Solution is to create a corporate model based on the principle that all workers will share in proportion to their input whether manual, intellectual or the likes in the corporate profitability of the company thereby making them minority shareholders. There will need to be a structure whereby successful workers get additional shares of the company and a corporate ladder reflecting such performance. This method aligns the interests of the workers with that of the board and executives, incentivizes all workers as they see the company as if its their own and more importantly distributes profits and wealth more equitably throughout the economy whilst energizing economic activity. Finally it polices profligate boards who on many occasions are totally self serving at the expense of the unsuspecting or helpless shareholders and ultimately workers.
6/21/2013
6/20/2013
Response to Paul Krugman. Is the Fed premature?
PRK wrote a blog in the New York times on 20.6.13 titled 'A Potentially Tragic Taper http://nyti.ms/104e2S4 ' basically fearing the Fed is perhaps too proactive in anticipating an end to QE.
I list below my response:
I list below my response:
This is so and I couldn’t agree more with your reasoning
after all back in August of 2011 I was
trumpeting the need for the Fed & Central banks in general to abandon the guardianship of inflation
fighting and embrace and promote higher inflationary expectations.
(See my first ever blog below)
What we should be focusing on however, is both the yield on
longer term treasuries which has moved up considerably over the course of the
last few months as the market assesses growth prospects, as well as the yield
curve which is showing signs of steepening.
Both these factors, although in the past falsely signaled
the return to stronger growth and subsequently collapsed, have now trended at
these higher levels implying that market participants are more convinced about
the sustainability of growth.
In this respect therefore, you may not be giving the Fed
enough of the credit it is due. Time will of course be the judge of this. .
1/29/2013
The Relationship between short & long term interest rates
1-
Short
term policy rates- These are the rates which are determined by Central
Banks and on which all other market rates take their cue. They include such
rates as federal funds and discount rate in the US, the bank rate in the UK
etc.
2-
Short
term market rates-These are market set rates and are closely associated
with short term policy rates, such as the infamous LIBOR (An interbank rate), short
Guilt rates in the UK or Treasury bills
(T-bills) in the US etc. These usually refer to anything with maturities from 1
month to one year. Depending on the quality of the borrower these rates vary
from the most secure T-bills & short Guilts, where both governments are
perceived as almost riskless having an independent Central bank and therefore
the ability to print ad infinitum and the riskiest junk corporates or
peripheral government bills the likes of Greece, Portugal, etc. So the less
risky implies they converge closest to the Federal funds rate whilst the
riskiest diverge the most. For example if rate expectations are neutral, 1
month T-bill rates will be almost identical to the overnight Federal funds rate
whilst I month USD interbank rates will be at a slight premium to Federal funds
reflecting the additional risk premium of first class banks.
The key is that the market sets
these rates based on the costs of borrowing on the short term policy rates. So
for example if the market feels the Fed will be tightening credit by raising
the federal funds rate in 2 months’ time then 3 month T-bills will be trading
at a rate higher than the overnight federal funds rate to a level closer to
where the market thinks rates will be raised by the Fed. The opposite would
also occur should the Fed be expected to lower rates in 2 months’ time. In
other words the market tends to discount presently rate expectations based on
the dynamic forces affecting these rates on a daily basis.
3-
Medium
& long term market rates- The market refers to these as yields not
rates anymore. It applies to maturities from 2 to 50 years known as notes and
bonds. For any instrument whether it’s a Treasury or corporate note or
bond will henceforth be priced by the
market by discounting presently the total of interest or coupon payments this
instrument will have and thus the price of such instrument will vary on the
basis of such discounts. Should short term policy rates therefore go up,
ceteris paribus, the market will re-price presently existing T-notes or bonds
to reflect these higher interest rates in the future too. In fact the longer
the maturity the greater the changes in price for a given yield change. Moreover, long term rate or yield
expectations are not only dependent on short rates but more importantly on all
market forces which may have an instrumental effect on interest rates in the
future. For example if the USD continues to fall in this current economic
environment the market may perceive an expansionary effect by the increase in
US exports and may thus begin to drive yields higher in expectation of a rise
in short term rates in the future. The same would apply if the government
embarks in a highly expansionary fiscal policy. These are just two examples but
the variants are endless and yields will change by the effect each variable
will have on perceived future economic activity.
So in conclusion, long term rates are
clearly associated with short term policy rates but because long rates are
market determined they are also independent of them. A case in point would be
if for example the Fed decided to raise short rates at this juncture. A likely
effect would be a short term spike in long yields as the market feared the
start of a longer term trend but may fall to a level lower than prior to such a
policy decision as the market judges it premature and growth disruptive.
