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Thursday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Europe's strategy requires exports to Mars; The heartbreaking detail of China's one child policy; America's bee population slumps; How to kill Zombie banks; Dilbert

Thursday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Europe's strategy requires exports to Mars; The heartbreaking detail of China's one child policy; America's bee population slumps; How to kill Zombie banks; Dilbert
<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 10 am today 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 is #4 on China's one child policy. The details are heartbreaking. 

1.  The problem with Europe - Martin Wolf at the FT has written an excellent summary of the problem in Europe.

Germany is trying to impose its economic model on the rest of Europe.

The problem is not everyone can grow their economies by forcing real wage deflation and exporting their way out of trouble.

That only works when someone else is willing to borrow to consume the surplus exports.

That worked for Germany during the 2000s because either America was consuming the surplus or Southern Europe.

Now Southern Europe has no capacity to borrow to keep consuming the surplus and America is trying its own devaluation and exporting trick. Not to mention China is trying to do the same thing, and has to because of its virtual peg to the US dollar. This is the real reason we should care. When Europe stops importing Chinese stuff, then China has a problem, which means we have a problem.

Any New Zealanders hoping to export to Europe (or attract European tourists) will really, really struggle under the weight of Europe's slow-motion economic trainwreck.

When everyone is trying to export their way back to balance through internal devaluations the strategy doesn't work. It would require Mars to start importing the surpluses. Hence the massive deflationary and recessionary forces sweeping Europe in particular, and much of the rest of the developed world.

Here's Wolf:

The eurozone is not a small and open economy, but the second-largest in the world. It is too big and the external competitiveness of its weaker countries too frail to make big shifts in the external accounts a workable post-crisis strategy for economic adjustment and growth. The eurozone cannot hope to build a solid recovery on this, as Germany did in the buoyant 2000s. Once this is understood, the internal political pressures for a change in approach will surely become overwhelming.

Europe will not become a bigger Germany. It is foolish to believe it ever could. The eurozone will either achieve a better-balanced resolution of its difficulties or break up. Which of the two will it be? That remains the big unanswered question.

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2. How will the 15% be policed? - The government's allocation of 13.5% of the Mighty River Shares to foreign funds leaves it with a problem. How will it police its self-imposed 15% limit on foreign ownership? 

The first thing that will happen tomorrow morning is that yield-starved foreign funds, who would have bought all 49% of the shares if they could have, will rush in to buy off local investors.

I was surprised that so much was allocated overseas. Why was there any scaling down at all of retail investors? Why did local funds get so little?

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3. Ending stimulus has never been a problem - Paul Krugman writes here about the worries many have about governments being unable to stop stimulating once they start. He makes the partisan, but true, point that Republicans are the worst offenders as serial stimulants.

There is, I believe, a further obstacle to change: widespread, deep-seated cynicism about the ability of democratic governments, once engaged in stimulus, to change course in the future.

So now seems like a good time to point out that this cynicism, which sounds realistic and worldly-wise, is actually sheer fantasy. Ending stimulus has never been a problem - in fact, the historical record shows that it almost always ends too soon. And in America, at least, we have a pretty good record for behaving in a fiscally responsible fashion, with one exception - namely, the fiscal irresponsibility that prevails when, and only when, hard-line conservatives are in power.

There’s a reason for that association: US conservatives have long followed a strategy of “starving the beast,” slashing taxes so as to deprive the government of the revenue it needs to pay for popular programs.

The funny thing is that right now these same hard-line conservatives declare that we must not run deficits in times of economic crisis. Why? Because, they say, politicians won’t do the right thing and pay down the debt in good times. And who are these irresponsible politicians they’re talking about? Why, themselves.

To me, it sounds like a fiscal version of the classic definition of chutzpah - namely, killing your parents, then demanding sympathy because you’re an orphan

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4. What China's one child policy (still) really looks like - This policy is now a driving demographic force in the economic, social and political life of New Zealand's largest trading partner. Yet we know little about it.

