No More Communism! North Korea Capitulates: Farming.

"The last hold-out is no longer holding out. North Korea now allows collective farms to lease land to peasants. The peasants pay 30% of the crop to the collective. We can be sure of this: output will rise. This is what Deng did in 1978. He freed up agriculture. The boom began within a year. The peasants will buy into this if they believe they will really get to keep 70%. They are suspicious. But if the collectives abide by the rules, Communism is finished. The experiment has failed. Celebrate. Light up a Cuban cigar. (No. Sorry. That’s illegal in the land of the free and the home of the NSA.) May the lights come back on in the North." Continue reading

Continue ReadingNo More Communism! North Korea Capitulates: Farming.

“You’re Fired. Want to Work Part-Time?”

"The U.S. Chamber of Commerce summarizes what the situation is. 'Small businesses expect the requirement to negatively impact their employees. Twenty-seven percent say they will cut hours to reduce full time employees, 24 percent will reduce hiring, and 23 percent plan to replace full time employees with part-time workers to avoid triggering the mandate.' Thanks, Nancy. Thanks Barack. You have just created the new normal for low-paid workers: lower pay! This is why the government decided to delay implementation of small business rules until 2015. You see, there are Congressional elections in November of 2014." Continue reading

Continue Reading“You’re Fired. Want to Work Part-Time?”

Detroit’s City Pensioners Are Wiped Out.

"This is the thing about impossible obligations. They get abandoned. This confirms economist Herbert Stein’s law: 'When things can’t go on, they have a tendency to stop.' A year ago, the experts denied that anything was wrong. Yes, there were 'problems,' but nothing that could not be fixed. 'Bankruptcy? Are you serious? Of course not. There is no possibility of that. Such talk is inflammatory. Perish the thought.' That’s what politicians always say . . . right up to the end. The pensioners will have to go back to work. They will be covered by Medicare only. They believed the politicians. They invested their working years in terms of promises made by politicians." Continue reading

Continue ReadingDetroit’s City Pensioners Are Wiped Out.

Bernanke: I’m Clueless About Gold

"Chmn. Bernanke: When we buy securities from a private citizen, we create a deposit in their bank, and it shows up as reserves. So if you look up our balance sheet, our balance sheet balances. We have Treasury securities on the asset side. On the liability side we have either cash or reserves at banks, and on the margin that’s what has been building up as excess reserves at banks. Rep. Rothfus: You create the reserves? Chmn. Bernanke: Yes. Rep. Rothfus: Is that printing money? Chmn. Bernanke: Not literally." Continue reading

Continue ReadingBernanke: I’m Clueless About Gold

101 Million Americans Received Food Aid Last Year

"Nearly one-third of Americans received government-funded food aid in 2012, according to a new report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). There are roughly a dozen federal food assistance programs operating today. The USDA reports that 59 percent of households that participated in one of the four largest food assistance programs—food stamps, school breakfasts, school lunches, and WIC—end up receiving benefits from 'two or more programs.' This indicates significant duplication, 'providing participants total benefits in excess of 100 percent of daily nutritional needs.'" Continue reading

Continue Reading101 Million Americans Received Food Aid Last Year

Detroit Declares Bankruptcy; Citizen Layoffs Begin

After decades of mismanagement, decay, and taxpayer flight led to one of the largest municipal bankruptcies in U.S. history Friday, city officials have begun circulating notices informing citizens that their continued residence would no longer be required. "Look, there's really no need to spell out what everyone knows: Detroiters are a net drain on the Detroit economy," said city emergency manager Kevyn Orr. "The city services they consume cost far in excess of what they can afford. The sooner we complete this restructuring, which will unfortunately require a significant reduction in headcount, the sooner we will be back on track as a city." Continue reading

Continue ReadingDetroit Declares Bankruptcy; Citizen Layoffs Begin

City of Detroit Files for Chapter 9 Bankruptcy

"If the Chapter 9 filing is approved, Detroit’s case would be the largest municipal bankruptcy in the history of the United States. The tax base has been destroyed. Detroit lost a quarter-million residents between 2000 and 2010. A population that in the 1950s reached 1.8 million is struggling to stay above 700,000. Much of the middle-class and scores of businesses also have fled Detroit, taking their tax dollars with them. Likely those holding any of the $11 billion in unsecured debt will get next to nothing. Per person, the debt of the U.S. government ($54K/person) is about twice as large as the debt of the City of Detroit ($26K/person)." Continue reading

Continue ReadingCity of Detroit Files for Chapter 9 Bankruptcy

Bill Bonner: Has gold bottomed out?

"Is there any reason to doubt? Any reason for worries? Any reason to stash a gold coin in your safe, just in case this reprise of credit-based money doesn’t pan out? It took the Soviets 70 years to realise that their experiment with primitive communism wouldn’t work. They tried to run a huge, modern nation as though it were a paleolithic tribe. It took Zimbabwe nearly 30 years to discover that it couldn’t cover its expenses by printing up its own credit-based money (though it didn’t begin running the presses at full speed until near the end). And how long did it take the Thousand-Year Reich to discover that ignoring the laws of civilised nations would be fatal? Only 12 years!" Continue reading

Continue ReadingBill Bonner: Has gold bottomed out?

China defies IMF on mounting credit risk and need for urgent reform

"As you can see from the first chart, total credit has jumped from 129pc to 195pc of GDP since 2008, and has completely departed from its historic trend. The great mistake, plainly, was to keep the foot on the floor in 2010 and 2011, long after the Lehman crisis had subsided. The deeper thrust of the IMF report is that the growth model of the past 30 years is exhausted. The low-hanging fruit has been picked. If the Communist Party fails to take radical action, it will soon be caught in the middle income trap. Loans have jumped from $9 trillion to $23 trillion since 2008, a faster pace of debt build-up than in any major episode of the past century." Continue reading

Continue ReadingChina defies IMF on mounting credit risk and need for urgent reform

India takes drastic steps to defend rupee as global Fed shock deepens

"The country’s central bank raised a key funding rate 200 basis points to 10.25pc and took steps to drain money from India’s financial system, even though the economy is stalling and risks a hard landing. Foreign funds have been selling India debt at a record pace since late May, causing a 7pc fall in the rupee. Brazil and Indonesia have both had to tighten policy after a sharp slide in their currencies. Turkey signalled this week that it can longer afford to keep burning foreign reserves to protect the lira, and may have to raise interest rates instead. Nomura said India’s clamp-down is comparable to the funding squeeze last month by China’s central bank." Continue reading

Continue ReadingIndia takes drastic steps to defend rupee as global Fed shock deepens