Showing posts with label Public goods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Public goods. Show all posts

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Frédéric Bastiat on the Philippine Government’s Massive Infrastructure Spending Program

Today’s headline from one of the major newspapers screams that the Philippine government will undertake a massive infrastructure spending program (worth about Php 113 billion about  US $ 2.55 billion), “to make economic growth inclusive and lift millions out of poverty”

Last weekend I noted that aside from the critical pivot by the BSP in 2009 to reconfigure the direction of the domestic economy from a supposed 'external dependent' economy to a 'domestic demand' based economy via monetary blowing bubble policies and through fiscal expenditure projects (which is this massive spending program), I pointed out how the BSP chief also misstated the context of the great French free market champion Frédéric Bastiat on the latter's message from his work “what is  seen and what is unseen”.

Now I quote Bastiat’s  view of public work spending programs: (bold mine, italics original)
Nothing is more natural than that a nation, after making sure that a great enterprise will profit the community, should have such an enterprise carried out with funds collected from the citizenry. But I lose patience completely, I confess, when I hear alleged in support of such a resolution this economic fallacy: "Besides, it is a way of creating jobs for the workers."

The state opens a road, builds a palace, repairs a street, digs a canal; with these projects it gives jobs to certain workers. That is what is seen. But it deprives certain other laborers of employment. That is what is not seen.

Suppose a road is under construction. A thousand laborers arrive every morning, go home every evening, and receive their wages; that is certain. If the road had not been authorized, if funds for it had not been voted, these good people would have neither found this work nor earned these wages; that again is certain.

But is this all? Taken all together, does not the operation involve something else? At the moment when M. Dupin pronounces the sacramental words: "The Assembly has adopted, ...." do millions of francs descend miraculously on a moonbeam into the coffers of M. Fould and M. Bineau? For the process to be complete, does not the state have to organize the collection of funds as well as their expenditure? Does it not have to get its tax collectors into the country and its taxpayers to make their contribution?

Study the question, then, from its two aspects. In noting what the state is going to do with the millions of francs voted, do not neglect to note also what the taxpayers would have done—and can no longer do—with these same millions. You see, then, that a public enterprise is a coin with two sides. On one, the figure of a busy worker, with this device: What is seen; on the other, an unemployed worker, with this device: What is not seen.

The sophism that I am attacking in this essay is all the more dangerous when applied to public works, since it serves to justify the most foolishly prodigal enterprises. When a railroad or a bridge has real utility, it suffices to rely on this fact in arguing in its favor. But if one cannot do this, what does one do? One has recourse to this mumbo jumbo: "We must create jobs for the workers."

This means that the terraces of the Champ-de-Mars are ordered first to be built up and then to be torn down. The great Napoleon, it is said, thought he was doing philanthropic work when he had ditches dug and then filled in. He also said: "What difference does the result make? All we need is to see wealth spread among the laboring classes."

Let us get to the bottom of things. Money creates an illusion for us. To ask for co-operation, in the form of money, from all the citizens in a common enterprise is, in reality, to ask of them actual physical co-operation, for each one of them procures for himself by his labor the amount he is taxed. Now, if we were to gather together all the citizens and exact their services from them in order to have a piece of work performed that is useful to all, this would be understandable; their recompense would consist in the results of the work itself. But if, after being brought together, they were forced to build roads on which no one would travel, or palaces that no one would live in, all under the pretext of providing work for them, it would seem absurd, and they would certainly be justified in objecting: We will have none of that kind of work. We would rather work for ourselves.

Having the citizens contribute money, and not labor, changes nothing in the general results. But if labor were contributed, the loss would be shared by everyone. Where money is contributed, those whom the state keeps busy escape their share of the loss, while adding much more to that which their compatriots already have to suffer.

There is an article in the Constitution which states:

"Society assists and encourages the development of labor.... through the establishment by the state, the departments, and the municipalities, of appropriate public works to employ idle hands."

