Archive for the ‘Rants’ Category

Indiana, I Didn’t Know

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

Look at that map. That map looks very, excitedly strange! It all due to the “Big Ten Battleground Poll,” a poll conducted by the University of Illinois, the University of Iowa, Michigan State University, the University of Michigan, Northwestern University, The Ohio State University, Pennsylvania State University and the University of Wisconsin over October 19-22. The results are somewhat unbelievable. They give Obama a 10 point lead in Indiana, which is a huge swing. It is enough of a swing to turn the average of polls (which is what the above map is based on) for Indiana in to the tossup category. The Ohio numbers (Obama +12) move the avergae to Obama+6, which is into the leaning category. The detailed results, which I had to take a look at are here. Obama may well need to revise his plan to throw some of that September $150millon at Georgia, South Carolina, North Dakota and Arizona to include Indiana.

I’ve pretty much had it with voters in Ohio, so I was and may continue to still write off Ohio as a lost cause. I think the more sure path to an Obama victory lies through Virgina and North Carolina. While this poll does not update the numbers for those two states, any chance of a swing in Indiana bodes very well for demographically the more Obama friendly North Carolina, which is my big call, based more on hope than on numbers at this point.

No Bailout

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

I am not in support of a bailout of any kind. I also live in an ivory tower when it comes to economics, and a short, unexperienced or well taught one at that. I am confused somewhat by the push for a bailout. Why am I confused? Well, on the one hand, I can see where the people who are going to get free money want it, and I can even see how the republicans, who generally are against free money for people, are ready and willing to give free money to banks. I understand that Bush is once again saying, “my way or the highway.” Why wouldn’t he? it has worked every other time he’s done that. That stuff is not confusing.

What is confusing is the economic reasoning for a bailout. The entire point of capitalism is that it is the best known method for increasing the standard of living of a society. It does this by selecting ideas that are winners and ideas that are losers by rewarding people who have good ideas, and making people who try to long on bad ideas go broke. Of course, one would hope people with bad ideas get the picture before they go broke, but sometimes they don’t. This idea is called Creative Destruction. I just recently finished Alan Greenspan‘s book, The Age of Turbulence, which stated the importance of this in no uncertain terms. It also stated that as you increase socialism and other safety nets to insulate people from risk, creative destruction occurs less often and the ability of the capitalist system to increase the standard of living decreases.

All that is happening here is creative destruction. Some firms, are going to go out of business. They are going to go out of business because they had some bad ideas and they ran to far with them. There is nothing wrong with these firms going under. They actually increase the standard of living in the long run by going away. Of course, not all firms will fail completely, some will merge and what not, and be able to survive. This is because they did not run as far with or have as bad of an idea as the ones who did fail. They will, however, suffer pain, as a result of the bad risks they took. Everyone who took bad risks will suffer pain, and as a result people will not take these same bad risks again. That’s how its all supposed to work. That’s clearly an ivory tower way of thinking.

But what about the credit market? When firms go out of business it is usually because there is a glut of supply, too many firms are in the market, producing too many goods. This was in fact the problem a year or two ago (or more). There were too many people willing to lend money and not enough people to which to lend money. To solve this they expanded the pool of people they to whom they were willing to lend. Clearly that was a bad idea, and the market is telling everyone who did this that it was a really bad idea, and it is telling them this in a big way. It seems obvious now that it was a bad idea, but we only know that because of the market.

The problem now is that there isn’t enough credit. People can’t get loans. There is a lack of supply, because in effect all the firms who took bad risks can’t loan money, so they are no longer in the market. The call for a bailout is grounded in the idea that we need these firms to re-enter the market so that supply will increase, and people will be able to get loans. I agree that we need more firms in the credit market, or at least that we need to increase the supply of credit. But why do we need these firms? Firms are in the end just people. These people have proven themselves unfit to be in a credit market; that is they have bad ideas about how to make money in the credit market. We should not help them to re-enter a market that they so clearly have failed at.

But how do we increase the supply of credit without them? There is no reason why new firms won’t stream in to the credit market now that there is a shortage. These new firms will need promises to their investors that they won’t repeat the mistakes that were made. They will need to not take as many risks. Investors, who are reeling from taking too much risk will flock to these new firms. This will provide them with the capitol they need to provide the loans, for which people are apparently clamoring. These new firms will flourish with their new ideas, and the old firms will die; creative destruction. As I said before, die is a simplification, some old firms may survive by doing the same thing the new firms are doing. However, if they can’t survive that way, we should not help them, just let a new firm take their place. This whole thing will take time, I don’t know much, but I bet that we can have new firms in the credit market in 2-3 quarters.

