Category Archives: Political
How tax code devalues labor
USA TODAY
3 Reasons to Fade a Fiscal Cliff Freak-out | The Exchange – Yahoo! Finance
China’s Factories Losing Pricing Power in Earnings Threat- Bloomberg
Most “American” cars index
Yes, this article causes endless debates. My opinion: buy whatever car you want to with the money you earned. If you buy a Ford Fusion made in Mexico by exploited cheap labor you can say “the profits stay in the US.” But ask yourself, in that situation, who has those profits? Is it primarily in the hands of the executives (read: the 1%). If you buy a Toyota Camry and are told “all the profits go to Japan” ask yourself (and the questioner) “just how much of every $1 spent on a Camry goes to US workers / US executives / Toyota in Japan and how does that compare with the $1 spent on a Ford fusion made in Mexico?”
I have not come across any numbers in that amount of detail. Also, the profit margins on mass-produced midsize sedans like the Camry are relatively low to begin with. Given that, what precisely are “all the profits going to Japan?” I hear that argument in a Cadillac vs. Lexus debate. It does not make much sense to me in a Mexican assembled Ford Fusion vs. a Kentucky assembled Toyota Camry.
State updates list of Top 500 delinquent taxpayers
Insurance exec gives another $8M to initiative – AP State Wire News – The Sacramento Bee
Report Threatens Huawei’s Growth Plans
Wall St.’s Next Profit Scheme — Buying Up Every Piece of Your Home Town
This is a long read that I have not finished on Wall St and privatization. From the big picture perspective allow me to use dialectical reasoning:
- Thesis: public workers and governments are broken and bloated. We need to cut pensions, pay, services, and useless government jobs.
- Anti-thesis: the private sector free-market system is destroying the public sector (e.g., education) and taking every opportunity to concentrate wealth in the hands of the few.
- Synthesis: Both the public sector and private sector need fixing. Government employees and systems need to see some cuts. Private bondholders need to see some losses and face more prudent regulation going forward.
Why is “synthesis” left out of most discussions? As the linked article points out, California municipalities had to borrow as a result of Proposition 13. When you slash real estate taxes in half across the board where does the revenue come from to support existing government operations? Also, bear in mind who benefitted the most from those real estate tax cuts: the wealthy and in particular commercial real estate owners.
So, with a shortfall in revenue municipalities faced a choice: cut services or borrow money. It turns out they borrowed money from already-wealthy private entities. That could last only so long. Now, municipalities are facing another choice: cut services to continue to pay interest to the already wealthy private entities or keep the services, restore taxes, and default on those existing municipal bonds.
The Economist had an article on Prop 13 in April 2011. The same arguments were made in that article. The tax cut proposed to “help your grandmother keep her home” was really a tax cut that saved the wealthy commercial property owners millions (perhaps billions) while eviscerating school systems and public services. The Alternet article points out the subtle point that this lead to borrowing, and borrowing from already wealthy Wall Street types. They must get their tax-exempt interest you know!
This reminds me of when the Federal Government debated extending the debt ceiling last year. The notion that we must raise the debt ceiling or our veterans may not receive benefits did not sit well with me. I thought “Why don’t we keep funding the military and veterans, stop paying interest to overseas lenders (China), and then enter renegotiations with those lenders? The notion of not paying veterans to ensure China receives their interest payment seems ludicrous.”
Shared sacrifice will lead to shared prosperity. We need to see both. We will see both. I hope. 🙂