Thursday, May 26, 2011

Kiting, Chaining and a Tornado of Government IOU’s


"All frauds, if allowed to continue will first destroy the entity’s reputation and then destroy the entity."-
Shaun Larocque

What the heck is kiting? Or chaining for that matter? And what exactly is a government IOU? For those in the financial and legal sectors, you know all too well about the type of people that perpetrate frauds like kiting, the transactional fraud of usually small amounts of money, but are you familiar with the lesser known term of chaining and how it compares to the current state of the economy or should I say, the current economy of the states.

Chaining was a method developed by the senior management at E.F.Hutton in the early 1980’s to perform a very large kiting scam using different bank branches or the chain of branches. It enabled these corporate scammers to use $250 million in funds without ever having to pay a penny in interest. The discovery of the chaining fraud eventually destroyed the company and they ceased to exist in 1987.

According to Bob Chapman and his International Forecaster, “more than 40 states are struggling to balance their budgets. Most will, some will not and they'll default on the interest payment on their bonds and probably have to pay vendors with IOU's.” Chapman is drawing on recent history for his evidence. On July 2, 2009, California issued $3.36 billion in promissory notes instead of giving tax refunds in order to allow the state to continue spending tax dollars elsewhere.

If Chapman is right, and there is no reason to think it won’t happen in large numbers this time, then many state governments will be playing the kiting game with state based vendors and taxpayers. The sad part of this is that we all know this is fraudulent. We know inherently that the United States and many of its member states no longer have the ability to pay, but we continue to do business with them anyway. Where is the organization in charge of frauds perpetrated by governments?

The government IOU scam means that all those tax dollars that the government stole from its constituents over the course of the year simply wasn’t enough. They need to raise taxes on real wage earners because they fear cutting back on all the people on the dole will hurt them at the polling booths come the next election. But real wage earners are declining in numbers because government taxes and regulations are killing jobs by destroying the reward side of starting and maintaining businesses. And it’s cyclical. It’s a storm of ever growing magnitude that will kill every decent job in its path until the fraud comes to an end.

Falling Real Wages

The job killing tornado can persist for a very long time. In the mean time, the IOU’s will continue to mount and the government will have to print more paper dollars to pay back the taxpayers. This monetary inflation will NOT be accompanied by higher and higher wages like we’ve seen in the past because employers simply have no room to pay higher wages because they are paying most of their margin to the government in the form of taxation. If wages did rise, then these businesses would fail and the storm would continue. The only logical conclusion is that inflation will grow, not necessarily out of control, but certainly high enough to allow state and federal governments to start climbing out of their debt mess without having to cut back on spending. This implies that the standard of living will be declining across the United States for a very long time to come.

Finding Shelter

The only way to find shelter from the coming decline in the standard of living is to use a natural hedge against inflation – precious metals. As Peter Schiff continues to remind us, buy PMs from reputable dealers and don’t buy collectibles. Stick to purchasing minted coins with gold, silver and even platinum and only pay SPOT PRICE PLUS A SMALL PREMIUM to the dealer, or buy older circulated coins at or near the spot price of the intrinsic metal value. For current prices of older circulated coins, both for the U.S. and Canada use http://www.coinflation.com/ and you will quickly see which coins to hoard and which ones to get rid of. There isn’t a better visual display of Gresham’s law than coinflation.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Time to Get Your 10 year Mortgage?



Time to Get Your 10 year Mortgage ?