What do we do for the next 2-3 quarters? Well, it won’t be easy. There is a shortage of credit, and so people who need credit will have to stand in long lines, and accept higher interest rates (pay more for it).

Who will they borrow money from? Anyone who will lend money of course, be it small banks who see a profitable new opportunity to expand their business, or the vestiges of the old firms still limping along. There is also the federal reserve of course, they are the lender of last resort. They always have money to lend (that’s the point). In the past, large banks have been their customers, but there is no reason why they can’t make loans, at appropriate rates, to smaller customers, or anyone really. Lastly, don’t forget overseas investors.

The only real problem is that there needs to be capitol, money to lend. There is an easy way to generate capitol; raise interest rates until people who do have money are willing to lend it. There should be no free money from the government. There is no reason to think that the only people who have money are the government. There is plenty of money in the country, and even more in the world. If we want people to loan it to us so we can buy houses, we need to provide them with an attractive interest rate. When we do that we’ll get the money, and we can loan it out, to anyone who wants the money badly enough to pay for it. As time wears on the risk premium that is currently going to be required will diminish and things will return to normal. Change leads to normalcy. We need to change the big names in banking, if we just sit tight, this will happen for us. If we meddle, we’ll loose in the long run.

What might really happen? From what I’ve read, which is only a little, they are considering a type of reverse auction where the banks will all place bids. What they are actually bidding in is too complex for me right now, but the way it works out is that the banks who are better off will be able to off the government a lower bid. The lowest bid wins, and every bidder may make trades to the government at that rate. Anyone who can afford that rate, who can avoid bankruptcy by trading some amount at that rate will survive, and those who can’t still go out of business. As you can tell, Bush did not come up with this plan, which is being called his. This plan is reasonable, in that those who took the worst risks still get creatively destroyed. It lesses the short term pain, and the cost of some, intangible amount of long term prosperity. The risk to reward trade off is probably there in this plan, especially since who knows how much prosperity, how far in the future we’re talking about.

So am I for the plan? Well, I still think we should do nothing, but what they plan to do is not brain dead. What the democrats are pushing for, more regulation would be bad. It all sounds good, but markets don’t like regulation. I don’t much care how much CEO’s get paid. As the paper pointed out to day, they are losing a lot of money right now, if you count stock. If you put a cap on how much you can pay them you could end up with a shortage of qualified CEOs. One may argue we already have that, in which case we clearly need to pay more to get the actual good ones, not less. What we really need is a populace who is educated enough to participate in the credit market on both the lender and borrower sides. Until we have that, the only sensible regulation, increased transparency, is worthless. This is roughly the same remorseless conclusion that I came to in my last econ rambling. What I want to see then, are some educational riders on this bill. Assuming the risks the taxpayers are taking on comes up good and we win big. Lets require all that money we made go to education.

Maybe someday soon I’ll have time to see what Greg Mankiew thinks of all this, but I’ve been too busy at work to keep abreast of his position.

On Principle

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

I have an amusing anecdote from last Friday to share with you all today. Pre-play-on-the-common I was at target attempting to acquire on of those blue tarp things that you place on the ground to prevent your blanket from getting wet. Alas, I was unable to find any there – blast you target: you and the $5 gift card to you that I’ve been carrying around for more than a year now have failed me again.

On the way back to my car I was met with a question from a man in a red Ford Taurus. “Are you leaving?,” he asked. Now, that’s not too uncommon a thing to hear in a Boston area parking lot, but the parking lot of the Target in East Somerville is not as packed as say, the Shaw’s parking lot in Porter Square; there were plenty of empty spots. But I had just walked out of the store and so there weren’t any open near me, near the store’s door. I figured maybe he needed a good spot cause he had to load something heavy. But then, my spot wasn’t such a good spot; I was just walking past the good spots to get to my normal spot.

I responded, “Yes, but there are…” plenty of spots. I mumbled the second half. I continued walking, without looking back. When I arrive at my car and turned I noticed that the man had put the car in reverse and followed me down the row. He was now blocking me in, I suppose, although; that was not a concern I noticed at the time. He asked, “Can you do me a favor?” Still thinking he wanted my spot I replied, “um, what?” It would, of course, have been rather unorthodox to need a favor for a spot as mediocre as mine in face of such an abundance of open spaces, but that’s what I was going with.

He explained, “I’m $7 short on gas money to get back to New Hampshire. My son was supposed to meet me here…” he trialled off. I am not a generous one; I rarely if ever offer handouts to beggars. But this was a good scam, if it was a scam; I felt bad. However, my rules did not betray me, despite having at least $48 in cash in my pocket I responded, “Sorry, I don’t have any cash on me.” With this the man, in his car, drove away.

