How America Can Rise Again January 7, 2010
Posted by tkcollier in Geopolitics, philosophy & politics.Tags: America, Economy & Business, Geopolitics, Government
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Is America going to hell? After a year of economic calamity that many fear has sent us into irreversible decline, the author finds reassurance in the peculiarly American cycle of crisis and renewal, and in the continuing strength of the forces that have made the country great: our university system, our receptiveness to immigration, our culture of innovation. In most significant ways, the U.S. remains the envy of the world. But here’s the alarming problem: our governing system is old and broken and dysfunctional. Fixing it—without resorting to a constitutional convention or a coup—is the key to securing the nation’s future. – by James Fallows
via How America Can Rise Again – The Atlantic (January/February 2010).
Economic View – For Much of the World, a Good Financial Decade January 2, 2010
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Economy & Business, Financial Crisis
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Steady economic growth is an under-reported news story.
In a given year, an extra percentage point of economic growth may not seem to matter much. But, over time, the difference between annual growth of 1 percent and 2 percent determines whether you can double your standard of living every 35 years or every 70 years. At 5 percent annual economic growth, living standards double about every 14 years.
Putting aside the United States, which ranks third, the four most populous countries are China, India, Indonesia and Brazil,all had over 5% annual growth. Even Africa, as a whole grew at moer than 5% most years.
via Economic View – For Much of the World, a Good Financial Decade – NYTimes.com.
Our New Economy’s Direction September 20, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Economy & Business, Manufacturing
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The U.S. remains the world’s largest manufacturing nation, larger than China or anyone else. Many of these manufactured goods are sold outside of the U.S.. U.S. farm products, technology products, consumer products, commodities, and services are also sold abroad.
Bureaucracy and hierarchy were wonderful administrative structures for a manufacturing based economy and for command and control based activities like large scale manufacturing, large military, mass education, and the big government of the 1940’s, 50’s, 60’s, and even the 70’s. However, since the 1980’s, the efficacy of the command and control oriented hierarchical bureaucracy has been poor. Since that time, large manufacturing companies have been downsizing and failing with great frequency.
On the other hand, many of the more flexible, quick moving, and technologically advanced organizations have prospered. One reason for this may be that Technology based companies have flat organizational structures rather than hierarchical bureaucracies. In addition they often have merit-based promotion and compensation schemes, rather than seniority based promotion schemes. Guild Investment Letter
China Largest Meat & Poultry Producer May 20, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Business, Food, Geopolitics.Tags: China, Economy & Business, Food
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And China is the largest aqua-culture producer of seafood and the largest Wheat grower in the world (for all those Dim Sums and noodles to feed their 6 Billion mouths). Click on this link to see an animation on the Chinese populationn trend and their oncoming aging problem, similiar to Japan’s. To read more about the latest surprising population trends read the linked article under “Muslim Birth Rates Falling Worldwide”.
India and China want IMF to sell its $100b gold April 21, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Banks, Economy & Business, Financial Crisis, Gold
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Another example of the emerging Markets thinking outside-of-the-box to come up with a seemingly simple solution to re-starting the developing world’s growth.
India and China may press for the sale of the entire gold reserves of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to raise money for the least developed countries.
The IMF holds 103.4 million ounces (3,217 tonnes) of gold that, if sold, can fetch about $100 billion.
A draft paper exchanged between New Delhi and Beijing proposes that the gold be sold in bullion markets over a period of two to three years. The money thus raised must be used in tackling poverty in the poorest nations.
IMF Warns Over Limits Of Stimulus April 17, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Banks, Economy & Business, Financial Crisis
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Mr Strauss-Kahn called for a urgent action to “cleanse banks” of toxic assets and for further fiscal stimulus beyond the 2pc of global GDP already agreed. The snag is that high-debt countries may have hit the limits already.
“The impact becomes negative for debt levels that exceed 60pc of GDP,” said the Fund.
While no countries were named, this would raise questions about Japan, Germany, France, Italy and ultimately Britain and the US after their bank rescues.
via IMF warns over parallels to Great Depression – Telegraph.