(First published by Rockenomics May 1, 2011 at PinnacleDigest.com)
Anyone reading financial articles already knows that there is significant economic trouble around the entire world. Earlier this week, Ben Bernanke reiterated the Fed policy of maintaining near zero interest rates and the Bank of Canada has also backed away from raising rates at least until the fall of this year. This of course means that both countries will continue to print money  - the Yanks to monetize the debt that no one else wants and the Canucks to prevent the Loonie from running too far ahead of the Greenback.
A recent article published by Agora Financial’s Bill Bonner recommended that people start spending their money like they stole it. When you fully understand the fundamentals around the US debt situation and the fallout that could ensue, his argument makes a whole lot of sense.
Mortgage interest rates have been hovering near historic lows for much of the past 7 years and pressure is mounting for governments to start fighting inflation. Inflation figures according to Bernanke are nominal and meet their ‘target’ of 2% annually. (Why any country is targeting a minimum inflation rate is beyond me – it makes no sense economically). His preference for the government’s core rate which excludes the volatile food and energy components makes him look like a soothsayer which of course is the result of the aim of all Keynesian economic theory – to create an image of the economy rather than tell what is happening in the economy.
According to John Williams of Shadowstats.com, the real rate of interest is near 10% based on the calculation method used up until the Reagan Presidency. If you don’t believe in John’s truth telling mission, perhaps you would believe Google’s Price Index instead? Google is developing its own basket of goods to judge the value of inflation. In Applied Economics Quarterly Vol. 55. No 2 (2009) , the entire methodology is laid bare and it will put the current measurement methods to shame in both accuracy and speed of delivery.  Since that measure has not published any data yet you could use the MIT measure that is available called the “Billion Prices Project” which has automated the process by using web-bots that troll the internet. Inflation is at 3.45% over the past year in the U.S, double the amount the Fed admits to, but 3.1% of that amount has come in just the past 4 months suggesting that inflation is spiking upwards.

Now to the title of this week’s blog: Time to Get Your 10 Year Mortgage.
There are a few lenders in Canada that offer 10 year fixed rate mortgages (and many more in the USA) with the lowest national published rate available being 4.84%. You can knock another 15 basis points off if you have a solid credit score and argue for it. Of course, the question is why you would want it when you can get an adjustable 1 year rate for just 2.1%.
Here’s the rationale and you certainly don’t have to agree with me. I can afford a fixed rate loan under 5% with the lowest possible payments pretty much forever. It eliminates the interest rate risk for a full 10 years and that is a lot of peace of mind. In the early 1980’s when Volcker raised rates to fight inflation, millions lost their homes because they couldn’t afford the interest payments and since I can see this coming, I don’t want to be in that boat. By taking on this 10 year fixed rate mortgage, I effectively shift the interest rate risk to the financial institution.

Here’s a scenario that may help to clarify (skip to last paragraph if it’s already clear)
Assuming we both borrow $500,000 (for simplification I am using interest only loans rather than a blended mortgage) – you choose the 1 year variable rates and I choose the 10 year fixed rate. The interest only portion of the 1 year loan is $2100/100K while the 10 year rate at 4.69% will cost me $4690/100K. That’s an additional $2590 out of pocket to go with the 10 year rate. WOW – doesn’t look good for me does it?
Let’s assume that the Bernanke miracle of zero interest rates continues for 2 more years and that Carney follows suit in Canada. Over that time I’ve spent $7770 more in interest than you. In year 4, interest rates climb by 2% to 4.1% so you now pay $4100 and I’m still paying $4690 and by year’s end I‘ve now paid $8360 more than you in interest.
Year 5 and rates continue to climb but at a faster pace as inflation is getting out of control. Bernanke raises rates to 6.5% (at this rate, the interest portion of the US debt is nearly equivalent to the total Federal tax revenue) and you still pay the 1.1% loan premium or 7.6% for a total of $7600 in interest. By year end I have paid $5450  more than you.
Year 6 is when it really gets interesting. Fearing the Us becoming a banana republic, Bernanke tries to emulate Paul Volcker and raises the US prime rate to 14.5% and you’re paying 15.1% or $15,100 interest. In year 7 the rate hikes continue upwards to 21.5% and you pay $22600 in interest unless of course you default on the loan. By the end of year 7 you have now paid $22870 more than me and there are still 3 years left on my fixed rate loan.
By the end of the 10th year, you have paid at least $50,000 in interest more than I did under this scenario. Of course, I didn’t tell you that I borrowed the money to invest in gold and silver, both of which grew exponentially over the life of this interest only loan and by the end of year ten I sold a small portion and paid off the principle.
I am putting this into action right now because a 5 year term rate would cost about 4.35% and the 10 year rate can be had for 4.84% or less via True North Mortgage. Historically these rates are extremely low and by the fall they will likely be heading higher. Within three years they could easily be 10% to 15% for a 10 year fixed, so the time to do this is before September. Most companies offering 10 year mortgages will only accept 1st mortgages so you will have to discharge your current mortgage and that could be costly. Be careful and weigh all your options but be cognizant of the debt time bomb that is going to drive inflation higher as the U.S. monetizes its debt.

