Cleveland Settles For $3 Million in Fatal Car Chase That Ended With 13 Cops Firing 137 Shots, Killing Two

Timothy Russell and Marissa WilliamsWithout any major filings or motions from either
side, the city of Cleveland
settled
a wrongful death suit with the families of Timothy
Russell and Marissa Williams for $3 million. Russell and Williams
were killed by police at the end of a car chase that most likely
started when a cop mistook the backfire of a car for a gunshot.

Of the 13 officers involved in the fatal shooting, only one was

indicted
, for involuntary manslaughter. Five other cops were
charged with dereliction of duty for allowing the chase to
escalate. They’ve all pled not guilty.

The Plain Dealer compares the settlement to some
previous ones
Cleveland’s made
:

In 2003, the city paid $1.9 million in the case of an 8-year-old
boy who was struck by a stray bullet from a detective’s gun. The
officer had been scuffling with a suspect when the gun fired, and a
bullet pierced the child’s internal organs. The boy recovered and
later returned to school.

In 2008, Cleveland paid $1 million to the family of 16-year-old
Ricardo Mason, who was killed by police after a car chase in 2002.
Police claimed the driver tried to pin the officers with his car
after patrolmen approached it, prompting officers to fire at the
car.

In 2012, Cleveland paid $900,000 to former state prison guard
Martin Robinson, whose violent confrontation with a group of vice
officers nearly ended with Robinson and officers shooting at each
other outside a prison fence. Robinson claimed officers attacked
him and falsely arrested him. He claims the attack has left him
unable to work.

A probate judge has to approve
the settlement as “fair” before it’s finalized.

An attorney for Michael Brelo, the officer who fired 49 shots,
15 from the hood of Russell’s car, said the settlement didn’t
affect his client’s case, insisting the victim’s families
“bootstrapped themselves on the investigation and have used it for
their case.”

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Rand Paul Last Week: ‘I Want to End the War on Drugs’

On his
HBO show last Friday, Bill Maher
asked
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) about
remarks
he made in 2000 concerning the war on drugs: 

Maher: You said in 2000, “The war on drugs is
an abysmal failure and a waste of money.” Are you still on that
page?

Paul: I’m absolutely there, and I’ll do
everything to end the war on drugs….The war on drugs has become
the most racially disparate outcome that you have in the entire
country. Our prisons are full of black and brown kids.
Three-fourths of the people in prison are black or brown, and white
kids are using drugs, Bill, as you know…at the same rate as these
other kids. But kids who have less means, less money, kids who are
in areas where police are patrolling…Police are given monetary
incentives to make arrests, monetary incentives for their own
departments. So I want to end the war on drugs because it’s wrong
for everybody, but particularly because poor people are caught up
in this, and their lives are ruined by it. 

It is encouraging to hear Paul reiterate his opposition to the
war on drugs in general, as opposed to particular aspects of it
(such as overfederalizaton, mandatory minimum sentences, and civil
asset forfeiture). Although it is still not entirely
clear what
he means
by ending the war on drugs, the disparities that worry
him cannot be fully addressed as long as the government continues
to arrest people for supplying arbitrarily proscribed
intoxicants.

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Goldman FX Trader Fired For Participating In Currency-Rigging Cartel Even As Goldman Avoids Any Charges

As we noted previously, one of the glaring omissions from the list of banks that were charged with rigging FX markets, and subsequently promptly settled with nobody going to prison as usual, which consisted of:

  • Barclays PLC
  • HSBC Holdings PLC
  • Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC
  • UBS AG
  • Citigroup
  • J.P. Morgan Chase
  • Bank of America Corp. Bank of America

Was none other than the bank which according to recent revelations, has undue control over the NY Fed, Goldman Sachs. And yet, moments ago the WSJ reported that Goldman Sachs just fired a currencies trader who “allegedly was involved with the misconduct before he joined the firm.”

So how is it possible that Goldman, which housed one of “The Cartel’s” (or was it Bandits?) riggers, was never busted in the first place? Because apparently Goldman had no clue of his impecable FX-rigging chat room credentials when it hired him from HSBC back in 2012.

Incidentally, when Cahill was hired by HSBC from Barclays, the bank said the following:

“Frank is a talented trader and we look forward to welcoming him to the team, where he will run our GBP/USD book. His hire is part of our continued build-out of our overall product and distribution capability.”

Talented indeed. As for Frank’s FX-rigging credentials, we find it very believable that he never again used these while employed by Goldman because the moment he walked through the door at 200 West, he was a changed man, doing merely god’s work and nobody else’s.

Frank Cahill, who joined Goldman Sachs in 2012 as a currencies trader after working at HSBC Holdings PLC, was asked to leave Goldman’s London offices on Tuesday as a result of his alleged involvement in the currencies-rigging affair, according to a person familiar with the matter.

 

“This relates to a period before he joined Goldman Sachs and he has now left the firm,” a Goldman Sachs spokeswoman said.

And then when he joined Goldman, he dropped everything, never entered another chat room ever again, and everyone lived happily ever after. Until now that is, because someone had to take the fall: that someone was Mr. Cahill was also happens to be a “cable rigger“, no pun intended.

Mr. Cahill, a sterling trader, worked at Barclays PLC before joining HSBC in 2010, according to U.K. regulatory records. He was one of a number of unidentified HSBC traders whose conversations in electronic chat sessions were quoted by the U.K.’s Financial Conduct Authority and the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission as part of their settlements with the British bank last week, according to people familiar with the chat transcripts.

