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Friday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Do the Plutocrats really want a revolution?; Morality and monetary policy; China warns Japan about 'garbage bin' money printing; The penthouse with a gym for cats; Dilbert; Clarke and Dawe

Friday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Do the Plutocrats really want a revolution?; Morality and monetary policy; China warns Japan about 'garbage bin' money printing; The penthouse with a gym for cats; Dilbert; Clarke and Dawe
<a href="http://bit.ly/107VHl0">Five key reasons people buy gold and silver</a>

Here's my Top 10 links from around the Internet at 12.30 pm in association with NZ Mint.

As always, we welcome your additions in the comments below or via email to bernard.hickey@interest.co.nz.

See all previous Top 10s here.

My must read today is #7 on how China is a mercantilest country and what that might mean in the long run. It's quite disturbing...

1. The central challenge of our age - The rise and rise of wealth and income inequality is not just threatening the economic recovery.

It's also threatening social and political stability.

Here's John Lloyd writing at Reuters about the growing public anger about how the rich have gotten stonkingly richer in the last decade or so while the poor have gotten poorer and more unemployed around the world.

He's right.

When will the plutocrats and their political representatives realise this state of affairs is not sustainable in any social or political sense?

Do they want to push it to the point of revolution?

Lloyd summarises the last week's moves well:

People who live on low, even middling incomes and who may be or are threatened by being unemployed are becoming more and more angry at the sight of vast wealth, and are ceasing to believe that nothing can be done. The Swiss are not known for their love of irony, but they do love referenda: They had 12 last year, on employment leave, second houses, building society savings, a fixed book price agreement, gambling revenues, healthcare, foreign policy, home buying, a smoking ban, secure housing in old age, music lessons at school and an Animal Diseases Act. Earlier this month, 68 percent of citizens who took part voted for a series of curbs on executive pay, including a ban on golden handshakes and parachutes and bonuses for organizing a takeover or a partial company sell-off. This in the world’s banking capital; moreover, it’s in the state that has struggled to preserve the secrecy of the often-dubious fortunes lodged in its banks.

The European finance ministers are this week debating a vote in the European parliament last week that would limit banker bonuses to a 1:1 ratio with salaries. The British, home to the biggest financial services industry in Europe, are worried that the high-rolling bankers in the City of London will seek new homes: several have said so. One banker told the FT: “This is big stuff. This wrecks the model of keeping salaries low.” (Salaries were kept low, but augmented with bonuses.) But a vote in the European Parliament is likely to be decisive: Something along these lines is now likely.

Dickens’ Tale of Two Cities begins “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.” In today’s tale of two worlds, it is a time when nothing can be done, it is a time when something must be done. Popular anger and will is beginning to demand that the resignation to vast inequality ends, and something less gross takes its place. This will run on – and on.

2. Morality and monetary policy - Edward Hadas does a great job writing at Reuters about the issue of monetary policy and morality. 

Monetary policy these days is complicated, ineffective, and quite possibly immoral. The complexity is inevitable; there is no simple way to ensure that the supply of money and credit is appropriate in a large modern economy. The ineffectiveness is evident: central bankers let that supply grow too fast before the 2008 financial crisis, and have unable to return monetary conditions to normal since then.

The moral lapses may be subtle, but I believe the lack of attention to the common good in the management of interest rates and the monetary system causes three serious problems.

This section is particularly good.

Central bankers are supposed to keep prices stable. Right now, the monetary system is conspicuously failing to do so. True, fluctuations in the U.S. Consumer Price Index have been fairly modest since 1991; the annual rate of change has varied from a 2 percent decline to a 5 percent increase. However, the prices of houses, oil and most other commodities have moved far more in both directions, often at a dangerously rapid pace. To call that price stability is like a fire department boasting that its record was good because few houses burned down, arbitrarily ignoring numerous factory blazes.

