July 31, 2006
How can we make “possibilism” more possible?
Javier Santiso Chile possibilism
July 28, 2006
Should they now sue their Central Banks?
July 27, 2006
Who is a threatening who?
Kolbe is of course right when he explains about how much the competition from entitlement programs might signify for what’s-over-for-aid-and-alike, in terms of cash budget allocation, but if we are really going to be more explicit about the links between them, then he should also explain that it is much more than about money. Equally no one would object that the US needs to be much more careful with its international stature but, also, even in this case, it is not really the amount of aid-dollars paid that will break or make the day, and believing that it is only a question of hard money, is about the surest way of loosing international stature. When Kolbe says that “Nothing provides as much tangible evidence of America’s leadership as foreign aid” we, the good friends of the USA, do not know where to look.
Nonetheless, let us not despair, who knows if satisfying the high expectancies build up by the baby-boomers could not turn itself into a real growth opportunity for the many poor, far superior in effectiveness than aid itself, and all in line with frequently heard clamors such as “give us trade not aid”. Mr. Kolbe, do help in fixing your entitlement overhangs, not so much for the poor of the world, they would hardly notice it, but try doing it for your own soon to be poorer baby boomers.
Jim Kolbe baby boomers poverty foreign aid entitlement
Are we consuming hypocrisy in an unsustainable way?
Among his observations, we find that “Further restrictions will breed even more disrespect for the law, while creating exciting new opportunities for criminals” stands out as an issue that needs to be much more seriously considered, so that society stops fertilizing the markets where evil forces thrive and that, through any available means, are always trying to go for a takeover of the world.
It is high noon to call in some good economic analysis into any legislative procedure destined to prohibit something, to ascertain there is a due analyst of the supply and demand curve for the to-be-prohibited, and of the available resources for the fight. If the demand for the “bad” in question is inelastic, meaning that the “marginal” human urge for it is very strong, and the supply elastic, meaning that better returns will immediately place more offers of “bad” on the markets, and finally, the resources scarce, meaning mostly there is not a sufficient social consensus about the need for the fight, well then we are all better off forgetting it.
As a society we should never forget that hypocrisy, as a last ditch resource, has its limits too, and we should be careful not to consume it in an unsustainable way.
Jacob Weisberg illegal internet gambling unsustainable consumption hypocrisy
July 24, 2006
Yes anything could indeed happen!
But, with respect to that anything could happen, in Venezuela, with Chavez, this could perhaps be better understood by your readers if you also had informed them that at this moment, almost eight years into Chavez’s XXI Century Socialism, gasoline is being sold in Venezuela at 3.7 cents of dollar per liter or less than 15 dollar cents per gallon.
With this marvel of a public policy Chavez, besides stimulating a runaway consumption of gasoline with all its environmental consequences, based on the international cash-opportunity cost manages to transfer a regressive subsidy of about 10 billion dollars, or about 10% of Venezuela GDP, or about 100% of the GDP of a country like Bolivia, from the poor who do not buy gasoline, to those that love to guzzle it up.
For comparison the gasoline price in an oil country like Norway that seems to been doing things right is 52 times higher and in the USA of Mr. Bush, Chavez´ sworn enemy, and the Cuba of Castro, Chavez´ best buddy, the price is only about 25 times higher. Even in the land that has inspired the term of oil-Saudism the price is seven times as high.
Now you try to draw your own conclusions of what Chavez is all about! Are you clear now?
Now so you can also understand the current opposition groups that are against Chavez, let me inform you that they do not mention this issue either. Are you clearer yet?
Chavez XXI century socialism gasoline petrol prices
July 19, 2006
We need to find and fund our global National Parks
carbon tax global warming Kyoto
July 18, 2006
Are they really sure it is enforceable?
How long will legislators around the world be allowed to go on declaring things illegal without giving sufficient considerations to whether they have the enforcement capability and the full backing of the society’s social sanctioning mechanisms? If this is not ascertained then all what will be achieved is to take society further down on that slippery road of loosing credibility and hand over on a silver plate a new growth opportunity to those who prosper from participating in illegal and illicit activities.
banning net gambling enforcementsocial sanction
Is there some state-of-the-art anti corruption tool we do not know about?
lobbying corruption net neutrality
July 17, 2006
Why was not 6 cents on the dollar offered before the invasion?