A ‘Copper Standard’ for the world’s currency system? – Telegraph April 16, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: China, Economy & Business, Financial Crisis
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One thing is clear: Beijing suspects that the US Federal Reserve is engineering a covert default on America’s debt by printing money. Premier Wen Jiabao issued a blunt warning last month that China was tiring of US bonds. “We have lent a huge amount of money to the US, so of course we are concerned about the safety of our assets,” he said.
This is slightly disingenuous. China has the world’s largest reserves – $1.95 trillion, mostly in dollars – because it has been holding down the yuan to boost exports. This mercantilist strategy has reached its limits.
The beauty of recycling China’s surplus into metals instead of US bonds is that it kills so many birds with one stone: it stops the yuan rising, without provoking complaints of currency manipulation by Washington; metals are easily stored in warehouses, unlike oil; the holdings are likely to rise in value over time since the earth’s crust is gradually depleting its accessible ores. Above all, such a policy safeguards China’s industrial revolution, while the West may one day face a supply crisis.
The next industrial revolution is going to be led by hybrid cars, and that needs copper. You can see the subtle way that China is moving into 30 or 40 countries with resources
via A ‘Copper Standard’ for the world’s currency system? – Telegraph.
Free Food, Party All Night – At Denny’s April 11, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business, Food.Tags: Economy & Business, Food
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On February 1, the 56-year-old company aired a Super Bowl commercial that promised free Grand Slams to anyone who walked through the door from 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Feb. 3. Denny’s, which is open 24/7, says some two million free meals were served.
Do these promotions justify the cost? CEO Marchioli. The additional customers buying juice and coffee with their free breakfast, plus the repeat business the giveaways generate, covers the cost. “We’ve already paid for the Super Bowl promotion, and then some,”
Denny’s has created something called the “Allnighter” program. From 10 p.m. to 5 a.m., the chain has started playing alternative rock music on the restaurant soundtrack. Denny’s has now sponsored over 30 emerging bands —they get free meals while on tour — and organized late-night meet-and-greets, and occasional jam sessions, with the musicians in the restaurants. The servers wear casual black t-shirts instead of a buttoned-up uniform. Denny’s also just introduced four new late-night menu items, each priced between $3 and $4. These include the “Pancake Puppy 12-pack,” a dozen bite sized hotcakes rolled in cinnamon and sugar, and “Kickin’ Flavor Wraps,” two tortillas served with chicken strips. The idea is to serve stuff that groups of amped-up rabble-rousers can share. Denny’s wants to give the late-night crowd a social experience they can’t get at the fast-food drive-thrus, which are now staying open later through the night and eating away at the chain’s graveyard shift revenues.
via Denny’s: Where The Food Is Free, and Drunks Can Pee – TIME.
Black Swan-proof World April 8, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Banks, Economy & Business, Financial Crisis
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We love 10 step programs. So here an economic perscription by the author who was a veteran trader, a distinguished professor at New York University’s Polytechnic Institute and the author of The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable 1. What is fragile should break early while it is still small. Nothing should ever become too big to fail. Evolution in economic life helps those with the maximum amount of hidden risks – and hence the most fragile – become the biggest.
2. No socialisation of losses and privatisation of gains. Whatever may need to be bailed out should be nationalised; whatever does not need a bail-out should be free, small and risk-bearing. We have managed to combine the worst of capitalism and socialism. In France in the 1980s, the socialists took over the banks. In the US in the 2000s, the banks took over the government. This is surreal.
via FT.com / Comment / Opinion – Ten principles for a Black Swan-proof world.
Serious Threats to Sirius Radio March 31, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business, Music.Tags: Economy & Business, Internet Radio, Music
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Web outfits like Pandora, Foneshow, Stitcher, and Slacker broadcast portable and mobile content that makes Sirius look overpriced and stodgy.
Companies like the Web radio service Pandora, Foneshow, Stitcher, and Slacker—as well as traditional content providers—are broadcasting portable and mobile content that is cheaper or even free. Moreover, these upstarts can often replicate Sirius programming. One example: On Mar. 30, MLB will release an iPhone (AAPL) mobile application that will stream games live from all 30 teams—which is what Sirius customers get now—and offer video clips and live score updates for $10 for the entire season. Sirius’ subscriptions that include MLB games start at $10 a month. The new app doesn’t violate baseball’s contract with Sirius XM, which covers rights to stream games only on satellite radio.
