Excited Delirium

Stories about Excited Delirium, the Shock Economy and a little fiction here and there.

Economics, Media and Mass Manipulation

I don’t recall where I got the link for this site, but the context of this article on Economics, Media and Mass Manipulation is riveting, despite the length.  It’s well worth the read, packed with data and the author accomplishes what they set out to do:  prove that change is coming, whether we like it or not.

The three pillars sustaining the American empire edifice of never ending war, ever accumulating debt and excessive consumerism are crumbling. The growing corruption and weight of un-payable debt have weakened the very foundation of our grand experiment. The existing structure will surely collapse. My entire adult life has tracked the decline of the American empire. I had become comfortably numb. I came to my senses and began to question all the Federal government/Wall Street/Corporate Media sponsored truths about eight years ago. Many others have also awoken and begun to challenge the false storylines dictated by those in power.

Yeah, right.  I can hear you now:  whispering about the pot-induced lyrics of Pink Floyd in context of ‘Comfortably Numb’, the chosen title of this piece, but it was this chart the reminded me that income opportunities, taxation and share of income is definitely not skewed in our favour:

superrich-graphs-motherjones

Every day we work, we lose money to inflation and taxation.  The cards are clearly stacked against us, but apparently things will be OK so long as we continue to inflate our debt, swap real assets for credit assets and keep track of what’s happening with ‘Dance with the Stars’.

What can I say?  Things are going to change.  If they don’t, things are going to change.

Tax Changes Worth Considering

In the world of fiscal and monetary policy, once you make specific changes, it’s very difficult to turn back on them.

Unfortunately, this is true for reductions that we’ve seen in the past with specific tools like the GST (now HST) which was reduced by Stephen Harper, Dalton McGuinty and other leaders in an economically questionable tactic to get into office.  Today, our economic instability continues and yet our leaders still commit to reducing corporate tax rates, forcing us to shake our heads at the gross inequality of Canadian citizens compared to capital owners.

With this in mind, I’d like to spin the topic a little towards something more positive:  eliminating or reducing tax deductions.  I’m sure lots has been written about this, but I personally feel that little has been done to explore the impact of altering deductions when it comes to corporate and income tax policy.  Here are some standard deductions, all of which create questionable policy outcomes:

  • Car and gas:  the more I drive for business, the less I pay in tax.  Larger organizations would have entire ‘fleets’ that are deductible for tax purposes.  Also, allowing car, gas and other fleet deductions encourages the consumption of the wrong kind of transportation and carbon-based fuels.  My mind would change if someone actually developed a functional hydrogen vehicle or mode of transport that used an alternative fuel, but allowing these carbon deductions only keeps us stuck in the 20th century.
  • Meals and entertainment:  the more I eat and the more hockey games I go to, the less tax I pay.  This makes no sense.
  • Land and real estate assets:  I don’t know a lot about this, but my instincts are that if we taxed inactive land assets, they would be used for economic activity or put on the market.  While this might push down the value of land in the short-run, it would ease the cost for entrepreneurs to open up office space or local retail locations.  It would also help put an end to the miles of waste that we see everywhere now with closed offices, land for lease and excessive apartment costs.
  • Business losses:  my understanding is that business losses that are accumulated in any given year can be carried forward for use indefinitely years for the company in question and are also transferable to other subsidiary or parent companies.  Are there ways to proactively reduce losses that are carried forward against profitable organizations?  I know I’m playing with fire on this, but at what point should we just force unprofitable companies to be shut down?
  • Charity activity:  ‘charity’ runs counter to the goals of profit maximization, so why do we allow massive deductions against corporate activity (some might argue ‘meddling’) with charities and non-profits?  Why don’t we just increase the deduction at the personal level?
  • Professional services:  how many lawyers are enough?
  • Dividend tax preference:  once again, I’ll concede that the economics on this topic are grey, but giving preferential tax status to dividend income seems to run counter to income earned from non-dividend sources.
  • Special incentives and investment programs:  All levels of government are hobbled by excessive grant giveaways and most of the companies that benefit from these programs have shareholders that simply don’t need handouts from the public.  Great examples of this are the Canadian Magazine Fund and the Canadian Film and Video Tax Credit.  Do we really need to give CTV and Quebecor hundreds of millions of dollars each year to produce what amounts to propaganda?