What remains a mystery though is how, under such circumstances, no one thought of making a debt purchase offer, let us say of a quite generous 6 cents on the dollar, before the US invasion, since not only is that what you would rationally expect from any normal rescuer willing to stick their neck out for a bankrupt company/country, but also, in this particular case, since it would probably have been the most effective way of transmitting the seriousness of the American threat. As is, when having to read all the front page horror stories about the Iraqi tragedy, it is hard to know whether to laugh or cry, when you describe their recent efforts “to develop a creditor profile in international markets and debt management capabilities.”
Iraq debt Joanna Chung Stephen Fidler
Something will indeed explode in our face
On July 10, in FT, Jeremy grant reported on how “Regulators ‘face challenge posed by multiple ownership’” and have to work overtime trying to identify who are the owners of all those hedge funds that are taking bets on credits in order to understand their conflicts of interests and, that very same day, Giles Tett describes how “Credit officers are hot to trot in a fired-us up market for loans” and now leave the banks to work for hedge-funds.
It seems the world did not learn enough from overly centralized economies falling into pieces, as otherwise there is no way of explaining the blind support it has given to that systemic risk factory that has been set up in Basel.
Frank Partnoy David Skeel credit derivatives
Basel bank regulations systemic risks
July 15, 2006
Allow it, or call in the Righteousness Brigade!
Since even online gamblers would probably like to know who they are dealing with, and at least who deals them the cards, perhaps much more could be gained by allowing online gambling and developing some good governance principles. Alternatively, let society bear down its full weight on gamblers. Most of us who have stopped smoking have not done so because it was prohibited, in fact in many cases that might even been the reason why we started, but because there is a quite obnoxious but extremely effective social pressure against it and which, to top it up, does not cost a lot of taxpayer dollars.
Christopher Caldwell online gambling
July 13, 2006
What a curious argument!
What a curious argument that is! Anyone would have thought that buying gasoline in the open market and distributing was what that business was all about. If Citgo can’t distribute petrol profitable to these 1,900 filling stations, then it sounds like they should perhaps retire from the other 11,200 too.
Venezuela USA Citgo oil gasoline petrol
July 12, 2006
Careful though with giving the illegal and the illicit markets (the IIM's) another juicy growth opportunity
Now, if I read Hazlett right, he seems to suggest that it is better to allow some time for competition to provide the market with the alternatives before calling in the trustbusters. He is probably right, I agree, though I would also have to warn against waiting for too long, since it is always preferably to legally bust a trust (if there is one) than to allow for yet another new growth opportunity for the illegal and illicit forces of evil to start pirating and copying the iPods. By the way, are there already some fake cheap iPods out there? Hey, just asking!
Thomas Hazlett iPod antitrust illegal illicit growth opportunity
About the calm and silent Mr Wolf
global warming
About priorities and painting firehouses
July 11, 2006
Hedging our emotional investments in World Cups
World Cup Juventus defeat France investments risks hedging derivatives
On pushing the merchandise!
In this respect and since the authors mention the positive experience with Argentine GDP-Warrants, which ironically is only the results of the Argentina economy bouncing back after the crisis, they should also have tried to answer what would have happened if all of Argentina’s debt had been contracted their way. As I see it Argentina would just have been able to contract more debt, and the fall would have been even more severe, some few months later.
There are a couple of truths in life you cannot just structure yourself out of and to try so, could only make things much worse. With respect to developing countries and their public debt, it is high time to leave this “how-much-can-we-load-them-with-before-they-break” thinking and go back to basics, perhaps to the financial “innovation” of contracting debt that repays itself!
gdp linked debt debt sustainability Stephany Griffith-Jones Robert Shiller
July 10, 2006
Mr. Paulson Drop the Big Tax Bomb Now!
The only thing really worthy for sticking out a reputable neck such as Mr. Paulson’s at a time like this, would be to promote a substantial new tax on gasoline consumption in the USA, thereby killing many sick birds with one single shot, and bringing much rewards for the neck-owner, the nation and the world at large.
For instance when so many remind Paulson about the need for Social Security reform they should not forget that whatever he does there will come to naught if the USA does not solve its most fundamental structural weakness, its excessive consumption of oil. Now reduce oil consumption and you need to do much less about Social Security, financial crisis, fiscal deficits, trade-deficits, oil dependency and, the top of the heap, Gore’s environmental sermon.