Which is ironic, because the FCA complaint involving HSBC revolves precisely around a manipulator of sterling. Let’s recall just how that one particular chat session, which generated $162K in profit for HCBS and Mr. Frank Cahill who ran HSBC’s Cable book and almost certainly is the participant in the chat session – went:

An example of HSBC’s involvement in this behaviour occurred on one day within the Relevant Period when HSBC attempted to manipulate the WMR fix in the GBP/USD currency pair. On this day, HSBC had net client sell orders at the fix which meant that it would benefit if it was able to move the WMR fix rate lower.10 The chances of successfully manipulating the fix rate in this manner would be improved if HSBC and other firms adopted trading strategies based upon the information they shared with each other about their net orders.

 

In the period between 2:50pm and 3:44pm on this day, traders at four different firms (including HSBC) inappropriately disclosed to each other via chat rooms details of their net orders in respect of the forthcoming 4pm WMR fix in order to determine their trading strategies. The other three firms are referred to in this Final Notice as Firms A, B and C, as well as two other firms as Firms D and E. HSBC participated in a series of actions described below in an attempt to manipulate the fix rate lower.

  1. At 2:50pm, Firm A disclosed in a chat room (including to HSBC) that it had net sell orders for more than GBP100 million at the fix. At 3:25pm, Firm A indicated that the orders were for approximately GBP130 million.
  2. At 3:25pm, HSBC disclosed to Firm A in a one-to-one chat that it had net client sell orders for GBP400 million at the fix. Since HSBC and Firm A each needed to sell GBP at the fix each would profit to the extent that the fix rate at which it bought GBP was lower than the average rate at which it sold GBP in the market.
  3. Firm A informed HSBC that it now had net sell orders of GBP150 million at the fix. HSBC responded by saying “lets go”,11 to which Firm A replied “yeah baby”. The Authority considers these statements to refer to the possibility of HSBC and Firm A co-ordinating their actions in an attempt to manipulate the fix rate downwards.
  4. At 3:28pm in a chat room which included HSBC, Firm A expressed the hope that other traders would also have sell orders at the fix (“hopefulyl a fe wmore get same way and we can team whack it”). At 3:36pm, Firm B, which was a participant in the chat room, confirmed to the other traders that he now also had net sell orders for GBP40 million at the fix.
  5. At 3:28pm, HSBC informed Firm C via a one-to-one chat room that he had net client sell orders of around GBP300 million at the fix and asked the trader to do some “digging” to see if anyone else had orders in the same direction at the fix. Firm C replied at 3:34pm and disclosed to HSBC that it now also had net sell orders of GBP83 million at the fix.
  6. At 3:36pm, Firm D asked Firm A in a chat room (which included HSBC), for an update on its net sell orders. Firm A disclosed that it had now increased to GBP170 million. Firm D noted that it did not have any fix orders at that time, but commented that he expected Firm A to “bash the fck out of it”.
  7. At 3:38pm, HSBC commented simultaneously into chat rooms in which Firms A, C and D participated that it had net client sell orders at the fix for GBP in a “good amount”.
  8. At 3:42pm, in a one-to-one chat Firm A warned HSBC that another firm which was not a participant in the chat room (Firm E) was “buidling” in the opposite direction to them and would be buying at the fix.
  9. At 3:43pm, Firm A updated HSBC by indicating that it had netted some of its sell order off with Firm E and “taken him out… so shud have giot rid of main buyer for u…im stilla seller of 90… gives us a chance”. The Authority considers that this refers to Firm A’s belief that Firm E would no longer be transacting its orders in the opposite direction at the fix. It also confirmed that Firm A still held net sell orders for GBP90 million to trade at the fix and could still participate in the co-ordinated behaviour. This is an example of Firm A “clearing the decks”.

In the period from 3:32pm to 4:01pm, HSBC sold GBP381 million on Reuters and other trading platforms. Approximately GBP70 million (or 18%) of this volume was sold by HSBC in advance of the 60 second fix window around 4pm. During the period from 3:32pm to the start of the fix window, the GBP/USD rate fell from 1.6044 to 1.6009. These early trades were designed to take advantage of the expected downwards movement in the fix rate following the discussions within the chat rooms described above.

 

In the first five seconds of the fix window, HSBC entered a further nine offers to sell GBP101 million. During the first five seconds, the bid rate fell from 1.6009 to 1.6000. HSBC continued to enter offers throughout the remainder of the fix window and the bid rate fluctuated between 1.6000 and 1.6005.

 

HSBC sold GBP311 million during the fix window on Reuters and other trading platforms. The amount it sold on Reuters accounted for 51% of the volume sold in the GBP/USD currency pair on the Reuters platform during the fix window. Cumulatively HSBC and Firms A to C accounted for 63% of selling during the fix window. Subsequently, WM Reuters published the 4pm fix rate for GBP/USD at 1.6003.

 

The information disclosed between HSBC and Firms A, B and C, regarding their order flows was used to determine their trading strategies. The consequent trading by HSBC during the fix window was designed to decrease the WMR fix rate to HSBC’s benefit. HSBC’s trading in GBP/USD in this example generated a profit of approximately USD162,000.

 

Subsequent to the fix, traders in the chat rooms congratulated one another by saying: “nice work gents…I don my hat”, “Hooray nice team work”, “bravo…cudnt been better” and “have that my son…v nice mate” and “dont mess with our ccy [currency]”. One of the traders commented “there you go … go early, move it, hold it, push it”. HSBC stated “loved that mate… worked lovely… pity we couldn’t get it below the 00” and “we need a few more of those for me to get back on track this month”.