Behind this failure lies a poor moral judgment. The authorities insist that bank balance sheets must be treated as nearly sacrosanct. They refuse to impose losses on lenders, leaving banks to carry on and the economy smothered under a heavy blanket of debt. For the sake of the false good of bank stability, central banks have “abnormalised” the financial system with absurdly low policy interest rates.

3. Hear hear - Bryan Gould says it better than I could over at NZ Herald. 

We have lived with an overvalued currency for so long that we no longer have a proper base mark by which to measure it. What we can do, however, to establish whether the dollar is overvalued is to ask what we might expect to see in an economy that has been fundamentally uncompetitive over a long period.

The answer is that such an economy would exhibit slow rates of growth, high unemployment, low rates of investment and productivity growth, persistent trade deficits, a perennial need to borrow overseas, a propensity to sell off assets - including national assets - into foreign ownership, high levels of import penetration, a weak export sector, and low rates of return on investment and therefore of profitability.

Sound familiar? If we do not recognise these characteristics as the hallmarks of New Zealand's economic performance, it is only because of the resolute refusal of our policymakers to think about our loss of competitiveness, let alone do something about it.

4. The drums of currency wars are beating - Here's more stick wielding via WSJ from the head of China's Sovereign Wealth Fund aimed at Japan's humming money printing machine. 

The Chinese, by dint of their crawling peg to the US dollar, are effectively printing themselves. But they're worried Japan may print faster and more.  And remember, these guys are also rattling sabres over a bunch of rocks in the East China Sea. Or was that the West Japan Sea.

The president of China's giant sovereign-wealth fund warned Japan against using its neighbors as a "garbage bin" by deliberately devaluing the yen, joining growing international griping about a potential currency war.

In unusually strong language, Gao Xiqing, president of China Investment Corp., echoed alarms from Latin America to Europe that the new Japanese government is aiming to boost its exports at other countries' expense via a weaker currency—allegations often leveled at China itself by the U.S. and others.

Mr. Gao's comments in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, among the strongest remarks yet by a senior Chinese official, signaled growing concern in Beijing about the impact on the Chinese economy of a wave of more-aggressive easing under Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, which the country says is aimed at ending persistent deflation.

5. This is how some people spend their riches - Further to #1 above. This Bloomberg piece on a four storey penthouse in Manhattan explains how imaginative some people can be in trying to spend their cash piles. It has a four storey slide.

And the owners' two cats have their own gym....

Come the revolution...

Running along Manhattan’s skyline is a vein of private spectacle, accessible by invitation only. Mostly, it’s a place of generic luxury, where a fortune buys a bigger room, a higher ceiling, a better shower head. One couple, though, has turned four full stories atop an 1896 skyscraper into a palace of ideas.

At the 21st floor, the beaux-arts building culminates in grand arched windows and stone angels supporting a sharply pitched roof, Bloomberg Pursuits will report in its Spring issue. Inside this conventionally gracious shell is an utterly contemporary space, a 7,000-square-foot (650-square-meter) penthouse apartment that combines mathematical complexity with childlike playfulness and reduces privacy to an antiquated foible. It’s architecture for the age of social media.

The result is a place of inspired confusion. Walls splay outward and floors slope. Daylight flows in through hidden windows -- bouncing off walls, bleaching out shadows and wreaking havoc with all sense of depth. Wherever you stand, you can look through to other levels without quite comprehending how they relate.

The occupants -- a husband and wife who declined to be identified -- wanted their starship outfitted with the perks of perpetual childhood (although they have no children of their own): Ladders lead to hidden lofts, a swing dangles in front of a fireplace and a steel column rising 40 feet (12 meters) from the living room to the rafters is equipped with rubber handholds and a harness, so you can get in a quick climb before breakfast and rappel down before your cappuccino’s finished frothing. The two cats have a gym of their own, a series of secret passageways buried in the walls and leading to a window that looks down upon their masters’ bed.

