Friday, December 24, 2010

Merry Christmas to us: Wall Street Bull, Cost-cutting CEOs and the politicized U.S. Supreme Court




The CEO's were not the only ones busily tightening the screws on us ordinary, gullible and dumped-on Americans. The new class of business aristocracy that had emerged starting in the 1960s from Harvard Business School, Wharton and other mass producers of financial whiz kids were emptying our pockets as we stood tied to a pole, ready to be cannibalized by savages dancing to the beat of a jungle (survival of the fittest and best connected) drummer.

We were overnight transformed from a producing society to a consuming society, overnight transformed to consumers of Wall Street's raging bull droppings. Instead of making things, we are now selling things made by others. But, there are not enough sales jobs in warehouses and retail stores to go around, so we sell each other financial products invented for us by the financial wizards in our midst. The financial whiz kids from Harvard and Wharton sold us a gargantuan Ponzi scheme that dwarfed even Bernie Madoff. They sold us securities consisting of worthless mortgages and products not the smartest among us could understand.

Wall Street icons sold us worthless securities knowing full well they were worthless, bet against the products they were selling us, effectively tanking their reputations by telling us those securities were opportunities of a lifetime. They were out for the quick buck, these gleaming cap-toothed suits, they were not concerned for their long-term reputations. "A horse, a horse, my reputation for a horse!"

Continuing with Robert Borosage's blog post, "Obama and the CEO's: Looking for Love in all the Wrong Places":

Financial Speculation and Soaring Insecurity

40 percent of American households have experienced unemployment, foreclosure, underwater homes or mortgage arrears in the financial collapse. Americans lost some $11 trillion in savings and home values, dashing retirement plans. At the height of the Bush economy, Wall Street was capturing fully 40 percent of corporate profits, as the housing bubble built on a tsunami of financial speculation. UBS and General Electric, whose CEOs met with the president, were among the financial institutions bailed out by the Federal Reserve and the Treasury.

This bubble-bust Wall Street economy was a product of deregulation, the growth of a shadow banking system, and the spread of leveraged speculation with other people's money. President Obama was right when he said Wall Street needs to be smaller and engaged more in real investment than in speculation. But the president's cautious reforms engendered a multimillion-dollar lobby reaction from Wall Street. The banks were rescued but not reformed, the casino has reopened, and Wall Street's back to paying record levels of million dollar bonuses. The pervasive fraud and abuse revealed in the housing bubble has resulting in shockingly few prosecutions.

(Nykos2: We as a country do not want to learn. We are split by ideology. Those in the right are getting hoarse, screaming into our ears that we must leave business alone. They are drilling into our cerebellums the notion that government is the problem, therefore, government cannot possibly have the solution. Our government, effectively neutered, has stepped back. Wall Street is back in business, selling us on their latest Ponzi schemes.)

The economy can't work well without major reforms that curb financial speculation and make banking boring again. That requires tighter control on leverage and activities, curbs on banker's compensation schemes, and, as even the IMF now supports, taxes on banks -- including a financial transaction tax that would dampen computer-driven speculation. Needless to say, America's financial barons and their lobbies will oppose these reforms fiercely.

(Nykos2: From the Washington insider bloggers' website, The Hill: "One idea for raising taxes to pay down the debt is the bill introduced this February by Rep. Chaka Fattah (D-Pa.). His “Debt Free America Act” (H.R. 4646) would impose a 1 percent “transaction tax” on every financial transaction — whether paid by cash, credit card or any form of financial transfer, the only exception being transactions involving the purchase or sale of stock. Theoretically, everyone would pay one cent on the dollar for every such transaction in America every day — whether $3 million on a $300 million business acquisition, $300 on the purchase of a $30,000 car, or $5 on a $500 ATM withdrawal.

"To reduce the impact of such a flat tax on the poor, Fattah’s bill provides for a 1 percent tax credit for couples earning $250,000 or less ($125,000 or less for individuals) and discretion by the Treasury Department to exempt certain transactions on which lower-income people disproportionately rely. Another idea would be to amend his bill to exempt all transactions below $500.

"Using 2008 numbers as an example: There was $755 trillion in total transactions that year. If you deduct the exempted $312 trillion in stock transactions, that leaves $443 trillion in revenues, minus the cost of the tax credit and other possible measures to soften the impact on the poor. This means that with Fattah’s transaction tax in place, there is a real chance for eliminating the national debt within the next 10 years..."

This is a great idea, and easily enforceable. Will the U.S. Congress pass this bill? Of course not. Many in the lower House and in the Senate are kangaroos in Wall Street's pockets.)

Top End Tax Cuts and a Collapsing Infrastructure

America is literally falling apart. Collapsing bridges, exploding water mains, crumbling levees are a deadly clear and present danger. Children go to schools that are dangerous to their health. Our declining infrastructure is also costly economically, with outmoded transport, crowded highways, slow and inadequate broadband impeding our ability to compete. As President Obama has suggested, we need to make significant investments in building a 21st-century infrastructure, in education and training, in research and development as a foundation for a revived American economy.

