Intended Consequences
August 15, 2006 (Weekly Standard)
How the Fed, the economy, terrorism, and Ned Lamont are changing the political scene.
IF WE NEEDED ANY REMINDING that our world can change with nerve-rattling speed, we got it last week when the security services uncovered a plot by Islamofascists to slaughter innocent air travelers. Suddenly, a cup of coffee looks suspiciously like a terror weapon, an iPod like an explosives device, and a plane trip becomes even more of a hassle than it has been.
Other changes, less potentially lethal than the latest scare, are in store. The most obvious one underlies the decision of the Federal Reserve Board's monetary policy gurus to pause in their two-year program of ratcheting up interest rates.
Now, a decision by the Fed to wait for incoming data before deciding whether to continue tightening, taken alone, is hardly earth-shaking. But the reasons underlying the Fed's move mean that the lives of many Americans, and by extension many workers and consumers in other countries, are about to change. Uppermost in the Fed's mind is the fact that the U.S. housing market is coming off the boil. Not collapsing, but cooling sufficiently to deprive American consumers of one source of funding for their trips to the malls.
AntiSpin: The most interesting aspect of this article is its source: the neocon Weekly Standard. It's especially surprising to see this point noted in this publication, "Add to the effect of the Fed's policy shift another change that is likely to affect Americans more than they now realize: Something has been happening to the way the benefits of economic growth are being distributed in the United States. For reasons not fully understood, America's highest earners are garnering the largest share of the rise in the nation's income. At the same time, the relatively benign overall inflation figures mask the fact that the cost of living is rising more rapidly for the elderly (the price of drugs), than for the affluent young (think computers and flat-screen television sets). Result: a middle class that is beginning to question the American Dream that has done so much to ensure social stability, and that has typically rejected appeals of leftish class warriors."
What's this we hear? Neocons noting that unequal distribution of income gains might have negative long term political consequences? We've been preaching that for years. Our message is: Want to turn back the clock on all the progress that's been made to liberalize capitalism in the US to make the nation more innovative, competitive and able to generate more wealth for all? Just keep up policies that funnel more and more money into fewer and fewer hands, concentrate privilege, fail to take care of public goods like the environment, and ignore the needs -- such as healthcare -- of those who were not born on third base and have to work to hit a triple.
Keep it up and we're going back to an earlier time when wealth was better distributed, but there was a whole lot less of it to distribute. Greed is good, but only to a point, the point where we correctly do not attempt to guarantee equal opportunity of result for all participants in the economy, but no longer even attempt to create the conditions of equal opportunity, either. The single party Democratic/Republican state, with their Greenspan and now Bernanke Fed, with policies that promote ever higher levels of indebteness for the poor and middle class to compensate for declining real incomes to maintain living standards, passed that point a long time ago.
August 15, 2006 (Weekly Standard)
How the Fed, the economy, terrorism, and Ned Lamont are changing the political scene.
IF WE NEEDED ANY REMINDING that our world can change with nerve-rattling speed, we got it last week when the security services uncovered a plot by Islamofascists to slaughter innocent air travelers. Suddenly, a cup of coffee looks suspiciously like a terror weapon, an iPod like an explosives device, and a plane trip becomes even more of a hassle than it has been.
Other changes, less potentially lethal than the latest scare, are in store. The most obvious one underlies the decision of the Federal Reserve Board's monetary policy gurus to pause in their two-year program of ratcheting up interest rates.
Now, a decision by the Fed to wait for incoming data before deciding whether to continue tightening, taken alone, is hardly earth-shaking. But the reasons underlying the Fed's move mean that the lives of many Americans, and by extension many workers and consumers in other countries, are about to change. Uppermost in the Fed's mind is the fact that the U.S. housing market is coming off the boil. Not collapsing, but cooling sufficiently to deprive American consumers of one source of funding for their trips to the malls.
AntiSpin: The most interesting aspect of this article is its source: the neocon Weekly Standard. It's especially surprising to see this point noted in this publication, "Add to the effect of the Fed's policy shift another change that is likely to affect Americans more than they now realize: Something has been happening to the way the benefits of economic growth are being distributed in the United States. For reasons not fully understood, America's highest earners are garnering the largest share of the rise in the nation's income. At the same time, the relatively benign overall inflation figures mask the fact that the cost of living is rising more rapidly for the elderly (the price of drugs), than for the affluent young (think computers and flat-screen television sets). Result: a middle class that is beginning to question the American Dream that has done so much to ensure social stability, and that has typically rejected appeals of leftish class warriors."
What's this we hear? Neocons noting that unequal distribution of income gains might have negative long term political consequences? We've been preaching that for years. Our message is: Want to turn back the clock on all the progress that's been made to liberalize capitalism in the US to make the nation more innovative, competitive and able to generate more wealth for all? Just keep up policies that funnel more and more money into fewer and fewer hands, concentrate privilege, fail to take care of public goods like the environment, and ignore the needs -- such as healthcare -- of those who were not born on third base and have to work to hit a triple.
Keep it up and we're going back to an earlier time when wealth was better distributed, but there was a whole lot less of it to distribute. Greed is good, but only to a point, the point where we correctly do not attempt to guarantee equal opportunity of result for all participants in the economy, but no longer even attempt to create the conditions of equal opportunity, either. The single party Democratic/Republican state, with their Greenspan and now Bernanke Fed, with policies that promote ever higher levels of indebteness for the poor and middle class to compensate for declining real incomes to maintain living standards, passed that point a long time ago.
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