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Creativity Motivation – What is motivation – Corey K Katir
Advertising From http://www.creativitymotivation.com Describes motivation process for creativity with emphasis on intrinsic motivation by Corey K Katir How bad would it be for Greece to leave the euro?
From feeds.washingtonpost
Now letas go to the counterarguments. Greek economist Yanis Varoufakis says this sort of talk is aprofoundly wronga and that thereas no way Greece can emulate Argentina. For one, the trade situations were completely different (Argentina got to sell a bunch of commodities to a fast-growing Chinese market.) Second, Varoufakis argues that Greece wouldnat simply be devaluing its currency the way Argentina did a it would be swapping out an old currency for a brand-new one. And that transition could get very, very messy. aBank of Greece colleagues tell me that it will take months before ATMs are stocked with new drachmas once they get the go-ahead to print them,a he writes. In the interim, Greece would be aunmonetiseda a people would be paying each other with IOUs, presumably a a good recipe for civil unrest and other nasty surprises.** Varoufakis also worries that a Greece exit could drag down the rest of Europe. What if, say, countries like Portugal and Italy start seeing their own bank runs and head for the exits? A continent-wide euro collapse could make it nearly impossible for a newly unshackled Greece to keep growing through trade: When Argentina defaulted and broke the peg, the ill effects on its trading partners (China, Brazil, etc.), as well as on the broader macro-economy in which it was functioning, were negligible. If Greece leaves the euro, however, the results will most certainly prove catastrophic for our aeconomic ecology,a and in a never-ending circle of negative feedback, will bite our struggling nation back. For what itas worth, most Greeks tend to side with Varoufakis a polls show that some 80 percent of the country wants to stay within the euro. Still, as we discussed yesterday, if Greek bank customers keep withdrawing their money from Greek banks and sending their euros off to Germany, that could drain the country of its currency and force a Greek exit anyway a even if no one actually wants to leave. ** How long would it take for Greece to print and distribute a new currency, anyway? Hereas one historical precedent: aIn 2003, the U.S.-led coalition managed to do it in Iraq in less than three months. But that required the efforts of De La Rue, a British speciality printer, a squadron of 27 Boeing 747s and 500 armed Fijian guards to ease the process.a
The TED talk TED doesnat want you to hear
From feeds.washingtonpost
TED describes itself as aa nonprofit devoted to Ideas Worth Spreading.a In case that was unclear, their statement of purpose is just four lean words: aOur mission: Spreading ideas.a But as Seattle venture capitalist Nick Hanauer has learned, that mission comes with an unwritten caveat: aUnless the ideas might offend one party or the other.a
In November, Hanauer wrote a column for Bloomberg View taking direct aim at the conventional wisdom on taxation and job creation.
aIam a very rich person,a he wrote. aAs an entrepreneur and venture capitalist, Iave started or helped get off the ground dozens of companies in industries including manufacturing, retail, medical services, the Internet and software. I founded the Internet media company aQuantive Inc., which was acquired by Microsoft Corp. in 2007 for $6.4 billion. I was also the first non-family investor in Amazon.com Inc.a
aEven so, Iave never been a ajob creator.a I can start a business based on a great idea, and initially hire dozens or hundreds of people. But if no one can afford to buy what I have to sell, my business will soon fail and all those jobs will evaporate.a
aThatas why I can say with confidence that rich people donat create jobs, nor do businesses, large or small. What does lead to more employment is the feedback loop between customers and businesses. And only consumers can set in motion a virtuous cycle that allows companies to survive and thrive and business owners to hire. An ordinary middle-class consumer is far more of a job creator than I ever have been or ever will be.a
And for that reason, Hanauer said, taxes on the rich would create jobs. aIt is mathematically impossible to invest enough in our economy and our country to sustain the middle class (our customers) without taxing the top 1 percent at reasonable levels again. Shifting the burden from the 99 percent to the 1 percent is the surest and best way to get our consumer-based economy rolling again.a
In March, Hanauer was asked to give a TED talk on the subject. The talk went well. aI want to put this talk out into the world!a one excited TED official told Hanauer.
But as the National Journalas Jim Tankersley reports, Hanaueras talk never quite made it out into the world. In an e-mail to Hanauer, Chris Anderson, director of TED, wrote that he wouldnat post the talk because ait would be unquestionably regarded as out and out political. Weare in the middle of an election year in the US. Your argument comes down firmly on the side of one party.a
Tankersley has posted the full transcript of Hanaueras talk. Heas also got the slides. But no one has the video because TED refuses to release it.
The speech itself mostly rehashes Hanauers op-ed. The conclusion, though, is tailored directly to the TED mission a or, at least, what Hanauer thought was the TED mission.
aSo hereas an idea worth spreading,a says Hanauer. aIn a capitalist economy, the true job creators are consumers, the middle class. And taxing the rich to make investments that grow the middle class is the single smartest thing we can do for the middle class, the poor and the rich.a
Whether the idea is aworth spreadinga or not is up to you to judge. But TED wonat be spreading it. Because as we know, the history of ideas worth spreading is that they never offend societyas entrenched interests.
Update: TED has released Hanaueras talk. You can view it here.
What the oil industry wants a in charts
From feeds.washingtonpost
In many ways, life has never been better for the U.S. oil and gas industries. Production is up, thanks to new fracking technology. Profits are high. Thereas little chance Congress will cap carbon emissions anytime soon. What more could they ask for?
First up is this graph showing where the current boom in oil and natural gas production is taking place. Mostly, itas occurring on private lands a in, for instance, the oil-rich Bakken shale formation that spans North Dakota and Montana. By contrast, oil and gas production has flatlined and even dropped in areas that are supervised by the federal government:
Does this mean the government is stifling production? Thatas a murky question. The first two years of the Obama administration saw a rise (pdf) in oil production on federal lands. Then there was a drop in 2011. But a big reason for the drop was the temporary moratorium on deepwater drilling in the Gulf of Mexico after the BP oil spill. This is now being reversed: As the Energy Information Administration explains, drilling has resumed in the region, but itas been a slow, fitful recovery, thanks to a aslower permitting process with increased environmental review.a
But itas not all about the Gulf of Mexico. API also argues that permits for new oil and gas drilling on Western lands has also been too sluggish a something the Obama administration recently said it would try to correct.
Still, speedier permitting, along with lower taxes and less regulation, is only a part of APIas wish list. The biggest request from the industry is for Congress to open up the rest of Americaas coasts for oil and gas exploration. The key targets here are the Eastern Gulf of Mexico and the Outer Continental Shelf in the Atlantic and Pacific. (The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and parts of the Rocky Mountains are their big onshore targets.) Hereas the map:
Bear in mind that opening up these areas isnat as simple as it sounds a even many of Floridaas Republicans arenat thrilled with the notion of a potential spill near the stateas beaches. Opponents of expanded offshore drilling argue that thereas not nearly enough oil in these parts anyway: A 2009 EIA analysis, for instance, found that opening up the Outer Continental Shelf would only lower gasoline prices by 3 cents per gallon by 2030. In response, API argues that there might be far more oil in these areas than anyone suspects a the industry just needs a chance to look.
Finally, API contends that if we can open up all of these areas to exploration, keep building oil pipelines from Canada a the ever-controversial Keystone XL pipeline is on their wish-list a and ramp up biofuels production, then the United States could eliminate oil imports from everywhere but Canada by around 2030. Hereas what that would look like:
Yes, wead still be relying on Canada, but API argues that dollars used to buy Canadian oil are more likely to be recycled back into the U.S. economy than dollars used to buy oil elsewhere.
Not everyoneas as impressed with APIas report. Three researchers from the Center for American Progress a Jorge Madrid, Kate Gordon, and Tina Ramos a have published a response to API. They argue that adystopiaa will ensue if the oil industry gets its way and we maintain our current dependence on crude for the next few decades. Hereas what dystopia looks like in chart form:
Carbon emissions keep going up, up, and up. The CAP report spends a lot of time dwelling on the consequences of unchecked global warming a e.g., by 2030 wildfires in Western states like Montana will increase by 300 percent. But they also point out that the sort of energy security promised by API is still no defense against high prices and other shocks.
Related: CBO: True oil independence is an unrealistic dream.
Democrats talk about cutting entitlements. Republicans donat talk about raising taxes.
From feeds.washingtonpost
The line you often hear in Washington is that Republicans wonat talk taxes and Democrats wonat talk entitlements. The two parties, the thinking goes, are similarly irresponsible, albeit on opposite sides of the budget.
aOur partyas problem is, we are always reluctant to give up the gains of the past to create the future,a Bill Clinton told the audience at the Pete Petersonas fiscal summit. aDemocrats are reluctant to commit to longer-term health-care savings; they donat want to touch Social Security.a
Clinton went on to attack Republicans for becoming a far more extreme and ideological party, making compromise nearly impossible. But he brought up the same point time and again: aMy party is not blameless.a
Rep. Xavier Becerra (D-Calif.), a former member of the supercommittee, echoed the same sentiments at Petersonas deficit-reduction confab. In responding to legitimate fears that Republicans would privatize or eliminate social services,amaybe Democrats worked too hard to protect those programs from devastating cuts and in doing so, perhaps that has kept us from trying to come up with a smart budget,a Becerra admitted.
Democrats say they took these criticisms to heart during the supercommittee negotiations, initially proposing $400 billion in savings from Medicare a half through benefit cuts and half through provider cuts. Democrats point to such proposals as evidence of their partyas willingness to compromise and incorporate a diversity of views, blaming Republican intransigence for the deficit-reduction talksa ultimate failure. aWe have a lot of people in our party who will not be drummed out if they depart from the conventional wisdom,a Clinton explained.
For all that the Democrats tried to show they were willing to talk entitlements, you didnat hear any Republicans at Petersonas fiscal summit saying that they should be willing to compromise more by considering tax increases.
Even when asked point-blank how the GOP was to blame for the deficit crisis, Sen. Rob Portman a Bushas budget director and another supercommittee alum a avoided any mention of taxes. Yes, he said, the Bush administration could have paid more attention to the long-term fiscal picture. But it was because aafter 9/11, particularly … more was spent on homeland security, defense,a Portman explained. He added that Bush should have vetoed costly appropriations bills from Congress and cut more social spending. What he didnat bring up: the Bush tax cuts a which have added more than $1.8 trillion to the deficit, more than any single other program under his presidency or Obamaas.
When Republican discuss a fresh approach to taxes, they cast it as atax reforma that excluded any tax hikes. aWhat also doesnat count as acuts and reformsa are tax increases,a said Speaker John Boehner, declaring that the GOP would refuse the lift the debt-ceiling a once again a until equivalent acuts and reformsa were passed. (Read Boehneras full speech.)
CNNas Erin Burnett prodded Boehner further to see whether Republicans were, in fact, completely unwilling to compromise on the issue. After all, closing tax loopholes and carve-outs a something that the House speaker did promise to do a would presumably result in some people paying more, right?
Boehner stuck to the script, insisting that alowering rates and broadening the basea was the only acceptable answer. Burnett pressed the question again: aBroadening the basea meant closing loopholes, which meant taxes for some would go up, right? Boehner equivocated. aYeah, some may pay more and some may pay less,a he said quickly.
So, under duress, Republicans signaled a tiny bit of wiggle room on taxes. Sen. Pat Toomey suggested as much during the last gasp of the supercommittee negotiations, with a proposal that would save $250 billion through limiting tax deductions and write-offs.
But unlike the Democrats, Republicans are much more reluctant to self-flagellate. And they certainly werenat going to question the partyas ano tax increasesa line on stage at the Andrew Mellon auditorium, with TV cameras rolling.
Boehneras debt ceiling crisis would be so much worse than you think
From feeds.washingtonpost
Thereas some chance that House Speaker John Boehneras threat to provoke another debt-ceiling crisis doesnat much matter. If it does matter, itas only because fiscal policy has already gone very, very wrong.
In other words, the Bush tax cuts expire on Dec. 31. The automatic spending cuts begin on Dec. 31. The debt ceiling likely wonat come due till February, or perhaps even March. So the scenario in which we reach a debt ceiling showdown is a scenario in which the two parties have already failed to come to an agreement on spending and taxes.
That is to say, itas a scenario in which weave already reached the fiscal cliff and fallen over the edge. Itas a scenario in which the Bush tax cuts have probably expired, and the spending cuts have probably begun. Itas a scenario in which the markets are already in some amount of turmoil, and the forecasters are already sharply warning that Congress is dragging the country into a double-dip recession. Itas a scenario in which the two parties are already under tremendous pressure, in which Washington has been in some sort of semi-crisis for months, and in which all the possible deals have already been tried and failed. (Itas also a scenario, incidentally, in which our projected deficits are much lower, because our expected tax revenues are so much higher.)
The alternative possibility is that Congress has passed, and the president has signed, some sort of short-term patch to prevent the tax cuts from expiring and the spending cuts from triggering. But Boehner just radically reduced the odds of that: Why would Democrats patch the Bush tax cuts, which give them leverage, just so Boehner could provoke a debt-ceiling crisis in order to give his party leverage?
So weare not likely to have a adebt-ceiling crisis.a Weare either likely to solve our fiscal problems early in the year in way that defuses Boehneras debt-ceiling threat or weare likely to spend 2013 in a state of permanent crisis in which Congress lights the economy on fire by failing on the Bush tax cuts, the automatic spending cuts, the debt ceiling, and the appropriation bills needed to keep the federal government open.
Thatas not a scenario that looks like August 2011, when the debt ceiling was the only thing on the docket. Itas an economic crisis that looks more like September 2008, when Lehman was collapsing. And in that world, itas so hard to predict the resulting financial chaos, public outrage, interest group pressure, and political terror that itas almost impossible to say anything about how the crisis would be resolved, or who might benefit.
Lunch break: aThe politics of competitive board gaming amongst friendsa
From feeds.washingtonpost
Director Jay Cheel achieves the seemingly impossible: A short, interesting and charming documentary about the board game Settlers of Catan.
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FAQ: What happened at JP Morgan? And should you care?
From feeds.washingtonpost
What was the trade?
As Michael Hiltzik of the Los Angeles Times writes, we donat need to get too technical here. aLeaving aside the sophistication of the transactions themselves, JPMorganas trader, a London-based derivatives expert whose portfolio was so outsized he became known in the markets as the London Whale, essentially bet that corporate debt was becoming less risky as corporations were getting stronger — in trading parlance, he was long corporate debt. But he did so in a way that even a tiny hiccup in the index he was trading could be exploited by rival traders. And thatas what happened.a If you want to get technical, however, FT Alphaville has you covered.
No one really knows yet. Matt Levine, the editor of Dealbreaker, thinks they simply messed up the math that was governing the trade. aThis looks like the CIOas trading desk modelling the actual [profits and loss] and risks of the trade wildly wrong. That seems to me like the simplest way to lose a billion dollars without noticing it. You can see that in Jamieas ajust acause weare stupid doesnat mean everybody else wasa: this was not driven by the market moving against them (though it seems to have), it was driven by them getting the math wrong.a
How much did JP Morgan lose on it?
We donat know. We probably wonat know for awhile. The number $2 billion is floating around. But it could easily be closer to $5 billion when all is said and done. The key here is that the trade isnat over. JP Morgan Chase is still trying to get out of its positions. How quickly they do that, and where the market moves between now and then, will decide the extent of their total losses.
Will JP Morgan need a bailout?
No. Itas hard to believe, but $2 billion, or even $5 billion, just isnat that much money to the bank. In 2011, JP Morganas profits were $19 billion in 2011. And CEO Jamie Dimon called that amildly disappointinga at the time.
So does this matter at all?
Yes.
Why?
For one thing, JP Morgan was known as the best manager of risk on Wall Street. Thatas largely because they made it through the financial crisis mostly unscathed. But it turns out that even the best manager of risk isnat very good. This trade, in fact, looks a lot like the financial crisis: They bet on something unlikely as if it was impossible. Thatas what all those banks did when they made bets on the belief that the housing market never goes down everywhere all at once. Itas a reminder that this is a kind of mistake that even agooda banks make. And remember — JP Morgan made this mistake less than four years after the fall of Lehman Brothers, so this came at a time when the lessons of the crisis are fresh in everyoneas mind, and when regulators are watching closely.
So thatas it? The national media is engaged in a collective attack of post-traumatic stress because the only bank it kinda-sorta trusted did something dumb?
No. Thereas a political dimension here, too. JP Morgan has used its sterling reputation to fight the Volcker rule. Thatas the regulation that says that banks that take commercial loans and get federal insurance to protect those loans — banks that you might open a checking account with, like JP Morgan — canat make speculative bets on their own behalf. If youare going to be a bank, then you canat play at the casino.
