Six Ways To Avoid The Resume Black Hole – Forbes

For all of the job seekers out there…
http://www.forbes.com/sites/jacquelynsmith/2014/02/04/six-ways-to-avoid-the-resume-black-hole/

Six Ways To Avoid The Resume Black Hole

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Six Tips For Avoiding The Resume Black Hole

Many job seekers spend countless hours writing, polishing and blasting their resumes to dozens of companies. Then they wait, and wait, and never hear a thing.

That’s because human resources people and hiring managers receive heaps of resumes for any given job opening, and they end up missing, skipping or tossing a lot of them. However, it turns out there are things you can do to help ensure your resume is seen.

Career experts and a spokesperson for Glassdoor.com, a jobs and career community where people share information and opinions about their workplaces, weigh in.

“I think resumes end up in the resume black hole if the person just responds to a posting or ad and does nothing else,” says Anita Attridge, a Five O’Clock Club career and executive coach. “Today companies are receiving hundreds of resumes for each position and, due to the volume, are not acknowledging receipt of them. Most large and medium-size companies are using applicant tracking systems to screen resumes before a person looks at them. Smaller organizations many just review the ones they receive until they find enough qualified candidates and then set the other resumes aside.”

In Pictures: Six Tips For Avoiding The Resume Black Hole

Rosemary Haefner, vice president of human resources at the jobs site CareerBuilder.com, says she suggests that candidates use the job posting to their advantage. “Use some of the same words and phrases that appear in the job posting in your resume,” she says. “The computer will then recognize them and move your resume toward the top of the pile because you will be a match. But don’t just cut and paste the job posting into your resume or cover letter. If the computer doesn’t catch it, the hiring manager definitely will, and it could hurt your chances of moving forward with an interview.”

Ruth Robbins, a certified career counselor with the Five O’Clock Club, agrees that using buzz words and key phrases that demonstrate you are a perfect fit for the job will help you get on the employer’s radar—but even with a perfectly tailored resume, there is no way to know if or when it will be reviewed by the hiring manager.

“The best way to make sure your resume is seen is by networking into the company,” Attridge says. “Let your networking contact know that you have applied for a position, and ask that person if he or she would send your resume to the H.R. department with an endorsement of you as a candidate. Another way is to try to determine who the hiring manager is and send a resume directly to that person, with a letter asking for an informational interview.”

Robbins agrees. “H.R. managers are often avalanched with resumes, so if you can find someone who works at the company who would be willing to hand in your resume directly to a hiring manager or interested influencer in the selection process, your chances of landing in the black hole [will shrink significantly],” she says.

Mary Elizabeth Bradford, an executive resume writer and author of the bestselling eBook series The Career Artisan, offers some alternative advice. “From what I have seen, what works best in any market is for the job seeker to take a pure, entrepreneurial approach to their job search process,” she says. “I think it would be futile to call H.R. and leave repeated voice messages. A better way is to contact a key decision maker through hard mail and follow up with a phone call. Go around H.R. That’s provocative, right? Well, it works.”

Samantha Zupan, a spokesperson for Glassdoor, agrees that it’s smart to look for more than one way to apply. “In addition to sending your resume through a company’s online job portal, also take the time to do some research and try to identify who the hiring manager may be. If you send a personalized note to the likely hiring manager, a good e-mail may get your resume pulled out of the stack.”

Zupan offers some additional advice:

Have someone proofread your resume. Sometimes it can be something as small as a typo that may turn off an employer and land you in the black hole, she says. “Before sending your resume, have at least one person you trust review it so that it can have a better chance of catching the eyes of the employer.”

Keep it simple. Avoid graphics and logos and other things that may “clog” how an applicant tracking system reads your resume, Zupan suggests.

Research the company’s hiring process. “Companies like Google and Facebook include specific insights into their interview process,” Zupan says. “For example, on the Google careers page, they let you know that one of their recruiters is the first to review your resume and that they look first at your qualifications and experience.” Thorough research can help you properly prepare to avoid the resume black hole.

In Pictures: Six Tips For Avoiding The Resume Black Hole

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This is an update of a piece that ran previously.

Where Did the Federal Reserve Get All that Money? – New Economic Perspectives

Another good read…

http://neweconomicperspectives.org/2012/03/where-did-the-federal-reserve-get-all-that-money.html

Where Did the Federal Reserve Get All that Money?

By Stephanie Kelton (h/t Matthew Berg)

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke gave his fourth lecture at George Washington University yesterday. Buried in the lecture, beginning at about 19:18 in the video, Bernanke explained where the Fed got the money to “pay for” the assets it purchased as part of its Quantitative Easing (QE) policies.

I remember when the Fed announced the first round of QE. Those who don’t understand Fed operations – think most mainstream economists – went nuts. Many worried that the Fed would be unable to “unwind” its positions (i.e. divest itself of the assets – MBS, Treasuries, etc. – it had purchased) because banks would refuse to swap their nice safe cash for riskier instruments when the economy recovered. Others insisted that QE was “stuffing the market full” of too many dollars and that this, inevitably, would result in hyperinflation.

John Carney just wrote a very nice piece, showing that not only was the Fed able to find buyers for its assets but that markets actually bought them back at a premium. Bernanke addresses the second objection in his remarks below – idle balances don’t chase any goods – but it’s the financing of the asset purchases that I want readers to understand, because this is fundamental to understanding Modern Monetary Theory (MMT).

