Saudi Airstrikes Kill 48 Yemeni Civilians In 24 Hours

Authored by Leith Fadel of Al-Masdar News,

At least 48 Yemeni civilians have been killed by the Saudi Coalition in the last 24 hours, the Saba News Agency reported. "A total of 48 civilians, including women and children, were killed and wounded in 51 airstrikes launched by US-backed Saudi-led aggression coalition using internationally banned weapons on several Yemeni provinces over the past few hours, military and security officials told Saba on Sunday," the news agency reported.

The Saudi airstrikes were primarily concentrated on the northern part of the country, where the Houthis currently control several provinces. In addition to northern Yemen, the Saudi airstrikes were also targeted the western part of the country, including the Hodeidah Port that was finally reopened after being blockaded for several weeks.

The death toll from airstrikes included the deaths four civilians reportedly attending a demonstration inside the Yemeni capital – the attack followed a large number of air raids conducted above Sana’a. According to Saba News Agency, the Saudi Coalition airstrikes not only killed four civilians, but also wounded dozens of others, including many women and children. The report added that the airstrikes were conducted during a solidarity vigil that was held in support of Palestine.

Image via Al-Masdar News

The Yemeni War has been ongoing for nearly three years now and much of the country still remains embroiled in a civil war that has yet find a political solution. With the assassination of former president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, in early December, the Yemeni war has entered a new stage with his loyalists now fighting alongside the UAE-backed Southern Resistance forces.

As a result of this alliance, the Southern Resistance forces have been able to recapture several areas from the Houthis, including much of the territory just north of the Mocha Port. While the Houthis have recaptured some sites near the Mocha Port, they are still far away from this historical city.


Yemen situation map as of 12/22/17. Green=Houthis (or Ansar Allah); Red=Saudi coalition/forces loyal to President Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi; Black=AQ, ISIS. Map source: ISW News

Meanwhile over the weekend, the Saudi-backed Yemeni Army and Hadi loyalists continued their offensive in the eastern part of the Sanaa Governorate, capturing several sites from the Houthi forces near the Marib axis. According to the Yemeni Army’s official media wing, their 7th Division attacked the Dahshush, Jabal al-Tafaha, Tabat al-Qanaseen and Jabal al-Mashna areas of eastern Sanaa on Saturday.

The Yemeni Army was able to capture these sites after a fierce battle with the Houthi forces. The Saudi-backed forces allege that they killed at least 28 Houthi fighters during the advance; however, no official verification has been made available to corroborate the claim.

via http://ift.tt/2pvN1ML Tyler Durden

White Christmas? Northeast Forecast To Get Big Winter Blast

Three days ago, we asked: Is A Major Winter Blast Coming To The East Coast This Christmas?

Despite all the chatter from global warming alarmists this year, there is a chance, some in the Northeast could experience a white Christmas.

Ed Vallee, a private weather forecaster based in Connecticut, reports merging storms will spread snow, rain, and mixed conditions from the central Appalachians to New England. The system will start on Sunday night and continue into Monday. Snow totals are forecasted to bring 2-8″ for parts of the Northeast (shown below). 

Vallee discusses the risks associated with the storm, along with more details into the timing of this system.

AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Brett Anderson, confirms Vallee’s forecast and said, there will be “enough snow to shovel and plow is likely from western and northern Pennsylvania and southern Ontario to Maine, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia.”

Here are the highways that could be heavily impacted by the storm include Interstate 70, I-76, I-78, I-80, I-81, I-84, I-86, I-87, I-88, I-89, I-90, I-91, I-93, I-95, and I-390. AccuWeather’s team expects delays at airports in Pittsburgh, New York City, and Boston.

Also, the National Weather Service has issued a deluge of winter weather advisories and warnings for the Northeast (as of 12-24).

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) provides an animated Gif depicting the trajectory of the system with the different types of precipitation probabilities.

 

Accuweather sheds more color on the storm:

From just north and east of Philadelphia to New York City, Providence, Rhode Island, and New Bedford, Massachusetts, just enough snow may fall to cover the ground, just in time for a White Christmas.

 

Farther south and west from Atlantic City, New Jersey to Baltimore and Salisbury, Maryland, and Washington, D.C., little or no snow is likely. Little or no rain may fall as well due to a gap in the storm.

Winter weather for the Northeast comes at no surprise considering the La Niña reading on the Oceanic Niño Index (ONI). La Niña conditions formed last month, indicating the Northern Hemisphere could be due for an abundance of winter weather (See: She’s Back! La Niña Is Here For The Second Consecutive Year).

BAMWX.com notes, the pattern is about to change in a huge way and it may begin on Christmas eve! Accumulating snow is on the table between Dec 24th-Jan 5th in a big way.

Obviously, if the winter blast does erupt, it is a perfect excuse for lagging spending, despite consumer sentiment at lofty levels.

Let’s just hope, the weather models above are as bad as Dennis Gartman’s market forecasts.

via http://ift.tt/2BZ72xu Tyler Durden

The Strangelovian Russia-Gate Myth

Authored by Phil Rockstroh via ConsortiumNews.com,

The Strangelovian palaver of Russia-gate is embraced by many liberals as some totem to ward off the vile Donald Trump, but this dishonest process only furthers the cause of American Empire and risks global destruction…

Peter Sellers playing Dr. Strangelove as he struggles to control his right arm from making a Nazi salute.

The effects of humankind created climate chaos are proving to be more devastating than even the grimmest predictions. Today’s wealth inequity is worse than in the Gilded Age. Around the world, the U.S. empire wages perpetual war, hot and cold, overt and covert, including military brinksmanship with the nuclear power, the Russian Federation.

Speaking of the latter, the U.S. media retails a storyline that would be considered risible if it was not so dangerously inflammatory i.e., L’affaire du Russia-gate, wherein, according to the lurid tale, the sinister Vladimir Putin, applying techniques from the Russian handbook for international intrigue, Rasputin Mind Control For Dummies, has wrested control of the U.S. Executive Branch of government and bends its policies to his diabolical will.

Ridiculous, huh? Yet the mainstream press promulgates and a large section of the general public believes what is clearly a reality-bereft tale, as all the while, ignoring circumstances crucial for their own economic well-being; their safety, insofar as a catastrophic nuclear exchange; and the steps required to maintain the ecological criteria crucial for allowing the continued viability of human beings on planet earth.

A socio-cultural-political structure is in place wherein the individual is bombarded, to the point of psychical saturation, with self-serving, elitist manufactured media content. Decades back, news and entertainment merged thus freedom of choice amounts to psychical wanderings in a wilderness of empty, consumer cravings and unquenchable longings. Moreover, personas are forged upon the simulacrum smithy of pop/consumer culture, in which, image is reality, salesmanship trumps (yes, Trumps) substance. Among the repercussions: A reality television con man gains the cultural capital to mount a successful bid for the U.S. presidency.