The problem is that itas very hard to say when a bank is betting on its own behalf and when its betting on its clientsa behalf. JP Morgan says that this trade was a ahedgea: It was there to reduce risk, not make money. But given how exquisitely it blew up in JP Morganas face, now regulators are going to make sure that the Volcker rule would stop trades like this one from happening. Otherwise, theyall get the blame next time. That means a much tighter Volcker rule — which in turn means JP Morgan (and other banks) wonat make as much money in the coming years. Thatas part of why all their stocks are tumbling. JP Morgan, for instance, lost $14.5 billion on Friday.
And the government may not stop with the Volcker rule. The SEC has opened an investigation. And remember: this is an election year. If a few congressmen band together to propose some much more stringent regulations on the banks, thereas some chance that they could sail through as both parties try to show theyare tougher on the banks.
What else could they do?
Lots. If you look hard enough, you can find many, many regulatory changes that were left out of Dodd-Frank.
For instance, Eliot Spitzer points out that Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JP Morgan Chase, asits on the board of the New York Federal Reserve Bankathe very organization that is supposed to oversee his bankas financial practices, the organization that is supposed to issue all sorts of regulations that control what his bank can do, the very organization he has been lobbying to relax the rules about the bets he wants to make…The Fed conflict is so obvious that it defies any possible rationalization or explanation. For a decade, the New York Fed has failed to pick up on any of the significant Wall Street threats: excess leverage, subprime fraud, dangerous concentration in atoo big to faila entities. Maybe the reason is that the board is controlled by the very voices that have been at the root of the failure. There has been not the slightest voice of protest from the boardayet it is a public organization!a
Canat Wall Street just lean on Congress to stop them?
Possibly. But remember that the most aggressive and effective of Wall Streetas defenders was…Jamie Dimon. And his argument was always that the financial crisis was, in large part, a case of many banks being stupid. But JP Morgan had been smart. And was it really fair to punish JP Morgan for the mistakes of Washington Mutual.
But as Noam Scheiber writes, JP Morganas bad trade just annihilated that argument. aWe now have ironclad proofaas if we really needed itathat everyone is capable of disastrous stupidity. But thatas the one thing Dimon canat admit, since it would require him to support intrusive regulations. Stupidity, in Dimonas mind, is always isolated and explainable, not systemic and unavoidable…[but] almost every mitigating circumstance he cited actually strengthens the case for reform. Dimon made clear that the loss wasnat the work of a rogue trader: The position was completely authorized, he suggested, just poorly executed and weakly monitored. One shudders to think what might have happened at a less scrupulously-managed bankaof which there are manyawhen the losses could have escaped detection much longer. a
What are you more worried about? JP Morgan or Greece.
Oh, Greece. A thousand times Greece. This JP Morgan thing is bad for JP Morgan. Whatas going on in Europe might be bad for the global economy. Or, to put it another way, JP Morganas losses are something you might be angry about, or smug about, but theyare not something you should be worried about. This isnat a second financial crisis or anything.
I have more questions, and you havenat answered them.
Leave them in comments. Iall try and update this post as appropriate.
Wonkbook: The losses and lessons of Hedgegate
From feeds.washingtonpost
On Saturday, at 9:17am, Henry Blodget, the editor of Business Insider, asked the question that was on everyone’s mind: “So, when is JP Morgan going to fire the incompetent fools who just lost $2 billion and trashed the firm’s reputation?”
Over at Seeking Alpha, Gene Kirsch tried to put Hedgegate into a broader context. “JPMorgan losses are reported to be actually $800 million in Q2 with the potential for legal and other losses up to $4.2 billion over a longer period of time, possibly exceeding one year,” he wrote. “The banking unit of JPMorgan Chase alone made $12.4 billion last year. The holding company has over $2.26 trillion in assets and is the largest U.S. bank and 8th largest in the world. The holding company made $29.9 billion in operating income and just over $20 billion in net income for 2011. So, this initial loss of $800M represents approximately 4% of its total net profit for all of 2011, less than 2.7% of its operating income.”
The firm, in other words, can manage it. Though as Brad DeLong was quick to point out, tallying the direct losses misses the episode’s larger impact on the firm’s value. “The revelation that JPMC did not have control over its derivatives book–even though accompanied by promises of multiple firings and deep reforms–destroyed 1/7 of JPMCs franchise value.” Turns out the market doesn’t much like it when what’s reputed to be the safest bank on Wall Street turns out to be incompetent.
Jared Bernstein draws out the larger lesson nicely, and so I’ll quote him at some length. “The fundamental truth here is the one known since Adam (Smith, that is) and amplified by the great financial economist Hy Minsky: humans underprice risk. Their proclivity to do so increases as the business cycle progresses and confidence takes over (remember, JPas bet was unwound by the fact that the economy wasnat as strong as they thought). The advent of a global derivatives market with notional trades in the trillions greatly amplifies the risks.”
“The fact that humans like Jamie Dimonahe who presided over JPas self-proclaimed ‘fortress balance sheet’ahe who inveighed against financial reform as imposing unnecessary oversight on such skilled risk managers as he and his staffafall prey to this fundamental truth only underscores the lesson of this episode in financial hubris.”
“And that is this: financial markets are inherently unstable. They will neither self-correct nor self-regulate. Their instability poses a threat to markets and economies and people across the globe. Therefore, they need to be regulated. Thatas not to say that anyone knows the best way to do this yet in order to balance the necessity of oversight with the dynamics of the markets. We donat know where to set the speed limits. It must be an iterative process. But we do know they need to be set, and JPas loss should be taken as a warning that our tendency is to set them too low.”
Wonkbook dashboard
RCP Obama vs. Romney: Obama +2.0%; 7-day change: Obama -0.3%.
RCP Obama approval: 48.0%; 7-day change: +0.7%.
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Top stories
1) Euro zone leaders are seriously discussing a Greek exit. “Eurozone central bankers have talked publicly for the first time of managing a possible Greek exit from Europeas monetary union as stalemate in Athens talks on a coalition government raises the prospect that Greece will renege on the terms of its international bailout. The comments by members of the European Central Bankas governing council indicate that the risk of eurozone fragmentation is being taken increasingly seriously by the regionas policymakers. They mark a significant shift at the ECB, which has previously argued that European treaties do not allow for an exit and that a break-up would cause incalculable economic damage.” Ralph Atkins in the FT.
Greece is headed towards new elections. “Greece appears headed to new parliamentary elections next month, further delaying its efforts to meet international demands to overhaul its economy, after leaders of the countryas major political parties declared little hope Sunday for a last-ditch effort to form a coalition government…Greek President Karolos Papoulias met with politicians Sunday in an effort to construct a unity government that could guide the country through the bailout program, and he planned to continue discussions Monday. But with top leaders expressing little hope for compromise after a week of efforts, it appeared likely that Papoulias would be forced to call new elections, most likely for June 10 or 17. Hopes for compromise have rested on Alexis Tsipras, the leader of the anti-bailout Coalition of the Radical Left Party, also called Syriza…But Tsipras has refused to go along with the pro-business New Democracy party, which won 19 percent of the May 6 vote, and the Socialists, who won 13 percent.” Michael Birnbaum in The Washington Post.
KRUGMAN: “weare talking about months, not years, for this to play out.”
@TheStalwart: Weird. As @renovatio_news points out, #quediceKrugman (What Krugman Says) is trending in Spain. http://twitpic.com/9ktvbo
2) Wall Street looks the same to voters. The giant $2 billion trading loss at JPMorgan Chase highlights a central problem in President Barack Obamaas case for a second term: Four years after the financial crisis nearly brought the nation to its knees, very little appears to have changed. No high-profile bank executives are in jail. Special multi-agency task forces to go after financial fraud and mortgage market abuses appeared in State of the Union addresses, only to issue a few news releases and mostly vanish from public view. And now one of the largest banks in the United States, headed by a Democrat and operating with government guarantees, has turned in the kind of headline-grabbing, casino-style style loss that drives voters crazy and that Obamaas financial reform bill was supposed to stop. Ben White in Politico .
JPMorgan Chase has been lobbying to make exactly the kind of trades that just lost the company billions of dollars. “Soon after lawmakers finished work on the nationas new financial regulatory law, a team of JPMorgan Chase lobbyists descended on Washington. Their goal was to obtain special breaks that would allow banks to make big bets in their portfolios, including some of the types of trading that led to the $2 billion loss now rocking the bank. Several visits over months by the bankas well-connected chief executive, Jamie Dimon, and his top aides were aimed at persuading regulators to create a loophole in the law, known as the Volcker Rule. The rule was designed by Congress to limit the very kind of proprietary trading that JPMorgan was seeking…The loophole is known as portfolio hedging, a strategy that essentially allows banks to view an investment portfolio as a whole and take actions to offset the risks of the entire portfolio. That contrasts with the traditional definition of hedging, which matches an individual security or trading position with an inversely related investment — so when one goes up, the other goes down.” Edward Wyatt in The New York Times.
The real response to JPMorgan Chase’s loss may come from global regulators, not the Volcker rule. “The size and scale of the surprise $2bn loss at JPMorgan Chase last week is likely to accelerate plans by global regulators to force banks to improve their trading risk models…While initial reactions to the JPMorgan loss last week focused on how it could reshape the US debate over implementing the ‘Volcker rule’ ban on proprietary trading, the misstep by one of the worldas largest banks could have far broader consequences. The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, which sets global rules, has already sought a replacement for Value at Risk – the main measure of potential trading losses – and looked at additional capital requirements to cover potential damages that are not adequately measured by existing models. That project was seen as a long-term effort when it was announced two weeks ago, but it has now gained urgency and could be pushed through more quickly.” Brooke Masters and Tracy Alloway in The Financial Times.
CONFUSED? Here’s an explainer on JPMorgan Chase’s loss.
@davidmwessel: Barney Frank on JPM: Case that banks don’t need new rules to avoid repeat of ’08 crisis “at least $2 billion harder to make todaya (DJNS)
3) Republican state officials are dragging their feet on setting up exchanges. “In about two dozen states across the country, the insurance marketplaces at the heart of the 2010 health-care law remain in limbo, with Republican governors or lawmakers who oppose the statute refusing to act until the Supreme Court decides its constitutionality…In states with Democratic governors, such as New Hampshire and Minnesota, it is often Republican-dominated legislatures that are causing the hold-up. And in six states where Republicans hold both branches of government, including Kansas and South Dakota, state assemblies havenat even considered laws to establish the marketplaces. Though the battles primarily break along partisan lines, there have been at least a half-dozen exceptions. Last spring, the Republican governor of Nevada chose not to stand in the way of an exchange bill adopted by the majority Democratic assembly.” N.C. Aizenman in The Washington Post.
4) Congressional transportation bills won’t fill America’s infrastructure funding shortfall. “The nationas population is growing at a steady pace, yet infrastructure investments lag. The lifelines of commerce — roads, bridges, runways, ports — are showing their age, and in this era of fiscal austerity it may be a long time before they get rebuilt…The financing fiasco has been well-known for years — in fact, the last transportation bill, enacted in 2005, ordered up a blue-ribbon commission tasked with studying the financing problem and making recommendations for how to fix it. The National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commissionas final report, issued in January 2008, a year before the last transportation bill was to expire, recommended that the country needs to be investing at least $225 billion annually from ‘all sources’ for the next 50 years in order to upgrade infrastructure to a state of good repair and make transportation advances. The Senateas current transportation bill, in comparison, would fund highways and transit at $109 billion over two years.” Kathryn Wolfe in Politico.
Top op-eds
1) BAKER AND HASSETT: We need a targeted response to long-term unemployment. “Policy makers must come together and recognize that this is an emergency, and fashion a comprehensive re-employment policy that addresses the specific needs of the long-term unemployed. A policy package that as a whole should appeal to the left and the right should spend money to help expand public and private training programs with proven track records; expand entrepreneurial opportunities by increasing access to small-business financing; reduce government hurdles to the formation of new businesses; and explore subsidies for private employers who hire the long-term unemployed. Those who hire for government jobs must do their share, too: managers who are filling open positions should be given explicit incentives to reconnect these lost workers. Every month of delay is a month in which our unemployed friends and neighbors drift further away.” Dean Baker and Kevin Hassett in The New York Times.
@davidfrum: “50 to 100% increase in death rates for older male workers in yrs immediately following a job loss”
2) YGLESIAS: America is headed towards default. “House Republicans voted to take money away from programs meant to help poor people and give it to the military instead. Thatas not my idea of wise policy, but thatas what was terrible about it. The problem is that the vote constitutes a collective Republican welching on the agreement that was reached last spring to raise the statutory debt ceiling and avoid national default. Yesterdayas vote doesnat undo the deal or cause any immediate problems, but by so speedily backing out of their agreement, the Republicans have done something much worse–made it impossible for anyone to negotiate with them in the future, because itas clear they cannot be trusted to keep the promises they made. If President Obama wins re-election, the debt-ceiling issue will have to be confronted again, but now in a Congress that has been poisoned by the Republicansa welching on the last agreement. The country, in other words, is set for an even more severe version of the crisis that crushed financial markets last summer.” Matthew Yglesias in Slate.
3) KRUGMAN: JPMorgan Chase’s loss proves the need for bank regulation. “Banks are special, because the risks they take are borne, in large part, by taxpayers and the economy as a whole. And what JPMorgan has just demonstrated is that even supposedly smart bankers must be sharply limited in the kinds of risk theyare allowed to take on. Why, exactly, are banks special? Because history tells us that banking is and always has been subject to occasional destructive ‘panics,’ which can wreak havoc with the economy as a whole…So what can be done? In the 1930s, after the mother of all banking panics, we arrived at a workable solution, involving both guarantees and oversight. On one side, the scope for panic was limited via government-backed deposit insurance; on the other, banks were subject to regulations intended to keep them from abusing the privileged status they derived from deposit insurance, which is in effect a government guarantee of their debts.” Paul Krugman in The New York Times.
@Austan_Goolsbee: #lettersyouwontsee: Dear Mr. Volcker, you were right all along. we’re now fixing things and won’t let it happen again. yours, wall St.
4) SLOAN: JPMorgan Chase doesn’t prove the need for the Volcker Rule. “The Volcker Rule, named for former Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker, is an example of the problem involved in regulating giant companies in a complex world. The principle sounds wonderful and simple: Donat let banks use federally insured deposits for risky trades. But implementing it is proving to be incredibly difficult, as realists, including me, predicted would happen. Once bank lawyers finish finding loopholes in the detailed provisions, whatever they prove to be, the rule will probably have little meaningful impact. So bash Morgan all you like for its trading losses, and feel free to snicker at the spectacle of Jamie Dimon losing his swagger and having to eat crow. But donat confuse Morganas mess-up with the supposed need for the Volcker Rule. The Volcker Rule would have symbolic impact, by appearing to rein in Wall Street. But it will prove to be more useful as a full-employment act for loophole specialists than for reining in the banks.” Allan Sloan in The Washington Post.
5) SNOW: Tax cuts on dividends and capital gains should stay. “Nine years ago this month Congress passed President George W. Bush’s Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act. That bill’s lower rates on capital, as well as the continuity in tax policy it established, have helped make our economy far more resilient. The legislation’s centerpiece was a reduction in the taxation of dividends and capital gains to 15%. Unfortunately, the 2003 tax rates, including those on capital income, are due to expire at the end of the year. Capital warrants special tax treatment because of the central role it plays in generating economic growth and jobs. Capital is the very lifeblood of the market economy, the mainstay of innovation, and the foundation for future prosperity. As more of it is put to work today, labor output and wages will rise tomorrow. An appreciation of that critical relationship should guide how the tax system treats earnings from capital.” John Snow in The Wall Street Journal.
6) THALER: Beware of slippery slope arguments on healthcare. “One pernicious category of imaginary risks involves those created by users of the dreaded ‘slippery slope’ arguments. Such arguments are dangerous because they are popular, versatile and often convincing, yet completely fallacious. Worse, they are creeping into an arena that should be above this sort of thing: the Supreme Court, in its deliberations on health care reform…Justice Scalia is arguing that if the court lets Congress create a mandate to buy health insurance, nothing could stop Congress from passing laws requiring everyone to buy broccoli and to join a gym…Please stop! The very fact that a slippery slope is being cited as grounds for declaring the law unconstitutional — despite that ‘significant deference’ usually given to laws passed by Congress — tells you all that you need to know about the argumentas validity. Can anyone imagine Congress passing a broccoli mandate law, much less the court allowing it to take effect?” Richard Thaler in The New York Times.