For Sirius XM, this competition over price and content comes at the worst possible time.
Let’s Put Down the Pitchforks March 22, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Banks, Economy & Business, Financial Crisis
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During a financial crisis, fairness is a luxury we cannot afford. During the 1930s, bankers and financiers lost everything, but the outcome — a decade-long depression — was hardly fair to the ordinary American. The key question is not whether something is fair, but whether it helps get us through this mess faster and at a lower cost.
At the moment, the Treasury is working (and working and working) on ways to entice private capital back into the banking and shadow-banking system by offering government financing and guarantees against losses. Every dollar of private capital that can be attracted back into the system is a dollar that the Treasury won’t have to borrow or the Federal Reserve won’t have to print. And only with the return of private capital will the government be able to get back the rescue money it has committed.
As the financiers see it, there’s a big difference between the government that sets tough terms for participation in its financial rescue programs and a government that is a fickle and unreliable partner, that tries to micromanage their businesses and changes the rules of the game with every zig and zag of public opinion
While it was Wall Street that got rich by peddling new ways for Americans to live beyond their means, the decision to do so was ours. It was we who ran up the credit card bills, we who drew down the equity in our homes and we who refused to tax ourselves for the government services we demanded. Wall Street bankers may have been the pushers, but it was we Americans who became addicted to the easy credit.
via Steven Pearlstein – Let’s Put Down the Pitchforks – washingtonpost.com.
Joe Cassano – The Guy Who Sank AIG March 21, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Banks, Economy & Business, Financial Crisis
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That guy — the Patient Zero of the global economic meltdown — was one Joseph Cassano, the head of a tiny, 400-person unit within the company called AIG Financial Products, or AIGFP. Cassano, a pudgy, balding Brooklyn College grad with beady eyes and way too much forehead, cut his teeth in the Eighties working for Mike Milken, the granddaddy of modern Wall Street debt alchemists. Milken, who pioneered the creative use of junk bonds, relied on messianic genius and a whole array of insider schemes to evade detection while wreaking financial disaster. Cassano, by contrast, was just a greedy little turd with a knack for selective accounting who ran his scam right out in the open, thanks to Washington’s deregulation of the Wall Street casino.
A Decade to Lose March 19, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Economy & Business, Financial Crisis
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If governments don’t understand and simply try to bring back the “good times” of an asset-based economy, it could result in a decade of stagnation.
Developing economies are already 30 percent of the global economy at current price and nearly half on a purchasing power basis. The export model cannot thrive for shortage of customers. Developing countries have to trade more with each other and develop domestic demand. But this would require painful reforms to their political economies. The key is property rights and income distribution. The two must go hand in hand. Lack of domestic demand tends to result from income concentration, which is due to uneven playing field in opportunities. Many developing countries, like South American and Southeast Asian countries, have stagnated in the past decade due to their inability to reform their political economies.
Bursting of the credit bubble is triggering the biggest recession since the World War II. Repairing the global economy requires complex and difficult reforms. Simple stimulus can’t bring back prosperity. Thanks to Peggy Sadler
Andy Xie was Morgan Stanley’s Chief Economist for Asia Pacific from 1997 to 2006.
via A Decade to Lose.
This Too Shall Pass March 17, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Economy & Business, Financial Crisis
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We are now in an astonishingly noncommercial moment. Risk is out of favor. The financial world is abashed. Enterprise is suspended. The public culture is dominated by one downbeat story after another as members of the educated class explore and enjoy the humiliation of the capitalist vulgarians.
Washington is temporarily at the center of the nation’s economic gravity and a noncommercial administration holds sway. This is an administration that has many lawyers and academics but almost no businesspeople in it, let alone self-made entrepreneurs. The president speaks passionately about education and health care reform, but he is strangely aloof from the banking crisis and displays no passion when speaking about commercial drive and success.
But if there is one thing we can be sure of, this pause will not last. The cultural DNA of the past 400 years will not be erased. The pendulu
via Op-Ed Columnist – The Commercial Republic – NYTimes.com.
A Simple Guide to the Banking Crisis March 15, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Banks, Economy & Business, Financial Crisis
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Proposition 1: The boom in the U.S. was funded almost totally by foreign money.
