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Sunday, November 30, 2014

Miscellany: 11/30/14

Quote of the Day
When I let go of what I am, I become what I might be.
Lao Tzu

Image of the Day




Swiss Turn Back Gold Reserve Increase, Immigration Limits 

I have mixed feelings about the referendum issues. The first issue involves the concept of a sound currency, which I support in principle. To a certain extent, the currency wars are described below in a Reason piece. To describe in concept: look at how China might enter the currency market to maintain its peg target to the dollar. It doesn't want to see the dollar to depreciate against the yuan, which would effectively make its goods more expensive to American customers. What it wants to do in order to keep the yuan from appreciating is to bid the dollar higher by buying dollars/lowering the supply of greenbacks, often in the form of Treasury bonds. (Recall bond prices and a currency's strength are negatively related to yield.)

Now the Swiss are worried about the franc becoming too strong against the euro and probably hurting its export markets, so it needs to be able to buy euros. The Swiss right wanted hard assets--gold--instead of weak fiat currency that could collapse and to more than double gold holdings and prevent its sale. This would have greatly hampered the Swiss ability to buy euros and maintain its own peg. As one might expect, the market has responded to the news with both the gold and Swiss franc falling, even though the defeat of the referendum had been widely expected.

Some aside news: the decreased US budget deficit has reflected more capital gains taxes from the stock market bubble manipulated by Fed Reserve easy money policy, not lower spending. This has decreased the amount of new public debt being issued, which has the effect of supporting the dollar; moreover, decreased oil imports also have the effect of bolstering the dollar. As you might expect, my concern is a deteriorating effect on the trade deficit due to cheaper imports and expensive exports might lead the Administration and/or the Fed joining in a "beggar thy neighbor" trade war. Consumers better keep their eyes on their wallets; more affordable imports and lower oil prices are a check on inflationary pressures.

The second issue involved an environmentalist initiative to reduce current immigration quotas by nearly three-quarters; this was seen as a check on key treaty agreements between the Swiss and the EU involving the free movement of people. (I clearly see this is a pro-liberty fundamental right.)

Facebook Corner

(FEE). "The concept of the 'tiered' Internet is not something to be feared. On the contrary, it could be a means of enhancing services to broadband customers, providing revenue for ISPs to invest in accommodating increasing demand for bandwidth-intensive and delay-sensitive applications and making further improvements to data delivery, and of increasing fairness by ensuring that content providers responsible for the most Internet congestion pay the higher costs of assuring a high quality of service for Internet users. Choking off this potential revenue stream through net-neutrality mandates will only ensure that instead of an Internet with regular lanes and 'fast lanes,' all consumers will be stuck in the slow lane."
You are going to have economically illterate useless idiot trolls spamming this thread, promoting their pushing-on-a-string "net neutrality" Trojan horse rationale for their Statist agenda. The Internet has developed robustly precisely because the federal government has allowed a more robust market. The last thing we need is technology know-nothings pursuing yet another case of obsoleted regulatory concern. As the piece points out, most of us have multiple broadband providers (I've had at least one in the last two towns I've lived), not to mention wireless. ISP's need to cope with broadband constraints caused by, say, Netflix users, without unnecessary government oversight; this includes resource hogs paying for their fair share of necessary capacity upgrades vs. being subsidized by other users.

(Reason). We asked four economists and market analysts to revisit what they originally predicted would happen after quantitative easing and assess whether (and why) they were right.
We have to acknowledge that inflation can also be affected by non-monetary policies, e.g., trade restrictions, global supplies/capacity, industrial policies (e.g., ethanol mandates), demographic trends (e.g., healthcare for an aging population), tax policies/regime uncertainty, etc.

I do not have faith that the manipulation of interest rates (six years running now at near-zero interest rates) ends well, that central planners of money are "more equal" than regime central planners. We have have subpar economic growth since 2000. Central banks are often caught flat-footed, too little, too late. I can't predict if and when the next correction will occur, but I think the obfuscation of price signals by government policy and policy uncertainty will not improve on the present period of economic malaise.

(Reason). Let illegal immigrants come out of the shadows.
Since the 1920's we've had restrictive immigration policies that have reflected bad economics and anti-liberty principles. We've made it all but impossible for foreign temporary workers to enter the country in a transparent fashion, and we have antiquated quota systems that take several years to clear, hamper domestic employers, discourage entrepreneurial professionals and delay family reunionification. We need to reform immigration in a manner consistent with our immigrant roots and values.