Let us hope Mr. Paulson does not go for a pellet gun and starts to dilute all his personal goodwill capital handing out one little aspirin here, and another one there. Let us hope he has already spoken with his perhaps willing but until now completely ineffective oil-addiction-fighting boss, about the need to Drop the Big Tax Bomb Now!
Paulson oil addiction gasoline tax
July 05, 2006
Wolf’s viva la vida loca
coal global warming sustainability
July 03, 2006
Why do you then support secrecy Mr. Carter?
Yes, But, Yes!
Christopher Earl Harvey Bale Advance Market Commitment AMC vaccines poor
Let the willing consumer in on the carbon trading principle!
June 30, 2006
What is most at risk is Doha’s own relevance
Just an example, look at call centers and similar outsourcings and ask yourself what on earth did Doha, or Gats, or what have you, have to do with them. In fact the most fundamental driver for the guys of Doha to produce some concrete results might be that if they do not, they will be further left behind, and risk looking foolishly irrelevant, like all those in the USA that are currently debating immigration reforms will do, when they finally wake up to the reality that they are already living in a de-facto Commonwealth with Central America.
June 29, 2006
FIFA is too Clubalised
FIFA
June 28, 2006
Energetic inflation possibilities
As Wolf reminds us about, the average US consumer uses ten times more primary energy than an average Chinese, which set against a large economic growth rate in China and a limited increase in energy supplies should put extraordinary pressure on energy prices, as simple as that! In these circumstances, the US Fed, and the American leaders at large, should be speaking out to their fellow citizens telling them that if they do not reign in their consumption of oil, inflation will take off, they will have to raise interest rates, and then they will have to see jobs and property values all go, as simple as that! But Wolf might still be right, since expecting a central banker to acknowledge that other forces are more powerful than his and his buddies, or a leader to lead and not follow polls, well that could really be dreaming.
Francesco Giavazzi
Charles Wyplosz
So many servants and not even one maid or one butler!
Well, Mr. Wolf’s home might be very well staffed, but to state that man or woman has been liberated from daily household drudgery is that sort of daring statement when most of us given a choice would gladly exchange at least 10 of those cold energetic Lomborg servants for a warm human body to help us out.
We agree fully with Mr. Wolf that slavery and serfdom is horrible, but let us not forget that serving other people is something very honorable and, if we forget that, we will soon risk be all out of jobs and twiddling our thumbs, when the machines with their Lomborg servants will be doing all the manufacture and the agriculture for us. So many countries with income per capita income over 40.000 US$ per year, and most of the households cannot afford a maid or a butler! Comes to show how this energy revolution Wolf talks about could instead be running out of steam.
Lomborg
Copenhagen Consensus
Sack some in the IEA!
Since we so recently could read in the world press about oil heading down towards $5 and the end of the oil age, and never heard an IEA representative forcefully negating such predictions, may I advance the idea that the first thing to be done, specially in times when we preach the worth of accountability, is to publicly sack some IEA bureaucrats, as incompetent lazybones, or worse, for misrepresenting the facts. This is no joking matter as hundreds of millions of persons around the globe will suffer if IEA, and others like them, do not get their act together.
IEA
June 26, 2006
The future very last book about Harry Potter
Harry Potter
J. K. Rowlings
June 23, 2006
The rumors of advertising’s death might be slightly exaggerated
But perhaps there should be no reason for him to despair since in Encyclopedia Americana we find that “The vocabulary has grown from the 50,000 to 60,000 words in Old English to the tremendous number of entries -- 650,000 to 750,000 -- in an unabridged dictionary of today" and so, not only are there many more words out there, but there might even be a niche for Saatchi in creating some new words.
That said and never taking a recommendation lightly, much less when it comes from such a reputable source, I immediately proceeded to try to register a “likable.com”, since likable sounds a very likable word, and niche, and you have to get them before its too late and you have to settle for something inferior. Unfortunately for me “likable.com” was already taken and so now I am just left with the urge for a word. See how clients grow on trees Mr Saatchi?
saatchi
June 22, 2006
What? Is it not criminal today?
I believe many of us would appreciate it if FT provided us a brief, in layman terms, legal explanation of where we are now, and where Mr Parrett wants us to go.
June 21, 2006
A not too transparent recommendation from Mr Wolf
This is exactly the type of non-transparency that would make it impossible for WTO to live up in the long run to its global institutional purposes, and it reminds me so much of some privatizations I witnessed, when the order of the day was to postpone any major increases in tariffs a couple years, so that consumers would not be able to connect the dots.
