Monday, April 26, 2010

Markets Ignore US SEC-Goldman Sachs Tiff, More Political Dirty Dancing

``Popular opinion ascribes all these evils to the capitalistic system. As a remedy for the undesirable effects of interventionism they ask for still more interventionism. They blame capitalism for the effects of the actions of governments which pursue an anti-capitalistic policy.” Ludwig von Mises, Interventionism an Economic analysis

Adding more arbitrary laws or “regulations”, which are usually founded upon noble goals, have been used as the main pretext for expanding political power by the incumbents.

This unfortunately is what people refuse to see yet has been a critical cause of much of today’s ills.

For the political economy, regulations can unilaterally skew the distribution of power from the ruled to the ruler. If there is such a thing as “income or wealth” inequality, the obverse side is the “political inequality”.

Professor Lawrence White[1] on the difference of rule of law and rule of men, ``The contrast between the rule of law and the rule of men is sometimes traced still further back to Plato’s dialogue entitled Laws. In that work the Athenian Stranger declares that a city will enjoy safety and other benefits of the gods where the law “is despot over the rulers, and the rulers are slaves of the law”. In other words, government officials are to be the servants and not the masters of society. The rule of law is vitally important because it allows a society to combine freedom, justice, and a thriving economic order.”

When government officials elect to end up as “masters of society”, one of the main acts to attain such goals is to deliberately trample upon with laws of the land to allow laws to work to their favor.

In short, despots legitimize their power grab by coercively instituting their own set of laws. The Philippines is no stranger to this as seen through former President Ferdinand Marcos’ proclamation 1081, ``Marcos ruled by military power through martial law, altered the 1935 Constitution of the Philippines in the subsequent year, made himself both Head of State as President and Head of Government as Prime Minister, manipulated elections and the political arena in the Philippines, and had his political party--Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL) (English: New Society Movement) control the unicameral legislative branch of government called the "Batasang Pambansa". All these allowed Marcos to remain in power and to plunder.[2]

And since the manipulation of laws tends to rearrange the political economic order according to the whims of those in power by restraining civil liberties and economic freedom, ergo, the benefits or privileges will be partial to those within the ambit of the administration.

Said differently instead of having resources distributed through the marketplace, resources will be allocated politically in accordance to the order of importance as seen by the authorities. Nevertheless when the concentration of power is left to a few to decide, then price signals will be distorted and that lobbying, favouritism, corruption and cronyism will be her common feature.

The Phony War Against The “Cockroaches”

So what has these to do with the current state of the markets?

Alot.

The emergence of proposed regulatory reforms by the Obama administration for Wall Street comes timely with the US SEC-Goldman Sachs brouhaha.

Aside from the noteworthy coincidence[3], the US markets appears to be validating our view by ignoring the impact of the US SEC-Goldman tiff (see figure 1).


Figure 1: Political Act Slowly Unraveling

In contrast to the camp that sees the Goldman controversy as an issue of fraud, by looking at the incentives that drives the actions of political authorities, we have argued otherwise[4].

Besides, it is not within our ambit to comment on juridical merits of any legal case and neither are those who claim that it is about ‘fraud’. Commenting on the legal aspects based on news accounts signifies nothing but “trial by publicity”.

If Goldman had been truly a “cockroach”, then there must be other cockroaches too from which the sudden apostasy of the Obama administration must mean a total “war on cockroaches”.

And true enough, we find that Goldman’s practice hasn’t been isolated but an industry practice especially among the TOO BIG TO FAIL institutions.

According to the New York Times[5], ``Many banks on Wall Street and in Europe were even bigger players in the types of complex investment deals that Goldman is now defending. Merrill Lynch was at the top of the heap, assembling $16.8 billion worth between 2005 and 2008, according to a new report by Credit Suisse.

``UBS put together $15.8 billion worth of similar products, according to the Credit Suisse estimates, while JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup each created more than $9 billion worth. Goldman Sachs was a comparatively small issuer, at $2.2 billion.”

Yet if one looks at the market, except for Goldman Sachs (GS), the SPDR Financial Select Sector (XLF) [where JP Morgan, Citigroup, Merrill and GS is 24.3% of index weighting] and the S&P Bank Index (BIX) has simply shrugged off any “contagion” against a so-called “war on cockroaches”.

Noticeably, the broad based US markets as shown by the S&P 500 (SPX), which includes the Dow Industrials, the Nasdaq and the mid cap Russell 2000 all went to a bullish rampage by breaking to the upside as of Friday’s close.

Oddly too that the so-called aggrieved party in the controversial case was also reported as practicing the same allegedly skulduggery employed by Goldman, this from John Carney[6],

``It was a piece of regulatory arbitrage: In essence, IKB was investing in complex mortgage bonds without having to set aside regulatory capital or report the increase in risky assets to its regulators or auditors.”