As a temporary measure in a time of crisis, during a severe winter, this intervention on the part of the taxpayer could have good effects. It acts in the same way as insurance. It adds nothing to the number of jobs nor to total wages, but it takes labor and wages from ordinary times and doles them out, at a loss it is true, in difficult times.

As a permanent, general, systematic measure, it is nothing but a ruinous hoax, an impossibility, a contradiction, which makes a great show of the little work that it has stimulated, which is what is seen, and conceals the much larger amount of work that it has precluded, which is what is not seen.
From Mr. Bastiat’s point of view, the supposed populist aim to ‘lift of millions out of poverty’ through massive public work projects has been a ‘ruinous hoax’ that has been recycled overtime (Remember Mr. Bastiat lived during the 19th century). And that the only ‘inclusivity of economic growth’ here will be a NET transfer of resources from society to politicians and the cronies through 'foolishly prodigal enterprises', thereby lifting economic benefits again to a select politically privileged and politically connected few. Woe to the taxpayers and to the politically unconnected peso holders.

[As a side note: It's lenten holiday season so I will abbreviate my comment on this.]

Thursday, July 25, 2013

China’s Railroad Stimulus is now Official: It’s an $85 billion boondoggle

So the rumored railroad stimulus has become official.

From Bloomberg:
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said the nation will speed railway construction, especially in central and western regions, adding support for an economy that’s set to expand at the slowest pace in 23 years.

The State Council also yesterday approved tax breaks for small companies and reduced fees for exporters, according to a statement after a meeting led by Li. China plans a railway development fund, the government said.

Additional spending would help the world’s second-largest economy, after the government signaled this week it will protect its 7.5 percent growth target for this year following a second straight quarterly slowdown…

China had planned to invest 520 billion yuan ($85 billion) in railway construction this year, according to a rail-bond prospectus published July 19. Total fixed-asset investment by the railroads, which also includes train purchases and maintenance, will be 650 billion yuan. 

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The report didn’t say that the Chinese government embarked on a massive US $586 billion fiscal stimulus program in 2008-9 as shield against the global US epicenter based crisis. 

Yet, Chinese economic growth has been faltering, that’s after a short period of “traction” from such policies (chart from tradingeconomics.com).

This means that stimulus work only for the “short term”. Also if $586 billion didn't do the job, then why would $85 billion of 'targeted' spending work?


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Adding railroads to what seems as faltering railway activities (chart from Business Insider), not only reflects on an ongoing downshift of economic activities, but importantly such would translate to surpluses or wastages of capital—where losses of public companies will be passed on to taxpayers.

So the Chinese government appears to be buying time by providing a short term statistical boost to a floundering economy.

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Of course, another thing the report didn’t mention is that much of the 2008-2009 stimulus has been funded heavily by debt.

Debt of State Owned Enterprises (SoE) have now been estimated at an eye-popping 4.5x leverage. Private sector debt has also ballooned. One shouldn’t forget that a lot of private sector companies are tied to or related to the government, a lot of of them as vehicles for the local government.

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The outcome of the 2008-2009 stimulus has been a colossal credit bubble that has fueled a runaway property bubble.

So the freshly installed Chinese government essentially will implement the same policies as the former administration. The more things change the more they stay the same…

The thrust towards public works means that Chinese stimulus program will be channeled via SoEs, which transfers economic opportunities to the political class and to the politically connected firms.

Public works also heightens credit risks on both the public and the private sector, as these $85 billion projects would be funded by more debt. 

Such would further magnify bubble conditions, despite the cosmetic measures to curtail the shadow banking.

Unfortunately for taxpayers, $85 billion spending means higher taxes overtime.

While it may be true that part of Li’s program would be to cut taxes for small businesses which should be good news…
Resolutions passed at yesterday’s cabinet meeting included the exemption of companies with monthly sales of less than 20,000 yuan from value-added and business taxes starting Aug. 1, according to the statement. The move will benefit more than 6 million small businesses and affect jobs and income of tens of millions of people, the government said.
…such is likely a superficial attempt or effort.