The Federal Reserve, like any bank, can acquire an asset simply by crediting a bank account. In other words, the bank pays by creating money. As Alan Greenspan explained, the Fed has an unlimited capacity to spend in US dollars. It can pay trillions of dollars with a single keystroke. Here is Chairman Bernanke (Readers can follow is presentation beginning on page 17):

“Now, you might ask the question, well, the Fed is going out and buying 2 trillion dollars of securities – how did we pay for that? And the answer is that we paid for those securities by crediting the bank accounts of the people who sold them to us, and those accounts, at the banks, showed up as reserves that the banks would hold with the Fed. So the Fed is a bank for the banks. Banks can hold deposit accounts with the Fed, essentially, and those are called reserve accounts. And so as the purchases of securities occurred, the way we paid for them was basically by increasing the amount of reserves that banks had in their accounts with the Fed.

So you can see this, here, this is the liabilities side of the Fed’s balance sheet. Of course, assets and liabilities (including capital) have to be equal. So the liabilities side had also to rise near 3 trillion dollars, as you can see.

Now, take a look first, as you look at this, take a look first at the light blue line at the bottom. The light blue line at the bottom is currency – Federal Reserve notes in circulation. Sometimes you hear that the Fed is printing money in order to pay for the securities we acquire. And I’ve talked about that in some, you know, in giving some conceptual examples. But as a literal fact, the Fed is not printing money to acquire these securities, and you can see it from the balance sheet here, the light blue line is basically flat. The amount of currency in circulation has not been affected by these activities.

What has been affected is the purple area. Those are reserve balances. Those are that accounts that banks, commercial banks, hold with the Fed, and they are assets of the banking system and they are liabilities of the Fed, and that’s basically how we paid for those securities. And so, the banking system has a large quantity of these reserves, but they are electronic entries at the Fed. They basically just sit there. They’re not in circulation. They’re not part of any broad measure of the money supply. They’re part of what’s called the monetary base, but again, they’re not, they certainly aren’t cash.

Then there are other liabilities including Treasury accounts and a variety of other things that the Fed does – we act as the fiscal agent of the Treasury. But the two main items, you can see, are the notes in circulation and the reserves held by the banks.”

So ask yourself this question: If the Federal Reserve can create trillions of dollars with a single keystroke, and the Fed is the government’s bank, then why does President Obama claim we’ve “run out” of money? Why have Democrats and so-called progressives supported job-killing budget cuts in the name of “shared sacrifice”? Why are we throwing away the equivalent of $9.8 billion in lost output every single day? Why don’t we do something about our $2.2 trillion infrastructure deficit, 25 million underemployed and unemployed Americans, 100 million Americans in or very near poverty, and so on?

The answer is simple. Most of us don’t understand the monetary system. Instead of deciding how the government should wield its power over the dollar, we live in fear of the ratings agencies, the Chinese, the bond market vigilantes and other imaginary evils. And this holds all of us back. Unused resources abound, human needs go unmet, and the vast majority of Americans believe that ‘There Is No Alternative’ (TINA). Or, as Warren Mosler says, “Because we fear becoming the next Greece, we’re turning ourselves into the next Japan.”

There is an alternative. And it begins with an understanding of the monetary system. The cat is already out of the bag. Chairman Bernanke confirms it. Money is no object.

Follow us on Twitter @stephaniekelton

Proof platinum coin. http://my.firedoglake.com/wigwam/2011/08/09/greenspan-the-united-states-can-pay-any-debt-it-has-because-we-can-always-print-money-to-do-that/

Was Quantitative Easing a Tax?

Food for thought…

http://www.cnbc.com/id/46898830

Was Quantitative Easing a Tax?

In the last of his four lectures to students at George Washington University, Ben Bernanke explained how the Fed’s quantitative easing programs worked. As it turns out, they were akin to a tax hike.

This aspect of government asset purchase-and-resale-for-profit programs is not well understood. I explained it in terms of a Treasury program last week.

A tax takes dollars out of the private sector, leaving households and businesses with fewer dollars and the government with more dollars. When the government buys something for $10 and sells it back to the private sector for $12, the net effect is the same as if the government had taxed away those $2.

Bernanke doesn’t come out and call quantitative easing a tax. But he comes close.

“The Fed’s asset purchases are not government spending, because the assets the Fed acquired will ultimately be sold back into the market. Indeed, the Fed has made money on its purchases so far, transferring about $200 billion to the Treasury from 2009 through 2011, money that benefited taxpayers by reducing the federal deficit,” he explains in one of the prepared slides.

Here’s a good rule of thumb. If something reduces the federal deficit, it is either the equivalent of a spending cut or a tax hike.

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Puerto Rico’s Junk Grade Shows S&P Catching Up With Market – Bloomberg

The September 2013 to February 2014 time frame is not the only period when S&P ratings were behind. Enron, mortgage backed securities, etc. How realizable are S&P’s ratings? Perhaps it is best to assess risk yourself before investing in municipal bonds rather than trusting questionable S&P ratings.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-02-05/puerto-rico-s-junk-grade-shows-s-p-catching-up-with-muni-market.html

Puerto Rico’s Junk Grade Shows S&P Catching Up With Market

Standard & Poor’s cut Puerto Rico to junk yesterday, catching up with investors in the $3.7 trillion municipal market who have viewed the island as speculative grade for months. Some commonwealth debt gained today.

S&P lowered the island’s general obligations one step to BB+ from BBB- and kept them on watch with negative implications, signaling the potential for further cuts, according to a statement from the New York-based company. S&P cited the U.S. commonwealth’s limited ability to raise funds in the capital markets.

Yields on commonwealth securities have traded at speculative-grade levels since at least September, luring buyers such as hedge funds and investors in distressed debt. Officials have struggled to revive the Caribbean getaway’s shrinking economy, and plan to sell bonds as soon as this month to raise funds and plug deficits.

