Monday, 30 April 2012

{Political_Views} News from The Hill: Obama goes round two with Boehner, this time on highway bill


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News from The Hill:

Obama goes round two with Boehner, this time on highway bill
By Amie Parnes

President Obama on Monday slammed Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) and the House Republican leadership for the second time in a week.

Obama's latest attack on Boehner is over construction projects, which the president says have been blocked by Republicans who have refused to take up a long-term highway bill approved in a bipartisan vote by the Senate.

The president said the stalled legislation is keeping millions of workers jobless, and is preventing necessary projects forward across the country, including in Boehner's own district.

"There are bridges between Kentucky and Ohio where some of the key Republican leadership come from, where folks are having to do detours an extra hour and half drive every day on their commute because these bridges don't work," Obama said in a speech to the Building and Construction Trades Department Legislative Conference in Washington. "Time after time, the Republicans have gotten together and they've said no," he said.

Read the story here.


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{Political_Views} Mitt Romney tries to Etch-A-Sketch away his opposition to bin Laden strategy

 


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{Political_Views} The Myth of Peak Oil and why "Drill Baby Drill" is a Foolish Response to Oil Price Increases

March 29, 2012
The Real Problem is Not Too Little Oil, But Too Much

 

The Myth of Peak Oil
 
by GEORGE WUERTHNER
 

 

Each time there is a short-term shortage of oil or the price begins to rise, there is talk of running out of affordable oil, an idea captured by the concept of Peak Oil. Peak Oil is the theoretical point when the maximum rate of oil production is reached and after that time enters into a terminal decline. There is a lot of debate surrounding the Peak Oil theory, with some observers predicting rapid decline in oil production with serious implications for our entire economy and society.

No name is more closely associated with the concept of Peak Oil than geologist Marion King Hubbert. Hubbert was a research geologist for Shell Oil Company and later the US Geological Service. Hubbert is credited with developing a quantitative technique (Logistic Growth Curve) now commonly referred to as the Hubbert Curve, which he suggested could be used to predict the remaining oil supplies (or any other finite resource like gas, copper, etc.) and the time of eventual depletion.

In the 1956 meeting of the American Petroleum Institute in San Antonio, Texas, Hubbert presented a paper titled Nuclear Energy and Fossil Fuels where he suggested that overall petroleum production would peak in the United States between the late 1960s and the early 1970s. Since US oil production did indeed appear to peak in 1970, many Peak Oil advocates acclaim Hubbert as a prophet. However, an apparent peak in production does not necessarily represent a peak in oil availability, especially in a global market—something that Peak Oil advocates tend to overlook. In fact, a "peak" may just be one of many "spikes".

Another point of confusion in the debate over the ultimate availability of oil and gas supplies is the question of "unconventional" fossil fuel sources like tar sands, oil shales, heavy oils, and shale oil. Hubbert did not include these other energy types in his estimates and many of the proponents of Peak Oil today tend to ignore these hydro-carbon sources. However, since there is vastly more oil (and gas) found in these "unconventional" sources compared to "conventional" crude oil and traditional gas sources, the exclusion of them from any policy debate over oil's demise leads to serious misrepresentation of our ultimate fossil fuel availability.

As Hubbert wrote in his paper, "if we knew the quantity (of some resource) initially present, we could draw a family of possible production curves, all of which would exhibit the common property of beginning and ending at zero, and encompassing an area equal to or less than the initial quantity." In theory, Hubbert's basic concept is sound. As a way of thinking about and approaching the issue of declining finite resources, Hubbert was a pioneer. But that does not mean his predictions were accurate.

The problem for anyone trying to predict future resource availability is discerning the initial starting amount of a resource such as oil when one cannot readily see or gauge accurately the resource. This lack of transparency presents huge opportunities for error, in particular, erring on the side of under estimation of the total resource. And time has consistently shown that under estimation of total resource is the most common error, and as we shall see this is exactly the error that Hubbert made with regards to his estimates of our remaining oil and gas reserves. Hubbert can be forgiven because new technology can make previously unavailable resources accessible, even less expensive to exploit. In fact, he even anticipated this to a degree in his paper, another point that today's admirers of Hubbert, tend to overlook.

FORECASTING PROBLEMS

Few that credit Hubbert with a successful prediction have apparently actually read his paper. A reading of his presentation demonstrates that Hubbert grossly underestimated total oil supplies, and thus his predicted high point of the bell curve deviates significantly from reality. Indeed, there is good evidence we haven't even reached the top of the bell curve, much less past it in 1970. He did not anticipate things like the discovery of oil in Alaska's Prudhoe Bay or shale oil like the North Dakota Bakken Formation, among many other oil discoveries that have significantly changed total oil supplies.

And because US oil production did peak in 1970, the same time period which Hubbert suggested oil reserves would reach their half-way point and start an inevitable decline, few bothered to ask whether the observed decline in US production might have any other explanation other than declining geological petroleum stocks as Peak Oil advocates suggest.

Predicting future oil and gas supplies is fraught with dangers. Many factors influence oil extraction other than geological limits; 1) a rapid shift to renewable energy, 2) a decline in global economies, 3) new technological innovation, 4) energy conservation, 5) a high oil price that dampens consumer demand, 6) political instability and 7) wars all significantly affects energy production, thus when and how "peak" is achieved. Many believe a more realistic model rather than a bell curve is a rapid run up in production to a spike or series of spikes followed by a long drawn out plateau and production decline with ultimately more oil production occurring after the apparent peak, but less rapidly than prior to the "peak" which of course wouldn't really be a peak in the traditional sense of the word.

