About Me

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Los Angeles, California, United States
The blog 'Breaking Bread' is for a civil general discussion, like you might have at the dinner table with guests. The posts 'Economics Without the B.S.' are intended for a general audience that wouldn't have to know the difference between a Phillips Curve, a Laffer Curve, or a Cole Hamels Curve. Vic Volpe was formally educated at Penn State and the University of Scranton, with major studies in History, Economics and Finance, and Business; and, is self-educated since by way of books and on-line university courses. His practical education came from fifty years of work experience in the blue-collar trades as well as a white-collar professional career -- a white-collar professional career in production and R&D. In his professional career and as a long-haul trucker, he has traveled throughout the lower forty-eight. From his professional career alone he has visited many manufacturing plants in the United States, Europe and China. He has lived in major metropolitan areas and very small towns in various parts of the United States. He served three years with the U.S. Army as an enlisted man, much of that time in Germany.

Friday, December 6, 2013

Thought for the Day: Acquired Skills

Economics Without The B.S.**: Acquired Skills

[**  Double entendre intended.]

Thought for the Day:
Acquired Skills

“The society which scorns excellence in plumbing as a humble activity and tolerates shoddiness in philosophy because it is an exalted activity will have neither good plumbing nor good philosophy.  Neither its pipes nor its theories will hold water.”

John Gardiner – Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare for President Lyndon B. Johnson


Invictus: Tribute to Nelson Mandela

Invictus
by
William Ernest Henley


Out of the night that covers me,
               Black as the Pit from pole to pole,
I thank whatever gods may be
     For my unconquerable soul.

In the fell clutch of circumstance
          I have not winced nor cried aloud
Under the bludgeonings of chance
          My head is bloody, but unbowed.

Beyond this place of wrath and tears
          Looms but the Horror of the shade,
And yet the menace of the years
     Finds and shall find me unafraid.

It matters not how strait the gate,
     How charged with punishments the scroll,
I am the master of my fate:
     I am the captain of my soul.


Invictus was Nelson Mandela's favorite poem -- from which the movie was made.

Tribute to Nelson Mandela

Tribute to Nelson Mandela

One Team, One Nation




Saturday, November 2, 2013

Economic Theory Meets Reality

Economics Without The B.S.**: Economic Theory Meets Reality

[**  Double entendre intended.]

Thought for the Day:
Economic Theory Meets Reality

When economic theory gets played in the political arena the conclusion is guaranteed to be unpredictable and very dramatic.



Paul Samuelson/MIT Economist and Nobel Prize recipient 

Thought for the Day

Economics Without The B.S.**: Thought for the Day

[**  Double entendre intended.]

Thought for the Day:

To plant a garden is to believe in tomorrow.”

Audrey Hepburn

Monday, October 7, 2013

How To Build A City

Economics Without The B.S.**: How To Build A City

[**  Double entendre intended.]


How To Build A City


OP-ED from the Los Angeles Times, October 7, 2013
How to build a better Los Angeles
By Eli Broad and Richard J. Riordan *
The civic engagement it took to complete Disney Hall is a lesson in what's required to move L.A. forward.
The Walt Disney Concert Hall, which opened its doors 10 years ago this month, is rightly celebrated as the most recognizable jewel in Los Angeles' cultural crown.



