The Bitter and the Generous Economies

I wrote this on screen tuesday morning. I just edited it to make it less of a mess. I’m not an economist, and the first draft had some questionable/waffley connections. My apologies if any remain.

Sometimes it seems to me that there are really only two economies: the bitter economy, and the generous economy.

The Bitter Economy – deserves everything that is gets and sees everyone as competition

The Generous Economy – sees itself as part of a community and its goods/services as one of many deserving options

I’ve been thinking and reading about the economy lately. How can we help our economy? Congress is looking at spending a whole bunch of money to help the economy… why is that?

The Federal Government really has very few options to influence the economy. Interest rates, and taxes/spending. If you never studied economics, I’d suggest skipping down to below the seond graph. If you have, please excuse some of the shorthand conclusions that I’m drawing toward my point.

Given that the country is already living with massive debt, and a large trade deficit, we have to be very careful to avoid inflation. When inflation gets out of control market actors end up in a spiral running after credit. Here’s a little image of the US CPI (Consumer Price Index.) You can see from this, or extrapolate, that our low unemployment and stable growth correlates to a stable CPI (controlled inflation rates.) Sorry the numbers are so small.

We’re looking at a global situation, and we have very few levers to push to influence things immediately. Interest rates are not a tools for us because of the potential to create inflation. We have to use taxes/spending. But we already have a massive deficit (which undermines the efficiency of the economy.) Any increase in spending will also increase the deficit.

We are not starting from moment one.  Over the last hundred years we have been using more and more efficient/complex means to help our economy.  We were employing all of these means as we descended into the current morass. It’s not like now we suddenly have new tools.  Our use of the ‘spending will help’ tool is has (helped) create our problems.

Looking at graphs of rising debt is like looking at graphs of rising green house gasses. It’s really easy to sort of say, ‘hey, that doesn’t matter’. But it really does. Deficit spending is like running up your credit card. At some point you end up having to make more and more money just to pay off the minimum. Deficits have to be controlled so that they don’t undermine the value of investment. If investment is less attractive, no matter where our currency and interest rates sit, our economy slows.

The government is looking at sector by sector investment, because everyone knows the debt is a threat to our economic health. Everyone knows that adding debt is unlikely to increase our economic health. But we ‘need to do something’.

The government can’t say, “Money for all my friends!!!”. So it is now in the process of prioritizing. Money for banks? Money for auto-makers? Money for green economy? Money for arts? The Institute for Policy Studies has suggested that one percent be spent on the arts. This would be an investment in human capital and communities.

We need to help our economy, but we also need to spend as little as possible helping our economy. The arts are an incredibly efficient investment. You get more bang for your buck with arts spending. It’s actually a little off-topic, but consider the following, which I pulled from Artslynx:

The three failed launches of satellites from Titan IV rockets in the 8.5 months before June 1999 totaled $3,000,000,000 in losses, an amount that could have funded the NEA for nearly ONE THIRD OF A CENTURY (AP & Denver Post 5/5/1999)

The $40,000,000 settlement made to the Italian victims of the ski gondola killed by US flier’s jockeying could have funded the NEA for more than HALF A YEAR (NPR Morning Edition 3/24/99)

On March 20,1999, The AP (read in the Denver Post) reported that The US Senate had voted to grant hog farmers an added $250,000,000 in aid to help them weather a free-market drop in prices. Such a subsidy could have matched our annulal NEA appropriation for TWO AND A HALF YEARS.

The arts are a very efficient economic investment, bearing many fruit. But like foreign aid, it is politically very bad. All government spending bears political risk. Arts funding is scary because when you give enough artists money you’re liable to end up with a piss-christ, and some flower penis, in addition to a mountain of bad poetry.

We need to encourage our politicians to fund the arts, and we must let them know that creative expression – even when it offends or bores – is part of what makes our country great. Politicians now need our vocal support to take risks, or, just like artists, we’ll only get more of the same.

What are our economic priorities? Innovation? Stability? Creativity?
How can the bailout be used for both short term good and to reinforce long-term priorities?

Arts sector investment makes sense as an efficient economic tool. In making immediate spending decisions arts spending must be considered a part of the generous economy, and must be defended from the interests of bitter economy actors.

Footnote:

Here’s a graph showing spending withing the US budget. Very simply: note that arts spending does not even register as a category.

