Coakley’s down. Is Healthcare Out?

The unbelievable, though not unpredictable, has happened. The Democrats have lost the Massachussetts Senate seat of Edward Kennedy, possibly killing his very life’s goal of healthcare.

The healthcare bills up for discussion – both of them – have major problems, most notably they dont bring down the crippling costs of health. But an advanced industrial country should be able to take care of its own.

Rushing something through the Senate is being mooted. The Republicans may have done this if they were in the majority. But that doesnt make it right. In fact, it is not right.

However, the Seante has already voted – legitamately – on a bill. The House Democrats need to take a deep breath and vote the same bill. They need to understand that any short term unpopularity will be vastly smaller than the long term electoral gain they will enjoy for doing something that has elluded politicians for generations.

You may wonder why i, a fiscal conservative, support health care reform. The answer is that we need to get health care cost down as a percent of the nation’s GDP. The current system cannot do that. The new system will not help either initially, but it starts a reform process in place that ultimately will.

Beyond that, this country cannot afford a crippled Administration for the next three years.

Voters gave George W Bush a second term to govern. President Obama deserves at least a second year.

Published in: on January 19, 2010 at 10:33 pm  Leave a Comment  
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Will Massachusetts Stick it to Obama (& Kennedy)?

If this were a movie script, it would be rejected for being too unrealistic. But the unbelievable may actually be happning. Tuesday night could see the Democracts actually lose Edward Kennedy’s seat in the Senate, thereby killing his life’s dream of comprehensive healthcare, just when it was inches from the finish line. In doing so, it also promises to torpedo the Obama Presidency and a (short) period of Democrat ascendancy.

Have no doubt,  I have big issues with the healthcare bill – both the House and the Senate versions. Neither really tackle the issue of exploding costs, and as anyone who has read this post knows, long term deficits and national debt are a critical concern of mine. But I also know that an advanced industrial country should also be able to take care of its sick. There has to be a solution here.

I also worry about the country having a wounded leadership at a time when it needs to command authority to deal with the critical economic situation (let alone deal with global threats). The President has staked everything on this, and to lose now would be devastating for him and the country.

The Dems need to do more than soul searching about wasting so many lost opportunities in 2009 (or excommunicate Coakley, whose laziness and highhandedness has been breathtaking). In order to save their political credibility, and that of this Adminstration, they are going to have to figure out a way to pass healthcare without that 60th vote.

Stalling tactics just dont seem right.

If the Democrats can’t hold on to Senator Edward Kennedy’s seat on Tuesday night (and i still cant believe i am even thinking this), the House will have no other choice but to vote the exact Senate bill, line by line. The Democratic Party will need Nancy Pelosi to pull off a legislative miracle one more time. And if the Dems cant stick together on this, heaven help them in the midterms.

Obama deserves credit for what didn’t happen last year

For all my concern about the ballooning deficit and the long term decline in the dollar, I have perhaps overlooked writing about one of the most important economic developments of the past year. It does not concern an event that happened, but rather an event that didn’t happen. Last November, we were gripped with fear at the prospect of total collapse of the financial system. This did not come to pass. The markets didn’t collapse. Credit didn’t freeze in the way it could of. And a depression didn’t ensue. The President’s economic team, particularly Ben Bernanke, deserve credit for this. Decisive action was needed and the Administration provided it. I still maintain that a lack of a plan to restore long term fiscal balance will burden this country in ways not imaginable at present. But the choice to stimulate the economy in the immediate term (even if I question the need for both monetary easing and a fiscal stimulus) was the right one. It was infinitely better than ideas advocated by some in the Republican Party that would have triggered a Hoover-style collapse. Unfortunately for the President and his team, history tends to overlook events that didn’t happen.

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Published in: on October 22, 2009 at 1:42 pm  Comments (1)  
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Who controls the Empire State Building? And have they gone totally insane?

New York’s Empire State Building is often bathed in colors representing important US and global holidays. Red white and blue for July 4th or Memorial Day. Yellow and white for Easter. Purple for Gay Pride. And a host of colors representing the flags of countries around the world to mark their national days. So when the owners of the Empire State Building announce they are going to light up this American icon in the colors of the Chinese flag to mark China’s National Day, should we be surprised? After all, China is one of the world’s great nations.

I suggest we shouldn’t just be surprised, but furious.

