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Unindicted co-counterconspirator-in-chief Donald Luskin will appear on CNBC's Kudlow & Company. Don will be talking about -- you guessed it -- politics, the economy, and the market.

Chronicle of the Conspiracy
Join us as we discover, document, expose and challenge the bad people, the bad institutions and the bad ideas that stand in the way of wealth creation -- and show you how to fight back!

Friday, June 24, 2005

THE VIENNA WEENIE   I'm probably not going to write a lot myself on Krugman's column today -- it's just such a mishmash of incoherent Bush-bashing innuendo, it practically debunks itself (filed from Vienna, no less). But other bloggers are less picky. Here's an assortment of today's fiskings:

Keith Burgess-Jackson
Tigerhawk
Chief Brief
Q and O

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 2:54 PM | link   

IT'S JUST SO DELICIOUS   As Paul Krugman said, "Meanwhile, The Blade uncovered an even bigger story..." You guessed it -- Democratic involvement in the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation investment debacle (which Krugman blamed entirely on Republicans) gets even deeper. The Toledo Blade reports today that Jesse Jackson steered investors toward the minority-owned investment firm at the center of the mess. Thanks to reader Jim Hammer for the link.

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 7:52 AM | link   


Thursday, June 23, 2005

SICK DECISION   Let's be clear about where populist liberals really stand when they seem to be supporting "the public" and "the community." A Supreme Court decision today, with all the liberals voting in favor, has cleared the way for government to condemn private property under eminent domain for commercial redevelopment. That means, simply, that individual families can have their homes seized against their will so that rich developers can put up shopping malls and office parks -- so long as some government entity makes a case that it's for "the public good." So who's the "public" here? Obviously, it's whoever has more power to influence government decisions. As reader Dave Duval asked me, can you imagine the outcry if the conservatives on the court had backed this decision? "Conservatives deliver the little guy to greedy businessmen." Well, that's just what has happened -- and the liberals did it. Where's the outcry? There will be none. Nowadays it's not what you do. It's who does it.

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:08 AM | link   

NEXT!   Glenn Hubbard, apparently, is auditioning for the job of Fed chair with this op-ed in the Wall Street Journal today. Only Alan Greenspan could have spent more words and been less clear about the simple proposition that ultra-low US interest rates are, in part, the result of huge global savings devoted to collateralizing financial risks in Asia. He gets my vote!

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 9:33 AM | link   


Wednesday, June 22, 2005

ANOTHER COURT DEFEAT FOR RE-REGULATION   A US Appeals Court has rejected rules made by the SEC mandating the independence of mutual fund boards and their chairpersons -- rules passed with Bush-appointee Bill Donaldson's tie-breaking vote, siding with the two Democratic commissioners. The reason? The SEC didn't bother to consider the costs of the regulations, or alternative approaches. Another re-regulatory rush-to-judgment rebuffed... Excellent!

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 8:56 AM | link   

WHEN "PUBLIC EDITORS" WON'T DO THEIR JOBS...   someone else has to. Here's an idea from Ken Waight at Lying in Ponds for how the blogosphere can more accurately and accountably monitor MSM pundits.

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 8:12 AM | link   


Tuesday, June 21, 2005

TALK ABOUT DIRTY TRICKS!   The Democrats have found yet another way to block Social Security reform.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Broke and without enough money in the bank to pay its bills after the end of the month, the Florida Democratic Party has now been slapped with a lien by the Internal Revenue Service for failing to pay payroll and Social Security taxes in 2003.
Thanks to reader Jill Olson for the link.

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 9:23 PM | link   

GATE SHUTS IN BARBARIAN'S FACE   Looks like Tim Worstall has a new colleague in defending the shores of Britain against the invading forces of Paul Krugman: check out this at Scott Callahan's American Expatriate blog.