But we should remember that Disney Hall came very close to not being built at all.
Despite a singularly generous $50-million donation from Walt Disney's widow, Lillian, in 1987, a brilliant design byFrank Gehry and an expenditure of nine years and $30 million, there was no Disney Hall by the early 1990s, and it looked like there never would be.
The city was attempting to recover from a devastating earthquake, the image-tarnishing O.J. Simpson trial and the shrinking of the local defense industry. In addition, Gehry's design was under fire — Los Angeles was suffering what contemporary art critic Robert Hughes called "the shock of the new" — and the additional fundraising required to supplement the Disney donation had slowed to a trickle. The New York Times Magazine even ran a cover story about the hall under the headline "A Phantom Hall Filled with Discord."
In 1996, county officials demanded that an additional $50 million be raised in the next year before construction could start. Without the money, the county was prepared to pull the plug. As longtime friends and devoted supporters of our adopted home city, it was clear to both of us that such an ambitious project needed mayoral backing and take-charge fundraising.
We vowed to raise double the money the county wanted, including $10 million from our own pockets. Andrea Van de Kamp, one of the city's most gifted fundraisers, joined our team. Together, we devised a new campaign to appeal not just to fans of the Los Angeles Philharmonic but to everyone who loves Los Angeles. "The Heart of the City" campaign emphasized that Disney Hall could be more than a home for great music and a work of brilliant architecture; it would be the linchpin of a downtown revitalization that would extend from the sports and entertainment district in the south to a cultural corridor in the north. Disney Hall would join the monumental buildings of Grand Avenue — MOCA by Arata Isozaki and the under-construction cathedral by Rafael Moneo — and would be unmatched by any street in the world for its architectural virtuosity.
For many months, every breakfast, lunch, dinner and cocktail party we organized included a pitch to support Disney Hall. We guaranteed all donations would go entirely to construction of the hall, not to consultants or studies. The city's corporate and philanthropic communities stepped up. We met the county's fundraising target and went on to raise more than $200 million to complete the hall. There were hurdles along the way, but everyone stayed committed.
In the end, the city rallied together around a vitally important project. Without that upwelling of civic commitment, the concert hall would probably still be a hole in the ground and Grand Avenue would still sit largely fallow.
Today, another roadblock threatens the completion of the long-delayed Grand Avenue Project, and the story of Disney Hall offers an important lesson for city leaders. The region's public institutions and private citizens are generous, and Los Angeles can match any city for ambitious civic projects that are vital to our economic, cultural and social identity. But citizens need leaders who sketch a vision of what is possible and rally them to the cause.
There were those who complained about Disney Hall's final price tag. But most Angelenos today would agree that Disney Hall is priceless. It is to Los Angeles what the Eiffel Tower is to Paris and the Opera House is to Sydney. And Disney Hall isn't just a great building. Gehry's magnificent work catalyzed the development of Grand Avenue, including an architecturally distinct arts high school by Wolf Prix, the beautiful and well-programmed Grand Park and, by the end of next year, a new contemporary art museum, the Broad. Thanks in large part to Disney Hall, cultural tourism to Los Angeles has tripled. We have become one of the four cultural capitals of the world.
The lesson Disney Hall's story teaches might be summed up in this formula: Private generosity plus political will equals civic success. It's a lesson Los Angeles can't afford to forget.

·         Philanthropist Eli Broad and former Los Angeles Mayor Richard J. Riordan co-chaired the Walt Disney oversight board, which raised much of the money to build Walt Disney Concert Hall.


Thursday, October 3, 2013

Do Elections Matter?

Economics Without The B.S.**: Do Elections Matter?

[**  Double entendre intended.]


The Election That Wasn’t???