``In short order, Rhineland became one of the biggest buyers of the complex investment products puked out by the likes of Lippman at Deutsche Bank, JP Morgan Chase—and Goldman. One banker told Euroweek that IKB—through Rhineland and similar tactics—had become one of the five or six largest investors in Europe. Thus, Goldman found them a willing buyer for the junk piled into Abacus” (underscore mine)

Take note of the word: regulatory arbitrage.(as we will be using this later)

More Dirty Dancing Politics

As the days go by, more and more Goldman-Washington ties are being uncovered.

In contrast to common knowledge that the Democratic Party has been less affiliated with Wall Street, this is turning out to be untrue, according to the Politico, ``The Democratic Party is closer to corporate America — and to Wall Street in particular — than many Democrats would care to admit.” A chart from the New York Times can be seen here.

Moreover, we discovered that there are five former employees of Goldman currently employed in the Obama administration. This perhaps reveals the extent of connection between the two supposed rivals.


In addition, the timing of Friday’s government lawsuit likewise coincided with SEC’s report about its “failure to
investigate alleged fraudster R. Allen Stanford”[7]. This may seem like an effort to possibly dampen media’s impact from regulatory failure by exposing a much bigger news. Apparently this succeeded.

And speaking of regulatory competence, one cannot help but guffaw at news reports where 33 SEC employees, including high ranking officials, spent much time during the crisis in porno browsing!

According to the NY Daily News[8], ``The shocking findings include Securities and Exchange Commission senior staffers using government computers to browse for booty and an accountant who tried to access the raunchy sites 16,000 times in one month.”

Perhaps, Madoff, Standford and Goldman people were trying to arbitrage falling markets with “porno” finance-whatever that means. This resonates clearly of the quality of the bureaucratic mindset.

Moreover, there have been pressures for Goldman to amicably settle with the SEC even if “they’re right on the merits of the case”[9].

And surprisingly, President Obama despite earlier reports to verbally assail Wall Street turned up with a conciliatory voice at a recent speech ``Ultimately, there is no dividing line between Main Street and Wall Street,” Obama said in his speech at Cooper Union, about two miles from the financial district. “We will rise or we will fall together as one nation.”[10]

We read a popular American blogger offer a bet against anyone who thinks Goldman will win the suit. Apparently this perspective is looking at the wrong issue.

Goldman can lose a case and still win the war. In the game of chess, this is called sacrifice or even queen sacrifice. Yet in a staged or scripted dispute, like in wrestling, one party’s loss is just a part of drama to fulfil other goals. A real life example of a staged battle is the US-Spanish “Battle of Manila”[11].

History As Guide To Future Actions

Let us put the issue in historical context.

Rightly or wrongly banks and financial institutions have been in the public “hot seat” from nearly time immemorial[12]. But in contrast to having reduced power from financial reforms, the banking system had even acquired more political clout in spite of these. The Federal Reserve was even stealthily hatched amidst scepticism over the banking industry.

Here is G. Edward Griffin’s speech[13], Author of The Creature from Jekyll Island, on the inception of the Federal Reserve (all bold highlights mine),

``Why not? why the secrecy? what's the big deal about a group of bankers getting together in private and talking about banking or even banking legislation. And the answer is provided by Vanderlip [Frank Vanderlip president of the National City Bank of New York] himself in the same article. He said: "If it were to be exposed publicly that our particular group had gotten together and written a banking bill, that bill would have no chance whatever of passage by Congress." Why not? Because the purpose of the bill was to break the grip of the money trust and it was written by the money trust. And had that fact been known at the get-go, we would never have had a Federal Reserve System because as Vanderlip said it would have had no chance of passage at all by Congress. So it was essential to keep that whole thing a secret as it has remained a secret even to this day. Not exactly a secret that you couldn't discover because anybody can go to the library and dig this out, but it is certainly not taught in textbooks. We don't know any of this in the official literature from the Federal Reserve System because that was like asking the fox to build the henhouse and install the security system.

``That was the reason for the secrecy at the meeting. Now we know something very important about the Federal Reserve that we didn't know before, but there's much more to it than that. Consider the composition of this group. Here we had the Morgans, the Rockefellers, Kuhn, Loeb & Company, the Rothschilds and the Warburgs. Anything strange about that mixture? These were competitors. These were the major competitors in the field of investment and banking in those days; these were the giants. Prior to this period they were beating their heads against each other, blood all over the battlefield fighting for dominance in the financial markets of the world. Not only in New York but London, Paris and everywhere. And here they are sitting around a table coming to an agreement of some kind. What's going on here? We need to ask a few questions.

``This is extremely significant because it happened precisely at that point in American history where business was undergoing a major and fundamental change in ideology. Prior to this point, American business had been operating under the principles of private enterprise--free enterprise competition is what made American great, what caused it to surpass all of the other nations of the world. Once we had achieved that pinnacle of performance, however, this was the point in history where the shift was going away from competition toward monopoly. This has been described in many textbooks as the dawning of the era of the cartel and this was what was happening. For the fifteen year period prior to the meeting on Jekyll Island, the very investment groups about which we are speaking were coming together more and more and engaging in joint ventures rather than competing with each other. The meeting on Jekyll Island was merely the culmination of that trend where they came together completely and decided not to compete--they formed a cartel.”

