Posts tagged: Public Policy

Business Conditions, Sentiment, the USD and Gold

File under confirmation bias:

The Philly Fed’s Business Conditions Index is still hanging tough after its most recent update, though it’s still slightly negative relative to historical data.

A point of interest we came across on the Philly Fed’s site is its regional July Business Outlook survey (pdf). The apparent downturn in sentiment in early 2010 appears to coincide with our “strong dollar” call in January 2010, which was based heavily on increasing verbal hawkishness (pdf) from the Obama administration on fiscal matters:

The timing could very well be coincidental, but we think sentiment and fiscal expectations are related at some level, which may be supported by some other interesting features in that graph, from a “sectoral balances” point of view.*  

One is that business sentiment was most buoyant at the time of President Bush and the GOP’s major fiscal easings in 2001 and 2003 (blue circle); the other is the steady downward trend in  sentiment as the Clinton administration’s and Dole-Gingrich GOP’s widely revered budget surpluses were materializing (green line):

Again, this is purely circumstantial evidence, and would require much more analysis to see if anything academic can be made of it. But it does fit nicely with the theoretical frameworks we’re relying on to guide clients through these “interesting times”.

It might also be reassuring that the USD has taken a slight break from its strengthening trend (the red line below is the inverted trade weighted USD index inverted, and the blue line is foreign commercial paper, a measure of foreign credit and business activity in the private sector).

While it’s not at a level that augurs an imminent return to the headiness of 2007 and early 2008, some stability at current levels would be a welcome sign for the world’s credit, goods, and services markets:

There’s also an interesting new bit of evidence that supports our Nov-Jan warnings of a strengthening USD and weakening gold prices. From the FT:

…more than 10 [banks] based in Europe…swapped gold with the Bank for International Settlements in a series of unusual deals that caused confusion in the gold market and left traders scratching their heads…

The Financial Times has learnt that the swaps, which were initiated by the BIS, came as the so-called “central banks’ bank” sought to obtain a return on its huge US dollar-denominated holdings. The BIS asked the commercial banks to pledge a gold swap as guarantee for the dollar deposits they were taking from the Basel-based institution…

Some analysts speculated that the swap deals were a surreptitious bail-out of the European banking system ahead of last week’s publication of stress tests…

…two central bank officials said some of the commercial banks…needed the US dollar funding and were keen to act as a counterparty with the BIS. The gold swaps began in December and surged in January, when the Greek debt crisis erupted and European commercial banks were facing funding problems…

In other words, large banks on the continent were more than willing to swap gold for USDs with the BIS when facing credit strains and stress tests. This is something to keep in mind among all the gold bug chatter — unbacked paper or “fiat” money can become dear, even relative to precious metals. Witness gold’s long term decline against the Yen as Japan’s balance sheet recession and negative turn in age structure unfolded:

 

 The wrench, as we always try to point out, is the USD’s global reserve status. More dovish monetary policy in the U.S. (which can only be accomplished via renewed “quantitative easing” and its distorting impacts) could very well stoke renewed inflationary pressures abroad, with feedback effects on certain components of U.S. price levels. In fact, the deep decline in Yen per gold ounce might have been driven in part by the absence of Yen carry trade mechanisms. Once those mechanisms were in place and more widely available (circa late 1990s or early 200s?), Yen-gold was freed to the upside.

The fact that the USD is the traditional carry trade currency is a reminder that USD-gold could still have plenty of room to run, and that uncertainty is why we are not placing any bets on gold prices, either to the upside or the downside. But to the extent that any rally is driven by Ponzi-style leverage — which is still quite possible due to the anemic and slow moving nature of some of the reform measures in Dodd-Frank – gold will, like residential real estate before it, eventually come crashing back down to more normal levels.

It may even be near “normal” levels now. The caveat we’re trying to put forth is that if fiscal, trade, or monetary policymakers err on the hawkish side in the next five to ten years, then USDs will be in scarcer supply, and all else equal, that would mean lower prices generally — even for gold.

One last note — preliminary second quarter GDP came in light at 2.4%. This is a steep fall from recent quarters, and it too lends some support to our argument (and others’) that federal stimulus played a significant role in driving and/or supporting private sector activity in 2H09 and early 2010.  That’s why we think that any concerted move towards fiscal tightening in the quarters ahead — whether through tax cut expirations (we’re talking to you, Democrats) or spending cuts (ahem-ahem-ahem, GOP) — will substantially raise the probability of a second recession.