The Election of 1936 and the Reaffirmation of the New Deal

There are only a few elections in American history that really make a change, a change that fundamentally alters the course of history and the American way of life.
The election of Andrew Jackson in 1828 brought in an egalitarian spirit and the mythology of the ‘Common Man’ after the previous presidents established the bedrock of the Founding Fathers – a Common Man identity that we still cling to today.  The election of 1860 initiates a great Civil War with the election of Abraham Lincoln and as a result of the consequences brings about a new birth of freedom and national identification and reconciliation that replaces partisan sectionalism.
The election of Franklin Roosevelt in 1932 brought in the New Deal – re-defining a more activist role for the Federal Government that we are still under the influence of today after eighty years.  The role of the Federal Government was changed during the first days of the New Deal to integrate the industrial, commercial, and agricultural sectors of the economy into a national network and to bring the advantages (e.g., water resources, electricity, better transportation, farming techniques taught at land-grant colleges, etc.) of urbanized centers to rural, isolated areas of the country.  [See the post for Congressman Wright Patman of East Texas.]
Some people attribute this insight on FDR’s part to his experience in the 1920’s traveling (by land) from the Hudson Valley of New York to the Appalachian hills of Warm Springs, Georgia.  Warm Springs was where he spent his time recovering from polio and had to learn all over again how to be somewhat self-sufficient while overcoming a mishap that was not of his own making.  While at Warm Springs he would drive out to the countryside and visit farmers and sharecroppers and he could compare this to other agricultural enterprises in the county.
          The other big change in the role of the Federal Government occurred at the advent of WWII.  And that was disentangling America from its isolationist past and integrating America into world affairs.  It was an attempt to try and spread an American practice of self-government where a legislative body would be the arena for partisan factionalism to evolve into peaceful political compromise rather than having the differences spill over to where the streets became the battleground for one side to triumph over another.  Does this sound familiar?  We are still at it seventy years later; but, unlike our experience after WWI, we have never returned to our isolationist past.
          But, rather than pick the election of 1932 as being crucial, I would point to the re-election of FDR in 1936 as the key election that cements the legacy of the New Deal into the framework of American society.  I point to this because over the recent decades there is an attempt by the Right Wing and Libertarians to give a revisionist view of this period and its influence.  Milton Friedman, Henry Hazlitt, and Bill Buckley, just to name a few, spent many decades mischaracterizing the New Deal influence and now we have Amity Shlaes and George Nash writing several books doing the same.  First, let’s examine what led up to the election of 1932.
During the whole decade of the 1920’s the Republicans controlled not only the Presidency but also both the Senate and House of Representatives.  This did not change until after the Stock Market Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression which resulted.  In the off-year election of 1930, the Democrats got control of the House of Representatives and the Republicans barely hung on to control of the Senate by just one vote.  In the main election of 1932 , it was a Democratic Party sweep – the Presidency and both houses of the Congress, by wide margins in each.
During FDR’s first term he initiated banking reforms, public works projects, the TVA and rural electrification projects, and had a very productive first 100 Days with major legislative accomplishments.  His main program, the National Recovery Administration (NRA), was eventually declared unconstitutional by the second term.  Did it get us out of the Depression?  NO!  But it helped and showed an administration that was doing something from the get-go and not waiting for an eventual economic recovery.
In the off-year election of 1934, the Democrats increased their margins in controlling both houses of the Congress.  In the election of 1936, in the midst of the Depression with only a little improvement over the past four years, a re-election for FDR and re-affirmation of his first term, it was a Democratic Party wipe-out of the Republican Party.  Not only did FDR defeat Alf Landon by taking just over 60% of the popular vote -- Landon ran not on Hoover’s platform, but as a Populist from the Great Plains; but, the Democrats increased their hold on both houses of the Congress with the Republicans having less than 20 Senators out of a total of 96.

To put this in perspective with other landslide re-elections since:

(1)  If you look at LBJ’s victory over Goldwater 1964 as a re-election of the Kennedy Program, the Democrats had a sweep but their margins in Congress were not as great as FDR’s in 1936.
(2)  Nixon in 1972 could take over 60% of the popular vote but had no coat-tails as the Democrats retained control in the Senate and the House of Representatives.
(3)  Reagan in 1984 took over 60% of the popular vote; but, had no coat-tails as the Republicans lost a couple of seats in the Senate while gaining a few seats in the House but the Democrats still maintained control.

In short, FDR had coat-tails that swept in other Democrats with him by even wider margins than they had before; and, we have not seen this one-sided an election since.

          Now you could make an argument that people do not always know what they are voting for.  And in 1932, when people voted for FDR they knew it would be a New Deal, but they didn’t know, or care, what that was as long as it wasn’t Hoover.  People felt abandoned by the big corporations and looked to the Federal  Government to step in and do anything.  After all, the major corporations hardly had one quarterly loss during the whole period of the Great Depression while Main Street and Small Town America suffered.  From the last couple of years of the Hoover Administration to the first year of FDR's Administration, the country experienced a deflationary spiral of 25% and a GDP that was half of what it was during the Roaring 20's.  But, by 1936, after four years of FDR and the New Deal, people had some idea of what they were in for and this was their chance to ‘APPROVE’ or ‘REJECT’ the previous four years.  The results were so one-sided that the Republicans did not get control of another branch of the Federal Government until the 1946 election.
So, how do we account for this re-interpretation of history by Amity Shlaes and her cohorts?   As one-sided as all of these elections are, there is still almost 40% who did not vote for the victor – FDR, LBJ, Nixon, or Reagan.  That is still a sizeable minority that has to be dealt with even while proponents move forward with implementing their programs.  Try as they might, the Republicans have never been able to un-do the New Deal programs or the influence of the role of the Federal Government in our modern democracy.  The intellectual elite can re-interpret with their revisionist history, but there is still plenty of foundation left in the New Deal legacy for them to chip away at.  A foundation that was embedded into the American fabric eighty years ago.