6.  The problem with China - James Saft has a good piece here on China's imbalances, highlighted by the stock market there selling off this week on news of more controls on its hot housing market. 

The growth of debt and of fixed investment into things like houses and factories in China has been spectacular but very unusual for an economy as big and as developed. Between 2002 and 2011 fixed investment grew by 13.5 percent a year, much higher than economic growth, meaning that it is now somewhere in the neighborhood of 50 percent of GDP.

Debt too has been sky-rocketing, allowing China to grow while much of the rest of the world languishes, but, as in the U.S. a decade ago, building up potentially dangerous vulnerabilities in its financial system and contributing to what looks achingly similar to a bubble in real estate and in unwanted production.

Total debt, public and private, is now twice the size of China's economy and every year China's shadow banking system makes loans equal to 35 to 40 percent of GDP.

"The quality of China's growth has become increasingly poor, and the rate of growth is utterly unsustainable. The bigger the bubble, the bigger the eventual bust," Mike Riddell, a fund manager at M&G Investments in London, wrote in a note to clients.

Riddell points out that no major economy has been so reliant on fixed investment, and those that have had fixed investment as half of output for two years or more form an uninspiring roster, including Botswana in the early 1970s and Chad in 2003-2004.

7. China's cyber-mercantilests - The New York Times' David Brooks runs an extraordinary piece here on China's cyber warfare measures agains the New York Times and many, many others.

He makes a good point. China takes a mercantilest and openly nationalistic approach to world trade. Do New Zealanders realise this?

The United States is a traditional capitalist nation that has championed an open-seas economic doctrine. We think everybody benefits if global economics is like a conversation, with maximum openness, mutual trust and free exchange.

But along comes China, an economic superpower with a more mercantilist mind-set. Many Chinese, at least in the military-industrial complex, see global economics as a form of warfare, a struggle for national dominance.

Americans and Europeans tend to think it is self-defeating to engage in cyberattacks on private companies in a foreign country. You may learn something, but you destroy the trust that lubricates free exchange. Pretty soon your trade dries up because nobody wants to do business with a pirate. Investors go off in search of more transparent partners.

But China’s cybermercantilists regard deceit as a natural tool of warfare. Cyberattacks make perfect sense. Your competitors have worked hard to acquire intellectual property. Your system is more closed so innovation is not your competitive advantage. It is quicker and cheaper to steal. They will hate you for it, but who cares? They were going to hate you anyway. C’est la guerre.

And this bit about a "brutality cascade" is fascinating. Who would and should New Zealand side with when the silos are formed...

In a brutality cascade the Chinese don’t become more like us as the competition continues. We become more like them. And that is indeed what’s happening. The first thing Western companies do in response to cyberattacks is build up walls. Instead of being open stalls in the global marketplace, they begin to look more like opaque, rigidified castles.

Next, the lines between private companies and Western governments begin to blur. When Western companies are attacked, they immediately turn to their national governments for technical and political support. On the one hand, the United States military is getting a lot more involved in computer counterespionage, eroding the distance between the military and private companies. On the other hand, you see the rise of these digital Blackwaters, private security firms that behave like information age armies, providing defense against foreign attack but also counterattacking against Chinese and Russian foes.

Pretty soon the global economy looks less like Monopoly and more like a game of Risk, with a Chinese military-industrial complex on one part of the board and the Western military-industrial complex on another part.

8. Here's a new theme song for Forsyth Barr about accentuating the positive and not messing with Mr In-between. I'm a big fan of the Singing Detective.

9. An open inflation tax-  Martin Wolf from the FT talks in a fascinating way here about how Japan can get out of its debt crisis by running inflation higher than interest rates to essentially dilute the value of savings and shift wealth from the savers to borrowers. This is the financial repression strategy writ large.