* We note that the New School’s History of Economic Thought (HET) website has yet to publish anything on the recently deceased Wynne Godley, who helped to articulate the intersectoral balances approach. As with age structure, underappreciation implies to us that Godley’s balances framework can be put to an investor’s advantage. 

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES: Symmetry Capital Management, LLC (“SCM”) is a Pennsylvania registered investment advisor that offers discretionary investment management to individuals and institutions. This publication is for informational, educational, and entertainment purposes only. It is not an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy securities, or to engage in any investment strategy. You should consult with your personal financial advisor before engaging in any investment activity. Any mention of investable companies and/or securities is incidental and for illustrative purposes only.

“Money we don’t have”

Good NYT article on deficit hysteria, with an especially illustrative quote from Rep. Cooper (D, TN):

“We have to stop spending money we don’t have,” said Representative Jim Cooper, a Tennessee Democrat who voted against the bill. “I hope deficit reduction fever is catching.”

The U.S. is in the midst of a balance sheet recession, with demographic ratios shifting an an unfavorable economic direction for several more years.  Under those conditions, deficit reduction fever will lead directly to the dreaded Japanese Disease —  another decade of stagnation, underemployment, and opportunity costs, all of which will impose greater burdens on future generations than expanded federal deficits would.

And policymakers — not to mention most members of the electorate, including analysts and the media — continue to commit two fundamental errors regarding fiscal policy:

  1. They believe that all deficit spending must be financed with interest bearing debt, thus competing with the private sector for scarce financial resources.  However, judging by current Treasury rates, there’s still plenty of room for expanded federal borrowing.  And there’s a symbiosis between federal deficits and repair of balance sheets in the financial sector, as evidenced by the perfect quarters turned in by several major investment banks recently.  Politically, that relationship is almost nauseating, as it’s doing very little to relieve distressed households — but it nevertheless makes apparent the  dynamic between public sector fiscal deficits and private sector balance sheet relief.
  2. They also believe implicitly that the U.S. is on a gold or similar standard, where fiscal and monetary policies are constrained by the supply of some exogenous factor, and governments can thus literally “run out of money.”  Governments can’t run out of money, as it is ’created’ by nothing more than digital ledger entries.  In other words, government (today, via operations of the quasi-private Fed) is the sole creator and supplier of high powered money.  Thus, the only constraint on money creation is inflation and a loss of confidence in the currency, and at the moment, those forces are emphatically not in play.  This too is symptomatic of Japanese Disease.

The fears of incumbent politicians like Cooper are certainly understandable.  But they’re borne of either ignorance about how these things work, or self-preservation.  Either way, it smacks of lousy political leadership. 

And given that Republicans are likely to benefit in November, we’d expect the trend towards fiscal conservatism to intensify.  Even President Obama, in a speech yesterday, promised the following:

  • A three year freeze on all non-discretionary federal spending beginning in 2011
  • Expiration of tax cuts via sunset provisions
  • Elimination of 120 federal programs
  • Reinstatement of PAYGO
  • Higher fees on banks that are expected to lower federal deficits by $90B over ten years

He promised all of this as a way to force the public sector to budget in the same way that families and businesses do.  Again, this is wrong, and is borne of either ignorance or pandering.  And as with Congress, it smacks of crummy political leadership either way. 

The administration’s jawboning is also reminiscent of budget austerity measures touted by the Carter administration in the 1970s in reaction to the “tax revolt” — austerity measures that contributed to its eventual demise, even though they may have been more appropriate to the conditions prevailing at the time (e.g., baby boomers entering adulthood, global trade and financial integration, etc).   Today, austerity is far less appropriate, but even more vigorously pursued.  That almost certainly spells trouble for Obama in 2012 – assuming the GOP can field a worthy candidate and avoid blowing all of its political capital in the intervening years. 

You also have to wonder, were he to experience a change of heart, whether there’s any credible way for him to backtrack from his neo-liberal rhetoric.  The DLC, Brookings, Peterson, and all the other usual suspects have painted the guy into one hell of a corner.

In the meantime, assuming that reality will align with rhetoric, the political climate continues to be favorable to the USD and Treasuries, and rather risky to gold.  A contrarian call? You bet.  But it’s based on what we think is a well-grounded and – just as importantly – non-ideological assessment of the facts. 