It did not hit me until the exchange was over, the irony involved. Here was a man, in a car, driving around a parking lot, using gasoline, which he supposedly needed all (and more) of to get back to New Hampshire. I wonder if he included in his seven dollar estimate the cost of the gas he was burning while trying to come up with the money? If he turned his car off and parked it and then begged, could he move from $7 to $6, maybe? After realizing his wasteful ways, I no longer felt bad about lying to the man. I was in the right to deny his request on principle alone.

Sitting here now I wonder how the conversation would have gone had I actually denied him on principle. Would I have asked to see his figures, or espoused that he could make it home on $4 worth of gas if he drove 55 mph instead of 70 mph? It certainly would have taken more time, and I was in a hurry. I still had to go over to Home Depot to pick up a tarp before heading home and on to the show. Let this be a lesson to you all, if you’re short on gas money, don’t be a dumbass!

The Game is Up: Americans Loose

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

No, were not trying to play soccer, we’re trying to live normal lives without having our rights infringed, but we can’t, not anymore. The not-at-all a compromise FISA amendment passed the senate today by 69-28. Many thanks to the 28 senators who voted no, including:

  • Hilary Clinton (D-NY)
  • Chris Dodd (D-CT)
  • Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV)
  • Russ Feingold (D-WI)
  • Joe Biden (D-DE)
  • and one of my senators, whom I did write too on the issue, John Kerry (D-MA)

Of course, senator Ted Kendey, the only currently sitting senator whom I’ve personally voted for did not vote due to his medical problems. And of course, no thanks at all to Obama for throwing all 22,893 of his most loyal supporters under the bus. I am jaded enough to believe that if Senator Clinton was the party nominee she and Obama would be on opposites sides of this issue than they are with this vote. As of yesterday, “Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, [had] not made up her mind on the controversial measure.” It’s almost as if she is trying to say I told you so, but had she actually told me so, as Obama did, then things might have been different. Of course, being lied to never leaves a good taste in one’s mouth. I’m now quite glad I never ponied up cash for the Obama campaign, I certainly would want my money back if I had, and I certainly won’t contribute now.

Low Probility Events

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Last Sunday while playing a game of Settlers of Catan with Knights and Cities my friend Post rolled a corner. I went on to win the game of settlers, but we gave Post an honorary win for the dice roll. Which really, will be more memorable than the game. Of course, if it ever happens again I’m going to have to buy some new dice.

I mean, statistically speaking, it should be the most exciting thing that happened all week. This was of course a week in which the Boston Celtics won their 17th NBA Championship, Tiger Woods won the US Open in some sort of playoff sudden death thing, and I went to the beach after having dim sum for the first time. All somewhat unlikely things, but without crunching the numbers I’m going to go with the dice roll as the rarest event of the four.

It’s a good thing all those sporting events happened last week or that list would have been really short. Things with me have been pretty normal, following the familiar patterns of which I have grown tired. My new mantra, of sorts, is that I am moving in September.

I have, however, failed to make friends with enough people to avoid moving in with some more craig’s list randoms. Last week I started looking and I found a seemingly low probability find (aka it sounded awesome). They responded quickly, to say that they were busy and would let me know when they’re free. I’m thinking that was a line since I haven’t heard anything. But I’m not jaded on the housing search yet, hopefully I find a place before that happens.

Telecom Immunity Up For Debate Again

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

I can’t quote or link to the AP story (There is now a story I can link to over at Arstechnica on the new compromise.), but the Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives have agreed upon a compromised Protect America ActFISA replacement bill that includes telecom immunity. This ends 4 months in which the House did nothing instead of doing a bad thing. They have not yet passed this bill, so those outside of the committee that drafted compromise may still not pass it. There can be no compromise on telecom immunity for the reasons I outlined before.

The other big part of the compromise is that the government may not invoke war powers or other authorities to supersede surveillance powers in the future. Of course, they are already bared from doing this, hence the lawsuits they have incurred by doing it. Who is to say that yet another law against it will stop them in the future. You know what would stop them? If the people/companies in a position to enable the surveillance were so frightened of the repercussions for violating the law that they refused to help! I wonder how we could cause them to shake in their boots so? Oh maybe we could not provide them immunity from past actions, and make them pay for what they did. That way, next time they will know not to do it. End result, liberty is preserved; those who seek to destroy it, in this case the Bush Administration, are thwarted. Liberty must be protected against all enemies, not just the ones with guns.

