Archive for January, 2010

Book Burning Overseas Again?

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

Book burning has become an expression of economic, not political stress.

Some pensioners in Britain are buying cheap books at charity shops and burning them as a cheaper alternative to coal. Energy prices in Britain are up around 40 percent since January 2008 and gas consumption has increased by 30 percent over seasonal averages. (CNBC, 1/5/10)

The extremely cold winter is making things even more difficult for people struggling with an economy that contracted 4.8% in 2009 – the biggest one year decline since 1921. (Bloomberg Businessweek, 1/25/10)

Can a Kindle become kindling?

Eric Zavolinsky

9021 NO

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Protectionist actions among countries have garnered a lot of attention over the past year, but how about protectionism between school districts within the same state?

In the past, California school districts such as the one in Beverly Hills welcomed students from outside its locale, since the district accepting the students received a payment of $6,239.00 per student from the state. With recent cutbacks in state funds for education, Beverly Hills has told its roughly 400 out-of-district students to either rent an apartment in the boundaries of the district or find another place to go to school. (New York Times, 1/14/10)

A statement by one Beverly Hills parent seems relevant: “This is a community trying to take care of its own, and there is nothing wrong with that.” That thought reflects an emerging protectionist attitude being encouraged by a sense of scarcity.

Charles Hess

Primary-Care, Primary Problem

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

In a Commonwealth Fund survey of 10,000 primary-care physicians in eleven industrialized countries, U.S. doctors had the worst score of all countries for making provisions for after-hours care.  Two of three U.S. primary-care physicians made no allowance for care during evenings and weekends, leaving Americans no option but to seek help in more expensive hospital emergency rooms during such hours.

In another survey finding, 97 percent of doctors in the Netherlands, New Zealand and Norway use electronic medical records, while 46 percent of American doctors do. (Governing, 1/10)

In the healthcare bill making its way through Congress, changes planned for Medicaid alone will bring 15 million more patients into the United States’ healthcare system, each one likely to look for a primary care physician.  Not only are fewer medical students going into general practice, but primary-care physicians are already behind the curve in providing health care at the most basic level.  The reason for such a shortage of basic doctors’ services might have come through in another part of the survey:  Fifty-eight percent of patients of primary-care physicians in the U.S. have trouble paying for the care they receive; the other countries in the survey had figures ranging from five to thirty-seven percent.

Ken Hey

How bad is it? Ask the states

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Five percent??  That is the number that some economists expect the U.S. GDP to grow this year.  It would certainly be an impressive number when you figure that, according to The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, state and local spending accounts for about one-eighth of GDP.

During legislative sessions in 2009, state legislatures cut $145.9 billion from their fiscal 2010 budgets. Despite these cuts, states still face a mid-year budget gap of $28.2 billion.  (Stateline.org, 2/21/09)

How bad are things for the states?

Things are so bad in Illinois that as of mid-December, the Illinois State Board of Education has sent the state comptroller more than 18,000 vouchers totaling $757 million and that number is just a drop in the $4.5 billion bucket of I.O.Us the state has handed out. (Beacon News, 1/4/10)

Things are so bad in Maine that the new budget proposal submitted by its governor is based on the assumption that congress will pass another $200 billion in stimulus programs and provide direct aid for the state to fund its Medicaid program.  Certainly other states must be hoping for the same as stimulus funds plugged about 30 to 40 percent of the budget gaps states were facing last year. (Stateline.org, 12/14/09;  CNN,11/11/09)

Things are so bad in North Carolina that it has borrowed $1.4 billion from the federal government since February 2008 to fund unemployment insurance claims.  During the last recession the state borrowed a total of $270 million.  Twenty-three other states have borrowed from the treasury to fund claims and they will all have to begin repayment, with interest, in 2011. (Charlotte Observer, 12/1/09)

Things are so bad in Arizona that on November 19, the state borrowed $700 million from Bank of America, the first time since the Depression that the state needed to turn to an outside borrower.  After less than two weeks, the money had all been allocated and the state had to borrow $73 million from its internal account to make a payment to the state’s schools.  Arizona claims it will replenish the accounts as tax collections come in.  (Arizona Republic, 12/2/09)

Tax collections are going to have to improve for the states to find their footing.  The nominal and inflation adjusted figures indicate that the first three quarters of 2009 marked the largest decline in state tax collections since the Census Bureau began tracking the data in 1962.  (Rockefeller Institute of Government, 1/10/10)

Together sales and income taxes make up roughly half of state and local tax revenue. With national unemployment still above 10 percent, states like Arizona are betting a lot on individuals increasing spending despite a difficult job market.  Anyone betting on 5 percent GDP growth is betting that these states get healthy…quickly.  Any takers?

Eric Zavolinsky

Bringing It Home

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Despite cutting costs in 2009, many companies in Germany and the rest of Europe appear to be less interested in outsourcing, and some companies in Germany are even bringing manufacturing back home.

In 2009, three German companies continued to outsource work abroad for every one company that brought formerly outsourced jobs home. In 2003, six companies were sending jobs overseas for every one returning jobs home. An October survey by Cognizant found that 40 percent of European companies cut back outsourcing plans in 2009.  (Newsweek, 1/11/10)

This could be evidence of slackening demand or anticipated slackening demand. Or it could be a nationalist shift in attitude about production and labor. But, either way, this is a negative for shippers.

Eric Zavolinsky

Corporate Spending “Green Shoot”?

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

Are businesses getting ready to re-open their wallets?

Marketing expenses at Wells Fargo increased by 70.4 percent from the second to the third quarter, jumping from $71 million to $121 million.  U.S. Bank saw an increase in its marketing budget of 64 percent quarter to quarter, actually doubling the figure of one year earlier (roughly $52 million to $105 million).  Bank of America’s marketing spending increased from $257.6 million in the second quarter of 2009 to $282.1 million in the third quarter. (US Banker, 1/10)

Are these increases in marketing expenses the first signals of corporate spending – a category missing from the much-touted economic “green shoots” – becoming vibrant again?

Ken Hey

Chinese Old-Age Security –> Consumer Society?

Monday, January 4th, 2010

For the sixth year the government of China is increasing state pensions, and more importantly Beijing will now allow workers to transfer pension accounts across provinces and when switching jobs. (South China Morning Post, 12/23/09)

Analysts of Chinese consumers’ spending habits have often cited a fear of lack of savings in old age as a reason for China’s high private savings rate.  Beijing’s increases of pension payments as well as making the pensions mobile will help address the retirement concern and potentially boost personal consumption expenditures in the communist state – a stated goal of the Beijing government in light of depressed export demand.

Michael Hines