Of course, most of you who are intensely more familiar with tax policy would quickly jump on me and argue that many of these deductions are equal in the sense that small businesses and co-ops can make use of them as much as a large corporation can.

Unfortunately, most small businesses can’t even afford these expenses and rarely take a moment to spend any more than a couple of hundred dollars per year on the odd hockey game or taking a buddy to brunch.  As someone who describes himself as a small business owner, I know this to be true.

All I’m suggesting is that we consider caps on these deductions and for some, look at ways to eliminate them all together as effective ways to shape social policy and reaction out of prudent fiscal measures.  For example, now that we live in the digital age, why do we need to drive to meetings?  Why don’t we just do more via Skype calls or by leveraging other video-conferencing tools?

In an ideal world, we address simply questions of ‘equality’ and ‘fairness’ by understanding that our tax system is excessively skewed to the benefit of those that own it:  governments and the corporations that own them.

Simple modifications will improve financial liquidity for our governments and ensure that fairness is restored to average citizens.  I think this is something we can all accept, possibly including those with #occupywallstreet.

Ultimately, any or all of these changes push the needle towards a flat tax, but that’s something best discussed in another article.

Open The Books for Everyone

Here’s a great piece from David Climenhaga contributing to rabble about fiscal openness.

While it’s extremely unlikely that the Harperites will follow his advice, I fully agree that now is the time to open all books for any organization that receives (or received) public funds of any kind.  If unions are being wrenched open – and I don’t see why they shouldn’t – then we have an opportunity to apply ‘what’s fair’ logic to the other organizations listed below:

  • Organizations like the bar, medical, engineering and other professional associations that members must join in order to practice in their fields
  • Private corporations that receive any form of subsidy paid by taxpayers
  • Private corporations that bid on any publicly financed contract
  • Any corporation or organization that exists for the purpose of influencing public policy, including lobbying firms and “think-tanks” not associated with public institutions, which have their own reporting requirements
  • Associations of corporations, businesses or individuals that by definition try to influence public policy and trade practices
  • Churches and religious organizations that raise funds for other than purely spiritual matters, including the operation of chartable, educational or public policy institutions
  • Any organization that can give charitable tax receipts for donations

I would add defense contractors and police organizations to the list, assuming the latter don’t already have to fully disclose details about spending activities (eg. G20 largesse) as part of annual budget reports.

It just makes perfect sense.  If you want to hide and recede from public scrutiny, then stop milking the public teat.  Stop accepting public funds.

If you want to get grants, subsidies or economic benefit of any kind, then accept the fact that the public has a RIGHT to see what you’ve earned, what you did with the money and decide if it was a good use of funds.

If we have this kind of openness, it’ll likely result in a significant reduction in the number of charities that have been set up simply to ensure a tax dodge for their creators and will go a long way to curbing the corruption that we’ve fomented in places like Montreal with programs like the Economic Action Plan.

The age of openness is upon us.  Conservatives ramming this aggressive ideological agenda down the throats of left-of-centre organizations like unions and the CBC will only cause grief for themselves as Canadians demand more insight into the rest of the organizations that they are involved with.

Occupy Santa Claus?

While there is an occupyxmas concept already put out there, will someone act on the idea of occupying Santa Claus parades?

It makes sense:

If done right, this visibility could be translated into very positive messages related to the occupy movement.  Those mainstream media types that typically slander and ‘poo poo’ those with a positive message about what occupy is all about may be forced to confront those positive messages as occupiers are broadcast to middle America.

Maybe have messages like ‘Make Gifts, Not War’, ‘Buy Local, Not From The North Pole’, and ‘Stop Shopping, Start Caroling’ to remind people that the ‘season’ is all about, peace, love and understanding and not about emptying your wallets for Wal-Mart, ToysRUs and other international conglomerates.

If we’re lucky, that message will translate to the millions of viewers that are about to spend the next 4 or 5 Saturdays in busy malls and force them to reconsider what Christmas should be all about.

The down side?  Unfortunately, there’s a huge risk that occupiers (or police removing occupiers) might act in poor taste or make threats to parade members or property.  This would destroy any positive currency that occupiers may have earned by looking out for the average ’99%er’ and will draw a LOT of criticism from people that can’t see past the commercialism of the annual events.

Make Them Pay

Citizens for Tax Justice and the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy in the US research shows that nearly a third of 280 corporations surveyed didn’t pay taxes or even got a tax break.