The BoJ could insist that it is aiming at 2 per cent inflation, but follow policies likely to bring higher inflation than this. That would be risky deceit. Alternatively, it could announce the aim of higher inflation, while announcing a lengthy period of low nominal interest rates. This would be an open inflation tax. Either way, policy could be buttressed by a temporary move to a target for price or nominal GDP levels. The argument for this is that bygones should not, in this extreme case, be bygones.

The current price level is 30 per cent below where it would have been if annual inflation had been 2 per cent since 1997. Similarly, nominal GDP is 40 per cent lower than it would have been if it had grown at 3 per cent a year. If the BoJ sought to return to the level of nominal GDP implied by 3 per cent annual growth from 1997, it would be committing itself to annual increase of close to 9 per cent a year over the next decade. That could surely reduce the real burden of debt!

10. Totally Clarke and Dawe on government by reality television.

"It's not reality. It's reality television."

(Updated with cartoons)

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36 Comments

Re:#3 - The most obvious remedy for an economy-wide lack of competitiveness is to reduce our costs across the board through bringing down the value of the dollar.

 

How does that work?

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A devalueation is essentially a pay cut for everybody....it devalues your cost of labour (ie paycut) and therefore your cost of production.

 

Next it increases your cost of imported goods, thereby cutting their demand (yes no more Flatscreen TVs and iPhones).....but increases the demand for your own "Made in NZ" products.....

 

Until the Labour Unions cry foul and demand pay increases to offset the paycut caused by devalueation....then we go back to square one and start all over again....

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Next it increases your cost of imported goods

 

Got it - petroleum products, pharmaceuticals, production machinery, fertliser, telecommunication hardware, etc, etc  - a significant portion of the imported input costs of primary export production.

 

Plus an increase in sales margins of these essentials to compensate for the paycut you mentioned.

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For those interested in reading more about #1, please read this blog entry :

 

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.co.nz/2013/02/top-1-received-121…

 

TOP 1% received 121% of income gains......

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The plutocRats don't care; they know the outcome, they engineered it!

They're raiding the till on their way out!!

Watch this video: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IaVRxlUY5lI

PRICELESS!

HGW

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Hey Bernard..off topic , is the U.S. the only Country precluded from registering interest in Mighty river.....?

 If so . why so ...me ol china.

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Christov

Mighty River Power retail float only available to NZ residents.

US not different from the rest.

cheers

Bernard

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Have you been to the registration site Bernard ...?

the specific question asked in registration... is that you are not in the U.S. or buying on behalf of a U.S. citizen.

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It is because of US securities law that this disclaimer exists you'll find it on many websites in relation to most investment products. (Reg S)

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#3 Bryan Gould often displays the problems that left-wing academics have in understanding some really basic issues. He says that the dollar is overvalued, and then in the same breath says we no longer have a base mark against which to measure it. How do we know it is overvalued then? How do we know whether anything is overvalued or undervalued? He needs to have a coherent theory of value.

In an attempt to determine whether the currency is overvalued he says it can be determined by whether the economy is uncompetitive. How does he draw this connection? Maybe we are uncompetitive because we are lazy and dim-witted and work shorter hours. How does the value of the currency connect with these things? Surely competitiveness depends on who or what we are competing with, not the value of the currency.

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The Big Mac index is an excellent and practical guide. It has shown the NZ$ to be at about the right level for almost a decade.

http://www.economist.com/content/big-mac-index

Roger Douglas once responded when asked why we didn't devalue along the lines of: "If 20% devaluation would be good why don't we go for 200%".

It's nonsense. A vote for higher import prices and dearer oil isn't going to help the deficit in the medium term.

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A simple enough measure is our balance of payments. If it's roughly in balance over time, then you can argue that the currency is valued at an appropriate rate. 

A more detailed measure is our overall current account position, which reflects the historic borrowing we have done to pay for balance of payments deficits, plus other flows of investments.

Our accumulated current account deficit is very large and reflects 40 years of balance of payments deficits AND borrowing for local consumption. 