It is one thing to celebrate thousands of years of Chinese culture and history. Chinese civilization is one of the great symbols of human achievement. But China’s current National Day (and in this case its 60th National Day) has nothing to do with Chinese civilization but with Chinese communism. This is the day that the Chinese Communist Party celebrates the imposition of its one party rule – and all the horrors that it has wrought, from the Great Leap Forward, the Cultural Revolution (killing millions), Tiananmen Square, suppression in Tibet and now a massive military build up to counter the US in the Pacific.

Lets me put this symbolism in some context. New York is building what will be its tallest sky scraper to replace the fallen World Trade Center. It plans on calling it the Freedom Tower – a name that I may find unimaginative but at the same time is certainly representative of the American ideal. It therefore strikes me as highly ironic and totally inappropriate that the city’s current tallest building should be celebrating the exact opposite of freedom.

Who makes these decisions? This is insane.

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Published in: on September 30, 2009 at 9:38 pm  Leave a Comment  
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G20 Scorecard – the agenda and the villains

So its official, the G2 – I meant the G20 – has now replaced the G7 (or was it the G8?) as the central body to coordinate global economic policy. This makes sense as the countries of the G8 make up about 80% of the world’s GDP. Quickly, these countries (and organizations) include Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, the UK, the US and the EU. (Why does the EU get a seat when its main member countries are already there? Because of the Euro? Either way, Europe cant have it both ways).

 The summit in Pittsubrgh is being hailed as a great success, with a surprising amount of agreement. From what I can see, the main topics discussed were as follows:

• Continuing the Economic Stimulus – everyone agreed to keeping the money taps going. No one really answered the question as to when we would return to some kind of normality. In the mean time, we continue to saddle the next generation with ever increasing amounts of debt. Chief villain: the United States which is already knee-high in debt but believes the economy will stall in the immediate term without never-ending spending (or Germany which is most cavalier about near term stability, depending on your point of view).

• Rebalancing the Global Economy – everyone agrees that a few countries cannot keep generating huge surpluses selling to the rest of the world (particularly the US) and then complaining that everyone else is a glutton. This is the biggest long term change the world needs to make. Everyone agrees, but no one is saying how it will be enforced except by “peer review”. This is remarkably lame. Chief Villains: Japan/China/Germany. Japan sounds like it means to take action and it probably does. China is making the right noises but probably has no intention of doing anything whatsoever. Germany isn’t even making the right noises

• Regulating the Banking System – this is not getting the attention it deserves. Most of the world’s banks have not recognized the huge liabilities on their books. We will not get to normality until this is done. They will not just “grow” their way out of the problem. Everyone to blame, though the US seems more realistic on this than the rest. Chief Villain: Europe

• Changing the voting power at the IMF – emerging countries rightfully deserve more say at the IMF. America is for it. Chief Villain Europe says it’s also for it, but actually is not. (Its claims that America should give up its effective veto are nonsensical. America is already underrepresented in voting power relative to its economic weight).

• Banker pay – everyone agrees that excessive risk taking has to be curbed. It cannot be rewarded. But Europe’s excessive zeal for this says more about continental Europe’s reflexive anti-financial attitude than it does about banker pay. Chief villains: France and Germany

• Climate Change – all countries are getting it that something needs to be done about climate change. Europe and now Japan seem most serious about cutting emissions. America is getting there, though the Senate may pose a problem in getting domestic legislation passed. The Chinese have begun to point to real emissions cuts – twenty years from now. India has made fighting this a case of national virility on the grounds that on a per capita basis it is still the West that are the polluters. True – but is this really a helpful approach? Chief villains: everyone

I do not doubt that the new global G20 conference is where the power has shifted. I also do not doubt that within that, it is the relationship between the G2 that will increasingly be what matters. As to how to enforce any of the agreements, which on the whole are good ones, I have no clue.

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The New York pre-party is over. Now for business in Pittsburgh

The UN General Assembly meeting is now over. Not too much to write about. The usual cast of rogues turned up, predictably outraging the local media. Libya’s Ghaddafi seems to have gotten the most attention this year. Obama made his now regular speech of announcing that America is back – chastened but not alone. And then there was a whole host of forgettable speeches from an endless array of other leaders.  Luckily, there was no embarrassing Obama-Ahmedinejad photo. Iran’s recent brutal election conduct combined with Ahmedinejad’s usual disgusting comments on the holocaust, makes this rogue just too distasteful – even for Obama’s unclenched fist. So enough of this year’s leaders’ self-appreciation party.