“It’s all about them finding liquidity,” said Robert Amodeo, head of munis in New York for Western Asset Management Co., which oversees $28 billion in munis. If they do, “it will relieve some pressures in the immediate future,” he said.

The territory of 3.6 million people failed to stave off a downgrade to junk even after lawmakers reduced pension benefits, increased taxes and trimmed budget gaps.

Governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla, 42, who took office in January 2013, said in the past week that he would release a budget for next fiscal year that doesn’t rely on deficit borrowing, ending a practice used in every spending plan since at least 2000.

Fiscal History

“Decades of fiscal irresponsibility can’t be fixed in 12 months,” Garcia Padilla said at a press conference in San Juan after the S&P announcement yesterday. “We did everything we could.”

The commonwealth and its agencies have about $70 billion of debt, about $16 billion of which is backed by Puerto Rico’s full faith and credit, according to figures as of June 30 from the Government Development Bank, which handles the island’s debt transactions. The GDB was dropped two levels to BB.

As is the case with bonds from U.S. territories such as Guam, Puerto Rico’s securities are tax-exempt nationwide, making its offerings popular among mainland mutual funds. About 70 percent of U.S. municipal mutual funds own Puerto Rico debt, according to Morningstar Inc.

Access Question

“The commonwealth’s access to liquidity either through the GDB or other means will remain constrained in the medium term, even in the event of a potential issuance of debt,” David Hitchcock, an S&P analyst, wrote in a report released yesterday. “These liquidity constraints do not warrant an investment-grade rating.”

Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings give Puerto Rico the lowest investment grade. Moody’s on Dec. 11 threatened to cut Puerto Rico to junk within 90 days if it is unable to access capital markets. Fitch may lower it to junk by June 30, the firm said on Nov. 14.

The speculative rating from S&P may limit buyers for commonwealth debt because some mutual funds require managers to purchase only securities with investment grades. Puerto Rico officials plan to sell long-term debt this month after soaring interest rates last year halted issuance of as much as $1.2 billion of sales-tax bonds.

‘In Discussions’

S&P hasn’t lowered the sales-tax bonds, known as Cofinas, analysts at the company said in a webcast yesterday. A bond offering could remove the commonwealth from CreditWatch, the analysts said.

“We are confident that we have the liquidity on hand to satisfy all liquidity needs until the end of the fiscal year, including any cash needs resulting from today’s decision,” according to a statement from GDB Chairman David Chafey and Treasury Secretary Melba Acosta.

The bank and the commonwealth “have been in discussions with parties that have expressed an interest in arranging additional liquidity,” according to the statement.

The GDB will hold a webcast for investors on Feb. 12, according to the release.

Investors have been valuing Puerto Rico bonds at junk levels since at least September amid mounting speculation the island would struggle to repay its obligations, S&P data show.

Puerto Rico securities lost 20.5 percent in 2013, the steepest drop since at least 1999 and about eight times more than the loss for the entire municipal market, according to S&P data.

Yields Fall

Yields fell today on tax-exempt general obligations maturing in July 2041.

The securities traded with an average yield of about 8.26 percent, the lowest since November and down from 8.34 percent yesterday, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Investors demanded 4.42 percentage points of extra yield above benchmark munis, down from yesterday’s 4.49 percentage points.

A year ago, the debt traded with interest rates of about 5 percent, and investors only demanded about 2.5 percentage points of extra yield.

A cut to speculative grade means Puerto Rico will have to pay as much as $1 billion for collateral and accelerated payments on swaps and other financings, Lisa Heller, a Moody’s analyst, said in a Dec. 11 report.

Puerto Rico’s budget is on track this year through December. For the first six months of fiscal 2014, which ends June 30, revenue collections were $93 million above budgeted estimates, according to Acosta. At the same time, expenditures for July through November were $135 million below appropriations, according to Carlos Rivas, director of Office of Management and Budget.

Economy Challenge

The commonwealth’s fiscal challenges are compounded by its struggling economy.

An index tracking the island’s economic activity has contracted in six of the last seven fiscal years, according to the GDB. The 15.4 percent jobless rate in December was the highest in two years.

S&P also cited the island’s ties to the U.S. economy and the trade that relationship generates.

The federal government hasn’t offered additional funds and Puerto Rico hasn’t requested such aid, Acosta said Jan. 24 in an interview on CNBC.

“The federal government has offered technical assistance, and that’s what we’re getting,” Acosta said.

Interest rates on benchmark munis rose yesterday after the downgrade, pushing yields on 10-year maturities to 2.65 percent, the highest since Jan. 23, Bloomberg data show.

To contact the reporter on this story: Michelle Kaske in New York at mkaske

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stephen Merelman at smerelman

Why Mutual Fund Investors Need Not Panic After January Sell-Off – Investors.com

Perhaps the old saying “buy into the panic and sell into the rally” rings true…

http://news.investors.com/investing-mutual-funds/020414-688827-mutual-fund-investors-panic-january-sell-off-.htm

Why Investors Need Not Panic After January Sell-Off

Why Investors Need Not Panic After January Sell-Off

Equity mutual fund investors — especially those investing in emerging stock markets — started the New Year with losses as an emerging market currency crisis jump-started a flight out of riskier assets into safe-haven bond funds.

But after enjoying a 32% return in 2013, the U.S. stock market was overvalued by some measures and long overdue for a normal pullback.

Emerging markets funds lost 6.32% while the average U.S. diversified stock fund gave back 2.80% and world equity funds dipped 4.44% in January. Latin America, last year’s worst-performing region, fronted the global sell-off, diving 9.81%.

