USA > History > 2010 > Economy (V)
Matt Bors
Idiot Box
Cagle
20 December 2010
The
Looming Crisis in the States
December
25, 2010
The New York Times
For most of
this year, the state of Illinois has lacked the money to pay its bills. Some of
its employees have been evicted from their offices for nonpayment of rent,
social service groups have laid off hundreds of workers while waiting for
checks, pharmacies have closed for lack of Medicaid payments. Faced with $4.5
billion in overdue payments, Illinois has proposed a precarious plan to sell its
delinquent bills to Wall Street investors in exchange for cash, calculating that
the interest it must pay the investors will be less than the late fees it owes.
It is no way to run the nation’s fifth largest state, and it is not even clear
that investors will agree, but these kinds of shaky deals are likely to become
increasingly common as the states try to cope with the greatest fiscal drought
since the Great Depression. Starved for revenue and accustomed to decades of
overspending, many states have been overwhelmed. They are facing shortfalls of
$140 billion next year. Even before the downturn, states jeopardized their
futures by accumulating trillions in debt that they swept into some far-off
future.
But that future is not so distant, and the crushing debt has made recovery far
more difficult to achieve. As The Times reported, Illinois, California and
several other states are at increasing risk of being the first states to default
since the 1930s. The city of Prichard, Ala., has stopped sending out its pension
checks, breaking state law and shocking its employees.
A state or city unable to make its bond payments would send harmful ripples
through the financial system that could cause damage even to healthier
governments. But if states act quickly to deal with their revenue losses and
address their debt — and receive sufficient aid from Washington — there is still
time to avoid a crisis.
The most immediate cause of the states’ problems is the decline in tax revenue
caused by the downturn, just as the demand for services has increased.
Over the last two years, combined sales, personal and corporate taxes have
fallen by more than 10 percent. Although revenue is likely to tick up slightly
in 2011, federal stimulus money — which has been keeping many states afloat — is
largely scheduled to expire. Renewing a portion of that aid would be one of the
most effective ways to assist the economy.
Many conservatives have said the revenue decline is a good incentive for states
to cut their spending. That is precisely what almost all states have done,
because they are legally barred from running deficits. State spending fell by
3.8 percent in the 2009 fiscal year and 7.3 percent more in the 2010 fiscal
year, the only significant declines since at least the 1970s, even as the cost
of education and health care rose.
School aid, Medicaid, transportation, employee salaries, social services, courts
— whatever there was to cut, states have slashed it, often at ruinous costs to
the most vulnerable: the poor, the sick and disabled, students, tens of
thousands of laid-off workers.
But cutting spending will not affect the heaviest burden: the accumulated debt
that comes from passing off the biggest problems to future generations. States
and cities have nearly $3 trillion in outstanding bonds, and more than $3.5
trillion in shortfalls to pensions. Promised health benefits alone are more than
$500 billion.
Some states have tried to pretend their pension obligations do not exist. New
York is shortchanging its pension funds, and Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey,
who claims to be so financially responsible, is the latest in a line of
governors who have simply refused to pay the billions the state owes to its
employee pensions. (Instead, it has often spent that money on tax cuts.) Public
employee unions will need to give ground on pensions and other benefits, but it
will be hard to start productive discussions if Mr. Christie and other governors
refuse to acknowledge their obligations and bargain in good faith.
During the last year, 23 states raised taxes and fees, but only eight increased
personal income taxes. Ultimately, states are going to have to acknowledge that
more effective, targeted tax increases are inevitable, and can be achieved if
they are structured properly. Governors also must explain to voters that they
have cut spending. The nation’s richest taxpayers just got a windfall in the
federal tax deal extorted from President Obama by Republican senators. States
should not shy away from asking for more help from those most able to pay.
Too many newly elected governors have vowed not to raise taxes — including,
unfortunately, Andrew Cuomo of New York — fearing giving bad news to voters who
have not yet been told how dire things really are. Dan Malloy, the incoming
Democratic governor of Connecticut, is one of the few who have been honest with
their constituents, saying neither cuts nor tax increases alone can deal with
his state’s $3.5 billion shortfall, one of the largest, proportionally, in the
nation. “This is a time when people have to be on notice that they’ll be
requested to participate in shared sacrifice,” he said recently.
Many governors claim tax increases are ill-advised during a recession, but more
experienced economists say it is better to raise taxes on the rich than to lay
off workers and cut spending, in effect offsetting Washington’s attempts at
stimulus. The federal government missed a chance to begin to act rationally
about its long-term deficit by giving away the store to the rich in the tax
deal. States should not make the same mistake.
The Looming Crisis in the States, NYT, 25.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/26/opinion/26sun1.html
Online Sales Rose 15% This Holiday,
Beating In-Store Growth,
Report Says
December 23, 2010
The New York Times
By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS
Online sales increased more than 15 percent this holiday season, according to
data released Thursday, the latest confirmation of the growing importance of
Internet commerce during retail’s most lucrative time of the year.
Retailers online took in $36.4 billion from Oct. 31 to Dec. 23, compared with
$31.5 billion in the period a year ago, according to MasterCard Advisors
SpendingPulse, which tracks all forms of payments for purchases, including cash
and check.
The growth of online purchases is expected to surpass in-store sales this
Christmas, though it still represents a small percentage of total sales. The
National Retail Federation said last week that it expected sales in November and
December to increase 3.3 percent this year, up from 2.3 percent a year ago, to
$451.4 billion.
Much of the online increase came in apparel sales, SpendingPulse said, which
took in $7.3 billion since Oct. 31, up 25.7 percent from a year ago.
Over all, apparel purchases online accounted for 18.9 percent of the total
clothing sales this holiday, SpendingPulse said, up from 16.9 percent a year
ago.
Cold, wet weather across much of the country in the last several weeks led
consumers to stock up on warm clothing, which has been a boon to retailers, said
Michael McNamara, vice president for research and analysis at SpendingPulse. The
inclement weather has led many to shop at home.
“What is driving this is that apparel sales online are doing well in general,
represented by a shift from brick-and-mortar stores,” Mr. McNamara said. “The
cold weather has helped, too. Retailers are saying this is the season of the
sweater.”
Department stores saw an 11 percent increase in online purchases. Sales of
electronics goods increased 12.2 percent. Jewelry had a comparatively modest 4.5
percent increase online, according to SpendingPulse.
This year, six days surpassed the $1 billion mark, led by Nov. 30 and Dec. 1,
which each had about $1.1 billion in sales.
One three-day period — Dec. 14, 15 and 16 — each had sales of more than $1
billion. Last year, only three days had $1 billion in sales or more.
On the Monday after Thanksgiving, which was Nov. 29 this year, many online
retailers offered discounts and other deals to attract shoppers. The result was
$99.3 million in sales — a 25.3 percent increase rate from a year ago. Online
deals on the Friday after Thanksgiving spurred a 34.5 percent increase in online
sales, to $597 million.
Online Sales Rose 15%
This Holiday, Beating In-Store Growth, Report Says, NYT, 23.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/24/business/24retail.html
Economists See Signs of Stronger Recovery
December 23, 2010
The New York Times
By SEWELL CHAN
WASHINGTON — Eighteen months after the recession officially ended, the
government’s latest measures to bolster the economy have led many forecasters
and policy makers to express new optimism that the recovery will gain
substantial momentum in 2011.
Economists in universities and on Wall Street have raised their growth
projections for next year. Retail sales, industrial production and factory
orders are on the upswing, and new claims for unemployment benefits are trending
downward.
Despite persistently high unemployment, consumer confidence is improving. Large
corporations are reporting healthy profits, and the Dow Jones industrial average
reached a two-year high this week.
The Federal Reserve, which has kept short-term interest rates near zero since
the end of 2008, has made clear it is sticking by its controversial decision to
try to hold down mortgage and other long-term interest rates by buying
government securities.
President Obama’s $858 billion tax-cut compromise with Congressional Republicans
is putting more cash in the hands of consumers through a temporary payroll-tax
cut and an extension of unemployment insurance for the long-term unemployed.
It is also trying to address one of the biggest impediments to the recovery —
the reluctance of companies to invest their piles of cash in new plants and
equipment — by granting tax incentives for business investment.
The measured optimism is reminiscent of the mood a year ago, when the economy
seemed to be reviving, only to stall again in the spring amid widespread fears
caused by the debt crisis in Greece and other European countries.
Even so, economists are increasingly upbeat about the outlook, saying that while
the economy in 2011 will not be strong enough to drive unemployment down
significantly, it should put the United States on its soundest footing since the
financial crisis started an economic tailspin three years ago.
Phillip L. Swagel, who was the Treasury Department’s chief economist during the
administration of George W. Bush and teaches at the University of Maryland,
said, “The recovery in 2011 will be strong enough for us to see sustained job
creation that will finally give Americans a tangible sense of an improving
economy.”
A prominent forecaster, Mark Zandi of Moody’s Economy.com, predicted that the
economy would be “off and running” next year. “The policy response, in its
totality, has been very aggressive,” he said, “and I think ensures that the
recovery will evolve into a self-sustaining expansion early in 2011.”
The recession officially ended in June 2009, when the economy started to grow
again. Gross domestic product, the broadest measure of the country’s output,
grew at an annualized rate of 3.7 percent in the first quarter of this year. But
then it stalled, with the rate falling to a mere 1.7 percent in the second
quarter and 2.6 percent in the third quarter.
Jan Hatzius, the chief United States economist at Goldman Sachs, said the
economy was likely to grow at an annualized rate of around 3 percent this
quarter. Goldman projected last week that the growth rate would be 4 percent for
most of 2011. Morgan Stanley, which raised its growth forecast for 2011 to 4
percent, is even more optimistic, forecasting a rate of 4.5 percent this
quarter.
Administration officials, who have been burned by premature optimism in the
past, were reluctant to make predictions for next year. But Austan D. Goolsbee,
the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers since September, said that a
shift in sentiment quickly followed the news of the tax deal
“There aren’t many policies which, on the day Washington announces them, lead
most private-sector forecasters to publicly and significantly revise their
forecasts upward,” he said. “This one did.”
There are significant caveats to the more positive outlook. The housing market
remains weak, and another sustained drop in prices could badly undercut the
economy. Financial markets and the banking system remain vulnerable to a new
round of jitters in Europe over the debt burdens of countries like Ireland and
Spain. There is mounting concern about the tattered balance sheets of state and
local governments.
While fiscal and monetary policy seems to be helping the economy in the short
turn, the tax-cut compromise essentially deferred looming battles over how to
cut federal spending and address the government’s huge debt burden.
The Fed’s bond-buying efforts have not prevented long-term interest rates from
rising — a phenomenon that is interpreted by optimists as a reaction to higher
growth and by pessimists as a demonstration of the ineffectiveness of the
central bank’s efforts and the potential for inflation.
And for most of the roughly eight million Americans who have lost their jobs
since the recession began in December 2007, it hardly feels like a recovery.
The unemployment rate remains at its highest level since the early 1980s; it
rose to 9.8 percent this month and is likely to remain above 9 percent through
all of next year, confirming the view that the United States is in another
jobless recovery like the ones that followed the last two recessions, in 1990-91
and in 2001.
“Historically, unemployment rates come down slowly, so even with 4 percent
growth, you would expect to see the unemployment rate come down maybe a
percentage point a year, probably less,” said Alan B. Krueger, who was the
Treasury Department’s top economist until last month when he returned to
Princeton. “Given how high the unemployment rate is, that’s going to seem very
slow.”
Robert J. Gordon, an economist at Northwestern University and a member of the
committee that sets the start and end dates of business cycles, cautioned
against excessive optimism, noting the huge burdens on state and local
governments, rising costs of health care and other long-run fiscal challenges.
“The rise of the stock market is mainly because there are no other good
investments in sight, not because the stock market has some unique talent in
predicting what’s wrong with the economy.”
N. Gregory Mankiw, a Harvard economist who was chairman of the White House
Council of Economic Advisers under Mr. Bush, said that “anything that spooks
consumers and businesses from spending” could threaten the recovery, including
“a worsening of the fiscal crisis in Europe or the increased fear that a similar
crisis will soon infect U.S. cities and states.”
The Fed is likely to end its $600 billion bond-buying program in mid-2011,
meaning monetary policy might be providing less of a kick to the economy by the
end of the year. Officials in the Obama administration also seem to agree that
after the $787 billion stimulus last year and the $858 billion tax-cut
compromise just approved by Congress, the government’s arsenal of fiscal tools
has just about been used up.
“We went through a year and a half period, at least, with the private sector in
free fall and government taking a much more significant role than anybody in
normal times would want,” said Mr. Goolsbee. “And the president’s oft-repeated
view is that we don’t want to be in that circumstance forever — the government
should not be the primary driver of long-run growth in the country. We’ve got to
have the private sector stand up.”
Representative Kevin Brady of Texas, the top Republican on the Joint Economic
Committee of Congress, said he believed his party’s gains in the midterm
elections had bolstered consumer and business confidence, arguing that
Republicans have advocated fiscal discipline and opposed onerous regulations and
tax increases.
“Consumer confidence seems to be on the upswing and business angst is dropping,”
he said. “It hasn’t swung into the confidence column yet, but the negativity is
lowering.”
Economists See Signs of
Stronger Recovery, NYT, 23.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/24/business/economy/24forecast.html
U.S. Approved Business With Blacklisted Nations
December 23, 2010
The New York Times
By JO BECKER
Despite sanctions and trade embargoes, over the past decade the United States
government has allowed American companies to do billions of dollars in business
with Iran and other countries blacklisted as state sponsors of terrorism, an
examination by The New York Times has found.
At the behest of a host of companies — from Kraft Food and Pepsi to some of the
nation’s largest banks — a little-known office of the Treasury Department has
granted nearly 10,000 licenses for deals involving countries that have been cast
into economic purgatory, beyond the reach of American business.
Most of the licenses were approved under a decade-old law mandating that
agricultural and medical humanitarian aid be exempted from sanctions. But the
law, pushed by the farm lobby and other industry groups, was written so broadly
that allowable humanitarian aid has included cigarettes, Wrigley’s gum,
Louisiana hot sauce, weight-loss remedies, body-building supplements and sports
rehabilitation equipment sold to the institute that trains Iran’s Olympic
athletes.
Hundreds of other licenses were approved because they passed a litmus test: They
were deemed to serve American foreign policy goals. And many clearly do, among
them deals to provide famine relief in North Korea or to improve Internet
connections — and nurture democracy — in Iran. But the examination also found
cases in which the foreign-policy benefits were considerably less clear.
In one instance, an American company was permitted to bid on a pipeline job that
would have helped Iran sell natural gas to Europe, even though the United States
opposes such projects. Several other American businesses were permitted to deal
with foreign companies believed to be involved in terrorism or weapons
proliferation. In one such case, involving equipment bought by a medical waste
disposal plant in Hawaii, the government was preparing to deny the license until
an influential politician intervened.
In an interview, the Obama administration’s point man on sanctions, Stuart A.
Levey, said that focusing on the exceptions “misses the forest for the trees.”
Indeed, the exceptions represent only a small counterweight to the overall force
of America’s trade sanctions, which are among the toughest in the world. Now
they are particularly focused on Iran, where on top of a broad embargo that
prohibits most trade, the United States and its allies this year adopted a new
round of sanctions that have effectively shut Iran off from much of the
international financial system.
“No one can doubt that we are serious about this,” Mr. Levey said.
But as the administration tries to press Iran even harder to abandon its nuclear
program — officials this week announced several new sanctions measures — some
diplomats and foreign affairs experts worry that by allowing the sale of even
small-ticket items with no military application, the United States muddies its
moral and diplomatic authority.
“It’s not a bad thing to grant exceptions if it represents a conscious policy
decision to give countries an incentive,” said Stuart Eizenstat, who oversaw
sanctions policy for the Clinton administration when the humanitarian-aid law
was passed. “But when you create loopholes like this that you can drive a Mack
truck through, you are giving countries something for nothing, and they just
laugh in their teeth. I think there have been abuses.”
What’s more, in countries like Iran where elements of the government have
assumed control over large portions of the economy, it is increasingly difficult
to separate exceptions that help the people from those that enrich the state.
Indeed, records show that the United States has approved the sale of luxury food
items to chain stores owned by blacklisted banks, despite requirements that
potential purchasers be scrutinized for just such connections.
Enforcement of America’s sanctions rests with Treasury’s Office of Foreign
Assets Control, which can make exceptions with guidance from the State
Department. The Treasury office resisted disclosing information about the
licenses, but after The Times filed a federal Freedom of Information lawsuit,
the government agreed to turn over a list of companies granted exceptions and,
in a little more than 100 cases, underlying files explaining the nature and
details of the deals. The process took three years, and the government heavily
redacted many documents, saying they contained trade secrets and personal
information. Still, the files offer a snapshot — albeit a piecemeal one — of a
system that at times appears out of sync with its own licensing policies and
America’s goals abroad.
In some cases, licensing rules failed to keep pace with changing diplomatic
circumstances. For instance, American companies were able to import cheap
blouses and raw material for steel from North Korea because restrictions
loosened when that government promised to renounce its nuclear weapons program
and were not recalibrated after the agreement fell apart.
Mr. Levey, a Treasury under secretary who held the same job in the Bush
administration, pointed out that the United States did far less business with
Iran than did China or Europe; in the first quarter of this year, 0.02 percent
of American exports went to Iran. And while it is “a fair policy question” to
ask whether Congress’s definition of humanitarian aid is overly broad, he said,
the exception has helped the United States argue that it opposes Iran’s
government, not its people. That, in turn, has helped build international
support for the tightly focused financial sanctions.
Beyond that, he and the licensing office’s director, Adam Szubin, said the
agency’s other, case-by-case, determinations often reflected a desire to balance
sanctions policy against the realities of the business world, where companies
may unwittingly find themselves in transactions involving blacklisted entities.
“I haven’t seen any licenses that I thought we should have done differently,”
Mr. Szubin said.
Behind a 2000 Law
For all the speechifying about humanitarian aid that attended its passage, the
2000 law allowing agricultural and medical exceptions to sanctions was
ultimately the product of economic stress and political pressure. American
farmers, facing sharp declines in commodity prices and exports, hoped to offset
their losses with sales to blacklisted countries.
The law defined allowable agricultural exports as any product on a list
maintained by the Agriculture Department, which went beyond traditional
humanitarian aid like seed and grain and included products like beer, soda,
utility poles and more loosely defined categories of “food commodities” and
“food additives.”
Even before the law’s final passage, companies and their lobbyists inundated the
licensing office with claims that their products fit the bill.
Take, for instance, chewing gum, sold in a number of blacklisted countries by
Mars Inc., which owns Wrigley’s. “We debated that one for a month. Was it food?
Did it have nutritional value? We concluded it did,” Hal Eren, a former senior
sanctions adviser at the licensing office, recalled before pausing and
conceding, “We were probably rolled on that issue by outside forces.”
While Cuba was the primary focus of the initial legislative push, Iran, with its
relative wealth and large population, was also a promising prospect. American
exports, virtually nonexistent before the law’s passage, have totaled more than
$1.7 billion since.
In response to questions for this article, companies argued that they were
operating in full accordance with American law.
Henry Lapidos, export manager for the American Pop Corn Company, acknowledged
that calling the Jolly Time popcorn he sold in Sudan and Iran a humanitarian
good was “pushing the envelope,” though he did give it a try. “It depends on how
you look at it — popcorn has fibers, which are helpful to the digestive system,”
he explained, before switching to a different tack. “What’s the harm?” he asked,
adding that he didn’t think Iranian soldiers “would be taking microwavable
popcorn” to war.
Even the sale of benign goods can benefit bad actors, though, which is why the
licensing office and State Department are required to check the purchasers of
humanitarian aid products for links to terrorism. But that does not always
happen.
In its application to sell salt substitutes, marinades, food colorings and cake
sprinkles in Iran, McCormick & Co. listed a number of chain stores that planned
to buy its products. A quick check of the Web site of one store, Refah, revealed
that its major investors were banks on an American blacklist. The government of
Tehran owns Shahrvand, another store listed in the license. A third chain store,
Ghods, draws many top officials from the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps,
which the United States considers a terrorist organization.
The licensing office’s director, Mr. Szubin, said that given his limited
resources, they were better spent on stopping weapons technology from reaching
Iran. Even if the connections in the McCormick case had come to light, he said,
he still might have had to approve the license: the law requires him to do so
unless he can prove that the investors engaged in terrorist activities own more
than half of a company.
“Are we checking end users? Yes,” he said. “But are we doing corporate due
diligence on every Iranian importer? No.”
A McCormick spokesman, Jim Lynn, said, “We were not aware of the information you
shared with us and are looking into it.”
Political Influence
Beyond the humanitarian umbrella, the agency has wide discretion to make
case-by-case exceptions. Sometimes, political influence plays a role in those
deliberations, as in a case involving Senator Daniel Inouye of Hawaii and a
medical-waste disposal plant in Honolulu.
On July 28, 2003, the plant’s owner, Samuel Liu, ordered 200 graphite electrodes
from a Chinese government-owned company, China Precision Machinery Import Export
Corporation. In an interview, Mr. Liu said he had chosen the company because the
electrodes available in the United States were harder to find and more
expensive. Two days later, the Bush administration barred American citizens from
doing business with the Chinese company, which had already been penalized
repeatedly for providing missile technology to Pakistan and Iran.
By the time Customs seized the electrodes on Nov. 5, waste was piling up in the
sun. Nor did prospects look good for Mr. Liu’s application to the licensing
office seeking to do an end run around the sanctions. On Nov. 21, a State
Department official, Ralph Palmiero, recommended that the agency deny the
request since the sanctions explicitly mandated the “termination of existing
contracts” like Mr. Liu’s.
That is when Senator Inouye’s office stepped in. While his electrodes were at
sea, Mr. Liu had made his first ever political contribution, giving the
senator’s campaign $2,000. Mr. Liu says the timing was coincidental, that he was
simply feeling more politically inclined. Records show that an Inouye aide
called the licensing office on Mr. Liu’s behalf the same day that Mr. Palmiero
recommended denying the application. The senator himself wrote two days later.
Mr. Inouye’s spokesman, Peter Boylan, said the contribution had “no impact
whatsoever” on the senator’s actions, which he said were motivated solely by
concern for the community’s health and welfare.
The pressure appears to have worked. The following day, the licensing office’s
director at the time asked the State Department to reconsider in an e-mail that
prominently noted the senator’s interest. A few days later, the State Department
found that the purchase qualified for a special “medical and humanitarian”
exception.
The license was issued Dec. 10. Two months later, Mr. Liu sent the senator
another $2,000 contribution, the maximum allowable. Mr. Levey said he could not
comment on the details of a decision predating his tenure. But he noted that
sanctions against the Chinese company had since been toughened, and added,
“Certainly this transaction wouldn’t be authorized today.”
Curious Exemptions
Mr. Liu’s license is hardly the only one to raise questions about how the
government determines that a license serves American foreign policy.
There is also, for instance, the case of Irisl, an Iranian government-owned
shipping line that the United States blacklisted in 2008, charging that because
it routinely used front companies and misleading terms to shroud shipments of
banned arms and other technology with military uses, it was impossible to tell
whether its shipments were “licit or illicit.”
Less than nine months earlier, the licensing office had permitted a Japanese
subsidiary of Citibank to carry out the very type of transaction it was now
warning against. Records show that the bank had agreed to confirm a letter of
credit guaranteeing payment to a Malaysian exporter upon delivery of what were
described as split-system air-conditioners to a Turkish importer. Though the
government had yet to blacklist Irisl, sanctions rules already prohibited
dealings with Iranian companies. So when the bank learned that the goods were to
be shipped aboard the Irisl-owned Iran Ilam, it sought a license.
The license was granted, even though the Treasury Department’s investigation of
Irisl was well under way and the United States had reason to be suspicious of
the Iran Ilam in particular; that summer, the ship had attracted the attention
of the intelligence community when it delivered a lathe used to make nuclear
centrifuge parts from China to Iran, according to government officials who
requested anonymity to speak about a previously unpublicized intelligence
matter.
Mr. Szubin said that since the blacklisting of Irisl, his agency had forced
banks to extricate themselves from such transactions. But at the time the
Citibank license was issued, his agency regularly issued licenses in cases like
this one, where at the time of the transaction, the bank had no way of knowing
that Irisl was involved and where the shipping line would be paid by a foreign
third party anyway. To depart from the norm, he said, risked facing a lawsuit
charging unfair treatment and tipping Irisl off that it was under investigation.
But if the government has sometimes been willing to grant American businesses a
break, some companies have recently decided that the cost to their reputations
outweighs the potential profit.
General Electric, which has been one of the leading recipients of licenses, says
it has stopped all but humanitarian business in countries listed as sponsors of
terrorism and has promised to donate its profits from Iran to charity.
As Joshua Kamens, the head of a company called Anndorll, put it, he knew from
almost the minute he applied for a license to sell sugar in Iran that “it would
come back to haunt me.” Although he received the go-ahead, he decided to back
out of the deal.
“I’m an American,” he said. “Even though it’s legal to sell that type of
product, I didn’t want to have any trade with a country like Iran.”
Ron Nixon contributed reporting from Washington, and William Yong from Tehran.
U.S. Approved Business
With Blacklisted Nations, NYT, 23.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/24/world/24sanctions.html
In a Sign of Foreclosure Flaws, Suits Claim Break-Ins by Banks
December 21, 2010
The New York Times
By ANDREW MARTIN
TRUCKEE, Calif. — When Mimi Ash arrived at her mountain chalet here for a
weekend ski trip, she discovered that someone had broken into the home and
changed the locks.