Mass Market Manipulation by Mega Media


(First published by Rockenomics on April 17th, 2011 at PinnacleDigest.com)


Huge government debt is not a problem…

....Inflation is under control…….

....... Central banks have it all under control…..

 ..........Charlie Sheen matters….

 ...............The rich don’t pay enough taxes….

 ....................Gold is in a bubble….

All of these statements are of course nonsense, but the mega media companies of Canada and the United States continue to propagandize this garbage and as expected it is working. The average person knows nothing about the tidal wave of debt and how it will destroy America when interest rates are forced up just to the long term average. From 1926 to 2010, the average interest rate on US Treasuries was 5.4%. Applying this rate to the US Debt would crush America. Nobody talks about that and nobody ever talks about the fact that all debts are supposed to be paid back. When is the last time you got an interest only loan with no requirement to ever pay back the principle?

Central bankers like Bernanke and Carney want everyone to believe that they can control the markets by simply adjusting interest rates, but reality suggests otherwise. They actually create the bubbles in the markets. The housing market in the US grew far too fast because of easy credit exacerbated by near zero interest rates and when that bubble burst in 2007, the entire financial world was affected. Where was Helicopter Ben to prevent that from happening? Not too many years ago, the irrational exuberance of Greenspan allowed the tech bubble to grow out of control. Anyone who believes Central Bankers make good decisions for the benefit of the average person has obviously been corrupted by the media moguls.

Unless you are actively looking for the bad news about the economy, such as Wal-Mart’s CEO telling of a huge inflation wave that will hit consumers this June, you will only hear of the Charlie Sheen nonsense and the royal wedding. Why is the People Magazine agenda always the top news story when there isn’t a major disaster to cover?  Why can’t all of that crap be relegated to the entertainment section? Are there really that many people drinking the kool-aid?

And how about this notion that rich don’t pay enough taxes. Watch the youtube video Eat the Rich if you need a reality check in that department. While I am not rich yet, making significantly less than 100k per year, I do live in a ritzy area. I chose to spend my money to live in a good neighborhood, and spend it I am – on TAXES. I just had a conversation with someone who pays 1/6 of the property tax I pay and she lives in the same community as I do. She gets all the same services from the city that I get plus she has bus service and municipal sewers. The reality is that the rich pay a far greater share of the taxes than what they get credit for.

Now, let’s all jump on the bandwagon about gold being in a bubble. After all it just another all-time high. Never mind the fact that most people don’t own any gold and never mind that junior gold stocks are still significantly below the levels they reached before the housing market crashed….If you are still with me, I do believe gold WILL be in a bubble some day, but that is a long, long time away. When junior exploration companies are 50 to 100 times their current values, then gold will be in a bubble and owning these stocks will be scary. But right now, they are still at bargain basement prices and don’t let any newspaper editor tell you otherwise. I am buying these with all the spare change I can find and before the gold bubble bursts, I just may be rich.

