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Sunday 19 October 2008

An American Padmavyuh


 

Full convertibility was Manmohan's mantra. Thank god they failed.

S. GURUMURTHY
On March 18, 2006, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told a global audience in Mumbai that the Reserve Bank of India would prepare a roadmap on full capital account convertibility to fully integrate the Indian financial system with the global. But now, on September 30, '08, Dr Singh has done a U-turn. He now says "the foremost challenge is to insulate India from the ill-effects of the international financial crisis".

Why this shift from "integration" in 2006 to "insulation" in 2008? Simple. The Wall Street-innovated global financial architecture is like the padmavyuh in the Mahabharata which, like Abhimanyu, a nation can only enter, but never come out of. The global financial padmavyuh of today is the US-patented model. It is several thousand times more toxic now than at the time of the Asian crisis in 1998.

Just take one aspect, the monumental growth in virtual money, or derivatives. The outstanding over-the-counter derivatives (OTC) in banks was $100 trillion in 2002 and $596 trillion in 2007—a rise of 496 per cent in five years. This does not include exchange-traded derivatives. Both aggregated might be several hundred times the actual global trade. This false money had helped banks and shadow banks to leverage their equity 50-70 times, to make super profits. Six years back, Warren Buffet had equated derivatives to financial weapons of mass destruction. It is this WMD that has now carpet-bombed financial markets all over.

How did this virus spread? In the 1990s, after the collapse of the socialist model, the US sincerely believed—and the rest in the West and in the East seemed to accept—that Washington had become the new Rome; the Washington Consensus the new Bible; and the IMF, World Bank, WTO and the like the new evangelists. The US financial system thus became the benchmark for the world. Every nation, India included, was queuing up to copy its rules and models, to become like the US itself.

But suddenly, the US has now U-turned, bewildering those still standing in the queue. The America of today seems to look to the state capitalist USSR of yesterday to tackle the financial tsunami on Wall Street. It is no global crisis. It is a crisis exported to the world by the US. The question is: is it just a slowdown, or a recession, or a depression that torments the US and the West, and courtesy them, the whole world? It seems more than all these and not just a systemic fall. It seems—the impending, but un-admitted—collapse of an economic model.

Under its increasing influence, the most stable unit of human civilisation, the family, is bankrupted and nationalised and the insolvent government is privatised through corporates. Take the United States. Its family savings—which used to be 80 per cent of total savings in the '80s, and some 60 per cent in the '90s, has become negative 20 per cent. Meanwhile, corporate savings—which was 20 per cent of total savings in the '80s, and 40 per cent in the '90s—has become 120 per cent of the national savings now. Result: families bankrupted, corporates enriched.

But the US corporates which had grabbed the savings of families and had $600 billion in cash would not pump in a single dollar into the system, contrary to former US Fed chairman Alan Greenspan's view that they would, to ease credit. Finally, the Fed had to work its dollar printing presses to attempt to save America. The $700-billion rescue platform of the US is not to be raised on taxpayers' money, but from the electronic printers of the US Fed. The American Fed printed $400 billion from 1863 to 1995, but added some $400 billion more in the 10 years to 2005. The present package is thus financed by electronic cash, not tax money.

Back in India, the US-led crisis has put on hold all that the 'MMC' threesome—Manmohan, Montek and Chidambaram—would otherwise have sold as further reforms to India, the forex, financial and banking sector reforms.In the past, they had dismissed those who resisted them as Neanderthal minds. The Indian financial media too was singing in tune with them. But, if anything saves India today, as during the Asian crisis in 1998, it is the failure of the threesome in liberating the Indian financial system from Indians, and handing it over to Wall Street. Let the Indians thank God for their failure—and celebrate that they cannot do it easily hereafter.


(S. Gurumurthy is convenor of the Swadeshi Jagaran Manch)


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Saturday 18 October 2008

10 things to know before confessing to an affair

If you've had sex with someone other than your partner and are thinking of spilling the beans, read this first

Things you need to know before you... confess to having an affair.
1. Infidelity is not as common as you might think. A 2006 online survey of 46,000 people revealed that one in five married men and one in ten married women had committed infidelity during their marriage (BBC's UK Lovemap).
2. If there is no way that your partner will find out about a one-off misdemeanour on a business trip, and you want your relationship to survive, honesty is not necessarily the best policy.
3. Crippled with guilt or need advice? Respect your partner and talk to a neutral third party rather than confiding in a friend. Relate offers telephone counselling for £45 an hour on 0300 1001234. Or call the Samaritans on 08457 909090.
4. If the affair is ongoing and there is a chance that someone else will tell your partner, come clean. A one-night stand might just be excusable; lying never is.
5. Nor is compromising your partner's sexual health. If you were dumb enough to have unprotected sex, get tested for STIs. Some STIs can't be picked up for two weeks or more, and HIV has a three-month dormancy period. So even if your initial results are clear, you may need to tell your partner the truth so that he or she can get tested too.
6. When you tell your partner your motive should be a genuine desire to improve or, if necessary, gently terminate your relationship. Don't confess to ease your own guilt, vent anger or get even.
7. Infidelity is often a symptom, not a cause, of trouble in a relationship, and confessing may force you to address the underlying issues. For example, if you were drunk or high when your infidelity happened, drugs and alcohol may be the real problem.
8. Frank Pittman, a psychiatrist and relationship expert, says there are four types of infidelity: accidental infidelity (an unintended act of, usually drunken, carelessness); the romantic affair (you meet somebody wonderful while you are going through a big crisis in your life); the marital arrangement (comfort while you avoid dealing with a marriage that won't die and won't recover); and the philanderer (men who continually need their masculinity affirmed, women who are the daughters or ex-wives of philanderers).
9. Extra-marital affairs remain the biggest cause for divorce, according to the UK management consultants Grant Thornton.
10. Only 3 per cent of 4,100 high-powered, but unfaithful, men divorced their wives and married their lovers (Dr Jan Halper, the author of Quiet Desperation: The Truth About Successful Men). And the divorce rate among those who marry their lovers is 75 per cent (Frank Pittman).



