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Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby seahorse » Fri 18 Jan 2008, 09:08:16

Yes Mr. Bill, my biggest fear, being an American, is that we suffer the same fate as Argentina. I see us stumbling along that same path, and unfortunately, don't see us going anywhere else.

Not only does the US have unsustainable twin deficits, but it appears the hungry powers of the east, SCO, and their sovereign wealth funds will begin gobbling up everything of any value here. What resources we have left are still very valuable to others.

Here's the post I made linking a very good article about financial power moving out of the US. As you say, no one will rescue the US as they did Argentina. I best, they will gobble us up.

TF,

This is very true. It is the final phase of "outsourcing." Let's see if the boys on Wall Street will continue to talk up "globalization" as much as they did the last few years when we lost all our manufacturing jobs.

For more about this very topic, which essentially is a shift of economic power from west to east, there is a good article posted here:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse2', 'F')inancial power moving to Russia and China, and the trend is being exacerbated by the US financial crisis which is allowing foreign sovereign wealth funds to buy, consolidate, etc US financial interests.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')ncreasing liquidity in foreign financial markets is contributing to a shift in global power, especially as foreign investors step in to recapitalize the slumped U.S. economy, according to a global economics report.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he increase was perpetuated by markets such as China and Russia, which continued to grow and achieve financial depth. The consulting firm defines financial depth as the ratio of financial assets to GDP. The deeper the financial market, the more liquid it tends to be.

“What we’ve seen is this liquidity is finding its way into different parts of the world,” said MGI Director Diana Farrell. “You start to introduce the possibility of other markets playing a role.” The persistent challenges in the U.S. credit market will exacerbate the trend as the country moves to a less advantageous bargaining position and opens the door for other countries to pursue alternative investment styles and appetites, Farrell said.

“The answer is not going to be that these sovereign wealth funds and otherwise simply sign up to what the Anglo-Saxon model has said is the best practice for disclosure, the best practice for transparency,” Farrell said. “There’s a recognition that it’s not just going to be a mandate that’s going to come from the traditional players here.” While increasingly liquidity can spur inflationary pressures, publicly traded markets are not yet affected. Private markets, however, are beginning to see upward pressure on asset prices, Farrell said.

The report, the fourth Annual Mapping of Global Capital Markets (you can get a copy of the report if you register with McKinsey), says, “Europe’s capital markets are growing in size and financial clout, and emerging markets rising. Financial power is spreading beyond the U.S. as other markets mature….Emerging markets have rebounded from the financial crises that rocked many of their economies a decade ago. China is the heavyweight, but the group also includes Russia and other rapidly developing nations in Asia, Latin American, Eastern Europe and Africa.


Common Sense


Cold War Round 2, what will Russia and China do?

Without the US using so much oil, the rest of the world would have plenty. So, if the US crashes, and if the east assists that crash, they can buy up US resources, coal, steel, whole producing industries for pennies and turn us into a 3rd world country raped for its last remaining resources. Just as China needs the Sudan and the rest of Africa, so they may still need us, but not for our consumption patterns which can't be sustained, but for our resources to sustain their growth
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby MrBill » Fri 18 Jan 2008, 10:49:15

seahorse I liked that article, but didn't agree with all the conclusions. But I do think that western powers have somewhat under-estimated sovereign wealth funds.

They can be a benign investor such as Norway's oil & gas fund, but there is absolutely no guarantee what so ever that they will be such good corporate citizens.

Theoretically they should behave like any shareholder and look to maximize their return by running the companies well that they buy. Technically they should not go around destroying value. However, that is theoretically and technically.

The equivalent of modern day gun boat diplomacy would be for foreign governments to buy into strategic industries - to such an extent that they are allowed by law that is - and then demand changes by threatening to pull the plug the company. I am not sure how successful such a strategy would be - and maybe it is being paranoid - but in one industry towns or regions that may an effective threat.

