Sunday, April 24, 2011

Yemeni President To Resign: Another Near Victory For ‘Kids With Stones And Facebook’

Another MENA dictator bites the dust: Yemeni President agrees to step down

From the Wall Street Journal

Yemen's president and the country's top general are hashing out a settlement in which both men would resign within days, people familiar with the situation said, raising crucial questions of who will end up leading a key, though embattled, U.S. counterterrorism ally.

The outlines of a peaceful transition, to a civilian-led transitional government, emerged amid rising tension over the standoff between Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh and pro-democracy protesters backed by Gen. Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar. The general this week broke ranks and declared his support for protesters demanding that the president resign immediately.

Opposing tanks from units loyal to Mr. Saleh and to Gen. Ahmar have faced off in the streets of San'a all week and tens of thousands of antigovernment demonstrators vowed to continue their protest Friday in the capital's Change Square.

It’s almost a validation of what I earlier wrote about—rebutting critiques of MENA revolts spearheaded by “Kids with stones and Facebook”

Today’s defection of Yemen’s key army commanders partially rebuts the idea that incumbents “do not easily yield that power to kids with stones and Facebook”. Maybe not easily, but this only shows that “facebook and kids with stones” have the power to turn the army on their sides.

Don’t forget armies are composite of people---who can be swayed by influences (like networks-families, friends or culture-religion).

As a saying goes... It’s not over till the fat lady sings.

Like it or not, “Kids with stones and Facebook” will play a far crucial role in shaping the geopolitical context than most experts would expect.

As I would like to reiterate, politics is an ongoing process.

People participating in these social (MENA) revolutions may not understand liberty (private property, rule of law and voluntary exchange) enough, in as much as they would like their dictators out. As the 18th President of the US, Ulysses S. Grant, once said,
The right of revolution is an inherent one. When people are oppressed by their government, it is a natural right they enjoy to relieve themselves of the oppression, if they are strong enough, either by withdrawal from it, or by overthrowing it and substituting a government more acceptable.
But slowly and surely social media is helping them get there.


Saturday, April 23, 2011

Video: Rob Harmon On How Markets Keep Streams Flowing

In this talk, Rob Harmon shows, where regulations failed, how the markets solved a common pool resource dilemma. His example is the case of the Prickly Pear Creek where the institution of market mechanism has successfully brought back water to a formerly "dewatered" stream.

(hat tip:
Briggs Armstrong/Mises Blog)


Hi Ho Silver!

Silver prices went ballistic and has virtually outclassed its commodity peers!

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I included the S&P 500 (red) and the emerging market benchmark EEM (blue green) [chart from stockcharts.com]

The parabolic rise of Silver (51% year to date) may give the impression of a bubble at work. Could be, but other commodities have not been emitting the same signals.

Bubbles usually can be identified by across the board ‘rising tide lifts all boats’ increases. The same dynamic can be seen in a ‘flight to real asset’ phenomenon. The difference is with the subsequent outcomes: a boom goes bust while a crackup boom segues into hyperinflation.

The exemplary performance of silver can also due to another fundamental factor: A massive short squeeze!

Writes Alasdair Macleod of Goldmoney, (bold highlights mine)

There are a few banks with large short positions in silver on the US futures market in quantities that simply cannot be covered by physical stock. The outstanding obligations are far larger than the stock available. The lesson from the London Bridge example is that prices in a bear squeeze can go far higher than anyone reasonably thinks possible. The short position in gold is less visible, being mainly in the unallocated accounts of the bullion banks operating in the LBMA market. But it is there nonetheless, and the bullion banks’ obligations to their bullion-unallocated account holders are far greater than the bullion they actually hold.

But there is one vital difference between my example from the property market of 1974 and gold and silver today. The bear who got caught short of London Bridge Securities was right in principal, because LBS went bust shortly afterwards; but in the case of gold and silver, the acceleration of monetary inflation is underwriting rising prices for both metals, making the position of the bears increasingly exposed as time marches on.

No trend goes in a straight line. So silver prices may endure sharp volatilities in the interim.

However, if the short squeeze fundamental narrative is accurate, which will likely be amplified or compounded by the monetary inflation dynamics, then as the fictional TV hero the Lone Ranger would say,

Hi-yo, Silver! Away!

Post Script:

Here is where Warren Buffett made a big mistake.

Berkshire Hathaway reportedly bought 130 million ounces of silver in 1998 at an average of $5.25 per oz. which he subsequently sold at about $7 in 2006. His ideological aversion to metals made him underestimate Silver’s potentials.

Lesson: ideological blind spots can result to huge opportunity costs.

The Festering Culture Of Debt

In Canada, a recent poll manifested that one-third of their residents does not have enough savings.