It is also wrong of Wolf to hype the demands for results of the upcoming negotiations too much and even mentioning “potentially devastating consequences of failure”, as this could spill over into those disappointments that feed the self-realization of prophecies. Instead, we need to put forward the argument that independently of the results, WTO has a vital role to play since the world cannot afford to lose “a highly successful dispute settlement system” and it also needs a world-class coordinator to give support to whatever other negotiations, multilateral regional or bilateral, that could help the world to keep moving forward in the vital issues of trade.
It is strange that although Wolf tells us “Personally, I believe these rounds no longer make sense”, he should still feel the need of ordering us to bet our last clean shirt on them.
The public sector keeps some de-facto public debt off its balance sheet.
One of the things we should expect from any good accounting is that it allows us to make valid comparisons, in the case of the private sector between companies and, in the case of the public sector, between countries, but, in this case, how do you compare France and the UK?.
Another problem with not recording the true societal debts and therefore the true societal costs is that the government starts to loose track of its real weighted average cost of funds, something we are taught to quite handy when having to select what projects to carry out.
Today instead of investing so much effort looking for the exact worldwide convergence of the accounting standards for the private sector, we citizens might do much better looking for some better approximates for our public sectors.
June 20, 2006
Mama Mia what a mountain of debt!
First they draw our attention to some figures that even though they themselves do not seem too very upset about them (American stiff upper lips?), makes it hard for an ordinary reader to refrain from letting out a Mama Mia! Against a total market value of assets of $52,000bn, which includes the value of homes, they tell us American consumers owe $11,500bn. This whooping amount is not invested in a very well diversified portfolio either, as most of the income of the debtors and the value of the assets given in guarantee depend on the state of the US economy, which, to add salt to injury, is quite a prolific public debtor itself.
To top it up, the authors find their main ray of light in that “the world is awash with labor which combined with favorable demographics in the developing world, means that inflation should trend lower and rates more likely to be 2 per cent than 6 per cent the coming years” which only implies that they expect foreigners to keep on working hard in order to reinvest their surpluses in this portfolio at bargain rates. If so, they need to be reminded that this does not repay the American consumer’s debt, this does just postpone the day of reckoning.
Finally the authors refer twice to Poor Richard, which is also quite surprising given the topic as all we can remember he said in reference to debt is that “Industry pays debts, while despair increases them.”
Zachary Karabell
Dan Chung
Al Gore’s crusade against global warning is not yet warm enough!
Unfortunately in the list we cannot find a “write to your Congressmen and ask for a tax on gas (petrol)", which by cutting that demand that consumes one of every seven barrels of oil in the world just on American roads and highways, would be the best and most concrete evidence of really wanting to help out the environment… and also the American economy at large.
As a result we have to conclude that Gore’s crusade has not yet warmed up enough.
Al Gore
June 19, 2006
With or without strawberries the basket might still not matter
But when he then enters his very interesting discussion on core and headline inflation, developed to take care on timing differences and avoid knee jerk reactions, either for technical or political reasons (perhaps just another difference in timing) he also seems to ignore that the basket is just a bureaucratic product, designed to follow the cost of living for an average consumer, and as such, it might still, with or without strawberries, not be able to assure us that the fiat money is not loosing its purchase power.
When one observes how in a land with a per capita income of 42.000 US dollar per year so relative few can afford having a maid, much less a local maid, we might have the right of viewing with some more suspicion the real purchasing power of current fiat money.
Sent to FT, June 19, 2006
June 17, 2006
Does it smell a bit rotten in the Republic?
Having to read in FT, June 17, two full pagers about the electoral possibilities for the wife of a former president to become president of the United States of America, while the country is ruled by the son of another former president, should perhaps make Americans question the current state of their Republic.
Sent to FT, June 17, 2006
June 16, 2006
The ugly wart ignored
The left is frequently looking to reassess its relation with Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, in an effort something similar to when the right looks to reassess their relations with George W Bush.
Surprisingly enough, in most of their analysis, we see that in Chavez's case they always ignore the most concrete and convincing piece of evidence of why they should cut all relations with this dubious military ex coup-man, who quite unauthorized is taking cover behind their ideological mantle.