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES: Symmetry Capital Management, LLC (“SCM”) is a state registered investment adviser in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The views expressed by the author are as of the publication date, and are subject to change based on market and other conditions. The foregoing information is for informational, educational, or entertainment purposes only. It does not constitute an offer to buy or a solicitation to sell any security, or to engage in any investment strategy. Investors should not use this information as a basis for any investment decisions without first consulting their own financial adviser. SCM is an Amazon.com associate, and earns a commission on sales generated through links from our website. Some clients of the firm are long GLL and/or long TLT.  At the time of writing, neither the firm nor its principals owned any securities mentioned. PAST PERFORMANCE IS NO GUARANTEE OF FUTURE RESULTS.

URLs:

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/29/us/politics/29deficit.html

http://www.japanreview.net/review_bsr.htm

http://www.miraeasset.com/ourmarket/outlookView.do?board_id=1125&group_id=1&pageNo=2

http://www.investmentnews.com/article/20100602/FREE/100609973

http://seekingalpha.com/article/208174-how-deficit-hawks-will-keep-cutting-spending-until-we-re-all-on-food-stamps

A brief “Now what?!?”

Equity markets and indices are down over 2% today on worries about what most pundits refer to as the “Greek bailout,” which took its (supposedly) final shape over the weekend, with details to follow from the IMF and other parties. The terms, as currently laid out, are brutal, a fact reflected by the intense street protests in Greece and the government’s loss of union support. The theories and practices underlying them are highly questionable and pitifully anachronistic as well, which make it all the more frustrating.   

There’s no doubt that Greece has made some mistakes, that the lack of accurate fiscal disclosures by its previous government was extremely unethical, and that labor market reforms may be in order. But there are humane ways to approach and work through the entire imbroglio. Unfortunately, neither the IMF nor major eurozone countries seem to be giving that much thought. And as Marshall Auerback has pointed out, Germany’s longstanding inflation paranoia has it behaving as if it’s 1921 all over again; when to us, reality appears to be much closer to the deflationary late 1920s and 1930s.   

We referred to the Greek plan as pitifully anachronistic because it embodies what we might call gold standard era thinking, when the supply of new money was a function of mining output and demand for gold ownership in the private sector. At the turn of the 20th century, economist Knut Wicksell pointed out the need for a “rational monetary system“, while highlighting intellectual obstacles to it:   

It is no exaggeration to say that even to-day many of the most distinguished economists lack any real, logically worked out theory of money, a circumstance which has not, of course, been particularly conducive to the success of modern discussions in this field.   

Wicksell’s sentiments are still relevant today, and (in our view) have been powerfully echoed and expanded upon by proponents of neo-chartalism, also known as Modern Monetary Theory. Bill Mitchell, an occasionally acerbic but ever prolific member of the MMT club, recently posted the following diagram on his website:   

essential_government_non_government_relations

The essential point of the diagram is to illuminate that, under a fiat currency system, the government (whether through its treasury or via a quasi-public central bank) is the sole provider of money. And one of the resulting takeaways of this fact is that under certain conditions, fiscal austerity in the public sector will impose significant costs on the private sector. In turn, that will tend to raise the value of money, all else equal, which is the essence of deflation. And as Wicksell pointed out over a hundred years ago, deflation, like inflation, comes at a cost (emphasis added):   

…when a rise or fall occurs in the money prices of all, or of most, commodities…[a]djustment can no longer proceed through changes in demand or through a movement of factors of production from one branch of production to another. Its progress is much slower, being accomplished under continual difficulties, and it is never complete; so that a residue, either temporary or permanent, of social maladjustment is always left over.   

By linking the inflation boogeyman to public sector debt levels, prevailing economic theory sometimes leads to poor policy prescriptions and outcomes, as we are now seeing in Greece. It also fails utterly to explain the experience of Japan over the last two decades, and it looks set to fail in both the Eurozone and the U.S. in the coming decade.  So far, our contrarian calls for a strengthening USD and a dovish view of long term U.S. Treasury yields has lent support to this thesis.   

