Sugar High or Growth from Sustainable Economic Policy?

By Edward Harrison

Yves asked me to cross-post once more because she is in transit today. So I wanted to continue where I left off yesterday with a post from just a few days ago. I believe this upturn has more legs than many believed (and still believe) possible. However, that doesn’t mean the recovery to growth is sustainable.To quote from the last part of yesterday’s post:

If the developed economies use this cyclical upturn wisely to reduce household debt levels, to increase private sector savings, to clean up the balance sheets of weak banks, and to cautiously normalize fiscal and monetary policy, we will be in a much better position to counteract economic weakness when the next downturn hits. Will policy makers do so? I have my doubts.

Now, last week, I caught some very good commentary by a number of well-known financial industry experts. I wanted to share my own thoughts with you on their commentary, especially in light of my posts at Credit Writedowns on Eisenhower’s Farewell Address and The New Monetary Consensus. I had featured two of the commentaries at CW, from Roach and Faber. I will add a bit from Gross and Grantham and try to unify them into a single theme regarding corporatism and the sustainability of this upturn.

Let’s start with Stephen Roach. He opined in an interview with CNBC last week that the Federal Reserve was a serial bubble blower which is creating the pre-conditions for yet another bubble right now. He believes that the Fed’s dual mandate of considering employment and price stability in monetary policy must be strengthened to include considerations of financial market excess. He thinks the Fed needs three mandates in order to be fully effective. I would prefer the Fed be stripped of its existing mandates and concentrate only on its role as lender of last resort. See my post, Stephen Roach on CNBC and the included video clip for more of Roach’s view.

Marc Faber takes a similarly sceptical view of the Fed and its bubble blowing. His view is that the Fed created a credit bubble through artificially low interest rates, much as Roach has said. But he also sees government as a whole implicated in similar policies to boost consumption artificially, ultimately leading to low quality growth. In his view, these policies will eventually destroy the dollar, which he already views as an invalid unit of account. See Marc Faber, what are you worrying about? for more on that score.

Now, Faber made his comments at the Barron’s Annual Roundtable with a bunch of other market followers like Fred Hickey, Meryl Witmer, Abby Joseph Cohen, and Felix Zulauf. Bill Gross has also recently joined the Roundtable group as its resident bond expert.  He too had some uncharitable words to say about government’s stimulative policies. But he also introduces the government capture issue aka crony capitalism. Get a subscription and see Attention, Stockpickers from Barron’s. Here’s an excerpt from early in the text:

Gross: Corporations are probably at the peak of their domination. They dominate versus labor in terms of their ability to export jobs and production overseas. They dominate now in terms of Washington, given the Republican electoral victory and the Obama administration’s moving toward the center.

They even dominate with regard to the Supreme Court, as evidenced by the recent ruling removing limits on corporate donations to election campaigns. This is all good for the market, but not for Main Street in the long run.

Gross is speaking my language here. Just after the Faber commentary I quoted on Saturday, Gross then says:

Gross: I agree with Marc on many things, though not everything. I don’t know if the U.S. has reached a desperate point, but it is employing instruments and vehicles and policies that smack of desperation. We are not looking at a default here, but at years of accelerating inflation, which basically robs investors and labor of their real wages and earnings. We are looking at a currency that almost certainly will depreciate relative to other, stronger currencies in developing countries that have lower levels of debt and higher growth potential. And, on the short end of the yield curve, we are looking at creditors receiving negative real interest rates for a long, long time. That, in effect, is a default. Ultimately creditors and investors are at the behest of a central bank and policymakers that will rob them of their money.

Now, let’s round this out with Jeremy Grantham’s most recent newsletter. You can sign up to read it at GMO. Grantham also touches on the Eisenhower speech that I wrote about earlier today in a piece called "I Like Ike:  A Powerful Warning Ignored, January 17, 1961". He writes:

Historians may well look back on this period, say, from 1960 on, as the “Selfish Era” – a time when individualism and materialism steadily took precedence over social responsibility.  (To be fair, in the period from 1960 to 1980, the deterioration was slow, and the social contract dating back to the mid-1930s was more or less intact.)  Personal debt grew slowly at first but steadily accelerated, even though it can be easily demonstrated that consumers collectively are better off saving to buy and that the only beneficiary of a heavy debt society is the financial industry, whose growth throughout this period was massive, multiplying its share of a growing pie by a remarkable 2.2 times…