When she finally got into the house, it was empty. All of her possessions were
gone: furniture, her son’s ski medals, winter clothes and family photos. Also
missing was a wooden box, its top inscribed with the words “Together Forever,”
that contained the ashes of her late husband, Robert.
The culprit, Ms. Ash soon learned, was not a burglar but her bank. According to
a federal lawsuit filed in October by Ms. Ash, Bank of America had wrongfully
foreclosed on her house and thrown out her belongings, without alerting Ms. Ash
beforehand.
In an era when millions of homes have received foreclosure notices nationwide,
lawsuits detailing bank break-ins like the one at Ms. Ash’s house keep
surfacing. And in the wake of the scandal involving shoddy, sometimes illegal
paperwork that has buffeted the nation’s biggest banks in recent months, critics
say these situations reinforce their claims that the foreclosure process is
fundamentally flawed.
“Every day, smaller wrongs happen to people trying to save their homes: being
charged the wrong amount of money, being wrongly denied a loan modification,
being asked to hand over documents four or five times,” said Ira Rheingold,
executive director of the National Association of Consumer Advocates.
Identifying the number of homeowners who were locked out illegally is difficult.
But banks and their representatives insist that situations like Ms. Ash’s
represent just a tiny percentage of foreclosures.
Many of the incidents that have become public appear to have been caused by
confusion over whether a house is abandoned, in which case a bank may have the
right to break in and make sure the property is secure.
Some of the cases appear to be mistakes involving homeowners who were up to date
on their mortgage — or had paid off their home — but who still became targets of
a bank.
In Texas, for example, Bank of America had the locks changed and the electricity
shut off last year at Alan Schroit’s second home in Galveston, according to
court papers. Mr. Schroit, who had paid off the house, had stored 75 pounds of
salmon and halibut in his refrigerator and freezer, caught during a recent
Alaskan fishing vacation.
“Lacking power, the freezer’s contents melted, spoiled and reeking melt water
spread through the property and leaked through the flooring into joists and
lower areas,” the lawsuit says. The case was settled for an undisclosed amount.
More common are cases like Ms. Ash’s, in which a homeowner was behind on
payments, perhaps trying to work out a modification, when bank crews changed the
locks.
In Florida, contractors working for Chase Bank used a screwdriver to enter Debra
Fischer’s house in Punta Gorda and helped themselves to a laptop, an iPod, a
cordless drill, six bottles of wine and a frosty beer, left half-empty on the
counter, according to assertions in a lawsuit filed in August. Ms. Fisher was
facing foreclosure, but Chase had not yet obtained a court order, her lawyer
says.
The break-in was discovered when a Canadian couple renting the house returned
from the beach.
Chase officials said such behavior by its contractors, if determined to be true,
would be considered unacceptable and corrective action would be taken.
Banks and their contractors insist that the number of mistakes is minuscule
given the hundreds of thousands of new foreclosure cases filed each month. Bank
of America, for instance, says it works with third-party contractors to inspect
and maintain more than one million properties each month and has enhanced its
controls in the last year to prevent mistakes.
Alan Jaffa, chief executive of Safeguard Properties, which inspects and
maintains foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, acknowledged that a
handful of mistakes had been made. In most instances, he said, his company
provided a valuable service that protected properties and neighborhoods.
“There is a stigma that we go in, kick the door in and throw grandma out head
first and board up the windows,” Mr. Jaffa said. “We are doing a lot of good out
there.”
But Alan M. White, a consumer law expert at Valparaiso University in Indiana,
says: “Volume is not an excuse for violating someone’s rights.”
A clause in most mortgages allows banks that service the loan to enter a home
and secure it if it is in default, meaning if the mortgage payment is 45 to 60
days late, and if the house has been abandoned, authorities said.
Banks do so to protect the property from vandalism or damage for which the bank
could be liable.
But determining when a house is abandoned is not always easy and is often left
to inexperienced contractors, said Carlin Phillips, a Massachusetts lawyer who
represents Ms. Ash, who is 45.
“It’s sometimes as little as someone looking through the windows, or knocking on
the door of a neighbor and saying, “Where are they?’ ” Mr. Phillips said.
In Washington, Celeste Butler went to check on her father’s house after he spent
months in the hospital and ultimately died.
“The house was ransacked,” Ms. Butler said, adding that it had been neatly
maintained beforehand. “They had destroyed furniture, broken into china cabinet.
They had looted jewelry.”
In her lawsuit, Ms. Butler is accusing Safeguard, a contractor for JP
MorganChase, of breaking into her father’s house. Ms. Butler asserts that Chase
failed to properly credit payments made when she switched to an automatic system
in June 2009, but that she and the bank worked quickly to rectify the problem.
Officials at Chase said its contractors, dispatched to inspect the house when
payments were late, found it in disarray. When no one responded to a letter
asking if the property had been abandoned, Chase said, its crews went back in
the house to put antifreeze in the pipes.
The clearing out of Ms. Ash’s Truckee home, on Ski Slope Way high above Lake
Tahoe, came after several horrific years of personal and professional hardships.
During the California real estate boom, Ms. Ash and her husband, Robert,
thrived. Mr. Ash bought the house in Truckee in 2003. Two years later, he was
stabbed to death in a road-rage incident near Truckee. (The driver was convicted
of second-degree murder and is in prison.)
From there, Ms. Ash’s troubles with the Truckee house became tangled in her
worsening financial situation and, she claims, the bungling of the bank,
originally Countrywide Financial, which was bought by Bank of America in 2008.
She intended to assume the mortgage on the house, which landed in probate court
after her husband’s death. The bank required that she catch up on payments and
taxes, so she sent a check for $15,000.
Hearing nothing from the bank for many months and not having ownership of the
house, she made no more payments, she said. By the time Countrywide reached Ms.
Ash, the real estate market was collapsing, so she sought a loan modification.
Months and years of frustration followed. The bank lost documents and rarely
returned her e-mails and phone messages, she said.
When Countrywide issued a default notice in 2007, it went to the wrong address,
her lawsuit says. Later, Ms. Ash said, the bank assured her it would not
foreclose while she pursued the loan modification.
Even so, the bank conducted a foreclosure sale on the property in May 2008.
Again, Ms. Ash said she had not been notified and learned of the sale during a
summer visit. She said she had been told the sale would be rescinded.
Near Halloween 2008, work crews broke in and cleaned out the place, taking
Persian rugs, china, furniture bought on a trip in Peru, skis, photos of her
marriage and childhood in Iran. Her husband’s ashes were taken from the couple’s
master bedroom.
A bank spokeswoman, Jumana Bauwens, said, “We take the allegations made by Ms.
Ash very seriously and are thoroughly researching her claims. Bank of America
will work with Ms. Ash and her counsel to determine the extent and cause of her
claims and move toward an appropriate resolution of the case.”
Although the original foreclosure was rescinded, as promised, Ms. Ash, who
discovered the break-in in January 2009, says it is hard for her to visit the
house anymore and she will probably let it lapse into foreclosure. At this
point, she said, it is just a “sad reminder that 22 years of my history
vanished.”
“This is in essence a burglary,” said Ms. Ash, walking through the vacant home,
with its four levels and commanding mountain views. “But when a burglar goes in,
they don’t take your photos and your husband’s ashes.”
“This used to be my haven I’d run away to,” she said. “Now I run away from it.”
In a Sign of Foreclosure
Flaws, Suits Claim Break-Ins by Banks, NYT, 21.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/22/business/22lockout.html
Weighing
Costs, Companies Favor Temporary Help
December
19, 2010
The New York Times
By MOTOKO RICH
Temporary
workers are starting to look, well, not so temporary.
Despite a surge this year in short-term hiring, many American businesses are
still skittish about making those jobs permanent, raising concerns among workers
and some labor experts that temporary employees will become a larger, more
entrenched part of the work force.
This is bad news for the nation’s workers, who are already facing one of the
bleakest labor markets in recent history. Temporary employees generally receive
fewer benefits or none at all, and have virtually no job security. It is harder
for them to save. And it is much more difficult for them to develop a career arc
while hopping from boss to boss.
“We’re in a period where uncertainty seems to be going on forever,” said David
Autor, an economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “So this
period of temporary employment seems to be going on forever.”
This year, companies have hired temporary workers in significant numbers. In
November, they accounted for 80 percent of the 50,000 jobs added by private
sector employers, according to the Labor Department. Since the beginning of the
year, employers have added a net 307,000 temporary workers, more than a quarter
of the 1.17 million private sector jobs added in total.
One worker who has been forced to accept temporary jobs is Jeffrey Rodeo, 43,
who was laid off 14 months ago from his job as an accounting manager at a
produce company in Sacramento. He has applied for nearly 700 full-time positions
since then, but has yet to receive an offer. Meanwhile, to stay afloat and keep
his skills fresh, he has worked on short-term stints at four different
employers.
Mr. Rodeo figures his peripatetic work life will last at least another year.
“Companies are being more careful,” he said. “It just may take longer to secure
a permanent position.”
To the more than 15 million people who are still out of work, those with
temporary jobs are lucky. With concerns mounting that the long-term unemployed
are becoming increasingly unemployable, those in temporary jobs are at least
maintaining ties to the working world.
The competition for them can often be as fierce as for permanent openings, and
there are still far too few of them to go around. Indeed, the relative strength
in temporary hiring has done little to dent the stubbornly high unemployment
rate, which rose to 9.8 percent in November.
“With business confidence, particularly in the small business sector, extremely
low,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief United States economist at the High Frequency
Economics research firm, “it’s not surprising that permanent hiring is lagging
behind.”
The landscape two or three years from now might look quite different, of course.
Many economists and executives at temporary agencies say there are signs that
more robust permanent hiring is coming in the new year. Business confidence is
up, and temporary agencies report that the percentage of interim workers who
have been offered full-time jobs is also up from last year.
Nevertheless, there are signs that this time around, the economy could be moving
toward a higher reliance on temporary workers over the long term.
This year, 26.2 percent of all jobs added by private sector employers were
temporary positions. In the comparable period after the recession of the early
1990s, only 10.9 percent of the private sector jobs added were temporary, and
after the downturn earlier this decade, just 7.1 percent were temporary.
Temporary employees still make up a small fraction of total employees, but that
segment has been rising steeply over the past year. “It hints at a structural
change,” said Allen L. Sinai, chief global economist at the consulting firm
Decision Economics. Temp workers “are becoming an ever more important part of
what is going on,” he said.
Several factors could be contributing to the trend. Many businesses now tend to
organize around short- to medium-term projects that can be doled out to
temporary or contract workers.
Donald Lane, chief executive of Makino, a manufacturer of machine tools near
Cincinnati, said his company would increasingly outsource projects to contract
firms that pull together temporary teams. When installing a large machine, for
example, Mr. Lane said the company could appoint one full-time supervisor to
oversee a number of less skilled short-term workers.
Mr. Lane said he hoped to raise Makino’s share of temporary employees from 10 to
15 percent now to about 25 percent in the future.
Flexibility is another factor. Corporate executives, stung by the depth of the
recent downturn, are looking to make it easier to hire and fire workers. And
with the cost of health and retirement benefits running high, many companies are
looking to reduce that burden. In some cases, companies wrongly classify regular
employees as temporary or contract workers in order to save on benefit costs and
taxes.
Certainly, Americans who have never held anything but a full-time job have
sought out temporary posts because they were the only jobs available. And even
before the recession, workers were learning that lifelong employment was
disappearing along with phone booths and Filofax organizers.
But people still tend to prefer jobs with some sense of permanence, and with
full health benefits and some form of retirement contribution.
According to a survey by Staffing Industry Analysts, a Mountain View, Calif.,
research firm, 68 percent of all temporary workers are seeking permanent
employment.
But the whole notion of what constitutes a permanent job may simply be changing.
Workers “need to expect that their lives and jobs will change much more often
than they have in the past,” said Jonas Prising, president of the Americas at
Manpower.
Some people have discovered they prefer the freelance life. Antonia Musto lost
her job as a staff accountant for a newspaper in Wilkes Barre, Pa., more than
two years ago. She signed on with oDesk, a company that matches contract workers
with employers online.
She has since worked for several different businesses and even turned down a
full-time offer last November. “I just think I’ve gotten very accustomed to
working very fast and working with many different people,” Ms. Musto, 38, said.
She said she had fully replaced the income she was making at the newspaper and
buys private health insurance.
Of course, businesses that can now hire talented workers for temporary jobs may
find that when demand picks up, they will need to offer full-time positions with
perks and benefits. But it could take a long time to reach that point.
That indefinite stretch worries workers who fear that future employers will look
askance at a résumé filled with short-term engagements. Others worry that they
will lose valuable years of saving for the future.
Mr. Rodeo, the Sacramento accounting manager, said he made anywhere from 10 to
50 percent less while working in temporary jobs than he did at the produce
company. He has also been without health insurance all year. None of the interim
employers or temporary agencies have contributed to a 401(k) plan, nor has he
been able to save much on his own.
“That’s the scariest part,” said Mr. Rodeo.
He is confident he will eventually land a permanent post, but until then, he
knows he is losing ground in planning for retirement. “Of course, for my
generation, you can’t plan on Social Security,” he said. “Most likely, I will
have to work longer.”
Others are starting to face the prospect that they could move among temporary
assignments for the rest of their careers.
Jose Marin, 50, known as J. D., lost his technology job in Miami in February and
moved to North Carolina to live with his sister. After months of looking for a
permanent job, he signed on with Modis, a unit of Adecco, and in August began a
temporary assignment for a financial services company in Cary, a town west of
Raleigh.
While grateful for the job, he longs for a permanent position. “I’m still
old-fashioned and I still want to work for a company where I make a difference
and I’m going to be there to retire,” said Mr. Marin. “I know that’s wishful
thinking.”
Weighing Costs, Companies Favor Temporary Help, NYT,
19.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/20/business/economy/20temp.html
Online Stores Start to Wean Shoppers Off Sales
December 19, 2010
The New York Times
By STEPHANIE CLIFFORD and CLAIRE CAIN MILLER
This holiday season, online sales are zooming, even as online retailers offer
fewer discounts and turn picky about who shops at their sites.
After two years of relative malaise, online sales grew 12 percent in the first
47 days of the holiday season, according to comScore, to $27.5 billion. That
significantly outpaces the growth rate of retail sales over all, which analysts
expect to rise 3 to 4 percent this holiday season.
But online retailers are now protecting their margins with careful offers,
dispensing with the promotions of the last two holiday seasons that were meant
to drive sales and get rid of extra inventory. Gone are the coupons that give
shoppers 40 percent off all purchases. Instead, offers go to selected customers,
and are specialized: a discount on wool jackets, free hoop earrings when people
spend $100, a “mystery” discount amount that is revealed only at checkout.
The promotions try to get customers to behave in a certain way. A coupon may
seem straightforward, like Drugstore.com offering $5 off a $30 purchase. In
fact, it is encouraging one-time customers to browse through several pages of a
site and get to know what a retailer offers as they decide what to buy.
“The reason there’s these different promotions and not just the straight
dollar-off or percent-off promotions all the time is there are different
incentives,” said David Lonczak, chief marketing officer of Drugstore.com. “You
may just need a sale, you may have a product you’re long on and you need to get
rid of it, or you may be looking to acquire customers with a higher basket,” he
said, referring to the transaction price. “You have to be thoughtful.”
Discounting has declined; in November, retailers’ e-commerce revenue from sales
of full-price items rose 52 percent versus November 2009, according to MyBuys,
which works on personalization offers for retailers.
But less discounting has not tamped down online sales. On Thanksgiving weekend,
more than one-third of purchases were made online, versus about 28.5 percent
last year, according to the National Retail Federation.
That is because even staunch in-store shoppers are now comfortable buying
online, said Fiona Dias, executive vice president for strategy and marketing for
GSI Commerce, which provides e-commerce technology to retailers like Toys “R”
Us. And the high demand means that online retailers do not have to slash prices
to get customers.
“If anything, we’re running tight on inventory because everyone has sold a lot
more than they expected to,” Ms. Dias said of the sites she works with. “That’s
why we’re not seeing 50-percent-off promotions.”
Given their strong position, retailers are trying to get customers out of the
price-wars mind-set that they adopted during the recession.
“At some point, we have to stop and try to go back to where we were because if
everyone continues to offer 20 percent, 50 percent off, it’s going to change the
market on a long-term scale that it would be too hard to get back from,” said
Melissa Joy Manning, who runs an online jewelry store bearing her name. She has
stopped discounting, but is giving a pair of silver hoop earrings to customers
who spend $100 or more. “We don’t have unlimited resources, so we do try to be
as creative with them as we can,” she said.
Like Ms. Manning, other retailers are getting creative with unusually specific
offers.
“It’s about margins,” said Andy Dunn, the chief executive and co-founder of
Bonobos, a men’s clothing site. While last December, about a third of his
revenue came from promotions, this year it’s down to about a quarter, even as he
expects his revenue to nearly triple for the month. “There’s less of a need to
be highly promotional,” he said. “At the same time, we feel we need to get
better at the laser-beam promoting.”
So he is whittling down offers, sending, for instance, a 20 percent offer on
suit elements to people who have bought wool pants but not a jacket.
“We don’t have to treat everyone the same,” he said.
Drugstore.com also changes its approach depending on the customer.
That offer for $5 off any purchase over $30 may prompt people to explore the
site. “So if a new Drugstore.com customer doesn’t know I sell toys and games,
would you think I’d sell a Razor scooter?” he said. “I have to incent you to
shop around.”
He would use a percent-off coupon, he said, when he wants to drive overall
sales. And he tends to avoid offers like “$10 off your purchase,” because “I
would get a whole bunch of people coming in, they would find the product that
was 10 dollars and one cent, they would get it and I would never see them
again,” he said.
Other retailers are trying to stand out in crowded in-boxes. Bloomingdales.com
had a “mystery savings” event last week, in which customers on its e-mail list
were sent a code that called up discounts of between 10 and 40 percent at
checkout.
“People are going, ‘Well, maybe I’m going to be the one who hits the jackpot,’ ”
said Bruce Berman, president of Bloomingdales.com and chief financial officer of
Bloomingdale’s. “So they open it at a higher rate.” The tactic helped the store
stand out, he said. The day after the Bloomingdale’s e-mail went out, Saks Fifth
Avenue also sent one promoting a “mystery sale” online. Saks declined to comment
on the promotion.
For Bloomingdale’s, Mr. Berman said, “It worked out to our advantage because
whoever shops both will say, ‘I already did that.’ ”
Sometimes, a retailer can be too successful with an online sale, and have to
shift tactics on the fly to keep profit up.
At the Gap Inc. sites, which include Banana Republic and Old Navy, the plan was
to do heavy discounts on the four days after Thanksgiving. But Friday sales
“exceeded our forecast — it was too hot, it was too strong,” said Toby Lenk, the
president of Gap Inc. Direct. “So we pulled back on our promotions for Cyber
Monday.”
And other retailers have had to devise new tactics after vendors instructed them
to stop offering discounts on their brands.
“With the discounting in the last years, the perception from our vendors is that
we were discounting their products,” said Pete LaBore, director of customer
retention at Backcountry.com.
So the company came up with a new offer — “on our dime,” Mr. LaBore said — that
gave $20 off on the site. “It’s totally free money,” the offer said. But
customers did not seem to believe it, and Backcountry.com sent another e-mail
two days later with the subject line, “Seriously — It’s Free.”
The offer went only to people who had bought, in the past, certain brands or
categories in which Backcountry.com now had too much stock, or to people who
usually spent enough that “we weren’t just going to have somebody coming in
buying a three-dollar pair of socks,” Mr. LaBore said.
It seemed a smart approach; so far, the offer has been profitable, with most
people spending much more than $20, Mr. LaBore said.
“We’re trying to get away from the ‘sale, sale, sale’ message, and this is a
different way to do that,” he said.
Online Stores Start to
Wean Shoppers Off Sales, NYT, 19.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/20/business/20ecommerce.html
This Bonus Season on Wall Street, Many See Zeros
December
19, 2010
The New York Times
By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ and SUSANNE CRAIG
Bonus
season is fast approaching on Wall Street, but this year the talk does not
center just on multimillion-dollar paydays. It’s about a new club that no one
wants to join: the Zeros.
Drawn from a broad swath of back-office employees and middle-level traders,
bankers and brokers, the Zeros, as they have come to be called, are facing a
once-unthinkable prospect: an annual bonus of ... nothing.
“It’s going to a cause a lot of panic on Wall Street,” said Richard Stein of
Global Sage, an executive search firm. “Everybody is talking about it, but
they’re actually concerned about it becoming public. I would not want to be head
of compensation at a Wall Street firm right now.”
In some ways, a zero bonus should not come as a surprise to many bankers. As a
result of the 2008 financial crisis, Wall Street firms like Goldman Sachs and
banks like Citigroup raised base pay substantially in 2009 and 2010. They were
seeking to placate regulators who had argued that bonuses based on performance
encouraged excessive risk.
At Goldman, for instance, the base salary for managing directors rose to
$500,000 from $300,000, while at Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse it jumped to
$400,000 from $200,000.
Even though employees will receive roughly the same amount of money, the
psychological blow of not getting a bonus is substantial, especially in a Wall
Street culture that has long equated success and prestige with bonus size. So
there are sure to be plenty of long faces on employees across the financial
sector who have come to expect a bonus on top of their base pay. Wall Streeters
typically find out what their bonuses will be in January, with the payout coming
in February.
One executive, whose firm prohibited discussing the topic with the news media,
said the bump in base salaries had confused people, even though their overall
compensation was the same. “People expect a big bonus,” this person said. “It is
as if they don’t even see their base doubled last year.”
Dealing with the Zeros can be complicated. “It’s a real headache,” said another
senior banker, who asked not to be identified because the topic is so volatile
at his company. There has been so much grousing that in some cases, he said,
“we’ll throw $20,000 or $25,000 at each of the Zeros so they’re not
discouraged.”
“No matter what we pay people, it is never enough and they always find something
to complain about,” this banker said.
While Zeros are turning up in the ranks of back-office employees and midtier
bankers and traders who typically earn $250,000 to $500,000, their bosses way up
the compensation ladder are still expected to notch handsome paydays in the
millions.
In terms of overall profit, Wall Street is on track for one of its best years
ever, although it will trail 2009, which was pumped up by federal bailout money
and the rebound from the financial crisis.
In the first three quarters of the year, Wall Street earned $21.4 billion,
putting it on track to easily outpace 2006, when the economy was booming, and
well ahead of the New York City government’s initial estimate of $20.6 billion
for profit in all of 2010.
This year, Wall Street’s five biggest firms have put aside nearly $90 billion
for bonuses.
But bankers and compensation experts say that bonus payouts will vary widely
this year, much more than in the past when a rising tide lifted all boats. And
just as junior and senior bankers face varying fates, so some departments are
expected to fare better than others.
At JPMorgan and Bank of America Merrill Lynch, for example, the leveraged
finance group could receive a 10 to 20 percent bump from last year, because of
record issuance of junk bonds. Equity traders, on the other hand, are looking at
a 10 to 20 percent drop because stock trading tailed off during the second half
of the year.
At Morgan Stanley, equity trading was stronger, but bond traders are most likely
looking at smaller pay packages.
To be sure, the best performers on the most profitable desks will still receive
substantial bonuses. At Bank of America, top directors might earn a $1 million
bonus while top vice presidents could net $600,000, according to one banker
there.
What’s more, echoing trends in the broader economy, Wall Street chief executives
are almost certain to escape the fate of the Zeros, with bonuses climbing into
the stratosphere as the shock of the financial crisis fades and pay for the top
tier climbs back toward historical averages.
Morgan Stanley is perhaps feeling the most pressure. In 2009, it paid out a
record 62 percent of its net revenue in compensation and benefits; its chief
executive, James P. Gorman, vowed to bring that down to bolster profits. But
early this year, the firm’s board decided to start hiring in an effort to
rebuild businesses in the wake of the financial crisis.
Now, having added 2,000 people in 2010 yet lacking any growth in revenue, the
firm has little choice but to scale back on bonuses. Compensation will be
lowered across the board, but there will still be plenty of Zeros, said one
person familiar with Morgan Stanley’s compensation process.
Recently, Mr. Gorman has been telling employees that the selective, short-term
pain on compensation will give the firm credibility with shareholders and help
Morgan Stanley over the long haul, calling 2010 “the year of differentiation,”
several employees said.
Even if overall salaries for Wall Streeters remain generous, the new zero-bonus
culture is likely to change spending habits, said Robert J. Gordon, a professor
of economics at Northwestern. Bonuses are spent differently than more
predictable income, he said, citing “impulsive purchases, like jewelry from
Tiffany’s for a girlfriend.”
Zero bonuses are likely to have a bigger impact on New York’s economy, which has
grown dependent on the largess of Wall Street firms. Whether it’s for jewelry,
high-end clothing or apartments, bonus spending has long fed a postholiday boom
in January and February, especially in Manhattan and expensive suburbs like
Greenwich.
“I suspect there will be some pain in the short-term,” said Robert D. Yaro,
president of the Regional Plan Association, an independent research group in
Manhattan.
“We’ve all heard the stories of someone showing up in Greenwich to buy a $10
million house and paying cash on the spot,” he added. “But in the long term,
this is probably healthier for Wall Street and the regional economy. Wall Street
shouldn’t be a casino.”
This Bonus Season on Wall Street, Many See Zeros, NYT,
19.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/20/business/20bonus.html
When
Zombies Win
December
19, 2010
The New York Times
By PAUL KRUGMAN
When
historians look back at 2008-10, what will puzzle them most, I believe, is the
strange triumph of failed ideas. Free-market fundamentalists have been wrong
about everything — yet they now dominate the political scene more thoroughly
than ever.
