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This is Biden's America

 
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Sat 26 Mar, 2022 10:25 am
Warning: The Fed is aiming a battering ram at the American economy
The result is likely to be a recession
Robert Reich
8 hr ago
120
82
As Putin’s war shakes up the world economy, the Fed last week raised interest rates by a quarter point and penciled in six more increases by the end of the year. Fed Chair Jerome Powell says he’s ready to do whatever it takes to bring inflation down, including following the example of his predecessor Paul Volcker, who increased interest rates to 20 percent in 1981.

https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/9c8823cf-9637-4a44-955f-4de007650377_2263x3500.jpeg (2263×3500)
Volcker’s rate rise triggered a deep recession and double-digit unemployment. We can debate whether that harsh medicine in 1981 was necessary. What should be clear is that the current inflation is nothing like the inflation of the late 1970s — a time when nearly a quarter of all private-sector workers were unionized and American corporations couldn’t easily outsource production. Today, only 6 percent of private-sector workers are unionized — which means workers have almost no long-term bargaining leverage. And today American corporations can outsource almost anywhere (although China is becoming more complicated, and Russia is now off limits).

Inflation is running almost 8 percent annually, which is surely a problem. But it’s not due to permanent wage or price hikes. In fact, it has nothing to do with the business cycle. So expecting the Federal Reserve to remedy today’s inflation by raising interest rates to slow the economy is like trying to cool off on a hot day by aiming a battering ram at your head. Wrong diagnosis. Wrong remedy. The current inflation is the consequence of a perfect storm of unique events that won’t recur — and won’t be remedied by higher rates.

We’re emerging from a once-a-century pandemic during which much of the world economy closed down. In March through May 2020, demand evaporated as people retreated into their homes. Because the nation’s (and world’s) productive capacity couldn’t be closed down all at once (productive capacity includes factories, offices, warehouses, and so on, all of which take a while to wind down), the resulting excess of supply over demand caused a deep recession.

Now, at the other end, and without much opportunity to buy for the last two years, American consumers are flush with cash (the national savings rate is at its highest level in decades). So they want to buy lots of stuff (and they haven’t yet gone back to spending much on services such as restaurants, hotels, air travel, movies and other places where COVID reigned for two years). Yet the nation’s (and the world’s) productive capacity can’t be fully operational all at once. The resulting excess of demand over supply is causing major inflation.

That inflation is being driven by other unique events as well. In housing, the real engine of rising prices is demographics. The huge Millennial generation (the largest in American history), born in the 1980s, is now storming into the housing market after COVID closed their world for two years. Making matters worse, the Great Recession clobbered the construction industry, dramatically reducing the number of available houses to buy or rent.

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Energy prices are soaring mostly because of Putin’s war (they were rising even in anticipation of it). So are food costs. (Russia and Ukraine together provide about one-quarter of all the planet’s wheat exports.)

Another culprit is the pricing power of big corporations. In a White House briefing last fall, National Economic Council Director Brian Deese noted that half of the overall increase in food prices is due to spikes in the cost of beef, pork, and poultry, which has fueled record profits among the four biggest producers that control most of the market. "It raises a concern about pandemic profiteering — about companies that are driving price increases in a way that hurts consumers who are going to the grocery store, and also isn't benefiting the actual producers — the farmers and the ranchers," Deese said.

Profiteering is occurring over much of American industry, as I’ve chronicled on these pages, here and here.


If you don't believe that corporations are taking advantage of their pricing power and inflation to raise prices, just listen to corporate executives themselves. The Chief Financial Officer of Constellation Brands, the parent company of Modelo and Corona beers, told investors in January that the company wants to “take as much as [we] can” from customers. (Publicly, however, the company has blamed rising material costs for their increased prices.) Here’s another: The grocery food brand Hormel saw a 19 percent increase in their operating income in the first quarter of 2022. Their CFO’s response to these soaring profits? “We’ve done a great job with our pricing.”

