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Tag Archive for 'economy'

Don’t Understand the Economy! Kiplinger Says….

Beth Belton is a Senior Editor for Economics at Kiplinger, the source for personal finance and business forecasting. The Kiplinger Letter has been around since 1923 and, as far as I know, the various Kiplinger publications are well known and respected. Thus, I thought I would ask them what the heck they thought about this economy. Beth was a great help. I canceled my plane ticket to the unknown Pacific island.

The good news is Beth is encouraging, not overly pessimistic. She thinks the economy is almost, maybe not quite, at the bottom. She does not believe we are entering a “great depression,” although we probably entered a recession a few months ago. She does not think the recession will last a long time, less than two years. Unemployment, currently around 6%, will go to 7.5%, maybe higher. Remember, it was 10.2% in the ‘81-’82 recession, which was a bad one for Americans. For a guy like me, that has been thinking soup lines, this is pretty good news. I feel much better!

As for the stock market, it may go a little lower. She cautions against pulling money out of the market, if you don’t need it. If you can leave it in for 3 years, she believes things will turn around. She even says that if you have extra money (who does?), now is the time to invest, because there are a lot of good opportunities out there. You know, buy cheap! If my stock broker (I don’t have one!) told me to buy now, I would assume he/she/it was lying to me and trying to make his/her/its next mortgage payment. Since neither Beth, nor Kiplinger recommend particular stocks or make money selling stocks, her recommendation has a lot more credibility for me.

She mentions Alan Greenspan’s recent testimony before Congress in which he admitted that his basic assumption that banks and financial institutions would act in the best interest of their shareholders was wrong. Apparently, Greenspan’s brain is a lot older than he looks. This guy was Chairman of the Federal Reserve for 19 years! Had I known that was an underlying assumption of his economic policy, I would never have bought his damn book!

Was the baleout a good thing? According to Beth, it is not whether the baleout was ideologically good. It was necessary, unless of course, you prefer chaos and more chaos. Beth says the credit crunch was the big problem, not the failure of the banks, per se. According to Beth, companies like McDonalds and General Electric, good solvent companies, were advising the Treasury Department that if they could not borrow money, short-term, they were not going to be able to make payroll within the week. That would mean businesses close, workers are laid off, and instead of trying to solve a short-term problem, a long-term problem is created. Of course, I don’t even begin to understand how McDonalds could have a cash flow problem making payroll, much less a credit problem, but this is a good example of the degree to which confidence in commercial paper (short term loans) had evaporated overnight.

One result of these recent banking collapses is that we will return to credit standards that were in effect years ago. If you clearly can’t afford the monthly mortgage payment, you won’t be able to buy a house. No more buying a house without a downpayment.

Beth advises that it is going to take time for the banks and the Treasury Department to weed through all the good and bad mortgages and determine which ones will be subject to the terms of the baleout.

She notes that the recent decrease in the price of oil is going to make it easier for consumers to deal with a recession. It was $147 a barrel in July and is now around $65. She says that this wild fluctuation in the price of oil is due to the world markets, not OPEC manipulation. The economies of India and China have experienced a slow down and that is responsible for the decrease in the price of oil.

I feel better. Hope you do too!

 
 Beth Belton, Senior Editor, Kiplinger [29:05m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (369)

Allen Buckley, Candidate for U. S. Senate (GA)

Allen Buckley is a Libertarian running for U.S. Senate from Georgia. Sometimes Libertarians can go too far with the idea that things work better without government. While this is true in many instances, things work better without corporate greed and influence. That is what makes government necessary because nothing other than government can make the playing field level.

But, for what it is worth, when it comes to our economic woes, social security reform, health care insurance, everyone needs to give Allen a listen. As a CPA and an attorney, I think Allen understands both the law and balancing the books and he offers some interesting proposals to solve some of America’s most difficult problems.

One thing I like about Allen is that he doesn’t deal in soundbites. (How I hate people that answer questions in soundbites.) I have no doubt that Allen has a passionate concern for the economic future of America. When our elected officials have more concern for our economic future than getting re-elected, we might actually get some of these long term problems solved.

Allen took on Saxby Chambliss and Jim Martin recently at the debate in Perry, GA. Allen has no hesitation to call Chambliss a liar. According to Allen, Chambliss lies everytime he tells audiences that the Fair Tax is a viable solution to all our tax propblems. The Fair Tax is a sales tax on everything (or virtually everything) at a rate that brings in enough tax revenue to pay for government program. The rate is very much in dispute. Allen points out that the proposal Chambliss supports calls for an unrealistically low tax rate that even the President’s Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform considers to be about half the tax rate that would actually be necessary.

