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Wednesday's Top 10: To Taper or not to Taper, that is the question; Why economic planners should embrace doubt and failure; Mile high skyscrapers?;'Eating baloney and burping caviar'; Shhhhh about Shibor; Dilbert

Wednesday's Top 10: To Taper or not to Taper, that is the question; Why economic planners should embrace doubt and failure; Mile high skyscrapers?;'Eating baloney and burping caviar'; Shhhhh about Shibor; Dilbert
This daily collection of links and comment was previously sponsored by NZ Mint. We'd welcome a new sponsor.

Here's my Top 10 links from around the Internet at 1 pm today.

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 what's happening inside China's money markets. Shiiii...it's Shibor!

1. To Taper or Not To Taper - That is the question everyone will be asking tomorrow morning when the US Federal Reserve Governor Ben Bernanke releases its latest decision and then holds a news conference.

Ben Bernanke's comments a few weeks ago that the tapering of bond buying would begin within a few meetings really rarked up bond and stock markets.

Everyone asked the question: can bond and stock prices stay at elevated levels when the world's central banks remove the stimulus?

The answer wasn't encouraging.

Bond prices slumped (ie yields rose) and emerging market stock prices slumped too. This has been a driving force in the US dollar strength (and therefore NZ$ weakness) of recent weeks.

Here's Bloomberg's useful guide in how to read whatever the Fed says:

A decision to taper bond purchases could mean any of three things about the economy: The situation is improving, the Fed doesn’t think it can do more to help, or the Fed is abandoning its past promises to keep stimulus going. Let’s walk through the possibilities.

1. Good news. A pullback on bond purchases could project confidence about the strength of the economy. If Bernanke and company are willing to take their foot off the accelerator, we can infer that they must see sunny times ahead. Studies have documented that Fed forecasts are typically more accurate than those of private-sector economists, so even sophisticated economists should become more optimistic when the Fed’s outlook improves. Bernanke’s confidence could have a positive effect on businesses, making them more likely to invest and helping to strengthen the recovery.

2. Mission accomplished. The tapering of stimulus, at a time when job growth remains middling, might tell us more about the Fed than it does about the economy. Maybe the Fed thinks that the unsatisfactory pace of economic recovery is good enough. Consider it the monetary equivalent of a “Mission Accomplished” banner: premature and unconvincing. Such a decision might signal that Fed officials think the labor market can’t improve much faster. Or perhaps they no longer believe that further bond purchases will make a difference. The prospect that the U.S. economy is dependent on a Fed that is willing to put down its weapons and declare victory when the battle isn’t yet won is deeply worrying. Such an announcement would lead businesses to think twice before investing, hurting the recovery.

3. Bait and switch. A shift away from stimulus could mean that Bernanke is reneging on his pledge to stimulate the economy until the labor market improved “substantially.” He promised open-ended quantitative easing, hoping to stimulate investment. Now that those investments have been made, he doesn’t need to actually deliver.

2. The Hiding Hand principle - Malcolm Gladwell has written an excellent piece here at The New Yorker about Albert Hirschmann, a central planner who celebrated failure.

It's a fascinating piece of economic history.

When people from organizations like the World Bank descended on Third World countries, they always tried to remove obstacles to development, to reduce economic anxiety and uncertainty. They wanted to build bridges and roads and airports and dams to insure that businesses and entrepreneurs encountered as few impediments as possible to growth. But, as Hirschman thought about case studies like the Karnaphuli Paper Mills and the Troy-Greenfield folly, he became convinced that his profession had it backward. His profession ought to embrace anxiety, and not seek to remove it.

3. Mile high skyscrapers? - The Economist suggests a new lightweight lift cable could make them possible.

4. Brazil's protests - Ryan McCarthy at Reuters has a bunch of links to explain the strange Brazilian riots of recent days.

The glitz of Brazil’s sports spending hasn’t fixed the country’s more pressing needs. Travis Waldron flags some details: Government watchdogs say that more than 80% of Brasilia’s schools aren’t up to basic standards; in Cuiaba, 70% of the city’s wastewater is left untreated.

