Proposals for Obama, update


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  1. Effective immediately have the Tsy make all FICA payments on behalf of employees and employers. Leave this arrangement in place at least until it is deemed that the economy is growing too rapidly.

    These payroll taxes currently reduce income by about $1 trillion per year for employees and employers and are highly regressive.

    Removing these payroll deductions will immediately add about $20 billion per week of ‘spending power’ to the economy on an ongoing basis, and all the funds benefit workers and businesses.
  2. Effective immediately distribute $100 billion in unrestricted federal revenue sharing to the states on a per capita basis.
  3. Make another $200 billion of federal revenue sharing available to the states for general infrastructure repairs and projects.

    This will effectively increase take home pay, remove a cash drain on business, address infrastructure needs, and support employment and income in general.

    What Wall St. and Main St. need most are consumers who have the funds to make their mortgage payments and car payments, and be able to buy what the US can produce.

    This ‘bottom up’ approach will work, while the current ‘top down’ proposals may eventually show results but will take far longer to reverse the current slowdown.

    And while my proposals will result in an immediate recovery, they do not address the energy issue.

    Any recovery will drive up energy prices if consumption is not first reduced by both the private and public sectors.


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Weakest crude demand report to date


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Still looks to me the call on OPEC crude will be about the same:

CGES: Global oil demand to contract in 2009

CGES,The Centre for Global Energy Studies a leading energy forecasting organization said on Tuesday on its monthly oil report that Global oil demand
is likely to contract in 2009 for the first time in 25 years.

CGES said demand growth in Asia, Latin America and the Middle East can no longer offset the continuing decline in the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development countries.

In a report, the consultancy said consumers are still responding to recent high pump prices, and a loss of confidence in employment and income prospects means even a lower price won’t halt the decline in demand.

CGES also said the recent slide in oil prices won’t end until the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries implements its recent 1.5 million barrels a day cut in output, or higher cost non-OPEC production is shut-in.

CGES said its demand pessimism is “offset to a degree” by its view of non-OPEC supply, which is “unlikely to show any real growth in either 2008 or 2009.”


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Russian Central Bank spent $58 billion backing Ruble (Update1)


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Russian Central Bank Spent $58 Billion Backing Ruble (Update1)

By Alex Nicholson and Maria Levitov

Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) — Russia’s central bank spent $57.5 billion defending the ruble in September and October, Chairman Sergey Ignatiev said.

Why would they ‘defend’ the ruble? Maybe they ‘defend’ it selectively, via transactions with ‘insiders’ moving from rubles to dollars?

Russia held 45 percent of its reserves in U.S. dollars, 44 percent in euros, 10 percent in pounds and about 1 percent in yen on Nov. 1, Ignatiev, said in the lower house of parliament in Moscow today.

“Russia ensures the stability of its currency, given the fundamental indicators of our economy,” Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin told lawmakers today. The amount of reserves ensures “a firm foundation for macroeconomic stability, for stability of the national currency,” he added.

Looks like I’m wrong on suspecting insider conversion. Sorry!!!

Russia’s international reserves stood at $475.4 billion as of Nov. 7, the third-biggest after China’s and Japan’s. They have fallen $122.7 billion since Aug. 8 as the central bank shored up the ruble. The bank buys and sells currency to keep it within a trading band against a dollar-euro basket to limit the impact of exchange-rate fluctuations on the economy.

Right, that’s the reason…

Ignatiev also said that the central bank reduced its holdings of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bonds, which are held by Russian oil funds that are part of the reserves, to $20.9 billion on Nov. 1 from $65.6 billion on Jan. 1.

Explains some of the spread widening.

Fannie and Freddie were “taken under state control” in the U.S. in September, guaranteeing their reliability, Ignatiev said. The bank isn’t currently selling bonds of the two U.S. mortgage- finance companies, he said.

Right, not even if an insider wants to buy them with rubles.


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Fed funds rate, control of


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Bernanke’s Cash Injections Risk Eclipse of Fed’s Benchmark Rate

By Craig Torres

Bernanke said in a congressional hearing yesterday that the expansion of the Fed’s balance sheet “makes it more difficult to control the federal funds rate.” It is “still an issue we are working on,” he told the House Financial Services Committee.

How about the Fed trading Fed funds and making a 1 basis point market in Fed funds. Yes, that would mean lending to Fed member banks without specific collateral, but Fed collateral demands are redundant, as other government agencies- FDIC, OCC, etc- are already responsible for monitoring all bank assets and capital, and presumably close down any and all insolvent banks.