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 12:32 PM | link   

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STILL MOVIN' ON UP  
My article from the July 4 print edition of National Review...
Starting on May 13, the Wall Street Journal ran a series of four front-page stories—totaling almost 10,000 words—about what it manifestly considered a major threat to the Republic. Two days later, the New York Times launched a series of a dozen stories about the same threat, most of the articles splashed on page one, above the fold: a total of nearly 50,000 words. BusinessWeek, the Christian Science Monitor, and the Los Angeles Times have taken up the story, too; Michael Kinsley, writing in the L.A. Times, even suggested that the Washington Post get into the act.

Was the furor about al-Qaeda? Iran? North Korean nukes? Nope. The sword of Damocles hanging over our national future—and discovered, coincidentally, by all of these mainstream liberal media outlets at once—is . . . income inequality. But a concerned citizen who wades through these tens of thousands of words, and pores over the studies they solemnly cite as authoritative, will find a simple, but highly reassuring, truth: There’s no story here.

The Journal and the Times are exercised by reports that, over the last three decades, a new class of what the Times calls the “hyper-rich” has arisen in the United States, resulting in a disparity in incomes between rich and poor not seen since the 1920s: the most severe income inequality in the developed world today. How did this happen? As the Times explains it, “The hyper-rich have emerged . . . as the biggest winners in a remarkable transformation of the American economy characterized by, among other things, the creation of a more global marketplace, new technology and investment spurred partly by tax cuts.”

Fair enough. We have indeed seen a transformative era of economic growth. That era has indeed produced a whole new class of extremely wealthy individuals—or, more accurately, a whole new class of individuals became extremely wealthy as their reward for taking the risks that made that growth happen. And indeed tax cuts were at the root of it—supply-side tax cuts that increased the incentives for risk-taking in the first place.

But none of this is exactly man-bites-dog material. What the Times reports as news is a pattern that should be familiar to economic historians: Times of great prosperity have been associated with greater income inequality (for example, the 1920s), and conversely times of economic decline have been associated with greater equality (the 1930s). The lines of causality here are complex, and no doubt run in both directions: Prosperity is both the cause and the effect of inequality, and decline is both the cause and the effect of equality. So ideological advocates of income equality for its own sake ought to be careful what they wish for.

The great prosperity of the last three decades has been dominated by American technological and commercial prowess. So no one should be surprised that the emergence of the new hyper-rich has been preeminently an American phenomenon. Today 341 of the world’s 691 billionaires—including five of the top ten—are Americans. These aren’t old-money names, either. You have to get all the way down to number 86 before you find a Rockefeller. At the top of the chart are Gates, Buffett, Ellison, Allen, Walton—precisely the people whose innovations and risk-taking made our current prosperity possible. Much of the rise in American income inequality could probably be erased in one fell swoop just by getting these 341 people to move to another country.

We need to focus, then, on the question: What harm has it done to have this new class of the hyper-rich on the American scene? The Times and the Journal both go on at length about how Americans who used to consider themselves very rich—one thinks inevitably of the Sulzbergers of the Times, and the Bancrofts of Dow Jones—are rather annoyed to have to compete socially with the new hyper-rich; old money has never liked new money. But in truth, the incomes of the hyper-rich have not come at the expense of anyone else. The poverty rate, for example, hasn’t risen over the last 30 years; it has actually fallen slightly. Average after-tax, inflation-adjusted income has risen for every income quintile in the population. Yes, it has risen the most for the highest quintile, and risen the least for the lowest—but this can be explained to some extent by the great wave of immigration over the same period. The fact remains that income has risen for all: The rising tide has lifted all boats.

