hits New Record High
1. The number of individual donations of $100 million or more hit a record in 2006.
2. In 2006, there were 21 donations of $100 million or more by individuals to universities, hospitals and charities, compared to 11 in 2005.
3. The philanthropy of the country's 60 most generous givers hit a record $7 billion in 2006, up from $4.3 billion the year before.
Read more here in USA Today.
Gore's Inconvenient Truth: He's an Energy Glutton
Last August alone, Gore burned through 22,600 kWh—guzzling more than twice the electricity in one month than an average American family uses in an entire year. As a result of his energy consumption, Gore’s average monthly electric bill topped $1,359.
Since the release of An Inconvenient Truth, Gore’s energy consumption has increased from an average of 16,200 kWh per month in 2005, to 18,400 kWh per month in 2006.
Gore’s extravagant energy use does not stop at his electric bill. Natural gas bills for Gore’s mansion and guest house averaged $1,080 per month last year. In total, Gore paid $30,000 in combined electricity and natural gas bills for his Nashville home in 2006.
Read more here from the Tennessee Center for Policy Research.
Monday, February 26, 2007
Impressions of Madrid After 4 Days
2. Lots of smokers, they are everywhere, this is a smoker's paradise.
3. Lots of olives, they are everywhere, and they are far higher quality than what we get in the U.S.
4. Free olives at almost every bar, and free tapas at every bar - olives, potato chips, spanish omelette (tortilla), small sandwiches, nut mixes, etc., included in the price of drinks.
5. Lots of facial piercings.
6. Not very many Internet cafes, I haven't seen one!
7. Very efficient subway system, and cheap (1 euro).
8. Accordions everywhere, on the subways, in the subway stations, all around downtown.
9. Excellent beer, wine and cheese, and of course olives.
10. Lots of books and lots of reading, more than the U.S. I think. Homes and apartments have lots more books than in the U.S., and there are lots of people reading books on the subway. In the U.S., it seems more common that people are reading newspapers on subways and trains.
Sunday, February 25, 2007
Why Should We Complain About Overvalued Dollar?
George Mason economist Don Bodreaux makes a good point that Americans are beneficiaries of an overvalued dollar vs. the yen or yuan, so why should we complain about bargain prices for Chinese and Japanese goods?
There's an even deeper reason why Americans should not tolerate Uncle Sam accusing foreign governments (like China and Japan) of undervaluing their currencies. Such undervaluing -- if, indeed, it occurs -- benefits Americans.
Keeping in mind that it is difficult to determine whether or not a government truly is keeping the value of its currency too low relative to the dollar, let's assume (for argument's sake) that the Chinese government really is doing so.
How does it achieve this outcome? Answer: The Chinese government must buy up dollars and keep them out of circulation. By reducing the supply of dollars on foreign-exchange markets, the value of the dollar rises relative to other currencies, including that of the Chinese yuan.
In other words, the value of the yuan falls against the dollar.
Now ask: How does the Chinese government buy these dollars? It can do so only by taxing its citizens, either directly (such as by raising their income taxes) or indirectly through inflation -- simply printing new yuan -- or deficit financing. Each of these policies transfers money from the pockets of Chinese citizens to the coffers of the Chinese government. This government then uses these yuan to buy up dollars.
The ultimate result is that the Chinese government forces Chinese citizens to subsidize the consumption of Americans and other peoples who import goods from China. The Chinese people either pay higher taxes or suffer inflation so that Chinese exporters can sell goods to foreigners at artificially low prices.
Why should Americans complain? The real victims of such currency manipulation are the Chinese people. Americans are beneficiaries.
Stepping on the Scale Exposes Union Flab
When that is more than the labor in question produces, some workers who are perfectly capable become "unemployable" only because of wages set above the level of their productivity. In the short run — which is what matters to politicians and to union leaders, who both get elected in the short run — workers who are already on the payroll may get a windfall gain before the market adjusts.
But, sooner or later, the chickens come home to roost. They have been coming home to roost big time in the automobile industry, where hundreds of thousands of jobs have been lost over the years. It is not that people don't want automobiles. Toyota is selling plenty of cars made in its American factories with non-union labor.
