Mark Spitznagel Slams The Fed For Creating The Rich-Poor “Chasm”

Submitted by Mark Spitznagel via The Daily Reckoning blog,

A major issue is the growing disparity between rich and poor, the 1% versus the 99%. While the president’s solutions differ from Republicans, they both ignore a principal source of this growing disparity.

The source is not runaway entrepreneurial capitalism, which rewards those who best serve the consumer in product and price. (Would we really want it any other way?) There is another force that has turned a natural divide into a chasm… dun, dun, dun… the Federal Reserve. The relentless expansion of credit by the Fed creates artificial disparities based on political privilege and economic power.

David Hume, the 18th-century Scottish philosopher, pointed out that when money is inserted into the economy (from a government printing press or, as in Hume’s time, the importation of gold and silver), it is not distributed evenly but “confined to the coffers of a few persons, who immediately seek to employ it to advantage.”

In the 20th century, the economists of the Austrian school built upon this fact as their central monetary tenet. Ludwig von Mises and his students showed that an increase in money supply is beneficial to those who get it first and is detrimental to those who get it last. Monetary inflation is a process, not a static effect. To think of it only in terms of aggregate price levels (I’m looking at you Ben Bernanke) is to ignore this pernicious process and the imbalance and economic dislocation that it creates.

As Mises protégé Murray Rothbard explained, monetary inflation is akin to counterfeiting, which necessitates that some benefit and others don’t. After all, if everyone counterfeited in proportion to their wealth, there would be no real economic benefit to anyone. Similarly, the expansion of credit is uneven in the economy, which results in wealth redistribution. To borrow a visual from another Mises student, Friedrich von Hayek, the Fed’s money creation does not flow evenly like water into a tank, but rather oozes like honey into a saucer, dolloping one area first and only then very slowly dribbling to the rest.

The Fed doesn’t expand the money supply by uniformly dropping cash from helicopters over the hapless masses. Rather, it directs capital transfers to the largest banks (whether by overpaying them for their financial assets or by lending to them on the cheap), minimizes their borrowing costs, and lowers their reserve requirements. All of these actions result in immediate handouts to the financial elite first, with the hope that they will subsequently unleash this fresh capital onto the unsuspecting markets, raising demand and prices wherever they do.

The Fed, having gone on an unprecedented credit expansion spree, has benefited the recipients who were first in line at the trough: banks (imagine borrowing for free and then buying up assets that you know the Fed is aggressively buying with you) and those favored entities and individuals deemed most creditworthy. Flush with capital, these recipients have proceeded to bid up the prices of assets and resources, while everyone else has watched their purchasing power decline.

At some point, of course, the honey flow stops—but not before much malinvestment. Such malinvestment is precisely what we saw in the historic 1990s equity and subsequent real-estate bubbles (and what we’re likely seeing again today in overheated credit and equity markets), culminating in painful liquidation.

The Fed is transferring immense wealth from the middle class to the most affluent, from the least privileged to the most privileged. This coercive redistribution has been a far more egregious source of disparity than the president’s presumption of tax unfairness (if there is anything unfair about approximately half of a population paying zero income taxes) or deregulation.

Pitting economic classes against each other is a divisive tactic that benefits no one. Yet if there is any upside, it is perhaps a closer examination of the true causes of the problem. Before we start down the path of arguing about the merits of redistributing wealth to benefit the many, why not first stop redistributing it to the most privileged?


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/oR0JxCpS9kU/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Mark Spitznagel Slams The Fed For Creating The Rich-Poor "Chasm"

Submitted by Mark Spitznagel via The Daily Reckoning blog,

A major issue is the growing disparity between rich and poor, the 1% versus the 99%. While the president’s solutions differ from Republicans, they both ignore a principal source of this growing disparity.

The source is not runaway entrepreneurial capitalism, which rewards those who best serve the consumer in product and price. (Would we really want it any other way?) There is another force that has turned a natural divide into a chasm… dun, dun, dun… the Federal Reserve. The relentless expansion of credit by the Fed creates artificial disparities based on political privilege and economic power.