It’s said that 5 families control greater than 90% of the US media and without figuring it out, I would guess that less than 5 families control 99% of the Canadian media. These media mogul families will promote garbage on the front page until they see things that will benefit themselves. The inflation warning by the CEO of Wal-Mart was back page news but the commodities sell-off urged by Goldman Sachs last week made the front page. It is nothing if not fraudulent. Goldman stated that they recommended being underweight commodities for the next 3-6 months (sell now so Goldman and the media families can buy cheap) and overweight in 9-12 months (so you can buy it back at higher prices).

Ignore big media and use timely independent news sources. Not only will you be better informed, but you’ll also make better financial decisions.

Always the Contrarian: Should We Help Japan?

(First published by Rockenomics March 31, 2011 at PinnacleDigest.com)
This is a serious question. The world has seen the horrifying natural and man made disasters that have taken place in Japan and the cost to rebuild is probably somewhat higher than the $300 billion that has been estimated. Everywhere you turn, more and more companies, agencies and others are hanging out a shingle asking for Japanese relief funds, but I contend they do not need your money and they do not need mine as they are already prepared financially to deal with this. This is not an assumption, so please don't think I'm being heartless.

 Japan, up until this catastrophe, had the world’s third largest economy behind the European Union and the United States and had been building a ‘rainy day fund’ of approximately $900 billion American dollars (USD). Is this not a rainy day for Japan? Is this not the worst set of circumstances to ever hit that country?

The rainy day fund is their own insurance program and they aren’t using it. Why not?

The answer lies on our side of the Pacific and has its roots in entitlement programs and government spending in America. With the USD being the world’s reserve currency - the currency of business - it forces other countries to hold its currency in order to conduct business. Since Japan as well as many other countries have built up huge reserves of USD, it is in their best interest to help those dollars maintain their value relative to other currencies. However, the American government has been taking advantage of the reserve status for many years and has been counting on these other countries to continue to support the USD.

The short answer: The enormous debt load in the US is growing rapidly and is putting the reserve status in jeopardy. If the dollar loses its reserve status, the value of the USD will drop precipitously and Japan with its $900 billion in reserves will lose a significant portion of the value. By supporting Japanese relief efforts, you are inadvertently supporting all of those people on entitlement programs in the United States and delaying the reality check that the American government will face when the USD does lose its reserve status.

What should Japan do? With $900 billion, the Japanese should be funding a new sovereign wealth fund that will purchase basic commodities and large industrial companies. Then using their keiretsu methodology (vertical and horizontal integration of businesses) they can sole source contracts to rebuild their devastated country and have the profit margin in the countracts come back to them. This will require them to SPEND a lot of the rainy day fund and stop buying USD treasuries, which will cause the remaining USDs in that fund to lose value. Not doing this will cause the Yen to continue to erode and it will cost the Japanese much more money to rebuild their country, effectively increasing the burden to the Japanese taxpayer. Their choice boils down to either supporting the Japanese people by spending the dollars they have, or supporting the American people by buying more USD . Which one makes sense to you?

It is completely foolhardy for any person, organization or government to give money to a wealthy person who has had a financial set back. Why then would you give to Japan who are net creditors in the global marketplace. If you feel a need to help out, continue giving to Haiti or other impoverished nations (through organizations like the Red Cross and Rotary International) where the government does not have a bank roll to fix the problem.

GDP: Now a Mostly Useless Econometric Measure




(First published by Rockenomics on Feb 24, 2011 at PinnacleDigest.com)