Allen says Chambliss is fiscally irresponsible, having voted for all the deficit spending federal budgets proposed during his time in the Senate. He is especially critical of Chambliss’ support for unrestrained, uncontrolled farm subsidies.

As for the difference between Democrats and Republicans, it is just a question of who gets the tax cuts, the wealthy (Republican) or the middle class (Democrat).

While Allen thinks the baleout of Wall Street and the banks is not a good idea, he makes it clear that $700 or $800 billion is not our biggest problem. He sounds the alarm loud and clear that if we do not resolve the social security and medicare budgetary problems in the next decade or so, we will simply get to the point that our debts bring government to a standstill.

If you think a vote for Allen is a wasted vote because a Libertarian may not win, Allen points out that if you really want change in Washington, a vote him is definitely a vote for change.

 
 Allen Buckley, Candidate, U.S. Senate GA [31:35m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (236)

What’s In Your @#$@#$ Wallet???????

If you are definitely voting for McCain, if you are even considering voting for McCain, you really ought to think about the economy. Why is the American economy experiencing the worst losses in half a century? Forget corporate greed. Forget corporate arrogance. Forget million dollar, billion dollar, bonuses for corporate executives managing failing companies. All that doesn’t explain why the largest insurance company in the world, AIG, needs (and gets) an $85 billion dollar baleout. Some of that is my damn money, my tax money, my “cut my taxes” tax money.

By the way, if you go to the AIG website, you will see their motto: “The Strength to be There.” Give me a break!

Why? Republican policies. Republican policies of doing away with government regulations because it is killing small businesses. Republican policies of false, hypocritical faith in the “free market.” They believe the free market solves all problems. Republicans deny to their last sorry breath that there is any evil in the free market. @#$@#% the free market. It works until its excesses and abuses catch up with it and then we (working people) pay for it.

Everyone in America had better thank whatever God they believe in that we are going to baleout these sorry sacks of feces, because if we didn’t, you just wouldn’t like the world you live (exist) in.

Republicans love unregulated business because it makes them tons of money, but it also allows business to put the dollar (the love of which I have heard is the root of all evil) ahead of wise business decisions. The corporations that are doing this are not the small business down the street skimming a few bucks out of the cash register. These corporations are multinational, have more money than any individual can even dream about, and are powerful enough to put you out of a job or a mortgage or a home when they risk your financial security so they can make another dollar.

If you think this election is about abortion, you are a moron. If you think it is about morality (gay marriage) in government, you are a fool. You should look in your investment portfolio, your wallet or more importantly, your employer’s wallet, and see which you love the most: your morals or your financial future.

If you vote Republican in November, I sincerely hope you reap what you sow.

No, I don’t think the Democrats are going to miraculously change all of this overnight. They are not going to eliminate waste and corruption. They are not going to solve all our problems. But if there is one damn thing the Democrats understand, it is corporate power. If there is one thing the damn Democrats know how to do, it is regular the s*** out of business. And by god, I am ready for a little of that with these bastards!

By the way, I didn’t lose a dime! I wouldn’t put my money in the stock market if you guaranteed me a 50% return.

Numbers and Immigration: Jobs and the Environment

If you don’t know where you stand with regard to the illegal aliens, maybe you can at least get a handle on the problem with LEGAL IMMIGRATION. Just like your check book, it is all about numbers. Roy Beck has the numbers. And, as we all know, numbers don’t lie - even if we don’t want to believe them!

Now, you can watch the video or read the rest of this post. My advice: do both!

Beck is a former journalist who now devotes his time to educating Americans about the destructive truth of our immigration policies. Roy started Numbers USA in 1997 to carry out the recommendations of the U. S. Commission on Immigration Reform, created by the Immigration Act of 1990 and the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development. Some people don’t like him, but all I can say is that he makes a hell of a lot of sense.

Remember, I am talking about legal immigration, those people who enter the US with our permission each year. How many people do you think that is? Would you believe that from 1776 through 1976 the traditional level of immigration to this country was an average of 250,000 people per year.

Roy’s point is that throughout our history when we have exceeded traditional levels of immigration we have always had problems assimilating the additional immigrants. Immigrants have also suffered from high levels of immigration because they are forced to compete for jobs in a market flooded with available workers.