David Hume, the 18th-century Scottish philosopher, pointed out that when money is inserted into the economy (from a government printing press or, as in Hume’s time, the importation of gold and silver), it is not distributed evenly but “confined to the coffers of a few persons, who immediately seek to employ it to advantage.”

In the 20th century, the economists of the Austrian school built upon this fact as their central monetary tenet. Ludwig von Mises and his students showed that an increase in money supply is beneficial to those who get it first and is detrimental to those who get it last. Monetary inflation is a process, not a static effect. To think of it only in terms of aggregate price levels (I’m looking at you Ben Bernanke) is to ignore this pernicious process and the imbalance and economic dislocation that it creates.

As Mises protégé Murray Rothbard explained, monetary inflation is akin to counterfeiting, which necessitates that some benefit and others don’t. After all, if everyone counterfeited in proportion to their wealth, there would be no real economic benefit to anyone. Similarly, the expansion of credit is uneven in the economy, which results in wealth redistribution. To borrow a visual from another Mises student, Friedrich von Hayek, the Fed’s money creation does not flow evenly like water into a tank, but rather oozes like honey into a saucer, dolloping one area first and only then very slowly dribbling to the rest.

The Fed doesn’t expand the money supply by uniformly dropping cash from helicopters over the hapless masses. Rather, it directs capital transfers to the largest banks (whether by overpaying them for their financial assets or by lending to them on the cheap), minimizes their borrowing costs, and lowers their reserve requirements. All of these actions result in immediate handouts to the financial elite first, with the hope that they will subsequently unleash this fresh capital onto the unsuspecting markets, raising demand and prices wherever they do.

The Fed, having gone on an unprecedented credit expansion spree, has benefited the recipients who were first in line at the trough: banks (imagine borrowing for free and then buying up assets that you know the Fed is aggressively buying with you) and those favored entities and individuals deemed most creditworthy. Flush with capital, these recipients have proceeded to bid up the prices of assets and resources, while everyone else has watched their purchasing power decline.

At some point, of course, the honey flow stops—but not before much malinvestment. Such malinvestment is precisely what we saw in the historic 1990s equity and subsequent real-estate bubbles (and what we’re likely seeing again today in overheated credit and equity markets), culminating in painful liquidation.

The Fed is transferring immense wealth from the middle class to the most affluent, from the least privileged to the most privileged. This coercive redistribution has been a far more egregious source of disparity than the president’s presumption of tax unfairness (if there is anything unfair about approximately half of a population paying zero income taxes) or deregulation.

Pitting economic classes against each other is a divisive tactic that benefits no one. Yet if there is any upside, it is perhaps a closer examination of the true causes of the problem. Before we start down the path of arguing about the merits of redistributing wealth to benefit the many, why not first stop redistributing it to the most privileged?


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/oR0JxCpS9kU/story01.htm Tyler Durden

PolitiFact’s Lie of the Year Was Half True in 2012

The main thing one learns from
PolitiFact’s 2013 Lie of the Year Award is that PolitiFact is not
very good at determining what does or does not constitute a lie, or
a fact, at the time it’s actually utttered. 

Yesterday, the fact-checking organization
named
President Obama’s oft-repeated promise that individuals
who like their health plans can keep them under Obamacare its 2013
Lie of the Year. 

Given that Obama first uttered his promise years ago, this might
seem a bit late. Especially since, as PolitiFact editor Angie Holan
notes in a column on the award, the organization rated that same
promise “half true” in both 2009 and 2012, which Holan says means
the statement was “partially correct and partially
wrong.” 

So it was partially true then, but it’s the Lie of the Year now?
That’s quite an evolution—and one that doesn’t exactly offer a
strong reason to trust the organization’s real-time fact-checking
prowess. 

Indeed, PolitiFact’s judgment on this particular Obama claim has
actually shifted even more over the years. As The Washington
Examiner
‘s Sean Higgins
points out
, PolitiFact
rated
Obama’s statement that “if you’ve got a health care plan
that you like, you can keep it” as “true” back in 2008, when Obama
was campaigning for president. The reasoning behind that call:
“Obama is accurately describing his health care plan here. He
advocates a program that seeks to build on the current system,
rather than dismantling it and starting over.” As millions of
people have already discovered, however, even building on the
existing system turns out to require tearing some parts of it
down. 