Certainly governments are prone to giving into special interest groups and corporate blackmail, so I do not see why we would disregard the possibility that a strong China might deny access to a certain market if so and so does not make the changes they feel they deserve. They certainly have been successful at scarying any country that wants to do business in China from recognizing Taiwan or complaining about human rights in Tibet. They even get bent out of shape when someone dares to have a meeting with the Dali Lama like Angela Merckel did last month.

I think lawmakers should be reviewing foreign investment laws and possibly making changes to bar majority control of publicly traded companies by foreign governments or their agents. It is better to address this issue early rather than wait until the Barbarians are at the gate to avoid the charge of protectionism and using a double standard. That goes for Canada, too! ; - )
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby cube » Fri 18 Jan 2008, 19:18:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mattduke', 'I') wish the government had never built the interstate highway system. How much differently would we have organized our society without it?
Be careful for what you wish for because you might actually get! If you know what I mean. :P

Asphalt, which is derived from heavy oil, is a major component of making a freeway. A lot of people forget that a rise in the price of oil is actually a 2 hit combo:
1) cost of fuel
2) cost to repave the damn freeways!


Yes, but a heavy truck causes 35 times more damage to the road as a passenger car. And adding extra axels to spread the weight hampers fuel efficiency. Getting trucks off the road and freight onto rail would solve both problems.
MrBill I used to work for the DOT (department of transportation). I remember 1 person in particular from the maintenance / re-pavement dept. complaining about a lack of funds. Granted EVERYBODY likes to cry poor but this time it's for real. Instead of properly completely repaving a freeway, the new trend is to cut 2 parallel trenches in the freeway lane (where the car tires normally touch the road) and just repave the trench area only.

That's how bad things are getting in California.
BTW this was when oil was less the $40, so I can imagine asphalt was cheaper back then. :wink:
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby Popeman » Sat 19 Jan 2008, 17:46:08

Cube - all anybody needs to do to understand whether the DOT needs more funding is look at the average work crew on the side of the road.

4 guys holding walkie talkies and signs.
3 guys operating heavy equipment.
2 guys walking around trying to look busy.
6 guys making sure their shovels stay upright.

It's all a sad joke. We had a section of pipe patched in our area by the state DOT. I went over to take a look. There's about 7 guys on the crew. What a big joke.

The point I'm making is that everything having to do with the govt is inefficient.

The model is completely wrong.

Someone wrote:$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')Popeman, you Communist- Capitalist world view is incredible simplistic!
Every state needs taxes because there are always means which are owned as a community like railways roads bridges hospitals schools.
You would really prefer taking your money and share it with no one and caring only for yourself and you family? Hope that no one gets in trouble!"


My world view is simple.

Work hard, live clean, things work out for you.

It's simple, but every person I know who has tried it has done very well.

"means" owned as a "community"?

Railroads? Bridges?

That's the best yuh got?

Hospitals are publicly owned and not for profit? All of them?

I didn't say I favor capitalism, by the way.

Humans are mostly lazy slobs, with a few hard workers thrown in here and there.

The laziest of the slobs elect people like Andy Cap to drone constantly on about "the downtrodden" and so on, so as to get them the largest dole possible.

Govt should be kept as small as possible because everything govt touches turns to crap, and there's not one counter example in history of humanity.
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby LoneSnark » Sun 20 Jan 2008, 00:50:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')heoretically they should behave like any shareholder and look to maximize their return by running the companies well that they buy. Technically they should not go around destroying value. However, that is theoretically and technically.

The equivalent of modern day gun boat diplomacy would be for foreign governments to buy into strategic industries - to such an extent that they are allowed by law that is - and then demand changes by threatening to pull the plug the company. I am not sure how successful such a strategy would be - and maybe it is being paranoid - but in one industry towns or regions that may an effective threat.

Mr Bill, you should know better. First, shareholders are not always interested in maximizing return. Sometimes their goal is tax evasion, sometimes their goal is producing something at a loss so their other overseas holdings can profit, and sometimes their goal is to rip off other investors and in the process destroy their own company. Now, what could a foreign owned firm possibly do that would not already fit into one of these descriptions?