As with our recent “What Happened?!?” piece, we also think it’s important to tie the Greek “rescue” package to the current U.S. policy outlook. Today, speaking to the Business Council, President Obama once again invoked our “unsustainable fiscal deficit” and argued for immediate reimplementation of PAYGO. Looked at in terms of Mitchell’s diagram above, that implies that at best, the federal government is unlikely to add to the supply of vertical money.  It’s also important to realize that a concept like PAYGO essentially restricts the vertical money supply function to the central bank. And yet, according to recent testimony from Fed Chairman Bernanke, the Fed is targeting roughly a 50% contraction in its balance sheet, which also implies a contraction in narrow or vertical money supply (though rising velocity could give the Fed some room to work with).  Similarly, it was over tightening in both the fiscal and monetary spheres that led to the 1937 recession after several years of economic recovery.

The upshot of all this is that leaders in the public sectors of both the U.S. and the Eurozone are clearly signalling their intentions to “crowd out” private sector saving and, potentially, income. And unfortunately, electoratal majorities in key countries seem to support this direction. Normally, we expect electoral outcomes to approach optimal, but in this particular case, we suspect that the historic lack of economic and financial education might steer us wrong. Then again, voters with incomes might be making some rational inferences about deficits, austerity, and taxes. If so, the burden of adjustment could rest even more heavily on the on the un- and under- employed (believe it or not, that’s something that a handful of policy pundits have advocated, and that at least one senator briefly pursued).   

Either way, deflation will be the inescapable result of excessive restriction or contraction in vertical money.  We’re currently getting slight whiffs of it from credit markets and price indices (although the latter are still positive); cooling measures in China are also likely to help it along. As noted in our “What Happened?!?” piece, we don’t expect it to manifest in an economic downturn until 2012 or 2013, but it could show up in market prices before that. We’ll be watching commodity markets closely, as a broad decline in those prices would provide an especially powerful confirming signal.  Stay tuned…   

URLs:   

http://www.newdeal20.org/2010/03/30/greece-and-the-eurozone-angie-aint-it-time-to-say-goodbye-9235/   

http://www.newdeal20.org/2010/04/12/the-piigs-problem-maginot-line-economics-9697/   

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflation_in_the_Weimar_Republic   

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:GDP_depression.svg   

http://mises.org/books/interestprices.pdf   

http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/?p=7864  

http://www.econlib.org/library/Essays/wcksInt1.html   

http://symmetrycapital.net/index.php/blog/2010/04/a-brief-what-happened/ 

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES: Symmetry Capital Management, LLC is a state registered investment advisor. The foregoing information is for informational, educational, or entertainment purposes only. It does not constitute an offer to buy nor a solicitation to sell any security, or to engage in any investment strategy.

A brief “What happened?!”

It was a tough day in major equity indices yesterday, with the S&P 500 down over 2%.

We don’t think it had much to do with the Senate’s lengthy grilling of Goldman Sachs executives. Rather, it was mostly about the continuing sovereign crisis in Europe, especially Greece and Portgual. We think it might also have been helped along by President Obama’s remarks on deficit reduction earlier in the day, though that’s a much more controversial assertion. 

On top of Germany’s continuing hard line on support for Greece, S & P substantially lowered its ratings yesterday on the sovereign debt of Greece and Portgugal. Such actions lower the price that buyers are willing to pay for their debt in the market place. The resulting price adjustments are often exacerbated by rules governing institutional portfolio holdings and bank capital, as multiple large sellers head for the exits simultaneously. Momentum driven speculators might play a role as well. 

In turn, lower bond prices mean higher bond yields. For example, if a bond with a $100 face value pays an annual coupon of $5, its stated yield is 5%. But if the best price the bond can fetch is $50, then the yield rises to 10%, or $5 divided by $50. The yield to maturity on such a bond is even higher, since the holder eventually receives the $100 face value at maturity. 

This is trouble for Greece because a large slug of its sovereign debt matures this year, meaning that it will have to pay an exorbitantly high price (in terms of interest rates) on its new debt. If those rates are high enough that default or insolvency become inescapable, then current bond holders may not be able to recover the full face value of the bonds they own. There’s been a good deal of talk about debt restructuring, which is basically a process aimed at helping a debtor avoid a worst case outcome while containing the total damage done to creditors.