Robert Creamer is senior consultant for Strategic Consulting Group. This morning he was a guest on the Peter Schiff radio show to defend his article "Why Americans Need Unions Now More Than Ever"
Peter Schiff had a difficult time containing his emotions during the discussions and Mr. Creamer was unable to get his point across, so I emailed and requested his article. He obliged and made some interesting arguments.[I've included the full text of his article at the bottom of the blog to allow him his due]
He writes, "This stagnation of middle class incomes has not happened because our economy has failed to grow over this period.  In fact, real (adjusted for inflation) per capita gross domestic product (GDP) increased more than 80% over the period between 1975 and 2005. In the last ten years, before the Great Recession, it increased at an average rate of 1.8% per year.  That means that if the benefits of economic growth were equally spread throughout our society, everyone should have been almost 20% better off (with compounding) in 2008 than they were in 1998.
   But they weren’t better off.  In fact, median family income actually dropped in the years before the recession.  It went from $52,301 (in 2009 dollars) in 2000 to $50,112 in 2008.  And, of course it continued to drop as the recession set in.....
So the answer to the question is simple. Virtually all of the increase in our gross domestic product over the ten years before the Great Recession went to the wealthiest 2% of the population."
Like so many modern economists, Creamer has failed to consider the parameters of his argument. The GDP, the once time sledge hammer of the economists tool bag, has become about as useful as a hand powered drill. GDP as any economist will tell you can be derived from a variety of methods, but the most common is from totaling consumption (consumer spending), investment by industry, government purchases and net exports. The astronomical trade deficits are well known and written about ad infinitum, so I don't need to get into those here other than to say they are a tremendous negative value in calculating GDP. Industry investment has been declining for years and American factory production has been in a steady state of decline, with fewer and fewer workers involved in manufacturing. Government spending has been growing steadily and dangerously, but the real growth and driver of the GDP is consumer spending.
In the 90's and 00's Americans used their homes as personal ATM's borrowing against the value of the home whenever something new came along that they wanted to purchase. The vast majority of Americans also bought on credit which is NOT part of the GDP calculation and household debt skyrocketed. All of this consumption by both the populous and the government drove GDP to dizzying heights over the past 30 years.
Traditionally, the GDP figure was used as a measure of wealth growth by a country, but when nations use credit to drive consumption, the country has more stuff but less wealth - exactly the opposite of what the Keynesian economists tell you to expect. The greater the trade deficit becomes on the back of domestic consumption, the more meaningless GDP becomes.
Rather than admit defeat and say their GDP calculation is flawed and no longer applies, they look to pass the blame elsewhere and Robert Creamer has set his sights on greedy corporations and their equally greedy CEOs. He states after saying that union membership has declined, "Collective bargaining is the only way to level the playing field – to assure that increases in American productivity are widely shared throughout the economy. "
The reality is that the exact opposite, once again is true. I am a UAW/CAW member and I can assure you that the amount of work that gets done is the MINIMUM AMOUNT and nothing more. Unions do not increase productivity. There are NO MERIT increases in unionized shops, so there is NO INCENTIVE to increase production REGARDLESS OF THE WAGE. Union inefficiency combined with holding management hostage at collective bargaining times in the 70's and 80's, coupled with management that refused to listen to its clients needs is what killed the North  American auto industry.
The real culprit of the disintegration of the middle class is ultimately a combination of cool new technology, cheap foreign labour and mostly an easy money policy. The easy money (debt) is a direct result of central banks ridiculously low interest rates and is at least 90% to blame for the modern family having a lower standard of living today. If they weren't carrying the debt, they wouldn't have interest payments eating up a sizeable portion of their income and they would have more disposable income.
Creamer's conclusion is to blame the wealthy saying that all of the increase in the GDP went to the wealthiest 2% of the population. Of course it did!! When the other 98% of the population spend all of their money and more, they are buying consumer goods and fuel for their SUV's from business owners and their shareholders and the last time I checked, the wealthy tend to become wealthy by providing goods and services in the marketplace.
In conclusion, the notion the unions are good for productivity is completely false and I've experienced that first hand; interest rates that entice people to spend rather than save will eventually lower the standard of living and finally, the GDP ain't what it used to be.
Cheers!

