Guest Post: A Grand Unified Economic Theory?

Authored by Dambisa Moyo, originally posted at Project Syndicate,

Last month’s US government shutdown – the result of a partisan standoff in congressional budget negotiations – epitomizes the polarization that prevails in modern economic-policy debates.

On one side, John Maynard Keynes’s cohort argues that government intervention can help any economy grow its way out of crisis by spurring aggregate demand and, in turn, raising the employment rate. A country’s government, Keynesians contend, has the capacity – and responsibility – to solve many, if not all, of its economic problems.

On the opposite side, followers of the Austrian School of economic thought, especially the ideas of Friedrich Hayek, assert that limited government and free enterprise form the only viable path to liberty and prosperity. The market is the best arbiter of how to allocate scarce resources, and thus should serve as an economy’s main driver.

In recent years, this long-running debate has become increasingly contentious – and the costs of stalemate are mounting. In order to restore growth in developed economies, while sustaining strong GDP growth and reducing poverty in the developing world, a more unified approach to economic policymaking that draws from both traditions is needed.

Official responses to the global economic crisis highlight the interventionist model’s merits, proving that decisive government action can help to enhance efficiency and clear unbalanced markets, thereby protecting the economy from the demand shortfall caused by falling investment and rising unemployment. But the free market also has a crucial role to play, with longer-term, incentive-based policies catalyzing scientific and technological advancement – and thus boosting economies’ growth potential.

In determining how to promote innovation without sacrificing social protection, economists and policymakers should take a lesson from the field of physics. For nearly a century, physicists have attempted to merge the competing ideas of the field’s titans, including Wolfgang Pauli, the first physicist to predict the existence of neutrinos (the smallest particles of matter), and Albert Einstein, who explained the curvature of space-time. The so-called “theory of everything” would reconcile the inconceivably small with the unimaginably large, providing a comprehensive understanding of the universe’s physical properties.

Policymakers should be working to unite seemingly disparate theories to align policy decisions with the business cycle and the economy’s level of development. Such an approach should seek to protect economies from the destabilizing impacts of politically motivated policy changes, without impeding governments’ ability to correct dangerous imbalances. Officials must be at least as vigilant about reducing expenditure and withdrawing stimulus measures during periods of growth as they are inclined to introduce such policies during downturns.

To the extent that this approach reflects the view that policymaking is an art, not a science, that is a good thing: the world needs more flexibility in economic policymaking. But some might consider it a cause for concern, especially given growing suspicion of incentive-based economic policies in the wake of the global economic crisis.

Many blame the crisis on the decades-long ascendancy of a laissez faire approach to economic policymaking, and rightly credit government intervention with facilitating recovery. The tremendous economic success of countries like China, where hundreds of millions of people have escaped abject poverty in a single generation, has reinforced support for state-led systems.

In developed countries, too, many advocate a greater role for the state, in order to ensure that promised social benefits are delivered to rapidly aging populations. In fact, in many countries, the government’s capacity is already strained. As German Chancellor Angela Merkel has pointed out, though Europe is home to just 7% of the world’s population and produces 25% of the world’s wealth, it accounts for 50% of global welfare payments. When the United States is included, 11.5% of the global population receives 88% of the world’s welfare payments.

But relegating free-market principles to the past would simply create a new set of imbalances. Rather than allow extremists to continue to hijack economic-policy debates, policymakers must work to bridge competing schools of thought. Only then will productive discourse – the kind that does not end in government shutdown – be possible.

Keynes once wrote that he agreed with “almost all” of Hayek’s ideas. And Hayek found it “reassuring” to know that he and Keynes agreed “so completely.” This raises the question: What is really preventing economists and policymakers from devising – or even seeking – a unified theory of economics?

 

And if all that ignorance of credit’s inevitable limit and to-ing and fro-ing made you nauseous… the following may help…


    



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Something Is Very Wrong With This Picture

Just because very few actually understood the severity of the Cisco earnings guidance, in which the company forecast an 8-10% drop (let’s call it 9%) in quarterly revenues when Wall Street was expecting a 4% increase, we have compiled and presented in chart form the historical and projected quarterly revenue data for CSCO to show today’s preannouncement in all its gruesome context.