There you go indeed Mr. Cahill: “go early, move it, hold it, push it”, and don’t le the door hit you on your wait out when your new employer realizes that you were just guilty of the biggest crime possible in finance: getting caught.

As for Goldman, we expect the firm to never be charged with any rigging crimes: after all none of said riggers actually every abused their privilege while working at 200 West. They merely were hired for such manipulative skills.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1zAEm5S Tyler Durden

Why, Despite Its Failure, Abenomics Is “Still Working” For These People, In Quotes

If you were forced to admit that everything you believed about markets and monetary policy was in fact completely fallacious, as this week’s Japanese GDP collapse proved of Abenomics and devaluing yourself to prosperity, could you do it? Or would you stick to your blinkered views of the worldThe following characters continue to have faith in the self-proclaimed ponzi scheme…

Yesterday’s [GDP] report “is a small setback, but it should be viewed as a buying opportunity,” John Praveen, chief investment strategist at Prudential International Investments Advisers LLC

 

 

“There’s no reason to be depressed,” Audrey Kaplan, the head of international equities for Federated Investors Inc., which oversees about $350 billion, said by phone from New York. “It’s just pushing the recovery back a bit. We look at Abe trying to break the cycle of deflation and from the top down they’re doing the right things.”

 

 

“When you boil it all down, at least near-term, a weakening currency is helpful for the economy and the drop in GDP is backward-looking,” said Wayne Lin, a fund manager at QS Investors,

 

 

“It’s binary — you either believe in the market or you don’t,” said Luschini, who helps oversee $67 billion including Japanese stocks. “We aren’t taking a secular view that the Japanese market looks great because the economy looks great. We view this as tactical. If investors do warm to the fact that market could respond favorably to these positives, that’s a tactical reason to own it.”

 

 

“On the question of whether Abenomics is working or not, it’s kind of working but we need to do more of it,” said Stewart Richardson, who helps oversee $180 million at RMG Wealth Management LLP in London. “It’s just not wise to bet against a central bank when it has such deep pockets.”

But there are some voices of reason – that are not buying into the self-proclaimed Ponzi scheme…

“A lot of people will say he has tons of rope, he can keep weakening the yen — those aren’t sustainable,” said Gareth Watson, vice president of investment management and research at Richardson GMP Ltd. in Toronto. The firm manages about C$29 billion. “Longer term, it doesn’t solve the structural issues.”

Source: Bloomberg

*  *  *
And as a reminder, here is what Abenomics architect Hamada said about the cult

Mr Hamada agreed that Japan had created a “mild ponzi game”, he also said it was a “feasible” one because of Japan’s huge foreign reserves.

 

“In a Ponzi game you exhaust the lenders eventually, and of course Japanese taxpayers may revolt. But otherwise there are always new taxpayers, so this is a feasible Ponzi game, though I’m not saying it’s good.”

*  *  *




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1xleHyT Tyler Durden

Why Is California Fighting the Release of Non-Violent Inmates? Cheap Labor.

Just because it's history doesn't mean it's not still happening.California has had a prison
overcrowding problem for years and has been ordered, repeatedly, to
reduce the problem, so bad it has been determined to be cruel and
unusual punishment.

California hasn’t done a particularly good job at meeting goals
(maybe the recent passage of
Proposition 47
might help). Federal judges have ordered them to
expand the parole program to let more folks out and determined that
the state had not implemented an order from all the way back in
February.

The Los Angeles Times reported the order, along with
this rather interesting explainer of why the state was resisting

letting prisoners out early
:

Most of those prisoners now work as groundskeepers, janitors and
in prison kitchens, with wages that range from 8 cents to 37 cents
per hour. Lawyers for Attorney General Kamala Harris had argued in
court that if forced to release these inmates early, prisons would
lose an important labor pool.

Prisoners’ lawyers countered that the corrections department
could hire public employees to do the work.

So, yeah, that’s a pretty horrifying argument for keeping people
in overcrowded prisons. Adam Serwer followed up over at
BuzzFeed, and Harris is pulling a page from President
Barack Obama’s playbook.
She says she had no idea this was going on
:

“I will be very candid with you, because I saw that article this
morning, and I was shocked, and I’m looking into it to see if the
way it was characterized in the paper is actually how it occurred
in court,” Harris told BuzzFeed News in an interview Monday. “I was
very troubled by what I read. I just need to find out what did we
actually say in court.”

Serwer identifies the actual attorney responsible for the
argument as Deputy Attorney General Patrick McKinney. His argument
extends even further than what the Times reported.
California uses thousands of prisoners to help fight wildfires,
each paid $2 a day. In a roundabout fashion, releasing prisoners
early could reduce the number of firefighters they’d have
available. Read more
here
.

The feds did not find the arguments compelling. To me, what’s
fascinating (and scary) is what’s going to happen when the state
does indeed have to hire hundreds, possibly thousands of new public
employees to do the work they were getting on the cheap. These
employees will, of course, be unionized, well-paid (in comparison
with both the prisoners and what they’d get in the private sector)
and would qualify for some very nice pensions that would put
California even further in debt. It could possibly demolish Gov.
Jerry Brown’s (already inaccurate) claims the state no longer has a
budget deficit.

Oh, and as a reminder: California raised its minimum wage to $9
an hour in July. It goes up to $10 an hour in 2016.

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Why QE May Lead to DEFLATION In the Long Run

Quantitative easing (QE) was supposed to stimulate the economy and pull us out of deflation.

But the third round of quantitative easing (“QE3″) in the U.S. failed to raise inflation expectations.

