The Play’s The Thing

Submitted by Ben Hunt of Epsilon Theory

We did get something – a gift – after the election. … It was a little cocker spaniel dog in a crate. … And our little girl – Tricia, the 6-year old – named it Checkers. And you know, the kids, like all kids, love the dog and I just want to say this right now, that regardless of what they say about it, we’re gonna keep it.

      – Richard Nixon, “Checkers” speech after accepting illegal campaign contributions

 

Cory is here tonight. And like the Army he loves, like the America he serves, Sergeant First Class Cory Remsburg never gives up, and he does not quit. My fellow Americans, men and women like Cory remind us that America has never come easy.

     –Barack Obama, 2014 State of the Union address

 

You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns, you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.

     – William Jennings Bryan, the Boy Orator of the Platte, 1896 Democratic nomination speech

 

Every man a king, but no one wears a crown.

     – Huey Long, the Kingfish, slogan from 1928 Louisiana gubernatorial campaign

 

You didn’t build that.

      – Elizabeth Warren, slogan from 2012 Massachusetts campaign for US Senate

 

The play’s the thing. Wherein I’ll capture the conscience of the king.

      – Shakespeare, “Hamlet”

 

The Play’s The Thing

As usual, I was struck by the pageantry and sheer theatricality of this Tuesday’s State of the Union address. As usual, you had the props – human and otherwise – on full display. As usual, you had the rhetorical flourishes, the ritualized audience behavior, the talking head performances before and after. Unusual for me, though, was the professionally scripted and rehearsed television broadcast production, such that the cameras were trained on the human props before the President referred to them in his speech. A bravura technical performance, to be sure.

Last week’s note focused on the primal human behavior of dance. This week it’s the primal human behavior of theatre, of the representation of stories, particularly the play-within-a-play…a fundamental trope of human story-telling from Hamlet to The Simpsons.

There’s the ostensible meaning of the spoken words and the performance, and there’s the ostensible audience to whom the words and performance are addressed. But then there’s the real meaning of the words, and the real audience to whom the words are addressed. And then maybe there’s a meaning and an audience beyond that. This is the recursive, strategic nature of public communications. These multi-level games are the beating hearts of both politics and economics, and looking at these behaviors through the lens of game theory can help us both see the social world more clearly and call more things by their proper names.

We expect this sort of linguistic game-playing in politics. It’s what politicians DO, whether it’s Elizabeth Warren’s “You didn’t build that” speeches putting a modern slant on the same language and imagery of populism and class warfare used by William Jennings Bryan in the 1890’s and Huey “Kingfish” Long in the 1920’s, or whether it’s the entire Republican Party’s “Southern Strategy” of coded language to maintain racist voting blocs post the Civil Rights Act of 1964. If you’ve never read political operative extraordinaire Lee Atwater’s infamous interview on the subject, you really should. And yes, I know that Atwater’s point was that overt racist appeals were diminishing in the South as the language changed, but does anyone doubt that Atwater would use language straight from the KKK handbook if he thought it were still an effective campaign tool? It’s not that he thinks racism is wrong or even distasteful in the context of a political campaign, any more than Elizabeth Warren would be opposed to burning Jamie Dimon in effigy (or maybe in person) at her next campaign rally … it’s just an unpopular tactic today, at least in its unvarnished form. But if it works tomorrow? Sure, why not? In the immortal words of Al Davis, “Just win, baby.”

This sort of linguistic game-playing is not a modern phenomenon. It is a quintessential human phenomenon, played just as effectively by Pericles 2,500 years ago as it is by politicians today. My favorite example of a linguistic play-within-a-play was staged 150 years ago by an undisputed American political genius: Abraham Lincoln. We’re all familiar with the Lincoln-Douglas debates as some sort of shining example of civic participation and civil discourse, but few know the politics behind those debates. Lincoln lost that 1858 election to Stephen Douglas for the US Senate (well, he won the aggregate popular vote by a slim margin, but US Senators were still chosen by state legislatures back then, and the allocation of votes within the Illinois legislature gave Douglas a clear victory). But the way he lost that Senate race … the way Lincoln played the game … won him the Presidency in 1860.