Trump’s ascendency should not come as a shock. Nor should desperate Democrats’ embrace of Russia-gate/The Russians Are Coming mythos. In essence, U.S. citizens/consumers are the most successfully psychologically colonized people on planet earth. In the realm of the political, Democratic and Republican partisans alike, on cue, are prone to parrot the self-serving lies of their party’s cynical elite, who, it is evident, by the utter disregard they hold towards the prerogatives of their constituency, view the influence-bereft hoi polloi with abiding distain … that is, in the rare event they regard them at all.

The crucial question is: Whose and what agenda does the Russia-gate yarn serve? The answer is hidden in plain sight: the profiteers of U.S. economic and militarist hegemony. The demonization and diminution of Russian power and influence is essential in order to maintain and expand U.S. dominance and the attendant maintenance and expansion of the already obscene wealth of capitalism’s ruling elite.

While It might seem we are mired in an (un-drainable) swamp of complexity, in reality, the political landscape is a bone-dry wasteland, wrought by a single factor — the addictive nature of greed.

Moreover, the reality of Beginning Stage Human Extinction crouches just beyond the line of the horizon. All signs auger, we lost souls of the Anthropocene must alter our course. Yet, we, stranded in the mind-parching wasteland of late-stage capitalism, collectively, continue to stagger, mesmerized, towards mass media mirages leading us further and further into the hostile-to-life terrain.

Gen. Jack D.Ripper, played by actor Sterling Hayden in “Dr. Strangelove.”

Yet the wasteland’s Establishment media outlets are doing a dead-on, although straight faced, impression, right out of Stanley Kubrick’s satirical film of Cold War era madness, “Dr. Strangelove, “of Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper’s roiling with paranoia ranting about a Russian “conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids.”

Hyperbolic? Take at perusal at the cover story of the Washington Establishment mouthpiece Newsweek, headlined: “PUTIN IS PREPARING FOR WORLD WAR III — IS TRUMP?”

A sphincter-clinching tale of woe and warning promulgated by the same governmental entities and their corporate media stenographers who waxed apocalyptic about Iraq possessing weapon’s of mass destruction; that an immediate NATO bombing campaign must be launched against the government of Muammar Gaddafi or else a mass slaughter of the innocent would be imminent; and regime change in Syria must proceed because Assad is gassing his own people.

Just what sort of an embittered cynic would call into question the credibility of and mistrust the motives of such paragons of probity? Yet, somehow, in regard to Russia-gate, liberals display scant-to-zip skepticism towards the stories peddled by this unelected, unaccountable clutch of hyper-authoritarian prevaricators. In fact, they are, in a cringe-worthy spectacle, allowing themselves to be played like Dollar Store kazoos.

Terror of Tweet-Town

Although, I get it. The tangerine-tinged Terror Of Tweet-town represents a hideous affront to common sense and common decency. But the same applies to his antagonists in the anti-democratic institutions of the U.S. National Security State and Intelligence Community. While the mission statements of the bureaucracies in question declare they exists to protect the nation from all manner of threats to the safety of the citizenry, a study of their history and present-day operations reveals, their modus operandi serves to ensure obscene amounts of wealth continue sluicing into the already bloated coffers of the profiteers of global-wide operations of capitalist plunder.

I understand the desperate need for hope. To crave the quality is inherently human. Even to the point of being whipped into a tizzy by the Russia-gate imbroglio. Yet: All and all, an obsessive focus on Trump, the Orange Scylla, buffets one into the maw of the Washington Establishment’s Charybdis.

Again, I understand the sense of desperation: Trump’s smug, bloated face, the grandiose squawk of his voice, and his crass, mean-spirited, petty-minded pronouncements and middle-school bully taunts deserve to be resoundingly rebuked. His hubristic posturing simply begs for comeuppance. One is prone to grow plangent with magical thinking. One longs to witness the bully smirk smacked from his face as he is dispatched in disgrace, Richard Nixon-style, to his parvenu palace at Mar a Lago.

But the effect of banishing Nixon was cosmetic. The accepted Watergate storyline, of probing, political inquest and Constitutional redemption, served as a palliative administered to the U.S. public in the rare case the slumbering masses might have desired to delve deeper into the heart of darkness of U.S. empire thus might begin to question the mythos of American Exceptionalism and doubt the uplifting denouement cobbled onto the scandal by the political and media elite, e.g., the system of checks and balances functioned as the nation’s Founders intended. Granted, the system did work as designed, only not in the cliched manner portrayed by its apologists; it worked in the manner in which it was rigged, to wit, to preserve the secrets of state. The long national nightmare was far from over. In fact, it has been normalized.

When the unthinkable becomes quotidian, by means of the normalization and systemic codification of crimes against the greater good of humanity, there is a good chance the dynamics of empire-building are in play. Empires are not only inherently entropic but they are anathema to the democratic processes crucial to maintaining a republic.

A scene from “Dr. Strangelove,” in which the bomber pilot (played by actor Slim Pickens) rides a nuclear bomb to its target in the Soviet Union.

The vast amounts of wealth acquired by means of plunder render a nation’s elite not only craven with cupidity but prone to become so dismally shortsighted, even, judging by the evidence of their reckless actions and crackbrain casuistry, bughouse mad. The present U.S. nuclear saber- rattling at North Korea and the economic aggression and militarist posturing deployed against the Russian Federation are proof of the declaration. A military empire’s unchecked, monomaniacal, more often than not self-destructive, impulse for domination are monstrous traits. The death and carnage strewn in the wake of the imperial monster’s presence in Libya and Syria illustrate a grim testament to the fact.

History reveals, overreach and the passage of time renders the aspirations of imperium a nimbus of dust; its grandiose pronouncements a cacophony of strutting clowns; its belief in its inviolable nature and its trumpeted tales of vaunted exceptionalism the stuff of asylum-dweller gibbering. On the contrary, a sense of perspective imparts the knowledge, late empire is a fool’s inferno played out on a landscape ridden with exponentially increasing decay.

The storylines of the beneficiaries and operatives of vast systems of runaway power concoct are, more often than not, self-justifying fictions. Cover stories and flat-out prevarications, rolled out for the purpose of hiding the prevailing order’s actions and motives, come to dominate the socio-cultural-political sphere. Views running counter to reigning narratives are apt to be marginalized and/or met with scorn, rage and revulsion. A dangerous one-sidedness prevails.