I recognize the threat of some U.S. legislature some-where feeling threatened and giving in, but that is their own fault. In a free enterprise system firms are free to be stupid and financially wreck everything they touch for good reasons, be they domestic or foreign. We accept this because in practice there is nothing you can do to hurt me. If I accept a job with you then I accept the risk of you firing me. If I sell you property then me and my society have determined that the property is worth less than the money you paid for it. If you mothball the property then me and my society still have the money, we won no matter what you did with it.

As such, threatenning to pull your own plug in a free enterprise system is an idle threat. Anyone that is actually harmed can recoup their damages through lawsuits from breach of contract. If you are foreign owned and have a tendency to make threats then I will protect myself with binding contracts and demands for severance pay.

Any number of one mill towns have already closed down to move production elsewhere or even overseas, so how serious a threat would it be for a Chinese firm to close another one down? If their behavior is indistinguishable from ordinary economic dislocation, then how is it an effective threat? If such a threat got you anywhere then domestic firms would happily make identical threats to secure their own diverse goals (on second thought, they already do!)

Finally, you should realize there is no such thing as a strategic industry beyond the guys actually building our tanks and planes. Overall, it is difficult to prove a negative in this instance. Perhaps it would be best if you gave it some thought and gave me the most egregious circumstance you can think of for a Chinese firm to blackmail Americans for something and I will describe the mechanisms that individual Americans will use to minimize this risk.

Seahorse, don't bother worrying about foreigners buying up American businesses. Running a business is tough and makes sleep difficult, I would rather be given what I think my business is worth today than bother earning it myself. I suspect the same goes for all Americans. And if these foreigners do a bad job of serving American customers then our entrepreneurs will take the foreigners money and start new businesses. If the foreigners buy up these then we can just start new ones, then new ones. All the while, being outsiders, they keep giving us more than these companies are worth. Which, is irrelevant, cause as long as there is competition, even if it is just Honda competing with Toyota, American customers and workers will be well served.
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby MrBill » Sun 20 Jan 2008, 07:00:14

LoneSnark, if we were speaking about businesses with low barriers to entry and exit then you would be right.

However, if the Chinese bought-up the Alberta tarsands, for example, they would have a strategic global advantage, and unless Alberta or Canada were willing to re-nationalize that investment and face the consequences the Chinese would be free to either run this business in a sustainable or unsustainable, in an environmentally or non-environmentally friendly, manner or not.

China prefers to invest in cestpools like Venezuela as opposed to Canada because there is not the same degree of control. And politicians are more pliable.

You're wrong. It does matter. Any limited liability company can strip assets at will, close-up shop, and walk away no matter what long-term liabilities they create. If they get sued or penalized by the government they can simply declare bankruptcy.

Laws need to be carefully crafted ahead of time because majority-owned firms controlled by foreign states are not the same as private shareholders. For example, the only reason China has so much money to invest abroad is because the PBOB buys-up foreign currency in the open market by printing its own yuan. No private company or investor could do the same thing.

There is absolutely no reason to privatize domestic industries only to see them fall into foreign government hands. It does matter. Drop your blinders. This is reality and not theory! ; - )
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby LoneSnark » Sun 20 Jan 2008, 12:15:48

Yes, and in reality the Chinese are not magicians. If it is in their interest to run the Canadian tar sands unsustainably why is it not in the interest of some Canadian firm? A domestic firm can just as easily declare bankruptcy. Every problem you list applies just as strongly to domestic limited liability corporations. I would argue they apply even more so, since a Chinese firm actually has to worry about how its reputation affects the Chinese government. An Albertan firm must worry about no such thing.

All the problems you list are very real conflicts of interest and the Canadian government must address them to prevent LLC A from harming plaintiff B. But it does not matter who LLC A is, regulations must be passed and enforced to prevent everyone from wrecking the environment, be they Chinese, American, or Albertan.

A truely free country does not require pliable politicians. China invests in Venezuela because no one else will, not because they cannot invest in Canada, especially when they have.