One prominent Brazilian sports writer borrowed a local phrase to describe the disconnect between Brazil’s image and its reality: “We’ve been eating baloney and burping caviar.

5. Why do we work so much and enjoy so little leisure? - This is one of the conundrums of modern economics. In theory, we should all be working fewer hours and earning higher wages for each hour so that fewer people will be unemployed.

But it hasn't worked out that way.

Here's Ed Dolan writing about Robert and Edward Skidelsky's musings on this problem:

The Skidelskys review three possible explanations: First, that people take joy in their work. They find that plausible for artists, skilled artisans, and authors but not for most people. Second, that the capitalist system forces people to work because employers, not workers, get to call the tune. They approvingly quote sociological theories supporting that view, but in the end, they do not find it entirely persuasive. Third, that wants are insatiable. Although that sometimes seems to be the case, they think that insatiability is not a fixed feature of human nature, but a flaw of our economic system.

Keynes, they say, “did not understand that capitalism would set up a new dynamic of want creation that would overwhelm traditional restraints of custom and good sense. . . . Capitalism has achieved incomparable progress in the creation of wealth but has left us incapable of putting that wealth to civilized use.” 

6. How caffeine can cramp creativity - I wonder about this a lot. Here's Maria Konnikova (real name) at the New Yorker.

7. "The rise and fall of money manager capitalism: Minsky's half century from WWII to the great recession" - Eric Tymoigne and L Randall Wray have written what looks like an interesting economic history book.

The book starts with changes in monetary policy and income distribution from the 1970s. These changes profoundly modified the foundations of economic growth in the US by destroying the commitment banking model and by decreasing the earning power of households whose consumption has been at the core of the growth process.

The main themes of the book are the changes in the financial structure and income distribution, the collapse of the Ponzi process in 2007, and actual and prospective policy responses. The objective is to show that Minsky’s approach can be used to understand the making and unfolding of the crisis and to draw some policy implications to improve financial stability.

8. Defending the 1% - Economic textbook writer and economist Greg Mankiw has written about 'Defending the 1%'. 

And here's Matt Nolan defending Mankiw's defence.

9. Australia's perfect storm - Alan Kohler writes about Australia's 'perfect economic storm' over at the ABC. He's right about the household debt. Same problem here, although the rest of our economic variables are looking a bit different.

In last week's national accounts, GNE or gross national expenditure (which is GDP minus external trade, so a proxy for the domestic economy) declined for the second consecutive quarter - that is, we're in a "domestic recession".

Is that caused by the long election campaign, as Michael Chaney asserts? I doubt it, although three years of feverish politics certainly haven't helped. Government has been reasonably stable these past three years, with plenty of legislation passed and no threat to supply, but politics has been in a state of constant uproar.

I suspect the main reason domestic demand is declining is the high level of household debt, which is producing a return to higher savings to repair personal balance sheets. That process is likely to continue after the election, especially if a new government imposes new austerity measures to repair its own balance sheet.

10. Totally John Oliver on Iran's new President.

(Updated with cartoons)

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18 Comments

Yay for economic planners... or the ones at  mpi.govt.nz

report page 13, 16...

The Ministry for Primary Industries, in its latest Situation and Outlook report,

http://www.mpi.govt.nz/news-resources/news/situation-amp-outlook-for-pr…

The outlook for the farm gate milk price in 2013/14
is $5.90, a 4.8 percent increase on the 2012/13
season.

and:

STOP PRESS: On 29 May, Fonterra announced a
forecast milk price in 2013/14 of $7 per kilogram of
milk solids.

 

and we found this nugget (policy view?) tucked in the vegie section - page 44:

The implementation of limits on water quality and quantity allocations is beginning following the introduction of the National Policy Statement for Freshwater Management in 2011. As a result, cropping systems or mixed livestock-cropping systems should become better able to compete with dairying for irrigable land.