Here was the central question of those debates, the way in which Lincoln framed the language of the debate to give himself the best chance of winning the larger political game: should the citizens of a Territory have the right to decide whether or not to allow slavery in that Territory? Every time Douglas tried to move the debate to some other topic (and seeing as how Illinois was, of course, a state rather than a Territory, you can understand why other topics might be of interest), Lincoln moved it right back. Every time the crowd’s attention seemed to wane in the subject, Lincoln would say something certain to inflame his opponents in the crowd, drawing Douglas back into the fight. Lincoln’s position on this question may surprise you. He was adamantly opposed to popular sovereignty in the Territories, even when the majority opposed slavery (like Kansas). Lincoln’s position was not only anti-slavery, but also (and perhaps more importantly to Lincoln from a political game perspective) anti-states’ rights and local sovereignty.

Why? Lincoln’s question was not really directed at Douglas, the immediate audience. Nor was it really directed at the crowds of voters in the various Illinois towns where they debated. Nor was it really directed at the Illinois newspaper reporters who carried the debates across the entire state of Illinois. It was really directed at a national audience of Republican voters, because Lincoln knew that the Illinois Senate race in 1858 was just a warm-up for the Presidential election of 1860. If Douglas agreed with Lincoln on the Territorial sovereignty question, then he would lose the only issue where he was more popular than Lincoln within Illinois … Douglas would lose the Senate race and fatally damage his chances in the national Democratic primary. If Douglas disagreed with Lincoln, then he would probably win the Illinois Senate race and put himself in a reasonable position to win the national Democratic primary, but not without splitting his own party (Southern Democrats wanted slavery legalized in Territories even if the majority voted it down). Lincoln was playing a game four layers deep! He didn’t care about “winning” the debate. He didn’t care about winning the crowd. He didn’t really care about winning the Illinois Senate election. All of those things would be nice, but it was the fourth level – winning the national Republican primary and the national Presidential election of 1860 – where Lincoln was focused.

Lincoln’s multi-level game strategy worked perfectly. The Democratic party split into Northern and Southern factions (really into three factions if you count the Constitutional Union, which drew principally from former Southern Whigs), giving the Republicans a clean sweep of the Northern states and Electoral College domination even though Lincoln received less than 40% of the popular vote nation-wide. Douglas – the candidate of the (Northern) Democratic Party – finished second in the popular vote with 30% of the vote, but carried only one state (Missouri) and ended up with a mere 12 Electoral College votes, compared to Lincoln’s 180. Not bad for a former Congressman from a frontier state who couldn’t even win a Senate seat.

I’m always surprised when people who are quite aware of the linguistic game-playing that creates the fabric of politics are somehow blind to the same linguistic shaping of the fabric of economics and market behavior. I shouldn’t be surprised – as Upton Sinclair said, “it is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it” – but still. We don’t expect our politics to be “scientific” or our politicians to be anything less than fallible humans, but somehow we expect Truth with a capital T when it comes to economics. There’s a tendency to treat economic communications and signals – whether it’s from a Famous CEO, a Famous Investor, a Famous Economist, a Famous TV Personality, or a Central Banker – as somehow less theatrical or less staged for a larger purpose than political speech. But this is a mistake. When Ben Bernanke said that the Fed would increasingly use its communications as a policy tool, he was declaring his intention to start playing a linguistic game. Or rather, his intention to play the game even harder than it had been played in the past. When Jean-Claude Juncker, former Luxembourg Prime Minister and head of the Eurogroup Council, said of European monetary policy “when it becomes serious you have to lie,” he was simply saying what every successful game-player knows: sometimes you have to bluff. Some Central Bankers are pretty good poker players (Draghi, for example); others … not so much. But they are all playing the Common Knowledge Game as hard as they can, they’re getting better at it, and they’re not going to stop. If you don’t understand the rules of this game, if you don’t listen to what is being said in the context of game-playing, then you are placed at a disadvantage versus those who do. You will not understand the WHY that exists behind the public statements.

