Author: Curt Doolittle

  • WATCH: RESISTANCE TO SPENDING FROM 2010 People do not want to invest in infrastr

    http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/12/16/build-we-wont/KRUGMAN WATCH: RESISTANCE TO SPENDING FROM 2010

    People do not want to invest in infrastructure in the midst of a class war, even if it’s battles are conducted by policy rather than by violence. People do not have faith in the government. They cannot have faith in the government, because we have too disparate a set of interests.

    You’re approaching the problem from the wrong direction. There is no ‘We” any longer. The use of factions and class warfare to undermine the old class, race and cultural power base was successful.

    If people do not own their government, or feel that it represents them, then it is an external entity. They’re acting as if it is.

    There is no “We”.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-25 20:52:00 UTC

  • WATCH – FROM 2010 Every politician in Washington has a constituency. That consti

    http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/11/lacking-all-conviction/KRUGMAN WATCH – FROM 2010

    Every politician in Washington has a constituency. That constituency is profoundly either conservative and/or moderate. Liberals are, and likely always will be, a small minority of the population.

    As a politician in a Democracy, when your constituents of all flavors start calling, contributing to others coffers, and reducing contribution to yours. When key contributors call with displeasure. When mail full of fury piles on your desk. When lobbyists start spending time with the opposing party. When the friends and allies you need to gain political support at home start abandoning you, then you have a certain perception of reality.

    Democracy is not getting what you want. It’s getting what the majority of people want. Not even what the party in control wants. But what the majority of people want.

    The political information system is not ideologically based except in the popular press. It is extraordinarily functional in practice – the construct of alliances of people of different desires and ideals. The political economy is run by donations and relationships. These people know what’s said in the popular press. But they live in the political economy of relationships and donations. That’s their ‘reality’. That is their ‘pricing system’: the information system that they rely upon.

    They are not stupid. They are not cowards. They are pragmatic. And the voters are telling them what they think: that the country is center right. And voting against the previous administration was not voting for this one. And this administration did something few have done, and none should do: pass ideological legislation over the objection of the majority.

    THis congress will fall. And the president will either move toward the center. Or he will be out in two years. And while he is a weak character, he is probably not stupid enough to stay so far left. And he has lost his legitimacy with the populace and as such, oratorical appeals to left agendas will only serve to undermine his power further.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-25 20:45:00 UTC

  • WATCH – FROM 2010 (Posted for archival purposes) Small business people? Hardly.

    http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/20/soros-obama-and-me/KRUGMAN WATCH – FROM 2010

    (Posted for archival purposes)

    Small business people? Hardly. That writing provides a limited return is not a measure of its level of consumption by a large number of customers, but a measure of how little people are willing to pay for it.

    The term Mitch is looking for is not “entrepreneur” it is “Schumpeterian Intellectuals”: people who bring about the destruction of capitalism, the market and the prosperity of national competitiveness by undermining both the sentiment of, and capital structure of entrepreneurship.

    Unfortunately, we don’t have special taxes for Shumpeterian market destroyers like we have special taxes on entrepreneurial market creators. But we can fix that. Perhaps we should level the playing field by heavily taxing political, extra-market goods and services, and lowering taxes on apolitical intra-market goods and services?

    Wouldn’t that be a switch? I mean, why should the amount of income be the axis of measurement, rather than the service provided to the market? Under that measure we could confiscate all of Soros’ money, recover our losses from the bloated financial sector, and reduce the media to non-profit status, and make political writing an unprofitable exercise.

    As for putting capital to a better purpose, that’s not yet proven. Soros was not participating in the market for goods and services by creating unemployment and reorganizing that capital. He’s just using remunerative coercion under state protections. And extra-market remunerative coercion at that. A form of coercion made possible only by the restraint of violence by others in order to create the somewhat free market – a restraint he does not himself employ. And while that asymmetry of restraint may not be apparent to your cult of those who are incapable of holding territory and trade routes, or building an durable government, or durable institutions of calculation and cooperation, it is not lost on those of us whose ancestors have done so for a millennia or more.

    It seems odd to me that so many people fail to grasp just how entertaining and enjoyable civil war is for those people who practice militial restraint – often at high personal cost of forgone opportunity. Modern war is a ‘hell’ only for people who fight in the western model. It’s not for warriors, terrorists and raiders. We forget that the reason we cannot conquer the Afghans is in no small part because raiding and killing are actually enjoyable, entertaining, status-enhancing pass times among practitioners. And creating markets and property rights, and philosophy and econometrics, is a poor substitute.

    Then, perhaps some of us should put our capital stock of violence to better use, if in our restraint, we are disabused by men who simply take advantage of our creation – the market. It would be the optimum use of our asset.

    Or those who put their financial capital stock, or political capital stock to such uses, could pay the opportunity cost of restraint, so that we do not have to. And can continue to devote our energies to the proxy of entrepreneurship and company building instead of the more enjoyable and rewarding use of our capital stock of violence.