Emerging markets experienced the biggest currency sell-off since 2009. Argentina’s central bank allowed its peso to devalue by not propping up its ailing currency. At the same time, the country’s foreign reserves fell to a seven-year low, fanning fears it wouldn’t be able to make debt payments. The domino effect spread to Brazil, Indonesia, India, Mexico, Turkey, Russia, South Africa, Thailand and Ukraine, whose currencies fell to multiyear, if not all-time, lows.

Fear Of Inflation Abroad

Central banks unsuccessfully tried to support their currencies by raising interest rates. That, in turn, incited fears of rampant inflation and slower economic growth, as higher rates boost borrowing costs for consumers and businesses.

As a value investor, Mark Mobius, executive chairman of Franklin Templeton, says current valuations are very attractive and believes the sell-off is “overdone and based largely on irrational investor panic.” Some countries are clearly worse off than others, but the long-term case for investing in emerging markets remains intact, he says.

“Emerging markets’ economic growth rates in general continue to be at least three times faster than those of developed markets, emerging markets have much greater foreign reserves than developed markets, and the debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratios of emerging market countries generally remain much lower than those of developed markets,” Mobius wrote in a note Jan. 30.

Emerging markets currently trade at steep discounts compared with the U.S.; iShares MSCI Emerging Markets (EEM) sports a price-to-earnings ratio of nearly 11 and price-to-book ratio of 1.4, while SPDR S&P 500 (SPY) has a P/E of nearly 16 and P/B of 2.4, according to Morningstar.

“Ultimately investors will begin to pay attention to valuations after the selling frenzy fades away,” said Ronald Saba, co-manager of Horizon Active Asset Allocation and director of equity research at Horizon Investments in Charlotte, N.C., with about $3 billion in assets under management. “Cheap things can get cheaper, but at some point become compelling investments from a valuation standpoint.”

A weak manufacturing report from China spooked the markets, says Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst at S&P Dow Jones Indices. “The old saying that ‘When the U.S. gets a cold, the world gets pneumonia’ may now extend to ‘When China gets a cold, emerging markets and Asia get pneumonia,'” Silverblatt wrote in a note released Feb. 1.

Chinese manufacturing slipped to a six-month low in January as output and orders slowed. The nonmanufacturing sector, jobs and exports also showed weakness. China’s economy may not be growing at the double-digit pace that the world has come to expect, but it’s still expanding rapidly, says Mobius.

“There will be deceleration — but that’s OK,” Mobius wrote. “And China is embarking on a number of important reforms as it moves toward a more domestic-driven economic model.”

Mobius added: “As I see it, critics of the Chinese government seem desperate to find something wrong in China and have latched on to the idea that China’s growth is slowing. If China can achieve a growth rate in the range of 6%-8% this year, it would be incredible for any economy of that size.”

Investors pulled $3.3 billion out of emerging market mutual funds and ETFs in January after pouring in $12.8 billion in 2013, according to Lipper. U.S. fund outflow paled in comparison at $816 million. By contrast, bond mutual funds and ETFs experienced positive inflow for the first time in seven months, absorbing nearly $11 billion in new money.

U.S. Stock Market Action

The S&P 500 ended January down 3.56% to 1783 after hitting a new record midmonth. With half of the index companies having reported fourth-quarter results, earnings are estimated to grow nearly 8% year over year, according to FactSet.

About three in four companies have beat earnings estimates, while about two-thirds eclipsed sales forecasts.

The S&P has completed a small double-top chart pattern, which could turn into a bearish head-and-shoulders pattern, says Mark Arbeter, chief technical strategist at S&P Capital IQ. Should that pattern play out, it would lead to a 9% correction from the recent high, he wrote in his weekly technical report.

But signs of irrational exuberance signaling a top in the stock market have yet to appear, says Birinyi Associates, a money management and research firm. “The hope phase has yet to appear: no magazine covers, limited anecdotal stories (brokers buying multimillion-dollar houses, cab drivers giving stock tips), get-rich books and positive market stories,” Birinyi wrote in a client note released Friday.

Birinyi forecasts the S&P 500 will reach 1900 in the second quarter as corporate earnings grow 10% this year. Historically, in the 10 years in which earnings grew between 8% and 12%, the market returned as much as 45% (in 1954) but also fell as much as 30% (in 1974), Birinyi wrote.

The bears, on the other hand, believe the sell-off in emerging markets is a foreboding sign for U.S. markets.

“With emerging markets having already entered a bear market, it is likely that the weakness will spread into all indexes,” Brad Lamensdorf, chief investment officer of the Lamensdorf Market Timing Report in Westport, Conn., and co-manager of Ranger Equity Bear ETF (HDGE), wrote in his newsletter Jan. 27. “Since we count on emerging markets to serve as the world’s growth engine, this negative divergence is worrisome.”

Sector Funds

Last year’s worst-performing sector, precious metals funds took the lead in the new year, rallying 9.59%. Miners, gold and silver all still trade below their long-term 200-day moving averages, and so the recent uptrend has to be considered a countertrend rally in a decline that started 2-1/2 years ago. The sharpest upside and downside moves tend to occur below the 200-day moving average, where volatility tends to increase.

Health care/biotechnology, up 5.48%, real estate, up 3.38%, and utilities, up 1.07%, were the only other equity sectors to end the month with gains. Positive research results from biotechnology stocks — notorious for rocketing and cratering in the blink of an eye — drove the health care sector’s outperformance the past year.

Fidelity Select Biotechnology Portfolio ended January up 13%.

Investors flocked to real estate and utilities in search of higher dividends as interest rates on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes dropped 33 basis points in January to 2.67%.

“When rates are moving so dramatically, anything with a yield is going to act like a fixed-income security,” said Saba of Horizon Investments.

Consumer goods and services funds, both down about 6%, were hurt by weak retail sales and unusually cold weather keeping shoppers at home.