Top long reads
Jeffrey Toobin on how John Roberts orchestrated Citizens United: “Citizens United is a distinctive product of the Roberts Court. The decision followed a lengthy and bitter behind-the-scenes struggle among the Justices that produced both secret unpublished opinions and a rare reargument of a case. The case, too, reflects the aggressive conservative judicial activism of the Roberts Court. It was once liberals who were associated with using the courts to overturn the work of the democratically elected branches of government, but the current Court has matched contempt for Congress with a disdain for many of the Courtas own precedents. When the Court announced its final ruling on Citizens United, on January 21, 2010, the vote was five to four and the majority opinion was written by Anthony Kennedy. Above all, though, the result represented a triumph for Chief Justice Roberts. Even without writing the opinion, Roberts, more than anyone, shaped what the Court did. As American politics assumes its new form in the post-Citizens United era, the credit or the blame goes mostly to him.”
Andrew Martin and Andrew Lehren on the skyrocketing cost of college: “With more than $1 trillion in student loans outstanding in this country, crippling debt is no longer confined to dropouts from for-profit colleges or graduate students who owe on many years of education, some of the overextended debtors in years past. Now nearly everyone pursuing a bacheloras degree is borrowing. As prices soar, a college degree statistically remains a good lifetime investment, but it often comes with an unprecedented financial burden. Ninety-four percent of students who earn a bacheloras degree borrow to pay for higher education — up from 45 percent in 1993, according to an analysis by The New York Times of the latest data from the Department of Education. This includes loans from the federal government, private lenders and relatives. For all borrowers, the average debt in 2011 was $23,300, with 10 percent owing more than $54,000 and 3 percent more than $100,000.”
’90s nostalgia interlude: Nine Inch Nails play “The Becoming” in studio..
Got tips, additions, or comments? E-mail me.
Still to come: Wholesale prices are down; rebates will be credited to the ACA; Secure Communities expands; the IEA doesn’t like Obama’s plans; and cats, in slow motion.
Economy
Europe’s woes could hit the U.S.. “During bouts of European turmoil in the past two years, U.S. financial markets regularly stumbled and growth ebbed due to fears of a euro-zone meltdown. But Europe muddled through and avoided calamity, and the effects on the U.S. economy weren’t all bad. U.S. exports to Europe rose, and many U.S. banks benefited as overseas competition fell away. Now, the troubles in the currency union–the threat of a Greek exit from the euro zone, rising borrowing costs in Spain and Italy, recessions in several European countries–are renewing fears of an escalating crisis that could deliver a more serious blow to the fragile U.S. recovery. U.S. companies are bracing for a hit. Networking giant Cisco Systems Inc. last week blamed worries about Europe, along with other uncertainty, for its cautious outlook. Watchmaker Fossil Inc. reported a slowdown in German sales on top of deeper pullbacks in Italy and Spain. Chemicals firm Celanese Corp. attributed its disappointing results to weakening European demand.” Sudeep Reddy in The Wall Street Journal.
Wholesale prices declined for the first time this year. “U.S. wholesale prices declined for the first time this year, suggesting a drop in energy costs is helping to keep inflation under control. The index of producer prices, which measures how much wholesalers and manufacturers pay for goods and materials, fell a seasonally adjusted 0.2% in April from a month earlier, the Labor Department said Friday. The decline, the first since December, was due entirely to cheaper prices for energy goods, including gasoline and utility gas…The report on producer prices suggests inflation is subdued, after a run-up in oil prices earlier this year pushed costs beyond the Federal Reserve’s annual inflation target of roughly 2%. Lower inflation could reassure Fed officials as they keep a key interest rate exceptionally low through late 2014 to stimulate the economy. Lower inflation also gives the Fed more room to act, perhaps through additional bond purchases, if economic growth falters.” Josh Mitchell in The Wall Street Journal.
@BobCusack: “Where are the jobs?” references (from both parties) in the Congressional Record between ’09-’12: 357. Between ’05-’08: 3.
Vintage bicycle manufacturing tutorial interlude: How a bicycle is made.
Health Care
Insurers will be required to credit premium rebates to Obamacare. “Health-insurance companies must tell customers who get a premium rebate this summer that the check is the result of the Obama administration’s health-care law, according to federal guidelines released Friday. The move is the latest sign the Obama administration is trying to draw attention to the law’s benefits before the fall elections, even though the law faces an uncertain future. The Supreme Court is expected to decide in June whether its central plank–a mandate that everyone carry insurance–violates the Constitution. Mitt Romney, the presumed Republican presidential nominee, has pledged to wipe out the law if elected. Under the 2010 legislation, insurers that don’t spend a specified amount of revenue on actual medical care–as opposed to administrative costs–must refund the difference to customers.” Louise Radnofsky in The Wall Street Journal.
Domestic Policy
The Senate cybersecurity bill is running into privacy concerns. “Thereas yet another hurdle for Sen. Joe Liebermanas cybersecurity bill: Democrats who say it doesnat go far enough to protect consumer privacy. With Senate Republicans standing firm against the measure, the friendly fire from Democrats means thereas only more work ahead as Lieberman and others scramble to cobble together 60 votes to move the bill. A handful of members, including Sens. Al Franken of Minnesota and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, are echoing the concerns of civil liberties groups, which are growing increasingly fearful that consumersa data could end up being passed around by companies and the government as security experts share with each other information about emerging cyberthreats. To them and others, the Senate measure as written would specify too few limitations on how data could be used and cover entities with too broad a protection from liability.” Tony Romm and Jennifer Martinez in Politico.
The Obama administration will expand the controversial Secure Communities program. “Obama administration officials have announced that a contentious fingerprinting program to identify illegal immigrants will be extended across Massachusetts and New York next week, expanding federal enforcement efforts despite opposition from the governors and immigrant groups in those states. In blunt e-mails sent Tuesday to officials and the police in the two states, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said the program, Secure Communities, would be activated ‘in all remaining jurisdictions’ this Tuesday…Last year, officials at the agency said they had determined that they did not require consent from states to start the program. Citing antiterrorism legislation that Congress passed in 2002, the officials canceled agreements they had signed in 40 states and said they would extend the program nationwide by 2013.” Julia Preston in The New York Times.
Minority contracts fell last year for the first time in a decade. “U.S. government contracts to black-and Hispanic-owned small businesses fell last year for the first time in a decade, declining at a sharper rate than awards to all companies. Contracts to the black-owned firms dropped 8 percent to $7.12 billion in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, compared with fiscal 2010. Awards to Hispanic-owned businesses decreased 7 percent to $7.89 billion, according to federal procurement data.Contracts to the two minority groups fell at a faster pace than all contracts, which dipped 1 percent as the U.S. government slowed spending to help reduce the federal deficit. The gap may reflect stiffer competition over a shrinking pool of revenue and the recessionas greater impact on black and Hispanic firms…The absence of these set-aside programs may help explain the dip in awards for some minority groups, said James McCullough, who leads the government contracts practice at Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson in Washington.” Danielle Ivory in The Washington Post.
Cuteness amplified interlude: Cats in slow motion.
Energy
Fracking is sparking a boom in sand mining. “Scouts armed with geological maps and elevations from Google Earth are knocking on doors in the upper Midwest in search of what seems too common to mine: sand. The sedimentary material is in high demand among U.S. oil and natural-gas producers, setting off a sand rush in Wisconsin, Minnesota and other Midwestern states. While adding jobs, the mining boom is prompting pushback from some local residents, who are surprised by the frenzy and leery of its impact on their communities. Sand mined in the Midwest is used in places such as North Dakota and Pennsylvania to tap oil and gas reserves. The U.S. producers’ demand for sand reached 28.7 million tons in 2011, up from six million tons in 2007, according to independent laboratory PropTester Inc. and consultancy Kelrik LLC…Sand, injected deep underground to prop open fractures in shale formations and allow oil and gas to flow out, is important in ‘fracking.’” Mark Peters and Isabel Ordonez in The Wall Street Journal.
Lawmakers are torn on how to use high-speed rail funds. “As roads become more crowded each year, transportation planners have been looking for a game-changer that can reduce congestion and efficiently move millions of people. Enter rail — a centuries-old mode that may be a shining savior to those hoping to push the United States into a new way of getting people around at high speeds. But it wonat work everywhere — a lot depends on simple geography. And lawmakers are torn between how to use limited funds: along the densely packed East Coast, which has a history of commuter rail, or out West, where California has ponied up billions of dollars to build a high-speed system, much of it from scratch. Amtrakas Acela service from Boston to Washington runs the fastest trains in the country, maxing out at 150 mph and increasing soon to 160 mph…Three thousand miles away, California is inching ever closer to its high-speed rail vision, having formally approved the initial Central Valley route.” Burgess Everett and Adam Snider in Politico.
The IEA has concerns about Obama’s plans to increase oversight of oil markets. “Barack Obamaas plans for strengthened supervision of the oil markets have come under fire from the International Energy Agency, which has warned they could lead to sharp swings in crude prices. The warning, contained in the agencyas monthly oil market report, came in response to moves by authorities in the US and Europe to crack down on what they see as excessive speculation in commodities markets using derivatives. The US presidentas proposal to give the Commodity Futures Trading Commission authority to direct exchanges to raise margin requirements to address increased price volatility or prevent excessive speculation or manipulation could have the opposite effect, the western countriesa oil watchdog said on Friday. The IEA said raising margin requirements in oil futures trading might increase price volatility and concentrate market share in the hands of large speculators while having no effect on price levels.” Guy Chazan in The Financial Times.
America is running out of helium. “Sure, Congress has plenty of crises to deal with: a weak economy, an expiring highway bill, the end-of-the-year ‘taxmageddon.’ But now thereas another one floating into view. The United States is running out of helium. Yes, helium. Thanks, in part, to a 1996 law that has forced the government to sell off its helium reserves at bargain-bin prices, the countryas stockpile of the relatively rare and nonrenewable gas could soon dwindle…Congress is slowly grasping the extent of the problem. At a sleepy Senate hearing Thursday morning, the Energy and Natural Resources Committee listened to an array of experts chat about the gas. The hearing was tied to a bill, sponsored by Sens. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) and John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), that would change how the government sells helium from its Federal Helium Reserve (yes, this exists) in order to prevent shortages.” Brad Plumer in The Washington Post.
@mattyglesias: Helium Privatization Act is a classic example of inefficient pseudo-privatization gone horribly wrong
Wonkbook is compiled and produced with help from Karl Singer and Michelle Williams.
Wonkbook: ‘Just because weare stupid doesnat mean everybody else was’
From feeds.washingtonpost
Of the big banks, JPMorgan Chase arguably came through the crisis best. And its CEO, Jamie Dimon, has been using the credibility built up during that period to fight the Volcker rule. aPaul Volcker by his own admission has said he doesnat understand capital markets,a Dimon told Fox Business earlier this year. aHe has proven that to me.a
Dimon, for his part, doesn’t see the relevance. aJust because weare stupid doesnat mean everybody else was,a he said on a Thursday conference call. aThere were huge moves in the marketplace but we made these positions more complex and they were badly monitored.a
But the point of the Volcker rule — and of financial regulation more generally — isn’t to punish banks for being evil. It’s to protect the rest of us from banks being stupid. And if the most prudent of the big banks can’t keep itself from being this stupid this soon after the financial crisis, then it’s pretty clear we’re going to need very strong rules to keep them from being stupid in the years to come, when the lessons of the financial crisis have faded more completely.
As Reuters’ Felix Salmon writes, “JP Morgan more or less invented risk management. If they canat do it, no bank can. And no sensible regulator can ever trust the banks to self-regulate.”
Wonkbook dashboard
RCP Obama vs. Romney: Obama +1.5%; 7-day change: Obama -2.1%.
RCP Obama approval: 47.4%; 7-day change: -.7%.
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Top stories
1) A massive bet gone wrong cost JP Morgan Chase at least $2 billion. “A massive trading bet boomeranged on J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., leaving the bank with at least $2 billion in trading losses and its chief executive, James Dimon, with a rare black eye following a long run as what some called the ‘King of Wall Street.’ The losses stemmed from wagers gone wrong in the bank’s Chief Investment Office, which manages risk for the New York company. The Wall Street Journal reported early last month that large positions taken in that office by a trader nicknamed ‘the London whale’ had roiled a sector of the debt markets. The bank, betting on a continued economic recovery with a complex web of trades tied to the values of corporate bonds, was hit hard when prices moved against it starting last month, causing losses in many of its derivatives positions. The losses occurred while J.P. Morgan tried to scale back that trade.” Dan Fitzpatrick, Gregory Zuckerman, and Liz Rappaport in The Wall Street Journal.
The loss is putting the spotlight on the Volcker Rule. “JPMorgan Chaseas $2 billion trading loss, which was disclosed on Thursday, could give supporters of tighter industry regulation a huge new piece of ammunition as they fight a last-ditch battle with the banks over new federal rules that may redefine how banks do business…The centerpiece of the new regulations, the so-called Volcker Rule, forbids banks from making bets with their own money, and a final version is expected to be issued by federal officials in the coming months. With the financial crisis fading from view, banks have successfully pushed for some exceptions that critics say will allow them to simply make proprietary trades under a different name, in this case for the purposes of hedging and market-making. The missteps by JPMorgan could highlight that murky line between proprietary trading and hedging. The bank unit responsible for losses takes positions to hedge activities in other parts of the bank.” Nelson Schwartz in The New York Times.
@lizzieohreally: Dimonfreude.
@BCAppelbaum: If losing $2 billion in your trading operations doesn’t violate the Volcker Rule, is it possible that we might need a broader rule?
@ezraklein: At this point in time, I feel comfortable predicting Jamie Dimon will not replace Tim Geithner as Secretary of the Treasury
2) The U.S. ran a monthly surplus for the first time since 2008. “The federal government posted a budget surplus in April as tax receipts rose, the first month that revenue has outpaced spending in more than three and a half years. The Treasury Department, in its latest monthly budget figures out Thursday, said the government ran a surplus of $59.12 billion during April, compared with a deficit of $40.39 billion a year earlier. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires had projected a $30.00 billion surplus. The federal government has historically run a budget surplus in April, when many Americans file their tax returns. Over the past 58 years, there have been 44 April surpluses, a Treasury official said. But from late 2008 up until two months ago, the government ran steady deficits amid weaker tax receipts and heavy spending following the financial crisis. The government last ran a monthly surplus in September 2008, the same month that Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for bankruptcy.” Jeffrey Sparshott in The Wall Street Journal.
@DaveedGR: Obviously, the April surplus is due to taxes coming in. Remarkable that there hasn’t been a surplus in any April since 2008…
3) Republicans may not offer a comprehensive replacement for Obamacare. “Republicans might not offer a comprehensive plan to replace President Obamaas healthcare law if the Supreme Court strikes it down this summer. House Republicans had said they would have a healthcare bill ready to go by the time of the ruling to present a clear alternative to the Democratsa Affordable Care Act. But now, with the high courtas ruling just weeks away, some conservatives are urging the party to abandon that strategy, fearing voters will recoil from another sweeping revamp of the healthcare system…Ditching a comprehensive proposal could also make it easier for Republicans to steer the publicas focus away from popular elements of the Affordable Care Act that are unlikely to make the cut in a GOP plan…But a piecemeal strategy on healthcare could present its own risks. Republicans campaigned in 2010 on ‘repealing and replacing’ Obamaas law, but have struggled to clearly articulate a healthcare platform of their own.” Sam Baker in The Hill.
4) Europe delayed a loan payment to Greece. “Euro-zone governments held back part of a big scheduled loan payment in a warning shot to Greece Wednesday, as outside pressure mounted on the country’s politicians to pull together a pro-euro coalition to take charge of the government. Greece’s euro-zone partners agreed to release only a!4.2 billion ($5.5 billion) in previously agreed financing, to be paid out Thursday, holding back a!1 billion at least until June. That would be paid only if Greece keeps to pledges it made to secure a bailout. With Athens in political turmoil after a fractured result in weekend elections, and a new vote likely by June, German politicians cautioned that further aid could be withdrawn if Greece abandons austerity targets–even if that pushes the country from the bloc…Thursday’s payment is needed for Greece to pay a!3.3 billion it owes the European Central Bank next week. The aid was agreed in March by euro-zone governments as part of Greece’s a!130 billion second bailout program.” Alkman Granitsas, Laurence Norman, and Matthew Dalton in The Wall Street Journal.