The financial industry, with its incestuous relationships with government agencies, runs a close second to the energy industry.  In the last 10 years or so, their machine, led by the famously failed economic consultant Alan Greenspan – one of the few businessmen ever to be laughed out of business – seemed perhaps the most effective.  It lacks, though, the multi-decadal attitude-changing propaganda of the oil industry.  Still, in finance they had the “regulators,” deregulating up a storm, to the enormous profit of their industry.  Even with the biggest-ever financial fiasco, entirely brought on by the collective incompetence they produced (“they” being the financial regulators and the financial industry leaders working together in some strange, would-be symbiotic relationship), reform is still difficult.  Even with everyone hating them, the financial industry comes out smelling like a rose with less competition, profits higher than ever, and not just too big to fail, but bigger still.

Other industries, to be sure, are in there swinging: insurance and health care come to mind, but they seem like pikers in comparison.  No, it’s energy and finance in coequal first place, military-related companies an honorable third, and the rest of the field not even in contention.   And now, adding the icing to the corporate cake, we have the Supreme Court.  Formerly the jewel in the American Crown, they have managed to find five Justices capable of making Eisenhower’s worst nightmare come true.  They have put the seal of approval on corporate domination of politics, and done so in a way that can be kept secret.  The swing-vote Senator can now be sand-bagged by a vicious advertising program on television, financed by unknown parties, and approved by no stockholders at all!

All in all it appears that Eisenhower’s worst fears have been realized and his remarkable and unique warnings given for naught.  From now on, we should tread more carefully.  Honoring President Eisenhower’s unique warnings, we should perhaps not take this 50-year slide lying down.  Squawking loudly seems preferable. 

We have reviewed the last 50 years and compared 1960 with 2010 in every way we considered interesting, and present the results in Table 1.

[see table in original CW post]

What are the unifying themes about the America of Today?

  1. The Financial Services sector is too large relative to the size of the economy. This is a de facto admission that the US economy is unbalanced, favouring a financial elite at the expense of the rest of American society.
  2. Government is a large part of the problem. In fact, it is the government’s desire to counteract cyclical downturns which not only has allowed debt to accumulate but has also taught industry to insinuate itself into Washington to benefit from these actions. Industries implicated are Big Oil, Big Bank, the military industrial complex, Big Pharma, and the Insurance Lobby.
  3. Deregulation as practiced now favours incumbent organizations at the expense of entrants, large companies at the expense of smaller companies and corporations at the expense of individuals.
  4. The Federal Reserve is part of the problem or even the main trouble maker through its asymmetric easy money policy geared to goosing aggregate demand after financial bubbles.
  5. US Economic policy is short-sighted and has no discernible longer-term objectives that can boost long-term economic growth.

I think that’s about as far as I can go in unifying these comments. Let me say a few things as well. First, the comment by Tim Geithner I keep coming back to repeatedly is

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Are we the Wikileaks of Green Building?

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The word of the year 2010 is transparency.   Credit its prominence to the modern James Bondian figure Julian Assange and his WikiLeaks divulgence of state secrets.  But WikiLeaks’ efforts have done as much to cloud the debate over transparency as they have to shed light on matters that impact our daily lives. 

What the Pharos Project shares with WikiLeaks is being a transformative platform for transparency.  But we do not use shadowy tactics to achieve this goal. We do not play geopolitical games. We’re encouraging voluntary disclosure by manufacturers, and we’re empowering consumers to make informed choices. 

There are important distinctions between types of transparency,  data collection tactics, and information dissemination.  There are state secrets, and then there are marketplace secrets.  There are data dumps, and then there are contextualized fact-based evaluations.  

There is now a healthy debate about the role full transparency has in global affairs -- does it encumber authoritarianism (as Assange argues) or engender anarchy?  It is hard to judge where the release of state secrets falls -- does it hurt or help people to satisfy basic human needs, and protect human rights?  It shakes up the status quo, but what is end game of this chaos strategy?

In the marketplace, the role of transparency is clear.  As consumers who want a healthier planet, we have the power to demand to know what we are buying.  We are in a position of strength, though some corporations try to flip the equation through black-box certifications and greenwash. 

The Pharos Project has had some positive results in obtaining fully transparent information from manufacturers.  Many companies are clearly committed. Others are much more reluctant to say even where their products are made.    If we (and you) want to know, it is our choice to buy only from companies that are transparent.