And QE hasn’t worked in Japan, either.  The Wall Street Journal noted in 2010:

Nearly a decade after Japan’s central bank first experimented with the policy, the country remains mired in deflation, a general decline in wages and prices that has crippled its economy.

 

***

 

The BOJ began doing quantitative easing in 2001. It had become clear that pushing interest rates down near zero for an extended period had failed to get the economy moving. After five years of gradually expanding its bond purchases, the bank dropped the effort in 2006.

At first, it appeared the program had succeeded in stabilizing the economy and halting the slide in prices. But deflation returned with a vengeance over the past two years, putting the Bank of Japan back on the spot.

 

So why didn’t quantitative easing work in Japan? Critics say the Japanese central bank wasn’t aggressive enough in launching and expanding its bond-buying program—then dropped it too soon.

 

***

 

Others say Japan simply waited too long to resort to the policy.

But japan has since gone “all in” on staggering levels of quantitative easing … and yet is still mired in deflation.

The UK engaged in substantial QE. But inflation rates are falling there as well.

And China engaged in massive amounts of QE.  But it’s also falling into deflation.

Indeed, despite massive QE by the U.S., Japan and China, there is now a worldwide risk of deflation.

So why hasn’t it worked?

The Telegraph noted in June:

The question is why the world economy cannot seem to shake off this “lowflation” malaise, even after QE on unprecedented scale by the US, Britain, Japan and in its own way Switzerland.

 

***

 

Narayana Kocherlakota, the Minneapolis Fed chief, suggested as far back as 2011 that zero rates and QE may perversely be the cause of deflation, not the cure that everybody thought. This caused consternation, and he quickly retreated.

 

Stephen Williamson, from the St Louis Fed, picked up the refrain last November in a paper entitled “Liquidity Premia and the Monetary Policy Trap”, arguing that that the Fed’s actions are pulling down the “liquidity premium” on government bonds (by buying so many). This in turn is pulling down inflation. The more the policy fails – he argues – the more the Fed doubles down, thinking it must do more. That too caused a storm.

 

The theme refuses to go away. India’s central bank chief, Raghuram Rajan, says QE is a beggar-thy-neighbour devaluation policy in thin disguise. The West’s QE caused a flood of hot capital into emerging markets hunting for yield, stoking destructive booms that these countries could not easily control. The result was an interest rate regime that was too lax for the world as a whole, leaving even more economies in a mess than before as they too have to cope with post-bubble hangovers.

 

The West ignored pleas for restraint at the time, then left these countries to fend for themselves. The lesson they have drawn is to tighten policy, hoard demand, hold down their currencies and keep building up foreign reserves as a safety buffer. The net effect is to perpetuate the “global savings glut” that has starved the world of demand, and that some say is the underlying of the cause of the long slump. “I fear that in a world with weak aggregate demand, we may be engaged in a futile competition for a greater share of it,” he said.

 

The Bank for International Settlements [the "central banks' central bank"] says the world is suffering from addiction to stimulus. “The result is expansionary in the short run but contractionary over the longer term. As policy-makers respond asymmetrically over successive financial cycles, hardly tightening or even easing during booms and easing aggressively and persistently during busts, they run out of ammunition and entrench instability. Low rates, paradoxically, validate themselves,” it said.

 

Claudio Borio, the BIS’s chief economist, says this refusal to let the business cycle run its course and to purge bad debts is corrosive. The habit of turning on the liquidity spigot at the first hint of trouble leads to “time inconsistency”. It steals growth and prosperity from the future, and pulls the interest rate structure far below its (Wicksellian) natural rate. “The risk is that the global economy may be in a deceptively stable disequilibrium,” he said.

 

Mr Borio worries what will happen when the next downturn hits. “So far, institutional set-ups have proved remarkably resilient to the huge shock of the Great Financial Crisis and its tumultuous aftermath. But could (they) withstand yet another shock?” he said.

 

“There are troubling signs that globalisation may be in retreat. There is a risk of yet another epoch-defining and disruptive seismic shift in the underlying economic regimes. This would usher in an era of financial and trade protectionism. It has happened before, and it could happen again,” he said.

The Economist reported last year:

Is QE deflationary? Yes, quite obviously so. Consider:

  • A central bank that is deploying QE is almost certainly at the zero lower bound.
  • QE will only help get an economy off the zero lower bound if paired with a commitment to higher future inflation.
  • If a central bank is deploying QE over a long period of time, that means it has not paired QE with a commitment to higher future inflation.
  • Prolonged QE is effectively a signal that the central bank is unwilling commit to higher inflation.
  • QE therefore reinforces expectations that economic activity will run below potential and demand shocks will not be completely offset.
  • QE will be associated with a general disinflationary trend.

Don’t believe me? Here is a chart of 5-year breakevens since September of 2012, when the Fed began QE3, the first asset-purchase plan with no set end date:

 

(The article then goes onto say that QE can be deflationary or inflationary depending on what else the central bank is doing.)

Michala Marcussen – global head of economics at Société Générale – believes that QE may be deflationary in the long run because:

Excess capacity is deflationary and the means to deal with it is to shut it down. Indeed, we expect China [which also engaged in massive QE] for now to exert deflationary pressure on the global economy.

 

***

 

Unproductive investment is by nature ultimately deflationary. This is a point also worth recalling when investing in paper assets fuelled by QE liquidity and not underpinned by sustainable economic growth.

Prominent economist John Cochrane thinks he knows why. As he explained last year:

Here I graphed an interest rate rise from 0 to 5% (blue dash)  and the possible equilibrium values for inflation (red). (I used ?=1 ?=1 ).