The hope is that China’s economy would grow enough to pick up the public spending tab seems as wishful thinking as the 2008-2009 stimulus has shown.

Japan has had the same post-bubble fiscal and monetary stimulus experience through the 90s into the new millennium, or the lost decade, a failed practice which have been repackaged today as “Abenomics”, or differently put, doing the same things over and over again (but at a bigger and more audacious scale) and expecting different results—insanity.

Also the Chinese government’s grand 2008-2009 stimulus program has a growing list of public work disasters

Politicization of economic activities means lower “real” economic growth as resources are allocated on non-market preferences and to vote or approval generating political pet projects, thus compounding on imbalances (bubbles), increasing waste and losses, higher taxes overtime, redistribution to the political class which implies greater inequality and cronyism, capital consumption and a lowered standards of living.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

How Free Trade Promoted Peace in Mindanao

It is refreshing to read about anecdotes of how the largely unappreciated free markets works unnoticeably in the Philippine setting

Dave Llorito World Bank’s communications officer at World Bank’s East Asia blog writes
“It was a war zone, one of the most dangerous places on earth.” 

That’s how Mr. Resty Kamag, human resource manager of La Frutera plantation based in Datu Paglas (Population: 20,290) in Maguindanao (the Philippines) described the national road traversing the town from the adjacent province.

Residents and travelers, he said, wouldn’t dare pass through the highway after three in the afternoon for fear of getting robbed, ambushed or caught in the crossfire between rebels and government soldiers.

“That was before the company started operations here in 1997,” said Mr. Kamag. La Frutera operates a 1,200-hectare plantation for export bananas in Datu Paglas and neighboring towns, providing jobs to more than 2,000 people.

“Today, the town is peaceful,” he said. “Travelers now come and go without fear of getting harmed. People have better things to do.”
La Fruta Inc. is the Philippines largest banana exporter, whose chairman and president Senen Bacani was conferred the 2006 Entrepreneur of the year award in 2006 by the SGV Ernst and Young (wiki Pilipinas).

And to promote trade, the private sector led by La Fruta and other private firms made huge investments in the region’s infrastructure.

Again Mr. Llorito:
A joint project by foreign investors (Unifruitti group) and Filipinos including Toto Paglas, a charismatic Muslim leader, La Frutera spent millions building roads, bridges, irrigation systems and other facilities.

The company infuses the local economy with 11 million pesos of monthly payroll, encouraging local entrepreneurs to set up retail shops, banks and small businesses. Other companies like Del Monte followed suit establishing agribusiness plantations in other parts of the province.

Today, paved highways cut through thriving towns and fields planted to rice, corn, coconuts, palm oil, rubber trees, and bananas.
The point is that markets on its own will invest and finance on infrastructure projects without the need for taxpayer exposure and for government directive.

Trade reduces war and promotes social harmony and cooperation due to the division of labor.  

As the great Ludwig von Mises wrote (Omnipotent government p.122)
Social cooperation and war are in the long run incompatible. Self-sufficient individuals may fight each other without destroying the foundations of their existence. But within the social system of cooperation and division of labor war means disintegration. The progressive evolution of society requires the progressive elimination of war.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Has Private Security Scuppered the Somali Piracy?

Incidences of Somali piracy has significantly declined. The main reason: Private security contractors

From Yahoo.com (bold mine) [hat tip Bob Wenzel]
In truth, the Queen Mary 2 - carrying 2,500 passengers and 1,300 crew from Southampton to Dubai on the first leg of a world cruise - is not particularly at risk.

Some 345 metres long and 14 stories high, even its promenade deck is seven floors above the sea. The liner is fast, hard to board and - on this passage at least - moderately well armed.

Like many merchant vessels, the QM2 now carries armed private contractors when passing through areas of pirate risk.

