Tag Archive for 'obama'

why it isn’t so simple as A or B (our economy)

I have a lot of friends.  Among my friends are people from every color of the political spectrum, and all of them have an opinion about President Obama’s Economic Recovery Plan.  From conversations at school, tweets I’ve received on twitter, facebook wall posts, and emails, I have discussed this issue with my friends.  Some know what they’re talking about, some don’t.  I would guess that less than 1 in 10 people understand both sides of the debate, and even fewer know why this isn’t a yes or no answer.  My understanding of macroeconomic theory, its application in the US in the last 7 decades, and my observations of the current state of the economy today impel me to share my views and opinion.  Unfortunately, I can’t do that in a tweet, but must explain myself fully.  If you care to join for the ride, I guarantee you will learn something…

You see, if you support the bill, you, whether you know it or not, are in support of Keynesian Economics.  If you are against it, whether you know it or not, you are in support of Free Market Economics.  And here is the cold, hard, sad truth: scholars on each side of thought think they’re right, and scholars on each side of thought have been critically wrong at least once in the last half century.  Lets use this as a starting point.

Macroeconomics is the concept of the role of the government and governments to aid, assist, and/or manage an economy. Both of the big ideas in macroeconomics consider the management of the money supply.  Why?  Available money is usually spent, and therefore, re-spent many times.  This is called the economic multiplier.  The re spending of money represents the total demand (or spendable money) of all the people in the country, and is called aggregate demand.  That demand (money) will be satisfied, so a supply of product must be able to meet demand, and to meet that supply, firms must hire, which means low unemployment, and low unemployment is generally the measure of a healthy economy.

Follow me so far?  Ok, lets talk more about the multiplier.

If every person saved an average proportionate amount of their income and spent the rest, every dollar in the economy is partially saved and partially spent many times. If on average we saved 3% of every dollar (which is my 401k contribution right now) that means that we each spend 97% of every dollar.  The first person to receive the dollar spends $.97 and keeps $.03, the second person spends $.949 cents and keeps $.029, the third spends $.921 and keeps $.024, and so on, until the dollar has been completely saved.  The sum of the spending of that dollar is the multiplier.  I calculated a multiplier using a 3% savings rate and a 30% tax rate and I got a result of 3.11.  In other words, if that were the US multiplier, each dollar in the US economy, after taxes, is worth 3.11 dollars in annual demand.

(Please note: calculating the true multiplier is far more complex as you must consider imports and exports and all taxes.  My 3.11 was using a simple calculation.)

Alright, not too hard, right?  Now, that you know the basics of macroeconomics, lets get into the differences between the two schools of thought.

Keynesian Economics come from the inventor of Macroeconomics, John Keynes.  Keynes suggested that careful planning on the part of the government could control the demand of an economy, which as I said above, results in its prosperity.  A recession is basically slowed demand, which means slowed output, which means higher unemployment.  If the government wants to reduce unemployment and therefore rebound from a recession, it needs to increase demand.  How? By spending money into the economy.   That money is respent through the multiplier into a total increase in aggregate demand.  Using my 3.11 multiplier, 1 trillion dollars is a 3.11 trillion dollar increase in aggregate demand.  This is the control of fiscal policy, the Keynesian’s key tool to economic management.  The Keynesian belief is that in bad times, when the private sector is saving money due to loss of confidence and fear of the recession, the government should spend money to boost the economy out of the hole.  The consequence is deficit spending, which must be paid for through debt.  In good times, the government should increase taxes to repay the debt and consequentially prevent a boom time at the cost of paying back the last recession’s debt.  The long-term result is short recessions and no boom times but no depressions and long-term high levels of employment.