However, beginning in 1959, US immigration policy has taken a wrong turn. After the devastation of WWII, many people wanted to immigrate from Europe to America for a better life. By the end of the ’50s, Europe;s economy had improved and less people were immigrating to America. You may remember this was about the same time a lot of us were being told we needed to achieve zero population growth. Well, the law of unintended consequences went into effect when Congress, apparently fearing we would not have enough European immigrants, began opening the floodgates.

Up until 1965 there were annual immigration quotas and East European countries had the largest quotas. In 1959 Congress invented “chain immigration” so that Europeans could bring their extended family. With chain immigration, the person who is approved for entry into the country gets to bring his relatives with him. In 1965 Congress did away with quotas and allowed immigration from all countries on the same basis. As a result of chain immigration, since 1990 we have been averaging 1,000,000+ legal immigrants a year. This is in addition to a milliion or more illegal aliens entering the country every year.

Do you wonder why immigration hasn’t been a big deal for the last 60 years (since WWII) and now, all of a sudden, it is a very big deal? Well, it’s because when legal immigration is at the traditional level of 250,000 a year, the country has been able to cope with this increase in population. However, after almost 40 years of higher levels of immigration, we are experiencing the pressure of these increased numbers on our utility and transportation infrastructure, our schools systems, our employment rates and wage rates.

According to Roy, there is a relationship between levels of legal immigration and illegal immigration. The greater the number of legal immigrants, the greater the pressure on others to enter illegally.

One of the problems with our immigration policy is that it has been run by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the ACLU. The Chamber and its pro business agenda promotes higher levels of immigration to exploit cheap labor at the expense of the American worker. Naturally, the ACLU is motivated bythe liberal idea that everyone should get to live in Amercia. (While I generally support ACLU principles, like all organizations, they can take the wrong stance on any particular issue. This is one of them.)

The problem with our immigration policy is that it is not guided by the most important question: What level of immigration is in our national interest? Politicians ignore focusing on this issue because of political correctness and voters. They don’t want Hispanic Americans mad at them.

I asked Roy where our presidential contenders stood on this issue of reducing immigration levels. (You can find check out your state delegation here.) All three of the remaining front runners, McCain, Clinton, and Obama, have the same rating: abysmal.

 
 Roy Beck, Founder, Numbers USA [29:36m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (874)

A Penny for Your Thoughts: The Writer’s Bottom Line!

Mama always said it was important to write well. I am sure the 12,000 members of the Writers’ Guild of America know that better than most of us.

I was in New York recently to attend my favorite TV show,The Daily Show, and while I was standing in line, there was a line of strikers standing a few feet away. Naturally, I lined up an interview. I was surprised to find out that I could interview someone in Georgia about the WGA efforts to negotiate a new contract. In this interview with Phil Nutman and Jason Dolan, Co-Captains for the WGA in Georgia, I find out that the essence of this dispute is over something less than a penny!

That’s right. Less than a penny! Since the last WGA Minimum Basic Agreement was negotiated in 1988, things have changed. Now we have DVDs, the internet and naturally corporate America exploits these new sources of revenue just as much as they can. The writers want their fair share. And what is that fair share: an increase in royalties from 1/3 of a penny to a penny.

Talk about corporate greed! This is a good example of why unions became powerful at the beginning of the century. Sure, unions ended up abusing their power (doesn’t everyone) and as a result the fell out of favor beginning in the 80s. Even so, the Writers Strike is proof positive of the fact that in this world of greedy multi-national corporations the ordinary working doesn’t have a chance against billion dollar corporations unless they are unionized. Not only do we need to appreciate what unions have done, we need to appreciate what they can do and encourage more employees to seek union organization. I wish we could come up with some way to have a Consumer’s Union to give all us some way to effectively fight the bastards. But what do I know, I just work for a living.

Even though there are no unions at Turner Broadcasting and CNN located in Atlanta, Atlanta is a media center and there are writers and TV shows produced in Georgia. The WGA can’t picket, but they can hold rallies to increase public awareness and support for the writer’s cause.

The Directors Guild (DGA) and Screen Actors Guild (SAG) have contracts that will be up in June and they are supporting the WGA, while trying to negotiate their own new contracts. SAG members, the movie and TV stars, won’t go on TV shows like Jay Leno because of the writers’ strike. They will appear on David Letterman because his production company, WorldWide Pants, owns his show (not the networks) and has negotiated its own agreement with the WGA and its writers have returned to work.

