If We Were in Charge

George Washington

IF WE WERE IN CHARGE

By John Butler

With regard to equity market valuations, other factors equal, as the capital base erodes, so does aggregate corporate profitability. Fewer factories = fewer profits. That said, if there is inflation, then the price level and headline revenues may continue to increase, but real economic profits will nevertheless decline. Even if shrinking capacity results in stable price margins, investors should be wary about buying into an eroding capital stock, which is what we have at present. But if margins are under pressure due to soaring input costs, then the combined impact on corporate profits, over time, could be unusually severe.

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The Lifeboat Rules

THE LIFEBOAT RULES

By David Harris

I’m always looking for metaphors and finding them in odd places, often despite myself.

I stumbled over this one while talking with Bowser, my Dharma buddy turned Buddhist monk.  The two of us grew up in opposite ends of the San Joaquin Valley and played football against each other in high school.  This metaphor arose when we were sharing our childhood memories of backwater black and white television and the cheesy, low budget B movies that stations back then used to fill their air time late at night or on weekend afternoons.  There were cowboy movies, road racing movies, war movies of every stripe, truck driving movies, aliens from outer space, pirate movies, former serials—both science fiction and cowboy—horror films, and lots of the Three Stooges and the Little Rascals.  And more.

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Where is the Culture Going and Who Will We Be When it Gets There?

Crazy MultitaskingWHERE IS THE CULTURE GOING AND WHO WILL WE BE WHEN IT GETS THERE?

By David Harris

Though I have adopted assorted electronic gadgets over the years as digital technology became essential for doing commerce, my citizenship in the culture the internet and broadband revolutions have generated is naturalized at best.   I am several gadgets behind the curve and only marginally literate at the ones I do have.  Nonetheless, I am convinced that all of us need to participate in the reconciliation of this technology with our ongoing humanity—who we will be is up for grabs—so the other evening I set out to explore the subject.

The birthday party was almost all twenty-somethings.  It was in a bar, where five tables had been strung together end to end, and I was sitting where I could see the whole crowd.  Everyone had their smart phones open on the table in front of them and several had laptops in readiness nearby.  For two hours they talked with great animation and volume, regularly sent and received text messages as the conversation continued unabated, fielded incoming phone calls, checked e-mails, took pictures, posted them on the internet, ordered more drinks, texted friends at the other end of the table, worked their way through dozens of Facebook walls, and sang Happy Birthday when the time came.  After a while, I turned on my five year old cell phone just to feel a little less self conscious. [Read more…]

A Century of Money Mischief

John ButlerA CENTURY OF MONEY MISCHIEF

By John Butler

On precisely the same weekend in November as the Republican victory parties in and around Washington, the Fed celebrated its centennial far away from its DC home at Jekyll Island, Georgia. One-hundred years ago, seven US Congressmen and bankers gathered together in secret at this highly remote location to lay the political foundations for what would become, in 1913, the Federal Reserve Act.[2] The ostensible purpose of creating the Federal Reserve was to provide for greater financial stability in the wake of the US banking panic of 1907. So how has the Fed fared in this role?

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The Van Riper Company

The Van Riper Company