Analogous to the laws governing thermodynamic equilibrium, when a governor (or speed limiter or controller) switch has been rendered inoperative, a state of thermic runaway comes into play. We are talking the stuff of runaway trains, flaming out super novas, nervous breakdowns, and overreaching empires. By suppressing countervailing views, empires create chaos and carnage and will, in the end, meet their demise by self-annihilation. The rage for total dominance and attendant overreach of capitalist/U.S. militarist hegemony has wrought the phenomenon on a global-wide basis.

The governor switch within the greed and power crazed minds of the corporate, military, and governing elite, by all indications, is inoperable. Impervious to the consequences of their recklessness, ranting about Russians, they careen through the Anthropocene. At present, the whole of humankind is held in the thrall of a trajectory of doom. Yet their power is hinged on the ability to dominate the storyline.  Withal, complicity translates to destiny usurped. Conversely, the first measure towards a restoration of equilibrium is to call out a lie.

via http://ift.tt/2C2ietz Tyler Durden

New Fiscal Rules Will Produce Discipline And A Confidence Shock In Zimbabwe

Authored by Steve H. Hanke of the Johns Hopkins University. Follow him on Twitter @Steve_Hanke.

Zimbabwe’s new President Emmerson
Mnangagwa, like his predecessor Robert Mugabe, claims that economic sanctions
have crippled Zimbabwe’s national development. What nonsense. Robert Mugabe and
the current governing party ZANU-PF have made Zimbabwe into an economic basket
case. Indeed, the ruling Party has put its stamp of approval on one disastrous
economic policy after another for 37 years. Among other things, a total lack of
fiscal discipline resulted in the world’s second-highest
hyperinflation
. It ended abruptly on November 14, 2008, when the annual
inflation rate peaked at 89,700,000,000,000,000,000,000%.

To illustrate Zimbabwe’s lack of
fiscal discipline, consider that the budget for 2017 called for total government
expenditures of $4,100 mil. On December 8, 2017, the new Mnangagwa government
estimated that total expenditures for 2017 will actually reach $6,045 mil.
That’s a whopping 47.4% overshoot. Talk about indiscipline. The 2018 budget,
which was announced on December 7th, projects $5,743 mil to be spent
in 2018. That’s 40.1% higher than the 2017 budget, but 5% lower than the
estimate of actual 2017 expenditures.

******

To successfully implement reforms,
the Mnangagwa government will have to generate confidence and credibility. As
Keynes argued in The General Theory:

The state of confidence, as they term it, is
a matter to which practical men always pay the closest and most anxious
attention. But economists have not analyzed it carefully and have been content,
as a rule, to discuss it in general terms. In particular it has not been made
clear that its relevance to economic problems comes in through its importance
influence on the schedule of the marginal efficiency of capital. There are now
two separate factors affecting the rate of investment, namely, the schedule of
the marginal efficiency of capital and the state of confidence. The state of confidence
is relevant because it is one of the major factors determining the former,
which is the same as the investment demand schedule.

There is, however,
not much to be said about the state of confidence a priori. Our conclusions
must mainly depend upon the actual observation of markets and business
psychology.

Most economists have completely
ignored this passage in the General Theory, because confidence is difficult to
define and insert in any formal abstract model. Economists find it difficult to
quantify and measure. Keynes admitted as much. Perhaps this explains the
failure of economists to consider confidence seriously. Yet, it is clearly
unsatisfactory to confine analysis only to definable and quantifiable
magnitudes and to ignore an important determinant of behavior simply because it
cannot be encapsulated in any neat definition or be measured by government
statisticians.

Unlike Keynes, I suspect that there
is much to be said a priori about the state of confidence. For example, it
seems likely that confidence is determined by the general credibility of
government policy.

******

To deliver a positive confidence
shock to the Zimbabwean economy, the new Mnangagwa government must change
Zimbabwe’s fiscal order. In short, it must replace disorder, with order. Three
new elements must be introduced:

1.     1. Fiscal order and transparency must be
established
. Zimbabwe lacks the fiscal institutions to guarantee that
budget deficits and government spending can be controlled. To put its fiscal
house in order, Zimbabwe’s government should begin to publish a national set of
accounts which includes a balance sheet of its assets and liabilities and an
accrual-based annual operating statement of income and expenses. These
financial statements should meet International Accounting Standards and should
be subject to an independent audit.

Just what is an
accrual-based operating statement? At present, accounts in Zimbabwe are kept on
a crude cash basis. Revenues and expenditures are recorded when cash is
received or paid out. With accrual accounting, spending and revenues are
recorded when they are incurred, regardless of when the money actually changes
hands. Accrual accounting gives a much more accurate picture of the realities
and avoids many financial tricks that politicians can play with cash
accounting. For example, under cash accounting, politicians can promise
pensions for future retirees, but since no money is paid until people retire,
there are no budgeted costs under cash accounting until the pensions are paid.
With accrual accounting, the promises to pay future pensions would appear in
the government’s accounts when the promises for future obligations are made.
Consequently, under accrual accounting, the government cannot distort the
magnitude of its spending obligations.

Do any countries
use accrual accounting for their public accounts? Yes. For instance, New
Zealand started to use it in 1989. As a result, New Zealand presents a far more
transparent and honest picture of government operations than do most other
governments. This has allowed New Zealand to make more informed decisions and
control the state much better.

To reduce
corruption in Zimbabwe, there is no better medicine than the transparency which
would accompany a New-Zealand type set of fiscal accounts.

2.     2. Supermajority voting must be established for
important fiscal decisions
. Many countries require supermajority voting for
important decisions. Such a voting rule protects the “minority” from the
potential tyranny of a simple “majority.” A supermajority voting rule is
particularly important for the protection of minorities in countries, like Zimbabwe,
where the democratic process is not circumscribed by a firm rule of law.

Fiscal decisions
are important. The arithmetic of the budget shows us that two new fiscal rules
would be sufficient to control the scope and scale of the government and
protect minority interests. Total outlays minus total receipts equals the
deficit, which in turn equals the increase in the total outstanding debt. Rules
that limit any two of these variables would limit the other variables. Which
two variables should be limited?

Before I answer
that question, I should remark that the goal of reducing Zimbabwe’s total
public debt to something less than 50% of GDP by 2025 is desirable and that it should
be vigorously pursued by the Zimbabwean government.

The easiest way to
answer the question about which two variables should be limited by
supermajority voting rules is to sketch an amendment to the Zimbabwean
constitution:

Section 1. The total Zimbabwean debt may increase
only by the approval of two-thirds of the members of the House of Assembly.

Section 2. Any bill to levy a new tax or increase
the rate or base of an existing tax shall become law only by approval of
two-thirds of the members of the House of Assembly.