 

thx herald:

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=108…

 

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The dairy sector's demand for debt financing over the past decade was due to a number of factors, one of which was the requirement to fund a large number of capital-intensive dairy conversions.

 

"While there is a strong correlation between the increase in debt and dairying land during the six-year period ending June 2009 - the period of strongest debt growth - the 15.5 per cent annual average growth in debt during this period was only associated with a 2 per cent increase in dairy land per annum," the ministry said.

 

A significant proportion of the debt accumulated during this period could be attributed to price inflation for dairy land, which averaged 12 per cent a year.

 

What were our so called prudent banks thinking of when accommodating such inordinately high, but certainly ill advised, levels of leverage one normally associates with gambling and get rich quick schemes.

 

Is that where Mr Key believes the future lies? Read more

 

Prime Minister John Key is telling lies in an attempt to attack opposition parties, NZ First leader Winston Peters says.

 

During a speech in Kerikeri this morning, Key said the Greens were "bozos", Peters' position on China was "madness" and Labour was peddling a "dog" of a policy.

 

He started out talking about the need for economic growth to ensure all New Zealanders lived a comfortable life.

 

But as "there are 4.5 million of us and we're never going to get rich selling to each other", we need to trade with China and attract American tourists, Key said.

 

"It's fine if you're Saudi Arabia, you just put another hole in the ground."

 

New Zealand needed to become more efficient, move up the value curve and sell more overseas. Yeah right!!!

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It's fine if you're Saudi Arabia, you just put another hole in the ground."

 

Bollocks.

 

http://satelliteoerthedesert.blogspot.co.nz/2009/06/five-easy-leases-ghawars-discovery.html

 

http://peakoilmatters.com/tag/export-land-model/

 

Key must have been trained in economics - we need someone who deals with the real.

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It's ok PDK.  Give it five years and the view from your place at Waitati will be a forest of oil platforms poking over the sea horizon.  There is so much oil and gas off your coast you will never have to worry again.  Who cares about tired old Saudi.

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Chuckle. I was asked why I'm not into protesting that, with the DCC and others.

 

I pointed out that they aren't building an awful lot of oil-rigs, new refineries or tankers. The reason is simple; to do that requires more than optimism as a business case. Given that "local forest of them" would indicate little more than the depletion of the easier fields they are currently slurping, we can confidently predict that the economic system they underwrite, will be

 

http://www.rigzone.com/data/

 

underwater.  Deep water. So where will the 'funding' come from? No point protesting something dying of natural causes, so to speak. Waste of energy, so to speak.

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There is a saying, "you can fool some of the ppl all of the time, all of the ppl some of the time, but not all of the ppl all of the time". When JK drifts into areas he knows nothing about and quickly shows that, you have to wonder if he knows anything, or does know and is lying.

Sadly I cant see many signs that even one of the MPs out of 120 odd meets our criteria let alone a party leader. Worse of course ppl dont want to deal with the real so will continue to vote for someone who promises them candy. Even the Greens appear to be vote buying with promises of cheaper things.

regards

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Johnson ridicules Labour Plan to introduce CGT on the grounds it doesnt produce much money .. well I'll tell you what makes a lot of money there Johnson .. Muldoons clawback of interest deductions on sale of a property that has been rented .. all that tax rebated is clawed back at a later date .. it's been mentioned here on interest.co.nz a couple of times .. but as usual, like a lot of other things, it gets lost pretty quick in the noise. The trouble with that tactic is there weren't too many non-residents and blow-ins buying up huge swathes of property with hot money .. in those days it was a local thing. Probably wouldn't work today because it would only hurt the locals. Muldoon was smart. Wasn't nice. Was clever. Governed by regulation. Gang-of-one. Just did it. No mucking around

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"What were our so called prudent banks thinking of when accommodating such inordinately high, but certainly ill advised, levels of leverage one normally associates with gambling and get rich quick schemes."