In theory, the business lobby supports these investments. But they also lobby hard for top end and corporate tax cuts, and for spending cuts that makes it impossible to finance them. A fruitful conversation with the CEOs might have focused on whether they would commit real resources in a drive to increase investment in areas vital to our future. Instead, reports are that the president promised to move directly from the egregious top-end tax cuts in December to cutting spending and reducing deficits in January. If the wealthiest Americans, like those around the table with the president, are going to continue to pay a lower effective tax rate than their secretaries -- as Warren Buffett has noted -- then America will continue to starve investments in the areas vital to our future.

(Nykos2: Why shouldn't America's secretaries pay a higher effective tax rate than their bosses? The secretaries are lucky to have jobs. Top executives, after all, no longer need secretaries. They can do all their communication themselves via the Internet, using their companies' sophisticated email. The filing work can and is being done in India by some outsourcing company at the fraction of the cost of America's secretaries.

Their coffees? The executives can designate one of them to be in charge of coffee for the day. Each executive from division manager on shall function as the coffee guy or gal to serve all the other executives. By installing such a system, the executives will be forced to communicate with their fellow executives, promoting inter-department, inter-division communication.

Why shouldn't the executives eliminate the position of secretaries? They've eliminated their personnel managers, their data processing people, their accountants, their factory workers, their staff managers, etc. Every job that can be off-shored or outsourced to China, India and other countries is already either in China or other countries, or on a plane going to destinations suspected but officially unknown.

Their Boards of Directors are rewarding executives for shipping jobs overseas. Wall Street loves news about jobs going to China and making multinationals enormously profitable.

Secretaries who still have jobs should be eternally grateful that their jobs are not yet being outsourced to some heavily-accented Indian. So, yes, tax the secretaries more than their S.O.B. bosses.)

Regressive Tax Reforms and Record Poverty

More than 43 million Americans are in poverty, the highest number since they began keeping records. More than 42 million are on food stamps. Millions of homeowners are still facing foreclosure and loss of their homes. Mass unemployment continues, with more than 20 million Americans in need of full-time work. An entire generation of urban kids is essentially being written off, sentenced to crowded schools, broken families, dangerous streets, and joblessness. This is the tinder for social explosion.

Yet, programs for the poor will be on the chopping block from conservatives when the new Congress convenes. The politicians that the CEOs supported will be adding to, not subtracting from, the burdens of the "least of these." For there to be a serious effort to address poverty, to promise a fair start for every child, to provide the core elements of a real hand up that offers them the opportunity for a good education, a decent job, an affordable home and hope, we'll need costly new priorities that will have to be pursued largely without significant corporate support.

(Nykos2: The rich, the powerful, the well-connected are the new aristocracy in America. The outrageous compensations that they have packaged for each other have put them on a rocket ship to space. They no longer identify with ordinary, everyday Americans. "Americans are starving? Let them eat cake. I don't have time for them," they seemingly say to each other. "They are scum because they choose to be scum."

Listen to these new American aristocrats talk. Then, and only then, will you know if you still have a future in this country.)

Corporate Power and Corrupted Democracy

Corporate lobbies and corporate money are corrupting our politics. Over the last two years, we've witnessed graphic scenes in how powerful and entrenched corporate lobbies could fend off common sense reforms in health care, energy, finance and trade. The decision of the conservative Supreme Court gang of five in Citizen's United, overturning settled precedent to declare that corporations had the same free speech rights as people and could spend unlimited amounts in independent expenditure campaigns to influence elections, contributed to the flood of corporate money that helped to bring Republicans the majority in the House.

Washington can't work as an instrument of common purpose so long as corporate lobbies dominate the backrooms and corporate money dominates elections. Hundreds of billions of subsidies are now wasted on entrenched corporate complexes -- the military industrial complex, the drug and health care complex, the agribusiness and Big Oil complexes. Needless to say, the Obama CEOs aren't about to cut back their lobbying unilaterally and oppose bitterly any restrictions on their political activity. Yet, no reform agenda can survive unless the corporate hold on Washington is challenged.

This list can go on. Talking with CEOs makes much sense. Finding areas of agreement -- perhaps around infrastructure investment, education, R&D -- is useful. (It remains bizarre that corporate America so vociferously opposes single-payer health care that would remove from their balance sheets a major expense that harms their ability to compete). Making an alliance with the small businesses and national companies that actually want to prosper in America might be possible.

But the president should not use his "bully pulpit" to teach the wrong lesson. America can't succeed without prosperous companies, but global corporations now are prospering while America fails. They stand in the way of reforms vital to our economy and society. If Obama is at peace with America's corporate barons, he isn't doing his job. Embracing their agenda isn't "moving to the center," it is abandoning the fundamental reforms this country desperately needs.