There’s a slightly different linguistic game going on in the financial media, but no less important for understanding market outcomes. I’ll take CNBC as an example, but it’s just an example… you could make the same observations about any other media outlet. Within CNBC, Jim Cramer is everyone’s favorite whipping boy when it comes to complaints about media theatrics, but this is missing the forest for the trees. At least Cramer lets us in on the play-within-a-play conceit without constantly pretending that a daily price chart or a market “heat map” is anything other than a theatrical prop. If anything, Cramer’s performance is a paragon of honesty compared to the performances of the “news” hosts or the interchangeable “traders” on shows like “Fast Money.” XKCD published this cartoon in reference to ESPN and the like, but it’s even more applicable to CNBC and its ilk. Just to be clear, I’m not slamming these hosts and traders. I’m sure that they are overwhelmingly smart, honest people who believe that what they say are useful truths from their own perspectives. They are not hypocrites. But they are performers. And like any performer, there is a larger game being played with their words.

The larger meaning of the statements made on CNBC has absolutely nothing to do with specific investment advice or news. CNBC really could not care less about the actual content of what is being said. The purpose of CNBC’s game is not to tell you WHAT to think, but HOW to think, that thinking about investing in terms of some sell-side analyst’s anodyne story about fundamentals or some trader’s breathless story about open option interest is smart or wise or what all the cool kids are doing. Why? Because CNBC can create inexpensive content essentially at will to fill this demand, allowing them to sell advertisements and take cable carriage fees. Nothing evil or wrong about this. It’s what for-profit media companies DO. But the content they are producing is no less of a theatrical production than the State of the Union address, no less of a multi-level game, and it needs to be understood as such.

So what’s to be done if all of our leaders and all of our institutions are speaking past us, playing a larger game for power or money or whatever? Do we rage against the machine? Do we wander around like Diogenes, the founder of Cynic philosophy, holding to some absolutist standards of Honesty with a capital H and Truth with a capital T, living in rags and sleeping in a large clay jar?

If that’s the price of being a Cynic and constantly fighting the innate fallibility of Man and his works…no thanks. There has to be a middle ground between being a Cynic and a Fool, some way of playing the game without losing one’s soul. Recognizing that all of us human animals, including me and including you, are playing multiple multi-level games … well, that seems like a good start to me. The Truths in life are still death and taxes (and maybe compounding returns). Everything else is theatre, where honesty (with a small h) and truth (with a small t) are probably the best we can achieve. And that’s not so bad.


    



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Roll Up! Roll Up! EU Place to Be For Corruption!

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As if we didn’t know it already! The Western world is the ultimate destination for corruption, pulling a swift one and swiping the valuables from the inside pocket of the guy’s pants standing in front of you as he keeps his beady eye on the economy. It’s always been the past master of tom-foolery and make-believe, the West. The place where they tell you that it was as far back as the Romans you would have to go to in order to find a tinge of corruption in the political world and it has been certainly banished to the very fringes of the financial world. That’s what we get told.

It now turns out according to figures recently published that it’s the EU that is one of the most corrupt places in the world. Enough to take your breath away and not just your hard-earned cash. It will certainly be fuel for the fire to the arguments of the anti-Europeans and the Euro-sceptics that are becoming a great deal more than just a mere handful few and far between.

Corruption in the European Union costs at least 120 billion euros ($162.10 billion) every year according to a European Commission. Let’s just hope that the Commission was honest enough to stay away from fraudulent activities while carrying out the study and putting the report together. Oh! What a wicked web we weave!

Anybody would hazard a guess that the 120 billion euros is rather on the conservative side. But, then again, the EU did always like to throw figures around, didn’t it? They must have money to throw away. Sorry correction, the EU citizens must have money to throw at the politicians and corrupt officials like chucking peanuts into the mouths of the monkeys swinging from the branches of the trees at the zoo.

The 120-billion figure is the equivalent to the budget of the EU. So are the Europeans paying double for the running of their united Union? It would appear that the only thing about the EU that is united at the moment is the fight to maintain the fraudulent activities of embezzlement and the using of public funds to one’s own personal gain at the top of the agenda. Such a survey has never been carried out before and it hardly seems likely that they will be wanting to do it again given the results.