From Yahoo,

Nearly one-third of Canadians that responded to a recent survey backed by a major Canadian bank said they didn't have enough money to cover living expenses.

An online survey completed for TD Canada Trust (TSX:TD) also found that 54 per cent of the 1,003 people who answered said it was a real struggle or impossible to save.

The report, released Wednesday, says that 38 per cent of respondents said they had no savings and 30 per cent said they didn't have enough money for their living expenses.

In other words, a big segment of Canada’s population has been living on debt.

And the culture of debt has been a festering pandemic since Nixon Shock where the gold anchor was severed from the world’s monetary system.

As the Economist points out in the crisis year of 2008,

Throughout the 1980s and 1990s a rise in debt levels accompanied what economists called the “great moderation”, when growth was steady and unemployment and inflation remained low. No longer did Western banks have to raise rates to halt consumer booms. By the early 2000s a vast international scheme of vendor financing had been created. China and the oil exporters amassed current-account surpluses and then lent the money back to the developed world so it could keep buying their goods.

Those who cautioned against rising debt levels were dismissed as doom-mongers; after all, asset prices were rising even faster, so balance-sheets looked healthy. And with the economy buoyant, debtors could afford to meet their interest payments without defaulting. In short, it paid to borrow and it paid to lend.

Like alcohol, a debt boom tends to induce euphoria. Traders and investors saw the asset-price rises it brought with it as proof of their brilliance; central banks and governments thought that rising markets and higher tax revenues attested to the soundness of their policies.

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The culture of debt signifies symptoms of accrued policies shaped by the dominant economic ideology which sees spending as the key force for promoting prosperity or keeping society “permanently in a quasi-boom”.

The war against savings, which is being channeled through policy-based low interest rates (“The remedy for the boom is not a higher rate of interest but a lower rate of interest! For that may enable the boom to last”-General Theory) punishes savers and rewards speculative activities which benefits the wards of central banks—added profits for the banking industry cartel and expanded government spending for politicians.

Never mind the law of diminishing returns on debt to an economy (such as in the US; see right window of the above chart).

Past ephemeral successes [plus sustaining a debt based political economy] will lead global authorities towards path dependent policy choices (which is why I think that global QEs will continue)

Besides, politicians and the bureaucracy sees such policies as even more beneficial to them even if the markets suffer from the convulsions of debt overdose: people will be more captive to them which expands their control over the society.

As Mises Institute’s President Doug French aptly points out, (bold highlights mine)

Those with no savings are more dependent on government and others when the unexpected occurs, whether it's job loss or the washing machine quits. Professor Paul Cantor reminds us in his article, "Hyperinflation and Hyperreality: Mann's 'Disorder and Early Sorrow,'" that "money is a central source of stability, continuity, and coherence in any community. Hence to tamper with the basic money supply is to tamper with a community's sense of value."

When the Fed makes saving seem futile and immediate pleasure seem rational, the world has been diabolically turned upside down. Just one step away from hyperinflation, the central banks' actions are threatening "to undermine and dissolve all sense of value in a society."

"Thus inflation serves to heighten the already frantic pace of modern life, further disorienting people and undermining whatever sense of stability they may still have," Cantor explains.

The government sponsored debt culture fundamentally erodes society’s moral fibers.

Yet most people have either not been cognizant or simply refuses to see (out of blind reverence on government) the deleterious effects of false prosperity (turning bread into stones) policies.

Nevertheless, in the fullness of time, the world will see that the emperor has no clothes.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Video: Public Choice: Why Politicians Don't Cut Spending

Professor Ben Powell in a short video explains, from the public choice perspective, why politicians are intuitively reluctant to cut spending. (source Learn Liberty)

Forbes: World’s 2000 Biggest Publicly Listed Companies

Forbes just published a list of the world’s 2000 biggest publicly listed companies.

Here is the top 10:

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By region, the Asia-Pacific had the most entries in the roster with China as the leader.

Forbes Scott DeCarlo quotes Gady Epstein (bold emphasis mine)

The Asia-Pacific region led The Global 2000 again this year with 701 companies, including the most additions to the list of the four regions (11) and by far the biggest increase in profits (they doubled). The biggest profit center was China, no surprise, as 121 companies, including PetroChina, ICBC and Sinopec, returned an aggregate profit of $168 billion. But Japan’s and South Korea’s conglomerate-led rosters provided surprisingly impressive returns: Japan turned from deficit to the region’s second-most-profitable nation and added assets and employees despite losing ten companies (Sumikin Bussan and Makita among them); South Korea added ten companies, more than China, and saw profits surge 178%. New additions: Samsung Life Insurance, Honam Petrochemical.