(Nykos2: Obama has not completely capitulated to the business interests. I know, I was overly harsh on him in my past comments. Further reflection has convinced me that this guy may have the right stuff after all. He has allowed Big Business, Big Oil, Big Insurance, etc. to win this round. Hopefully, if he is re-elected in 2012, we will see the real fight between this administration and a business community that is drunk with power. The CEOs and their satellites and sycophants have, after all, most of the power centers, including the U.S. Supreme Court, seemingly in their pockets.)

Follow Robert L. Borosage on Twitter: www.twitter.com/borosage

19 comments:

  1. From Lynn Abad Santos by email:


    ERRY XMAS TO YOU ALL

    I WAS JUST THINKING ALOUD

    REPUBLICANS DO NOT DENY THEY OPENLY PROTECT THE TOP 66,000 FAMILIES SUPPOSEDLY MAKING $ 250,000 AND MORE

    THIS IS WHY SO MANY FILIPINO DOCTORS MAKING $ 1 M AND MORE BELIEVE THEY ARE PART OF THE REPUBLICAN ELITE BEING PROTECTED

    IF WE EVEN RAISED THAT CAP TO $ 1M NOT $ 250,000, THERE WILL EASILY BE TWICE THAT 66,000 FAMILIES.

    START WITH NEW YORK CITY, THERE ARE AT LEAST 20,000 PEOPLE MAKING THAT MUCH, INCLUDING THOSE WHO GO HOME TO NEW JERSEY AND CONNECTICUT

    WHAT ABOUT HOLLYWOOD? ANOTHER 5-10,000 THOSE ARE ACTORS, PRODUCERS, FILM EXECUTIVES, AND DISTRIBUTORS.

    WHAT ABOUT SAN FRANCISCO WITH IT'S PACIFIC RIM TRADERS AND ASIAN INVESTMENT HOUSES - ABOUT ANOTHER 10,000

    HOW ABOUT SILICON VALLEY? ANOTHER 3,000 AT LEAST THERE. MAKING MORE THAN $ 1 M/YR

    HOW MANY DOES THE COMPUTER OR IT INDUSTRY HAVE ALL OVER THE U.S. AS FAR AS MAKING $ 1 M OR MORE A YEAR? 10,000 IS NOTHING. MICROSOFT, IBM, HP, INTEL, ALL THE OTHER SOFTWARE COMPANIES. WHAT ABOUT EBAY, AMAZON AND THE OTHER E-COMMERCE COMPANIES.

    WHAT ABOUT MINNESOTA, ILLINOIS - TEXAS AND FLORIDA WITH THEIR SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZED INDUSTRIES BOTH CHEMICAL AND MANUFACTURING , THERE AT AT LEAST ANOTHER 10,000 THERE/

    YOU STILL HAVE WASHINGTON DC, WE HAVE 3,000 TOP LOBBYISTS HERE NOT COUNTING THE DEFENSE CONTRACTORS - $ 2 M/YR IS NOTHING TO THESE PEOPLE BECAUSE THEY ALL OWN MULTI MILLION DOLLAR HOMES HERE IN POTOMAC, AND HAVE VACATION HOMES IN FLORIDA, AND COLORADO. WHAT ABOUT OUR BIOTECH AND OUR DEFENSE INDUSTRY RIGHT HERE IN MY BACK YARD.

    WHAT ABOUT THE OWNERS OF AGRICULTURAL BUSINESSES ( PROCESSING - DISTRIBUTION - PACKAGING - IMPORTING - EXPORTING ) IN THE MIDWEST LIKE INDIANA, OHIO, TENNESSEE, WISCONSIN, MICHIGAN

    THE POINT I AM GETTING AT IS THAT IT IS A FLAT OUT LIE THAT REPUBLICANS ARE PROTECTING THOSE MAKING $ 250 K AND MORE.

    THEY ARE REALLY PROTECTING THOSE MAKING $ 2 M ( NET TAXABLE INCOME ), AND MORE BECAUSE $ 1 M DOES NOT EVEN MAKE THEIR EXCLUSIVE CLUB

    WHY? BECAUSE THEY ARE PROTECTING THOSE WHO STAND TO LOOSE THE $ 110-450 K/YR IN TAX SAVINGS IF THE BUSH TAX CUTS ARE NOT EXTENDED.

    (continued next)

    ReplyDelete
  2. From Lynn Abad Santos (continuation):

    HE TAX AUTHORITIES ARRIVED AT THIS FIGURE BY CALCULATING HOW MUCH LOSSES IN TAX REVENUE WILL RESULT IF THE TAX CUTS OF BUSH ARE EXTENDED, AND WHO OF THOSE TAXPAYERS WILL SAVE THE MOST

    WORK IT BACKWARDS.