 

As you can see, it’s perfectly possible, despite the price-stickiness of the new-Keynesian Phillips curve, to see the super-neutral result, inflation rises instantly.

 

***

 

Obviously this is not the last word. But, it’s interesting how easy it is to get positive inflation out of an interest rate rise in this simple new-Keynesian model with price stickiness.

 

So, to sum up, the world is different. Lessons learned in the past do not necessarily apply to the interest on ample excess reserves world to which we are (I hope!) headed. The mechanisms that prescribe a negative response of inflation to interest rate increases are a lot more tenuous than you might have thought. Given the downward drift in inflation, it’s an idea that’s worth playing with.

Bloomberg noted earlier this month:

Now, the Neo-Fisherites [including Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota] have been joined by a very heavy hitter — University of Chicago economist John Cochrane. In a new paper called “Monetary Policy with Interest on Reserves,” he explains a mechanism by which higher interest rates raise inflation. Unlike Williamson’s model, Cochrane’s model obtains a Neo-Fisherian result without appealing to fiscal policy. In fact, he finds that in some cases, raising interest rates can even stimulate the economy in the short term! He concludes succinctly:

The basic logic is pretty simple: raising nominal interest rates either raises inflation or raises real interest rates. If it raises real interest rates, it must raise consumption growth. The prediction is only counterintuitive because for so long we have persuaded ourselves of the opposite[.]

Cochrane has a simple explanation of the model’s key predictions on his blog. He hypothesizes that now that the Fed pays interest on the reserves that banks hold with the Fed, monetary policy will be even more Neo-Fisherian — i.e., even more perverse.

 

***

 

Cochrane’s arguments are based on simple equations that are at the heart of most modern macroeconomic models. If the Neo-Fisherites are right, then everything the Fed has been doing to try to stimulate the economy isn’t just useless — it’s backward.

 

Now, the overwhelming majority of empirical studies tell us that QE, and Fed easing in general, tends to raise inflation in the short term. But what if that’s at the cost of lower inflation in the long term? Japan has been holding interest rates at zero for many years, and its economy has been in and out of deflation. Massive QE has noticeably failed to make the U.S. hit its 2 percent inflation target. What if mainstream macroeconomics has it all upside down, and prolonged periods of low interest rates trap us in a kind of secular stagnation that is totally different from the kind Harvard economist Larry Summers talks about?

 

It’s a disquieting thought.

One of the main architects of Japan’s QE program – Richard Koo – Chief Economist at the Nomura Research Institute – explains that QE helps in the short-run … but hurts the economy in the long run (via Business Insider):

Initially, long-term interest rates fall much more than they would in a country without such a policy, which means the subsequent economic recovery comes sooner (t1). But as the economy picks up, long-term rates rise sharply as local bond market participants fear the central bank will have to mop up all the excess reserves by unloading its holdings of long-term bonds.

 

Demand then falls in interest rate sensitive sectors such as automobiles and housing, causing the economy to slow and forcing the central bank to relax its policy stance. The economy heads towards recovery again, but as market participants refocus on the possibility of the central bank absorbing excess reserves, long-term rates surge in a repetitive cycle I have dubbed the QE “trap.”

 

In countries that do not engage in quantitative easing, meanwhile, the decline in long-term rates is more gradual, which delays the start of the recovery (t2). But since there is no need for the central bank to mop up large quantities of funds, everybody is no more relaxed once the recovery starts, and the rise in long-term rates is far more gradual. Once the economy starts to turn around, the pace of recovery is actually faster because interest rates are lower. This is illustrated in Figure 2.

costs of qe

 

Indeed, things which temporarily goose the economy in the short-run often kill it in the long-run … such as suppressing volatility.

Postscript:   Quantitative easing fails in many other ways, as well …

The original inventor of QE  – and the former long-term head of the Federal Reserve– say that QE has failed to help the economy.  Numerous academic studies confirm this.  And see this.

Economists also note that QE helps the rich … but hurts the little guy. QE is one of the main causes of inequality (and see this and this).    And economists now admit that runaway inequality cripples the economy.  So QE indirectly hurts the economy by fueling runaway inequality.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1qTayMJ George Washington

One Reason Why Sickcare Is Outrageously Expensive: Needless Scans/Tests

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

Add easy profits from needless tests to defensive medicine and no cost controls or real competition, and we have the perfect formula for waste, fraud, profiteering, bad medicine and dysfunctional, unaffordable healthcare.

Why is sickcare (a.k.a. "healthcare") absurdly unaffordable in America? There are many structural reasons which I have covered in depth for years, but one that most of us can relate to from personal experience is needless, hyper-costly scans and tests.
 

Even those of us who have never had a CT or MRI scan (and I hope I never will) know the drill from friends and family: practically every injury is now scanned by one device or another at enormous expense–not for treatment, as M.D. Ishabaka explains, but as defensive medicine to ward off future lawsuits or in response to patient demands.

Ishabaka (M.D.) walks us through the maze of CT and MRI by using his own injuries and treatments as examples of how our system has become unaffordable and ineffective.
"When I first got into the hospital as a medical student in 1977, MRI scanners did not exist, and the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal had the first CT scanner in Canada. A scan took an hour, and the images were blurry as heck, compared to modern scanners which take a few minutes and produce crystal clear images – but it was MAGNIFICENT. All of a sudden, we could see brain problems that could only be seen by operating, or doing a cerebral angiogram – a good but somewhat dangerous test (up to 3% of patients who have one suffer a stroke caused by the test).
 
When used appropriately, CT scans save lots of money and lives. One example is head trauma. Most people who are knocked out just have a concussion, but a few have bleeding either around or inside the brain that will kill or permanently disable them unless they are operated on ASAP.
 
