Saturday, October 31, 2015

The sabotage of the New Deal

How con artists corrupted the New Deal Part I

Continued review of James Galbraith's "The Predator State"

At the end of Chapter 8, "What the Rise in Inequality is Really About"; in his book "The Predator State" James Galbraith notes that:

"public policy"..."can create oligarchs", but also that it can "destroy them." [inequality-and-oligarchy.html]

Friday, October 30, 2015

Innocence is no reason to stay the noose

Today was a report in Slate about corrupt crime labs which reminded me that one of the lousiest Supreme Court decisions I've seen in recent years which was Herrera Versus Collins.

Dookhan & Farak Frauds

Our System that is supposed to be about Justice is corrupt and inept (and thus unjust) when it allows evidence from sloppy crime labs to stand as reported in the slate article concerning the Dookhan scandal up in Boston:

"Over her nine-year career, Dookhan tested about 60,000 samples involved in roughly 34,000 criminal cases." [Slate]

This is pretty awful, but what is really galling is the comment in the slate article:

"despite the fact that there were between 20,000-40,000 so-called “Dookhan defendants” (depending on whether you accept the state’s numbers or the American Civil Liberties Union’s), fewer than 1,200 had filed for postconviction relief.*" [Slate]

Most of these defendants remain jailed because despite their tainted evidence, prosecutorial power is so strong that they fear prosecutorial retaliation!:

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Taxing the right people for the right reasons

Can Unscrupulous Speculation be Solved with a Tax?

The Washington Post printed an article: "Poorer tenants fear being pushed out by planned Congress Heights complex"

"To build the project, the developer would have to raze four rent-controlled apartment buildings where residents already feel they are no longer welcome. The tenants are largely poor, elderly and live on fixed incomes. They said they believe they are being pushed out by two politically connected developers, who have failed to make improvements to the four apartment buildings even as many residents live in squalor."

Walter Rybeck, Silver Spring wrote:

"The Oct. 15 front-page article “Tenants in path of D.C. renewal” might instead have had the headline “Affordable housing remedy missing in action.” It told a sadly familiar tale: tenants in wretched dwellings unable to afford decent housing elsewhere, and slumlords given a green light to oust their tenants and proceed with lucrative real estate projects. This classic gentrification scenario cannot be fixed with housing subsidies or rules requiring developers to offer dwellings at below market rates, as many housing advocates urge. These approaches at best help a tiny portion of those in need."

In our modern "market" heresy the Bull of "markets" reigns supreme over common sense, common-wealth, common properties and our politicians. Admittedly one:

"...problem is high land costs — the sites that housing sits on."

High land costs aren't the only problem here. But it is a start. And as Rybeck notes:

"Officials and their advisers ignore the one tax that, unlike others, lowers the selling price of what is taxed: The more you tax the value of land, the lower its price. The less you tax it, the more its value rises, making housing unaffordable. Thus, shifting the property tax off the value of homes and apartments and onto the site value spurs slum upgrading and new housing at lower prices, as over a dozen Pennsylvania cities have demonstrated."

What he's talking about is a tax that ignores capital properties and home values and focused on the unearned value of property and taxes that. He's also right that:

"By modernizing its property tax, the District could lead the nation in easing the housing crunch."

But it won't do it by itself and simply changing the tax system may alleviate the problem, but won't eliminate it. Especially if it is sold as a tool for Development.

Getting it Right

By capital George meant:

"Capital is ... [that] part of wealth—that [is] devoted to aid production." and Capital is "wealth in the course of exchange." [Georges Definitions]

So the LVT tax was a means to get to unearned incomes and unearned rents. It wasn't meant as a tool for slum clearances, gentrification, or even "new housing at lower prices" -- it was meant to break the power of monopoly over land ownership. So, yes a LVT tax is a great idea -- but not by itself. Without tax reforms that exclude wage compensation and hit at unearned wealth -- it is a shadow of what George Had in mind. Indeed George called folks who advocated the LVT for the wrong reasons as "unsound followers." As long as taxes "fall on users of land as users, and ....add to the cost of production or increase prices" the tax solution is a Kludge and not what George Had in mind. Indeed the history of the Tax was that it was struck down by the Supreme Court as a Direct Tax and so George's followers started pushing it as a reform of the Real Estate tax, and when the 16th amendment was passed in 1913, they were already set in their ways.

A Right to A Decent Home

The other side of this is that home ownership should be a right - though not necessarily the right to a house or mansion, wages should be a right and wage compensation not taxed. This is something that American's have affirmed since the beginning of the country. And FDR put it in writing:

The benefits of a right to a home. Of "property in land," which includes tenants and renters. If tenants have a property right in their apartments, they'll take care of them themselves. Deny folks power over their own neighborhoods and this is what you get.