How did that happen? How, after runaway banks brought the economy to its knees,
did we end up with Ron Paul, who says “I don’t think we need regulators,” about
to take over a key House panel overseeing the Fed? How, after the experiences of
the Clinton and Bush administrations — the first raised taxes and presided over
spectacular job growth; the second cut taxes and presided over anemic growth
even before the crisis — did we end up with bipartisan agreement on even more
tax cuts?
The answer from the right is that the economic failures of the Obama
administration show that big-government policies don’t work. But the response
should be, what big-government policies?
For the fact is that the Obama stimulus — which itself was almost 40 percent tax
cuts — was far too cautious to turn the economy around. And that’s not 20-20
hindsight: many economists, myself included, warned from the beginning that the
plan was grossly inadequate. Put it this way: A policy under which government
employment actually fell, under which government spending on goods and services
grew more slowly than during the Bush years, hardly constitutes a test of
Keynesian economics.
Now, maybe it wasn’t possible for President Obama to get more in the face of
Congressional skepticism about government. But even if that’s true, it only
demonstrates the continuing hold of a failed doctrine over our politics.
It’s also worth pointing out that everything the right said about why
Obamanomics would fail was wrong. For two years we’ve been warned that
government borrowing would send interest rates sky-high; in fact, rates have
fluctuated with optimism or pessimism about recovery, but stayed consistently
low by historical standards. For two years we’ve been warned that inflation,
even hyperinflation, was just around the corner; instead, disinflation has
continued, with core inflation — which excludes volatile food and energy prices
— now at a half-century low.
The free-market fundamentalists have been as wrong about events abroad as they
have about events in America — and suffered equally few consequences. “Ireland,”
declared George Osborne in 2006, “stands as a shining example of the art of the
possible in long-term economic policymaking.” Whoops. But Mr. Osborne is now
Britain’s top economic official.
And in his new position, he’s setting out to emulate the austerity policies
Ireland implemented after its bubble burst. After all, conservatives on both
sides of the Atlantic spent much of the past year hailing Irish austerity as a
resounding success. “The Irish approach worked in 1987-89 — and it’s working
now,” declared Alan Reynolds of the Cato Institute last June. Whoops, again.
But such failures don’t seem to matter. To borrow the title of a recent book by
the Australian economist John Quiggin on doctrines that the crisis should have
killed but didn’t, we’re still — perhaps more than ever — ruled by “zombie
economics.” Why?
Part of the answer, surely, is that people who should have been trying to slay
zombie ideas have tried to compromise with them instead. And this is especially,
though not only, true of the president.
People tend to forget that Ronald Reagan often gave ground on policy substance —
most notably, he ended up enacting multiple tax increases. But he never wavered
on ideas, never backed down from the position that his ideology was right and
his opponents were wrong.
President Obama, by contrast, has consistently tried to reach across the aisle
by lending cover to right-wing myths. He has praised Reagan for restoring
American dynamism (when was the last time you heard a Republican praising
F.D.R.?), adopted G.O.P. rhetoric about the need for the government to tighten
its belt even in the face of recession, offered symbolic freezes on spending and
federal wages.
None of this stopped the right from denouncing him as a socialist. But it helped
empower bad ideas, in ways that can do quite immediate harm. Right now Mr. Obama
is hailing the tax-cut deal as a boost to the economy — but Republicans are
already talking about spending cuts that would offset any positive effects from
the deal. And how effectively can he oppose these demands, when he himself has
embraced the rhetoric of belt-tightening?
Yes, politics is the art of the possible. We all understand the need to deal
with one’s political enemies. But it’s one thing to make deals to advance your
goals; it’s another to open the door to zombie ideas. When you do that, the
zombies end up eating your brain — and quite possibly your economy too.
When Zombies Win, NYT, 19.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/20/opinion/20krugman.html
With New Tax Bill, a Turning Point for the President
December 17, 2010
The New York Times
By PETER BAKER
WASHINGTON — With the stroke of a pen, President Obama on Friday enacted the
largest tax cut in nearly a decade and, in the process, took a big step toward
reinventing himself as a champion of compromise in a politically fractured
capital.
When he first struck the deal two weeks ago, a sour Mr. Obama announced it by
himself, lamented his own agreement and testily denounced his Republican
partners as “hostage takers” and his liberal critics as “sanctimonious.” By the
time he signed it into law on Friday, little more than six weeks after an
electoral debacle for him and his party, he stood with the Senate Republican
leader and celebrated the package as a hallmark of cooperation.
“The final product proves when we can put aside the partisanship and the
political games, when we can put aside what’s good for some of us in favor of
what’s good for all of us, we can get a lot done,” Mr. Obama said buoyantly at a
bill-signing ceremony in the White House complex. “I’m also hopeful that we
might refresh the American people’s faith in the capability of their leaders to
govern in challenging times.”
One leader in particular. Mr. Obama’s embrace of compromise comes as he tries to
find his footing after midterm elections that cost the Democratic Party control
of the House and pared its majority in the Senate. As the weeks have passed, the
president who has emerged appears increasingly more confident than chastened,
eager to revive his campaign image as a postpartisan leader who can work across
party lines even at the cost of alienating his own supporters.
Such an identity is hardly new to Mr. Obama, but it has largely eluded him in
his first two years in office. As a candidate, he managed to come across as
diametrically opposite to different supporters, the leader of a new progressive
movement to some and a reasoned pragmatist who could bridge the divide in
Washington to others. If the first identity dominated his opening two years, the
second may come to the fore in his next two.
“These two aspects of his persona have existed side by side from the very
beginning,” said Geoff Garin, a Democratic strategist who in 2008 worked for Mr.
Obama’s opponent for the presidential nomination, Hillary Rodham Clinton.
However imperfect, the tax deal “spoke to a deep feeling in the country about
the need to work across party lines to get things done,” he said.
It remained unclear whether Mr. Obama can, or would want to, sustain such an
approach. The tax deal may be a one-off situation where a looming
end-of-the-year deadline forced action to avoid tax cuts expiring across the
board. And in reality, of course, it is much easier for politicians to agree
about cutting taxes and adding the bill to the national debt than, say, cutting
spending or other much tougher choices to come.
“Sometimes the lessons take a while to sink in, particularly if you’re a person
of great arrogance, as he is,” said Peter H. Wehner, who was a top White House
aide to President George W. Bush and is now a senior fellow at the Ethics and
Public Policy Center in Washington. “But he’s not suicidal, and it’s beginning
to kick in.”
Still, Mr. Wehner said, “it may be seen as an anomaly rather than the beginning
of a trend.”
Indeed, Mr. Obama has made it clear that he will press advantages where he sees
them, and he has chosen an energetic agenda for a lame-duck session beyond taxes
and other issues that had to be addressed because of deadlines.
He decided to wage a full-fledged fight to push his arms control treaty with
Russia through the Senate before it returns next month with five more
Republicans. And he has given no ground in the legislative battle to end the ban
on gay men and lesbians serving openly in the military.
“His strong resolve was we were not going to meekly limp out of this year not
having accomplished what he needed to accomplish,” David Axelrod, the
president’s senior adviser, said in an interview.
But Friday’s tableau of the Democratic president flanked by Senator Mitch
McConnell, the Republican leader and his prime nemesis on Capitol Hill, served
as a portrait of the change in his presidency. While Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton
and both George Bushes advanced top priorities in tandem with the opposition
party, this was the first time in Mr. Obama’s presidency that he forged a major
bipartisan compromise on a signature issue — and it was Mr. McConnell’s first
time at a major White House bill signing under this president.
The $858 billion package Mr. Obama signed extends Bush-era tax cuts for two
years, pares back payroll taxes for a year, lowers the scheduled tax rate for
the largest estates, extends jobless benefits for the long-term unemployed for
13 months and continues a series of other tax cuts benefiting businesses,
parents and students.
The entire cost will be added to the federal debt, and arguably Mr. Obama has
succeeded mainly in buying a temporary truce by delaying a final reckoning on
the fundamental questions of who deserves to pay how much in taxes. But for the
moment, the plan has polled well and the White House has fended off protests
from Mr. Obama’s party.
Mr. Axelrod, who once referred to the parts of the tax plan benefiting the
wealthiest Americans as “odious,” said this was not a day to focus on the
negatives. “This is something to celebrate,” he said. “The fact that we got this
done is something to celebrate.”
At the ceremony, Mr. Obama gave a nod to criticism from the left, noting that
“there are some elements of this legislation that I don’t like.” But, he added,
“that’s the nature of compromise,” and focused on what he considered the
benefits of the accord, particularly the expectation that it will stimulate
economic growth.
“It’s a good deal for the American people,” the president said. “This is
progress. And that’s what they sent us here to achieve.”
He added, “There will be moments, I am certain, over the next couple of years in
which the holiday spirit won’t be as abundant as it is today.” But, reviving a
phrase used on the campaign trail, he said, “I don’t believe that either party
has cornered the market on good ideas.”
With New Tax Bill, a
Turning Point for the President, NYT, 17.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/18/us/politics/18obama.html
Two States Sue Bank of America Over Mortgages
December
17, 2010
The New York Times
By ANDREW MARTIN and MICHAEL POWELL
The
attorneys general of Arizona and Nevada on Friday filed a lawsuit against Bank
of America, accusing it of engaging in “widespread fraud” by misleading
customers with “false promises” about their eligibility for modifications on
their home mortgages.
In withering complaints filed in state courts in both states, the attorneys
general accused Bank of America of assuring customers that they would not be
foreclosed upon while they were seeking loan modifications, only to proceed with
foreclosures anyway; of falsely telling customers that they must be in default
to obtain a modification; of promising that the modifications would be made
permanent if they completed a trial period, only to renege on the deal; and of
conjuring up bogus reasons for denying modifications.
“Bank of America’s callous disregard for providing timely, correct information
to people in their time of need is truly egregious,” Catherine Cortez Masto, the
attorney general of Nevada said in a statement.
Many Nevada homeowners continued “to make mortgage payments they could not
afford, running through their savings, their retirement funds or their
children’s education funds.”
The lawsuit comes as top prosecutors nationwide are investigating whether the
paperwork that banks used to support foreclosure cases often was egregiously
sloppy, sometimes relying on robo-signers — employees who signed hundreds of
documents a day — to sign sworn court documents.
Tom Miller, Iowa’s attorney general who is heading the multistate investigation
into foreclosure fraud allegations, said the two states’ lawsuits would not
dilute his inquiry. “It is clear that attorneys general in Arizona and Nevada
believe that it is in their two states’ best interests to pursue coordinated
civil cases against Bank of America,” he said in a statement.
A Bank of America spokesman, Dan Frahm, said bank officials were disappointed
that the lawsuits were filed “at this time,” given the bank’s cooperation with
the multistate investigation.
Mr. Frahm disputed the allegations in the lawsuit, saying the bank was committed
to making sure no property was foreclosed until the customer had a chance to
modify the loan or, if ineligible for a modification, to pursue another
solution.
He said the attorneys general didn’t acknowledge the many improvements the bank
had made, like providing a single point of contact for customers who have
started the modification process and increasing staff to support “homeownership
retention initiatives.”
Arizona and Nevada are among the states hardest hit by the housing downturn, and
the state attorneys general said their lawsuits were prompted by hundreds of
complaints by consumers who sought modifications of their mortgages.
The complaints in the lawsuit in many ways echoed problems encountered by
homeowners nationwide who have tried with little luck to obtain mortgage
modifications from banks, often through a federal program set up for that
purpose. Thousands of homeowners complain that banks repeatedly lose their
documents, fail to return calls or foreclose when a homeowner believes he or she
is still negotiating a modification.
Indeed, according to the lawsuits, Bank of America’s efforts were the most
anemic of the big banks and were not confined to the Western states but rather
“reflect a pervasive nationwide pattern and practice of conduct.” The lawsuit
noted that Bank of America ranked last in “virtually every homeowner experience
metric” monitored in a monthly report on the federal home loan modification
program.
Ms. Masto of Nevada said her office’s findings were confirmed by interviews with
consumers, former employees, third parties and documents. Former employees said
that Bank of America’s modification staff was “chaotic, understaffed and not
oriented to customers,” according to a news release. One former employee said,
“The main purpose of the training is to teach us how to get customers off the
phone in less than 10 minutes.”
Another employee said, “When checking on a borrower’s status, I often found that
the modification request had not been dealt with or was so old that the request
had become inactive. Yet, I was instructed to inform borrowers that they were
‘active and in status.’ One time I complained to a supervisor that I felt I
always was lying to borrowers.”
The Arizona complaint cites the case of an Apache Junction couple who faced
foreclosure. When the wife called the bank, a representative told her ‘not to
worry,’ there was a stop order on the foreclosure and the couple’s loan
modification package would arrive the next day. The next day the homeowner
learned that her house had already been sold, the suit says.
Terry Goddard, attorney general of Arizona, said the lawsuit was filed in part
because the bank had violated the terms of a 2009 consent decree that
Countrywide Home Loans — which Bank of America purchased in 2008 — had engaged
in “widespread consumer fraud” in originating and marketing mortgages. As part
of the judgment, Countrywide had agreed to create a loan modification program
for some Arizona homeowners.
Mr. Goddard, a Democrat who lost a bid for governor, will leave office in
January.
Two States
Sue Bank of America Over Mortgages, NYT, 17.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/18/business/18mortgage.html
Wall
Street Whitewash
December
16, 2010
The New York Times
By PAUL KRUGMAN
When the
financial crisis struck, many people — myself included — considered it a
teachable moment. Above all, we expected the crisis to remind everyone why banks
need to be effectively regulated.
How naïve we were. We should have realized that the modern Republican Party is
utterly dedicated to the Reaganite slogan that government is always the problem,
never the solution. And, therefore, we should have realized that party
loyalists, confronted with facts that don’t fit the slogan, would adjust the
facts.
Which brings me to the case of the collapsing crisis commission.
The bipartisan Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission was established by law to
“examine the causes, domestic and global, of the current financial and economic
crisis in the United States.” The hope was that it would be a modern version of
the Pecora investigation of the 1930s, which documented Wall Street abuses and
helped pave the way for financial reform.
Instead, however, the commission has broken down along partisan lines, unable to
agree on even the most basic points.
It’s not as if the story of the crisis is particularly obscure. First, there was
a widely spread housing bubble, not just in the United States, but in Ireland,
Spain, and other countries as well. This bubble was inflated by irresponsible
lending, made possible both by bank deregulation and the failure to extend
regulation to “shadow banks,” which weren’t covered by traditional regulation
but nonetheless engaged in banking activities and created bank-type risks.
Then the bubble burst, with hugely disruptive consequences. It turned out that
Wall Street had created a web of interconnection nobody understood, so that the
failure of Lehman Brothers, a medium-size investment bank, could threaten to
take down the whole world financial system.
It’s a straightforward story, but a story that the Republican members of the
commission don’t want told. Literally.
Last week, reports Shahien Nasiripour of The Huffington Post, all four
Republicans on the commission voted to exclude the following terms from the
report: “deregulation,” “shadow banking,” “interconnection,” and, yes, “Wall
Street.”
When Democratic members refused to go along with this insistence that the story
of Hamlet be told without the prince, the Republicans went ahead and issued
their own report, which did, indeed, avoid using any of the banned terms.
That report is all of nine pages long, with few facts and hardly any numbers.
Beyond that, it tells a story that has been widely and repeatedly debunked —
without responding at all to the debunkers.
In the world according to the G.O.P. commissioners, it’s all the fault of
government do-gooders, who used various levers — especially Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored loan-guarantee agencies — to promote loans
to low-income borrowers. Wall Street — I mean, the private sector — erred only
to the extent that it got suckered into going along with this government-created
bubble.
It’s hard to overstate how wrongheaded all of this is. For one thing, as I’ve
already noted, the housing bubble was international — and Fannie and Freddie
weren’t guaranteeing mortgages in Latvia. Nor were they guaranteeing loans in
commercial real estate, which also experienced a huge bubble.
Beyond that, the timing shows that private players weren’t suckered into a
government-created bubble. It was the other way around. During the peak years of
housing inflation, Fannie and Freddie were pushed to the sidelines; they only
got into dubious lending late in the game, as they tried to regain market share.
But the G.O.P. commissioners are just doing their job, which is to sustain the
conservative narrative. And a narrative that absolves the banks of any
wrongdoing, that places all the blame on meddling politicians, is especially
important now that Republicans are about to take over the House.
Last week, Spencer Bachus, the incoming G.O.P. chairman of the House Financial
Services Committee, told The Birmingham News that “in Washington, the view is
that the banks are to be regulated, and my view is that Washington and the
regulators are there to serve the banks.”
He later tried to walk the remark back, but there’s no question that he and his
colleagues will do everything they can to block effective regulation of the
people and institutions responsible for the economic nightmare of recent years.
So they need a cover story saying that it was all the government’s fault.
In the end, those of us who expected the crisis to provide a teachable moment
were right, but not in the way we expected. Never mind relearning the case for
bank regulation; what we learned, instead, is what happens when an ideology
backed by vast wealth and immense power confronts inconvenient facts. And the
answer is, the facts lose.
Wall Street Whitewash, NYT, 16.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/17/opinion/17krugman.html
Risky
Borrowers Find Credit Available Again, at a Price
December
12, 2010
The New York Times
By ERIC DASH
Credit card
offers are surging again after a three-year slowdown, as banks seek to revive a
business that brought them huge profits before the financial crisis wrecked the
credit scores of so many Americans.
The rise is striking because it includes offers to riskier borrowers who were
shunned as recently as six months ago. But this time, in contrast to the boom
years, when banks “preapproved” seemingly everyone, lenders are choosing their
prospects more carefully and setting stricter terms to guard against another
wave of losses.
For consumers, the resurgence of card offers, however cautious, provides an
opportunity to repair damaged credit and regain the convenience of paying with
plastic. But there is a catch: the new cards have higher interest rates and
annual fees.
Lenders are “tiptoeing their way back into the higher-risk pool of customers,”
said John Ulzheimer, president of consumer education at SmartCredit.com.
In extending credit again to riskier borrowers, lenders are looking beyond
standard credit scores, on the theory that some people who may seem to be
equivalent credit risks on the surface may show differences in spending or other
behavior — like registering on a job Web site — that suggest variations in their
ability to keep up with payments.
Industry consultants, in their attempt to feed the demand for finer
classifications of borrowers, have coined new labels to describe different
borrowers with similar credit scores.
One is “strategic defaulters,” whose credit scores were damaged because they
walked away from a home when its value dropped below what was owed on the
mortgage. These borrowers made a bad bet on real estate but may otherwise be
prudent risks because they make a good living.
Similarly, “first-time defaulters” once had a strong credit record but ran into
financial trouble during the recession. Typically, these borrowers fell behind
on some sort of loan payment after losing a job, not from taking on too much
debt.
By contrast, there are “sloppy payers,” who pay only some bills on time;
“abusers,” who are defiant about paying; and “distressed borrowers,” who simply
do not have the means to pay.
The goal is to weed out the latter groups to identify consumers whose credit
scores are blemished but who still have the money to pay their bills.
“Lenders want to prove to themselves that it is worth taking a higher risk,”
said Brad Jolson, an executive of the decision management company FICO, who has
helped several card companies analyze their customer base.
This new approach to assessing default risk is emblematic of the challenge faced
by the many banks that were hobbled by the financial crisis: They desperately
want to grow again, but the memory of a near-death experience makes them wary
about taking outsize risks.
Lenders have taken $189 billion in credit card losses since 2007, according to
Oliver Wyman Group, a financial consultancy. That was a significant part of the
$2 trillion or so that banks are estimated to have lost since the crisis began,
and a contributor to the government bailout of the banking system.
To stem losses, lenders halted new card offers to all but their most affluent
customers. At the same time, more than eight million consumers stopped using
their credit cards, in a sign of the nationwide belt-tightening, according to
TransUnion, the credit bureau. Millions more borrowers who still have cards have
been compelled to pay down their balances, or are more often choosing to use
cash.
That has had a big impact on lenders’ bottom lines. Credit cards once gave the
banking industry as much as a quarter of its profits; today those profits have
all but vanished and lenders are seeking ways to replace them.
Now that the losses have stabilized, lenders have set out to revive their card
businesses, and mail offers to riskier borrowers are roaring back.
HSBC mailed more than 16 million card offers to this group in the third quarter
of this year, Citigroup 14 million and Discover 10 million, all roughly tenfold
increases over the same period last year, according to Synovate Mail Monitor, a
market research firm. Capital One’s rate rose fiftyfold, to 22 million.
Many of the new lower-end cards start with high interest rates and annual fees,
because new federal rules limit the ability of lenders to change the terms after
payments are missed. Capital One, for example, is offering low-end cards that
carry interest rates of 18 percent or higher and annual fees of up to $50.
In all, lenders will send about 2.5 billion credit card offers by the end of the
year, Synovate estimates, compared with more than six billion in 2005, the peak
year. The bulk of this year’s mailings are still going to affluent people, with
just 17 percent going to borrowers with blemished credit. That compares with
about 39 percent in 2007 and a low of 7 percent in late 2009.
The response to the card campaigns has been strong, with roughly 4 percent of
these riskier borrowers submitting applications. That is about 10 times the
typical response rate for the group, though that may be partly explained by the
absence of offers over the last two years.
After racking up more than $17,000 in credit card charges, Sue Talkington, 69, a
retired saw mill worker living in Modesto, Calif., started working with a credit
counselor in September to start paying down her debt.
Then, last month, right after she had cut up three credit cards, she received an
application for a new Capital One card, the second pre-approved mail offer she
has received recently.
She says she was stunned. “I’m trying to get out of debt, so why would I want a
credit card to get into more debt?” Ms. Talkington asked.
“It really shows me how much greed there is out there,” she added. Card issuers
“aren’t interested in helping me get back on track with a credit card,” she
said. “They just want my money.”
Since the mass marketing of credit cards began decades ago, lenders have waited
for years to extend credit to borrowers like Ms. Talkington who have fallen on
hard times — a process sometimes called “rehabilitating the customer.” But these
days, rehab is happening faster because the lenders cannot afford to wait.
Citigroup is testing a credit card with training wheels, known as CitiMax,
devised for customers whose credit was damaged by the recession. Borrowers are
required to link their credit card account to a checking, savings or brokerage
account so that Citi can withdraw money if a payment is missed.
Branch workers for Bank of America and Wells Fargo are steering more customers
denied a traditional credit card toward “secured” cards, backed by a deposit
that the owner is not permitted to touch.
Wells says that more than a third of secured cardholders receive a traditional
credit card after 12 months.
“I graduated, as they call it, to the unsecured,” said Joshua Hoglan, 26, a
college student from Las Vegas who says he became a more responsible borrower
after making timely payments on a Wells secured credit card he applied for in
early 2008. He called graduation “a great relief.”
Risky Borrowers Find Credit Available Again, at a Price,
NYT, 12.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/13/business/13credit.html
Madoff
Lawsuits Are Headed for Court
December
12, 2010
The New York Times
By GRAHAM BOWLEY and PETER LATTMAN
With the
final deadline for litigation having passed at midnight on Saturday, at least
1,000 individual civil lawsuits will now go forward to try to recover more than
$50 billion for the victims of the global Ponzi scheme orchestrated by Bernard
L. Madoff.
David J. Sheehan, the counsel for Irving H. Picard, the trustee charged with
recovering the assets, said on Sunday that he expected that “hundreds” of those
suits — many against individuals, some of them prominent — were likely to be
settled in negotiations before or soon after they reach court in coming months.
But the remainder were likely to be contested and would proceed to trial, he
said.
Mr. Sheehan said the death on Saturday of Mark Madoff, the older of Bernard
Madoff’s two sons, would not affect the complaints against him, his brother,
Andrew, and other relatives.
“We have to proceed with that and stay the course,” Mr. Sheehan said.
Mark Madoff, 46, was found dead Saturday morning in his Manhattan apartment,
hanging from a dog leash while his 2-year-old son slept in an adjoining room.
The medical examiner’s office conducted an autopsy on Sunday and confirmed that
the official cause of death was hanging, and labeled it a suicide.
As the shock of his death set in, people close to him continued to shed light on
his emotional state, saying he had been increasingly upset in recent weeks by
the extensive scrutiny the Ponzi scheme was receiving as the second anniversary
of his father’s arrest approached.
He was particularly troubled by a series of lawsuits against him and his family
as the bankruptcy trustee approached the Saturday deadline, and by the weight of
media speculation about whether or not he played a role in his father’s fraud
and whether he could be the subject of criminal charges, they said.
No immediate funeral arrangements were made public. But relatives have expressed
the view that excessive media attention will make a funeral difficult to hold,
according to two people close to the family, who insisted on anonymity because
the family had not authorized them to speak on its behalf.
Another person close to the family said that Mark Madoff’s wife, Stephanie, had
returned to New York from Florida, where she and her mother had taken the
couple’s 4-year-old son to Disney World, leaving Mr. Madoff and their 2-year-old
son in New York.
According to two of the people close to Mr. Madoff, in the days running up to
his suicide he had been particularly anxious about an article that was due to
run in The Wall Street Journal.
One of these close friends, who said he had spoken with Mr. Madoff frequently
over the last two years, talked to him on Friday on his cellphone for 10
minutes.
There was nothing particularly foreboding about the conversation, this person
said. He said Mr. Madoff told him that The Journal was running an article about
him the next day, and even though he believed it would not contain new
information, he expressed concern and frustration about the coverage.
