Will We Never Learn? 1840’s Gold Rush Edition

1840’s Gold Rush or 2014 Dot-Com 2.0?

Despite the amazingly high cost of living and the extraordinary opportunities for frittering away money, everyone in early San Francisco was supremely confident that he would soon be able to return home with an incalculable amount of [wealth].

 

Everything was conceived on a vast scale, and there was always plenty of cash available for any scheme that might be proposed, no matter how impossible or bizarre it seemed. No one hesitated to borrow money…

 

-The Barbary Coast (describing the gold rush)

 

 

Source: @signejb

 


    



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Feds Don’t Want Kids to Even See How Awesome Junk Food Is

Avert your eyes, citizen!In another example of your
federal rulers thinking our poor habits are due to not knowing any
better and being manipulated by the agricultural industrial complex
and not, say, our own decisions, the feds are forcing public
schools not just to drop what it deems to be unhealthy food, but to
drop any advertising that appears at schools for unhealthy food.
Even pictures of food have to have the federal government’s stamp
of approval. From the
Associated Press
:

Promotion of sugary drinks and junk foods around campuses during
the school day would be phased out under the Agriculture Department
rules, which are intended to ensure that marketing is brought in
line with health standards that already apply to food served by
public schools.

That means a scoreboard at a high school football or basketball
game eventually wouldn’t be allowed to advertise Coca-Cola, for
example, though it could advertise Diet Coke or Dasani water, also
owned by Coca-Cola Co. Same with the front of a vending machine.
Cups, posters and menu boards that promote foods that don’t meet
federal standards would also be phased out.

Ninety-three percent of such marketing in schools is related to
beverages. And many soda companies already have started to
transition their sales and advertising in schools from sugary sodas
and sports drinks to other products they produce. Companies are
spending $149 million a year on marketing to kids in schools,
according to the Agriculture Department.

There are
questions
as to whether diet sodas are actually healthier than
sodas with sugar in them, but they have the government stamp of
approval, so it’s fine. It’s the stamp that makes it safe.

I dare some kid out there to make a book cover out of candy bar
wrappers. You know you want to.

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HealthCare.gov’s Cloud Computer System Cost Five Times as Much as Expected

The cloud computing contract for the federal
government’s Obamacare exchange came in a lot higher than
originally planned,
reports NextGov
:

The government’s contract with Terremark, Verizon’s cloud
division, had
already quadrupled
 from $11 million when it was first
awarded in 2011 to $46 million at the time of HealthCare.gov’s
disastrous launch in October 2013. That included a $9 million
adjustment just
days before launch
 when testing revealed the cloud could
only support 10,000 concurrent HealthCare.gov users rather than the
expected 50,000.

CMS ordered an additional $15.2 worth of cloud services from
Terramark between the launch date, when most users were unable to
access key portions of the site, and Nov. 30, when officials
declared the site was performing at an acceptable level, according
to a justification
for other than full and open competition document
 posted
on Thursday.

That contract adjustment paid for added cloud storage plus
firewall upgrades, additional software and various other
services.

Once again, it suggests that the federal government didn’t know
what they were getting into when the exchanges launched last
October. Asked about the increased cost, a federal health official
tells NextGov that “if the additional services were not added
urgently, the exchanges would not function as designed and citizens
would continue to have issues using the marketplace.” In other
words, the original plan had been for a system that wouldn’t
work. 

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Parking Fines Are Unconstitutionally Excessive, Violate Due Process, Claims Class Action Suit

Jennifer Abel
writes in Consumer Affairs
about an interesting
approach to fighting parking tickets: a class-action federal suit
complaining that the end result consistutes an unconstitutionally
“excessive” fine.

Details:

Lead plaintiff Jesus Pimentel ran up a $63 expired parking meter
fine, which is bad enough, but the city gave him only two weeks to
pay before doubling the fine. Then there was a $28 “delinquent” fee
and a $21 “collection” fee. Add it all up and Pimentel was out
$175, which he thinks is so excessive it’s
downright unconstitutional, Courthouse
News Service
 reported. 

Besides the money, Pimentel was miffed when the DMV threatened
to withhold his car’s registration if he didn’t pay up, the city
threatened to boot and impound his car while also holding out the
possibility of civil litigation, damage to his credit rating and
garnishing of his state tax refund. This, says Pimentel, violated
the Due Process clause…..

Pimentel’s fines come to 336 percent of the daily median
income for a Latino Angeleno.

I wrote last month on how the
pettiest end of state enforcement of laws
regarding
things like vehicular and body movement can quickly escalate to
life-ruining problems.

[Hat tip: Jeff Patterson]

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Howard Davies On The Banks That Ate The Economy

Authored by Howard Davies, originally posted at Project Syndicate,

Bank of England Governor Mark Carney surprised his audience at a conference late last year by speculating that banking assets in London could grow to more than nine times Britain’s GDP by 2050. His forecast represented a simple extrapolation of two trends: continued financial deepening worldwide (that is, faster growth of financial assets than of the real economy), and London’s maintenance of its share of the global financial business.