HUBBERT'S ERROR

The first problem with Hubbert's prediction is that his estimates of total oil and gas reserves are far too low. If the starting amount of reserves are low, than the top of the bell curve is reached much sooner than if there are greater amounts of oil – assuming that a bell curve actually represents what is occurring – which many people dispute. Some suggest Hubbert just drew the curve to fit his assumptions.

In his paper, Hubbert estimated that the "ultimate potential reserve of 150 billion barrels of crude oil for both the land and offshore areas of the United States." Hubbert's estimate was based on the crude oil "initially present which are producible by methods now in use." Using the 150 billion barrel estimate he predicted US Peak Oil occurring in 1965. But to be cautious, he also used a slightly higher figure of 200 billion barrels which produced a peak in oil production around 1970 — the figure that Hubbert advocates like to use to demonstrate that Hubbert was prophetic in his predictions. However, by 2006 the Department of Energy estimated that domestic oil resources still in the ground (in-place) total 1,124 billion barrels. Of this large in-place resource, 400 billon barrels is estimated to be technically recoverable with current technology.

This estimate was produced before horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing or fracking techniques were widely adopted which most authorities believe will yield considerably more oil than was thought to be recoverable in 2006.

Going back to Hubbert's paper we find that he predicted that by 1970 the US should have consumed half or about 100 million barrels of oil of the original endowment of 150-200 billion barrels of recoverable oil. And by his own chart on page 32 of his paper if we use the assumption of 200 billion barrels as the total potential oil reserves of the US we should be completely out of oil by now. According to his curve and graph, by year 2000 we should have had only around 27 billion or so barrels of oil left in the US and fallen to zero sometime in the mid-2000s.

Yet the US government estimates as of 2007 that our remaining technically recoverable reserves are 198 billion barrels, and this excludes oil that may be found in area that are off limits to drilling (i.e. like most of the Continental Shelf).

And there are another 400 billion barrels that some suggest could be recovered with new methods (which itself is a subset of total in place oil which future technology may make available at an affordable price).

Obviously if Hubbert were correct, and we had reached Peak Oil in 1970 (the point where we had consumed half of our oil) and we started out with only 200 billion, we could not have nearly 200-400 billion still left to extract — and total resources are likely even higher than this figure.

It's also important to keep in mind that "technologically recoverable" resources are not the "total" amount of oil thought to exist in the US, so the total in-place reserves are much, much larger. It does not take a lot of imagination to predict that many of these oil resources will eventually be unlocked with new technological innovation thus added to the total "proven reserves."

Another example of his under-estimation of oil is US off-shore oil. In his 1956 paper, Hubbert suggests we had 15 billion total barrels, but the US government now estimates there is closer to 90 billion barrels of oil left off-shore–and we have already extracted quite a bit. (I'm not sure if that figure is just for off-shore currently open to exploration or all off-shore since oil exploration is banned on 83% of the US coastline. If this figure refers only to those areas currently available to drill, then the number may be quite a bit higher if all off shore areas were opened to oil extraction).

Hubbert was even farther off in his estimate for global oil reserves, which is not surprising since in 1956 very few parts of the world had been adequately studied. In his 1956 paper Hubbert wrote that there was "about 1250 billion barrels for the ultimate potential reserves of crude oil of the whole world." In his paper he estimated that the entire Middle East including Egypt had no more than 375 billion barrels of oil. Yet by 2010, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) estimated that just the "proven reserves" in Saudi Arabia alone totaled 262.6 billion barrels. Similarly in his paper Hubbert uses an estimate of 80 billion barrels for all of South America, yet Venezuela has 296 billion barrels of proven reserves.

By 2000, the point when Hubbert estimated that we would reach global Peak Oil we would have only around 625 billion barrels of oil left. Just the 558 billion barrels of proven reserves known to exist in Saudi Arabia and Venezuela alone (and a lot more in-place resources) is nearly equal the total global oil supplies that Hubbert estimated would remain in global reserves. Obviously once again Hubbert's global estimates were way too low.

The world has already burned through more than a trillion barrels of oil, clearly demonstrating how far off his prediction of oil supplies were. The estimated "proven reserves" left globally are today more than 1.3 trillion for the top 17 oil producing countries alone.

PROVEN RESERVES Vs. TOTAL RESOURCES

Part of the confusion in the Peak Oil debate is that people, agencies and organizations use different definitions and accounting methods that are often not explicitly acknowledged. For instance, most Peak Oil advocates rely upon "proven reserve" numbers to argue we have limited oil supplies remaining. However, it is important to note the term "proven reserves" has a very precise meaning that only includes oil that has a 90% certainty that the oil can be extracted using current technology at current price. It does not represent total oil that may over time be produced. The total estimated amount of oil in an oil reservoir, including both producible and non-producible oil, is called various terms, including "oil in place". Due to technological, political and other limitations, only a small percentage of the total "in place" oil can be extracted at the present time. However, proven reserves are the bare minimum amount of oil that reasonably can be expected to be extracted over time.