Importantly, the price adjustments did not just hit Greek and Portuguese debt, but also that of Ireland, Italy, and Spain. It’s more than a little ironic that dithering by the same governments that want banks and nations to shore up their balance sheets is having the exact opposite effect. And if that dithering continues long enough for full blown contagion effects to take hold, then the threat of the euro payments system locking up will become too large to ignore. That’s the very thing that the USD payments system faced in the wake of Lehman’s collapse and AIG’s near collapse in 2008, and which U.S. policymakers took such drastic measures to avert. Could Greece prove to be the eurozone’s Lehman, or at least its Bear Stearns? [Update 4/28/10 - We just noticed that Marshall Auerback asked a similar question on April 12th]

Ironically, Germany’s Angela Merkel has claimed that the primary motive for her country’s intransigence is to preserve the eurozone. And yet the current EMU is essentially what they’ve anted up in the high stakes game they are playing with Greece and other eurozone governments.

While we’re not huge fans of the credit rating agencies, especially given their track records during the mortgage crisis and during the twenty year bull market in Japanese government bonds, yesterday’s announcement might actually have some value when all is said and done, as long as the markets’ severe reactions act as a wake up call to European leaders. The news flow today seems to support that thesis, though only time will tell.

Meanwhile, President Obama’s remarks reminded us that the threat of premature fiscal tightening in the U.S. is still in play. We think that his call to cast a critical eye upon all federal expenditures and carefully address longer term structural deficits is absolutely appropriate (just as we think it’s fair for the German electorate to raise similar questions about Greece). However, we’re concerned that he might be a victim of the same budget surplus fetishism that has gripped many Democrats since the 1990s.

For example, he repeated, as erroneously as ever, that the federal government’s budget is like that of any family. But in fact, the federal government’s budget is more properly thought of as a complement to family and private sector budgets in the U.S. For example, if the private sector desires to increase it savings, the public sector should run larger deficits, all else equal. And if the public sector does not fully accomodate this desire, one likely result is higher private sector leverage (debt). We’re careful to point out that this dynamic is complicated by global effects — but it should still sound familiar to anyone who was awake during the past decade or two.

Amazingly, the same budget fetishists who continue to decry ”crowding out” effects in borrowing ignore those same effects when it comes to saving. 

Until the President and policymakers demonstrate a better grasp of this, our call for long term USD strengthening remains on the table. And if stringent fiscal reforms are accompanied by a Fed tightening cycle, watch out. This isn’t likely to unfold until 2012-2013 (late 2011 at the earliest). However, it’s important to point out that underlying demographic cycles have the potential to make things all the worse, perhaps along the lines of a 1937 redux.  

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES: Symmetry Capital Management, LLC is a state registered investment advisor. The foregoing information is for informational, educational, or entertainment purposes only. It does not constitute an offer to buy nor a solicitation to sell any security, or to engage in any investment strategy. Symmetry Capital Management, LLC is an Amazon.com associate, and earns a commission on sales generated through links from our website. At the time of writing, some of the firm’s clients own shares of Alpha Bank (ALBKY), National Bank of Greece (NBG), and Currencyshares Euro Trust (FXE). One of the firm’s principals owns shares of Goldman Sachs (GS). The firm, its clients, and its principals do not hold any positions in Lehman Brothers, AIG, or the debt of any sovereign issuers mentioned.

URLs:

http://preview.bloomberg.com/news/2010-04-27/greece-s-junk-contagion-pressures-eu-to-broaden-bailout-after-market-rout.html

http://www.newdeal20.org/2010/04/12/the-piigs-problem-maginot-line-economics-9697/

http://seekingalpha.com/article/200708-greece-will-have-the-last-laugh

http://www.newdeal20.org/2010/03/30/greece-and-the-eurozone-angie-aint-it-time-to-say-goodbye-9235/

http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232?video=1478940638&play=1

http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/blog/10/04/27/Laying-the-Path-to-Fiscal-Responsibility/

Good column by Ron Rhoades

 Good column by Ron Rhoades on RIABiz.com, in which he predicts what types of financial reforms might come out of Congress in the current session. He echoes some concerns we’ve raised (emphasis added):

There are many parts of the overall financial services reform legislation that are incremental improvements over what we have today, and which should be supported. I hope the upcoming amendments will address “too big to fail” and reduce the perverse compensation incentives which tend to drive improper risk-taking activities.

I am deeply troubled, however, by the lack of oversight of all credit default swaps and other forms of derivatives. There are likely to remain many gaps in regulation which can continue to be exploited.