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Meanwhile a large segment of the strong performance of US companies has been imputed to overseas sales.

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Notes Mr. DeCarlo, (bold emphasis mine)

The U.S. companies on our list earn an average 26% of revenue outside the country, and world GDP grew at a rate of 5% in 2010. Almost one-quarter of the U.S. firms, names such as Aflac, Colgate-Palmolive and Intel, generate a majority of their sales from overseas operations. Still, the U.S. grip on The Global 2000 has been slipping since 2004, when the number of U.S. constituents was 751. It’s now 536. The U.S. still accounts for the most firms among the top 100 with 28

Incidentally, 4 companies from the Philippines had been included in this elite group.

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Three of them, in my view, represents political enterprises.

The Forbes also listed the Global High Performers

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These companies, according go to Scott DeCarlo, has been expanding their earnings at 23% annually and returned an average 16% to shareholders over the past five years.

Furthermore, the list has shown growth of 17% which topped the S&P 500 (up 14%) over the same time period with priceline.com, McDermott International and Genting as best performers.

In addition. Mr. DeCarlo notes, 69 of the 130 companies have headquarters outside the U.S. and includes global brand names, such as Spain’s Telefónica, Nestlé (Switzerland) and Christian Dior (France); as well as foreign companies with lower profiles, such as Denmark drug company, Novozymes. Among notable U.S. Global High Performers are Walt Disney, Google, McDonald’s, and Nike.

Read the rest about Global 2000 here.

All these add up to show how globalization has distributed corporate winners across nations.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Reason TV: The Top Five Environmental Disasters that Didn't Happen

Reason TV gives a good account of the failed predictions by environmental doomsayers

(hat tip: Art Carden/Mises Blog)


US Dollar’s Diminishing Role As Reserve Currency

The Wall Street Journal editorial highlights on the baneful effects of the Fed’s inflationist policies, which is being transmitted via the US dollar, to the world. Such paradox had partly been captured by the famous quote attributed to former US Treasury secretary John Connally “our currency, but your problem.

From the Wall Street Journal, (bold highlights mine)

The larger story is that the world is starting to protect, and perhaps ultimately free, itself from America's weak dollar standard. The European Central Bank recently raised interest rates and may do so again to prevent an inflation breakout. China is allowing more trade to be conducted in yuan, a first step toward making it a global currency. At a meeting of developing countries—the so-called BRICs—in China recently, leaders called for "a broad-based international reserve currency system providing stability and certainty." They weren't referring to the dollar.

Even in the U.S., Americans are buying commodities (oil per barrel: $111) and gold ($1,500 an ounce) as a dollar hedge, and the state of Utah recently took steps to make it easier for citizens to buy and sell gold as a de facto alternative currency. Whether or not these prove to be wise investments, they are certainly signals of mistrust in Washington's economic stewardship.

At an economic town hall this week, President Obama blamed "speculators" for rising oil prices. He should have mentioned the Fed and his own Treasury, which have encouraged the world to invest in hedges against the falling dollar. Chairman Ben Bernanke and Mr. Geithner have deliberately pursued a policy of unprecedented monetary and spending stimulus to reflate the economy and boost asset prices. The bill is coming due in a weak dollar, food and energy inflation, and the decline of U.S. economic credibility.

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But inflationism eventually will be everyone’s problem.

There will be feedback mechanisms from other nations. And this process is exactly what the Wall Street Journal article has been about. Other nations have been taking defensive maneuvers from a policy of sustained inflationism adapted by the US Federal Reserve.

And one consequence is that the US dollar will shed its pre-eminence as the world’s reserve currency.

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Sustained inflationism means that the US dollar will diminish her role as the world’s reserve currency. The above chart shows how this process has been taking place.

The rise of the Euro came amidst the US Technology bust in 2000. Overtime, the Euro has grabbed a larger slice of the reserve currency pie. But it is unclear if the Euro will be a worthwhile substitute as the Euro suffers from the same malaise as the US. The difference is just a matter of degree.

Nevertheless, the great Ludwig von Mises described how the inflation process negates the role of money. (bold highlights mine)

The course of a progressing inflation is this: At the beginning the inflow of additional money makes the prices of some commodities and services rise; other prices rise later. The price rise affects the various commodities and services, as has been shown, at different dates and to a different extent.

This first stage of the inflationary process may last for many years. While it lasts, the prices of many goods and services are not yet adjusted to the altered money relation. There are still people in the country who have not yet become aware of the fact that they are confronted with a price revolution which will finally result in a considerable rise of all prices, although the extent of this rise will not be the same in the various commodities and services.

These people still believe that prices one day will drop. Waiting for this day, they restrict their purchases and concomitantly increase their cash holdings. As long as such ideas are still held by public opinion, it is not yet too late for the government to abandon its inflationary policy.

