“Money for Nothing and Cheques from Centre Link” |
| Money for Nothing and Cheques from Centre Link Posted: 16 Jul 2010 04:39 PM PDT Governments around the world are in trouble. They face unhappy voters at every turn. It's when voters are unhappy that they tend to care. That is supposed to be good for democracy. But who knows what sort of hair brained schemes the voting public might come up with once empowered? Telling people what clothes they can wear seems quite popular at the moment. So then you wonder whether politicians will stand up and do the right thing in the face of adverse political pressure. Will the mob rule? That's what constitutions are for, by the way. When popular opinion goes haywire, there are certain things the majority can't do. But politicians and the judiciary have watered down their constitutions in the name of practicality, necessity and their careers. There were poor to be supported, refugees to be saved, gunmen to be kept at bay, criminals to be cared for, consumers to be protected, rich to be made more equal and houses to be made affordable. Constitutional barriers are mere inconveniences to these lofty goals. Now we face the consequences. High taxes are the main one. Low employment rates are another. Who works when you get your money for nothing and your cheques for free from Centre Link? Wait a minute. Low employment in Australia? Yup, "Australia's employment rate - the percentage of the population with a job - ranks only 20th of the 27 rich OECD countries for prime-age workers" reports Tim Colebatch at The Age. The details are very much worth a read. Never again do we wish to receive an email from subscribers about Australia's lofty employment numbers. They aren't fair dinkum. Back to the global sphere. It's going to take an impressive set of politicians to educate the masses on the consequences of many years of free lunches. One woman who people can look to for guidance is Maggie. Janet Albrechtsen at the Australian is a fan:
Strangely enough, Margaret Thatcher probably wouldn't object to Janet's description. And she would probably measure her success by her death threats. But Australia isn't exactly stuck in the middle of an economic crisis, so why worry? GDP stats indicate the private sector is doing just fine. And house prices barely sneezed as the US was deciding on flower arrangements for its funeral in 2008. It hardly seems necessary to point out that the Aussie stock market did in fact plunge. And the battles raging around the world are ideological ones. It isn't likely that Australia will remain a lone bastion of Keynesianism if the world figures out how stupid that is. So change is in the air. Where do we turn? If a rather annoyed public opinion does control politics, where will it take its political leaders? That's where Janet Albrechtsen's second and recent article comes into play: Hey, big spenders, hands off our money. The sub-heading a slightly confused "Julia Gillard can learn much from the principles of Hayek and Friedman." We won't get into the Hayek vs Friedman story. Aside from that, Janet probably didn't read the "Why I am not a Conservative" chapter in Hayek's The Constitution of Liberty, nor Friedman's Free To Choose. But the remaining article itself is excellent.
One example was the Green Loans Program.
(Perhaps the longest sentence ever written?) Ahh, stimulus. The Working (to be) Poor The Age's article titled "Sea of Debt" sounded good from the beginning. It got worse. Geoff Strong went on a bit of a tangent with a so called Stacey:
We go on to read about how "the registration on her 1995 Toyota Camry has sometimes gone unpaid and she has only allowed herself a one-week holiday in Hobart in two years. Her weekly outing is ten-pin bowling with friends." And she doesn't even celebrate Christmas. This is a sad story indeed. Then Geoff Strong drops the bombshell: Stacey has a "full-time permanent job with the state government pays $55,000 a year". So if life is that difficult for an Aussie on that income, this country really is in trouble. But perhaps there is more to the story. Find out yourself here. (Hint: Her house was refinanced several times in a suburb with "the third-highest price rise for houses in Melbourne" in 2008.) But if "unremarkable expectations should allow [a person] at least a small slice of the Australian dream," then communism would work. Sadly it's not about expectations. It's about reality. And changing your expectations to conform with reality is a rather basic skill, one would have thought. To console Stacy and Australians in the same position, the Greeks are having trouble with it too. Hedgies in High Places When your editor was young, he got stuck in a hedge maze in London while experiencing some severe hay-fever. Wherever we turned, there was another hedge. It wasn't pretty. Now, it's the same thing all over again. Last week, we discovered a former hedge fund manager at the helm of Europe's bailout fund. This week Obama nominated a hedge fund managed from Citigroup to be his budget