• Greece, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Lithuania, Bulgaria and Romania had results which showed that between 6% and 29% of citizens from those countries had to pay bribes to public officials (in the last twelve months) in those countries as well as private individuals. 
• 99% of Greeks believe that corruption is rife in the EU (tell us something new?). 
• Poland had a figure of 15%.
• Hungary stood at 13%.
• The UK had a surprisingly low level (only 1%). So either they are all telling fibs in Great Britain or they have little dealings with EU officials or government officials. Take your pick!
• 64% of the Brits did actually state however that they had the impression that fraud and corruption was widespread in the UK. That shows that someone is lying somewhere along the line. 
• But, the overall figure in the EU was that 74% believed that corruption was everywhere. 
• 9% of Germans know someone that has taken a bribe. 
• 60% of French companies believe that corruption is an obstacle do doing business in the EU. 
• 4% of Swedes say that they have had to pay a bribe. 
• Although 18% of Swedes know someone that has had to pay a bribe. 
• So, we can only deduce here in the strange figures that either all of the people know each other in Sweden and that it’s the same old fools paying the money under the table. 
• Or alternatively the EU (Stockholm-born) Commissioner Anna Cecilia Malmström who was heading the fraud report has some answering to do.

The EU report was made at the request of the EU member countries and also the European Parliament. Nothing like apparent transparency to keep the barking dogs quiet, is there?

The EU already has an anti-fraud agency called OLAF (particular concerning EU fraud on the European budget). But, there again is one of the other wonders of modern investigative research. Keep the budget as tight as a shoe-string and they won’t be able to investigate anything. OLAF only gets 23.5 million euros($31.74 million). But, would it be worth them getting any more? In 2000, internal auditors had reports placed on the desks of OLAF investigators to show that Eurostat had fraudulently attributed contracts to private companies. OLAF decided not to act on that information, but was later forced to do so when the scandal was revealed by the press.

The latest findings of the EU report show that public procurement procedures were open to fraud, in particular. Political-party financing also came under attack for fraudulent activities.

Hocus-pocus, chicanery, dupery and duplicity, oh what a guile bamboozlement of double-dealing and deceit!

Drown it as much as possible in long-winded texts, with a superfluous over-heightened sense of hierarchy at all levels so that you can never get to the bottom of things, and you have a grand old recipe for corruption in the EU. Voilà! Magic!

Originally posted: Roll Up! Roll Up! EU Place to Be For Corruption!

You might also enjoy: You’re Miserable USA! | Emerging Markets: Lock, Stock and Barrel | End of the Financial World 2014 |  Kristallnacht on Wall Street? Bull! | China’s Credit Crunch | Working for the Few | USA:The Land of the Not-So-Free  

 


    



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Nigerian Central Bank Falls For Nigerian Email Scam? Says $20 Billion Unaccounted For

A month ago, Nigeria’s state-owned National Petroleum oil company (NNPC) said it had accounted for all of the $49.8 billion in revenues that were supposed to paid to the government explaining it had spent over $10 bn on subsidies, repairs, and losses on crude oil inventory – “no money is missing,” they exclaimed. However, according to Bloomberg, Nigeria’s Central Bank governor Lamido Sanusi (often seen at the footer of those emails everyone gets) proclaimed to the government’s senate finance committee that NNPC hasn’t accounted for $20 billion in revenue. “There is $20 billion that has not come back to us – the burden of proof is on NNPC.” That is 8% of GDP! Perhaps dropping a line to some Western central bankers for a temporary bridge loan (because we are sure the money is there) would be appropriate.

 

A month ago… trust us – the money is there…

Via Bloomberg,

Nigeria’s state-owned oil company said it made a full account for $49.8 billion revenue it was alleged to have failed to pay to the government.

 

The spendings include $8.49 billion on fuel subsidies, $1.22 billion on pipeline repairs and $1.09 billion for crude losses, Bernard Otti, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corp.’s group executive director of finance and accounts, told reporters today in the capital, Abuja. Part of the money was also used to maintain strategic reserves of refined fuel, he said.