Now, what global advantage would they have? They can turn natural gas into oil; what can they do strategically with that? Jack shit. Oil is a fungible commodity, if the Chinese firm insists on exporting all the oil it produces in Canada to China it is only hurting itself. The oil going to China will simply displace oil that would have been bought elsewhere, say from Saudi Arabia. The world price for oil should remain unaffected. If it stops production then the world price for oil would rise, harming the oil importing Chinese an equal amount to if they had turned off the taps in northern China. Chinese investors would lose the oil revenue and Chinese consumers would pay more (the world price) for oil.

And why does it matter where their money came from? These Chinese firms did not print dollars, they printed Yuan, ripping off the Chinese people and anyone else holding Yuan. While the money may be morally tainted such accusations apply to any country with a lender of last resort capable of just printing the domestic currency. Should American firms also be excluded from the Canadian tar-sands? What about Canadian firms with their Bank of Canada?

This is a debate Mr Bill, and in my opinion you need a good reason to exclude an investor from your country, because you never know when the alternative to another investor is closure. If it were not for foreign car makers opening up factories in Kentucky and Tennessee then the U.S. would might not have a car industry today, we would be almost completely dependent upon imports.

While it might make sense for Americans to not be making cars, there is no doubt such an eventuality would have been artificially created by halting the free flow of capital to its owners most valued uses. If owning oil wells in Canada makes the Chinese feel good then they paid top-dollar for that right, let them enjoy it. The company they bought the wells from may put the money towards research which makes oil obsolete, we never know.
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby MrBill » Sun 20 Jan 2008, 13:40:36

No, I will have to address this argument tomorrow. Otherwise my good wife will kill me. I cannot risk such an outcome with this argument as of yet unresolved! ; - )

Basically, if you understand NIMBY, then you will recognize the argument that you may behave otherwise not in your backyard than you would at home.

Also, when China is willing to tolerate 10 of the world's top 20 polluted cities in China, why would they care about environmental damage in Canada?

Being from Calgary, AB, I certainly know that Esso and other US/Canadian firms certainly 'used' to invest in VZL. It is untrue to say that the Chinese do because no one else will! It is ALL about pliable politicians. Namely that the Chinese get VZL oil for approximately $3 a barrel cheaper than market price.

I will not get into politics, but there is a cost of giving the USA a political black-eye and that is what Chavez is doing. He probably even believes he is buying Chinese loyalty? HAHA! The joke is on him! ; - )
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby vision-master » Sun 20 Jan 2008, 20:27:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('alokin', '
')Popeman, you Communist- Capitalist world view is incredible simplistic!

Every state needs taxes because there are always means which are owned as a community like railways roads bridges hospitals schools.

You would really prefer taking your money and share it with no one and caring only for yourself and you family? Hope that no one gets in trouble!


I do not want to take side is this debate, but we need to respect a diversity of opinion on peak oil dot com.

Unfortunately, as simplistic as Popeman's Communist-Capitalist argument is, I can empathize with his sentiment. The ever constant litany that taxes are regressive and hurt the poor the most is sadly a way overstated argument.

As Popeman correctly points out - and Tyler_JC's tax calculations last week proved - is that the lower income brackets hardly pay little if any taxes on their income.

Sadly, we (collectively) have a form of government that on the whole is too big, too expensive and unsustainable. That may be by fighting needless foreign wars or by wealth transfers from its most productive citizens to its least productive ones.

Government needs to be streamlined and rationalized at all levels. And we have to end this sense of entitlement that we can somehow get something for nothing. Whether it is pensions that we have not contributed (fully) to or hurricane disaster relief just because we chose to build a beachhouse on a sandbank and no sane company would insure such a risk.

Because I can guarantee you one thing - and I am not American so really its none of my business - but America is doing an Argentina, and there is no one that is going to be there to bail them out. Then you will not have your infrastructure - the real job of government - and you will not have those social programs either. Then watch the poor really suffer! ; - )


Ain't you forgeting something?

The S & L Bailout:
$32 billion every year for 30 years

Take the Rich Off Welfare
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Corpo ... ilout.html
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby LoneSnark » Mon 21 Jan 2008, 02:34:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Also, when China is willing to tolerate 10 of the world's top 20 polluted cities in China, why would they care about environmental damage in Canada?