Cunard will not discuss precise security arrangements. But contractors on other vessels routinely carry M-16-type assault rifles and sometimes belt-fed machine guns, often picked up from ships acting as floating offshore armouries near Djibouti and Sri Lanka…
More from the same article:
Most vessels passing through the area - container ships, tankers, cruise liners and dhows - now register daily with UKMTO. If they believe they are in danger, they will contact the British team to request military support.

"We've had calls when you could hear gunfire and rocket propelled grenades in the background," says Lieutenant Commander Simon Goodes, the current officer in charge. "But lately, the phones are ringing much less."

The only confirmed attack this year, Goodes said, was on a merchant vessel in early January as it sailed towards the Kenyan port of Mombasa. On-board private security guards repelled the assault after a 30 minute firefight…

For many in the shipping industry, the fall in attacks is a vindication of the decision to massively ramp up the use of armed guards.

So far, not a single ship with armed guards has been taken by pirates - although naval officers and other piracy specialists say hired guards can be excessively trigger-happy and have fired on innocent fishermen from India, Oman and Yemen.
The above shows how the private sector can effectively provide security services.

Monday, December 03, 2012

Phisix at 5,600: Emergent Signs of Euphoria?

Phisix 6,000!!! That seems to be the resounding cry which had been embraced by the audience as the year-end target, during the recent assembly that I attended. Well, if realized, that’s tantamount to another mammoth 6% gains from Friday’s record close.

Given the current momentum and environment, it seems foolhardy to dispute such exceedingly high confidence levels. Nonetheless “strong convictions”, especially coming from the highly vulnerable crowd-following retail participants, for me, is something to be concerned about.
 
This represents a radical change of sentiment. During the same occasion last year, the crowd’s disposition was largely ambivalent. A mainstream analyst showcased the Greece crisis as a major hurdle to the Phisix. It was held that Phisix 5,000 won’t be breached for as long as Greece crisis persisted. Of course I challenged that point of view[1] The rest is history. 

Many factors have been rationalized for Phisix 6,000 and beyond for 2013; among them, strong economic growth, election spending, strong corporate earnings, reforms by the PSE to become Sharia compliant or open to Muslim investors, potential credit upgrades, bulging interests from residents, potential capital flows from foreign investors due to the above and etc…

As side note, any improvements on the capital markets are welcome.

The Philippine Stock Exchange [PSE: PSE] should not only consider becoming Sharia law compliant, it should immediately participate in the ASEAN’s thrust to cross list equities.

Crosslistings would allow for greater coverage of the region’s financial markets and more efficient use of capital. Local companies would have wider access to the region’s capital. Similarly, this would provide local investors expanded avenues to allocate capital and to optimize profit opportunities. Financial markets will naturally integrate if given the opportunity to trade freely. Not only that, there will be multiplier effects to the real economy as regional investors become acquainted with one another through free trade. National boundaries will become less of a concern. This is the essence of globalization

The wave of cross-listings has become global; the Malaysian and Singaporean link has already gone online last September[2]. Thailand connected with them last October 15th.[3] In Latin America, the connection of three equity markets of Columbia, Chile and Peru has been in operation since May.

I have argued for a Phisix 10,000 even before I began blogging, but for much different reasons: particularly the business or the bubble cycle[4] and from globalization.

Yet it is important to realize that no trend goes in a straight line.

There are 8 crucial features of the bubble psychology as identified by billionaire but crony George Soros[5]. These are the unrecognized trend, beginning of a self-reinforcing process, successful test, the growing conviction, widening divergences between reality and expectations, the flaw in perceptions, the climax, and the self-reinforcing process in the opposite direction.

Let us see if this has been applicable to the current environment.

Falsifying the Correlations of GDP Growth and Phisix Returns

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How strong and feasible has been the so-called causal nexus between the Phisix-Peso and the annual GDP growth?

The above chart hardly provides any substantial evidence to validate on mainstream’s wisdom.