Currently in Venezuela, after soon eight years of a “socialist” government, petrol is sold at less than 4 cents of dollar per liter, compared to the 160 cents per liter paid, with taxes, by consumers in Europe, 40 times more, 4.000% more. By selling the petrol at 4 cents instead for the 64 cents he could get for it for anywhere exclusive of taxes, the “Socialist” Chávez transfers effectively 60 cents of dollar per liter to those “with cars” from the resources that could directly been used in favor of those “without cars” and, to make it worse, creates simultaneously horrendous incentives against the environment.
The previous is such an absolute aberration of public policies for most people, especially in Europe, especially for the left, so it is so hard to understand how they can ignore it. Perhaps it is because sometimes a wart it is so ugly that you just have to look away… but please, do not!
June 13, 2006
Little guys will still be little guys
That said what really seems to be calling the shots now, both for big and small guys alike, are just plain old time fundamentals, like the environment and the availability of energy. Naím begins his article with the example of big Shell giving in to a small Bolivia but he knows very well that in a world of 5 dollars per barrel, as actually some major pundits spoke about as late as 1999, nobody would give a jota for a small southern-hemisphere hillbilly who happened to strike it rich and who probably would misspend his fortune soon anyhow. Had only the Big one act responsible and checked his runaway consumption of oil, then Bolivia would sadly still be forgotten and perhaps Baghdad a non issue.
Sent to FT, June 13, 2006
June 10, 2006
The global work-force needs some global representation too
Sent to FT on June 10, 2006
June 09, 2006
An Ättestupa for Mr Lind
June 08, 2006
Just a reshuffle among the “locals” in the Fund won’t do it
Sir, you and others seem to opine, June 8, something like if only the composition at the board of the International Monetary Fund better reflected economic size then for instance, like magic, China would speedily devaluate and all the current global imbalances disappear. It might not be as easy as that and by the way why would GDP and share of market trade more important than market capitalizations for assigning votes at the IMF and also, if we at it, why should we not go for a full democratic reform and use populations as the basis?
Much of the problem in these days of globalization lies in that it is mostly the “local” perspectives that are represented, making in fact the globe at large the most underrepresented constituency. In this respect, instead of just reshuffling the deck of card among the locals, more could perhaps be gained if some of the current chairs at the IMF Board were to be occupied by independent Executive Directors, who are there to think and represent exclusively the global perspective and interests, with the horizon of our grandchildren.
That the Fund’s professional staff could somehow act in the name of the world, well that is nice, and we all hope they do, but “Mother Earth” could still benefit from some additional support at the board level, and besides there is always the need of making sure that we don’t fall into the hand of even smaller and more parochial interests, as has indeed happened with many corporations that have de-facto been taken over by their management teams.
Sent to FT June 8, 2006
June 02, 2006
A Blog Is Born
But then I realized that all those letters to the editor that for reasons impossible for me to comprehend were never published, were condemned to an eternal silence not of their own fault, and so I decided to, at a marginal cost of zero, to resurrect them and keep them alive, right here.
English is not my mother language so bear with me and you’ll probably note when my letter has been published in FT by its correctness. Swedish is my mother language but I have not written anything serious in it for about 40 years and last time I tried, they just laughed their hearts out because of my outdated expressions. Polish is my father language but, unfortunately, I do not speak a word of Polish, much less write. Yes Spanish is my language, as I am from Venezuela and although I trust I write in it with great flair, I would never dream of publishing an article in Spanish without having it edited by my wife.
And so friends here is my Tea with FT blog with my old and new letters to the editor. I hope you will share them with me now and again, and then again.
Welcome, and cheers, as I believe they say over there.
Per
PS. Just so that FT does not get too cocky and believes they are my only window to the world, I will now and again publish a letter sent to the editor of another publication.
May 31, 2006
Some properly documented could be even worse
Sent to FT May 31, 2006
Should we then pursue inequality?
As for me, for our global little world to have a chance to work out, I firmly believe that we all need to share much more equally the future, which is much better of course than just focusing on equally dividing the past.
Sent to FT May 31, 2006
May 29, 2006
Shivers running down Executive spines
Sent to FT May 29, 2006
May 24, 2006
The information Mr Market receives could also be neurotic
Sir, Martin Wolf’s very interesting although not quite sure where-it-finally-leads-you article “Neurotic Mr Market has plenty to be anxious about” (May 24), bases itself on an argument made by William White, in a working paper of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), that there is something intrinsically destabilising derived from stabilising inflation.