Section 3. The above two sections of this
amendment shall be suspended in any fiscal year during which a declaration of
war is in effect.

3.     3. Fiscal accountability must be established.
Since actual fiscal expenditures have little relationship to budgets in
Zimbabwe, strict rules of accountability must be imposed. If the actual
government expenditures exceed 10% of budgeted expenses in any fiscal year, the
Finance Minister and the Governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe should be
dismissed immediately. Furthermore, they should be barred from holding any
government or government-related position for life. The only exception to this
rule would be in fiscal years during which a declaration of war is in effect.

The adoption of these three rules
would generate a significant confidence shock in Zimbabwe. And, with that, an
investment boom and prosperity would follow.
 

 

This piece was originally published on Forbes

via http://ift.tt/2l6ADNF Steve H. Hanke

New Fiscal Rules Will Produce Discipline And A Confidence Shock In Zimbabwe

Authored by Steve H. Hanke of the Johns Hopkins University. Follow him on Twitter @Steve_Hanke.

Zimbabwe’s new President Emmerson
Mnangagwa, like his predecessor Robert Mugabe, claims that economic sanctions
have crippled Zimbabwe’s national development. What nonsense. Robert Mugabe and
the current governing party ZANU-PF have made Zimbabwe into an economic basket
case. Indeed, the ruling Party has put its stamp of approval on one disastrous
economic policy after another for 37 years. Among other things, a total lack of
fiscal discipline resulted in the world’s second-highest
hyperinflation
. It ended abruptly on November 14, 2008, when the annual
inflation rate peaked at 89,700,000,000,000,000,000,000%.

 

To illustrate Zimbabwe’s lack of
fiscal discipline, consider that the budget for 2017 called for total government
expenditures of $4,100 mil. On December 8, 2017, the new Mnangagwa government
estimated that total expenditures for 2017 will actually reach $6,045 mil.
That’s a whopping 47.4% overshoot. Talk about indiscipline. The 2018 budget,
which was announced on December 7th, projects $5,743 mil to be spent
in 2018. That’s 40.1% higher than the 2017 budget, but 5% lower than the
estimate of actual 2017 expenditures.

******

To successfully implement reforms,
the Mnangagwa government will have to generate confidence and credibility. As
Keynes argued in The General Theory:

 

The state of confidence, as they term it, is
a matter to which practical men always pay the closest and most anxious
attention. But economists have not analyzed it carefully and have been content,
as a rule, to discuss it in general terms. In particular it has not been made
clear that its relevance to economic problems comes in through its importance
influence on the schedule of the marginal efficiency of capital. There are now
two separate factors affecting the rate of investment, namely, the schedule of
the marginal efficiency of capital and the state of confidence. The state of confidence
is relevant because it is one of the major factors determining the former,
which is the same as the investment demand schedule.

 

There is, however,
not much to be said about the state of confidence a priori. Our conclusions
must mainly depend upon the actual observation of markets and business
psychology.

 

Most economists have completely
ignored this passage in the General Theory, because confidence is difficult to
define and insert in any formal abstract model. Economists find it difficult to
quantify and measure. Keynes admitted as much. Perhaps this explains the
failure of economists to consider confidence seriously. Yet, it is clearly
unsatisfactory to confine analysis only to definable and quantifiable
magnitudes and to ignore an important determinant of behavior simply because it
cannot be encapsulated in any neat definition or be measured by government
statisticians.

 

Unlike Keynes, I suspect that there
is much to be said a priori about the state of confidence. For example, it
seems likely that confidence is determined by the general credibility of
government policy.

******

To deliver a positive confidence
shock to the Zimbabwean economy, the new Mnangagwa government must change
Zimbabwe’s fiscal order. In short, it must replace disorder, with order. Three
new elements must be introduced:

1.    

Fiscal order and transparency must be
established
. Zimbabwe lacks the fiscal institutions to guarantee that
budget deficits and government spending can be controlled. To put its fiscal
house in order, Zimbabwe’s government should begin to publish a national set of
accounts which includes a balance sheet of its assets and liabilities and an
accrual-based annual operating statement of income and expenses. These
financial statements should meet International Accounting Standards and should
be subject to an independent audit.

 

Just what is an
accrual-based operating statement? At present, accounts in Zimbabwe are kept on
a crude cash basis. Revenues and expenditures are recorded when cash is
received or paid out. With accrual accounting, spending and revenues are
recorded when they are incurred, regardless of when the money actually changes
hands. Accrual accounting gives a much more accurate picture of the realities
and avoids many financial tricks that politicians can play with cash
accounting. For example, under cash accounting, politicians can promise
pensions for future retirees, but since no money is paid until people retire,
there are no budgeted costs under cash accounting until the pensions are paid.
With accrual accounting, the promises to pay future pensions would appear in
the government’s accounts when the promises for future obligations are made.
Consequently, under accrual accounting, the government cannot distort the
magnitude of its spending obligations.

 

Do any countries
use accrual accounting for their public accounts? Yes. For instance, New
Zealand started to use it in 1989. As a result, New Zealand presents a far more
transparent and honest picture of government operations than do most other
governments. This has allowed New Zealand to make more informed decisions and
control the state much better.

 

To reduce
corruption in Zimbabwe, there is no better medicine than the transparency which
would accompany a New-Zealand type set of fiscal accounts.

 

2.    

Supermajority voting must be established for
important fiscal decisions
. Many countries require supermajority voting for
important decisions. Such a voting rule protects the “minority” from the
potential tyranny of a simple “majority.” A supermajority voting rule is
particularly important for the protection of minorities in countries, like Zimbabwe,
where the democratic process is not circumscribed by a firm rule of law.

 

Fiscal decisions
are important. The arithmetic of the budget shows us that two new fiscal rules
would be sufficient to control the scope and scale of the government and
protect minority interests. Total outlays minus total receipts equals the
deficit, which in turn equals the increase in the total outstanding debt. Rules
that limit any two of these variables would limit the other variables. Which
two variables should be limited?

 

Before I answer
that question, I should remark that the goal of reducing Zimbabwe’s total
public debt to something less than 50% of GDP by 2025 is desirable and that it should
be vigorously pursued by the Zimbabwean government.

 

The easiest way to
answer the question about which two variables should be limited by
supermajority voting rules is to sketch an amendment to the Zimbabwean
constitution:

 

Section 1. The total Zimbabwean debt may increase
only by the approval of two-thirds of the members of the House of Assembly.

 

Section 2. Any bill to levy a new tax or increase
the rate or base of an existing tax shall become law only by approval of
two-thirds of the members of the House of Assembly.