One of the wild cards in predicting oil reserves is the recovery factor. Recovery factors vary greatly among oil fields. Most oil fields to this point have only given up a fraction of their potential oil holdings—between 20-40%. By 2009 the average Texas oil field had only about a third of its oil extracted, leaving two-thirds still in the ground. Using Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) techniques, many of them not even available when Hubbert wrote his paper, recovery can often be boosted to 40-60%. In essence if EOR were applied to many of the larger US oil fields, we could effectively double the oil extracted, hence "proven reserves."

Even Hubbert recognized that we may eventually extract more oil from existing fields, though he still underestimated the effect of new discoveries and new technology. Hubbert wrote "… only about a third of the oil underground is being recovered. The reserve figures cited are for oil capable of being extracted by present techniques. However, secondary recovery techniques are gradually being improved so that ultimately a somewhat larger but still unknown fraction of the oil underground should be extracted than is now the case. Because of the slowness of the secondary recovery process, however, it appears unlikely that any improvement that can be made within the next 10 or 15 years can have any significant effect upon the date of culmination. A more probable effect of improved recovery will be to reduce the rate of decline after culmination….."

While no one realistically believes it's possible to get every last drop of oil from an oil reservoir, new technologies are often able to get significantly more oil from existing fields than was possible in the past. The important fact is that the recovery factor often changes over time due to changes in technology and economics. Since the bulk of global oil still remains in the ground, and any shift upward in price and improvement in technology suddenly makes it profitable to exploit reserves that were previously not included in the "proven reserves" estimate. Thus proven reserve estimates are a minimum, not the maximum amount of oil available.

To demonstrate how technology and price can affect "proven reserves" estimates, just a few years ago Canada's "proven reserves" of oil were only 5 billion barrels. Today, due to higher prices and improved technology that makes tar sands production economically feasible; Canada now has "proven" reserves of 175 billion barrels of oil. Nothing changed other than the price of oil and the technology used to extract it. Oil companies knew there was a lot of oil in the tar sands, but it took a change in technology and price to move it into the "proven reserves" category. Even more telling is that the total minimum estimate of "in place" oil for the tar sands exceeds 1.3 trillion barrels of oil. Keep in mind that 1.3 trillion barrels is more oil than Hubbert thought existed in the entire world when he presented his 1956 paper.

People knew all along there were tremendous amounts of oil locked in Alberta's tar sands. But it took a change in price, along with some technological innovation to make it profitable for extraction. So proven reserves are not a static figure based on geology, rather it reflects economics and technology. Unfortunately too many writing about the presumed Peak of oil in the United States appear to ignore the distinction, and regularly use the "proven reserves" figure as if it were the ultimate geological limit on oil and/or gas supplies.

Although the major point of his paper was the potential depletion of traditional oil and gas reservoirs, he did mention "unconventional oil." Unconventional oil reserves are oil or hydrocarbons found in geological formations other than a traditional oil reservoir. Examples of unconventional oil include Alberta's tar sands, oil shales of the Green River Basin of Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming, the heavy oils of Venezuela, and other non-traditional hydrocarbons. There are far more of hydro-carbons in these formations than traditional oil reservoirs—a fact that many Peak Oil advocates frequently ignore. Or if they acknowledge their existence, they dismiss them as uneconomical or technologically impossible to exploit and therefore will never make a significant contribution to global energy supplies.

Hubbert failed to appreciate the potential contribution of these unconventional sources of synthetic oil. For instance, he put the total for US oil shales at around a trillion barrels of oil equivalent. Recently the USGS estimated that the Green River drainage area of Colorado, Wyoming and Utah may contain as much as 4.2 trillion barrels of "in place" oil equivalent in oil shale deposits. To put this into context, in 2010 the US consumed around 24 billion barrels of oil, so even if a fraction of these oil shales are exploited it will significantly increase available energy to the US.

With unconventional oils like tar sands, oil shales, heavy oils, etc. included, it seems we have huge amounts of potential energy – even acknowledging that much of that oil may not be extracted until some future date due to cost and/or lack of technology.

NATURAL GAS ESTIMATES

As he did with his estimates of oil, Hubbert also appears to have underestimated natural gas supplies as well. He put total natural gas supplies to be around 850 trillion cubic feet (TCF) and maximum US production would be 14 TCF annually. The Energy Information Agency (EIA) estimates that shale gas reserve alone total 750 TCF and shale gas is only one source of natural gas.Total natural gas reserves are increasing. Estimates vary about total gas reserves, but they run between 1400 to 2000 TFC. I see no reason to doubt these estimates.

If correct, then his estimate of natural gas was also a vast underestimate. This link shows that gas supplies are increasing well into the future. And new estimates for gas hydrates (methane locked in frozen ice) suggests there may be twice as much energy locked in these resources than all the coal, oil, and traditional natural gas supplies combined. One estimate suggests there may be a 3000 plus year supply of natural gas in gas hydrates. Whatever the ultimate number may be, the important point is that we are not in any danger of running out of fossil fuels in the near future.

OTHER EXPLANATIONS FOR US PEAK OIL PRODUCTION

Was it just coincidence and luck that Hubbert picked 1970 as one of the possible peaks in US oil production even though his starting numbers were way too low?

