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Wednesday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Why are ze Germans zo grumpy?; Exodus of tax avoidance cash from Swiss banks begins; Britain's lost decade to come; Unclothed Royals; 'Tax cuts just cut economic growth'; Dilbert

Wednesday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Why are ze Germans zo grumpy?; Exodus of tax avoidance cash from Swiss banks begins; Britain's lost decade to come; Unclothed Royals; 'Tax cuts just cut economic growth'; Dilbert

Here's my Top 10 links from around the Internet at midday 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 why Australia is about to have a hard time as hard commodity prices slump.

1, Why are the Germans so grumpy? - There seem few reasons for the Germans to be so reluctant to help out the rest of Europe, particularly when the Euro-zone has been great for Germany.

The weak Euro has been hugely beneficial to Germany's exporters, and by extension, its workers.

German unemployment is near its lows.

Yet still most Germans want to stop helping Southern Europe and a good proportion want to return to the Deutschemark. And it's not all about Weimar hyperinflation fars.

This Guardian piece helps explain the reluctance. The Germans are tired after 20 years of bailing out East Germany with 1.3 trillion euros of transfers...with more to come.

Here's the detail:

The enormous costs the country has shouldered since 1989 have pushed many to the limits of their largesse, with people fed up with how much they have had to pay and for how long. "People feel these transfers will never stop, that the money will just keep flowing," says Matthias Kullas of the Centre for European Policy.

In a domestic debate that mirrors the rancour and resentments that have broken out across the EU as leaders bicker endlessly over who should pay to rescue the euro, richer German states now complain about constantly having to help out poorer states via the national federal subsidies system. Just as tens of thousands of Germans tried and failed last week to persuade the country's constitutional court to rule against the eurozone's bailout fund, the rich southern state of Bavaria is taking similar action to try to freeze payments to poorer areas. Some southerners are calling for Bavarian independence from Germany, arguing it would be better off. In addition to the subsidies, German taxpayers stump up a "solidarity surcharge" of 5.5% of income tax to fund the hefty costs of unification in an arrangement due to last until 2019. "East Germany might well need another trillion," said Katinka Barysch, a German economist at the Centre for European Reform.

2. Infrastructure as an asset class - Liberal UK thinktank The Cornerhouse has written a useful analysis of private equity infrastructure funds and the controversial practice of Public Private Partnerships.

It's all very topical as governments increasingly use infrastructure spending to support economies. Who benefits?

Viewed as an asset class, infrastructure has political and economic consequences that go beyond the immediate social and environmental impacts of the projects that are built. The increased financialisation of the infrastructure sector has profound implications for what is funded (and what is not) and who gets to benefit (and who does not).

In the energy sector, infrastructure-as-asset-class is hindering a transition away from fossil fuels. Strategies that civil society has developed to hold infrastructure developers to account and to ensure positive outcomes from specific projects - such as safeguards and standards - are not keeping up with these swiftly-evolving new realities.

3. 'Where can I stash my money tax-free?' - Reuters reports on the inevitable fallout from the US crackdown on people hiding money away from the tax man in Swiss bank accounts. A whistleblower who handed over details of all the tax avoiding dodginess was recently paid more than US$100 million in bounties for dobbing in tax avoiders at UBS.

Now UBS is expecting a whole bunch of customers to clear out their accounts. I wonder where it will go. Auckland property? I have a house in Epsom someone can buy. I will take Swiss francs, but only lots and lots and lots of them because they're being printed hand over fist.

Juerg Zeltner, head of UBS wealth management, reiterated an estimate he gave in May that Switzerland's biggest bank could see outflows of 12-30 billion Swiss francs ($12.8-31.9 billion) from total European assets under management of over 300 billion.

"As a consequence of the realignment of the financial centre and the planned withholding tax, we assume that a total of hundreds of billions of francs will flow out of Switzerland," he told the Schweizer Bank magazine in an interview on Monday. "In the offshore business with European customers, I assume that we will have to live with significant outflows of wealth for quite a long time yet." German financial services consultancy Zeb/Rolfes Schierenbeck Associates estimates Swiss banks could see European clients pull up to 200 billion francs by 2016 of the 789 billion it believes they currently hold in untaxed assets.

4. 'By 2015 hard commodity prices will have collapsed' - So says China-watcher Michael Pettis in this long and well argued piece.