These may be reasonable assumptions, but the estimate was deeply unsettling to many. Hosting a huge financial center, with outsize domestic banks, can be costly to taxpayers. In Iceland and Ireland, banks outgrew their governments’ ability to support them when needed. The result was disastrous.

Quite apart from the potential bailout costs, some argue that financial hypertrophy harms the real economy by syphoning off talent and resources that could better be deployed elsewhere. But Carney argues that, on the contrary, the rest of the British economy benefits from having a global financial center in its midst. “Being at the heart of the global financial system,” he said, “broadens the investment opportunities for the institutions that look after British savings, and reinforces the ability of UK manufacturing and creative industries to compete globally.”

That is certainly the assumption on which the London market has been built and the line that successive governments have peddled. But it is coming under fire.

Andy Haldane, one of the lieutenants Carney inherited at the BoE, has questioned the financial sector’s economic contribution, pointing to “its ability to both invigorate and incapacitate large parts of the non-financial economy.” He argues (in a speech revealingly entitled “The Contribution of the Financial Sector: Miracle or Mirage?”) that the financial sector’s reported contribution to GDP has been significantly overrated.

Two recent papers raise further doubts. In “The Growth of Modern Finance,” Robin Greenwood and David Scharfstein of Harvard Business School show that the share of finance in US GDP almost doubled between 1980 and 2006, just before the onset of the financial crisis, from 4.9% to 8.3%. The two main factors driving that increase were the expansion of credit and the rapid rise in resources devoted to asset management (associated, not coincidentally, with the exponential growth in financial-sector incomes).

Greenwood and Scharfstein argue that increased financialization was a mixed blessing. There may have been more savings opportunities for households and more diverse funding sources for firms, but the added value of asset-management activity was illusory. Much of it involved costly churning of portfolios, while increased leverage implied fragility for the financial system as a whole and imposed severe social costs as over-exposed households subsequently went bankrupt.

Stephen G. Cecchetti and Enisse Kharroubi of the Bank for International Settlements – the central banks’ central bank – go further. They argue that rapid financial-sector growth reduces productivity growth in other sectors. Using a sample of 20 developed countries, they find a negative correlation between the financial sector’s share of GDP and the health of the real economy.

The reasons for this relationship are not easy to establish definitively, and the authors’ conclusions are controversial. But it is clear that financial firms compete with others for resources, and especially for skilled labor. Physicists or engineers with doctorates can choose to develop complex mathematical models of market movements for investment banks or hedge funds, where they are known colloquially as “rocket scientists.” Or they could use their talents to design, say, real rockets.

Cecchetti and Kharroubi find evidence that it is indeed research-intensive firms that suffer most when finance is booming. These companies find it harder to recruit skilled graduates when financial firms can pay higher salaries. And we are not just talking about the so-called “quants.” In the years before the 2008 financial crisis, more than a third of Harvard MBAs, and a similar proportion of graduates of the London School of Economics, went to work for financial firms. (Some might cynically say that keeping MBAs and economists out of real businesses is a blessing, but I doubt that that is really true.)

The authors find another intriguing effect, too. Periods of rapid growth in lending are often associated with construction booms, partly because real-estate assets are relatively easy to post as collateral for loans. But the rate of productivity growth in construction is low, and the value of many credit-fueled projects subsequently turns out to be low or negative.

So, should Britons look forward with enthusiasm to the future sketched by Carney? Aspiring derivatives traders certainly will be more confident of their career prospects. And other parts of the economy that provide services to the financial sector – Porsche dealers and strip clubs, for example – will be similarly encouraged.

But if finance continues to take a disproportionate number of the best and the brightest, there could be little British manufacturing left by 2050, and even fewer hi-tech firms than today. Anyone concerned about economic imbalances, and about excessive reliance on a volatile financial sector, will certainly hope that this aspect of the BoE’s “forward guidance” proves as unreliable as its forecasts of unemployment have been.


    



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Citing Joke, Annapolis Police Chief Testifies That Pot Killed 37 People on the First Day of Legalization in Colorado

Testifying against marijuana
legalization before the Maryland legislature today, Annapolis
Police Chief Michael Pristoop warned of the potentially lethal
consequences. “The first day of legalization, that’s when Colorado
experienced 37 deaths that day from overdose on marijuana,”
Pristoop
told
the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee. “I remember the
first day it was decriminalized there were 37 deaths.”

As Sen. Jamie Raskin (D-Montgomery) quickly pointed out, what
Pristoop actually remembered was a
joke story
at The Daily Currant headlined
“Marijuana Overdoses Kill 37 in Colorado on First Day of
Legalization.” The article included a quote from “Peter Swindon,
president and CEO of local brewer MolsonCoors,” who supposedly
said: “We told everyone this would happen. Marijuana is a deadly
hardcore drug that causes addiction and destroys lives. When was
the last time you heard of someone overdosing on beer? All these
pro-marijuana groups should be ashamed of themselves. The victims’
blood is on their hands.”

Pristoop seemed taken aback that something he had seen in print
might not be the literal truth. “If it was a misquote,” he told
Raskin, “then I’ll stand behind the mistake. But I’m holding on to
information I was provided.”

[Thanks to Tom Angell of Marijuana Majority for the tip.]