    IF THE MINIMUM INCOME BRACKET THEY ARE PROTECTING WILL SAVE $ 110,000 HOW MUCH TAX MUST THAT PERSON BE PAYING NORMALLY? ASSUME NEW YORK WHICH HAS THE MOST ATROCIOUS TAXI RATE.

    THAT WOULD BE ALMOST 50% SO IF YOU MADE $ 2M AS YOUR NET TAXABLE INCOME YOU WOULD PAY ABOUT 950,000. ( AFTER DEDUCTIONS )

    SINCE THE BUSH TAX CUTS ARE SUPPOSED TO SAVE THESE PEOPLE ABOUT 10% AND UP THAT WOULD BE ABOUT $ 110,000

    THESE ARE THE PEOPLE IN A POSITION TO GIVE SOME OF WHAT THEY SAVE TO THE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN BECAUSE THEY ARE SAVING SO MUCH. THOSE MAKING $ 250,000 GROSS IN NEW YORK WHO PAY MAYBE $ 70-80,000 WOULD HAVE ONLY SAVED $ 10,000 AT MOST. THESE ARE NOT THE MAJOR CONTRIBUTORS OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY

    BUT TO HEAR BOENER AND MCCONNELL, THESE ARE THEIR CONSTITUENTS

    SO WHAT AM I SAYING, REPUBLICAN SUPPORTERS ARE EITHER DUMB.OR IN-DENIAL THEY DO NOT EVEN REALIZE THEY DO NOT BELONG TO THAT ELITE CLUB THAT THE REPUBLICAN PARTY REALLY NURTURES. THEY WANT TO THINK THEY BELONG BUT THEY DON'T.

    IF YOU JUST COUNT THE INTERLOCKING DIRECTORS, LAWYERS, LOW AND MID LEVEL INVESTMENT BANKERS, AND STOCK TRADERS IN NEW YORK, YOU MIGHT EVEN HAVE OVER 20,000 SINCE $ 1 M IN NEW YORK IS LIKE $ 600,000 ELSEWHERE BECAUSE OF THE CRAZY COST OF LIVING.

    BUT TRY TELLING THIS TO A REPUBLICAN SYCOPHANT MAKING $ 1 M ONLY OR WORSE THE GUY WHO IS MAKING ONLY $ 250 K AND THINKS HE IS NOW THE RULING ELITE , HE WILL BE INSULTED, NOT THAT HE IS BEING FOOLED BY THE REPUBLICANS,

    BUT FOR TELLING HIM HE IS JUST "INU-UTO,' BECAUSE HE DOES NOT EVEN COUNT AMONG THOSE TOP 66,000 FAMILIES THAT THE REPUBLICANS COULD NOT DENY IN CONGRESSIONAL SESSION THAT THEY WERE REALLY UNASHAMEDLY PROTECTING

    HIS FALSE PRIDE SIMPLY WON'T TAKE IT - YOU'LL MAKE AN ENEMY FOREVER BECAUSE HE THINKS YOU MINIMIZED HIM WHEN IN FACT YOU ARE JUST OPENING HIS MIND

    IKAW PA NGAYON ANG MASAMA KAHIT GUMAGAMIT KA LANG NG SIMPLE LA SALLE 2ND YEAR HIGH SCHOOL MATHEMATICS.

    PEOPLE LOVE RHETORIC, THEY THINK IT SAVES THEM FROM THINKING.

    LYNN

    ReplyDelete
  3. Lynn Abad Santos (continuation):


    HE TAX AUTHORITIES ARRIVED AT THIS FIGURE BY CALCULATING HOW MUCH LOSSES IN TAX REVENUE WILL RESULT IF THE TAX CUTS OF BUSH ARE EXTENDED, AND WHO OF THOSE TAXPAYERS WILL SAVE THE MOST

    WORK IT BACKWARDS.

    IF THE MINIMUM INCOME BRACKET THEY ARE PROTECTING WILL SAVE $ 110,000 HOW MUCH TAX MUST THAT PERSON BE PAYING NORMALLY? ASSUME NEW YORK WHICH HAS THE MOST ATROCIOUS TAXI RATE.

    THAT WOULD BE ALMOST 50% SO IF YOU MADE $ 2M AS YOUR NET TAXABLE INCOME YOU WOULD PAY ABOUT 950,000. ( AFTER DEDUCTIONS )

    SINCE THE BUSH TAX CUTS ARE SUPPOSED TO SAVE THESE PEOPLE ABOUT 10% AND UP THAT WOULD BE ABOUT $ 110,000

    THESE ARE THE PEOPLE IN A POSITION TO GIVE SOME OF WHAT THEY SAVE TO THE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN BECAUSE THEY ARE SAVING SO MUCH. THOSE MAKING $ 250,000 GROSS IN NEW YORK WHO PAY MAYBE $ 70-80,000 WOULD HAVE ONLY SAVED $ 10,000 AT MOST. THESE ARE NOT THE MAJOR CONTRIBUTORS OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY

    BUT TO HEAR BOENER AND MCCONNELL, THESE ARE THEIR CONSTITUENTS

    ReplyDelete
  4. From Lynn Abad Santos (continuation):


    SO WHAT AM I SAYING, REPUBLICAN SUPPORTERS ARE EITHER DUMB.OR IN-DENIAL THEY DO NOT EVEN REALIZE THEY DO NOT BELONG TO THAT ELITE CLUB THAT THE REPUBLICAN PARTY REALLY NURTURES. THEY WANT TO THINK THEY BELONG BUT THEY DON'T.