Free Market Economies are an offshoot of the original concept of pure capitalism from classical economics plus some new ideas.  Unlike pure capitalism, the government does have a role, first, to ensure a competitive environment (prevent monopolies), second, to keep taxes low (which increases the multiplier and thus aggregate demand), and third, to control monetary policy.  The adjustment up or down of the central bank’s interest rate is the free market economist’s main tool.  Like the Keynesian equivalent, fiscal policy, monetary policy increases or decreases the money supply (which is then subject to the multiplier) by letting the private sector, and not the government, take on debt and increase spending during down times.  Why?  Because supposedly, the government can’t pick the best ways to spend money, but the private sector can.  With cheaper lending, firms can take on value-added projects for cheaper and thus hire workers and decrease unemployment.  Once the economy rebounds, the interest should be raised so firms only invest in the highest value projects and not the inefficient projects.  So yes, the two theories have directly opposite results on the private and public sectors depending on the economic conditions.

So now, we’ve got both big theories in our heads… now for the history.

Before the invention of macroeconomic theory by Keynes after WWI and during the depression, a policy like free markets were in effect… and the world boomed.  But, the unregulated markets took advantage of the freedom, greed set in, and boom! Great Depression.  Roosevelt was advised by Keynes and others like him to spend, and spend he did, and relief was had, but it was not complete.  The WWII ended the Great Depression because Government spent like mad, and that money, with the multiplier, resulted in the huge growth of the economies of all the capitalist governments of the time.  Keynes became a hero for helping the allies win the war through careful management of the economy, and made a case for careful management from then out.  Keynes died shortly thereafter.

And so in the USA, Keynesian economics took hold, and peaked with Kennedy/Johnson who achieved statistical unemployment with steady growth.  Johnson balanced the budget and wanted to raise taxes more to set aside government savings for the next slow time, but the congress wouldn’t let him… after all, they had elections to win.  So the growth continued… faster and faster.  Fueled, no pun intended, by the oil embargo and a President who didn’t understand economics, that growth stopped.  Nixon & Carter tried to spend their way out of a recession, but couldn’t.  All across the world, Keynesian economies were suffering similarly.

In the 80’s, it was generally believed that Keynes’ ideas saved us from war but not from the forces of the economy, and so a new approach was taken to fix the current woes.  Reagan, and his counterpart in Great Britain, Margaret Thatcher, shoved free-market economics down our throats.  The transition was hard, but by reelection time, we had growth again.  Huge tax cuts, huge government spending cuts (but  still a deficit), a more proactive central bank (Federal Reserve), and a couple years resulted in a growth again.  Clinton took office with nothing to do but continue to ride the tide.  Under G. W. Bush, the Federal Reserve pushed interest rates very low to spur growth during the post-9-11 downturn, and didn’t bring them back up.  Growth… faster and faster. And again, the bubble burst.  Here we are today.

So, there is your overview of macroeconomic theory and short history.  Now, what about today?

As of today, 70 years of economic policy can be summed up as two ideas that both epically failed.  The 1970’s recession and the post-housing bubble recession of today each proved a theory wrong.  So, both theories have been proven failures… or have they?  I say not and instead common denominator to the failures: government inaction during good times as a result of greed.  You see, our government had a role as the agent of macroeconomic policy to be responsible about our nation’s growth.  Each economic theory dictated things to do when times are good and things to do when times are bad.  Our governments followed the “when times are bad part” even when times were good.

Our government wanted unending growth… faster and faster.  In their tenures, each economic theory was used to wind an economy up from the ground and then push it harder and harder despite a warning label on the box.  Doctors warn us that taking medicine regularly makes it increasingly ineffective on a our bodily systems.  When the current dose doesn’t work, we get more.  When the drug doesn’t work anymore, we change it.  Doctors also tell us to not take drugs when we’re not sick, or the speed at which the drug becomes ineffective increases.  The last 70 years saw a government heavily drug its economy with higher and higher doses, even when it wasn’t sick, and twice, the drugs stopped working.  Instead of raising taxes (Keynesian) or raising the interest rate (Free Market) when times were good, the government ignored the call to enact the fair-weather policies their economists told them to.  And the economy, which is a living breathing thing, being forced to do something unnatural, needed a reset.  Our government, made of both republicans and democrats, an extension of us, because of the greed we all shared, made these recessions happen… no economic theory is to blame.

