Thursday, July 28, 2011

Into the Valley of Death

Into the Valley of Death Rode the Six Hundred. Theirs not to make reply, theirs not to reason why, theirs but to do and die.

What kind of romantic nonsense have the Tea Party types been reading? Are they like the colonels who ordered their troops into a suicide attack, because they had bought their commissions and were incompetent? Or are they like Sir Joseph. the "ruler of the Queen's Navy" in H.M.S. Pinafore, who never thought of thinking for himself at all.

None of these characters, however, had the power to drag a whole nation into disaster with them.

It must be a heady brew for eighty or so ignorant young idealogues.

Certitude unsupported by facts.

Where Are The Milk Jugs?

Remember a couple of years ago when local organizers in Oriental mailed empty milk jugs to Washington in opposition to President Obama's health care reform? Many of them were afraid the health care reform would harm their medicare. They were apparently influenced by "mediscare" reports.

I'm waiting for them to start up their protest again, mailing the jugs to Republican members of Congress. Turns out Republicans really want to reduce or abolish medicare, and are using the national debt limit to extort agreement.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Vicious Cycle

Here's a recent post by Robert Reich. I think he's absolutely spot on.

Let's Cut Spending and Follow Britain

Pentagon Staff Officers used to turn to each other after receiving particularly muddleheaded direction from on high and say:"that's dumb - let's do it."

In case we need current evidence that government austerity when a country is in a liquidity trap contracts the economy, just look to Britain.

Since invoking austerity, British GDP has shown no growth for the past nine months. The Tories have a number of excuses: it was the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton; no - it was the Japanese earthquake and tsunami; no - it was record high temperatures in April; no - it was advance ticket sales for the 2012 Olympics in London.

Really?

Might it be the result of reducing government spending, thus reducing demand when the economy is already weak?

Goldman Sachs seems to think that will happen here, according to a report quoted by economist Jared Bernstein. Goldman Sachs analysis:

“A review of the spending and tax data at the federal, state, and local level suggests that a significant part of the weakness in economic activity in 2011 so far is due to fiscal retrenchment. In the first quarter, the Commerce Department estimates that spending cuts at the federal, state, and local level subtracted 1.2 percentage points from the annualized pace of real GDP growth; moreover, the expiration of the “Making Work Pay” federal tax cut and hikes in state taxes probably offset most, if not all, of the boost to disposable income from the temporary payroll tax cut.

In the second quarter, the fiscal policy impact was probably smaller, but still negative. Indeed, monthly data on defense spending, state and local employment, and state and local construction all show a clear downward trend for 2011 so far.”

So don't be surprised if our next employment report looks bad.

In the meantime, I like this photo:

http://jaredbernsteinblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/RAZE-2.png

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Voting

The North Carolina legislature today attempted unsuccessfully to override Governor Perdue's veto of House Bill 351, the Voter ID bill. According to the News and Observer, there may be future attempts to override.

I have commented previously on this and similar bills here and here.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Meanwhile, Back at Town Hall

The Town of Oriental has now resolved the police hiring impasse by recognizing that town administration, including hiring and supervision of police officers, is the legal responsibility of the town manager, not the Board of Commissioners.

The morning this revelation was announced, one of the commissioners revealed that she (the commissioner) had tasked one of the town employees with uncovering all of the amendments to the town charter and putting them on the web site.

Not a bad idea, but a better approach would have been to suggest the course of action to the manager and let him decide how to go about it. He is the one who must assign tasks to the staff. This is neither the duty nor the responsibility of a commissioner.

Now that the principal of how responsibilities are divided by North Carolina law between the board of commissioners and the town manager has been accepted, I think commissioners will find their own job very much easier. And they will probably do it better.

Debt Ceiling Kabuki

Here's what Brad DeLong thinks we should do about the debt ceiling: http://delong.typepad.com/sdj/2011/07/what-to-do-about-the-debt-ceiling.html

I like it. It's an example of the TACAMO principal (Take Charge and March Out).

There's another principal the Republican intransigents should consider if they get their way: you broke it, it's yours. In other words, if they succeed, everything that goes wrong with the economy in the next year and a half belongs to them! Be careful what you wish for, lest you get it (the Midas Principal).

Heads You Win, Tails I Lose

Here are some thoughts on the probable effects of the debt talks: Lose-Lose-Lose.