A few points:

  • The current quarter, in which revenues missed expectations of $12.4 billion by $300 million, while bad, was still a year-over-year increase of 1.8%.
  • It is the next quarter that is a true stunner because while Goldman Sachs (which has the company at a Conviction Buy rating with a $30 price target) was expecting a print of $12.9 billion, taking the midline of CSCO’s guide-down, Cisco now expects to make a paltry $11 billion, the lowest amount since early 2011, which would make the next quarter, ending January 2014, the biggest miss to expectations in company history.
  • In sequential terms, the drop in revenue next quarter would amount to just over $1 billion, a topline crash second only to the $1.2 billion sequential collapse in the quarter when Lehman filed and the modern financial system as we know it nearly ended.
  • There is simply no way that the company will be able to grow into its current projected revenue growth range as this quarter will mean a dramatic change to the topline trendline

And while another massive buyback is just what the adjusted EPS doctor ordered, should CSCO experience just one more quarter such as the forecast, things will get very ugly not just for revenue, which it is quite obvious is no longer growing anywhere, but for the bottom line.

In short: while the markets may not represent it, because the markets stopped reflecting reality some time in 2009, something is suddenly seriously broken not only with the global demand picture, but the entire world economy as well.

 


    



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Bernanke "Explains" 100 Years Of The Federal Reserve (And It's War On Gold?) – Live Webcast

With Janet stealing the limelight, we really don’t expect any market-moving fireworks from the lame-duck Bernanke’s town hall presentation to US educators this evening. Discussing the Fed’s 100-year history and his efforts to bring greater transparency to the central bank’s actions, Bernanke will also take questions (which may well be much more interesting than the speech itself). But, to ensure some ‘fair-and-balanced’ coverage, we offer an alternate history of the Fed’s 100-year war against gold (and economic common sense).

 

Bernanke’s 100-Year History Of The Fed – Live Stream:

Live streaming video by Ustream

 

Nick Barisheff’s alternate 100-Year History of the Fed’s War Against Gold And Economic Common Sense

Federal Reserve Centennial Anniversary_Executive Summary_Final_Formatted_12 11 13.pdf


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/BYJ8tE9hueg/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Bernanke “Explains” 100 Years Of The Federal Reserve (And It’s War On Gold?) – Live Webcast

With Janet stealing the limelight, we really don’t expect any market-moving fireworks from the lame-duck Bernanke’s town hall presentation to US educators this evening. Discussing the Fed’s 100-year history and his efforts to bring greater transparency to the central bank’s actions, Bernanke will also take questions (which may well be much more interesting than the speech itself). But, to ensure some ‘fair-and-balanced’ coverage, we offer an alternate history of the Fed’s 100-year war against gold (and economic common sense).

 

Bernanke’s 100-Year History Of The Fed – Live Stream:

Live streaming video by Ustream

 

Nick Barisheff’s alternate 100-Year History of the Fed’s War Against Gold And Economic Common Sense

Federal Reserve Centennial Anniversary_Executive Summary_Final_Formatted_12 11 13.pdf


    



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Humpday Humor: Batman Falls On Hard Times – Caught Stealing

You know it’s bad when…

As The BBC reports,

A man with the eye-catching name Batman bin Suparman has been jailed on theft and drugs charges.

 

 

The 23-year-old man, Batman bin Suparman (bin means “son of”), has been given a prison sentence of 33 months by a court in Singapore. Batman was arrested after being caught stealing money from a shop, as well as using his brother’s cash card to withdraw money. Far-fetched as it seems, this unusual name does appear to be entirely genuine!