Thus a market related sustainable higher
trending yield and thus yield curve is a sign of expectations of stronger growth as well as higher
inflation. The key is for this mix to favor growth.
1/22/2013
Wealth Inequality & Growth a response to Paul Krugman
The
financial bubble of the last decade created the housing bubble and along with
it the financial crisis with its ramifications along all sectors of the economy
and the world at large. Specifically in the US,
already overextended consumers
had an unprecedented negative wealth effect to contend with both from a
reduction in the value of more liquid assets such as stock holdings but more
importantly the collapse in the value of their homes to such a level that more
than 50% of all mortgage holders were effectively underwater on what
constitutes most probably their biggest lifetime investment. In other words, if
they were to liquidate at any time and sell their home they would be short on
the amount owed to the bank. Interestingly, most (close to 85%) of these negative
equity mortgages were being serviced and non delinquent indicating that owners
were willing to adhere to mortgage payments on expectation ( I would contend) of
an improvement in their home values.
More
importantly however, is what this has meant to the underlying level of demand
in the economy and what the government should have done to reinvigorate it.
Understandably the FED and government gave precedence to the stability of its
financial system as its first and foremost priority for without a solvent
banking sector the US and the world for that matter would have experienced an
apocalyptic depression. All emphasis then on the financial system which was
successfully revamped and returned to health with the FED’S dramatic actions
including aggressive QE, still with us today. It was hoped that the salvation
of the money lending institutions would also have secured the necessary lending
to households and businesses to remobilise the economy; to no avail. On the one
hand the banks were in no mood to expand their balance sheet in an environment
of conservative restructuring and a consumer already underwater and on the
other a consumer faced with negative equity in a defensive mode with a focused
purpose, to increase the savings rate and deleverage. It is evident that in
such a setting unless balance sheet restructuring takes hold final demand will
at best be weak.
How was
inequality exacerbated from the above phenomenon? Saving stockholders at the
expense of debtors clearly transferred wealth from debtors to creditors. The US
population was asked to bailout the financial system by dramatically expanding
the US’s budget deficit and the FED’S
balance sheet reinvigorating both bond
and stock prices but without a commensurate knock on effect on the
weakest and largest part of the population. This has meant that the ultimate
driver of demand the consumer did not receive any direct help to a healthier
balance sheet. He was left to the unforgiving effects of the market forces of
adjustment. In other words, the consumer would only return to his usual habits
if any or all of the following could take place & in such a magnitude so as
to substantially improve his balance sheet and its prospects: A rise in home
values, debt deleveraging and forgiveness with its accompanying increase in the
savings rate, world growth that would induce cash rich companies to
substantially increase investment and employment to meet this growth in world
demand.
Will
reversing this inequality by pursuing policies aimed at creating the
aforementioned conditions drive demand and ultimately consumption? Without
doubt the liquidity effect aptly described by Paul Krugman is likely to play an
important catalyst. I would in fact call it a wealth effect for it is households
feeling good about returning to positive equity that should induce them to
spend part of this windfall. This would in turn provide impetus to the cash
rich companies to increase the utilisation of their existing factors of production
and perhaps lead them to increased investment. The economic textbooks should
then take over through the multiplier momentum.
The above deals of course with wealth and not income inequality a more complex issue worth discussing in a different blog.
The above deals of course with wealth and not income inequality a more complex issue worth discussing in a different blog.
1/06/2013
My comment on Frances Coppola's blog "Slaying the inflation monster"
Excellent article.
We have been living in an era of deflation since the 2008
financial crisis with inflation vigilantes worsening the situation from central
banks to inflationary hawks by not allowing for the cleansing effects of
slightly higher inflation/expectations and a redistribution of income from
creditors to debtors. The result, historically low long term yields unable to
boost economic growth and employment, economies mired in slow growth and a debt
overhang which may take decades to write down to manageable levels if policies
remain unaltered. The QE embraced by most central banks of indebted countries does
help but should be reinforced without half measures and the threatening fear of
higher inflation for it is no more than fear for as long as long term bond yields
do not predict otherwise and to my knowledge till very recently, they have been
showing the exact opposite.
In fact Central Banks should aspire to create market induced
sustainably higher long term yields for its this indicator which should lead us
to expect stronger growth.
12/20/2012
A comment to Paul Marshall's Opinion on the FT about Central Banks seeing beyond inflation
In response to this article http://t.co/vZKJRdXm on the FT my take:
There are two routes not mutually exclusive but complimentary at redistributing wealth from creditors to debtors: 1- The pursuit of increased inflationary expectations & 2- Debt forgiveness. It is inevitable that both will ultimately be chosen to improve the faltering household balance sheets and regenerate consumer demand. Central banks, like in Japan's case, should embrace higher inflationary expectations but more importantly structure a mechanism that will work equitably towards the path to debt forgiveness.