I would argue instead that it is solely the way how inflation is measured that creates the confusion.
Let us not forget that inflation as they, our monetary authorities, know it, is just obtained by looking at a basket of limited consumer goods chosen by bureaucrats and that although they might be highly relevant to the many have-nots, are highly irrelevant to measure the real loss of value of money.
For instance, who on earth has decided for that the increase in the price of houses is not inflation? And so what should perhaps be argued is that really our monetary authorities have not been so successful fighting inflation as they claim they have been.
May 21, 2006
Might we not do better with some divergence in accounting?
Anyhow, it is interesting to see an Italian taking a Prussian stand on accounting issues… who can doubt globalization?
Sent to FT on May 21, 2006
May 17, 2006
About Mr. Martin Wolf’s own oil shock
Sent to FT, May 17, 2006
May 12, 2006
Yes to a floor, but go for a roof too!
Sent to FT, May 12, 2006
May 10, 2006
The world needs open pastures, not corrals
May 06, 2006
$7 per gallon should do it!
Levying a new federal consumption tax on gas that would increase its price to $7 a gallon, about the level at which it has been in Europe, would reduce demand for imported oil, provide the government with about $300 billions in taxes to balance the accounts and benefit the environment.
It would destroy many jobs, but it also would create new ones. Better to bite the bullet now before the current economic imbalances erode confidence in the dollar, and anyhow take the price to $7 but then with no gain to pay for the pain. That, of course, would require leadership, which is even scarcer than oil.
May 03, 2006
Don't force them to swear allegiance to a flag if that's not what they want
Sir, while reporting on immigration (your front page today May 2) one frequently see “foreign illegal workers” used a synonym for “illegal immigrants” and they are not, and it seriously confuses the debate. Foreign illegal workers, the majority, come to the USA primarily to get a job, to earn some money and be able to go back to their homeland, and the illegal immigrants are those that come with the clear purpose of staying. Forcing “foreign illegal workers” to swear allegiance to the flag, just so they can get a job, is a wrong way to solve the problems. The fact that Americans love their own country so much should not preclude them from understanding that other can also love their own country, just as much.
May 01, 2006
We need to stop oil price vendettas
Sent to FT, May 1, 2006
April 26, 2006
With a little help from the pirates!
Is FT on its way to take sides against Jethro Tull’s Ian Anderson? My new tune: equality on copyright, April 11.
Sent to FT April 26, 2006
Yes, that is an effective suicide method
April 25, 2006
Another unforeseen consequence
Sent to FT, April 25, 2006
April 21, 2006
Do not dare to abandon the fight!
Unfortunately, in too many countries the generals, for political reasons, frequently want to show off as entrepreneurs and good hearted distributors of anticipated spoils of war, and in doing so they most often turn themselves into the greatest promoters of inequalities.
We need so urgently to make certain that the future is equally shared among all that we cannot allow ourselves to be distracted trying to distribute equally the past.
Sent to FT, April 21, 2006
April 20, 2006
Go for an oil consumers' co-operative group
Sir, James Pinkerton suggests that “The world should get ready for a Nato-style oil alliance” (April 20), and although he makes it implicit that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is the “enemy, he does not really explain what the alliance should be up to. Let me make three suggestions. First, forget about the NATO simile - too militaristic - and go for a simple Oil Consumer Co-operative. Second, the OCC should then start some serious introspection so as to realize that its biggest enemy, unchecked oil demand, is thriving behind their own lines. Finally it should look seriously into the alternative of offering the oil producing nations long-term supply and purchases agreements based on prices that are reasonable for both sides.
April 18, 2006
Oil does not have to be that volatile
Unfortunately it would seem that there are many economic interests in maintaining the volatility of oil for these stabilizing long term contracts to come into fruition.
Sent to FT, April 18, 2006
April 07, 2006
'American Union' passports could work
Published in FT, April 10, 2006
Sir, It is sad in today’s globalized world to still find so many local Americans who believe that when they ship a criminal band member over the border, to someone much less resourceful, they have gotten rid of their problem.
In this respect, Jacob Weisberg, ("Immigration ideas bordering on perverse”, April 6), aghast with the current ideas on immigration law reform in the US, proposes not passing any reforms but to keep going as if nothing’s happening.
Another more transparent route would be to bite the bullet and accept that an “American Union” between North and Central America already exists, de-facto, and issue a common passport for all the citizens of the enlarged American Union.