Additionally, much of the bill appears to fragment, rather than to consolidate, banking regulation. Regulation needs to be robust – to paraphrase James Madison, if securities industry participants were all angels, regulation would not be needed. But regulation also needs to be efficient. Our country cannot afford inefficient regulation of the same functional areas through duplicative, often over-lapping agencies.

This point, on disclosure as panacea, was particularly interesting, and lends some support to our call (and others’) for bringing basic financial education (legal might be a good idea too) into primary education:

The fundamental problem is that the SEC continues to emphasize disclosure above all else. While I support better disclosures of compensation practices and conflicts of interest, we must be realistic in what disclosure can accomplish. Disclosures are usually ineffective, as research into behavioral biases has demonstrated.

Today the financial world is far more complex for consumers than it was in 1940. Hence, disclosures utterly fail to overcome the huge “knowledge gap” between financial advisors and their clients.

The full column is available here: http://www.riabiz.com/a/748005?subscribed=true

Banking regulation: Volcker vs. Basel

There’s additional chatter about financial regulatory reform today due to a luncheon speech that Paul Volcker’s giving on the subject. The debate continues to center around whether more stringent restrictions under the so-called Volcker Rule make sense, or whether capital requirements are a better way to go. The latter approach has some eloquent defenders, and seems to be favored by Asian and European regulators, but they should take heed of this new IMF study:

Using data for over 3,000 banks in 86 countries, we find that neither the overall index of BCP [Basel Core Principles on capital requirements] compliance nor its individual components are robustly associated with bank risk measured by Z-scores. We also fail to find a relationship between BCP compliance and systemic risk measured by a system-wide Z score.

And the band plays on…with each passing day it becomes more doubtful that something constructive will be done before the next financial crisis unfolds.

URLs:

http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2010/wp1081.pdf

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES: Symmetry Capital Management, LLC is a state registered investment advisor. The foregoing information is for informational, educational, or entertainment purposes only. It does not constitute an offer to buy nor a solicitation to sell any security, or to engage in any investment strategy.

Crisis, regulation, vigilance & cynicism

cynical take on Sen. Dodd’s financial regulatory reform bill by Matt Koppenheffer for Motley Fool:

We can probably point to plenty of regulatory failures in the lead-up to the financial crisis. But I hardly think that they’re regulatory failures stemming from lack of regulators. As Valukas noted in his report, regulators were swarming on Lehman well before its collapse…

It seems to me that the issue never was whether there were people trying to address the problem, but rather that they were trying to regulate on a fuzzy mandate of not letting something bad happen within the bounds of a very permissive system. For the same reason that we have speed limit signs posted in our residential neighborhoods, we need to give regulators a clearer, tougher set of standards that they can impose on financial companies.

First and foremost, those standards need to address the lunatic business model that Lehman Brothers — and, really, most of the big financial companies — was operating on at the time of its demise.

Specifically, Lehman was increasingly building up large, illiquid, proprietary investments while primarily financing itself through very short-term agreements. What it became was a massive, teetering Jenga game right smack in the middle of our financial system that could be toppled in the blink of an eye if it lost the confidence of major counterparties…

That last paragraph echoes a beautiful turn of phrase by Bill Bernstein in the most recent Financial Analysts Journal, in which he refers to ”leveraging so unstable that it could not survive the slightest of economic breezes, let alone a 100-year storm.”

Koppenheffer continues:

…the bill includes the Volcker Rule the way Cocoa Puffs include well-balanced nutrition. Little actually gets implemented in the text of the bill. Rather, specific regulations are supposed to come from a study on the rule’s potential impact. Not only is this likely to maximize the squishiness of the eventual rules, but it also gives lobbyists plenty of time to work their magic.

In the end, I don’t see the Fed folks as a bunch of incompetent bumblers. But when it comes to smothering the next Lehman, Fannie Mae…or AIG…I do think they’ll fail miserably because they’re being given a butter knife to regulate with when what they need is a buzzsaw.

A tangential riff: If we aren’t going to impose a hard, fast cap on leverage and other risky behaviors, then perhaps the power of network effects and private sector vigilance (vigilantism?) can help fill the gaps in our financial regulatory structure. For example, it seems reasonable to expect (OK, hope) that the next Harry Markopolos will be taken more seriously.