Update: They passed it, see the ars story here. All I can say is fuck you Nancy Pelosi (and the other 104 democrats who voted for the bill), apologies and comparing it to an even worse bill don’t protect my liberties. Props go out to Denis Kucinich and Mike Capuano (my congressman) who did not vote for the bill. With everything else that happened this weekend I’m so disillusioned right now I can’t even comprehend it.

On Being a Millennial

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

Tonight’s conclusion of the democratic primary season really got me thinking about some of the things that I read with regard to the ongoing controversy over Robert Lanham’s Generation Slap article. Can’t you just hear me wanting to say Victory by Obama, but not being able to actually say it because we’re only really half way there. I still think we can’t really rest until HRC either concedes or takes the VP spot. This “Clinton acknowledges delegate math” subtitle really doesn’t calm the nerves. But why am I so nervous? Why does this matter so much? Why do I fear the personal disillusionment a Clinton victory would have caused me?

I first stumbled upon this whole debate two weeks ago from a digg link to this seemingly copycat and less in-depth post. I was reading some more about it today because Tim’s blog brought up the topic and linked to a really well done rebuttal. The rebuttal really got me thinking, especially with the political aspects he brought up. I’m not one to really competently argue music culture with anyone educated on the subject, which was another aspect he hit on. But I’m highly invested in politics, which has surprised even myself. This is the bit I’ve been reflecting on:

[Generation X] got all the cool traits! Disaffection! Nihilism! Cynicism! Ironic distance! People just keep calling us idealistic….

As we grow up, it continues. According to the Washington Post, we’re “collegial.” And “Millennials, more than their elders, believe that U.S. political institutions will deal effectively with concerns the nation will face in the future.” We’re “sociable, optimistic, talented, well-educated, collaborative, open-minded, influential, and achievement oriented…”

Our optimism is every bit as ignorant as [Generation X’s] cynicism is lazy….

…here’s the thing about our starry-eyed good faith in the system: We might very well be the first generation to elect a black president. That’s thrilling.

Alex Pareene

This is thrilling. What really struck me, and reinforced things enough to write about it is that this is effectively the same sort of thing that Tom Brokaw said tonight while discussing race, youth, Obama, and tonight’s place in political history. I will assert that I do believe that government institutions will, by implementing well designed and thought out policies, solve the problems facing my generation. Why do I think that? Maybe because if it doesn’t then we’re all screwed, that’s sort of a proof by contradiction for you. On the positive side the resounding and successful defeat of the gas tax holiday idea is a big, recent sign that governments can make correct policy decisions for the right reasons.

It took someone else to say it for me to realize it, exactly how much idealism drives my motivations. This is why I am a democrat despite the fact that I’m not convinced that their solutions are the right ones. This is why, I, and the vast majority of my generation support Obama, who promises to deliver a reintroduction of reason, honesty, and the big Millennial thing – openness – to government. Openness is the ground work for debate that works to provide solutions. The open source movement and other open/transparent entities have shown what you can do with that kind of groundwork in place.

The interplay between the discussion and the real world affirming events have me really embracing and feeling a connection to my generation, which has not been a common thing for me. The feeling is not so much as a coalescing in response to attack, but positive thing. When I read the initial article I wasn’t even sure if I was being attacked. As I am among the eldest of the Millennials I’ve never been sure which side of the blurry line I fall on. This discussion has done much to clarify that for me.

The personal disillusionment avoided by the presumptive selection of Obama as the democratic presidential candidate is so affirming because he alone, of the three, offer this open and transparent path. Without that path — with the, as Jon Stewart put it last night, “willful deception” of Bush; the blatant, trivial, and outright lies for Clinton; or the complete disregard for once held upstanding principles of McCain — the process I am counting on to solve our problems does not work. If we can’t solve our problems through government then I think disillusionment is the result, and so now that we have a good choice, we must make that choice in November!

Charging for the First Checked Bag

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

American Airlines will start charging $15 for the first checked bag…

Come on! That is a lot ridiculous. You might as well just increase fares by $15 across the board. The only real difference is the marketing angle. People are used to fare increases, they don’t like them, but they expect them. Increases in extraneous fees that you must pay just make people feel like you are ripping them off. The marketing can’t possibly favor the fee, now that it is no longer, hidden having been reported in the press.

I, personally, like to travel light and make a quick getaway from the airport. Until the asinine no liquids TSA rule was made I never checked a bag (when possible). The current, exceedingly annoying liquids rule results in the same behavior. The alternative, of course, is to purchase shampoo and such at your destination. This takes time, but probably only costs on the order of $5. By charging for a checked first bag American makes this option more desirable, probably more desirable than checking the bag. Although, it may be easier to for business travelers to get reimbursed for the fee than for the cheaper incidentals.