5) Almost 250,000 Americans will lose their unemployment insurance this weekend. “More than 230,000 jobless Americans will lose their unemployment insurance by this weekend as reductions in the federal program that provides extended benefits to the long-term unemployed take broader effect. The new round of reductions is hitting eight states this month, meaning that about 400,000 long-term unemployed Americans in 27 states will have been cut off of the federal governmentas extended unemployment benefits program this year, according to an analysis by the National Employment Law Project, which advocates for the unemployed. The cuts stem from a congressional agreement this year that will reduce the maximum duration of unemployment benefits from 99 weeks to 79 weeks as the nationas jobless rate declines. Most states provide 26 weeks of benefits, and the federal government provides the rest, partially through a complicated formula that requires jobless rates to be both high and increasing to reach the benefit limit.” Michael Fletcher in The Washington Post.
6) The House passed the GOP’s sequester replacement bill. “The House approved sweeping legislation on Thursday to cut $310 billion from the deficit over the next decade — much of it from programs for the poor — and shift some of that savings to the Pentagon to stave off automatic military spending cuts scheduled for next year. The legislation has no chance of passing the Senate or of becoming law. The White House issued a stern veto threat, saying the bill would ‘fail the test of fairness and shared responsibility.’ But the legislationas prescriptions and priorities could define the 2012 Congressional elections — and are likely to affect the race for the White House…The billas political sensitivity came through in the 218-to-199 vote. Democrats were united in their opposition. Sixteen Republicans sided with the Democrats, and one Republican voted present. ‘I voted my conscience, and I voted my district,’ said Representative Mike G. Fitzpatrick, a Republican from suburban Philadelphia, who voted no.” Jonathan Weisman in The New York Times.
Top op-eds
1) REICH: J.P. Morgan Chase makes the case for Glass-Steagall. “Ever since the start of the banking crisis in 2008, Dimon has been arguing that more government regulation of Wall Street is unnecessary. Last year he vehemently and loudly opposed the so-called Volcker rule, itself a watered-down version of the old Glass-Steagall Act that used to separate commercial from investment banking before it was repealed in 1999, saying it would unnecessarily impinge on derivative trading (the lucrative practice of making bets on bets) and hedging (using some bets to offset the risks of other bets)…What just happened at J.P. Morgan – along with its leaderas cavalier dismissal followed by lame reassurance – reveals how fragile and opaque the banking system continues to be, why Glass-Steagall must be resurrected, and why the Dallas Fedas recent recommendation that Wall Streetas giant banks be broken up should be heeded.” Robert Reich.
2) KRUGMAN: Talk of structural unemployment is an excuse for inaction. “So now weare in another depression, not as bad as the last one, but bad enough. And, once again, authoritative-sounding figures insist that our problems are ‘structural,’ that they canat be fixed quickly. We must focus on the long run, such people say, believing that they are being responsible. But the reality is that theyare being deeply irresponsible…So whatas with the obsessive push to declare our problems ‘structural’? And, yes, I mean obsessive. Economists have been debating this issue for several years, and the structuralistas wonat take no for an answer, no matter how much contrary evidence is presented. The answer, Iad suggest, lies in the way claims that our problems are deep and structural offer an excuse for not acting, for doing nothing to alleviate the plight of the unemployed…All this talk about structural unemployment isnat about facing up to our real problems; itas about avoiding them, and taking the easy, useless way out. And itas time for it to stop.” Paul Krugman in The New York Times.
3) ALTER: Obama and Romney offer differing views of capitalism. “A more useful distinction may be between venture capitalists and human capitalists. Romney came up as a private-equity investor. Like his party, he believes in his heart that the way forward for the U.S. is to slash taxes for the wealthy even further so that they have more venture capital to invest in businesses. Obama came up as a community organizer. Like his party, he believes in his heart that a great nation must invest in human capital through education, health care and infrastructure…Last week brought a classic example of the differing approaches. The tussle over doubling interest rates for student loans (scheduled for July 1) was a controversy ginned up for the Obama campaign, but it was also an acid test. Democrats wanted to pay for the lower rate with a modest business tax; Republicans responded with plans to scuttle the preventive health-care part of Obamacare, despite much evidence of its efficacy for both people and budgets. ” Jonathan Alter in Bloomberg.
4) CARPENTER AND KNEPPER: Occupational license reform would spur economic opportunity. “Since the 1950s, the number of U.S. workers needing an occupational license–effectively a government permission slip to work–has grown from one in 20 to nearly one in three, according to a 2010 study by Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota) and Alan Krueger (Princeton). The burdens these licenses impose on would-be workers and entrepreneurs are substantial…The risk of a few bad haircuts seems worth a roll of the dice if the upside is more economic opportunities. But the truth is that consumers are capable of judging the quality of many services for themselves. If lawmakers in Michigan and elsewhere want to help more Americans find jobs, they should start by reducing or removing burdens that do little more than protect some people from competition by keeping others out of work.” Dick Carpenter and Lisa Knepper in The Wall Street Journal.
5) BAKOPOULOS: Greek voters didn’t have a chance to reject austerity without rejecting Europe. “Itas clear that Greeks — derided throughout the Continent as lazy and corrupt, hobbled by the bailout dealas austerity measures and humiliated by the troika (the European Central Bank, European Commission and International Monetary Fund) — have put their trust outside the mainstream…But an election usually asks: who, or what, are you for? Not this one. If voters were given any choice, it was this: either accept the austerity measures or be forced to leave the euro zone. A double bind, this either-or option is unable to give expression to the complexity of both yes to Europe and no to austerity. Just before the vote, the German finance minister issued a warning: If Greek voters did not elect a government that would abide by the terms of the deal, ‘then Greece will have to bear the consequences.’ But the consequences are unclear. Vote correctly, or else. Or else what?” Natalie Bakopoulos in The New York Times.
Top long reads
Binyamin Appelbaum profiles financial blogger Joe Weisenthal: “Weisenthal is often — perhaps more often than anyone else — the first person to describe new data on Twitter. And almost as quickly, he repeats the thought, with a new headline, on Business Insider. When the government reported that only 120,000 jobs were created in March, well below expectations, he quickly rewrote the draft of his tweet: ‘DISASTER: MARCH JOBS REPORT MISSES EXPECTATIONS AT 120K. (Analysts expected +205K)’ A search on Twitter suggests that this, at 8:30 on the dot, was the first line published on the subject. Weisenthal managed to post a complete sentence before one of his main rivals, a blogger whose handle is ZeroHedge, tweeted just this: ’120k.’…And then Weisenthal and his audience moved on to the next thing. Around 10 a.m., he posted a new article. The headline read, ‘FORGET THE JOBS REPORT: The Most Important Number of the Day Hasnat Even Come Out Yet.’”
James Bandler and Doris Burke investigate the struggles of HP: “Dr. Phil could fill a month’s worth of shows just examining HP’s board, whose dynamics have resembled those of rival junior high school cliques more than what is supposed to be a sage guiding force. At times, as we’ll see, HP directors have refused to be in the same room with one another and have accused each other of lying, leaking, and betrayal. Time and again they’ve failed in their choice of CEO — their most important task — selecting a new leader whose most salient trait is that he or she is the opposite of the last one. All of this has impeded the company from tackling the fundamental problem it faces: Simply put, Hewlett-Packard has lost its way. The company is in the midst of an existential crisis. It remains a behemoth, No. 10 on the Fortune 500, with $127 billion in sales last year and $7 billion in earnings. But the trajectory is ominous. Those profits, for example, were 19% lower in 2011 than in the previous year.”
’60s nostalgia interlude: Jimi Hendrix plays “Rock Me Baby” live at Monterey 67.
Got tips, additions, or comments? E-mail me.
Still to come: CEOs push for deficit reduction; an abortion rights leader is stepping down; low scores on a science exam; oil independence may not be a realistic goal; and bear cubs hop aboard the love train.
Economy
A rise in imports widened the trade deficit. “The U.S. trade deficit widened in March but other data Thursday reflected two conditions that could spur the economic recovery: strong American exports and falling oil prices. The March trade gap expanded 14.1% from February to $51.8 billion, the government said. Growing demand from consumers and businesses for goods and services from abroad, along with high oil prices that have since retreated, sent imports surging 5.2% to a record $238.6 billion. But exports also showed strength, rising at the fastest pace since last summer to set their own record. Despite Europe’s fiscal woes and Asia’s slower growth, the U.S. sent abroad $186.8 billion in goods and services in March, up 2.9% from February. Exports have climbed for the past four months, defying forecasts of slower growth due to the recession in the euro zone. U.S. manufacturers appear to have been helped by a historically weak dollar as well as subdued wage growth at home.” Josh Mitchell in The Wall Street Journal.
The House passed the first appropriations bill of the year. “The House on Thursday approved the first appropriations bill of the year, a measure that spends $51 billion on the Departments of Commerce and Justice, NASA and other related agencies. The spending bill, H.R. 5326, was approved in a 247-163 vote in which eight Republicans voted against it, reflecting opposition to the amount spent in the bill. But it also picked up the support of 23 Democrats…The bill is among the least controversial of the 12 annual appropriations bills but has little chance of becoming law on its own. The White House has said President Obama will veto any and all of the 12 bills until the House renounces the top-line spending level in the overall budget written by Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.). The legislation cuts spending by about 3 percent compared to current levels, which Republicans said shows their ongoing commitment to trim spending. The GOP said spending by agencies covered by the bill has been cut by 20 percent over the last three budget cycles.” Pete Kasperowicz in The Hill.
CEOs are making a new push for a deficit deal. “Top business executives, many of whom sat on their hands during last year’s frantic debate about raising the federal debt ceiling, have begun mobilizing and plan to be more vocal in urging Congress to reach a bipartisan deficit-reduction deal by the end of the year. Executives have been meeting privately with lawmakers, urging them to start laying the groundwork now so they can reach an agreement after the November elections to avoid the large tax increases and heavy spending cuts scheduled to take effect in January. They worry those measures could tip the economy back into recession and create turmoil in financial markets, according to people who have attended some of the meetings. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. chief executive James Dimon hosted a lunch for several dozen chief executives and two U.S. senators late last month, one of the latest in a series of private meetings aimed at drumming up support for a political agreement.” Damian Paletta in The Wall Street Journal.
Subsides are fueling gains in manufacturing. “As chairman and principal owner of Revere Copper Products, Mr. OaShaughnessy runs one of Americaas oldest manufacturing companies, started by Paul Revere himself, a fact that exerts considerable pressure. As he put it: ‘What kind of a message are you sending to the people of the country if you abandon America?’ But spend a day with him, and a more complex picture emerges. He wonders sometimes about the less patriotic alternative of relocating production to Asia or closing the factory entirely on the ground that Revereas profit margin here is too thin — less than $1 million on $450 million in annual revenue…What staves off those alternatives are labor concessions and a substantial government subsidy, something he and others in the United States say is increasingly important to fuel a nascent recovery in manufacturing…With such support, the key measure of manufacturingas presence in America is ticking upward.” Louis Uchitelle in The New York Times.
@jbarro: Just got woken up. I swear I was in the middle of a dream where I was arguing w/ a reporter about transfer taxes.
Engineering interlude: A real life Mario Kart.
Health Care
The leader of an influential abortion rights advocacy group will step down. “At the end of this year, Nancy Keenan will step down from her post as president of NARAL Pro-Choice America, the countryas oldest abortion-rights advocacy group. The 60-year-old Keenan said she is leaving out of concern for the future of the pro-choice movement — and thinks she could be holding it back.Nancy Keenan will retire as president of NARAL Pro-Choice America at the end of the year. In recent years, Keenan has worried about an ‘intensity gap’ on abortion rights among millennials, which the group considers to be the generation of Americans born between 1980 and 1991. While most young, antiabortion voters see abortion as a crucial political issue, NARALas own internal research does not find similar passion among abortion-rights supporters. If the pro-choice movement is to successfully defend abortion rights, Keenan contends, it needs more young people in leadership roles, including hers.” Sarah Kliff in The Washington Post.
An F.D.A. panel backed the preventive use of a H.I.V. drug. “A drug already used to treat H.I.V. infection should also be approved to prevent it, an advisory panel to the Food and Drug Administration said on Thursday. The recommendation is the first time that government advisers have advocated giving antiviral medicine to healthy people who might be exposed through sexual activity to the virus that causes AIDS. One panelist called approving the drug ‘an amazing opportunity to turn the tide on this epidemic.’ Studies have shown that people who take the medicine, Truvada, every day have a greatly reduced risk of infection. The F.D.A. usually accepts the advice of its advisory panels, which are made up of outside medical experts…Experts say better methods of prevention are needed because there are 50,000 new H.I.V. infections a year in the United States. Several speakers emphasized Thursday that that number had not budged in 15 to 20 years.” Denise Grady in The New York Times.
Domestic Policy
Scores remained low on a national science test. “U.S. eighth graders made modest gains on the latest national science exam, but more than two-thirds still lacked a solid grasp of science facts, according to figures released Thursday that renewed concerns American schools are inadequately preparing children for college and the workforce. The 2011 National Assessment of Educational Progress, an exam administered by the U.S. Department of Education, showed that 32% of students were proficient in science, compared with 30% the first time the new version of the science exam was administered, in 2009…Teachers and education-advocacy groups cite various possible causes for weak scores, including a lack of qualified science teachers, budget cutbacks and a narrowing of the curriculum prompted by the No Child Left Behind law. That 2002 U.S. statute caused schools to be evaluated solely on math and reading tests, which persuaded some to reduce science education.” Stephanie Banchero in The Wall Street Journal.
Congress is considering subsidizing the deductibles on crop insurance. “It’s a deal that most businesses would relish: Buy an insurance policy to cover losses or falling prices, and the government will foot most of the bill. Such an arrangement has been enjoyed for more than a decade by the farmers who grow crops such as corn and soybeans, and the companies that insure them. And it’s about to get even better. The farm bill now before Congress includes a provision — estimated to cost about $3 billion a year — that would help cover the losses farmers suffer before their crop insurance policies kick in. Those losses, termed deductibles, can run in the tens of thousands of dollars for a typical mid-size farm. Supporters say it’s a money saver because it would replace an existing subsidy costing $5 billion a year. That subsidy, known as direct payments, pays farmland owners a set amount regardless of whether they’ve planted crops on the land.” Kim Geiger in The Los Angles Times.
Adorable animals being adorable together interlude: All aboard the (bear cub) love train!
Energy
Oil independence may not be possible. “Over the past few years, the United States has experienced a boom in oil and gas production. And thatas led a few commentators to declare that the country is on the verge of ending its dependence on foreign energy and supply disruptions. Alas, thatas never fully possible…Even if the United States goes further and somehow manages to produce every last drop of the oil and gas it needs to run its economy, the country would still be vulnerable to events in the Middle East, tensions in Iran, strikes in Venezuela and other disruptions in the oil markets…. As the CBO explains, oil prices are set by the global oil market. ‘Disruptions in oil production in one country will cause the world oil market to readjust so that all countries and firms continue to receive oil at the new prevailing price.’ Even if the United States produced 100 percent of its own oil, the price would still go up if rising demand from China outstripped the ability of supplies to keep up.” Brad Plumer in The Washington Post.
@AndrewRestuccia: A lively version of “Chain of Fools” is playing before confernce call with Grover Norquist, Rep. Pompeo, Sen DeMint on energy tax credits
Wonkbook is compiled and produced with help from Karl Singer and Michelle Williams.
How bad would it be for Greece to leave the euro?