But then, finally, the masses wake up. They become suddenly aware of the fact that inflation is a deliberate policy and will go on endlessly. A breakdown occurs. The crack-up boom appears. Everybody is anxious to swap his money against "real" goods, no matter whether he needs them or not, no matter how much money he has to pay for them.

Within a very short time, within a few weeks or even days, the things which were used as money are no longer used as media of exchange. They become scrap paper. Nobody wants to give away anything against them.

It’s a process in motion.

Gold at $1,500 Settles the Jim Rogers-Nouriel Roubini Debate

Celebrity guru Nouriel Roubini has been dead wrong. Prolific investor Jim Rogers has been spot on. They had an impassioned debate in November of 2009.

Professor Roubini earlier said of gold prices,

Maybe it will reach $1,100 or so but $1,500 or $2,000 is nonsense,” Roubini said.

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Professor Roubini represents the mainstream econometric model based analysis whom has constantly failed to predict the markets accurately.

As Professor Robert Higgs points out, mainstream (academia) thinking has [bold highlights mine]

little interest in the search for truth, however one might understand or pursue it. To them, their research and publication amounted to a game in which the winning players receive the greatest rewards in salary, research funding, and professional acclaim. They understood that because of cloistered academic inbreeding, economists at the most prestigious universities consider the “smartest guys” to be those who employ the most advanced, complex, and incomprehensible mathematics in their “modeling” and “empirical testing.

Gold’s record price surge has been nominal based.

Economist John Williams, who uses the old methodology (1990 CPI) to compute for inflation, says that gold is still far away from reaching its inflation adjusted high in 1980s.

The USAWatchdog quotes economist John Williams (bold highlights original)

In a recent report, economist John Williams of Shadowstats.com contends a declining U.S. currency is reflected in spiking gas prices. Williams’ said, “. . . the primary problem behind higher oil and gasoline prices is the Fed’s efforts at dollar debasement, but few in the media are willing to blame the Fed . . . Also hitting the dollar, though, are increasing instabilities in and ineffectiveness of political Washington, D.C., as viewed by the rest of the world.”

Williams says gold and silver are nowhere near their former inflation adjusted highs of 1980. Back then, gold hit $850 per ounce and silver $49.45 per ounce. To truly equal that price in today’s inflated money, gold would have to be “$8,331 per troy ounce” and silver would have to be priced at “$485 per troy ounce,” according to Williams’ recent calculations.

Yet Gold’s record price surge isn’t only a US dollar dynamic but against global currencies.

The following charts from gold.org shows of gold trends in different currencies since 1998

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Euro

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Yen

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Pound

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South African Rand

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Australian Dollar

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Canadian Dollar

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Indian Rupee

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G-5 basket

In my view, surging gold in all currencies seem to be validating Voltaire’s observation—Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value ---- zero.

The blunt way to say this is that zero extrapolates to hyperinflation.

Again, all these mainly depend on the prospective actions of global governments, most especially the US Federal Reserve.

Russia’s Putin Says US Federal Reserve Policies Represent ‘Hooliganism’

Even some governments recognize the implicit harm from US Fed policies.

This report from Wall Street Journal Blog (Bold highlights mine)

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WSJ Blog AFP/Getty Images Prime Minister Vladimir Putin

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin slammed expansionary U.S. monetary policy, calling it “hooliganism”, in remarks that followed more veiled criticism from China after Standard & Poor’s Corp. cut the outlook on its U.S. debt rating this week.

“We see that everything is not so good for our friends in the States,” Putin told lawmakers Wednesday.

“Look at their trade balance, their debt, and budget. They turn on the printing press and flood the entire dollar zone — in other words, the whole world — with government bonds. There is no way we will act this way anytime soon. We don’t have the luxury of such hooliganism,” he said.

Even as Putin blamed the U.S. for printing money — something for which Russia was criticized during periods of hyperinflation in the 1990s — other Russian officials said there is no alternative to the U.S. dollar and declined to discuss cutting the country’s dollar holdings.

Russia has the world’s third-largest international reserves after China and Japan, with the biggest part in U.S. government debt. However, Russia appears to have cut its direct Treasury holdings significantly in recent months, according to data from the U.S. Treasury.

Russia can be seen as benefiting from the recent policy of the U.S. Federal Reserve, linked to higher commodity prices. But an increase in dollar supply and low interest rates could also lead to a commodities bubble that could wreak havoc on Russia’s finances if oil prices later collapse.

Authorities of some nations earlier admonished the Fed’s actions as stoking a currency war.