This raises the question whether declining US production since 1970 is due to depletion of oil fields as asserted by Peak Oil advocates or whether economics explains it better. (This is not to deny that at some point we will see declining production due to real limits – the question of importance however is when that will occur).

Another explanation requires looking beyond the US. Keep in mind that oil is a commodity. Just because we may see a decline in production of some commodity does not mean we are running out of that substance or resource. The Northeast US was once the major producer of timber in the US. Today if you buy lumber in New England, there's a good chance it was cut and shipped from the Pacific Northwest, not because there are no trees to cut in New England. Rather due to climate, vegetation, and infrastructure factors, it's less expensive to cut trees in Oregon or British Columbia than to log New England forests. It would be wrong to conclude that because New England imports most of its lumber that there are not enough trees left to provide wood locally.

Similarly attributing declining US oil production to geological depletion ignores the effect of global oil production. Immediately after WWii the US was easily the global leader in oil production. This dominance of global oil markets by US production and companies continued throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Then in the late 1960s and early 1970s oil production in other parts of the world began to increase substantially. In particular, Middle East oil production improved dramatically due to foreign investment and technology. For a variety of factors, once the oil infrastructure (pipelines, tanker ports, oil fields,) was built in these places, it became less expensive to import oil from Saudi Arabia, for example, than to build a new oil field in Wyoming or Texas. Indeed in some cases producing oil wells in the US were capped and retired even though they were perfectly capable of producing more oil. Not only was oil production increasing in Saudi Arabia, but all over the world at this time including Venezuela, Mexico, and the Soviet Union. All of these new fields were producing lower cost oil than one could get from most US oil fields at the time. So could it be that US producers just decided it was a better business plan to invest in and/or buy oil from other oil producing countries? Did this low cost oil cause oil companies to import oil rather than invest in US oil production?

Worse for US producers, except for a few manufactured shortages like the 1973 oil crisis created by OPEC in response to US support for Israel or the War in Iraq, the abundance of relatively inexpensive oil kept oil prices depressed throughout the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and into the early 2000s, discouraging new investment in US oil production.

It takes up to a decade or more to bring a new oil field on line, especially if the field is not located near other infrastructure. For instance, Alaska's Prudhoe Bay Oil field was discovered in 1968 and it wasn't until 1978 before the first oil was sent to market. Oil companies will only invest in major new production if they are certain that the prices are stable and will remain at a specific break-even point into the future. This lag time between changes in price or technology and significant production is why the oil industry cannot rapidly respond to short term price increases or politically created shortages.

Peak Oil advocates continuously point to the rise in oil prices during the latter part of the 2000s and suggest that an apparent lack of significant new oil production is due to depletion. However, there is a time lag before higher prices result in a noteworthy increase in oil production. Given the huge investments needed to bring on line new oil production, companies have to first wait for quite a number of years after an oil price hike before they start any new development to make sure that higher prices are going to stabilize, not rise and then fall suddenly as happened in 2008 when oil reached $145 a barrel then crashed to $30 a barrel. Such volatility does not lead to greater oil production.

Nevertheless, higher oil prices in the past few years have started to spur new development in the US and around the globe. The US, for instance, has reduced its import of foreign oil from 60% to 45% due to higher production at home as well as greater efficiency spurred by higher fuel prices. These trends point to continued reduction in imports. However, because of the long delay between start up and full production, there is no quick relief. This is one reason why "Drill, Baby, Drill" is a foolish response to any oil price increase.

From the oil producer's perspective, there is no advantage in increasing spare production capacity. All this will do is flood the market (global market) with cheap energy. What company wants to reduce its profits by over production? So far global oil production has largely been able to meet all demand, except for short term shortages as a result of political change, wars, and/or price speculation. But none of these reflect a true geological short-fall or serious effect of depletion.

Despite Hubbert's prediction that we would be just about out of oil by now, the US oil production (and gas) have both gone up in recent years. This is in response to higher prices and new technologies. But according to Hubbert this could not be occurring because we are long past our Peak and indeed, very near our bottom line for oil production.

There is no doubt that a finite resource such as oil will continue to decline, and demand will likely grow at least into the foreseeable future, both of which should lead to higher fuel costs. But whether this leads to a long term chronic shortages that cause major economic disruption or even the collapse of civilization as some predict is subject to more uncertainty than perhaps some like to admit. For one thing there is far more oil on the planet than most people recognize, and new technologies combined with rising price for fuels is spurring development of new oil supplies. Rising prices also spurs shifts to other energy sources, as well as greater efficiency and conservation of energy.

Rather than running out of oil and/or gas any time soon, I think the bigger danger is that we have MORE than enough oil and other fossil fuel energy resources to sustain us for quite a few decades if not centuries. Any efficiencies and/or conservation of energy, combined with replacement of fossil fuel energy with renewable energy sources, will extend hydrocarbon resources quite a few additional decades.

The real problem for the planet and human society is not the imminent danger of running out of hydrocarbon fuels, but that an abundance of these energy sources will permit population and economic growth that will gradually diminish the planet's biodiversity, degrade ecosystems, and disrupt global climate and other systems.

George Wuerthner is an ecologist. He is currently working on a book about energy.