The issue I have with Obama's executive order is not so much with the policies as with the the rule of law. Obama's action was totally political and clearly violates the Separation of Powers. Instead of negotiating with Congress, he's been engaged in a form of extortion or blackmail. Clearly the ends do not justify the means: by acting before the new Congress has even opened, as a lame duck, he has poisoned the well for more substantive and overdue legitimate immigration reform. The immigrants who surface will be in limbo as the next Presidential cycle plays out.
I tend to agree, in my opinion immigration reform would be simplifying the process for work visa's, something George W Bush actually advocated. Although I would prefer giving priority to visa applicants based upon education and or skills in demand. My fear is that we are currently attracting those who frankly lack the education and skill to be hired in Mexico and subsequently would most likely compete with Native born unskilled labor. This process can only further erode wages for those at the bottom of the income ladder in this Country.
Generally, immigration researchers find only a minor, temporary effect to inflows of unskilled immigrants (maybe 5% impact on wages). (Note that immigrants tend to be more mobile than native unskilled labor; not many people are willing, say, to pick apples on a farm,) We heard stories of how some Southern states after anti-immigrant legislation made it difficult for local farmers to find labor. Don Boudreaux says, and I agree, that we shouldn't discriminate on skill level because the economy needs good workers across the spectrum, and immigrant consumption and taxes help grow the economy. We need to keep in mind that during the great recession there was actually a reverse migration. I myself would not migrate if I was unable to find work. What helps is making the process more transparent.


What we should also keep in mind is that maybe 30% of immigrants will return to their native country after working a certain number of years. For example, some of my Indian friends claimed they could live like a king in India for a fraction of the cost it takes to live in the US.
Milton Friedman said a country cannot have open borders and a welfare state at the same time and survive. When the U.S. had open borders, it had no welfare state. Get rid of the welfare state first, then make an argument for open borders.
No, you are misquoting Friedman. I just wrote this yesterday on another thread:

"So help me if I hear one more anti-immigrant repeat Friedman's argument about incompatibility of open immigration with the welfare state. They misunderstand Friedman's argument; as Stephen Moore pointed out in a WSJ piece, Friedman also argued "Legal and illegal immigration has a very positive impact on the U.S. economy...Look, for example, to the obvious, immediate and practical example of illegal Mexican immigration. Now that Mexican immigration over the border is a good thing. It is a good thing for the illegal immigrants. It is a good thing for the United States, and it is a good thing for the citizens of the country.But it is only a good thing if it is illegal." What Friedman argued against was immigration motivated by State handouts; unauthorized aliens do not qualify for handouts. Thus, Friedman's argument has more to do with restrictions on immigrant eligibility for welfare state benefits; note that the private sector, e.g., charities, could provide as-needed humanitarian assistance. Quite typically, immigrants are younger, productive workers who contribute to vs. consume State programs."

Political Humor
Courtesy of Ken Catalino via Townhall
Musical Interlude: Christmas 2014

Pachelbel Canon in D Major

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Miscellany: 11/29/14

Quote of the Day
When a man's knowledge is deep, he speaks well of an enemy.
Instead of seeking revenge, he extends unexpected generosity.
He turns insult into humor, ...
and astonishes his adversary who finds no reason not to trust him.
Baltasar Gracian

Tweet of the Day

HT TPNN
Image of the Day

Ferguson Protest in Portland: 12YO Devonte Hart Gives "Free Hug" to Sgt. Bret Barnum via ABC

As We Approach the Centennial of the WWI Christmas Truce of 1914: A Great Supermarket Ad

From history.com:
On December 7, 1914, Pope Benedict XV suggested a temporary hiatus of the war for the celebration of Christmas. The warring countries refused to create any official cease-fire, but on Christmas the soldiers in the trenches declared their own unofficial truce.


Facebook Corner


(Ron Paul). Do you think the Tea Party Movement has been hijacked? ––> http://bit.ly/1xDDBaV
I think the official Tea Party got co-opted by other right-wing groups who went beyond its limited government roots and tried to push their own, unrelated conflicting agendas, e.g., pro-military, anti-immigration, social conservatism.

As to how Sarah Palin, basically an unprincipled populist, got conflated with the Tea Party movement is beyond me. Remember, she was a big spender during an era of rising state oil revenues, and her biggest legislative "achievement" was a punitive progressive tax increase on oil companies. Parnell tried to roll back the increase to prove more of an incentive to expand production, when Palin joined the repeal movement (and in a related matter, Parnell just lost his reelection battle). Other figures like Michele Bachmann have voted for the Patriot Act and oppose immigration reform.