From economist Thomas Sowell´s recent column Priceless Politics III.
MP: Like stepping on the bathroom scale, the ruthless forces of the market alway eventually expose economic flab and inefficiency. And although you can maybe avoid stepping on the scale in the short run, you cannot avoid the scale in the long run.
The market forces of supply and demand, along with a strong dose of globalization, finally forced the UAW to step on the scale, and guess what? Union wages and compensation are way too high, and union productivity is way too low, according to the scale. And like the bathroom scale, the market doesn´t lie, it always provides accurate and truthful information, as painful as it might be.
Bottom Line: The UAW is probably the most successful union in U.S. history, at achieving both higher-than-market wages and below-market productivity for its members, at least in the short run. But that very union success created the seeds of a powerful destruction that we are witnessing today, and in the long run that very union success is destroying thousands and thousands, and maybe millions of union jobs, and is destroying many of the very companies that employs its members (GM, Ford and Chrysler). As Sowell points out, the chickens have come home to roost, or the UAW finally had to step on the scale.
Top Oscar Picks from Actual Betting on Intrade
Best Director: Martin Scorsese 90%
Best Supporting Actor: Eddie Murphy 60%
Best Supporting Actress: Jennifer Hudson 81%
Best Actress: Helen Mirren 94%
Bestor Actor: Forest Whitaker 82%
Best Picture: The Departed 47%
Other contracts:
Hillary Clinton to be Democratic nominee, about 50%
Hillary Clinton to be President, 2008: about 28%
Chance of U.S. economy in recession 2007: 16.5%
Saturday, February 24, 2007
Quote of the Day
Thomas Sowell, in his recent column Priceless Politics II.
Friday, February 23, 2007
Clinton: Windfall Profits on the Lecture Circuit
See a list of his speeches and fees here, minimum Clinton fee is $100,000, maximum is $400,000 and average is probably about $150,000 to $175,000.
His income in 2005 was about $8 million from speeches. And you thought CEOs were overpaid!
Thursday, February 22, 2007
Problems with the Govt. Savings Rate
Another problem with the saving rate is that when consumers buy durables - think cars, furniture and appliances - the spending is counted right away even though payments will be made over time. Amortizing these purchases would push up the saving rate another 2 percentage points.
From economists Brian Wesbury and Robert Stein at First Trust Portfolios.
People Trade, Not Countries
From George Mason economist Walter Williams' most recent column.
MP: Walter Williams makes an obvious, but often overlooked point, that individual American consumers and individual U.S. companies buy imported foreign products, and private U.S. firms sell and export products and services to private foreign consumers and private foreign companies. When we hear all of the media hysteria about the "U.S. trade deficit" with the rest of the world, or with individual countries like China or Japan, we lose sight of the fact that it was voluntary, individual decisions on a daily basis in the marketplace by U.S. consumers and firms that led to the trade deficit.
Look at the tags and labels on your clothing, and you'll find that you voluntarily purchased clothing produced by workers and private firms in China, Mexico, India, Brazil or Bangladesh, etc., which contributed to the "trade deficit" with those countries, but obviously made you better off. Or if you took a vacation to Canada, Mexico or Europe, that contributed to the "trade deficit" with those countries, but made you better off.
Bottom Lines: 1) People trade, not countries and 2) Restrictions on trade are restrictions on people.
Corporate Social Responsibility: Indian IT Industry
The IT industry’s primary obligation is to its shareholders and customers. It will be doing its bit for the country as long as it does this with efficiency and excellence. Of course, corporations, like citizens may want to do good for the society they are a part of. But they have no moral or legal obligation to do so. In a country where a communal socialist government is not only unwilling to unshackle restrictive labour laws that hurt both employers and employees but is also attempting to impose community-based quotas on private companies, the use of the word obligation must be treated with extraordinary care.
From The India Economy Blog.
Let Sirius and XM Merge
Read more of the article "No Ear Ache: Let Sirius and XM Merge" here.
20th Century's Most Influential Libertarian
Milton Friedman was never a politician. He could never make things happen. He could only attempt to persuade his fellow citizens and their leaders, making himself an exemplar of the virtues of the truly liberal intellectual. Because of him, the world is a freer and better place.