Proposition 2: Foreign investors preferred to put their money into investments that were perceived as having low risk.
Proposition 3: Today, after everything has gone bad, many of the counterparties on the other side of the toxic assets are foreign investors, directly or indirectly.
Proposition 4: It’s a lot harder for the Federal Reserve and Treasury to resolve a banking crisis where the main counterparties are not American.
Proposition 5: The fact that the counterparties are overseas means that out of the three options: bailout, bankruptcy, or nationalization—none are satisfactory.
The best actual marker of the progress of the financial crisis is not stock or real estate prices, but rather how well international cooperation holds up.
Sometime later this year we will have a massive global conference aimed at simultaneously resolving the banking crises in the major developed countries. The goal will be a political negotiation of the value of the toxic assets, and a clearing of the books.
If the conference succeeds, then it will be possible to fix the financial system relatively easily. But if it fails, then things get dicey.
“The Great Disruption” March 8, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business, Enviroment.Tags: Economy & Business, Environment, Financial Crisis
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— when both Mother Nature and Father Greed have hit the wall at once — “The Great Disruption.”
“We created a way of raising standards of living that we can’t possibly pass on to our children,” said Joe Romm, a physicist and climate expert who writes the indispensable blog climateprogress.org. We have been getting rich by depleting all our natural stocks — water, hydrocarbons, forests, rivers, fish and arable land — and not by generating renewable flows.
“We are taking a system operating past its capacity and driving it faster and harder,” he wrote me. “No matter how wonderful the system is, the laws of physics and biology still apply.” We must have growth, but we must grow in a different way. For starters, economies need to transition to the concept of net-zero, whereby buildings, cars, factories and homes are designed not only to generate as much energy as they use but to be infinitely recyclable in as many parts as possible. Let’s grow by creating flows rather than plundering more stocks.
via Op-Ed Columnist – The Inflection Is Near? – NYTimes.com.
Globalization Retreating March 5, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business, Geopolitics.Tags: Banks, Economy & Business, Financial Crisis, Globalization
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“The collapse of globalization . . . is absolutely possible,” said Jeffrey Sachs, a noted American economist. “It happened in the 20th century in the wake of World War I and the Great Depression, and could happen again. Nationalism is rising and our political systems are inward looking, the more so in times of crisis.”
Tom Friedman Is Worried March 4, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Banks, Economy & Business, Financial Crisis, Obama
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I’m worried. We’ve just elected a talented young president with many good instincts about how to propel our country forward, extend health care to more people, make our tax code fairer and launch a green industrial revolution. But do you know what I fear? I fear that his whole first term could be eaten by Citigroup, A.I.G., Bank of America, Merrill Lynch, and the whole housing/subprime credit bubble we inflated these past 20 years.
I hope my fears are exaggerated. But ask yourself this: Why couldn’t former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson solve this problem? And why does it seem as though his successor, Tim Geithner, won’t even look us in the eye and spell out his strategy? Is it because they don’t get it? No. It is because they know — like Roy Scheider in the movie “Jaws,” when he first saw the great white shark — that “we’re gonna need a bigger boat,” and they’re too afraid to tell us just how big.
The Formula That Killed Wall Street March 4, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Banks, Economy & Business, Financial Crisis
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In the mid-’80s, Wall Street turned to the quants—brainy financial engineers—to invent new ways to boost profits. Their methods for minting money worked brilliantly… until one of them devastated the global economy.
via Recipe for Disaster: The Formula That Killed Wall Street
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USA – The Great World Hope February 25, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business, Geopolitics.Tags: Economy & Business, Financial Crisis, Obama
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Johns Hopkins University foreign policy expert Michael Mandelbaum in his book, “The Case for Goliath.
” When it comes to the way other countries view America’s pre-eminent role in the world, he wrote, “whatever its life span, three things can be safely predicted: they will not pay for it; they will continue to criticize it; and they will miss it when it is gone.”
A senior Korean official remarked to Tom Friedman
“No other country can substitute for the U.S. The U.S. is still No. 1 in military, No. 1 in economy, No. 1 in promoting human rights and No. 1 in idealism. Only the U.S. can lead the world. No other country can. China can’t. The E.U. is too divided, and Europe is militarily far behind the U.S. So it is only the United States … We have never had a more unipolar world than we have today.”