In the old days, just when I was starting practice, most hospitals did not have a CT scanner. People who had been seriously knocked out were ALL admitted to the hospital for "neurological observation" – a nurse would check on them every hour to see how alert they were.
 
Two problems with that: for most patients it was a total waste of time and money (and hospitalization is way more expensive than a CT scan), and for some with a bleed – it wasn't detected until too late.
 
Now, when someone gets knocked out, you do a CT scan, and within 30 minutes know whether it's safe to send them home, or you need to call a neurosurgeon to operate on them – as an emergency physician working in a trauma center from 1985 – 1990 this was a REALLY GOOD THING.
 
Then MRI scanners came along. They show some things really well that a CT scanner doesn't and vice versa. For example, an MRI scanner is unparalleled for showing a brain tumor. A CT is much better for showing bleeding inside the skull. An MRI scan will also show torn cartilage and ligaments in a joint with almost crystal clarity – a problem for which CT scanning is almost useless.
 
So – used appropriately, CT and MRI scans are two of the greatest inventions in my medical career.
 
But they are hellaciously expensive due to the fact that the machines are so expensive, and like computers, become obsolete within about 5 years – you have to pay of the multi-million dollar cost of the machine and make a reasonable profit within about 5 years.
 
Let me tell you from personal experience how they get overused: In 2004 I tore a cartilage (posterior third of the media meniscus if you need to know) in my right knee. I KNEW I tore a cartilage – I had the right kind of injury, the right symptoms, and the right findings on exam. I called up an orthopedic surgeon friend of mine and asked "Do you want to operate on my knee?" Somewhat dryly he said "Well, I think I should examine you first!".
 
So I went to see him. He did a regular X-ray – only $60 – pretty reasonable, and my exam showed ALL the classic findings of a torn meniscus. I told him I was ready for surgery (I couldn't run or do the martial arts classes I was taking at the time) – but he insisted on an MRI – I suspect because he was nervous about malpractice operating on a doctor in case the surgery was unnecessary – a risk I was willing to take – I would have signed papers releasing him from all liability.
 
Guess what – the $1,700 MRI showed a torn cartilage, I had surgery, and my knee is 99% as good as before I tore the cartilage – so basically the $1,700 (which was about half my total operation cost) was health care money down the toilet.
 
This is important: in the pre-MRI days, I would have been operated on based on my history, exam findings, and X-ray.
 
Now, my back and my neck – I have had recurring problems with both. The back issue came from lifting a heavy table the wrong way. It flares up every 8 – 9 years, I rest it, use a heating pad, take some ibuprofen or naproxen and cyclobenzaprine – and it gets all better.
 
In 1993, I tore something in my neck – I was lifting weights with my neck with a head harness. I was going up in weight and got to 37.5 pounds. As I extended my neck, I heard and felt a tearing sound. Idiot that I am, instead of dropping the weight, I finished the rep and REALLY heard and felt something tear. I had God-awful pain – for about a week, if I had to roll over in bed, I had to hold my head with my hands so my neck didn't bear the weight – but I got better.
 
Once or twice a year it flares up, I have trouble swiveling my neck to back up my car. A chiropractor friend of mine gives me a free adjustment and it's all better within 24 hours.
 
Now – here's the deal – I don't NEED an MRI of my neck or back. I'm SURE I have torn discs and/or ligaments – but I ALWAYS get better with very inexpensive meds, and a heating pad, plus chiropractic adjustment. BUT – every patient with spinal pain wants an MRI these days. ALL of them.
 
The fact is – it doesn't matter a hill of beans if an MRI shows torn disc/ligaments UNLESS surgery is being contemplated. The indications for surgery are VERY CLEAR – they are loss of sensation or strength in a limb, loss of bowel or bladder control in the case of a very low back injury, or what is called "parasthesias" – burning, tingling, shock-like feelings, etc in a limb.
 
The most serious of these is weakness – if a person has injured their spine, and are weak in a limb, they almost all need surgery or they will be permanently paralyzed/disabled. In these instances, and MRI is marvelous – it will show the surgeon perfectly where the problem is, so he/she knows exactly where to operate and what needs to be done.
 
But for the gazillion and three patients who have pain only, and demand an MRI (and if I refuse one, they WILL find a doc to order one) it is complete and utter mal-investment of health care dollars. I have a friend who is REALLY in shape – a serious surfer and weight lifter. He injured his neck in a surfing wipe-out in his early 30's and his right triceps became weak. He asked me what to do and I told him to get an MRI and see a neurosurgeon.
 
Well, he didn't want to, so he tried all kinds of useless remedies – he kept coming to see me (as a friend, not as his doctor) – and I could see his weight-lifter's triceps shrinking away to nothing. Finally I got him to see a neurosurgeon friend of mine, an MRI was done showing a ruptured disc pressing on (and slowly killing) the nerve that activated his right triceps – he was operated on – and ALL his strength came back.
 
So – bottom line – in appropriate circumstances, CT and MRI scans save lives and limbs – they are wonderful tools. However, my rough estimate is that probably around 90% of MRI scans and 80% of CT scans done in the USA now are a complete waste of time and money.
 
The real point about scans – and so many tests – is you treat the PATIENT – not the scan, or the test. Tests are just an aid in determining what is the best treatment for the PATIENT.
 
