This post is a published copy of a draft blog found here content should be identical except for tags. The 128bit tag (CDFB2AF9833A4) on this post is identical to the tag on that post.
As a student of history, we learn about events, but
sometimes not from events. Many events within the last century seem to
be repeating themselves. Aggressive dictators slowly grab land based on
ancient territorial claims. "Haves" may blame the "have-nots" after
possibly enabling the latter to be dependent.
In
this post, there will be an attempt to remind the readers of past
events, their conclusions and how current events may be
similar. Generally accepted western history shows that after the first
world war, the victorious powers imposed tough sanctions against the losing
powers. The German Weimar republic suffered and struggled to pay of
its war debts. Misery in that country led to the election of a loud
mouthed populist that promised to give "Dignity" to the German people.
The rise of Hitler and the resulting second world war was fresh in the
victors memory when Germany was once again defeated at great cost of
life. Europe was devastated. That time a new way was proposed. It
became known as the Marshall Plan (officially the European Recovery Program, ERP).
Overly simplifying it, basically the victors bailed out the destroyed
economies. The United States spent a lot of money and in return earned a
lot of it back through the purchase of American goods and services by
the beneficiaries.
Timeline,
one of my new favorite news aggregators, published a set of stories
about public spending and explained the Marshall Plan in context. (see
Link Below right #1)
Recently a major anniversary of the Holocaust brought to light the extraordinary effort the German nation puts on educating the young people the atrocities carried out in the name of Germany by the fascist regime of the Nazis. Have the Wiemar years of foreign humiliation and austerity been forgotten? Now that Germany is rich, do they not remember what it was like to be poor?
Absolutely, this is not
an exact match for what is going on. Self-made men and women, sometimes
have disdain for those that rely on handouts and excuses. But is any
self made power created in a vacuum? Do the winners better use the gifts
around them and perhaps use them more efficiently through skill or
luck?
China seems to be
ridiculously rich. Apple seems to be ridiculously rich. Bill Gates and
Warren Buffet are ridiculously rich. Could any one of these band with
one another, and create a modern form of the Marshall Plan (or
Lend-Lease) for the struggling economies. Where does one start? Many
rich donors like to give anonymously because when they give publicly,
grasping hands seem to materialize in a sphere around them. So perhaps
naming names isn't a good idea.
The so
called Euro-zone is essentially flawed. A goal of a central bank is to
be the bank for banks. Allowing the short term ebbs and flows of
capital to smooth over and not snow ball into panic. Politicians want to
oil every squeaky wheel they hear. Having an independent central bank
helps to cure that. Currently each member country seems to have their
own central bank with differing degrees of political autonomy. Could
the ECB be molded into a more Federal system, with the country CBs
being like the regional Feds in the United States?
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in 2008, had the Fed not been absolutely
independent, it could not have saved the day like it did. It reacted
with hours to spare saving the world economic system from collapsing to a
system of barter of beads. At the time of this writing the ECB
basically ignored its role as lender of last resort to Greek Banks, but
retaining that role for the Greek Central Bank. Changing lanes in the
middle of a traffic jam, rarely gets a driver home faster. Member states
of the EU don't even have the ability to intervene with monetary
stimulus anymore. The ECB must.
Is this
blogger hopelessly naive? Should/can angel white knights Marshall plan
Greece to recovery? Should Warren Buffet move International Dairy Queens
world operations to some high unemployment town and hire everyone?
Should Apple build a European design center in Athens? Should Bill gates
stop buying computers for kids in Africa and start distributing Greek
goods? Greece needs jobs, hard currency, things to spend them on,
allowing the shop keepers to earn money to buy form other shop keepers.
Did Europe and Japan ever repay the USA? Could we "change our mind",
demand repayment at current value, then flip it over to help Greece,
Portugal and Spain etc?
This
blogger has an advanced degree in economic theory. The concept of
velocity of money, and the time value of money is a difficult one to
grasp for some readers. Essentially, how fast does a single Euro move
through the economy. People like to think of money as a consumable
good. But a better analogy is the food cycle. Rain falls to the ground
and nourishes the planted seeds. They sprout and create food stuffs and
oxygen. Plant eaters consume the plants the plants, digest the
digestible and expel waste. The waste in turn nourishes new seeds.
Meanwhile meat eaters eat plant eaters and have a similar process and so
on. Farmers collect seeds from the wild, plant them harvest them, save
some to plant for next year. A Euro given as a tip to a porter, is
spent by the tipper, but is earned by the porter, who in turn spends it
to an earner and so on. When someone has money to burn, unless they
truly burn it up, the flames are actually income to the economy.
In
college a group of friends played a complicated board game that
combined the conquest action of a game like Risk, with the economic
functions of a game like Monopoly. Late one night, a player decided he
had enough, but did not want to be a quitter, so he decided to spend
recklessly and try to lose. The result was the opposite, the reckless
spending stimulated the games economy, and it seemed to make it last
longer. The velocity of money increased, and it was like each dollar was
spending like it was a dollar and a half.
At
the time of this writing the concept of a Marshall Plan like bailout
for Greece had been proposed by the Galloping Greek finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis..
This writer was unaware. Chiding Germany for seeming to ignore the
periods of economic chaos before and after WW2 seems logical to this
blogger. A January 30 discussion on CCTV's program Dialogue. also
implies support of this idea. (Above right #2).
In conclusion. Something needs to be done. Rich Europe needs to help poor Europe. If only to kharmically pay back the benefits of the Marshall Plan. Someone even call this idea the Merkel Plan
---In conclusion. Something needs to be done. Rich Europe needs to help poor Europe. If only to kharmically pay back the benefits of the Marshall Plan. Someone even call this idea the Merkel Plan
and so it goes
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Big Public Works in America: Who Foots the Dam Bill?! - via @Timeline_Now
ReplyDeletehttps://m.timeline.com/#!/stories/public-works-obama-budget-corporation-tax-roads-bridges-jobs