J. Bradford DeLong's Blog, page 2177

October 13, 2010

All R Investment Banks May Belong to Bankruptcy Court...

Felix Salmon:




The enormous mortgage-bond scandal: [M]ortgage-bond documentation generally says that if more than a minuscule proportion of notes in a mortgage pool weren’t properly transferred, then the trustee for the bondholders can force the investment bank who put the deal together to repurchase the mortgages. And it’s looking very much as though none of the notes were properly transferred. But that’s not even the biggest potential problem facing the investment banks who put these deals together. It also turns out that there’s a pretty strong case that they lied to the investors....



[T]he risk to investment banks isn’t only one of dodgy paperwork; there’s also a serious risk of massive lawsuits.... The key firm here is Clayton Holdings, a company which was hired by various investment banks — Goldman Sachs, Bear Stearns, Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank, everyone — to taste-test the mortgage pools they were buying from originators. Here’s how it would work....



[T]he bank would put in a winning bid for the pool of mortgages, with the intention of slicing it up into mortgage bonds and selling those bonds off to investors at a profit. After submitting the winning bid, the bank would commission Clayton to take a closer look at a representative sample of loans in the pool. Clayton controlled as much as 70% of the market for this service, which is known as third-party due diligence. But Clayton’s not at fault here, and the problem is likely to apply no matter who performed this service.... Clayton would go back to the loans, one by one, and re-underwrite them after the fact, checking that the originator’s underwriting standards were in fact being upheld. Clayton would either accept or reject the loans it was looking at, according to whether or not they met underwriting standards....



I’m just using Citi as an example, here; all banks behaved in basically exactly the same way.... Clayton reviewed 1,280 loans on behalf of Citigroup in the first quarter of 2006. Of those, it accepted 554 outright: they lived up to the originator’s underwriting standards. It also waived another 144, on the grounds that there were mitigating factors (a large downpayment, say). And it rejected 582 for a rejection rate of 45%. This kind of information was valuable to Citigroup: it showed them that the quality of the loan pool.... Armed with this information, Citigroup would do two things.... [I]t would take those 582 rejects and put most of them back to the underwriter.... But remember that Clayton had tested only a small portion of the loans in the pool. So Citi knew that if there were a bunch of bad loans among the loans that Clayton tested, there were bound to be even more bad loans among the loans that Clayton had not tested.... If there had been any common sense in the investment banks, that would have been the end of the deal. But... the investment banks would instead renegotiate the amount of money they were paying for the pool....



The investment banks didn’t mind buying up loans they knew were bad, because they considered themselves to be in the moving business rather than the storage business.... Now here’s the scandal: the investors were never informed of the results of Clayton’s test. The investment banks were perfectly happy to ask for a discount on the loans when they found out how badly-underwritten the loan pool was. But they didn’t pass that discount on to investors.... I talked to one underwriting bank — not Citi — which claimed that investors were told that the due diligence had been done: on page 48 of the prospectus, there’s language about how the underwriter had done an “underwriting guideline review”, although there’s nothing specifically about hiring a company to re-underwrite a large chunk of the loans in the pool, and report back on whether they met the originator’s standards.... [B]anks had price-sensitive information on the quality of the loan pool which they failed to pass on to investors in that pool. That’s a lie of omission, and if I was one of the investors in one of these pools, I’d be inclined to sue for my money back.... The bank was essentially trading on inside information about the loan pool: buying it low (negotiating for a discount from the originator) and then selling it high to people who didn’t have that crucial information...






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Published on October 13, 2010 10:01

Matthew Yglesias: Steve Pearlstein Doesn't Understand the Economics of Exchange Rates

Indeed. Exchange rate depreciation is the best solution to a country that has priced itself out of export markets. I wonder why Steve Pearlstein doesn't say that a weaker dollar is in America's interest?



Matthew Yglesias comments:




Yglesias » Pearlstein on Wage Cuts: [A] lot of people are going to despite today’s Steven Pearlstein column advocating lower wages for American workers especially since he throws in a gratuitous paragraph suggesting that highly compensated newspaper columnists are the reason the US outperformed the USSR. But this is the paragraph with analytic weight:




Which brings us back to the story of GM’s Orion plant. There are lots of reasons why American companies like GM have lost market share (yes, I wrote about currency manipulation last week), but one is that in too many industries, our labor costs are now too high to be globally competitive. Reducing wages and benefits in those industries would not only help to create and save jobs, but would also force a further reduction in consumption and living standards that is necessary to bring the U.S. economy back into balance....