In other words, the trend towards consolidation of the industry via “financial reforms” has empowered more cartelization than less. And today’s proposed financial reform bill will enhance and not reduce such relationship in contrast to opinion of the reform advocates.

John Paulson And The Survivorship Bias

I’d like to show the relevance of hedge fund manager John Paulson’s reputation during the latest boom-bust cycle (see figure 2).


Figure 2: Google Trend/Wall Street Journal: John Paulson’s Popularity

As we have earlier argued, the SEC-Goldman dispute is a fait accompli argument (Wall Street seems to agree[14]).

That’s because Mr. Paulson, among the 12,400 hedge funds as reported by Hedgefund.net during the 3rd quarter of 2007, only shot to fame in early 2008 (left window) after profits in his fund skyrocketed (in mid 2007) which left the field biting his dust (right window).

In most of 2007, John Paulson, like Manny Pacquiao in the early 90s, was relatively an unknown figure (Mr. Paulson has hardly been searched by anyone)! This means that counterparties when appraised of Mr. Paulson’s participation in early 2007 would have simply ignored him as he was just one among the many “mediocre” aspiring hedge fund managers.

This also reveals that many people tend to read and value information based on today’s account and not during the time when the controversial transactions was developed. This cognitive error is known as the survivorship bias, or the ``the logical error of concentrating on the people or things that "survived" some process and ignoring those that didn't[15].”



[1] White, Lawrence Avoiding and Resolving Financial Crises: The Rule of Law or The Rule of Central Bankers?

[2] Wikipedia.org, Proclamation No. 1081

[3] Norris, Floyd, Fortunate Timing Seals a Deal

[4] See Why The US SEC-Goldman Sachs Hoopla Is Likely A Charade

[5] New York Times, Questions for Banks That Put Together Deals

[6] Carney John, Goldman’s Dirty Customers, The Daily Beast

[7] Wall Street Journal, The SEC's Impeccable Timing The Goldman suit helped to hide the IG report on the Stanford debacle.

[8] NY Daily News; While economy crumbled, top financial watchdogs at SEC surfed for porn on Internet: memo

[9] Bloomberg, Goldman Sachs Should Cut Losses in SEC Standoff, Lawyers Say

[10] Bloomberg, Obama Challenges Financial Industry to Join Regulatory Overhaul

[11] Wikipedia.org, The Battle of Manila (1898)

[12]see Quote of the Day on Wall Street: After Nearly A Century, Hardly Any Change

[13] Bigeye.com; A Talk by G. Edward Griffin Author of The Creature from Jekyll Island

[14] See SEC-Goldman Sachs Row: The Rising Populist Tide Against Big Government

[15] Wikipedia.org, survivorship bias


Sunday, April 25, 2010

Sand Castles From US Regulatory Reforms

“Any fool can make a rule. And any fool will mind it.” - Henry David Thoreau

Among the popular misconceptions about resolving today’s social and institutional problems is the issue of regulation.

For many (particularly for the left), the recent Financial Crisis had been a product of “free markets” or “market fundamentalism”. This notion is totally absurd.(there can be no pure free market in a world of central banking)

For instance many hold that the repeal of the Glass Steagall Act via the Gramm-Leach Bliley as responsible for today’s crisis.

Economist and Professor Luigi Zingales argues otherwise[1], ``In 1984, the top five U.S. banks controlled only 9% of the total deposits in the banking sector. By 2001, this percentage had increased to 21%, and by the end of 2008, close to 40%. The apex of this process was the 1999 passage of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which repealed the restrictions imposed by Glass-Steagall. Gramm-Leach-Bliley has been wrongly accused of playing a major role in the current financial crisis; in fact, it had little to nothing to do with it. The major institutions that failed or were bailed out in the last two years were pure investment banks — such as Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, and Merrill Lynch — that did not take advantage of the repeal of Glass-Steagall; or they were pure commercial banks, like Wachovia and Washington Mutual. The only exception is Citigroup, which had merged its commercial and investment operations even before the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, thanks to a special exemption.” (bold emphasis)

On the other hand, the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), whose regulations forced financial institutions to accept risky borrowers have also been held responsible.

According to Peter J. Wallison of the American Enterprise Institute[2], ``In 1995, the regulators created new rules that sought to establish objective criteria for determining whether a bank was meeting CRA standards. Examiners no longer had the discretion they once had. For banks, simply proving that they were looking for qualified buyers wasn’t enough. Banks now had to show that they had actually made a requisite number of loans to low- and moderate-income (LMI) borrowers. The new regulations also required the use of “innovative or flexible” lending practices to address credit needs of LMI borrowers and neighborhoods. Thus, a law that was originally intended to encourage banks to use safe and sound practices in lending now required them to be “innovative” and “flexible.” In other words, it called for the relaxation of lending standards, and it was the bank regulators who were expected to enforce these relaxed standards.”