From feeds.washingtonpost
Now letas go to the counterarguments. Greek economist Yanis Varoufakis says this sort of talk is aprofoundly wronga and that thereas no way Greece can emulate Argentina. For one, the trade situations were completely different (Argentina got to sell a bunch of commodities to a fast-growing Chinese market.) Second, Varoufakis argues that Greece wouldnat simply be devaluing its currency the way Argentina did a it would be swapping out an old currency for a brand-new one. And that transition could get very, very messy. aBank of Greece colleagues tell me that it will take months before ATMs are stocked with new drachmas once they get the go-ahead to print them,a he writes. In the interim, Greece would be aunmonetiseda a people would be paying each other with IOUs, presumably a a good recipe for civil unrest and other nasty surprises.** Varoufakis also worries that a Greece exit could drag down the rest of Europe. What if, say, countries like Portugal and Italy start seeing their own bank runs and head for the exits? A continent-wide euro collapse could make it nearly impossible for a newly unshackled Greece to keep growing through trade: When Argentina defaulted and broke the peg, the ill effects on its trading partners (China, Brazil, etc.), as well as on the broader macro-economy in which it was functioning, were negligible. If Greece leaves the euro, however, the results will most certainly prove catastrophic for our aeconomic ecology,a and in a never-ending circle of negative feedback, will bite our struggling nation back. For what itas worth, most Greeks tend to side with Varoufakis a polls show that some 80 percent of the country wants to stay within the euro. Still, as we discussed yesterday, if Greek bank customers keep withdrawing their money from Greek banks and sending their euros off to Germany, that could drain the country of its currency and force a Greek exit anyway a even if no one actually wants to leave. ** How long would it take for Greece to print and distribute a new currency, anyway? Hereas one historical precedent: aIn 2003, the U.S.-led coalition managed to do it in Iraq in less than three months. But that required the efforts of De La Rue, a British speciality printer, a squadron of 27 Boeing 747s and 500 armed Fijian guards to ease the process.a
The TED talk TED doesnat want you to hear
From feeds.washingtonpost
TED describes itself as aa nonprofit devoted to Ideas Worth Spreading.a In case that was unclear, their statement of purpose is just four lean words: aOur mission: Spreading ideas.a But as Seattle venture capitalist Nick Hanauer has learned, that mission comes with an unwritten caveat: aUnless the ideas might offend one party or the other.a
In November, Hanauer wrote a column for Bloomberg View taking direct aim at the conventional wisdom on taxation and job creation.
aIam a very rich person,a he wrote. aAs an entrepreneur and venture capitalist, Iave started or helped get off the ground dozens of companies in industries including manufacturing, retail, medical services, the Internet and software. I founded the Internet media company aQuantive Inc., which was acquired by Microsoft Corp. in 2007 for $6.4 billion. I was also the first non-family investor in Amazon.com Inc.a
aEven so, Iave never been a ajob creator.a I can start a business based on a great idea, and initially hire dozens or hundreds of people. But if no one can afford to buy what I have to sell, my business will soon fail and all those jobs will evaporate.a
aThatas why I can say with confidence that rich people donat create jobs, nor do businesses, large or small. What does lead to more employment is the feedback loop between customers and businesses. And only consumers can set in motion a virtuous cycle that allows companies to survive and thrive and business owners to hire. An ordinary middle-class consumer is far more of a job creator than I ever have been or ever will be.a
And for that reason, Hanauer said, taxes on the rich would create jobs. aIt is mathematically impossible to invest enough in our economy and our country to sustain the middle class (our customers) without taxing the top 1 percent at reasonable levels again. Shifting the burden from the 99 percent to the 1 percent is the surest and best way to get our consumer-based economy rolling again.a
In March, Hanauer was asked to give a TED talk on the subject. The talk went well. aI want to put this talk out into the world!a one excited TED official told Hanauer.
But as the National Journalas Jim Tankersley reports, Hanaueras talk never quite made it out into the world. In an e-mail to Hanauer, Chris Anderson, director of TED, wrote that he wouldnat post the talk because ait would be unquestionably regarded as out and out political. Weare in the middle of an election year in the US. Your argument comes down firmly on the side of one party.a
Tankersley has posted the full transcript of Hanaueras talk. Heas also got the slides. But no one has the video because TED refuses to release it.
The speech itself mostly rehashes Hanauers op-ed. The conclusion, though, is tailored directly to the TED mission a or, at least, what Hanauer thought was the TED mission.
aSo hereas an idea worth spreading,a says Hanauer. aIn a capitalist economy, the true job creators are consumers, the middle class. And taxing the rich to make investments that grow the middle class is the single smartest thing we can do for the middle class, the poor and the rich.a
Whether the idea is aworth spreadinga or not is up to you to judge. But TED wonat be spreading it. Because as we know, the history of ideas worth spreading is that they never offend societyas entrenched interests.
Update: TED has released Hanaueras talk. You can view it here.
What the oil industry wants a in charts
From feeds.washingtonpost
In many ways, life has never been better for the U.S. oil and gas industries. Production is up, thanks to new fracking technology. Profits are high. Thereas little chance Congress will cap carbon emissions anytime soon. What more could they ask for?
First up is this graph showing where the current boom in oil and natural gas production is taking place. Mostly, itas occurring on private lands a in, for instance, the oil-rich Bakken shale formation that spans North Dakota and Montana. By contrast, oil and gas production has flatlined and even dropped in areas that are supervised by the federal government:
Does this mean the government is stifling production? Thatas a murky question. The first two years of the Obama administration saw a rise (pdf) in oil production on federal lands. Then there was a drop in 2011. But a big reason for the drop was the temporary moratorium on deepwater drilling in the Gulf of Mexico after the BP oil spill. This is now being reversed: As the Energy Information Administration explains, drilling has resumed in the region, but itas been a slow, fitful recovery, thanks to a aslower permitting process with increased environmental review.a
But itas not all about the Gulf of Mexico. API also argues that permits for new oil and gas drilling on Western lands has also been too sluggish a something the Obama administration recently said it would try to correct.
Still, speedier permitting, along with lower taxes and less regulation, is only a part of APIas wish list. The biggest request from the industry is for Congress to open up the rest of Americaas coasts for oil and gas exploration. The key targets here are the Eastern Gulf of Mexico and the Outer Continental Shelf in the Atlantic and Pacific. (The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and parts of the Rocky Mountains are their big onshore targets.) Hereas the map:
Bear in mind that opening up these areas isnat as simple as it sounds a even many of Floridaas Republicans arenat thrilled with the notion of a potential spill near the stateas beaches. Opponents of expanded offshore drilling argue that thereas not nearly enough oil in these parts anyway: A 2009 EIA analysis, for instance, found that opening up the Outer Continental Shelf would only lower gasoline prices by 3 cents per gallon by 2030. In response, API argues that there might be far more oil in these areas than anyone suspects a the industry just needs a chance to look.
Finally, API contends that if we can open up all of these areas to exploration, keep building oil pipelines from Canada a the ever-controversial Keystone XL pipeline is on their wish-list a and ramp up biofuels production, then the United States could eliminate oil imports from everywhere but Canada by around 2030. Hereas what that would look like:
Yes, wead still be relying on Canada, but API argues that dollars used to buy Canadian oil are more likely to be recycled back into the U.S. economy than dollars used to buy oil elsewhere.
Not everyoneas as impressed with APIas report. Three researchers from the Center for American Progress a Jorge Madrid, Kate Gordon, and Tina Ramos a have published a response to API. They argue that adystopiaa will ensue if the oil industry gets its way and we maintain our current dependence on crude for the next few decades. Hereas what dystopia looks like in chart form:
Carbon emissions keep going up, up, and up. The CAP report spends a lot of time dwelling on the consequences of unchecked global warming a e.g., by 2030 wildfires in Western states like Montana will increase by 300 percent. But they also point out that the sort of energy security promised by API is still no defense against high prices and other shocks.
Related: CBO: True oil independence is an unrealistic dream.
Democrats talk about cutting entitlements. Republicans donat talk about raising taxes.
From feeds.washingtonpost
The line you often hear in Washington is that Republicans wonat talk taxes and Democrats wonat talk entitlements. The two parties, the thinking goes, are similarly irresponsible, albeit on opposite sides of the budget.
aOur partyas problem is, we are always reluctant to give up the gains of the past to create the future,a Bill Clinton told the audience at the Pete Petersonas fiscal summit. aDemocrats are reluctant to commit to longer-term health-care savings; they donat want to touch Social Security.a
Clinton went on to attack Republicans for becoming a far more extreme and ideological party, making compromise nearly impossible. But he brought up the same point time and again: aMy party is not blameless.a
Rep. Xavier Becerra (D-Calif.), a former member of the supercommittee, echoed the same sentiments at Petersonas deficit-reduction confab. In responding to legitimate fears that Republicans would privatize or eliminate social services,amaybe Democrats worked too hard to protect those programs from devastating cuts and in doing so, perhaps that has kept us from trying to come up with a smart budget,a Becerra admitted.
Democrats say they took these criticisms to heart during the supercommittee negotiations, initially proposing $400 billion in savings from Medicare a half through benefit cuts and half through provider cuts. Democrats point to such proposals as evidence of their partyas willingness to compromise and incorporate a diversity of views, blaming Republican intransigence for the deficit-reduction talksa ultimate failure. aWe have a lot of people in our party who will not be drummed out if they depart from the conventional wisdom,a Clinton explained.
For all that the Democrats tried to show they were willing to talk entitlements, you didnat hear any Republicans at Petersonas fiscal summit saying that they should be willing to compromise more by considering tax increases.
Even when asked point-blank how the GOP was to blame for the deficit crisis, Sen. Rob Portman a Bushas budget director and another supercommittee alum a avoided any mention of taxes. Yes, he said, the Bush administration could have paid more attention to the long-term fiscal picture. But it was because aafter 9/11, particularly … more was spent on homeland security, defense,a Portman explained. He added that Bush should have vetoed costly appropriations bills from Congress and cut more social spending. What he didnat bring up: the Bush tax cuts a which have added more than $1.8 trillion to the deficit, more than any single other program under his presidency or Obamaas.
When Republican discuss a fresh approach to taxes, they cast it as atax reforma that excluded any tax hikes. aWhat also doesnat count as acuts and reformsa are tax increases,a said Speaker John Boehner, declaring that the GOP would refuse the lift the debt-ceiling a once again a until equivalent acuts and reformsa were passed. (Read Boehneras full speech.)
CNNas Erin Burnett prodded Boehner further to see whether Republicans were, in fact, completely unwilling to compromise on the issue. After all, closing tax loopholes and carve-outs a something that the House speaker did promise to do a would presumably result in some people paying more, right?
Boehner stuck to the script, insisting that alowering rates and broadening the basea was the only acceptable answer. Burnett pressed the question again: aBroadening the basea meant closing loopholes, which meant taxes for some would go up, right? Boehner equivocated. aYeah, some may pay more and some may pay less,a he said quickly.
So, under duress, Republicans signaled a tiny bit of wiggle room on taxes. Sen. Pat Toomey suggested as much during the last gasp of the supercommittee negotiations, with a proposal that would save $250 billion through limiting tax deductions and write-offs.
But unlike the Democrats, Republicans are much more reluctant to self-flagellate. And they certainly werenat going to question the partyas ano tax increasesa line on stage at the Andrew Mellon auditorium, with TV cameras rolling.
Boehneras debt ceiling crisis would be so much worse than you think
From feeds.washingtonpost
Thereas some chance that House Speaker John Boehneras threat to provoke another debt-ceiling crisis doesnat much matter. If it does matter, itas only because fiscal policy has already gone very, very wrong.
In other words, the Bush tax cuts expire on Dec. 31. The automatic spending cuts begin on Dec. 31. The debt ceiling likely wonat come due till February, or perhaps even March. So the scenario in which we reach a debt ceiling showdown is a scenario in which the two parties have already failed to come to an agreement on spending and taxes.
That is to say, itas a scenario in which weave already reached the fiscal cliff and fallen over the edge. Itas a scenario in which the Bush tax cuts have probably expired, and the spending cuts have probably begun. Itas a scenario in which the markets are already in some amount of turmoil, and the forecasters are already sharply warning that Congress is dragging the country into a double-dip recession. Itas a scenario in which the two parties are already under tremendous pressure, in which Washington has been in some sort of semi-crisis for months, and in which all the possible deals have already been tried and failed. (Itas also a scenario, incidentally, in which our projected deficits are much lower, because our expected tax revenues are so much higher.)
The alternative possibility is that Congress has passed, and the president has signed, some sort of short-term patch to prevent the tax cuts from expiring and the spending cuts from triggering. But Boehner just radically reduced the odds of that: Why would Democrats patch the Bush tax cuts, which give them leverage, just so Boehner could provoke a debt-ceiling crisis in order to give his party leverage?
So weare not likely to have a adebt-ceiling crisis.a Weare either likely to solve our fiscal problems early in the year in way that defuses Boehneras debt-ceiling threat or weare likely to spend 2013 in a state of permanent crisis in which Congress lights the economy on fire by failing on the Bush tax cuts, the automatic spending cuts, the debt ceiling, and the appropriation bills needed to keep the federal government open.
Thatas not a scenario that looks like August 2011, when the debt ceiling was the only thing on the docket. Itas an economic crisis that looks more like September 2008, when Lehman was collapsing. And in that world, itas so hard to predict the resulting financial chaos, public outrage, interest group pressure, and political terror that itas almost impossible to say anything about how the crisis would be resolved, or who might benefit.
Lunch break: aThe politics of competitive board gaming amongst friendsa
From feeds.washingtonpost
Director Jay Cheel achieves the seemingly impossible: A short, interesting and charming documentary about the board game Settlers of Catan.
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FAQ: What happened at JP Morgan? And should you care?
From feeds.washingtonpost
What was the trade?
As Michael Hiltzik of the Los Angeles Times writes, we donat need to get too technical here. aLeaving aside the sophistication of the transactions themselves, JPMorganas trader, a London-based derivatives expert whose portfolio was so outsized he became known in the markets as the London Whale, essentially bet that corporate debt was becoming less risky as corporations were getting stronger — in trading parlance, he was long corporate debt. But he did so in a way that even a tiny hiccup in the index he was trading could be exploited by rival traders. And thatas what happened.a If you want to get technical, however, FT Alphaville has you covered.
No one really knows yet. Matt Levine, the editor of Dealbreaker, thinks they simply messed up the math that was governing the trade. aThis looks like the CIOas trading desk modelling the actual [profits and loss] and risks of the trade wildly wrong. That seems to me like the simplest way to lose a billion dollars without noticing it. You can see that in Jamieas ajust acause weare stupid doesnat mean everybody else wasa: this was not driven by the market moving against them (though it seems to have), it was driven by them getting the math wrong.a
How much did JP Morgan lose on it?
We donat know. We probably wonat know for awhile. The number $2 billion is floating around. But it could easily be closer to $5 billion when all is said and done. The key here is that the trade isnat over. JP Morgan Chase is still trying to get out of its positions. How quickly they do that, and where the market moves between now and then, will decide the extent of their total losses.
Will JP Morgan need a bailout?
No. Itas hard to believe, but $2 billion, or even $5 billion, just isnat that much money to the bank. In 2011, JP Morganas profits were $19 billion in 2011. And CEO Jamie Dimon called that amildly disappointinga at the time.
So does this matter at all?
Yes.
Why?
For one thing, JP Morgan was known as the best manager of risk on Wall Street. Thatas largely because they made it through the financial crisis mostly unscathed. But it turns out that even the best manager of risk isnat very good. This trade, in fact, looks a lot like the financial crisis: They bet on something unlikely as if it was impossible. Thatas what all those banks did when they made bets on the belief that the housing market never goes down everywhere all at once. Itas a reminder that this is a kind of mistake that even agooda banks make. And remember — JP Morgan made this mistake less than four years after the fall of Lehman Brothers, so this came at a time when the lessons of the crisis are fresh in everyoneas mind, and when regulators are watching closely.
So thatas it? The national media is engaged in a collective attack of post-traumatic stress because the only bank it kinda-sorta trusted did something dumb?
No. Thereas a political dimension here, too. JP Morgan has used its sterling reputation to fight the Volcker rule. Thatas the regulation that says that banks that take commercial loans and get federal insurance to protect those loans — banks that you might open a checking account with, like JP Morgan — canat make speculative bets on their own behalf. If youare going to be a bank, then you canat play at the casino.
The problem is that itas very hard to say when a bank is betting on its own behalf and when its betting on its clientsa behalf. JP Morgan says that this trade was a ahedgea: It was there to reduce risk, not make money. But given how exquisitely it blew up in JP Morganas face, now regulators are going to make sure that the Volcker rule would stop trades like this one from happening. Otherwise, theyall get the blame next time. That means a much tighter Volcker rule — which in turn means JP Morgan (and other banks) wonat make as much money in the coming years. Thatas part of why all their stocks are tumbling. JP Morgan, for instance, lost $14.5 billion on Friday.
And the government may not stop with the Volcker rule. The SEC has opened an investigation. And remember: this is an election year. If a few congressmen band together to propose some much more stringent regulations on the banks, thereas some chance that they could sail through as both parties try to show theyare tougher on the banks.
What else could they do?
Lots. If you look hard enough, you can find many, many regulatory changes that were left out of Dodd-Frank.