The re-election of 1936, and re-affirmation of the New Deal, there has never been another election like it since!

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Government Shut-Down?

Economics Without The B.S.**: Government Shut-Down?

[**  Double entendre intended.]


The Ripple Effects of
Our Intrusive Federal Government Economy

With the Federal Government shut-down because of a dispute over ObamaCare (aka Affordable Care Act), the question Liberals, Conservatives, Libertarians, Democrats, and Republicans are all trying to answer is “Will you feel the effects of a Federal Government Shut-Down?”
Well first we need to define what a Federal Government Shut-Down is.  Is it just a layoff of federal workers so that no work gets done?  Is it stopping funding of government operations?...stopping spending on federal contracts?...freezing government spending at current levels (of the last year)?  Judging by the last government shut-down during the Clinton Administration, federal workers were laid-off for less than 30 days total.  However the threat of a government shut-down started at the end of a fiscal year (September) going into the new fiscal year with the threat that funding would be stopped.  That threat lasted for over 100 days and it affected the way some bureaucrats hold or transferred money to keep some programs going while holding other programs in check.  It was estimated that the Shut-Down during 1995/1996 cost GDP growth around one percent, and that was at a time when we had a much stronger economy.
Will it hurt the economy this time?  Will I feel the results when the Federal Government shuts down?   The Federal Government portion of our GDP (the economy) is running between 22-24%, which is sizeable but it depends on what you do and where you live.  Social Security and Medicare, two of the biggest government programs, are funded by their own accounts and not by the general funds that are affected by a government shut-down -- and there is over $2.5 trillion in the Social Security Trust Fund and it has been operating at annual deficits only in the past couple of years at approximately $40-$50 billion.  The biggest portion of government spending that would be affected would be defense spending.  So it depends on if you live in a community with a big defense presence or military contractors/suppliers doing business with the government.  Farming communities may see a direct Federal Government presence; and, there may be a few other programs like the Small Business Administration or a university research project funded by the National Institute of Health.  But a lot of other federal spending comes through state and local government entities, like highway funding and education.  So, a federal government shut-down is not always that visible or easy to figure the impact.
Who will know if the Shut-Down hurts the economy?  It is somewhat ironic that the people who track unemployment and GDP growth statistics are considered non-essential workers and are part of the laid-off workforce.  I don’t know how these figures will be reported if the shut-down drags on for a while.
We have a $16 trillion economy.  Every ¼% loss of GDP amounts to $10 billion each three month period.  Some have estimated a ½% loss of GDP if the shut-down is prolonged.  In 1995/1996 the loss was estimated at 1%.  We have a weak economy this time and it is hard to determine just what the impact will be.  Also, if this shut-down is prolonged, lasting more than three months, there could be a multiplier effect since we have a consumer economy that dominates instead of a large commercial/industrial sector to supplement a consumer economy.  We do not know what an economic slowdown here would do to the international economy that is tied to us and we to them.
More ironic is the people who want to shut the Federal Government down are the ones who have been preaching fiscal responsibility and giving economic arguments for economic growth.  If they continue in their ways, we will find out.
The threat of a shut-down this time has been coupled by Republicans to defunding ObamaCare.  But ObamaCare has already been funded, so shutting down Government doesn’t stop implementation of ObamaCare.  Or is it political gamesmanship?  Who takes the blame in the eyes of public opinion when the Federal Government is shut down?  Who will yield first?  Politically, if you want to hang yourself, will your opponent save you from the rope or feed you more rope?  Will public opinion shift as this drags on?  Aside from public opinion, the Mother’s Milk of Politics is money and both sides have used the Shut-Down to raise money.  So, when they have milked the situation for all it is worth, will they be ready to settle?  Moderates and Independents await the results after the food fight is over.  The final irony is that the nihilists among the Libertarians and Conservatives who constantly warn us of an intrusive Federal Government are now telling us that we will not feel the effects of a government shut-down.  [Just go on the web site for Cato Institute or the Heritage Foundation and follow their messages.]

