No Runny Eggs

The repository of one hard-boiled egg from the south suburbs of Milwaukee, Wisconsin (and the occassional guest-blogger). The ramblings within may or may not offend, shock and awe you, but they are what I (or my guest-bloggers) think.

Archive for February 19th, 2009

Elections have consequences, Wisconsin edition, part 1

by @ 12:57. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

The following just came in from Rep. Rich Zipperer’s office:

It’s official. The first major piece of legislation approved by the new majority in the Assembly included $1.2 billion of job killing tax increases. And, after 50 separate suggestions to improve the bill were offered by Republicans and each were summarily rejected by Democrats, not a single Republican voted for the tax increases.

The 389 page bill, dubbed by Governor Doyle as his ‘stimulus’ plan, was fast-tracked through the entire legislative process this week in less than 36 hours – a process that normally takes months. Unfortunately, the ‘stimulus’ bill is actually a budget bailout bill necessary because of yet another failed budget that has harmed our economy and failed to meet revenue expectations.

It became clear to me during the floor debate last night why the Democrat leadership wanted to fast-track this bill and deny the public an opportunity to see, debate, and comment on the legislation. The bill does what politicians in Washington have thus far refused to do – raise taxes in the midst of a recession. The Governor’s bailout plan, disguised as economic stimulus, is more accurately a laundry list of tax hikes that will only serve to further damage our state’s financial security and drive thousands of jobs from our state.

In an attempt to turn this package into a catalyst for economic growth and prosperity, I, along with a number of my Assembly Republican colleagues, offered 50 amendments that put taxpayers first and would have actually put stimulus ideas into the bill. Our taxpayer-friendly amendments would have:

  • Halted the $925 million Sick Tax
  • Eliminated $70.7 million in new sales tax collections
  • Exempted over-the-counter drugs from state sales tax
  • Ensured oversight over the federal stimulus money that is coming to Wisconsin
  • Eliminated the iPod tax, a $10.9 million tax proposed by Governor Doyle on digital downloads
  • Turned $1.6 million of earmarks given by Governor Doyle to labor unions into competitive public grants
  • Created an August sales tax holiday for back-to-school clothing shopping
  • Protected segregated funds, such as the Transportation Fund and the Injured Patients and Families Compensation Fund, from future raids and abuse
  • Stopped a new $215 million job killing tax on businesses
  • Made certain that tax dollars aren’t used to perform abortions
  • Provided immediate incentives for job creators to spend capital on research and innovation
  • Provided immediate tax relief to start-up small businesses

The people and businesses of Wisconsin can and will compete with anyone in the world if just given the opportunity. We have the can-do spirit. Unfortunately, Assembly Democrats stood lock-step with the Governor tonight and refused to accept a single amendment from our side of the aisle.

In this time of job loss and economic uncertainty, we need to make efforts to create jobs and make government accountable to taxpayers our top priorities. We must end the tax and spend culture that has taken hold in Madison. The actions this week by the majority party, however, will only help to shrink our state’s economy, drive jobs from our state, and still leave us with a current budget deficit of $416.9 million – allowing the potential for yet another budget bailout before the fiscal year ends on June 30th.

And this is all before we even begin to debate the over $1.4 billion in additional tax increases sought by Governor Doyle as part of his 2009-2011 proposed state budget.

Slight correction – it’s $2.1 billion of additional tax increases in the Necro-Budget, not $1.4 billion.

Who Knew?

by @ 5:53. Filed under Politics - National.

Democrats like big spending and Socialism!

In the first poll since the signing of the largest, government expanding,  spending bill ever, from Rasmussen Reports:

Democrats grew more optimistic this week, while Republicans showed no change in opinion. More Democrats now say the country is heading in the right direction by a 48% to 41% margin, compared to last week when they believed the opposite was true,by a similar margin. Just 11% of Republicans hold this positive view while 84% say the country is heading down the wrong track.

Drive By Observation

by @ 5:27. Filed under Miscellaneous.

“American Pravda” reports on Nancy Pelosi’s meeting with the Pope.   According to sources at the Vatican the Pope told Speaker Pelosi that

all Catholics"”especially legislators, jurists and political leaders"”should work to create “a just system of laws capable of protecting human life at all stages of its development.”

Evidently, this is Vatican code language for an expression often used by the pope when expressing opposition to abortion.

I wonder if Nancy used the bipartisan, New Obama English and explained her position to the Pope by saying:

I won!

So Much For Economic Decoupling

by @ 5:15. Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

You’ve probably heard the adage, “When the US gets a cold, the rest of the world gets pneumonia.”   The adage comes from the fact that world economies intertwined and the US, being the largest, influences a lot of what happens in the rest of the world.   Early in this economic downturn several financial experts attempted to argue that there had been a significant decoupling of world economies.   They argued that while issues were deteriorating in the US, other countries, especially China, wouldn’t see the downturn because their economy was much more stand alone.   While the evidence is obvious that these folks were wrong, Marc Faber does a good job of reconstructing events and deconstructing the decoupling myth, in yesterday’s WSJ.

Admittedly, Faber is known as Dr. Doom.   He has had a perspective on US financial management that is less than complimentary.   That said, Faber’s analysis is still spot on.

Faber’s key descriptive paragraph of the events of this downturn is here:

In 2008, a collapse in all asset prices led to lower U.S. consumption, which caused plunging exports, lower industrial production, and less capital spending in China. This led to a collapse in commodity prices and in the demand for luxury goods and capital goods from Europe and Japan. The virtuous up-cycle turned into a vicious down-cycle with an intensity not witnessed since before World War II.

As important as the tear down of the decoupling theory is Faber’s take on what caused this bubble to burst and what is to be learned from our experience.   As to what was the cause, Faber says:

Sadly, government policy responses — not only in the U.S. — are plainly wrong. It is not that the free market failed. The mistake was constant interventions in the free market by the Fed and the U.S. Treasury that addressed symptoms and postponed problems instead of solving them.

Faber rightly identifies the Fed’s easy credit monetary policies following the Dotcom bust as the fuel for the next bust.   By keeping rates artificially low for too long, Faber argues:

The complete mispricing of money, combined with a cornucopia of financial innovations, led to the housing boom and allowed buyers to purchase homes with no down payments and homeowners to refinance their existing mortgages.

Read the whole article.   Faber is correct in his analysis and he is correct on what he sees from the folks who are attempting to “do something” to resolve this problem:

So what now? Unfortunately, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner were, as Fed officials, among the chief architects of easy money and are therefore largely responsible for the credit bubble that got us here. Worse, their commitment to meddling in markets has only intensified with the adoption of near-zero interest rates and massive bank bailouts.

Faber’s suggestion for what should be done?

The best policy response would be to do nothing and let the free market correct the excesses brought about by unforgivable policy errors. Further interventions through ill-conceived bailouts and bulging fiscal deficits are bound to prolong the agony and lead to another slump — possibly an inflationary depression with dire social consequences.

All the Fed, Treasury and Congress have done in this downturn is to cause more fear and uncertainty.   They have done nothing to change the arc of the events that they all were a part of creating.   By implementing programs like today’s housing bailout, US financial institutions and businesses will be even less likely to put themselves out to take risk.   After all, who’s to say that tomorrow Congress won’t decide that their business needs to have contracts revoked, rewritten or renegotiated by force.   Until the Fed, Treasury, Congress and President Obama quit making “the rules of the day” don’t expect the US economy to improve or recurrent, wasteful spending to slow down.

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