Capitalism vs. Democracy – NYTimes.com

Joseph Schumpeter wrote about similar topics 1942 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitalism,_Socialism_and_Democracy). I will checkout Piketty’s book when it is available in he library.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/29/opinion/capitalism-vs-democracy.html

Capitalism vs. Democracy

Thomas Piketty’s new book, “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” described by one French newspaper as a “a political and theoretical bulldozer,” defies left and right orthodoxy by arguing that worsening inequality is an inevitable outcome of free market capitalism.

Piketty, a professor at the Paris School of Economics, does not stop there. He contends that capitalism’s inherent dynamic propels powerful forces that threaten democratic societies.

Capitalism, according to Piketty, confronts both modern and modernizing countries with a dilemma: entrepreneurs become increasingly dominant over those who own only their own labor. In Piketty’s view, while emerging economies can defeat this logic in the near term, in the long run, “when pay setters set their own pay, there’s no limit,” unless “confiscatory tax rates” are imposed.

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Fig. 1: After-tax rate of return vs. growth rate at the world level from Antiquity until 2100. Thomas Piketty

Conservative readers will find that Piketty’s book disputes the view that the free market, liberated from the distorting effects of government intervention, “distributes,” as Milton Friedman famously put it, “the fruits of economic progress among all people. That’s the secret of the enormous improvements in the conditions of the working person over the past two centuries.”

Piketty proposes instead that the rise in inequality reflects markets working precisely as they should: “This has nothing to do with a market imperfection: the more perfect the capital market, the higher” the rate of return on capital is in comparison to the rate of growth of the economy. The higher this ratio is, the greater inequality is.

In a 20-page review for the June issue of the Journal of Economic Literature that has already caused a stir, Branko Milanovic, an economist in the World Bank’s research department, declared:

“I am hesitant to call Thomas Piketty’s new book Capital in the 21st Century one of the best books in economics written in the past several decades. Not that I do not believe it is, but I am careful because of the inflation of positive book reviews and because contemporaries are often poor judges of what may ultimately prove to be influential. With these two caveats, let me state that we are in the presence of one of the watershed books in economic thinking.”

There are a number of key arguments in Piketty’s book. One is that the six-decade period of growing equality in western nations – starting roughly with the onset of World War I and extending into the early 1970s – was unique and highly unlikely to be repeated. That period, Piketty suggests, represented an exception to the more deeply rooted pattern of growing inequality.

According to Piketty, those halcyon six decades were the result of two world wars and the Great Depression. The owners of capital – those at the top of the pyramid of wealth and income – absorbed a series of devastating blows. These included the loss of credibility and authority as markets crashed; physical destruction of capital throughout Europe in both World War I and World War II; the raising of tax rates, especially on high incomes, to finance the wars; high rates of inflation that eroded the assets of creditors; the nationalization of major industries in both England and France; and the appropriation of industries and property in post-colonial countries.

At the same time, the Great Depression produced the New Deal coalition in the United States, which empowered an insurgent labor movement. The postwar period saw huge gains in growth and productivity, the benefits of which were shared with workers who had strong backing from the trade union movement and from the dominant Democratic Party. Widespread support for liberal social and economic policy was so strong that even a Republican president who won easily twice, Dwight D. Eisenhower, recognized that an assault on the New Deal would be futile. In Eisenhower’s words, “Should any political party attempt to abolish Social Security, unemployment insurance, and eliminate labor laws and farm programs, you would not hear from that party again in our political history.”

The six decades between 1914 and 1973 stand out from the past and future, according to Piketty, because the rate of economic growth exceeded the after-tax rate of return on capital. Since then, the rate of growth of the economy has declined, while the return on capital is rising to its pre-World War I levels.

“If the rate of return on capital remains permanently above the rate of growth of the economy – this is Piketty’s key inequality relationship,” Milanovic writes in his review, it “generates a changing functional distribution of income in favor of capital and, if capital incomes are more concentrated than incomes from labor (a rather uncontroversial fact), personal income distribution will also get more unequal — which indeed is what we have witnessed in the past 30 years.”

Piketty has produced the chart at Figure 1 to illustrate his larger point.

The only way to halt this process, he argues, is to impose a global progressive tax on wealth – global in order to prevent (among other things) the transfer of assets to countries without such levies. A global tax, in this scheme, would restrict the concentration of wealth and limit the income flowing to capital.

Piketty would impose an annual graduated tax on stocks and bonds, property and other assets that are customarily not taxed until they are sold. He leaves open the rate and formula for distributing revenues.

The Piketty diagnosis helps explain the recent drop in the share of national income going to labor (see Figure 2) and a parallel increase in the share going to capital.

Piketty’s analysis also sheds light on the worldwide growth in the number of the unemployed. The International Labor Organization, an agency of the United Nations, reported recently that the number of unemployed grew by 5 million from 2012 to 2013, reaching nearly 202 million by the end of last year. It is projected to grow to 215 million by 2018.

Piketty’s wealth tax solution runs directly counter to the principles of contemporary American conservatives who advocate antithetical public policies: cutting top rates and eliminating the estate tax. It would also run counter to the interests of those countries that have purposefully legislated low tax rates in order to attract investment. The very infeasibility of establishing a global wealth tax serves to reinforce Piketty’s argument concerning the inevitability of increasing inequality.

Some liberals are none too happy with Piketty, either.

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Fig. 2: Nonfarm Business Sector: Labor Share U.S. Department of Labor

Dean Baker, one of the founders of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, wrote me in an email that he believes that Piketty “is far too pessimistic.” Baker contends that there are a host of far less ambitious actions that might help to ameliorate inequality:

“Is it really implausible that we would ever see any sort of tax on finance in the U.S., either the financial transactions tax that I would favor or the financial activities tax advocated by the I.M.F.?”