(Independent Institute). Senior Fellow John Goodman: "Republicans in Congress have created their own internal gridlock on ObamaCare. Even if the Democrats all abstained and let Republican legislators do whatever they wanted, the Republicans still could not agree on what to do next."
I have some nuanced differences with Goodman. I was initially surprised to read him write "The reason ObamaCare looks like a Rube Goldberg contraption is because it is almost purely the product of special interest bargaining...Should labor union plans be taxed to subsidize health insurance for their non-union competitors? Absolutely not." The deferment for the Cadillac tax was a clear example of the earlier statement. But the issue with Cadillac plans is the fact they get "more equal" tax subsidies; the real issue is whether other taxpayers should subsidize union tax subsidies in the form of Cadillac plans. I'm not sure why the Dems implemented an excise tax on Cadillac plans; they could/should have simply capped/standardized any subsidy, e.g., like McCain's universal deduction. As someone who prefers restoration of a free market to the healthcare sector, I don't see the logic in exempting everyone since healthcare expenses should be treated like all economic transactions; if anything, policy tends to obfuscate/exacerbate sector prices.

I would have approached a GOP reform differently: (1) use interstate authority to promote a free market against state barriers to entry; (2) repeal centralization authority, e.g., IPAB; (3) implement the principle of Subsidiarity: e.g., match subsidies to state/region high risk pools, regulate at the state/local level, etc; (4) restrict health insurance coverage to risk-based events, conditions, not ordinary expenses and/or reinsure against catastrophic expenses

(Catholics for a Free Market). If this roots out more closeted nationalists, I'll be overjoyed.
[Robert Higgs:] I am disgusted by the frequency with which I encounter this argument: because the state takes money from me and uses it to finance certain benefits enjoyed by "illegal" immigrants, I am in favor of the state's activities to keep such people from coming to the USA.
Several responses immediately occur to me: (1) do you really believe that the state will take any less of your money if it tries to "secure the border," rather than permitting peaceful people to come here freely? (2) do you really believe that it is better for you to support a state's manifestly unjust actions than it is to lose (as you suppose you will) a few more dollars, at most, to the state's plundering? (3) do you not understand that you will lose far more of your income and wealth to a state that undertakes the enormously expensive activities associated with "securing the border" than you would lose if peaceful migrants were permitted to come here freely? (4) do you not understand that the problem we face here is not the arrival of "illegal" immigrants, but the existence of an evil welfare state? and, finally, (5) what difference does it make if your money goes to total strangers (often clearly undeserving ones) born on one side of an arbitrary line rather than another?
Agreed. So help me if I hear one more anti-immigrant repeat Friedman argument about incompatibility of open immigration with the welfare state. They misunderstand Friedman's argument; as Stephen Moore pointed out in a WSJ piece, Friedman also argued "Legal and illegal immigration has a very positive impact on the U.S. economy...Look, for example, to the obvious, immediate and practical example of illegal Mexican immigration. Now that Mexican immigration over the border is a good thing. It is a good thing for the illegal immigrants. It is a good thing for the United States, and it is a good thing for the citizens of the country.But it is only a good thing if it is illegal." What Friedman argued against was immigration motivated by State handouts; unauthorized aliens do not qualify for handouts. Thus, Friedman's argument has more to do with restrictions on immigrant eligibility for welfare state benefits; note that the private sector, e.g., charities, could provide as-needed humanitarian assistance. Quite typically, immigrants are younger, productive workers who contribute to vs. consume State programs

When we look at the fact of unauthorized entries, we have to treat the disease, not the symptoms. It's things like the union opposition to temporary work visa programs and absurdly tight quota systems that delay family reunification for years. The existence of a black market exists because of arbitrary protectionist restrictions on voluntary contracts between employer and immigrant worker. It's patently absurd to advocate the State overhead of border control, which is grossly inefficient, when the real solution is to liberalize and make more transparent the process of immigration.

(IPI). The average American pays $6,000 in subsidies to corporations every year, but that gigantic chunk of taxpayer change simply is not enough for some special interests.
FDR created "Boeing's Bank", just like his other redistribution schemes, like agricultural price supports at the expense of consumers. It's the well-known problem of concentrated benefits and diffuse costs: e.g., domestic sugar producers really like above world-market sugar prices. Domestic consumers (beyond candy makers, bakeries, etc.) may not think it's worth their while to protest a few cents a pound. Let's hope that the new GOP-controlled Congress drives a stake through the heart of FDR's Dracula.

(IPI). Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel called a special city council meeting yesterday on a proposal to raise the minimum wage in the city to $13 an hour.
Economic illiterate political ploy by a politician pandering for the pro-labor vote without putting up the money for the job-crippling policy. Let's be clear; if you are low-skilled/inexperienced and can't find work at the current minimum wage, you don't have a shot at $13/hour. All this "progressive' moron will be doing is reducing the work schedules and/or opportunities of workers: the law of supply and demand, as you raise the price of labor... If a worker's skills were worth $13 or more, they would already be making it in a competitive market. An idiot politician pulling some arbitrary number out of his ass is simply telling people without jobs they don't have a right to available gainful employment at a lower price; with "friends" like this, who needs enemies?