Meanwhile, the Cleveland Fed downplays the role of the CRA in this crisis[3].

There has been “no consensus” as to which of the two laws had truly an adverse impact on the markets. Since there has been no perfect correlation, the ensuing tit-for-tat in the media had been reduced into a debate based on ideological slant.

In addition, we also said that the impact of laws tend to be divergent and ‘time sensitive’, where some laws could have positive interim term effects but with negative long term impact, and vice versa.

As caveat, while correlations may not appear to be outright linear, as the debate above holds; it would be misguided to attribute the lack of correlation to a single variable or to one law considering that there are many other laws or variables that also combine and or compete to expand or diminish the effects of a particular law.

Here the underlying general principles or theory will be more dependable than simply relying on statistics or math. Murray Rothard notes of the observation of John Say in distinguishing these[4],

``Interestingly enough, Say at that early date saw the rise of the statistical and mathematical methods, and rebutted them from what can be described as a praxeological point of view. The difference between political economy and statistics is precisely the difference between political economy (or economic theory) and history. The former is based with certainty on universally observed and acknowledged general principles; therefore, “a perfect knowledge of the principles of political economy may be obtained, inasmuch as all the general facts which compose this science may be discovered.” Upon these “undeniable general facts,” “rigorous deductions” are built, and to that extent political economy “rests upon an immovable foundation.” Statistics, on the other hand, only records the ever changing pattern of particular facts, statistics “like history, being a recital of facts, more or less uncertain and necessarily incomplete.” (underscore mine)

In short, trying to pinpoint the effects of one law based on oversimplified statistics to the political economy can be tricky. And this is where the left has used statistics or math to obfuscate evidences.

More of John Say from Murray Rothbard, ``The study of statistics may gratify curiosity, but it can never be productive of advantage when it does not indicate the origin and consequences of the facts it has collected; and by indicating their origin and consequences, it at once becomes the science of political economy.” (underscore mine)

Regulatory Arbitrage And Fighting The Last War

And as we earlier pointed out to the contrary, where laws are lengthy, ambiguous, partisan and subject to political discretion, they tend to be distortive and create imbalances in the system. And the impact of some of these laws indubitably accentuated the crisis.

Nevertheless there had been some policies or regulations that had relatively more material impact among the others (see figure 3).


Figure 3: Bank of International Settlements: Ingredients of the Crisis

The apodictic evidence from last crisis had been the surfacing of the “shadow banking system” (see right window).

As pointed out earlier above, one of the unintended consequences of bad laws or overregulation is to have regulatory arbitrages, where markets look for regulatory loopholes from which it exploits. These are parallel to the emergence or existence of black markets over economies that operate heavily under price controls[5].

So even the multilateral government agency as the UN via its subsidiary the UNCTAD had to admit this[6], ``Recent United States banking regulations, for example, were designed to control risk through the measured capital ratio used by commercial banks, the report says. This attempt backfired because bank managers circumvented the rules either by hiding risk or by moving some leverage outside the banks. This shift in leverage created a "shadow banking system" which replicated the maturity transformation role of banks while escaping normal bank regulation. At its peak, the US shadow banking system held assets of approximately $16 trillion, about $4 trillion more than regulated deposit-taking banks. While the regulation focused on banks, it was the collapse of the shadow banking system which kick-started the crisis.”

The lesson of which clearly is that politics, no matter how heavy handed, can hardly control the fundamental laws of economics.

Another problem with regulation is that it fights the last war.

For instance during the last bubble, the issue of prominence had been the accounting fraud from Enron, Tyco International, Worldcom, Adelphia and others that gave rise to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act[7].

Obviously, from a hindsight bias the regulation failed to make any headway to stop the recent crisis. Again that’s because markets are dynamic and seizes the next loopholes as opportunity to expand.

Nonetheless some has argued that the Sarbox law itself has been a drag to the recovery of the US. An example is this commentary from Wall Street Journal’s James Freeman[8],

``Is Sarbox to blame? Many financial pundits say no, but the SEC survey results point in the other direction. When public companies are asked whether Section 404 has motivated them to consider going private, a full 70% of smaller firms say yes, and 44% of all public companies also say yes.

``Has Sarbox driven businesses out of the country? Among foreign companies, a majority in the survey say that Section 404 has motivated them to consider de-listing from U.S. exchanges, and a staggering 77% of smaller foreign firms say that the law has motivated them to consider abandoning their American listings.”

In short, another unintended consequence of having more regulation is to raise the cost of compliance.

In a globalized market, investors can arbitrage away regulatory burden or the cost of compliance by simply transferring to where there is less onus or costs.