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{Political_Views} Why Paul Krugman is Full of Shit

April 23, 2012
 
 
The Fed Works for the Very Rich
Why Paul Krugman is Full of Shit
by ROB URIE
 
Late last week Princeton University economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman wrote a piece on his NY Times blog that history will view as the best evidence to appear in at least several decades of the utter irrelevance of mainstream economics. The piece purported to respond to a Wall Street Journal editorial by Mark Spitznagel in which Mr. Spitznagel argued broadly the Austerian economists' line that all government spending favors one group over another and more specifically that the Fed's Quantitative Easing (QE) programs of recent years favor banks and the rich.

Mr. Krugman could have argued his New Keynesian shtick that government investment can prevent deflationary spirals in economic downturns and all would be as it was. Instead, he chose to argue (Plutocrats and Printing Presses – NYTimes.com), an astonishing amount of evidence to the contrary, that Fed QE policies have not disproportionately benefited banks and the very rich and were in fact enacted against their wishes and interests.

The basis of his argument has two parts:

(1) conservative economists argue that QE is "printing money," they also argue that printing money causes inflation, banks hate inflation (because loans get repaid in less valuable dollars), therefore banks opposed QE and

(2) that banks earn profits from the difference between long term interest rates and short term interest rates (NIM, or Net Interest Margin), QE has reduced this difference, therefore the banks have seen their profits fall from QE.

Were these arguments used when writing about (1) a solvent banking system whose (2) profits still came from making prudent loans to creditworthy borrowers and (3) whose shadow banking system was immaterial (couldn't destroy the global financial system), then Mr. Krugman might have had a point. The facts, however, suggest that if bank loans and other bank assets were fairly valued the big banks would be conspicuously insolvent, that the entire impetus of banking consolidation and deregulation (as explained by bankers) was to reduce the impact of NIM on bank profits, and that building out the shadow banking system was the way that banks intended to accomplish this.

The housing crisis that began in 2006 is well known to most people, but it was part of a much larger build-up of debt by households and corporations at the behest of bankers. Among the "innovative" home mortgage types that put people who couldn't afford regular loans into houses were "adjustable-rate mortgages" (ARMs). What set off the initial stages of the financial crisis was the realization that (1) a large percentage of people who had taken out mortgages couldn't repay them under any circumstances and (2) if rising interest rates caused the mortgage payments on ARMs to rise then a much larger group of people would also default on their home mortgages. In 2007 – 2008 both of these realizations caused the value of the mortgage loans held by banks either directly or through securitizations (the banks' own creations) to fall precipitously.

The same principle that rising interest rates cause the market value of loans and loan-type instruments to fall applied to an unprecedented quantity of assets held by banks in 2008, and still does today. However, the opposite is also true, when interest rates fall the market value of loans on bank books and in financial markets rises. As too much un-repayable private debt in the economy was what made the banks insolvent, lowering both short and long term interest rates has had far more impact on restoring the banks to fake health by raising asset values than profits from interest margin (NIM) possibly could have. The banks killed their ready supply of credit-worthy borrowers along with the economy in the 2000s— the only game they could play was to restore the market values of the garbage assets that they held. The Fed willingly accommodated this strategy.

The Fed wasn't alone in its efforts to save the banks at all costs – the utterly corrupt actions by ex-New York Fed Chair, now Treasury Secretary, Timothy Geithner, and current Fed Chair Ben Bernanke to move bad loans made by the banks to other government agencies including FHA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and an astonishing array of seemingly unrelated others, was tied to Fed asset purchases through QE. Readers may remember the low interest, non-recourse government loans that were used to induce hedge funds to buy garbage assets at no risk to themselves (non-recourse) to (1) get the assets off of bank books and (2) to create fake market prices for garbage assets based on contrived economics to thereby induce less sophisticated buyers to pay higher prices for the assets. The Fed itself bought assets at higher prices that it had driven higher.

The way that the Fed's QE directly benefited the very richest Americans, in addition to the most recent vintage of richest Americans being bankers, is by running up the value of all financial assets. Fed Chair Bernanke gave a veiled explanation of how this works in his Jackson Hole speech from 2010 that can be found online. Mr. Bernanke calls his method the "portfolio balance channel," and it it is premised on two basic economic concepts, 1) supply and demand and 2) substitution. When the Fed buys assets it takes those interest-paying assets out of circulation and replaces them with cash. This reduces the supply of interest bearing assets in financial markets and replaces them with cash with which to buy other assets. It also reduces market interest rates thereby making stocks and other assets (substitution) more attractive.

But we need not rely on theory to see if this works the way that Mr. Bernanke theorized that it would. There are a significant number of rigorous analyses that were done demonstrating that when the Fed (or the ECB) is buying assets through QE, financial markets rise and when the Fed stops buying, they fall. The evidence is both unambiguous and voluminous. And in an anecdotal sense, there was some skepticism from Wall Street in 2009 when QE began but few if any doubters remain—it is absolutely the perceived wisdom on Wall Street that the reason that financial asset prices have been rising when they have is, because the Fed is causing them to. The only question still out there for Wall Street is whether or not the Fed will continue to run prices up further?

How does running up the prices of financial assets directly benefit the richest Americans?  Ironically, every three years the Fed also produces a survey of income and wealth distribution in the U.S. that is available on the Fed's website. The data is broken out by income and wealth deciles. The quick answer to who benefits from rising financial asset prices is that the rich do because they own all the financial assets. See for yourself on the Fed's website.