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Friday 17 October 2008

Fully Loaded Magazine

In its 13 years, Outlook has honed a peculiarly Indian take on secular fair play that opens its pages to diversity and dissent

MUKUL KESAVAN
Outlook is now 13 years old. For a Jewish boy, his thirteenth birthday is the time he comes of age; an English-speaking Indian child is likely to be told that she (or he) is now a teenager, an otherwise alien time of life for most Indian children. What 13 means in the life-cycle of a magazine is less obvious because the average life expectancy of an English magazine in India is hard to reckon.

If we were to use the Illustrated Weekly of India as a precedent (which began life in 1880 as the weekly edition of the Times of India and kept going up to 1993 by which time it was a hundred and thirteen years old), Outlook would be a child with a century of vigorous life ahead of it. On the other hand, if we take as our guide one of India's most promising newsmagazines, Sunday, which began publishing in 1973 and died (along with the twentieth century) in 1999, Outlook would be in the middle of its mid-life crisis, with just another 13 years to look forward to.

On the whole, though, there's reason to take the long view. Successful magazines of news and opinion tend to keep going for a while. Time, the prototype for most modern newsmagazines, opened shop in 1923, and while it isn't quite the behemoth it was in its prime, its paid circulation adds up to around 3.5 million copies each week.

TIME Jan 6, 1936 cover

And Time is a child compared to The Economist, which started life in 1843 and successfully sells three-quarters of a million copies of every issue. Closer home, India Today, which, along with Sunday, transformed magazine journalism in India in the mid-'70s, continues to flourish. So the outlook, for Outlook at 13, is good.

But the jinx of 13 seems to have created a run of bad luck for the country Outlook reports on. The troubles in Kashmir, the explosions that seem to randomly and regularly terrorise Indian cities, the unending attacks on Christians in Orissa and Karnataka, the worldwide recession that seems to be upon us, are enough to make a rational Outlook reader triskaidekaphobic (bet you didn't know the word!).

But a little perspective will show us that the world was ever the same. Around Time's 13th anniversary, 1936, the news was considerably more ominous. Hitler's Germany tore up the Treaty of Versailles by reoccupying the Rhineland; a violently militarist politician, Koki Hirota, became the prime minister of Japan; and as if these portents of the Second World War weren't bad enough, this was also the year that the Arab revolt against British policy in Palestine and Arab resistance to Jewish migration into the region began, a conflict that festers to this day.


Bin-laden terror: The 9/13 blast at Barakhamba Road in Delhi

The Economist's 13th year wasn't much better; in 1856, it editorialised on the Crimean War that had just come to an end but the massive Taiping Rebellion in China continued, and the Second Opium War had just begun. Closer home, Britain declared war on Persia, and Wajid Ali Shah, once the Nawab of Oudh, was sent into internal exile on the eve of the great revolt of 1857.

So Outlook's 13th anniversary doesn't fall in a specially blighted year: in this world of ours, there's always enough bad news to keep newsmagazines going. What's much more interesting is the way in which a newsmagazine slants and summarises the world.


Outlook 13th anniversary

Ever since Time invented the template for the modern newsmagazine—the world summarised in dozens of short articles arranged in departments that deal with politics, religion, the arts, sport, cinema, the news told through personalities and celebrities, the weirdly uniform house style in which the news was processed—every imitator from Der Spiegel to India Today has tried to claim the mantle of objectivity. This claim is not, of course, true, which is just as well: these magazines would be unreadable if it were.

Every successful newsmagazine has had a broad ideological position. In the 35 years that Henry Luce edited Time, from 1929 to 1964, the magazine hewed closely to his conservative politics. In more recent times, Time has been accused of a liberal bias. The Economist was an ideological paper from its inception: James Wilson, its founder, was committed to laissez faire economics and the immediate provocation for setting it up was to argue against the British government's proposal to impose levies on grain import. More than a century-and-a-half later, The Economist is still busily (and profitably) arguing for low taxes and less government intervention (except in the matter of war: it supported the American invasion of Iraq as it does nearly every Western military adventure) in an anonymous house style which delights as many people as it infuriates.

Indian newsmagazines are, like their Western counterparts, ideological. It's possible, of course, to argue that all newsmagazines are the same newsmagazine, in that they all accept the mainstream presumptions of the societies in which they operate. But for the moderately alert reader, the differences in point of view are apparent too.

One of Outlook's distinguishing features is the lack of a house style. This isn't an accident: more than most other newsmagazines, Outlook carries columns, reviews and even reportage by outsiders, people who don't work for the magazine. There isn't even an attempt to tidy up the prose of its inhouse writers into a uniform idiom. As a long-time reader, this seems intentional, an attempt to create, within the constraints of a newsmagazine format, a forum for diverse and lively writing. The travel diary with which every issue ends is a remarkable and successful innovation in a genre of journalism that has traditionally shunned idiosyncratic, impressionistic writing the better to cultivate an authoritative impersonality.


From the archives, May 1846 Economist front page

But the most interesting part of Outlook's persona (or its brand identity, as marketing mavens might have it) is its commitment to a liberal and pluralist politics. Just as The Economist reports the world through a laissez faire lens, Outlook's sense of what's newsworthy in India is shaped by a peculiarly Indian take on secular fair play. Critics write that the magazine is politically skewed towards the Congress and against the BJP; if this is true, it's true only to the extent that the Congress conforms to the principles of a plural liberalism more closely than the BJP does or can. Is this unhealthy? Only if Outlook was the one newsmagazine on the stands.