Our banks were rubbing their hands in glee! They already know that people buying into land for farms are not doing it for the business but rather the capital gain on the land when they sell it. (The only reason that makes sense) The banks wrap the mortgages up so tight the farmer carries all the risk and when the farm collapses under its debt loading the bank ends up with the land. The farmer loses, the bank (read "the house") always wins!
 

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Glee indeed, at the bottom f the system, the ppl selling the mortgages get commission and bonuses they are sales ppl.  They only work year to year, hence its all about how much you sell in a year to generate a big bonus.

Yes, there is an "asset" attached to the borrowing and its full recourse, ie the person who takes out the mortgage is fully liable to the last cent.

So the options are play on their ruleset or dont play.  Ppl have played because of the never ending growth and increasing profits promise....thats coming unstuck and there were not many other options in town.

The entire system is simply geared wrong, it has to be fixed, but no pollie will, its a vote loser...so they'll can kick to the next pollie...

So it will be left to blow up.

regards

 

 

 

 

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Henry - word on the local street is that Fonterra is planning to build a processing centre in Tarras. There's a reasonable bit of land been converted and irrigated here - large farms. Rumour has it that a senior MP is invloved with one of the conversions.  Have you heard anything?  God help the Clutha if this area becomes another 'Canterbury' for conversions.

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Henry, try comparing the 2012 Situation and Outlook with the 2013 one.

 

You may notice that forecast growth in milk production has now doubled from 2% to 4% pa. And that forecast payouts take a hit due to exchange rates not falling as far or as fast as predicted in 2012.

 

I do wonder how Fonterra's forecast payout can credibly be more than a $1.00 higher than MPI's.

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#5 - Or we are "Keeping up with the Joneses". If the norm was say three days a week and someone started working four, their neighbours and work colleagues in seeing their newfound relative wealth could also want in. The converse would also hold - many workplaces are flexible, particularly public sector, and offer 0.8 FTE or less positions. Not many take them - you wouldn't disadvantage yourself (relatively) unless you valued your leisure / family time more.

This is probably a contributing factor in two-income households becoming the norm too - as soon as the majority of the population are doing it, it becomes harder for single income households to afford scarce resources such as land. The majority rules.

[edit - didn't rtfa properly - they kind of cover it with the 'wants are insatiable' angle. Wouldn't agree that it's a flaw of economics - its a flaw in our culture]

 

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#5 Greed is the reason. Increasing costs (the biggest one being housing) are a scourge on the population. We end up working longer just to maintain the status quo.

When will the average kiwi wake up to the fact that increasing prices on the biggest expense is  bad for the majority of people?

Why is the biggest cost not included in how we measure inflation?  Who cares if milk goes up by $2, when house prices triple.  

When will the pollies wake up?  After they have sold their investment properties?

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Becase buying is a one off capital thing, once a house is bought thats it you dont keep paying more, unlike milk or rates. Also if in an asset bubble and we are then that price would distort the true/real inflationary figures and you use that data to monitor the state of the economy and set the OCR.

regards

 

 

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Red flags everywhere and all 'standing up' too...

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.co.nz/2013/06/cash-squeeze-in-china-interest-rate.html

The cost of debt is set to rise and where it stops nobody knows....

The RBNZ has no control...the question for punters..."are my savings safe"....and the answer is...

If the China reports are not sufficient to have you very worried...try reading about new car sales across Europe...!

include this with your Porridge!

http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article40977.html

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"Yet what causes me to hesitate is the drip of reports and comments from key figures in – or near – the Fed seeming to suggest a loss of nerve, or who fear that QE has turned counterproductive".
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/finance/ambroseevans-pritchard/100024895/if-bernanke-really-shakes-the-tree-half-the-world-may-fall-out/

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Just talk of easing has the markets in a coniption........load up on the debt while the getting is cheap I say.

Cheers

 

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load up on the debt while the getting is cheap I say.
Cheers

 

Usain Bolt is not fast enough to catch this rout

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