    



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Peter Schiff: "Gold Is Being Undermined By The Fantasy Of A US Recovery"

With gold down 10 of the last 11 days, Peter Schiff tells CNBC that this temporary downswing is due to “the fantasy of a US recovery,” that so many actually believe and thus, due to this ‘recovery’ the Fed will taper back its quantitative easing. “It’s not gonna happen,” Schiff explains, “we have a phony recovery,” and the Fed will more likely increase the amount of QE in order to sustain it, “which is very bullish for gold.” Crucially, Schiff clarifies that he “doesn’t think a taper is inevitable,” as many believe, “but an end to QE won’t happen by the Fed’s choice – the market will force them to tread on the brakes as the USD collapses.” As we noted earlier, Schiff also believes there is an attempt to do “whatever it takes” to pull the EUR down to maintain the USD – but as today’s price action shows, it’s not working… “Long-term, the fundamentals have never been better for gold.”

 

Schiff goes on to explain why he believes Yellen’s first act will be to raise QE…(which she somewhat confirmed after hours in her early pre-released testimony)

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/6cB7FaOEFtE/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Peter Schiff: “Gold Is Being Undermined By The Fantasy Of A US Recovery”

With gold down 10 of the last 11 days, Peter Schiff tells CNBC that this temporary downswing is due to “the fantasy of a US recovery,” that so many actually believe and thus, due to this ‘recovery’ the Fed will taper back its quantitative easing. “It’s not gonna happen,” Schiff explains, “we have a phony recovery,” and the Fed will more likely increase the amount of QE in order to sustain it, “which is very bullish for gold.” Crucially, Schiff clarifies that he “doesn’t think a taper is inevitable,” as many believe, “but an end to QE won’t happen by the Fed’s choice – the market will force them to tread on the brakes as the USD collapses.” As we noted earlier, Schiff also believes there is an attempt to do “whatever it takes” to pull the EUR down to maintain the USD – but as today’s price action shows, it’s not working… “Long-term, the fundamentals have never been better for gold.”

 

Schiff goes on to explain why he believes Yellen’s first act will be to raise QE…(which she somewhat confirmed after hours in her early pre-released testimony)

 


    



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Tech Giant Cisco Craters Following Horrifying Guidance

On the surface, CSCO’s numbers were not terrible: the company only missed its revenue expectation which is fine: after all nobody cares about revenues anymore and the only thing that matters are adjusted, recasted, pro-forma, non-GAAP, made up EPS numbers excluding virtually all COGS, R&D and SG&A items. Just for kicks, CSCO also threw in that last refuge of a company with no growth prospects: yet another massive $15 billion stock buyback. However, in light of the ongoing idiotic hopium that a recovery is just around the corner, as has been the case for the past 5 years always to no avail, what is cratering the company in after hours trading, was its forecast for the next quarter. It was a doozy:

  • Q2 EPS was expected to be $0.52. Instead the company lowered the outlook to a range of $0.45-$0.47.

But the punchline… wait for it:

  • Q2 revenues was expected up 4%. Instead it will be… drumroll… -8 to -10%!

Yup: the company expected an up to a 10% drop in revenues. Welcome to Mr. Yellen’s recovery.

Because who really needs the internet… Oh yeah, with the social media bubble in full force, apparently insolvent retailers do: after all FB, TWTR, LNKD et al are all trading based on the assumption that advertising budgets are getting infinite-er by the day.

Curiously, the stock is trading after hours as if the vacuum tubes algos don’t know that fundamentals haven’t mattered in ages, and all CSCO has to do is boost its 2022 multiple by another 5-6 turns to get back to even.


    



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How JPMorgan’s Latest PR Stunt Blew Up In Its Face

Yesterday, in what is a clear attempt at faux transparency and social media openness, JPM tweeted the following:

Unfortunately for the criminal organization (because after all JPM did admit to violating securities laws), the outcome was not quite as planned… To wit:


   


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/jKRp_Q_2Tms/story01.htm Tyler Durden

How JPMorgan's Latest PR Stunt Blew Up In Its Face

Yesterday, in what is a clear attempt at faux transparency and social media openness, JPM tweeted the following:

Unfortunately for the criminal organization (because after all JPM did admit to violating securities laws), the outcome was not quite as planned… To wit:


   


    



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