 

These expenditures have been incurred by the NNPC as part of our statutory responsibility as a national oil company which we execute on behalf of the federal government,” he said. “No money is missing.”

 

Central bank Governor Lamido Sanusi said last month he had written to President Goodluck Jonathan to ask for a probe of the country’s oil accounts, after newspapers reported that he alleged in his letter that $49.8 billion was unaccounted for. The NNPC said on Jan. 5 that it worked with the finance and petroleum ministries to reconcile $39 billion of the amount.

And then the truth today… hhm, sorry we are short $20 billion…

State-owned Nigeria National Petroleum Co. hasn’t accounted for $20b in revenue, Lamido Sanusi tells Senate finance committee in capital, Abuja.

 

“There is $20b that has not come back to us. The burden of proof is on NNPC”: Sanusi

We await our invitation to participate in the bridge financing if we just send bank account details…

 

And while $20bn is a third of a month’s Fed LSAP – it’s 8% of Nigerian GDP…


    



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Deputy Drug Czar Admits Marijuana Is Safer Than Alcohol

During a congressional hearing
today, The Raw Story‘s Eric Dolan
reports
, Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) got deputy drug czar
Michael Botticelli to admit that marijuana is safer than
alcohol. But it was not easy:

“How many people die from marijuana overdoses every year?”
Connolly asked.

“I don’t know that I know. It is very rare,” Botticelli
replied.

“Very rare. Now just contrast that with prescription drugs,
unintentional deaths from prescription drugs, one American dies
every 19 minutes,” Connolly said. “Nothing comparable to
marijuana. Is that correct?”

Botticelli admitted that was true.

“Alcohol—hundreds of thousands of people die every year from
alcohol-related deaths: automobile [accidents], liver disease,
esophageal cancer, blood poisoning,” Connolly continued. “Is
that incorrect?”

But Botticelli refused to answer. Guessing where the line
of questioning was headed, he said the “totality of harm”
associated with marijuana indicated it was a dangerous drug, even
though it was not associated with deaths.

“I guess I’m sticking with the president—the head of your
administration—who is making a different point,” Connolly fired
back. “He is making a point that is empirically true. That isn’t a
normative statement, that marijuana is good or bad, but he was
contrasting it with alcohol and empirically he is correct, is he
not?”

Botticelli again tried to dodge the question,
but Connolly interrupted him and told him to answer.

“Is it not a scientific fact that there is nothing comparable
with marijuana?” Connolly asked. “And I’m not saying it is
good or bad, but when we look at deaths and illnesses, alcohol,
other hard drugs are certainly—even prescription drugs—are a threat
to public health in a way that just isolated marijuana is not.
Isn’t that a scientific fact? Or do you dispute that fact?”

“I don’t dispute that fact,” Botticelli said.

The head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, by contrast,
refuses to
admit that marijuana is safer than anything. At a a recent meeting
of county sheriffs, DEA Administrator Michele Leonhart reportedly

criticized
President Obama for
speaking candidly
about the relative hazards of alcohol and
marijuana. It’s not clear whether Leonhart thinks Obama’s statement
was incorrect or merely inconvenient. But either way, the
outrage
generated by Obama’s remarks shows drug warriors
believe he conceded a point crucial to their cause. I hope they are
right.

[Thanks to Marc Sandhaus for the tip.]

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Another Nat Gas Margin Hike: Third In Two Weeks

The CME is angry. And you won’t like it when the CME is angry.

Moments ago, in the aftermath of today’s nat gas jump to the latest $5+ close (due to the persistence of cold weather), the CME hiked NG margins by another 10%: the third such hike in the past two weeks. Of course, this means that just like gold speculators were the target in 2011 and “evil” crude oil traders were demonized by the Margin hiker-In-Chief, so too the first commodity price shock of 2014 – that which America’s consumers will experience when they get their January (and likely February) utility bills – will be blamed on, you guessed it, evil nat gas speculators. It appears that the CME will not rest and will keep hiking margins until nat gas fall back to whatever the president deems a “fair” price.