THREE CHEERS FOR DIVERSITY

Before the present era of transformative growth and its concomitant income inequality, many economists had expected the mid-20th-century trend toward greater equality to persist forever. According to the influential hypothesis of Simon Kuznets, nearly a half-century of steadily rising equality of income following the technology revolution that peaked in the 1920s was explained by the fact that more and more workers were joining the high-productivity sectors of the economy. Now it appears that what Kuznets described may be, in fact, a cyclical phenomenon that restarted at some point about 25 years ago. Income-inequality guru Emanuel Saez, an economist at the University of California at Berkeley, has written that “a new industrial revolution has taken place, thereby leading to increasing inequality, and inequality will decline again at some point, as more and more workers benefit from the innovations.”

In other words, at the beginning of each cycle a small band of risk-takers get extremely wealthy in the vanguard of economic transformation, but that’s only a one-time effect. For years afterward, everyone else in the economy adapts to the new, higher productivity potential that the new rich have made possible, and incomes gradually gravitate toward greater equality. Happily, then, those who hope for greater income equality need not wish for slower growth, or for the mass deportation of our billionaires. All that is required is patience—and hard work.

But income inequality will never go away entirely—and it’s not at all clear that we should want it to. Even if a socialist-minded fairy godmother were to wave her magic wand and set all incomes to perfect equality, in a free economy they would immediately drift toward inequality owing entirely to voluntary choices made by each individual. Each of us would choose freely whether to work hard or take it easy; to marry a working spouse or a stay-at-home; to educate ourselves for a better job, or settle for less; to invest in income-producing securities, or just spend our money. All these things would determine our unequal incomes, just as they do today. To be sure, in the real world we don’t make those choices from an initial position of equality. Some of us are born rich, others poor, most in between. Nevertheless it’s choices like these that determine whether we will rise or fall within the class in which we are born, or move upward or downward to another class. So we shouldn’t fear income inequality: We should celebrate it as “income diversity.”

Changing our incomes by making choices different from those of our parents is called “income mobility.” Both the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times correctly acknowledge this practice as fundamental to American life (and both happen to discuss Benjamin Franklin as its exemplar). Yet the papers argue that income mobility is on the decline just as income inequality is on the rise. You’d think that the emergence of a whole new class of the hyper-rich would prove that income mobility is alive and well (they had to come from somewhere, after all). But no.

The Times and the Journal cite many authoritative-sounding studies on declining income mobility. But to get an accurate picture of income mobility, you’d have to track hundreds of millions of individuals through time, monitoring changes across generations in such factors as their income, tax rates, wealth, lifestyle, and education. Looking back further than a couple of decades, robust statistics are hard to find in standard databases; you can’t ask all the individuals concerned, because many of them are deceased. So researchers end up relying on surveys of small samples of people, containing what they can recollect about their parents’ and grandparents’ economic circumstances. As a result, hard facts about economic mobility are elusive, and studies about it are approximate and subjective at best.

Yet for all that, the Times and Journal stories are peppered with definitive-sounding statements, like this one from the Times: “One study, by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, found that fewer families moved from one quintile, or fifth, of the income ladder to another during the 1980s than during the 1970s and that still fewer moved in the 90s than in the 80s.” If you follow the Times’s link to this study, it turns out actually to be about women in the workforce and what happens to families when a spouse dies; the more general findings cited by the Times are buried in an appendix. Yes, that appendix shows that about 4 percent more households stayed in their income quintile during the 1990s than in the 1970s. But it also shows—though the Times doesn’t mention this—that in the 1990s more households than ever jumped from the poorest quintile to the richest. But none of this is reliable anyway: A footnote reveals that the statistics are derived from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics database, an ongoing survey that tracks only 8,000 families out of a U.S. population of 295 million individuals.

The other studies cited are based on evidence equally unreliable, and come to conclusions even less interesting. At most, these surveys suggest that—maybe—income mobility has stopped improving over the last 30 years.

Perhaps the best research method for getting our arms around the slippery topic of income mobility is simply to take a poll, and ask people how they feel about it. The New York Times itself took such a poll, and its optimistic results are strikingly at odds with the paper’s gloomy conclusions. Eighty percent of respondents said “it’s still possible to start out poor in this country, work hard, and become rich”—up from 57 percent in 1983. Twenty-five percent said they believed their children’s standard of living would be “much better” than their own—up from 18 percent in 1994. Forty-six percent said hard work is “essential” for getting ahead in life—up from 36 percent in 1987.