The above report reveals that Russia’s Putin recognizes the consequences of the massive money printing operations as one of the bubble cycles and commodity inflation which eventually will sow chaos or devastate global economies again. (Could Putin be reading Austrian economics?)

It is not true that “there is no alternative to the U.S. dollar”. People will intuitively shift to either other foreign currencies or bring back hard currency once the ‘policies of hooliganism’ worsens.

With gold and commodities generally soaring, these represent symptoms of a worldwide “flight to real values” from the ongoing crackup boom.

World’s Richest Green Political Entrepreneurs

Kerry Dolan of Forbes magazine lists the world’s richest green billionaires

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Ms. Dolan writes,

Being green and making money don’t always go hand in hand, but these 10 billionaires have tapped global demand for solar and wind power and gotten very rich from it. To make this list, billionaires were measured on the size of their “green” net worth – for the most part, the value of a stake in a publicly traded wind or solar company (two of the 10 have private holdings; I consulted others to come up with an estimate of those values). The four Chinese billionaires in the top ten illustrate that China really has become the hot spot for solar and wind manufacturing. The added boost came from a booming IPO market in the country over the past year.

It’s true being green and making money don’t always go hand in hand, that’s because being green is more about financial benefits brought by political privileges more than about satisfying consumers.

For instance this article from Washington Post says (bold highlights mine)

A 2008 Citigroup analysis found that about one-third of China’s wind power assets were not in use. Many turbines are not connected to the transmission grid. Chinese power companies built wind turbines that they didn’t use as the cheapest way of satisfying — on paper — government requirements to boost renewable energy capacity.

and...

China indeed invests more than any other nation in environmentally friendly energy production: $34 billion in 2009, or twice as much as the United States. Almost all of its investment, however, is spent producing green energy for Western nations that pay heavy subsidies for consumers to use solar panels and wind turbines.

Bottom line: green energy mostly represents political entrepreneurship (euphemism for crony capitalism).

Web Business Model: Online Coaching Or Mentorship

This is definitely one business model I’d like to be part of: Online Coaching or Mentorship.

Unfortunately I need to be popular first!

Reports the Bloomberg, (bold highlights mine)

Lots of bandwidth and $5,000 can get anyone an hour with Nobel Prize-winning economist Gary Becker.

A couple more computer clicks can also remake a tennis serve, fix a golf swing and provide tips on how to out-bluff the poker world’s top pros.

Becker, a University of Chicago professor who won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1992, will be selling his time on ExpertInsight.com, a website offering one-to-one video chats with leaders, which opened yesterday. He’ll join people such as economics professors Jeffrey Miron of Harvard University and Laurence Kotlikoff of Boston University, “Freakonomics” co- authors Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner, poker celebrities Patrik Antonius and Tom Dwan, and tennis coach Jeff Salzenstein.

“The idea is to bring this coaching model to everything,” said Brandon Adams, Expert Insight’s 32-year-old founder and chief executive officer.

The site’s roster blends the interests and contacts of Adams, a top poker professional who taught undergraduates in Harvard’s Department of Economics for the past eight years. Adams, the primary research assistant for Michael Lewis’s book “The Big Short,” began giving one-to-one poker lessons over the video-chat service Skype in March 2010, charging $300-$400 per hour....

Internet video chat has potential to be used for services ranging from tutoring and counseling to home repair and psychic readings. It may also help the world’s biggest celebrities interact with fans.

As I have been saying, the internet has been reshaping the way we do things.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Why Electric Vehicles Won’t Sell

It’s basic economics at work

Researchrecap explains, (bold emphasis mine)

A new survey from Deloitte shows that 78 percent of consumers in the United States would consider purchasing an electric vehicle (EV) when fuel prices reach $5.00 per gallon. The study, Gaining traction: Will consumers ride the electric vehicle wave?, surveyed 12,000 consumers globally, including more than 1,000 in the US, and finds that the higher the price of fuel, the more interested consumers are in EVs.

“Offsetting the fuel factor is the finding that the better the fuel efficiency of internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles, the less interested consumers become in EVs,” said Craig Giffi, vice chairman, Deloitte LLP and U.S. automotive practice leader. “A total of 68 percent of consumers in the U.S. and 57 percent in China are less likely to consider an EV if they are able to find ICEs with a fuel efficiency of 50 miles per gallon.”…

More than half of U.S. consumers surveyed are not willing to pay any price premium for an EV compared to a regular car (ICE) while only 8 percent are willing to pay a price premium of more than $3,000.

Moreover, the overwhelming majority of these consumers (77 percent) expect to pay less than $30,000 net of government incentives. In Europe and China however, it becomes an even more significant challenge as the majority of consumers expect to pay less than $20,000 for an electric vehicle and more than 50 percent of consumers in these markets refuse to pay any kind of price premium for an electric vehicle.