Of course corporate financial officers want to brag about profits. But if their corporations were actually competing against other corporations in the same industry, they’d absorb cost increases in order to keep their prices as low as possible so consumers didn't abandon them. Today, however, corporations have been raising prices even as they rake in record profits by coordinating price hikes with the handful of other big companies in their industry. That way, all of them come out ahead — while consumers and workers lose.

Raising interest rates won’t remedy any of this.

Which gets me back to trying to cool yourself down on a hot day by aiming a battering ram at your head. You won’t get cooler. You’ll only get a very bad headache. That’s exactly what the Fed will do to the economy if it sticks to its plan. The Fed’s rate hikes won’t remedy inflation. They will do the opposite. Since World War II, most Fed rate hikes have resulted in recession.

Over the longer term, it’s necessary to attack the pricing power of big corporations in America who are profiteering off the pandemic. For now, it’s best to ride out the perfect storm.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Sat 26 Mar, 2022 06:07 pm
https://truthout.org/articles/nearly-200-children-who-fled-afghanistan-without-family-are-stuck-in-us-custody/?fbclid=IwAR2PIFb-dlJbjIQV_Y35V8d12PiDIedt_oQwqaLHd1h-DHpy61dcFoYIxLQ
Nearly 200 Children Who Fled Afghanistan Without Family Are Stuck in US Custody
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Sun 27 Mar, 2022 06:24 am
https://truthout.org/articles/disillusioned-with-dems-and-gop-independents-now-largest-voter-group-in-the-us/?fbclid=IwAR35m3abpjJPGOPyqRa0ykmwcLbahTdMjW89PE0JSz55QK5ffXa1AHMCrck
Disillusioned With Dems and GOP, Independents Now Largest Voter Group in the US
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Sun 27 Mar, 2022 11:38 am
ICE Continues to Abuse and Traumatize Under Biden. Immigrants Are Fighting Back.

https://truthout.org/articles/ice-continues-to-abuse-and-traumatize-under-biden-immigrants-are-fighting-back/?fbclid=IwAR1oqEBC6M0QAPRGVakmDZJjr45ABvjCeBOKYI-WxO4BnglNEeBQ-UHfJkw
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Sun 27 Mar, 2022 11:58 am
Biden approval rating falls to record low in NBC News poll
https://thehill.com/homenews/599910-biden-approval-rating-falls-to-record-low-in-nbc-news-poll
bulmabriefs144
 
  -3  
Sun 27 Mar, 2022 12:49 pm
@Frank Apisa,
Sorry, but... most American rightists were the same people who wanted an America in the first place.

The American left on the other hand, tells us incessantly how our nation has a history of slavery (citing the so-called 1619 Project as example), and how we should be made to feel guilty for everything our country has done. Seems like they're prefer to live in UK. Or Saudi Arabia.

The left are Tories. The right are closer to people from Texas. Which is fine by me, but let's be real here. One group of people loves freedom and loves America. Another can't stop telling us how much they hate everything we do. Seems to me that if you say the Tories are scum, you'd better own the title.
Frank Apisa
 
  2  
Sun 27 Mar, 2022 01:48 pm
@bulmabriefs144,
bulmabriefs144 wrote:


Sorry, but... most American rightists were the same people who wanted an America in the first place.

The American left on the other hand, tells us incessantly how our nation has a history of slavery (citing the so-called 1619 Project as example), and how we should be made to feel guilty for everything our country has done. Seems like they're prefer to live in UK. Or Saudi Arabia.

The left are Tories. The right are closer to people from Texas. Which is fine by me, but let's be real here. One group of people loves freedom and loves America. Another can't stop telling us how much they hate everything we do. Seems to me that if you say the Tories are scum, you'd better own the title.


The Tories were (and still are) the conservatives. The American right during Revolutionary Days were the people claiming George III was our Liege Lord to whom we owed fealty...and that the revolutionaries (Founding Fathers) were traitors.

American conservatives during the Civil War days were the ones arguing for the right of each state to decide if slavery was legal.