Yet fighting the last war means attacking past problems which may not be the source of the next crisis.

Another factor that is seemingly ignored is that the leverage, which is now a “prominent” factor, acknowledged by the mainstream seems to be building not in the previous sectors, which suffered from a bust, but instead in government debt.

As in the earlier chart (figure 3 left window) from the speech of Hervé Hannoun[9] Deputy General Manager of the BIS, low interest rates which has allowed for the chasing of yields, low volatility and high risk appetite, were outstanding features of the last crisis. However, practically the same ingredients in the past we are seeing today.

And governments are in a tight fix because, as we have been saying[10], “ governments will opt to sustain low interest rates (even if it means manipulating them-e.g. quantitative easing) as a policy because ``governments through central banks always find low interest rates as an attractive way to finance their spending through borrowing instead of taxation, thereby favor (or would be biased for) extended period of low interest rates”

So governments are operating in a policy paradox.

They pretend to know the main sources of the crisis yet are addicted to it for political reasons. An addict can hardly refuse what’s keeping them going. It’s simply path dependency from what we call as policy “triumphalism”. According to the G-20, ``The global recovery has progressed better than previously anticipated largely due to the G20’s unprecedented and concerted policy effort.”[11]

Again we are being validated.

Agency Problem And Socializing Losses While Privatizing Profits

There is another problematic aspect in regulation; it’s called the agency problem or the principal agent problem.

It’s a problem which emanates from different incentives or goals by those operating within the industry.

For instance during the last crisis, risk monitoring was fundamentally outsourced by risk buyers to the ratings agencies (yes in spite of the army of professionals). On the other hand, originators of risk securities or risk sellers tied fees due the credit ratings agencies on the credit ratings they issued which were then sold to “sophisticated” financial institutions.

Said differently, the job of credit appraisals were delegated to the ratings agencies which incidentally derived its income from the issuers of securities, and not from the buyers. Whereas buyers of securities fully delegated the role of due diligence to the ratings agencies.

So credit risks had been ignored in the assumption that someone else would do it for them. As Charles Calomiris Columbia University recently said in an interview[12], “Agency problem...Ratings agencies were a coordination device for plausible deniability."


Figure 5: The Economist: Reforming Banking

Perhaps the ultimate source of ‘plausible deniability’ comes with attendant with the current structure of the banking system-it’s basically called the fractional reserve based banking platform (see figure 5).

Bank equity as % of assets is now nearly at the lowest level since the introduction of central banking and deposit insurance.

In a BIS paper from Andrew Haldane of the Bank of England[13] writes, ``Over the course of the past 800 years, the terms of trade between the state and the banks have first swung decisively one way and then the other. For the majority of this period, the state was reliant on the deep pockets of the banks to finance periodic fiscal crises. But for at least the past century the pendulum has swung back, with the state often needing to dig deep to keep crisis-prone banks afloat. Events of the past two years have tested even the deep pockets of many states. In so doing, they have added momentum to the century-long pendulum swing.”

This means that the banking system’s ability to take more risks comes under the broadening premise of “privatizing profits and socializing losses” as the guiding policy.

This means that aside from central banking, deposit insurance is another means to “privatizing profits and socializing losses” which allows the banking system to absorb more risks, while on the hand tolerates the expansion of regulatory powers by the central bank.

As Murray N. Rothbard wrote[14], `Under a fiat money standard, governments (or their central banks) may obligate themselves to bail out, with increased issues of standard money, any bank or any major bank in distress. In the late nineteenth century, the principle became accepted that the central bank must act as the “lender of last resort,” which will lend money freely to banks threatened with failure.

``Another recent American device to abolish the confidence limitation on bank credit is “deposit insurance,” whereby the government guarantees to furnish paper money to redeem the banks’ demand liabilities. These and similar devices remove the market brakes on rampant credit expansion.”

So moral hazard and the agency problem seem to be significant factors that had been transforming the developed world banking system.

Of course there are other potential sources of regulatory problems, such as economics and behavioural aspects of enforcement, conflicting laws, a multitude of arcane laws which the public can’t comprehend, Arnold Kling’s legamoron (laws that could not stand up under widespread enforcement) and others, but due to time constraints we will be limited to the above.

At the end of the day, those building up the expectations for more regulations as elixir to the current problem would likely fail them. Why? Because there will be a new crisis down the road and hardly any of the current reforms will stop it.

Until they deal with roots of the problem, bubbles like the game called whack-a-mole will keep reappearing. Yet history says that all paper money is bound to go back to its intrinsic value-zero.




[1] Zingales, Luigi Capitalism After the Crisis, National Affairs

[2] Wallison, Peter J. The True Origins of This Financial Crisis, American Spectator

[3] Nelson, Lisa Little Evidence that CRA Caused the Financial Crisis, Cleveland Fed

[4] Rothbard, Murray N. Praxeology as the Method of the Social Sciences

[5] An example of this is North Korea, which recently massively devalued her currency to fight the black markets. But unlike before where policies where met with passive resistance, riots broke out from which tempered Kim’s political approach. See Will North Korea's Version Of The 'Berlin Wall' Fall In 2010?