From "The Life and Times of Milton Friedman: Remembering the 20th century's most influential libertarian," in the March edition of Reason Magazine.
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Indian Newspapers Are Booming
"India has some 300 big newspapers, with a combined circulation of 157m last year—a rise of 12.9% on 2005."
Quote of the Day
Entrepreneurs are the heroes of our world. Despite the risks, the hard work, the hostility from society, the envy from neighbors, and state regulations, they keep on creating, they keep on producing and trading. Without them, nothing would be there.
~Johan Norberg, "Entrepreneurs Are the Heroes of the World," from Cato's Letter.
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
Forbes Magazine's Best Cities for Jobs
Top 5 cities for jobs are:
1. Raleigh
2. Phoenix
3. Jacksonville
4. Orlando
5. Wash DC
At the bottom, New Orleans ranks #99 and Detroit ranks #100.
Thanks to Kristin Reardon.
Politics is Priceless
They see prices as just obstacles or nuisances, instead of seeing them as messages conveying underlying realities that are there, whether or not prices are allowed to function. What prices are telling San Francisco is that municipal golf courses cost more than they are worth -- not in my opinion, but in the actions of people who are spending their own hard-earned money. But what politician wants to hear that? Politics is priceless.
~Thomas Sowell, writing about San Francisco's 6 municipal golf courses, which are all losing money, and the hand-wringing over what to do about it.
Monday, February 19, 2007
Cash of the Future? Your Cell Phone
Mobiles are used to buy lots of things in Asia. Earlier this month Visa and SK Telecom, South Korea's leading mobile company, announced the commercial launch of a phone-payments system aimed initially at 30,000 subscribers. In Japan hundreds of thousands of transactions, from buying railway tickets to picking up groceries, already take place every day with customers passing their handsets across a device like that pictured above. Payments are confirmed with a sound like the bell of an old cash register.
How To Fire An Incompetent Teacher? Not Easy
Is It Any Wonder the Big 3 Are in Trouble?
Toyota 28 vehicles/worker
GM 25
Ford 22
VW 15
Chrysler 12.5
2. Toyota produces about the same number of cars as GM with 15% fewer workers.
3. Toyota produces roughly twice as many cars per worker as Ford or Chrysler.
Sunday, February 18, 2007
The Sugar Swindle
This is a classic case of a narrow, vocal lobby — sugar growers — benefiting at the expense of the larger economy. The latest victim of high-priced sweeteners is Atlanta-based Coca-Cola Enterprises Inc., the largest bottler of Coca-Cola products, which announced last week that it would cut 3,500 jobs because of a $1.1-billion loss in 2006. Other soft-drink makers, confectioners and food companies also pay a steep price for the complex system of price supports and import quotas aimed at protecting U.S. sugar growers by insulating them from global market realities.
From today's LA Times, thanks to Club for Growth.
MP: The current world price of sugar is about 11 cents per pound, and the U.S. price is about 21 cents per pound, because of protectionist U.S. trade policy that protects inefficient domestic sugar beet farmers from more efficient sugar cane farmers in other countries.
Steve Jobs Blasts Teacher Unions
From the Houston Chronicle, via Club for Growth.
Realtor Shakeout
When David Lereah, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, addressed the group's convention in New Orleans in November, he got one of the biggest bursts of applause by predicting there would be fewer Realtors around in a year. Mr. Lereah said in an interview that he expects membership in the trade group to decrease by about 6% to 8% from the record of nearly 1.4 million reached in 2006.
From the WSJ article "Amid Slump, Real-Estate AgentsHang Up Their Blazers."
Saturday, February 17, 2007
What's Your House Worth?
From the current issue of Fortune Magazine.
Get a "zestimate" here of your house, or your neighbor's house, or your boss's house.
Forget the World Bank, Try Wal-Mart
Act locally, think globally: Shop Wal-Mart.
From Michael Strong, CEO and co-founder of FLOW.
Watch a 5-minute interview of Michael Strong on Bloomberg's Money and Politics, via Cafe Hayek.