    πŸ™‚

    Cheers


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-25 20:42:00 UTC

  • RECAPTURE: FROM FEBRUARY 2008 – ON THE CRISIS 1) In order to sustain that spendi

    http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/02/16/defining-the-macroeconomic-problem/KRUGMAN RECAPTURE: FROM FEBRUARY 2008 – ON THE CRISIS

    http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/02/16/defining-the-macroeconomic-problem/#comment-19177

    1) In order to sustain that spending you seek, and support reorganizing both production and consumption, all these groups need impetus that it no longer appears policy can quickly reorient. Our tools seem to have exhausted their usefulness:

    -Monetary Policy and Bureaucrats

    -Traders (private sector)

    -Institutions (commercial banks and insurance)

    -Merchants (Distributors)

    -Producers (theory, capital and production cycle)

    -Ordinary Consumers and Their Daily Spending Habits

    -Interpersonal Networks (intertemporal theories)

    -Common Sense and Traditions (long wave theories)

    2) I would like to understand why we don’t just put the onus back on the debt market by authorizing a new set of banks or bank divisions to issue home loans at some fractional value, and forcing the previous lending institutions to write off the debt, rather than letting people get forced out of homes and have their equity destroyed – especially if the problem was created by monetary policy in the fist place.

    If the asset bubble will evaporate anyway, why pay the knowledge-cost and related stresses? Instead, why not simply force the issue and make consumers elated (and make them into spending consumers) because of it. What you do to refinance the write downs is paid one way or another – either by market losses or by buying out the bad debt. But this is the only method by which I can see we can affect the entire chain of human behavior quickly and positively without paying the dreadful cost of uncertainty over a period of four or five years. (Roughly what I am able to calculate it will take – not the two years I see others coming up with.)

    The problem I see on the horizon is the limited innovation going on in the economy outside of healthcare, and even that is under threat. This coming period of contraction and consequent distraction is time we cannot afford to lose. We need to be competing and we need to channel money into innovation rather than home construction. (This is a lengthy topic in it’s own right.)

    There must be some variant of this solution that would be sufficient. Imagine all homeowners reducing their mortgages by two thirds, or perhaps better said, simply refinancing DOWN and retaining their equity, as often as possible, and what that would do to the economy. (I cannot go into detail on a blog but this is a solvable process.) Raise interest rates and give ourselves room to control inflation rather than deflation, which is the only choice we really want to make.

    I understand the natural objections but hiding this deflation inside of market processes will still yield the same result and the consequential shock will be very hard on the average person. Demographically, I am very concerned that if we don’t do something like this many people will simply not recover their financial lives. Ever. There are just too many people too late in life with too little savings, and the savings they have in their homes looks like it is rapidly going to evaporate. They cannot afford the double loss of equity and earning remaining lifetime earning potential as all this works out β€” time being the ultimate scarce capital we all have to work with.

    Cheers

    β€” Curt Doolittle


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-25 20:40:00 UTC

  • AN HONEST AUTHOR “Like most books …, this one is two-fifths analysis, two-fift

    AN HONEST AUTHOR

    “Like most books …, this one is two-fifths analysis, two-fifths criticism, and one-tenth polemic. … This leaves but a tenth or so of the manuscript for constructive proposals.” – Benjamin Barber (author)

    Seems about right. πŸ™‚ Most books can be summarized in 2500 words or less, and their entire contributions in 500 or less. Everything else is sales, justification, and defense.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-25 19:58:00 UTC

  • Why on earth would one think that we could create an aristocratic society where

    Why on earth would one think that we could create an aristocratic society where everyone is an aristocrat? It’s a contradiction in terms.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-25 14:13:00 UTC

  • “Down on the street, I interpret a lot of what Krugman says, to mean “make it/ma

    “Down on the street, I interpret a lot of what Krugman says, to mean “make it/manufacture it/produce it it doesn’t matter if you can sell it for a profit or sell it at all, hell stash it in a warehouse until the aliens come, the idea of production is to transfer money to employees, not to sell things and make profit”. Shiit straight out of the old Soviet Union.”

    -George White


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-25 13:14:00 UTC

  • “To every man upon this earth Death cometh soon or late. And how can man die bet

    “To every man upon this earth

    Death cometh soon or late.

    And how can man die better

    Than facing fearful odds,

    For the ashes of his fathers,

    And the temples of his Gods.”

    HEROISM


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-25 10:22:00 UTC

  • MORE BAN ON ELECTRONICS DURING TAKEOFF AND LANDING πŸ™‚

    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/23/technology/faa-nears-new-rules-on-devices.html?smid=fb-shareNO MORE BAN ON ELECTRONICS DURING TAKEOFF AND LANDING

    πŸ™‚


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-25 08:31:00 UTC

  • (Silly) NEW GLASSES Picked up my new computer-reading glasses. Round lenses. I l

    (Silly) NEW GLASSES

    Picked up my new computer-reading glasses. Round lenses. I love them.

    Veronika says I look like an old professor. Sigh.

    I don’t mind the professor part. But the “old” thing hurts a bit. πŸ™‚


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-25 08:14:00 UTC