[6] UNCTAD, Shadow banking system that escaped regulation, faith in ´wisdom´ of markets led to meltdown, study says

[7] Wikipedia.org, Sarbanes-Oxley

[8] Freeman, James The Supreme Case Against Sarbanes-Oxley, Wall Street Journal

[9] Hannoun, Hervé Financial deepening without financial excesses, Bank of International Settlements, 43rd SEACEN Governors’ Conference, Jakarta

[10] See How Myths As Market Guide Can Lead To Catastrophe

[11] Wall Street Journal Blog, Text Of G-20 Finance Ministers, Central Bankers’ Statement

[12] Calomiris Charles, Econolog David Henderson: Calomiris on the Financial Crisis

[13] Haldane, Andrew Banking on the state Bank Of International Settlements

[14] Rothbard, Murray N., The Economics of Violent Intervention, Man, Economy and State


Friday, April 23, 2010

Celebrating Earth Day With Free Markets

There are two ways to celebrate Earth Day.

The first path, if we opt to follow the environmentalists solution; the most efficient way to reduce Carbon Footprint would be through atavism (bring life back to the medieval ages) or simply commit suicide.

As Michael S. Berliner, Ph.D. writes,

``Such is the naked essence of environmentalism: it mourns the death of one whale or tree but actually welcomes the death of billions of people. A more malevolent, man-hating philosophy is unimaginable."

But hostility to human affairs on the environment has long been here.


Professor Pierre Desrochers in the Financial Post writes, ``The idea that Nature is in fragile balance and under constant threat from human greed goes back much further than is generally believed.

``In his treatise On the Testimony of the Soul published more than 1,800 years ago, at a time when the world’s population was about 30 times lower than it is today, the theologian Tertullian noted with horror that humans have “become a burden to the Earth; the fruits of nature hardly suffice to sustain us; there is a general pressure of scarcity giving rise to complaints, since the Earth can no longer support us.” Fortunately, he added, “plague and famine, warfare and earthquake, come to be regarded as remedies.”

``Human existence was also long blamed for changes in the weather, as researchers Hans von Storch and Nico Stehr explained in a recent scientific article. Well before a supposed “consensus” blamed our use of coal, oil and natural gas for climate change, periods of cooling or heating over the last few centuries were attributed to various manmade causes such as witchcraft, deforestation, the invention of the lightning rod and then wireless telegraphy, cannon shots in the First World War and nuclear testing."

But since, people have outlasted such pessimism and will continue to do so.

And apparently beyond all the environmental ruckus, life has been improving.

Writes Bjorn Lomborg, ``But consider this: In virtually every developed country, the air is more breathable and the water is more drinkable than it was in 1970. In most of the First World, deforestation has turned to reforestation. Moreover, the percentage of malnutrition has been reduced, and ever-more people have access to clean water and sanitation."

So George Carlin's "Saving The Planet" video which we blogged last year George Carlin on Saving The Planet, should be a comic refresher anent the fallacy from the demagoguery engaged by extremist environmentalists.



The second way to celebrate Earth Day is to recognize that we are in a much better position to acknowledge the importance of our planet.

Again Bjorn Lomborg, ``But in a world in which most developing countries depend almost exclusively on fossil fuels to power their economies, it's both impractical and immoral to insist that the only solution is for everyone to drastically cut carbon emissions. This approach might make sense if we were able to offer developing countries practical, affordable alternatives to coal and oil. But we cannot— and as long as we can't, all we're really doing when we call for massive carbon cuts is asking the world's poor people to continue living lives of misery and deprivation...

"...we might consider one of the fundamental lessons of the past 40 years of environmental concern. You cannot expect people to care about what the environment may be like 100 years from now if they are worrying about whether their children have enough to eat. With this in mind, we should focus on the many more immediate problems faced by the developing world today — problems such as malnutrition, education, disease and clean drinking water."

In other words, the path to a better environment is to for economies to prosper first.

How? Through free markets.


Professor Pierre Desrochers anew, ``It was not regulation or green activism that provided for improvements in the quality of our environment over the last few decades but rather a process inherent to the market economy, leading to ever more efficient innovations and an ever more economical use of resources." (underscore mine)

The World Bank agrees, (bold highlights mine)

``A new report from the World Bank, International Trade and Climate Change: Economic, Legal, and Institutional Perspectives, says liberalization of the global trading system will be a key factor in helping developing countries reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate change.

“Climate change is a global challenge requiring international collaboration,” said Warren Evans, Director of Environment, World Bank. “One area where countries have successfully committed to a long-term multilateral resolution is the liberalization of international trade. Integration into the world economy has proven a powerful means for countries to promote economic growth, development, and poverty reduction.”