Where do we go from here?

Free Market Economics imply that there is nothing that can be done.  The key tool, the control of the interest rates, was dulled and ineffective when some interest rates were lowered to zero last year.  From here out, Free Market Theory is dead weight, mainly because the predicted result of low rates, increased borrowing is not occurring.  George Bush and his economic team enacted odd policies to try and save the economy in a way that scared both Keynesian and Free-Market Economists.  Time will tell if they worked.  For the most part, an entire nation is begging for government intervention, something very much against Free-Market Economics.  People don’t understand the consequences of government intervention and going back to Keynesian Economics.  It isn’t easy, and there is no such thing as a quick fix.  Republicans, who are generally Free-Market, are favoring tax cuts but those cause deficits just as easily as spending.  This crisis, unlike the 1970’s recession, has to do with completely unavailable credit, even though rates are at all-time lows, so as far as I, the casual observer, sees it, further support of Free Market Economics could result in ten years of stagnant, if not worsening, conditions much like ten years of further support of Keynesian Economics did in the 1970’s.  I don’t know if a full switch back to Keynesian-ism is wise, especially in a very globalized world that we live in today.  These questions can’t be fully answered in my scope of knowledge, nor do I think anyone can.

So, what is the opinion on the Obama plan?  I refuse to answer that for you… I leave it up to you to decide.  But when you make your decision, know that there is no right answer anymore, and that either side you pick has been both wrong and right and tarnished by greed and subject to the epic failure of government, and that I beg you to please cease the harsh if not downright mean commentary you aim toward people who may be on the other side of the line but are just as lost as you.

reflections on the state of the states

Any resident of the United States will agree: times are rough and somewhat scary.  Today, Warren Buffet’s 8 year old warning saying that the stock market was overvalued by as much as twice as what it should be worth proved true, because today after seeing peaks near $14,000 one year ago, the Dow Jones Industrials Average stock index dipped below $7500.  My bank, er, credit union, had $11 million in losses last month, when last year it had less than $1 million in losses all year.  With only 10 months of undistributed earnings (aka, equity) left to feed on, I worry for my money and my mom’s job.  My generation’s civil rights movement is breaking out, as gay and lesbian activists march on courts, capitols, and Mormon churches demanding an end to the injustice after devastating losses this year at the ballot box after years of quiet and less visibile protest.  Our current President, on his way to being remembered with as much unfavorability as Herbert Hoover or James Buchannan, is lost in the whirlwind of activity as he watches his ideals fly out the window in a desperate move to undo his and his peers in the markets’ mistakes.  President-Elect Obama is hopeful, strong-willed, and resolute, but he is taking on a job that he didn’t sign up for two years ago when he commenced his campaign, and bless him for keeping his chin up (in fact, that is a major reason why I voted for him, because he lives, breathes, and glows Hope and calmness, something we need from a leader right now).  Though my job is safe, my home isn’t, and my businesses are hurting.  School is chaotic, as teachers try to teach me stuff out of books that are being rewritten by the current events every day.  And around me, my friends are suffering too.  This was not how it was supposed to be when I entered my twenties, but this is where I am.

I am exstatic Obama won.  I shed a few tears of joy when it became offical.  Election day was better than Christmas, and the hangover was random smiling for days afterward.  Obama proves to me everyday why he is worthy of being my President.  If you haven’t seen it yet, check out his transition team office web site, http://www.change.gov/.  Just the domain name sounds awesome, doesn’t it?  Explore that site and you’ll see why my expectations for his White House’s transparency, ethics, and committment to campaign promises has gone up, not down, after he won.  Especially check out the page on his ethics rules!  It is nice to see a President with realistically high ideals replace one with unrealistically high idealism.

In-n-Out forces me to contribute 3% to the 401k.  It has lost 40% of every $1 I’ve put in.  That is $500 I’ve lost I could used elsewhere.  Oh well.  I just hope my bank remains solvent and nobody rushes it, because its financial statements scare me (credit unions must show that data publicly, since it is a not-for-profit institution).