Because SAG members would not cross the picket lines and attend the Golden Globes they were cancelled. The networks had to return hundreds of millions of dollars in advertising revenues. If the Oscars are cancelled in a few weeks, they will lose hundreds of millions more. All over less than a penny.

I understand that the writers and studios are resuming talks to try and end the strike.

For more information, you can check out United Hollywood.

Never give up!

 
 Phil Nutman and Jason Dolan, Writer's Guild of America [29:23m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (530)

Year End Greetings from the Big Apple: Doug Monroe!

My apologies to Doug for not posting this interview last year (last week), but I am afraid my mind took the holiday break more seriously than usual. (When is the next long weekend!) I hope everyone had a safe and great time during the holidays, both Christmas and New Year’s.

Even though Doug has moved to the Big Apple, he is still a fifth generation Atlantan and keeps in touch on Georgia issues. After all, Sonny praying for water made the The Times.

In this end of the year conversation we cover Atlanta, New York, Iowa, the nation and the world. All in less than 30 minutes!

Looking to the issues the Georgia legislature will have to deal with in 2008, Doug bemoans the failure of leadership to deal with some of the serioius problems now facing the state, water and transportation being close to the top of the list. He notes that Roy Barnes and Tom Murphy made an effort (but not enough of one) to address water issues several years ago. And then, there was Zell who put a developer in charge of transportation in the state. Not a good move for the future of public mass transit.

Unfortunately, Doug did not get a dime of the billion dollar bonuses they gave out on Wall Street in December. He is as amazed, as am I, that anyone can “earn” a billion dollar bonus, particularly when their companies, in many cases, lost billions on the subprime mortgage market. This isn’t the American Dream we grew up with.

As might be expected, Doug is still disappointed in Democratic leadership and candidates. He wonders if they aren’t already dead in Georgia elections for 2008.

In the national contest for president, he favors John Edwards, who is the only Democratic candidate even attempting to talk about the issues that concern most Americans: wages in particular, the economy in general and the growing divide between the wealthy and the rest of us. (As you know by now, Edwards came in second. Not bad for a lawyer who is publically financed, not by lobbyists!)

On the Republican side, Doug thinks Rudy is on the slippery downhill slope to irrelevancy. I hope so. He is the one Republican candidate that I simply do not trust. According to Doug, people in New York don’t trust him either. Many think he is rather sleazy, even misrepresenting his role in 9-11. While he is still leading in NY, Doug thinks he is vulnerable.

By the way, Doug’s teacher’s union endorsed Hillary. I wonder if Iowa will change that.

Doug notes, with some seriousness, that a lot of people in New York are convinced that Bush and Cheney were responsible for 9-11. While you may think otherwise, New Yorkers point to the fact that the Twin Towers were heavily insured and apparently sold just before the attack. They wonder if the destroyed video tapes of the interrogation of the terrorists contain any information that would shed light on who was responsible for 9-11. You may not want to hear this, but will someone look at the video of the collapse of Building #7 (not the Towers) and tell me it was not the result of a controlled demolition! (There go my syndication chances.)

As for Saxby Chambliss’ re-election, Doug doesn’t think he has much competition. He wasn’t impressed with any of the candidates based on what he followed in “Drifting Through the Grift” about the recent senatorial debate. Doug sees the Iraq War as a big issue in the 2008 election and doesn’t understand Dale Cardwell’s position on the war. Doug thinks it sounds more like a Republican. (The problem is that it may be the position it takes to get elected in this state.)

And then we get into the news media, its’ faults and shortcomings, its failure to do what it should do: investigate and tell us the truth. On the whole, American has lost faith in the media. Doug relates some of the problem to the consolidation of media under the control of a few corporations. For example, the Cox organization owns the AJC and WSB in Atlanta, in addition to other local radio stations. The AJC lost 9% of its circulation in 6 months to become the fasting shrinking major American newspaper.

Doug points out that small, independent newspapers are doing fine, while the giants are having trouble making a profit. The problem seems to be that more and more people are turning to the internet for their news and no one has discovered a way to make money with news online.

Doug’s disdain for the crap that airs as either news or legitimate commentary is palpable. He doesn’t hold high opinions of Michael Savage or Neal Boortz on WSB. Bigots both!

It is always good to talk with Doug.

 
 Doug Monroe, Writer and Commentator [29:36m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (600)

The State of the State’s Economy!