NOTE:  By the way, when the finance industry and investors want to do calculations and need to determine a risk-free investment return, what statistic do they use?...Federal Government bonds, notes, and treasuries.  Why?  Because there has never been a U.S. default in our history, and we have never failed to pay our debts, and we have the power to print our own money, and the U.S. debt  that is held by foreigners is held in U.S. dollars (and not a foreign currency like Euros, Yen, Chinese Yuan, etc – which is what happened to Argentina years ago when they had a huge foreign debt held not in the Argentine currency but in foreign currency like U.S. $ or the German DM.).

P.S.  In February 2014, when this issue came up again, Republicans and Right Wing organizations no longer made the Government debt ceiling an issue.  If it wasn't important enough to make it an issue in February 2014, why was it so important months before in 2013 to bring the Government to a close?

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Then (1960’s) versus Now

Economics Without The B.S.**: 

[**  Double entendre intended.]


The Economy of the 1960’s versus our Present Economy

The 1960’s were our most productive decade since WWII – and I’m talking about decades and not some reconstructed 10 year period.  [This is real GDP growth; factoring out inflation; in current dollars and not some reconstructed base line.  Based on fiscal year data and not calendar year data.]  During the spend-thrift 60’s (up to FY1969) (the Vietnam War, Great Society Programs, etc., etc.) where we had eight years of Democrats and the only balanced budget was the one submitted by LBJ in FY1969 -- Debt to GDP went from over 55% to approximately less than 40% when the Liberal Democrats finally got kicked out. 

Some want to attribute this remarkable recovery to the Kennedy tax cuts.  But by the time LBJ signed this tax cut, in 1964 after JFK was assassinated, the economy was already growing over 6% annually -- and the tax cut was still a year away from taking any effect.  In the first year that the tax cuts took effect, they contributed just over $10 Billion to a $600 Billion economy. To put the $10 Billion in perspective, the NASA budget that year was over $6 Billion.

The economic growth of the 1960’s can be attributed to many things – the tax cut is just one, and not the most important.  Mainly you could characterize this decade, not as a supply-side phenomenon, but as a demand-driven economy.

1.  From the Depression through the 1950’s and even into the 1960’s there was pent up demand for consumer items.

2.  Defense spending was at a premium.  This was the height of the Cold War and a post-Sputnik era (until we landed on the Moon).  And by the mid-1960’s we had the Vietnam build-up.  Go to Huntsville, AL and the Red River Army Depot in Texarkana, TX and convince them how unimportant this was.

3.  Government spending in general, during the 1960’s, was much more capital intensive/infrastructure as compared with the last several decades we have had (especially since the 1980’s).  The welfare programs were far fewer than what we have today.  Social Security paid for itself in those days.  There was no Medicare until later in the decade.  And many of the states were making the same kind of expenditures – CA, NC, just to name a few.  Expenditures for roads, water projects, utilities in rural areas, university programs, airports, shopping centers, suburban sprawl, etc.

4.  Our economy in this post-war period was different in its input/output from sectors than what we have had in the last several decades (since the 1990’s anyway).  Our GDP was almost pretty evenly divided between Government (Fed, state, and local), consumer, and industry/commercial – today we are about 40-50% consumer, 35-40% Govt, and the rest industry/commercial.  Up to the 1960’s the Govt spending could ‘pump-prime’ the economy – today that effect is much diminished [just ask W and the Big O]. 

Today we are a consumer economy based on service sectors, which have multipliers of half that and less than the manufacturing sector.  Cutting taxes will not have the stimulus effect needed to propel the economy because of the tax burden that is mainly on upper income individuals.  Middle class and low income wage earners are tapped out on debt and the housing recovery (only a little over ½ -way to 2007 levels) will take several more years to benefit these consumers. 