So far the Fed has tried to save the banks by keeping interest rates low and through various programs to dump toxic assets on the rest of us, AND it has revived the fortunes of the kind folks who looted the banks and stolen our wealth (the very rich) in the first place, by running-up stock prices. The Fed did this with QE1, QE1.5, QE2, QE2.5, "Operation Twist" and various less publicized programs with similar intent. The banks and bankers have absolutely loved these programs — read their research and you will see. On his very own blog Mr. Krugman referenced UC Berkeley economist Emmanuel Saez's recent report stating that since the recession theoretically ended in 2009, the top one percent of income earners has received 93% of income gains. Mr. Saez's research illustrates that it is the revival of capital gains from rising financial asset prices (including stock options granted to corrupt coporate executives) that is behind the gains.

Finally, Mr. Krugman claims that the only way that banks could have benefited from the Fed buying assets was if the Fed overpaid for the assets. Fed Chair Bernanke publicly stated at the time Fed purchases commenced in 2009 that the Fed was going to overpay for the MBS (Mortgage-Backed Securities) it purchased in order to induce banks to sell them to the Fed. This was widely reported in the financial press at the time. It was also widely viewed as part of the ongoing (that is - never ending) bank bailouts. Readers may recall the news reports from all of the Wall Street banks of perfect trading records (banks earned profits from trading financial assets every day) for several quarters in 2009. If the banks are winning then someone else is losing — thank you Federal Reserve.  If Mr. Krugman can't find credible contemporaneous reports of this then he should try a little harder.

Last, there is no ax to grind here with Paul Krugman.   Mr. Krugman has put a human face on his politics for which he should be thanked.  But legitimate criticism of his economics includes the absence of the class struggle that Wall Street and the Federal Reserve clearly understand as evidenced by their actions — they are fighting for America's rich and their policies are intended to benefit them alone. The sleight of hand that sustains mainstream economics is the claim that we all benefit if the system benefits.  Take a look around and you'll see that no, we don't all benefit. In fact, were it not for the ideological drivel disguised as mainstream academic research, this would be evident to even the least interested among us.  When in doubt, look a little harder.

Rob Urie is an artist and political economist in New York.

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Sunday, 29 April 2012

{Political_Views} Slow jam




Dear member,

Across the country Tuesday night, college students took a break from studying, sat down with their late night snacks (I'm a cheez wiz fan myself), and watched President Obama deliver a soulful "slow jam" about student debt.

It was a clever way to deliver a serious message—about the crushing mountain of debt faced by today's students (now over $1 trillion) and how it's about to get a whole lot worse, if we don't kick Congressional Republicans into gear.

If you haven't seen it,  you've got to check it out. And because many students were still hard at work studying Tuesday night, in bed, or...um...elsewhere, we need to share it on our social networks, where students live, breath, and share things.


Watch the video

Thanks for all you do.

–Lenore, Mark, Elena, Laura, and the rest of the team

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Thursday, 26 April 2012

{Political_Views} Karl Rov is pretty optimistic about President Obama's reelection chances


http://www.rove.com/polling_notes/0000/0202/Polling_News_and_Notes_04_26_12.pdf?wpisrc=nl_pmfix

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{Political_Views} OSAMA BIN LADEN IS DEAD - GM IS ALIVE Obama - Biden 2012

Biden defends Obama's foreign policy record, hits Romney for holding Cold War-era views

 


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{Political_Views} The Big Secret The GOP Wants To Keep Hidden About A Certain Bailout | MoveOn.Org




"The Big Secret The GOP Wants To Keep Hidden About A Certain Bailout | MoveOn.Org" can be viewed at:
http://bit.ly/JS7ajq

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{Political_Views} How The Government Chops Up Your Tax Dollar | MoveOn.Org




"How The Government Chops Up Your Tax Dollar | MoveOn.Org" can be viewed at:
http://bit.ly/JS8ZNa

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{Political_Views} HILARIOUS! Jon Stewart Cracks Up While Destroying Fox News




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{Political_Views} 6 Cut-Through-The-Bullsh_t Reasons To Support The 99% | MoveOn.Org





"6 Cut-Through-The-Bullsh_t Reasons To Support The 99% | MoveOn.Org" can be viewed at:
http://bit.ly/JSlBE4

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{Political_Views} Bet You Didn’t Know How Obamacare Is A Solution To A Law Enacted By Ronald Reagan | MoveOn.Org





"Bet You Didn't Know How Obamacare Is A Solution To A Law Enacted By Ronald Reagan | MoveOn.Org" can be viewed at:
http://bit.ly/JT4BgN

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{Political_Views} "Mitt Romney: Memories to Last a Lifetime"


"Mitt Romney: Memories to Last a Lifetime"



     
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President Obama has his opponent: Mitt Romney. Here are some things we all need to remember about him—and make sure our friends know, too.
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{Political_Views} WINNING! GOP Economics Explained In One Hilarious Graphic | MoveOn.Org


"WINNING! GOP Economics Explained In One Hilarious Graphic | MoveOn.Org"
http://bit.ly/JT8tyC

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{Political_Views} If Everyone Knew This Astonishing Fact About Unions, We’d All Be In One | MoveOn.Org


"If Everyone Knew This Astonishing Fact About Unions, We'd All Be In One | MoveOn.Org"
http://bit.ly/InmXlB