Caption This...
Via Washington Times
And then Barry said to me, "Forbes called me the best economic President of modern times."
Via IJReview
Political Cartoon
Courtesy of Ken Catalino via Townhall
Musical Interlude: Christmas 2014

Tchaikovsky Nutcracker Suite - 3 'Sugar Plum Fairy

Friday, November 28, 2014

Miscellany: 11/28/14

Quote of the Day
The young do not know enough to be prudent, and therefore 
they attempt the impossible -- and achieve it, generation after generation.
Pearl S. Buck


Image of the Day


Via Joe Schaller on FB
Via Dollar Vigilante

Malinvestment? Shale Oil Producers In a Leverage Nightmare As Oil Prices Plunge

The biggest news in the stock market today, from my perspective, was the hit almost every energy company took today in the aftermath of OPEC's decision to stay the course on production--almost immediately the major oil benchmarks dropped a few dollars, and energy companies in my own following dropped anywhere from 3 to 25% on the day. Keep in mind that unconventional recovery like oil sands and shale oil are much more expensive; it varies by locations. Some companies can make a profit at $60/barrel, about 20% from the WTI benchmark; others struggle at $100/barrel. Here's an intriguing excerpt from Zero Hedge:
We should be glad the price of oil has fallen the way it has (losing another 6% today as we write this). Not because it makes the gas in our cars a bit cheaper, that’s nothing compared to the other service the price slump provides. That is, it allows us to see how the economy is really doing...
It shows us the huge extent to which consumer spending is falling as stock markets set records. It also shows us how desperate producing nations have become, who have seen a third of their often principal source of revenue fall away in a few months’ time. Nigeria was first in line to devalue its currency, others will follow suit.
Now, all oil producers, not just shale drillers, turn into Red Queens, trying ever harder just to make up for losses. The American shale industry, meanwhile, is a driverless truck, with brakes missing and fueled by on cheap speculative capital. The main question underlying US shale is no longer about what’s feasible to drill today, it’s about what can still be financed tomorrow. 
Pointing to past oil bubbles risks missing the point that the kind of leverage and cheap credit heaped upon shale oil and gas, as Dizard also says, is unprecedented. As Wolf Richter wrote earlier this year, the industry has bled over $100 billion in losses for three years running.
Not because they weren’t selling, but because the costs were – and are – so formidable. There’s more debt going into the ground then there’s oil coming out. Shale was a losing proposition even at $100. But that remained hidden behind the wagers backed by 0.5% loans that fed the land speculation it was based on from the start. WTI fell below $70 today.
The piece points out two banks (including Wells Fargo) trying to syndicate a nearly $1B loan made to 2 oil and gas companies, and rumors are that they may be able to get 60 cents on the dollar. There are others to other energy companies from other banks. In part, I've been hinting at this in recent posts, suggesting that some of the boom in North Dakota, West Texas and elsewhere that Mark Perry of Carpe Diem has been hyping may taper off. China's slowdown has hurt resource exporters is Australia, South America, and Africa. Europe and Japan look like they're sliding into recession. Energy correlates with the world economy. Consumers definitely like  lower prices at the pumps, but this is a case of being really careful of what you wish for. I'm not suggesting at this time a global recession or depression, but Obama and the Dems could be in real trouble if we slide into a recession or worse during Obama's lame duck period. The GOP would also need to reconsider their approach since unconventional oil issues, including the Keystone pipeline, become less urgent in a slumping energy economy. If we start seeing those 200K jobs/month start dropping, there will be political implications.

Busting Liberal Myths: FEE Looks at FDR and the Depression

FEE has a great series on the theme, which it terms 'progressive cliches'.