Team One America

I read an article last night by Friedman supporting a gas tax. At the same moment that he recognized the need to support our economy and bail out the Big 3 auto-makers, he suggested that we need to act now on altering the basic geometry of our national energy strategy.

I think he’s right in many ways, but wonder how many priorities an administration can have. We do need to prop up the existing economy.  The United States has benefited from its acceptance of free market principles. Im actually uncertain how were getting around some parts of the WTO with giving aid to our auto industry. Isn’t giving aid to industry (be it agriculture, steel) illegal with the WTO?

senate_in_session(Anectdotally, I went to the Senate chamber in 1994 and witnessed the WTO vote. Shout out to Shifter and IAD.)

Would it be smart right now to raise the minimum wage? Or increase business contributions for health care? Friedman is correct that raising the gas tax would be a nifty way to encourage transition, but I’m not certain that it’s the efficient choice right now. I’m so pleased we (are about to) have a smart man in the White House who chooses for us.

Obama/Team One America did a few things lately I really respect.

Getting Clinton out of the Senate was really smart. You’re talking someone who still wants to run for president, and who REALLLLY does not agree with everthing on Obama’s domestic agenda.

She would have taken every opportunity to fight. I had the thought some time ago (about Pelosi) that this will be a real measure for her as a politician – her ability to evolve.

You lead a minority. A minority fights. You manage a majority.

And all of a sudden she has an administration she isn’t fighting with. That means she has to manage her majority. Wonder how she’ll do. Am pretty sure Obama made it easier for her by removing Clinton.

Another smart move by Team One America: inviting the schmuck Warren to speak at the inauguration. It guaratees a full, nationwide hearing on certain issues in a non-threatening way. (If you click here you’ll got warren’s site… check out number 8.)

No legislation is proposed at the inauguration. Nothing is really at stake. But the people who work the platform with the new president are gonna get a lot of profiles, and attention. Why would Obama give a major platform to someone who I’m sure he doesn’t agree much with? I think he trusts the judgment of the population. The more that U.S. citizens hear that the strongest critics of gay marriage are the people who think humans were kicking it with dinosaurs in the land of Cain and Abel a few years back, the more likely a coalition can be formed to create real change.

I’m pretty sure Clinton didn’t want don’t ask, don’t tell, but it was the best he could do. Politicans don’t get the luxury of having only one fight. Obama can’t lead where the country can’t follow. Part of the job is helping us – as a nation – follow. And I’m very encouraged with the management of issues that we’re seeing. Hope it continues once the live fire starts…

Garbage Men

Carmel Morgan ( a dc-based dance critic) and I have been working on an article for about 8 months now…. I’m not gonna post much, cause we’re working toward ‘real’ publication. But in response to some recent online conversations, here’s a small excerpt:

Bloggers and online news are simultaneously undercutting and enhancing general news coverage, in every field. The issue in arts journalism is the same as in journalism in general; do we need paid journalists at all? Are bloggers and free-lancers sufficient?

Professional critics remind the public to look beyond current trends, and encourage an appreciation of the long view. Classical audiences are aging, as are the defenders of the classics. The arts as a profession obviously feed into arts education. Without adequate connection and understanding between the last generation, the current generation, and the future generation, classical arts will decline.

Beyond consideration of ‘classical’ art, critics contribute to the development of tomorrow’s curriculum. The Humanities are a funnel: millions of creations, ideas, concepts and concerts fall into the world every year. The informed mind, eye, and pen, have helped shape that funnel since the middle ages. The elimination of critic positions in major newspapers threatens to create a chasm between the values and work of recent generations, and those of today.

As the article proceeds it gets into more of the problem, and some potential solutions. There are a lot of issues with newspaper decline, and significant overlap between the economics and the emotions….

by Rob Bettmann
I read yesterday that:

“If tv killed reading, the internet saved writing”

I thought that was interesting. Some months ago read this on John Rockwell’s Articles blog:

“Mediums are not necessarily the message; mediums are the mediums, and if the future is the internet, the present is still partly in print.”

Will hopefully post a full version of our piece in the next few months, following its publication. In the meantime, if you’re wicked curious email me and I can send a draft.

The image here is something I made just to make it, to illustrate our piece – maybe. I have a freelance business making words, images, etc. for people. If you think I can help with something, please contact me. You can see more about the business here.