Pearlstein... [does not] understand that Yuan revaluation is the same thing as lower wages for American workers.... [I]f dollars become less valuable relative to other important currencies, our real compensation declines. By the same token, if the Federal Reserve succeeds in raising the price level, our real compensation declines. These are all related concepts.... [O]f the three, nominal wage cuts are... least attractive.... If you force nominal wage cuts on an indebted population, you get an unbalanced deflation where existing debt obligations come to consume a larger and larger share of income. Alternatively, if you reduce real compensation via currency devaluation or higher inflation you reduce income and debt alike, allowing us to dig out of the balance sheet hole more quickly.




It is getting to the point where I don't believe that Matthew Yglesias wasn't an economics major...





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Published on October 13, 2010 09:53

Steven Pearlstein Wages Class War!

Hoo boy. The usually reliable Steve Pearlstein strikes out:







Wage cuts hurt, but they may be the only way to get Americans back to work: I'm sure many of you are reading this and thinking that if anyone is forced to take a pay cut to rebalance the economy, surely it ought to be overpaid investment bankers, corporate executives and newspaper columnists. That's how things would work in a socialist paradise, but not in market economies, which are much better at producing efficiency than fairness.







I must say that when I look at the Washington Post's newspaper columnists, I see no efficiency there.





The public debate would be more elevated and do much less harm to America if all of them were fired immediately.





Indeed, only the subsidy from Stanley Kaplan keeps Steve Pearlstein employed today--and I see no strategy open that gives the print Post even a 50% chance of ever returning to permanent profitability.





Why oh why can't we have a better press corps?





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Published on October 13, 2010 09:50

Linda Beale: Boost Greg Mankiw's Marginal Tax Rate. Andrew Gelman: I'm Not Impressed with an Argument That Doesn't Work on Its Example

Why oh why can't we have a better press corps?



There were many things wrong with Greg Mankiw's "Going Galt" column in the New York Times. They biggest was that Greg blames high future tax rates on his income on Obama, rather than piercing the veil--that is, noting that to spend is to tax--and blaming the true architects of higher future taxes: Greg Mankiw himself and the others in the Bush administration who unbalanced America's public finances in the 2000s with Medicare Part D and their wars of choice.



Those of us who worked very hard in the 1990s for eight long years to try to bring America's fiscal policy back toward long term balance did not like Greg Mankiw and company's casual destruction of our extremely valuable work. And we like his current evasion of responsibility for his role in our admittedly dismal fiscal future even less.



Linda Beale, however, thinks that it is socially optimal to raise Mankiw's marginal tax rate. If he works less, more young economists have an opportunity to build their own sklls and their own reputations so they can add to the public debate.



Linda Beale:




ataxingmatter: Greg Mankiw's anti-tax arguments: [H]aving a bigger tax bite should work as an incentive to work more, not less, if his goal is really to provide more for his kids. 



But let's assume... he would turn down more... were an incremental increase in his tax rates.... [D]oes that mean that the economy suffers...?  He suggests that when stars turn down additional earning opportunities, the not-rich bear the burden because the service provided is simply not available.  But in fact that is when competition increases.... For every speaker who turns down a speaking engagement, another with competent qualifications is waiting in the wings to become a star (or at least receive this incremental increase to compensation).  The economy is in fact served by spreading the service opportunities across more people and allowing more people to develop a level of expertise that is worthy of higher compensation, instead of allowing a few "stars" to garner all the income.  That is the way we achieved dramatic growth in the post-war years. 



So go to it, Mankiw.  Turn 'em all down, so that budding young economists--maybe even some women and people of color for a change--will have their chance in the limelight.




Andrew Gelman:




Mankiw's marginal tax rate (which declined from 93% to 80% in two years) and the difficulty of microeconomic reasoning: First, the good news! Obama's tax rates are much lower than Mankiw had anticipated! According to the above quote, his marginal tax rate is currently 80% but threatens to rise to 90%. But in October 2008, Mankiw calculated that Obama's would tax his marginal dollar at 93%.... According to Mankiw's calculations, he is currently keeping almost three times the proportion of his income that he was expecting to keep under the Obama administration....