The platform of the Democratic Party whose ticket Roosevelt headed declared, “We believe that a party platform is a covenant with the people to be faithfully kept by the party entrusted with power.” It called for a 25 percent reduction in federal spending, a balanced federal budget, a sound gold currency “to be preserved at all hazards,” the removal of government from areas that belonged more appropriately to private enterprise, and an end to the “extravagance” of Hoover’s farm programs. This is what candidate Roosevelt promised, but it bears no resemblance to what President Roosevelt actually delivered. Who called the administration of incumbent Herbert Hoover “the greatest spending administration in peace time in all our history” and assailed it for raising taxes and tariffs? Roosevelt did. FDR’s running mate, John Nance Garner, even declared that Hoover “was leading the country down the road to socialism.”
It was socialist Norman Thomas, not Franklin Roosevelt, who proposed massive increases in federal spending and deficits and sweeping interventions into the private economy—and he barely mustered 2 percent of the vote. When the dust settled, Warburg shows, we got what Thomas promised, more of what Hoover had been lambasted for, and almost nothing that FDR himself had pledged. FDR employed more “master minds” to plan the economy than perhaps all previous presidents combined.
Two UCLA economists—Harold L. Cole and Lee E. Ohanian—in the important mainstream Journal of Political Economy observed that Franklin Roosevelt extended the Great Depression by seven long years. “The economy was poised for a beautiful recovery,” the authors show, “but that recovery was stalled by these misguided policies.” In a commentary on Cole and Ohanian’s research, Loyola University economist Thomas DiLorenzo pointed out that six years after FDR took office, unemployment was almost six times the pre-Depression level. Per capita GDP, personal consumption expenditures, and net private investment were all lower in 1939 than they were in 1929.
Using a broad measure that includes currency, demand and time deposits, and other ingredients, Rothbard estimated that the Federal Reserve expanded the money supply by more than 60 percent from mid-1921 to mid-1929.By early 1929, the Federal Reserve was taking the punch away from the party. It choked off the money supply, raised interest rates, and for the next three years presided over a money supply that shrank by 30 percent. This deflation following the inflation wrenched the economy from tremendous boom to colossal bust.
Unemployment in 1930 averaged a mildly recessionary 8.9 percent, up from 3.2 percent in 1929. It shot up rapidly until peaking out at more than 25 percent in 1933. Until March 1933, these were the years of President Herbert Hoover—the man that anti-capitalists depict as a champion of noninterventionist, laissez-faire economics.
Did Hoover really subscribe to a “hands off the economy,” free-market philosophy? His opponent in the 1932 election, Franklin Roosevelt, didn’t think so. During the campaign, Roosevelt blasted Hoover for spending and taxing too much, boosting the national debt, choking off trade, and putting millions of people on the dole. He accused the president of “reckless and extravagant” spending, of thinking “that we ought to center control of everything in Washington as rapidly as possible,” and of presiding over “the greatest spending administration in peacetime in all of history.” Roosevelt’s running mate, John Nance Garner, charged that Hoover was “leading the country down the path of socialism.” Contrary to the modern myth about Hoover, Roosevelt and Garner were absolutely right.
The crowning folly of the Hoover administration was the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, passed in June 1930.
Commenting decades later on Hoover’s administration, Rexford Guy Tugwell, one of the architects of Franklin Roosevelt’s policies of the 1930s, explained, “We didn’t admit it at the time, but practically the whole New Deal was extrapolated from programs that Hoover started.”
The Big Squeeze

The familiar reader knows that I've been beating the drum on fixing out-of-control state pensions which are already squeezing the operating budgets of municpalities in Detroit, California and especially Illinois (let me point out if Chris Christie does launch a battle for the White House, the NJ pension system isn't looking so hot)--cf. the Pension Tsunami website. But if  you remember how pathetic it was for Romney to talk about Big Bird in dealing with DC's chronic deficits and national debt, the federal government is facing its own big squeeze causing by mandatory entitlement spending. From mygovcost:
The National Interest‘s Milton Ezrati has the numbers:
These constraints are crystal clear in existing budget data. Entitlements have grown relentlessly over the decades, from 30 percent of all government spending in 1950 to fully 70 percent today. They amount to 15 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP). More than one dollar in seven, then, of everything this country produces now gets paid out in one or the other of these programs. Since the full implementation of the Affordable Care Act promises only to increase those proportions, and voters clearly show no desire to fork over still more economic resources to Washington, the rest of the budget, everything else that Washington does, faces a relentless financial squeeze.
Ezrati describes where this is all going:
The arithmetic is irrefutable, whatever some people would like to believe. There simply is no room in the budget for much else but entitlements. Washington will either reverse sixty-plus years of practice and turn to serious entitlements reform, or it will have to give up on most of its other priorities. The only remaining question is this: can the White House, the Senate and the House do the math?
Facebook Corner


Courtesy of Henry Payne via Reason
False dichotomy. The solution to failed Statism is to set the market free, not impose alternative Statist policies.

(IPI). Some states have revenues larger than their pension debt, while others have pension debt that far exceeds their revenue.
Illinois fits into the latter category.
In fact, Illinois ranks worst in the nation on ability to pay for its pension debt.
The problem is what you need to do with Illinois' corrupt judges looking out for their own unsustainable pensions. I think Illinois taxpayers may need to amend the state's constitution to repeal and replace the pension protection clause, to empower conversion of accrued pension benefits into vested self-directed 401K benefits; no state employee has "earned" a multi-million dollar retirement that is mostly funded/bailed out at future taxpayer expense.