For instance, Eliot Spitzer points out that Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JP Morgan Chase, asits on the board of the New York Federal Reserve Bankathe very organization that is supposed to oversee his bankas financial practices, the organization that is supposed to issue all sorts of regulations that control what his bank can do, the very organization he has been lobbying to relax the rules about the bets he wants to make…The Fed conflict is so obvious that it defies any possible rationalization or explanation. For a decade, the New York Fed has failed to pick up on any of the significant Wall Street threats: excess leverage, subprime fraud, dangerous concentration in atoo big to faila entities. Maybe the reason is that the board is controlled by the very voices that have been at the root of the failure. There has been not the slightest voice of protest from the boardayet it is a public organization!a
Canat Wall Street just lean on Congress to stop them?
Possibly. But remember that the most aggressive and effective of Wall Streetas defenders was…Jamie Dimon. And his argument was always that the financial crisis was, in large part, a case of many banks being stupid. But JP Morgan had been smart. And was it really fair to punish JP Morgan for the mistakes of Washington Mutual.
But as Noam Scheiber writes, JP Morganas bad trade just annihilated that argument. aWe now have ironclad proofaas if we really needed itathat everyone is capable of disastrous stupidity. But thatas the one thing Dimon canat admit, since it would require him to support intrusive regulations. Stupidity, in Dimonas mind, is always isolated and explainable, not systemic and unavoidable…[but] almost every mitigating circumstance he cited actually strengthens the case for reform. Dimon made clear that the loss wasnat the work of a rogue trader: The position was completely authorized, he suggested, just poorly executed and weakly monitored. One shudders to think what might have happened at a less scrupulously-managed bankaof which there are manyawhen the losses could have escaped detection much longer. a
What are you more worried about? JP Morgan or Greece.
Oh, Greece. A thousand times Greece. This JP Morgan thing is bad for JP Morgan. Whatas going on in Europe might be bad for the global economy. Or, to put it another way, JP Morganas losses are something you might be angry about, or smug about, but theyare not something you should be worried about. This isnat a second financial crisis or anything.
I have more questions, and you havenat answered them.
Leave them in comments. Iall try and update this post as appropriate.
Wonkbook: The losses and lessons of Hedgegate
From feeds.washingtonpost
On Saturday, at 9:17am, Henry Blodget, the editor of Business Insider, asked the question that was on everyone’s mind: “So, when is JP Morgan going to fire the incompetent fools who just lost $2 billion and trashed the firm’s reputation?”
Over at Seeking Alpha, Gene Kirsch tried to put Hedgegate into a broader context. “JPMorgan losses are reported to be actually $800 million in Q2 with the potential for legal and other losses up to $4.2 billion over a longer period of time, possibly exceeding one year,” he wrote. “The banking unit of JPMorgan Chase alone made $12.4 billion last year. The holding company has over $2.26 trillion in assets and is the largest U.S. bank and 8th largest in the world. The holding company made $29.9 billion in operating income and just over $20 billion in net income for 2011. So, this initial loss of $800M represents approximately 4% of its total net profit for all of 2011, less than 2.7% of its operating income.”
The firm, in other words, can manage it. Though as Brad DeLong was quick to point out, tallying the direct losses misses the episode’s larger impact on the firm’s value. “The revelation that JPMC did not have control over its derivatives book–even though accompanied by promises of multiple firings and deep reforms–destroyed 1/7 of JPMCs franchise value.” Turns out the market doesn’t much like it when what’s reputed to be the safest bank on Wall Street turns out to be incompetent.
Jared Bernstein draws out the larger lesson nicely, and so I’ll quote him at some length. “The fundamental truth here is the one known since Adam (Smith, that is) and amplified by the great financial economist Hy Minsky: humans underprice risk. Their proclivity to do so increases as the business cycle progresses and confidence takes over (remember, JPas bet was unwound by the fact that the economy wasnat as strong as they thought). The advent of a global derivatives market with notional trades in the trillions greatly amplifies the risks.”
“The fact that humans like Jamie Dimonahe who presided over JPas self-proclaimed ‘fortress balance sheet’ahe who inveighed against financial reform as imposing unnecessary oversight on such skilled risk managers as he and his staffafall prey to this fundamental truth only underscores the lesson of this episode in financial hubris.”
“And that is this: financial markets are inherently unstable. They will neither self-correct nor self-regulate. Their instability poses a threat to markets and economies and people across the globe. Therefore, they need to be regulated. Thatas not to say that anyone knows the best way to do this yet in order to balance the necessity of oversight with the dynamics of the markets. We donat know where to set the speed limits. It must be an iterative process. But we do know they need to be set, and JPas loss should be taken as a warning that our tendency is to set them too low.”
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Top stories
1) Euro zone leaders are seriously discussing a Greek exit. “Eurozone central bankers have talked publicly for the first time of managing a possible Greek exit from Europeas monetary union as stalemate in Athens talks on a coalition government raises the prospect that Greece will renege on the terms of its international bailout. The comments by members of the European Central Bankas governing council indicate that the risk of eurozone fragmentation is being taken increasingly seriously by the regionas policymakers. They mark a significant shift at the ECB, which has previously argued that European treaties do not allow for an exit and that a break-up would cause incalculable economic damage.” Ralph Atkins in the FT.
Greece is headed towards new elections. “Greece appears headed to new parliamentary elections next month, further delaying its efforts to meet international demands to overhaul its economy, after leaders of the countryas major political parties declared little hope Sunday for a last-ditch effort to form a coalition government…Greek President Karolos Papoulias met with politicians Sunday in an effort to construct a unity government that could guide the country through the bailout program, and he planned to continue discussions Monday. But with top leaders expressing little hope for compromise after a week of efforts, it appeared likely that Papoulias would be forced to call new elections, most likely for June 10 or 17. Hopes for compromise have rested on Alexis Tsipras, the leader of the anti-bailout Coalition of the Radical Left Party, also called Syriza…But Tsipras has refused to go along with the pro-business New Democracy party, which won 19 percent of the May 6 vote, and the Socialists, who won 13 percent.” Michael Birnbaum in The Washington Post.
KRUGMAN: “weare talking about months, not years, for this to play out.”
@TheStalwart: Weird. As @renovatio_news points out, #quediceKrugman (What Krugman Says) is trending in Spain. http://twitpic.com/9ktvbo
2) Wall Street looks the same to voters. The giant $2 billion trading loss at JPMorgan Chase highlights a central problem in President Barack Obamaas case for a second term: Four years after the financial crisis nearly brought the nation to its knees, very little appears to have changed. No high-profile bank executives are in jail. Special multi-agency task forces to go after financial fraud and mortgage market abuses appeared in State of the Union addresses, only to issue a few news releases and mostly vanish from public view. And now one of the largest banks in the United States, headed by a Democrat and operating with government guarantees, has turned in the kind of headline-grabbing, casino-style style loss that drives voters crazy and that Obamaas financial reform bill was supposed to stop. Ben White in Politico .
JPMorgan Chase has been lobbying to make exactly the kind of trades that just lost the company billions of dollars. “Soon after lawmakers finished work on the nationas new financial regulatory law, a team of JPMorgan Chase lobbyists descended on Washington. Their goal was to obtain special breaks that would allow banks to make big bets in their portfolios, including some of the types of trading that led to the $2 billion loss now rocking the bank. Several visits over months by the bankas well-connected chief executive, Jamie Dimon, and his top aides were aimed at persuading regulators to create a loophole in the law, known as the Volcker Rule. The rule was designed by Congress to limit the very kind of proprietary trading that JPMorgan was seeking…The loophole is known as portfolio hedging, a strategy that essentially allows banks to view an investment portfolio as a whole and take actions to offset the risks of the entire portfolio. That contrasts with the traditional definition of hedging, which matches an individual security or trading position with an inversely related investment — so when one goes up, the other goes down.” Edward Wyatt in The New York Times.
The real response to JPMorgan Chase’s loss may come from global regulators, not the Volcker rule. “The size and scale of the surprise $2bn loss at JPMorgan Chase last week is likely to accelerate plans by global regulators to force banks to improve their trading risk models…While initial reactions to the JPMorgan loss last week focused on how it could reshape the US debate over implementing the ‘Volcker rule’ ban on proprietary trading, the misstep by one of the worldas largest banks could have far broader consequences. The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, which sets global rules, has already sought a replacement for Value at Risk – the main measure of potential trading losses – and looked at additional capital requirements to cover potential damages that are not adequately measured by existing models. That project was seen as a long-term effort when it was announced two weeks ago, but it has now gained urgency and could be pushed through more quickly.” Brooke Masters and Tracy Alloway in The Financial Times.
CONFUSED? Here’s an explainer on JPMorgan Chase’s loss.
@davidmwessel: Barney Frank on JPM: Case that banks don’t need new rules to avoid repeat of ’08 crisis “at least $2 billion harder to make todaya (DJNS)
3) Republican state officials are dragging their feet on setting up exchanges. “In about two dozen states across the country, the insurance marketplaces at the heart of the 2010 health-care law remain in limbo, with Republican governors or lawmakers who oppose the statute refusing to act until the Supreme Court decides its constitutionality…In states with Democratic governors, such as New Hampshire and Minnesota, it is often Republican-dominated legislatures that are causing the hold-up. And in six states where Republicans hold both branches of government, including Kansas and South Dakota, state assemblies havenat even considered laws to establish the marketplaces. Though the battles primarily break along partisan lines, there have been at least a half-dozen exceptions. Last spring, the Republican governor of Nevada chose not to stand in the way of an exchange bill adopted by the majority Democratic assembly.” N.C. Aizenman in The Washington Post.
4) Congressional transportation bills won’t fill America’s infrastructure funding shortfall. “The nationas population is growing at a steady pace, yet infrastructure investments lag. The lifelines of commerce — roads, bridges, runways, ports — are showing their age, and in this era of fiscal austerity it may be a long time before they get rebuilt…The financing fiasco has been well-known for years — in fact, the last transportation bill, enacted in 2005, ordered up a blue-ribbon commission tasked with studying the financing problem and making recommendations for how to fix it. The National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commissionas final report, issued in January 2008, a year before the last transportation bill was to expire, recommended that the country needs to be investing at least $225 billion annually from ‘all sources’ for the next 50 years in order to upgrade infrastructure to a state of good repair and make transportation advances. The Senateas current transportation bill, in comparison, would fund highways and transit at $109 billion over two years.” Kathryn Wolfe in Politico.
Top op-eds
1) BAKER AND HASSETT: We need a targeted response to long-term unemployment. “Policy makers must come together and recognize that this is an emergency, and fashion a comprehensive re-employment policy that addresses the specific needs of the long-term unemployed. A policy package that as a whole should appeal to the left and the right should spend money to help expand public and private training programs with proven track records; expand entrepreneurial opportunities by increasing access to small-business financing; reduce government hurdles to the formation of new businesses; and explore subsidies for private employers who hire the long-term unemployed. Those who hire for government jobs must do their share, too: managers who are filling open positions should be given explicit incentives to reconnect these lost workers. Every month of delay is a month in which our unemployed friends and neighbors drift further away.” Dean Baker and Kevin Hassett in The New York Times.
@davidfrum: “50 to 100% increase in death rates for older male workers in yrs immediately following a job loss”
2) YGLESIAS: America is headed towards default. “House Republicans voted to take money away from programs meant to help poor people and give it to the military instead. Thatas not my idea of wise policy, but thatas what was terrible about it. The problem is that the vote constitutes a collective Republican welching on the agreement that was reached last spring to raise the statutory debt ceiling and avoid national default. Yesterdayas vote doesnat undo the deal or cause any immediate problems, but by so speedily backing out of their agreement, the Republicans have done something much worse–made it impossible for anyone to negotiate with them in the future, because itas clear they cannot be trusted to keep the promises they made. If President Obama wins re-election, the debt-ceiling issue will have to be confronted again, but now in a Congress that has been poisoned by the Republicansa welching on the last agreement. The country, in other words, is set for an even more severe version of the crisis that crushed financial markets last summer.” Matthew Yglesias in Slate.
3) KRUGMAN: JPMorgan Chase’s loss proves the need for bank regulation. “Banks are special, because the risks they take are borne, in large part, by taxpayers and the economy as a whole. And what JPMorgan has just demonstrated is that even supposedly smart bankers must be sharply limited in the kinds of risk theyare allowed to take on. Why, exactly, are banks special? Because history tells us that banking is and always has been subject to occasional destructive ‘panics,’ which can wreak havoc with the economy as a whole…So what can be done? In the 1930s, after the mother of all banking panics, we arrived at a workable solution, involving both guarantees and oversight. On one side, the scope for panic was limited via government-backed deposit insurance; on the other, banks were subject to regulations intended to keep them from abusing the privileged status they derived from deposit insurance, which is in effect a government guarantee of their debts.” Paul Krugman in The New York Times.
@Austan_Goolsbee: #lettersyouwontsee: Dear Mr. Volcker, you were right all along. we’re now fixing things and won’t let it happen again. yours, wall St.
4) SLOAN: JPMorgan Chase doesn’t prove the need for the Volcker Rule. “The Volcker Rule, named for former Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker, is an example of the problem involved in regulating giant companies in a complex world. The principle sounds wonderful and simple: Donat let banks use federally insured deposits for risky trades. But implementing it is proving to be incredibly difficult, as realists, including me, predicted would happen. Once bank lawyers finish finding loopholes in the detailed provisions, whatever they prove to be, the rule will probably have little meaningful impact. So bash Morgan all you like for its trading losses, and feel free to snicker at the spectacle of Jamie Dimon losing his swagger and having to eat crow. But donat confuse Morganas mess-up with the supposed need for the Volcker Rule. The Volcker Rule would have symbolic impact, by appearing to rein in Wall Street. But it will prove to be more useful as a full-employment act for loophole specialists than for reining in the banks.” Allan Sloan in The Washington Post.
5) SNOW: Tax cuts on dividends and capital gains should stay. “Nine years ago this month Congress passed President George W. Bush’s Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act. That bill’s lower rates on capital, as well as the continuity in tax policy it established, have helped make our economy far more resilient. The legislation’s centerpiece was a reduction in the taxation of dividends and capital gains to 15%. Unfortunately, the 2003 tax rates, including those on capital income, are due to expire at the end of the year. Capital warrants special tax treatment because of the central role it plays in generating economic growth and jobs. Capital is the very lifeblood of the market economy, the mainstay of innovation, and the foundation for future prosperity. As more of it is put to work today, labor output and wages will rise tomorrow. An appreciation of that critical relationship should guide how the tax system treats earnings from capital.” John Snow in The Wall Street Journal.
6) THALER: Beware of slippery slope arguments on healthcare. “One pernicious category of imaginary risks involves those created by users of the dreaded ‘slippery slope’ arguments. Such arguments are dangerous because they are popular, versatile and often convincing, yet completely fallacious. Worse, they are creeping into an arena that should be above this sort of thing: the Supreme Court, in its deliberations on health care reform…Justice Scalia is arguing that if the court lets Congress create a mandate to buy health insurance, nothing could stop Congress from passing laws requiring everyone to buy broccoli and to join a gym…Please stop! The very fact that a slippery slope is being cited as grounds for declaring the law unconstitutional — despite that ‘significant deference’ usually given to laws passed by Congress — tells you all that you need to know about the argumentas validity. Can anyone imagine Congress passing a broccoli mandate law, much less the court allowing it to take effect?” Richard Thaler in The New York Times.
Top long reads
Jeffrey Toobin on how John Roberts orchestrated Citizens United: “Citizens United is a distinctive product of the Roberts Court. The decision followed a lengthy and bitter behind-the-scenes struggle among the Justices that produced both secret unpublished opinions and a rare reargument of a case. The case, too, reflects the aggressive conservative judicial activism of the Roberts Court. It was once liberals who were associated with using the courts to overturn the work of the democratically elected branches of government, but the current Court has matched contempt for Congress with a disdain for many of the Courtas own precedents. When the Court announced its final ruling on Citizens United, on January 21, 2010, the vote was five to four and the majority opinion was written by Anthony Kennedy. Above all, though, the result represented a triumph for Chief Justice Roberts. Even without writing the opinion, Roberts, more than anyone, shaped what the Court did. As American politics assumes its new form in the post-Citizens United era, the credit or the blame goes mostly to him.”
Andrew Martin and Andrew Lehren on the skyrocketing cost of college: “With more than $1 trillion in student loans outstanding in this country, crippling debt is no longer confined to dropouts from for-profit colleges or graduate students who owe on many years of education, some of the overextended debtors in years past. Now nearly everyone pursuing a bacheloras degree is borrowing. As prices soar, a college degree statistically remains a good lifetime investment, but it often comes with an unprecedented financial burden. Ninety-four percent of students who earn a bacheloras degree borrow to pay for higher education — up from 45 percent in 1993, according to an analysis by The New York Times of the latest data from the Department of Education. This includes loans from the federal government, private lenders and relatives. For all borrowers, the average debt in 2011 was $23,300, with 10 percent owing more than $54,000 and 3 percent more than $100,000.”
