Sunday, October 25, 2009
Heady Polarities
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Sweatshops, Underdevelopment, and Progress
Friday, September 25, 2009
Great Minds
"Capitalism is a system in which the central institutions of society are, in principle, under autocratic control. Thus, a corporation or an industry is, if we were to think of it in political terms, fascist, that is, it has tight control at the top and strict obedience has to be established at every level... Just as I'm opposed to political fascism, I am opposed to economic fascism. I think that until the major institutions of society are under the popular control of participants and communities, it's pointless to talk about democracy".
Noam Chomsky
"The tyranny of a prince in an oligarchy is not so dangerous to the public welfare as the apathy of a citizen in a democracy".
Montesquieu
I can't approach the eloquence of Montesquieu or Chomsky, but there is a connection between these two thoughts that I don't think speaks for itself.
There is in America today an unprecedented amount of economic freedom. I can buy shares in a corporation, claiming a bit of their profits. But more importantly, I can start my own corporation - with incredible ease. All I need do is apply for a business loan. (There are definitely complexities and difficulties involved in that, and I have little knowledge of them, but I would be absolutely shocked if they were not fewer and less severe than those of my forebears.) If our liberal, progressive ideas are so great, put them in to action! And I do not mean to say that our ideas are not great - I mean that we should put them into action. The corporate system is deeply flawed, what is unique about today's situation is that we have the opportunity to participate in it. And thus the connection: in as much as commerce has been democratized, along with politics, the onus lies on the citizen. If we find the status quo repulsive, how can we blame its authors when we hold in our hands the pen and in our guts the ink?
Brevity will, I hope, leave the artistry of those two scholars somewhat intact. The issue is complex - corporations hold power, government may play for the status quo, the profit rule itself raises serious considerations. But consider those two thoughts, and the space between them.
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Efficient Markets - the Lehman Example
Saturday, September 5, 2009
LTCM and the Financial Crisis of 2008
Monday, August 24, 2009
Equality and Financial Knowledge
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Long Term Capital Management
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Timothy Geithner Speaking at SAIS in 2006
It also happens to be an example of the kind of primary source media I was talking about in the post I put up a couple hours ago, both because of his position as a leader and the incredibly technical nature of the speech. To clarify though, I think there's also a place for someone like Geithner to "dumb it down" for those of us without graduate degrees in international relations (i.e. the previous US executive director at the IMF, who just happened to be in the audience), in addition to the technical discussion.
http://www.sais-jhu.edu/mp3_player/timothygeithner100406.htm
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Early Observations and Concerns
- (3) Often times developments have grave implications in regard to a certain issue, and therefore carry "newsworthy weight", yet without an understanding or awareness of back-story misrepresent themselves, the nature of the development, the issue at stake, and the reaction that should take place.
One important component of this is the omission of the traditional practice of "non-biased" news. If information presented is passing through the lens of the organizations interpretation, we have bias. The idea is to instead make that bias quite clear. Often times, that elucidation can only take place at the technical level. This invites the criticism that you are presenting propaganda. While the concern of disinformation is legitimate, I think that in the context and reality of current mass media, it is just as easy for propaganda to exist in the "spin" that any "raw data" is presented with. In other words, the capability for biased interpretation exists regardless. By at least making visible the underpinning debate (via the technical tier), and openly disclosing the presence of bias, the process is opened to debate and review, rather than being controlled primarily by the varied, unidentifiable bias of a particular reporter.
One particular idea that occurred to me is a specific channel of information that only presents primary sources (e.g. leaders, officials, experts). Often times this information is available, but only with considerable effort. Primarily, what is presented are sound bites or quotes or summaries. By opening a direct channel from leaders to the public, the possibility of "expert debate" exists. Basically this was inspired by a story I read commenting on a speech Treasury Secretary Paulson made regarding the financial crisis where the writer quoted a few sentences of the man we consider knowledgeable and expert enough to lead the United States Treasury, then went on to offer his own summary and conclusions. Why are we getting our economic analysis by some random staff writer at the LA Times? (Or evening news reporter, radio personality, blogger, etc.) I think there is a lack of leadership by our leaders. This may be their fault, it may be our fault, it may be the media's fault, or it may be a combination of all three plus some others. But the media is a place to start.