Sepia tint: Roger Fenton's 1855 photo of the Crimean war

But it isn't.There are other magazines that report the news differently, that give the State the benefit of the doubt, that try, in their reportage and their comment, to explain the logic of majoritarian politics, that report India in the language of 'realism' and realpolitik. Which leaves Outlook free to open its pages to diversity and dissent. For a newsmagazine to do a cover emblazoned with a Hindu swastika and a cover story exploring majoritarian bias, as Outlook did recently, is unusual. These first years of its life have seen the idea of a plural India contested, in office and out of it, as never before, by the Hindu right. What is remarkable is that in this uncongenial political climate, Outlook has built a large mainstream readership, thrived, and is now 13.

Outlook's longevity will depend not on how it weathers ideological hostility, but how it copes with the threat of online browsing. Salman Rushdie, in a recent interview, declared that he no longer subscribed to newspapers and magazines because they were all available online. Every deadwood periodical in the world faces the danger of a young generation that has fallen out of the habit of paying for 'content', whether it be music, films or journalism. In a world where peer-to-peer sharing is eroding notions of copyright and ownership and theft, newsmagazines will have to find new ways of making money out of opinion and news. Outlook's achievement on its 13th birthday is that in this relatively short span it has found many readers who are desperate for it to succeed.

Wednesday 15 October 2008

Booklovers turn to Karl Marx as financial crisis bites in Germany


Karl Marx is back. That, at least, is the verdict of publishers and bookshops in Germany who say that his works are flying off the shelves.

The rise in his popularity has of course, been put down to the current economic crisis. "Marx is in fashion again," said Jörn Schütrumpf, manager of the Berlin publishing house Karl- Dietz which publishes the works of Marx and Engels in German. "We're seeing a very distinct increase in demand for his books, a demand which we expect to rise even more steeply before the year's end."
Most popular is the first volume of his signature work, Das Kapital. According to Schütrumpf, readers are typically "those of a young academic generation, who have come to recognise that the neoliberal promises of happiness have not proved to be true."
Bookshops around the country are reporting similar findings, saying that sales are up by 300%. (Though the fact that they are not prepared to quote actual figures suggests the sales were never that high).
Literature comes and goes and it is nice to see that trends are not always driven by slick marketing campaigns. Just as Rudyard Kipling would have been delighted that his poem The Gods of the Copybook Headings which contains the apt lines: "Then the Gods of the Market tumbled, and their smooth-tongued wizards withdrew." is modish once more, so Marx would have reveled in the idea that an economic crisis had reignited interest in his works. (Not, you understand, because of the increased royalties that would be coming his way over the next few months were he still alive.)
Increasing numbers of Germans appear ready to out themselves as Marx fans in a time when it is fashionable to repeat the philosopher's belief that excessive capitalism with all its greed finally ends up destroying itself. When Oskar Lafontaine, the head of Germany's rising left-wing party Die Linke, said he would include Marxist theory in the party's manifesto, in the outline of his plans to partially nationalise the nation's finance and energy sectors, he was labeled as a "mad leftie" who had "lost the plot" by the tabloid Bild. But even Germany's finance minister, Peer Steinbrück, who must have had some sleepless nights over the past few weeks, has now declared himself something of a fan. "Generally one has to admit that certain parts of Marx's theory are really not so bad," he cautiously told Der Spiegel.
"These days Marx is on a winning streak in the charm stakes," Ralf Dorschel commented in the Hamburger Abendblatt.
But for those not quite ready to immerse themselves in Marxist theory, Marx's correspondence to Friedrich Engels at the time of an earlier US economic crisis makes more entertaining reading. "The American Crash is a delight to behold and it's far from over," he wrote in 1857, confidently predicting the imminent and complete collapse of Wall Street.


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Monday 13 October 2008

Reversal of Fortune


 

When the American economy enters a downturn, you often hear the experts debating whether it is likely to be V- shaped (short and sharp) or U-shaped (longer but milder). Today, the American economy may be entering a downturn that is best described as L-shaped. It is in a very low place indeed, and likely to remain there for some time to come.

 

Virtually all the indicators look grim. Inflation is running at an annual rate of nearly 6 percent, its highest level in 17 years. Unemployment stands at 6 percent; there has been no net job growth in the private sector for almost a year. Housing prices have fallen faster than at any time in memory-in Florida and California, by 30 percent or more. Banks are reporting record losses, only months after their executives walked off with record bonuses as their reward. President Bush inherited a $128 billion budget surplus from Bill Clinton; this year the federal government announced the second-largest budget deficit ever reported. During the eight years of the Bush administration, the national debt has increased by more than 65 percent, to nearly $10 trillion (to which the debts of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae should now be added, according to the Congressional Budget Office). Meanwhile, we are saddled with the cost of two wars. The price tag for the one in Iraq alone will, by my estimate, ultimately exceed $3 trillion.

 

This tangled knot of problems will be difficult to unravel. Standard prescriptions call for raising interest rates when confronted with inflation, just as standard prescriptions call for lowering interest rates when confronted with an economic downturn. How do you do both at the same time? Not in the way that some politicians have proposed. With gasoline prices at all- time highs, John McCain has called for a rollback of gas taxes. But that would lead to more gas consumption, raise the price of gas further, increase our dependence on foreign oil, and expand our already massive trade deficit. The expanding deficit would in turn force the U.S. to continue borrowing gargantuan sums from abroad, making us even more indebted. At the same time, the higher imports of oil and petroleum-based products would lead to a weaker dollar, fueling inflationary pressures.

 

Millions of Americans are losing their homes. (Already, some 3.6 million have done so since the subprime- mortgage crisis began.) This social catastrophe has severe economic effects. The banks and other financial institutions that own these mortgages face stunning reverses; a few, such as Bear Stearns, have already gone belly-up. To prevent America's $5.2 trillion home financiers, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, from following suit, Congress authorized a blank check to cover their losses, but even that generosity failed to do the trick. Now the administration has taken over the two entities completely, a stunning feat for a supposedly market-oriented regime. These bailouts contribute to growing deficits in the short run, and to perverse incentives in the long run. Market economies work only when there is a system of accountability, but C.E.O.'s, investors, and creditors are walking away with billions, while American taxpayers are being asked to pick up the tab. (Freddie Mac's chairman, Richard Syron, earned $14.5 million in 2007. Fannie Mae's C.E.O., Daniel Mudd, earned $14.2 million that same year.) We're looking at a new form of public-private partnership, one in which the public shoulders all the risk, and the private sector gets all the profit. While the Bush administration preaches responsibility, the words are addressed only to the less well-off. The administration talks about the impact of 'moral hazard' on the poor 'speculator' who borrowed money and bought a house beyond his ability to pay. But moral hazard somehow isn't an issue when it comes to the high-stakes speculators in corporate boardrooms.