The same reason an American worries about environmental damage in Canada; why an Albertan cares about environmental damage in British Columbia: the men with guns (the government) will fine you for breaking the law and when you refuse to pay they will auction off your property to pay interest, penalties, fines, compensation and cleanup, putting an end to the pollution. Presumably you paid a lot of cash for that property, so having it sold at a bankruptcy auction should be fun.

When you wife is done with you, and only then, come back and try to explain why foreign investors should be expelled that does not depend upon domestic capitalists feeling a kindred self-sacrificing connection with all other Canadians.
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby MrBill » Mon 21 Jan 2008, 05:18:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Also, when China is willing to tolerate 10 of the world's top 20 polluted cities in China, why would they care about environmental damage in Canada?

The same reason an American worries about environmental damage in Canada; why an Albertan cares about environmental damage in British Columbia: the men with guns (the government) will fine you for breaking the law and when you refuse to pay they will auction off your property to pay interest, penalties, fines, compensation and cleanup, putting an end to the pollution. Presumably you paid a lot of cash for that property, so having it sold at a bankruptcy auction should be fun.

When you wife is done with you, and only then, come back and try to explain why foreign investors should be expelled that does not depend upon domestic capitalists feeling a kindred self-sacrificing connection with all other Canadians.


I am not labelling 'all foreign investment' as bad. It is obviously patently necessary if countries run current account deficits to offset another country's current account surplus. They are both sides of the same coin.

However, there is a difference between how sovereign wealth funds are managed. Some like Norway's are transparent. Others are opaque. And it matters a great deal whether funds are passive investors in minority shares of public companies or whether they take an active majority stake.

I agree that all shareholders should be treated equally. And that firms must by definition follow all local laws and regulations. So in this respect it is up to the Canadian and Albertan governments to enforce their own laws uniformly. And by extension to resist any foreign pressure to ammend those laws if they are not in the best interests of its own citizens.

The Chinese were really bummed when they found out they could just not send over cadres of cheap Chinese labor to work in the Canadian oilsands displacing well-paid Canadian workers. They also wanted to float modular platforms - made in China - down the McKenzie and Athabasca rivers. Nevermind that it is technically impossible and would be an environmental disaster.

Never the less, politics is politics. There are good reasons to be wary of trade partners that are capable of putting political pressure on host governments by say linking laxer environmental standards to access to Chinese markets. And that is the difference between private or public companies and governments.

UPDATE:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')lthough sovereign-wealth funds hold a bare 2% of the assets traded throughout the world, they are growing fast, and are at least as big as the global hedge-fund industry. But, unlike hedge funds, sovereign-wealth funds are not necessarily driven by the pressures of profit and loss. With a few exceptions (like Norway's), most do not even bother to reveal what their goals are—let alone their investments.

source: The invasion of the sovereign-wealth funds
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby LoneSnark » Mon 21 Jan 2008, 13:06:46

MrBill, again, you have not provided any good reason to exclude soverign wealth funds from Canada. All you have is a conspiracy theory about the Chinese government threatenning to keep Canadian companies out of China if the Canadian government does not let Chinese investors violate Canadian law.

That is not an argument against Chinese investors, it is an argument against special treatment, treatment I question whether Canada can even provide. The Canadian Parliament, unlike the Chinese Congress, does not have the authority to override court decisions, so if a Chinese firm finds itself being prosecuted for breaking the law no amount of high level politicing can stop it. And even if it did, some Judge or prosecutor plays golf with the PM let's say, Canada's free press would be all over it, and the politicians would find themselves likewise being prosecuted for corruption.