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The following is the complete text of Robert Creamer's response to my inquiry:
Why Americans Need Unions Now More Than Ever
     How often do you hear someone say, “Oh, at one time unions were a good thing, but not anymore”?
     The premise of this argument is that once upon a time there were robber barons stalking the land, and it was a fine thing that workers organized into unions to prevent them from hiring children and paying employees a pittance as they labored in sweatshops working fifteen-hour days.
     Now, goes the narrative, in the age of high-tech industrial campuses and “information” workers, unions are “obsolete.”
     Next time you hear that argument from an otherwise rational person, give them a good shake and insist that they wake up from their dream world.
     The central problem facing the American economy – and our society – is the collapse of the American middle class. The incomes of the middle class Americans, and those who aspire to be middle class  – 90% of Americans -- have been stagnant for almost three decades.   This trend, which was briefly interrupted during the Clinton Administration, is the chief defining characteristic of our recent economic history.
     This stagnation of middle class incomes has not happened because our economy has failed to grow over this period.  In fact, real (adjusted for inflation) per capita gross domestic product (GDP) increased more than 80% over the period between 1975 and 2005.  In the last ten years, before the Great Recession, it increased at an average rate of 1.8% per year.  That means that if the benefits of economic growth were equally spread throughout our society, everyone should have been almost 20% better off (with compounding) in 2008 than they were in 1998.
     But they weren’t better off.  In fact, median family income actually dropped in the years before the recession.  It went from $52,301 (in 2009 dollars) in 2000 to $50,112 in 2008.  And, of course it continued to drop as the recession set in.
     How is that possible?
     Was it – as the Right likes to believe – because of the growth of the Federal Government?  Nope. In fact, the percentage of GDP going to federal spending actually dropped during the last four years of the Clinton Administration. When Bush took office it began to increase again as the Republicans increased spending on wars.  Over the last 28 years, federal spending has averaged about 20.9% of the GDP and varied within a range of only about 5%, with the high being in 1983 (in the middle of the Reagan years) and the low in 2000 before Bush took office.  It has never even come close to the 43.6% of GDP that it consumed during World War II in 1943 and 1944, or the 41.9% it consumed in 1945.    The percent of GDP that goes to Federal spending went up in 2009 and 2010 – but that was mainly because the economy shrunk on the one hand, and a major, temporary stimulus bill was need on the other to prevent another Great Depression.
     Was it because taxes have skyrocketed?  No again.  In fact, according to the Census Bureau, the median household tax burden actually dropped from 24.9% in 2000 to 22.4% in 2009.
     Was it that labor became less productive?  No.  In fact, there has been a major gap between the increase in the productivity of our workforce and the increase in their wages.  Even when wages were improving at the end of the Clinton years, productivity went up 2.5% per year and median hourly wages went up only 1.5%.
      From 2000 to 2004 worker productivity exploded by an annual rate of 3.8% but hourly wages went up only 1% and median family income actually dropped .9%.
     The bottom line is that people who work for a living (most of us) are getting a smaller and smaller share of the nation’s economic pie.
     In August of 2006, the New York Times reported that Federal Reserve study showed that, “Wages and salaries now make up the lowest share of the nation’s gross national product since the government began recording data in 1947; while corporate profits have climbed to their highest shares since the 1960.”
     So the answer to the question is simple. Virtually all of the increase in our gross domestic product over the ten years before the Great Recession went to the wealthiest 2% of the population.
     These changes in income distribution are not the result of “natural laws.”  They are the result of systems set up by human beings that differentially benefit different groups in the society.
     Economist Paul Krugman has summarized the history of income distribution in America.
     At the beginning of the Great Depression, income inequality, and inequality in the control of wealth, was very high.  Then came the great compression between 1929 and 1947.  Real wages for workers in manufacturing rose 67% while real income for the richest 1% of Americans fell 17%.  This period marked the birth of the American middle class.  Two major forces drove these trends – unionization of major manufacturing sectors, and the public policies of the New Deal.
     Then came the postwar boom, 1947 to 1973.  Real wages rose 81% and the income of the richest 1% rose 38%.  Growth was widely shared, but income inequality continued to drop.