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Re: To prevent bubbles, restrain the Fed


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(email exchange)

Right, add CATO to the list of organizations that have no credibility and now put the Dallas Fed on the suspect list as well. The difference between now and 1929 is back then we were on the gold standard he proposes, and therefore didn’t have the option for the Treasury to deficit spend without the loss of the nation’s gold reserves and devaluation/default as we ran out of gold. This also subjected the banks to true systemic failure as customers demanding their funds were entitled to convertible currency, which was limited by the same gold reserves. That’s exactly what happened as multitudes of banks failed, depositors lost their money, and the US both devalued for international purposes and was forced off gold domestically by 1934.

Since then, ‘automatic stabilizers’ (deficits counter cyclically ‘automatically’ rise in down turns and fall in expansions) and some proactive fiscal responses have resulted in much milder downturns and also have limited expansions.

The gold standard wasn’t abandoned because it worked so well- rather, because it has always gone down in flames:

To Prevent Bubbles, Restrain the Fed

By Gerald P. O’Driscoll

The incoming administration must think about that possibility because the timing of boom and bust cycles seems to be shortening. The next bust could come five or six years from now — or about in the middle of an Obama second term. Should that happen, Mr. Obama would be unable to blame Republicans for the mess and would be tagged as the second coming of Jimmy Carter.

To avoid such a fate, Mr. Obama needs to stop the next asset bubble from being inflated by imposing a commodity standard on the Fed. A commodity standard (such as a gold standard) imposes discipline on a central bank because it forces it to acquire commodity reserves in order to increase the money supply. Today the government can inflate asset bubbles without paying a cost for it because the currency isn’t linked to the price of a commodity.

With a commodity standard in place, the government would also have price signals that would alert it to the formation of a bubble. Why? Because the price of the commodity would be continuously traded in spot and futures markets. Excessive easing by the Fed would be signaled by rising prices for the commodity. In recent years, Fed officials have claimed that they cannot know when an asset bubble is developing. With a commodity standard in place, it would be clear to anyone watching spot markets whether a bubble is forming. What’s more, if Fed officials ignored price signals, outflows of commodity reserves would force them to act against the bubble.

The point is not to deflate asset bubbles, but to avoid them in the first place. Imposing a commodity standard is a practical response to the repeated failures of central banks to maintain sound money and financial stability. What would be impractical is to believe that the next time central banks will get it right on their own.

Mr. O’Driscoll, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, was formerly a vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

>   
>   On Tue, Nov 18, 2008 at 10:27 PM, Ron wrote:
>   
>   Warren,
>   
>   I know you’ll love this one.
>   
>   http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122688652214032407.html
>   


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2008-11-19 USER


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MBA Mortgage Applications (Nov 14)

Survey n/a
Actual -6.2%
Prior 11.9%
Revised n/a

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MBA Purchasing Applications (Nov 14)

Survey n/a
Actual 248.50
Prior 284.40
Revised n/a

 
Back down big time.

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MBA Refinancing Applications (Nov 14)

Survey n/a
Actual 1281.20
Prior 1248.40
Revised n/a

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Consumer Price Index MoM (Oct)

Survey -0.8%
Actual -1.0%
Prior 0.0%
Revised n/a

 
Not much of a surprise led by gasoline prices. More to come.

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CPI Ex Food and Energy MoM (Oct)

Survey 0.1%
Actual -0.1%
Prior 0.1%
Revised n/a

 
Lower than expected. Owner equivalent remains positive at up 0.1%.

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Consumer Price Index YoY (Oct)

Survey 4.0%
Actual 3.7%
Prior 4.9%
Revised n/a

 
Coming down quickly with the fall in gasoline prices, much like Aug 06 when Goldman changed their commodity index and triggered a liquidation of gasoline inventories.

Karim writes:

  • Largest single mthly fall on record in headline CPI: -0.961%
  • Core also falls, by 0.071%
  • Service inflation now unchanged for 2 straight months
  • OER up 0.1%
  • Apparel -1%, vehicles -0.7% (new -0.5%, used -2.4%)
  • Medical care and education each up 0.2%
  • Market strains + output gap + weaker commodities to lead to falling/slowing inflation in period ahead

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CPI Ex Food and Energy YoY (Oct)

Survey 2.4%
Actual 2.2%
Prior 2.5%
Revised n/a

 
Also moving down.

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CPI Core Index SA (Oct)

Survey n/a
Actual 216.801
Prior 216.956
Revised n/a

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Consumer Price Index NSA (Oct)

Survey 216.700
Actual 216.573
Prior 218.783
Revised n/a

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Consumer Price Index TABLE 1 (Oct)

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Consumer Price Index TABLE 2 (Oct)

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Consumer Price Index TABLE 3 (Oct)

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Housing Starts (Oct)

Survey 780K
Actual 791K
Prior 817K
Revised 828K

 
Looking grim again after showing signs of bottoming.

Karim writes:

  • October housing starts down another 4.5% and permits down 12%-contribution from housing to GDP will remain a significant drag at least thru Q2 2009 (based on lag from permits to construction).

