by Bill Bonner
The Dow is still rising. It rose another 125 points yesterday… hitting a new record high.
Gold is dawdling.
We’re
still thinking about how so many smart people came to believe things
that aren’t true. Krugman, Stiglitz, Friedman, Bernanke — all seem to
have a simpleton’s view of how the world works. They believe they can
manipulate the future and make it better. Not just for themselves, but
for everyone. Where did such a silly idea come from?
Aristotelian
logic came to dominate Western thought after the Renaissance. It was
essentially a forerunner of positivism — which is supposedly based on
objective conditions and scientific reasoning. “Give me the facts,” says
the positivist, confidently. “Let me apply my rational brain to them. I
will come up with a solution!”
This is fine, if you are building
the Eiffel Tower or organizing the next church supper. But positivism
falls apart when it is applied to schemes that go beyond the reach of
the “herald’s cry.”
That’s what Aristotle said. He thought only a
small community could work at all. Because only in a small community
would all the people share more or less the same information and
interests. In a large community, you can’t know things in the same
direct, personal way. So it’s hard for people to work together in the
same way.
In a large community, you have no idea who made your
sausage or what they put in it. You have to rely on “facts” that are no
longer verifiable by direct observation or personal acquaintance.
Instead,
the central planners’ facts usually are nothing more than statistical
mush, wishful thinking or theoretical claptrap — like Weapons of Mass
Destruction, the unemployment rate and the Übermensch.
Large-scale planning fails because the facts upon which it is built are unreliable, frequently completely bogus.
And it fails because people don’t really want it.
Hidden Agenda
In
a small community the planners and the people they are planning for are
close enough to share the same goals. In a large community the planners
are a small minority.
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Showing posts with label Unemployment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unemployment. Show all posts
Friday, April 26, 2013
Why central planning fails
Etichette:
Central Planning,
fatal conceit,
job creation,
macroeconomics,
Unemployment
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Germany And IMF's Initial Deposit Haircut Demand: 40% Of Total
by Tyler Durden
As the President of Cyprus proclaims to his people that "we' should all take responsibility as his historic decision will "lead to the permanent rescue of the economy," it appears that the settled-upon 9.9% haircut is a 'good deal' compared to the stunning 40% of total deposits that Germany's FinMin Schaeuble and the IMF demanded. This action, his statement notes, enables the rescue of 8,000 banking sector jobs and ensuring the liquidity of the banks, "allowing the economy to proceed decisively to a new beginning." Ekathimerini reports," this is the first time in the eurozone that a levy has been imposed not on the interest of bank accounts but on the capital itself," and was the only way to bridge most of the the gap between the EUR17bn Nicosia needed and the EUR10bn the ESM was offering, though tax on interest in Cypriot banks will also rise to 20-25%. It is the 40% haircut requirement that concerns us the most as clearly going forward that means other nations, starting Monday (or Tuesday given national holidays) see deposit outflows surge, as the willingness to take such steps is now painfully clear.
As the President of Cyprus proclaims to his people that "we' should all take responsibility as his historic decision will "lead to the permanent rescue of the economy," it appears that the settled-upon 9.9% haircut is a 'good deal' compared to the stunning 40% of total deposits that Germany's FinMin Schaeuble and the IMF demanded. This action, his statement notes, enables the rescue of 8,000 banking sector jobs and ensuring the liquidity of the banks, "allowing the economy to proceed decisively to a new beginning." Ekathimerini reports," this is the first time in the eurozone that a levy has been imposed not on the interest of bank accounts but on the capital itself," and was the only way to bridge most of the the gap between the EUR17bn Nicosia needed and the EUR10bn the ESM was offering, though tax on interest in Cypriot banks will also rise to 20-25%. It is the 40% haircut requirement that concerns us the most as clearly going forward that means other nations, starting Monday (or Tuesday given national holidays) see deposit outflows surge, as the willingness to take such steps is now painfully clear.
Etichette:
Cipro,
default,
European Central Bank,
Germany,
Greece,
IMF,
Italy,
recession,
recovery,
Unemployment
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Italy Is Not Spain - It's Worse
With Rajoy quietly gloating at his political fraud being off the front-pages thanks to Italian elections, it seems the more we dig into Italian reality, the weaker the story becomes. The meme of the last few years has been that "at least we're not as bad as Greece" and rightly so, for as Bloomberg's Niraj Shah notes today, Greece's poverty rate is a stunning 31% (against Holland's 15.7%). However, while all eyes have been focused on Spain's dismal economy, the sad reality is that Italy is worse than Spain in that its poverty rate is a breath-taking 28.2% (relative to Spain's 27%) - even though the unemployment rates in the two nations are vastly different (Spain 26% and Italy 11.2%). Given this fact it is perhaps not surprising that the 'people' voted against austerity and furthermore, that Italy's CDS has pushed above Spain's for the first time in over a year.
by Tyler Durden
Etichette:
CDS,
Debt,
ECB,
European Central Bank,
Greece,
Italy,
Unemployment
Monday, February 11, 2013
Lessons From The 1930s Currency Wars
by Tyler Durden
With Abe picking his new dovish playmate, and Draghi doing his best to jawbone the EUR down without actually saying anything, it is becoming very clear that no matter what level of bullshit histrionics is used by the politicians and bankers in public, the currency wars have begun to gather pace. Japan's more open aggressive policy intervention is the game-changer (and increasingly fascinating how they will talk around it at the upcoming G-20), as if a weaker JPY is an important pillar of the strategy to make this export-oriented economy more competitive again, it brings into the picture something that was missing from earlier interactions among central banks of the advanced economies – competitive depreciation. The last time the world saw a fully fledged currency war was in the early 1930s. Morgan Stanley's Joachim Fels looks at what it was like and what lessons can be drawn for the sequence of events - there are definite winners and losers and a clear first-mover advantage.
Via Morgan Stanley, Back to the 1930s? What Would a Currency War Look Like?
What did the currency war of the 1930s look like?
The backdrop for the currency war of the 1930s was the Gold Standard and the Great Depression (many economists blame the former for the latter). By fixing the value of the currency to the price of gold, the Gold Standard prevented a country from printing too much money. If it did, people would simply exchange it for gold (or for other currencies pegged to gold).
With Abe picking his new dovish playmate, and Draghi doing his best to jawbone the EUR down without actually saying anything, it is becoming very clear that no matter what level of bullshit histrionics is used by the politicians and bankers in public, the currency wars have begun to gather pace. Japan's more open aggressive policy intervention is the game-changer (and increasingly fascinating how they will talk around it at the upcoming G-20), as if a weaker JPY is an important pillar of the strategy to make this export-oriented economy more competitive again, it brings into the picture something that was missing from earlier interactions among central banks of the advanced economies – competitive depreciation. The last time the world saw a fully fledged currency war was in the early 1930s. Morgan Stanley's Joachim Fels looks at what it was like and what lessons can be drawn for the sequence of events - there are definite winners and losers and a clear first-mover advantage.
Via Morgan Stanley, Back to the 1930s? What Would a Currency War Look Like?
What did the currency war of the 1930s look like?
The backdrop for the currency war of the 1930s was the Gold Standard and the Great Depression (many economists blame the former for the latter). By fixing the value of the currency to the price of gold, the Gold Standard prevented a country from printing too much money. If it did, people would simply exchange it for gold (or for other currencies pegged to gold).
Etichette:
central banks,
China,
Debt Ceiling European Central Bank,
France,
Germany,
great depression,
Japan,
Market Share,
Mexico Morgan Stanley,
Norway,
Unemployment,
United Kingdom,
Yen
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