 

Section 3. The above two sections of this
amendment shall be suspended in any fiscal year during which a declaration of
war is in effect.

 

3.    

Fiscal accountability must be established.
Since actual fiscal expenditures have little relationship to budgets in
Zimbabwe, strict rules of accountability must be imposed. If the actual
government expenditures exceed 10% of budgeted expenses in any fiscal year, the
Finance Minister and the Governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe should be
dismissed immediately. Furthermore, they should be barred from holding any
government or government-related position for life. The only exception to this
rule would be in fiscal years during which a declaration of war is in effect.

 

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–>

The adoption of these three rules
would generate a significant confidence shock in Zimbabwe. And, with that, an
investment boom and prosperity would follow.  

 

This piece was originally published on Forbes

via http://ift.tt/2kQYeT3 Steve H. Hanke

Citi: ‘What If?…”

One month ago, Citi’s credit team laid out its outlook for the coming year in what – in our opinion – was one of the gloomiest reports for the coming year, and included the following fascinating revelation according to which central bankers appears to have lost control: “That seems to be a growing fear among a number of central bankers that we have spoken to recently. In our experience, they too are somewhat baffled by the lack of volatility and concerned about the lack of response to negative headlines…. Our guess is that sooner or later in the process of retrenchment they     will  end up going too far – though that will only be obvious with hindsight.” As we said at the time, “frankly, that’s about the scariest admission from one of the world’s biggest banks that we have read in a long time.”

And while Citi’s “base case” was clearly bearish (our summary can be found here) – what was left unsaid was even more interesting, if not troubling. As the bank’s credit team writes “what about the outcomes that didn’t quite make it into our base case? The scenarios that aren’t central, but which aren’t entirely implausible either – both bullish and bearish.

So ‘What if…”:

  • idiosyncratic risk is returning to credit?
  • European corporates get more aggressive?
  • global growth & commodity prices disappoint?
  • inflation accelerates as output gaps close?
  • the US yield curve inverts?
  • central bank tapering really is a non-event?
  • the market doesn’t like the choice of ECB successor?”

Here is Citi’s take on each of these possible, if not necessarily probable, scenarios:

What If…

1. idiosyncratic risk is returning to € credit?

New Look, Astaldi, and now Steinhoff. If it felt as if idiosyncratic risk was as dead as a dodo in the age of ECB QE, well then, now we know it isn’t. All three credits have at one point seen their bonds drop by more than 25 points in the last few weeks. A mere coincidence or a sign of things to come? With European default rates at 1.5%, strong fundamentals, healthy earnings growth and broad economic growth the best-guess answer has to be “mostly the former”.

But not exclusively so. As we illustrated in our derivatives outlook, the compression of risk premia has been accompanied by a risk-bifurcation in € credit. Well over 90% of credits are historically tight and carry very little of the overall default risk of the market, which is overwhelmingly skewed to a small number of names. Such a bifurcation happens in every bull cycle, but it has been augmented by all the central bank excess liquidity. The government bond buyer, crowded out by the ECB or money market trying to escape negative yields, moved into high-rated corporates. The buyer of high-rated corporates no longer finds sufficient returns and so moves down in quality. The eventual consequence of the excess liquidity is that the whole market ends up priced almost to perfection, except of course the credit that is at high risk of relatively imminent default. It will still trade to its recovery value (Figure 1).

The point we are trying to make is that this inevitably results in a much sharper cliff in pricing between those that are deemed to be going-concern investments and those that are deemed to be over the edge. Hence the precipitous losses (or gains) when a name shifts from one to the other.

But beyond this, blow-ups do tend to come in clusters. It wasn’t just Enron; it was also Worldcom. It wasn’t just Ahold; it was also Tyco. Even if recent blow-ups have no direct bearing on other risky credits, they serve to remind investors of the risk of standing close to the brink. And there is a general tendency for, shall we say, ‘credit homework’ that gets overlooked during bull markets to be rediscovered in a hurry once losses have been incurred. As analysts rummage around there is an increase in the likelihood of something being uncovered in another name. At an absolute minimum, when large quantities of debt have been raised, as the market gets more nervous there is an increased probability of an outsized knee-jerk reaction. This has no doubt contributed to some of the recent underperformance of the HY market versus IG (Figure 2). With curious synchronicity, a similar set of worries seems to have reared its head in other regions (think Windstream and Community Health in the US, or HNA, Noble Group and Kobe Steel in Asia).

Steinhoff is, of course, rather an odd one out in that its investment-grade rating meant it seemingly was nowhere near the fringe. But accounting irregularities, though rare, are, if anything, far worse in that they tend to undermine confidence in the fabric of the system. That it is a bolt out of the blue will be cold comfort for the several funds, which according to public holdings data, held well over 1% of their assets in the 2025 bond and which must have seen a >30bp hit to the aggregate performance as a result of this one blow-up.

It has even been bought by the ECB, though that should be less of a concern. As we discussed last week, the ECB may choose to sell holdings at its discretion but is not forced to do so as a result of a downgrade or even a sudden drop in prices. The Eurosystem can take losses (which will in any case be minute relative to its €2.2tn bond portfolio and ability to absorb them) and there is an agreed mechanism for loss sharing.

We still think the risk of a material rise in idiosyncratic risk in Europe next year is low (our guess would be around ~15%), but each event is progressively more toxic for the broader market, especially if it hits places where there isn’t supposed to be much risk. Solutions? We only have the obvious ones really – favour transparency and diversify your portfolios. Look carefully at groups with acquisitive track records and complex structures, and try to follow the cashflow rather than the earnings! Credit 101 that may be, but all too often it is forgotten in the increasingly desperatehunt for returns.

* * *

2. European corporates get more aggressive?

While we do expect corporates to lavish more cash on their shareholders, material releveraging is not our central scenario. Rising earnings also in 2018 (Figure 3) should facilitate greater payouts without raising net debt to EBITDA. Given the large and persistent divergence between spreads and fundamentals in recent years already (Figure 4), we suspect the rise in net debt would have to be quite substantial to actually trigger a repricing in spreads.

To our minds, the bigger question is whether the market would seamlessly absorb a corresponding increase in issuance. There is almost a 1:1 correlation between M&A volumes and net issuance as illustrated in Figure 5. It is not inconceivable that a few large acquisitions could add €50bn or more to our net supply estimate, which already sees a significant increase in the net private funding requirement (Figure 6) compared to previous years. The CSPP notwithstanding, a reduction in inflows to credit of crowded-out government bond money when spreads are near record lows makes the credit market quite vulnerable to such an increase in our opinion. We think the risk of a sharper increase in M&A (and buybacks for that matter) than in our central scenario it quite high: at a  guestimate around 25-35%. The increase in funding requirement would likely lead to spreads to ending modestly wider than in our central scenario.