What it boils down to is this: you want Canada to pass a new law in hopes that it will stop people from breaking an earlier law. Which is absurd, just enforce the earlier law and everyone gets to play nice. And if they are able to break the earlier law and get away with it, what makes you think a new law will work?
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby MrBill » Tue 22 Jan 2008, 05:09:44

Okay, I have in fact laid-out several arguments. I do not have the time to re-iterate those arguments. A new law covering majority control of a public firm by a foreign government would be a new law and not be covered by existing laws except that the anti-monopoly authorities have a right to review stratetgic investments. Its not a law banning investment, but a review process. I could give numerous examples of tit for tat political responses to unfair trading cases brought before the WTO, but to be honest I cannot be bothered today. So you win! ; -)
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby LoneSnark » Tue 22 Jan 2008, 12:13:20

You have laid out several arguments, and I shot down every one of them. Every single 'bad outcome' you gave is already being prevented by existing laws, so a new one is not necessary.

Of course, the one you just now gave (monopoly construction) is not handled by existing law as existing law on this subject is arbitrary and completely political, making it the only instance you have suggested where a foreign firm might gain from bringing political pressure.

And that some nations engage in unfair trading practices is irrelevant: usurping the property rights of your own citizens by reviewing who they can or cannot sell their property to is wrong, I would even say unconstitutional. Not that it matters, our government does it anyway. We do live in a morally bankrupt world, afterall.

So, you have not given several arguments, you have given one. And this one is so unlikely I think it can be ignored: what are the odds that the Chinese could buy their way into ownership of a true global monopoly? Pick any product and they would need to buy up the entire world's supply, and even then it would not be able to stop new firms from entering. I realize it is a separate subject, but I don't find monopolies a reasonable fear in a globalized world.
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby MrBill » Tue 22 Jan 2008, 12:47:38

Anti-monopoly authorities being slopply shorthand for the competition watchdogs that review foreign investment and mergers or acquistions that might lead to industry concentration or reduced global competition. Clearly this is within their mandate as a Federal agency and does not violate any constitutional rights. That is why we have elected officials and their agents.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')The motives of the sovereign moneymen could be sinister: stifling competition; protecting national champions; engaging, even, in geopolitical troublemaking. Despite their disruptive market power, their managers have little accountability to regulators, shareholders or voters. Such conditions are almost bound to produce rogue traders.


source: The invasion of the sovereign-wealth funds

And governments already restrict access (or unrestricted access) by foreigners to their domestic markets, so it is not even really a precedent.

My concern is not passive investment or minority stakes in public companies, but majority stakes in public companies directly controlled by foreign governments. I believe this impacts a country's sovereignty. But you seem deterimed to twist my words into a strawman argument, so go ahead. Shoot me down! ; - )
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby LoneSnark » Tue 22 Jan 2008, 16:47:54

Clearly yes, MrBill, our government agents agree with you. As I said, "Not that it matters, our government does it anyway. We do live in a morally bankrupt world, afterall." That our government is already doing something does not make it right, justified, or even necessary.

And just because the Economist magazine says there could be a problem of soverignty does not mean there is. Whatever credibility you allow the Economist, the magazine itself pointed out that whatever problems foreign ownership might present are swamped by more important matters, such as solvency. It then concludes with techniques for preventing nationalists and protectionists, such as yourself, from taking control. So, clearly, the Economist agrees with me that equity markets should remain free and global. So, thanks to your own link, you must now argue your case against both me and the Economist.
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby cube » Wed 23 Jan 2008, 00:38:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', '.')..
And just because the Economist magazine says there could be a problem of soverignty does not mean there is. Whatever credibility you allow the Economist, the magazine itself pointed out that whatever problems foreign ownership might present are swamped by more important matters, such as solvency.
...
Do we have a choice? Or maybe that was a rhetorical question!
I see no point in getting into a debate about foreign vs. domestic ownership of American industries because that suggests we have a choice --> we don't. When an individual defaults on a loan and cannot pay back using his income then the bank swoops in and takes the farm away or whatever assets. When a nation cannot pay back its loans then it must sell off its industries to foreigners.

That's what's happening to the USA right now. Sad but true.
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Re: Panel to suggest 40 cent gas tax increase

Postby MrBill » Wed 23 Jan 2008, 07:28:28

My concerns are apparently shared by others as well. That does not make us right, but it is correct to raise these concerns before they do become an economic or political problem.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')rowing concerns
Despite the many beneficial effects of petrodollars in increasing global liquidity and spurring the growth of various financial-asset classes throughout the world, the rise of investors in oil-exporting countries has created concerns.