 

How Did We Get into This Mess?

 

A unique combination of ideology, special-interest pressure, populist politics, bad economics, and sheer incompetence has brought us to our present condition.

 

Ideology proclaimed that markets were always good and government always bad. While George W. Bush has done as much as he can to ensure that government lives up to that reputation-it is the one area where he has overperformed-the fact is that key problems facing our society cannot be addressed without an effective government, whether it's maintaining national security or protecting the environment. Our economy rests on public investments in technology, such as the Internet. While Bush's ideology led him to underestimate the importance of government, it also led him to underestimate the limitations of markets. We learned from the Depression that markets are not self- adjusting-at least, not in a time frame that matters to living people. Today everyone-even the president-accepts the need for macro-economic policy, for government to try to maintain the economy at near- full employment. But in a sleight of hand, free-market economists promoted the idea that, once the economy was restored to full employment, markets would always allocate resources efficiently. The best regulation, in their view, was no regulation at all, and if that didn't sell, then 'self-regulation' was almost as good.

 

The underlying idea was, on the face of it, absurd: that market failures come only in macro doses, in the form of the recessions and depressions that have periodically plagued capitalist economies for the past several hundred years. Isn't it more reasonable to assume that these failures are just the tip of the iceberg? That beneath the surface lie a myriad of smaller but harder-to-assess inefficiencies? Let me venture an analogy from biology: A patient arrives at a hospital in serious condition. Now, it may be that the patient has simply fallen victim to one of those debilitating ailments that go around from time to time and can be cured by a massive dose of antibiotics. In this case we have a macro problem with a macro solution. But it could instead be that the patient is suffering from a decade of serious abuse-smoking, drinking, overeating, lack of exercise, a fondness for crystal meth-and that it has not only taken a catastrophic toll but also left him open to opportunistic infections of every kind. In other words, a buildup of micro problems has led to a macro problem, and no cure is possible without addressing the underlying issues. The American economy today is a patient of the second kind.

 

We are in the midst of micro-economic failure on a grand scale. Financial markets receive generous compensation-in the form of more than 30 percent of all corporate profits-presumably for performing two critical tasks: allocating savings and managing risk. But the financial markets have failed laughably at both. Hundreds of billions of dollars were allocated to home loans beyond Americans' ability to pay. And rather than managing risk, the financial markets created more risk. The failure of our financial system to do what it is supposed to do matches in destructive grandeur the macro-economic failures of the Great Depression.

 

Economic theory-and historical experience-long ago proved the need for regulation of financial markets. But ever since the Reagan presidency, deregulation has been the prevailing religion. Never mind that the few times 'free banking' has been tried-most recently in Pinochet's Chile, under the influence of the doctrinaire free-market theorist Milton Friedman-the experiment has ended in disaster. Chile is still paying back the debts from its misadventure. With massive problems in 1987 (remember Black Friday, when stock markets plunged almost 25 percent), 1989 (the savings- and-loan debacle), 1997 (the East Asia financial crisis), 1998 (the bailout of Long Term Capital Management), and 2001-02 (the collapses of Enron and WorldCom), one might think there would be more skepticism about the wisdom of leaving markets to themselves.

 

The new populist rhetoric of the right-persuading taxpayers that ordinary people always know how to spend money better than the government does, and promising a new world without budget constraints, where every tax cut generates more revenue-hasn't helped matters. Special interests took advantage of this seductive mixture of populism and free-market ideology. They also bent the rules to suit themselves. Corporations and the wealthy argued that lowering their tax rates would lead to more savings; they got the tax breaks, but America's household savings rate not only didn't rise, it dropped to levels not seen in 75 years. The Bush administration extolled the power of the free market, but it was more than willing to provide generous subsidies to farmers and erect tariffs to protect steelmakers. Lately, as we have seen, it seems willing to write blank checks to bail out its friends on Wall Street. In each of these cases there are clear winners. And in each there are clear losers-including the country as a whole.

 

What Is to Be Done?

 

As America attempts to work its way out of the present crisis, the danger is that we will listen to the same people on Wall Street and in the economic establishment who got us into it. For them, our current predicament is another opportunity: if they can shape the government response appropriately, they stand to gain, or at least stand to lose less, and they may be willing to sacrifice the well-being of the economy for their own benefit-just as they did in the past.

 

There are a number of economic tools at the country's disposal. As noted, they can yield contradictory results. The sad truth is that we have reached the limits of monetary policy. Lowering interest rates will not stimulate the economy much-banks are not going to be willing to lend to strapped consumers, and consumers are not going to be willing to borrow as they see housing prices continue to fall. And raising interest rates, to combat inflation, won't have the desired impact either, because the prices that are the main sources of our inflation-for food and energy-are determined in international markets; the chief consequence will be distress for ordinary people. The quandaries that we face mean that careful balancing is required. There is no quick and easy fix. But if we take decisive action today, we can shorten the length of the downturn and reduce its magnitude. If at the same time we think about what would be good for the economy in the long run, we can build a durable foundation for economic health.

 

To go back to that patient in the emergency room: we need to address the underlying causes. Most of the treatment options entail painful choices, but there are a few easy ones. On energy: conservation and research into new technologies will make us less dependent on foreign oil, reduce our trade imbalance, and help the environment. Expanding drilling into environmentally fragile areas, as some propose, would have a negligible effect on the price we pay for oil. Moreover, a policy of 'drain America first' will make us more dependent on foreigners in the future. It is shortsighted in every dimension.