The corollary to this – and what it is SO HARD to convey to many patients – is that if the results of a test will not change the treatment – there is no reason to do the test. A classic ER example is an injured small toe (the big toe is different). It DOESN'T MATTER if the toe is broken or just sprained – the treatment is the same – taping, ice and elevation for 24 hours, rest, and mild pain medication. Try telling an injured patient that you are not going to order an X-ray of their toe – they will complain to the hospital administrator, and you will be lucky if you are not fired."
 
Thank you, Ishabaka, for the detailed explanation. I should also add that scans costing thousands of dollars each in the U.S. are available in other countries with the exact same machines for a fraction of the cost in the U.S.
 
As I noted in Sickcare Will Bankrupt the Nation–And Soon (March 21, 2011), Pittsburgh has as many MRI machines as the entire nation of Canada.
 
Why is this so? Studies have found that a doctor who owns his own machine is four times as likely to order a scan as a doctor who doesn't. Garsh, I wonder why.
 

Add easy profits from needless tests to defensive medicine and no cost controls or real competition, and we have the perfect formula for waste, fraud, profiteering, bad medicine and dysfunctional, unaffordable healthcare.




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Ignore The Noise: The Asians Are Picking Up The Gold Sold By ETF’s

In a picture taken on October 26, 2011 a

 

As could be expected, the decreasing gold price has caused people to run away from gold investments and not only did the gold miners drop faster than expected, any decrease in the gold price usually also caused people to liquidate their holdings in the Exchange Traded Funds which are trying to provide an easy and liquid possibility for ‘the common man’ to invest in gold.

And indeed, the SPDR Gold Trust ETF (GLD) saw an outflow of almost 29 tonnes of gold (roughly 925,000 ounces) during the month of October. As of at the end of last month, the ETF only held 741 tonnes of gold (a little bit less than 24 million ounces) which is the lowest point in six years time. So even though the net long position in the gold futures is still positive, it looks like the smaller investors have spit out gold as an investment, and that’s exactly something we like to see when we are waiting for the ‘total capitulation’ phase.

Apart from the discussion whether or not the ETF effectively holds all of its gold in physical form, the outflow was real and it looks like the gold which was dumped by the ETF was immediately flown over to Hong Kong (after a short re-melting layover in Switzerland). According to more recent data, China has imported more than 68 tonnes of physical gold in earlier this month and India was also stepping up its gold buying efforts as it acquired 100 tonnes of the yellow metal.

ETF Gold flows

Total ETF Outflows Source

So it’s almost guaranteed that these two Asian countries are extremely happy with the Gold ETF dumping its position as it allows them to get their hands on even more physical gold without upsetting the normal market circumstances (Asia is now practically just absorbing the selling pressure from the Western countries, which is the smartest thing to do, because if China and India would have been as aggressive when gold isn’t in a glut, it might have disrupted the normal market).

This could lead to a very interesting ‘problem’ when the retail investors are looking to get back in gold. Now the Asians are absorbing all the selling pressure, but the problem is that Asia obviously won’t stop buying gold when (yes, ‘when’, not ‘if’) the price goes up again. This means that instead of a net compensating move, there will be two larger buyers of the yellow metal as both Asian demand and ETF demand will dramatically increase the net demand for gold. Should the investment appetite for gold increase again to the levels of 2012, the Gold Trust would have to repurchase 612 tonnes of physical (!) gold, which is roughly 20 million ounces.

So we could be gearing up to see a perfect storm. At this point the Asian demand is high enough to compensate for all the ETF outflows, but the moment those Exchange Traded Funds will once again see a net inflow, they will have to compete with the Asian demand for physical gold as both will be scrambling to get their hands on those nice shiny gold bars.

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About That Japanese Downgrade

While we no longer live in a world in which debt matters – because central banks will just monetize it in their ongoing and no longer covert effort to reflate the final bubble – and thus debt ratings are an irrelevant anachronism from a bygone era, we can’t help but recall a certain statement by S&P from September of last year, in which the rating agency reminded everyone just why Japan has to proceed with both its first sales tax hike from 5% to 8%, (which, together with weather, has now been blamed on Japan’s shocking quadruple-dip recession), but also the follow up from 8% to 10%, which as we now know, has been delayed indefinitely, and which was supposed to prefund welfare spending for Japan’s demographic disaster which with every passing day gets closer and closer.

This is what S&P said:

Japan could face a debt downgrade if it does not shrink its budget deficit, which is unlikely to return to primary balance by a targeted date of fiscal 2020, even if the prime minister’s policies go well, a senior official of Standard & Poor’s said. Japan’s outstanding debt burden is the highest in the world at 1,000 trillion yen, or more than twice the size of its economy.

 

Standard & Poor’s remains doubtful about the scale of Japanese welfare reform and how much spending can be cut, Takahira Ogawa, director of sovereign ratings at the agency, told reporters on Friday.

 

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is set to announce around October 1 that he will raise sales tax to 8 percent from 5 percent in April to pay for welfare spending, but the hike may not aid public finances because the government is compiling stimulus measures to offset the blow, Ogawa said. “The government is taking about raising the sales tax by 3 percentage points, but the stimulus spending is worth around 2 percentage points,” Ogawa said. “In the end a 1 percent point hike may not have much of an impact.”

Now that the remainder of the sales tax hike is indefinitely postponed what is Japan doing instead, in addition to monetizing all of its debt issuance of course? It is about to inject another JPY3 trillion stimulus, which means that not only will Japan’s deficit will not shrink but it will in fact grow as a result of the incremental spending!