There are four reasons why I expect prices to drop a lot more. First, during the last decade commodity producers were caught by surprise by the surge in demand. Their belated response was to ramp up production dramatically, but since there is a long lead-time between intention and supply, for the next several years we will continue to experience rapid growth in supply. As an aside, in my many talks to different groups of investors and boards of directors it has been my impression that commodity producers have been the slowest at understanding the full implications of a Chinese rebalancing, and I would suggest that in many cases they still have not caught on.

Second, almost all the increase in demand in the past twenty years, which in practice occurred mostly in the past decade, can be explained as the consequence of the incredibly unbalanced growth process in China. But as even the most exuberant of China bulls now recognize, China’s economic growth is slowing and I expect it to decline a lot more in the next few years.

Third, and more importantly, as China’s economy rebalances towards a much more sustainable form of growth, this will automatically make Chinese growth much less commodity intensive. It doesn’t matter whether you agree or disagree with my expectations of further economic slowing. Even if China is miraculously able to regain growth rates of 10-11% annually, a rebalancing economy will demand much less in the way of hard commodities.

And fourth, surging Chinese hard commodity purchases in the past few years supplied not just growing domestic needs but also rapidly growing inventory. The result is that inventory levels in China are much too high to support what growth in demand there will be over the next few years, and I expect Chinese in some cases to be net sellers, not net buyers, of a number of commodities.

This combination of factors – rising supply, dropping demand, and lots of inventory to work off – all but guarantee that the prices of hard commodities will collapse. I expect that certain commodities, like copper, will drop by 50% or more in the next two to three years.

5. 'A lost decade' - Former US economic maestro and now Harvard Professor Larry Summers argues in this FT.com piece that Britain risks a lost decade unless it changes course from its austerity focus. He makes some good points about how bond vigilantes actually care about growth prospects, rather deficits. Growth helps reduce debt loads.

It is the mark of science and perhaps rational thought to operate with a falsifiable understanding of how the world works. So it is fair to ask economists a fundamental question: what could happen that would cause you to revise your views of how the economy operates and acknowledge that the model you had been using was flawed? As a vigorous advocate of fiscal expansion as an appropriate response to a major economic slump in an economy with zero or near-zero interest rates, I have for the past several years suggested that if the British economy – with its major attempts at fiscal consolidation – were to enjoy a rapid recovery, it would force me to substantially revise my views about fiscal policy and the macroeconomy.

Unfortunately for the British economy, nothing in the past several years compels me revise my views. British economic growth post-crisis has lagged substantially behind the US and the gap is growing. British gross domestic product has not yet returned to its pre-crisis level and is more than 10 per cent below what would have been forecast from the pre-crisis trend. The cumulative output loss from this British downturn in its first five years exceeds even that experienced during the 1930s. Forecasts continue to be revised downwards, with a decade or more of Japan-style stagnation emerging as a real risk.

Sorry couldn't resist this from Steve Bell. I think he's a Republican, and not in the American political sense.

6. The craziness of those anti-Japanese protests in China - Here's an example of what people in China have said and done in the last couple of days. Here's the translation of this sign below, which was displayed outside an Audi dealership. HT BusinessInsider.

"Even if China becomes nothing but tombstones, we must exterminate the Japanese; even if we have to destroy our own country, we must take back the Diaoyu Islands."

And this picture shows how big these protests are:

7. Tax cuts don't work to increase economic growth - Here's David Leonhardt at the New York Times showing tax cuts actually coincided with reduced economic growth in America, while tax increases coincided with increased economic growth.

The chart tells the story best.

8. Sanctions on Japan - Could China actually impose sanctions on Japan over the Diaoyu Islands spat? And how damaging would that be?

Senior Chinese officials have been talking about it out loud. Here's WSJ on what it might mean:

“Japan’s economy will suffer severely if China were to impose sanctions on it. China’s loss would be relatively less,” said the piece in China Daily, penned by Jin Baisong, an analyst at a think tank affiliated with China’s Ministry of Commerce. The headline of the piece: “Consider Sanctions on Japan.”

It’s arguable who would be hit worse. Both economies would suffer for sure. China has relied heavily on Japanese investment capital and technology and Japan is a key export market, its third largest after the U.S. and E.U. (not counting Hong Kong, which is mostly a transshipment point). Japan benefits from those investments it makes in China in terms of corporate profits. And China is Japan’s biggest customer of expensive exports like heavy machinery and high tech gear.