RESENTING PROSPERITY

So where’s the beef? Everyone’s gotten richer—and a few have gotten hyper-rich. And there’s no real reason to think that income mobility isn’t alive and well. So why this full-court press by the liberal mainstream media to create the impression that America is becoming a feudal society? Maybe it’s a media thing; there’s no other industry more obsessed with pigeonholing people by class. Here, for example, is how the New York Times sees its readers: They’re “nearly three times as likely as the average U.S. adult to have a college or post-graduate degree, more than twice as likely to be a professional/managerial and more than twice as likely to have a household income exceeding $100,000.”

Or maybe it’s a liberal thing. You’re more likely to vote Democratic if you’re convinced that “the rich” are keeping you from getting your fair share—you know, “Two Americas” and all that. And you’re more likely to support liberal initiatives like affirmative action if you think that the American dream based on income mobility is falling apart. So liberal media outlets like the Times go through periodic frenzies about income inequality, regardless of who’s in the White House. (Two typical Times headlines, from 1998: “In Booming Economy, Poor Still Struggle to Pay the Rent” and “Benefits Dwindle for the Unskilled Along with Wages.”)

And, of course, the putative problem of income inequality is yet another opportunity for the liberal media to excoriate the Bush tax cuts. Whatever the problem—Social Security solvency, economic growth, outsourcing to China, budget deficits—repealing those tax cuts is always the liberal answer. In this case, the Times claims they “stand to widen the gap between the hyper-rich and the rest of America.” This year Congress will vote on the extension of President Bush’s tax cuts on income from dividends and capital gains, and on making permanent the repeal of the estate tax. For the liberal media, demonizing the rich is a powerful way to fight against those conservative initiatives. There’s good reason, though, to think it won’t work. That Times poll that showed how much faith Americans have in their income mobility also produced a striking result about taxes on “the rich”: Seventy-six percent of respondents said they opposed the estate tax.

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 9:42 AM | link   


Monday, June 20, 2005

JOKE OF THE DAY  

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:30 AM | link   

AT LEAST OUR KIDS WILL HAVE SOCIAL SECURITY   From an alarming commentary in today's Wall Street Journal:
Now mathematics is being nudged into a specifically political direction by educators who call themselves "critical theorists." They advocate using mathematics as a tool to advance social justice. Social justice math relies on political and cultural relevance to guide math instruction. One of its precepts is "ethnomathematics," that is, the belief that different cultures have evolved different ways of using mathematics, and that students will learn best if taught in the ways that relate to their ancestral culture. From this perspective, traditional mathematics -- the mathematics taught in universities around the world -- is the property of Western Civilization and is inexorably linked with the values of the oppressors and conquerors. The culturally attuned teacher will learn about the counting system of the ancient Mayans, ancient Africans, Papua New Guineans, and other "non-mainstream" cultures.

Partisans of social justice mathematics advocate an explicitly political agenda in the classroom. A new textbook, "Rethinking Mathematics: Teaching Social Justice by the Numbers," shows how problem solving, ethnomathematics and political action can be merged. Among its topics are: "Sweatshop Accounting," with units on poverty, globalization, and the unequal distribution of wealth. Another topic, drawn directly from ethnomathematics, is "Chicanos Have Math in Their Blood." Others include "The Transnational Capital Auction," "Multicultural Math," and "Home Buying While Brown or Black." Units of study include racial profiling, the war in Iraq, corporate control of the media, and environmental racism. The theory behind the book is that "teaching math in a neutral manner is not possible." Teachers are supposed to vary the teaching of mathematics in relation to their students' race, gender, ethnicity, and community.