    IF YOU JUST COUNT THE INTERLOCKING DIRECTORS, LAWYERS, LOW AND MID LEVEL INVESTMENT BANKERS, AND STOCK TRADERS IN NEW YORK, YOU MIGHT EVEN HAVE OVER 20,000 SINCE $ 1 M IN NEW YORK IS LIKE $ 600,000 ELSEWHERE BECAUSE OF THE CRAZY COST OF LIVING.

    BUT TRY TELLING THIS TO A REPUBLICAN SYCOPHANT MAKING $ 1 M ONLY OR WORSE THE GUY WHO IS MAKING ONLY $ 250 K AND THINKS HE IS NOW THE RULING ELITE , HE WILL BE INSULTED, NOT THAT HE IS BEING FOOLED BY THE REPUBLICANS,

    BUT FOR TELLING HIM HE IS JUST "INU-UTO,' BECAUSE HE DOES NOT EVEN COUNT AMONG THOSE TOP 66,000 FAMILIES THAT THE REPUBLICANS COULD NOT DENY IN CONGRESSIONAL SESSION THAT THEY WERE REALLY UNASHAMEDLY PROTECTING

    HIS FALSE PRIDE SIMPLY WON'T TAKE IT - YOU'LL MAKE AN ENEMY FOREVER BECAUSE HE THINKS YOU MINIMIZED HIM WHEN IN FACT YOU ARE JUST OPENING HIS MIND

    IKAW PA NGAYON ANG MASAMA KAHIT GUMAGAMIT KA LANG NG SIMPLE LA SALLE 2ND YEAR HIGH SCHOOL MATHEMATICS.

    PEOPLE LOVE RHETORIC, THEY THINK IT SAVES THEM FROM THINKING.

    LYNN

    ReplyDelete
  5. From Eduardo Gimenez (by email):

    Chai,

    The numbers are frightening. They should give us pause and cause us to unite against the savages that lead our American society. In 1960, 56% of the nation’s GDP came from manufacturing. Today this is down to barely 9%. We have been transformed into a service economy made up largely of consumers of products made by other people in other lands. This sea change has taken place unnoticed and undiscussed in the public arena. It’s been done largely in the secrecy of boardrooms all over the nation.

    The Wall Street market maker for (say) Carrier asks for and gets a meeting with Carrier’s CEO. The market maker is a 24-year old kid with a Cornell or Columbia MBA. The kid has never run anything in his life and is in Carrier’s boardroom the tell Carrier’s 64 year old CEO how to run his company. “This factory in NY is only making 11% ROI and must be moved to China where the market-maker’s calculations point to a likelihood of 18%. That factory in Ohio has to be closed and moved to Mexico.”

    That one meeting between the Wall Street market maker and the Carrier CEO suddenly has caused the almost instantaneous evaporation of 20,000 jobs. Where a kid with Wall Street credentials is able to push an experienced 64-year old CEO to do what he knows is not the right thing to do. He is forced by the kid’s threat to write-down Carrier and create the certainty of smaller bonus payments for the CEO. His $9.0 million a year salary isn’t in jeopardy. It’s his $20 million a year bonus that will take the hit as that is tied to the value of the stock… and that value will tumble.

    (continued next)

    ReplyDelete
  6. From Eduardo Gimenez (continuation):

    Here is the worst part of it all. Let us take a close look at the CEO’s $9 million a year salary and disregard the bonus. $9 million a year is the “mean salary level” for CEO pay among Fortune-500 companies (there are as many earning more than $9 million as there are CEOs earning less). $9 million a year is $6.3 million a year after taxes. This translates to $525,000 a month. At an average of 21 days per month, our poor beleaguered CEO, even without bonuses would still be earning $25,000 a day. This isn’t exactly “hardship pay” in any society.

    But it is “hardship pay” in those lofty circles. It is hardship pay even if his taxes are just 30% compared to 70% or more for his counterparts in Europe, Japan and in all the rest of the developed world. The problem we have in America is that Wall Street is the tail that wags our nation’s manufacturing dogs. Thus, a 24-year old “idiot-savant” without an ounce of experience or wisdom, can tell a 64-year old experienced gutless wonder of a CEO what he must do with his factories and his workers. That… in a nutshell is America’s free-market system.