 

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App for shoppers rates how brands address forced & child labour

 

This is the fourth in a series of posts on traceability. Written by Springwise, and supported by IBM. Check out our previous posts on milk tracking by a Swedish dairy, a registration service for product recalls and supermarkets offering increased food traceability, or read more about building a smarter planet.
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While traceability often deals with consumer-centric issues like toy recalls and contaminated peanut butter, a new product tracking app aims to protect not consumers, but manufacturers. Specifically, the children and adults who make the products we buy.

Launched in time for the holiday shopping season, Free2Work's iPhone app hopes to educate consumers about forced and child labour. It gives ratings for products like Hasbro’s Beyblades, Pillow Pets, Apple’s iPad and other popular items. Manufacturers are assigned grades based on their policies, implementation, employee empowerment, response to child labor and transparency. Free2Work was developed by the Not for Sale Campaign and the International Rights Forum. Bama Athreya, Executive Director of the International Labor Rights Forum, explains: “A broad range of certification programs exist that claim to protect worker rights. The volume and variety of these systems and product labels can be confusing to consumers. Free2Work helps to reduce the confusion and demonstrate to consumers how each program differs.”

The app's current list of brands and products is limited, and a barcode scanner for easy access to information would be more user-friendly. And, since each company’s rating can only be based on publicly available information, the scorecards might not be accurate. Still, it's a first step to increased transparency about child and forced labour, helping consumers make informed shopping decisions that could pressure brands into ensuring that their factories and those of their suppliers are entirely free of forced labour.

Website: www.free2work.orgwww.notforsalecampaign.org
Contact: support@free2work.orginfo@notforsalecampaign.org

Spotted by: Katherine Noyes

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The Party of Hate: Tea and No Sympathy

As a blogger at Good Business (Good-B), I usually write about money, not politics. This year, however, the two are indistinguishable. Make no mistake, American politics in 2010 are all about money—who has it, who doesn’t and who wants it at any cost.

The economy continues to teeter on disaster two years after the Fall of the Great Lehman Empire. The crash was heard around the world and reverberates in our lives to this day. Massive unemployment, foreclosure nightmares and millions of businesses closing their doors are changing the fabric of American middle class life.

People (those ordinary folks who did not cause the crash yet are paying for it) are mad as hell at the injustice of the bailouts and the economic fallout they inherited. The Wall Street mortgage machine used money as a weapon of mass destruction. Those responsible for the greatest bank robbery in our history have made away with the vault and their freedom too. It’s enough to make the citizenry rise up and turn the boats of taxpayer money over. And so they have in the form of the “Tea Party,” a well-funded upheaval of the status quo. Or is it?

The hyped-up hyperventilating media has convinced us that the amorphous body of angry and contradictory views dubbed the “Tea Party” is a revolution of the “people.” But who are these people? Nobody I know. Despite Peggy Noonan’s passionate defense of Tea Party dogma on Fareed Zakaria GPS recently, the tea drinkers are attracting all varieties of fringe extremists who want among other things to abolish public education, Social Security and Medicare and further deregulate the financial markets. Ouch!

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It Pays to Hire Women in Countries That Won't

Executive Summary:

South Korean companies don't hire many women, no matter how qualified. So multinationals are moving in to take advantage of this rich hiring opportunity, according to new research by professor Jordan Siegel. Key concepts include:

  • Employing women who are excluded by their own countries' labor markets is a growing trend for international affiliates of global multinational companies.
  • Using data from South Korea, researchers showed that a 10 percent nominal increase in the percentage of female managers (at the level of the then-prevailing glass ceiling) was associated with a 1 percent nominal increase in ROA.
  • Multinational firms that recruit females into management roles at their local affiliates face the possibility of upsetting local male employees, partners, and customers who don't approve of women in executive roles.
  • In many instances, multinational firms hired and promoted female managers in a discriminatory host market at a far higher rate than they employed female managers in their own home markets.

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RealBiz Shorts Use Humor to Drive Home Critical Messages on Corporate Ethics

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Corpedia Corporation, a global leader in ethics and compliance training solutions and advisory services, has announced a partnership with Second City Communications (SCC), the innovative corporate services division of the world’s foremost comedy theatre company, The Second City, to distribute SCC’s RealBiz Shorts videos for corporate compliance and ethics training.

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Ethisphere Briefing: Anti-Corruption Program Verification

Anti-Corruption Program Verification provides third-party validation for companies that are able to prove they have designed, implemented, and enforced a robust, best-in-class anti-corruption program that is capable of  reasonably detecting and preventing bribery and corruption.