Baker also noted that “much of our capital is tied up in intellectual property” and that reform of patent laws could serve both to limit the value of drug and other patents and simultaneously lower consumer costs.

Lawrence Mishel, the president of the Economic Policy Institute, responded to my email asking for his take on Piketty:

“We’d take the perspective that this phenomenon is related to the suppression of wage growth so that policies which generate broad-based wage growth are an antidote. The political economy is such that the political power to enact those taxes also requires a mobilized citizenry and institutional power, such as a robust labor movement.”

Daron Acemoglu, a more centrist economist at MIT, praised Piketty’s careful acquisition of data, as well as his emphasis on the economic forces and political conflicts over distribution that shape inequality. In an email, Acemoglu went on to say:

“Part of his interpretation I do not share. Piketty argues that there is a natural tendency for high inequality in ‘capitalist’ economies (the term capitalist is not my favorite) and that certain unusual events (world wars, the Great Depression and policy responses thereto) temporarily reduced inequality. Then both earnings inequality and inequality between capital and labor have been reverting back to their ‘normal’ levels. I don’t think that the data allow us to reach this conclusion. All we see is this pattern of fall and rise, but so many other things are going on. It is consistent with what Piketty says, but it is also consistent with certain technological changes and discontinuities (or globalization) having created a surge in inequality which will then stabilize or even reverse in the next several decades. It is also consistent with the dynamics of political power changing and this being a major contributor to the rise in inequality in advanced economies. We may be seeing parts of several different trends underpinned by several different major shocks rather than the mean-reverting dynamics following the shocks that Piketty singles out.”

There is, however, significant liberal applause for Piketty.

Richard Freeman, an economist at Harvard who specializes in inequality, unions and employment patterns, wrote me by email:

“I am in 100 percent agreement with Piketty and would add that much of labor inequality comes because high earners got paid through stock options and capital ownership.”

Freeman and two colleagues, Joseph Blasi and Douglas Kruse, professors at the School of Labor and Management Relations at Rutgers, contend in their 2013 book, “The Citizen’s Share: Putting Ownership Back into Democracy,” that they have an alternative to a global wealth tax. They argue that:

“The way forward is to reform the structure of American business so that workers can supplement their wages with significant capital ownership stakes and meaningful capital income and profit shares.”

In other words, let’s turn everyone into a capitalist.

Piketty does not treat worker ownership as a solution, and he is generally dismissive of small-bore reforms, arguing that they will have only modest effects on economic growth worldwide, which he believes is very likely to be stuck at 1 to 1.5 percent through the rest of this century.

Piketty joins a number of scholars raising significant questions about how the global economic system will deal with such phenomena as robotics, the hollowing out of the job market, outsourcing and global competition.

His prognosis is extremely bleak. Without what he acknowledges is a politically unrealistic global wealth tax, he sees the United States and the developed world on a path toward a degree of inequality that will reach levels likely to cause severe social disruption.

Final judgment on Piketty’s work will come with time – a problem in and of itself, because if he is right, inequality will worsen, making it all the more difficult to take preemptive action.

Sent from my iPad

NSA spying through Angry Birds, Google Maps, leaked documents reportedly reveal | Fox News

Enough is enough. This has got to stop. Angry Birds?

http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2014/01/27/nsa-spying-through-angry-birds-google-maps/

NSA spying through Angry Birds, Google Maps, leaked documents reportedly reveal

Angry Birds Logo

The NSA and its British counterpart are tapping popular smartphone apps such as Angry Birds to peek into the tremendous amounts of very personal data those bits of software collect — including age, location sex and even sexual preferences, according to new reports from the New York Times and The Guardian.

Citing confidential documents provided by whistleblower Edward Snowden, the reports detail efforts to supplement data collection from cell phone carriers and smartphones by tapping into “leaky” apps themselves.

“Some apps, the documents state, can share users’ most sensitive information such as sexual orientation – and one app recorded in the material even sends specific sexual preferences such as whether or not the user may be a swinger,” the Guardian said.

That information can come from a user profile, which may contain martial status — options included “single,” “married,” “divorced,” “swinger” and more, the report said.

Both spy agencies showed a particular interest in Google Maps, which is accurate to within a few yards or better in some locations and would clearly pass along data about a phone owner’s whereabouts.

“It effectively means that anyone using Google Maps on a smartphone is working in support of a GCHQ system,” reads a secret 2008 report by the NSA’s sister spy agency, according to the New York Timesexternal-link.png.

More surprising is the wide range of apps that the agencies cull for data, including innocent-seeming apps such as Angry Birds. One document in particular from GCHQ listed what information can be extracted from which apps, citing Android apps but suggesting the same data was available from the iPhone platform.

Angry Birds maker Rovio said it had no knowledge of any NSA or GCHQ programs or mechanisms for tapping into its users’ data.

“Rovio doesn’t have any previous knowledge of this matter, and have not been aware of such activity in 3rd party advertising networks,” said Saara Bergstrom, Rovio’s VP of marketing and communications. “Nor do we have any involvement with the organizations you mentioned [NSA and GCHQ].”

Mobile photo uploads appear to be a particularly rich source of information for the spy agencies as well. Metadata in the photos — which is often ultimately stripped from pictures by social media sites like Facebook and Twitter — is briefly available.

The NSA and GCHQ are able to tap into that metadat to collect a wealth of key data points about a person’s life, including age, gender, marital status (“Options include single, married, divorced, swinger and more,” The Guardian saidexternal-link.png), income, education level and more.

“NSA does not profile everyday Americans as it carries out its foreign intelligence mission,” the agency told the Times in response to questions about the program.