Now, to correct that, or pay if off, we must earn more from our exports, pay less for our imports or sell assets.

A lower currency would certainly help with the exports (and yes, complications occur when some exports contain imported materials).

Again, we could just sell $150b worth of assets to China, clear the current account deficit and then focus on keeping the balance of payments under control. I'm sure they would be very happy to write the check :-) 

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Raf, surely our current A/C deficit primarily reflects our accumulated trade deficits - which represent our desire to import more than we export today, which we hope to cover by exporting tomorrow - except that the latter never materialises - it really is a function of our greed outweighing our collective capabilities. 

 

The trick is how to cut back the desires of those who believe they are most deserving when it comes to spending the export dollar they never earnt.

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Yes. I did say that PLUS the borrowing on top. So, as you note, we not only do not export enough but we import way more than we could ever hope to export. So we have a double whammy.

Why can't we live within our limits? I'm sure we could but we would need to have limits, specifically on credit creation. Unfortunately, that horse has well and truly bolted. Still, we could begin the process now with a sinking lid approach to credit creation. To be fair i have been banging this drum for over 10 years now. 

Increase bank capital ratios (and get bacl to basic definitions of capital!) and provide core public services with new public money...and thus keep the money supply in check. 

Start measuring inflation properly as well. The dodgy data we keep getting is as much as a problem. No point giving an independent monetary authority pointless targets to aim at. 

Time to grasp the nettle. Roll on the next election. 

 

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What about a simple requirement that the RBNZ and government ensure that credit growth (private plus government plus corporate) be kept below nominal GDP growth? Quite what you need to measure and how accurately you can measure it needs a bit of refinement but the idea seems pretty obvious now the dust has settled.

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Hmmm, Trying to remember now, wasn't the central banks attempt to control credit growth called something? What was it called now. Ohh yeah, Monetarism.

http://utip.gov.utexas.edu/papers/CollapseofMonetarismdelivered.pdf

 

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Yes, but times change and understanding changes. You choose the tools for the job. We targeted inflation and brought down inflation. If we target the current account deficit via credit growth we will probably get it sorted.

 

The important point about credit growth is it needs to be in a range, not too high or too low. It needs to be positive and it needs to be lower than nominal GDP growth. That way credit as a percentage of GDP goes gently down.

 

Try to pay off accumulated debt too fast and you sink the ship (which is why monetarism got a bad name).

 

To my mind the credit growth that led to the housing bubble was created by the Greenspan Fed keeping interest rates low at a time of existential crisis in the USA. The Twin Towers shocked Americans deeply and their military response needed financing, hence the low interest rates.

 

The modern banking system has evolved over centuries to finance the central state in times of war, that is its primary function. Military issues will always take precedence over all others. I can't see that as necessarily a bad thing, but it is a hard and unpleasant one.

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Nice one. Apparantly you don't understand.

Central banks don't have the tools or ability to control credit growth, regardless what the target is.

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Yes, that's why I said the RBNZ and the government, monetary and fiscal policy working to the same ends. Actually I think we need a third plank which would be private investment policy, what Brian Gaynor referred to as "buying back the farm". Go to it.

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Unless you can stop banks creating more debt contracts you can't stop banks creating money, the RBNZ doesn't have the tools to control credit at the present, and you didn't mention any it will get to control this anywhere.

 

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Thanks for the James Galbraith article by the way. Full of brilliant quotes. I do find him a bit full of himself though in a "if only they had listened to me " sort of way. Did he predict the GFC?

 

To me Keynes was brilliant, those who use his name not so much. In common with Nassim Taleb, who is brilliant, he actually tested his theories. Both were very successful investors and traders. Of course academics like to look down on the actual testing of ideas as a nasty grubby business suitable only for those for have failed to obtain a dignified and tenured position such as theirs.