    Consider that Europeans or Japanese companies aren’t doing the same thing with their jobs. They cannot. The financial penalties their governments would impose against such moves are so severe that they would eliminate any gains in shareholder values from transferring manufacturing jobs. What they sometimes move abroad are expansions. A German factory that is nearing capacity because America is now buying 30% of what the plant produces, will set up a plant in America when the German capacity is reached. Also… there are no German or French call centers robbing those nations of service jobs.

    How long can America take this form of punishment? Not long. America is now 2 nations. We have an underclass nation everyone in America knows about but no one wants to see or to acknowledge. So we sweep it under the rug pretending it is gone. But it is here. Here are a few pictures that show this other America. Those of you familiar with Europe know that nothing similar and in the same scale exists. In the developed world, such enormous slums are found only in America.

    Love to all,

    Danding

    ReplyDelete
  7. From Eduardo Gimenez (continuation):

    Here is the worst part of it all. Let us take a close look at the CEO’s $9 million a year salary and disregard the bonus. $9 million a year is the “mean salary level” for CEO pay among Fortune-500 companies (there are as many earning more than $9 million as there are CEOs earning less). $9 million a year is $6.3 million a year after taxes. This translates to $525,000 a month. At an average of 21 days per month, our poor beleaguered CEO, even without bonuses would still be earning $25,000 a day. This isn’t exactly “hardship pay” in any society.

    But it is “hardship pay” in those lofty circles. It is hardship pay even if his taxes are just 30% compared to 70% or more for his counterparts in Europe, Japan and in all the rest of the developed world. The problem we have in America is that Wall Street is the tail that wags our nation’s manufacturing dogs. Thus, a 24-year old “idiot-savant” without an ounce of experience or wisdom, can tell a 64-year old experienced gutless wonder of a CEO what he must do with his factories and his workers. That… in a nutshell is America’s free-market system.

    Consider that Europeans or Japanese companies aren’t doing the same thing with their jobs. They cannot. The financial penalties their governments would impose against such moves are so severe that they would eliminate any gains in shareholder values from transferring manufacturing jobs. What they sometimes move abroad are expansions. A German factory that is nearing capacity because America is now buying 30% of what the plant produces, will set up a plant in America when the German capacity is reached. Also… there are no German or French call centers robbing those nations of service jobs.

    How long can America take this form of punishment? Not long. America is now 2 nations. We have an underclass nation everyone in America knows about but no one wants to see or to acknowledge. So we sweep it under the rug pretending it is gone. But it is here. Here are a few pictures that show this other America. Those of you familiar with Europe know that nothing similar and in the same scale exists. In the developed world, such enormous slums are found only in America.

    Love to all,
    Danding

    ReplyDelete
  8. From Eduardo Gimenez (continuation):

    Here is the worst part of it all. Let us take a close look at the CEO’s $9 million a year salary and disregard the bonus. $9 million a year is the “mean salary level” for CEO pay among Fortune-500 companies (there are as many earning more than $9 million as there are CEOs earning less). $9 million a year is $6.3 million a year after taxes. This translates to $525,000 a month. At an average of 21 days per month, our poor beleaguered CEO, even without bonuses would still be earning $25,000 a day. This isn’t exactly “hardship pay” in any society.

    But it is “hardship pay” in those lofty circles. It is hardship pay even if his taxes are just 30% compared to 70% or more for his counterparts in Europe, Japan and in all the rest of the developed world. The problem we have in America is that Wall Street is the tail that wags our nation’s manufacturing dogs. Thus, a 24-year old “idiot-savant” without an ounce of experience or wisdom, can tell a 64-year old experienced gutless wonder of a CEO what he must do with his factories and his workers. That… in a nutshell is America’s free-market system.

    ReplyDelete
  9. From Eduardo Gimenez (continuation):

    Consider that Europeans or Japanese companies aren’t doing the same thing with their jobs. They cannot. The financial penalties their governments would impose against such moves are so severe that they would eliminate any gains in shareholder values from transferring manufacturing jobs. What they sometimes move abroad are expansions. A German factory that is nearing capacity because America is now buying 30% of what the plant produces, will set up a plant in America when the German capacity is reached. Also… there are no German or French call centers robbing those nations of service jobs.

    How long can America take this form of punishment? Not long. America is now 2 nations. We have an underclass nation everyone in America knows about but no one wants to see or to acknowledge. So we sweep it under the rug pretending it is gone. But it is here. Here are a few pictures that show this other America. Those of you familiar with Europe know that nothing similar and in the same scale exists. In the developed world, such enormous slums are found only in America.