    



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How Many HFT Quotes Does It Take To Execute 3 Trades? (Hint – Over 2 Million)

The farce that is the so-called stock "market" gets more and more mindblowing every day. Following yesterday's record high volume in VIX futures and options, this morning saw one stock – the $4bn market cap WhiteWave Foods represent a stunning 27% of all quotes in this morning's pre-open. As Nanex notes in this great analysis, HFT algos generated 2.04 million quotes which created… drum roll please… 3 trades.

 

Via Nanex,

Between 8:00 and 9:20 on February 4, 2014, in the stock of The WhiteWave Foods Company (symbol WWAV, market cap $4 Billion), one or more High Frequency Trading (HFT) algos, generated 2.04 million top of book orders at Direct Edge. Most of these affected the NBBO (National Best Bid/Offer) hundreds of times per second. There were 3 trades – all occurring at the very beginning of this quote onslaught.

By 9:20, the number of quotes in this one stock represented 27% of all quotes from all NMS symbols up to that point in time. There are over 8,000 NMS symbols comprised of NYSE, NY-Arca, NY-Mkt and Nasdaq listed stocks and ETFs.

Read what an HFT Lobbyist thinks of high order cancellation rates, or an Exchange CEO on quote flickering.

1. WWAV – Bids and Asks color coded by exchange and NBBO (gray shading).
All 2.04 million quotes from EDGX – were generated between 8:00 and 9:20. There were 3 trades (right at 8:00 – impossible to see).



2. WWAV – Zooming in from 8:06 to 8:24 (18 minutes).



3. WWAV – Zooming in on price (same time scale as chart 2 above).



4. WWAV – Zooming it from 8:16 to 8:17:45 (just under 2 minutes).



5. WWAV – Best Bids and Asks, zoomed in to 1 second of time.



6. Short Video of a quote screen during this event.

 


    



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John Taylor Berates Bernanke's Fed (In 300 Words)

Via John Taylor’s Economics One blog,

Like many monetary economists, I’ve recently been approached by reporters  and commentators to say a few words about monetary policy during Ben Bernanke’s time at the Fed.  Back in December the Washington Bureau of the Wall Street Journal asked me and others to write a short 300 word statement on the subject, and I have simply re-circulated that in response to further inquiries. Here are the 300 words:

Many will remember Ben Bernanke for classic central bank stabilizing actions taken during the fall 2008 panic, including emergency loans to banks and swap lines to foreign central banks. But historians might also consider actions the Fed took before and after that panic.

 

During 2003-2005, shortly after Ben Bernanke joined the Board stressing deflationary concerns, the Fed embarked on a very low interest rate policy. The policy was rationalized in part by these deflationary concerns, but it was a deviation from a policy that had worked well for two decades, and it exacerbated the housing boom and led to excessive risk taking.

 

The inevitable bust and defaults started as early as 2006. But the Fed misdiagnosed the resulting hits to bank balance sheets as a pure liquidity problem, and its initial treatment — pouring funds into the interbank market via the 2007 Term Auction Facility — did little good. The Fed then followed up with an on-again off-again bailout policy which created more instability. When the Fed bailed out Bear Stearns’ creditors in March 2008, investors assumed Lehman’s creditors would be bailed out too. When they weren’t, it was a big surprise. With policy uncertainty reaching new heights, panic ensued.

 

After the panic, the Fed began to draw down the emergency loans, but then embarked on an entirely unprecedented policy — massive purchases of mortgage-backed and Treasury securities, known as quantitative easing (QE).  The economy has grown slowly with QE compared with past recoveries without QE and far short of the Fed’s predictions. Many argue that QE has not reduced unemployment, but has diminished the Fed’s independence and credibility, offsetting the effects of adopting a numerical inflation target. Now, only a year after the latest round of QE began, the Fed is struggling with how to unwind it, just as many had warned.


    



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John Taylor Berates Bernanke’s Fed (In 300 Words)

Via John Taylor’s Economics One blog,

Like many monetary economists, I’ve recently been approached by reporters  and commentators to say a few words about monetary policy during Ben Bernanke’s time at the Fed.  Back in December the Washington Bureau of the Wall Street Journal asked me and others to write a short 300 word statement on the subject, and I have simply re-circulated that in response to further inquiries. Here are the 300 words:

Many will remember Ben Bernanke for classic central bank stabilizing actions taken during the fall 2008 panic, including emergency loans to banks and swap lines to foreign central banks. But historians might also consider actions the Fed took before and after that panic.

