This chart, from Henry Blodget at Business Insider, shows that corporate profits as a percent of GDP are at an all-time high. This is occurring as wages are stagnating for most Americans — more on this in the remaining charts,
10 Charts of 2012: History of U.S. Debt
This chart, from Quartz.com, shows the historical debt-to-GDP ratio for the United States going back to 1790. What’s interesting to note about the graph is how the historical trends in this ration changed during the Reagan years. Prior to that point, we saw a fairly traditional pattern: debt rose during wars and during economic downturns. What made the Reagan years different was the fact that debt continued to increase even during the best of times in the 1980s.
10 Charts of 2012: The Rise and Fall of the PC
This chart, from Horace Dediu, shows the rise and fall of PC-based computing over the last 35 years. It shows that the rise of tablet computing and smart phones have disrupted the market in a way not seen since the rise of the PC thirty years ago.
10 Charts of 2012: Rising Tide
This chart, from Bloomberg Businessweek, shows that the number of natural disasters since 1996 costing $1 billion or more doubled compared with the previous 15-year period.
10 Charts of 2012 Preview: James Bond by the Numbers
The 10 Charts of 2012 starts Saturday. Here’s another couple of other charts to serve as a preview.
I am an unabashed fan of James Bond. (If you like the movies and haven’t read the original Ian Fleming novels, go out and do so.) And I’d be happy to tell you why Timothy Dalton was an underrated Bond or why On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (even with George Lazenby as Bond) is one of the best movies in the series.
The latest entry in the James Bond movie series, Skyfall, has shattered previous box office records for the franchise. It has already earned more that $100 million more in the U.S. than the second highest grossing Bond movie domestically, 2008′s Quantum of Solace. In worldwide box office, Skyfall is poised to become the movie in history to cross $1 billion in box office receipts, crushing 2006′s Casino Royale, which earned $599 million worldwide. But how does Skyfall compare if you adjust domestic box office receipts against inflation?
Daniel Craig’s incarnation of Bond still has some work to do to catch up to the heights of Sean Connery’s popularity in the 1960s. (And yes, I excluded Never Say Never Again from consideration. It’s not official. Don’t make me go into that.)
Meanwhile, The Economist provided another way to look at the Bond series. Turns out Pierce Brosnan is the most lethal of the bunch. Who woulda thunk?
10 Charts of 2012 Preview: How Long Until Miller Time?
Our now-annual feature, the Top 10 Charts of the Year begins on Saturday. Today, we give you a bonus chart as a preview. From the Economist, this chart shows how many minutes you have to work in countries across the planet to be able to afford 500 ml (16.9 oz) of beer.
Who says America is losing its global competitiveness?
Gun control options are many but solutions are hard to come by
The elementary school massacre in Newton, Conn. Friday is apparently going to prompt actual Congressional debate over potential new gun control measures. Here’s a look at some of the options you might hear about in the coming weeks, with some pros and cons of each:
- Firearm registration: Would require users to register all of their guns with the state. Would facilitate tracking of guns used in crime, as well as discourage ownership of prohibited weaponry. Would be relatively easy to avoid, however, and viewed as a serious abridgment of Second Amendment rights.
- Owner licensing and training: Would require gun owners and purchasers to be licensed by the state. Most proposals tie such licensing to requirements for successful completion of a gun safety course including passing a proficiency exam. Process would likely create additional expense for prospective gun owners.
- Liability insurance: Would require gun owners to purchase liability insurance that would cover any damages resulting from illegal usage of the weapon. Presumably, this would discourage the ownership of semi-automatic weapons because insurance rates would be higher. Would make it much harder for lower-income folks to own firearms.
- Additional screening: Would subject current or prospective gun owners to more intensive screening of their criminal and mental health background. Would likely prevent more people with mental health problems from obtaining weapons, but will never be 100% successful. Also, could be considered a significant invasion of privacy depending on what steps are involved.
- Limits on magazine size: The Bushmaster .223 semi-automatic rifle used by the Connecticut shooter had a detachable magazine that carried 30 rounds. Some have called for the limit to be as low as six rounds, but most proposals place the number at 10 or 12 rounds as the maximum. Significant numbers of these large magazines still exist today (and would continue to after a ban), and one could expect a robust black market to develop.
- Ban on detachable magazines: Some have called for a ban on detachable magazines altogether, which would require rounds to be loaded by hand instead of the quick change process facilitated by the detachable magazine. Similar black market issues would exist with this option.
- Other limits on ammunition sales: Various options could be in play here, such as limits on the amount or type of ammunition that could be purchased.