This wasn’t unusual, the friend said. Mr. Madoff had always been acutely
sensitive to media coverage connecting him to his father’s fraud.
A spokeswoman for The Journal declined to comment.
“Andy was always tougher than Mark,” said the friend, referring to Mr. Madoff’s
younger brother. “Mark was much more sensitive and took all the press coverage
very personally.”
“He loved his wife and his kids so much,” this friend added. “The only way to
accept this is that he was in so much pain, and that pain outweighed the love he
had for his wife and his kids. And I guess he thought this was the only way
out.”
Mr. Madoff was hoping to get a job, and had looked for work over the last two
years as a professional securities trader, talking to people in the industry,
two of the people close to him said.
But he had gradually become less and less optimistic about that possibility. In
recent months, Mr. Madoff had been doing work for a friend who ran a business,
the close friend said.
“He seemed to be looking to the future and trying to get his life together,”
said the friend. “He was looking for ways to support himself and his family.”
Mr. Madoff had also been working on the publication of an online newsletter on
the real estate industry. But he realized that whatever he distributed he would
not be able to attach his name to it, the friend said.
The lawyer for Bernard Madoff, Ira Lee Sorkin, would not comment Sunday on
whether Bernard Madoff, who is serving a 150-year sentence for his crimes at a
North Carolina prison, had been told of his son’s suicide.
Mr. Madoff was found at his apartment at 158 Mercer Street, on the edge of the
SoHo section of Manhattan. A law enforcement official confirmed that Mr. Madoff
had sent two e-mails to his wife in Florida after 4 a.m. Saturday. He had asked
her to get someone to check on their son, the police said earlier. The police
have seized Mr. Madoff’s computer and were searching it for further information,
the official said.
On Sunday, Pedro Romero, 39, a parking garage attendant where Mr. Madoff parked
his two cars — a late model Chevrolet Suburban and a Land Rover — said he last
saw Mr. Madoff on Friday night while Mr. Madoff was walking his dog.
“I said thank-you for the gift,” Mr. Romero recalled, referring to $400 that Mr.
Madoff had given the garage’s half-dozen workers for Christmas. “He looked
happy,” Mr. Romero said. “He didn’t look depressed.”
A friend at the building who said he knew Mr. Madoff fairly well said that
recently Mr. Madoff had seemed to be coming out of his depression of the last
two years and that he seemed fine as he was taking a walk Friday morning.
Mr. Picard issued a statement on Saturday extending sympathy to Mr. Madoff’s
family, calling his death a “tragic development.”
Mr. Sheehan, counsel for Mr. Picard, said that most of the civil lawsuits had
been filed in federal bankruptcy court in Manhattan in the last three weeks, and
that he was now prepared for a barrage of legal challenges trying to stop the
complaints over the coming six months. Mr. Picard has recently sued more than a
dozen major banks.
There may be yet more lawsuits filed by the trustee, he said. Although the
initial two-year deadline for litigation had passed, the trustee still has one
more year to trace the money he is trying to recover from the current roster of
defendants, and to file complaints against anyone else to whom those funds may
have been transferred, he said.
The trustee has already reached deals with some major defendants, including a
recent $500 million settlement with Union Bancaire Privée, and this month, Carl
Shapiro, one of the early investors with the Madoff firm, agreed with Mr. Picard
and federal prosecutors to forfeit $625 million that will go toward returning
money to victims of the fraud.
That agreement also settled claims against many members of Mr. Shapiro’s family,
including his son-in-law Robert Jaffe, whom the trustee has sued separately as
an executive of Cohmad Securities, the small brokerage firm that shared space
with Bernard Madoff in the Lipstick Building.
On Friday, Mr. Picard announced that he had reached settlement with a “number of
charities and nonprofit organizations,” including a $45 million settlement with
the American Jewish volunteer women’s organization, Hadassah.
Mr. Picard is also negotiating with business entities connected to Fred Wilpon,
the owner of the New York Mets baseball team, and the estate of Jeffry Picower,
a longtime Madoff investor who died last year.
Ron Stein, president of the Network for Investor Action and Protection, a group
set up to assist victims, said many of the legal actions were aimed at people
unfairly, because many of the so-called clawbacks were at the expense of smaller
investors who had already suffered. “Why does he go after innocent victims,” Mr.
Stein said.
Mr. Picard has said he will dismiss any cases filed against defendants who seek
and qualify for “hardship” status because of their financial circumstances.
Diana B.
Henriques, Al Baker, Tim Stelloh and Mosi Secret contributed reporting.
Madoff Lawsuits Are Headed for Court, NYT, 12.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/13/business/13madoff.html
Madoff’s
Son Found Dead in Suicide
December
11, 2010
The New York Times
By DIANA B. HENRIQUES and AL BAKER
Mark
Madoff, the older of Bernard L. Madoff’s two sons, hanged himself in his
Manhattan apartment on Saturday, the second anniversary of his father’s arrest
for running a gigantic Ponzi scheme that shattered thousands of lives around the
world.
“Mark Madoff took his own life today,” Martin Flumenbaum, Mark Madoff’s lawyer,
said in a statement. “This is a terrible and unnecessary tragedy.” He called his
client “an innocent victim of his father’s monstrous crime who succumbed to two
years of unrelenting pressure from false accusations and innuendo.”
According to Deputy Police Commissioner Paul J. Browne, officers responded to a
911 call made just before 7:30 Saturday morning from Mr. Madoff’s apartment
building at 158 Mercer Street. Mr. Browne said Mr. Madoff’s body was found
hanging from a black dog leash attached to a metal beam on the living room
ceiling. He said there was no evidence of foul play.
Mr. Madoff’s 2-year-old son was asleep in an adjoining bedroom, Mr. Browne said.
Law enforcement officials said Mr. Madoff had sent e-mails to his wife in
Florida sometime after 4 a.m. Saturday. “It was more than one,” said an
official, who added: “He basically tells his wife he loves her and he wants
someone to check on the child.”
Mr. Browne said the body was discovered by Martin London, a prominent New York
lawyer who is the stepfather of Mark Madoff’s wife, Stephanie. Mr. London
apparently had gone to the apartment in response to the message to check on the
child. Reached by phone, Mr. London declined to comment.
A person in close contact with the family who had spoken with Mark Madoff
frequently in the last few weeks said he had been in “an increasingly fragile
state of mind” as the anniversary of his father’s arrest approached. The person
said Mr. Madoff had expressed both continuing bitterness toward his father and
anxiety about a series of lawsuits that were filed against him, his brother
Andrew and other family members.
Just last week, Mr. Madoff, 46, was among the directors and officers of a Madoff
affiliate in London who were sued by the trustee seeking assets for victims of
the scheme.
It was the second lawsuit filed against him by the trustee, Irving H. Picard,
who had initially sued him last year seeking to recover approximately $200
million that the family had received in salaries, bonuses, expense-account
payments and gains in their own investment accounts at the Madoff firm.
Mr. Madoff was particularly upset that the trustee had named his young children
as defendants in a lawsuit filed in late November seeking the recovery of money
Bernard Madoff had paid out to his extended family over the years, according to
the person who recently spoke with him, who insisted on anonymity because he was
not authorized to speak on behalf of the family.
The person said Mr. Madoff had also been upset at some recent news coverage
speculating that criminal charges against him and his brother were still likely.
Charges have not been filed against any of the immediate family members, and
their lawyer has said publicly that neither Mark Madoff nor his brother has ever
been notified by prosecutors that they were the subjects of a criminal
investigation.
Nevertheless, there has been speculation that members of the Madoff family were
vulnerable to being prosecuted for tax-law violations, given the variety of
low-cost loans and generous expense-account payments that were part of the
office culture at the Madoff brokerage firm.
The person who had recently spoken with Mr. Madoff said that there was also
growing discouragement about finding a job. “He had concluded he was
unemployable,” the person said.
Ira Lee Sorkin, a lawyer for Bernard Madoff, said he had not been able to
contact his client at the North Carolina prison where he is serving a 150-year
sentence for his crimes.
“But I’m very sure he has been informed,” Mr. Sorkin said, adding, “This is a
great tragedy on many, many levels.”
A spokeswoman for the Federal Bureau of Prisons, Traci Billingsley, said, “Any
time there is a death of a family member, and the agency is notified, we
immediately notify the inmate.”
Inmates may request to attend funerals, she said, and those requests are
considered case by case.
Peter Chavkin, a lawyer for Ruth Madoff, Mark’s mother, said simply: “Ruth is
heartbroken.”
Mark Madoff had been a licensed broker at his father’s firm since June 1987. A
number of Mark’s oldest childhood friends from Roslyn, N.Y., invested with the
Madoff firm and lost their savings in the fraud, said another person who was
close to the family. This destroyed those relationships and caused Mr. Madoff
great pain, the person said..
And on the advice of his lawyer, Mark Madoff has had no contact with his parents
since the day before his father’s arrest two years ago.
The steps that led to that arrest began when he and his brother, Andrew,
confronted their father over his plans to distribute hundreds of millions of
dollars in bonuses to employees months ahead of schedule.
According to documents filed by the F.B.I. at the time of the arrest, that
meeting led to a private conversation on Dec. 10, 2008, in which Bernard Madoff
told his sons that all the wealth and success the family seemed to possess were
based on a lie — an immense Ponzi scheme that was crumbling under the pressures
of the financial crisis.
Mark and his brother immediately consulted a lawyer and were advised they had to
report their father’s confession to law enforcement. They did so, and the
following morning their father was arrested at his Manhattan penthouse.
The public fury over the stunning crime — Bernard Madoff estimated the losses at
$50 billion — was not limited to its mastermind. Mark Madoff, his mother and his
brother were all the subject of constant media speculation. Many articles
speculated that they had been involved in their father’s crime, or at least were
aware of it.
The lawsuits that are pending against Mr. Madoff will not necessarily be
derailed by his death. Typically, the litigation would continue against the
estate of any deceased defendant.
The autopsy on Mr. Madoff is scheduled to be conducted on Sunday, said Ellen S.
Borakove, a spokeswoman for the city’s chief medical examiner, Charles S.
Hirsch. She said that the results should be available “by early afternoon” on
Sunday.
Mr. Madoff’s body was removed on a stretcher from his building on the edge of
SoHo shortly after noon Saturday. Police blocked off the street for a while as a
crowd of reporters and camera crews mixed with a growing number of people
stopping to watch. The building is also home to the performer Jon Bon Jovi.
Gregarious and handsome, Mark was the more outgoing of Mr. Madoff’s two sons. At
the University of Michigan, his social circle included students largely from
other well-to-do East Coast families.
He graduated in 1986 and moved to New York to join his father’s firm. Most of
his friends rented crammed studios, but Mark lived in an apartment his father
had bought for him in Sterling Plaza, a luxury high-rise on Manhattan’s East
Side developed by Sterling Equities. Sterling is controlled by Fred Wilpon, the
owner of the New York Mets, whose family was friendly with the Madoffs and whose
businesses had invested hundreds of millions of dollars in the Ponzi scheme.
Mark Madoff married his college girlfriend, Susan, and moved to Greenwich,
Conn., where they raised two children. They divorced in the 1990s and Mark
eventually moved back to Manhattan. He was remarried, to Stephanie Mikesell, and
had two more children with her.
His brother Andrew was considered more cerebral and reserved than Mark, and
served as co-director of trading with his brother. He, too, joined his father’s
firm after earning an undergraduate business degree from the Wharton School at
the University of Pennsylvania.
The civil lawsuit Mr. Picard filed last year said Bernard Madoff’s firm
“operated as if it were the family piggy bank.” It said Mark received at least
$66.9 million of improper proceeds, including approximately $30 million in
compensation since 2001, from his father’s firm.
Mark and his relatives were “completely derelict” in carrying out their roles at
the firm, the suit said.
At the time, Mr. Flumenbaum, Mark’s lawyer, said in a statement that his client
“strongly disagreed with the trustee’s baseless claims.”
Peter Lattman,
Liz Robbins and Tim Stelloh contributed reporting.
Madoff’s Son Found Dead in Suicide, NYT, 11.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/12/business/12madoff.html
Making
Disability Work
December 9,
2010
The New York Times
By PETER ORSZAG
I will
begin a new job for Citigroup in January, so this is my last article as a
contributing columnist for The Times. I hope to see you again from time to time
on the Op-Ed page.
•
One of the gravest dangers posed by the weak economy is that the unemployed will
become discouraged and give up looking for work, perhaps permanently as their
skills atrophy. This would be harmful not only to the workers and their
families, but also to the economy as a whole, as those people would no longer
contribute to economic growth. The longer the labor market remains sluggish, the
more pronounced this risk becomes.
Unfortunately, at this point more than six million people have been unemployed
for six months or longer. More than one million have already given up looking
for work because they believe no job is available. And a drastic rise in
applications for disability insurance suggests we may be headed for more
long-lasting trouble. The number of disability applications has reached more
than 750,000 a quarter, according to the Social Security Administration, an
increase of more than 50 percent from four years ago.
The disability insurance program provides crucial support for people who can no
longer work because of a disability. But once someone begins receiving benefits,
the likelihood that he will re-enter the work force is almost nonexistent;
recipients become permanently dependent on the program.
The result is not only lost economic productivity, but also a fiscal burden for
the federal government: disability benefits now cost more than $120 billion a
year, and Medicare benefits for those on disability add $70 billion.
The spike in disability insurance applications (and awards) does not reflect a
less healthy population. The fraction of working-age adults who report a
disability, about one in 10, has remained roughly constant for the past 20
years. (Indeed, it would be surprising if the number of workers with
disabilities had risen by 50 percent over the past four years.) Rather, the weak
labor market has driven more people to apply for disability benefits that they
qualify for but wouldn’t need if they could find work.
When Congress created the disability insurance program in 1956, it required that
recipients be unable to “engage in substantial gainful activity in the U.S.
economy.” In other words, they had to be unable to work. That was sensible at
the time, when more jobs involved physical labor and technologies to assist
people with disabilities were not widely available.
Today, however, many people with disabilities are able to engage in some form of
work — even if they can’t admit that and still keep their insurance benefits.
Cutting off access to the workplace in this way is both unfortunate and
unnecessary — and reinforces the threat that the current downturn could cause a
long-term reduction in the share of people who work.
So what should be done?
First, macroeconomic policy. We need more stimulus immediately, and more deficit
reduction enacted now to take effect in two or three years. The plan just
proposed by the White House in a compromise with Congressional Republicans is
encouraging in that it includes a new payroll tax holiday, a helpful stimulus.
It does not reduce future deficits, but at least it avoids making the Bush tax
cuts permanent, reserving the flexibility to address medium-term deficits down
the road.
Even if this plan goes ahead, however, the unemployment rate is likely to remain
high for some time. For it to fall by even one percentage point (from 9.5
percent to 8.5 percent) the economy needs to grow by about 4.5 percent a year.
Second, unemployment insurance should be extended, as President Obama’s
compromise plan also would do. Unemployment benefits are a form of stimulus:
they spur spending and thereby help keep the economy afloat. Just as important,
unemployment benefits keep many people from falling back on disability insurance
— and unlike disability insurance, which effectively prohibits beneficiaries
from seeking work, unemployment insurance requires recipients to keep looking
for a job and thus remain connected to the work force.
Finally, the disability insurance program itself must be reformed. Program
administrators understand the need to encourage beneficiaries to return to work,
and they have experimented with various incentives. Such initiatives have
generally been ineffective, though, because they reach beneficiaries too late,
after they have already become dependent on the program and lost their
attachment to the work force.
A better approach has been suggested by David Autor of M.I.T. and Mark Duggan of
the University of Maryland. In a paper released last week from the Center for
American Progress and the Hamilton Project, these economists argue that
employers should be required to offer their workers private disability
insurance. Such coverage would provide people who have a work-limiting
disability with vocational assistance, workplace accommodation and limited wage
replacement. All of these benefits would kick in within 90 days of the onset of
disability, to avoid the problems with delayed assistance that have plagued
efforts to reform public disability insurance. Private employers would have an
incentive to prevent their workers from having to file disability applications,
because their insurance premiums would rise in response to higher disability
rates.
Disabled workers could remain on this privately financed insurance for two
years, and then be eligible for the existing public program. The goal would be
to minimize long-term dependency, and re-orient the federal disability insurance
program toward assisting those who are truly unable to work.
One concern is that this approach would burden firms with additional human
resource costs when we need to encourage hiring. But the costs are projected to
be modest — roughly $250 per worker per year. And if they help to reduce the
future payroll tax increases that would be needed to finance rapid growth in
disability benefits, the pressure on overall labor costs would be even smaller.
Another concern is that private insurance firms would need to be given
substantially expanded responsibility for evaluating workers’ disabilities. Mr.
Autor and Mr. Duggan propose to mitigate this potential problem by suggesting
that workers be allowed to appeal any such evaluations to state government
agencies.
The Netherlands has adopted a program like this, and the results so far are
promising. In 1994, the Dutch government required all firms to finance the first
six weeks of disability benefits. That period was later extended to one year and
then to two years. In 2002, the program was broadened to require back-to-work
plans, developed cooperatively by the disabled worker, his employer and a
consulting doctor. The number of disability recipients in the Netherlands has
since declined significantly.
None of these policy changes would be easy. But failing to act would result in
millions of Americans needlessly dropping out of the work force. In our
precarious economy, neither progressives nor conservatives should be willing to
watch passively as the disability insurance rolls grow, and beneficiaries are
locked out of the labor market.
Peter Orszag,
the director of the White House Office of Management and Budget from 2009 to
July 2010, is a distinguished visiting fellow at the Council on Foreign
Relations.
Making Disability Work, NYT, 9.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/10/opinion/10orszag.html
Voting
for an Odious Tax Deal
December 7,
2010
The New York Times
Liberal
Democrats are in revolt at the tax deal that President Obama struck with
Republicans on Monday, and it is not hard to understand why. By temporarily
extending income tax breaks for the richest Americans, and cutting estate taxes
for the ultrawealthy, the deal will redistribute billions of dollars from job
creation to people who do not need the money.
But the Democrats should vote for this deal, because it is the only one they are
going to get. Mr. Obama made that case — strongly — on Tuesday, summoning an
eloquence that is often elusive, as it was on Monday when he first announced the
deal. Without this bargain, income taxes on the middle class would rise.
Unemployment insurance for millions of Americans would expire. And many other
important tax breaks for low- and middle-income workers — including a 2 percent
payroll tax cut and college tuition credits — would not be possible.
If angry Democrats blow up the deal, they will be left vainly groping for
something better in a new Congress where they will have far less influence than
they have now. The middle class and the unemployed would be seriously hurt.
The president, and particularly Congressional Democrats, might not be in this
bind if they had fought harder against the high-end tax cuts before the midterm
elections. But that moment has passed. The real responsibility for what’s wrong
with the tax deal lies with Republicans. They coldly insisted on the high-end
tax cuts at all costs, no matter the pain they might inflict further down the
income ladder or what staggering cost they might impose in years to come.
President Obama was right to use the metaphor of hostage-taking to describe the
Republicans’ tactics. Using the parliamentary rules of the Senate, 42 Republican
senators threatened to raise middle-class taxes if Democrats let tax cuts expire
on the richest 2 percent of Americans. That left the White House and the
Democrats little room to maneuver. “I think it’s tempting not to negotiate with
hostage-takers, unless the hostage gets harmed,” Mr. Obama said at his news
conference on Tuesday.
Some of the provisions won by the president could act as a new stimulus to the
economy, particularly the extension of the unemployment benefits for 13 months
and the cut to the payroll tax, though the full stimulative effect is uncertain.
The cut only applies to wages and salaries up to $106,800 — people who really
need it.
There remains much to dislike in the package, including the pressure that its
deficit spending will create to cut important programs in the years to come. Mr.
Obama was clearly not thrilled at the compromises he had to make, and neither
are we. But at least he acted in what he believed are the best interests of the
country.
When are the Republicans going to step up and do the same? There is no
legitimate national interest in opposing the New Start nuclear arms treaty with
the Russians, which most military and foreign leaders agree would make the world
a safer place. There is no legitimate national interest in clinging to the
discrimination against gay members of the military, which the Pentagon’s leaders
want to end. There will be no sound economic reason to make the tax cuts for the
top 2 percent of taxpayers permanent in two years.
The only reason for Republican recalcitrance on these issues is to deny the
Democrats an accomplishment, to stymie Mr. Obama’s re-election and appeal to the
most retrograde elements of the party’s base.
President Obama will face a liberal whirlwind for the compromise he made on
taxes. It is time for Republicans to show that they are strong enough to take on
their base for their country’s benefit.
Voting for an Odious Tax Deal, NYT, 8.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/08/opinion/08wed1.html
Disappointing Job Growth in U.S. as Jobless Rate Hits 9.8%
December 3,
2010
The New York Times
By MOTOKO RICH
In a
jolting surprise to the economic recovery and market expectations, the United
States economy added just 39,000 jobs in November, and the unemployment rate
rose to 9.8 percent, according to the Department of Labor.
November’s numbers were far below the consensus forecast of close to 150,000
jobs added and an unchanged unemployment rate of 9.6 percent.
More than 15 million people remained out of work last month, and 6.3 million of
them have been unemployed for six months or longer.
Private companies, which have been hiring since the beginning of the year, added
50,000 jobs in November. Most of those increases came in the form of temporary
help, where 40,000 jobs were added, and in health care, with an additional
19,000 jobs.
Retail jobs declined by 28,000 in November, while manufacturing, which had
showed some strength earlier in the year, lost 13,000 jobs. Government jobs
dropped by 11,000 in the month.
Included in the latest report were revisions from previous months. The agency
now says that the economy added 172,000 jobs in October, instead of the 151,000
jobs previously reported. September was revised to a loss of 24,000 jobs from a
loss of 41,000.
The anemic net gain in jobs came as economists had been gradually showing more
optimism. Weekly initial unemployment claims have recently been trending lower,
pending home sales in October topped forecasts and November retail sales jumped
by one of their highest increases in years.
“Obviously this is a disappointing report, to say the least,” said James
O’Sullivan, chief economist at MF Global. But he said he did not believe the
recovery was actually derailed. “Certainly the weight of evidence is that the
economy is improving, and labor data can be unreliable.”
Many risks remain for the economy. The latest numbers included 14,000 local
government job losses, which could accelerate if legislatures and city councils
are forced to prune further to deal with shrinking budgets and larger deficits.
With President Obama’s deficit commission examining long-term spending cuts,
unemployment benefits expiring and a Congressional fight over taxes looming,
consumer spending, which has recently shown signs of life, could come under
pressure. That, in turn, could cause businesses to reconsider hiring plans.
Advocates for the unemployed were shocked by the number.
“I’m still trying to get my jaw off the floor,” said Andrew Stettner, deputy
director of the National Employment Law Project. “What it does is it kills the
story that maybe I thought we could start telling, which was steady improvement.
If we had four months in a row of improving jobs numbers, we would still need a
lot of work to get back to full employment, but now it’s not even moving in the
right direction.”
Analysts generally estimate that the economy needs to add at least 100,000 to
125,000 jobs a month simply to keep up with new entrants to the labor force. So
if employers keep hiring at the current pace, it will not help reduce the
unemployment rate for some time.
For those who have been searching for work for more than six months, this is a
discouraging prospect. “I have looked high and low,” said Melissa Barone, who
was laid off from a job in technical support 14 months ago. “I have a college
degree and a ton of technical skills, but I can’t find a job.” Ms. Barone, 42,
lives in St. Clair Shores, Mich., near Detroit, a particularly hard hit area.
She has applied for hundreds of jobs but has yet to receive an offer.
If the economy is improving, that is news to Ms. Barone. “It doesn’t seem that
way here,” she said.
Disappointing Job Growth in U.S. as Jobless Rate Hits
9.8%, NYT, 3.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/04/business/economy/04jobs.html
Obama
Seeking Aid for Jobless in Deal on Tax Cuts
December 2,
2010
The New York Times
By DAVID M.
HERSZENHORN and JACKIE CALMES
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is holding out for an extension of
unemployment assistance and of a variety of expiring tax breaks for low-wage and
middle-income workers as part of a deal with Congressional Republicans to extend
all the Bush-era tax cuts.
But it is unclear how much leverage the White House has in the tax negotiations,
given the drubbing Democrats took in the midterm elections, the tight
Congressional calendar and a threat by Senate Republicans to block any
legislation until the tax fight is resolved.
In a symbolic nod to President Obama’s pledge to let the tax cuts on
upper-income brackets expire on Dec. 31, as scheduled by law, the House on
Thursday approved a bill to continue the lower tax rates enacted during the Bush
administration for Americans they described as “middle class.” The vote was 234
to 188, with three Republicans joining 231 Democrats in favor; 20 Democrats and
168 Republicans were opposed.
The bill, however, has no chance of passage in the Senate, where even some
Democrats say the tax cuts should be extended for everyone, at least
temporarily, given the continued weakness in the economy.
Senate Democratic leaders scheduled their own symbolic votes for Saturday,
intending to demonstrate their desire to end the tax cuts for the rich.
Republicans, meanwhile, expressed dismay at the posturing by Democrats, which
they said was delaying the inevitable and even getting in the way of a potential
deal on aid for millions of unemployed Americans whose benefits have started to
run out.
Administration officials said no deal was at hand, and negotiators from the
administration and the two parties in Congress met only briefly on Thursday. It
is possible that the parties will be unable to reach a compromise, in which case
tax rates will revert at the end of this year to their pre-2001 levels, meaning
an across the board tax increase. However, the Treasury could be directed to
keep the current rates while negotiations continue.