For instance, during the US mortgage crisis which pinnacled with the Lehman bankruptcy, the Phisix more than halved (from peak to trough) in 2007-2008 or based on 2008 returns nearly halved (-48.29%). Such losses has been deeper or at par with the losses endured by her crisis stricken developed economy counterparts. But, ironically the Philippine economy was spared from a recession.

In addition, earnings of publicly listed corporations, which did fall from record highs, remained exceptionally robust in 2008 as I previously pointed out[6].

Philippine stock market essentially priced in a recessionary environment even when the real economy didn’t.

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So what justified the price collapse of the Phisix, the general stock market and the Peso then? Essentially little from the real economy, except for the contagion effect from a global liquidity crunch: the chain linkages of the liquidation process from the financial industry which spread to the local domestic financial markets. Yet this was not simply an issue of confidence, the selloff was broad market based. Even the region’s 5- year Credit Default Swaps which embodied the credit risks, spiked[7] or investors then factored in a higher risks of default of Asian sovereigns. 

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Another example, the annual growth of GDP also registered a sharp decline in 2010-2011. This has likely been in reaction to the sharp rebound from the 2008 crisis (more on this later).

Yet if the pattern of 2007-2008 has been replicated, then we’d be seeing negative returns. But the Phisix (as well as the Peso) continued to advance—see left window.

Although the returns of the Phisix did somewhat reflect on the annual GDP in slowing down, this does not tell the entire story. The general market hardly experienced a slowdown; instead internal rotation or a shifting occurred. The slowing Phisix induced a redirection of money flows or that market’s attention moved to the mining sector—see right window.

Today, this rotational process seems in place, but in the opposite direction: surging Phisix and mining in red ink.

Economic Drivers: The Myth of Government Spending and Election Spending

Recently media has raved optimistic about recent strength in statistical growth. Unfortunately the public through the mainstream media only regurgitates “hook line and sinker” the announcements by political agencies without having to dwell or investigate deeper into the details or the economic composition of the recent statistical growth.

News says that this “surprising” growth has been about domestic consumption and government spending. Officials even contrived “Aquinomics” to such supposed feat.

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None has been said, as I explained earlier[8], about the past administration’s intense austerity measures of slashing of government debt to GDP by 27 percentage points in 2004-2010, relative to the current administration whom has only pruned 4 percentages points since assuming office. This means that the actions of the past administration have basically paved way for this administration to engage in “record” infrastructure spending.

In politics, credit grabbing is the norm which why I am anti-politics.

Also, government or infrastructure spending do not guarantee productivity increases. Government spending is consumption even when applied to public works—they are not engineered to produce revenues or profits.

Yet such projects will have to be financed through the acquisition of more debt, higher taxes or higher consumer prices.

It’s no wonder the current administration has been desperately targeting big industries who gets academic support from foreign institutions[9] to justify the raising of taxes e.g. SIN tax, SMS tax, Mining excise tax[10] and etc…

This government has been trying to squeeze the proverbial goose that lays the golden egg in the name of anti-corruption or good governance.

Café Hayek’s Professor Don Boudreaux aptly describes the empty histrionics behind stereotyped politics[11]
Applause today, as loud as possible: that's pretty much all that matters to the thespians we call "government officials."
Higher taxes also means a crowding effect which implies productive output will be substituted, by rechanneling resources, to politically directed consumption activities which will lead to shortages of capital goods.

As the great Ludwig von Mises explained[12]
The fundamental error of the interventionists consists in the fact that they ignore the shortage of capital goods. In their eyes the depression is merely caused by a mysterious lack of the people's propensity both to consume and to invest. While the only real problem is to produce more and to consume less in order to increase the stock of capital goods available, the interventionists want to increase both consumption and investment. They want the government to embark upon projects which are unprofitable precisely because the factors of production needed for their execution must be withdrawn from other lines of employment in which they would fulfill wants the satisfaction of which the consumers consider more urgent. They do not realize that such public works must considerably intensify the real evil, the shortage of capital goods.
In short, all these political projects will translate to suppressed real economic growth overtime.