So my belief is this: the media needs reform. We need experts presenting our information, not media professionals.
2. The economy is distorted in its allocation of value and conception of progress.
People need jobs to get money. Jobs are provided by corporations. Yet corporations often exist to provide products that are unnecessary or even harmful to the human condition. For example, no one needs Coca-Cola. In some cases, Coke has a detrimental effect (health concerns and just plain old wasted resources come to mind). Yet thousands (I'm guessing, I don't know how many people they employ) of people earn their livelihood through Coke: distributors, merchants, advertisers, producers, managers, etc. The amount of advertising Coke does suggests there's a second group of people who are employed by the money Coke spends on advertising in TV, billboards, sports, etc. So if Coke was justifiably marginalized to being a much smaller component of the economy, huge amounts of people would be out of work. How is it that by making a decision as a society that is fundamentally wise, cutting our consumption of Coke, our economy is damaged? Please don't think I'm trying to say Coke is evil, or that we should ban or even inhibit it's sale. Coke is fine. In some ways, it's good. But I am trying to say that I think it would benefit our society if we consumed less of it. The fact that that would have a directly negative effect on the economy worries me.
And thus the larger issue: economic focus on growth as the holy grail of progress. In particular, the primacy of growth in developing nations (it's in the freakin' name) worries me about the future of humanity and our planet. Setting aside the viability of sustained worldwide growth, it presents serious concerns for the survivability of the human species (although the issue of it's viability may take itself off the shelf before the planet gives out, as resources becoming increasingly scarce and competition lowers state inhibition against aggression).
Therefore, I believe a thoughful and realistic reassessment of economics is necessary, requiring exploration and legitimate understanding of the current system and a realistic but nevertheless relevantly ambitious reformation of it.
P.S. The purpose of this post, and thus the title, is mostly to clarify what I consider to be major issues, coming from a more lay/general perspective. The impetus to write some of them down was my concern over getting to absorbed in the technical, in-depth debates and losing sight of the big picture.
P.P.S. Among those not elaborated on yet: international anarchy, foreign policy creation, and education. Oh, and that whole environmental thing.
Monday, January 5, 2009
Restate my assumptions.
Systems are corruptible.
No law or structure can guarantee goodness.
Mankind must help itself.
We cannot hope to encapsulate goodness in a system, organization, or product.
Goodness must exist in man.
To promote good, we must look to man.
Our primary concern, then, should be the perfection of individuals.
Sunday, January 4, 2009
Media Bias - Blatant v. Subtle
"Both Israel and Abbas' government worry about Hamas' considerable popular support in the West Bank and its potential to challenge Fatah's supremacy in the territory."
That was a pretty awkward bush-beating. Assuming the paper is trying to bring some background to the topic for an unfamiliar audience (which I'd say is clear given the other backstory that is given), to leave out the fact that "considerable popular support" is not only flag-waving mobs, but a legitimate parliamentary majority.
This is irresponsible journalism at it's worst. It doesn't simply drive for a point, it omits facts that not only have great relevance, but are also contraindicated by the jist of the article; people are not going to assume "oh, Hamas must control the legislature, via the most recent election", they are going to assume they are a rogue organization who maintains control purely through force and exploitation of general anarchy and public fervor.
Please don't infer that I'm trying to assign some kind of moral highground to Hamas. They are labeled a terrorist organization with good reason. I've seen their propaganda, and blatant is the word. The issue becomes the conflict between elections and morals, which has implications both for Palestine and the world. I have not arrived at any conclusions about the issue. But it's a pertinent fact.