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{Political_Views} The Awesome Jimmy Carter Quote About Women That Everyone Is Sharing | MoveOn.Org


"The Awesome Jimmy Carter Quote About Women That Everyone Is Sharing | MoveOn.Org" can be viewed at:
http://bit.ly/JT9GpD

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{Political_Views} The #1 Best Occupy Wall Street Sign We’ve Seen | MoveOn.Org

The #1 Best Occupy Wall Street Sign We've Seen | MoveOn.Org
:



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{Political_Views} The Craziest Idea Our Great-Grandparents Ever Had | MoveOn.Org


The Craziest Idea Our Great-Grandparents Ever Had | MoveOn.Org




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{Political_Views} One Guess Who Wants To Give Your Boss Your Facebook Password | MoveOn.Org

One Guess Who Wants To Give Your Boss Your Facebook Password | MoveOn.Org




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{Political_Views} The Most Unreasonable Assumption We’ve Ever Heard One Woman Make About Other Women | MoveOn.Org

The Most Unreasonable Assumption We've Ever Heard One Woman Make About Other Women | MoveOn.Org




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{Political_Views} The Only Way Mitt Romney Could Be More Dangerous To America Is With A Plan And A Time Machine

The Only Way Mitt Romney Could Be More Dangerous To America Is With A Plan And A Time Machine




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Tuesday, 24 April 2012

{Political_Views} Facing A Run Off, Orrin Hatch Has No Respect for Freedomworks

Facing A Run Off, Orrin Hatch Has No Respect for Freedomworks

By Nicole Belle      
 
http://crooksandliars.com/nicole-belle/facing-run-orrin-hatch-has-no-respect

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{Political_Views} News from The Hill: Senate votes down motion to block NLRB election rule

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News from The Hill:

Senate votes down GOP motion to block NLRB union election rule
By Daniel Strauss

The Senate on Tuesday voted down a Republican-backed motion meant to block a National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) rule that speeds up union elections.

In a mostly party line vote, the Senate, as expected, voted 45 to 54 to defeat S.J. Res 36, a motion of disapproval on the NLRB ruling, halting GOP efforts to block the union election rule from taking effect.

Read the story here.


For all the latest news:
Visit TheHill.com
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Sunday, 22 April 2012

{Political_Views} News Alert: Wal-Mart Hushed Up Vast Mexico Bribery Case After Top-Level Struggle

"Corporations are people too my friend", so if Wal-Mart is found guilty of bribery, cover up and/or obstruction of justice tell me, who goes to prison?  Maybe Wal-Mart can get the "death penalty" wherein all their assets are seized and sold off and the company would be no more!  Some say that some of the Walton family members surely must of known of the skulduggery going on within the company.  Maybe they too can be arrested, tried, convicted and sent to prison seizing their ill gotten gains via the RICO statute.  Now wouldn't that be a hoot?

Breaking News Alert
The New York Times
Saturday, April 21, 2012 -- 2:31 PM EDT
-----

Wal-Mart Hushed Up Vast Mexico Bribery Case After Top-Level Struggle

An investigation by The New York Times examines a vast bribery case by Wal-Mart in Mexico and describes a prolonged struggle within the company that pitted its much publicized commitment to the highest moral and ethical standards against its relentless pursuit of growth.

Wal-Mart became aware of the situation in Mexico from a former executive, who explained how the company's Mexican division had orchestrated a campaign of bribery to win market dominance. But instead of deciding to expand an internal investigation, Wal-Mart's leaders decided to shut it down.

Read More:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/22/business/at-wal-mart-in-mexico-a-bribe-inquiry-silenced.html?emc=na

.


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New York, NY 10018

Copyright 2012 The New York Times Company


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Wednesday, 18 April 2012

{Political_Views} Send Paul Ryan the fax







Fellow Group Member,

 

Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) is perfectly willing to follow the dictates of the Catholic bishops on limiting women's access to reproductive health care. Funny how he ignores his church when it advises caring for the poor, ending war—and supporting President Obama's proposed federal budget instead of Ryan's own "starve the poor, help the wealthy" plan.

Perhaps the architect of the make-poor-people-pay plan hasn't read the recent guidance from the Conference of Catholic Bishops that "a just framework for future budgets cannot rely on disproportionate cuts in essential services to poor persons; it requires shared sacrifice by all, including raising adequate revenues, eliminating unnecessary military and other spending, and addressing the long-term costs of health insurance and retirement programs fairly."

Let's remind Paul Ryan of his church's advice.

Call out Paul Ryan by faxing him a copy of the statement from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops denouncing his budget proposal.

Thousands of faxes will let Ryan and his fellow conservatives know that you can't hide behind church teachings when it's in line with conservative thinking and ignore it when it's not. Voters are keeping track of the hypocrisy.

Please, click here to send a fax to Paul Ryan.

Keep fighting,
Kaili Joy Gray, Daily Kos

               
Daily Kos Home Contribute to Daily Kos Unsubscribe



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{Political_Views} One Photograph That Will Restore Your Hope In The Fight For Equality




Hello! Here are the three hottest progressive videos and graphics that we found on the web today, April 17, 2012.

They call them the 'Greatest Generation' for a reason.

One Photograph That Will Restore Your Hope In The Fight For Equality

A simple graphic that will make you think.