And then there is the hollow CTRL-C/CTRL-V echo chamber which because its has no idea what it is talking about (or has any recollection of facts from the distant 2013) is blaming the Japanese quadruple dip recession on, don’t laugh, austerity, when quite clearly what happened as part of Abenomics was this:Japan’s government has finalized a $50-billion stimulus package that will pave the way for a scheduled increase in the sales tax. The scheme will include some tax breaks to companies that invest in new plants or equipment, expand tax breaks for residential mortgages and some public works for reconstruction after the March 2011 earthquake and nuclear disaster.”

Looks like the non-austerity spending did not quite offset impact of the tax hike.

And guess what: the sales tax hike was more than offset by increased spending:

Japan’s politicians want to stimulate the economy to make sure the sales tax hike doesn’t derail a recovery from a recession last year and delay an escape from deflation. But stimulus spending is offsetting much of the benefit to government revenues from the sales tax hike, according to Ogawa.

More complaints from S&P from over a year ago:

The government’s efforts to reform welfare spending, the biggest drag on the state budget due to a rapidly ageing population, do not go far enough to ensure the big spending cuts needed to lower outstanding debt, Ogawa said.

 

Japan is unlikely to meet its target of eliminating the primary budget deficit, which excludes debt service and income from debt sales, by fiscal 2020, so Abe will have to find further ways to cut spending, Ogawa added.

 

The agency has an AA- rating on Japan, which is three notches from the top rating of AAA. S&P’s rating on Japan has a negative outlook, meaning a downgrade is possible.

And now that Japan has clearly given up on pretending it cares about its budget ever again balancing, or its fiscal situation and is rushing headlong into the Keynesian abyss, we are holding out breath for S&P to follow through on its threat and to downgrade the land of the setting sun.

Ironically, Abe would be grateful: after all Japan hopes more “investors” dump bonds and buy stocks in one final liquidity supernova explosion. An S&P downgrade may be just the catalyst for this “virtuous” great rotation.




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About That Japanese Downgrade

While we no longer live in a world in which debt matters – because central banks will just monetize it in their ongoing and no longer covert effort to reflate the final bubble – and thus debt ratings are an irrelevant anachronism from a bygone era, we can’t help but recall a certain statement by S&P from September of last year, in which the rating agency reminded everyone just why Japan has to proceed with both its first sales tax hike from 5% to 8%, (which, together with weather, has now been blamed on Japan’s shocking quadruple-dip recession), but also the follow up from 8% to 10%, which as we now know, has been delayed indefinitely, and which was supposed to prefund welfare spending for Japan’s demographic disaster which with every passing day gets closer and closer.

This is what S&P said:

Japan could face a debt downgrade if it does not shrink its budget deficit, which is unlikely to return to primary balance by a targeted date of fiscal 2020, even if the prime minister’s policies go well, a senior official of Standard & Poor’s said. Japan’s outstanding debt burden is the highest in the world at 1,000 trillion yen, or more than twice the size of its economy.

 

Standard & Poor’s remains doubtful about the scale of Japanese welfare reform and how much spending can be cut, Takahira Ogawa, director of sovereign ratings at the agency, told reporters on Friday.

 

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is set to announce around October 1 that he will raise sales tax to 8 percent from 5 percent in April to pay for welfare spending, but the hike may not aid public finances because the government is compiling stimulus measures to offset the blow, Ogawa said. “The government is taking about raising the sales tax by 3 percentage points, but the stimulus spending is worth around 2 percentage points,” Ogawa said. “In the end a 1 percent point hike may not have much of an impact.”

Now that the remainder of the sales tax hike is indefinitely postponed what is Japan doing instead, in addition to monetizing all of its debt issuance of course? It is about to inject another JPY3 trillion stimulus, which means that not only will Japan’s deficit will not shrink but it will in fact grow as a result of the incremental spending!

And then there is the hollow CTRL-C/CTRL-V echo chamber which because its has no idea what it is talking about (or has any recollection of facts from the distant 2013) is blaming the Japanese quadruple dip recession on, don’t laugh, austerity, when quite clearly what happened as part of Abenomics was this:Japan’s government has finalized a $50-billion stimulus package that will pave the way for a scheduled increase in the sales tax. The scheme will include some tax breaks to companies that invest in new plants or equipment, expand tax breaks for residential mortgages and some public works for reconstruction after the March 2011 earthquake and nuclear disaster.”

Looks like the non-austerity spending did not quite offset impact of the tax hike.

And guess what: the sales tax hike was more than offset by increased spending:

Japan’s politicians want to stimulate the economy to make sure the sales tax hike doesn’t derail a recovery from a recession last year and delay an escape from deflation. But stimulus spending is offsetting much of the benefit to government revenues from the sales tax hike, according to Ogawa.

More complaints from S&P from over a year ago:

The government’s efforts to reform welfare spending, the biggest drag on the state budget due to a rapidly ageing population, do not go far enough to ensure the big spending cuts needed to lower outstanding debt, Ogawa said.

 

Japan is unlikely to meet its target of eliminating the primary budget deficit, which excludes debt service and income from debt sales, by fiscal 2020, so Abe will have to find further ways to cut spending, Ogawa added.

 

The agency has an AA- rating on Japan, which is three notches from the top rating of AAA. S&P’s rating on Japan has a negative outlook, meaning a downgrade is possible.

And now that Japan has clearly given up on pretending it cares about its budget ever again balancing, or its fiscal situation and is rushing headlong into the Keynesian abyss, we are holding out breath for S&P to follow through on its threat and to downgrade the land of the setting sun.

Ironically, Abe would be grateful: after all Japan hopes more “investors” dump bonds and buy stocks in one final liquidity supernova explosion. An S&P downgrade may be just the catalyst for this “virtuous” great rotation.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1urAaDR Tyler Durden