 

Our ethanol policy is also bad for the taxpayer, bad for the environment, bad for the world and our relations with other countries, and bad in terms of inflation. It is good only for the ethanol producers and American corn farmers. It should be scrapped. We currently subsidize corn-based ethanol by almost $1 a gallon, while imposing a 54-cent-a-gallon tariff on Brazilian sugar-based ethanol. It would be hard to invent a worse policy. The ethanol industry tries to sell itself as an infant, needing help to get on its feet, but it has been an infant for more than two decades, refusing to grow up. Our misguided biofuel policy is taking land used for food production and diverting it to energy production for cars; it is the single most important factor contributing to higher grain prices.

 

Our tax policies need to be changed. There is something deeply peculiar about having rich individuals who make their money speculating on real estate or stocks paying lower taxes than middle-class Americans, whose income is derived from wages and salaries; something peculiar and indeed offensive about having those whose income is derived from inherited stocks paying lower taxes than those who put in a 50-hour workweek. Skewing the tax rates in the other direction would provide better incentives where they count and would more effectively stimulate the economy, with more revenues and lower deficits.

 

We can have a financial system that is more stable-and even more dynamic-with stronger regulation. Self- regulation is an oxymoron. Financial markets produced loans and other products that were so complex and insidious that even their creators did not fully understand them; these products were so irresponsible that analysts called them 'toxic.' Yet financial markets failed to create products that would enable ordinary households to face the risks they confront and stay in their homes. We need a financial-products safety commission and a financial-systems stability commission. And they can't be run by Wall Street. The Federal Reserve Board shares too much of the mind-set of those it is supposed to regulate. It could and should have known that something was wrong. It had instruments at its disposal to let the air out of the bubble-or at least ensure that the bubble didn't over- expand. But it chose to do nothing.

 

Throwing the poor out of their homes because they can't pay their mortgages is not only tragic-it is pointless. All that happens is that the property deteriorates and the evicted people move somewhere else. The most coldhearted banker ought to understand the basic economics: banks lose money when they foreclose-the vacant homes typically sell for far less than they would if they were lived in and cared for. If banks won't renegotiate, we should have an expedited special bankruptcy procedure, akin to what we do for corporations in Chapter 11, allowing people to keep their homes and re-structure their finances.

 

If this sounds too much like coddling the irresponsible, remember that there are two sides to every mortgage-the lender and the borrower. Both enter freely into the deal. One might say that both are, accordingly, equally responsible. But one side-the lender-is supposed to be financially sophisticated. In contrast, the borrowers in the subprime market consist mainly of people who are financially unsophisticated. For many, their home is their only asset, and when they lose it, they lose their life savings. Remember, too, that we already give big homeowner subsidies, through the tax system, to affluent families. With tax deductions, the government is paying in some states almost half of all mortgage interest and real-estate taxes. But many lower-income people, whose deductions are meaningless because their tax bill is too small, get no help. It makes much more sense to convert these tax deductions into cashable tax credits, so that the fraction of housing costs borne by the government for the poor and the rich is the same.

 

About these matters there should be no debate-but there will be. Already, those on Wall Street are arguing that we have to be careful not to 'over-react.' Over- reaction, we are told, might stifle 'innovation.' Well, some innovations ought to be stifled. Those toxic mortgages were certainly innovative. Other innovations were simply devices to circumvent regulations-regulations intended to prevent the kinds of problems from which our economy now suffers. Some of the innovations were designed to tart up the bottom line, moving liabilities off the balance sheet-charades designed to blur the information available to investors and regulators. They succeeded: the full extent of the exposure was not clear, and still isn't. But there is a reason we need reliable accounting. Without good information it is hard to make good economic decisions. In short, some innovations come with very high price tags. Some can actually cause instability.

 

The free-market fundamentalists-who believe in the miracles of markets-have not been averse to accepting government bailouts. Indeed, they have demanded them, warning that unless they get what they want the whole system may crash. What politician wants to be blamed for the next Great Depression, simply because he stood on principle? I have been critical of weak anti-trust policies that allowed certain institutions to become so dominant that they are 'too big to fail.' The harsh reality is that, given how far we've come, we will see more bailouts in the days ahead. Now that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are in federal receivership, we must insist: not a dime of taxpayer money should be put at risk while shareholders and creditors, who failed to oversee management, are permitted to walk away with anything they please. To do otherwise would invite a recurrence. Moreover, while these institutions may be too big to fail, they're not too big to be reorganized. And we need to remember why we're bailing them out: in order to maintain a flow of money into mortgage markets. It's outrageous that these institutions are responding to their near-monopoly position by raising fees and increasing the costs of mortgages, which will only worsen the housing crisis. They, and the financial markets, have shown little interest in measures that could help millions of existing and potential homeowners out of the bind they're in.

 

The hardest puzzles will be in monetary policy (balancing the risks of inflation and the risk of a deeper downturn) and fiscal policy (balancing the risk of a deeper downturn and the risk of an exploding deficit). The standard analysis coming from financial markets these days is that inflation is the greatest threat, and therefore we need to raise interest rates and cut deficits, which will restore confidence and thereby restore the economy. This is the same bad economics that didn't work in East Asia in 1997 and didn't work in Russia and Brazil in 1998. Indeed, it is the same recipe prescribed by Herbert Hoover in 1929.

 

It is a recipe, moreover, that would be particularly hard on working people and the poor. Higher interest rates dampen inflation by cutting back so sharply on aggregate demand that the unemployment rate grows and wages fall. Eventually, prices fall, too. As noted, the cause of our inflation today is largely imported-it comes from global food and energy prices, which are hard to control. To curb inflation therefore means that the price of everything else needs to fall drastically to compensate, which means that unemployment would also have to rise drastically.