Ethisphere will be hosting a brief, 20 minute overview of Anti-Corruption Program Verification to explain the business case for Anti-Corruption Program Verification, the methodology, process, deliverables and the benefits of independent verification.

When: Tuesday, October 5, 2010 at 10:00 a.m. PT/1:00 p.m. ET

We hope you’ll join us!

Register here.


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Sustainable Business - Custom Bamboo Furniture

Vivi Blog: Earth Friendly Living, Fashion and Fun

The process of opening the store was a painstaking process full of dozens of dead ends, poorly formed ideas and LOTS of researching and planning . I knew I wanted all aspects of the store to be eco-friendly, including the furniture and fixtures. One of the biggest obstacles during this process was finding furniture that not only looked beautiful and was functional but also sustainable and produced as little waste as possible. I spent a long time searching the internet looking at the same products on dozens of different websites. By same I mean particle board and plastic, slat wall, grid wall, gondola, all disposable and all manufactured half way across the world.

Enter Matthew, my awesome fiance (boyfriend at the time) to save the day! 

Matt is an architect and an amazing designer. He designed and built all the furniture and fixtures at Vivi without using a single nail! The material we chose is bamboo plywood, which not only looks beautiful but according to Matt is a great material to work with. He used Formby's Tung Oil, to stain the wood, an all natural oil that brings out the natural color of the wood. It is water-resistant and provides a durable protective finish. The furniture requires very little maintenance, just a little lemon oil now and then to clean and shine.

Matt spent many days and night gluing and clamping (with Jasmine the family dog).

We used real black bamboo poles and hemp rope for the clothing racks.

I love the finished product, it's everything the store needed, functional, sustainable, and really beautiful. : )

If you are highly motivated you can take a woodworking class, or would like to get in touch with talented local word workers check out Peter's Valley in Layton New Jersey.

GreenwashingIndex.com Teaches Consumers How to Spot Greenwashing

Companies have gone to great lengths to appear green, even if they aren't. Greenwashing is common, and it's not always easy for consumers to figure out if a product is truly eco-friendly. Enter the GreenwashingIndex.com, a website that helps consumers learn how to separate the truly green companies from the greenwashers.

A joint venture between EnviroMedia Social Marketing and the University of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication, the site's primary goal is to "educate consumers about how to 'read' an ad and encourage them to decide for themselves if what they're seeing is greenwashing." The hope is that an informed consumer base will force businesses to be truthful in their claims of sustainability, and to be accountable for sustainable practices.

Users can submit, comment on, and rate ads or business claims. The ratings are generated from responses to a series of questions about the wording and visuals in the ad, the use of vague or unprovable claims, exaggeration of greenness, and failure to disclose important information.

While some users are clearly informed, citing outside expert analysis or reputable statistics in their critique of an ad, others make generalizations not supported by facts, which is precisely the problem in many of the ads. It would be nice to see environmental experts employed by the project who comment on the greenwashing pitfalls of an ad within two or three weeks of an ad being posted. This would give users a chance to rate the ad without expert opinion, but then also provide an expert opinion on an ad that users can compare their critique to so that they can see where they correctly identified greenwashing and where they did not.

Despite this one failing, the website is a useful interactive tool for teaching consumers how to spot greenwashing--and that's a vital step in going green.

More on greenwashing:
The Future of Sustainable Shopping: Wal-Mart?
Is Cash for Clunkers Government Greenwashing?
How Many Products Were Guilty of Greenwashing in 2008?

Obama, Krishna Das, Paradise and Me

It has been a heck of a week up here in Paradise. For my usual August respite, Barack, Michelle, the kids and me all vacationed together on Martha’s Vineyard. Okay not exactly together, but only a few miles away on this small beautiful island, their hearts beat with mine. It was a sublime dream of unity.

I did see the camera crews at Sweet E’s Cupcake Shop waiting breathlessly for a glimpse of the Big O. But it was not to be, the First Fam was ordering gulf shrimp one town away. Still this week it was comforting to know that half the secret service, some of the nation’s best military and the Prez himself were battling it out with locals through the three day Nor’easter.

Speaking of unity, Krishna Das dazzled audiences at Union Chapel the other night with spiritual songs and chants in Sanskrit and English. It was a divine experience for everyone present. After two hours of musical love, I floated away with his new CD, “Heart as Wide Open as the World.”