* * *

3. global growth & commodity prices disappoint?

As our economists have argued, current risks to their global outlook if anything seem skewed to the upside. But we don’t have to go back further than to 2015 to see what a sustained period of negative surprises in the economic data can do to sentiment over time – € IG credit spreads reached 160bp in February 2016 (versus about 45bp now). A repeat of the rout in commodity markets, which triggered – or at least reinforced – that soft patch seems comparatively unlikely right now. Our commodity strategists expect strong, sustained demand for the next couple of years. However, a greater than expected slowdown in China, where both fiscal and credit impulses are weakening considerably, remains a risk to both global growth and commodity prices. In 2016, China’s contribution to global GDP growth was 1 percentage point, or more than 40% of the total.

If the global economy were to experience a similar negative dynamic in 2018, we believe it would once again be a very painful experience for credit. Fears of secular stagnation and deflation still linger and could easily be rekindled. Some of the excess has probably been taken out of the $ HY market since then, but the energy sector remains the third largest in terms of outstanding and is still highly sensitive to fluctuations in prices. Moreover, with € spreads already tight to fundamentals, they would be highly vulnerable to a weakening in the growth and earnings outlook. As in 2015, we suspect that the response from most central banks would lag the market considerably. However, within € credit specifically, it would greatly increase the chance that the ECB ultimately decided to extend the CSPP beyond September 2018. This would not prevent widening in our opinion (despite the CBPP, covered bond spreads widened substantially in H2 2015), but it would probably act as a
dampener.

We’d informally put the probability of such a scenario in the region of 10-20%, but if it did occur spreads would in all likelihood end substantially wider than our 80bp base case.

* * *

4. inflation accelerates as output gaps close?

The chance of a structural shift in inflation dynamics remains pretty small, in our view, and it is worth highlighting that inflation has undershot Citi’s expectations six years in a row. But in a cyclical sense, it is feasible that ever lower unemployment rates in key economies and greater pricing power do eventually take us far enough out on the tail of the Phillips curve that we start to see upside surprises to inflation.  Core inflation is already firming in the US after a succession of weak prints this summer. Across advanced economies, the unemployment rate was 0.4pp below the OECD estimate of the NAIRU in Q3 2017, and wage settlements in places like Japan and Germany will be important to watch. And as noted above, strong demand for commodities or supply disruptions could also pose upside risks to prices.

To the extent that higher inflation reflects higher wage growth, resulting from greater productivity gains and more corporate pricing power, the immediate impact on corporate fundamentals would be rather modest. However, to the extent wage growth exceeds productivity growth and pricing power, it might start to dent earnings growth.

However, a more important impact on credit comes through the central bank response function and market returns. A confirmation of the ECB’s inflation forecasts would greatly increase the chance that asset purchases are terminated in September. It would likely also temper attempts over the coming months from governing councillors to jawbone the market into postponing the implied timing  of a future rate hike. In the US, it would cement the path implied by the dot plot and potentially open up scope for a fourth rate hike, which would lift Fed funds to 2.25-2.5% by the end of the year.

Such a scenario would also likely increase yields at the long end, relative to our rates strategists central scenario, taking total returns at least in € credit further into negative territory. While higher yields would likely be a net benefit to flows into credit over time, we believe there is enough money invested in € credit on a total return basis that the process of adjustment in risk-free yields would see outflows from corporate bond funds, in turn leading to wider spreads in the short term.

We would conjecture that the probability of such as scenario is around 20-30%. It would probably result in spreads somewhat above our central scenario.

* * *

5. the US yield curve inverts?

US 1s10s, 2s10s and 2s30s are all the flattest they’ve been since the GFC. While 2- year yields have already risen 50bp since September, a rate hike in December and three rate hikes next year would leave them below the Fed Funds rate, highlighting that there is still upside risk. Conversely, market reluctance to revise terminal rates higher makes an inversion of the 2s10s yield differential, currently at 50bp, a possibility.

The debate about what an inverted yield curve would imply for the future growth outook in the post-QE era has been raging for some time already. We’d subscribe to the view that QE has left long-end real interest rates lower than they otherwise would have been with the implication that outright curve inversion per se might not have quite the same implication for forward recession probabilities that a historical analysis would suggest. However, considering that the flattening is occurring at the very time that the Fed is beginning to reverse its grip on the long end does send an important signal in our view. The market may countenance Fed hawkishness near term, especially in light of tax reforms, but continues to take a rather dim view of the longer-term sustainability of   current above-potential growth rates. As we have shown, this curve flattening empirically holds a strong (negative) signal for the future path of credit spreads.

But beyond that, the flattening of the $ curve is a problem for credit because it reduces the opportunity cost of not being invested. At the moment the yield on $ IG corporate credit is 3.2%, while the 1-year risk-free yield is about 1.6%. Another 4 rate hikes over the coming year could easily take the latter to 2.25-2.5%, which then raises the question whether the marginal investor is prepared to take 7½ years of duration risk and BBB credit risk for potentially less than 100bp pickup? If the answer is no, then either spreads will widen or long-end yields need to rise. In either scenario, it would impact total returns, which in turn in the short-term would dent inflows to credit. This might be a dollar rather than a euro story, but given that the historical correlation between corporate spreads in the two markets is more than 85%, it would almost certainly have an impact on € IG as well.

The magnitude of the impact is contingent on the exact driver of the US treasury curve inversion – a bear flattening is probably ultimately less “damaging” than a bull flattening would be, because of the very clear signal about growth that would send. So for the latter, in particular, we would again argue that € IG spreads would end up wider than in our central scenario. Our guesstimated probability of inversion next year is in the region of 15-25%.

* * *

6. central bank tapering really is a non-event?

If you’ve stumbled upon any of our research over the last couple of years, you’ll probably know that we have bees in our bonnets about the impact that QE in a broad sense is having on markets. Crucially, we strongly believe it is the flow, i.e. the pace of net central bank purchases, at a global level, which does the lifting of asset prices. Many market participants and most central banks seem to believe it is the stock. Without going into the whole debate again, it is worth contemplating what our central scenario would look like if we are wrong.

So what happens if reducing the free float of securities and increasing excess liquidity by shifting supply and demand curves has a permanent impact on asset prices and taking away the backstop increases risk appetite among investors, allowing an increase in private flows to seamlessly replace the $1tn drop in central bank net demand in 2018? Obviously, that would, in isolation, be very good news for asset prices. It implies a continuation of excess demand.