The American right has always been on the wrong side of morality and patriotism...and always pretending to be both moral and patriotic.

The American right are a bunch of sick morons who should be hospitalized for their own safety.

They are, as I mentioned, SCUM.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  2  
Sun 27 Mar, 2022 02:40 pm
There are more Texans who are leftists than most out of staters realize. In free and fair elections the Texas Democratic Party could likely revitalize itself. As it stands now, the party is in a pitiful state due to gerrymandering and other voter suppression actions that keep the left from getting a toehold.
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Mon 28 Mar, 2022 07:56 am
@edgarblythe,
They'll never believe it, Edgar, but then they don't know about the hardiness of a Texas Yellow Dawg Democract.
edgarblythe
 
  2  
Mon 28 Mar, 2022 08:30 am
@bobsal u1553115,
You have to live among the people to know what they think and feel. Most Texas voters don't go to the polls, seen as an act of futility.
0 Replies
 
Ragman
 
  1  
Mon 28 Mar, 2022 01:23 pm
@edgarblythe,
Approval/disapproval polls are meaningless and carry no weight in the real world. More so than ever, people change their opinions often and by the time the federal election comes around again, it’s a whole different ball,of wax. The media loves polls cause it helps them with readership and ratings shares. It doesn’t pass laws or get good”egislation proposed or passed. Worse it can suppress some voters from turning out to the polls.
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Mon 28 Mar, 2022 03:11 pm
@Ragman,
Low polls such as that may or may not tell us if Biden can be reelected. What it does tell us is that even this lesser of two evils is not delivering what we need.
bulmabriefs144
 
  -4  
Tue 29 Mar, 2022 07:06 am
@edgarblythe,
Plurality doesn't mean majority.

Just because there are a bunch of woke assholes in Austin, doesn't mean they shouldn't get the **** out of a state that 85% or 95% of the people owning ranches doesn't want them. Don't mess with Texas, as they say. Our founders wanted this government to be based on landmass, not population density.
A stretch of land less than 100 acres should not decide policy for all of the people living in the country. This is what "tyranny of majority" meant as framed by the constitution. Not that we have tyranny of minorities either (that's oligarchy) but that the cities shouldn't dictate life for the farmers or miners (or ranchers, in Texas's case).
Every real Texan wants those people to sod off. They want the state to turn blue. Build big cities, take away guns, and have vegans tell people it is wrong to raise cattle.

Guess what? When a state no longer has any use for cows, they basically dispose of them. These people thinking they were kind to cows? Instead of killing about ten a week (I'm likely underestimating), they kill 100% and don't have any more. And then there is the crime, pollution, and psychological problems that cities bring.

Ummmmm, how did that work for Seattle Washington? Or Chicago? Or in my state, Richmond? Richmond used to be a nice historic town, then they got ******* offended about their history. Nice job, now there's no reason for us to visit but family. Crime has gone up, and the town has become unpleasant.
hightor
 
  5  
Tue 29 Mar, 2022 07:47 am
Quote:
(...)

How do you feel Joe Biden is doing as President? What is he not doing?

I met some friends for brunch today. They’re all — ostensibly at least — successful professionals. One couple is a doctor and a manager at a bank. These two can’t afford to live in the town they grew up in — and so they’re moving to a cheaper state. Think about that for a second, because it’s the story of a whole generation or three of young Americans.

Biden’s doing a good job when it comes to the war. But America has a very, very big set of problems. Among them, perhaps the biggest is that the cost of living is crazy. So crazy that I don’t think Americans really grasp it. I’ve done a number of essays in the last year trying to explain how high it really is. It’s absolutely crippling — if my friends who are a doctor and a manager can’t afford a decent life in the city they grew up in, then what about people who aren’t remotely as successful or affluent?

But that’s everyone, more or less, under the age of 45 or so. Young Americans have been completely and totally destroyed, and I mean that. They have no real hope of owning homes, which is why so many are delaying forming families, having kids, falling into depression, why rates of suicide and anxiety are sky-high and endemic.