- Bans on certain types of weapons: Congressional Democrats have already indicated that they will be looking to reinstate the Assault Weapons Ban which expired in 2004 — this legislation primarily impacted semi-automatic rifles with certain military features. Could be somewhat effective — for instance, the AR-15 used by the Aurora, Colo. movie theater shooter would have been banned by the law had it still been in place. However, there were legal weapons available that provided essentially the same function. As with some of the other options, a robust black market would likely exist, unless the U.S. were to undertake an effort like Australia did in the mid-1990s, spending millions to buyback banned weapons.
The key thing to note about all of these options is that there’s no provision here that’s going to be a magic wand. Guns are and always will be a part of American culture. Mainstream debate (on both sides of the political aisle) reflect the fact that no one wants to take away the rights of law-abiding Americans to have a firearm for self-defense and hunting. To reduce the number of tragedies like Newtown or Aurora or Columbine or Virginia Tech is going to require changes across a number of areas of American life — not just or not even primarily changes in gun laws. It has to reflect that our system for treating folks with mental illness isn’t working. It has to reflect that there are some things very wrong with our culture. Bob Costas may have used the wrong platform to talk about it, but we need to rethink our love affair with firearms and begin to treat them with the respect that they deserve. Ads like this don’t help the process along:
Featured image courtesy of the Newtown Bee.
Elites agree: it’s time for you and your kids to pay for their failures
Today’s POLITICO has one of those only-in-the-Beltway kinds of stories that make you wonder if there’s any signs of life there at all. Reported by Jim VandeHei and Mike Allen, it’s a synthesis of elite opinion (lawmakers and staffers from both sides of the aisle, as well as business executives) about what needs to be done to get our economy back on track once and for all. Now certainly, there’s some good stuff in there — expanding immigration for high-skilled workers, for instance, is something that is long overdue. But let’s be clear here. The elite agenda for “fixing” our economy calls for significant doses of sacrifice from the middle class and working poor and precious little sacrifice from them.
Let’s start off with the sacrifice that the elites are willing to make — an increase in taxes for those making over $250,000 a year. This would raise the top marginal tax rate (on income over $250,000) from 35% to the Clinton-era rate of 39.6%. That’s certainly something, although one could fairly argue that returning to the tax rates that coincided with the best period of economic growth this country has had in the last 20 years might not be the worst thing in the world. But let’s look at what isn’t on the table.
Changes to capital gains taxes? Nope. They’ll continue to get their much lower rate, meaning that folks like Mitt Romney or Paris Hilton who live off of investment income will continue to pay tax rates in the 15% range — lower than many middle-class and working poor families. Not only that, but hedge fund and private equity investors will still get to treat their regular earnings as investment income instead of wage income, saving some individuals millions in tax liability every year.
Taxes on financial transactions or financial speculation? Nope. In the wake of the financial market meltdown in 2008, some suggested using a transaction tax on stock or bond transactions or higher rates on short-term capital gains as a means to both discourage speculative activity that makes the markets more volatile as well as creating a fund to deal with the damage created by current (and future) market failures. These are still not on the table.
Breakup of the largest financial institutions? Nope. The 2008 market meltdown required government intervention to prevent the collapse of institutions deemed “too big to fail”. What largely happened in these cases is that other large banks ended up buying the failing banks. So an industry that was already unduly concentrated and prone to risk has become even more concentrated and even more prone to risk (despite some of good provisions in Dodd-Frank).
All of these items would represent real sacrifice for the elites in our society, but they’re not on the table. What are they asking of the middle class and the working poor? Oh, not much, except the gutting of perhaps the two most effective government programs at providing income security and health care to Americans. Banks and financial institutions get bailouts when they make bad decisions. Now the government is poised to give you insecurity when you retire after decades of hard work.
Sacrifice for thee, not for me
Medicare is the largest contributor to the future deficit problem due the explosion in both the number of seniors citizens and the continuing rise in health care costs (at a rate much faster than inflation in the rest of the economy, which means it will have to be part of the solution. But there’s smart ways to reform Medicare and stupid ways to reform Medicare. As befits our current political dialogue, the ones that are being debated are the stupid ones.
One of most likely changes to Medicare is an increase in the age of eligibility from 65 to 67. At a base level, this doesn’t sound like that big of a deal. Well, the problem is that in trying to save the federal government a little money, we’re going to end up spending a lot more overall. Increasing the age to 67 would save the federal government about $5.7 billion a year, but would raise individual out-of-pocket expenses by $3.7 billion, and increase the insurance premium expense for employers by $4.5 billion. Already, we’ve made the overall system less efficient by $2.5 billion, but we’re not done yet. Adding 65- and 66-year-olds to the general health insurance pool is going to make everyone else’s health insurance more expensive (because the overall population will be sicker) — that’s another $2.5 billion. Finally, states are going to have additional health expense on some of these seniors totaling about $0.7 billion. If you total it up, the financial cost to society of changing the Medicare eligibility age is twice as large the savings we would see in the deficit. That’s not a good trade-off. (And that’s before we look at some of the non-financial impacts.)