Consumers have continually been weighing on the tradeoff between utility “better the fuel efficiency of internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles” and prices “when fuel prices reach $5.00 per gallon”.

Currently, fuel prices have not been high enough to sway consumers towards Electric Vehicles (EV). And this has been happening in spite of US government’s interventions (via incentives).

That’s because prices determine people’s actions, as Friedrich von Hayek wrote, (bold highlights mine)

prices are signals which enable us to adapt our activities to unknown events and demands, it is evidently nonsense to believe that we can control prices. You cannot improve a signal if you do not know what it signals.

Bottom line: government intervention has failed to modify people’s behavior. Prices will.

Mark Twain’s Rational Optimism

Samuel Langhorne Clemens popularly known by his pen name Mark Twain reveals his rational optimism, in a letter birthday greeting letter to contemporary Walt Whitman.

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Here is part of that letter (hat tip Matt Ridley, go to Letters of Note see the complete letter)

Transcript as follows: [bold emphasis mine]

You have lived just the seventy years which are greatest in the world's history & richest in benefit & advancement to its peoples. These seventy years have done much more to widen the interval between man & the other animals than was accomplished by any five centuries which preceded them.

What great births you have witnessed! The steam press, the steamship, the steel ship, the railroad, the perfected cotton-gin, the telegraph, the phonograph, the photograph, photo-gravure, the electrotype, the gaslight, the electric light, the sewing machine, & the amazing, infinitely varied & innumerable products of coal tar, those latest & strangest marvels of a marvelous age. And you have seen even greater births than these; for you have seen the application of anesthesia to surgery-practice, whereby the ancient dominion of pain, which began with the first created life, came to an end in this earth forever; you have seen the slave set free, you have seen the monarchy banished from France, & reduced in England to a machine which makes an imposing show of diligence & attention to business, but isn't connected with the works. Yes, you have indeed seen much — but tarry yet a while, for the greatest is yet to come. Wait thirty years, & then look out over the earth! You shall see marvels upon marvels added to these whose nativity you have witnessed; & conspicuous above them you shall see their formidable Result — Man at almost his full stature at last! — & still growing, visibly growing while you look.

Read the rest here

Well, Mark Twain was right. Such marvels has been brought about by capitalism.

Knowledge Revolution: Internet and Freedom

I’ve been writing about how the internet/web has functioned (and will continue to function) as a critical instrument for the widespread dissemination of the principles of freedom based on what I call the Hayekian Knowledge revolution platform—characterized by a decentralized-horizontal flow of information.

You can read my earlier explanations here or here.

And in realizing that the web has been undermining the current political order, governments around the world has, intuitively, resorted to counterbalancing these evolving spontaneous order by attempting to regulate the internet or by imposing censorship. A good example are reports from wikileaks (such as this and this) that has exposed many covert government activities.

Well my observations seem to be getting substantial validations.

Here is the Economist, (bold emphasis mine)

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THE number of people with access to the internet has more than doubled in the past five years to over two billion. Many governments have responded with regulation and repression, according to a report published on April 18th by Freedom House, which assigns countries an internet freedom score. Nine of the 15 countries that the Washington-based think-tank assessed in 2009 fared worse this year, among them Iran, Tunisia and China. On the plus side, citizens are growing increasingly adept at sidestepping these threats to their internet freedoms, and the use of social media did much to galvanise political opposition across the Arab world in recent months. Indeed web-users in some countries, such as Georgia and Estonia, have more freedom now than they did two years ago.

Some great charts

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The massive growth of Internet Users (Freedom House)

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Social media as a widely used application (Internet world stats)

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Index of Internet freedom: 37 country score of internet freedom (0 Best, 100 Worst)

A green-colored bar represents a status of “Free,” a yellow-colored one, the status of “Partly Free,” and a purple-colored one, the status of “Not Free” on the Freedom of the Net Index. (Freedom House)

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More internet freedom versus less internet freedom (Freedom House)

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How Asia has fared.(Freedom House)

Freedom House identifies the typical government’s countermeasures:

(From Freedom House, bold emphasis original)

Key Trends

* Explosion in social-media use met with censorship: In response to the growing popularity of internet-based applications like Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter, many governments have started targeting the new platforms as part of their censorship strategies. In 12 of the 37 countries examined, the authorities consistently or temporarily imposed total bans on these services or their equivalents.

* Bloggers and ordinary users face arrest: Bloggers, online journalists, and human rights activists, as well as ordinary people, increasingly face arrest and imprisonment for their online writings. In 23 of the 37 countries, including several democratic states, at least one blogger or internet user was detained because of online communications.

