Monday 6 July 2015

Irrational Exuberance - "Don't Go There"


 

H. G. Wells and the Baby Boomers from Spike EP on Vimeo.

 

The Baby Boomer Problem = Don't Go There!

 


Remarks by Chairman Alan Greenspan

At the Annual Dinner and Francis Boyer Lecture of The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, Washington, D.C.

December 5, 1996

The Challenge of Central Banking in a Democratic Society

 

Good evening ladies and gentlemen. I am especially pleased to accept AEI's Francis Boyer Award for 1996 and be listed with so many of my friends and former associates. In my lecture this evening I want to give some personal perspectives on central banking and, consequently, I shall be speaking only for myself.

 

William Jennings Bryan reportedly mesmerized the Democratic Convention of 1896 with his memorable ". . . you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold." His utterances underscored the profoundly divisive role of money in his time--a divisiveness that remains apparent today. Bryan was arguing for monetizing silver at an above-market price in order to expand the money supply. The presumed consequences would have been an increase in product prices and an accompanying shift in the value of net claims on future wealth from the "monied interests" of the East to the indebted farmers of the West who would arguably be able to pay off their obligations with cheaper money.

 

The debates, before and since, over the issue of our money standard have mirrored the deliberations on the manner in which we have chosen to govern ourselves, and, perhaps more fundamentally, debates on the basic values that should govern our society.

 

For, at root, money--serving as a store of value and medium of exchange--is the lubricant that enables a society to organize itself to achieve economic progress. The ability to store the fruits of one's labor for future consumption is necessary for the accumulation of capital, the spread of technological advances and, as a consequence, rising standards of living.

 

Clearly in this context, the general price level, that is, the average exchange rate for money against all goods and services, and how it changes over time, plays a profoundly important role in any society, because it influences the nature and scope of our economic and social relationships over time.

 

It is, thus, no wonder that we at the Federal Reserve, the nation's central bank, and ultimate guardian of the purchasing power of our money, are subject to unending scrutiny. Indeed, it would be folly were it otherwise.

 

A central bank in a democratic society is a magnet for many of the tensions that such a society confronts. Any institution that can affect the purchasing power of the currency is perceived as potentially affecting the level and distribution of wealth among the participants of that society, hardly an inconsequential issue.

 

Not surprisingly, the evolution of central banking in this nation has been driven by such concerns. The experiences with paper money during the Revolutionary War were decidedly inauspicious. "Not worth a Continental" was scarcely the epithet one would wish on a medium of exchange. This moved Alexander Hamilton, with some controversy, to press for legislation that established the soundness of the credit of the United States by assuming, and ultimately repaying, the war debts not only of the fledgling federal government, but of the states as well. Equally controversial was the chartering of the First Bank of the United States, which, although it had few functions of a modern central bank, was nonetheless believed to be a significant threat to states rights and the Constitution itself.

 

Although majority controlled by private interests, the Bank engaged in actions perceived to shift power to the federal government. Such a shift was thought of by many as a fundamental threat to the new democracy, and an essential element of what was feared to be a Hamilton plan to re-establish a powerful aristocracy. The First Bank--and especially its successor Second Bank of the United States--endeavored to restrict state bank credit expansion when it appeared inordinate, by gathering bank notes and tendering them for specie. This reduced the reserve base and the ability of the fledgling American banking system to expand credit. The issue of states' rights and concern about the power of the central government reflected the free wheeling individualism of that time. The Second Bank was a major issue of the election of 1832. Earlier in that year, President Andrew Jackson had vetoed the bill to extend its charter, and the election became a referendum on his veto. The outcome was a resounding victory for Jackson and the death knell for the Bank.