During a Monday press conference, White House press secretary Jay Carney stressed that same position.

“As the president said in his Jan. 17 speech, to the extent data is collected by the NSA, through whatever means, we are not interested in the communications of people who are not valid foreign intelligence targets and we are not after the information of ordinary Americans,” he said.

T-Mobile will help you cash your checks: how it works – The Washington Post

A few more details on the T-Mobile Mobile Money program…

http://m.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/t-mobile-will-cash-your-checks-how-it-works/2014/01/22/e00f9a42-836b-11e3-9dd4-e7278db80d86_story.html

T-Mobile will help you cash your checks: how it works

T-Mobile is fond of saying that it’s redefining the mobile carrier world with its “uncarrier” initiatives. And its latest announcement, on Wednesday, adds a new angle to the definition of “mobile banking”: The company is now getting into the check-cashing business.

The service, called Mobile Money, is timed for a February launch and will be available at T-Mobile retail locations and participating Safeway stores around the country, the company says. The big promise from T-Mobile is that the service will allow users to cash their checks without “excessive fees” that traditional check-cashing companies require.

Customers don’t have to be T-Mobile wireless subscribers to be Mobile Money subscribers — or vice versa — but being both has its perks. The company will automatically waive monthly fees for its wireless customers.

T-Mobile%20Visa%20Card.jpg?type=mobile

T-Mobile announced that it is offering a prepaid card from Visa and a check cashing service, expanding its reach from wireless service to personal finance. (Courtesy of T-Mobile)

“Millions of Americans pay outrageous fees to check cashers, payday lenders and other predatory businesses – just for the right to use their own money,” said T-Mobile chief executive John Legere in a press release. “Mobile Money shifts the balance of power for T-Mobile customers and keeps more money in their pockets.”

So, how will it work? T-Mobile customers will get a T-Mobile prepaid Visa Card that can be loaded and reloaded through the Mobile Money app. The company did not give specifics but said it will offer the services at a “reduced fee or $0 cost” for its registered wireless customers. The service will require no minimum balance and also promises no overdraft fees. On an information page, T-Mobile said there will be fees for “non-typical use,” such as overnight card shipments, using an out-of-network ATM and putting rush demands on checks to be cashed.

From their Mobile Money accounts, users will be able to direct-deposit paychecks, deposit checks via smartphone camera, make purchases, pay bills and withdraw cash from 42,000 ATMs across the country, T-Mobile said.

The service sounds similar to a program Walmart and American Express began offering in 2012 called Bluebird, which gives users a prepaid card aimed at the “non-banked” or “underbanked” sections of the population who do not have traditional bank accounts. As The Washington Post’s Danielle Douglas reported, banks are bracing for the possibility that the federal government may begin imposing new rules on such consumer products, including prepaid cards.

But T-Mobileappears eager to step into the space. “Mobile Money builds on T-Mobile’s financing experience to provide a sensible and affordable alternative to checking fees for the roughly 68 million U.S. adults who do not have traditional accounts and have to rely on alternative financial services,” the company said in a statement.

The move makes a certain amount of sense , given that T-Mobile has aggressively gone after the lower end of the smartphone market and the prepaid market — moves that make them particularly popular with young customers and those in urban areas. Those demographics match pretty well with the FDIC’s profile of American’s unbanked from a 2012 report.

Those interested can sign up for the service starting Wednesday, T-Mobile said.

Related stories:

Wells Fargo, U.S. Bank to end deposit advance loans, citing tougher regulation

Innovations: T-Mobile is trying its hand at banking

In bidding war with AT&T, T-Mobile offers new customers as much as $650

Follow The Post’s new tech blog, The Switch, where technology and policy connect.

T-Mobile is trying its hand at banking – The Washington Post

One week ago I attended a meeting of tech startups focused on financial services. The topic was serving the unbanked and under banked. Now, a week later, T-mobile has an offering. As I recall from the meeting, major reasons people don’t use banks include (1) they don’t trust them, (2) banks fees are too high, and (3) access. T-Mobile’s move address all three issues. T-Mobile customers use the same kiosk they already use to pay their bill via cash. Now there is an additional option to deposit cash into a T-Mobile bank account. Let’s see how this works.

http://m.washingtonpost.com/blogs/innovations/wp/2014/01/22/t-mobile-is-trying-its-hand-at-banking/?tid=hpModule_a2e19bf4-86a3-11e2-9d71-f0feafdd1394

T-Mobile is trying its hand at banking

2014-01-06T153407Z_01_TOR606_RTRIDSP_3_TMOBILE-VERIZON.jpg

T-Mobile and CEO John Legere have another new idea. (Brendan McDermid/Reuters)

Here’s a look at six ideas that could affect to how we live, work and play.

1. Banking with your wireless provider.

I’ve written in the past about T-Mobile’s renegade CEO and his desire to shake up the telecom industry. Well, John Legere is at it again. His company’s latest offering is a low-cost alternative for millions of Americans who don’t have a bank account or rely on expensive checking-cashing and payday-loan services. Via Hayley Tsukayama:

From their Mobile Money accounts, users will be able to direct-deposit paychecks, deposit checks via smartphone camera, make purchases, pay bills and withdraw cash from 42,000 ATMs across the country, T-Mobile said.

2. The computer chip that cancels out sound waves. From Forbes:

The company has already gained acceptance in data centers, where its chip is valued for its ability to reduce server noise without affecting airflow. Silentium has also found a receptive audience in the transportation industry. Barath said the company is working with a variety of automotive and aerospace seat makers who are gearing up to manufacture noise-cancelling headrests. The idea, Barath explains, is to create a quiet bubble that lets a person enjoy desired sounds, like music or a movie, without having to suffer the roar of engines and other aural assaults.