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/13/politifacts-lie-of-the-year-was-half-tru
via IFTTT

PolitiFact's Lie of the Year Was Half True in 2012

The main thing one learns from
PolitiFact’s 2013 Lie of the Year Award is that PolitiFact is not
very good at determining what does or does not constitute a lie, or
a fact, at the time it’s actually utttered. 

Yesterday, the fact-checking organization
named
President Obama’s oft-repeated promise that individuals
who like their health plans can keep them under Obamacare its 2013
Lie of the Year. 

Given that Obama first uttered his promise years ago, this might
seem a bit late. Especially since, as PolitiFact editor Angie Holan
notes in a column on the award, the organization rated that same
promise “half true” in both 2009 and 2012, which Holan says means
the statement was “partially correct and partially
wrong.” 

So it was partially true then, but it’s the Lie of the Year now?
That’s quite an evolution—and one that doesn’t exactly offer a
strong reason to trust the organization’s real-time fact-checking
prowess. 

Indeed, PolitiFact’s judgment on this particular Obama claim has
actually shifted even more over the years. As The Washington
Examiner
‘s Sean Higgins
points out
, PolitiFact
rated
Obama’s statement that “if you’ve got a health care plan
that you like, you can keep it” as “true” back in 2008, when Obama
was campaigning for president. The reasoning behind that call:
“Obama is accurately describing his health care plan here. He
advocates a program that seeks to build on the current system,
rather than dismantling it and starting over.” As millions of
people have already discovered, however, even building on the
existing system turns out to require tearing some parts of it
down. 

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/13/politifacts-lie-of-the-year-was-half-tru
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Los Angeles Creates Thriving Black Market for Pet Bunnies

I admit that I chose to blog about this as an excuse to look at cute bunny photos. Dawww!Los Angeles Times writer
Carla Hall, in an opinion piece, is heartened to see LAPD officers
cracking down on illegal vendors who sell adorable little bunnies,
turtles, kittens and other animals on street corners in the city.
Somebody actually even got jail time over it. She
observes
:

Vendors display unweaned bunnies in cages and let them nibble on
lettuce leaves (which, by the way, they shouldn’t be fed at a young
age.) Turtles commonly carry salmonella on their outer shells and
skin. Buyers end up with animals that are malnourished, sick,
likely to die once they get them home — or make family members
sick.

“Not only is this an issue of animal cruelty, it is a public
safety issue as well,” says Lejla Hadzimuratovic, who set up a
foundation devoted to rescuing and caring for rabbits and also
works with the police to get illegal vendors of all animals off the
street. Children are considered particularly vulnerable to
contacting salmonella from picking up and playing with small
turtles. (Since 1975, the Food and Drug Administration has banned
the sale of small turtles with a shell less than 4 inches
long.)

In her conclusion, she declares “[I]t will take more than that
to get people out of the business of illegally selling bunnies and
turtles. It will take people refusing to buy these animals on the
streets and legitimate vendors — and passersby like [Phillip]
Horlings — being assertive enough to call the police when they see
sales taking place.”

There’s a problem here in Hall’s reference of “legitimate
vendors”: In 2012 Los Angeles banned
(pdf) the sale of commercially bred dogs, cats, and rabbits from
pet stores. “Legitimate vendors” in Los Angeles are only permitted
to sell rescued animals of the named species, though pet-buyers are
permitted to go directly to breeders. This new law is never
mentioned in Hall’s commentary and it doesn’t seem to occur to her
that maybe these new regulations introduced a level of pet scarcity
that has fostered this black market. If animal lovers don’t want
people buying sick bunnies from men in trenchcoats on street
corners, learn from every other example provided by our endless
parade of failed prohibitions. Are those “puppy mills” animal
activists hate so much actually worse than this?