Of course, encouraging people not to check a bag does nothing to decrease the weight of the plane (saving fuel), it just makes them carry it on. With the planes packed as full as they are these days, there is already not enough space for everyone to carry on their two bags. This will only make things worse in that area, and further increase the importance of getting seated early in the boarding order. When the space on the plane is exhausted there will be an interesting choice — do you charge for baggage that must be checked at the gate due to over crowding? That is a damned if you do, loophole if you don’t situation.

The only saving grace of all this is that, for now,

Rival Delta has no current plans to match American’s fee for the first checked bag…

But we all know how this oligopoly works, everyone follows suit rather quickly. Of course, given the bone headedness of this idea compared to the easier to implement fare hike, maybe they wont all be lemmings. Come on, the cost to implement charing for a first checked bag has got to cost more than $15 per bag.

Updates that Suck (and Don’t)

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

I recently bugged Chris about updating this wordpress install, which has been complaining about being out of date for months now. He kindly updated it for me today. I have to say that it has some nifty new features, and is a lot more dynamic working (at least when you’re in the admin area). However, it has a problem. They changed a lot about how the page I spend most of my time on (the write a post page works). They made it suck for instance to preview the post while editing it. They also made it suck to include images.

In news of updates that don’t suck, Mario Kart Wii Rocks! I’m off to play it now.

McCain’s Gax Tax Holiday

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008

On April 15th, according to this article, John McCain called for a gas tax holiday, explained below:

To help people weather the downturn [in the economy] immediately, McCain urged Congress to institute a “gas-tax holiday” by suspending the 18.4 cent federal gas tax and 24.4 cent diesel tax from Memorial Day to Labor Day. By some estimates, the government would lose about $10 billion in revenue. He also renewed his call for the United States to stop adding to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and thus lessen to some extent the worldwide demand for oil.

This is pretty much the worst idea I have heard in the entire presidential race. For example, it would be a better idea to elect Ron Paul and eliminate the IRS. Lets examine the economics. First let us ignore the possibly dubious (to crazy right wing pudits) idea that high oil prices driving alternative energy research is a good thing, and assume that we want low oil prices. In this scenario it is still a bad idea.

Why eliminate it during those dates?
Well, that is the “summer driving season,” when every family in America has the god given right to drive from their home to Dinseyworld, the Grand Canyon, or wherever else they may like to go.
How do they get there?
Interstate highways.
What does eliminating the federal gas taxes do?
It severely reduces funding for highway maintenance and construction.
What’s the problem?
Reduction in gas prices encourages more families to drive on highways for their holiday.
Whats the end result?
Highways turn to mush as we don’t have the money to pay for their upkeep.
Surely that wouldn’t happen from a temporary moratorium.
You know what happens when tax decreases lapse? All the anti tax people get up in arms saying that politicians are raising taxes. John McCain faces this very issue on the Bush tax cuts, which will soon lapse. He was against the cuts, but now must be against the lapsing of the cuts because it’s an election year. Long story short:temporary my ass.

I for one would much prefer to be able to drive on a highway in 10 years and spend more on gas, than not be able to drive on a highway in 10 years cause they don’t exist/are horrible roads. Of course, maybe, just maybe, McCain’s goal is to destroy our highway infrastructure in the long run — forcing us to use less gasoline cause we can’t drive anywhere. Somehow I doubt this. Of course, the analysis when you consider that in the long run we don’t want to burn oil to move people and goods is much stronger. However, I think that any fiscal conservative could be swayed by the argument presented here.

Now, the Strategic Petroleum Reserve itself; that is a good idea. Oil is important and set to increase in value over the long run, so buying oil now and putting it in storage is a great investment. Now, I always think, in the very long term, that all that stored oil is going to be super useful in 2100 when we want to fly around military jet fighters to protect ourselves. You know, because the world is pretty much out of oil (allow me some fudge room on that date will ya). Sadly, that is not the goal of the reserve. The goal of the reserve is to mitigate future temporary supply disruptions. Given that goal, this is a debatable step that should be discussed. Effectively, not filling the reserve indicates that we:

  1. Do not expect supply disruptions of the kind that would exhaust the reserve.
  2. Expect the price of oil to drop over the next few years.

Well, if Iraq ever becomes an exporter again, the price will be sure to drop, but other than that I doubt it. Although, it is getting to the point where you’d think it must come down. If we don’t invade Iran or anyone else, and prices remain high, I don’t see how the producers could afford a disruption. So there on one count, maybe the on the other — so its a question of motivation really. And at this point the argument relies on the idea that we should free ourselves from oil — both foreign and domestic. So I’ll just leave it at that.