 

In addition, this is not the time to turn to the old- time fiscal religion. Confidence in the economy won't be restored as long as growth is low, and growth will be low if investment is anemic, consumption weak, and public spending on the wane. Under these circumstances, to mindlessly cut taxes or reduce government expenditures would be folly.

 

But there are ways of thoughtfully shaping policy that can walk a fine line and help us get out of our current predicament. Spending money on needed investments-infrastructure, education, technology-will yield double dividends. It will increase incomes today while laying the foundations for future employment and economic growth. Investments in energy efficiency will pay triple dividends-yielding environmental benefits in addition to the short- and long-run economic benefits.

 

The federal government needs to give a hand to states and localities-their tax revenues are plummeting, and without help they will face costly cutbacks in investment and in basic human services. The poor will suffer today, and growth will suffer tomorrow. The big advantage of a program to make up for the shortfall in the revenues of states and localities is that it would provide money in the amounts needed: if the economy recovers quickly, the shortfall will be small; if the downturn is long, as I fear will be the case, the shortfall will be large.

 

These measures are the opposite of what the administration-along with the Republican presidential nominee, John McCain-has been urging. It has always believed that tax cuts, especially for the rich, are the solution to the economy's ills. In fact, the tax cuts in 2001 and 2003 set the stage for the current crisis. They did virtually nothing to stimulate the economy, and they left the burden of keeping the economy on life support to monetary policy alone. America's problem today is not that households consume too little; on the contrary, with a savings rate barely above zero, it is clear we consume too much. But the administration hopes to encourage our spendthrift ways.

 

What has happened to the American economy was avoidable. It was not just that those who were entrusted to maintain the economy's safety and soundness failed to do their job. There were also many who benefited handsomely by ensuring that what needed to be done did not get done. Now we face a choice: whether to let our response to the nation's woes be shaped by those who got us here, or to seize the opportunity for fundamental reforms, striking a new balance between the market and government.

 



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Exit the dragon


 
By Noah Tucker

This crisis is not the end of capitalism. But the main ideas which underpin capitalism have already been slain by the system itself.

Nobody knows how bad this disaster will prove to be, except that it is already very much worse than anybody, barring a few Marxists and other lonely radicals, predicted. But it is no longer merely a crisis of finance, or even of the functioning of the global market economy.
Let us consider the best-case scenario: that over the next few days, weeks or months, the combined action of the governments of the USA, the EU and the other developed countries, by throwing trillions of dollars, pounds and euros of taxpayers money into the hitherto privately-owned system of financial speculation; in contradiction of their deepest beliefs, re-regulating much of what was de-regulated; and even nationalising huge parts of that imploding system; that, by these draconian anti-market means, the state succeeds in rescuing the financial markets from complete meltdown, prevents the 'real economy' (ie, the production of material products and recognisably useful services) from a terminal crash, and thus avoids the likelihood that hundreds of millions, rather than scores of millions of people in the 'West', who have until now been living a relatively comfortable existence, are cast into unemployment and poverty.

Even in that scenario, in which the people of the developed world will suffer only from an economic crisis rather than an economic catastrophe, the damage inflicted on the ideas which underpin the support for the capitalist system will be catastrophic.

Writing on 12th September- after the seizure by the US authorities of the giant mortgage corporations Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but before the nationalisation of AIG and the subsequent '700 billion dollar bailout'- Anatole Kaletsky, the Principal Economic Commentator and Associate Editor of The Times, remarked wistfully:
Whatever happened to the triumph of global capitalism? Even more than "the end of history", the idea that "we're all capitalists now" became an article of faith around the world from the early 1990s onwards...
Noting what he described as the "complete failure of the biggest, most dynamic, most innovative and competitive markets that have existed in the history of capitalism", Kaletsky wrote: 
Their failure has been so obvious, that even the most capitalist administration ever, in the world's most capitalist country, had decided to wipe out the private owners of its biggest and most important financial companies and replace them with state-appointed bureaucrats.

The reasons for these failures - related, ironically, to the dogmatic belief among regulators, politicians and financiers that "the market is always right" - have been much discussed. Much less widely considered have been the consequences of this justifiable disillusionment with market forces.

Even more than the mind-boggling $5,500 billion size of the two US mortgage companies, it was the political significance of their nationalisation that marked it out as an historic turning point.
In his conclusion, the Associate Editor of The Times clarified what he meant by the political significance of the events:
If the US loses faith with free markets, compromises the protection of property rights and hobbles its financial markets - all of which it has dramatically done in the past seven days - then Europe will surely follow suit. Emerging economies such as China and India will become even more ambivalent about market economics. Instead of We Are All Capitalists Now, There Are No Capitalists Left may become the ideology of the next decade.
Changing my religion

As Kaletsky remarked, there has been much discussion on the reasons for the spectacular failure of the capitalist financial institutions; with many other commentators and politicians joining him in expressing their 'justifiable disillusionment with market forces'. On 8th October 2008, the prime minister of Britain justified his latest nationalisation and bailout plan, secured by negotiations which had concluded at 5am that morning:
"Our stability and restructuring programme is comprehensive, it is specific and it breaks new ground. This is not a time for conventional thinking or outdated dogma but for the fresh and innovative intervention that gets to the heart of the problem."
Gordon Brown has a proud record as an opponent of outdated dogma. It was in 2003, in his most explicit theoretical exposition, his lecture at the Social Market Foundation, that he declared:
For the left historically it has been a matter of dogma that to define the public interest – opportunity and security for all – as diminishing the sphere of markets [...]

Why? Because for the left markets are too often seen as leading to inequality, insecurity and injustice. In this view, enterprise is the enemy of fairness, and the interests of social justice are fundamentally opposed to the interests of a competitive economy. The left's remedy has therefore been seen to lie in relegating the impact and scope of the market through greater public ownership, regulation and state intervention [...]
In opposing this doctrinaire remedy, he averred:
It is ever more important that markets are strengthened [...] Instead of being suspicious of enterprise and entrepreneurs, we should celebrate an entrepreneurial culture – encouraging, incentivising and
rewarding the dynamic, and enthusing more people from all backgrounds and all areas to start up businesses. Here again, enabling markets to work better and strengthening the private economy.