Such an outcome is evidently more bullish than our base case, but would it imply actual tightening from current levels? Well, € credit would in all probability still face a drag on spreads from the dwindling opportunity cost discussed above, the direct effect of ending the CSPP, more net supply and a maturing cycle. That said, as illustrated in our most optimistic scenarios in the 2018 Outlook, it might still imply a small net tightening for the year as a whole, which would translate into an excess return (to swaps) of 0.5-1.0%. As in our other scenarios, we think tightening would be front-loaded, with a partial give-back in H2 2018.

And the probability of us being wrong on what is at the crux of our central scenario? We’ll leave it to you to judge.

* * *

7. the market doesn’t like the choice of ECB successor?

We often get asked who will succeed Mario Draghi at the helm of the ECB when his 8-year term expires at the end of October 2019, and what it will do to markets. It is a dark horse for next year (and hence we have included it), but in truth we think the probability that it becomes a major issue already in 2018 is low. The choice of Mario Draghi at the end of Trichet’s tenure was only made public in June 2011 – 4-5 months before the changeover. Indeed, until February 2011 the front-runner was Axel Weber.

We doubt if Draghi’s replacement will be apparent even by the end of 2018. The market might conceivably react as candidates emerge more clearly, and if it does most likely it is due to fears of a shift in a more hawkish direction. At the margin, Portuguese Finance Minister Mario Centeno’s appointment as President of the Eurogroup after Dijsselbloem ought to increase the chance that the next ECB President will come from a core country. But we’d informally put the probability of it becoming a major driver of spreads already in 2018 below 5%.

* * *

We’ll continue with Part II of Citi’s “What If” scenarios tomorrow, in which the bank reveals its final 7 questions for the next year.

via http://ift.tt/2C7fA7Y Tyler Durden

Amid Crypto-Chaos, Morgan Stanley Warns ‘True Value Of Bitcoin Could Be Zero’

After bouncing aggressively yesterday, cryptocurrencies are sliding again today with Bitcoin testing back below $13,000, Bitcoin Cash below $3,000, and Ethereum under $700 once again.

image courtesy of CoinTelegraph

Back down…

Bitcoin is back below $13000…though downside volume is notably lower than on Friday…

From Thursday's close, cryptos are now down 15 to 20%…

There is still no obvious catalyst for the moves aside from a growing anxiety that HODLers may be losing faith…

Charlie Shrem, a founding member of Bitcoin Foundation, believes that the market has already seen similar price movements and there is no reason to panic

 

Others are arguing that crypto markets are broken…  (via CoinTelegraph)

Cryptocurrencies have captured international attention this year. Although trading currency is nothing new, it certainly feels like an ancient concept being renewed by novel technology. The rapid price increase of almost all digital tokens, which is most noticeable in Bitcoin’s 1,600 percent improvement this year, and their surprising integration into mainstream investment markets through futures contracts, has made crypto trading an appealing pursuit for many investors. In fact, with a total market cap of more than $400 bln, crypto trading is becoming one of the hottest investment opportunities available.

 

Unfortunately, many traders are finding that the technological advances or even basic trading needs found on traditional investment exchanges are utterly lacking on crypto exchanges. This could be a big problem.

 

While cryptocurrencies have never been more popular or more in-demand, the exchanges that are intended to facilitate the buying and selling of cryptocurrencies are subpar and inefficient. In their current state, they are the tangible manifestation of people’s worst fears about cryptocurrencies. In general, they lack equity between exchanges, they utilize embarrassingly outdated technology, and they are infused with bad actors.

 

It’s clear that cryptocurrencies are going to be a significant part of the financial landscape going forward, but these problems need a solution. Perhaps by better understanding how crypto markets are broken, we can begin to find answers for their shortcomings, so that they can thrive.

 

Read more here…

Morgan Stanley, on the other hand, takes a deeper dive into the 'value' side of Bitcoin.

Analyst James Faucette and his team sent a research note to clients this week suggesting that the real value of bitcoin might be $0.

The report (titled "Bitcoin decrypted") did not give a price target for bitcoin, but in a section titled "Attempts to Value Bitcoin," he concluded, stating the somewhat obvious:

"If nobody accepts the technology for payment then the value would be 0," Faucette suggested.

Faucette backed his argument with this chart of online retailers who accept bitcoin, titled "Virtually no acceptance, and shrinking":

We humbly suggest that, in the same argument, if no one was forced to transact their oil requirements in USDollars, what would the world's reserve currency be worth?

Faucette described why it is so hard to ascribe value to the cryptocurrency. It's not like a currency, it's not like gold, and it has had difficulty scaling.

Can Bitcoin be valued like a currency?

No. There is no interest rate associated with Bitcoin.

Like digital gold?

Maybe. Does not have any intrinsic use like gold has in electronics or jewelry. But investors appear to be ascribing some value to it.

Is it a payment network?

Yes but it is tough to scale and does not charge a transaction fee.

  • Bitcoin average daily trading volume of $3bn (last 30 days) vs $5.4 trillion in the FX market.
  • Est. <$300mn in daily purchase volume vs. $17bn for Visa.

However, institutions are starting to invest…

And trading and transaction volumes are soaring…

However, despite Morgan Stanley's admittedly self-defending perspective, we leave it to John McAfee to remind cryptospace players what's important to remember…

via http://ift.tt/2DJpMSg Tyler Durden

Pakistan Opens Fire Along Border Killing Indian Troops, Warns “Nuclear War Cannot Be Ruled Out”

With most of the Western hemisphere on holiday, another crisis appears to be developing on the India–Pakistan border known as the Line of Control (LoC). The incident started on Saturday, where at least four Indian soldiers were killed, in an exchange of fire with the Pakistani Army on the Line of Control (LoC) dividing Kashmir, ABC News reported.

The two sides reportedly exchanged heavy fire in the Keri sector of the Rajouri district, about 222 km southwest of Srinagar city, the summer capital of the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir.

The skirmish started when Pakistani troops used automatic weapons, small arms, and mortars to attack Indian positions in Shahpur area of J&K’s Poonch district. The Indian army said Pakistani soldiers violated the 2003 cease-fire, calling the attack an “unprovoked cease-fire violation.”

A local government official said that the “Pakistani army today resorted to unprovoked firing along the LoC here, killing three troopers and wounding one” He added that “the slain included an officer of the rank of Major.”

Following the incident, heavy cross-border firing and shelling was reported at several places in the region.

On Sunday, India launched a retaliatory attack, gunning down a Pakistani solider in J&K’s Jhangar, The Indian Express said. The incident occurred when a Pakistani sniper along the LoC was ‘neutralized’, Army sources reported.

The Indian troops retaliated and the exchange of fire was going on till reports last came in the evening, sources said. “Firing and shelling exchanges started at 1.30 pm, and were continuing,” the official added.