     From 1973 to 1980, everyone lost ground.  Real wages fell 3% and income for the richest 1% fell 4%.  The oil shocks, and the dramatic slowdown in economic growth in developing nations, took their toll on America and the world economy.
    Then came what Krugman calls “the New Gilded Age.” Beginning in 1980, there were big gains at the very top.  The tax policies of the Reagan administration magnified income redistribution.  Between 1980 and 2004, real wages in manufacturing fell 1%, while real income of the richest one percent rose 135%.
     The single largest contributor to this stagnation of middle class incomes has been the corporate attack on organized labor.  The percentage of private sector workers in unions has shrunk from 35 percent to 7%.  The exception has been the public sector, where 35% of teachers, firemen and public service workers now have access to collective bargaining.
     The last thirty years shows conclusively that the “competitive market” – absent collective bargaining -- simply does not assure that everyday employees share in the fruits of increased productivity or economic growth.  Left to their own devices, CEO’s will pad their own massive incomes and seek higher returns for the stockholders that hire them. That is especially true in an economic world that is globalized – where CEO’s can often hire labor at pennies on the dollar of what they would have to pay in the U.S. – if it were not for union contracts.
     Collective bargaining is the only way to level the playing field – to assure that increases in American productivity are widely shared throughout the economy.
     And when they are not shared, that is not only bad for the everyday family.  It is horrible for the economy.  Economies are in balance if productivity gains result in commensurately higher salaries for employees that allow them to buy the larger number of products and services that the productivity increases allow corporations to manufacture and sell.  If they don’t have increased buying power – if all of the income growth goes to the top 2% -- then a demand deficit will inevitably develop that will lead to a recession – or depression.  That gap in buying power can be filled for a while – as it was in the early 2000’s – with greater consumer debt.  But after while the bubble bursts and the house of cards comes tumbling down.
     We saw that movie – we know the ending.  And it was mainly a result of the disparity between increased worker productivity and increased worker income.  It was the direct consequence of the corporate attack on the right to join a union.
     American workers – and the American economy – need unions now more than ever.   They are the only means by which we can guarantee widely-shared economic growth.  And as it turns out, sustained, long-term economic growth requires widely-shared economic growth.   Unions are the only way to prevent the collapse of the American middle class.
     That’s why the fight in Wisconsin is so fundamental.  Governor Scott Walker and his corporate supporters want to destroy labor unions – to eliminate the right to choose a union.   They want a low wage economy.  They want the freedom to pay people as little as possible at their companies – and in the government.
     They believe if they can break public employee unions, that they can ultimately eliminate organized labor as a meaningful force in the American economy – and in American politics.
     Walker’s action are a case study in right wing philosophy.  He cut state taxes on corporations and then demanded that middle class state workers take cuts in wages and benefits in order to pay for the corporate tax cuts.
     Luckily regular voters have begun to smell the coffee.  Nationally a new poll shows that 61% of voters reject the kind of proposals that Walker is trying to cram down the throats of the people of Wisconsin.
     In Wisconsin itself a new poll by Greenberg, Quinlan, Rosner Research found that a majority of Wisconsin voters disapprove of Walker’s job performance and give him a negative favorability of 39 percent favorable and 49 percent unfavorable.  In contrast 62 percent of voters offer a favorable view of public employees and only 11 percent unfavorable.  And 53 percent rate labor unions favorably with only 31 percent unfavorable.
     Over half of the voters oppose the agenda offered by Walker and Republicans in the legislature.  Only 43 percent favor it.  There is a major intensity gap as well, with 39 percent strongly opposing their proposals and only 28 percent strongly supporting them.
      In the end, the Republican attack on the right to choose a union completely ignores what is good for everyday Americans – and for the American economy.  It is only concerned with what is good for the narrow economic and political interests of a tiny fraction of our population.  That’s why they must be defeated.  That’s why the battle of Wisconsin is really a battle for the survival of the American middle class.
Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and author of the book:  Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win