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Hey Boston Reasonoids: Happy Hour with Nick Gillespie Wed., 2/26, 6-8pm

I’ll be in Boston for business this week and
we’re throwing together a happy hour in Beantown on Wednesday,
February 26, from 6 to 8pm ET.

Details:

Join Reason’s Nick Gillespie for a Reason happy hour at the
Grafton Street Pub & Grill in Cambridge. 

The event is free but RSVPs are required – email Amy Pelletier
at amy.pelletier@reason.org.

The Grafton Street Pub offers free parking at a neighboring
church; we’ll email you a parking pass after you RSVP. You can also
take the Red Line train to Harvard Square.

Hope
to see you there.

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California Bill Would Amend Silly “No Bare Hands Can Touch Ready to Eat Food” Rule

 Southern California Public
Radio 
reports
on some possible sense
 coming down the pike
regarding a new California law barring bare hands from touching
ready-to-eat foods:

Assemblyman Richard Pan (D-Sacramento), chair of the Assembly
Health Committee, said AB 2130 would replace the language in the
state health code that took effect Jan. 1st that
barred sushi
chefs
, bartenders and others from handling ready-to-eat foods
with their bare hands.

Pan’s bill would permit some bare hand contact, stipulating that
preparers must “minimize bare hand and arm contact.” The chef or
bartender would also need to wash his hands in accordance with
current state health regulations….

I blogged about this rule, especially how it
enraged serious sushi chefs
, last month.

A Reason TV video on the matter,which makes the point
that no compelling public health problem connected to food
preparers bare hands has been demonstrated:

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Bank Bonus Bonanza

Remember when you were a kid and you got extra pocket-money for doing absolutely nothing? The joy that lasts ephemerally, but is none the less a welcome boost to your dire finances as a kid. When all is said and done there is very little between that kid and the HSBC bankers that are getting their increase in pocket money these days to avoid the cap on salaries from the European Union. You have to hand it to the Brits, they defy the EU, slap Brussels in the face and then go and ask them to pay for the weather damage to the country. Have they no shame? I guess where money is concerned, shame doesn’t have a lot of room. The trouble is, that kid / banker will be needing more and more of the increase in his pocket money in the future. It’s all about satisfiers and dissatisfiers. What satisfies today will become the source of dissatisfaction tomorrow.

HSBC Bank has been giving Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver £32, 000 ($53, 000) a week extra to avoid the cap on his salary (now at £1.2 million ($2 million). Either HSBC is just the first bank to admit doing it or the others will now quickly follow suit. What a double waste of money. Laws are obviously there sometimes to have smart guys thinking up new ways to dodge them. The art of the administration should be to constantly work to get around the tricks of the trade and paper over the cracks in the walls that allow for such things to happen. But, the EU is a machine that takes ages to actually get into motion; the cogs of the wheels move so slowly that the banks have thought up ways of getting around the voiced opinions that have petered out into a mere echo heard now far off in the distance.

It’s all about side-stepping and HSBC has just disdainfully rebuffed the boys from Brussels. As if the pocket money wasn’t enough, the bank has also revealed that there are 239 bankers working for the HSBC that were paid £1 million in 2013. Boardroom greed it was once called, with soaraway proportions. The European Union had stated that banks would have to restrict bonuses and cap them at 200% of salary. Stuart Gulliver has taken on the guys from Lilliput and whereas the latter used to be no bigger than six inches tall, the former is obviously into six-figure sums rather than anything else.

• Gulliver will be getting £1.7 million paid out every quarter, ensuring that his salary and bonuses combined reach £4.2 million a year. 
• HSBC will be giving 554 bankers cash bonuses.
• 111 will be getting shares that cannot be sold for a period of five years.
• Gulliver also gets £79, 000 for the use of a car in Hong Kong. 
• Accommodation expenses stand at £229, 000. 
• Profits posted by HSBC have risen by 9%, reaching $22.5 billion at the end of last year. 
• Bonuses rose to $3.9 billion, which is a 6%-increase. 
• Dividends for shareholders rose by 11% and staff costs have fallen by 6%.

It is expected that Barclays Bank will be doing the same. Why wouldn’t they anyhow? The Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne is going to try to get Brussels to reverse the cap on bonuses and so to all intents and purposes is defending the bankers.

It’s all about satisfiers and dissatisfiers. But, obviously, the general public has always been dissatisfied with the fact that bonuses are dished out by the banksters. The champagne drinkers were satisfied once (when they had a sense of what money meant and they actually might have done something to deserve it). ‘What satisfies today will become the source of dissatisfaction tomorrow’ has never been more resounding than when it concerns bankers and the financial sector. Why does everyone keep on harping on about why the bankers get silly money that only you and I can see in the newspapers? The bankers got given ridiculous sums. Ridiculous became absurd and absurd turned into harebrained simply because they were constantly dissatisfied by the amounts that were being given to them. Neither the European Union nor the governments of any of our super-rich (virtual) and yet desperately-and-critically-in-debt countries will ever be able to stop the bankers from getting their gelastic bonuses.

Originally posted: Bank Bonus Bonanza

 


    



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