Damage from a China-Japan trade war would spread beyond the two countries. Supply chains for everything from iPads to automobiles rely on parts and materials making it back and forth easily between Japan and China. U.S., South Korean, Malaysia, German and Thai companies are in the middle of the China-Japan economic relationship.

9. African wariness of China - China has been rapidly expanding trade with and investment in Africa over the last decade.

A backlash is brewing, Reuters reports.

Jaffa Shaibu, a burly 32-year-old merchant in a clothes market in Salima, a dusty town near the shores of Lake Malawi, feels less than welcoming to the Chinese traders who have moved in over the past four years. "The way it looks, one day there will be a big fight with them," Shaibu said. "One day there will be blood."

Echoing a grievance heard across Africa, Shaibu and his colleagues in this town of 40,000 complain of Chinese businessmen with better access to cheap imports of clothes, shoes and electronics, and deeper pockets that allow them to reduce their margins. That sentiment is part of a grass-roots backlash against Beijing's increasing diplomatic and commercial clout in Africa.

10. Totally Jon Stewart promoting his upcoming clash with Fox's Bill O'Reilly. Should be fun.

 

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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.

49 Comments

I Think the CCP this time has let the little Genie out of the bottle but will not be able to put it back anymore.

 

It is notiscable now that most of the demonstrators are young (below 40) and also weibo reports shows most are also uni students. This time the problems may go on for much longer than the CCP wishes and might just turn around to target the Chinese Goverment itself after their anti Japan rant is exhausted.

 

Talking of blowback.....For US it's muslim fundamentalist they so happy enlisted to fight Russians and Libyans, and now the Chinese using their own youth to beat the Japs until they turn round to find a new target......

 

Most Japanese see this is an unusual style of anti-Japanese rant and so has wisely closed their factories before real Japanese bodies end up in hospital.....I am not sure that is what the Chinese Goverment expect.......

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#7 yes! let's tax our way to prosperity!

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Professor Alberto Alesina ( Harvard ) and Silvia Ardogna completed a study in 2010 in which they reviewd 200 fiscal adjustments in 21 different countries , and they concluded that spending discipline ( by governments ) and tax cuts was the best way to spur economic growth .

 

...... Bernard Hickey believes differently of course , since his " I've been thinking " metamorphosis of several years ago ...... he's been on the side of big government , central controls , and less freedom to the market-place and to individuals ......

 

Hickey is an Orwellian " Big Brother " acolyte ........ Orwell was trying to scare us Bernard , not offer a blueprint of how to structure society !

 

...... lower  taxes encourages productive endeavour & philanthropy together ........ increased taxes equals less of each ......

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Have a look at the evidence Gummy.

What does it say?

Have tax cuts worked?

Or not?

Developed world's highest growth rate decades were 1950s, 60s and 70s when income tax and corporate growth rates were highest.

The austerity isn't working. Otherwise Greece, Spain, Portugal and Britain would be growing like crazy. 

They're not.

One of the reasons our economy coped pretty well through the last 3 years was the government didn't slash and burn. 

It's moving in that direction now. A pity.

It needs to be investing in infrastructure all over the place. Firstly, in Canterbury.

Instead it's about to force the local council to sell assets and is looking at doing dodgy PPP deals that make more Macquarie Millionaries and eventually have to be bailed out any way.

cheers

Bernard

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You are free to donate all the income you wish to the mob in the Beehive...I am sure they will make wise decisions on how it is invested...not.

The current 'infrastructure' splurge by National amounts to their version of Keynesian economics...and it will come with the usual price tag...massive debt costs for future Kiwi..lately it has dawned on Tweak and Fiddle that their little game has run into a dead end...hence the move to cut back and downsize..and we all know the promised 'surplus' will be an accounting fiddle.

The highest growth rate decades you refer to came on the back of cheap energy...when that rort ended, so did the 'growth'

To suggest the piigs and the uk would do better without the austerity fails to explain why they ended up needing the austerity in the first place.

Have a nice day Bernard.

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Hugh : Bernard's avoiding our questions regarding the NBR embargo ...... feeling guilty , or just plain embarrassed ?

 

...... and as for the blueprint of CHCH , the fiasco , nary a word ......

 

I do wonder if private individuals , homeowners & businesspeople , had been allowed to repair things as they saw fit , to hire their own engineers and re-construction companies , how much would have been remedied by now ......

 

...... this government & local council are the problem ..... socialist dictators to the core ...