But the sense within both parties was that Democrats were essentially
negotiating the terms of their major retreat on an issue that they once
considered a slam-dunk on both substantive and political levels.
Senior Senate Republican aides said that an extension of all the income tax cuts
was a foregone conclusion, but that a deal on jobless aid was possible if
Democrats agreed to cover the cost. Democrats expressed indignation that
Republicans were insisting on finding spending cuts to offset the unemployment
benefits while being perfectly willing to add to the national debt the $700
billion cost of continuing the tax cuts on the highest incomes for the next
decade.
“This is so grossly unfair,” the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, said in a floor
speech urging passage of the so-called middle-class tax package.
While the House bill has no chance of becoming law, it holds enormous symbolism
for Democrats, who used the debate to accuse Republicans of standing for the
rich. In an indication of the tensions between the parties on the issue, the
House Republican leader and soon-to-be speaker, John A. Boehner of Ohio, derided
the Democratic maneuver to force a vote on the bill as “chicken crap.”
Even as lawmakers were debating the bill on the House floor, negotiators,
including the Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, were meeting in talks
that all sides expected to end in a temporary extension of the tax rates for all
income levels, perhaps for two or three years.
At the White House, administration officials outlined a list of their demands
for an extension of expiring tax breaks, including the $800-per-couple “Making
Work Pay” tax credit for about 110 million households, a tuition tax credit for
8 million college students, and the earned-income tax credit and child tax
credit for 15 million low-income families. They also listed expiring tax breaks
for small businesses. They said those tax credits would have a greater impact on
the economy than continuing the Bush tax cuts on upper income levels.
And with federal unemployment aid having expired on Tuesday for two million
Americans, Mr. Obama is seeking a one-year extension. Senate Republicans on
Wednesday blocked an effort by Democrats to take up a bill extending the
benefits.
More Americans have been out of work beyond the 26-week period typically covered
by state unemployment assistance than at any time in the decades since the
government began keeping records. The unemployment assistance at issue is
federal emergency aid for people who are unemployed beyond six months.
About 6.2 million Americans have been out of work for 27 weeks or more,
according to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Mr. Obama’s Council on Economic Advisers reported on Thursday that nearly seven
million Americans could lose benefits through next November as more people
remained out of work for long periods.
Talks at the Capitol involving senior lawmakers from both parties, Mr. Geithner
and the White House budget director, Jacob Lew, are expected to continue into
next week.
But in the meantime, the majority leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, said he would
bring the House bill to the Senate floor on Saturday and would hold votes on
that measure, as well as on an alternative Democratic proposal to raise the
threshold at which the lower rates expire to $1 million.
Democrats had hoped to hold those votes on Friday, as well as votes on two
Republican proposals for extending the tax breaks, but late Thursday a single
Republican senator registered an objection stopping those votes.
That prompted Mr. Reid to note that even after agreeing to take up the tax issue
before anything else, he was encountering Republican obstruction.
“I think everybody remembers that famous letter that was written to me saying
until we get tax cuts resolved, funding the government, we’re not going to let
you do anything legislatively,” he said at a news conference late Thursday.
“We’re at a new one tonight. They are not going to let us do anything with tax
cuts or funding the government.”
The Republican alternatives include one from the Senate Republican leader, Mitch
McConnell of Kentucky, that would indefinitely extend all of the Bush-era income
tax cuts. None of the measures is expected to win the 60 votes needed to
advance.
Congressional Democrats expressed deepening frustration with the White House,
which they said had made numerous missteps that gave Republicans the upper hand.
Some Democratic aides said that Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. had been
asked to attend a caucus meeting to defend the White House negotiating stance. A
spokesman said Mr. Biden had a previous commitment.
Congressional Democrats also voiced worries that the administration was ready to
give in quickly to Republican demands, in a bid to preserve time on the Senate
calendar for ratification of an arms control treaty with Russia known as New
Start.
Separately, the Senate approved a 15-day extension of the temporary spending
measure that has financed the federal government since Oct. 1 and was set to run
out on Friday.
Obama Seeking Aid for Jobless in Deal on Tax Cuts, NYT,
2.12.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/03/us/03cong.html
Unemployed, and Likely to Stay That Way
December 2,
2010
The New York Times
By CATHERINE RAMPELL
The longer
people stay out of work, the more trouble they have finding new work.
That is a fact of life that much of Europe, with its underclass of permanently
idle workers, knows all too well. But it is a lesson that the United States
seems to be just learning.
This country has some of the highest levels of long-term unemployment — out of
work longer than six months — it has ever recorded. Meanwhile, job growth has
been, and looks to remain, disappointingly slow, indicating that those out of
work for a while are likely to remain so for the foreseeable future. Even if the
government report on Friday shows the expected improvement in hiring by
business, it will not be enough to make a real dent in those totals.
So the legions of long-term unemployed will probably be idle for significantly
longer than their counterparts in past recessions, reducing their chances of
eventually finding a job even when the economy becomes more robust.
“I am so worried somebody will look at me and say, ‘Oh, he’s probably lost his
edge,’ ” said Tim Smyth, 51, a New York television producer who has been unable
to find work since 2008, despite having two decades of experience at places like
Nickelodeon and the Food Network. “I mean, I know it’s not true, but I’m afraid
I might say the same thing if I were interviewing someone I didn’t know very
well who’s been out of work this long.”
Mr. Smyth’s anxieties are not unfounded. New data from the Labor Department,
provided to The New York Times, shows that people out of work fewer than five
weeks are more than three times as likely to find a job in the coming month than
people who have been out of work for over a year, with a re-employment rate of
30.7 percent versus 8.7 percent, respectively.
Likewise, previous economic studies, many based on Europe’s job market
struggles, have shown that people who become disconnected from the work force
have more trouble getting hired, probably because of some combination of stigma,
discouragement and deterioration of their skills.
This is one of the biggest challenges facing policy makers in the United States
as they seek to address unemployment. Its underlying tenet — that time
exacerbates the problem — means that the longer Congress squabbles about how to
increase job growth, the more intractable the situation becomes. This, in turn,
means Washington would need to pursue more aggressive (and, perversely, more
politically difficult) job-creating policies in order to succeed. Even reaching
an agreement over whether to extend benefits yet again has proved contentious.
Several factors lead to this downward spiral of the unemployed.
In some cases, the long-term unemployed were poor performers in their previous
positions and among the first to be terminated when the recession began. These
people are weak job candidates with less impressive résumés and references.
In other instances, those who lost jobs may have been good workers but were laid
off from occupations or industries that are in permanent decline, like
manufacturing.
But economists have tried to control for these selection issues, and studies
comparing the fates of similar workers have also shown that the experience of
unemployment itself damages job prospects.
If jobless workers had been in sales, for instance, their customers might have
moved on. Or perhaps the list of contacts they could turn to for leads is
obsolete. Mr. Smyth, for example, says that so many of his former co-workers
have been displaced that he is no longer sure whom to call on about openings.
In particularly dynamic industries, like software engineering, unemployed
workers might also miss out on new developments and fail to develop the skills
required.
Still, this explanation probably applies to only a small slice of the country’s
6.2 million long-term unemployed.
“I can’t imagine very many occupations and industries are of the type that if
you’re out for nine months, the world passes you by,” said Heidi Shierholz, an
economist at the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal research organization. “I
think this erosion-of-skills idea is way overplayed. It’s probably much more
about marketability.”
Many unemployed workers fret about how to explain the yawning gaps on their
résumés. Some are calling themselves independent “consultants” or
“entrepreneurs.”
Mr. Smyth has been working on his own documentary film and trying to develop
ideas for new TV shows with a friend. But with financing for such projects
scarce, he says he is still looking for a full-time job.
Employers are reluctant to acknowledge any bias against the jobless, and many
say they try to take broader economic circumstances into consideration.
“Generally speaking, when the economy’s good and someone’s been out of work for
a year, you might look at them funny,” said Jay Goltz, who owns five small
businesses in Chicago. “These days I don’t know if you can hold it against
somebody.”
Even so, old habits die hard, especially because unemployment has been unusually
concentrated among a smaller group of workers in this recent recession than in
previous ones, meaning that fewer workers bear the scarlet “U” of unemployment.
“From what I’ve seen, employers do tend to get suspicious when there’s a
long-term gap in people’s résumés,” said James Whelly, deputy director of work
force development at the San Francisco Human Services Agency. “Even though
everyone on an intellectual level knows that this is a unique time in the
economy, those old habits are hard to break with hiring managers and H.R.
departments who are doing the screening.”
It does not help when job seekers are repeatedly rejected — or worse, ignored.
Constant rejection not only discourages workers from job-hunting as intensively,
but also makes people less confident when they do land interviews. A Pew Social
Trends report found that the long-term unemployed were significantly more likely
to say they had lost some of their self-respect than their counterparts with
shorter spells of joblessness.
“People don’t have money to keep up appearances important for job hunting,” said
Katherine S. Newman, a sociology professor at Princeton. “They can’t go to the
dentist. They can’t get new clothes. They gain weight and look out of shape,
since unemployment is such a stressful experience. All that is held against them
when there is such an enormous range of workers to choose from.”
Though economists generally agree that getting the long-term unemployed back to
work quickly is necessary to keep people from becoming unemployable, the
mechanism to do so is unclear.
Most forms of stimulus try to create business conditions that foster the
nation’s output growth, which encourages companies to hire. Output has been
growing slowly, however, and has not stoked much job creation. There have also
been other indirect incentives, like a small tax break for hiring unemployed
workers, but as yet their effectiveness is unknown.
Direct employment programs — like the public works projects of the New Deal and
World War II — may be the fastest way to put people back to work, economists
say. But those raise concerns of crowding out businesses and displacing other
workers. Also the approach, which smacks of socialism to some, seems politically
untenable at the moment.
One possible compromise might be broader-scale retraining and apprenticeship
programs, suggests Lawrence Katz, a labor economist at Harvard.
“That’s better than having more people just go on disability as a last resort,
and then basically never return to work in their life, which many will do,” he
said. The Obama administration has recently thrown its support behind an effort
to overhaul community college retraining programs.
“One of the reasons to focus on training for workers, even if you’re not
training workers for new jobs, is that when you have workers who have not been
in a job for a long time, you need to do all you can to get them to look and
feel job-ready when the openings do eventually come back,” said Betsey
Stevenson, the Labor Department’s chief economist.
The real threat, economists say, is that America, like some of its Old World
peers, may simply become accustomed to a large class of idled workers.
“After a while, a lot of European countries just got used to having 8 or 9
percent unemployment, where they just said, ‘Hey, that’s about good enough,’ ”
said Gary Burtless, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. “If the
unemployment rates here stay high but remain relatively stable, people may not
worry so much that that’ll be their fate this month or next year. And all these
unemployed people will fall from the front of their mind, and that’s it for
them.”
Unemployed, and Likely to Stay That Way, NYT, 2.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/03/business/economy/03unemployed.html
The
Unemployed Held Hostage, Again
November
27, 2010
The New York Times
It is hard
to believe, as the holidays approach yet again amid economic hard times, but
Congress looks as if it may let federal unemployment benefits lapse for the
fourth time this year.
Lame duck lawmakers will have only one day when they return to work on Monday to
renew the expiring benefits. If they don’t, two million people will be cut off
in December alone. This lack of regard for working Americans is shocking. Last
summer, benefits were blocked for 51 days, as senators in both parties focused
on preserving tax breaks for wealthy money managers and other affluent
constituents.
This time, tax cuts for the rich are bound to drive and distort the debate
again. Republicans and Democrats will almost certainly link the renewal of
jobless benefits to an extension of the high-end Bush-era tax cuts. That would
be a travesty. There is no good argument for letting jobless benefits expire, or
for extending those cuts.
The recession that began in 2007 has led to the worst unemployment in nearly 30
years. We have record levels of long-term unemployment. The jobless rate, 9.6
percent, has been essentially unchanged since May, and nearly 42 percent of the
14.8 million jobless workers have been sidelined for six months or more.
Some opponents of unemployment benefits — mostly Republicans but a few Democrats
as well — would have you believe those figures are evidence of laziness, enabled
by generous benefits. They conveniently ignore three facts. One, there are five
unemployed people for every job opening — a profound scarcity of jobs. Two,
federal benefits average $290 a week, about half of what the typical family
spends on basics and hardly enough to dissuade someone from working. Three, as
unemployment has deepened, benefits have become less generous. Earlier this
year, lawmakers ended a subsidy to help unemployed workers pay for health
insurance and dropped an extra $25 a week that had been added to benefits by
last year’s stimulus law.
Other opponents would have you believe that the nation cannot afford to keep
paying unemployment benefits: a yearlong extension would cost about $60 billion.
The truth is, we cannot afford not to. The nation has never ended federal
benefits when unemployment is as high as it is now, and for good reason: Without
jobs, there is inadequate spending, and that means ever fewer jobs. A wide range
of private and government studies show that unemployment benefits combat that
vicious cycle by ensuring that families can buy the basics.
Nor do jobless benefits bust the budget. Just the opposite. They do not add to
dangerous long-term deficits because the spending is temporary. And because they
support spending and jobs, they contribute powerfully to the economic growth
that is vital for a healthy budget. Extending the Bush high-end tax cuts would
be budget busting, because they are likely to endure, adding $700 billion to the
deficit over 10 years. Tax cuts for the rich provide virtually no economic
stimulus, because affluent people tend to save their bounty.
Ignoring facts and logic, several Republicans have said that any benefit
extension must be paid for with spending cuts elsewhere. That would, in effect,
be giving with one hand while taking away with the other. It is not only cruel,
but foolish, because it would reduce the economic boost that benefits would
provide.
President Obama should pound the table for a clean, yearlong extension of
unemployment benefits, and should excoriate phony deficit hawks — in both
parties — who say that jobless benefits are too costly, even as they pass vastly
more expensive tax cuts for the rich.
The Unemployed Held Hostage, Again, NYT, 27.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/28/opinion/28sun1.html
Family’s
Fall From Affluence Is Swift and Hard
November
25, 2010
The New York Times
By GERALDINE FABRIKANT
WAMEGO,
Kan. — Grateful to have found work in this tough economy, Nick Martin teaches
grape growing and winemaking each Saturday to a class of seven students in a
simple metal building here at a satellite campus of Highland Community College.
Then he drives 14 miles in an 11-year-old Ford Explorer to a sparsely furnished
tract house that he rents for $900 a month on a dead-end street in McFarland, a
smaller town. Just across the backyard is a shed that a neighbor uses to make
cartridges for shooting the prairie dogs that infest the adjacent fields.
It is a far cry from the life that Mr. Martin and his family enjoyed until
recently at their Adirondacks waterfront camp at Tupper Lake, N.Y. Their garage
held three stylish cars, including a yellow Aston Martin; they owned three
horses, one that cost $173,000; and Mr. Martin treated his wife, Kate, to a
birthday weekend at the Waldorf-Astoria, with dinner at the “21” Club and a
$7,000 mink coat.
That luxurious world was fueled by a check Mr. Martin received in 1998 for $14
million, his share of the $600 million sale of Martin Media, an outdoor
advertising business begun by his father in California in the 1950s. After
taxes, he kept about $10 million.
But as so often happens to those lucky enough to realize the American dream of
sudden riches, the money slipped through the Martins’ fingers faster than they
ever imagined.
They faced temptations to indulge, with the complexities and pressures of new
wealth. And a pounding recession pummeled the value of their real estate and new
financial investments, rendering their properties unaffordable.
The fortune evaporated in little more than a decade.
While many millions of Americans have suffered through this recession with only
unemployment benefits to sustain them, Mr. Martin has reason to give thanks — he
has landed a job at 59, however far away. He also had assets to sell to help
tide his family over.
Still, Mr. Martin, a strapping man with a disarming bluntness, seemed dazed by
it all. “We are basically broke,” he said.
Though he faulted the conventional wisdom of investing in stocks and real estate
for some of his woes, along with poor financial advice, he accepted much of the
blame himself.
“We spent too much,” he conceded. “I have a fourth grader, an eighth grader and
a girl who just finished high school. I should have kept working and put the
money in bonds.”
Mrs. Martin recalled the summer night in 1998 when the family was having a
spaghetti dinner at home in Paso Robles, in central California, and a bank
representative called to ask where to wire the money. “It seemed like an
unbelievable amount,” she said regretfully.
Soon after the money arrived, the family decided to leave Paso Robles, amid some
lingering tensions that Mr. Martin felt with his brother and brother-in law, who
had run the business. Mr. Martin had never been in management at the billboard
company, though he had been on the board and worked at Martin Brothers Winery,
another family business.
First, the Martins bought a house in Somerset, England, near the home of Mrs.
Martin’s parents, and he decided to write a novel. At about the same time, they
spent $250,000 on the 3.5-acre camp with four structures on Tupper Lake, deep in
the Adirondacks, as a summer home. They began extensive renovations at the lake,
adding a stunning three-story boathouse and two other buildings.
Clouds gathered quickly. Life in England turned sour when Mr. Martin’s novel,
“Anthony: Conniver’s Lament,” did not sell, and the family’s living costs —
school fees, taxes and even advice for filing tax returns — swelled. In 2002,
fed up with England, the Martins chose a new base, Vermont, and plunked down
about $650,000 for a home there, as renovations continued on the Tupper Lake
property.
By March 2007, the Martins were determined to move to the lake full time.
They managed their expenses for a while, but the costs mounted and mounted some
more as they worked at refurbishing the Adirondack property — eventually
totaling a staggering $5.3 million, Mr. Martin said. He poured another $600,000
into the Vermont property, he said.
He vacillates between blaming the builders and blaming himself for letting costs
get out of hand. “We should have built something quite modest,” he conceded.
Tensions rose in 2007 as summer came without any offers for the Vermont home.
“I thought that housing was going into a tailspin,” he said. “I had the feeling
that something bad was happening.”
So “we started selling cars, shotguns, antique furniture, whatever,” Mr. Martin
said. The Aston Martin fetched $395,000. With a big gap in his employment
history, he found a job teaching English at Paul Smith’s College near his home
in Tupper Lake for $14,000 a year. For an additional $7,000, he coached the
school’s cross-country runners.
Then came the financial crisis. The markets plunged, as did the value of the
Martins’ trust. By fall 2008, with much of the family’s net worth tied up in
housing, Mr. Martin faced a series of margin calls. He needed more cash in his
brokerage accounts because he had been tapping into a credit line with his
investments as collateral. In January 2009, he cashed in a retirement account
worth roughly $91,000.
The houses could not be sold quickly. Though if they had been, some of the
pressure would have lifted. “To maintain those things, you have to have a pretty
good cash flow,” Mr. Martin said.
The family ultimately put the Adirondacks property on the market for $4.9
million, then quickly slashed the price by half. Last month, the Martins got an
offer for just half of the latest $2.5 million asking price.
They have stopped making payments on their $1.1 million mortgage and their
$53,000 in annual property taxes in the Adirondacks as well as the mortgage and
taxes on their Vermont home. They cannot afford those obligations on Mr.
Martin’s current salary of $51,000. Their household income is down from $250,000
four years ago.
At the moment, they are working with a loan modification unit at their bank. The
lender proposed a new payment of $3,550 a month, reduced from $7,400. Given his
current status, Mr. Martin argued, that it does not make much sense. He predicts
that the house will ultimately be sold or taken over by the bank. Meanwhile, for
the Christmas holidays and some of next summer, the family has found renters for
the main house to help cover some of the costs.
Over lunch recently at Barleycorn’s Downtown Bar and Deli in Wamego, Mr. Martin
said he believed “the worst is behind us.”
Perhaps. But a forced restructuring can be difficult for children and spouses
even in longstanding marriages.
Sometimes he and his wife took it out on each other, he said. “She bought a
bunch of horses. I blamed her for the horses. I bought cars. She blamed me for
the cars — and the house being too big. We had a rough time,” he acknowledged.
“But I think we have gotten over that.”
Until Christmas, when she plans to join him, Mrs. Martin continues to work as a
substitute teacher with autistic children at an Adirondacks elementary school: a
$12,000-a-year job she loves in a place she says she is hesitant to leave. With
their younger daughter, she has moved into a smaller building on their big
property.
A lively woman who loves bike riding and horses, she has built a close network
of friends. “What is the place in Kansas like?” she asked a reporter with some
trepidation before her first visit at Thanksgiving.
Mr. Martin, who moved to Kansas last April, brought the couple’s 13-year-old
son, Edward, to join him in the fall. He has been counting the days until his
wife and Sophia, 9, come permanently. The older daughter, Mrs. Martin’s from a
previous marriage, has found work in Florida after finishing high school.
In the meantime, Mr. Martin is also overseeing a one-acre vineyard beside the
Oregon Trail Road, drawing on his knowledge of the wine industry from his
California days.
He does what he can to lessen the family strains.
“I have a temper. I have to control my temper,” he said. “I could drink like a
fish, but if you have problems in your life, drinking does not help.”
And he recites a quotation he holds dear : “The measure of a man is not whether
he falls down, but whether he gets up again.” Still, Mr. Martin is prone to
ruminate over the loss of so much money. He is furious at the banks and the
bankers, who he thinks gave him bad advice, and he still sounds angry at his
brother and others who decided to sell the company and who he says gave him
little voice. Some of them got more than $100 million each, he said, while he
got $14 million, as did his father and his sister Ann, because they were all
minority shareholders.
His brother-in-law David Weyrich said that if Mr. Martin had objections to the
sale, he did not voice them.
Mrs. Martin says she believes the move from California was motivated in part
because he resented his brother and brother-in-law’s bigger role in the
community.
She also speculates that the Adirondacks estate was alluring partly as a way of
keeping up. “I think he wanted to show his brother and brother-in-law that he
had a big home, too,” she said over dinner recently in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.
Mr. Martin disagreed. “We are Irish Catholics, and we thought it would be a
compound for our family over generations,” he said. After the cramped rooms at
their house in England, he liked the big rooms, he said. “Sometimes, things
don’t work out.”
Family’s Fall From Affluence Is Swift and Hard, NYT,
25.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/26/business/26fall.html
Black
Friday Brings Out the Competitors
November
26, 2010
The New York Times
By STEPHANIE CLIFFORD
Retailers
kicked off Black Friday long before dawn and with bad weather in parts of the
country as stores waited to see if consumers would return after two years of
tepid sales.
Earlier in the week, shoppers like Melissa Guzman of Visalia, Calif., had
already planned their strategies to take advantage of specials that have moved
up ever earlier over the years. A door-buster deal at Staples for laptops had
caught her attention. “This year, since I don’t have to work the day after
Thanksgiving, I’ll get up at 4 in the morning,” said Ms. Guzman, who works as a
cashier at a convenience store.
Brad Wilson, who runs the online deal site BlackFriday2010.com, said that this
year’s Black Friday deals seemed even better than last, and analysts said there
would be aggressive promotions in almost every sector.
Weather forecasts had retailers across the country worried. In October, stores
like J. C. Penney blamed warm weather for slow sales of winter goods — now, they
have a similar problem.
A Rocky Mountain snowstorm early in the week had resulted in closed highways and
white-out conditions in Washington, Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, New Mexico and
Arizona, as officials advised against travel.
The storm was expected to move to the Midwest by Thursday, and to New England by
Friday morning.
In Chicago, where a big storm was expected, a couple was overheard detailing
plans to ride a snowmobile to Best Buy to get in line for the plasma television
door-buster offer there.
In New York City, where heavy rain can slow down subways and even the hardiest
of shoppers, expected rainstorms had stores worrying about whether shoppers
would venture out. The rains were expected to also hit Philadelphia and farther
south.
Stores planned promotions and giveaways to lure customers. Wal-Mart opened at
midnight, and promised breakfast bars, donut holes, gum and chocolates to
shoppers there. It also had a bigger incentive: price matching on even
competitors’ door-buster ads.
Its Sam’s Club warehouse unit was also luring shoppers with sustenance, giving
hot egg sandwiches, fruit and yogurt to members starting at 5 a.m. on Friday.
Getting in on the holiday shopping, Burger King said it would offer free coffee
during breakfast hours on Friday.
Toys “R” Us opened at 10 p.m. on Thursday, with about 150 door-buster deals, and
put another 50 deals on sale at 5 a.m. on Friday. It was handing out free
Crayola crayon packs and coloring books with all purchases.
Sears and K-mart stores were also open on Thanksgiving Day, as were many Gap and
Old Navy stores.
Kohl’s opened at 3 a.m. Friday, followed by many other department stores, like
J. C. Penney, Macy’s, Sears and Target, at 4 a.m.
Though many retailers were pushing Thanksgiving Day online bargains that
extended into Black Friday, they said they still expected lines outside.
“There’s still a whole bunch of people who love the thrill of the hunt, coming
in at 4 or 5 a.m., it’s a very social thing,” said Martine Reardon, executive
vice president of marketing for Macy’s.
“There’s a segment of customers for who Black Friday is all about the deal and
the bargain,” said Barbara Schrantz, executive vice president for marketing and
sales promotion at Bon-Ton Stores, which opened at 3 a.m. “There’s kind of a
game to it, and a family tradition.”
Black Friday Brings Out the Competitors, NYT, 26.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/27/business/27shop.html
Stocks
Drop, Unsettled by Korea and Ireland
November
23, 2010
The New York Times
By CHRISTINE HAUSER
Shares on
Wall Street fell on Tuesday as heightened uncertainty over conflict in Asia and
the debt crisis in Europe continued to put investors on edge.
Traders were confronted with tensions on two continents. In Asia, the South
Korean military went to “crisis status” and threatened strikes against the North
after the North fired shells at a South Korean island.