Here's an excellent piece from Chinese novellist Ma Jian in The Guardian. Spine chilling stuff. Heartbreaking actually from a purely human point of view. The economics of it are disturbing too, from our point of view.

A man with a motorbike agreed to take me to meet a family who had been persecuted the previous year. "They live in a remote valley, far from the nearest village, so the local officials are unlikely to see us," he said as I climbed on behind him. He drove me through dark green hills, past brick shacks painted with half-defaced slogans, one of which read: "After the first child: insert an IUD; after the second: sterilise; after the third: kill, kill kill!"

When we arrived at the house, Ah-Li was laying out shrivelled, salted vegetables to dry in the sun. She had to care for four children and her husband's elderly parents, and looked much older than her 30 years. When I asked her about the forced abortion she suffered, she flinched.

"It crippled me," she said. "I couldn't stand up straight for weeks afterwards. I had to spend hundreds of yuan on painkillers."

5. The untouchables of the 21st century - Youth unemployment is shaping up as global economic disaster that will live with us and cripple a generation for decades.

Here's automatic earth with some polemic. 

The Eurozone (and probably the EU as a whole and as a mechanism) has nothing left to offer its poorer members but a world of pain. But it's up to the people themselves to make sure they get out in time. And all the countries still have europhiles in power. Italy got close, but it's already back to the days of old with the same old president and a new PM from the same old school. And if leaving half your children with the prospects of being condemned into meaningless lives, of being ostracized as modern day untouchables, is not enough to wake you up and say No Mas, you really need to wonder what is.

Brussels is not going to create jobs for Europe's young people, they're instead going to cut more jobs, they say so themselves. What they intend to do is squeeze the politically relevant - older - part of the population, but only so far. They don't want them to revolt. That leaves only the young to be squeezed more.

Political power in our societies is also defined by age. In that the young have very little of it, and the older have a death grip. That can work, and has worked, as long as - economical - trend lines are positive. It no longer does, however, when these lines break.

Then you don't have one society anymore, but several, starting with older haves and younger have nots. And of course everyone's parents have more than they do, but until now there was the prospect of going out and getting as much as or more than, one's parents have (a better life for my children). That prospect is now gone.

6. High unemployment AND high corporate profits - Here's Joe Stiglitz and Frank Rich explaining this phenomena in America.

7. The problem of temporary work - Here's Canada's Globe and Mail with a piece on the scourge of temporary work for young people.

When are they going to revolt?

Since the recession, temporary work has grown at more than triple the pace than permanent employment – up 14.2 per cent for temp work between 2009 and 2012, versus 3.8 per cent for permanent workers.

A detailed breakdown shows most of the growth in temp work in the past decade and a half has been among young people. Temporary positions are most prevalent in education, culture and the accommodation and food services sector.

“You’re either a winner or loser in this labour market,” said Wayne Lewchuk, professor of labour studies at McMaster University in Hamilton. “The clear winners [are those] with great, stimulating, well-paid jobs. But a lot of others [exist] in a treadmill of insecurity, with little training and a limited career path,” which in turn makes it difficult to maintain relationships, buy houses, engage with the community or get established in life.

8. Europe's Zombie banks - Banking professors Harald Benink and Harry Huizinga write in the FT that Europe needs more credible stress tests to solve the problem of Europe's Zombie banks.

First, a credible stress test should assess the losses hidden on the balance sheet for each bank, as well as the likely cost of the removal of implicit guarantees of all liabilities. This will result in an estimated capital shortage, taking into account capital levels as required by international bank supervisors.

Second, supervisors need to assess whether the capital shortfall can be financed by international capital markets and/or governments. If the required amounts are too high, the bank must be entered immediately into a resolution and restructuring process imposing some losses on unsecured creditors (the Cyprus model). The legal basis for this would be an intervention law, which some countries may need to enact through emergency legislation. Most banks in Europe, unlike their counterparts in Cyprus, have significant financing by bondholders and can be recapitalised by imposing losses on holders of subordinated and common debt without infringing on savings deposits.

Third, in the event that capital shortfalls are relatively small, supervisors could instead implement the US model. This would mean banks being given a limited period of time to issue equity on international capital markets, after which national governments would step in to provide the remainder.