’90s nostalgia interlude: Nine Inch Nails play “The Becoming” in studio..
Got tips, additions, or comments? E-mail me.
Still to come: Wholesale prices are down; rebates will be credited to the ACA; Secure Communities expands; the IEA doesn’t like Obama’s plans; and cats, in slow motion.
Economy
Europe’s woes could hit the U.S.. “During bouts of European turmoil in the past two years, U.S. financial markets regularly stumbled and growth ebbed due to fears of a euro-zone meltdown. But Europe muddled through and avoided calamity, and the effects on the U.S. economy weren’t all bad. U.S. exports to Europe rose, and many U.S. banks benefited as overseas competition fell away. Now, the troubles in the currency union–the threat of a Greek exit from the euro zone, rising borrowing costs in Spain and Italy, recessions in several European countries–are renewing fears of an escalating crisis that could deliver a more serious blow to the fragile U.S. recovery. U.S. companies are bracing for a hit. Networking giant Cisco Systems Inc. last week blamed worries about Europe, along with other uncertainty, for its cautious outlook. Watchmaker Fossil Inc. reported a slowdown in German sales on top of deeper pullbacks in Italy and Spain. Chemicals firm Celanese Corp. attributed its disappointing results to weakening European demand.” Sudeep Reddy in The Wall Street Journal.
Wholesale prices declined for the first time this year. “U.S. wholesale prices declined for the first time this year, suggesting a drop in energy costs is helping to keep inflation under control. The index of producer prices, which measures how much wholesalers and manufacturers pay for goods and materials, fell a seasonally adjusted 0.2% in April from a month earlier, the Labor Department said Friday. The decline, the first since December, was due entirely to cheaper prices for energy goods, including gasoline and utility gas…The report on producer prices suggests inflation is subdued, after a run-up in oil prices earlier this year pushed costs beyond the Federal Reserve’s annual inflation target of roughly 2%. Lower inflation could reassure Fed officials as they keep a key interest rate exceptionally low through late 2014 to stimulate the economy. Lower inflation also gives the Fed more room to act, perhaps through additional bond purchases, if economic growth falters.” Josh Mitchell in The Wall Street Journal.
@BobCusack: “Where are the jobs?” references (from both parties) in the Congressional Record between ’09-’12: 357. Between ’05-’08: 3.
Vintage bicycle manufacturing tutorial interlude: How a bicycle is made.
Health Care
Insurers will be required to credit premium rebates to Obamacare. “Health-insurance companies must tell customers who get a premium rebate this summer that the check is the result of the Obama administration’s health-care law, according to federal guidelines released Friday. The move is the latest sign the Obama administration is trying to draw attention to the law’s benefits before the fall elections, even though the law faces an uncertain future. The Supreme Court is expected to decide in June whether its central plank–a mandate that everyone carry insurance–violates the Constitution. Mitt Romney, the presumed Republican presidential nominee, has pledged to wipe out the law if elected. Under the 2010 legislation, insurers that don’t spend a specified amount of revenue on actual medical care–as opposed to administrative costs–must refund the difference to customers.” Louise Radnofsky in The Wall Street Journal.
Domestic Policy
The Senate cybersecurity bill is running into privacy concerns. “Thereas yet another hurdle for Sen. Joe Liebermanas cybersecurity bill: Democrats who say it doesnat go far enough to protect consumer privacy. With Senate Republicans standing firm against the measure, the friendly fire from Democrats means thereas only more work ahead as Lieberman and others scramble to cobble together 60 votes to move the bill. A handful of members, including Sens. Al Franken of Minnesota and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, are echoing the concerns of civil liberties groups, which are growing increasingly fearful that consumersa data could end up being passed around by companies and the government as security experts share with each other information about emerging cyberthreats. To them and others, the Senate measure as written would specify too few limitations on how data could be used and cover entities with too broad a protection from liability.” Tony Romm and Jennifer Martinez in Politico.
The Obama administration will expand the controversial Secure Communities program. “Obama administration officials have announced that a contentious fingerprinting program to identify illegal immigrants will be extended across Massachusetts and New York next week, expanding federal enforcement efforts despite opposition from the governors and immigrant groups in those states. In blunt e-mails sent Tuesday to officials and the police in the two states, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said the program, Secure Communities, would be activated ‘in all remaining jurisdictions’ this Tuesday…Last year, officials at the agency said they had determined that they did not require consent from states to start the program. Citing antiterrorism legislation that Congress passed in 2002, the officials canceled agreements they had signed in 40 states and said they would extend the program nationwide by 2013.” Julia Preston in The New York Times.
Minority contracts fell last year for the first time in a decade. “U.S. government contracts to black-and Hispanic-owned small businesses fell last year for the first time in a decade, declining at a sharper rate than awards to all companies. Contracts to the black-owned firms dropped 8 percent to $7.12 billion in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, compared with fiscal 2010. Awards to Hispanic-owned businesses decreased 7 percent to $7.89 billion, according to federal procurement data.Contracts to the two minority groups fell at a faster pace than all contracts, which dipped 1 percent as the U.S. government slowed spending to help reduce the federal deficit. The gap may reflect stiffer competition over a shrinking pool of revenue and the recessionas greater impact on black and Hispanic firms…The absence of these set-aside programs may help explain the dip in awards for some minority groups, said James McCullough, who leads the government contracts practice at Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson in Washington.” Danielle Ivory in The Washington Post.
Cuteness amplified interlude: Cats in slow motion.
Energy
Fracking is sparking a boom in sand mining. “Scouts armed with geological maps and elevations from Google Earth are knocking on doors in the upper Midwest in search of what seems too common to mine: sand. The sedimentary material is in high demand among U.S. oil and natural-gas producers, setting off a sand rush in Wisconsin, Minnesota and other Midwestern states. While adding jobs, the mining boom is prompting pushback from some local residents, who are surprised by the frenzy and leery of its impact on their communities. Sand mined in the Midwest is used in places such as North Dakota and Pennsylvania to tap oil and gas reserves. The U.S. producers’ demand for sand reached 28.7 million tons in 2011, up from six million tons in 2007, according to independent laboratory PropTester Inc. and consultancy Kelrik LLC…Sand, injected deep underground to prop open fractures in shale formations and allow oil and gas to flow out, is important in ‘fracking.’” Mark Peters and Isabel Ordonez in The Wall Street Journal.
Lawmakers are torn on how to use high-speed rail funds. “As roads become more crowded each year, transportation planners have been looking for a game-changer that can reduce congestion and efficiently move millions of people. Enter rail — a centuries-old mode that may be a shining savior to those hoping to push the United States into a new way of getting people around at high speeds. But it wonat work everywhere — a lot depends on simple geography. And lawmakers are torn between how to use limited funds: along the densely packed East Coast, which has a history of commuter rail, or out West, where California has ponied up billions of dollars to build a high-speed system, much of it from scratch. Amtrakas Acela service from Boston to Washington runs the fastest trains in the country, maxing out at 150 mph and increasing soon to 160 mph…Three thousand miles away, California is inching ever closer to its high-speed rail vision, having formally approved the initial Central Valley route.” Burgess Everett and Adam Snider in Politico.
The IEA has concerns about Obama’s plans to increase oversight of oil markets. “Barack Obamaas plans for strengthened supervision of the oil markets have come under fire from the International Energy Agency, which has warned they could lead to sharp swings in crude prices. The warning, contained in the agencyas monthly oil market report, came in response to moves by authorities in the US and Europe to crack down on what they see as excessive speculation in commodities markets using derivatives. The US presidentas proposal to give the Commodity Futures Trading Commission authority to direct exchanges to raise margin requirements to address increased price volatility or prevent excessive speculation or manipulation could have the opposite effect, the western countriesa oil watchdog said on Friday. The IEA said raising margin requirements in oil futures trading might increase price volatility and concentrate market share in the hands of large speculators while having no effect on price levels.” Guy Chazan in The Financial Times.
America is running out of helium. “Sure, Congress has plenty of crises to deal with: a weak economy, an expiring highway bill, the end-of-the-year ‘taxmageddon.’ But now thereas another one floating into view. The United States is running out of helium. Yes, helium. Thanks, in part, to a 1996 law that has forced the government to sell off its helium reserves at bargain-bin prices, the countryas stockpile of the relatively rare and nonrenewable gas could soon dwindle…Congress is slowly grasping the extent of the problem. At a sleepy Senate hearing Thursday morning, the Energy and Natural Resources Committee listened to an array of experts chat about the gas. The hearing was tied to a bill, sponsored by Sens. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) and John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), that would change how the government sells helium from its Federal Helium Reserve (yes, this exists) in order to prevent shortages.” Brad Plumer in The Washington Post.
@mattyglesias: Helium Privatization Act is a classic example of inefficient pseudo-privatization gone horribly wrong
Wonkbook is compiled and produced with help from Karl Singer and Michelle Williams.
Wonkbook: ‘Just because weare stupid doesnat mean everybody else was’
From feeds.washingtonpost
Of the big banks, JPMorgan Chase arguably came through the crisis best. And its CEO, Jamie Dimon, has been using the credibility built up during that period to fight the Volcker rule. aPaul Volcker by his own admission has said he doesnat understand capital markets,a Dimon told Fox Business earlier this year. aHe has proven that to me.a
Dimon, for his part, doesn’t see the relevance. aJust because weare stupid doesnat mean everybody else was,a he said on a Thursday conference call. aThere were huge moves in the marketplace but we made these positions more complex and they were badly monitored.a
But the point of the Volcker rule — and of financial regulation more generally — isn’t to punish banks for being evil. It’s to protect the rest of us from banks being stupid. And if the most prudent of the big banks can’t keep itself from being this stupid this soon after the financial crisis, then it’s pretty clear we’re going to need very strong rules to keep them from being stupid in the years to come, when the lessons of the financial crisis have faded more completely.
As Reuters’ Felix Salmon writes, “JP Morgan more or less invented risk management. If they canat do it, no bank can. And no sensible regulator can ever trust the banks to self-regulate.”
Wonkbook dashboard
RCP Obama vs. Romney: Obama +1.5%; 7-day change: Obama -2.1%.
RCP Obama approval: 47.4%; 7-day change: -.7%.
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Top stories
1) A massive bet gone wrong cost JP Morgan Chase at least $2 billion. “A massive trading bet boomeranged on J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., leaving the bank with at least $2 billion in trading losses and its chief executive, James Dimon, with a rare black eye following a long run as what some called the ‘King of Wall Street.’ The losses stemmed from wagers gone wrong in the bank’s Chief Investment Office, which manages risk for the New York company. The Wall Street Journal reported early last month that large positions taken in that office by a trader nicknamed ‘the London whale’ had roiled a sector of the debt markets. The bank, betting on a continued economic recovery with a complex web of trades tied to the values of corporate bonds, was hit hard when prices moved against it starting last month, causing losses in many of its derivatives positions. The losses occurred while J.P. Morgan tried to scale back that trade.” Dan Fitzpatrick, Gregory Zuckerman, and Liz Rappaport in The Wall Street Journal.
The loss is putting the spotlight on the Volcker Rule. “JPMorgan Chaseas $2 billion trading loss, which was disclosed on Thursday, could give supporters of tighter industry regulation a huge new piece of ammunition as they fight a last-ditch battle with the banks over new federal rules that may redefine how banks do business…The centerpiece of the new regulations, the so-called Volcker Rule, forbids banks from making bets with their own money, and a final version is expected to be issued by federal officials in the coming months. With the financial crisis fading from view, banks have successfully pushed for some exceptions that critics say will allow them to simply make proprietary trades under a different name, in this case for the purposes of hedging and market-making. The missteps by JPMorgan could highlight that murky line between proprietary trading and hedging. The bank unit responsible for losses takes positions to hedge activities in other parts of the bank.” Nelson Schwartz in The New York Times.
@lizzieohreally: Dimonfreude.
@BCAppelbaum: If losing $2 billion in your trading operations doesn’t violate the Volcker Rule, is it possible that we might need a broader rule?
@ezraklein: At this point in time, I feel comfortable predicting Jamie Dimon will not replace Tim Geithner as Secretary of the Treasury
2) The U.S. ran a monthly surplus for the first time since 2008. “The federal government posted a budget surplus in April as tax receipts rose, the first month that revenue has outpaced spending in more than three and a half years. The Treasury Department, in its latest monthly budget figures out Thursday, said the government ran a surplus of $59.12 billion during April, compared with a deficit of $40.39 billion a year earlier. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires had projected a $30.00 billion surplus. The federal government has historically run a budget surplus in April, when many Americans file their tax returns. Over the past 58 years, there have been 44 April surpluses, a Treasury official said. But from late 2008 up until two months ago, the government ran steady deficits amid weaker tax receipts and heavy spending following the financial crisis. The government last ran a monthly surplus in September 2008, the same month that Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for bankruptcy.” Jeffrey Sparshott in The Wall Street Journal.
@DaveedGR: Obviously, the April surplus is due to taxes coming in. Remarkable that there hasn’t been a surplus in any April since 2008…
3) Republicans may not offer a comprehensive replacement for Obamacare. “Republicans might not offer a comprehensive plan to replace President Obamaas healthcare law if the Supreme Court strikes it down this summer. House Republicans had said they would have a healthcare bill ready to go by the time of the ruling to present a clear alternative to the Democratsa Affordable Care Act. But now, with the high courtas ruling just weeks away, some conservatives are urging the party to abandon that strategy, fearing voters will recoil from another sweeping revamp of the healthcare system…Ditching a comprehensive proposal could also make it easier for Republicans to steer the publicas focus away from popular elements of the Affordable Care Act that are unlikely to make the cut in a GOP plan…But a piecemeal strategy on healthcare could present its own risks. Republicans campaigned in 2010 on ‘repealing and replacing’ Obamaas law, but have struggled to clearly articulate a healthcare platform of their own.” Sam Baker in The Hill.
4) Europe delayed a loan payment to Greece. “Euro-zone governments held back part of a big scheduled loan payment in a warning shot to Greece Wednesday, as outside pressure mounted on the country’s politicians to pull together a pro-euro coalition to take charge of the government. Greece’s euro-zone partners agreed to release only a!4.2 billion ($5.5 billion) in previously agreed financing, to be paid out Thursday, holding back a!1 billion at least until June. That would be paid only if Greece keeps to pledges it made to secure a bailout. With Athens in political turmoil after a fractured result in weekend elections, and a new vote likely by June, German politicians cautioned that further aid could be withdrawn if Greece abandons austerity targets–even if that pushes the country from the bloc…Thursday’s payment is needed for Greece to pay a!3.3 billion it owes the European Central Bank next week. The aid was agreed in March by euro-zone governments as part of Greece’s a!130 billion second bailout program.” Alkman Granitsas, Laurence Norman, and Matthew Dalton in The Wall Street Journal.
5) Almost 250,000 Americans will lose their unemployment insurance this weekend. “More than 230,000 jobless Americans will lose their unemployment insurance by this weekend as reductions in the federal program that provides extended benefits to the long-term unemployed take broader effect. The new round of reductions is hitting eight states this month, meaning that about 400,000 long-term unemployed Americans in 27 states will have been cut off of the federal governmentas extended unemployment benefits program this year, according to an analysis by the National Employment Law Project, which advocates for the unemployed. The cuts stem from a congressional agreement this year that will reduce the maximum duration of unemployment benefits from 99 weeks to 79 weeks as the nationas jobless rate declines. Most states provide 26 weeks of benefits, and the federal government provides the rest, partially through a complicated formula that requires jobless rates to be both high and increasing to reach the benefit limit.” Michael Fletcher in The Washington Post.
6) The House passed the GOP’s sequester replacement bill. “The House approved sweeping legislation on Thursday to cut $310 billion from the deficit over the next decade — much of it from programs for the poor — and shift some of that savings to the Pentagon to stave off automatic military spending cuts scheduled for next year. The legislation has no chance of passing the Senate or of becoming law. The White House issued a stern veto threat, saying the bill would ‘fail the test of fairness and shared responsibility.’ But the legislationas prescriptions and priorities could define the 2012 Congressional elections — and are likely to affect the race for the White House…The billas political sensitivity came through in the 218-to-199 vote. Democrats were united in their opposition. Sixteen Republicans sided with the Democrats, and one Republican voted present. ‘I voted my conscience, and I voted my district,’ said Representative Mike G. Fitzpatrick, a Republican from suburban Philadelphia, who voted no.” Jonathan Weisman in The New York Times.
