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A Grand Theory of Our Present Dilemna

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villager Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-02-09 02:49 PM
Original message
A Grand Theory of Our Present Dilemna
Edited on Mon Feb-02-09 03:07 PM by villager
by
Jonathan Taplin

A Grand Theory of Our Present Dilemma
January 31, 2009 · 45 Comments

For the last month, I have been gripped by the gnawing sensation that all of the conventional wisdom about our current economic crisis is wrong. I think we are facing a crisis of capitalism, not just a periodic bout of market failure. What was most startling about yesterday’s GDP drop, was that consumer spending literally stopped. We have been riding in a vehicle turbo-charged with leverage and we just hit a brick wall.

“The drop in spending was so fast, so rapid, that production could not be cut fast enough,” said Nigel Gault, chief domestic economist at IHS Global Insight. “That is happening now, and the contraction in the current quarter, as a result, will probably exceed 5 percent.”

As I have said before, we are entering an Interregnum. Now the reason there was so much uproar about the Wall Street Bonuses this week is that the bankers didn’t realize this. The election of Barack Obama reintroduced the notion of a social contract. This is a very old notion as Karl Polanyi notes in his landmark book, The Great Transformation.

Take the case of a tribal society. The individual’s economic interest is rarely paramount, for the community keeps all its members from starving unless it is itself borne down by catastrophe, in which case interests are again threatened collectively, not individually. The maintenance of social ties on the other hand is crucial. First, because by disregarding the accepted code of honor, or generosity, the individual cuts himself off from the community and becomes an outcast; second, because in the long run, all social obligations are reciprocal, and their fulfillment serves also the individual’s give-and-take interests best.

<snip>

But men like Henry Kravis, Boone Pickens and Ron Perlman were not satisfied with these steady returns and Mike Milken, the junk bond king showed how with a lot of leverage they could “juice” those 4% returns into the mid 20% level. So in 1985 when Kravis’ KKR bought the Beatrice Companies (Tropicana, Samsonite) for $6.1 billion, most of the money used was junk bond debt. They then sold off individual brands, retired the debt and made a 30:1 return on their investment. Now everyone wanted in on the leverage game. Pension funds, college endowments and private investors battled their way to get in on these deals. The new normal was that money should earn 10%+ per annum. Like Adam Smith said, this was unsustainable.

Next, this mentality began to affect the CFO’s of even the most successful business. Joseph Schumpter in his classic text, Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy talks about the “vanishing of investment opportunity”. In 2003 even after the tech crash, Microsoft had cash holdings of $49 billion. But did they invest it in some new breakthrough technology? No–they used the money to buy back their own shares! So Bill Gates, our genius inventor, felt the investment opportunities had vanished and so he bought back shares to keep his stock price up. This same strategy was deployed in boardrooms all over the country, but on Wall Street, big hitters desperate for “Juiced returns” demanded even more leveraged product. And so the genius quants in the basement invented new derivatives to which 30:1 and 40:1 leverage could be applied...

<snip>

http://jontaplin.com/2009/01/31/a-grand-theory-of-our-present-dilemma/
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MineralMan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-02-09 02:59 PM
Response to Original message
1. I thought you might have made a mistake in your title,
Edited on Mon Feb-02-09 03:00 PM by MineralMan
but a Google search of "dilmena" showed me I was wrong:

Results 1 - 10 of about 29,300,000 for dilmena. (0.30 seconds)
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villager Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-02-09 03:07 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. Apparently, it's an easy typo to make!
Especially on this new keyboard! ;-)
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MineralMan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-02-09 03:11 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Seems so...just joshin' you...
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villager Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-02-09 04:56 PM
Response to Reply #4
6. Figured you were -- but glad to know I was in good company!
:D
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vicman Donating Member (373 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-02-09 03:00 PM
Response to Original message
2. I remember the early 90's
right after the collapse of the Soviet Union there was all this nonsense about "the triumph of capitalism" and "the End Of History." I also remember thinking at the time "how long it will it take us to fall into the same hole." Maybe we have part of that answer now. About 17 years. Imagine that.

It may also be that the "superpower" state model isn't workable either.
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SharonAnn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-02-09 07:44 PM
Response to Reply #2
7. Read or see "Barbarians at the Gate". Great book (good movie) and very readable.
After reading that and observing some similar things with companies that were customers of mine (good, solid companies) and were bought out and began laying off people, cutting back on compensation and spending, cutting price and quality of materials they purchased for manufacturing, etc., I wonder "what the heck is oing on".

So, I went back to school, got and MBA and figured out that you could use MBA tools to be a very successful, big-time thief.

That's what's happening.

We was robbed!
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Warpy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-02-09 03:35 PM
Response to Original message
5. Actually, Clinton's two terms were the interregnum
between Reagan/Poppy and Stupid. He did next to nothing to overturn their worst fiscal policies-only a timid tax increase that did nothing by itself to pay down the debt-and allowed the repeal of Glass-Steagall to pass. His presidency was the holding pattern between two imperial ones that "interregnum" suggests.

What Obama has a mandate for is revolution, not interregnum. Should he be forced to the left by events that are certain to come, he will represent the overthrow of the imperial order.

The rest of the article is correct. Rich men never have enough and pushed their money managers to create more money out of thin air. Now that money is returning to what it always was, thin air, and the results will be catastrophic for a lot of us.
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Laelth Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-02-09 09:58 PM
Response to Reply #5
8. Well said. n/t
:dem:

-Laelth
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woodwrite Donating Member (97 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Feb-03-09 03:54 AM
Response to Reply #5
10. Overthrowing the Imperial Order?
Are we talking politics or reality, here? Certainly the "imperial order" that worries me isn't going to be overthrown by the political industry. And revolution is often a rhetorical term these days, isn't it?
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Warpy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Feb-03-09 12:41 PM
Response to Reply #10
11. It's a process, not a destination
Edited on Tue Feb-03-09 12:42 PM by Warpy
and IMO, the process has just started.

Well, it started during the Katrina aftermath when the imperial order destroyed the illusion of the social contract with the people.

Obama has the mandate. Whether or not he realizes it and chooses to use it is moot.
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jgraz Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-02-09 10:39 PM
Response to Original message
9. Anybody else read the author's name as "Jonathan Tailspin"?
Maybe it's the absinthe...

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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Feb-03-09 08:17 PM
Response to Original message
12. Yep, nobody gets the big, easy money in a meat-and-potatoes economy.
If you want to get rich quick and easy, there's nothing like a bubble.
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