Yes, many Asians resent the fact that Americans scolded them about their banking crisis in the 1990s, and now we’ve made many of the same mistakes. But that schadenfreude doesn’t last long. In random conversations here in Seoul with Korean and Asian thinkers, journalists and business executives, I found people really worried: Could it be, they ask, that the Americans don’t know what they are doing, or, worse, that they know what they are doing but the problem is just so much bigger than anything we’ve ever seen?
Biggest Housing Bubble Of The Century February 5, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: Economy & Business, Housing
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This chart puts the size of the last Housing Bubble in perspective and show us how far we have to go to correct it.
The next chart shows how far we have come in downgrading 56% of all Mortgage-Backed Securities issued from 2005 through 2007 Bubble. 
The US Started And Now Has to Fix The Economic Mess February 4, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business, Geopolitics.Tags: Economy & Business, Obama
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Decisions taken in the next few months will shape the world for a generation. If we get through this crisis without collapse, we will have the time and the chance to construct a better and more stable global order. If we do not, that opportunity may not recur for decades.
We are living on the cusp of history. The priority is to reverse the downward spiral of despair through overwhelming and concerted action. That will only occur if the US now gives the leadership we need. Mr Obama may even find, as many presidents have found before him, that leading the world is easier and more rewarding than cajoling a recalcitrant Congress. This may not be the challenge he expected. But it is the challenge he confronts. History will judge his presidency on whether he dares to succeed
via FT.com / Columnists / Martin Wolf – Why Davos Man is waiting for Obama to save him.
Folding dealers shock car buyers with unpaid liens February 3, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in Business, Economy & Business.Tags: auto, Economy & Business, Scams
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The national wave of auto dealership closures has come crashing down on thousands of people who are on the hook for used-car loans that dealers were supposed to absolve.
When a car buyer still owes money on a vehicle he is trading in, the dealer promises to pay off the outstanding loan, then resells the vehicle. But as more dealers go out of business, some are sticking consumers with the bill. Lenders can then go after the previous owner who thought the debt was paid, or repossess the car from the new owner who assumed it came with clear title.
via Folding dealers shock car buyers with unpaid liens – Yahoo! News.
Blame HGTV for the Real Estate Crash January 4, 2009
Posted by tkcollier in cool stuff.Tags: Economy & Business, Housing
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HGTV is an evil empire that never rests. You can loathe your current domicile 24/7 with programs such as “Stagers” (move a few things around and double the value of your home); “Designed to Sell” (you can sell your house, even if the house next to yours is in foreclosure); “Design on a Dime” (see, it’s cheap); and “Property Virgins” (losing your virginity was fun, wasn’t it?) Every show features highly attractive hosts who show you how to “unlock the hidden potential” in your home, how to turn a $10 thrift-store table into a “wow” media center, and how to make everything “pop.” Pop is the word of choice on HGTV.
Ironic, isn’t it, given the fact that pop is the sound we keep hearing from the McMansion-sized housing bubble HGTV created.
via Jim Sollisch: Blame Television for the Bubble – WSJ.com. (more…)
Why No UAW In The South December 22, 2008
Posted by tkcollier in Economy & Business.Tags: auto, Auto Bailout, Economy & Business, Union
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Thus, historians agree that unionizing southern plants would require a dramatic cultural shift.”In the North you work for the UAW first and the company second,” says Hoffer at Virginia Commonwealth University. “It’s just never been that way in the South. You work for the company first.”
That attitude certainly is reflected in previous failed attempts to organize the transplant factories. Two decades of work by the UAW to force a vote at a Toyota factory in Georgetown, Ky., have yielded no results; votes at a Nissan plant in Smyrna, Tenn., were rejected out of hand by workers in 1989 and 2001.
“There is considerable tension between the union and Southern autoworkers,” says John Heitmann, a history professor at the University of Dayton in Dayton, Ohio, who has studied the auto industry for a decade. “It’s in part due to the strong strain of individualism that’s a part of the South. There’s no real compassion for union brothers down there.”
via Auto Bailout: Southern Workers Watch and Worry – BusinessWeek.




