The Cost of Being Poor

As if the current job market and economy didn’t make it hard enough for low income households in America to make ends meet, it turns out that living below the poverty line is actually more costly in many respects as well. It not only takes money to make money, it also takes quite a bit of money to live in poverty. This graphic illustrates how expensive it is to be a poor American… Source: Onlinesociologydegree.net

Advanced Cloud Computing Report: What To Do Now?

    The potential benefits of cloud computing includes promoting economic growth, creating employment and enabling innovation and collaboration….This report presents eight action areas for providers of cloud computing services and government agencies. it is intended to set the agenda for further engagement among all stakeholders, ensuring the healthy future development of the cloud computing industry. [scribd id=54138441 key=key-p4iyprbb4jkipzai145 mode=list]   Source: World Economic Forum via Scribd

Chinese recycling and US interest rates

I mentioned in last week’s blog entry that during my trips to New York, Washington and Hangzhou in the past two weeks one of the common themes was concern about rising debt levels and weaknesses in the banking sector.  Another theme – one which I want to discuss in this entry – was the possible impact of China’s rebalancing on US and global interest rates.  A lot of people were very concerned that if China does indeed rebalance, US interest rates will soar.

The argument runs like this.  If China raises the consumption share of GDP faster than investment declines, this will result in a reduction in China’s current account surplus.  Clearly if China’s current account surplus drops, the amount of capital it exports must drop in tandem – since a rising share of consumption means a declining share of savings and so a declining excess of savings over investment which must be exported.

But because it is recycling the world’s (and history’s) largest current account surplus, China is one of the world’s largest purchasers of US government bonds.  If China’s current account surplus declines, and so China sharply cuts back on its purchases of US government bonds, this should automatically cause US interest rates to rise.

In at least half the meetings I attended this was the argument.  Fortunately for me, just after I returned to Beijing Martin Feldstein made the same argument in a Project Syndicate blog entry.  He starts out;

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Reforming the banks

I just got back from a very interesting but hectic week in New York and Washington, followed by two days at a conference in Hangzhou.  During my meetings I noticed that much of the discussion, and many of the questions I was asked by both government officials and investors, focused on debt levels and reforms in the Chinese financial system.  I have written a lot about rising debt in China and am glad that analysts and policymakers seem to be spending a lot more time thinking about balance sheet issues.  Every case of rapid, investment-driven growth in the past century, as far as I can make out, has at some point reached a stage in which debt levels rose to unsustainable levels and precipitated either a debt crisis or a long grinding adjustment period.

The reason debt levels always seem to grow unsustainably, I suspect, is that in the initial stages of the growth model much if not all of the investment is economically viable as it pours into building necessary infrastructure whose profits and externalities exceed the cost of the investment.  The result is real growth.  At some point, however, the combination of subsidies, distorted incentives (in which investment benefits accrue to those making the investment while costs are shared broadly through the banking system), and very cheap financing costs leads inexorably to wasted investment and debt rising faster than asset values.  This is when the debt burden begins to rise in an unsustainable way.

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‘s Changed Since the Flash Crash

Summary Report of the Joint CFTC-SEC Advisory Committee on Emerging Regulatory Issues,February 18, 2011Do you feel lucky? Well… do ya?It has been nearly one year since the infamous Flash Crash of May 6, 2010 exposed the vulnerabilities in our USmarket structure.Steady and controlled selling gave way to a dangerous and precipitous plunge, as algorithmic proprietary traderstripped over each other to see who could hit the next bid the fastest. After a pause in one market center, the algo-bots raced to see who could take offers and cover shorts the fastest, and the 1,000 plus DJIA drop reversed just asfast. Phillip Morris fell from nearly $49 to … Read more

Where do we stand? A look at Bullish Sentiment & Bull Markets

According to Bespoke Invest, The S&P 500 is currently on pace to close at a new bull market high for the first time since February 18th.  With this milestone, the bull market will officially make it to the two-year mark (the last closing high on 2/18 was two and a half weeks shy of the two-year mark). In the chart below we compare the current bull market to the 25 prior S&P 500 bull markets since 1928.  With a gain of about 99% in a little more than two years (778 days), the current bull market ranks right near the middle in terms of … Read more

‘s Press Conference, No Rate Hike Until July 2012?

Yesterday was a historic day. The Federal Reserve gave their first press conference, ever. Below is the actual full press conference so you can watch for yourselves, in full. What are your thoughts on how Ben handled the issues at hand? Barclays Capital looks does not look for the Federal Reserve to hike interest rates until the summer of 2012 and says the loose monetary policy in the meantime should remain supportive for gold. Prices rose after a Wednesday FOMC statement that said rates will remain low for an “extended time,” with gold hitting a fresh record overnight and silver also … Read more

US Dollar-Apropos of Everything

“In May 2007 we wrote a lengthy piece called The Value of the Dollar in which we argued the following: Consistently excessive money and credit growth has taken the US economy past the point of no return. What (policy makers) have done consistently – and will continue to do – is inflate the money supply and promote more credit, thereby sustaining asset prices at the expense of the purchasing power of the US dollar. We argue the US dollar will ultimatily lose it’s status as the world’s reserve currency. In fact, we believe events currently unfolding may be foreshadowing the … Read more