This is a serious, serious problem. Think about it. An entire nation’s young generations — all of them, can’t afford to have a life. No matter what they do. How much education they have, what kinds of “jobs” they have, what career they choose — a stable, secure life is simply out of reach. The only way you can have it, really, is to pretend, and not tell anyone, that you’re in serious debt, which you can never pay off, and the anxiety of paying all those bills and trying to scrimp pennies you don’t have anyways is slowly killing you.

Now, older Americans will think that I overstate things. I don’t. America’s real financial indicators are shocking. Absolutely, totally shocking. Two in three Americans live paycheck-to-paycheck, and that number skews hard towards the young. The majority of new jobs are “low wage service jobs.” You can find PhD working at Starbucks in any town. Young people will openly laugh at the idea of ever being able to afford a stable, secure middle class life — they can barely make rent.

And that’s as things are. Meanwhile, the cost of living just goes on exploding. And I don’t think Americans really grasp how overinflated it is, comparatively. Everything is a rip-off in America. Everything. Education and healthcare cost you crippling amounts, while they’re free in most of the rest of the rich world, even the middle income ones now. Food? 3–5 times more expensive than Europe, easily. Rent? LOL — the average cost of a two bedroom apartment in nowheresville is half the median income.

American life is seriously, seriously overpriced. And it’s getting crazily more expensive by the year. Food, education, healthcare, everything is just skyrocketing. It didn’t always used to be like this. This is a new thing. When I was growing up, Europe used to be more expensive by quite a ways. But now? American life is more expensive, by a very long way. Only in Europe you get, well, Europe — a far higher quality of life. When it was more expensive, that was understandable. But now America delivers the one-two punch of a dramatically higher cost of living coupled with a vastly lower standard of living.

This is a huge problem. What does a country do when things get this expensive? Well, it grows poor. This is what getting poorer is. Americans now overpay for the same things — only, in many cases, they’re not even the same things. I’ll give you an example. In America, frozen croissants cost me more than fresh ones do in Europe. A trivial example, but a telling one, because it holds true for everything to healthcare to education to consumer and goods. Life is just unlivable financially in America — this is the dirty secret that nobody much really talks about. Americans pretend. But they’re all super, super stressed out about money, all the time.

Now, the problem here is that there’s no good answer to all this. Why is America’s cost of living so crazily high? The answer to that is simple — just look at a chart of corporate profits, and see how it skyrockets. See how much CEOs and “hospital administrators” make — it’s scandalous.

But because the problem is systemic and institutional…how do you change it? It’s like the Soviet Union. The whole economy was rotten. All of it. You couldn’t just fire the head of a factory or university or fix prices for bread. It was everything. The same is true in America. It’s eminently unclear how to fix a country where the cost of living is so high that entire generations are now effectively impoverished.

There is very, very little that can be done about this problem. I say that because in the end, Biden is going to pay a price. Americans are already living right on the edge — and in the next few years, they’ll be pushed past it. As inflation hits hard, Americans who are already living pay check to pay check — and that’s everyone, more or less, it doesn’t matter if they pretend they’re still “middle class,” they’re not — all those people will find themselves financially wrecked. They’ll begin missing bills — and in America, not paying bills has catastrophic consequences. A vicious cycle of poverty sets in. This round of inflation is going to devastate America, and push plenty of people — more people — into real and serious poverty, and trap them there.

Biden is the one who’s going to pay the price for that. It almost doesn’t matter what he does, sadly, because there’s nothing much that you can do. About an economy that’s rotten from branch to root. What can you really do? Fire all the CEOs? Fix prices? None of that will work. Because this is a deeper problem.

It’s really about a way of life, a culture, an attitude. Greed. Selfishness. Materialism. The ways Americans put up with weird, repressive institutions like “credit scores,” or “medical debt” which by the way don’t even exist in most other countries. Americans are the ones who keep on recreating the systems which ruin their lives. Bernie and Liz Warren offered them decent healthcare and affordable education — they turned them down.