Now, the bad news. I don't think Mankiw has fully thought this through. He writes as if he's writing newspaper articles for the money.... I think he's writing the articles because he has views that he thinks are important and he wants to share them with the world. Like blogging, but with more readers. As you all know, we blog for free. And, for people like Mankiw (or even me), when we write newspaper articles it's pretty much for free too.... [T]he marginal tax rate doesn't have anything to do with it....



The last time this came up, a couple of years ago, Mankiw wrote the following in response to Obama's threatened 93% marginal tax rate:




The bottom line: If you are one of those people out there trying to induce me [Mankiw] to do some work for you, there is a good chance I will turn you down. And the likelihood will go up after President Obama puts his tax plan in place. I expect to spend more time playing with my kids. They will be poorer when they grow up, but perhaps they will have a few more happy memories.




And here's what I wrote at the time:




To start with, it does sound like Mankiw's kids are already well provided for, and, although I'm sure they'd disagree with me on this, it's not clear that they would benefit from having more money in the bank when their parents are gone. So, from that point of view, the question is why Mankiw isn't already spending more time playing with his kids?



I can't speak for him, but for me, I have to say that it can be fun to work (or even to write blog entries). But, more than that, I feel a sense of obligation to get things done...




[H]is division of waking hours into "working" or "playing with kids" is, I would guess, not very sensitive to the marginal tax rate....



The irony is that Mankiw (like so many people, particularly economists!) is conditioned to be hard-headed and think that it's all about the benjamins, when, really, he's writing newspaper articles for the completely sane reason that he wants to make the world a better place, and he'd like to do this by presenting cogent arguments that can help convince people that his views are correct. I assume that Mankiw sincerely believes that higher taxes on the rich are a bad thing and will ultimately make everyone less well-off (just as Krugman, say, believes the opposite). But he feels uncomfortable characterizing his actions as idealistic and, as a result, ends up placing his work and child-care decisions into a nearly nonsensical framework of dollars and cents.




Andrew Gelman:




Update on Mankiw's work incentives - : The discussion of Mankiw's column seems to have caused him to rethink one of his ideas. Two years ago, he framed his decision as follows:




On a regular basis, I am offered opportunities to make some extra money. It could be giving a talk, writing an article, editing a journal, and so on. . . . The bottom line: If you are one of those people out there trying to induce me to do some work for you, there is a good chance I will turn you down. And the likelihood will go up after President Obama puts his tax plan in place. I expect to spend more time playing with my kids.
The choice was clear: make money or play with the kids. At the time, I suggested that perhaps Mankiw is working not for the money but for the fun and also out of some sense of moral obligation (for example, to do his part to stop a proposed government policy that he opposes).




For whatever reason, Mankiw has added some of these motivations into his calculus and now writes:




I [Mankiw] face a choice among a wide range of activities, each of which offers some combination of pecuniary and non-pecuniary benefits. . . . When the government taxes pecuniary benefits, I spend more time on those activities that yield non-pecuniary benefits. Some of those activities may look like leisure, but others may be better described as "fun work" rather than "income-producing work."




I think he's most of the way there. But he still needs to recognize that he does some things for motivations that are neither familial (saving money for his kids), pecuniary, or for fun. Again, I think his formal framework is too narrow and I would find it refreshing if he were to state that he does some things (such as column-writing) because he thinks they will benefit the public good. I'm not saying he needs to be taxed at 93% on these efforts, though; he could perhaps set up a special cookie jar for his extra income and spend it in a productive way on his research so it won't get swallowed up by inheritance taxes in 30 years. He could, for example, set up a nonprofit foundation for economic analysis, or endow a fellowship at the American Enterprise Institute, or something like that. This could have the effect of furthering his advocacy and policy goals and give him the sense that his extra money is going somewhere useful.



P.S. Cowen argues that details-oriented commenters like me are missing the point: the issue is not Mankiw's particular circumstances but rather the larger issues of the efficiency and morality of high tax rates. I take Cowen's point, but, as a statistician, I'm not impressed with an argument when it doesn't work on the example it's been applied to.






