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Bastiat's Bastions

What is seen and what is unseen.


Archive for the 'General' Category

Bhagwati echoes Bastiat on Free Trade

Monday, June 27th, 2011

If you look at Bastiat’s writings, you will notice a major theme.  Freer trade improves the lives of people in the society, while protectionism promotes the interests of some at the expense of others in the society.  In this recent article in The National, the prominent Indian economist, Jagdish Bhagwati, repeats Bastiat’s theme of free trade not only increases overall prosperity, but also elevates the well being of the poor by examining the evidence from history.  If you think “oh, free trade ideas from another Republican economist,” think again.  If you go to the Wikipedia entry for Bhagwati, you will see that Bhagwati is a Democrat.

-MC

Lower gas prices, but for how long?

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

Contrasting to gas prices seen earlier this month, I saw the lowest gas prices I have seen in a while as I drove to New Orleans tonight.  I saw gas prices around $3.32 in Boutte, and then down to $3.29 by Avondale and then down to as low as $3.19 in Westwego.  I wondered why, but quickly remembered seeing stories like this one from Reuters that the Obama administration has released a part of the US strategic oil reserve and will continue to release oil from our reserves over the next month, as part of an international effort to increase the supply of oil to counter the reductions in supply because of the war in Libya.

How long can we count on these lower prices?  My bet is that these reserves will be used up and prices will be back up long before Gadaffi is forced from office.  And then, we will have high prices and a big hole in our strategic reserves, that we would be wise to replenish.  Then, we will have sold our reserve oil at low prices and will have to replace it at higher prices.  “Sell low, buy high” is the strategy of fools.

-MC

There’s an app for that

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

In any basic microeconomics class, the role of information, especially about prices for competing goods, is discussed.  In this article from NBC33 News, a Baton Rouge plastic surgeon, Dr. Jonathon Kaplan, has created a smart phone app for patients to search through the prices for local medical procedures.  By better informing patients about alternative sources and their prices, the local market for medical procedures, clearly a monopolistically competitive market, as every doctor’s services are different in some way from her competitors, the elasticities of demand for these services increases, making these markets more competitive.

-MC

Google and antitrust filings by the FTC

Saturday, June 25th, 2011

It is too early to even tell what Google may be accused of, but the Antitrust division of the Federal Trade Commission is subpoenaing Google and is clearly suspects something, surely of monopolizing.  See this article from the New York Times.  But what does it mean “to monopolize?”  Merely “having” a monopoly is quite different from monopolizing, which requires some action to drive out competitors beyond superior operation.

The article states:

In a statement, FairSearch.org, an organization that represents several of Google’s critics, including Microsoft and the Web sites Expedia, Travelocity and Kayak, said that Google’s “anticompetitive practices include scraping and using other companies’ content without their permission, deceptive display of search results, manipulation of search results to favor Google’s products, and the acquisition of competitive threats to Google’s dominance. Google’s practices are deserving of full-scale investigations by U.S. antitrust authorities.”

Don’t hold your breath for a quick resolution of this case.  But pay attention, as Google has certainly gained the lead position among search engines which gives it an advertising advantage, and being in front draws the fire of critics.  Are they in front because they are the best, or have they done something to make it hard for others to compete, other than providing a better search engine?  Just stay tuned to this story.  It will be important.

-MC

Insider Trading on Congressional Action: Congressmen Don’t Play by the Same Rules

Thursday, May 26th, 2011

Insider trading is the “ethically questionable” practice of buying or selling stock or other assets based on special, inside knowledge, information that is not yet known to the general public.  I say ethically questionable, because there are certainly instances where one might trade, or refrain from trading, based on special information that may be ethical.  But such a discussion of ethical vs. unethical insider trading will have to wait for another day (coming soon, however).

Many of us should recall the now famous ImClone Case , where Martha Stewart , TV celebrity and founder of the founder of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, was sentenced to five months in jail, five months of home confinement, and probation for two years for lying, conspiracy, and obstruction of justice, all about insider trading in the final days of 2001.  While she did not really go to jail for insider trading itself, several others did.

 While Martha Stewart and others serve jail time for insider trading, it seems that our lawmakers, the distinguished members of the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate are not barred from trading on the special information they come across in making laws for the rest of us.  In this article in the Huffington Post, Dan Froomkin reports on study found in the B.E.Press journal, Business and Politics, Abnormal Returns From the Common Stock Investments of Members of the U.S. House of Representatives,” by A. J. Ziobrowski, J. W. Boyd, P. Cheng, and B. J. Ziobrowski.

