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[A-List] Modern Economics: Kleptomacy



American workers have not enjoyed an actual increase in
wages since 1968; families have "made" it by having both
adults work, overtime, and through use of "easy" but very
high-interest credit.  This latter problem has been ameliorated
most recently by the re-finance mortgage market, which is
gasping.  Now the screws are really going to be tightened,
and it will be interesting to see if the number one taxpayers
coerced into funding the NWO begin connecting the dots.

BTW, the Shiller book ("The New Financial Order:  Risk
in the 21st Century") mentioned in the commentary below
is a real totalitarian horror.  You should all read it, if you
can stomach it.  And I though Jeff Sachs was a menace!
(He is, of course, but Shiller is a MOAB - and apparently
the new theorist of the NWO's finance department.)

Anne

PS  Sorry the charts and graphics didn't reprint.
***********************************************
Sanders Research Associates



Commentary

Chris Sanders

Sanders Research Associates

Our species, let us accept it, is entering its phase of socialisation; we
cannot continue to exist without undergoing the transformation which in one
way or another will forge our multiplicity into a whole. But how are we to
encounter the ordeal? In what spirit and what form are we to approach this
metamorphosis so that in us it may be hominised?

This, as I see it, is the problem of values, deeper than any technical
question of terrestrial organisation, which we must all face today if we are
to confront in full awareness our destiny as living beings, that is to say,
our responsibilities towards 'evolution'.

Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, The Future of Man, Harper and Row, New York,
1964, p.42. Emphasis in original.

"We will tolerate substantial income inequality."

War as you like it

Markets have not yet absorbed the realities of the new war. This is
particularly true of equities, which have behaved since the "end" of the
Iraq campaign as though it was all over. It is not over. Only the imposition
of censorship disguises that fact. Once the American military killed a few
journalists, serious coverage of its activities in Iraq ended. That is all
there is to the end of the campaign. The war goes on, moving into another
stage in which American forces focus on cementing control over the region.
Donald Rumsfeld is fond of using the experience of Afghanistan as the model
for what the world can expect in Iraq. The war continues in Afghanistan, and
in spite of the imposition of a puppet regime in Kabul, the US controls very
little of the country. For once we agree with Rumsfeld. That is very likely
to be the outcome in Iraq.

War is being sold, if that is the right word, on the basis that it is good
for business and for the market. This is simply wrong. Nothing could in fact
be worse. America's apparent offensive is in fact defensively inspired and
even desperate. It is a bald attempt to reinvigorate the post World War II
international order, collapsed under a mountain of debt. It is, in short,
being waged to preserve relative American power. This is doomed to failure,
but saying this is not to say that its boosters in Washington, London and
Jerusalem are going to be losers, either.

The real losers are what the political left has always called the masses,
which is to say labour. The problem in economic terms is an old one, but the
current level of economic discourse is so impoverished that it is seldom
discussed, much less analysed. This is too bad, because current developments
threaten not just labour, but the markets themselves.

The problem is the age-old conundrum of wealth and income distribution,
which contrary to the self-advertisement of the neo twins, "neo-liberalism"
and "neo-conservatism," has not been solved in the United States or anywhere
else. In modern economics, terminology is just the first of the difficulties
encountered by the serious analyst. Neo-liberalism refers supposedly to the
exponents of modern global market capitalism, while neo-conservatism might
well be characterised as its military wing. The point here is that there is
considerable overlap between the two groups, which as in so many facets of
the new world order, is nonsensical locution. How one can be liberal and
conservative at the same time is a contradiction that does not seem to
disturb the smug editorial staff at organs of the press that could be fairly
considered to be the propaganda instruments of the of this new order, which
is neither new nor endowed with much order.

One man's deflation is another's falling income

Recognising the problem is a fundamental prerequisite for understanding the
behaviour of the modern international economy. If one denies the increasing
disparity of wealth and incomes then one need not be troubled by its
deflationary consequences. Yet fear of deflation in recent years has become
the bugbear of the markets. But deflation as the markets appear to
understand it is just another of the order's tautologies. The assertion is
this: profits are threatened by poor pricing power so costs must be cut. The
costs that are cut, of course, are labour costs. This most emphatically does
not include management compensation, which has soared in recent decades.
With labour incomes stagnant or even falling, it is no wonder that demand
for products falls behind, and in turn creates a new cycle of cost pressures
and job cuts. In formal terms, the problem is that New World Order economics
does not recognise or acknowledge that one man's cost is another man's
income. In the global economy, this can be expressed as an identity, Y = W,
or income equals wages. In order for there to be demand, workers must be
paid so that they have the means with which to express that demand. If
profit, and by extension capital accumulation is supported by lowering
wages, than eventually the circulation of money between income and wages
will fall to zero. Capital, accumulating with nowhere else to go, will be
diverted to investment in paper, which is to say on claims on future income.
This is the same as saying that it will be diverted to claims on future
wages. This is the real source of deflation in the modern global economy,
not the wages of workers. In an idealised economy this could not continue
indefinitely or perhaps even for very long, as investment in new productive
capacity would fall to bring supply and demand back into alignment.