In Europe, the fallout from the sovereign debt crisis continued. The Irish
government faced imminent collapseafter signing off on a $100 billion bailout
set the stage for a new election. And Greece’s international lenders cleared the
way Tuesday for Athens to receive another installment of its bailout package,
saying the government had made progress in reducing the budget deficit. But they
warned that “extra effort” would be needed to meet next year’s goals.
A Commerce Department report that revised growth higher in third quarter did
little to stir traders.
And the Federal Bureau of Investigation agents raided the offices of three hedge
funds on Monday in the government’s latest action in an investigation into
insider trading on Wall Street.
Gordon Charlop, a managing director at Rosenblatt Securities Inc., said the
markets were skittish because of the events unfolding in Asia and Europe, and to
a lesser extent perhaps in reaction to the government inquiry.
“There is not a lot of good stuff to hang your hat on,” Mr. Charlop said.
In addition, analysts said the markets were poised for retreat after recent
gains, and that traders were likely to adjust portfolios in low volumes in a
shorter trading week because of the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday.
“People are trying to position themselves because of a shorter week and cut
exposure before what is effectively a four-day weekend,” Mr. Charlop said.
In mid-morning trading, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 125.94 points, or
1.13 percent. The broader Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index was down 13.78
points, or 1.15 percent, while the Nasdaq composite index fell 28.87 points, or
1.14 percent.
The stock market had ended mixed on Monday amid concerns over the European
financial crisis and the inquiry on Wall Street. As they did on Monday after
news of the inquiry spread, financial sector shares slumped by more than 1
percent on Tuesday. Energy and materials stocks fell by more than 2 percent.
As risk concerns were heightened, the dollar rose on its weighted index against
a range of currencies. The euro declined by about 1.4 percent to $1.3429 and
gold prices firmed as investors sought safe havens.
“The minute you had geopolitical tension, the Swiss franc and the dollar got
stronger,” said Quincy Krosby, the market strategist for Prudential Financial.
“That said geopolitical uncertainty has the ability to get worse.”
“Then again we had a market that moved up significantly and it was a market that
was poised to consolidate,” Ms. Krosby said. “And all of these events have given
the market a very good reason to pull back.”
In London, the FTSE 100 index was down 62.38 points, or 1.1 percent, while the
DAX in Frankfurt fell 89.40 points, or 1.3 percent. The CAC 40 in Paris was
60.82 points, or 1.5 percent, lower.
Some analysts said that the uncertainty related to the European debt crisis,
which has been escalating for weeks over Irish banks, has been mostly priced
into the market.
But on Tuesday, events in Asia escalated and unnerved the markets. Ten-year
Treasury yields fell to 2.73 percent from 2.8 percent late Monday.
“Until a resolution is reached, expect Treasuries to take on greater appeal,
especially this week, when liquidity will probably be tough to come by if it’s
needed,” said Kevin H. Giddis, the executive managing director and president for
fixed-income capital markets at Morgan Keegan & Company, in a market commentary.
“In other news, a handful of economic numbers come in this morning, but they
appear to be taking a backseat to the news out of Korea.”
The Commerce Department reported on Tuesday that the nation’s output grew at a
rate of 2.5 percent a year in inflation-adjusted terms, higher than the initial
estimate of 2 percent.
While economists said the rate is still far too slow to significantly reduce the
unemployment rate, some of the components of the report showed improvement in
revisions, such as a decline in inventories and a rise in consumer spending.
Anthony Chan, the chief economist at J. P. Morgan Private Wealth Management,
said they signaled a “fighting chance” for improvement in future economic
growth.
Stocks Drop, Unsettled by Korea and Ireland, NYT,
23.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/24/business/24markets.html
U.S.
Home Sales Fell Sharply in October
November
23, 2010
The New York Times
By DAVID STREITFELD
Housing
sales plunged again in October, dropping 26 percent from the month a year ago,
the National Association of Realtors reported Tuesday
While severe, the decline was anticipated. Buyers rushed beginning last fall to
conclude deals so they could qualify for an $8,000 tax credit and that pulled
sales forward from the winter.
This fall had no such incentive, and despite the lowest interest rates in
decades, buyers shunned the market, agents and analysts said.
“Nothing’s selling,” said Mark Fleming, an analyst with the data firm,
CoreLogic. “People aren’t buying houses. Period.”
October sales dropped 2.2 percent from September.
One factor apparently weighing on some buyers was the uproar surrounding
foreclosures. Several major banks suspended the processing of foreclosures under
pressure during October. In some cases, buyers for foreclosed homes were told
they had to postpone their deals.
That helped reduce the sales of foreclosed homes, which have been declining
anyway.
About 4.43 million homes were sold on a seasonally adjusted annual basis in
October, compared with nearly 6 million in October 2009. The tax credit was
extended late last year through the spring, which saw another burst of activity.
Then came July and a sharp drop. Sales fell 26 percent from July 2009 to an
annualized rate of 3.84 million, the lowest level in 14 years.
The Midwest was the region hit the hardest in October, falling nearly a third
below the level of a year ago. The West fared best, dropping 21 percent.
It would take 10.5 months to sell all the homes on the market now, down from
10.6 months in September, the Realtor’s group said. A normal house market has
about half that level of inventory.
U.S. Home Sales Fell Sharply in October, NYT, 23.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/24/business/economy/24foreclosure.html
Corporate Profits Were the Highest on Record Last Quarter
November
23, 2010
The New York Times
By CATHERINE RAMPELL
The
nation’s workers may be struggling, but American companies just had their best
quarter ever.
American businesses earned profits at an annual rate of $1.66 trillion in the
third quarter, according to a Commerce Department report released Tuesday. That
is the highest figure recorded since the government began keeping track over 60
years ago, at least in nominal or non-inflation-adjusted terms.
Corporate profits have been going gangbusters for a while. Since their cyclical
low in the fourth quarter of 2008, profits have grown for seven consecutive
quarters, at some of the fastest rates in history.
This breakneck pace can be partly attributed to strong productivity growth —
which means companies have been able to make more with less — as well as the
fact that some of the profits of American companies come from abroad. Economic
conditions in the United States may still be sluggish, but many emerging markets
like India and China are expanding rapidly.
Tuesday’s Commerce Department report also showed that the nation’s output grew
at a slightly faster pace than originally estimated last quarter. Its growth
rate, of 2.5 percent a year in inflation-adjusted terms, is higher than the
initial estimate of 2 percent. The economy grew at 1.7 percent annual rate in
the second quarter.
Still, most economists say the current growth rate is far too slow to recover
the considerable ground lost during the recession.
“The economy is not growing fast enough to reduce significantly the unemployment
rate or to prevent a slide into deflation,” Paul Dales, a United States
economist for Capital Economics, wrote in a note to clients. “This is unlikely
to change in 2011 or 2012.”
The increase in output in the third quarter was driven primarily by stronger
consumer spending. Wages and salaries also rose in the third quarter, which
might help bolster holiday spending in the final months of 2010.
Private inventory investment, nonresidential fixed investment, exports and
federal government also contributed to higher output. These sources of growth
were partially offset by a rise in imports, which are subtracted from the total
output numbers the government calculates, and a decline in housing and other
residential fixed investments.
Corporate Profits Were the Highest on Record Last Quarter,
NYT, 23.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/24/business/economy/24econ.html
Fewer
Fall Delinquent in Paying Mortgages
November
18, 2010
The New York Times
By DAVID STREITFELD
Even as the
fight over foreclosures continues, the high tide of delinquency among homeowners
has begun to recede.
Households that are behind in their mortgage payments fell during the third
quarter to 13.52 percent, from 14.42 percent in the second quarter, the Mortgage
Bankers Association reported on Thursday.
It was the lowest delinquency rate since the beginning of 2009, just as the
financial crisis began hitting home. The new data come amid stepped-up scrutiny
of foreclosures by state and federal authorities, prompted by revelations that
the banks have been pursuing them in ways that could violate the law.
Delinquencies during the summer months declined for two reasons. Bankers reduced
the pool of the seriously delinquent by offering loan modifications to some and
evicting others. Seriously delinquent mortgages — those that are three months
overdue or more — fell during the third quarter to 8.70 percent of all loans,
from 9.11 percent in the second quarter, the bankers’ group said.
An economy that stopped deteriorating also had a positive effect. The percentage
of borrowers that missed their first mortgage payment dropped in the third
quarter, both from the second quarter and from the third quarter of 2009.
Just as the third quarter was ending in September, however, an uproar over
foreclosure documentation began. Under pressure, several lenders suspended
foreclosures so they could review their procedures.
Until those reviews are completed, analysts said, the number of households in
the latter stages of delinquency is likely to swell again, meaning it is too
early to know whether the third-quarter data signals a longer-term trend.
The report “is clearly good news, but perhaps we should wait” another quarter
before concluding that the delinquency decline is permanent, said Jennifer H.
Lee of BMO Capital Markets.
Lender Processing Services, a mortgage data company, also suggested caution in a
separate report this week, saying the number of properties in delinquency and
the number in foreclosure edged up in October from September.
Even with the third-quarter drop, delinquencies and foreclosures are above
normal. They are closely tied to the employment situation, which is no longer
worsening but not getting much better, either.
The delinquency survey on Thursday came out during a second day of Congressional
hearings this week on foreclosures, with five major banks testifying. The banks
tried to emphasize they were changing their ways, statements that were met with
some skepticism.
“There is significant evidence to suggest that the speed-driven, corner-cutting
operations endemic in the mortgage servicing industry have produced systemic and
damaging consequences for the nation’s homeowners and for our housing and
financial markets,” said Representative Maxine Waters, the California Democrat
who is chairwoman of the House Subcommittee on Housing and Community
Opportunity.
Elizabeth A. Duke, a Federal Reserve Board governor, said in her testimony that
the central bank expected about 2.25 million foreclosure filings this year and
in 2011, and two million more in 2012.
“They will remain extremely high by historical standards,” Ms. Duke said in her
prepared testimony. In 2006, before the collapse, there were about one million
foreclosures a year.
It is evident from the third-quarter data that foreclosures are no longer being
caused by bad loans, which was the case for much of the recession. Now most
foreclosures occur with prime loans, which are harder for banks to modify than
subprime.
Prime fixed-rate loans, the safest kind of loans, represented 36 percent of all
new foreclosures in the third quarter, up from 30 percent in the third quarter
of 2009. Meanwhile, the percentage of new foreclosures generated by the worst
kind of loans, adjustable subprime, fell sharply.
The Treasury Department also released its most recent loan modification figures
on Thursday, showing that only 24,000 households had gotten permanent new loans
during October. It was the lowest number since the government’s Making Home
Affordable Program was getting started last year.
About 483,000 homeowners have gotten permanent new loans through the program;
719,000 enrolled in a trial but were either foreclosed or got a modification
without government oversight.
Bank of America said that it modified 25,000 loans in October, up from 16,500 in
September. Relatively few were done through the government program.
Michael Fratantoni, vice president of research for the mortgage bankers, said,
“The modification effort has certainly benefited a number of homeowners.” But he
noted that the re-default rate of modified loans can be as high as 50 percent
after the first year, another reason foreclosures are unlikely to decline
significantly.
Fewer Fall Delinquent in Paying Mortgages, NYT,
18.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/19/business/19delinquent.html
Pretty
Good for Government Work
November
16, 2010
The New York Times
By WARREN E. BUFFETT
Omaha
DEAR Uncle Sam,
My mother told me to send thank-you notes promptly. I’ve been remiss.
Let me remind you why I’m writing. Just over two years ago, in September 2008,
our country faced an economic meltdown. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the pillars
that supported our mortgage system, had been forced into conservatorship.
Several of our largest commercial banks were teetering. One of Wall Street’s
giant investment banks had gone bankrupt, and the remaining three were poised to
follow. A.I.G., the world’s most famous insurer, was at death’s door.
Many of our largest industrial companies, dependent on commercial paper
financing that had disappeared, were weeks away from exhausting their cash
resources. Indeed, all of corporate America’s dominoes were lined up, ready to
topple at lightning speed. My own company, Berkshire Hathaway, might have been
the last to fall, but that distinction provided little solace.
Nor was it just business that was in peril: 300 million Americans were in the
domino line as well. Just days before, the jobs, income, 401(k)’s and
money-market funds of these citizens had seemed secure. Then, virtually
overnight, everything began to turn into pumpkins and mice. There was no hiding
place. A destructive economic force unlike any seen for generations had been
unleashed.
Only one counterforce was available, and that was you, Uncle Sam. Yes, you are
often clumsy, even inept. But when businesses and people worldwide race to get
liquid, you are the only party with the resources to take the other side of the
transaction. And when our citizens are losing trust by the hour in institutions
they once revered, only you can restore calm.
When the crisis struck, I felt you would understand the role you had to play.
But you’ve never been known for speed, and in a meltdown minutes matter. I
worried whether the barrage of shattering surprises would disorient you. You
would have to improvise solutions on the run, stretch legal boundaries and avoid
slowdowns, like Congressional hearings and studies. You would also need to get
turf-conscious departments to work together in mounting your counterattack. The
challenge was huge, and many people thought you were not up to it.
Well, Uncle Sam, you delivered. People will second-guess your specific
decisions; you can always count on that. But just as there is a fog of war,
there is a fog of panic — and, overall, your actions were remarkably effective.
I don’t know precisely how you orchestrated these. But I did have a pretty good
seat as events unfolded, and I would like to commend a few of your troops. In
the darkest of days, Ben Bernanke, Hank Paulson, Tim Geithner and Sheila Bair
grasped the gravity of the situation and acted with courage and dispatch. And
though I never voted for George W. Bush, I give him great credit for leading,
even as Congress postured and squabbled.
You have been criticized, Uncle Sam, for some of the earlier decisions that got
us in this mess — most prominently, for not battling the rot building up in the
housing market. But then few of your critics saw matters clearly either. In
truth, almost all of the country became possessed by the idea that home prices
could never fall significantly.
That was a mass delusion, reinforced by rapidly rising prices that discredited
the few skeptics who warned of trouble. Delusions, whether about tulips or
Internet stocks, produce bubbles. And when bubbles pop, they can generate waves
of trouble that hit shores far from their origin. This bubble was a doozy and
its pop was felt around the world.
So, again, Uncle Sam, thanks to you and your aides. Often you are wasteful, and
sometimes you are bullying. On occasion, you are downright maddening. But in
this extraordinary emergency, you came through — and the world would look far
different now if you had not.
Your grateful nephew,
Warren
Warren E.
Buffett is the chief executive of Berkshire Hathaway, a diversified holding
company.
Pretty Good for Government Work, NYT, 16.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/17/opinion/17buffett.html
One Way
to Trim Deficit: Cultivate Growth
November
16, 2010
The New York Times
By DAVID LEONHARDT
We look
back on the late 1990s as a rare time when the federal government ran budget
surpluses. We tend to forget that those surpluses came as a surprise to almost
everybody.
As late as 1998, the Congressional Budget Office was predicting a deficit for
1999. In fact, Washington ran its biggest surplus in five decades.
What happened? Above all, economic growth. And that may be a big part of the
answer to our current problems.
Yes, the government became more fiscally conservative in the 1990s. Both
President George H. W. Bush (who doesn’t get enough credit) and President Bill
Clinton, working with Congress, raised taxes to attack the 1980s deficits.
But those tax increases were the second most important reason for the surpluses
that followed. The most important was the fact that the economy grew more
rapidly than expected. The faster growth pushed up incomes and caused more tax
revenue to flow into the Treasury.
Today’s looming deficits are almost surely too large to be closed exclusively
with growth. The baby boom generation is too big, and the rise in Medicare costs
continues to be too steep. Yet growth could still make an enormous difference.
If the economy grew one half of a percentage point faster than forecast each
year over the next two decades — no easy feat, to be fair — the country would
have to do roughly 40 to 50 percent less deficit-cutting than it now appears,
based on my reading of budget data from the economists Alan Auerbach and William
Gale.
To get a concrete sense for what this would mean, you can play around with the
The Times’s online deficit puzzle. It asks you to find almost $1.4 trillion in
annual spending cuts and tax increases by the year 2030. If growth were a half
point faster than expected, the needed savings would instead drop to less than
$700 billion. That would mean many fewer painful choices, be they tax increases
or Medicare cuts.
So arguably the single best way to cut the deficit is to make sure that any
deficit-cutting plan does not also cut economic growth. Ideally, it will lift
growth.
There are two main ways to do so. First, we shouldn’t plunge ourselves back into
another economic slump by raising taxes and cutting spending too quickly.
President Franklin Roosevelt made that mistake in 1937, and this time (one
hopes) the country won’t be able to rely on war mobilization spending to undo
the error.
In the short term, we should actually spend more. “Some politicians and
economists present a false choice: reduce unemployment or stabilize the debt,”
argues a new bipartisan deficit plan that will be released Wednesday, the second
such plan to come out in the last week. As Alice Rivlin, a Democrat who oversaw
the writing of the plan with Pete Domenici, a Republican, put it: “We can do
both. We can put money in people’s pockets in the short run and trim government
spending in the long run.” .
The plan calls for a one-year payroll tax holiday for employers and workers,
costing $650 billion. But remember that’s a one-time sum, while the needed
deficit cuts will be hundreds of billions of dollars a year. Relative to those
cuts, a payroll tax holiday — or more spending on roads and bridges, as
President Obama favors — is a rounding error. And, of course, putting people
back to work has its own benefits.
Even more important than the next couple of years is the second part of a
pro-growth strategy: the long term. A good deficit plan doesn’t simply make
across-the-board cuts for years on end. It cuts funding for programs that do not
spur economic growth and increases funding for those relatively few that do.
Likewise, it raises tax rates that do not have a clear record of promoting
growth and cuts those that do.
This task is not an easy one, because advocates and lobbyists inevitably claim
that their idea, whatever it is, will help the larger economy. Just look at farm
subsidies, a form of welfare for agribusiness that is supposedly crucial to the
American economy. Or look at President George W. Bush’s tax cuts, which, after
being sold as an economic elixir, were followed by the slowest decade of growth
since before World War II.
The two bipartisan deficit proposals that have come out over the last week each
do a pretty good job, but not quite good enough, of focusing on economic growth.
The most pro-growth part of both proposals — the Domenici-Rivlin plan and the
one from Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson — is their emphasis on tax reform.
Today’s tax code is a thicket of deductions, credits and loopholes that force
people to change their behavior and waste time trying to avoid too large of a
tax bill. A tax code with fewer deductions and lower rates — which, to be clear,
is not the same thing as a tax cut — would instead let businesses and households
focus on being as productive as possible. The potential to make good money would
drive more decisions, and the ability to qualify for a tax break would drive
fewer.
Beyond tax reform, both deficit plans mention the importance of making
investments that will lead to future growth. In particular, the Bowles-Simpson
plan calls for a gradual 15-cents-a-gallon increase in the federal gasoline tax
to pay for highways, mass transit and other projects. The plans also urge the
government to prioritize education and science.
These are clearly among the best ways to promote growth. The United States
created the world’s most prosperous economy last century in large measure
because it was the world’s most educated country. It no longer is. Federal
science dollars, meanwhile, led to the creation of the intercontinental
railroad, the airline industry, the microchip, the personal computer, the
Internet and numerous medical breakthroughs. Yet science funding is scheduled to
decline as stimulus money runs out.
Unfortunately, the plans don’t get more specific than saying that education and
science are important. The only dedicated money for specific investments in
either plan is the infrastructure fund financed by the gas tax. And,
realistically, exhorting a future Congress to avoid wasteful spending and
prioritize growth has about as much chance of success as exhorting it to find
the political will to revamp Medicare.
The two bipartisan deficit groups deserve a lot of credit for starting to move
the debate beyond vagaries. There is one more step they can take, though: making
sure we remember that cutting the deficit is not only about making cuts.
One Way to Trim Deficit: Cultivate Growth, NYT,
16.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/17/business/economy/17leonhardt.html
U.S.
Retail Sales Post Biggest Gain in 7 Months
November
15, 2010
The New York Times
By CHRISTINE HAUSER
Sales at
the nation’s retailers and food service establishments rose in October compared
with the previous month, according to government figures released on Monday,
providing a glimmer of hope that consumer spending was set to improve in the
fourth quarter.
The Commerce Department statistics, which also showed an improvement over
October 2009, sales, were better than what economists had forecast, and were
based on upward revisions in similar sales in September and August. Economists
hope they indicate that consumer spending is gaining strength, although many
households are still de-leveraging and dealing with uncertainties in employment.
With an expected slow recovery in the job market and therefore small gains in
wages, growth in consumer spending will be “modest at best,” said Joshua
Shapiro, the chief United States economist for MFR Inc.
The Commerce Department said retail sales in October were up 1.2 percent from
September, a jump from economists’ predictions of 0.7 percent. The October sales
were also 7.3 percent higher compared with October last year. The seasonally
adjusted figure represents $373.1 billion in sales.
The rise in the October numbers was primarily attributed to a 14 percent gain in
motor vehicles and parts sales, and in sales at gasoline stations. Still, the
statistics, which were adjusted for seasonal and holiday variations, show that
when those components are removed the retail sales were also better than
expected, registering a 0.4 percent rise.
“With autos showing life in September and October, the consumer is doing
somewhat better than we would have expected,” said Mr. Shapiro in a research
note.
Clothing sales were up and building materials sales were also stronger, the
Commerce Department said.
Consumer spending accounts for about 70 percent of the gross domestic product
but a considerable portion of that spending is related to housing, medical care
and food necessities.
There were declines in sales of furniture, appliances and department store
sales, suggesting that some consumers were still hesitating before buying
discretionary items. The figures are advance estimates, and subject to
revisions.
The lower electronics sales could reflect a decline in prices as stores try to
attract consumers with discounts early in the holiday season, said Yelena
Shulyatyeva, a United States economist with BNP Paribas.
Dan Greenhaus, the chief economic strategist for Miller Tabak & Co., said that
based on the figures, it was likely that consumption in the fourth quarter could
be revised upward, with an estimated 2.5 percent fourth quarter GDP. But that is
still well below the GDP needed to bring down the unemployment rate of 9.6
percent.
“Generally speaking the report is quite good,” Mr. Greenaus said. “It is
coincident with stable levels of spending, although levels that remain well
below that which would be needed to drive significant GDP growth.”
Consumer spending and employment are two of the closely watched sectors that
economists use to gauge the pace of the economic recovery. Manufacturing has
also been one of the key sectors of the economy, and generally thought to be a
bright spot in hiring.
On Monday, the Federal Reserve provided a snapshot of regional New York
manufacturing that showed November was considerable weaker than expected, with a
decline of 11.14 compared with an expected reading of 15. New orders fell by
over 37 points and the numbers of employees also fell, the survey said.
U.S. Retail Sales Post Biggest Gain in 7 Months, NYT, 15.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/16/business/economy/16econ.html
Safer
Social Security
November
14, 2010
The New York Times
By PETER ORSZAG
Social
Security is not the key fiscal problem facing the nation. Payments to its
beneficiaries amount to 5 percent of the economy now; by 2050, they’re projected
to rise to about 6 percent. Over the same period, federal health care costs will
increase six times as much.
Nevertheless, Social Security does face an actuarial deficit. Current
projections suggest that, after 2037, benefits would need to be reduced by more
than 20 percent to match revenue. Measured over the next 75 years, the deficit
in Social Security is expected to amount to 0.7 percent of the economy — not a
huge amount, but a deficit nonetheless.
So it would be desirable to put the system on sounder financial footing. And
that is precisely what the co-chairmen of President Obama’s bipartisan
commission on reducing the national debt have bravely proposed to do. It’s too
bad their proposal has been greeted with so much criticism, especially from
progressives — who really should look at it as an opportunity to fix Social
Security without privatizing it. Although the plan leans too much on future
benefit reductions and not enough on revenue increases, it still offers a good
starting point for reform.
The proposal put forward last week by Alan Simpson, the former Senate Republican
leader, and Erskine Bowles, who was a White House chief of staff under President
Bill Clinton, has four main elements.
First, it would make the payroll tax more progressive by increasing the maximum
earnings level to which it applies. Over the past several decades, as higher
earners have enjoyed particularly rapid wage gains, a growing share of their
wages has escaped the tax because they have been above the maximum taxable
level. Today, about 15 percent of total wages are not taxed. The chairmen
recommend gradually raising the maximum threshold so that, by 2050, only 10
percent of total wages wouldn’t be taxed — decreasing the 75-year Social
Security deficit by more than a third.
Second, Mr. Simpson and Mr. Bowles recommend indexing the age at which full
Social Security benefits can be received to increases in life expectancy. This
age is already increasing to 67, and under the proposal the gradual rise would
continue, to 68 by 2050. A better approach would be to leave the full benefit
age alone and instead directly reduce the monthly benefits as life expectancy
rises, to keep average lifetime benefits roughly constant. But the chairmen’s
approach would by itself narrow the Social Security gap by about a fifth.
The third suggested change is to make the formula for determining Social
Security benefits more progressive, by reducing future payments to high earners
while increasing them for people at the bottom. These adjustments would close at
least another third of the projected deficit. And they would also help offset a
little-noticed trend: affluent Americans are increasingly living longer than
others. This pushes the Social Security system toward being less progressive, as
higher earners collect benefits for more years.
Finally, Mr. Bowles and Mr. Simpson would have Congress adjust the
cost-of-living index that’s used to determine annual increases in Social
Security benefits so that it would measure inflation more accurately. Making
this switch would fill in more than a quarter of the long-term deficit, because
the new index would grow more slowly.