Europe has postponed the recapitalisation of its banking sector far too long. And, without such a recapitalisation, the danger is that economic stagnation will continue for a long period, thereby putting Europe on a course towards Japanese-style inertia and the proliferation of zombie banks.

9. America's bee collapse - Almost third of America's bee population died last winter 

The report is the latest in a serious of mass honey bee deaths reported over the past several years. A decline was first reported by beekeepers in 2006 and is attributed to multiple factors such as parasites, mal-nutrition, disease and parasites. A separate Department of Agriculture study released last week concluded that scientists could find no single cause for bee deaths.

While the declining bee populations might be good news for those who live in fear of stinging insects, it’s actually bad news. After all, bees play a vital role in food production. The loss of honey bees across the country could mean dramatic changes to crops and the work of farmers. Almond farms in California are especially reliant on bee pollination.

The Agriculture Department   estimates that insect-pollination directly contributes $20 billion to the U.S. economy annually. The same study says that if indirect products such as milk and beef, which are created by cows that feed on crops that in turn rely on pollination, were to be included, bees’ economic contribution would rise to $40 billion. The honey yield is also diminishing, with bees producing less honey than they have in previous years, according to USDA data.

10. Totally Jon Stewart on America's mortgage electronic registration system. I love how he finds comedy in a mortgage registration system.

 

We welcome your comments below. If you are not already registered, please register to comment.

Remember we welcome robust, respectful and insightful debate. We don't welcome abusive or defamatory comments and will de-register those repeatedly making such comments. Our current comment policy is here.

19 Comments

#4 and #5 are in fact linked, via the death-spiral demographics each has.  I.e, replacement births should be around 2.1.

 

China's one-child policy has already sunk them:  Old before they can become truly Rich.

 

Europe is much more varied, but there's a delicious inverse correlation between Shade of Green, and extent of Demographic Death Spiral:  deeper Green=worse demographics.

 

So, perhaps, time alone will solve these issues.  After all, Italy's new generations are roughly half the size of the previous - a Half-Life, indeed.....

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No, peak oil and math (expotential function)  not aging demographics has sunk us all.

1.5billion of us have a "great" lifestyle that will end within 2 decades.  The other 5.5billion will look at us with what emotion do you think? hate?  and a few have nuclear weapons and enough fanatics to hand to deploy them.

Real wealth is the natural assets a country possess, so 1/2 the population makes each per capita twice as rich. If of course you ignore the next generations ie our children and grandchildren, they also want a piece of the resources.

regards

 

 

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#9 An article I read described it as the forth worst winter since 2006. If that is correct then it is squarely in the middle of the range for winter deaths.

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"Youth unemployment is shaping up as global economic disaster that will live with us and cripple a generation for decades."

 

Like the last US employment figures, those latest NZ employment figures are BS.

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Re 9 Bee Colony Collapse Disorder.  There is a possibity of a breakthrough and that is simply to let the colonies eat some of what they make, honey.

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/d-brief/?p=943

 

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Whilst the heart strings can easily be plucked over China's one child policy just imagine a world in which it had not been enacted and in which their population had grown unchecked. What would we be talking about, an extra 1 billion Chinese by now? Consider the vast pollution that 1.2 bilion Chinese have created (with all the suffering and disease associated with that) then multiply that to allow for the 'missing' population. Throw in the difficulty they would have had in feeding that 'missing' population (and the likely resultant famine etc) and the ledger does not seem so one sided.

Indeed if you want to look at where unchecked population growth gets you look at nations such as Egypt or Pakistan - both about to become failed states as overpopulation collides with resource exhaustion. You know things are bad when even the civil servants have to make sacrifices:

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/may/8/pakistan-bans-air-condit…

Edit - the Chinese govt claim the policy has saved 400 million extra births so my 1 billion figure is considerably too large. Nonetheless an extra 400 million mouths is a vast number.

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Indeed, Andy.