I am so sad for the gays and lesbians of Arizona and California.  Each group was dealt a deafening blow by the voters when the two states constitutionally outlawed same-sex marriage.  I think such terms and “redefining marriage” and “sanctity of marriage” are jokes, since people like Britney Spears go out and get married, have sex, and annul it the next day.  One man, one woman, on fucking stupid marriage.  But two gay people who love each and have committed to each other are forbidden from getting married?  Britney can make a joke of a man-woman marriage but allowing two people of the same sex who love each other will ruin marriage?  Please.  The Mormon Church funded about 30% of the Prop 8 Yes campaign in California and an unknown amount of the Yes 102 campaign in AZ, and then untold amounts of funding came from personal funding by church members.  Apparently, the separation of church and state only works one-way.  Isn’t it illegal for ministers, er, Bishops, to talk politics from the pulpit?  I applaud the gay groups for marching on Mormon Temples, do it, disrupt them, they deserve it for getting in yours, and my, business.  My beliefs on this topic as a whole were said almost verbatim the other day by Kieth Olbermann.  Though I disagree with Olbermann because I see him as liberal version of Limbaugh, and thus a cancerous disease tearing down American civil discourse, his words on this topic were right, so I offer a link to a video of it: video of Kieth Olbermann on Prop 8’s passage.

So there are some of my thoughts and observations.

TST featuring “Finnish National Railroad” by Ambiguous Clothing

Welcome back to T-Shirt Tuesday, now one month old.

The Threadless $12 sale continues this week and got even better, with select styles further marked down to $9.  While the selection of $9 shirts pales to the everything else selection at $12 each, there are still a few gems in the $9 sale (especially if you’re a girl or a size small guy) worth looking at.  Threadless released, like it does every week, a couple of new shirts and a couple reprints yesterday which are all only $12, including this one I am sure to pick up eventually (like, wow, UV color changing inks?  Crazy!).  I also discovered some great typography tees at Ugmonk… including a must-have called lowercase.

Finnish National Railway by Ambiguous

Finnish National Railway by Ambiguous

This week’s feature shirt explores another design trend in tee shirts, typography.  Typography is basically the study of and practice of design with typography, known in layman’s terms as the font face.  Great typography makes or breaks a design, case in point (Barack Obama’s bold yet comfortable feeling website design to John McCain’s rather bland and sterile website design).  Regardless of who I prefer, the design and use of creative typography on Obama’s website is superior to McCain’s. T-shirts also benefit from good type.  A beautiful design can suffer if the text used sucks.  On the other hand, some shirts can be simply words in different colors and fonts and be an awesome design.  This weeks featured shirt, which I call “Finnish National Railroad” is such an example.

Finnish National Railway closeup

Finnish National Railway closeup

This shirt was designed and wholesaled by Ambiguous Clothing, a skate and snowboard type company.  Ambiguous does not deal directly, but can be found in most “west coast style” stores.  These guys make some awesome typographic tees, including this one from their Summer 08 line and of course this week’s featured shirt.  What is cool about typographic design is that shirts like “Finnish” have simple artwork compared to something like “Refraction” but they still look great.  All it took was some layered fonts, a few lines, and a few colors, and the result was a stunning design that works well and looks great. I picked up this shirt two weeks ago at Pacific Sun Company (or PacSun) on half off sale for $15.  I had been eyeing it for weeks waiting for a sale.  I got the last in my size.  If you have one of those stores around you, check it out and see if you can pick up this gem for as good or better a price than I.