 

Progress occurs from the ground up , not from the top down ........ sadly , Bernard believes in central planning and control ......

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I have told you a structural change is required Hugh, but unfortunately that seems to translate to you as a change of Mayor. That is like the beast having a shave and a haircut I am afraid.

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Still looks like deck chairs to me Hugh. New mayor and new chief executive, give me a break that isn't going to solve the problems you perceive. Decentralised structure, yes for sure but you aren't going to get that.

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Right on Bernard.

 

You can find a study to support any result you desire but it doesn't change the fact that when tax cuts are given the poor spend their share and the rich don't.

 

Obama's largesse to big business has ended up being squirreled away by businesses and invested by banks in bonds etc. Bugger all jobs have been created and those that were have been of lower quality than the ones that were lost.

 

This has been going on for 30 years and it's time the voters opened their eyes to reality. They might start by contemplating the fact that the Fed and most other central banks are privately owned.

 

Then they might look at by whom they're owned.

 

Then they might consider what motivates the sods.

 

There was a lot of comment here yesterday that indicated that some otherwise economically literate people don't have a clue about how money is created or, more importantly, where the wherewithal to pay the interest comes from.

 

Money as debt. Robbing the naive through institutionalised inflation. The 0.1% creaming it at the expense of the economically illiterate. Controlling the media, Controlling the universities. Controlling EVERYTHING.

 

The party's over. Every major revolution in history has had its roots, to a greater or lesser degree, in excessive debt or poverty. I believe that the crap is going to hit the fan in the next 5 years; it's going to be nasty and it's going to be world-wide.

 

Hubris will be rewarded.

 

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Wrong lines of thinking Bernard. Gummy is, despite surface appearances, concerned with the fate of the planet. As everyone well knows the planets carrying capacity is much higher when wealth is distributed with a tiny elite and a large surplus population to function as slaves to the elite.

 

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the '70's Bernard?

 

Wasn't there a wee dip therabouts?

 

Any ideas what the growth and that dip might reflect?

 

http://www.paulchefurka.ca/WEAP2/Energy_Intensity_GDP_2050.html

http://www.theoildrum.com/node/9452

http://www.theoildrum.com/node/8615

http://ideas.repec.org/p/sur/seedps/113.html

 

It may be true that the deckchairs all got wet, the same night the steward crapped his pants. Linking one to the other causally, though, is a nonsense. You're better looking for a real driver....

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Not been your best day, Bernard. Almost everything you said on The Panel today about local government was demonstrably wrong and now you are falling headlong into the post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy.

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Bernard , Bernard , Bernard ....... must I spell out , yet again  ;  the greatest driver of jobs / prosperity & innovation in any economy ? ........

 

Small Business !

 

..... whatever encourages people to turn their ideas and inspirations into productive businesses will benefit everyone :  themselves , their employees , their customers ...... growth occurs from the ground up , not from the top down ...

 

Get the government out of the way ...... the tax cut eras you focus on were also times of massive government spending , debt binges ..... massive defence ramp ups , huge vote bribing welfare packages ...... no freakin' wonder growth was anaemic ..

 

....... to be effective , tax cuts must be combined with fiscal restraint on the government's part ...

:-)

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Oh come on Gummy, you have to be about 7 steps smarter than this.

 whatever encourages people to turn their ideas and inspirations into productive businesses will benefit everyone...

Thats a rather odd assumption to make, given your running disputes with Bernard, PDK, Steven, Christov and many others.... These guys don't appear to think that every productive idea turned into a business venture benefits them, and frankly they have a point. So if you are going to make a macro theory about the economy then you absolutely have to include the idea that there can be cases where not everybody benefits, either that or you are gonna have to explain the blatant discrimination and exclusion that such a theory justifies.

So don't give me any more of this rubbish blather, obviously you are smarter than this, and nobody with any smarts accepts such an argument, its ridiculus. What you need to do is construct a reasoned justification for excluding the people who don't benefit from the economy and then we can discuss its merits.

 

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@GBH

"productive businesses will benefit everyone :  themselves , their employees , their customers"

 

The only small businesses left are the shopkeepes and the only customer benefit i get is the cheep goods they sell me.

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# 5

In view of Larry Summers' performance in various US administrations and his role in the unhappy events around 2008 it's hard to take anything he says seriously.

