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Janet Yellin for FED chair

Personally, I think that if you have proven that you have fumbled the ball in critical situations, you probably shouldn’t get the ball in critical situations. This concept works in football and it should work in government. Larry Summers was a big cheerleader for deregulation. He squashed the regulation of derivatives, which would’ve prevented the meltdown of Long-Term Capital Management in the ’90s and would’ve prevented the great recession. All we needed to do was regulate derivatives. (Let us not forget that this month marks the 10th anniversary of the meltdown of Lehman Brothers.)

Economist Joseph Stiglitz has more:

The controversy over the choice of the next head of the Federal Reserve has become unusually heated. The country is fortunate to have an enormously qualified candidate: the Fed’s current vice chairwoman, Janet L. Yellen. There is concern that the president might turn to another candidate, Lawrence H. Summers. Since I have worked closely with both of these individuals for more than three decades, both inside and outside of government, I have perhaps a distinct perspective.

But why, one might ask, is this a matter for a column usually devoted to understanding the growing divide between rich and poor in the United States and around the world? The reason is simple: What the Fed does has as much to do with the growth of inequality as virtually anything else. The good news is that both of the leading candidates talk as if they care about inequality. The bad news is that the policies that have been pushed by one of the candidates, Mr. Summers, have much to do with the woes faced by the middle and the bottom.

The Fed has responsibilities both in regulation and macroeconomic management. Regulatory failures were at the core of America’s crisis. As a Treasury Department official during the Clinton administration, Mr. Summers supported banking deregulation, including the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, which was pivotal in America’s financial crisis. His great “achievement” as secretary of the Treasury, from 1999 to 2001, was passage of the law that ensured that derivatives would not be regulated — a decision that helped blow up the financial markets. (Warren E. Buffett was right to call these derivatives “financial weapons of mass financial destruction.” Some of those who were responsible for these key policy mistakes have admitted the fundamental “flaws” in their analyses. Mr. Summers, to my knowledge, has not.) (more…)

By |2013-09-10T20:58:48-04:00September 10th, 2013|Economy|Comments Off on Janet Yellin for FED chair

News Update – Larry Summers, Fast Food Strike, SNAP Benefits

News Roundup

I don’t know about you, but I’m sure tired of Larry Summers. He decided, along with Alan Greenspan and Robert Ruben, that we did not need to regulate derivatives. As a matter fact, he went so far as to make sure that Congress passed a law which would prohibit the regulation of derivatives. Derivatives were the exact weapons of mass destruction that killed the world economy in 2007/2008. Nope, we don’t need any more of Larry Summers. I have no idea who should be Fed Chair, but it can’t be and shouldn’t be Larry Summers. President Obama, just say NO!!!

In the history of the United States, there are very few companies that change because it’s the right thing to do. Looking back over the last century or so, we find that companies begin to pay workers more because they are pressured into it. I like the fact that fast food workers are trying to pressure their employers to pay them more money. They’re not making a living wage.

SNAP benefits are going to be cut. This is not good.

(more…)

By |2013-08-04T22:13:28-04:00August 1st, 2013|Economy, Sports|Comments Off on News Update – Larry Summers, Fast Food Strike, SNAP Benefits

S&P said what?

Under George W. Bush, Wall Street said nothing as the Bush administration enacted three major tax cuts in four years. None of the tax cuts were paid for. There were no major spending cuts proposed to offset the tax cuts. Wall Street sat silent. The Bush administration started two major wars. Again, none of this was paid for. The Bush adminstration did nothing to try to raise capital to pay for the wars and Wall Street was silent. Now we are coming out of a recession. It is imperative that the government spends money in order to get us out of the recession. Suddenly, Wall Street has something to say about our debt ratio! This is the same rating agency that rubber stamped garbage mortgage derivatives as AAA and AA. Now, I’m sure this is not politically motivated. They’re just warning the United States about our debt ratio. Interesting.

From TPM:

The threat of a downgrade raises the stakes in the struggle between President Obama’s Democratic administration and his Republican opponents in the House to get control over a nearly $1.4 trillion budget deficit and $14.27 trillion debt burden.

The White House last week announced plans to trim $4 trillion from the deficit over the next 12 years, mostly through spending cuts and tax hikes on the rich. Congressional Republicans want deeper spending cuts and no tax increases.

The deficit problem has become crushing since the financial crisis of 2008. Now for every dollar the federal government spends, it takes in less than 60 cents in revenue.

A budget deficit running at nearly 10 percent of output and expected to grow will likely further swell a public debt load that’s already more than 60 percent of the country’s gross domestic product.

“Because the U.S. has, relative to its AAA peers, what we consider to be very large budget deficits and rising government indebtedness, and the path to addressing these is not clear to us, we have revised our outlook on the long-term rating to negative from stable,” S&P said.

Even so, Austan Goolsbee, the top economist at the White House, downplayed S&P’s move, telling CNBC on Monday it was a “political judgment” that “we don’t agree with.

DoubleLine Chief Executive Jeffrey Gundlach said on Monday that the S&P warning “should serve as an effective cattle prod in pushing the politicians toward a program of spending cuts and tax increases.” (more…)

By |2011-04-19T12:22:07-04:00April 19th, 2011|Budget, Business|Comments Off on S&P said what?
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