If home ownership were the right -- then the takings clause would apply to renters and tenants too. The District, or unscrupulous developers, or other authorities should not be able to take people's homes without compensating them -- with a new home. If one's home is a right they can't offer just money so that the person can move to another substandard neighborhood, they'd have to protect their right to home, livelihood, etc... And it would thus be more expensive to stiff people than to do right by them. Yes, if a person lost all their money or is a drug addict, and is poor as a result; a "home" doesn't have to be the mansion or a giant house they once lived in. But it also be a "Decent Home." It has to be a home that their wages can afford.

None of that will eliminate speculation. But certainly taxing unearned income, unearned rent, is a start at taking the smoke and gas out of the gasbags of repeated bubble swindles.

Sources and Further Reading

References to Rybeck
"Poorer tenants fear being pushed out by planned Congress Heights complex"
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/dc-politics/poorer-tenants-fear-being-pushed-out-by-planned-congress-heights-complex/2015/10/14/1ecaad34-6c9b-11e5-9bfe-e59f5e244f92_story.html
Walter Rybeck's Editorial: [https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/tax-land-to-make-housing-more-affordable/2015/10/18/d4404438-741d-11e5-ba14-318f8e87a2fc_story.html]
Georgist Definitions of Capital
From http://www.henrygeorge.org/pchp2.htm
Related Posts:
http://holtesthoughts.blogspot.com/2015/09/the-target-of-progressive-taxation-and.html

Friday, October 23, 2015

No Sushi for me

No Sushi for me.
It glows in the dark.
Cesium makes me sneeze
and iodine glows blue.
 
How can you live,
in Japan without Sushi?
They send ships to the end of the world,
because they can't fish in Japanese Seas.
It glows in the Dark too.
 
Is there something in the water?
Besides radioactivity?
Does this stuff make people crazy?
Or are they just mentally lazy?
It certainly does blow around the world on a breeze...
And their claims it is over are untrue.
 
No Sushi for me.
It glows in the dark.
Japan is committing Hari Kari
And taking us with them, too.
 

Note: no actual fish were killed to write this poem. And I haven't seen any fish literally glow in the dark, yet.

Christopher H. Holte, 10/23/2015

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Inequality and Oligarchy

James Galbraith's 2008 book "The Predator State", touches on so much I consider important, I've been writing in installments. In Chapter Seven he touches on inequality:
"What the Rise of Inequality is Really About"

Galbraith explains how accounting for inequality has two sides. On the one hand is the disenfranchisement of what the Occupy Group came to call "The 99%", and on the other hand is the emergence of a billionaire class and oligarchy, as those benefiting from repeated finance driven bubbles start flexing their political-economic muscle using their newfound wealth. He notes:

"The Rise in income inequality reflects something that happened to a very small group of people....it reflects, ... the rise of a new class -- very small and unbelievably rich. It did not come from the labor market at all. It came instead from the [financial] capital market. Specifically,...it came from the stock market."

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Prophesy

Who would you rather be?
Ahab or Queequeg?
King Midas or a Gold Statue?
Helen or Cassandra?
 
We sail this ship together,
with a demented crew,
on a futile mission,
chasing a lost whale.
 
Christopher H. Holte 10/20/2015

Monday, October 19, 2015

Hillary and Jeb Bush's Donors are NOT the same

Hillary and Bush's donors compared

An examination of the Top 20 Donors to both Hillary and Jeb shows similarities but mostly differences. Their donors include Wall Street main-lights. For example Morgan Standley donated to both Hillary's campaign and Bush's campaign. But otherwise their donors represent a different base of rival oligarchs. Hollywood, entertainment and communications are strongly represented in Hillary's donation list and the Energy sector in Hillary's. All together, they are not supported by the same donors unless by 'the same donors' you mean one donor. So the argument that they are 'the same' is faulty propaganda, not truth. They are not the same

Jeb Bush/Hillary


Bush Contributor
Amount
Hillary Contributor
Amount
$161,100
Morgan & Morgan
$274,767
Neuberger Berman LLC
$65,800
Sullivan & Cromwell
$148,100
$43,750
$125,598
$41,500
Yale University
$95,434
Tenet Healthcare
$35,900
Latham & Watkins
$94,580
Rooney Holdings
$35,100
$90,799
Jeb 2016 (Employees)
$34,010
Creative Artists Agency
$88,501
Barclays
$29,700
$87,835
$29,700
$80,754
$28,500
$75,537
Southern Strategy
$27,800
Munger, Tolles & Olson
$72,850
NextEra Energy
$27,600
$72,500
Dannenbaum Engineering
$27,000
Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett
$69,550
Hunt Companies
$24,300
Centene Corp
$67,150
Fidelity National Information Services
$24,300
$62,650
Manchester Financial Group
$24,300
$61,080
$22,700
Paul, Weiss et al
$60,500
$22,200
Wilmerhale Llp
$59,250
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher
$22,100
Google Inc
$58,021
Guggenheim Partners
$21,600
$57,70