 

During 2003-2005, shortly after Ben Bernanke joined the Board stressing deflationary concerns, the Fed embarked on a very low interest rate policy. The policy was rationalized in part by these deflationary concerns, but it was a deviation from a policy that had worked well for two decades, and it exacerbated the housing boom and led to excessive risk taking.

 

The inevitable bust and defaults started as early as 2006. But the Fed misdiagnosed the resulting hits to bank balance sheets as a pure liquidity problem, and its initial treatment — pouring funds into the interbank market via the 2007 Term Auction Facility — did little good. The Fed then followed up with an on-again off-again bailout policy which created more instability. When the Fed bailed out Bear Stearns’ creditors in March 2008, investors assumed Lehman’s creditors would be bailed out too. When they weren’t, it was a big surprise. With policy uncertainty reaching new heights, panic ensued.

 

After the panic, the Fed began to draw down the emergency loans, but then embarked on an entirely unprecedented policy — massive purchases of mortgage-backed and Treasury securities, known as quantitative easing (QE).  The economy has grown slowly with QE compared with past recoveries without QE and far short of the Fed’s predictions. Many argue that QE has not reduced unemployment, but has diminished the Fed’s independence and credibility, offsetting the effects of adopting a numerical inflation target. Now, only a year after the latest round of QE began, the Fed is struggling with how to unwind it, just as many had warned.


    



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Does Calling Heroin Addiction a Brain Disease Help Avoid Tragedies Like Philip Seymour Hoffman's Death?

In a
recent Time essay, David
Sheff says
Philip Seymour Hoffman was not responsible for the decisions that
led to his death because he suffered from “a brain disease that’s
often progressive”—i.e., drug addiction:

It wasn’t Hoffman’s fault that he relapsed. It was the fault of
a disease that often includes relapse as a symptom and the fault of
the ineffective treatment he received.

You might surmise that there is a connection between viewing
addiction as a brain disease and coming up with an effective
treatment for it. But you would be wrong. The dominant model for
addiction treatment in the United States is the 12-step approach
promoted by Alcoholic Anonymous, which describes
addiction as a disease yet advocates what amounts to a spiritual
cure—one that does not
seem to work better
than any other approach, possibly including

no treatment at all
.

Sheff, author of Clean: Overcoming Addiction and Ending
America’s Greatest Tragedy
, suggests some alternatives.
“Traditionally,” he writes, “the only choices offered to addicts
were 12-step programs, but proven treatments now include cognitive
behavioral therapy, motivational interviewing and
psychopharmacology.” The effectiveness of cognitive behavioral
therapy and motivational interviewing hardly depends on viewing
addiction as a brain disease rather than a hard-to-break habit.
“Psychopharmacology” sounds  more like a medical treatment,
but here is what Sheff has in mind:

We don’t know if Hoffman was, upon discharge from treatment,
prescribed medications like Suboxone, which prevents opiate
relapse, but it’s unlikely, because most treatment programs eschew
them. If he had been (and if he took them as prescribed), it’s
almost certain that he’d be alive today. Another medication that
may have saved his life is naloxone, a drug that reverses an
overdose. All opiate addicts, as well as police and other first
responders, should have access to this drug. 

Suboxone contains buprenorphine, an opioid used, like methadone,
in “maintenance treatment,” which substitutes one narcotic for
another. (Although Sheff speculates that lack of proper medication
may explain Hoffman’s overdose, the New York Daily
News
 reports
that buprenorphine was found in the apartment where he died.) There
may well be advantages to
substituting an orally ingested pharmaceutical-quality opioid for a
snorted or injected black-market opiate. But that does not mean
addiction is a brain disease, or that a heroin addict must accept
that view to benefit from the substitution. It is even less
plausible to suggest that naloxone will work to reverse a heroin
overdose only if you adopt Sheff’s view of addiction, although he
is certainly right that naloxone should be more widely
available.