Top op-eds
1) REICH: J.P. Morgan Chase makes the case for Glass-Steagall. “Ever since the start of the banking crisis in 2008, Dimon has been arguing that more government regulation of Wall Street is unnecessary. Last year he vehemently and loudly opposed the so-called Volcker rule, itself a watered-down version of the old Glass-Steagall Act that used to separate commercial from investment banking before it was repealed in 1999, saying it would unnecessarily impinge on derivative trading (the lucrative practice of making bets on bets) and hedging (using some bets to offset the risks of other bets)…What just happened at J.P. Morgan – along with its leaderas cavalier dismissal followed by lame reassurance – reveals how fragile and opaque the banking system continues to be, why Glass-Steagall must be resurrected, and why the Dallas Fedas recent recommendation that Wall Streetas giant banks be broken up should be heeded.” Robert Reich.
2) KRUGMAN: Talk of structural unemployment is an excuse for inaction. “So now weare in another depression, not as bad as the last one, but bad enough. And, once again, authoritative-sounding figures insist that our problems are ‘structural,’ that they canat be fixed quickly. We must focus on the long run, such people say, believing that they are being responsible. But the reality is that theyare being deeply irresponsible…So whatas with the obsessive push to declare our problems ‘structural’? And, yes, I mean obsessive. Economists have been debating this issue for several years, and the structuralistas wonat take no for an answer, no matter how much contrary evidence is presented. The answer, Iad suggest, lies in the way claims that our problems are deep and structural offer an excuse for not acting, for doing nothing to alleviate the plight of the unemployed…All this talk about structural unemployment isnat about facing up to our real problems; itas about avoiding them, and taking the easy, useless way out. And itas time for it to stop.” Paul Krugman in The New York Times.
3) ALTER: Obama and Romney offer differing views of capitalism. “A more useful distinction may be between venture capitalists and human capitalists. Romney came up as a private-equity investor. Like his party, he believes in his heart that the way forward for the U.S. is to slash taxes for the wealthy even further so that they have more venture capital to invest in businesses. Obama came up as a community organizer. Like his party, he believes in his heart that a great nation must invest in human capital through education, health care and infrastructure…Last week brought a classic example of the differing approaches. The tussle over doubling interest rates for student loans (scheduled for July 1) was a controversy ginned up for the Obama campaign, but it was also an acid test. Democrats wanted to pay for the lower rate with a modest business tax; Republicans responded with plans to scuttle the preventive health-care part of Obamacare, despite much evidence of its efficacy for both people and budgets. ” Jonathan Alter in Bloomberg.
4) CARPENTER AND KNEPPER: Occupational license reform would spur economic opportunity. “Since the 1950s, the number of U.S. workers needing an occupational license–effectively a government permission slip to work–has grown from one in 20 to nearly one in three, according to a 2010 study by Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota) and Alan Krueger (Princeton). The burdens these licenses impose on would-be workers and entrepreneurs are substantial…The risk of a few bad haircuts seems worth a roll of the dice if the upside is more economic opportunities. But the truth is that consumers are capable of judging the quality of many services for themselves. If lawmakers in Michigan and elsewhere want to help more Americans find jobs, they should start by reducing or removing burdens that do little more than protect some people from competition by keeping others out of work.” Dick Carpenter and Lisa Knepper in The Wall Street Journal.
5) BAKOPOULOS: Greek voters didn’t have a chance to reject austerity without rejecting Europe. “Itas clear that Greeks — derided throughout the Continent as lazy and corrupt, hobbled by the bailout dealas austerity measures and humiliated by the troika (the European Central Bank, European Commission and International Monetary Fund) — have put their trust outside the mainstream…But an election usually asks: who, or what, are you for? Not this one. If voters were given any choice, it was this: either accept the austerity measures or be forced to leave the euro zone. A double bind, this either-or option is unable to give expression to the complexity of both yes to Europe and no to austerity. Just before the vote, the German finance minister issued a warning: If Greek voters did not elect a government that would abide by the terms of the deal, ‘then Greece will have to bear the consequences.’ But the consequences are unclear. Vote correctly, or else. Or else what?” Natalie Bakopoulos in The New York Times.
Top long reads
Binyamin Appelbaum profiles financial blogger Joe Weisenthal: “Weisenthal is often — perhaps more often than anyone else — the first person to describe new data on Twitter. And almost as quickly, he repeats the thought, with a new headline, on Business Insider. When the government reported that only 120,000 jobs were created in March, well below expectations, he quickly rewrote the draft of his tweet: ‘DISASTER: MARCH JOBS REPORT MISSES EXPECTATIONS AT 120K. (Analysts expected +205K)’ A search on Twitter suggests that this, at 8:30 on the dot, was the first line published on the subject. Weisenthal managed to post a complete sentence before one of his main rivals, a blogger whose handle is ZeroHedge, tweeted just this: ’120k.’…And then Weisenthal and his audience moved on to the next thing. Around 10 a.m., he posted a new article. The headline read, ‘FORGET THE JOBS REPORT: The Most Important Number of the Day Hasnat Even Come Out Yet.’”
James Bandler and Doris Burke investigate the struggles of HP: “Dr. Phil could fill a month’s worth of shows just examining HP’s board, whose dynamics have resembled those of rival junior high school cliques more than what is supposed to be a sage guiding force. At times, as we’ll see, HP directors have refused to be in the same room with one another and have accused each other of lying, leaking, and betrayal. Time and again they’ve failed in their choice of CEO — their most important task — selecting a new leader whose most salient trait is that he or she is the opposite of the last one. All of this has impeded the company from tackling the fundamental problem it faces: Simply put, Hewlett-Packard has lost its way. The company is in the midst of an existential crisis. It remains a behemoth, No. 10 on the Fortune 500, with $127 billion in sales last year and $7 billion in earnings. But the trajectory is ominous. Those profits, for example, were 19% lower in 2011 than in the previous year.”
’60s nostalgia interlude: Jimi Hendrix plays “Rock Me Baby” live at Monterey 67.
Got tips, additions, or comments? E-mail me.
Still to come: CEOs push for deficit reduction; an abortion rights leader is stepping down; low scores on a science exam; oil independence may not be a realistic goal; and bear cubs hop aboard the love train.
Economy
A rise in imports widened the trade deficit. “The U.S. trade deficit widened in March but other data Thursday reflected two conditions that could spur the economic recovery: strong American exports and falling oil prices. The March trade gap expanded 14.1% from February to $51.8 billion, the government said. Growing demand from consumers and businesses for goods and services from abroad, along with high oil prices that have since retreated, sent imports surging 5.2% to a record $238.6 billion. But exports also showed strength, rising at the fastest pace since last summer to set their own record. Despite Europe’s fiscal woes and Asia’s slower growth, the U.S. sent abroad $186.8 billion in goods and services in March, up 2.9% from February. Exports have climbed for the past four months, defying forecasts of slower growth due to the recession in the euro zone. U.S. manufacturers appear to have been helped by a historically weak dollar as well as subdued wage growth at home.” Josh Mitchell in The Wall Street Journal.
The House passed the first appropriations bill of the year. “The House on Thursday approved the first appropriations bill of the year, a measure that spends $51 billion on the Departments of Commerce and Justice, NASA and other related agencies. The spending bill, H.R. 5326, was approved in a 247-163 vote in which eight Republicans voted against it, reflecting opposition to the amount spent in the bill. But it also picked up the support of 23 Democrats…The bill is among the least controversial of the 12 annual appropriations bills but has little chance of becoming law on its own. The White House has said President Obama will veto any and all of the 12 bills until the House renounces the top-line spending level in the overall budget written by Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.). The legislation cuts spending by about 3 percent compared to current levels, which Republicans said shows their ongoing commitment to trim spending. The GOP said spending by agencies covered by the bill has been cut by 20 percent over the last three budget cycles.” Pete Kasperowicz in The Hill.
CEOs are making a new push for a deficit deal. “Top business executives, many of whom sat on their hands during last year’s frantic debate about raising the federal debt ceiling, have begun mobilizing and plan to be more vocal in urging Congress to reach a bipartisan deficit-reduction deal by the end of the year. Executives have been meeting privately with lawmakers, urging them to start laying the groundwork now so they can reach an agreement after the November elections to avoid the large tax increases and heavy spending cuts scheduled to take effect in January. They worry those measures could tip the economy back into recession and create turmoil in financial markets, according to people who have attended some of the meetings. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. chief executive James Dimon hosted a lunch for several dozen chief executives and two U.S. senators late last month, one of the latest in a series of private meetings aimed at drumming up support for a political agreement.” Damian Paletta in The Wall Street Journal.
Subsides are fueling gains in manufacturing. “As chairman and principal owner of Revere Copper Products, Mr. OaShaughnessy runs one of Americaas oldest manufacturing companies, started by Paul Revere himself, a fact that exerts considerable pressure. As he put it: ‘What kind of a message are you sending to the people of the country if you abandon America?’ But spend a day with him, and a more complex picture emerges. He wonders sometimes about the less patriotic alternative of relocating production to Asia or closing the factory entirely on the ground that Revereas profit margin here is too thin — less than $1 million on $450 million in annual revenue…What staves off those alternatives are labor concessions and a substantial government subsidy, something he and others in the United States say is increasingly important to fuel a nascent recovery in manufacturing…With such support, the key measure of manufacturingas presence in America is ticking upward.” Louis Uchitelle in The New York Times.
@jbarro: Just got woken up. I swear I was in the middle of a dream where I was arguing w/ a reporter about transfer taxes.
Engineering interlude: A real life Mario Kart.
Health Care
The leader of an influential abortion rights advocacy group will step down. “At the end of this year, Nancy Keenan will step down from her post as president of NARAL Pro-Choice America, the countryas oldest abortion-rights advocacy group. The 60-year-old Keenan said she is leaving out of concern for the future of the pro-choice movement — and thinks she could be holding it back.Nancy Keenan will retire as president of NARAL Pro-Choice America at the end of the year. In recent years, Keenan has worried about an ‘intensity gap’ on abortion rights among millennials, which the group considers to be the generation of Americans born between 1980 and 1991. While most young, antiabortion voters see abortion as a crucial political issue, NARALas own internal research does not find similar passion among abortion-rights supporters. If the pro-choice movement is to successfully defend abortion rights, Keenan contends, it needs more young people in leadership roles, including hers.” Sarah Kliff in The Washington Post.
An F.D.A. panel backed the preventive use of a H.I.V. drug. “A drug already used to treat H.I.V. infection should also be approved to prevent it, an advisory panel to the Food and Drug Administration said on Thursday. The recommendation is the first time that government advisers have advocated giving antiviral medicine to healthy people who might be exposed through sexual activity to the virus that causes AIDS. One panelist called approving the drug ‘an amazing opportunity to turn the tide on this epidemic.’ Studies have shown that people who take the medicine, Truvada, every day have a greatly reduced risk of infection. The F.D.A. usually accepts the advice of its advisory panels, which are made up of outside medical experts…Experts say better methods of prevention are needed because there are 50,000 new H.I.V. infections a year in the United States. Several speakers emphasized Thursday that that number had not budged in 15 to 20 years.” Denise Grady in The New York Times.
Domestic Policy
Scores remained low on a national science test. “U.S. eighth graders made modest gains on the latest national science exam, but more than two-thirds still lacked a solid grasp of science facts, according to figures released Thursday that renewed concerns American schools are inadequately preparing children for college and the workforce. The 2011 National Assessment of Educational Progress, an exam administered by the U.S. Department of Education, showed that 32% of students were proficient in science, compared with 30% the first time the new version of the science exam was administered, in 2009…Teachers and education-advocacy groups cite various possible causes for weak scores, including a lack of qualified science teachers, budget cutbacks and a narrowing of the curriculum prompted by the No Child Left Behind law. That 2002 U.S. statute caused schools to be evaluated solely on math and reading tests, which persuaded some to reduce science education.” Stephanie Banchero in The Wall Street Journal.
Congress is considering subsidizing the deductibles on crop insurance. “It’s a deal that most businesses would relish: Buy an insurance policy to cover losses or falling prices, and the government will foot most of the bill. Such an arrangement has been enjoyed for more than a decade by the farmers who grow crops such as corn and soybeans, and the companies that insure them. And it’s about to get even better. The farm bill now before Congress includes a provision — estimated to cost about $3 billion a year — that would help cover the losses farmers suffer before their crop insurance policies kick in. Those losses, termed deductibles, can run in the tens of thousands of dollars for a typical mid-size farm. Supporters say it’s a money saver because it would replace an existing subsidy costing $5 billion a year. That subsidy, known as direct payments, pays farmland owners a set amount regardless of whether they’ve planted crops on the land.” Kim Geiger in The Los Angles Times.
Adorable animals being adorable together interlude: All aboard the (bear cub) love train!
Energy
Oil independence may not be possible. “Over the past few years, the United States has experienced a boom in oil and gas production. And thatas led a few commentators to declare that the country is on the verge of ending its dependence on foreign energy and supply disruptions. Alas, thatas never fully possible…Even if the United States goes further and somehow manages to produce every last drop of the oil and gas it needs to run its economy, the country would still be vulnerable to events in the Middle East, tensions in Iran, strikes in Venezuela and other disruptions in the oil markets…. As the CBO explains, oil prices are set by the global oil market. ‘Disruptions in oil production in one country will cause the world oil market to readjust so that all countries and firms continue to receive oil at the new prevailing price.’ Even if the United States produced 100 percent of its own oil, the price would still go up if rising demand from China outstripped the ability of supplies to keep up.” Brad Plumer in The Washington Post.
@AndrewRestuccia: A lively version of “Chain of Fools” is playing before confernce call with Grover Norquist, Rep. Pompeo, Sen DeMint on energy tax credits
Wonkbook is compiled and produced with help from Karl Singer and Michelle Williams.
Music Pirates Will Be Unmasked, Despite Bandas Protests
From feed.torrentfreak Despite protests from the band All Shall Perish, the identities of 80 alleged file-sharers of their music are set to be handed over to a Panama-based copyright troll. The manager of the band says he is shocked and angry that the troll had obtained the copyrights to All Shall Perish’s music and has ordered the band’s German-based label to call off the dogs. “The band, their attorney and myself have and will continue to take any steps to protect fans, yes, even those who file trade,” he told us.
Source: Music Pirates Will Be Unmasked, Despite Band’s Protests
Top 10 Most Pirated Movies on BitTorrent
From feed.torrentfreak The top 10 most downloaded movies on BitTorrent, ’21 Jump Street’ tops the chart this week, followed by ‘Ger The Gringo’. ‘The Avengers’ completes the top three.
Source: Top 10 Most Pirated Movies on BitTorrent
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Capital Online Revenue Introduces Innovate Business Education Techniques
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Thereas been lots of discussion lately on whether Greece should exit the euro. Sure, advocates say, in the short term the country might face even more austerity and a crushing recession. But in the long run, Greece would be free to grow. Hereas Arvind Subramanian making that case:

Quite a bit, it turns out. On Tuesday, the American Petroleum Institute released a report full of recommendations to the Republican and Democratic committees that are crafting their party platforms this summer. Basically, this is Big Oilas wish list. It includes everything from opening up more federal lands for drilling to avoiding strict new federal rules on natural-gas fracking. And API has also included a slew of charts that help give a better sense for whatas driving the oil and gas industry.
But at the Peter G. Peterson Foundationas 2012 Fiscal Summit, there was a clear difference between Democrats and Republicans: Democrats talked constantly about how they should be talking about entitlements. Republicans reiterated their position that they wonat talk taxes.
As Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Tuesday, aweare likely to hit the debt limit sometime before the end of the year, but Congress has given the executive branch a set of tools that buy them some time. And those tools will probably take us into the early part of 2013, thus separating somewhat the timing of the expiry of the tax cuts and the sequester with the ultimate need for Congress to act on the debt limit.a
How did they make this mistake?
The answer, according to the Wall Street Journal, is…soon. The paper reports that the botched trade is “likely to result this week in the departure of three of the highest ranking executives with direct ties to the investments.”
And then, last night, JPMorgan Chase announced it had lost $2 billion on some very big, very dumb hedges. For proponents of stricter financial regulation, Dimon’s giant loss is a huge gift. The final version of the Volcker rule is scheduled to be released in the coming months. Dimon swears that these trades would have been compliant with the previous drafts of the Volcker rule. That will give regulators a strong incentive to make sure future trades like these aren’t.