Recent comments

  • I don't think Kerry's plan went far enough either.

    I wrote earlier about the Horizon Project policy recommendations.

    Going through their corporate tax code policy recommendations:

    1. Tax rate reduction for high value added
      jobs
    2. Eliminate tax deferrals on foreign
      profits
    3. Reform the foreign subsidiary tax
      allocation rules

    On 1, This is basically a VAT and a BAT tax, which I believe is farther than Kerry. Then on bullet 2, that is huge! Corporations do not pay taxes on foreign profits unless they bring that money back into the United States. On 3., see below. I think this needs more details and understanding. There appears to be abuses going on where corporations hide taxable income through R&D credits and other avenues.

    They also recommend extensive R&D tax credits.

    1. Increase and transform the R&D tax
      credit by allowing companies to take a
      40% (rather than a 20%) tax credit on
      incremental increases in R&D as well as
      workforce training expenses
    2. Create a flat, non-incremental 40%
      tax credit for company expenditures for
      collaborative research at universities and
      research consortia
    3. Boost the alternative minimum tax
      credit to 10% of qualified research expenses
      in excess of 60% of a taxpayer’s qualified
      research expenses

    I would add to that making sure those R&D credits are going to American workers and not being funneled somehow out of the United States. That's a real issue going on here, when dealing with advanced research, intellectual property, frankly it's in the head of the worker and thus can be easily transferred out of the United States through global migration methods.

    Link(pdf) to the full Horizon Project policy recommendations.

    These guys think things through and really analyze what is going on globally through statistical carrot and stick economic incentives.

    Reply to: Manufacturing Monday: Tax bill to spur jobs, and a costs eat into Dow   16 years 4 months ago
    EPer:
  • mentioned in this article. Punitive taxes, that's the key, and why not make 'em retroactive? Robert, I'd love to hear from you on this.

    Reply to: Manufacturing Monday: Tax bill to spur jobs, and a costs eat into Dow   16 years 4 months ago
    EPer:
  • Is frankly moving offshore in so many words. While they will tout poor quarters to justify their slash and burn in the United States, they will turn around and pour millions into investments, infrastructure, support and our favorite, jobs overseas.

    Reply to: Manufacturing Monday: Tax bill to spur jobs, and a costs eat into Dow   16 years 4 months ago
    EPer:
  • OPIC gives government subsidized loans to multinational corporations, so while you may "turn a profit" the reality is you are giving subsidizes, which is taxpayer money.

    You're running the classic "if we do not give away the US economy, oh, those other nations won't become Democracies or build up their own economies" line.

    Hmmm, would you be interested in investing in Detroit? Oh, I guess not, there isn't any oil under it.

    Ralph Nader on OPIC in 1996.

    CBO on OPIC. Hmmmmm, when the Congressional Budget Office says this might not be of benefit to the United States, do you think there is any ring of truth to it?

    Although you do say the obvious "promote the US biggest export, private enterprise". That's right, multinational corporations assuredly play the world and that is not in the US worker's interest or national interest.

    One might obtain some facts by looking at a hearing Congressman Brad Sherman held in the Subcommittee on Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation and Trade (May, 2007). The transcript from the hearing, Reauthorization of OPIC:

    Jeff Vogt, Global Economic Policy Specialist for the AFL-CIO raised a lot of questions on what OPIC says versus what OPIC does:

    OPIC’s reauthorization request presents the committee with a
    critical opportunity to review its effectiveness and to make necessary reforms to the laws that govern its operations. The AFL–CIO generally supports the mission of OPIC, which is to strengthen our trade balance and create jobs, and it contributes to sustainable developments and sustainable and equitable development abroad, based on full respect for workers’ rights, human rights, and the environment.

    However, we remain concerned that OPIC is not fully compliant with its statutory mandate. We believe that OPIC continues to support corporations that have committed workers’ rights violations abroad. The positive effect on U.S. employment appears in some cases speculative, particularly given the size of the investments.

    Moreover, there is little transparency and information available to assess whether these projections are based on realistic information.

    As to the impact of job creation and development abroad, the information provided by OPIC is also equally vague, and the methods used to assess the impacts on development both before and after project approval we feel are insufficient to predict positive broadbased development.

    And, fourth, the lack of transparency in general makes it difficult for civil society to participate meaningfully in raising relevant concerns prior to project approval and in monitoring projects once underway.

    Ah, so why the charter idea sounds great, it seems the actions and results could be something else entirely and on top of it, accurate monitoring is near impossible.

    I see.

    The Heritage Foundation testified in this hearing also. I think they are the organization who wants OPIC plain dissolved.