Tax cuts have little effect in a consumer economy when working people pay little in income taxes (and real wages for working people have not kept up with the national productivity gains over the decades and many working people have high consumer debts) and most of the tax burden is on the upper income folks -- Bush found that out.  Because we have a consumer economy the $700 billions of stimulus under Bush and Obama has little impact. 

Increasing our exports/trade policy doesn't do much when only 9% of the economy is manufacturing. 

[An aside:  Most households in the 1960’s were single-income households, with few two income households.]

5.  NASA spending during the post-Sputnik era was running around 3-4% of the Federal budget – today it is less than ½ of 1%.

6.  The post-Sputnik era saw technology take off, with an impetus from Government R&D spending and spending to bolster education.  The growth of the technology sector eventually went from Govt reliance to the consumer sector.

7.  Foreign trade – the good as well as the bad news for the dollar.  The continental European countries (Germany, France, Italy, minus England) were coming out of the post-WWII doldrums by the late 1950’s and were very competitive with the U.S. by the 1960’s.  The U.S. benefited greatly during this period from the increase in world trade – back and forth.  The best year we ever had with the Balance of Payments was way back in the mid-1960’s, before the tax cut (personal rates as well as business taxes) went into effect.

8.  And finally, for the Monetarists, the Fed was a little more accommodating in 1960’s in comparison to the 1950’s (when we had three recessions).

So, while the tax cuts were beneficial to sustained growth, they were hardly the only thing at play and were by no means the initiator of the growth during the 1960’s nor the most influential.  And all this economic productivity occurred during a decade of civil unrest, protest, and labor-management strife; not to mention sex, drugs, and rock n' roll.

Listen to JFK’s speech on why we are going to the Moon.  Then you will understand how a demand-driven economy works and how Fed spending creates jobs and drives innovation and productivity, especially at a time when ALL who worked shared in those productivity gains.


Friday, August 16, 2013

Thought for the day

Thought for the day

Economics Without The B.S.**:

[**  Double entendre intended.]


In order to appreciate the beauty of a rose, you have to spread a little manure.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Thought for the day

Thought for the day

Economics Without The B.S.**:

[**  Double entendre intended.]


A trucker said:

A bad attitude is like a flat tire.

You ain't goin no where until you change it.


Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Volpe’s Corollary to Lord Acton’s Axiom

Volpe’s Corollary to Lord Acton’s Axiom

Economics Without The B.S.**:

[**  Double entendre intended.]


Volpe’s Corollary to Lord Acton’s Axiom

Lord Acton’s Axiom:
            Power corrupts; and,
            Absolute power corrupts absolutely!
           
Volpe’s Corollary to Lord Acton Axiom:
            Power may corrupt; but,
            even in a democratic society
            WE MUST GOVERN!

Robert Caro’s Corollary to Lord Acton Axiom:
            Power reveals!

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Manufacturing Employment In Decline?

Economics Without The B.S.**:

[**  Double entendre intended.]


Manufacturing Employment In Decline?