Looking here:

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2127rank.html?countryName=China&countryCode=ch&regionCode=eas&rank=184#ch

shows China has a fertility rate of 1.55; higher than Spain, Italy, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong and Singapore (which at a staggeringly low 0.79, is the lowest in the world.)

Urbanisation and getting richer would have brought the number down anyway; while 1.55 across a vast population suggests in any case 1 has hardly been enforced. 

At some stage they will need to relax or even reverse the policy (and I suspect in practice they already have); although as other countries are finding out, getting fertility back up in cities can be a challenge.

 

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andyh....     maybe so....   but I would not wish that kind of brutality on anyone...  

Institutionalized brutality like that.... must be...hell on earth.      Makes me really scratch my head about China...   (  but I suppose that is nothing compared to middle eastern countries)

brings up that saying... the end justifys the means.....  a very slippery road

 

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and nature isnt brutal?  or maybe a better word is uncaring?

The planet without the input of fossil fuels can feed/support about 2 billion ppl, who do you think within 40 years we are going to get from 7billion to 2 billion "nicely"?

regards

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#9 There is a good doco on this lurking about on sky. Of course the officials that have contributed to the problems won't find fault themselves. So the scary thing about it is that the causes are still in place.....

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#4. In 2012 New Zealand had 61,000 live births and killed 16,000 unborn babies.

Ergophobia 

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removed as per DC request.

regards

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No more discussion on abortion policies/politics on this thread or site please. There are plenty of other websites where you can do that.

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Hang on there Mr Chaston, if you don't like discussion about abortions etc on this site, then perhaps don't include in your Top Ten, quotes like this from #4 above.

'When I asked her about the forced abortion she suffered, she flinched.

"It crippled me," she said. "I couldn't stand up straight for weeks afterwards. I had to spend hundreds of yuan on painkillers."

WTF, you been out for a session with Aaron Gilmore or something?

 

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moa man,

You make a valid point about Bernard's poor choice of excerpt starting the conversation. ( A demographic/economic story about China's one child policy and its good and bad points would be an interesting topic, but not with this particular story, fact or fiction).

Nevertheless I personally share David's view that I would prefer interest.co.nz to stay closer to its usual topics.

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#1  If everybody is trying to export more and there is less demand, would that mean cheaper goods like TVs, computers, phones etc for New Zealanders?

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On 1; Wolf's point is very valid, although has been I would have thought extremely self evident since almost the first sign of Greek stress at the start of the GFC, so am surprised that it is still presented as fresh analysis. The Germans will have to start consuming more than they earn, or there is no good outcome. Hard to see that happening without the breakup of the Euro. And potentially even  the breakup of formal Europe, as ex Chancellor Lawson now advocates- at least for the UK, and noted in your cartoon.

On 2; The government had clearly promised Aussie institutions close to 30% of the public  float from day one; all their rhetoric made that clear, so am surprised Bernard that you are surprised.

Am not sure they have ever promised that this 30% (or 15% of the total company) will be the ceiling going forwards. Pretty clearly the 15% is going to head closer towards 49%, probably fairly quickly from tomorrow morning as you point out.

Just one of the many reasons I don't like the sales at all.

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http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/top-ten-traded-currencies-of-the-world.pageCd-storyboard,pageNum-10.html#slideshow

Just noticed this; that the NZ$ is the tenth most traded currency in the world.

No doubt not news to Stephen Hulme and others.

Am wondering; do we benefit at all from the massive overtrading in our currency? Maybe lower interest rates than otherwise? But higher risks of forex exposure if and when the music stops? Clearly nearly all of it is just hedge funds or forex dealers having a virtual toy they can arbitrage and play with; nothing at all to do with NZ's actual business with the world; except of course that the resulting exchange rates have a massive effect.  Just wondering.

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China's one child policy has a direct effect on NZ. Immigration laws allow elderly parents to come here if the centre of gravity of the family is in NZ. So in effect if you let in one child you are in effect letting in the parents as well. These elderly people then after 10 years get the pension, health benefits - the whole dogs bollocks without ever contributing to the tax base. Wake up NZ

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