The Sad Irony of Unions
~George Mason economist Russ Roberts in today's LA Times
MP: Empirical evidence shows that industries with the largest union wage premiums are precisely the industries with the largest declines in the employment of unionized workers. The tradeoff then is short-run gains of above-market wages for long-run losses of employment for unionized workers. And the other sad irony is the more successful unions are in the short-run, the worse off they and their industry will be in the long-run. Exhibit A: UAW and GM, Ford and Chrysler.
Friday, February 16, 2007
Quote of the Day
~Arthur Godfrey
Incentives Matter: Bowling vs. Income Taxes
Under a progressive income tax system, you get penalized, not rewarded, for being successful, because the more income you earn, the higher the tax rate you pay, currently up to 35%, and it's been as high as 91% in the 1950s and 1960s, and 70% in the 1970s.
If we kept score in bowling the way we tax income, we would subtract points for a spare or strike.
If we taxed income the way we scored bowling, we would have a regressive tax system and would reduce the tax burden for the most successful workers, not increase it.
More on Income Inequality
The American dream is not broken. Our economic system, however flawed with perceptions of inequality, attracts people of all abilities from around the world. People who aspire to be computer programmers, financiers, gardeners, and taxicab drivers all gravitate toward America. Parents who hope that their children may have a chance to do well and amass a small fortune come to America.
They come not because they worry about income inequality; they come precisely because they do not.
From economist Diana Furchtgott-Roth in today's NY Sun.
Women Are Chokers?
If you have access to the World Wide Web, you'll have no problem finding theories, evidence, counter evidence, and polemics galore on this subject. Here I just want to talk about one bit of evidence regarding one of the many factors that might be in play: Women—especially high-achieving women—choke under pressure.
Read more here from "Armchair Economics: Economics and Everyday Life" author Steven E. Landsburg's latest Slate column.
Quote of the Day II
~John Fund in yesterday's WSJ
Capitalist-Friendly Harvard University
From the Harvard Crimson newspaper, via Greg Mankiw's blog.
Quote of the Day
~Nobel economist Edward Prescott in yesterday's WSJ.
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Informal Economy in Latin America: 50% Workforce
Is it any surprise that of the 13 million Peruvians of working age, 2.3 million work in the private sector formal economy, 1 million work in the public sector formal economy, and nearly 10 million work in the informal economy?
Read more here in today's Miami Herald, "Informal economy proves hard to control: About half of Latin America's urban workforce toils in the informal economy despite efforts to bring them under greater government oversight."
Quotes of the Day
"I didn't do it, nobody saw me do it, you can't prove anything."
~Bart Simpson
Why is U.S. Health Care So Expensive?
The reason the system has been so resistant to change is that lots of powerful interests do very nicely with things just the way they are.
Although doctors, hospitals, insurers and drug companies say they, too, want things to change, any comprehensive reform would reduce their incomes and their profits.
For example, the American Medical Association hopes no one will notice that American doctors make a lot more money than doctors elsewhere -- roughly twice as much. The average incomes of $274,000 for specialists and $173,000 for general practitioners are, respectively, 6.6 and 4.2 times those of the average patient. The rate in the other countries is 4 and 3.2.
MP: In "Capitalism and Freedom," Milton Friedman describes the American Medical Association as the "strongest trade union in the United States" and documents the ways in which the AMA vigorously restricts competition to achieve above-market income.
Pearlstein cites a recent study by McKinsey Global Institue that shows that "the U.S. spends approximately $480 billion ($1,600 per capita) more on health care than other OECD countries and that additional spending is not explained by a higher disease burden.
Instead, MGI found that the overriding cause of high U.S. health care costs is the failure of the intermediation system — payers, employers, and government — to provide sufficient incentives to patients and consumers to be value–conscious in their demand decisions, and to regulate the necessary incentives to promote rational use by providers and suppliers."
MP: Consumers of health care pay only 14% of health care costs out-of-pocket, and being insulated from the full burden of costs, there is no incentive to be cost conscious. If consumers aren't cost conscious, the providers of health care are much less likely to be cost conscious.