Update... reader Tom Kearney says:
Funny how those who call traditional mathematics "the property of Western civilization" forget that many of its concepts were transmitted to Europe via the Islamic world. After all, the word algebra is derived from the Arabic al jabr. Let's teach kids how to do math first, and then when they have mastered it, then let them try to quantify the injustices in the world.
And of course we know who invented the "algorithm" -- it was named after him.

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 8:54 AM | link   

PREDICTION MARKETS ASCENDANT   Chris Masse continues to be the blogosphere's best commentator on "prediction markets" -- and the sharpest reality check on their opponents. Check it out his latest opus.

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 12:16 AM | link   


Sunday, June 19, 2005

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KRUGMAN BLAMES GOP FOR DEMOCRATIC SCANDAL  
It seems there is no limit to Paul Krugman's hatred of the Republican Party. And apparently there's no limit to the New York Times' willingness to embarrass itself as -- once again -- Krugman's partisan hatred leads him into an hilarious error.

In his Friday column, America's most dangerous liberal pundit recites the salacious details of scandals involving Republican politicians. But what Krugman doesn't seem to know is that some of the politicians he's talking about are Democrats! And because the Times does no fact-checking of its op-ed columnists, this absurd blunder now lives forever in the "newspaper of record."

Krugman's column concerns apparent improprieties in the management of investment funds by the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation. Ohio's state government is Republican-dominated, so for Krugman the BWC scandals "an object lesson in what happens when you have one-party rule untrammeled by any quaint notions of independent oversight."

It started in April with the scandal now referred to as "coingate" on all the Angry Left hate-blogs that Krugman uses as sources. Apparently the BWC made a highly unconventional investment in rare coins managed by a high-profile Ohio Republican fund-raiser, Tom Noe. It remains to be seen how much real fire there is in "coingate," but there is plenty of smoke: though Noe really is an expert in coin investments, he is currently under investigation by the FBI for campaign finance violations, and other matters of ethical impropriety -- of unknown merit -- have been raised.

Krugman's column covers all that in salacious detail. Then he goes on to describe what he calls "an even bigger story" in Ohio, that wicked bastion of Republican "one-party rule":

...the Bureau of Workers' Compensation invested $225 million in a hedge fund managed by MDL Capital, whose chairman had strong political connections. When this investment started to go sour, the bureau's chief financial officer told another top agency official that he had been told to "give MDL a break."

According to the Columbus Dispatch, BWC's loss was actually $215 million -- leave it to economist Krugman to get the number wrong, and err on the side of partisan melodrama. But either way, that's a huge loss -- and it makes the $13 million loss in "coingate" look like small change, as it were.

Krugman goes on:

We're talking about personal payoffs... MDL Capital employs the daughter of one of the members of the workers' compensation oversight board...

Quite a scandal. But what Krugman seems too ignorant to know -- or perhaps he knows, and he's just too sleazy to acknowledge -- is that the MDL scandal is all about Democrats, all the way.

According to the Toledo Blade's reporting that Krugman cites as his source for this "bigger story," the person who told the CFO to "give MDL a break" was George Forbes, a member of the BWC's Oversight Commission. Forbes is also president of the Cleveland chapter of the NAACP, former president of the Cleveland City Council, former candidate for mayor of Cleveland -- and a Democrat.

And who's that daughter who's employed by MDL? You guessed it, didn't you -- Mildred "Mimi" Forbes, daughter of the very same George Forbes, Democrat.

The MDL scandal began in the mid-1990s, when Ohio passed an affirmative action law requiring its public investment funds to direct more business toward minority-owned investment managers. It was similar to law passed in many other states during the same era, usually promoted by Democratic legislators. MDL Capital was founded  in Pittsburgh by Mark D. Lay, an African-American.