Instead of thinking the state must take over responsibility where markets deliver insufficient investment and short termism in innovation, skills and environmental protection, we must enable markets to work better and for the long term...
Thus the markets- especially the financial markets- were ever more strengthened, their entrepreneurs were no longer subjected to suspicion; instead, they were incentivised, celebrated, and given ever more scope. A proportion of the increasing proceeds accrued via taxation to the state, allowing the government to promote a degree of fairness and social justice- in distinction from the previous hard-hearted and purely neo-liberal Conservative regimes of Margaret Thatcher and John Major. 
The gains to the people arose not only from the increased provision of state services and welfare payments; but also- through the exponential rise in property prices and the co-incidental industrialisation of China- the bountiful affordability of material goods to the majority of the population. A new paradigm had been created, the marriage of market freedom to social fairness, a match made in the evangelical but materialistic heaven of New Labour.

So the long boom was not merely economic, but ideological- and the bust was abrupt.
In the vengeful rhetoric of the right-wing populist press, the dynamic entrepreneurs went straight from 'go' to 'jail', without even passing through the due process of suspicion. On 30th September, the Daily Express published an editorial which denounced as 'greedy renegades' the senior bankers who it blamed for the crisis. The editorial was headlined 'Jail Rogue Fat Cats who Caused Financial Turmoil', but the text suggested a rather more drastic recourse than this modest proposal, hinting darkly: "In China they'd be executed." 

Some others, whose views have remained consistent, have suddenly found an eager audience. The Conservative Party's intellectual magazine The Spectator has printed an article by the chief of one of Britain's few remaining nationalised industries outside the banking sector, Archbishop Rowan Williams of the Church of England. In its pages, the Right Honorable Most Reverend Doctor Williams, who was appointed to his post by Mr Tony Blair, espoused his analysis of the immorality and greed of the de-regulated capitalist market, which he denounced as a form of 'idolatry', a heresy against the true God.

This has always been the opinion of Dr Williams, but until recently nobody cared about it; of his ardent views, only those about homosexuals and Muslims were considered worthy of mention. In his Spectator article Rowan Williams, who is is an honorable man not merely in his official title but in his words and deeds, cited as his intellectual ally a certain Dr Karl Marx- though, as he conceded, Marx was only partly right.

We should have no problem with that. As the the doctrine of that very moderate body the Church of England also concedes, even Moses and Jesus were only partly right.

Exit the dragon

But back to reality. In his poignant remark that we may be entering a period in which 'There Are No Capitalists Left', Anatole Kaletsky suggests that the myth that economic decisions can safely be left to the market will no longer have any believers; hence the capitalist market will be restricted, subject to increased direction by the state, and its field of operation reduced by nationalisations.
That alone would be a huge change. But the defeat in practice of capitalist ideology, which will be combined with the material effects of the crisis on the population- a reduction in prosperity and an increase in misery in the leading capitalist countries- could have a further, and even more significant effect.

This present crisis is not merely the result of personal wrong-doing by the insatiably greedy characters who gained by the worship of the masses at the satanic- and now all of a sudden, discredited- shrine of capitalist individualism.
It is the bitter eventual fruit of the roll-back, over the last several decades, of the nationalisations, regulations, repression of financial speculation and other state economic interventions which were implemented following the experience of that previous catastrophic downturn, the Great Depression.
The reforms which were instituted in the wake of the terrible crisis of the 1930s- including the New Deal under Franklin D. Roosevelt in the USA and the radical measures of the post-1945 British Labour Government under Clement Atlee- by reducing the economic scope of capitalism, thereby made that fettered and limited capitalism more economically stable than its previous unrestricted form.
Those reforms also allowed a drastic improvement in the conditions of working class people, which had hitherto been miserable, even in the richest capitalist countries; connected with this, by means of progressive taxation and the increased scope for the trade unions, there was a reduction of the gap in living standards between the very rich and the majority.

As Doug Henwood, editor of the Left Business Observer, has noted: the yawning gap which has opened, since the 1970s, between the incomes of most of the people and those of the wealthy elite, was key among the major factors which have contributed to the current debacle.

Why was the decision taken that the restricted model of capitalism, social-democratic capitalism, could and should be rejected and replaced with an updated version- recently becoming a turbo-charged version- of the pre WW2, dangerously unstable, 'free-market' capitalism?
The various factors included not only the lust for unrestricted opportunities for individual enrichment through the market, but the perception that it was the workers, strengthened by nationalisation and their trade unions, who were becoming the greedy ones, avaricious for ever-larger slices of prosperity and power; in other words, millions of people were increasingly discovering that collective means could yield them a decent and improving quality of life.

But those workers were no longer motivated by desperation. In Britain, the country which would become the Western crucible of privatisation, de-regulation and the liberation of financial capitalism from its shackles, the chief ideologue of the return to the unbridled market was Sir Keith Joseph, a man whose personality did not suit him for the direct leadership of a nation; nevertheless, Sir Keith found an able and eager student in Margaret Thatcher.

In girding himself for intellectual battle against the social-democratically resticted version of capitalism- which had by the 1970s even banished its own name, 'capitalism', from the vocabulary, instead defining itself with some justification as 'the mixed economy'- Keith Joseph fought to banish an image from his own mind, a ghost which still frightened his less audacious colleagues. As he recalled:
Our post-war boom began under the shadow of the 1930s. We were haunted by the fear of long-term mass unemployment, the grim, hopeless dole queues and the towns which died. So we talked ourselves into believing that these gaunt, tight-lipped men in caps and mufflers were round the corner, and tailored our policies to match these imaginary conditions. For imaginary is what they were.
The spectre of the impoverished working class, with little to lose but their chains and many of them becoming drawn towards revolutionary means of salvation, was banished from the historical imagination of the ruling elite. Thus the dragon of the free market, for three decades imprisoned by the chains of nationalisation and regulation, could be released from its hiding place in the theories of a few anti-Marxists and other lonely radicals, and breathe fire again on the real world.