The number of people employed in the manufacturing sector of our economy has been in decline for decades and experts point to this trend as if it will continue forever.  I read Race Against The Machine and enjoyed it — and I do believe that this is a trend. Never the less, high-tech and medium-tech manufacturing make up only one-third of manufacturing at the present time.  Low tech manufacturing still predominates and we have many workers with poor skills who can fill these low-tech jobs and get paid a lot better than they would in the consumer economy we have. Also, the authors fail to account for all the jobs that manufacturing has related to the manufacturing process that don’t appear on the shop floor or in the manufacturing facility itself — many engineering jobs, technician jobs, blue-collar jobs, etc., etc. Not to mention all the other sectors in our economy that are affected by the manufacturing sector — energy, transportation and logistics, computer services and applications, servicing the manufacturing plant and equipment and supply businesses, etc., etc.
Manufacturing is approximately 10% of our economy and could easily be a lot more (maybe 25%) — we have a lot of capacity that has never been developed since the 1990′s.  Let’s invest in this infrastructure. Our military readiness depends on a home-grown manufacturing sector better than sourcing off-shore and our military needs people within their ranks (civilian and military) who have the technical know-how that comes from an emphasis on manufacturing technology (i.e., making things as opposed to selling things). And, if we manufactured more, it would improve our exports and the large deficit in our current account/trade balance (which I think is running around $525 billion this year). I could go on and on; but, you can go on to other posts on my blog.
In discussing the trendline decline in manufacturing over the decades, “experts” like to compare it to the agricultural revolution at the turn of the century at 1900, when during the 19th Century most Americans made their living related to agriculture and by the beginning of the 20th Century only a small minority of farmers were feeding a continental nation that had grown a lot bigger.  This comparison with the agriculture industry is a good comparison in some respects to manufacturing. Farmers made up a large percentage of the workforce in the 1800′s but have been in decline ever since -- but producing more for domestic consumption and also making a big contribution to exports. Yet, there are still a lot of jobs/industry associated with food production and distribution (domestically and export) and the development of a mass market, not just domestically but internationally. And the scientific sector has been a lot more involved with the agriculture industry since WWII — chemicals, feed, plant research, constructing food for taste/shapes/appeal (the same food but for different nationalities), climate’s affect on plant management, pharmaceuticals for animals, etc.. etc.
Let’s not be short-sighted when it comes to manufacturing — listening to ‘experts’ who may never have worked in a manufacturing environment.  The complacency that comes from status quo thinking is not serving a nation well that has always been forward-looking, accepting challenges, seizing opportunity, and venturing into unchartered enterprises.

Going Places: The Transportation Network

Economics Without The B.S.**:

[**  Double entendre intended.]


Going Places:  The Transportation Network

Our national landscape is being renovated by an upgrading of our transportation infrastructure.  The global economy that emerged in the 1990’s is slowly re-integrating our rail, trucking, and interior waterways along with air.
The Panama Canal is being upgraded to handle larger sea-going vessels and the bigger ones to come in the nearby future.  Sea-going ports around the nation are spending hundreds of millions of dollars at each port to upgrade their facilities to capture future business, with our largest port, Los Angeles-Long Beach, spending billions.  The Savannah, GA/Charleston, SC port is aiming to compete with the West Coast ports for some of that business with Asia, both ways as Wal-Mart and car manufacturers in the Southeastern States see opportunities ahead.
Since the 1990’s the Inland Empire Area of Southern California has been transformed from a rural agricultural belt to a national transportation hub including rail, truck, and large distribution warehouses that feed the national byways with freight coming from Asia.  The dairy farms that once populated the area are being priced out of the region.  There have been so many massive warehouses built for the new business that the regional utility company has entered into agreements to utilize the roof-tops for solar panels for generating electricity for the region.
In the inland water-ways the Ohio River is being upgraded all along the river as more movement of freight is being revived.  The development along the Arkansas River still has potential as Wichita, KS is a small center where manufacturing is a significant part of the economy – twice what manufacturing is to the national economy.  And over the last couple of decades there have been large beef processing facilities built to handle the cattle raised in the old Dust Bowl Belt.  All of this feeding into the Mighty Mississippi, which is undergoing its own redevelopment along with the modernization of the Port of New Orleans and Port Arthur and Beaumont, Texas.
          In addition, the I-35 Corridor has been in effect since the 1990’s, running from Canada to Mexico.  Laredo, Texas has sprung up to take advantage of the trade that has developed along the route.  A route that runs North and South through the middle of the continent, connecting with all the major arteries running East and West and going through metropolitan areas that can take advantage of the developing trade avenues.
The developing infrastructure will be there for America to revitalize its industrial base and expand its manufacturing capability and increase its exporting prowess.  In addition, as the Panama Canal develops, there is the potential for the rest of Latin America to follow.  It is a great opportunity for economic development that would raise the living standards, bring progress to the fore, and ease the immigration problems which has burdened several of the countries.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Training Day


A workingman's tour of Philly.



Texas Economic Miracle and the California Basket-Case

Comparison:  The Texas Economic Miracle and the California Basket-Case

Economics Without The B.S.**:

[**  Double entendre intended.]

Now I know California has its problems -- poverty, poor water quality, bad business attitude, over regulation, etc., etc.  But if Fess Parker could make it in Santa Barbara County as an economic developer before he died, there is still hope for us all.