Robert Sumichrast, Dean of the Terry College of Business at the University of Georgia, gives an overview of the Georgia economy. It sounds like Georgia is in good shape and can expect continued growth in 2008, but as the Dean said, there is a lot of risk out there.

So what can we expect in 2008?

Population: An increase of about 2% in 2008. It is this growth that demands we create new jobs.

New Jobs: In 2007 Georgia created about 55,000 new jobs. In 2008, we can expect about 44,000 new jobs.

Economic growth: 2.4% in 2008, which is about the same as 2007.

Drought recession: Businesses that are water intensive are in a recession. This year the state will lose an estimated $800 million in agribusiness production due to the drought.

Recession generally: about a 40% chance. I don’t like the word recession, but from an economic standpoint, it may not be that bad unless it lasts and lasts and lasts. Technically, a recession is 2 quarters of negative growth in the economy. That doesn’t mean you lost your job, but someone may not have gotten one they needed. Many times we don’t know if we are in a recession until it has already occurred.

Why is Georgia doing well in these times? Climate is a big attraction. One of the concerns about the current drought is that if it continues it may damage the state’s reputation for a favorable climate.

The drought that we are experiencing is the state’s worst ever. Dean Sumichrast points out that economic developers are now asking about the water supply in areas of Georgia. The very fact that the water supply is of concern means that unless an adequate water supply is assured, at some point this will adversely affect growth and the economy.

In fact, when I asked Dean Sumichrast what he would say to the legislature when it convenes in January, at the top of his list was dealing with the drought long term. This is going to require a major investment in infrastructure. Of course, the battle that is developing in 2008 is trying to solve the Metro Atlanta water crisis by depriving other areas of the state of water.

If we do experience a recession in Georgia, the main impact will be the loss of jobs in industries related to building materials, textiles and automobiles.

Other industries such as food and beverage manufacturing, equipment manufacturing, and pharmaceuticals, are likely to do better in the face of a recession.

Subprime lending scandal: Georgia is in better shape than much of the country because our home prices are not inflated. Rather, home prices in Georgia have increased at the same rate as average income has increased. For this reason, Georgia doesn’t have a dangerous price bubble that exists in other areas. He sees the housing market stable this next year with only a 1% to 2% decrease in home prices.

Savings: As elsewhere, savings in Georgia is very low. The problem is that consumers are relying on debt to finance purchases. A blip in the economy that interfers with the income necessary to pay that debt can result in a rise in foreclosures and bankruptcies, less purchases and a slow down in the economy generally. Be careful what you spend for Christmas!

The most surprising comment by Dean Sumichrast is that according to recent studies, Atlanta is the lowest cost city in the country in which to start a business. Atlanta has lower wages, good location and proximity to transportation, including the ports, all of which keeps the cost down. And I thought everything was high in Atlanta.

You can read more about the economic forecast here.

 
 Robert Sumichrast, Dean, Terry College of Business, UGA [28:34m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (602)

Will We Ever Have “Freedom From Oil?”

I do not understand gas and oil. Oil is almost $90 per barrel crude and about $3.10 a gallon in the car. I thought the world was supposed to end when it reached $50 per barrel. I thought I was paying $3.00+ per gallon when it was $50 per barrell. I know damn good and well it doesn’t cost any more to pump it out of the ground today than it did a couple of years ago. So how come it’s almost $100 per barrell?

But why dwell on something you can’t do anything about i.e., the current price of oil? Congress surely isn’t going to do anything about it. Never has, never will. So let’s focus on tomorrow. How do we get away from being subservient to oil? To answer that question, I wanted to interview someone who has a plan. David Sandalow is an expert on energy, a former Assistant Secretary of State and a Senior Director on the National Security Council staff. Now, he is a Senior Fellow on Foreign Policy at the Brookings Institute. His current book is “Freedom From Oil: How the Next President Can End the United States’ Oil Addiction.” David is dead serious about reducing our dependence on oil. You can read the book or visit the Freedom From Oil, but regardless, you need to get your heart, mind and soul set to live with less oil.

David is ready to do his part. He has a prototype car that he plugs in every night, charges the battery and drives up to 30 miles without ever burning a drop of gasoline. Think about the independence such a vehicle could provide to all those people who drive less than 30 miles a day to and from work. But you can’t buy David’s car, at least, not right now, but he expects it and others to be available in 3 or 4 years. Check out the Chevy Volt.