    Note OPIC was on Senator Bernie Sanders radar of corporate welfare recipients for a long time.

    and another minor quote from the hearing:

    The OPIC 2006 Development Report states that for its investment of $2.85 billion, roughly 2,767 jobs were created in the U.S.

    $2.85B, 2767 jobs. Let's see, that's $1.03 million spent to create each job. Wow! That's cost effective!

    Reply to: OPIC Is Out Of Status   16 years 4 months ago
    EPer:
  • America's currency devaluation and nationalization of the finance industry (Fannie and Freddie among others) looks a bit like Mexico's recent history.

    Economic history of Mexico

    *******
    But economic activity fluctuated wildly during the decade, with spurts of rapid growth followed by sharp depressions in 1976 and 1982.
    *******

    *******
    Fiscal profligacy combined with the 1973 oil shock to exacerbate inflation and upset the balance of payments. Moreover, President Echeverría's leftist rhetoric and actions--such as abetting illegal land seizures by peasants--eroded investor confidence and alienated the private sector. The balance of payments disequilibrium became unmanageable as capital flight intensified, forcing the government in 1976 to devalue the peso by 58 percent. The action ended Mexico's twenty-year fixed exchange rate.
    *******

    *******
    The devaluation further fueled inflation and prevented short-term recovery. The devaluations depressed real wages and increased the private sector's burden in servicing its dollar-denominated debt. Interest payments on long-term debt alone were equal to 28 percent of export revenue. Cut off from additional credit, the government declared an involuntary moratorium on debt payments in August 1982, and the following month it announced the nationalization of Mexico's private banking system.
    *******

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_history_of_Mexico#The_Great_Depres...

    There is a caveat, America is a prisoner, but America is also the jailer. Abandoning the US Dollar can have catastrophic consequences.

    Fom a 2004 artile:
    So far only one OPEC country has dared switch to the euro: Iraq, in November 2002,3.

    One other OPEC country has been talking publicly about possible conversion to the euro since 1999: Iran2,4, a country which has since been included in the George W. Bush's 'axis of evil'.

    A third OPEC country which has recently fallen out with the US government is Venezuela and it too has been showing disloyalty to the dollar

    http://www.commondreams.org/views04/1115-31.htm

    Reply to: The dollar and the Prisoner's dilemma   16 years 4 months ago
    EPer:
  • Unfortunate that absolutely nothing in your post is accurate.

    OPIC is an indepedent agency of the government, not a bureau of the Treasury Dept. It has a 15 member board made up of public and private sector members, nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate.

    -- OPIC is required by statute to be self sustaining and turns a PROFIT of between $150 and 250 million each year. OPIC "spends" the money from its profits for its operations, meaning NO taxpayer money is appropriated.

    -- OPIC has strong statutory prohibitions on "runaway plants" and strict policies regarding projects that may harm the US eoonomy. OPIC does not support projects that would result in job loss in the US.

    -- For environmentally sensitive projects, OPIC follows World Bank standards, and in most cases improves environmental conditions and workers rights in the country where the project is operating.

    -- OPIC's outstanding portfolio is $13 billion with reserves of $5.5 billion; one of the best reserved financial institutions on earth. Historically OPIC has recovered over 90% of the insurance claims that have been filed with it from host governments.

    -- And by mobilizing private capital for investment in developing countries, OPIC helps promote our greatest export, private enterprise, so emerging economies can grow without perpetual grant assistance.

    --OPIC projects have a significant "demonstration effect", helping developing nations to understand and adapt to greater transparency, rule of law and environmental protections.

    --OPIC is a critical tool of US foreign policy where OPIC projects bring the hope of jobs and skills in countries of massive importance to the US including Afghanistan, Jordan, Lebanon and Liberia.

    -- The current lack of authorization prevents the agency from making obligations on behalf of the US government, it does not shut down the agency. OPIC authority to do so expired on April 1st. Authority should be restored before October.

    -- A government agency that promotes private sector led development in emerging markets, protects the US economy from harm associated with those projects, raises standards overseas for the environment, workers rights and transparency, serves important foreign policy objectives, and all for no cost to the taxpayer.

    If there weren't an OPIC, we'd need to invent one.

    Reply to: OPIC Is Out Of Status   16 years 4 months ago
    EPer:
  • Honestly, the creative class has to be the dumbest box of rocks if they are so grandiose to believe that China, India and the rest of the world is magically going to be their bitch while they do all of the "big picture" and "complex" stuff. That is so naive and it's also somewhat racist of them to believe that they have some magical leg up on ability. It also shows they are not paying attention to what's really happening and that's in the design areas. I hope you write up a review for I have not read it, although we all know the term from somewhere. The only creative class who doesn't have their country, their national interest in the back of their minds to advance are Americans.