One Enormous Reason The U.S. Is Still Miles Behind Other Countries

We will remember in November!

Reason Number 203 That The GOP War On Women Is Very Real

Powered by MoveOn Civic Action
 

Want to support our work? MoveOn Civic Action is entirely funded by our 7 million members—no corporate contributions, no big checks from CEOs. And our tiny staff ensures that small contributions go a long way. Chip in here.



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{Political_Views} Compare your tax rate to Romney's




Obama - Biden
Friend--

I love the Buffett Rule for the same reason Mitt Romney opposes it.

It levels the playing field in America by closing tax loopholes and ensuring that millionaires aren't paying a tax rate that's lower than what many middle-class families are paying.

And it's going to be one of the issues that will define this election.

We've got a new interactive tool that shows how Mitt Romney and some other millionaires play by their own set of rules -- the same rules they're trying to make sure you and I don't ever get to change.

Compare your tax rate to Mitt Romney's -- and see how the Buffett Rule makes him pay his fair share.

I can't think of a better way to illustrate the choice this country is facing in November. This is the way it breaks down:

The Buffett Rule closes loopholes and asks millionaires to pay at least as much as middle-class families, so that we can share the burden of reducing our deficit and investing in programs important to a strong middle class, like education, innovation and infrastructure.

Romney not only opposes the Buffett Rule, but he wants to make things even more unfair. He will explode the deficit by giving more tax breaks to the wealthy -- and place the burden of paying for them on the backs of the middle class and seniors.

This November, it's one or the other. We either stick with a President who fights for the middle class, or we choose a candidate who fights to protect an unfair status quo that benefits him at the expense of our economy and the middle class. You'll be hearing a lot about the Buffett Rule in the coming days. But remember this: It's not about class warfare, and it's certainly not about some arcane policy disagreement. It's about common-sense fairness.

If you're still curious about what the Buffett Rule would actually do, take a look around the new website now:

http://my.barackobama.com/Buffett-Rule-Calculator

Thanks,

Stephanie

Stephanie Cutter
Deputy Campaign Manager
Obama for America

P.S. -- Tax fairness is one of the most important issues we'll be fighting for in the next seven months. We need to keep growing this campaign from the ground up to reach as many voters as possible. If you can, please make a donation to support the President today.

Paid for by Obama for America

Contributions or gifts to Obama for America are not tax deductible.

 



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{Political_Views} Tell AT&T: "Drop your support of ALEC.!"





Tell AT&T: Drop your support of ALEC!
Clicking here will automatically add your name to this petition to AT&T:
"AT&T is a major supporter of the American Legislative Exchange Council which is actively pushing voter ID legislation that has the potential to disenfranchise up to 5 million voters — especially people of color, young people, and seniors. I urge you to immediately and permanently stop funding ALEC."
Automatically add your name:
Take action now!

Learn more about this campaign

CREDO Action | more than a network, a movement.

Tell AT&T: Drop your support of ALEC!

Dear James,

More than 150,000 CREDO activists, along with 85,000 ColorOfChange members, have called on corporations to stop supporting the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) because of its role in voter suppression. And in the two weeks since we started this campaign, news broke that Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Kraft Foods, Intuit, McDonald's, and Mars, Inc. have all ended their relationships with ALEC — a major step forward in our campaign. But many major corporations are still funding ALEC.

AT&T is one of them. Our friends at Color of Change contacted AT&T to make sure it understood that through its membership in ALEC, it is supporting racially-discriminatory voter ID laws that have the potential to disenfranchise over 5 million people in the upcoming elections. But despite numerous emails and telephone calls, AT&T's management will not respond. It appears that AT&T executives believe that if they ignore us we'll simply go away.

Tell AT&T to stop supporting ALEC and voter suppression. Click here to automatically sign the petition.

AT&T is a well-known household brand. By associating the company with ALEC, it lends legitimacy to a radical organization that is undermining voting rights and our democracy.

AT&T has made a substantial amount of money from consumers who are disenfranchised by voter ID laws — people of color, seniors, and young people.

AT&T has given at least $150,000 to ALEC since 1998. And although the company insists it only funds particular programs at ALEC, AT&T has played a leadership role within ALEC for many years — including serving as a corporate co-chair in California, Connecticut, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas as recently as November 2011.

Tell AT&T to stop supporting ALEC and voter suppression. Click here to automatically sign the petition.

Supporters of discriminatory voter ID laws claim they want to reduce voter fraud (individuals voting illegally, or voting twice). But such fraud almost never actually occurs, and never in amounts large enough to affect the result of elections. What is clear is that voter ID laws prevent large numbers of eligible voters from casting a ballot, and could disenfranchise up to 5 million people.

ALEC's voter ID laws are undemocratic, unjust and part of a longstanding right wing agenda to weaken the voting blocs that historically oppose Republican candidates. We have to expose the major companies like AT&T that are helping ALEC suppress the votes of millions of Americans before it's too late.

AT&T's financial support of ALEC must end.

Tell AT&T to stop supporting ALEC and voter suppression. Click below to automatically sign the petition:
http://act.credoaction.com/r/?r=5546005&id=38316-4802519-C1wop_x&t=10

Thank you for standing up to corporate funded voter suppression.

Becky Bond, Political Director
CREDO Action from Working Assets


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© 2012 CREDO. All rights reserved.

 



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