Said Evans, “Improving future human welfare is a goal shared by both global trade and climate regimes. Yet both climate and trade agendas have evolved largely independently through the years, despite their mutually supporting objectives. Since global emission goals and global trade objectives are shared policy objectives of most countries, and nearly all of the World Bank’s clients, it makes sense to consider the two sets of objectives together.”

Amen

Thursday, April 22, 2010

US-China Pork 'Imbalance'

Here is another interesting development in the international "Pork" market.

There seems to be an ongoing divergence in China and the US.

In China, pork prices seem to be collapsing.

This from the Wall Street Journal, (bold highlights mine)

``Pork prices have fallen 14 weeks in a row according to China’s Ministry of Agriculture, their lowest level in four years, and cheaper even than some vegetables. In the first week of April, the average hog price was 9.43 yuan ($1.38) a kilogram.

``The porcine price plummet has forced the government to add to its much vaunted frozen pork reserve, a series of icy warehouses around the country it set up a few years ago to stabilize pork prices.

``One Chinese press report, citing government statistics, says live pig prices have dropped 21% this year. Another report says pork prices have fallen below the lowly lentil.

``The hope is that by adding to the frozen pork hoard, the government demand will take enough meat off the market to drive prices back up.

``Why does the government want higher prices? Farmers are complaining. According to several stories in the Chinese press too many slaughtered pigs are coming to market, driving farmers to despair.

``Pork plays a vital role in China’s commerce. There are almost half a billion pigs in China, one for every three people. In gross terms, like in humans, China dwarfs other countries in pigs. And there’s no India of pigs to rival China. The next biggest producer is the U.S., which has 65 million pigs, according to the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organization. In fact China produces more pigs than the next 43 pork producing countries combined."


And here is why Pork supplies ballooned in China, back to the WSJ,

``The cause of the recent glut of pigs was a reaction to a shortage just a few years ago. An epidemic of blue pig ear disease wiped out pigs across the country and sent pork prices skyrocketing, leading inflation to dangerous levels. The virus attacks pigs’ reproductive systems.

``After the 2007 and 2008 price spike, the government set up the frozen pork reserve and offered subsidies to pig farmers to get the pig population back up. It seems to have worked too well.

``A Ministry of Agriculture report also says changes in the economy have also curbed the growth in the nation’s pork appetite. Demand for pork from migrant workers in big cities has ebbed as more country folk stayed home after the economic slowdown."

In short, markets reacted to the surge in prices by dramatically adding to supply, which had been exacerbated by government "subsidies".

So a pork "bubble" may have developed, which apparently could have just imploded.

At the other side of the continent, in the US, pork prices are going into the opposite direction.
Pork futures (lean hogs) seem to be skyrocketing! (chart courtesy of ino.com)

I have little clue on the status of the global pork trade, except for the following

-the global agriculture market remains one of the "closed" areas.
-the US became a net pork exporter since the mid 1990s.
-Chinese reportedly will reopen to US exports following a ban due to concerns over H1N1 virus.
-current rise in US futures is due to 'tight supplies'

I would suspect that such imbalances could have been mostly due to the distortions brought about by trade restrictions.

This means that the global pork market could be alot inefficient hence the immense disparity in the prices. Otherwise, in a free market, allocative adjustments through price signals would have approached the law of one price.

To add, there seems hardly a cross currency factor here influencing trade ("no 'low' yuan makes us poorer" meme here; move along nothing to see here).

Worst, closed markets, plus government interventions seem to give rise to miniature boom-bust patterns.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Graphic: Origin of The Rule of Law

This seems like an introspective portrayal by Ms. Jessica Hagy apropos "rules" which she calls Don't you know better by now?

From my point of view, this seems like a good depiction of the "origin of the rule of law".

Here is David Hume's the
History of England, (bold highlights mine)

``No government, at that time, appeared in the world, nor is perhaps found in the records of any history, which subsisted without a mixture of some arbitrary authority, committed to some magistrate; and it might reasonably, beforehand, appear doubtful whether human society could ever arrive at that state of perfection, as to support itself with no other control, than the general and rigid maxims of law and equity. But the Parliament justly thought that the King was too eminent a magistrate to be trusted with discretionary power, which he might so easily turn to the destruction of liberty. And in the event it has been found that,
though some inconveniencies arise from the maxim of adhering strictly to law, yet, the advantages so much overbalance them, as should render the English forever grateful to the memory of their ancestors who, after repeated contests, at last established that noble principle."

SEC-Goldman Sachs Row: The Rising Populist Tide Against Big Government

Professor Arnold Kling writes,

``perhaps it is not so crucial to bolster a financial sector that was misallocating capital or to bolster a state and local government sector that has been captured by unions. Perhaps these heroic efforts undertaken in the name of saving the economy only served to reward the looting classes. Perhaps we have arrived at a point in this country where looting is the most rewarding economic activity. In that case, it will not take many years before the wealth available to loot starts to shrink." (emphasis added)

He scorns the transformation to cronyism, which we totally agree. And that's why I see the latest Goldman controversy as part of the ploy to camouflage the "looting classes".