Public works, while nice to hear, mistakenly assumes the government’s superior knowledge in the allocation of resources. Such programs presume that political authorities know what exactly society needs; when in reality, pet projects are politically directed (e.g. oriented towards delivering votes or higher approval ratings or reward cronies, friends or etc…).

Banking consultant Patrick Barron expounds[13],
The common man may not know the term "tragedy of the commons", but he knows it when he sees it. As the scramble for public resources ensues, however, another economic phenomenon kicks in: the fallacy of composition, which states that what benefits one segment of the economy at the expense of everything else cannot possibly prove beneficial for the economy as a whole. Put simply, we cannot all subsidize each other and come out ahead. While most want to be subsidized by others without having to pay anything in return, special interests from all sides ensure that the looting becomes universal.
People hardly learn from experience. These are some examples:

In the US public stadiums[14] have been blotted by red ink. In Japan the $800 billion spending stimulus program in 1992-1998[15] has failed to lift Japan’s economy from two decades of stagnation, as well as contributing to record unsustainable debt levels. Airports, legacy of such public spending programs continues, to bleed taxpayers dry[16].

In China, the huge $586 billion stimulus program in 2008[17] which has been deployed as shield to the global financial meltdown has led to numerous collapsing bridges, money losing railways, empty cities, corruption charges and more[18]. To add, state public works has played a significant part in the ballooning of China’s shadow banking system[19].

Incidentally, Japan’s government has announced last week a second stimulus package worth ($10.7 billion) in less than one month[20].

Over two decades of the same set of interventionist approaches, particularly a bunch of QEs coupled with a series fiscal stimulus, reveals of the increasingly desperate political leadership. This will only advance Japan’s path towards a full blown debt crisis which is likely sooner than later.

And from political distribution of economic projects, there will always be the issue of cost overruns, quality of work and ethical problems as cronyism, favoritism, corruption and etc…

In the same plane, the idea that election spending will drive the Phisix higher seems highly unfounded.

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The ellipses in the above charts reveals of the first quarter trends on each of the national elections held since 1995[21] (blue congressional, red-presidential). I am assuming that election spending at the start of the year will have an influence on stock prices going into the Election Day in May.
Yet as the chart shows, there has been no consistency in the direction of trends in the interim, as well as, in the annual returns.

Much of the 1st quarter gains seem to have been acquired or carried over through momentum from yearend rallies. Others sputtered at the start of the year.

On the other hand, annual returns exhibited the flow of the general trend; where as a rule—returns have been positive during bullmarkets and negative during bear markets.

So stock markets actions supposedly influenced by elections, whether bullish via “election spending” or bearish via “election failures”[22], appear as popular myths.

Populist notions of the sustainability of the statistical economic growth, the alleged positive effects of election spending and the charade of good governance, in Mr. Soros’ classification of bubble psychology seems like a deepening of the “widening divergences between reality and expectations” phase.

Consumption Financed by Debt Policies are Unsustainable Bubble Policies

Current economic growth has also been attributed to a surge in capital intensive growth industries such as construction and real estate, which has been pumped by a surge in credit take up. The “property boom” has, so far, managed to neutralize the decline of exports.

But there has been nary a discussion about specific policies undertaken to induce domestic consumption. Let me point this out: negative real rates


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Unknown to most, behind the scenes, the one of the biggest force influencing the Philippine financial markets has been domestic (real) interest rates. This is aside from external overseas monetary policies and financial globalization.

One would note of the nominal interest rate increase in 2008 basically manifested on the global contagion phenomenon, which coincided with the collapse of the Phisix.

The aftermath of the crisis, which prompted for an orchestrated global easing by global central banks had been similarly implemented by domestic officials. This has led to a sharp decline in nominal interest rates, which impelled for a magnificent broad market rebound in the Phisix in 2009.