I remember the “oil crisis” during the Carter Administration and the long lines at the pump. What I really don’t understand is why, 30 years later, we are virtually no further along weaning America from its dependency on oil. Remember all those years ago when we all thought we were going to have to ride around in small cars. The next thing I know, I am buying a SUV. But, this is not my fault!

I think the problem has been a total failure of leadership, political leadership, corporate leadership, any and all kinds of leadership. Our leaders never chose a direction away from oil dependence. This is a bipartisan failure, Democrat and Republican. But, what is done is done. Blaming all or any of them is not productive and doesn’t save a drop of gas. (In fact, it may give you gas to think about it!)

David’s goal is to encourage us to chose the road out of this dilemma. He tells the story of the American General commanding the western forces in Iraq who wondered why he had to endanger the lives of his men and women delivering fuel to run electric generators. Surrounded by an abundance of wind and sun, he requested generators that could run on these alternative sources of energy. The Pentagon is working on it. You would think they would have thought of this one after 1991 or at least after they started painting all their vehicles tan for fun and sun in the wind and sun of the deserts of the Middle East.

David sees hope in solving the dependency problem because of two basic differences between today and the past. First, while this has always been tagged as a national security issue, national security has changed since 9-11. Today, it is easier to image oil producing countries like Venezuela and Iran intentionally depriving us of oil and attempting to disrupt our economy. Second, there is a lot of money to be made by companies that solve the problems associated with global warming. It is precisely because there is money to be made that we will be able to solve the problem. Making money motivates.

He mentions meeting with Newt Gingrich and Howard Dean on separate occasions and both offering the same essential solution: a massive, Manhatten type project to develop alternative fuels and alternative energy sources.

It seems the problem for consumers is the lack of available choices. Our market economy gives us thousands of choices with regard to most things we want to buy, except when it comes to cars. When it comes to cars, we basically have one choice: buy something that burns oil. He points to Brazil which has replaced about half its fuel consumption with ethanol. If Brazil can do it, why can’t we? Simple, a lack of leadership.

How long will it take to obtain this freedom from oil? David says a generation, 20 years. Why? Well, there are about 240 million cars on the road in America and we can’t afford to just scrap them. They will have to wear out. (Based on the longevity of cars, I estimate that all cars on the road today will be ready for the scrap pile by April 1, 2010, so I am not sure why it will take 18 more years.)

According to my calculations, about the time we achieve independence from oil, social security will go bust, and I will be wearing diapers. But at least David gives me hope that my grandchildren will have a greater appreciation for conservation and preservation than my generation.

 
 David Sandalow, Author, Freedom From Oil [24:45m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (494)

Capitalism and the Stock Market: Speculation vs. Investment

If you are concerned about the financial security of America, or if you think the stock market is a place to make a quick profit, or if you don’t understand investing in general, this interview with John C. Bogle may be of benefit to you. Without question, he has earned the right to comment on capitalism. John Bogle was a pioneer in mutual funds. He founded The Vanguard Group in 1954. In 2004 he was named by Time Magazine as one of the 100 most powerful and influential people in the world. A man who has been on the cutting edge for years, he also blogs.

He likes to be called “Jack” and he is the kind of person that gives someone like me, a small-town radio host, the same opportunity as Bill Moyers or CNN. In fact, he may have given me more. To show you what kind of person Jack is, I have to tell you that I started this interview several weeks ago, but 5 minutes into it, the transmitter at the radio station failed and we had to reschedule. Jack was unphased. He was happy to take the time to set it all up again. I was amazed. Still am!

He is also an author. I had seen his interview in September wth Bill Moyers regarding his recent book, “The Battle for the Soul of Capitalism.” He has written another book recently, “The Little Book of Common Sense Investing: The Only Way to Guarantee Your Share of Stock Market Returns.” And, he has written many more.

I do not think this interview does justice to the scope and breadth of Jack Bogle’s wisdom. He understands the good side of capitalism and he captures with clarity and insight where capitalism has gone wrong. Capitalism used to be about markets and products, providing what people needed and selling the best product that money could buy. Somewhere in the past, capitalism sought to benefit the worker and to reward him for his loyalty and industry. Where are these qualities in the capitalism that rules the world today? Gone! Gone with the wind!