They chose Joe Biden instead. And put him in the impossible position of asking him to solve a problem that Americans don’t want solved. There’s only real way out of this mess, and that’s for America to have serious public goods — a national healthcare system, a national education system, a set of institutions which govern the production of high quality food like in Europe, and so forth. But Americans don’t want that. They’ve been brainwashed to think all that’s “socialism,” when in fact it’s just common sense.

And so poor old Joe Biden will pay the price — Americans will blame for their exploding cost of living, as they grow poorer, fast, when it’s really their own selfishness and short-sightedness that makes that very problem exist, and makes it impossible to solve. Catch-22.

(...)

source
edgarblythe
 
  3  
Tue 29 Mar, 2022 08:42 am
@hightor,
I agree with much of that post. But almost every politician from both parties likely knows what it takes but are either too corrupt or too fearful to do anything about it. Seize the power back from the military-industrial complex. Spend our tax dollars to benefit the ones paying the taxes instead of lavish giveaways to companies and the military who don't need it. Biden is not innocent in this. He is no more on our side than the Republicans. The problem is, not enough politicians have the integrity to do the right thing. Therefore the devolution of the nation is an increasing whirlpool dragging us down the drain.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  7  
Tue 29 Mar, 2022 09:35 am
@bulmabriefs144,
Quote:
Our founders wanted this government to be based on landmass, not population density.

So that's why they hold a census every ten years to determine the number of representatives and electoral votes for each state. You're full of crap.
Ragman
 
  2  
Tue 29 Mar, 2022 12:42 pm
@edgarblythe,
I can see that as a possible conclusion. However, my feeling is that polls are less accurate than ever. People are more willing to intentionally mislead or outright lie. Or worse, have no clue at all about what the facts are.

I wish I could find some hope somewhere.
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Tue 29 Mar, 2022 12:53 pm
@Ragman,
He could try working at keeping his campaign promises for starters. Could also signal willingness to back healthcare for all. It would certainly make me less critical.
0 Replies
 
bulmabriefs144
 
  -2  
Tue 29 Mar, 2022 11:39 pm
@hightor,
The electoral college is based on districts.

Districts are based on land demographics.

In other words, the electoral college are a system that uses the land to vote.

Now, more populated areas get tinier districts, but if you ask me, this is a way to game the system. NYC should be about 5 districts. Bronx, Queens, and about three areas to the east. Instead, it's about 15 districts. This means that an area from Chautauqua to Tioga to Seneca gets one vote, while a tiny city gets fifteen or so. The founders set up the idea of districts fairly realistically. Then we got this sort of gerrymandering bullshit, and a region that could fit about 10 districts in it gets one vote.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/bd/Map_of_New_York%27s_congressional_districts_from_2013_to_2022.png

You can plainly see how the district map should be set up (counties = districts), compared to how it actually is.

We do not NEED a census. What we do need is surveyors. That's all that is required for a decent and fair election with an electoral college.

House votes are popular vote. Senate are electoral college. But the moment we start factoring in population to determine districts, we have a crooked electoral college.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  0  
Wed 30 Mar, 2022 03:07 pm
https://scontent.fhou1-2.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t39.30808-6/277229452_535625354593376_6950432716640260419_n.jpg?_nc_cat=110&ccb=1-5&_nc_sid=730e14&_nc_ohc=H0vSbCIPAQAAX-7CToz&_nc_oc=AQl0b2KZgF1SYC2Nw2Rc3zfRsglq8mGN9xbut7pu5cNt0K35JACPG3eecHHSLVDfv__aGGwSVtSDnPFcImgaAWLD&_nc_ht=scontent.fhou1-2.fna&oh=00_AT_2riYZyjzpqPcHKy_re3YCLS27nG50WKK36yhx9B6BFg&oe=6249F309
0 Replies
 
 

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