If Congress were to take all four of these recommended steps, it could not only
eliminate the long-term deficit in Social Security but also make the system much
more progressive. Even compared with the benefits promised by the current
system, the recommended benefits for the poorest 20 percent of recipients would
increase by about 5 percent, while those for the wealthiest retirees would fall
by almost 20 percent.
Furthermore, the plan would not create private accounts within Social Security —
the most controversial issue that came up when reform was last debated in 2005.
Why not lock in a reform when private accounts are off the table? (Note to
progressives: the Social Security plan put forward by Paul Ryan of Wisconsin,
the expected new chairman of the House Budget Committee, does include private
accounts.)
The main flaw in the proposed Social Security plan is that it relies too little
on revenue increases and too much on future benefit reductions. A reasonable
objective would be a 50-50 balance between changes in benefits and changes in
revenues. But the way to bring reform into better proportion is to adjust the
components of this proposal, not to fundamentally remodel it.
Finally, even though Social Security is not a major contributor to our long-term
deficits, reforming it could help the federal government establish much-needed
credibility on solving out-year fiscal problems — which in turn could improve
the political prospects for providing additional short-term stimulus for the
economy. All of which suggests that Democrats in Congress should support the
basic construct of the Bowles-Simpson proposal, while arguing for some changes
to improve it. That has not, however, been their reaction thus far.
It is therefore crucial that the Obama administration recognize the opportunity
and respond to it more positively. The White House has been handed a highly
progressive reform plan for Social Security that could attract Republican
support as well.
Peter
Orszag, the director of the White House Office of Management and Budget from
2009 to 2010 and a distinguished visiting fellow at the Council on Foreign
Relations, is a contributing columnist for The Times.
Safer Social Security, NYT, 14.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/15/opinion/15orszag.html
Wal-Mart Says ‘Try This On’: Free Shipping
November 11, 2010
The New York Times
By STEPHANIE CLIFFORD and CLAIRE CAIN MILLER
For years, Wal-Mart has used its clout as the nation’s largest retailer to
squeeze competitors with rock-bottom prices in its stores. Now it is trying to
throw a holiday knockout punch online.
Starting Thursday, Wal-Mart Stores plans to offer free shipping on its Web site,
with no minimum purchase, on almost 60,000 gift items, including many toys and
electronics. The offer will run through Dec. 20, when Wal-Mart said it might
consider other free-shipping deals.
“Everyone’s trying to figure out how we can serve a customer that’s trying to
save every penny they can,” said Steve Nave, senior vice president and general
manager of Walmart.com. “It’s the most competitive offer out there, and we’re
pretty excited about it.”
Even before Wal-Mart’s surprise move, shipping prices were this holiday season’s
predicament for online retailers. In a bid for cost-conscious consumers, Target
and J. C. Penney introduced their most aggressive free-shipping programs ever,
and Sears, Toys “R” Us, Williams-Sonoma and others were trying to match the
success of Amazon’s shipping program, offering unlimited two-day shipping for an
annual fee.
But given Wal-Mart’s scale and influence in the marketplace, its free pass for
shipping sets a new high — or low — in e-commerce. And it may create an
expectation among consumers — free shipping, no minimum, always — that would
make it harder for smaller e-commerce sites to survive.
Wal-Mart says it will not raise prices to offset shipping and will not press
shippers, like UPS and FedEx, to absorb the costs. But Wal-Mart and other big
retailers already have low-price contracts with shippers, and the stores
maintain distribution centers nationwide that reduce shipping distances and
costs.
For smaller retailers and Web sites, which pay regular mail rates and may ship
from only one location, free shipping is not nearly as affordable and often must
be added into prices.
“You’re trying to compete with the Amazons and the Zappos, who have so many
different warehouses that they can significantly reduce transport costs,” said
Gary Schwake, director of business development at the Distribution Management
Group, a consulting firm that advises retailers like Eddie Bauer.
Retailers say that shoppers have already started to revolt against shipping
fees. While consumers are sensitive to what an item costs online, shipping costs
can have even more influence, according to market research.
When e-commerce took off a decade ago, free shipping was a rare perk. Now, 55
percent of consumers are at least somewhat likely to abandon their purchase if
they do not get free shipping, according to comScore, the online-research firm,
and about 41 percent of transactions online now include free shipping (usually
with a minimum purchase).
Wal-Mart is throwing itself into the holiday season shipping fray as it tries to
revive sales. Even as other retailers’ sales have recovered, sales at Wal-Mart’s
stores in the United States open more than a year have fallen for five
consecutive quarters. Recently, it has been adding to the merchandise it
carries, offering products for under $1 and undercutting Target on toy prices.
The Wal-Mart shipping offer has no minimum. Mr. Nave said an important factor
was that an item was likely to be given as a gift. “We looked at the areas we
felt were going to be popular in gift-giving this holiday, and went from there,”
he said.
Even after the holidays, “I would expect to see us continue to have offerings
similar to this in the future in some way, shape or form,” he said.
The Wal-Mart announcement was not public until Thursday, but retailers had
already been escalating their shipping programs since last year, when mobile
comparison-shopping apps helped make free shipping popular.
Amazon.com has one successful model. Year-round, it offers free shipping on
orders over $25. And its Amazon Prime program, in which members pay $79 a year
for unlimited two-day shipping on almost all purchases, could account for as
much as a third of sales, said Jordan Rohan, an analyst with Stifel Nicolaus.
“It is making other retailers scramble,” he said.
To fight off Amazon Prime, a month ago GSI Commerce started ShopRunner, a
service that bands together e-commerce sites including eBags and the Web site of
Toys “R” Us. Shoppers pay $79 a year for unlimited two-day shipping from any of
the members. This fall, Williams-Sonoma started a service like that for $30 a
year, and Sears and Kmart, which introduced a similar program three years ago,
are pushing it heavily this season.
Beginning in October, J.C. Penney started offering free shipping year-round,
with a minimum purchase of $69 for most of the year. Target is offering free
shipping on purchases of $50 and up, on 800,000 items. And in August L.L. Bean
began offering free shipping with no minimum, through Dec. 20.
Bigger companies have a big advantage in the battle over free shipping: volume.
According to the Distribution Management Group, air shipping prices for big
retailers are about 70 percent less than for a small company. Shipping at Amazon
costs about 4 percent of sales, and Amazon loses money on it because it offers
marketing benefits, said Aaron Kessler, an e-commerce analyst at the research
firm ThinkEquity. But shipping at small sites usually costs about 35 percent of
sales, said Mr. Schwake, the retail adviser.
Despite the costs, smaller retailers say they have little choice but to offer
free shipping, in some form, these days.
“Everyone does it,” said Michael Mente, the co-founder of Revolve Clothing, a
Los Angeles-based women’s clothing site. Asked if he received discounts from the
shippers, he said, “Unfortunately not.” At the start-up site ModCloth, which
sells women’s clothes, the co-founder Susan Gregg Koger said she couldn’t afford
free shipping year round, but she decided to do it for the holiday season. It is
a risk, she said.
“That’s really hard to offer and then roll back,” she said.
While Wal-Mart may continue with some free shipping offers after the holidays,
even other big retailers like L.L. Bean say they just cannot afford it after
Christmas is over.
“We’d love to be able to offer free shipping, but free shipping isn’t free,”
said Laurie Brooks, an L.L. Bean spokeswoman. “It does cost a company money."
There are potential downsides, even for Wal-Mart. Physical stores with Web sites
run a risk in promoting free shipping, Mr. Rohan said. “They’d much rather you
buy that same item in the store for $50 and pick up a hundred dollars of other
stuff you wouldn’t even think about,” he said.
Wal-Mart Says ‘Try This
On’: Free Shipping, NYT, 11.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/11/business/11shipping.html
Obama Nears a Deal to Reduce Trade Imbalance
November 10, 2010
The New York Times
By SEWELL CHAN and SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
SEOUL, South Korea — Obama administration officials said
Thursday that they were close to securing a compromise agreement to help reduce
vast trade imbalances, a step that could ease conflict among the major world
economies over commerce, currency and monetary policies.
Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said he believed that the world’s leading
economies, which will meet in Seoul on Friday, would agree that they should
monitor and seek to reduce acute trade surpluses or deficits that threaten
economic and financial stability.
China and Germany, among others, sharply criticized an earlier American proposal
to set numerical limits to such imbalances. The new compromise appears devised
to eke out a modest agreement on principles that each country would adhere to
voluntarily.
While the agreement is unlikely to lead to bold new steps by individual
countries, Obama administration officials say an accord on broad goals may help
calm fears that a flurry of recriminations over who is responsible for trade
imbalances could lead to a competitive devaluations or trade war.
“I think it overstates the level of disagreement about the challenges we have
ahead,” Mr. Geithner told reporters on the way from Singapore to Seoul for the
Group of 20 summit meeting. “We expect we’ll see broad support for the type of
cooperative framework the ministers of finance first introduced two weeks ago.”
A senior Obama administration official, speaking in Seoul, said the advance
draft of a joint communiqué under consideration by the member nations would
adopt a set of “indicative guidelines” that set common standards for assessing
trade balances and prompting diplomatic discussions about them when they grow
too large.
As with all Group of 20 communiqués, this one relies on peer pressure and the
perception of shared long-term interests; it is not legally binding. But the
group plans to ratify calls for the International Monetary Fund to a play a
stronger and more prominent role in monitoring the trade imbalances and, when
necessary, publicizing them, a process that still must be worked out.
Word of the possible compromise came as American officials scrambled to cool
tensions that had flared over the United States Federal Reserve’s decision to
pump $600 billion into the economy to stimulate growth, which China, Germany,
Brazil and other major exporters fear is intended to push down the value of the
dollar and give the United States an advantage in global trade.
President Obama, in a letter to the Group of 20 released Wednesday, appealed for
calm, while also imploring other world leaders to shift global economic demand
away from its historical reliance on American consumption and borrowing.
“We all now recognize that the foundation for a strong and durable recovery will
not materialize if American households stop saving and go back to spending based
on borrowing,” Mr. Obama wrote. “Yet no one country can achieve our joint
objective of a strong, sustainable and balanced recovery on its own.”
In an opinion article for the Asian edition of The Wall Street Journal, Mr.
Geithner, joined Tharman Shanmugaratnam, the finance minister of Singapore, and
Wayne Swan, the treasurer of Australia, in warning that a “two-track recovery
will dominate the global economy for a long time to come” and would require new
forms of cooperation.
Together, Mr. Obama’s letter and Mr. Geithner’s article laid out a strategy that
combined an appeal to reason, an avoidance of confrontation and more than a
little humility. The benefit of their approach, they said, would be higher
overall growth in the long term.
It remained to be seen how a vague commitment to reduce imbalances would affect
China and Germany, which have the world’s two most powerful surplus economies.
Both countries rely on exports for much of their growth and have relatively low
rates of consumption, while the United States has high consumption and runs a
large trade deficit.
Mr. Obama’s letter indirectly defended the Fed’s move to try to stimulate more
growth by injecting fresh monetary stimulus into the economy. The president said
the world needed a robust United States recovery even though it should no longer
depend on the American consumer to serve as the mainstay of demand.
“A strong recovery that creates jobs, income and spending is the most important
contribution the United States can make to the global recovery,” Mr. Obama wrote
in the letter. “The dollar’s strength ultimately rests on the fundamental
strength of the U.S. economy.”
A few hours after Mr. Obama’s letter was released, the Commerce Department
reported that American exports grew 0.3 percent in September while imports fell
1 percent. Exports through the first nine months of the year are up nearly 18
percent from the same period a year ago.
“Our renewed focus on trade promotion is helping to grow exports, which are
critical to our continued economic growth,” the commerce secretary, Gary Locke,
said in a statement from Yokohama, Japan, where Mr. Obama is to travel on Friday
evening for meetings of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.
In his article with Mr. Tharman and Mr. Swan, Mr. Geithner said trade and
currency adjustments now required broad collective action.
“Currency issues were once left to the United States, Europe and Japan, but that
will no longer work in the new world economy,” they wrote, acknowledging that
the days in which American officials could more or less dictate global monetary
policy had ended.
The three men wrote that “the currencies of the major advanced economies are
roughly in alignment with each other today” and that the major nations should
avoid currency volatility, but they added that “emerging economies need to allow
their exchange rates to reflect the substantial growth they have achieved in
their economies over the last decade.”
The pair of new American statements also acknowledged the anxiety felt by
fast-growing emerging markets like South Korea, the host of this year’s Group of
20 meeting, over the surge of capital flows that have been entering their
economies, driving up currencies, interest rates and inflation and raising the
risk of unsustainable asset bubbles.
Despite the more conciliatory tone, many analysts argue that the struggle over
monetary policy is unlikely to be resolved quickly.
Uri Dadush, who directs the international economics program at the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace, said the system of flexible exchange rates
that had existed since 1971 was at risk of breaking down.
“At the heart of the problem is the unwillingness of the big players — and here
I would single out the United States, Germany and China — to deal with their own
domestic problem,” Mr. Dadush said.
He said that the United States needed to stimulate demand in the short run but
curb its addiction to borrowing in the long run; that China needed to reduce its
reliance on exports and allow its consumers to buy more and save less; and that
Germany needed to wean itself off the fixation on frugality and productivity
that helped it through reunification in 1990 but that now posed a threat to the
economic integration of Europe.
Mr. Dadush’s view is the mainstream one, and one shared by the United States. As
Mr. Obama put it, “Just as the United States must change, so too must those
economies that have previously relied on exports to offset weaknesses in their
own demand.”
Obama Nears a Deal to
Reduce Trade Imbalance, NYT, 10.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/11/business/global/11group.html
In These
Lean Days, Even Stores Shrink
November 9,
2010
The New York Times
By STEPHANIE CLIFFORD
SANTA ANA,
Calif. — A temporary wall slices the Anchor Blue store here in half. On one side
are abandoned dressing rooms, a few mannequins and no customers. On the other
are racks jammed with clothing and accessories — and more customers than ever
coming into the store.
Tom Shaw, the head of Anchor Blue, a clothing chain for teenagers, looked with
approval at the 2,500 square feet of empty space that his company still rents.
Foot traffic is up more than 7 percent, the chain says, and sales have increased
nearly 23 percent since the trial remodeling last year.
“We don’t want a department-store feel,” Mr. Shaw said. “With that much product
in that much space you can get lost, not know where to go.”
Anchor Blue is among a growing number of retailers thinking small — chopping off
big chunks of stores or moving to more efficient spaces. The change reflects two
trends in the retail world: Chains looking for new ways to cut costs in the sour
economy, and consumers demanding a less sprawling shopping experience as they
spend with greater purpose.
“The customer walks in the door, and often sees a huge selection of stuff in a
multibrand store, and can’t figure out what to buy and ends up buying nothing,”
said Paco Underhill, founder and chief executive of Envirosell, a
Manhattan-based company that advises stores on shoppers’ behavior. “We have
reached the apogee of the big box, meaning that we can’t grow the store or the
shopping mall any bigger, or get any more time or money out of somebody’s
pockets.”
Big chains like Bloomingdale’s and Nike are trying smaller stores, as are
specialty retailers like Charlotte Russe. Mr. Underhill said most of his clients
are exploring the idea, which can require creative thinking.
The new Bloomingdale’s in Santa Monica, Calif., for example, saves space with
dressing rooms that retract into the ceiling. Charlotte Russe uses free-standing
glass walls that can be rearranged. At Nike, the cash registers are wired into
movable counters.
The smaller stores help clean retailers’ balance sheets. Rents drop, and smaller
amounts of inventory cost less. Retailers can also reduce payroll costs because
fewer employees are needed. At the Anchor Blue store here in Santa Ana, three
employees now work on the floor instead of four.
Retail chains “saw their lives flash before their eyes in the financial crisis
downturn,” said John D. Morris, an analyst with BMO Capital Markets, a financial
services provider. “When you’re looking at such a severe slowdown as they were
in consumption, you worry about the commitment in real estate.”
Mr. Shaw said he reduced the amount of clothing in the Santa Ana store by about
15 percent, removing many slower-moving items like unpopular sizes — and
increasing profitability. As leases expire on its 118 stores, Anchor Blue is
moving into spaces about half their size .
“You’re placing a sizable bet when you’re buying a lot of inventory and filling
up a 6,000-square-foot box,” he said.
The financial success of many smaller stores is simple, retail analysts and the
stores say: Smaller spaces are cheaper, and can be easily changed to carry the
most profitable, fastest-selling inventory. The stepped-up foot traffic at the
Anchor Blue store in Santa Ana, and the sales increase, for example, are both
above the chain’s averages.
“It certainly enhances the productivity,” Mr. Morris said of the smaller spaces.
Bloomingdale’s store in Santa Monica, which opened this summer, is about 105,000
square feet on two floors, less than one-eighth the size of the chain’s
Manhattan flagship store. The developer packaged in the third floor, but
Bloomingdale’s declined the extra room, said Michael Gould, chairman and chief
executive of Bloomingdale’s.
Mr. Gould said he wanted a smaller store to move through inventory faster. The
Santa Monica store dropped two slower-moving categories, home and children’s,
that are often found in other Bloomingdale’s stores. It has also saved space
with innovations like a mobile rack, that resembles those dry cleaners use, on
the second floor ceiling that moves mannequins and clothes.
“You have a store that’s turning very quickly,” he said.
In addition, Mr. Gould said, many shoppers have responded to a more focused
retail experience — stores that have been stripped of the distractions and
temptations of unwanted merchandise — as the success of Bloomingdale’s smaller
Manhattan store in SoHo, opened in 2004, has demonstrated.
“We can be very specific to a customer and to a marketplace, and that’s what we
need to do,” he said.
Nike is also looking at flexible layouts as it experiments with smaller stores.
The typical Niketown store is more than 50,000 square feet, while its prototype
“brand experience” store, opened in Santa Monica in August, is just 22,000
square feet. Nike has no plans to open more Niketowns, opting instead for
smaller options like the “brand experience” store.
The driving force was to make shopping simple, said Tim Hershey, Nike’s vice
president and general manager of North American retail. “Customers are always
asking us to make it easy,” he said.
Almost all the elements of the new Nike store can be rearranged at a moment’s
notice. Each wall contains horizontal slats about six inches apart, and almost
every piece of hardware — the circle of metal that holds a soccer ball, the wire
cages that contain socks — can be hooked into the wall slats. Freestanding
tables and locker-compartmentlike display cases are on wheels. A big orange
station where the cash registers are housed looks like the only permanent
fixture in the store — but it is not.
“It’s wired to be relocated in multiple places,” Mr. Hershey said. “We like
where it’s at but we haven’t been through a holiday. Live and learn.”
Charlotte Russe, which has more than 500 outlets nationally, is also
experimenting with a new concept store in Santa Monica that is about 25 percent
smaller than the norm.
Jenny Ming, the chief executive, ordered freestanding glass walls to distinguish
between types of clothes. “It just makes it more shoppable,” she said. “So many
stores now, it’s just big, you throw everything in there,” Ms. Ming said.
For maximum versatility and efficiency, each fixture has been designed for
multiple purposes. A metal rod that lies perpendicular to the wall can hold
shoes on plastic hooks, underwear looped through a leg hole or hangers.
Ms. Ming tried stacking shoe boxes on the selling floor so customers could
select their sizes without waiting for a clerk. But that backfired, she said, as
boxes were scattered, requiring extra staff (and money) for cleanup.
The boxes are back in the storage area, the experience pointing to an axiom of
the new smaller-is-better movement. “It’s building in as much flexibility as
possible,” Ms. Ming said.
In These Lean Days, Even Stores Shrink, NYT, 9.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/10/business/10small.html
Exporting Our Way to Stability
November 5,
2010
The New York Times
By BARACK OBAMA
AS the
United States recovers from this recession, the biggest mistake we could make
would be to rebuild our economy on the same pile of debt or the paper profits of
financial speculation. We need to rebuild on a new, stronger foundation for
economic growth. And part of that foundation involves doing what Americans have
always done best: discovering, creating and building products that are sold all
over the world.
We want to be known not just for what we consume, but for what we produce. And
the more we export abroad, the more jobs we create in America. In fact, every $1
billion we export supports more than 5,000 jobs at home.
It is for this reason that I set a goal of doubling America’s exports in the
next five years. To do that, we need to find new customers in new markets for
American-made goods. And some of the fastest-growing markets in the world are in
Asia, where I’m traveling this week.
It is hard to overstate the importance of Asia to our economic future. Asia is
home to three of the world’s five largest economies, as well as a rapidly
expanding middle class with rising incomes. My trip will therefore take me to
four Asian democracies — India, Indonesia, South Korea and Japan — each of which
is an important partner for the United States. I will also participate in two
summit meetings — the Group of 20 industrialized nations and Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation — that will focus on economic growth.
During my first visit to India, I will be joined by hundreds of American
business leaders and their Indian counterparts to announce concrete progress
toward our export goal — billions of dollars in contracts that will support tens
of thousands of American jobs. We will also explore ways to reduce barriers to
United States exports and increase access to the Indian market.
Indonesia is a member of the G-20. Next year, it will assume the chairmanship of
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations — a group whose members make up a
market of more than 600 million people that is increasingly integrating into a
free trade area, and to which the United States exports $80 billion in goods and
services each year. My administration has deepened our engagement with Asean,
and for the first eight months of 2010, exports of American goods to Indonesia
increased by 47 percent from the same period in 2009. This is momentum that we
will build on as we pursue a new comprehensive partnership between the United
States and Indonesia.
In South Korea, President Lee Myung-bak and I will work to complete a trade pact
that could be worth tens of billions of dollars in increased exports and
thousands of jobs for American workers. Other nations like Canada and members of
the European Union are pursuing trade pacts with South Korea, and American
businesses are losing opportunities to sell their products in this growing
market. We used to be the top exporter to South Korea; now we are in fourth
place and have seen our share of Korea’s imports drop in half over the last
decade.
But any agreement must come with the right terms. That’s why we’ll be looking to
resolve outstanding issues on behalf of American exporters — including American
automakers and workers. If we can, we’ll be able to complete an agreement that
supports jobs and prosperity in America.
South Korea is also the host of the G-20 economic forum, the organization that
we have made the focal point for international economic cooperation. Last year,
the nations of the G-20 worked together to halt the spread of the worst economic
crisis since the 1930s. This year, our top priority is achieving strong,
sustainable and balanced growth. This will require cooperation and
responsibility from all nations — those with emerging economies and those with
advanced economies; those running a deficit and those running a surplus.
Finally, at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in Japan, I will
continue seeking new markets in Asia for American exports. We want to expand our
trade relationships in the region, including through the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, to make sure that we’re not ceding markets, exports and the jobs
they support to other nations. We will also lay the groundwork for hosting the
2011 APEC meeting in Hawaii, the first such gathering on American soil since
1993.
The great challenge of our time is to make sure that America is ready to compete
for the jobs and industries of the future. It can be tempting, in times of
economic difficulty, to turn inward, away from trade and commerce with other
nations. But in our interconnected world, that is not a path to growth, and that
is not a path to jobs. We cannot be shut out of these markets. Our government,
together with American businesses and workers, must take steps to promote and
sell our goods and services abroad — particularly in Asia. That’s how we’ll
create jobs, prosperity and an economy that’s built on a stronger foundation.
Barack Obama
is the president of the United States.
Exporting Our Way to Stability, NYT, 5.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/06/opinion/06obama.html
Working
With India
November 5,
2010
The New York Times
President
Obama will spend three days in India beginning on Saturday — the longest foreign
stay of his presidency. Indians are still feeling anxious and insufficiently
loved. But the trip is a clear a sign of the importance that Mr. Obama places on
the relationship. As he should.
The Clinton and Bush administrations talked that way, too. President George W.
Bush was so eager to woo New Delhi that he gave away the store in a 2006 nuclear
energy deal. It is up to Mr. Obama and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to take
this complex relationship to a more sustainable level. Ahead of the trip, much
of the focus has been on defense and trade deals that will produce jobs. Those
are undeniably important. But the trip will be a failure if it does not also
deal with strategic issues.
India is anxious about America’s plans for Afghanistan and Washington’s close
ties with Pakistan — base for insurgencies that threaten all three countries.
The Indian-Pakistan nuclear rivalry remains dangerous. And so long as Pakistan’s
army sees India as its main threat, it will never fully take on the Taliban.
India would gain credibility and make the world safer if it worked harder to
reduce tensions with Pakistan.
The Indians have made clear that they don’t want Washington as a mediator. Mr.
Obama still needs to nudge India to resume serious talks with Pakistan over
Kashmir and take other steps to help calm Pakistan’s fears including pursuing a
trade agreement.
Mr. Obama also needs to press Pakistan a lot harder to bring the Mumbai bombers
to justice.
New Delhi did not retaliate after the 2008 attack — a testimony to Mr. Singh’s
wise leadership. We hope that the president’s top aides have a plan for how they
would tamp things down if Pakistani-based terrorists strike India again. There
are many other challenges, including managing the rise of China, that can be
dealt with more effectively if Washington and New Delhi work together.
The Indians seem conflicted. In recent news reports, some complained that Mr.
Obama has not shown India enough attention. Others worried about getting overly
entangled with Washington.
There are many positive trends. Military and counterterrorism cooperation are
substantial. India holds more defense exercises with the United States than any
other country. And it will soon purchase $5.8 billion worth of American-made
C-17 military transport planes and more sales are expected.
There are also real differences that need to be addressed. Mr. Obama is pushing
New Delhi to lift a cap on foreign investment in the defense sector. India wants
more visas so high-tech workers can move to the United States. The two countries
need to find ways to cooperate on trade liberalization and climate change.