I like to read Richard Fisher of the Dallas Fed, especially when he makes comparisons between Texas and California; and, I agree with much of what he says about economic growth as an engine for prosperity.  I live in California.  But I also lived and worked in Texas.  So Richard, let's look at a few numbers.



COMPARISON:  CALIFORNIA AND TEXAS

Population:  California – approx 38 million;  Texas – approx 26 million
          California is 46% larger than Texas
California Workforce – approximately 47% larger than Texas
California GDP – approximately 50% larger than Texas
          Could it be that California attracts more tourists (money from outside the state than Texas?
Compare income data (which is given as a percentage to the U.S. economy) – Texas does not compare favorably to California, especially for farm income and for worker wages and salaries.
Government spending at state level – California is double that of Texas
Government spending at local level – California is more than double that of Texas (and look at your Rand McNally map, in the back, Texas has far more cities and towns than California and more geographic area to cover)

WORKFORCE POPULATION
Source:  Bureau of Labor Statistics Tables -- 2012


California
Texas
Civilian Labor Force
18.642 million
12.707 million
Unemployment (approx)
1.8 million
0.78 million
Total Nonfarm
14.570 million
11.119 million
Mining and Logging
29.9 thousand
281.5 thousand
Construction
616.9 thousand
617.4 thousand
Manufacturing
1,243.7 thousand
867.0 thousand
Trade, Transportation, and Utilities
2,747.8 thousand
2,220.4 thousand
Information
432.9 thousand
198.5 thousand
Financial Activities
785.0 thousand
665.0 thousand
Professional & Business Services
2,281.2 thousand
1,448.3 thousand
Education & Health Services
1,903.7 thousand
1,490.7 thousand
Leisure & Hospitality
1,649.4 thousand
1,130.7 thousand
Other Services
507.0 thousand
393.0 thousand
Government
2,372.9 thousand
1,806.6 thousand





Percentage each State contributes to the National GDP – expressed as a percentage of the National GDP

Source:  Bureau of Economic Analysis Tables -- 2011


California
Texas
Personal Income
12.79
8.08
Non-farm
12.77
8.10
Wages & Salaries
12.99
8.25
Proprietors
13.26
11.91
     Farm
12.26
5.68
     Non-farm
13.33
12.33




GDP COMPARISON
Source:  Bureau of Economic Analysis Tables -- 2011


California
Texas
Total GDP
$ 1.959 trillion
$ 1.308 trillion
Agriculture
$ 32 billion
$10 billion
Mining
$ 21
$ 119
Utilities
$ 28
$24
Construction
$ 59
$ 58
Durable Goods
$ 131
$ 83
Non-durable Goods
$ 99
$ 109
Wholesale
$ 107
$ 86
Retail
$ 121
$ 77
Transportation & Whrse
$ 44
$ 43
Information Technology
$ 136
$ 45
Finance & Insurance
$ 112
$ 90
Real Estate
$ 294
$ 110
Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services
$ 185
$ 92
Management of Companies
$ 29
$ 12
Admin & Waste Mgmt
$ 58
$ 40
Educational Services
$ 20
$ 8
Healthcare & Social Srv
$ 129
$ 82
Art & Entertainment
$ 26
$ 8
Accommodation & Food
$ 55
$36
Government
$ 225
$ 146



State budgets – what they spend

Source:  unknown, data approximately 2012



California
Texas
Pensions
$ 38 billion
$ 14 billion
Healthcare
$93
$ 45
Education
$ 113
$ 69
Welfare
$ 59
$ 12
Policing
$ 49
$ 21
Transportation
$ 27
$ 19
Interest on debt
$ 20
$ 12
Debt
$ 407
$281
     State Debt
$ 147
$ 34
     Local Debt
$ 260
$ 247
Total Spending
$ 479
$ 226
     State
$ 205
$ 100
     Local
$ 274
$ 126

One is a high service state and the other is a low service state.  Can you guess which?  And while Texas is more diversified than it has been; within sectors, California is more diversified -- for example, in agriculture California has approximately 200 cash crops.  And this comparison is made while California took a big hit from the economic collapse of 2008 while Texas supposedly fared better.  Let's return in a year or two and see how the comparison goes after the recovery.