In analyzing 16,000 stock trades of 300 members of the House of Representatives from 1985-2001, our congressmen received returns that were 6% above the market.  Using basic statistical methods, these returns of were much too high to have merely occurred by chance.  In 2004, these same researchers found that our Senators received even higher returns on their investments while in office.  Of course, an individual senator has much more political power than a congressman, and so the better return is to be expected.  The authors reason that in their work, congressmen come across information that is not generally available, “insider information.”  Also, congressmen understand the impact that their own legislative actions will have on individual companies as well as on specific industries.  Understandably, they use such information when adjusting their stock portfolio. 

Froomkin points out that neither the law nor rules of the House prohibit this sort of insider trading by members of Congress.  While some lawmakers have tried to pass legislation against such insider trading by congressmen, so far they have failed in doing so. 

The rule of law  means that our rulers play by the same rules as the rest of us–they are not above the law.  So much for the rule of law. 

-MC

Water, Water, Everywhere, Nor Any Drop to Drink

Friday, May 20th, 2011

 Those famous lines from Coleridge’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,” come to mind when we consider that Sulphur, Louisiana is only about 100 miles from Butte LaRose, Louisiana.  While Butte LaRose is expected to soon be under water from the opening of the Morganza spillway, we see in this KPLC article  that the city of Sulphur is asking its residents to conserve their water use.  With a break in their water main, water levels and pressure have fallen in the city, prompting citywide restrictions in water use.   

The KPLC article notes that there are no residential water meters in Sulphur, with residents being charged flat fees.  There is then no natural incentive to conserve to avoid high water bills.  The incentive that high water bills give citizens elsewhere a reason to call the plumber when there is an annoying water leak is gone in Sulphur.  There, citizens receive a flat bill each month of $43 to cover the costs of water, sewerage treatment and trash pickup.  While the city plans to raise that bill to $45 per month, this increase in water bills will not have any effect on the conservation of water, as they pay that same flat fee no matter their use of water, whether they draw a drop or use water at rates approaching the Morganza’s flow.  No matter what they do, they get charged the same rate.  With residents in Sulphur using water, water, everywhere, with no  added cost for using the added gallon, they will end up in the Mariner’s situation, “Nor any drop to drink.” 

MC

Look a little deeper at the numbers in the news: The unemployment rate has dropped

Saturday, March 5th, 2011

My son played baseball in an organized league for the first time last summer.  With excellent eye-hand coordination, he was batting 1000 for a while.  Three hits his first three times at bat resulted in a perfect batting average—for awhile.  While he finished his season of league ball with over a 700 batting average playing against other 6th and 7th graders, his beginning average was especially deceiving.

For students in macroeconomics, for students who will go into that class in the future and for just the ordinary Joe and Josephine, Rick Santelli of CNBC provides an important lesson  about looking reported numbers a little more closely, a little more critically.  We need to think about how those numbers are constructed.

Rates or ratios are the products of two numbers, and the unemployment rate is a ratio of the number of unemployed, which is measured as not just the number who do not have jobs, but those without jobs who are actively seeking a job, divided by the labor force. The labor force is the number of people with jobs plus those A drop in the unemployment rate can come from changes in either the numerator or the denominator.   

Be sure to read Santelli’s short piece.  It drives home the point that some reported numbers can be deceiving.  We often need to look a bit beyond what is reported. 

How do you know what to look for, though?  That is where one’s education comes into play.  I don’t know where Santelli went to college, but he certainly gets what many journalists miss.

Remember, whether looking at national statistics, or company accounts, it helps to look at other numbers for comparison and to know what those number really mean.

-MC

Driving and Drinking: What is Moving the Prices of Gasoline and Wine?

Thursday, February 24th, 2011

Unless you have been laid up in bed, you are sure to have noticed that the price for gasoline has skyrocketed in the last few days, rising by about $0.25 a gallon here in south Louisiana, or about 8%.  For extra credit only to the first of my students to correctly post the right answer, explain to me, in terms of supply and demand and the factors that affect them, why gasoline prices have gone up so much so fast.

Now, gasoline prices have been trending up a bit over a much longer period, peaking finally in the summer of 2008, and then the price for fuel plummeted. 

Researchers with the International Monetary Fund, the IMF, have noticed a peculiar correlation, as reported here at the Public Radio Program, Market Watch—the very high correlation of the price of oil and the price of fine wine, like the wine from the French wine region on Bordeaux.  These two prices move closely up and down together (see also this Wall Street Journal article ), and not for the reason one might suspect–it is not because of transportation costs, as transportation does not make up as much of the price of expensive wine as it would, say, for cheap wine. 

Again, for extra credit, but only for the first to answer this correctly, explain to me, in terms of supply and demand and the factors that affect them, why oil and wine prices move so closely together, that is, why are they strongly, positively correlated?

