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The G-20 Summit -- What's a Debtor To Do
November 13, 2010
The Republicans won the 2010 mid-terms. Our allies are of the mind that the trade deficit is our fault, but that any effort to reduce it would be harmful to their own interests, so tough tooties. Perhaps it is time to solve the problem of the dual deficit with a remedy that is tried and true and kills two birds with one stone -- mounting budget deficits, a sizable trade deficit, and a lack of jobs in the American heartland.
Saving the Economy and Reinvigorating the Democratic Base
September 12, 2010
What it will take to save the Democrats from a rout in November and what it will take to move the American economy away from dependence on foreign-made products quickly.
February 12, 2010
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act -- A more optimistic Assessment | www.cumber.com
Was I wrong about the recovery -- Yes and No
A Parody of Our Government Over the Last Year
February 11, 2010
Week Lost, Record Gained | www.washingtonpost.com
Weather in Washington. Its telling politicians a bit about what's important. Weather is important. Government is important because only government can clear snow, keep vital services running--perhaps like police, firemen, soldier. Only government can aid the homeless, care for the indigent, and make sure elderly, those we should most honor have food on the table, shelter, and good health. For the past year, the Senate of the United States, mainly as a result of the willingness of the Republican Party to bring down the edifice of government, to make it stop all together, has blocked major pieces of legislation without compromise. Perhaps the week off, a week when getting out of Washington was virtually impossible, can make them see that only through compromise can we move forward. If they don't like government so much, then why in the hell did they run for office. Finally, perhaps, Mother Nature has Had Enough!!!
How to Rebalance the Economy and Create Jobs At Home
January 31, 2010
No Jobs, No Recovery | www.nytimes.com
Since 1990 American has run a cumulative deficit on our traded goods account of $ 9 trillion dollars. Much of this money was re-circulated fueling the increasingly larger budget deficits and the over consumption of American consumers. American economists and politicians have been blinded by the promise of the advantages of free trade while ignoring the obvious costs to American security and prosperity of our increasing dependence on foreign suppliers for everything from food products to finished manufactures. Even our defense sector, below the level of our prime contractors, has been hollowed out by the outsourcing of production to distant sources of supply.
Global Warming -- A Nuclear Option that Maintains Existing Power Infrastructure
December 15, 2009
Impass Reached at Climate Conference | www.nytimes.com
The key problem with talking about reducing global green house gases is that for the last hundred years, since electric power was introduced, infrastructure to generate and distribute that power has been built and is operating. Recreating that infrastructure in the short time remaining to get some control of greenhouse gases would tax the industrial capacity of the world and disrupt entire industries. Thus countries see no future except to stall and bluff. There is, however, one quite viable option that can keep most of the infrastructure intact, but also eliminate greenhouse gas pollution from coal, oil, and gas, and that is a lower cost nuclear option that is safe, efficient, and can be used to replace heat in coal fired generating plants.
Rebalancing the US Economy Will Produce Growth and Jobs
December 9, 2009
We Need A Government Jobs Program | www.washingtonpost.com
Five million jobs have been lost each year as a result of the size of our external imbalance. There is a way to fix this without violating WTO rules and that will generate funds for the US Treasury in a time of deficits.
Slow Build-out After Recovery without Changes in Free Trade Policies
July 18, 2009
Fed: Unemployment rate could top 10% in 2009 | www.bizjournals.com
The QueERI-International model of the global economy integrates international trade effects at the industry level of detail with production and employment through an interrelated system for 72 countries comprising 90% or more of world output. Employment growth is measured at an industry level. The recovery of the American economy, when combined with the open markets leads to a continued decline in American-based manufacturing jobs.
Why MOst Macro Economists Were Wrong About Asia's Strength
March 10, 2009
NOBODY talks about decoupling anymore | www.economist.com
Decoupling of Asia from the rest of the world, and most importantly, the United States was always more a hope than a reality. I've been working with detailed trade flow data for Asia and the rest of the world for years and could easily see that much of what is traded within Asia is used as intermediate inputs in finished products shipped to the United States and Europe. Asia's economy is linked to the rest of the world because it is overly dependent upon trade with most of that trade with the United STates. One interesting statistic is that in 2006 the United States trade deficit equaled 3.5% of the GDP of all other countries except the United States. In terms of GDP associated with traded products the US deficit share equaled almost 7%. If Asia could decouple, then it must wean itself from dependence upon exports as the major driver in their economies.
Strong relationship between extension of consumer credit and personal consumption
December 16, 2008
America must keep consumer liquidity flowing | search.ft.com
An econometric model estimation based on the period 1995 through 2008 shows that for every 1% decline in credit (revolving and non-revolving) measured in constant 1995 $s there would be a .4 of 1% decline in consumer spending. Similarly for every 1% decline in employment adjusted by real wages, there would be a nearly 1% decline. Thus a fall in employment compounded by a decline in credit extended would cut consumer spending by nearly 1.4%.