The Bush administration overturned 30 years of nonproliferation policy when it
signed the deal to sell nuclear fuel and reactors to India. A promised benefit —
nuclear contracts for American companies that would create jobs at home — never
materialized after India adopted a liability law that American firms say exceeds
international standards and leaves them too exposed.
It is a grim irony that the nuclear deal, which was sold as essential to
removing a serious irritant in Indian-American relations, is now causing new
tensions. The two sides must find a way to resolve them.
Working With India, NYT, 5.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/06/opinion/06sat1.html
U.S.
Added Jobs Last Month for First Time Since May
November 5,
2010
The New York Times
By CATHERINE RAMPELL
The United
States economy added 151,000 jobs in October, a welcome change after four months
of job losses but still not enough to make a dent in unemployment.
Private companies have been expanding their payrolls throughout 2010, according
to a Labor Department report released Friday. Private job growth had been
overwhelmed by the elimination of temporary decennial Census jobs and layoffs by
state and local government during the summer and early fall — until October.
On many levels, the October report was much stronger than expected. Forecasters
had been expecting a gain of only 60,000 jobs. The report also revised the
numbers for August and September, showing 110,000 fewer jobs losses than
previously estimated. Hourly wages were slightly higher, too.
“The big picture from this report and some of the others recently all points to
a pickup in growth in the beginning of the fourth quarter,” said John Ryding,
chief economist at RDQ Economics. “The notion that the economy might be
double-dipping can now be safely tossed out.”
Still, the economy has a long way to go before the world brightens for many
Americans. Nearly 15 million people are out of work and actively looking, and
the unemployment rate, which remained steady at 9.6 percent, has been relatively
flat since May.
A broader measure of unemployment, which includes people who are working
part-time because they cannot find full-time jobs and people who have given up
looking for work, ticked down slightly to 17 percent from 17.1 percent in
September.
Coming just days after voters handed his party a “shellacking” at least in part
out of frustration with the economy, President Obama seized on the report as a
glimmer of hope in a bleak week. He called it “encouraging news” and pointed out
twice that it meant the private sector had added more than 1 million jobs since
the beginning of the year, although he acknowledged “that’s not good enough.”
“The fact is an encouraging jobs report doesn’t make a difference if you’re
still one of the millions of people who are looking for work,” he told reporters
before departing for a 10-day trip to Asia. “And I won’t be satisfied until
everybody who is looking for a job can find one.”
He reached out to Republicans who have just won control of the House and picked
up six seats in the Senate, pledging to work together on job growth. “I am open
to any idea, any proposal, any way we can get the economy growing faster so that
people who need work can find it faster,” he said, ticking off ideas like more
infrastructure spending and tax breaks for businesses.
Companies added 159,000 jobs last month, after a gain of 107,000 jobs in
September. Governments cut 8,000 jobs after losses of 148,000 positions in
September. The economy last added jobs in May, when more than 400,000 workers
were hired by the federal government to help with the Census.
Among the private industries with the strongest growth were education and health
services, which added 53,000 jobs; retail, which added 28,000; and temporary
help services, which expanded by 34,900 jobs. Another encouraging statistic was
the lengthening private sector workweek, which rose by one-tenth of an hour, to
34.3 hours. Like the hiring of temp workers, an expanding workweek typically is
seen as a harbinger of more permanent hiring.
Besides, the combination of longer hours and slightly higher hourly wages may
help propel consumer spending, which could in turn lead retailers to do more
hiring.
“For the fourth quarter, things may not be quite blockbuster, but it does look
like we’re picking up a little momentum as we’re going into the holiday season,”
Nigel Gault, chief United States economist at IHS Global Insight, said. “That’s
certainly good news.”
Citing concerns about “disappointingly slow” growth, the Federal Reserve
announced on Wednesday that it would engage in more aggressive monetary policy
to try and grease the wheels of growth. The Fed chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, has
hinted — and other economists have more openly advocated — that more active help
from Capitol Hill on the jobs and output front would also be welcome.
But the midterm elections this week, which divided control of Washington between
the major parties, have raised concerns that political gridlock may prevent
Congress from doing much, if anything.
In addition to the weak demand companies are generally facing, this resulting
uncertainty about the fate of measures like the Bush tax cuts, which are set to
expire next year, has left many businesses hesitant to commit to hiring more
workers.
“When we don’t have a clue what two of our largest budget items are, taxes and
health care, we’ve got to keep all the money we possibly have,” said Patricia
Felder, an owner and secretary-treasurer of Felder’s Collision Parts, a small
company in Baton Rouge, La., that sells automotive parts to dealerships and body
shops.
“We may need it for taxes since we have no idea what we’re looking at next
year,” Ms. Felder said. “And we may need it to provide the same level of health
care for employees that they got used to having.”
In the absence of Congressional action, the extensions of unemployment benefits
are scheduled to expire soon. With little prospect of employment in the near
future, many of the nation’s long-term unemployed, whose numbers hover around
record highs, have become increasingly desperate.
“I hope that Congress can become human and forget about being Democrats or
Republicans and just be human beings to see what it’s like for us,” said Annette
Tornberg, 50, of Sacramento. She was laid off from her job at a printing company
in 2009 and has been unable to find work despite sending out over 1,000 résumés.
“We’re human beings, and all we want is for you to help us out.”
Economists have expressed muted optimism about the prospects for job growth next
year.
“Our expectation is we are going to get a positive number on a sustained basis
for the next year or two,” John E. Silvia, chief economist at Wells Fargo, said.
He said the economy was at a point where businesses trying to increase output
must add workers, not just make them more productive or add hours. “That is the
phase of the business cycle we are in now,” Mr. Silvia said.
While net hiring is obviously desirable, he said he expected to see only about
100,000 to 150,000 private payroll jobs added on average per month in the first
half of the year. That would just barely enough to keep up with new people
entering the labor force.
And even if the economy adds jobs at a pace that is twice as fast as that, it
would still take about 12 years to fully close the gap between the growing
number of people available to work and the total number of American jobs
available, according to a recent analysis from the Brookings Institution’s
Hamilton Project.
Christine
Hauser and Peter Baker contributed reporting.
U.S. Added Jobs Last Month for First Time Since May,
5.11.2010, NYT,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/06/business/economy/06jobs.html
Fed Will
Buy $600 Billion in Debt, Hoping to Spur Growth
November 3,
2010
The New York Times
By SEWELL CHAN and DAVID E. SANGER
WASHINGTON
— The Federal Reserve, concerned about the slow recovery, announced a second,
large purchase of Treasury bonds on Wednesday, an effort to spur economic growth
by lowering long-term interest rates.
The Fed said it would buy an additional $600 billion in long-term Treasury
securities by the end of June 2011, somewhat more than the $300 billion to $500
billion that many in the markets had expected.
The central bank said it would also continue its program, announced in August,
of reinvesting proceeds from its mortgage-related holdings to buy Treasury debt.
The Fed now expects to reinvest $250 billion to $300 billion under that program
by the end of June, making the total asset purchases in the range of $850
billion to $900 billion.
That would just about double the $800 billion or so in Treasury debt currently
on the Fed’s balance sheet.
While the Fed has been signaling that it would act to bolster the economy, the
announcement was the first major policy move since the midterm elections, which
gave Republicans control of the House and heightened the potential for gridlock
on fiscal policy including tax cuts and spending to encourage job creation and
growth.
In justifying its decision, the Fed noted that unemployment was high and
inflation low, and judged that the recovery “has been disappointingly slow.”
The Federal Open Market Committee, which ended a two-day meeting on Wednesday,
also left open the possibility of additional purchases.
“The committee will regularly review the pace of its securities purchases and
the overall size of the asset-purchase program in light of incoming information
and will adjust the program as needed to best foster maximum employment and
price stability,” the committee said.
As expected, the Fed left the benchmark short-term interest rate — the federal
funds rate, at which banks lend to each other overnight — at nearly zero, where
it has been since December 2008. The committee’s vote was 9 to 1.
Thomas M. Hoenig, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City,
dissented, as he has at every meeting this year. Mr. Hoenig “was concerned that
this continued high level of monetary accommodation increased the risks of
future financial imbalances and, over time, would cause an increase in long-term
inflation expectations that could destabilize the economy,” the Fed said in a
statement.
Economists disagree about how much the new round of debt purchases — a reprise
of an initial, $1.7 trillion round that ended in March — will have on spurring
consumer and corporate demand.
Lower long-term interest rates in theory should ripple through the markets,
affecting other rates, like those of 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages. That could
encourage homeowners to refinance into cheaper mortgages, though it would not
help the millions of Americans facing foreclosure.
But there are several significant risks. The new actions are likely to further
drive down the value of the dollar, which as fallen about 7.5 percent since June
against the currencies of major trading partners. That could exacerbate the
trade and exchange-rate tensions that have threatened to unravel cooperation
among the world’s biggest economies.
Moreover, the Fed is exposing itself to the risk that the assets it has
purchased, like the $1 trillion in mortgage-related securities on its balance
sheets, could shrivel in value as interest rates rise. That could reduce the
amount of money the central banks turns over to the Treasury each year, and
expose the Fed — which has been attacked for failing to prevent the 2008
financial crisis — to further criticism.
And then there is a risk that the Fed’s action could be neutralized by a new
Congress that has vowed to contract government spending, a core argument that
led to the overwhelming Republican victory on Tuesday.
Mr. Obama, at a news conference on Wednesday, talked of compromise with the new
Republican majority in the House. But he also cited China’s new high-speed
trains and its advances in supercomputing to make the case that there are some
areas where the United States needs to make investments, and insisted that the
country would not shy away from those. “They are making investments, because
they know those investments will pay off in the long term,” he said of the
Chinese, seeming to suggest that the United States needs to do the same.
At the same moment, he reiterated that he would support continuing the Bush era
tax cuts only for families earning less than $250,000 a year. “It is very
important we’re not taking money out of the system from people who are most
likely to spend that money,” Mr. Obama said at the news conference.
But he hinted at flexibility, saying he expected to sit down with the new
Republican leadership to see “where we can move forward first of all in ways
that can do no harm.”
Asked if he was willing to negotiate, he said, “Absolutely.”
Laurence H. Meyer, a former Fed governor who closely monitors the central bank,
said the prospect of sustained fiscal gridlock had already pushed Mr. Bernanke
to move.
“Bernanke has said that fiscal stimulus, accommodated by the Fed, is the single
most powerful action the government can take for lowering the unemployment rate
,when short-term rates are already at zero,” Mr. Meyer said. “He has nearly
pleaded with Congress for fiscal stimulus, but he can’t count on it. So he has
to act as if that’s not going to happen. “
Mr. Meyer predicted: “The political drama is just beginning.”
Leonard J. Santow, an economic consultant, said he feared that the Fed was
reacting to one mistake — the failure of fiscal policy — by adding another.
“Monetary policy is already unsustainably easy, and adding to the Fed’s
generosity through more quantitative easing will do little to stimulate the
economy,” Mr. Santow said. “The main problem is on the fiscal side and there is
nothing wrong with the Fed chairman making budget recommendations and admitting
there is not a great deal left for monetary policy to achieve when it comes to
stimulating the economy.”
The Fed lowered short-term interest rates to nearly zero in December 2008, and
subsequently bought $1.7 trillion in mortgage-backed securities and government
securities, a program that was phased out last March.
Only months ago, the Fed was talking about returning to normal monetary policy
and discussing the timetable for eventually raising interest rates and
tightening the supply of credit, as it would normally do after a recession has
ended.
But this recession and its painful aftermath have been anything but normal.
Global financial markets were set back in the spring by the European debt crisis
in Europe, and over several months, Fed officials gradually became convinced
that their only option was to step back in again.
Fed Will Buy $600 Billion in Debt, Hoping to Spur Growth,
NYT, 3.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/04/business/economy/04fomc.html
How Obama Saved Capitalism and Lost the Midterms
November 2, 2010
11:59 pm
The New York Times
By TIMOTHY EGAN
Timothy Egan on American politics and life, as seen from the West.
If I were one of the big corporate donors who bankrolled the Republican tide
that carried into office more than 50 new Republicans in the House, I would be
wary of what you just bought.
For no matter your view of President Obama, he effectively saved capitalism. And
for that, he paid a terrible political price.
Suppose you had $100,000 to invest on the day Barack Obama was inaugurated. Why
bet on a liberal Democrat? Here’s why: the presidency of George W. Bush produced
the worst stock market decline of any president in history. The net worth of
American households collapsed as Bush slipped away. And if you needed a loan to
buy a house or stay in business, private sector borrowing was dead when he
handed over power.
As of election day, Nov. 2, 2010, your $100,000 was worth about $177,000 if
invested strictly in the NASDAQ average for the entirety of the Obama
administration, and $148,000 if bet on the Standard & Poors 500 major companies.
This works out to returns of 77 percent and 48 percent.
But markets, though forward-looking, are not considered accurate measurements of
the economy, and the Great Recession skewed the Bush numbers. O.K. How about
looking at the big financial institutions that keep the motors of capitalism
running — banks and auto companies?
The banking system was resuscitated by $700 billion in bailouts started by Bush
(a fact unknown by a majority of Americans), and finished by Obama, with help
from the Federal Reserve. It worked. The government is expected to break even on
a risky bet to stabilize the global free market system. Had Obama followed the
populist instincts of many in his party, the underpinnings of big capitalism
could have collapsed. He did this without nationalizing banks, as other
Democrats had urged.
Saving the American auto industry, which has been a huge drag on Obama’s
political capital, is a monumental achievement that few appreciate, unless you
live in Michigan. After getting their taxpayer lifeline from Obama, both General
Motors and Chrysler are now making money by making cars. New plants are even
scheduled to open. More than 1 million jobs would have disappeared had the
domestic auto sector been liquidated.
“An apology is due Barack Obama,” wrote The Economist, which had opposed the $86
billion auto bailout. As for Government Motors: after emerging from bankruptcy,
it will go public with a new stock offering in just a few weeks, and the United
States government, with its 60 percent share of common stock, stands to make a
profit. Yes, an industry was saved, and the government will probably make money
on the deal — one of Obama’s signature economic successes.
Interest rates are at record lows. Corporate profits are lighting up boardrooms;
it is one of the best years for earnings in a decade.
All of the above is good for capitalism, and should end any serious-minded
discussion about Obama the socialist. But more than anything, the fact that the
president took on the structural flaws of a broken free enterprise system
instead of focusing on things that the average voter could understand explains
why his party was routed on Tuesday. Obama got on the wrong side of voter
anxiety in a decade of diminished fortunes.
“We have done things that people don’t even know about,” Obama told Jon Stewart.
Certainly. The three signature accomplishments of his first two years — a health
care law that will make life easier for millions of people, financial reform
that attempts to level the playing field with Wall Street, and the $814 billion
stimulus package — have all been recast as big government blunders, rejected by
the emerging majority.
But each of them, in its way, should strengthen the system. The health law will
hold costs down, while giving millions the chance at getting care, according to
the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. Financial reform seeks to prevent
the kind of meltdown that caused the global economic collapse. And the stimulus,
though it drastically raised the deficit, saved about 3 million jobs, again
according to the CBO. It also gave a majority of taxpayers a one-time cut — even
if 90 percent of Americans don’t know that, either.
Of course, nobody gets credit for preventing a plane crash. “It could have been
much worse!” is not a rallying cry. And, more telling, despite a meager uptick
in job growth this year, the unemployment rate rose from 7.6 percent in the
month Obama took office to 9.6 today.
Billions of profits, windfalls in the stock market, a stable banking system —
but no jobs.
Of course, the big money interests who benefited from Obama’s initiatives have
shown no appreciation. Obama, as a senator, voted against the initial bailout of
AIG, the reckless insurance giant. As president, he extended them treasury loans
at a time when economists said he must — or risk further meltdown. Their
response was to give themselves $165 million in executive bonuses, and funnel
money to Republicans this year.
Money flows one way, to power, now held by the party that promises tax cuts and
deregulation — which should please big business even more.
President Franklin Roosevelt also saved capitalism, in part by a bank “holiday”
in 1933, at a time when the free enterprise system had failed. Unlike Obama, he
was rewarded with midterm gains for his own party because a majority liked where
he was taking the country. The bank holiday was incidental to a larger public
works campaign.
Obama can recast himself as the consumer’s best friend, and welcome the animus
of Wall Street. He should hector the companies sitting on piles of cash but not
hiring new workers. For those who do hire, and create new jobs, he can offer tax
incentives. He should finger the financial giants for refusing to clean up their
own mess in the foreclosure crisis. He should point to the long overdue
protections for credit card holders that came with reform.
And he should veto, veto, veto any bill that attempts to roll back some of the
basic protections for people against the institutions that have so much control
over their lives – insurance companies, Wall Street and big oil.
They will whine a fierce storm, the manipulators of great wealth. A war on
business, they will claim. Not even close. Obama saved them, and the biggest
cost was to him.
How Obama Saved Capitalism and Lost the
Midterms, NYT, 2.11.2010,
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/11/02/how-obama-saved-capitalism-and-lost-the-midterms/
Fast
Track to Inequality
November 1,
2010
The New York Times
By BOB HERBERT
The
clearest explanation yet of the forces that converged over the past three
decades or so to undermine the economic well-being of ordinary Americans is
contained in the new book, “Winner-Take-All Politics: How Washington Made the
Rich Richer — and Turned Its Back on the Middle Class.”
The authors, political scientists Jacob Hacker of Yale and Paul Pierson of the
University of California, Berkeley, argue persuasively that the economic
struggles of the middle and working classes in the U.S. since the late-1970s
were not primarily the result of globalization and technological changes but
rather a long series of policy changes in government that overwhelmingly favored
the very rich.
Those changes were the result of increasingly sophisticated, well-financed and
well-organized efforts by the corporate and financial sectors to tilt government
policies in their favor, and thus in favor of the very wealthy. From tax laws to
deregulation to corporate governance to safety net issues, government action was
deliberately shaped to allow those who were already very wealthy to amass an
ever increasing share of the nation’s economic benefits.
“Over the last generation,” the authors write, “more and more of the rewards of
growth have gone to the rich and supperrich. The rest of America, from the poor
through the upper middle class, has fallen further and further behind.”
As if to underscore this theme, it was revealed last week (by David Cay
Johnston, a Pulitzer Prize-winning former reporter for The New York Times), that
the incomes of the very highest earners in the United States, a small group of
individuals hauling in more than $50 million annually (sometimes much more),
increased fivefold from 2008 to 2009, even as the nation was being rocked by the
worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.
Last year was a terrific year for those at the very top. Professors Hacker and
Pierson note in their book that investors and executives at the nation’s 38
largest companies earned a stunning total of $140 billion — a record. The
investment firm Goldman Sachs paid bonuses to its employees that averaged nearly
$600,000 per person, its best year since it was founded in 1869.
Something has gone seriously haywire in the distribution of the fruits of the
American economy.
This unfortunate shift away from a long period of more widely shared prosperity
unfolded steadily, year after year since the late-’70s, whether Democrats or
Republicans controlled the levers of power in Washington. “Winner-Take-All
Politics” explores the vexing question of how this could have happened in a
democracy in which — in theory, at least — the enormous number of voters who are
not rich would serve as a check on policies that curtailed their own economic
opportunities while at the same time supercharging the benefits of the runaway
rich.
The answer becomes clearer when one recognizes, as the book stresses, that
politics is largely about organized combat. It’s a form of warfare. “It’s a
contest,” said Professor Pierson, “between those who are organized, who can
really monitor what government is doing in a very complicated world and bring
pressure effectively to bear on politicians. Voters in that kind of system are
at a disadvantage when there aren’t reliable, organized groups representing them
that have clout and can effectively communicate to them what is going on.”
The book describes an “organizational revolution” that took place over the past
three decades in which big business mobilized on an enormous scale to become
much more active in Washington, cultivating politicians in both parties and
fighting fiercely to achieve shared political goals. This occurred at the same
time that organized labor, the most effective force fighting on behalf of the
middle class and other working Americans, was caught in a devastating spiral of
decline.
Thus, the counterweight of labor to the ever-increasing political clout of big
business was effectively lost.
“We’re not arguing that globalization and technological change don’t matter,”
said Professor Hacker. “But they aren’t by any means a sufficient explanation
for this massive change in the distribution of wealth and income in the U.S.
Much more important are the ways in which government has shaped the economy over
this period through deregulation, through changes in industrial relations
policies affecting labor unions, through corporate governance policies that have
allowed C.E.O.’s to basically set their own pay, and so on.”
This hyperconcentration of wealth and income, and the overwhelming political
clout it has put into the hands of the monied interests, has drastically eroded
the capacity of government to respond to the needs of the middle class and
others of modest income.
Nothing better illustrates the enormous power that has accrued to this tiny
sliver of the population than its continued ability to thrive and prosper
despite the Great Recession that was largely the result of their winner-take-all
policies, and that has had such a disastrous effect on so many other Americans.
Fast Track to Inequality, NYT, 1.11.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/02/opinion/02herbert.html
From Farm to Fridge to Garbage Can
November 1, 2010
5:27 pm
The New York Times
By TARA PARKER-POPE
How much food does your family waste?
A lot, if you are typical. By most estimates, a quarter to half of all food
produced in the United States goes uneaten — left in fields, spoiled in
transport, thrown out at the grocery store, scraped into the garbage or
forgotten until it spoils.
A study in Tompkins County, N.Y., showed that 40 percent of food waste occurred
in the home. Another study, by the Cornell University Food and Brand Lab, found
that 93 percent of respondents acknowledged buying foods they never used.
And worries about food safety prompt many of us to throw away perfectly good
food. In a study at Oregon State University, consumers were shown three samples
of iceberg lettuce, two of them with varying degrees of light brown on the edges
and at the base. Although all three were edible, and the brown edges easily cut
away, 40 percent of respondents said they would serve only the pristine lettuce.
In his new book “American Wasteland: How America Throws Away Nearly Half of Its
Food” (Da Capo Press), Jonathan Bloom makes the case that curbing food waste
isn’t just about cleaning your plate.
“The bad news is that we’re extremely wasteful,” Mr. Bloom said in an interview.
“The positive side of it is that we have a real role to play here, and we can
effect change. If we all reduce food waste in our homes, we’ll have a
significant impact.”
Why should we care about food waste? For starters, it’s expensive. Citing
various studies, including one at the University of Arizona called the Garbage
Project that tracked home food waste for three decades, Mr. Bloom estimates that
as much as 25 percent of the food we bring into our homes is wasted. So a family
of four that spends $175 a week on groceries squanders more than $40 worth of
food each week and $2,275 a year.
And from a health standpoint, allowing fresh fruits, vegetables and meats to
spoil in our refrigerators increases the likelihood that we will turn to less
healthful processed foods or restaurant meals. Wasted food also takes an
environmental toll. Food scraps make up about 19 percent of the waste dumped in
landfills, where it ends up rotting and producing methane, a greenhouse gas.
A major culprit, Mr. Bloom says, is refrigerator clutter. Fresh foods and
leftovers languish on crowded shelves and eventually go bad. Mr. Bloom tells the
story of discovering basil, mint and a red onion hiding in the fridge of a
friend who had just bought all three, forgetting he already had them.
“It gets frustrating when you forget about something and discover it two weeks
later,” Mr. Bloom said. “So many people these days have these massive
refrigerators, and there is this sense that we need to keep them well stocked.
But there’s no way you can eat all that food before it goes bad.”
Then there are chilling and food-storage problems. The ideal refrigerator
temperature is 37 degrees Fahrenheit, and the freezer should be zero degrees,
says Mark Connelly, deputy technical director for Consumer Reports, which
recently conducted extensive testing on a variety of refrigerators. The magazine
found that most but not all newer models had good temperature control, although
models with digital temperature settings typically were the best.
Vegetables keep best in crisper drawers with separate humidity controls.
If food seems to be spoiling quickly in your refrigerator, check to make sure
you’re following the manufacturer’s care instructions. Look behind the fridge to
see if coils have become caked with dust, dirt or pet hair, which can interfere
with performance.
“One of the pieces of advice we give is to go to a hardware store and buy a
relatively inexpensive thermometer,” Mr. Connelly said. “Put it in the
refrigerator to check the temperature to make sure it’s cold enough.”
There’s an even easier way: check the ice cream. If it feels soft, that means
the temperature is at least 8 degrees Fahrenheit and you need to lower the
setting. And if you’re investing in a new model, don’t just think about space
and style, but focus on the refrigerator that has the best sight lines, so you
can see what you’re storing. Bottom-freezer units put fresh foods at eye level,
lowering the chance that they will be forgotten and left to spoil.
Mr. Bloom also suggests “making friends with your freezer,” using it to store
fresh foods that would otherwise spoil before you have time to eat them.
Or invest in special produce containers with top vents and bottom strainers to
keep food fresh. Buy whole heads of lettuce, which stay fresher longer, or add a
paper towel to the bottom of bagged lettuce and vegetables to absorb liquids.
Finally, plan out meals and create detailed shopping lists so you don’t buy more
food than you can eat.
Don’t be afraid of brown spots or mushy parts that can easily be cut away.
“Consumers want perfect foods,” said Shirley Van Garde, the now-retired
co-author of the Oregon State study. “They have real difficulty trying to tell
the difference in quality changes and safety spoilage. With lettuce, take off a
couple of leaves, you can do some cutting and the rest of it is still usable.”
And if you do decide to throw away food, give it a second look, Mr. Bloom
advises. “The common attitude is ‘when in doubt, throw it out,’” he said. “But I
try to give the food the benefit of the doubt.”
From Farm to Fridge to
Garbage Can, NYT, 1.11.2010,
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/11/01/from-farm-to-fridge-to-garbage-can/
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