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Published on October 13, 2010 09:42

Somehow I Am Now Wishing I Had Read More Nietszche When I Was Younger...

Last week I spent some time with a group of people I don't usually spend much time talking to. They were not rich--by which I don't mean that they had overstretched themselves by buying a seven-figure principal residence but rather that they weren't rich: their household income was in the five or, for some of them, perhaps the very low six figures. And (which is unusual for Berkeley) they were not lefties, neither cultural nor sociological. They were deeply concerned with the future of our country. And they were desperate to figure out how to engage in effective political action--but had few illusions that the politicians they would vote for in November were their kind of people with their interests at heart.



I suppose that in a previous era, back when there were private-sector unions, they might have been union stewards. But now we have no private-sector unions.



And so they are activists from the California Tea Party.



So I went through my standard spiel. Housing bubble. 5 million excess houses built in the desert between Los Angeles and Albuquerque, and on all of them the least $100K of mortgage debt will not be repaid. A $500B loss in an $80T world economy. Shouldn't have been a problem—securitization exists to spread risks. But the banks pretended that the AAA MBS issued by other banks were high-quality Basel capital even though they knew full well the dreck that they were issuing. A financial multiplier of 40. A flight to safety. A big shift away from spending on currently-produced goods and services and on currently-employed labor as people tried to build up their stocks of safe assets. A multiplier as people who lost their jobs stopped spending, and the situation snowballed.



It could have been worse, I said. Without all of the rescue policies we would probably now have an unemployment rate of 16 percent rather than 10 percent.



But they question is what to do now with the economy. The idea is not to go to socialism—not to nationalize large chunks of the economy and have everybody work for the government—but to conduct strategic interventions in financial markets. Relieve the excess demand for safe high-quality assets and you remove the pressure on people to spend less than they earn as they try to build up their stocks of safe assets, and you get a virtuous circle of strong recovery.



So, I said, the right thing to do is the Bagehot rule: lend freely at a penalty rate. The government should throw huge amounts of money at the financial markets and in the process take a large chunk of the upside in equities and options.



SOCIALISM, they said. We don't want SOCIALISM.



But it's not socialism, I said. It's an attempt to avoid socialism—it's an attempt to conduct a strategic intervention into the market economy so that it can rebalance itself.



SOCIALISM, they said.



Well, I said, how about lending freely to the financial sector but forget Bagehot's "penalty rate" stuff?



BAILOUT, they said. BAILOUT OF CORRUPT FINANCIERS WITH WASHINGTON CONNECTIONS, they said. WE LIKE THAT EVEN LESS.



Well, I said, how about pushing off taxes into the future, bringing forward infrastructure spending we know that we will want to do, and financing it by issuing more government debt? The spending should put some people to work, and the extra government bonds we print up will increase the supply of safe assets, decrease the excess demand, and so remove some of the downward pressure that is inducing people to spend less than they earn/



DEFICIT, they said. DEFICIT BAD. MUST REDUCE THE DEFICIT. GOVERNMENT MUST LIVE WITHIN ITS MEANS.



But, I said, the U.S. government now can borrow at unbelievable terms. If you could borrow at such terms, you would bust out the top of your house and add a second story immediately.



GOVERNMENT MUST LIVE WITHIN ITS MEANS.



OK, I said. How about having the federal government aid the states. We want to keep our police and our fire and our road maintenance and our schools running at their efficient levels, don't we? It's stupid to cut back on the long-term foundations of our economy and its growth because of recession, isn't it. How about a large program of federal aid to the states so that teachers, sewer workers, police officers, and firefighters can keep their jobs, keep protecting us—and keep spending and so provide employment for the rest of us?



ARE YOU KIDDING? THEY HAVE KEPT THEIR UNIONS. WE HAVE LOST OUR UNIONS. WE HAVE LOST OUR JOBS. THEY HAVE GONE TO CHINA. THEY HAVE VANISHED. WE ARE UNEMPLOYED. IF WE ARE EMPLOYED WE HAVE NO BARGAINING POWER WITH OUR BOSSES. IT IS NOT FAIR FOR STATE WORKERS TO NOT ONLY HAVE UNIONS, BARGAINING POWER, AND PENSIONS, BUT FOR THEM TO HAVE THEIR JOBS TOO. SINCE WE ARE LOSING OUR JOBS THEY SHOULD LOSE THEIR JOBS TOO. IT IS NOT FAIR.