Might there be disadvantages to viewing addiction as a brain
disease? Stanton Peele, a psychologist who has been writing about
addiction for nearly four decades,
suggests
 that the “learned helplessness” inculcated by the
disease model makes tragic outcomes like Hoffman’s death more
rather than less likely. An addict who believes complete abstinence
from heroin is the only acceptable option because he is
physiologically incapable of exercising control over his drug
consumption may be ill-prepared for a relapse. Having adopted an
all-or-nothing view, he may be disinclined to take precautions such
as moderating his intake, asking friends to look in on him, having
naloxone on hand in case of an overdose, and avoiding other
depressants (which are
involved
in the vast majority of so-called heroin overdoses).
In other words, the lack of responsibility that Sheff urges can
have deadly consequences.

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Does Calling Heroin Addiction a Brain Disease Help Avoid Tragedies Like Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Death?

In a
recent Time essay, David
Sheff says
Philip Seymour Hoffman was not responsible for the decisions that
led to his death because he suffered from “a brain disease that’s
often progressive”—i.e., drug addiction:

It wasn’t Hoffman’s fault that he relapsed. It was the fault of
a disease that often includes relapse as a symptom and the fault of
the ineffective treatment he received.

You might surmise that there is a connection between viewing
addiction as a brain disease and coming up with an effective
treatment for it. But you would be wrong. The dominant model for
addiction treatment in the United States is the 12-step approach
promoted by Alcoholic Anonymous, which describes
addiction as a disease yet advocates what amounts to a spiritual
cure—one that does not
seem to work better
than any other approach, possibly including

no treatment at all
.

Sheff, author of Clean: Overcoming Addiction and Ending
America’s Greatest Tragedy
, suggests some alternatives.
“Traditionally,” he writes, “the only choices offered to addicts
were 12-step programs, but proven treatments now include cognitive
behavioral therapy, motivational interviewing and
psychopharmacology.” The effectiveness of cognitive behavioral
therapy and motivational interviewing hardly depends on viewing
addiction as a brain disease rather than a hard-to-break habit.
“Psychopharmacology” sounds  more like a medical treatment,
but here is what Sheff has in mind:

We don’t know if Hoffman was, upon discharge from treatment,
prescribed medications like Suboxone, which prevents opiate
relapse, but it’s unlikely, because most treatment programs eschew
them. If he had been (and if he took them as prescribed), it’s
almost certain that he’d be alive today. Another medication that
may have saved his life is naloxone, a drug that reverses an
overdose. All opiate addicts, as well as police and other first
responders, should have access to this drug. 

Suboxone contains buprenorphine, an opioid used, like methadone,
in “maintenance treatment,” which substitutes one narcotic for
another. (Although Sheff speculates that lack of proper medication
may explain Hoffman’s overdose, the New York Daily
News
 reports
that buprenorphine was found in the apartment where he died.) There
may well be advantages to
substituting an orally ingested pharmaceutical-quality opioid for a
snorted or injected black-market opiate. But that does not mean
addiction is a brain disease, or that a heroin addict must accept
that view to benefit from the substitution. It is even less
plausible to suggest that naloxone will work to reverse a heroin
overdose only if you adopt Sheff’s view of addiction, although he
is certainly right that naloxone should be more widely
available.

Might there be disadvantages to viewing addiction as a brain
disease? Stanton Peele, a psychologist who has been writing about
addiction for nearly four decades,
suggests
 that the “learned helplessness” inculcated by the
disease model makes tragic outcomes like Hoffman’s death more
rather than less likely. An addict who believes complete abstinence
from heroin is the only acceptable option because he is
physiologically incapable of exercising control over his drug
consumption may be ill-prepared for a relapse. Having adopted an
all-or-nothing view, he may be disinclined to take precautions such
as moderating his intake, asking friends to look in on him, having
naloxone on hand in case of an overdose, and avoiding other
depressants (which are
involved
in the vast majority of so-called heroin overdoses).
In other words, the lack of responsibility that Sheff urges can
have deadly consequences.

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