Why? Because capitalism has lost its focus and now serves the CEO, the financial managers, the Wall Street stock broker, not the owners, the shareholders. The forcus is on making money by any means and if laying off hundreds of employees to turn a quick buck is necessary, that is all in a days work. CEOs and corporate boards scratch each other’s back with exhorbitant compensation packages that, in reality, create a conflict of interest between those in control of a corporation and those who own it.

I am not an investor. I do not understand the stock market. I do not understand day traders. If I knew that Jack Bogle was handling my investments, I wouldn’t have to worry about whether or not I was being lied to, tricked or sold down the river. I cannot begin to do justice to his comments. I can only be thankful that at least one billionare cares about the security of the common man.

If you want to know his advice for sound investing, you will just have to listen to the interview. And, read the book!

 
 John C. Bogle, Author and Investment Expert [30:29m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (481)

Robert Kuttner: “The Squandering of America”

Robert Kuttner is a co-founder and co-editor of The American Prospect magazine. While he writes on a variety of subjects, he focuses on economic policy, both domestic and international. He also writes a syndicated editorial column, which was awarded the John Hancock Award for excellence in business and financial journalism. Robert has also won the Jack London Award for labor journalism.

In his new book “The Squandering of America” he explores the history, the politics and the social forces that have turned the American Dream into a pipe dream for many Americans. In this day and time when everything seems screwed up, backwards, and headed down the wrong road generally, the word “squandering” sums up exactly how I feel. Seven years ago, I was dumb and happy and thought America was in pretty good shape. Today, I am disgusted, frustrated and regularly mad as hell. While this turn of events snuck up on me, it seems overnight, Robert was ahead of the curve. He wrote “Revolt of the Haves: Tax Rebellions and Hard Times” in 1980. I can’t say I have read that one, but I can imagine the plot, considering the fact that 27 years later, I am living it.

To put it bluntly, Robert thinks we (Americans) are in trouble. We don’t like to hear this. We much prefer to believe the soft lies from the people in power or who want to be in power. It’s like the water shortage in Atlanta. The critical nature of the crisis surprises and concerns most of us and who do we turn to for the solution: the people that either created the problem or ignored the problem at a time when it could have been solved. If responsibility is the theme of the day, why is no one being held responsible about anything?

It is obvious that Robert believes a lot of the current problems are the result of government’s failure to regulate business. In years past, we blamed government for being inefficient, wasteful and incompetent. This led to a general disdain for government regulation and a reliance on the free market to correct itself. Now, it is not the general ineffectiveness of government that is the problem, it is the fact that government simply isn’t involved.

You don’t have to look any further than toys from China. The Consumer Product Safety Commission which should be protecting our children from crappy toys is underfunded and understaffed because we prefer less government and tax cuts. The crazy thing is that the Acting Chairwoman (Acting?) told Congress the Commission didn’t want more money or more authority. Now that is a mentality that should be foreign to us, but half of us in this country think it is just great to eviscerate government. Tell that crap to the kids that died from the lead poisoning!

Think about it. If we didn’t have government regulation, your water might not be fit to drink, your car might not have air bags and your medicine might kill you. Regulation is not a bad thing. Bad regulation may be. Inefficiency may be. But, we threw the baby out with the bathwater. Government waste and inefficiency are not legitimate reasons to abandon any and all regulation.

According to Robert, Reagan began this experiment in the ability of the free market to regulate itself. It is an experiment he thinks has failed. The free market has turned Wall Street into a casino, where people don’t invest so much as gamble. The subprime mortgage scandal is the free, unregulated market at work.

The answer to this squandering is new leadership. Robert obviously favors Democrats over Republicans, although he isn’t convinced the DP is strong enough to lead us in a new direction. He doesn’t think Democrats have been looking out for the little guy. He points to the ‘06 election and successful campaigns like that of Jim Webb for Governor of Virginia to support his contention that people want leaders who are concerned about the plight of the middle class. According to Kuttner, Webb started out running to the right of the incumbent, George Allen, and changed his positions as he campaigned and began to understand the frustrations of the middle class.

In the presidential race, Kuttner doesn’t see Hilliary and Barack as sufficiently distancing themselves from the power brokers of Wall Street to steer the country in a new direction.

He seems to be encouraged by John Edwards who is not taking money from Wall Street and has accepted public financing of his campaign. I get the feeling that he thinks Edwards has found the right message, but he may not be the right candidate. The $400 haircut problem.

You can read a summary of the book’s chapters or listen to the interview, but whatever you do, realize that until we get the money out of politics, things probably will not change.

 
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