One worry is that the huge size of petrodollar sovereign wealth funds, coupled with their relatively high appetite for risk, could make global capital markets more volatile. The limited transparency of these funds amplifies the anxiety. Our research, however, finds that their investment portfolios are widely diversified not only across asset classes and regions but also through a number of intermediaries and investors. Diversification reduces the risk that the funds could make financial markets more volatile. Moreover, petrodollar investors have a track record of sensitivity about the broader market impact of large flows and use derivatives and intermediaries to lessen it. ADIA, for instance, reportedly invests 70 percent of its funds through external asset managers—intermediaries who know they must move slowly in markets to avoid adverse price adjustments. Direct petrodollar investors tend to adopt a relatively low profile.

A second concern has also attracted growing attention among financial-market regulators in Europe and the United States: the prospect that sovereign wealth funds could use their growing financial heft for political or other noneconomic motives. The rise of large government investors in financial markets is a new phenomenon—and one at odds with the shrinking role of state ownership in real economies. Given the limited transparency and enormous size of these investors, some observers question the motivations underlying their investment strategies. How will state investors behave as public shareholders or owners of companies in foreign markets? Will they seek to maximize value creation and long-term growth, or will their investments reflect the political objectives of their governments and the interests of businesses in their home countries? Financial markets require the free flow of information to function efficiently. The presence of huge, opaque players with noneconomic motives could distort the pricing signals that other investors need. A growing number of economists and policy makers in Europe and the United States now support the creation of disclosure standards for government investors.

Most sovereign wealth funds have historically invested at least part of their assets through external managers, which should help ease these anxieties. To the same end, it would be in the funds’ interest to increase their voluntary disclosures about their size, investment objectives, target portfolio allocation, and internal risk-management and governance procedures; this information would allow well-managed funds to stand out and demonstrate a spirit of cooperation. Some observers consider Norway’s Government Pension Fund a model because it makes its asset allocation, investment criteria, and investments available to the public on its Web site.

Regulators in Europe and the United States should ensure that they base any policy decisions about the activities of sovereign wealth funds on an objective appraisal of the facts. It will be essential to differentiate between the direct acquisition of corporations by state-owned enterprises and by government investment companies in oil-exporting regions, on the one hand, and the passive investments of sovereign wealth funds in debt and equity markets, on the other. Sovereign wealth funds typically hold a diversified portfolio of assets in public debt and equity securities rather than large stakes in foreign companies.

A final concern: the long-term economic impact of higher oil prices. In the 1970s their rise sparked inflation in the major oil-consuming economies and sent global banks on a petrodollar-fueled lending spree in Latin America. Both developments inflicted significant economic pain on the countries involved. Today higher oil prices have been a boon for global financial markets, but, paradoxically, inflation hasn’t risen very much. Can higher oil prices really be good for the world economy? As we have seen, petrodollars are creating inflationary pressures in markets for illiquid investments, such as real estate, art, and companies. If the pressures move beyond those markets, the potential asset price bubbles could burst. So far the world economy has accommodated higher oil prices without a notable rise in inflation or an economic slowdown, but this may change in the future.



Source: The new role of oil wealth in the world economy

The informal Bretton Woods II agreement where oil producers and Asian manufacturers export BOTH goods AND capital mean that exchange rates and freely traded currencies do not function properly and are not allowing trade and budget deficits to close naturally through currency appreciation.

That is not free trade based on comparative advantage, but currency manipulation. Allowing these so-called sovereign wealth funds to then use those illgotten gains to lock-in a long-term sustainable competitive advantage is then a double loser for importers with open capital markets.

Of course, you can take them to the WTO and try to prove they are currency manipulators, but then you risk a tit for tat trade war perhaps disguised as subtle and not so subtle non-tariff barriers. All very hard to prove and harder to enforce.

So it is not paranoia, but real-politik that recognizes just because we play by a certain set of rules does not mean everybody does or will also do in the future. And besides, just because you're paranoid doesn't mean the world is not out to get you! ; - )
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
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