There are smart ways to save money — significant money — in Medicare going forward. We can end fee-for-service payment policies and replace them with paying providers for results. We can give Medicare enhanced power to negotiate prices with suppliers — particularly for prescription drugs. We can research the statistically most effective and cost-efficient ways to treat conditions and encourage providers to use those guidelines. These are the types of reforms that we should be pursuing.
Perhaps even more galling in the context of the current budget debate is the fact that Social Security is getting dragged into the mix. Social Security contributes nothing to our nation’s current budget deficit. In fact, Social Security ran a $69 million surplus in 2011 and is projected to run surpluses for the next decade. We have 20 years before the Trust Fund is exhausted (under current projections), and the simple act of removing the cap on the payroll tax would resolve at least 95% of the projected deficit going forward. And if we did nothing, the cost of filling the gap after the Trust Fund is exhausted is less than 1% of GDP — a relative pittance compared to Medicare.
Instead, we’re seeing the same shortsighted tactics on Social Security as we are on Medicare. What’s on the table is an increase in the retirement age from 67 to 70, and changing the way inflation is calculated so that such increases would be smaller than they are today. These changes would have severe negative impacts on future retirees, but they would only raise 1/3 of the money that removing the payroll cap on the wealthy would. Yet, no one’s really talking seriously about major reform to the payroll tax cap.
Big bad ideas
These reform plans for Medicare and Social Security are based on two big ideas, both of which are misguided. The first bad big idea is “People are living longer, so increasing the eligibility ages is no big deal!”. And while that’s true, it’s not true in the same way for everybody. Wealthy Americans have seen their life expectancies improve by six years since 1977, while folks in the lower half of the income distribution have seen only an increase of one year in that time period. These workers are more likely to be in blue-collar industries that are more reliant on physical labor. Working in those jobs in their upper-sixties with questionable health insurance just isn’t a winning proposition.
The other really bad big idea in these plans is “We have to protect current seniors”. It’s certainly true that low- and middle-income seniors shouldn’t be expected to see substantial changes to these programs. But if this is the kind of crisis that makes one of our political parties willing to risk defaulting on our bonds, maybe rich seniors should make some sort of contribution to solving the problem? Certainly, there are wealthy seniors (and seniors-to-be) who could afford to pay co-pays for Medicare or take some means testing on their Social Security check today. It hardly seems fair to think that the bill for this financial mess should be borne primarily by the children and grandchildren of those who ran up the credit card in the first place. If we’re not willing to require any sort of contribution by today’s seniors (and seniors-to-be) to solving this crisis, aren’t we in fact admitting that it isn’t a crisis and just a problem that needs to be addressed in a reasoned manner?
Passing the buck and the bill
And it gets worse yet. Many of the elites pushing these sorts of “solutions” to the problem are simultaneously pushing for so-called tax reform that would lower corporate taxes. David Cote, the CEO of Honeywell, has been one of the key public faces behind Fix the Debt, a business organization that has made a large effort to influence the debate. Cote loves to talk about tax reform as a part of this process, but what he doesn’t like to talk about is that he’s really trying to eliminate the corporate income tax. If corporate taxes are eliminated, guess who’s going to get the bill to make up the lost revenue? (Hint: It’s not David Cote.)
I’m not opposed to tax reform. But tax reform shouldn’t consist of a series of handouts to one group while demanding sacrifices from another.
And guess what else isn’t on the table as part of these negotiations? Any real attempt to focus on the unemployment problem. Basically, at this point we’re left to hope that if the elites get their way and extract the appropriate sacrifice from everyone else that the certainty created by such maneuvers will suddenly convince business owners to start creating jobs. Of course, that notion in and of itself is misguided. Businesses don’t create jobs out of certainty — they create jobs because there is demand for their product and services. To create demand for their products and services, we need to have a population that has jobs and disposable income to spend. Cutting Medicare and Social Security while squeezing government spending through austerity does nothing to improve the employment picture or improve household income.
We have a medium- to long-term deficit problem that needs to be addressed. The important thing we need to remember is that it’s far more important to do the right thing for all of our citizens than to just earn political scalps by “raising taxes on the wealthy” or “cutting entitlements”. These problems are about more than numbers on a spreadsheet — they have real world impacts that CEOs or lawmakers or writers for Washington D.C. political journals will never have to deal with. It’s time for the voices of those who don’t attend Georgetown cocktail parties to be heard as part of this process as well.


December 27, 2012 