Oh.



EVERYTHING YOU PROPOSE TAKES OUR HARD-EARNED MONEY, TAXES IT AWAY FROM US, AND GIVES IT TO SOMEBODY ELSE.



Oh.



BERKELEY SOCIALIST.



So what do you think we should do?



GET US JOBS!



But you have just rejected every idea I have for boosting unemployment—short of nationalizing the means of production and employing everybody by the government, that is. What are your ideas?



CUT TAXES. ABOLISH THE EPA. REPEAL HEALTH CARE REFORM. KEEP GOVERNMENT'S HANDS OFF OF MEDICARE. RAISE SOCIAL SECURITY PAYMENTS. CUT THE DEFICIT.





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Published on October 13, 2010 09:13

Joachim von Ribbentrop Liveblogs World War II: October 13, 1940

Letter from the German Foreign Minister to Stalin (excerpts), Oct. 13, 1940:




My Dear Herr Stalin : Over a year ago, through your decision and the Führer's, the relations between Germany and Soviet Russia were examined and put on a completely new basis. I believe that the decision to reach an understanding between our two countries—which resulted from the realization that the Lebensräume of our peoples adjoin each other but need not necessarily overlap, and which led to a delimitation of mutual spheres of influence and to the German-Soviet Russian Nonaggression and Friendship Treaties—has proved advantageous to both sides. I am convinced that the consistent continuance of this policy of good neighborliness and a further strengthening of the political and economic collaboration will redound to the greater and greater benefit of the two great peoples in the future. Germany, at any rate, is prepared and determined to work to this end.
With such a goal, it seems to me, a direct contact between the responsible personalities of both countries becomes particularly important. I believe that such a personal contact through other than the customary diplomatic channels is indispensable from time to time in authoritarian regimes such as ours. Today I would, therefore, like to review briefly the events since my last visit to Moscow. Because of the historical importance of these events and in continuation of our exchange of ideas of last year, I would like to review for you the policy which Germany has pursued during this period.



After the conclusion of the Polish Campaign we became aware—and this was confirmed by many reports which were received during the winter—that England, faithful to her traditional policy, was building her whole war strategy on the hope of an extension of the war. The attempts made in 1939 to win over the Soviet Union to a military coalition against Germany had already pointed in this direction. They were frustrated by the German-Soviet Russian Agreement. Later on, the attitude of England and France in the Soviet Russian-Finnish conflict was similar.



In the spring of 1940, these concealed intentions became quite evident. With this began the active phase of the English policy of extending this war to other peoples of Europe. After the end of the Soviet Russian-Finnish War, Norway was selected as the first target. By the occupation of Narvik and other Norwegian bases, Germany's iron ore supplies were to be cut off and a new front established in Scandinavia. It was only due to the timely intervention of the German leadership in Berlin and to the quick blows of our troops—who chased the English and the French out of Norway—that all of Scandinavia did not become a theater of war.



Several weeks later this Anglo-French game was to be repeated in Holland and Belgium. And here, too, Germany was able at the eleventh hour to prevent the contemplated thrust of the Anglo-French armies against the Ruhr Region (of which we had been informed some time before) by decisive victories of our armies. Today, even France, "England's continental sword," it has become apparent to most Frenchmen that their country in the last analysis had to bleed to death as a victim of this traditional "humanitarian" policy of England. As to the present English rulers, who declared war on Germany and who thereby plunged the British people into misfortune, even they themselves were finally no longer able to conceal their traditional British policy and their contempt for their own allies. On the contrary, when fate turned against them, all their hypocritical protestations ceased. With true English cynicism, they have treacherously forsaken their friends. In fact, in order to save themselves they slandered their erstwhile allies, and later on they even openly opposed them by force. Andalsnes, Dunkerque, Oran, Dakar, are names which—it appears to me—could sufficiently enlighten the world on the value of England's friendship. However, on this occasion we Germans, too, learned a lesson: that the English are not only unscrupulous politicians, but also bad soldiers. Our troops have routed them wherever they accepted battle. The German soldier was superior to them everywhere...



[...]