But when the issue is not fraud by a single market participant, but rather systemic levels of leverage and risk, then it seems unlikely that any kind of enforcement powers could be brought to bear if regulatory bodies haven’t purposefully enlisted private sector assistance beforehand. 

I suppose we’re a bit cynical too.  

URLs:

http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2010/03/24/why-the-fed-will-fail.aspx

http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1553816

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_vigilantism

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Markopolos

Paul Ryan’s floor speech

As most of the country knows, the House of Representatives passed its latest version of healthcare reform yesterday, and emotions are running high on all sides as a result. Rep. Paul Ryan, a Republican from Wisconsin whom we sincerely admire, seemed to best embody his party’s core philosophical objections to the bill. Unfortunately, too many of the GOP’s arguments are stubbornly anachronistic and overly narrow. They don’t fully reflect the realities of healthcare, and they conveniently overlook the fact that we have had ‘socialized’ medicine in this country for quite some time – since Medicare and Medicaid became laws, and since the tax code and other regulations began to favor group insurance plans.

Our intent isn’t to cheer or take shots at either side. Instead, it’s to raise the level of discourse, something that neither party nor the press has done very well. With an issue as complicated and important as this one, political maturity is a must, and truth telling from leadership is absolutely vital.  Unfortunately, Ryan’s speech was riddled with shallow thinking and empty slogans. Perhaps that suited its purpose, but it does little to move the debate or the electorate in constructive directions.

At 1:45 of the video:  “Our founders got it right, when they wrote in the Declaration of Independence that our rights come from nature and nature’s God, not from government.”

For tens, perhaps hundreds of thousands of years, and in almost every part of the world, invoking divinity is how the powerful have justified their position (they still do in some parts of the world). So Jefferson may simply have been speaking the English monarchy’s language when he wrote that in the DOI.

More seriously, in today’s world, rational people ought to be able to agree that political rights are absolutely defined and managed by governments. The classical liberal principle of doing no harm to others is a great starting point, but the philosophical or religious beliefs that inform one’s political philosophy are not in and of themselves “rights”.

In fact, in a society of diverse religious and philosophical views, it’s absolutely vital that a government does just that.

1:57 “Should we now subscribe to an ideology where government creates rights, is solely responsible for delivering these artificial rights, and then systematically rations these rights?”

Government does indeed create rights. It defined and allocated them in the Constitution without any mention of God as a source. And it has amended and reallocated them many times since. Calling them “artificial”, as in man made, is no more meaningful than the typical PETA slogan, or the idea that human creations, good and bad, are somehow ‘unnatural’.

And political institutions absolutely ration individual rights. They always have, all the way back to our hunting and gathering days, so it’s an idea that we really ought to be used to by now. The challenge is to hold governments accountable for doing it in a way that approaches some social optimum. That’s what the Constitution has done rather well over two centuries, and it’s something that modern political institutions have tended to become more adept at over time.

2:09 “Do we believe that the goal of government is to promote equal opportunity for all Americans to make the most of their lives? Or do we now believe that government’s role is to equalize the results of people’s lives?”

Long ago, the federal government enacted some stupid ideas on how to finance health care coverage. For generations, those ideas have benefitted employees of large corporations, unions, and public sector employees. They have been subsidized, either through higher premiums, greater personal risk, or less health care, by the self-employed and entrepreneurs (which may be why politicians always try to kiss their rear ends), as well as those who do not qualify for private insurance coverage, Medicare, or Medicaid. From the get go, these ideas have promoted INEQUALITY.

Healthcare reform is aimed, in part, at finally addressing this situation, a situation that has stood in stark contrast to the principle of equal opportunity. Over the years, the GOP has developed some good ideas on this issue, but in session after session, they utterly failed to do anything about it. They punted repeatedly until the situation got bad enough that the Dems were finally able to run the ball down their throat. Tua culpa, GOP.

Furthermore, this legislation can’t be said to seek equal outcomes, and Ryan surely most know that. It does seek to extend the social safety net, i.e., to redefine the acceptable minimum outcome in personal health care coverage. It also seeks to impose responsibility, in that everyone must chip in in some way. Personally, I don’t care for that kind of thing, and I know I’m not alone in that. Compulsory anything tends to rub Americans the wrong way.

Unfortunately, as long as there is Medicaid, and as long as health care costs of the uninsured are borne socially (via welfare or higher costs for others), it doesn’t make any sense to avoid a minimum level of buy in. It’s similar to having to carry liability coverage on your automobile, except that we are all physical bodies, and thus all have to participate.