 

Meanwhile, ANI reported that gunshots were heard in the militant hotbed of south Kashmir’s Shopian district. The sound of firearms were heard from Arem Mohallah Watoo village and the Army and police have launched a joint cordon and search operation.

The Indian Express also said that the ceasefire violation by Pakistan was an attempt to “push in armed terrorists” into India before closure of the mountain passes this winter. Indian security forces have killed over 200 militants this year, including top commanders on the LoC. Meanwhile, hardly de-escalating the already tense situation, Pakistan’s National Security Advisor Nasser Khan Janjua warned the world of a possible “nuclear war” in South Asia.

Pakistan’s National Security Advisor Nasser Khan Janjua has accused the US of siding with India and warned of a possible “nuclear war” due to the delicate security situation in South Asia.

 

The stability of the South Asian region hangs in a delicate balance, and the possibility of nuclear war cannot be ruled out,” Janjua was quoted by the Pakistani media as saying at a seminar in Islamabad on Monday.

 

“India has been stockpiling a range of dangerous weapons as it threatens Pakistan continuously of conventional warfare,” he told the seminar on the “National Security Policy – Vision for Pakistan” that was organized by the Center for Global & Strategic Studies (CGSS).

India and Pakistan have a long history of skirmishes on the LoC, and have fought multiple wars on the border since India gained independence from British colonial rule in 1947. Last year, Indian and Pakistani soldiers engaged in some of the worst fighting along the Line of Control since the two countries agreed to the cease-fire accord.

via http://ift.tt/2DHrrb1 Tyler Durden

North Korea Declares New Sanctions An “Act Of War,” Refuses To Ever Abandon Its Nukes

Authored by Ryan Pickrell via The Daily Caller,

North Korea strongly rejected the latest United Nations sanctions resolution, calling it an “act of war” against the rogue regime.

The U.N. Security Council unanimously decided Friday to impose tougher sanctions on North Korea in response to the North’s test of a new intercontinental ballistic missile that some experts suggest can range the entire continental U.S.

Resolution 2397 bans nearly 90 percent of North Korea’s refined petroleum imports and sets new restrictions on other essential imports, such as heavy machinery. 

The punitive resolution also demands the repatriation of North Korean workers generating funds for the regime abroad and puts greater pressure on North Korean shipping.

Pyongyang called on the U.S. and its international partners to “wake up from its pipe dream of our country giving up nuclear weapons” and learn to “co-exist with the country that has nuclear weapons.”

“We will further consolidate our self-defensive nuclear deterrence aimed at fundamentally eradicating the U.S. nuclear threats, blackmail and hostile moves by establishing the practical balance of force with the U.S.,” North Korea’s state-run Korean Central News Agency said Sunday.

In the past, North Korea has stressed the need for a nuclear deterrent, but on several occasions this year, the North has hinted that it desires a nuclear arsenal akin to that of the U.S., indicating that North Korea intends to further expand its nuclear weapons stockpile and develop new means to deliver those devastating weapons to distant shores.

North Korea is already facing crippling sanctions designed to derail it’s grand strategy.

“The United States, completely terrified at our accomplishment of the great historic cause of completing the state nuclear force, is getting more and more frenzied in the moves to impose the harshest-ever sanctions and pressure on our country,” the state-run outlet further stated.

 

“We define this ‘sanctions resolution’ rigged up by the U.S. and its followers as a grave infringement upon the sovereignty of our Republic, as an act of war violating peace and stability in the Korean peninsula and the region and categorically reject the ‘resolution,'” the report explained.

The rogue state has warned that sanctions are hurting the North Korean people, a view echoed by certain American media outlets. The North does not accept that this punishment is a response to the North Korean leadership’s decision to pursue a hostile path.

“Those countries that raised their hands in favor of this ‘sanctions resolution’ shall be held completely responsible for all the consequences to be caused by the ‘resolution,'” KCNA reported.

 

“We will make sure forever and ever that they pay a heavy price for what they have done.”

China, North Korea’s long-time partner, played a significant role in the drafting and passage of the recent sanctions.

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“You All Just Got A Lot Richer” – Trump Confirms The Biggest Problem With The GOP Tax Cut

As we’ve pointed out time and time again, the biggest problem with the Trump tax cuts is that they overwhelmingly benefit the rich. In fact, shortly after the initial nine-page outline of the program was unveiled by Gary Cohn and Steven Mnuchin, the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center released an analysis that showed the wealthiest 1% of Americans would accumulate more than 80% of the benefit from the tax bill.

This is a huge problem – particularly if the administration hopes to come anywhere near the 2.9% rate of GDP growth sustained over the next 10 years, a feat that would amount to the longest period without a recession in US history.

That’s because when the wealthy receive tax breaks, they tend to save the money instead of putting it to productive use – at least at first. One need only glance at this chart from JP Morgan to see how shabbily middle– and working-class voters are treated by the tax bill.

The massive expansion of the deficit that will result from the drop in government revenues that is guaranteed to occur once the law takes effect will quickly send the national debt to 100% of GDP. This is problematic, because interest rates are beginning to rise, making borrowing more expensive. And President Trump has yet to unveil his $1 trillion infrastructure plan which, though it’s expected that it will rely mostly on private-public partnerships, will still likely tack even more on the debt.

Well, President Donald Trump effectively confirmed our analysis this weekend when, upon returning to  Mar-a-Lago, he haughtily told its members “you all just got a lot richer," according to the New York Post.

Trump made the announcement during a dinner at Mar-a-Lago – the “Winter White House” – on Friday evening, boasting to his fellow one-percenters that the “biggest in history” tax cut he signed earlier in the day would make them even wealthier, CBS reported, citing people sitting near the president’s table who heard the remarks.

 

The commander-in-chief touted the benefits of the tax cuts – his first major legislative accomplishment since winning the White House last year – as a jobs generator and a Christmas gift for the middle-class.

 

“They’re going to start seeing the results in February. This bill means more take-home pay. It will be an incredible Christmas gift for hard-working Americans. I said I wanted to have it done before Christmas. We got it done,” Trump told a meeting of his Cabinet members last week.

The New York Times estimated that Trump himself would reap an $11 million windfall from the bill, going by the parts of his tax return that have been publicly reported.

It’s also worth noting that, while the corporate tax cuts are permanent, those for individuals will expire in 10 years – something Republicans said they expect to be remedied by a future Congress.

However, the White House continued to push its message that Trump will not personally profit from the plan.

“In some ways, particularly on the personal side, the president will likely take a big hit,” White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said last week.

Of course, Sanders neglected to elaborate on exactly why and how these losses would accrue.
 

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