Minimum Wage Kills Affordable Housing - Creates Real Estate Opportunity

 (First published by Rockenomics on Feb 10th, 2011 at PinnacleDigest.om)
The title of today's blog doesn't sound possible if you are of the mind set that we need to help everybody because they aren't smart enough to help themselves. It couldn't possibly be true because we are told time and time again by the bleeding hearts that the minimum wage is the only thing separating the working poor from living in the streets. But alas, some simple number crunching and comparisons to actual published government documents reveal that indeed, the minimum wage and other government regulations aimed at making life better for the working poor actually go a long way to making many of them worse off.
Let's take a look at a minimum wage example where the minimum wage is $10/hour. It is higher in Ontario ($10.25) and lower in other places but the roundness makes the example slightly easier to demonstrate. In this example we have a slumlord who operates dozens of low rental units that he purchased at relatively high prices despite the shabby condition of many of them. In each of these units, he charges $160 per week or $694/month ($160 x 52 weeks / 12 months). He arrives at this figure rather simply - he gets it from his banker. The banker tells him that all people can afford to spend 40% of their income on housing. The banker tells him that the minimum wage is $10/hour and the normal person works 40 hours a week making $400/week. With 40% for housing, his tenants should be making payments of $160/week.
This may sound simplistic, but how does it compare to reality? As I said, the Ontario minimum wage is slightly higher and according to Stats Canada, the average monthly rent for a 1 bedroom apartment in Ontario in 2010 was $736.  That extra 25 cents an hour in Ontario's minimum wage raises the expected rate in my calculation to $711/month.  So, the actual rate charged is just $25 above my simple calculation.
What does this tell us? 
It tells us that minimum wages are propping up rent prices, which in turn are propping up the property values of affordable housing. As an investor, if you know this happens, then the time to purchase rental properties geared towards affordable housing is right after the government announces that the minimum wages are going up. Here's an example demonstrating the proof of this:
John owns a property and is collecting the expected rental rate of $711/month in Ontario based on his bankers recommended rate charge, which is based on the current minimum wage of $10.25/hour.
The government announces that it is going to raise the minimum wage to $11/hour beginning in 3 months.
Bill, an astute investor, recognizing the potential in real estate gains, does the simple calculation and determines that the property values should go up by the same percentage as the rent increase. The rate of increase in the wage is 7.3%. Bill offers John 5% below the market rate for the property knowing that he will make 7.3% when the wage actually rises. John accepts the offer, taking his money out of the market and Bill will now make 12.3% (5%+7.3%) in the first year. He knows that even if the economy turns bad, as long as he can rent the apartment, the value of the property will not fall.
Is the Minimum Wage Recipient Better Off?
The expected rental rate per unit will jump to $762/month, gobbling up 40% of the increase in the minimum wage and defeating the government's 'will' to make the person better off. Many other government intrusions, particularly those involving spending tax dollars, continue to drive up the cost of government debt creating an inflationary effect on the cost of basic goods including food and fuel. These items make up nearly 100% of the non-housing spending of low wage earners, so the remaining increase in the minimum wage is negated by inflation.
What if There was No Minimim Wage ?
Using the same arguments I've used above, if there was no minimum wage, then rents would not be tied to expected revenues, but to what the market can support. If the property isn't much better than  a rat hole, then rents might be only $150/month and someonebody would be willing to rent it. For someone making $10/hour in a non-minimum wageenvironment, there would be very good apartments available at much less than $700/month because the guaranteed income is no longer there for the landlord.
Indeed, there would need to be many more government regulations repealed in order for the elimination of the minimum wage to not be hurtful to the low income earner but the discussion neeeds to be started.
I've kept this as simple as possible because I've never seen this issue addressed anywhere. Hopefully it will create some discussion.