* Cyberattacks against regime critics intensifying: Governments and their sympathizers are increasingly using technical attacks to disrupt activists’ online networks, eavesdrop on their communications, and cripple their websites. Such attacks were reported in at least 12 of the 37 countries covered.

* Politically motivated censorship and content manipulation growing: A total of 15 of the 37 countries examined were found to engage in substantial online blocking of politically relevant content. In these countries, website blocks are not sporadic, but rather the result of an apparent national policy to restrict users’ access to information, including the websites of independent news outlets and human rights groups.

* Governments exploit centralized internet infrastructure to limit access: Centralized government control over a country’s connection to international internet traffic poses a significant threat to free online expression, particularly at times of political turmoil. In 12 of the 37 countries examined, the authorities used their control over infrastructure to limit widespread access to politically and socially controversial content, and in extreme cases, cut off access to the internet entirely.

The battle rages.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Leaked Secret Memos Reveal That The Iraq War Has Been Mostly About Oil

The Iraq War has NOT been about oil?

Well, highly confidential memos leaked to the public appear to expose on such duplicity.

From The Independent (hat tip Bob Wenzel) [bold emphasis mine]

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Plans to exploit Iraq's oil reserves were discussed by government ministers and the world's largest oil companies the year before Britain took a leading role in invading Iraq, government documents show.

The papers, revealed here for the first time, raise new questions over Britain's involvement in the war, which had divided Tony Blair's cabinet and was voted through only after his claims that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction.

The minutes of a series of meetings between ministers and senior oil executives are at odds with the public denials of self-interest from oil companies and Western governments at the time.

The documents were not offered as evidence in the ongoing Chilcot Inquiry into the UK's involvement in the Iraq war. In March 2003, just before Britain went to war, Shell denounced reports that it had held talks with Downing Street about Iraqi oil as "highly inaccurate". BP denied that it had any "strategic interest" in Iraq, while Tony Blair described "the oil conspiracy theory" as "the most absurd".

But documents from October and November the previous year paint a very different picture.

Five months before the March 2003 invasion, Baroness Symons, then the Trade Minister, told BP that the Government believed British energy firms should be given a share of Iraq's enormous oil and gas reserves as a reward for Tony Blair's military commitment to US plans for regime change.

Read the rest here

Comments:

What government says in public and what government does are almost always different.

Here is an example of the public choice theory at work where well-entrenched and powerful vested interest groups shape government policies.

Also, corporatism or crony capitalist agendas extrapolate into imperial (foreign) policies advertised in the name of national security, but covertly operates for the benefit of the politically favored groups. In short, “national interests” equals corporate interests.

Lastly, the beauty of the internet is to act as a neutralizing agent against clandestine operations by governments. Either the internet will reduce the incidences of government’s secret operations or governments will wage a war of control against the free flowing information provided by the internet via censorship. We see more signs of the latter than the former.

Cartoon of the Day: Free Lunch Politics

Here’s a nice parody of the political rhetoric of free lunches. [Hat tip Cato’s Dan Mitchell.]

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This applies even to Philippine politics.

Just replace President Obama with local politicians who dangle free stuffs for votes and we get the same message.

Monday, April 18, 2011

S&P Cuts U.S. Ratings To Negative: A Prelude To The Return Of The Bond Vigilantes?

I occasionally come across some myopic commentators who ask “where are the bond vigilantes?”

Bond vigilante are investors, who according to Wikipedia.org, "protests monetary or fiscal policies they consider inflationary by selling bonds, thus increasing yields". The term “Bond Vigilante” was coined in 1984 by economist Ed Yardeni.

The implication is—the absence of bond vigilantes seem to justify reckless government ‘spending’ policies, which for mainstream ideologues, imposes little adverse side effects on the economy or on the markets.

Yet this view hardly incorporates the impact of the massive interventionism applied by the world governments on the international bond markets, as well as the impact of financial globalization.

For them, because interest rates remain low, then governments are justified to keep running a spending binge.

Anyway the same camp, characterized by their reverence to government interventions on the market to thwart ‘deflation’ had earlier been insisting about “where is inflation?”

Well, the downgrade on the outlook of US debt by the credit rating agency S & P 500 seem to presage the return of the bond vigilantes.

The Bloomberg reports, (bold emphasis mine)

Standard & Poor’s put a “negative” outlook on the U.S. AAA credit rating, citing rising budget deficits and debt.

“We believe there is a material risk that U.S. policy makers might not reach an agreement on how to address medium- and long-term budgetary challenges by 2013,” New York-based S&P said in a report today. “If an agreement is not reached and meaningful implementation does not begin by then, this would in our view render the U.S. fiscal profile meaningfully weaker than that of peer ‘AAA’ sovereigns.