There are two routes not mutually exclusive but complimentary at redistributing wealth from creditors to debtors: 1- The pursuit of increased inflationary expectations & 2- Debt forgiveness. It is inevitable that both will ultimately be chosen to improve the faltering household balance sheets and regenerate consumer demand. Central banks, like in Japan's case, should embrace higher inflationary expectations but more importantly structure a mechanism that will work equitably towards the path to debt forgiveness.
12/08/2012
Η ΕΥΤΥΧΗΣ ΑΛΓΕΒΡΑ ΤΗΣ ΕΠΑΝΑΓΟΡΑΣ.
Η απάντηση μου σε άρθρο του Κυρίου Βαρουφάκη στο Protagon
1-Οτιδήποτε μειώνει το χρέος μας χωρίς να αυξάνει τις υποχρεώσεις μας είναι θετικό. Μπορεί κάτω από 20 δισ ευρώ μείωση να σας φαίνεται άνευ ουσίας αλλά για εσάς φαίνεται πως το χρήμα δεν έχει πλέον αξία. Μην υποτιμάτε οπιαδήποτε μείωση.
2- Η μείωση μας φέρνει πιο κοντά στην βιωσιμότητα του χρέους καθώς εκτός των άλλων οι αποδόσεις των ομολόγων μας υποχωρούν.
3-Οι τράπεζες όταν έχουν σύνολο 15 δισ στο χαρτοφυλάκιο τους πως κουρέυονται με 14 δισ, όπως λέτε, όταν το χρέος τους αγοράζεται με 35%; Μάλλον λάθος κάνετε. Πρώτον οι τράπεζες αγόρασαν τα ομόλογα που κατέχουν κάτω από την τιμή που τους προσφέρεται άρα έχουν και όφελος από την πώληση.ΔΕΝ ΚΟΥΡΕΥΕΤΑΙ ΚΑΝΕΝΑ ΚΑΙΝΟΥΡΓΙΟ ΠΟΣΟ.Το μόνο που χάνουν είναι την υπεραξία σε μία ενδεχόμενη μελλοντική άνοδο των τιμών των ομολόγων. Γιαυτό θα ήταν εύλογο η συμμετοχή των ξένων στην επαναγορά να είναι μεγάλη έτσι ώστε οι Ελληνικές τράπεζες να συμμετάσχουν με μικρότερο ποσοστό για να επωφεληθούν από την βελτίωση της μελλοντικής αξιοπιστίας της Ελλάδας. Ούτως η άλλως οι τράπεζες μπορούν εφόσον το επιθυμούν να ξαναμπούν στην αγορά να τα επαναγοράσουν.
1-Οτιδήποτε μειώνει το χρέος μας χωρίς να αυξάνει τις υποχρεώσεις μας είναι θετικό. Μπορεί κάτω από 20 δισ ευρώ μείωση να σας φαίνεται άνευ ουσίας αλλά για εσάς φαίνεται πως το χρήμα δεν έχει πλέον αξία. Μην υποτιμάτε οπιαδήποτε μείωση.
2- Η μείωση μας φέρνει πιο κοντά στην βιωσιμότητα του χρέους καθώς εκτός των άλλων οι αποδόσεις των ομολόγων μας υποχωρούν.
3-Οι τράπεζες όταν έχουν σύνολο 15 δισ στο χαρτοφυλάκιο τους πως κουρέυονται με 14 δισ, όπως λέτε, όταν το χρέος τους αγοράζεται με 35%; Μάλλον λάθος κάνετε. Πρώτον οι τράπεζες αγόρασαν τα ομόλογα που κατέχουν κάτω από την τιμή που τους προσφέρεται άρα έχουν και όφελος από την πώληση.ΔΕΝ ΚΟΥΡΕΥΕΤΑΙ ΚΑΝΕΝΑ ΚΑΙΝΟΥΡΓΙΟ ΠΟΣΟ.Το μόνο που χάνουν είναι την υπεραξία σε μία ενδεχόμενη μελλοντική άνοδο των τιμών των ομολόγων. Γιαυτό θα ήταν εύλογο η συμμετοχή των ξένων στην επαναγορά να είναι μεγάλη έτσι ώστε οι Ελληνικές τράπεζες να συμμετάσχουν με μικρότερο ποσοστό για να επωφεληθούν από την βελτίωση της μελλοντικής αξιοπιστίας της Ελλάδας. Ούτως η άλλως οι τράπεζες μπορούν εφόσον το επιθυμούν να ξαναμπούν στην αγορά να τα επαναγοράσουν.
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