More shocking with this news is that the corporations that were part of the survey – a mere fraction of the corporations in the US and Canada – received more than $223 billion in subsidies from various levels of US government.

All of this is proof that high corporate taxes are not the problem.

The more I read stuff like this, the more I want a simple tax system where there are NO deductions from income and a very reasonable and lower flat tax of, say, 10% on all activity.  This would solve a LOT of problems in most economies.

It would also put a lot of lawyers and lobbyists out on the street!

London Ontario: Home of the Intolerant

London, Ontario has done what no other city could do:  be the first city in Canada to boot Occupiers from public property.

What a shame.

The question that will be on everyone’s minds:  what’s next?

Truth be told, I wasn’t sure about the claim to occupy in this small south-western Ontario town, but the reality is this:  those that run the city keep pushing ahead with boondoggles that are going to (a) break the election promises of Joe Fontana and (b) keep wasting taxpayer dollars.

So, in answer to my own question, ‘what’s next’:  we have to continue to send the message that this kind of waste and crony capitalism is unacceptable.

Koch Konnections (aka “If They Can Do It, We Can Too!”)

The Koch Brothers.

What can I say about them?

Anyways, they have made a commitment to connect the 1% as thoroughly as possible with a view to ensuring that Americans and people elsewhere are constantly barraged with messages about libertarianism, anti-government sentiments and opposition to any kind of labour / union efforts.

So … if they can, why can’t ‘WE’?

What are WE doing to integrate our associations, affiliations, money flow, donations, charities and other efforts related to the progressive message in Canada, the US and elsewhere?  How are we presenting a unified front against these people who, ironically, look at solidarity as the model for their own survival?

What are WE doing to educate people everywhere about what the needs of all of us and not just those who can donate millions to political campaigns?

What are WE doing to protect ourselves?

US to Backstop $75 TRILLION in Derivatives Risk?

Just as #occupywallstreet picks up steam, it looks like the US Federal Reserve will backstop (ie. insure against risk or exposure) the massive $75 TRILLION of notional derivatives carried by the Bank of America.

What this means is that when Europe finally implodes and banks fail, U.S. taxpayers will hold the bag for trillions in CDS insurance contracts sold by Bank of America and JP Morgan.  Even worse, the total exposure is unknown because Wall Street successfully lobbied during Dodd-Frank passage so that no central exchange would exist keeping track of net derivative exposure.

No wonder Americans are upset.

This is the Ponzi-Bingo-Lottery-Casino attitude being presented by American financial institutions and the obvious reality is that the Fed will continue to do everything it can to prevent a massive hemorrage from happening, but every time they try to block things up, everyone just gets impacted.

It’s time to let it go.  Stop treating the banks like they’re little children and make them accept their responsibility.

Follow the Money Behind Europe’s Debt Crisis

This link offers an insightful look into the roots of the European debt crisis.

It offers some refreshing reminders as to why fake fiscal emergencies and resulting ‘austerity measures’ are nothing but a sham.

Worse, just as they did in 2008-09, governments are rushing to rescue rickety banks with public funds. That’s why the European Central Bank, the IMF and Europe’s leading powers keep bailing out ailing states like Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

Again: follow the money. When debt-strapped governments receive hundreds of billions in new loans, that money is immediately sent into the coffers of private banks as payments on past loans. The whole situation, observes one writer in the Financial Times, “resembles a pyramid or Ponzi scheme” in which original lenders are paid back with new loans.

The difference is that the new loans are coming from public funds, which is another way of saying that private banks are being rescued once more by the people. Just as in the global bank crisis of 2008-09, bank profits are private, but their losses are public. Not exactly the free market. But it’s a nice deal for profligate bankers.

Any finance minister – including Jim Flaherty – that pretends there are different and more pressing issues behind this building crisis risks their credibility as people wake up to the reality that the big transfer – shifting our funds to the big banks – has to come to a quick end.

It’s important that we all resist austerity measures – fake fiscal emergencies designed to crush public services and public service – in the wake of this knowledge.

70% Agree: Occupy Wall Street Reflects Their Concerns About Corporate Greed

70% of respondents to a FOX poll (yes, FOX, no less) agree that the Occupy Wall Street movement reflects their concerns that the United States economy and government is being undermined by excessive corporate greed.

Take the poll yourself.

And after you do that, remind everyone around you that it’s time for the corporate free ride to end.