(IPI). The state has mandated that thousands of home-based caregivers who receive a Medicaid benefit from the state must attend “training” sessions hosted by one of the state’s most powerful unions, SEIU.
But the truth is, these “trainings” aren’t trainings at all – they are little more than union membership drives.
This is a blatantly corrupt conflict of interest; assuming training is required, there must be explicit disclosure that any union membership is optional.

(Adam Smith Institute). Restricting access to the welfare state may be wise – restricting access to our labour markets is not.
For a start, this isn't a question of culture or whatever from my point of view. It's a simple fact of increasing demand for jobs relative to a supply which is essentially limited. That just makes life tougher for everyone and makes society a more shitty place to live.
This is economically incoherent. It falsely assumes immigrants don't help grow the economy and employers are able to find the right background worker locally available.

Political Cartoon
Courtesy of Henry Payne via Townhall
Musical Interlude: Christmas 2014

Classical Christmas Medley

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Miscellany: 11/27/14 Happy Thanksgiving!

Courtesy of freeinternetpictures.com
Quote of the Day
Treasure the love you have received above all. 
It will survive long after 
your gold and good health have vanished.
Og Mandino

Chart of the Day: Waiting For a Doctor To See You: Government "Fixes" To Healthcare
Via Bastiat Institute
Image of the Day

Via Rand Paul
Via LFC
/Via National Review: The Senate Tea Party Fab Four
Mike Lee, Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio


John Goodman, "Liberals Are Already Trying to Re-Write the History of the Obama Presidency", Thumbs UP!
The Obama presidency is a failed presidency. He has presided over one of the slowest economic recoveries in history. His foreign policy has been a disaster. ObamaCare is a mess. And it’s hard to lay the blame off on anyone else. The president didn’t make Republicans part of any of his decisions and most of the time he ignored congressional Democrats as well.
I realize that a post critical of Obama is not surprising to familiar readers. But let us look at the fact that Obama set himself to be the messianic post-partisan, post-racial President; perhaps those expectations were unrealistic, but how did he handle expectations? And really, there are comparisons; you can look at votes on major bills, mid-term election results, numbers of bipartisan legislation. Both FDR and LBJ got a significant number of GOP votes on their signature entitlement bills; Bill Clinton managed to achieve a balanced budget, certain investment tax and welfare reform. The GOP did not have a great second mid-term against Clinton, despite his impeachment. To argue, as many Dem apologists have, that the GOP opposition is obstructionist or racist or both is utterly pathetic; for one thing, the GOP actually has worse approval ratings than Obama, but the midterms were telling; most Dem candidates avoided public appearances with Obama (a few didn't even want to admit voting for him) and most GOP challengers attacked their opponent's voting record as pro-Obama). Even Chuck Schumer now admits the healthcare bill was a strategic error. Public opinion had turned against ObamaCare and was a key factor in Scott Brown's improbable victory in the special election for Ted Kennedy's old seat--and Scott Brown openly campaigned in deep blue Massachusetts as (filibuster-enabling) vote #41. Now the practical meaning is that the Senate and the House would normally reconcile their different bills, but Brown's vote would essentially kill any reconciled bill, so the House Dems basically held their nose and voted for a Senate bill they didn't like and then used the budget reconciliation process, not subject to a filibuster, to gain certain face-saving concessions. Obama and the Congressional Dems knew passing an unpopular partisan health bill had risks--they couldn't share the blame with GOP members who all voted against the bill.

I have frequently quoted Goodman, a health policy expert, in this blog. Goodman points out that ironically McCain's healthcare proposal during the 2008 campaign was, which involved a universal tax-free deduction for health insurance, was much more preferable than the Dems' own proposal. Right now individuals without employer-sponsored healthcare have to purchase with post-tax dollars, which means depending on their tax bracket they pay more for the same-cost coverage out of pocket. Although Goodman doesn't discuss these, the GOP might have also pressed for increasing marketing of policies across state lines, enabling pooling and/or self-insuring entities across states, shoring up state or regional high risk pools, and universal catastrophic coverage. Work with existing state regulators instead of centralizing authority, devolving/matching subsidy distributions; the fact is the Dems wanted to centralize regulation and expand already unsustainable Medicare/Medicaid programs. These were totally ideological and unnecessary goals.  If the goal was really to reduce the uninsured or to improve medical access, I would argue that freeing the healthcare industry is the best way to ensure that, but there are ways of using interstate authority to enabling basic major medical policies, break down anti-competitive state regulatory policy, occupational cartels, etc., and/or provide incentives for regional state arrangements. I would think that there was far less political risk working with existing state regulatory frameworks than trying to create a novel new federal entitlement. But the Dems, among other reasons, didn't like McCain's univeral deduction policy because union contracts often included Cadillac healthcare plans with full tax exemption, and they would likely lose some of their implicit tax subsidies, saying if you had a standard $15,000 deduction and their policies averaged, say, $23,000. But the greater injustice is that those who did not have an employer plan did not get an implicit tax subsidy.