 

Particularly this pearl:

 

“There are no... limits to the carrying capacity of the earth that are likely to bind any time in the foreseeable future. There isn't a risk of an apocalypse due to global warming or anything else. The idea that we should put limits on growth because of some natural limit, is a profound error and one that, were it ever to prove influential, would have staggering social costs.”

 

Mathematics?

 

Physics?

 

Don't confuse me with inconvenient facts.

 

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#7 Depends on what economic growth one is after. Govt spending does have an effect on an economy but Govt spending cannot exist in a democracy if there is no private enterprise.

Public sector might contribute a certain percentage of economic activity but this activity does not produce a value product which can be sold. Hence it is unproductive spending with little permanent or lasting productivity that contributes to economic growth.

 

I think this writer from the New York Times wanted to prove one specific point without considering other ramifications. If the USA wants economic growth then they need to get out and be competitive in the international market and actually produce something of economic value.

 

Maybe this writer should have considered why huge numbers of manufacturing firms don't produce many exportable products on-shore?

 

The fact that interest.co.nz thinks that this article was worthy of attention tells me a thing or two. Interest.co.nz - helping you make financial decisions Yeah Right !!!

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Agree. There are so many factors affecting GDP growth that it is not possible to conclude cause and effect, especially over such a short and volatile period. In my opinion It is quite likely that the increase in GDP shown in the graphs after the tax increases is a result of extra government expenditure (waste) as a result of the additional tax raised. After all building a new prison is positive for GDP but negative for wealth creation. It is time we had a new measure for economic  growth which only captures activities that contribute positively to society and/or increase wealth. Don't ask me how though.

 

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Curious - Absolutely correct and well said !  I have always had issues with GDP being used as the measure of economic growth. It only measures total economic activity it doesn't recognise the necessary profit component that needs to be achieved to see if wealth is actually being achieved.

In my opinion the only true measurement for wealth creation is what the private sector can produce. The trouble is many off-shore investors repatriate profits which are then not available to re-invest in the NZ economy which reduces wealth creation here. 

 

NZ'ers who invest off-shore are not likely to be repatriating many of their profits back home for many obvious reasons.

 

All Government spending is a cost/liability to the productive/private sector so it should be treated differently.  Tax Revenues generated by Government should not really be called income they should be called a debt as that is what they really are. Government books are actually back to front and this affects every facet of the economy.

 

 

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NotanE - you are correct about GDP- it's a much-repeated nonsense measure. We coud all go out and thrash each other's cars, and GDP would go upward; Chch is the same thing.

 

Shamubeel Eaquib put it well on Nat Radio this week: Chch will merely get us back to where we were.

 

Then you start to miss the point. Wealth - presuming we are talking of either tradeable assets and/or stored buying-power - has nothing to do with who 'created' it. Or with who 'owns' it.

 

'Profits' - unless barter/tangible - are a notated proxy. Nothing to buy, they're worthless. A restricted supply of stuff to buy, and they're worth less. In a finite world, sooner or later profits can only be had at the triaged expense of something else.

 

The nonsense is nowhere better exemplified than in the push to 'get rich' from selling our finite energy resources. When they're gone, what's the buy proxy worth? Wouldn't it be better to have the resource available? Surely with time, the resource has to be 'worth more' the longer it is left?

 

The other problem with your assessment, is the 'Govt spending is a cost/liability' bit. Not so. Do you use the Govt roads? Kids use to Govt schools, indeed you a product of them? Been to a hospital? Govt is us.

 

 

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Notaneconomist is pretty accurate.  Public provision of infrastructure is a necessity for producing a value product.  Try value rpoduct without educated people, without transport links, without law and order, ....

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I really admire your persistence Hugh, it can't be easy to keep going when you are up against these clowns in government.

I would have to agree with your views on the Aussies being much more inclined to walk the talk and get things done. Here in Adelaide the UDIA have the ear of the govt, and guess what, the govt are actually listening. Because guess what? The govt here knows that construction creates lots of jobs, and that unaffordable housing is in no ones interests other than speculators.

Quite frankly, the NZ govt is a total disgrace, their progress on the housing issue has been at snails pace, it is costing the country. 

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Good on you Hugh - get into them, they need the biggest kick up the proverbial. 30 years work and only 5 productive ones just shows how much BS is in the system and they wonder why productivity is crap.

 

The whole system is unfortunately infiltrated with this rubbish not just housing. NZ has the potential to be an absolutely amazing place with a quality of life that is second to none. I just wish that those hydraulic cables doing all the tilting and moving will rupture never to be repaired.  We all need to up the pressure for that to happen of course.