If that really rubs you the wrong way, you have a few options:

  • Start working on the technology that will provide the bodily equivalent of mass transit and other alternative modes of transport.
  • Work to repeal Medicaid (why not Medicare while you’re at it?).
  • Move.

2:24 “The philosophy advanced on this floor by this majority today is so paternalistic, and so arrogant. It’s condescending. And it tramples upon the principles that have made America so exceptional.”

Both parties have been guilty of arrogant, condescending paternalism throughout their history. I’m not sure what makes this bill so special. And if we look at the trajectory of American greatness, it’s hard to say that it’s based solely on founding principles (though they’ve certainly made it possible, along with plenty of luck).

Did the U.S. become more exceptional or less after the Progressive movement, the New Deal, and the Great Society? My point is not to sing the usual lefty praises for those episodes, but to point out that they do not seem to have undermined American exceptionalism at all.

3:18 “As we march towards this tipping point of dependency, we are also accelerating toward a debt crisis, a debt crisis that is the result of politicians of the past making promises we simply cannot afford to keep. Deja vu all over again…It’s unconscionable what we are leaving the next generation.”

First I’ll note my love for Yogi Berra quotes. Then I’ll reiterate that there is no U.S. debt crisis.

We do have entitlement and dependency issues to face as a society. But the federal budget is unlike any other budget in our country. It’s not like personal, household, business, or state and local government budgets. In the world, the only budgets that operate in a truly similar fashion are Japan’s and the United Kingdom’s (and in a far more constrained fashion, the European Monetary Union’s). Japan is about ten years ahead of us on the demographic curve, and its net public debt has reached levels that all the deficit hawks in the U.S. now shudder about. What happened? Nothing – no debt crisis, no threat of default, no crowding out. Nothing but a handful of downgrades from the credit rating agencies, and trading floors littered with the bodies of almost two decades worth of misguided hedge fund managers.

And the worst debt to GDP projections, even if we overlook the uncertainty involved in forecasting a decade or more, don’t reach any kind of level that justifies the prevailing deficit anxieties — not for a large modern economy with monopoly power over issuance of the currency used to pay interest on and retire its debts. Until people no longer want to accept dollars (and it’s easy enough for anyone to test out that hypothesis), the government can create more of them. In other words, unlike the rest of us, the only budget constraint faced by the federal government is the socially acceptable level of inflation.

Finally, without proper context, the ‘debt on the backs of our grandchildren’ meme is so much claptrap. If more debt now means better economic outcomes overall, then we are imposing severe opportunity costs on future generations if we do not run larger deficits.

That said, it may be true that health care reform does not represent a social investment with positive ROI. It may also be true that simply rectifying distortions and making the system fairer could have been accomplished with far less than what this bill contains. The electorate has a little over seven months to reflect on it before rendering its judgement in November, and as we’ve noted here and here, this issue deserves a lot more philosophical honesty than it’s been getting. It’s difficult, complicated stuff, with no right or wrong answers – only some as-yet-unknown social optimum, which our sometimes messy political processes are helping us grope our way towards.

URLs:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwk1aHU-pms

http://www.newdeal20.org/2010/02/10/the-federal-budget-is-not-like-a-household-budget-heres-why-8230/

http://symmetrycapital.net/index.php/blog/2009/07/should-health-care-be-a-right/

http://symmetrycapital.net/index.php/blog/2009/07/ryan-what-does-it-look-like-in-september/

Some personal Facebook ’stats’ on healthcare reform

Some very crude sample statistics on voter reactions to the passage of healthcare reform legislation, derived from my personal Facebook account:

Percentage of connections who cared enough to comment: 1.7%

Opposed: 60%

Approving: 40%

With so few people posting, the results are not statistically significant, but they do line up with more credible poll findings: http://healthcarepolls.blogspot.com/2010/03/comparing-iwfpolling-company-and.html

Smart Money: Credit Card Companies

Smart Money magazine has a great long running feature, “Ten Things.” Their latest is “Ten Things Your Credit Card Company Won’t Tell You,” a rather timely dissection given passage of the CARD Act.

URLs:

http://www.smartmoney.com/spending/rip-offs/10-things-your-credit-card-company-wont-tell-you-18808/?cid=1230