-MC

White House Proclaims Mission Accomplished for Stimulus Package

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

The new White House spokesman, Jay Carney, tells reporters in this video that the White House’s goals for the stimulus package have been met.  If that is the case, then the White House’s goal must have been to bankrupt the federal government, to leave many states in fiscal crisis, and to wreck the dollar, while leaving record numbers of Americans out of work and out of a home, facing their own private bankruptcies.  We have heard claims of “Mission Accomplished” from a previous White House, a claim that turned out to be premature to say the least.  Now this White House is claiming that trillions of dollars of stimulus and bailouts have worked?  Does the White House really expect the American public to believe them?

-MC

The government budget constraint and problems of deficit spending

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011


Economists recognize a limit on government spending due to the sources for the spending for those dollars to be spent.  Economists call this limitation the “government budget constraint.”  We recognize that there is a tax to be paid one way or the other, different ways of raising the funds implies different taxes.  Some of these are up front taxes, where we know we are being taxed, while others are hidden taxes that we pay, nonetheless.

Indulge me to some simple math.  Let’s use “G” for Government Spending, ”T” for Taxes, and “D” for Deficit.  The Deficit, D, is, of course, just G-T, so D = G-T.  That part is obvious:  the part of government spending that exceeds the taxes raised to pay for that spending is the deficit (government debt on the other hand, is the deficit accumulated over the years minus the few surpluses we have had).

So, the excess of government spending over above the taxes to pay for that spending is the deficit.  A hallmark of Keynesian economics has been the idea that deficits are ok, that they are even a good thing during recessionary periods.  This approval of deficit spending by the federal government removed the moral constraint to not run deficits that had been in play for years.

Borrowing to pay deficits and taxes on capital and labor

The next question is “how do we pay for this deficit?” Well, of course, we borrow the money–we choose to increase our debt by borrowing from anyone who thinks that we are credit worthy, better risks than others at the interest rate we are paying.   We simply put IOUs (or treasury bills) up for sale. Some of the creditors or buyers of these IOUs are our own citizens, and some are not.

If we only sell our IOUs only to our own citizens, we soon have to lower the price of our IOUs in order to sell more, as there will be a point where the our citizens will start to have to take their funds from investment projects in which they are willing to invest and keep those funds in treasuries, or government IOUs.  While I will not go into the explanation in this post, interest rates and the prices of IOUs go in opposite directions, but here is a sufficient explanation from About.com.

As we drop our price to sell more, our interest expense increases.   So, as we increase the size of our debt with deficits year after year, we also drive up interest expenses for most of the debt we owe, as much of it is in short-term securities.  Since interest payments amount to part of our G, government spending, the deficit goes up at an even faster rate.

Of course, we sell our IOUs not only to our own citizens, but to all those around the world.   By selling them to those outside our borders we are able to raise more funds at the same interest rate as compared to only selling them domestically.  Still, as our debt creeps upward, we have a larger proportion of our spending going to pay the interest on this debt.  Since so much of our current debt obligations are in short-term obligations, new debt from additional deficit spending raises our interest expense on most of our debt.   As more borrowing to finance new deficits begin to push interest rates up as the default risk on these funds increases (just like a lender runs a higher risk of not getting his funds back from someone who owes ten times what they make in a year compared to someone who is now debt free, but once had a mortgage), and so, lenders must get higher rates to take the risk of making the loan.

Interest rates start to edge upward as it becomes more difficult to sell our IOUs.  Higher interest rates mean fewer business investments in machinery, equipment, factories, etc. will be worth making and less of these tools will be available for workers to use.  Less capital per worker means lower productivity for workers and less pay, as workers are ultimately paid because they are productive.  If the worker does not produce as much, the worker cannot be paid as much.

So, increased borrowing is a tax on workers and owners alike, as lower wages for workers and less capital held by owners harms both of these producer groups.  This tax is hidden from immediate view, as it is not obvious that excessive government spending is immediately coming out of their pockets.  The tag line for our blog, “what is seen and what is unseen” becomes important here, as people usually perceive taxes that they get a bill for as a tax, but they don’t see deficits as taxing them.  As Louisiana Sen. Russell Long was noted for saying, voters really mean “Don’t tax me and don’t tax thee, tax the man behind the tree.”  We are the men behind the tree.  Or, when it comes to taxation, as Walt Kelly’s Pogo said “We have met the enemy and he is us.”