Note that I do not personally agree to tax-advantaged policies in the sense I think they are unwise interventions in the marketplace--e.g., encourage consumption of unnecessary resources by artificially lowering medical costs. I think in part the consumer is artificially divorced from controlling medical costs because he has little apparent skin in the game other than co-pays. But what Goodman and I are both saying is that Obama could have struck a non-libertarian grand bargain by being more practical, pragmatic instead of insisting on centralization and ideology. But Obama, by reacting to Brown's elections in pushing the Senate bill through the House's throat, made a strategic choice for purely political reasons. He avoided political compromise at all costs, even as popular support had turned on him. ObamaCare was a key reason he lost the House in the 2010 election, and it was all his own fault. I remember one former Arkansas Congressman warned him that Clinton had similarly lost the Congress after pushing through a tax increase and the failure of HillaryCare; Obama basically responded that he was not Clinton--he was a better politician. But the fact is that Clinton had much more success than "post-partisan" Obama in dealing with the GOP. No more excuses for Obama. You have to win with the cards you've been dealt, and Obama has had less success in dealing with an opposition Congress than either Clinton or Bush.

Facebook Corner


Via Dollar Vigilante
Plunder is plunder, illegal or legal. People who think opportunistic looters are "more equal" are more of the problem.

(Mercatus Center). If you could put an economist on a cereal box, who would it be and what would the brand be called? Join in and submit your suggestions on MRUniversity.com
Austrian Booms and Busts

(Reason). Robert Draper's August 7 cover story in The New York Times Magazine about the ascendance of libertarianism in American political life featured a report from reason's "posh" Washington, D.C,. office, numerous interviews with reason staffers, and a glimpse at how libertarian thinking is changing American politics.
I hope so. I'd love to be having arguments with other libertarians about just how small government should be rather than arguments with fascists, who don't even know that they are fascists, about just how much power government should have.
Actually, anarcho-capitalists have always seemed to be more interested in taking on the allegedly heretical minarchists (like myself) than taking on the fascists/"progressives". To equate non-interventionist minarchists with meddlesome neocons/progressives is intellectually dishonest.
It's a big mistake to confuse libertarianism with the Libertarian Party, even in politics. Better, for example, to look at the ease with which Justin Amash gained reelection despite establishment opposition.
Amash, the Pauls, Massey and others are more fusion libertarian-conservatives (like myself). We still get steamrolled on issues like the Patriot Act. I think the LP gets marginalized for things like a preoccupation with drug legalization. More successful politicians look for interim steps, e.g., audit the Fed and/or audit the DoD, vs. an all-or-nothing end the Fed.
Rand is not a Libertarian
He's a more pragmatic libertarian-conservative.

Political Cartoon
Courtesy of the original artist via IPI


Courtesy of Gary Varvel via Facebook
Courtesy of Glenn McCoy via Townhall
Musical Interlude: Christmas 2014

Pentatonix, "Mary, Did You Know?". This a cappella group a few years won an NBC singing competition. I love this version and the accompanying video; my overall favorite remake is still the following Christ Church Choir's (Mark Lowry, one of the song's writers, calls it his favorite also).



Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Miscellany: 11/26/14

Quote of the Day
The man who strikes first admits that his ideas have given out.
Chinese proverb

Earlier One-Off Post: "Progressives" in a State of Denial

Chart of the Day


Via Libertarian Catholic
Image of the Day

Re Broken Window Fallacy: via Dollar Vigilante
Fee-Greedy Towns



Entertainment Potpourri: My New Favorite Hallmark Cable Movie

Corrine, trying to rebound from a failed relationship, makes a wish for a great romance on a Christmas tree ornament. The context for the song is that her once pregnant newlywed grandmother had gotten serial arrangements of a song melody from her husband at war, who died before sending the final segment; at one point in the movie, Dave, a secret admirer and co-worker, asks her if she ever wrote anything, and she mentioned as a 7-year-old she had tried to merge the immortal "Twas the Night Before Christmas" with "Come Home For Christmas".  Harold, an angel with a mission, gets a job at the same music store with Dave and Corrine and tries to get them together. (Of course, the nefarious Tim returns to resurrect his relationship with Corrine.) Corrine overhears Harold playing her grandfather's whole song, including the missing part. Dave, in a bid to win Corrine's heart, bribes the community group with free musical instruments to get Corrine the solo part; the song happens to be a variation of the granddaughter's lyrics on the grandfather's melody. (Who wouldn't fall in love with Corrine, a real sweetheart?) I love the song and arrangement; the backing choir is brilliant.