In this final phase of the war, to guard against any moves which England might yet make in her desperate situation, the Axis, as an obvious precaution, was forced to secure its military and strategic position in Europe as well as its political and diplomatic position in the world. In addition, it had to safeguard the requirements for maintaining our economic life. Immediately after the end of the campaign in the West, Germany and Italy started with this task, and now they have carried it out in its broad outlines. In this connection there may also be mentioned the—for Germany—unprecedented task of securing her Norwegian coastal positions all the way from the Skagerrak to Kirkenes. Germany has therefore entered into certain purely technical agreements with Sweden and Finland, of which I have already fully informed you through the German Embassy. They are exclusively for the purpose of facilitating supply of the coastal cities in the North (Narvik and Kirkenes)—which are difficult for us to reach by land—by shipping supplies via the territory of these countries...



[...]



In summing up, I should like to state that, in the opinion of the Führer, also, it appears to be the historical mission of the Four Powers—the Soviet Union, Italy, Japan, and Germany—to adopt a long-range policy and to direct the future development of their peoples into the right channels by delimitation of their interests on a world-wide scale.



In order further to clarify issues of such decisive importance for the future of our peoples and in order to discuss them in concrete form, we would welcome it if Herr Molotov would pay us a visit in Berlin soon. I should like to extend a most cordial invitation to him in the name of the Reich Government. After my two visits to Moscow, it would now be a particular pleasure for me personally to see Herr Molotov in Berlin. His visit would then give the Führer the opportunity to explain to Herr Molotov personally his views regarding the future molding of relations between our two countries. Upon his return, Herr Molotov will be able to report to you at length concerning the aims and intentions of the Führer. If then—as I believe I may expect—the opportunity should arise for further elaboration of a common policy in accordance with my foregoing statements, I should be happy to come to Moscow again personally in order to resume the exchange of ideas with you, my dear Herr Stalin, and to discuss—possibly together with representatives of Japan and Italy—the bases of a policy which could only be of practical advantage to all of us.



With best regards I remain



Respectfully yours,



Ribbentrop






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Published on October 13, 2010 09:03

October 12, 2010

What Law Is This? It's Not Godwin's Law. It's Not Gresham's Law. But It Is Somebody's...

Joseph Nocera once again proves that all columns accusing others of engaging in breaches of ethical conduct will themselves be a breach of ethical conduct--in this case, Joseph Nocera's breach.



Seems to me that there is not "the appearance of a conflict of interest" here. Seems to me that Nocera has a genuine conflict of interest here...



We pick up the story at TalkingBizNews:




NYT columnist Nocera adds conflict note to Saturday column: New York Times business columnist Joe Nocera, who wrote his Saturday column about the new Hewlett Packard CEO and his involvement in an intellectual property theft lawsuit, has had to add an editor’s note to the column on Tuesday. The reason? His fiancee is director of communications for the law firm that is involved in suing the CEO.



The editor’s note states:




In the Talking Business column in Business Day on Saturday, Joe Nocera wrote about a lawsuit by Oracle against a division of SAP, claiming theft of intellectual property. Mr. Nocera learned after the column was published  that Oracle was represented by the law firm of Boies, Schiller & Flexner, where his fiancée works as director of communications. To avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest, Mr. Nocera would not have written about the case if he had known of the law firm’s involvement.




John Paczkowski of All Things Digital writes:




Odd to learn that Nocera, the Times’ star business columnist, was unaware that his own fiancée was a flak for the law firm repping Oracle in the suit (see screenshot above) that provided so much of the subject matter for his column. But it seems he was not, up to today, when he made a CNBC appearance on the subject...





We continue the story with John Paczkowski:




HP Scandal Sucks in New York Times Columnist Over Conflict of Interest: Another reputation smeared in the Hewlett-Packard/Oracle slag-fest. Turns out Joe Nocera... penned that scathing piece on former SAP chief and incoming Hewlett-Packard (HP) CEO Léo Apotheker... has a conflict of interest. Nocera’s fiancée, Dawn Schneider, is director of communications for Boies, Schiller & Flexner, the law firm that just so happens to represent Oracle in its very same suit against SAP...