Recipe for Low Unemployment Not Complicated
From today's WSJ:
Europe just got its best jobless report in a very long time. The bad news: In a decade when record numbers of people found work in the rich world, Europe's best is an unemployment rate of 7.5%, significantly higher than America's 4.6% or that of any other developed economy.
The Old World offers a useful model of what not to do. Its largest economies -- Germany, France and Italy -- have shunned a policy mix that has enabled English-speaking and Nordic countries to reduce their jobless rolls.
Rigid job protection laws have the perverse effect of keeping people out of work. Germany and France are generous with benefits, lax about getting the unemployed off the dole and inflexible on hiring and firing. Such laws discourage companies from hiring and they discriminate against the jobless by raising the bar to enter the workforce; women and minorities are disproportionately hit.
The recipe isn't complicated: Reduce taxes to reduce wage costs, tighten rules on government benefits, loosen up employment protection laws.
MP: In Europe, a 7.5% unemployment is celebrated as the best unemployment rate in a decade. In the U.S. a 6% unemployment in 2002-2003 was dismissed by the media as a "jobless recovery." With an jobless rate of Michigan's just slightly above 7%, it's called a "single state recession."
Wednesday, February 14, 2007
Dollar Coins Make Debut Today
The American dollar is now one of the smallest-value banknotes remaining in circulation in the world. Thirteen European nations use one- and two-euro coins, worth $1.32 and $2.64 respectively, and the smallest bill there is five euros, or $6.60.
Japan circulates a 500-yen coin, worth $4.14, with the smallest bill worth 1,000 yen, or $8.28. Most other Western nations have similar value levels for their largest coins and smallest bills. The most widely used coin in the United States, of course, is just 25 cents.
Paradoxically, Sacagawea coins are popular in countries like Ecuador that use American currency.
Dollar coins cost about 20 cents each to make, but last for up to 30 years; bills cost only about 4 cents each, but must be replaced every 18 to 22 months.
Maybe it work this time, the Fed has ordered 300 million dollar coins to be minted.
WSJ: Walk-in Retail Health Clinics
For people who aren't insured or have high-deductible policies, the retail health clinics -- run by companies such as MinuteClinic, Take Care Health Systems and RediClinic -- can offer significant savings. Many minor ailments are treated for $49 to $59, significantly less than at many doctors' offices.
MinuteClinic, the biggest chain, has 160 clinics and plans to open another 300 this year. Take Care Health, the next largest chain, has 36 clinics and plans to open another 250 this year.
One appeal of the clinics is that they post prices for services, such as treating bronchitis or giving a flu shot. Such information is rarely seen in physicians' offices or hospital emergency rooms, and consumer advocates have been pressing for more price transparency.
For many consumers, convenience is the main appeal of the clinics; for example, on a stop in for a strep test, a customer was diagnosed, given a prescription for an antibiotic and had it filled at the pharmacy -- all in 20 minutes.
See my article "Deregulate Health Care, Bring Back House Calls."
A Portrait of the Economy
The economy is still riding a wave of productivity growth, built on the winds of technological change. Computer chips are still getting faster, cheaper and more efficient. Software is becoming more powerful and telecommunication advances are moving at warp speed.
Free-market capitalism is not perfect. But it remains the single most efficient and powerful system for creating wealth, reducing poverty and developing less wasteful ways of organizing output and consuming resources.
From "A Portrait of the Economy," by BRIAN S. WESBURY in today's WSJ.
Who Sells Gas, And For What?
Fact: In reality, fewer than 3% of the more than 112,000 convenience stores selling gasoline are owned and operated by major oil companies. Convenience stores sell an estimated 80% of the gasoline purchased in the United States, and roughly 60% of these stores are one-store operations, owned by independent entrepreneurs.
Myth: One in 11 consumers (9%) say that gasoline retailers make more than $1 per gallon in profit, 30% of consumers age 18 to 49 believe that gas stations make 50 cents or more in retail profits per gallon of gasoline, and 2/3 of that group believe that gas stations make 10 cents or more per gallon in profits.
Fact: After factoring in all expenses, including credit card fees, the real average profit per gallon is closer to 1 cent.
From a press release from the National Association of Convenience Stores.