Until next T-Shirt Tuesday, I offer this advice: you may be a great friend who’d do anything for those you care about, but they can get their own t-shirts.

thoughts on the dems convention

The last few days through the end of next week are exciting moments for political junkies like me.  This week’s Democratic National Convention has been loaded with plenty of classic lines and unforgettable moments already, with the culmination tonight as Obama accepted the nomination.

i. Mark Warner Keynote:

I believe that Obama, if elected, has huge potential to be an amazing President, but in 2006 I wasn’t yet on his bandwagon.  In 2006 I was gunning for Mark Warner.  As a casual observer of American politics, I have often noticed that legislators suck at running the country.  Legislators make the laws and executives apply them.  The reason we haven’t elected a senator or congressman in decades is for this very reason.  I have faith in Obama’s executive potential because his community organizing required him to do lots with little resources, a challenge that builds character and leadership, two traits that are easily scalable.  Also, his relatively short career in the senate was not long enough to corrupt him.  Under most circumstances though, I’d prefer a former Governor to a Senator, and former Virginia Governor Warner was my man.  Early in 2007 he formally let down the thousands who had joined the “Draft Mark Warner” groups, myself included, saying he and his family weren’t ready.  With the honor of being the keynote speaker at the Democratic National Convention, however, he is now well on his way to getting there.

Former Virginina Governor Mark Warner

Former Virginina Governor Mark Warner

Mark Warner’s speech was the one I was most looking forward to, and before tonight’s festivities, the one I was most wowed by.   His energy and idealism were nothing like Obama’s in 2004, but instead it was firm and decisive, strong and quote-un-quote Presidential. His message of the ‘race into the future’ was uplifting, essentially the content, and clear sequel, to Obama’s “Audacity of Hope” speech.  His message contrasting Obama to McCain echoed one of the prevalent Democratic themes of the election, that McCain would be more of the same, but he offered details to back up the claim.  His words were firm, detailed, and pointed, and though it may not have inspired people like Obama four years ago, it instead ignited people’s resolve to see the change we need actually occur.

The best part of his speech was his “greatest criticism of President Bush” which, according to Warner, was not about policy but inaction, when he failed to “tap into our greatest resource: the character and resolve of the American people”.  Here is a quote, definitely the most thought-provoking moment of Convention.

“People always ask me, ‘What’s my biggest criticism of President Bush?’ I’m sure you all have your own. Here’s mine—it’s not just the policy differences, it’s the fact that this president never tapped into our greatest resource: the character and resolve of the American people. He never asked us to step up.

“Think about it: after September 11th, if there was a call from the president to get us off foreign oil to stop funding the very terrorists who had just attacked us, every American would have said, “how can I do my part?” This administration failed to believe in what we can achieve as a nation, when all of us work together.”

With a future as bright as Warner’s, I hope he ends up on the short-list for the next Democratic ticket next time go round.

ii. Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer:

Throughout the convention the headlining speakers have done their job to deliver the message in the way we expected them to.  I will save you all the trouble and not re-hash the analysis of most of these speakers.  But in Brian Schweitzer we had a minor speaker inspire, entertain, and impress us in a way totally unexpected.  CNN was decidedly ignoring the man’s speech, picking apart Warner’s recent speech to the utmost detail, until suddenly the crowd was overheard cheering like crazy.  The anchors shut up and cut to Schweitzer.  What a great cut it was.

Montana Governor Brian Schweizer

Montana Governor Brian Schweizer

Immediately what we saw was a good ole western cowboy whose level-headed look at what America needs, his energetic approach to speaking, and his calculated comedy back wit and charm made for an unforgettable speech. His occasional “whoo-weee” and guttural phrases characterize him as a modern loud and proud American frontiersman (cowboy), masculine and not afraid to rise up and speak out. I hope this guy makes it to national politics, we need a guy like him.

There were many memorable moments in his speech, including a one-liner about McCain’s forgetfulness about the number of homes he owns—which was followed by a “whew-wee” as the crowd cheered, a moment where explained that the best barrel of oil is the one we don’t have to buy, and another when he told convention delegates to “get off [their] hind ends” and let the world know we were declaring our energy independence.

iii. Hillary Clinton:

Hillary had a job to do.  She did it and more.  Among the many excellent things she said, I was most happy with this quote, which summed up the reasons I get so frustrated with old Hillary supporters that “can’t bring themselves to vote for Obama”:

New York Senator Hillary Clinton

New York Senator Hillary Clinton

“I want you to ask yourselves: Were you in this campaign just for me? Or were you in it for that young Marine and others like him? Were you in it for that mom struggling with cancer while raising her kids? Were you in it for that boy and his mom surviving on the minimum wage? Were you in it for all the people in this country who feel invisible?”