And Joe Nocera:




Talking Business: For H.P. Board, a Double Standard: And so it came to pass that on the 55th day — 55 days, that is, after firing its chief executive, Mark V. Hurd, for playing footsie with a consultant and fudging his expense accounts — the board of directors at Hewlett-Packard proudly announced it had found a new man to lead the company out of the wilderness. His name is Léo Apotheker, a suave European — how many American C.E.O.’s have an accent aigu in their name? — who had spent most of his career at SAP, the giant German maker of business software. SAP has one primary competitor: Oracle, the very same company that hired Mr. Hurd barely a month after H.P. let him go, in a move clearly intended not only to bolster Oracle but to humiliate H.P....



There were other things about the appointment that seemed a bit odd.... [H]aving written two unflattering columns recently about the H.P. board, I was inclined to take a pass on Mr. Apotheker’s hiring. But then I learned something about him that caused me to shake my head in disbelief. Next month, Oracle and SAP are scheduled to go to trial in a case involving the wholesale theft of Oracle’s intellectual property by an SAP division. SAP has acknowledged its guilt; the only issue being litigated is the size of the damages. (Oracle is asking for $2 billion; SAP says it should have to pay only “tens of millions” of dollars.) As a member of SAP’s executive board, Mr. Apotheker clearly knew about the theft.



It takes your breath away, really: the same board that viewed Mr. Hurd’s minor expense account shenanigans as intolerable has chosen as its new C.E.O. someone involved — however tangentially — with the most serious business crime you can commit. If it were anybody besides the H.P. directors, the situation would be unbelievable. With these guys, though, it’s all too believable...






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Published on October 12, 2010 20:29

Ignore All Other Versions and Use This Webpost

Charlie Brooker:




Jonathan Franzen's Freedom has been pulped: Like anyone who's ever suffered the traumatic loss of the only copy of a crucial file... I tend to end up saving about 1,500 different versions along the way, leading to a directory full of bewildering titles such as FINALSCRIPT2a.DOC and FINALSCRIPT1b-IGNORE-ALL-OTHERS-AND-USE-THIS.DOC and FINALSCRIPT1c- I-AM-SPARTACUS.DOC.



Sometimes the documents themselves are radically different; sometimes the differences consist of a few missing commas here and there. Disappointingly, it seems the disparity between the "right" and "wrong" drafts of Franzen's book chiefly consists of minor typographical errors and typesetting changes. It'd be far more interesting if they'd accidentally printed a version in which, halfway through the 19th chapter, the whole thing ends abruptly with the words MORE BOOK TO GO HERE. But that didn't happen.



Early drafts are rougher and baggier and less disciplined than the polished final product, but can be more entertaining as a result.... [T]he original cut of Ridley Scott's recent retelling of the Robin Hood legend contained a puzzling interlude during which Russell Crowe recited the URL for a pornographic website. The scene was dropped from the theatrical release at the last minute when it was discovered that a script supervisor had inadvertently pasted the contents of their clipboard into the script while trying to find the keyboard shortcut for "print". Neither of these stories is true, incidentally, but that doesn't necessarily make recounting them here any less worthwhile.



I'm assuming the Franzen error doesn't affect readers who bought digital copies of the novel to read on Kindles and iPhones and eReaders and the like – but then again, even if it did, it should be possible to remotely and automatically update them all without anyone really noticing. In fact, the advent of digital books blurs the whole notion of "final drafts" and "revised editions" into a confusing futuristic smudge. Freed from the physical limitations of a paper-and-ink edition, authors can continue tinkering with the text way beyond the date of publication, maybe even for ever. Perhaps before too long, you'll be midway through an especially underwhelming paragraph, and it'll start deleting itself before your very eyes, just like this one should have. Or your favourite character will die or reappear under an assumed name and have sex with themselves. Any notion of permanence will be a thing of the past. Even the individual letters will crawl around while you look at them, like agitated ants.



Worst of all, without the crushing finality of a concrete deadline looming over them, authors won't be forced to make up their minds about anything any more, and before long all books will open like this:




James Bond strode into the casino. Actually, no he didn't. He walked into a blazing warehouse. Except he wasn't on foot. He was in a car. Or on a horse. Whatever. The important thing is, it was all really exciting.




MORE COLUMN TO GO HERE.