I guess some charts of Pew Research captures prevailing public sentiment.


From Pew Research, (bold highlights mine)

``By almost every conceivable measure Americans are less positive and more critical of government these days. A new Pew Research Center survey finds a perfect storm of conditions associated with distrust of government -- a dismal economy, an unhappy public, bitter partisan-based backlash, and epic discontent with Congress and elected officials.

``Rather than an activist government to deal with the nation's top problems, the public now wants government reformed and growing numbers want its power curtailed. With the exception of greater regulation of major financial institutions, there is less of an appetite for government solutions to the nation's problems -- including more government control over the economy -- than there was when Barack Obama first took office.

``The public's hostility toward government seems likely to be an important election issue favoring the Republicans this fall. However, the Democrats can take some solace in the fact that neither party can be confident that they have the advantage among such a disillusioned electorate. Favorable ratings for both major parties, as well as for Congress, have reached record lows while opposition to congressional incumbents, already approaching an all-time high, continues to climb.

``The Tea Party movement, which has a small but fervent anti-government constituency, could be a wild card in this election. On one hand, its sympathizers are highly energized and inclined to vote Republican this fall. On the other, many Republicans and Republican-leaning independents say the Tea Party represents their point of view better than does the GOP."

In contrast to those who see and think in terms of their political party lines, the polls suggest that there is ballooning discontent about bi-partisan polity.

And it's why perhaps both the Democratic Party and the Republican Party have felt the backlash from the public and thereby has seen their approval ratings plummet, which has mostly been a reflection of the performance of the US congress.

And it is also why the Tea Party has spontaneously emerged.

Yet some would stubbornly argue that more government activism is likely the answer. For instance more regulation in the financial sphere. This camp never seem to realize that in politics, what you see isn't what you get.

As Heritage's Conn Carroll comments on the proposed financial reform bill, ``So whenever Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT) says his Wall Street Bailout Bill "would have prevented that kind of events from happening" he needs to explain how. If anything, the Dodd plan will only make future Wall Street bailouts more likely and more costly while also stifling consumer choice." (emphasis added)

This only goes to show that the proposed "new" regulatory reforms are being shaped to even benefit MORE (and not less) the looting class!

Not to mention that the controversial John Paulson who helped inspired the Goldman brouhaha, has been a generous political contributor.

According to Ben Smith of the Politico, ``Though many hedge fund managers lean Democratic, Paulson has split his giving, offering maximum six-figure contributions both the the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and to the Republican National Committee. Paulson, ranked 45 on Forbes' list of America's richest individuals, made maximum contributions to the presidential campaigns of Mitt Romney, John McCain, and Rudy Giuliani in 2008, but has also given to key Democratic senators for the finance industry, including Chris Dodd and Max Baucus.

``Paulson hasn't given directly to Schumer, though he maxed out to Schumer's committee. But he did host a fundraiser for the senior New York senator earlier this month, describing him in the invitation as "one of the few members of Congress that has consistently supported the hedge fund industry." (bold emphasis mine)

And all these (lobby groups, contributions, biased laws, regulatory capture etc...) seemingly add to the reasons on why the public's attitude on politicians seems to have tipped over. Instead of big government, which they had earlier hoped to work, they now seem prefer "smaller" government.

Again from Pew, ``Despite the public's negative attitudes toward large corporations, most Americans (58%) say that "the government has gone too far in regulating business and interfering with the free enterprise system." This is about the same percentage that agreed with this statement in October 1997 (56%)."

The point is that the polls suggest that there seems to be a growing public recognition that the previous "big government" or "activist government" experiment has noticeably been a failure, from which is being manifested in politics, as shown in the intratrade.com prediction markets chart courtesy of Bespoke Invest.

And this gives even more motivation for the ruling political class to use the Goldman caper as a likely prop as the "fall guy" role for political ends.

We just don't oversimplistically regulate cartels out of existence, not when the cartel itself is lead by the government via the Federal Reserve.

To quote Dr. Antony Mueller, "There can be no honesty in a dishonest monetary system".


Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Quote of the Day on Wall Street: After Nearly A Century, Hardly Any Change

Here is Murray Rothbard on the predicament of the Fed's origin

``The bankers, however, faced a big public relations problem. What they wanted was the federal government creating and enforcing a banking cartel by means of a Central Bank. Yet they faced a political climate that was hostile to monopoly and centralization, and favored free competition. They also faced a public opinion hostile to Wall Street and to what they perceptively but inchoately saw as the "money power."" (bold highlights mine)

So the problem of nearly 100 years ago is basically the same as today! The difference is that the Federal Reserve- banking cartel has been realized, but is still under fire.