Her words were spot on, uplifting, and well organized.  She made a case to her former supporters for Obama, and didn’t just say “I endorse him”, rather she told them why they must, for the sake of all they worked toward together, vote for him.

The next day when she interrupted the roll call of the states to motion to nominate Obama by acclimation, that was amazing.  I am proud of that woman.  I would have been proud to vote her.  She was and is good for America, and I am glad she had a role in this historic election.

iv. Obama:

After being picked apart by everyone under the sun, if you want to see some more intelligent commentary on Obama’s speech, check out any other website.  I just want to say this: it was great, at times it made me tear up, and it reminded me why he is my candidate.  Good job Obama, and good luck over the next few months.

v. See More:

All the speeches are archived on the convention website.  Especially check out Schweitzer’s speech if you have a moment.  You need Microsoft Silverlight (the new flash competitor) installed (boo), but the videos are high quality and worth it.

T-Shirt Tuesday featuring “Refraction”

One week in and I already messed up on my T-Shirt Tuesday series.  I have a good excuse though, my cat, Oliver, chewed up the power cable to my MacBookPro and I didn’t have my computer for a few days.   It cost $72 at the Apple store, including the student discount, to replace it, in addition to the funeral costs related to Oliver’s untimely demise.

In t-shirt news this week comes an excellent selection from Threadless, including a new must-have for me called T-Minus, and also some long-awaited reprints from Design By Humans, including one I missed out on called Controlled Chaos.  I discovered a great source for typographic tees called Snakes and Suits, which is definitely worth a look.  Also, Barack Obama’s campaign is holding a t-shirt design contest that should yield some awesome results considering an already awesome selection of fan-created tees (1, 2, 3).

A close up of Refraction

A close up of "Refraction"

This week’s feature shirt from my closet is “Refraction” from Design by Humans.

Refraction from the front.

"Refraction" from the front.

It is funny that five to seven years ago (when I was a teen and I cared how others thought of me) you were “gay” if you (as a guy) wore any colors other than black, red, or gray.  The dominant fashions of the late 90’s and early 2000’s except for the “prep” style all followed this rule, but none more stringently than the “skate” style.  With the skate style now melded into the more general “west coast” style, blacks, reds, and grays, are still around, but often as the base shirt for a design full of color. Bright Pinks, Purples, Blues, Greens, Yellows, and every other color imaginable have emerged, and people my age and younger now can wear whatever they want and not have their sexuality brought into question.  As a person who sees color as expressive, and as a person who is very loud, passionate, and expressive himself, this is a good thing for me.  I credit the mid 2000’s “Real Men Wear Pink” fad (which I avoided with a ten foot pole) as the opening that made it okay for us guys to express ourselves.

That said, my selection of “loud” designs is still limited, perhaps for more subconscious reasons than not.  But when it comes to loud designs in my collection, not one beats “Refraction”.

It looks great on me.

It looks great on me.

When I first saw this design on DBH, I thought of the classic Pink Floyd Album cover like it.  The beam of white light begins around the back of the shirt and hits a prism on the lower left side, exploding into swaths of brilliant colors.  The brilliant design is pleasing to the eye and exciting, and makes a statement when worn.  I picked this shirt up for $14 during a sale, but at $19 this shirt is still worth every penny.

This was my first shirt from DBH and I’ll warn you, the inks on this one don’t hold up as well as store-bought and Threadless tees.  I have begun washing this shirt in dark-colors-only loads on a gentle cycle to maintain the quality.  But even a little worn out, “Refraction” is still loud and proud and easily one of my favorite shirts in my collection.

I have already shot the pictures for next week’s selection, in hopes of having T-Shirt Tuesday posted Monday night.  Until then…