At the end of the day, what is unsustainable won’t last.

Fear Of Gold Shortage Prompts US School To Take Physical Delivery

The University of Texas has reportedly taken physical delivery of gold out fear of shortage.

From Bloomberg,

Dallas hedge-fund manager J. Kyle Bass helped advise the University of Texas Investment Management Co. on taking delivery of 6,643 gold bars, worth $987 million on April 15, now stored in a bank warehouse in New York…

The Texas fund’s $19.9 billion in assets ranked it behind only Harvard University’s endowment as of August, according to the National Association of College and University Business Officers. Last year, UTIMCO added about $500 million in gold investments to an existing stake, said Bruce Zimmerman, the endowment’s chief executive officer. The fund’s managers sought to take delivery of bullion to protect against demand for the metal overwhelming supply, according to Bass…

“Central banks are printing more money than they ever have, so what’s the value of money in terms of purchases of goods and services,” Bass said April 15 in a telephone interview. “I look at gold as just another currency that they can’t print any more of.”

This represents increasing signs where mainstream institutions are seeking refuge from (world) central bank’s policy of inflationism.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Understanding China’s Bubble Cycles

[note: This post as well as the next 2 below, are unedited. Since I’m in a hurry, sorry for the absence of quotes for my usual Sunday headings.]

For this week, profit taking enveloped equity markets of most of Asia.

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Despite the cyclical correction, Asian equity markets remain mostly on the upside led by China and major ASEAN bourses as seen from December 28th of 2010.

The outperformance of China’s Shanghai index comes amidst her governments repeated attempts to quell her internal demons-a brewing bubble cycle.

Proof of this bubble cycle has been the 64 million vacant apartments[1] as a result of centrally planned building of 10 new cities every year just to attain statistical economic growth.

China recently even imposed price controls[2] as panacea to contain this bubble. This would only add to the distortions brought about by these myriad policies.

US credit rating agency Fitch Rating threatened to cut China’s debt rating for the first time in 12 years with the prospects of a deterioration of loans “compounded by growth in off-balance-sheet credit[3]

In realization of homebound restraints, Chinese companies have embarked on an unprecedented scale of borrowing, more than five times the amount last year, from the international bond markets, which as the Financial Times reports, represents “a trend driven by property developers starved of credit by state-owned banks”[4].

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Chart courtesy of Bloomberg.com

The Shanghai index, despite a sluggish 2010, appears poised to make a substantial breakout from what appears to be 2-year consolidation period.

The blue channel lines reveal of a chart formation called a Pennant, a trend continuing pattern. Since the Shanghai appears to be testing the resistance level, the 2 years+ chart seems to suggest that the momentum for the breakout is imminent.

Bubble cycles represent an unsustainable political process.

64 million homes do not automatically mean a bubble bust. Imbalances may continue for as long as China’s government continues to inflate, and for as long as, rising price levels have not reached the critical point which undermines the feasibility of most of these existing projects.

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Chart courtesy of US Global Funds[5]

As one would note, given the administrative controls applied by the Chinese government, which has partly affected official statistics (as shown above), Chinese companies appear to circumvent these by tapping the international bond markets.

And such process is likely to get magnified by the requirement where Chinese banks would need to raise 860 billion yuan ($131 billion) of supplementary capital over the next years just to comply with stricter regulations[6].

And further proof of this inflationism is that the China has now accumulated more than $3 trillion of foreign exchange reserves[7]. This implies that if China refuses to appreciate her currency then this huge stash of excess reserves would only translate to an acceleration of domestic inflation process.

As you can see, no amount of policy controls will impede the law of economics from revealing the state of acquired imbalances. Eventually, quasi booms will end up in devastating busts.

The bottom line is that the “whack a mole” strategy employed by the Chinese government is most likely to fail and that China’s Shanghai Index could be manifesting signs of leakages from the ongoing boom in circulation credit in China and in the international realm.

All these represent parts of the jigsaw puzzles falling into place which we know as the bubble cycle.


[1] See China' Potemkin Cities and Malls, April 11, 2011

[2] See War on Economics: China Imposes Price Controls! April 16, 2011

[3] Bloomberg.com China’s Record Bank Lending May Spur Fitch Rating Downgrade, April 13, 2011

[4] Financial Times Chinese companies go on global bond spree, April 12, 2011

[5] Holmes, Frank Will China's Economy Overheat?, US Global Investors April 15, 2011

[6] Bloomberg.com, China Banks Said to Need $131 Billion in Stock Over 6 Years April 14, 2011

[7] Bloomberg.com China Reserves Exceed $3 Trillion as Wen Resists Yuan Pressure, April 15, 2011