    ReplyDelete
  10. From Louie Fernandez (by email):

    Danding,

    It was not all about short-term financial gain. As far back as 40 years ago, indeed at Columbia, and I am sure in other business schools as well, we were taught in Business Policy and Strategy, International Business, and Economics about this then rather new seductive concept of post-industrial economy -- a new global caste system, although not in that blunt phrase -- wherein America would arrogate to itself the sexy, high-end, high-creativity, high-tech information technological and knowledge-intensive pursuits and the rest of the world, Asians in particular, would do the dirty work and the drudgeries of manufacturing. It was of course appealing to the national psyche.

    Little did the policy makers, the guys at Boston Consulting Group and McKinsey with their sexy graphs, and the business school professors know -- or simply did not care -- that not every American despite the narcissistic rah-rah national estimation of Americans of themselves as being all above-average can be a part of that glamorous high-end segment of that post-industrial economy.

    ReplyDelete
  11. From Louie Fernandez (continuation):

    Unfortunately we can't all be nation of all chiefs and no Indians. But never mind. And so for the next four decades the wholesale evisceration of America of its factories continued unabated. Worse, our schools deteriorated. High school math/science scores continued to drop as Asian countries went up by leaps and bounds leaving Americans in the dust. Math, science and engineering enrollment in the US plummeted either because the students couldn't hack them or that they weren't as enticing or no longer as remunerative as being an investment banker or a hedge fund manager.

    But the hoped-for global caste system didn't turn out to be so. The smart countries like China, South Korea, Taiwan, and India will not buy into this rigged-up global caste system. They are producing engineers by the hundreds of thousands. They have been wisely doing their own R&D and product innovations and are competing with America head on with products of their own design.

    So you are right, Danding. We have two nations in America: the ultra-rich and the new American dalits in an unintended American caste system in this post-industrial service economy slinging hamburger, if they're lucky enough to have a job at all. Greed, and, as usual, arrogance precedeth fall as the karmic invisible hand does its job with ruthless market efficiency. Meanwhile, the top 1%, who are protected by their poor fool Republican/Tea Partyer free market fundamentalists who are far, far from being rich themselves, are laughing all the way to the bank.

    Louie

    ReplyDelete
  12. From Eduardo Gimenez (by email):

    Louie,

    Thanks. That was a great exposition. Of course it wasn’t all for short-term financial gain. Complex matters always have complex causes.

    I will cite two other important conditions that had to exist for the evisceration of the American industrial base. You alluded to education and this is completely correct. The destruction of American education reached its apex in 1978 with the passage of Prop-13 in California. Two thirds of the property tax base disappeared for good. California education dropped to where it is today at the bottom of the heap. Other states followed with their own versions of frontal assaults on their own children and on their nation’s future.

    The other necessary condition was Ronald Reagan’s elimination of the 70% top tax rate. It was this tax that kept executive salaries within a sensible range. It’s elimination resulted in a paroxysm of boardroom greed and brought American capitalism into uncontrolled savagery. What is the point of a CEO making $50 million a year when most of it will go to Uncle Sam? To compound it all, investment income taxes were lowered to 17%. Before Reagan, wealthy Americans had to contend with the 70% top rate on all their income. Today, salaries are taxed progressively upward until $350,000 at which point the tax rate drops from a high of 39% to 30%.

    ReplyDelete
  13. From Eduardo Gimenez (continuation):

    Investment tax rate is 17% to the chagrin of Warren Buffett who gets taxed at this rate on his $4+ billion annual income. Berkshire Hathaway is primarily an investment vehicle for Buffett, much more so than a source of salary income.

    This is where we now find ourselves. A nation diving down into a fractured state of economic extremes, and a population largely convinced that government is the enemy and all taxes are bad… while still completely convinced they live in the greatest and most prosperous nation on earth with the highest standard of living and quality of life. I passed on the same photos of slums to another group a few months ago and some idiot answered he knew of worse slums in Stockholm and in Malmo Sweden.

    There are no limits to human attachment to the most insane lunacies we are able to conjure from the depths of our ignorance.

    Love to all,

    Danding

    ReplyDelete
  14. To Louie and Danding:

    Thank you both for your comments. Danding, because I have known him - during the brief time that I have known him - as a brilliant mystic and did not know that he is equally adept at explaining the ins and outs of the U.S. economy. He is the foremost authority I know on spirituality. His clear, convincing logic is an intuition to behold. His zeroing in on the reduction of the top rate that occurred under Reagan is a new revelation - at least, new to me.

    Louie, for his rapier-like analysis of the very complex engineering of America's economic system.

    Again, thank you both.