The spillover of the easing policies through unchanged rates in 2010, apparently carried over substantial gains of the Phisix but at a much lower rate.

In 2011, the diminishing “economic growth” and subdued returns of the Phisix has corresponded with the marginal tightening or higher interest rates stance by the domestic central bank the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). Again during this period it was mining sector that took leadership.

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Yet the short-term tightening has been reversed in 2012. The BSP has undertaken the most aggressive easing policy in East Asia, cutting 3 times this year by about .8% as shown in the chart from Asian Bonds Online[23]

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Along with Thailand, who also cut rates this year but at a lesser degree, the Phisix and the Thailand’s SET has been running head-to-head for the region’s leadership.

I might add that the impressive surge in Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index has essentially imported the zero bound interest regime the US, given Hong Kong’s currency peg. The speculative fervor in Hong Kong has even inflated a “parking lot” bubble[24].

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Negative real rates have been a key pillar behind the shift in the public’s risk appetite.

People hardly realize that social policies are never neutral, as they shape incentives.

The public has been sublimely directed to assume greater risks. This has led to a surge in Ponzi activities[25], the “property boom” or property bubble (which I have been predicting[26]), greater local interests on the equity markets, aggressive speculations in the local stock market—for instance, the average issues traded daily has reached the highest level for the second time this year—this implies that formerly illiquid issues has become liquid out of the public’s desire for yield hunting), the record stock market highs, the near record high on the Peso and all sorts of illusory rationalizations to an inflationary booming market.

I may add that credit rating upgrades by international credit rating agencies will further whet on the appetite of domestic political authorities to wantonly engage in more public spending[27] that may indeed help propel an artificial boom but at the bigger cost to the society in the future through an economic bust, higher taxes and higher costs of living.

In finality, this administration’s policy has been geared towards the Keynesian path of ramping up of consumption activities from both the private sector (via asset bubbles, and credit driven malinvestments) and the public sector (public works) all to be financed by debt and higher taxes, which is unsustainable. This has been same recipe or the common denominator for the lingering crisis enveloping afflicted developed economies.

Real reforms require improving business environment, easing regulatory hurdles and promoting entrepreneurship or economic freedom. Apparently this has been set aside for posturing.

The winning streak of the Philippine assets will ultimately depend on the direction of interest rates. Local policy of zero bound rates which have been adapted from the US Federal Reserve has been the main engine in influencing domestic economic agents in helping drive this artificially driven boom. Current policies may be reversed when interest rates climb to reflect on greater demand for credit (insufficiency of resources) or as symptoms of accelerating price inflation or deterioration of credit quality or from another contagion episode from exogenous forces.

Again central banking activism and market’s response to them will determine the course of action of the financial markets.

Here, George Soros seems right, people are easily seduced to superficialities and to short term rewards to docilely eliminate thinking for their own interests. Instead seek comfort in the crowds.

Crowd psychology or social conformity can be our innate Achilles Heels, Mark Twain as previously quoted on this blog[28]
Our table manners, and company manners, and street manners change from time to time, but the changes are not reasoned out; we merely notice and conform. We are creatures of outside influences; as a rule we do not think, we only imitate…

Morals, religions, politics, get their following from surrounding influences and atmospheres, almost entirely; not from study, not from thinking. A man must and will have his own approval first of all, in each and every moment and circumstance of his life – even if he must repent of a self-approved act the moment after its commission, in order to get his self-approval again: but, speaking in general terms, a man's self-approval in the large concerns of life has its source in the approval of the peoples about him, and not in a searching personal examination of the matter.
Again, immensely Pollyannaish outlook which seems out of touch with reality, the escalation of aggressive speculations, rationalizations based on credit induced euphoria are symptoms of bubbles in progress.

More of Bernanke’s Hand on the US Fiscal Cliff

As for the likely effect of the coming the US fiscal cliff on stock markets, deal or no deal, is that the mandatory or entitlement spending and interest rates segments will remain untouched and will continue to balloon. 