The Paradox of the "Real Economy" versus the "Financial Economy"
October 13, 2008
The Geo-Politics of the Credit Crisis | globalstrategyproject.org
Financial engineering caused the mess The REal economy feels the pain Collapsing markets and confidence increase the pain Only Government Intervention Can Solve the Problem Sell the Gold and Buy Stocks is the Best Advise
The $ 850 billion dollar sure thing
September 15, 2008
Made (again) in America | money.cnn.com
The US economy could be $ 850 billion stronger if the trade balance were simply put back into near balance. A good majority of these jobs would be higher paying manufacturing jobs. The adjustment process could take 10 years or more and would require a shift in our prevailing economy position with respect to obligations under WTO rules.
Republican Orthodoxy Is Out of Line with Reality and the Flow of History
September 27, 2007
The Battle Over Health Care | www.nytimes.com
The Republican Party by adhering to its core orthodoxy that "markets are always better than government regulation, and management must be, by nature, evil and eliminated, is on a path to being as much a minority party as it was in the 1930's, 1940's, 1950's, and 1960's. The truth is that failures of regulation have led to the crisis in health care, home mortgages, trade, the loss of manufacturing jobs, dangerous pollution, global warming, and even the Iraq War.
Looking for a New Global Economic Paradign to Replace "Free Trade"
June 21, 2007
Global Trade Talks Collapse | news.yahoo.com
The Potsdam meetings confirmed what analysts already know -- concentrating on solving the problem of "agriculture" will forever doom global trade talks and lead to an impass that will surely force changes in the underlying views of the Atlantic concensus that "free trade" is always preferable to "managed trade."
February 28, 2007
Recession unlikely, economists say | www.businessweek.com
The Chinese meltdown has more to do with China's overheated and speculative culture and dependence on exports with the United States, than with short-term developments and conflicting economic statistics on the state of the American economy.
Alan Greenspan's remarks and actions by the Chinese government triggered the fall. The Greenspan remarks are being blamed for the US sell off, but in reality it might be more likely that it is a recognition by the Chinese investors that China's overheated state of growth is driven by exports to American consumers. Thus a recession in the United States will put the kibosh on Chinese growth.
And like Japan before it, when the speculative bubble collapses, it takes down growth throughout the economy.
Unlike most countries, China's growth is dependent upon outside stimulus rather than self initiated growth. Once that cycle starts, it opens the door for speculative investments helped by cheap money and easy credit. Once it slows, this cycle reverses.
But the relationship between China and the United States is weak. It is a unidirectional bias with China dependent upon the United States, rather than the reverse.
Would David Ricardo Be Proud of a $768 billion trade deficit?
February 23, 2007
News Release: U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services | www.bea.gov
- For 2006 the US trade deficit reached $763 billion, a new record.
- Exports of goods and services totaled $1437 billion.
- Imports totaled $2201 billion.
The trade deficit with China totaled more than $220 billion, a new record, double the deficit typically run with Japan.
Continuing on this course, we will reach a trillion dollar deficit within a few years, even if we are highly successful at exporting. The simple dynamics of imports being almost twice exports insures that even rapid growth, well above the historical norm, in exports will not reduce the deficit.
Would David Ricardo use the argument for "free trade" to support the position of most business leaders that we are better off with an open economy, or is he turning over in his grave when he hears his simple, two country, two product, theory invoked to explain the benefits of trade to the simple minded and self interested business executives who profit from this over indulgence.
Additional facts on Chinese demand for ores (including iron ore)
October 26, 2006
China's ire at North Korea tempered by ore | www.iht.com
While it is true that China has some dependence on North Korea for iron ore for the less efficient state owned mill, the reality is that overall imports of ores, mainly iron ore was over $ 18 billion measured in constant 1995 prices and exchangew rates. In current terms the value is significantly greater than this. Thus the $35 million import from North Korea is insignificant and could be made-up in less than a day by any of China's main suppliers. The chart attached shows the changing pattern of Chinese demand for ores and a forecast for future growth in demand basedon a global trade and industry model.
Corporate Values in the Age of Globalization
April 27, 2006
Corporate Values | www.themanufacturer.com
The Economy depends upon a circular flow.
If all companies become highly efficient or out to protect their bottom line, then it is possible that this highly competitive economy will find itself in economic distress.
Companies that see workers as stakeholders tend to do better financially those those who don't.
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January 26, 2012
Only 3% of the affluent are "under water" with their home mortgage
December 27, 2011
Affluent consumers head online to shop
December 27, 2011
Holiday spending by affluent may be a pleasant surprise for retailers
December 27, 2011
The future of sourcing in Asia
December 16, 2011