Collective Wisdom of Markets
It is the latest iteration of one of the most important economic developments of modern times - trading on the future.
Over the last few years, Intrade — with headquarters in Dublin, where the gambling laws are loose — has become the biggest success story among a new crop of prediction markets.
It has also been remarkably clairvoyant. Heading into the 2004 presidential election, Intrade’s odds correctly forecast the outcome in all 50 states.
Current odds for the U.S. 2008 presidential election on Intrade:
Democratic Nomination for President
Hillary Clinton 49%
Obama 21%
Edwards 13%
Republic Nomination for President
McCain 36%
Giuliani 23%
Romney 18%
President 2008
Clinton 26%
McCain 16%
Giulian 14%
Obama 11%
President 2008 by Party
Democrat 57%
Republican 42%
Odds that U.S. economy will go into a recession in 2007: 20%
Wanna bet? Open an account on Intrade.
Tuesday, February 13, 2007
Why Lawrence Summers Was Fired from Harvard
One possible reason is the greater variablity theory, i.e. women and men are equally intelligent on average, but male intelligence has greater variability than female intelligence (see graph above), and therefore there are more male geniuses AND male idiots. To be sucessful at MIT in engineering and science, you have to be in the extreme right-hand tail of the distribution for intelligence, i.e. 3-4 standard deviations above average; and in the range of 3-4 standard deviations above the mean, women are underrepresented and men are overrepresented. In that case, women would be underrepresented in super-competitive science and engineering departments.
NOTE: This was one of two reasons given by Summers, in addition to discrimination. Here is what Summers said:
It does appear that on many, many different human attributes-height, weight, propensity for criminality, overall IQ, mathematical ability, scientific ability-there is relatively clear evidence that whatever the difference in means-which can be debated-there is a difference in the standard deviation, and variability of a male and a female population.
If one supposes, as I think is reasonable, that if one is talking about physicists at a top twenty-five research university, one is not talking about people who are two standard deviations above the mean. And perhaps it's not even talking about somebody who is three standard deviations above the mean. But it's talking about people who are three and a half, four standard deviations above the mean in the one in 5,000, one in 10,000 class.
Quote of the Day
~Economist Lawrence Summers, ex-President of Harvard University
Trade for 2006
1. U.S. exports of goods increased by 14.42% in 2006 from $894 billion to $1,023 billion, thanks in part to the weak dollar and strong demand for our capital goods, industrial supplies and consumer goods.
2. U.S. imports of goods increased by 10.85% in 2006 from $1677 to $1859 billion.
3. U.S. exports of services increased by 8.8% (from $380b to $414b) vs. an 8.5% increase in service imports ($314b to $341b).
Despite the greater percentage change in exports vs. imports for both goods and services in 2006, the overall trade deficit increased by 6.7% to $764 billion in 2006, because the starting level of imported goods in 2005 ($1677 billion) was so much greater than the starting value for exported goods ($894 billion).
Patron Saint of Blogging: Milton Friedman
The beauty of blogging is self regulation at its very best.
The “blogosphere” is like a little experimental universe validating consumer choice vs. regulation—and consumer choice has won a colossal victory.
Left to the free market of ideas and instant reader feedback, good writing, quality and reliability in blogging secures a readership and reputation solely on merit.
Friedman should be the patron saint of the Age of Blogging: people with brains, networks, and powers of self-expression don't wait for journalism degrees anymore to have an impact.
Mad Money: How to Lose Your Money
Bottom Line: Buy and hold indexed funds from Vanguard or Fidelity, and watch Mad Money for entertainment purposes only. After taxes and expenses, you'll beat 97% of all actively traded funds.... not bad.
Monday, February 12, 2007
Quote of the Day
By adding money to, or subtracting money from, the US banking system, the Fed can impact the economy in the short-term, and influence the level of interest rates. But printing money creates no lasting wealth. If it did, counterfeiting would be legal and no nation on earth would experience poverty.