3. Verizon, Amazon could be threats to cable.

Cable companies such as Comcast and Time Warner are in trouble. Customers are disappearing, cord-cutting is hot, and alternatives such as Netflix are strengthening. Now Amazon is reportedly considering an online pay-TV service complete with live channels. Verizon just purchased an online video-streaming service, which paves the way for it to become a larger player in TV programming and what becomes of it.

4. The interactive resume. Robby Leonardi’s resume is in a class of its own.

5. Does Apple need an iPhablet? From Venturebeat:

Last year, 20 million phablets (smartphones with screens larger than 5.5 inches) shipped to consumers around the world. And according to the analysts at Juniper Research, that figure will rise by 100 million units over the next four years — meaning that by 2018, manufacturers will be shipping 120 million phablets per year.

Any way you slice it, that’s going to be a multi-billion dollar pie — a pie of which Apple currently has no slice whatsoever.

6. Long stories find a home on the small screen. From The Atlantic:

Buzzfeed published a piece called “Why I Bought a House in Detroit for $500.” The story ended up getting more than a million pageviews, which is notable because it is also more than 6,000 words long. The other notable thing: 47 percent of those views came from people accessing the story on mobile devices. And while people who read the piece on tablets spent an average of more than 12 minutes with the story, those doing so on phones spent more than 25 minutes–a small eternity, in Internet time.

LA Times – Oxfam report highlights widening income gap between rich, poor

No surprises here. Someone needs to come up with practical steps for the 99% to take to reduce the wealth gap. I am not so sure you can count on the 1% to help reduce their lead.

I have a few suggestions in my “Cadence of Finance” presentation. Robert Reich has more in his “Aftershock” book. Maybe someday those suggestions will be put into practice.

http://touch.latimes.com/#section/-1/article/p2p-78974229/

Oxfam report highlights widening income gap between rich, poor

As business and political leaders gather in Davos, Switzerland, to discuss the improving world economy, new evidence emerged about how much the rich have become richer — and how much further the poor are falling behind.

The 85 richest people on Earth now have the same amount of wealth as the bottom half of the global population, according to a report released Monday by the British humanitarian group Oxfam International.

The findings highlight the widening gap between rich and poor ahead of the annual World Economic Forum this week. The report, and others recently on the issue, could boost efforts in Washington to increase the federal minimum wage, which President Obama has made a priority.

“It is staggering that in the 21st century, half of the world’s population own no more than a tiny elite whose numbers could all sit comfortably in a single train carriage,” said Winnie Byanyima, Oxfam’s executive director.

“Widening inequality is creating a vicious circle where wealth and power are increasingly concentrated in the hands of a few, leaving the rest of us to fight over crumbs from the top table,” Byanyima said.

The bottom half of the population — about 3.5 billion people — account for about $1.7 trillion, or about 0.7% of the world’s wealth, according to the Oxfam report, titled “Working for the Few.”

That’s the same amount of wealth attributed to the world’s 85 richest people.

Those wealthy elite are a small part of the richest 1% of the world’s population, which combined has amassed about 46% of the world’s wealth, or $110 trillion, according to the report. The top 1% had 65 times the total wealth of the bottom half of the population.

Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, said he’s not surprised by the Oxfam report and others showing increased inequality between rich and poor.

“As long as we maintain high rates of unemployment, I don’t see any prospect of reversing this situation,” Baker said. “The only time where workers in the middle and bottom of the wage distribution were able to achieve sustained gains was in the late ’90s when we had low unemployment.”

He’s less concerned with measures of wealth, which have been inflated by stock market gains and could reverse with a market downturn. But he noted that income growth for poor and middle-class Americans has lagged behind that of the rich in the last three decades.

The Oxfam findings and others should help build support for an increase in the federal minimum wage, Baker said.

In a report last week, the World Economic Forum said widening income inequality was the risk most likely to cause serious damage in the next decade. Obama recently called the expanding gap between rich and poor a bigger threat to the U.S. economy than the budget deficit.

A Gallup poll released Monday found two-thirds of Americans were dissatisfied with the way income and wealth are distributed in the nation. The wealth gap was a factor in nationwide rallies last month by fast-food workers seeking higher wages.

Oxfam said the United States has led a worldwide growth in wealth concentration.

The percentage of income held by the richest 1% in the U.S. has grown nearly 150% from 1980 through 2012. That small elite has received 95% of wealth created since 2009, after the financial crisis, while the bottom 90% of Americans have become poorer, Oxfam said.

The uneven gains of the economic recovery, in which many people have had to take lower-paying jobs, have exacerbated income inequality, said Christine Owens, executive director of the National Employment Law Project.

“The people who are losing ground are the people in the middle and the bottom” of the economic spectrum, Owens said.

There also are concerns about the broader effect of the wealth gap.

“Income inequality is also socially destabilizing,” Owens said. “So it’s not just a question of fairness; it’s a question of how do we preserve a functioning democracy, and it’s difficult to do that if we don’t have broadly shared prosperity.”

The problem exists worldwide, Oxfam said.

The share of wealth owned by the richest 1% since 1980 expanded in all but two of the 26 nations tracked by researchers in the World Top Incomes Database. That has put a “massive concentration of economic resources in the hands of fewer people,” the report said.

Falling taxes for the rich and an increased use of tax havens have helped widen income inequality, Oxfam said.

The group called on World Economic Forum participants, which include some of the wealthiest and most influential corporate executives, to take steps to reverse the trend.

Among other things, Oxfam wants them to support progressive taxation, pledge not to dodge taxes, pay a living wage to workers at their companies and push governments “to provide universal healthcare, education and social protection” for their citizens.

jim.puzzanghera