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Published on October 12, 2010 19:47

UC Berkeley: Webcasts and File Uploads: J. Bradford DeLong: Economics 1, Fall 2010

File Uploads:





Summer Reading Assignment

Syllabus

Essay 1 Assignment





August 30: Introduction to Macroeconomics: Audio | Slides | Notes







Articles for Section Oral Presentations: Section 2; Section 3; Section 4



Ungiven NIPA/Circular Flow Lecture







September 1: Introduction to Depression Economics: Audio | Slides | Notes







Articles for Section Oral Presentations: Sections 5-8



Problem Set 1 (due September 15)







September 8: Downturns and Financial Markets: Keynesians and Monetarists: Audio | Slides | Notes





September 13: Dealing with the "Great Recession": Audio | Slides | Notes







Problem Set 2



Review of Depression Economics







September 15: Inflation Economics: Audio | Slides | Notes





September 20: Inflation Economics II: http://delong.typepad.com/econ_1_fall_2010/2010/09/files-for-september-20-econ-1-lecture-inflation-economics-ii-j-bradford-delong-uc-berkeley-fall-2010.html







Solutions to Problem Set 1

Problem Set 3

Revised Econ 1 Syllabus

Practice Midterm





September 22: Budget Economics: http://delong.typepad.com/econ_1_fall_2010/2010/09/files-for-september-22-econ-1-lecture-budget-economics.html





September 27: Budget Economics II:







[Slides]20100922 for 20100927 Econ 1.pdf

Six Lecture on Depression Economics: http://delong.typepad.com/econ_1_fall_2010/2010/09/six-lectures-on-depression-economics.html





September 29: Growth Economics: Background:







Slides

Audio





October 1: Pre-Midterm Review Session: http://delong.typepad.com/econ_1_fall_2010/2010/10/econ-1-pre-october-4-2010-midterm-review-session.html





October 6: Economic Growth II:







Slides:

Audio:

Essay Assignment for October 13: http://delong.typepad.com/econ_1_fall_2010/2010/10/essay-assignment-for-october-13.html

Section Assignments from the First to the Second Midterm: http://delong.typepad.com/econ_1_fall_2010/2010/10/section-assignments-from-the-first-to-the-second-midterm.html





October 11: Introduction to Microeconomics:







Slides

Audio

Lecture Notes





October 13: Fundamentals of Supply and Demand:







Slides

[Audio]

Lecture Notes

Problem Set 4









Three audio files of the first Econ 1 lecture: Lecture 1, August 30: Introduction to Macroeconomics.





One at:







Economics 1, 001:





The others at:







Download 20100830 Econ 1 LS | Download 20100830 Econ 1 SP





Comments on audio quality?





The consensus seems to be that the "SP" files are the best...









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Published on October 12, 2010 15:38

Barry Ritholtz Asks: Are WSJ OpEd Writers Clueless or Liars?

The answer is "yes."



Barry:




Are WSJ OpEd Writers Clueless or Liars? | The Big Picture:



“We’re not aware of a single case so far of a substantive error. Out of tens of thousands of potentially affected borrowers, we’re still waiting for the first victim claiming that he was current on his mortgage when the bank seized the home. Even if such victims exist, the proper policy is to make them whole, not to let 100,000 other people keep homes for which they haven’t paid.”




-The Politics of Foreclosure, WSJ OpEd




I used to think that the partisan, money-losing screeds that are WSJ OpEds were written by intelligent idealogues. Their errors were thought to be a function of a variety of cognitive mishaps and biases. These are typically associated with sports fans, but afflicts partisans as well.



I am no longer convinced of this.



I now believe they some combination of heavy metals or other pollutants has somehow rendered the judgment centers of their brain inoperative. They function in ways indistinguishable from other human beings, except when it comes to anything involving judgment. This includes complex mathematics, a new or unusual fact pattern, or simply something that conflicts with prior experience. It is beyond them.



If they are not clueless, then the alternative conclusion is that they are liars (a third possibility is they are developmentally disabled — i.e., high functioning morons –  but I doubt that). That conclusion is based on an October 9th editorial, from whence the above quote was derived.



As has been widely circulated and discussed in the media, Man’s home sold out from under him in foreclosure mistake. The gentleman in question DID NOT HAVE A MORTGAGE.



If that is not substantive error, then WTF is?






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Published on October 12, 2010 13:56

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