Guest Post Comment

From Libertarian Republican:
Australian Senator David Leyonhjelm today (26 November) introduced his long-awaited gay marriage bill in parliament. The straight Liberal Democrat told the upper house that he supported gay marriage 'because I think people ought to have the freedom to choose their own life path.'
'To most people, marriage equality means the right to get married irrespective of gender or sexual preference,' he said. 'But it is much more than that; it is the right to live your life as you choose and not have the government impose a particular view on you.'
The Freedom to Marry Bill proposes to change the definition of marriage to 'the union of two people', rather than a 'man and a woman.'
In keeping with his Libertarian values, it also gives non-government religious and civil celebrants the right to refuse to marry gay couples
No, the true libertarian position is NOT to change the legal definition of marriage, but rather to privatize the concept of marriage.

A Reappraisal of Bork

Familiar readers know that during the life of the blog I've sometimes shifted my perspective; e.g.,  I went from backing McCain in 2008 to publicly distancing myself from him in a 2012 post. But more specifically I finally dropped my Democratic Party affiliation (by that time, I was a rare conservative Democrat; I had been a pro-life liberal Democrat until I took my first economics course at UH;  my professor was non-ideological) over the borking of his failed SCOTUS nomination. In fact, I can recall ordering a number of Bork volumes during the early years of the blog; I don't think I ever found the time to read them.

But just like I developed nagging doubts about McCain, the same thing started to happen with Bork. I still believe that he was the most brilliant jurist ever selected for SCOTUS in my lifetime; that doesn't mean I always agreed with him, i.e., the infamous inkblot with respect to the ninth amendment. But it wasn't until I learned that he and Holmes had a majoritarian deference  that I suddenly realized how libertarian my perspective has evolved.

Sunday Talk Soup

Today I was listening to a backlog of MTP with Chuck Todd when I came across a rather brutal prosecution of Bobby Jindal by an argumentative Todd. It was one gotcha after another; e.g., you  have a high disapproval rate in LA--how do you expect to compete in a Presidential primary; you enacted a tax cut and then boom, you have a billion dollar deficit;  etc.  It was so one-sided; the only good thing was that Jindal is one of the brainiest politicians on the planet. He can land 3 or 4 spot-on talking points before Chuck Todd could draw a breath.

There was also a softball interview on ObamaCare where Todd was reinforcing  (in fact, finishing their sentences) administration talking points  about cost containment, cuts in the uninsured. GOP  resistance was regarded as totally political, and there were allegations that several Republicans were for ObamaCare before the stereotype Tea Party allegedly cracked down on them. It's the same nonsense that annoyed me about David Gregory.

Not to mention there was this whole discussion about how the Dems will have much different, favorable turnout in 2016, more minorities and some of the Senate seats (e.g., CO and NC)  would have gone the other other way, that in 2016 the Dems will start out with 240 or so votes, only a few states shy of the magic number. I will simply point out 2016 is a change election and Reagan's landslide victory over Carter was not expected. Too much emphasis that minorities will vote for Dems 4-1.

Facebook Corner

(LFC). Jon Stewart does a good job ripping the Republicans who have made grand stands against eminent domain being used for environmental purposes, but have no issue with eminent domain being used for the Keystone Oil Pipeline. Theft is theft, no matter the circumstances, The Law still applies. If I can't steal my neighbor's land, neither can the government.
Some idiots don't understand the difference between an easement, in this case a pipe buried 4 ft. deep under a thin strip of land, for which the person receives fair market value for lease or purchase and is otherwise minimally inconvenienced, and real eminent domain abuse. Cry me a river.

(Cato Institute). "If you could wave a magic wand and make one or two policy or institutional changes to brighten the U.S. economy’s long-term growth prospects, what would you change and why?"
Join the conversation on Twitter using ‪#‎CatoGrowth‬!
Elimination of progressive tax structures, emphasis on consumption taxes (e.g., VAT), zero-based regulation, privatization and/or devolution of noncore functionality (vs. defense, justice), open immigration, unilateral free trade.

Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Henry Payne via Townhall
Musical Interlude: My Favorite Vocalists

Glen Campbell, "It's Only Make Believe". As announced earlier, I'll be suspending the Vocalist/Campbell series until the New Year for my annual holiday music series.