The important global meeting is actually not being hosted in glamorous New York but in decidedly unglamorous Pittsburgh. The world’s 20 leading nations will discuss the status of the world economy as well as structural changes required to prevent the recurrence of the shocks of this past year. I am not sure exactly how much of worth will be accomplished. Pressure for change in America is receding as spending programs lift the US out of its slump, lessening the resolve to restructure our suicidal trade balance. This will be welcome news for China, whose trade/savings surplus is in good part behind many of the imbalances. Europe will try and take its swipe at bank regulations and banker pay – really a stick in the eye of American-style capitalism. Given the EU represents the largest economic zone, it is surprising that persecuting the financial sector seems more important than addressing global imbalances. Europe continues to grow smaller in its stature. Still, banking regulations do need to be debated.

These new-styled G20 meetings are going to increase in importance over the coming years. This is not because it involves more countries, particularly high-growth ones, than the G8 of old. Rather, it is that the new G20 format brings together the US and China – the world’s G2 – in one forum. The future of US-Chinese economic relationship will define the world for the coming decades. Stay tuned.

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Published in: on September 24, 2009 at 12:16 pm  Leave a Comment  
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Jimmy Carter goes rogue

Jimmy Carter is widely said to be America’s greatest ex-President. One who speaks truth to power (which is of course easier if you happen to have once been the most powerful man in the world). So, when the former President speaks, the press listens. Right now, everyone is fixated on his comments on the role of race in right wing rage against President Obama. Of course, the President was only stating the obvious – you would have to be totally removed from reality not to see a correlation between the racist fringe and some of those turning up to town hall meetings. I suspect, however, that far more than race is driving the rage. Either way, it is a legitimate topic to be debated, no matter how uncomfortable. I find it very inappropriate, however, when Mr. Carter talks about foreign policy issues in ways that undermine America’s global position. Mr. Carter’s latest remarks that America may have had a role in, or at least knew about, the coup in Venezuela a few years back, damage our credibility and influence in Latin America at a time when they are being challenged as never before. The comments are particularly damaging given that the President of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, is trying to put together an anti-American grouping in a region highly sensitive to “gringo” interference. They also undermine President’s Obama’s effort to restore America’s image in the eyes of the rest of the world.  Mr. Carter needs to remember that his oath as President of the United States trumps any post-presidential role as an impartial global arbitrator.

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Published in: on September 20, 2009 at 9:40 pm  Comments (6)  
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Council on Foreign Relations president’s theory on golf and geopolitics. To what end?

When the President of the Council on Foreign Relations puts forth a new theory on geopolitics, he’s got my attention. Richard Haass did just that this past week with his amusing comparison of geopolitics and golf. His theory is that countries that have more golf courses tend to be more pro-American than those that have fewer. Further, he extends his analysis to show how that the PGA championship results describe modern geopolitics – one where America faded, Europe collapsed and Asia emerged. While I am not sure you can base the entire flow of world events on the nationality of the winners of one golf tournament, there is some validity in the correlation of commitment to golf and a generally pro-American disposition. Of course, he could have done the same analysis by looking at the number of Gucci stores. His theory, in fact, reminds me of another theory of international relations based upon popular consumption – namely that countries with McDonalds don’t go to war with another (even though this is not true). My main fault with Mr. Haass’ proposition is not that it is wrong, but that it serves no purpose. I don’t need to look at the golf world to know that America may be fading, Europe may be collapsing, and China certainly is rising. What I want to know is what to do about it.

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Published in: on September 16, 2009 at 12:09 pm  Leave a Comment  
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America is both a continent and an island

I came across an interesting piece yesterday written by Tom Streithorst in the American Conservative. I provide the link below. It essentially questions the need for such a strong US military when we have no real enemies capable of occupying the American homeland. I particularly like one quote of his, “England survived Hitler because it is an island. Russia defeated Hitler because it is the size of a continent. We are both continent and island.” This speak to a strategic truth, based as it is upon an unchanging geographic fact. Streithorst is also correct in saying that we can’t afford to fight every battle in every part of the world. Imperial overstretch. He also questions the size of the US defense budget – which I also do. (You should always question any government expenditures as a matter of principal). Throwing money at a problem won’t solve it and that includes national security. I would prefer to see “smart” defense as opposed to simply “strong” defense – something that I think Defense Secretary Gates has begun to address. However, the author is arguing for a wholesale downsizing of the US military. In that, he is wrong. He bases his belief on the fact that the world has not seen any major power conflict in the last sixty years and so things must be different now. The reality is that that the world has not seen such a conflict precisely because of America’s overwhelming military predominance.

http://www.amconmag.com/article/2009/oct/01/00029/

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Published in: on September 15, 2009 at 11:13 am  Comments (2)  
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