    Chay

    ReplyDelete
  15. From Manny Almario (by email):


    I am reminded of the movie, American Beauty, which won the Oscar award for best picture some years ago. It is about a "typical" average American family. The hero, a magazine writer, is fired by a management downsizing "expert" and opts for the job "with the least responsibility" which is flapping hamburgers at McDonald's. His wife (Annette Benning who won the best actress award) was in sales, selling houses (the bubble), and worshiped money, eventually seducing her successful sales rival. Their daughter fell in love with a boy, their neighbor, who was in drugs. They ran away to sell drugs in New York. Their neighbors included a gay couple and a retired marine colonel who turned out to be a closet homosexual. Gone were the virtues of hard work and simple living that used to be glorified by the old movies about the individualistic Americans of the pioneering days and the depression. This movie is perceptive. Manny Almario

    ReplyDelete
  16. From Tony Nievera by email:

    I am sad to read posting like this and to see several of the poor around town and to hear and know people whose homes were foreclosed. Even sadder when I see many Americans had faced the problem by deciding to live simpler lives. People who go to rural areas and scavenge or live off the land. Bloggers who encourages others to live in homes no bigger than storage sheds sold at Home Depot. People who use bikes to work, hoping USA roads will look like China in the recent past with millions of bikes clogging the road. This is not progress.

    We are a service oriented economy.Look at the Forbes list of billionaires and you will find only the old families, the old money made their fortunes in manufacturing goods, most of the rich Americans made their billions from service oriented, including IT, operations. Again consider IBM, which used to be a manufacturing giant, that in WWII, even made MI carbine rifles for the army, now makes most of the revenues from services, software and financing, manufacturing is peony part of the company. Singer Sewing machine is another classic example of an old icon shifting the business model in the 80's from making money from manufacturing to earning from interests on installment payments.

    Renewable energy might provide some new hope, but Pickens just cancelled plans for Sweetwater TX, windmill farms and now trying to sell $2B worth of GE wind turbines to Canada. The cost of transmission lines from TX to the users is exorbitant. Germany and China are ahead in solar photovoltaic manufacturing. Maybe we can capture the next generation of batteries, including those that recharge by breathing oxygen from the air. But I doubt if we me do the manufacturing here, it will go the iPod way, designed in USA but made in China.

    For many years people have already seen and warned of this shift to service economy, flipping burgers and waiting on tables. This is reality. My children and their spouses here in the USA are already in the services field, 4 MD's in the medical field, a PhD son in biogen, they sell here but make their antibodies in Taiwan, one in legal and retail fields another in medical staffing. I am glad that my grandchildren continue to value good education and are pursuing service careers- law post graduate degree, Pre Med, Engineering. The other reality is the high drop out rates of HS students who are destined to flip burgers and wait on tables or serve time in jail.

    Thanks to you all for your persistent analyses and warnings, but how do we find a cure to this malaise.

    Happy New Year

    Cheers
    Tony

    ReplyDelete
  17. From Tony Nievera by email:


    I am sad to read posting like this and to see several of the poor around town and to hear and know people whose homes were foreclosed. Even sadder when I see many Americans had faced the problem by deciding to live simpler lives. People who go to rural areas and scavenge or live off the land. Bloggers who encourages others to live in homes no bigger than storage sheds sold at Home Depot. People who use bikes to work, hoping USA roads will look like China in the recent past with millions of bikes clogging the road. This is not progress.

    We are a service oriented economy.Look at the Forbes list of billionaires and you will find only the old families, the old money made their fortunes in manufacturing goods, most of the rich Americans made their billions from service oriented, including IT, operations. Again consider IBM, which used to be a manufacturing giant, that in WWII, even made MI carbine rifles for the army, now makes most of the revenues from services, software and financing, manufacturing is peony part of the company. Singer Sewing machine is another classic example of an old icon shifting the business model in the 80's from making money from manufacturing to earning from interests on installment payments.

    Renewable energy might provide some new hope, but Pickens just cancelled plans for Sweetwater TX, windmill farms and now trying to sell $2B worth of GE wind turbines to Canada. The cost of transmission lines from TX to the users is exorbitant. Germany and China are ahead in solar photovoltaic manufacturing. Maybe we can capture the next generation of batteries, including those that recharge by breathing oxygen from the air. But I doubt if we me do the manufacturing here, it will go the iPod way, designed in USA but made in China.

    ReplyDelete
  18. From Tony Nievera (continuation):

    or many years people have already seen and warned of this shift to service economy, flipping burgers and waiting on tables. This is reality. My children and their spouses here in the USA are already in the services field, 4 MD's in the medical field, a PhD son in biogen, they sell here but make their antibodies in Taiwan, one in legal and retail fields another in medical staffing. I am glad that my grandchildren continue to value good education and are pursuing service careers- law post graduate degree, Pre Med, Engineering. The other reality is the high drop out rates of HS students who are destined to flip burgers and wait on tables or serve time in jail.

    Thanks to you all for your persistent analyses and warnings, but how do we find a cure to this malaise.

    Happy New Year

    Cheers
    Tony

    ReplyDelete
  19. From Danny Gil by email:

    Tony,

    To your query, simple. Export people, from our child-producing industry. No need for any high tech inputs or efficient infrastructure. And this export item is self replicating.
    And we've been at it some some time already.

    Duh-knee

    ReplyDelete