Keith Joseph, and his increasingly poweful proteges, were encouraged and empowered also by the decline, and then the fall, of the Soviet Union.

Like it did on a regular basis before it was institutionally moderated after the 1930s, the capitalist monster is again undermining the conditions for its own existence. It is bringing down the financial aristocracy which it created, and along with it the idolatrous religion of their admiring cheer-leaders.

And what will result? As history teaches, the proceeds may encompass the worst as well as the best. From the crisis of the 1930s, Hitler arose, backed by the desperate capitalists, and a World War which killed fifty million human beings.
But also, that terrible crisis resulted in the aggressive advance of socialism, from the isolated Soviet Union to Central Europe, China, and even eventually to a small island in the Caribbean.

Cuba's survival, against all odds since the 1990s, gave hope for the the masses in Latin America- who have revolted since the start of this Century against capitalism and for a better life.

The current crisis will inflict millions of casualties, almost all of them innocent. But among the collateral damage will be the invincibility of the capitalist system, even in its heartlands.


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Sunday 12 October 2008

What MFIs can teach Wall Street


 

12 Oct 2008, 0116 hrs IST,
 Swaminathan S Anklesaria Aiyar


Big financial institutions of all sorts are in dire straits across the globe. But one category remains unaffected - micro-finance. Even as the global financial system freezes and giants like Lehman Brothers collapse, micro-finance institutions (MFIs) are expanding unfazed. Famous financiers face defaults big enough to wipe them out, but MFIs report virtually zero default.

This is extraordinary. Big financiers lend against collateral, a back-up if their borrower defaults. But MFIs lend with no collateral at all. Big financiers lend to the most creditworthy corporations. MFIs lend to poor women whom nobody in history considered creditworthy before. Yet, the secured loans to big corporations are bombing, while unsecured loans to poor women are being repaid in full.

How so? What lessons does micro-finance have for Wall Street? I distilled some answers from feedback from promoters of three MFIs that i myself have a stake in: Shubhankar Sengupta of Arohan, Kolkata; Rakesh Dubey of Sonata Finance, Allahabad; and Manab Chakraborty of Mimo Finance, Dehra Dun.

The big lesson for Wall Street is that lending against collateral, supposedly prudent, can blind you to the need for checking the repayment capacity of borrowers. US banks happily gave mortgages of 100% of the value of houses during the housing bubble, and suffered when house prices fell. So did august institutions buying mortgage derivatives. Some, like Lehman Brothers, borrowed massively to invest in AAA mortgage-backed securities, and went bust when value of these securities plummeted. A trillion-dollar house of cards was built on collateral. When the collateral value fell, the house of cards collapsed.

Lesson: don't just depend on collateral, assess the cash flow of borrowers, and leave a cushion to ensure repayment. The housing bubble induced banks to give NINJA (no verification of income, job or assets) loans, secured just by house value. As house prices rose, their value exceeded the repayment capacity of borrowers. The rest is history.

Microfinance, by contrast, has no collateral at all. MFIs deliberately keep loans small, well within repayment capacity. Some MFIs give first loans of just Rs 5,000 a year. Those who repay qualify for a higher second loan, maybe Rs 7,000, and the third loan can be still higher. But MFIs set an absolute loan limit, ranging from Rs 12,000 to Rs 25,000, depending on local economic opportunities, to guard against over-borrowing. Wall Street needs similar safeguards.

US housing brokers get commissions from banks based on the size and interest rate of loans. This gives them incentives to fiddle documents and data to lend excessive sums at excessive rates of interest, increasing default risk. But MFIs have a fixed interest rate, and fixed ceilings on the first, second and subsequent loans. MFI field agents are trained to ensure that loans do not exceed repayment capacity. Mimo Finance, for instance, gauges the cash flow of borrowers by taking a quick look at the quality of their houses. Wall Street needs similar safeguards.

MFIs lend to groups of poor women. If any borrower defaults, the whole group is barred from credit, so other members put social pressure on the defaulter to repay. This is remarkably effective.

By contrast, defaulting home-owners in the US are treated as victims, offered subsidies and write-offs by politicians. Some home-borrowers may have been duped by brokers, but many others over-borrowed on the assumption of ever-rising house prices. Many bought houses to re-sell at a profit. Some can afford to repay but have decided not to, since default attracts no social opprobrium.

High inflation in India has not caused MFI defaults. MFIs report that worker-borrowers have demanded and got a 20% increase in wage rates, while small-businesses' borrowers running tea shops have raised their prices from Rs 2 per cup to Rs 3. By contrast, home borrowers (or even giant corporations) in the US are unable to increase their incomes in line with borrowing costs. So, the MFI model is small but sound. But don't lavish excessive praise on it. Western banks lend far too much. But Indian lenders - including MFIs -lend far too little. Rural studies suggest that poor rural households need Rs 25,000 of credit per year. MFIs provide far less. The balance is made up by borrowing from relatives and moneylenders. The system cries out for more formal credit.

The aim must be to enable capable but capital-starved entrepreneurs to move beyond ownership of buffaloes and tea-shops. At an MFI meeting in rural Dehra Dun, i saw an enterprising village woman pleading for a loan of Rs 50,000, saying (rightly) that this was the minimum needed for a decent shop. But the MFI regretted that this was beyond its lending limit.

So, don't get too excited by the fact that we've avoided the excessive lending of Wall Street. Bemoan the fact that our stunted financial system fails to reach hundreds of millions. Microfinance has its merits, but is not enough. The big challenge is to move from micro-loans to mini-loans of Rs 50,000 to Rs 2 lakh. These alone can transform poor borrowers from objects of pity to objects of envy.


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