 

Keep up the good work, think  I might have to find some time to put into this cause.

 

 

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HMMMMM.

 

I wonder how much cumulative property prices went up in the last decade? The last 4 decades?

 

All regarded as 'private sector wealth'.

 

If Hugh (it's physically impossible, but let's pretend) could have his way, property prices would have to reduce by what? 1/3? 1/2?

 

Imagine the screaming punters.

 

Mind you, that's where it has to go, purchasing-power-wise. Gonna be interesting.

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We have had 15 years of mad property speculation....land values are as much a symptom of that as they could be a cause. 

Infrastructure is on a user wants, user pays basis. I fail to see why a little old lady or other financial limited person should carry the risk and cost of infrastructure that a developer or new house wanter should pay for, simple.

That isnt an improved environment....thats converting limited environment and resources to wasteful outputs that benefit a few today and disadvantage many.

regards

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There is no such thing as 'normal'. Just what you have known, for your short span.

 

Improved environment?  Nup. Sorry. I'll grant you we can have a debate about the advantages for the biosphere of tract housing vs BigAg farming, but neither are an improvement.

 

And you're still up against what you insist on not recognising. The physical limits to growth are what is hitting Local Authorities (fuel for infrastructure, you know of a digger doesn't use it?) and you folk alike. Costs will rise, and incomes will reduce.

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Hugh why do you ignore the impact of speculative asset bubbles and the banking sector and the cost of building materials from (is it?) two building material providers?

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(1/3 1/2) Which of course would send us into a Greater Depression very quickly....NB at 3:1 earnings v price its at least 1/2 and then there's the inevitable under-shoot.

Hopefully that PV and battery piece I send you will be interesting.....I need to look at it in detail but it doesnt look very effective.

Got to wonder on the alternatives like pumping water back up a hill for later re-use....probably less efficient and not very per house dooable but no batteries to replace every few years...

Any idea what CuM of water per KWH for your setup?  and the head?

 

regards

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(1/3 1/2) Which of course would send us into a Greater Depression very quickly....NB at 3:1 earnings v price its at least 1/2 and then there's the inevitable under-shoot.

Hopefully that PV and battery piece I send you will be interesting.....I need to look at it in detail but it doesnt look very effective.

Got to wonder on the alternatives like pumping water back up a hill for later re-use....probably less efficient and not very per house dooable but no batteries to replace every few years...

Any idea what CuM of water per KWH for your setup?  and the head?

 

regards

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Pumped storage is never efficient, but better than wasting the resource-du-moment.

 

There are good tables around for head/flow/Kw, but real life gets in the way, and always to the detriment of optimal.

 

http://www.homepower.ca/data_tables.htm#power

 

We have about 70ft of head, and a flow that can rage, or dry up completely. A reasonable lower rate is 1ltr/sec. Gives us a theoretical 6 amps @ 12 volts, I seem to recall. must re-work it one day. We get 4+, and the bigger diameter pipe (100mm vs 32mm currently) will give us most of the rest. Communal systems if not individual.

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resource-du plus there is then no batteries to replace, so the capital cost, yes sure bigger but should be significantly lower over time....no batteries every few years.  Also the infrastructure can use alternative pumping energy sources like direct wind or converted.......just being curious....avoiding technology intensive solutions where possible.

regards

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The Japanese / Chinese tensions around those little rocks is just silly (sure there is potential of gas reserves, but nothing really concrete). I blame the Jap govt more than the Chinese, it was an inflammatory move by the Nationalist mayor or Tokyo, the last thing Japan needed when its economy is in trouble, and is trying to rebuild after Fukushima. This won't help China's slowing economy either.  

Of course, the Chinese reaction is over the top and inflammatory. Like the Sydney riots etc., I suspect its more a case of young testosterone filled men just burning off some pent up fury more than anything else.

Incredibly complex history around those islands by the way. I've read a few accounts and still cannot determine which country has legitimate rights over them. 

 

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Actually, after what the Japs did to the Chinese, they deserve the fire that is one day going to rain down on them.

I once worked at the OECD with a (really great) Japanese guy who had never heard of Nanking - it was completely expunged from the Japenese social memory. The Japanese leadership know a day of reckoning will come one day.

As for all the NZ issues what can one say - stupid hobbits. I reckon I can't be bothered rapatriating any more. Uraguay looks good - seems there is a still a concern for freedom there.