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What will likely be affected will be the discretionary spending segment[29], i.e. military (defense) and non-military budgets as veterans' assistance, the Congress, the White House, the Supreme Court, national parks, law enforcement, education, research and development, and investments in physical infrastructure.

Although I think a deal may be reached at the last hour, as Republicans who seem to be representatives of the military industrial complex will likely seek to curb spending cuts for the industry and may accede to “tax hikes”.

Yet even if the Republicans agree to raise tax rates, historical tax revenues as % of GDP, despite high tax rates in the past, has only averaged 18%, as shown in the chart above from the conservative Heritage Foundation[30].

This means that people are likely to engage in greater tax avoidance measures. In UK newly increased high tax rates have jolted the wealthy, where two thirds of their millionaires vanished[31]!! This will likely be the case for the US too. 

Nevertheless because it would seem taboo to touch entitlements, which would translate to suicide for a political career, efforts for structural reforms will be avoided and budget deficits will remain at a trillion dollars a year.

And this means that the US Federal Reserve, which has already bought over $1.6 trillion of US treasuries[32], will stand as contingent to other buyers (residents and non-residents) to US Treasuries, to avert a default. 

This means the greater likelihood of expanding the unlimited QE programs through the conversion or the incorporation of the expiring Operation Twist into additional purchases of US treasuries or mortgages via QE 4.0[33]

Some officials have already been amplifying their policy communications or signaling.

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With more Fed easing in the pipeline, this likely implies for higher gold prices, and higher equity prices over the interim.

Thus, the recent drop of gold prices does not seem to be consistent with the overall actions of the broader spectrum of commodities and actions of global equity markets.

Industrial metals have shown a vigorous recovery (GYX), oil has exhibited some signs of improvements (WTIC) while agricultural commodities remain in consolidation (GKX). 

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Soaring Indian and Thai markets have eclipsed gains of the marginal gains of the US, Japan, Germany, France and the Phisix.

Since price movements of gold seems aligned with global stocks which have accounted for a risk ON or risk OFF environment, a confirmation of the Fed’s expansion of the QE most likely during the FOMC’s meeting in December 11-12 will likely push gold and global stock markets higher.

So this also means that both external and domestic policies will likely serve as tailwinds in support of a higher Phisix perhaps at least until the first quarter of 2013. Of course this is conditional to the above. Emergence of unforeseen forces, most likely from the dimensions of political risks may undermine this scenario.

Nevertheless volatility in both directions should be expected but with an upside bias.

However, given the steep ascent and overbought conditions by the Phisix, expect temporary corrections and possibly rotational activities.



[2] Businessweek Bloomberg.com Singapore, Malaysia Exchanges Debut Cross-Border Trading September 17, 2012



[5] George Soros, The Alchemy of Finance, p. 58 Google Books






[11] Donald J. Boudreaux Sound & fury, signifying pandering Triblive.com August 10, 2011

[12] Ludwig von Mises The Chimera of Contracyclical Policies Mises.org March 26, 2012

[13] Patrick Barron C + I + G = Baloney June 29, 2010


[15] New York Times Japan's Plan: A Big Shrug November 17, 1998





[20] CNNMoney.com Japan unveils $11bn stimulus package November 30, 2012



[23] Asian Bonds Online ASIA BOND MONITOR NOVEMBER 2012

[24] See Hong Kong’s Parking Lot Bubble November 28, 2012





[29] Peter G. Peterson Foundation Discretionary spending funds a wide range of government programs, January 1, 2012

[30] Heritage Blog Morning Bell: 4 Reasons Warren Buffett Is Wrong on Tax Hikes Heritage Foundation, November 27, 2012


[32] Wall Street Journal Blog U.S. Treasury vs. Fed: You Say Long, I Say Short November 28, 2012

[33] Marketwatch.com Fed likely to expand QE with Treasurys: report November 28, 2012