More Reason on black markets here.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/13/los-angeles-creates-thriving-black-marke
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Armed TSA Agents Supported by Majority of Americans

americans better off trusting each other with gunsNearly 60 percent of
respondents in the latest Reason-Rupe poll said they believed TSA
agents at airports
ought to carry guns
. 35 percent opposed the idea, and only 4
percent gave the measured response that it “depends.” The high
level of support for arming the agents oppose it that have operated
airport checkpoints since 9/11 could be a result of last month’s
shooting at Los Angeles International Airport, in which the first
TSA agent to die in the line of duty was killed. The alleged
shooter reportedly went to the airport looking specifically to
target a TSA agent.

For more than a decade, TSA agents at airports have been
unarmed, with no major incidents at any airport checkpoint. Indeed,
in most security-related incidents involving TSA at the airport,
it’s the agents accused of misconduct and criminal activity,
largely theft. Earlier this year, a GAO study found
misconduct by TSA agents up 26 percent in 3 years. A 2011 report in
the LA Times
noted
that fewer than 500 TSA employees had been arrested for
alleged theft, about .3 percent of the workforce, but acknowledged
it could just be that “culprits just don’t get caught very often.”
In its twelve years of existence, however, the kinds of situations
where a TSA agent might need to be armed have been even rarer, with
that first fatality occurring just a few months ago. It’s far from
clear arming TSA agents would have any positive effect anyway. At
LAX,
for example
, about 400 armed police officers already patrol the
airport. Arming the agents that have to engage with every single
traveler at the airport will only make an uncomfortable situation
for flyers even more so, with no benefit to show for it. 

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/13/armed-tsa-agents-supported-by-majority-o
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Mission Accomplished (Really)! Reason Webathon 2013 Succeeds Where Bush, Obama Fail!

Over the last two weeks, Reason
ran its annual webathon, in which we ask readers of this website
to make
tax-deductible donations
to the 501(c)3 nonprofit that
publishes Reason magazine, Reason.com, and Reason TV.

We started out by asking for $100,000 over an eight-day period
but after a tremendously generous gift of $50,000 from a single
donor), we upped the total to $150,000. I’m happy to report that
650 of you ginned up $165,000 in support.

From all of us at
Reason, thank you. Your support is essential to our efforts to
produce cutting-edge journalism that makes the case for “Free Minds
and Free Markets” in politics, culture, and ideas. Without it, we
wouldn’t be able to publish 11 issues of Reason a year, post
thousands of articles and blog entries at Reason.com, or produce
hundreds of videos at Reason TV.

So thank you, thank you, thank you.

Here’s a little Remy, to keep the mood upbeat:

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/13/mission-accomplished-really-reason-webat
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Emily Ekins on Americans’ Mixed Feelings Over the Minimum Wage

CashNearly three-fourths of Americans favor raising
the minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 an hour, while 26 percent
oppose according to the latest Reason-Rupe poll. However,
points out Emily Ekins, director of polling for Reason Foundation,
support flips and 57 percent oppose a hike if raising the minimum
wage causes some employers to lay off workers or hire fewer
workers, while only 38 percent would favor the move.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/13/emily-ekins-on-americans-mixed-feelings
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Emily Ekins on Americans' Mixed Feelings Over the Minimum Wage

CashNearly three-fourths of Americans favor raising
the minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 an hour, while 26 percent
oppose according to the latest Reason-Rupe poll. However,
points out Emily Ekins, director of polling for Reason Foundation,
support flips and 57 percent oppose a hike if raising the minimum
wage causes some employers to lay off workers or hire fewer
workers, while only 38 percent would favor the move.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/13/emily-ekins-on-americans-mixed-feelings
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Video: Dirty Jobs’ Mike Rowe on the High Cost of College

“If we are lending money that ostensibly we don’t have to kids
who have no hope of making it back in order to train them for jobs
that clearly don’t exist, I might suggest that we’ve gone around
the bend a little bit,” says TV personality Mike Rowe, best known
as the longtime host of Discovery Channel’s
Dirty Jobs
.

Rowe recently sat down with Reason’s Nick Gillespie to discuss
the problem with taxpayer-supported college loans, the disconnect
between the way we educate versus the job opportunities that are
available, the hidden costs of regulatory compliance, and more.

Watch above or click below for full text, links, and
downloadable versions.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/13/video-dirty-jobs-mike-rowe-on-the-high-c
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