Tom Maguire of the Just One Minute blog is aghast that Krugman failed to mention Mark D. Lay by name in his column -- considering the homophonic coincidence with Krugman's favorite GOP punching bags Kenneth Lay (Krugman's former boss at Enron) and House Majority Leader Tom DeLay. But there's no confusing this Lay with a Republican. This Lay has been a heavy contributor to Democratic Pennsylvania politicians, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (including Pennsylvania House Minority Leader Bill DeWeese, who recently nominated Lay to a position on the state's Commonwealth Financing Authority).

MDL and Lay were marketed to Ohio's public investment funds in the late 1990s by lobbyist Jerry Hammond, formerly president of the Columbus City Council -- and a Democrat -- according to the Dispatch. MDL paid Hammond $3,000 a month to introduce the firm to Ohio politicians. It was a nice investment for MDL -- the Bureau of Workers' Compensation alone has paid the firm $2 million in fees, and Ohio State University is a client, too.

At BWC, Hammond introduced MDL to Oversight Commission members including George Forbes, the late Neal H. Schultz, and William A. Burga. I can't say as to Schultz, but Forbes is a Democrat and so is Burga -- in fact, Burga is a member of the Democratic National Committee and the Ohio Democratic Party Executive Committee, as well as president of the Ohio AFL-CIO.

It must have been these behind-the-scenes Democratic machinations that Krugman was referring to when he wrote,

These efforts have already created an environment in which politicians from the right party and businessmen with the right connections believe, with good reason, that they have immunity. 

Immunity? The Democrats may wish it were so. Pennsylvania Democrat Bill DeWeese, the recipient of Lay's largesse, is aggressively defending his patron. But Republican Ohio Attorney General Jim Petro is suing Lay for fraud and breach of contract. Republican Petro, by the way, was endorsed a decade ago by Democrat George Forbes when he was running for office against one of Forbes' Democratic rivals, whom Forbes once attacked with a metal folding chair during a Cleveland City Council meeting (according to the Cleveland Plain Dealer).

And Michael Meckler points out on his Red-State.com blog that the case has been assigned to a Democratic judge who is running for Ohio Secretary of State in the next election. Meckler says, "with both 'prosecutor' and judge eyeing statewide election next year, there is the strong likelihood the case could turn into even more of a political circus."

So much for Krugman's thesis of "one-party rule."

Krugman clearly has no idea who's doing what to whom in Ohio. All he knows is that he hates Republicans, and if there's a scandal out there, Republicans simply must be behind it. He claims in his column, "Ohio's state government today is a lot like Boss Tweed's New York." And he says of the Republican Party, "they're trying to turn America into a giant version of the elder Richard Daley's Chicago."

But this is surely a first, even for him, in terms of the sheer virulence of his condemnation of the GOP. By comparing Republicans to Tweed and Daley, he's saying that they're as bad as... Democrats!

Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 11:41 PM | link   

DIRTY CHINESE LAUNDRY   Paul Krugman is in London, mongering scare stories about how the American economy is being propped up by the housing market which is, in turn, being propped up by Chinese investment in T-bonds. What's propping up the Chinese econony? And what's propping up whatever is propping up the Chinese economy, and what's propping up that? Don't ask -- Krugman doesn't bother to go there, but Tim Worstall doesn't even need to dig that deep to demolish Krugman, based simply on the numbers.
Gross purchases by foreigners of US domestic securities are running around the $14 / $15 trillion mark per annum. The abscence or prescence of a $200 billion a year buyer [i.e. China] in such a market does have some effect on prices, of course, but it’s pretty minimal. What Krugman’s doing is saying here is China’s gross purchases and I will compare that to the net position of purchases by all foreigners.

Look down a couple of lines and you will see the net position of purchases of T-Bills and -Bonds by foreign governments...around $200 billion. Wow! Oooooh! Scary! China buys $200 billion (gross), foreign governments buy $200 (net) so if China stops buying no one will buy any and we’re all doomed, doomed I tell you!


Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 1:03 PM | link   


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