From "Monday Morning Outlook" by Brian S Wesbury; Chief Economist, First Trust Portfolios
Consumer Sovereignty, UK Style
Last Thursday, the day of the Great Snow, neither our scheduled rubbish collection nor any postal delivery took place, but our newsagent managed to struggle through the arctic conditions – well, the four inches of crunchy white stuff on the ground – to deliver our papers at 7am. The schools in our area were all closed, but every single shop and supermarket was open for business at the normal time.
There is a certain common theme in the way that government-run public services treat you, as opposed to the ones that have to compete for your business (and whose survival depends on pleasing the consumer).
Thanks to Bob Houbeck for the tip.
Significant Income Mobility
The bottom row tracks those in the lowest-income quintile in 1968, and shows that only 41.6% of that group stayed there for two decades, and almost 60% had moved up to a higher quintile, and more than 34% had moved to one of the three highest quintiles.
Among those in the next-to-lowest income quintile in 1968, almost 75% had moved up by one or more income group between 1968 and 1991.
The top row tracks those in the highest-income quintile in 1968, and shows that only about 47% of those individuals were in that same top quintile 23 years later, and 53% had moved down by one or more quintiles; 7% to the lowest quintile.
Bottom Line: There is significant movement up and down the income categories over time. The "top 5%" or "top 10%" or "the rich" are not closed groups, like a country club that is not accepting new members. Most workers start in one of the low income quintiles when they are young, make it into one of the top quintiles at the peak of their career, and move back to a lower income quintile in retirement.
Why Europe Lags Behind the U.S.: Dynamism
Europe's root problem is a dearth of such economic dynamism. Germany, Italy and France possess less dynamism than do the U.S. Far fewer firms break into the top ranks in the former, and fewer employees are reported to have jobs with extensive freedom in decision-making -- which is essential at companies engaged in novel, and thus creative, activity.
From 2006 Nobel economist Edmund Phelps in today's WSJ, Entrepreneurial Culture.
Global Trade and U.S. Economy Both Grow
2. U.S. exports shot up to 11.2% of U.S. GDP in the third quarter alone, the highest level in dollar terms ever.
3. Since the 2001 recession, the U.S. economy has created 9.3 million new jobs, compared with 360,000 new jobs in Japan during the same period and 1.1 million new jobs in the euro zone. This despite our trade deficits and their trade surpluses.
From "As Global Trade Grows, So Will U.S. Economy," by Donald Lambro.
Sunday, February 11, 2007
1281% Annual Inflation in Zimbabwe
The trigger of the country's crisis — hyperinflation — reached an annual rate of 1,281% this month, and has been near or over 1,000% since last April (see graph above). Hyperinflation has bankrupted the government, left 8 in 10 citizens destitute and decimated the country’s factories and farms.
The central bank’s latest response to these problems, announced this week, was to declare inflation illegal. From March 1 to June 30, anyone who raises prices or wages will be arrested and punished.
MP: Perhaps instead of "declaring inflation illegal" (isn't that like declaring high temperatures in August "illegal"), Zimbabwe should follow New Zealand's approach to monetary policy:
"The Reserve Bank of New Zealand Act sets out an ambitious framework for setting monetary policy goals and holding the Governor to account for the conduct of monetary policy. The framework is built around the provisions that make the Governor the single decision maker, and allow the Governor to be dismissed for inadequate performance."
Sucking Sound of Jobs Leaving Bangalore?
That’s because Karnataka is the Indian state whose capital city, Bangalore, is "the back office to the world." Bangalore is awash in call centers for Western companies such as Apple and Microsoft, boasts over 200 high tech companies of its own, and enjoys the highest number of engineering colleges of any city on Earth.
But if an Indian court doesn’t step in soon, the out-sourcing capital of the world may put itself out of work.
If the crackdown on these schools succeeds, the English-fluent high-tech labor pool will gradually drain away and the sucking sound of jobs leaving Bangalore will be audible all the way to North America.
From the Cato Institute article "Only in Kannada, Eh?"
Want To Buy An Auto Rickshaw?
More on Congestion Pricing
Americans rely on prices for a stable supply of food, clothes, water, energy, and telecommunications. Why should roads be an exception? Pricing can improve the usefulness of existing roads and attract funds for improvement.
From the New York Sun, an article by Diana Furchtgott-Roth "Traffic Congestion Solutions."