    Reply to: "Money for nothing?": Higher Education Cost and Endowments   16 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • it really looks like our entire higher education system doesn't even seem to recognize what they are supposed to be doing with US taxpayer money.

    It's more than that though. With the exception of the military academies, there are no federally chartered universities. They all have state charters, and are state schools.

    Yet, you have state schools where less than a third of the graduate population is from the actual state the schools located in. And when you talk about funding it's even worse. And when it comes to the real penetration of higher education by foreign nationals, it's graduate education that we're talking about.

    I've been reading The Rise of the Creative Class which seems a lot like a apologia for the destruction of the American working class, and the concentration of income and wealth in the hands of an economic elite.

    And I'm realizing that a lot of what we talk about as "culture war" has the subtext of class warfare to it. The "creative class" is socially liberal and economically neoliberal, while the working class has turned to social consevatism because there is no party for economic populism. And the creative class folks self select, and set themselves up as doorkeepers in academia and the new economy. And lock the gates.

    And is it any wonder then when working class folks rebel against this?

    These "creative class" folks seriously believe that the future lies in an economy where they provide the designs and administration, and all actual process of construction has been deskilled and outsourced to China. Up until the internet boom, you had IT folks who seriously believed that the reason that factory jobs went overseas and their's did not was because factory jobs required no intelligence or skill. So that those who held them were to be looked down upon as idiots, and shouted down when they complained about jobs being outsourced. They thought they were immune, and you have the same thing in academia today. They think that they can't be outsourced, or pushed out by foreign nationals brought into the country.

    Reply to: "Money for nothing?": Higher Education Cost and Endowments   16 years 5 months ago
  • I think you mean by raising tuition they will reduce demand from the Domestic market (i.e. Americans). It seems to me, more and more they see students as products. I agree and what's more is a college degree no longer means a ticket to the middle class. Few are challenging the common claim of more education, more training by what is happening in reality, on the ground. I did a piece over on NoSlaves blog that goes through the rejection rates in STEM fields from colleges. It's astounding and I don't care if they are flooded with incomplete applications or whatever, the numbers are shocking. This is going on while they claim they cannot find enough students and talent.

    Also this post, Are our Universities Ours? and Is the United States Bachelor Degree Getting the Shaft?, it really looks like our entire higher education system doesn't even seem to recognize what they are supposed to be doing with US taxpayer money.

    Reply to: "Money for nothing?": Higher Education Cost and Endowments   16 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • is that higher education tends to be a positional good in that the way that its usefulness is measured is not the absolute quantity that one has, but the relative surplus one has as compared to others.

    Thus, if education allows the person who has it to hold a leadership job, what matters is not the amount they have, but instead the amount they have as compared to others. So while a high school degree may have been sufficient to ensure one a leadership position at the turn of the previous century because it represented an increment of education above that in the general workforce that provides one credentials. This in time initiates a positional treadmill, where the general increase in education means that requires an increase in the credentials needed to get a leadership job.

    So the position that used to take a high school degree now requires a master's.

    And this all seriously undermines the idea of higher education as a "market." In neo-classical economics, the presumption is that price increases limit demand, because individuals will presumably have better ends to which to dedicate the money they might spend on education. But it doesn't. Instead it actually increases demand because it creates the impression that the school is more exclusive and therefore providing better credentials.

    And so rather than recognizing what's at work, the thought is that simply raising tuition will best determine how to allocate scarce enrollment slots by encouraging those who "value" education the least to pursue other paths.

    But that isn't the way that it works. Raising tuition increases demand, and by effectively prohibiting lower and middle income families from sending their children to these, it ensures that enrollment as "prestige" schools is allocated to the offspring of the well off. And in doing so inhibits social mobility, and locks people into the social class into which they were born. So the idiot children of the economic elite are provided leadership positions while individuals who come from the lower classes are locked out.

    And it creates a social loss, because the idiot children of the elite are far less qualified to be leaders, but as a result of having been credentialed are put into positions of power. And the whole time, they believe that they hold the position of power because of their power, not because they were born into it.

    Now if a mechanism other than price were used to allocate university enrollment, you'd likely see university populations more reflective of the general population. And you'd provide the opportunity to educate those who can benefit society the most from receiving it. But even testing regimes to determine merit degenerate as parents buy SAT tutoring for their kids, to help them "beat the test."

    And much of what passes for higher education has no use as skills training for the modern workplace. There needs to be a greater emphasis on skills training in both high schools and universities in order to provide trained workers for the marketplace. And the stigma attached to skills training that occurs outside of the university needs to be combated. Detaching the social stigma that comes these days with skilled manual labor like plumbers, electricians, and the the like would go a great distance towards getting high school graduates to undertake the training for these positions.