Such a strategy would make it possible for many of the over 11 million illegal immigrants that dare not leave the US because they do not know whether they can later return, to be freed from their (also de-facto) mother of all jails, and go home, even on a temporary basis.
It would also help to realize that had the US spent an Iraq-war sized budget assisting Central America, as the European Union did with Spain and others, the whole immigration debate could have been a moot issue, with exception perhaps of all the aging baby boomers moving south to find care and services.
Finally, the fact is that when you see how all the Central Americans toil away in the US and help their families back home, you have to ask yourself whether this is not just part of the process whereby the US manages to renew its working and family ethics, in order to remain strong.
https://perkurowski.blogspot.com/2009/09/mcprison.html
https://voiceandnoise.blogspot.com/2003/02/snowing-in-washington-my-first.html
March 22, 2006
Might the camera lenses see more than they?
Sir, there on the first page of the New York Times is the photo of a student from an American university photographing a poor Caracas neighborhood during his visit to Venezuela, described aptly as a new leftist Mecca. One wonders whether while taking the photo he reflects even for a second on the fact that the extreme poverty in front of him exist, and might indeed even be growing, after more than seven years of a very strange revolution that is financed by an oil boom, or does he believe that the poor are just placed there by the travel agency to give him a photo op. He might also have asked himself if it is right or not that these poor people should be sending money to help the poor of Massachusetts and the Bronx, which is what happens when the Chavez-Citgo combo sell subsidized oil there.
On a lighter note, Juan Forero also forgot completely to mention the possibility that Mr. Harry Belafonte’s trip to Venezuela was in fact just to try to get back the money Matilda took from him.
March 15, 2006
Do not be too harsh on BBC
March 13, 2006
Are credit rating agencies Angels?
Sir, it is not clear from Frank Partnoy’s “Take away the credit rating agencies licences”, March 13 whether he is against the system of using credit rating agencies to perform the assessment of risks in lieu of the market, as I am because of the systemic risks that are introduced; or against the market of the credit rating agencies, that he describes as a locked duopoly that does not allow for the entrance of a company named Rapid Rating.
That said I would recommend the reading of Rethinking Bank Regulations, Cambridge Press 2006, where its authors James R. Barth, Gerard Caprio, Jr., and Ross Levine, explore the possibility that regulators might not be Angels and they find proof that giving more power to authorities does indeed creates dangerous distortions. In this respect we might also need to question whether we should dare to move forward evaluating risks, with the premise that the credit rating agencies are Angels.
Sent to FT, March 13, 2006
March 11, 2006
Unpatriotic-patriotism
Sent to FT, March 11, 2006
March 07, 2006
Perhaps we could do with fewer academicians in our universities
Sent to FT, March 7, 2006
March 03, 2006
Europe's welfare state should not be scorned
Sir, Whatever failings Martin Wolf points out with respect to the European welfare state let us not forget that its main pillar is the sharing of social responsibilities among citizens and, in this respect its opposite, the non-welfare state, the everyone-on-his-own state, is fundamentally more rotten and unsustainable in today's global world. Most of his criticism is not about the welfare state itself but about its workings and these do indeed present some problems that need urgent corrections. Nonetheless, while reforming please do not throw out this very beautiful baby with the bathwater.
February 19, 2006
On what’s to be done with a subsidiary of an international bank
It is sad indeed, to only be a risk diversification, in someone else’s portfolio.
Sent to FT, on February 19, 2006
February 13, 2006
Mobility carries a hidden cost!
Sent to FT, February 13, 2006
February 08, 2006
Quitting oil this way should be easy
Quitting oil as proposed should be easy and, as Mark Twain said, we should be able to do it a thousand times. Analyzing what is on the table for battling the habit of oil reminds one of a new-year pledge to quit smoking based exclusively on the use of low tar cigarettes and patches of nicotine, and zero will. Before politicians dare to express the need for a substantial tax on the consumption of gas, no one should be compelled to believe in their determination. But, what about cars with lower gas consumption? Well as it just reinforces the current no-public-transport-model, this could indeed worsen the withdrawal symptoms when, on doctor’s orders, the country finally has no choice but to quit.
January 25, 2006
Between fakes and originals which has the more real market?
Sent to FT, January 25, 2006
January 23, 2006
Who told you life in the “curse” lane was easy
Sent to FT on January 23, 2006