director. Apparently the favoured candidates were too busy fighting among themselves to see this coming. Surprisingly enough, the new guy's connections (read employment) to a bailed out firm are up for discussion at his confirmation hearings. But it will take someone as bright as a Hedgie to do the jobs these two have been tasked with. Dan Denning pointed out the inherent flaw in the European bailout plan in his latest edition of the Australian Wealth Gameplan: "The absurdity is that a bankrupt government cannot be expected to bail out a bankrupt bank when the bank was bankrupted by the bad government debt in the first place." And as for the American budget outlook, it seems Obama's Debt Commission is talking the talk. If the issue is left unchecked, it "will destroy the country from within". But America has already check mated itself:
The 'flations The 'flations are back in the news. Like some sort of dysfunctional family in a reality TV series, the central bankers are all over the place. Australia's Glen 'flation is expected to continue his rate rises. Jean-Claude 'flation has been busy doubling Spanish bank's debt to the ECB. Minutes from the Federal Reserve, home of 'flation family Chief Ben 'flation, indicated the "Committee would need to consider whether further policy stimulus might become appropriate". One thing that has been confusing is the central banker's definition of inflation. Supposedly it's rising prices. But, based on Stacey's anecdotal evidence of rising energy prices, it seems much of inflation comes from increased costs to the businesses providing goods and services. (Climate change policy perhaps?) A central bank's interest rate raising won't affect the cost of energy favourably. Nor the price of un-poisoned tomatoes if they become rarer. Yet the CPI's (or similar price indexes') moves supposedly dictate monetary policy. What if the central bank is merely interfering in supply and demand changes when it makes policy decisions on perfectly appropriate price changes? That might cause something like a global financial crisis or something, mightn't it? Despite their differing behaviour, all the 'flations have one thing in common. A dislike of the US dollar. Most central banks are either questioning, berating or dumping dollars. But only Ben 'flation is capable of showing true disdain for the Greenbacks. In an ultimate display of his apathy for them, he simply creates more. And when the great inflation begins, the 'flations will blame the free market again. But, to paraphrase investigators into South Korea's missing ship, it was either the Dear Leader, Ben 'flation, or it was the Martians. Perhaps we are being too harsh on Ben Bernanke. Let's go to former White House Budget Director David Stockman for a fair and balanced view:
Bankers Get a Reprieve in Switzerland - Surprise! Naming bank capital requirements after a Swiss city turned out to be an indication of what was to come. And it wasn't "works like clockwork" nor was it efficiency. It was secrecy and snobbery. And the banks came out on top. Closely followed by the ratings agencies. Now the circus continues:
This bit got Dan Denning all fired up on Wednesday.
Dan's reply:
Degraded Downgraders Downgrading the Degenerating Debts for Deutschland Another week, another downgrade from our steadfast bastions of financial wisdom - ratings agencies. Portugal falls victim this time. As the German's see it, countries can't change their Kuhflecken, let alone leopard spots. That's why Infowars reports ze Germans are preparing a European bankruptcy framework. Supposedly with a provision for giving up state sovereignty! They are at it again... The United Shambles of America In order of absurdity (not sure if rising or falling though):
Investment Advice For anyone who has a basic understanding of finance, the following quotes from David Potts at The Age are worth a giggle:
The P/E ratio measures a company's earnings, not the investors return. You don't get the money back.
Something is drastically right if people have figured out that analysts aren't particularly good at forecasts. But they can probably do their math. Unlike some:
Reputable? After missing the financial crisis, making a complete mess of stimulus policies (see above), and now this "significant mistake" of $7.5 billion ... reputable!? What a joke.
Banks decide how much credit grows by their lending practices. They can't really need something to happen when they are the ones doing it... Until next week, Nickolai Hubble. P.S. to get The Daily Reckoning direct to your inbox sign up to our free e-mail newsletter or if you prefer to use RSS, subscribe to the Daily Reckoning RSS feed. Related Articles:
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Having recently escaped from academia, Nick decided to drop his tights (the required attire of a trapeze artist) and joined Port Phillip Publishing. Instead of telling everyone about the Daily Reckoning, he now spends his time writing for the weekend edition.
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