    Reply to: "Money for nothing?": Higher Education Cost and Endowments   16 years 5 months ago
  • is your friend.

    Seriously, this site is a little different because Bob the Blogger, yours truly, is also the admin. So, I've tried to add features (to the best of my ability), that would be useful, are different from the major blogs and where I suspect most people get hung up. Most don't have a WYSIWYG (rich text) editor for example. So, if you're not used to having one, you probably aren't clicking on those links listed when creating a post.

    Also, if someone wants a feature, just ask. I might be able to hack it together.

    Anyway, I'm trying to put the important, good juju in the user guide.

    Reply to: "Money for nothing?": Higher Education Cost and Endowments   16 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • This is one place where I don't think much spot light has been put upon, although some have tried. That's a great idea and along the lines of "Americans 1st" in terms of our taxpayer funded institutions doing their charter (educating Americans) first and foremost.

    I read that higher education is an emerging for profit market that rivals the financial sector in terms of profits. So, it seems to be also more of a political tool in some respects to advance globalization these days.

    Note, I just made an opinion that is not quantified! But nice if we could get to the bottom of this more.

    Reply to: "Money for nothing?": Higher Education Cost and Endowments   16 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • I'm glad there's an app for this.

    Thanks!

    Reply to: "Money for nothing?": Higher Education Cost and Endowments   16 years 5 months ago
  • I just gave you a gift (hey everybody don't expect this!) and edited your post to make the table.

    Tables are a real bitch frankly, whether you know the tags or not.

    For now when you to go create content, in the body, right below, turn on the rich text editor, (toggle that by clicking on it). Then, on the buttons, you will see one that looks like a spreadsheet icon. That's tables. You can have it make the table for you and then you fill in the data.

    I'll have to add a "how to" in the user guide but regardless, tables are tough and one dropped tag can mess up all of your alignment.

    I think that's what you wanted.

    Reply to: "Money for nothing?": Higher Education Cost and Endowments   16 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • to create tables. I also wanted to note that at least in my home state of Indiana, there's been a push to limit enrollment of out of state and international students.

    No one is arguing that there should be none. But I think that when in state students make up only a third of graduate enrollment and a tenth of graduate funding that questions need to be asked.

    Reply to: "Money for nothing?": Higher Education Cost and Endowments   16 years 5 months ago
  • Simply brilliant. We are in for a period of pain, I'm afraid. The question is, can we push forth the reforms needed fast enough to get through our upcoming troubling times to that phase of investment that marked the end of this piece?

    Reply to: The dollar and the Prisoner's dilemma   16 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • That's true and even worse the flaws are buried deep within their "research". That said, Heritage has come out with a few things that I read valid, but honestly I cannot recall anything from CATO that was!

    Also, I've seen some bogus data from a few left ones too, so this isn't just a one sided game. Special interests cover their bets and fund all flavors of organizations.

    I think Dana's blog post is onto something though. With multinational corporations running the show, why is it this entity even exists when we really need investment into the United States.

    This is going to sound crass, but when I see the TV ads for poverty stricken kids around teh world and how you can sponsor one for $30 a day, I ever wonder about all of the kids in the United States going hungry, who have no day care, terrible schools, cannot get health care.

    I mean we need 3rd world Medical doctors to set up free clinics in the United States these days. Dentists too.

    So, why would any government agency be assisting in funding foreign investments when they should be assisting in funding domestic investments?

    Reply to: OPIC Is Out Of Status   16 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • Shame it didn't hit Recommended status over at Big Orange.

    The "total debt private+public" is an interesting chart, but I'm not sure about its operative implications. It's a little like putting together GM + Ford. One might go out of business, but the effect on the other might be neutral or even contrary.

    The most interest thing is, this is the first time in history that every single major currency is backed solely by "good faith." The resulting "competitive currency devaluations" have been a major feature of the global economy for the last 30+ years.

    Reply to: The dollar and the Prisoner's dilemma   16 years 5 months ago
  • Yes, these neo conservative think tanks base their talking points on the scantist and flimsiest cherry picked information and anecdotes to further their agendas. Cato and Heritage are two of the very worst offenders. If you dig deeper into who their supporters are you will find a good bit of them tied to the fossil fuel industry and multinational corporations.

    I have long maintained that the product of these "think tanks" is little different than what is produced when I am sitting on my own "think tank" each morning

    Reply to: OPIC Is Out Of Status   16 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • Why would you link to that propaganda site Cato? As far as I know, both right/left based in reality, Cato has never had valid stats, for anyone who isn't a multinational corporation.

    Here is an overview from the FPIF that at least gives an objective description of the issues and charter of the OPIC.

    Reply to: OPIC Is Out Of Status   16 years 5 months ago
    EPer:

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