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Building Permits (Oct)

Survey 774K
Actual 708K
Prior 786K
Revised 805K


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Eurozone trade deficit rising


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This is not a good sign given their monetary arrangements with no federal fiscal authority to incur the corresponding budget deficits, public and private.

And the unlimited Fed swap lines to the ECB could now be further increasing eurozone foreign currency debt, and funding imports with fresh ‘cheap and easy’ dollar debt.

Euro-zone trade deficit swells in September

Euro-zone trade deficit swells in September (AP) – The euro-zone swung to a trade deficit of 5.6 billion euros ($7.1 billion) in September from a 2.9 billion euro surplus last year. Imports surged 16 %in September from a year ago. Exports grew just 9 percent. The euro-zone trade deficit for the year to date — from January to August — now stands at 29.6 billion euros ($37.52 billion). Euro exports to the United States dropped 5 %from January to August from a year ago, Eurostat said. And exports to the currency area’s biggest customer, Britain, did not grow at all for the first eight months of the year. Imports from Russia climbed by a quarter over the same timeframe. Eurostat revised down its August trade figures, saying total euro-zone exports dropped 3 %during the month from a year ago. It originally reported a first estimate of 2 percent. Imports in August also grew less than expected — at 6 %instead of 7 percent.


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GSE debt doesn’t carry full faith of government: Treasury


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Huh?

GSE debt does not carry ‘full faith and credit’ of governments but close- Treasury’s Kashkari

Nov 14 (Reuters) – Debt issued by major U.S. mortgage finance sources Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac do not carry the full faith and credit backing of the U.S. Treasury but it’s “darned close”, a senior Treasury official said on Friday.

“Fannie and Freddie are not full faith and credit. We have provided very strong implicit support … But they are not the same thing as full faith and credit. It’s darned close, but it’s not quite full faith and credit,” U.S. Interim Assistant Secretary for Financial Stability, Neel Kashkari told a Congressional panel.


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WSJ.com- Opinion: Why Spending Stimulus Plans Fail


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WSJ.com- Opinion: Why Spending Stimulus Plans Fail

Congressional Democrats are now demanding another economic stimulus package to “inject” as much as $300 billion into the economy. The package will fail–

Not.

just like last year’s $333 billion in emergency spending and $150 billion in tax rebates failed.

No it didn’t. Q2 was well over 2% due to the rebates.

There’s a simple reason why.

Government stimulus bills are based on the idea that feeding new money into the economy will increase demand, and thus production.

Which it does.

But where does government get this money? Congress doesn’t have its own stash. Every dollar it injects into the economy must first be taxed or borrowed out of the economy.

The funds the government borrows are the ‘same’ funds the government deficit spends.

No new spending power is created. It’s merely redistributed from one group of people to another.

Wrong, government borrowing does not remove net nominal wealth. All it does is offer treasury securities as alternatives to reserve balances.

Taxing, however, does remove net nominal wealth. Paying taxes lowers reserve balances.

Of course, advocates of stimulus respond that redistributing money from “savers” to “spenders” will lead to additional spending.

No, to that point, giving net new balances to consumers tends to increase spending. Nothing is taken away from savers by deficit spending. In fact, deficit spending increases savings by the same amount.

That assumes that savers store spare cash in their mattresses, thereby removing it from the economy. In reality, nearly all Americans either invest their savings (where it finances business investment) or deposit it in banks (which quickly lend it to others to spend).

No, that’s reverse causation. In fact, the causation goes from loan to deposits. Bank deposits are the result of bank loans. They are not ‘used up’ by lending.

The money gets spent whether it is initially consumed or saved.

It’s not a question of ‘the money.’ Income is either spent or not spent. And borrowing to spend is not constrained by available savings to lend.

Governments don’t create new purchasing power out of thin air.

Yes they do. In fact, that’s the only place it can come from.

If Congress funds new spending with taxes, it is redistributing existing income.

Sort of. But spending isn’t ‘funded’ as it’s merely a matter of government crediting a bank account. It’s just an entry on a spread sheet. Entries don’t ‘come from’ anywhere.

Taxes are also a spread sheet entry- in this case the reduction of someone’s bank balance. But nothing ‘goes’ anywhere- data just changes.

If the money is borrowed from American investors, those investors will have that much less to invest or to spend in the private economy.

No, borrowing to spend from investors moves the balances from the investors account to the account of the recipient of the spending.

If the money is borrowed from foreigners, the balance of payments must still balance. That means reducing net exports through exchange-rate adjustments, thereby leaving net spending on the economy unchanged.

Not at all. Foreigners receive funds from net exporting to the US. They then exchange these bank balances for other financial assets, such as treasury securities. The exchange of one financial asset for another has nothing to do with the balance of payments or trade.