We do not, however, live in an idealised economy, let alone an ideal one.
Indeed, it is hard to recognise the economy of the textbooks even remotely
in the real political economy of life. In the textbook economy the United
States would have long since adjusted to the debt accumulation of the cold
war years and raised national savings and net exports. In the textbook
economy trade would be free and access to vital resources would be taken as
a market and price guaranteed fact of life. In the real economy, world wars
have been fought over just this point, and the War on Terror has just had
its first real macro economic impact: the US has now become the monopoly
price setter in the international petroleum markets.

If you can get away with something once, why not twice?

In our last issue of Commentary we revisited our expectations for the growth
of the US net foreign debt and government deficit. We have been frequent
critics of US economic leadership for the reason that the American failure
to deal with its dependence on foreign borrowing constitutes a large and
growing weight upon the international economy and is the premier source of
international instability. The US failure to deal with this has been
puzzling and has led us from time to time to deride administration economic
plans as no plans at all.


A clearer picture is emerging however, of what American intentions might be.
Disquietingly, it is more of the same - a lot more of the same. We have in
previous issues discussed the effects of the Basel bank capital adequacy
standards, one of which has been to enable a vast increase in the leverage
permitted the largest international, and especially American, banks. Now the
American economist Robert Shiller has published a book The New Financial
Order, which proposes six "ideas for a new financial order." (Be sure to
read the forthcoming SRA review of Shiller's book by Anne Williamson)
Shiller's six ideas, which are for such modest things as livelihood
insurance, GDP swaps and markets in national income (yes you heard right,
markets in long term claims on national income) which boggle the mind. Not,
mind you, because of their thoughtfulness, originality or even exposition,
but rather for the opposite. For Shiller, the concentration of financial
power represented by the structure of the modern financial industry is the
apogee of human development. Facts are no impediment to his
post-intellectual mind, which sets the stage with that most fashionable
device of the New World Order literati, a thought experiment. Imagine,
Shiller invites us, to think of what the world might have been had we had
such "innovations" at the end of the Second World War. That what we have,
which is an increasingly unstable financial and political system, is of no
consequence to this man, who dismisses Enron, Long Term Capital Management,
and the stock market debacle of 2000 as aberrations instead of the evidence
of systemic dysfunction that they really are. The linkage of these events to
the innovations he praises is simply dismissed out of hand. In Shiller, the
New World Order economics profession has found its Michael Ledeen.

The Ministry of Kleptomania

This should terrify anyone with a net worth of under a quarter of a billion
dollars because what it represents is a faux intellectual blueprint for
institutionalised kleptomania coming out of the heart of American academia,
Yale University. Shiller understands this. In his introduction, titled The
Promise of Economic Security, he tries to cloak his real intentions by
staking claim to the moral high ground. What we are to read, he tells us
with typical modesty, is a way to bring economic security and life
fulfilment to all. He wastes no time, however, in reassuring the trustees of
Yale and others who might read this and wonder if Shiller's career should be
deep-sixed. "We are thus concerned about all people's lives, and not just
the poorest," Shiller intones. "We will tolerate substantial income
inequality." There is thus no danger of mistaking exactly for whom Shiller
is shilling. He needn't worry about the Bush family or an invitation to a
midnight session at the Skull and Bones Society's crypt on the Yale campus.

This is not hot air. Unemployment in the United States has risen to 6%.
Corporate profits are recovering, but this is happening through cost
reductions, not due to strong demand. Now this is not in itself necessarily
a bad thing. Early in a recovery one would expect business to be slow in
hiring. But the Employment Cost Index has risen, with benefits inflation
surging. That old bugbear, rising health costs, is leading the way.

Class War redux

The international situation deteriorates almost by the day. Though the
Middle East receives the lion's share of attention these days, Latin America
is equally troubled. In Cuba, where a thaw in political life was
discernible, a crackdown by the regime has put an end to it. This was
inevitable, given Washington's escalating rhetoric, and the increasing
problems elsewhere in the region. With the examples of Afghanistan and Iraq
before them, no one on the Pentagon's hit list could conceivably afford to
relax.

The point here is that the market wants to believe good news right now and
is in a mood to give almost any development the benefit of the doubt. But
situations like this usually are a consequence of market positions, not
fundamental valuation. Our inclination is to think that after three years of
market declines, there must be a lot of shorts. They have to contend with a
president determined to win a second term in 2004, a Federal Reserve Board
that is equally determined to accommodate whatever financial leverage he
demands to get it, and an oil industry that is now in a position to set
prices. A short squeeze could well be protracted, and take the market
surprisingly high.

But not too high, we would venture. War may make for cool photo ops, but the
chickenhawk in the White House has started one that is not about to end any
time soon, and is going to be a drain on manpower and resources for years to
come. Even if he were to lose in 2004, the two Democrats most likely to face
him, Lieberman and Gephardt, have run both flags up their halyards, American
and Israeli. Electing a democrat is not going to change the things that
count.

What counts is that there is nothing yet on the horizon to suggest that the
trends toward greater national and international wealth and income
concentration are going to reverse, the implication being that demand will
continue to stagnate. This will continue to be offset by low interest rates
and super-accommodative monetary policy. It would be wrong to think of this
as deflationary, though. More accurately, it is the essential precursor for
hyper-inflation. What is at issue really is how the big blocks of the
industrial world, the US and Europe, position themselves for relative
advantage. And it may be in ten years time that we all look back on this and
remember it as having been the time when the first shots in a new class war
were fired. Because the truth is that the "masses" are being left with very
little choice in the matter. Sometimes you just have to fight. Whether you
want to or not.



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