Ahh, if only the world could be as wide open, loving and blissful as Martha’s Vineyard in August…

But truthfully, even Martha’s Vineyard is not as blissful as itself when the season ends. Work is harder to come by than ever since the financial crisis. The local housing market is a shadow of its former self. Foreclosures still pop up all over the island. Property values have diminished 30-50%. A talk with local realtor Roy Cutrer of Martha’s Vineyard Premier Properties  reveals there are good deals to be had and local banks to finance them, but sellers and buyers continue to be hesitant. Who knows what is coming down the pike for the economy? (Read Saniel Bonder’s take on the rocky “recovery.”) 

Yet remarkably, some good news is on the horizon. I am happy to report that democracy is alive and well on Martha’s Vineyard despite the current economic challenges. The community has united to form Vineyard Power, an island-wide collective initiative, to provide real solutions for renewable energy. Two passionate VP supporters are local celebs, John Abrams of South Mountain Company and Steve Bernier of Cronig’s Markets.  Both of these folks are living breathing examples in their highly successful enterprises of socially and environmentally responsible businesses. (Full disclosure: SB is a friend.)

South Mountain has been a pioneer in the sustainable building industry long before it was fashionable. The “employee-owned company offering integrated development, architecture, building, interiors, and renewable energy services has been around since 1975.  Abrams and crew are devoted to the local community and continually innovating solutions for affordable and sustainable island housing.

Cronig’s Market is simply my favorite grocery store anywhere. Coming from a gal who shops in New York City, land of Fairway, Zabar’s, Grace’s, Garden of Eden and the usual staples Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods, that is a big statement. What do I love about Cronig’s? Well, everything really – from the sleek and elegant way it looks to its wide selection of organic and local food to its sustainable product annex, Healthy Additions and eco-friendly philosophy. The supershop even has an extensive gluten-free section for otherwise breadless folks like me. Cronig’s was one of the first major markets to eliminate plastic bags and offer reusable cloth satchels. The store is on the cutting-edge of the shop local movement and is an active member of the Island Grown Initiative, “a non-profit grassroots organization working to support local food and farming on Martha’s Vineyard.”

But back to Vineyard Power… Unfortunately, I had to miss VP’s community meeting this week in favor of the once-a-year musical event with KD. (Sorry Vineyard Power, but you can’t sing.) Yet that is not to discount how thrilled I am to be a part of such an amazing display of not only democracy in action, but of a highly developed community spirit. Sitting in a July meeting at the Katherine Cornell Theater, it felt like a throwback to early American days – those years when common folk really controlled their own destiny and fulfilled the promise of self-government. Discussion revolved around a shared conversation of how to join the island community together to create renewable energy.

The goal of Vineyard Power is to develop a totally sustainable island within the next few years. Ultimately, wind power will be offered to islanders at “cost” rather than profit and will be a 100% community owned initiative. Membership is refreshingly inclusive, rather than exclusive. Every resident, seasonal and year-round homeowner or tenant is eligible to join the effort. The strength of its results will be in the numbers. After all, they are taking on strong forces of opposition—mainly the big energy companies with a vested interest to stop them and not least of all, residents who prefer to save their water views than save the planet.

And really that view thing – if you ever had a great water view you know— is a big issue. Sometimes the reason you buy a particular house is because of the view. Obstructing the horizon can diminish property values substantially. As a former waterfront home owner myself, I am sympathetic to opponents. A beloved islander Walter Cronkite was a staunch foe of the wind power movement. An avid sailor and long-term resident he did not want wind turbines blocking his view of Nantucket Sound. Yet dear Walter is gone now and so is the choice about whether to wind power or not.

Renewable energy is no longer an elective. Those days are long past. Nowadays, there is no confusion—the survival of our planet is at stake. We are all called to make some sacrifices to that end.

Vineyard Power believes that sustainable wind power is inevitable, especially on the island where the wind resources are enormous. In the true American spirit, VP’s collective action is an effort to control the island’s own energy destiny. The belief is that something so essential to daily life should be directed by locals rather than an unknown corporate entity with little concern for people and planet.

The “community-owned energy cooperative” Vineyard Power hopes to generate its own renewable energy, minimize electrical costs and reduce the island carbon footprint. The business and community leaders behind this project are those that understand that people always come before profits.

That really is a sublime dream of unity – to continue in our 21st century evolution to open our hearts as wide as this wonderful world with all its infinite possibilities.

©2010 – All Rights Reserved

Monika Mitchell - Executive Director