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No, I don't think James Galbraith predicted the GFC not in any strong sense anyway. His father John (among others, actually I think James was involved here too) predicted the failure of Monetarism and did their best to prevent its implementation, that was before it was implemented of course.

 

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Yes, well the powers that be in charge at the time will choose the theories that appear to best further their ends.

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Ah yes, that is a weakness indeed. I guess I take the view that the RBNZ is quite capable of working up some tools, getting them approved and trying them out. Some of them may even prove to be useful.

 

In time they may even figure out when then work and when they are counterproductive.

 

They are clever types and I think the Core Fundng Ratio has turned out rather well so far. They should be okay with the the Core Funding Ratio as a practical tool just as long as they don't let the ungrounded academics develop a General Theory Of Everything based on its application in All Circumstances and at All Times as a Cure for All Ailments that Affect Mankind. I seem to have it in for academics at the moment. After all it must be someone's fault mustn't it?

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Nic,

It is quite simple to restrict the creation of new credit: you raise capital requirements. This restricts the amount of new credit a bank can issue. 

The SNB have just implemented this in Switzerland

http://www.snb.ch/en/mmr/reference/CCB%20communication/source

It's not the one and only tool but should be used alongside other monetary management tools, in order to maintain a stable monetary base. 

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I quite agree, the details are pretty thin, but the general form of the problem seems to be apparent now. We thought house prices going up was good. We now see it was just borrowing from overseas to outbid each other and was actually pretty stupid. So the next step is to develop policies to remedy the problem we have created. These things take time, firstly to make sense of what happened and secondly to figure out and implement a solution. It is frustrating.

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Re #1. Wealth distribution in America.

People's perceptions are bad enough. Reality is horrifying.

This short Youtube video is worth a look.

Not that we're much better. 

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It is likely that USA investors are excluded because of their draconian securities laws. American investors will be able to buy when listed on the market, but if there is a share issue at a 90% discount they will be unable to participate "to protect the investor". This nonsense may come here soon as it provides work to the lawyers, politicians and paper shufflers that impose these sort of regulations.

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#1

Assuming world population of 6 billion
If 1% of the worlds population hold most of the wealth then that is 60 million people
If 20% of the worlds population are middle class that is 1.2 billion people
If the 60 million own all the factories and produce all the food and products. And if most of the production is done by robots they only need people to buy their products.
60 million should be able to live comfortable off 1.2 billion people

So what about the 4.8 billion poor people. Well, from the 1% point of view they are a pest because they have more votes than them and outnumber them in a revolution. The best thing to do is have a war and get rid of them and get rid of your problem at the same time

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The Greens in Ashtraylia have proposed a Super Capital Wealth tax on the nation's big four banks ....... they want an annual levy of 0.2 % charged on all their assets above the $A 100 billion mark ....... the CBA alone will be slugged an extra $A 310 million per year , based on it's total asset holding of $A 255 billion .....

 

..... how did that last ruddy industry specific super tax work out ? ........ Don't think Julia and the Hard Labour Party are gonna tread into that mine shaft again ....

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-

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"as the government sector shrinks, private economic growth expands"
 http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2013/03/clowns-never-learn.html#SrKikbg6xWuwBQQL.99

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Ba ha ha ha. Nice one Wolly. Good to see you getting in the spirit and joking around (it is Friday after all!).

 

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If we assume earthquake displaced people (47,000) remain in Canterbury (a big assumption given the cost of housing in NZ), then these building rates indicate 43% (1440/3342 x100) will be rehoused in Christchurch and 57% in Waimakariri and Selwyn council areas. So we can say that the Christchurch City Councils response to the earthquakes will displace something like 26,750 people from the city they were living in. This is social engineering on a massive scale.

 

I think CCC will be very embarrassed when the latest census results come out. Historians will talk about the earthquakes causing the relative decline of Christchurch and the rise of satellite towns in Canterbury.

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Great employment news in the USA...oh no wait....they are still telling lies...http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.co.nz/

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