Yet Congress will soon borrow $300 billion from one group of people and then give it to another group of people and tell us we’re all wealthier for it.

Nominal wealth of the non government sectors does go up by 300 billion. Real wealth is another story.

Lawmakers commit this fallacy repeatedly. They tout unemployment and food-stamp spending as stimulus without asking where the programs’ funding comes from. They hype a federal bailout of the states as stimulus, as if having Congress do the taxing and borrowing instead of state governments makes it a free lunch.

Wrong, and the media commits this fallacy repeatedly.

And, especially in this era, when “our crumbling infrastructure” seems to have become the new mantra, legislators and lobbyists tout a 2002 Department of Transportation (DOT) study that they believe proves that every $1 billion spent on highways adds 47,576 new jobs to the economy.

At the macro level, they should say this ‘costs’ 47,576 jobs as work is a cost, not a benefit. The benefit is the output from the work.

The problem is that the study doesn’t actually make that claim. It stated that spending $1 billion on highways would require 47,576 workers (or more precisely, would require 26,524 workers, who then spend their income elsewhere, supporting an additional 21,052 workers).

The fewer workers it takes to get the job done the better for all of us, provided government knows how to sustain demand at full employment levels.

But before the government can spend $1 billion hiring road builders and purchasing asphalt, it must first tax or borrow $1 billion from other sectors of the economy, which then lose a similar number of jobs.

No it doesn’t. The billion is net spending. And the billion it spends are the same funds that it ‘borrows’.

In other words, highway spending merely transfers jobs and income from one part of the economy to another.

Not if it employs unemployed resources.

As economist Ronald Utt has explained, “The only way that $1 billion of new highway spending can create 47,576 new jobs is if the $1 billion appears out of nowhere as if it were manna from heaven.”

Another economist who doesn’t understand how a spreadsheet works.

The DOT tried to correct this misperception in an April 2008 memo specifying that their analysis refers to “jobs supported by highway investments, not jobs created” (italics in the original). The Government Accountability Office and Congressional Research Service also released studies making the same point.

Of course, they have no idea if the people will come from other employment or be the employment of idle resources. And if the economy is already at full employment that’s how many jobs there are.

In reality, economic growth — the act of producing more goods and services — can be accomplished only by making American workers more productive.

Or putting the unemployed to work.

Productivity growth requires a motivated and educated workforce, sufficient levels of capital equipment and technology, a solid infrastructure, and a legal system and rule of law sufficient to enforce contracts.

The best measure of a policy’s impact on economic growth is through productivity rates. Lower marginal tax rates encourage working, saving and investment, all of which increase productivity (as opposed to tax rebates, which are grants that require no additional productive efforts).

Even Laffer would not agree. As he says, his curve works at the extreme- 100% tax- but it’s been impossible to detect much difference in the middle ranges.

Reforming — rather than merely throwing money at — education and infrastructure will raise future productivity. These necessary improvements would take time and shouldn’t be considered short-term “stimulus.”

All good, but doesn’t alter the shortage of aggregate demand that only fiscal policy can address.

It’s time for lawmakers to stop futilely trying to wave the magic wand of short-term “stimulus” spending, which threatens to push the deficit above $1 trillion.

It’s time for the Wall Street Journal to wise up and stop publishing this stuff!

Focusing on productivity will build a stronger economy over the long run and leave America better prepared to handle future economic downturns.

Agreed.


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2008-11-18 USER


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ICSC UBS Store Sales YoY (Nov 18)

Survey n/a
Actual -0.10%
Prior 0.40%
Revised n/a

 
Bending but not breaking, yet. Gasoline prices probably helping.

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ICSC UBS Store Sales WoW (Nov 18)

Survey n/a
Actual 0.30%
Prior -1.00%
Revised n/a

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Redbook Store Sales Weekly YoY (Nov 18)

Survey n/a
Actual -0.90%
Prior -1.00%
Revised n/a

 
Looking weak as well.

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Redbook Store Sales MoM (Nov 18)

Survey n/a
Actual -1.10%
Prior -1.20%
Revised n/a

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ICSC UBS Redbook Comparison TABLE (Nov 18)

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Producer Price Index MoM (Oct)

Survey -1.9%
Actual -2.8%
Prior -0.4%
Revised n/a

 
Way lower than expected.

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PPI Ex Food and Energy MoM (Oct)

Survey 0.1%
Actual 0.4%
Prior 0.4%
Revised n/a

 
Way higher than expected.

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Producer Price Index YoY (Oct)

Survey 6.2%
Actual 5.2%
Prior 8.7%
Revised n/a

 
Still high but falling rapidly.

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PPI Ex Food and Energy YoY (Oct)

Survey 4.0%
Actual 4.4%
Prior 4.0%
Revised n/a

 
Still moving higher.


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