 

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And we are whiter than white?

http://www.sacu.org/opium2.html

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Nope.

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Russell, if we apply tit-for-tat logic the whole damn planet would be wiped off the map.

 

95% of the Japanese people weren't even alive then. The Japanese nation has changed beyond recognition.

 

What about what the English did to the Scots and the Irish? The Spanish and Portuguese to the Americas? Chinese to Tibetans? White Australians to Aborigines?

 

You could go on for pages and list every nation and race on Earth shafting one another in both directions. I don't even want to think about the circular payback of Maori between other Maori, Chatham Islander and Pakeha.

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Gasp!

The Rich Haven’t Always Hated Taxes

Once upon a time, the wealthy elite took pride in the fact that they paid higher rates than other Americans

http://ideas.time.com/2012/09/18/the-rich-havent-always-hated-taxes/#ix…

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Germans are grumpy?  You would be too. Work hard, do the right things when it's inconvenient, and make the effort to be productive.  And what happens.  Greeks goof off completely.  Somehow that's your fault. Of course you would be gumpy.

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True.

 

But said Germans were quite happy to lend the goofers the money to buy the German shovel with which to dig the hole they're in.

 

Pay back time.

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Nonsense. The German's didn't lend the money. The banks did. Accuse the German people of ignorance, but not complicity. Like Kiwis, they're just stupid hobbits.

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The teaser at the top right of this page says:

 

"Flogging off F&P Finance could recoup Haier almost half its outlay on Gareth Vaughan"

 

By my reckoning this values Gareth at about $500 million. Who says journalists make no money?

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It is a direct assault on global trade. The city of Bristol has launched its own currency, which cannot be used in Bath, never mind Berlin or Bombay.

More than 350 firms in the city have signed up, making it the UK's largest alternative to sterling

Unlike previous schemes which have relied on paper, the Bristol Pound can be used online, even by mobile phone.
 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-19627592

Alternative currencies have certainly done well abroad. A German currency called the Chiemgauer has been operating in Bavaria since 2003. Last year, 550,000 Chiemgauer were in circulation, with a turnover of 6.2 million. With a 1:1 exchange rate with the Euro, that's serious business.

In 2006 a rival to the US Dollar was launched in the Berkshire region of Massachusetts, called the BerkShare. Since then, 2.2 million have been issued and 370 local firms are signed up.

Ciaran Mundy hopes to hit the £6m turnover level soon: "We should reach that next year, and go well beyond it. We're ambitious for the Bristol Pound."
 

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Good stuff.

 

Therein lies a route to some kind of salvation. Repeal the legal tender laws, open the $NZD to competition from privatey currencies and open the mint to gold and silver with no seignorage.

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Bonuses: UK workers received a total of £37bn, ONS says

However, the finance sector received 36% of all bonuses, even though just 4% of all employees work in the industry.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19646398

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What would it look like if you analyse in terms of the sector's share of GDP, not employment?

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Bernard, take note

Future of Europe Group plans closer EU integration

The Commission has already acquired more powers of oversight in the crisis, scrutinising national budgets to ensure compliance with EU targets. The new controls are considered necessary to prevent any reckless accumulation of debt in future.

Besides Mr Westerwelle, the Warsaw meeting brought together the foreign ministers of Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal and Spain.

Their report says EU treaties will have to be changed for some of the institutional reforms to take effect.

In the past treaty change has been a thorny and time-consuming issue for the EU, as voters in several countries have rejected proposals agreed by a majority of EU leaders. Treaty change requires unanimity among all 27 member states.

The report says such changes could be speeded up in future, when the EU has 28 or more members, by getting approval through a qualified majority, instead of unanimity.

One such goal is "a European Parliament with the powers to initiate legislation and a second chamber for the member states". Currently only the Commission can initiate legislation - it is then discussed and amended by the EU governments (the Council) and European Parliament.

 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-19638337

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And this Bernard

Remember November last year when i said that by the end of this year we would see the emergence of the United States of Europe. I don't like it but i still believe i am right.

Read on

Barroso calls for EU ‘federation’

Europe must evolve to “a federation of nation states”, Europe’s top official has said,

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/83f2e49c-fcbe-11e1-9dd2-00144feabdc0.html#axzz26uz7JNoe

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One not insignificant hurdle.

 

Convincing the voters.

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I'm meeting Barosso next week. Am wondering whether I should tell him I'm a UKIP supporter?

 

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