Printing money to pay the deficit and the inflation tax

Now one of the tricks that governments have used in the past is to have its central bank (our Federal Reserve) become one of the creditors and buy up these IOUs.  In an earlier day, we would simply have some institution print or coin money.  Increases in the supply of money in an economy usually or eventually results in raising prices, in inflation.  If the increased money supply causes people to reduce their acceptance of the money involve as they expect the money to have a declining value,

The unstable Weimar Republic, the post-WWI German government, did exactly that, resulting in inflation rates that boggle the mind, reaching a rate of 100% every 2 days.  In other words, prices were doubling every two days for a while.

Another way of thinking about that is that a person’s savings in money fell in half every two days.  There is an often-repeated story of someone choosing between a huge prize and a penny payment that doubled every day for a month (30 days—we won’t get greedy here).  Imagine getting a million dollars in 30 days or the penny payment doubling every 30 days.  Here is a little article on that choice.   The doubling penny ends up being $5,368,709.12 in just 30 days.

Now imagine the reverse, where you start off with cash holdings of $5,368,709.12, and you face inflation of 100% every two days.  In only 60 days the buying power of your cash holdings is reduced to a single penny.  In those short 60 days, the government’s inflation policy, turning its debt into money, has taxed away over $5 million of your savings.  “My father was a lawyer,” says Walter Levy, a German-born oil consultant in New York, “and he had taken out an insurance policy in 1903, and every month he had made the payments faithfully. It was a 20-year policy, and when it came due, he cashed it in and bought a single loaf of bread.” (From the PBS series, Commanding Heights )

While everyone may try to rid their portfolios of money assets, it cannot be done for the whole economy, and so, wealth held in dollar assets falls, making us all poorer, but also making the inflation tax even higher.   As people try to protect their portfolios by buying real assets (not money or dollar denominated IOUs), we end up in a game of “who gets stuck with the worthless money.”  We spend that money at a faster and faster rate.  For instance, the German hyperinflation mentioned above led to retailers raising their prices several times a day.  Workers and their spouses soon started demanding to get paid several times a day so that the same marks were going around the economy at faster and faster rates.  A very old and well known relationship in economics is that the price level (think CPI) times the output of real goods and services produced (think real GDP) equals the Money in the system times the speed at which money circulates (something called Velocity).  Or, put another way, the growth rate in the Money Supply times the growth in Velocity divided by the growth in the economy is the growth in prices better known as inflation.  Either more money or faster circulating money will drive up prices if we don’t increase our output.

We see store owners and farmers raising prices and seldom think that it is really the government and the central bank behind these price increases, making inflation amount to an invisible tax eroding away at the cash savings we worked years to build up.

I should point out that economists recognition of a government budget constraint, that we are taxed one way or the other for all of our spending is noted in the acronym “TANSTAAFL,” standing for “There Ain’t No Such Thing as a Free Lunch,” coined by Robert Heinlein in his science fiction book, “The Moon is a Harsh Mistress.” Still earlier, David Ricardo noted the equivalence of taxing and borrowing in his 1820 “Essay on the Funding System.”

Why Do Deficits Matter?

If we are taxed one way or the other as has been shown, why do deficits matter, why should we care about deficits and running up big national debts?

Well, just as Ricardo noted the monetary equivalence between borrowing and taxing to pay for some large government expense, such as a war (Ricardo’s example), Ricardo also suggested ways that these were not the same, noting that people often fail to perceive the full costs of government spending when it is financed by borrowing, noting what has been called by one of my professors, James Buchanan, “Fiscal Illusion.”  The problem is that the taxpayer-voter seldom notices the perpetual interest payment the government must make as the same as the immediate tax increase to avoid a deficit.

Another way of putting this is that not all taxes are seen as such.  People seldom connect the inflation that they face because of government services that they receive while refusing to pay higher taxes.   People also do not notice that they have less equipment and tools at work and fewer sellers in each industry because investments were not made at some earlier time because interest rates were too high.

Taxes out of their own pockets are seen and kept to a minimum, while government benefits they get are seen and kept to a maximum.  On the other hand, stealth taxes on capital and on money holdings are not seen as payments for their government benefits or the reductions in taxes for which they themselves are liable.

So, voters ask for lower taxes and higher benefits, more spending, and their representatives oblige.  The cost of government is perceived as being very low.  When we do not see the full cost of something, we usually ask for more, just as the consumer who does not pay for the environmental costs of the products they consumer want more to be produced.

Deficits matter because they misrepresent the true costs of decisions to voters.  Voters who benefit from the spending vote for it, as it is clear that they benefit.  Voters who pay the inflation tax or the capital tax (higher interest rates) do not perceive their liabilities and do not try to block passage.  The most popular legislation, then, raises deficits.  Fiscal Illusion that plagues us, especially when we employ deficit financing of government spending, makes continued deficits more likely, as voters, more than Twist, find it easy to ask for “More, please.”

-MC