 

It has not been easy, however, to separate often seemingly conflicting threads in the debate between advocates of state powers over money and those seeking a national role. When Andrew Jackson vetoed the charter renewal of the Second Bank of the United States, for example, he argued for the severing of the grip on the economy of easterners and especially foreigners, who owned a significant stock interest in the bank. Ironically, by helping to create what was perceived to be an unstable currency, he set the stage for the later development of a full-fledged gold standard, the institution that Bryan railed against in 1896 from much the same populist philosophical base as Jackson.

 

After the Civil War, redemption of the paper greenbacks issued during the war brought an era of a gold-standard-induced deflation, which, while it may not have thwarted the impressive advance of industrialization, was seen by many as suppressing credit availability for the rural interests of the nation, which were still a majority. The general price level declined for more than two decades, which meant borrowers were paying off their loans in more expensive dollars than those they borrowed.

 

Not surprisingly, mounting pressures developed for reform, with Bryan bearing the standard for subsidized silver coinage, that is, free silver. Though Bryan lost to McKinley in 1896 (and again in 1900), the rural-based pressures for a more elastic currency did not diminish and ultimately were reflected, in part, in the creation of the Federal Reserve.

 

Nonetheless, many of the proponents of banking reform in the 1890s, and in the aftermath of the Panic of 1907, were suspicious of creating a central bank. In very large measure, those concerns underlay the various threads of reform that were joined together in the design and creation of the Federal Reserve System in 1913. Its founding followed a prolonged debate on the balance of power between the interests of the New York money center banks and the rest of the nation, still largely rural. The compromise that resulted from that debate created twelve regional Reserve Banks with a Washington presence vested with a Federal Reserve Board. Its purpose was to "furnish an elastic currency, . . . to establish a more effective supervision of banking in the United States, and for other purposes." Monetary policy as we know it today, was not among the "other purposes." That evolved largely by accident in the 1920s.

 

Even with a central bank, the gold standard was still the dominant constraint on the issuance of paper currency and the expansion of bank deposits. Accordingly, the Federal Reserve was to play a minor role in affecting the purchasing power of the currency for many years to come.

The world changed markedly with the advent of the Great Depression of the 1930s, and the evisceration of the gold standard. The upheaval, and still festering fear of New York "monied interests," engendered the Banking Acts of 1933 and more importantly of 1935, which vested more of the Federal Reserve's authority with the Board of Governors in Washington. During World War II, and through 1951, however, monetary policy was effectively subservient to the interests of the Treasury, which sought access to low-cost credit. With the so-called Federal Reserve-Treasury Accord of 1951, the Federal Reserve began to develop its current degree of independence.

 

Although in the 1950s and early 1960s there were short-lived bouts of inflation that caused momentary concern about sustained increases in the price level, these events did little to shake the conviction of most that America's economic and financial structure would indefinitely and effectively contain any inflationary forces. This prescription certainly seems to have been reflected in the low inflation premium then embedded in long-term bonds.

 

That this view was profoundly wrong soon became apparent. The 1970s saw inflation and unemployment simultaneously at relatively elevated levels for some time. The notion that this could occur was nowhere to be found in the conventional wisdom of the economic policy philosophy that developed out of the Keynesian revolution of the 1930s and its subsequent empirical applications. Moreover, these models embodied the view that aggregate demand expansion, from almost any level, would permanently create new jobs. When that expansion carried the economy beyond "full employment" there would be a cost in terms of higher inflation--but only a one-time increase in inflation, so that there existed a permanent trade off between sustainable levels of inflation and employment.

 

The stagflation of the 1970s required a thorough conceptual overhaul of economic thinking and policymaking. Monetarism, and new insights into the effects of anticipatory expectations on economic activity and price setting, competed strongly against the traditional Keynesianism. Gradually the power of state intervention to achieve particular economic outcomes came to be seen as much more limited. A consensus gradually emerged in the late 1970s that inflation destroyed jobs, or at least could not create them.

 

This view has become particularly evident in the communiques that have emanated from the high-level international gatherings of the past quarter century. That inflation could reduce employment was a highly controversial subject in the mid-1970s when introduced into communique language drafts. At the meetings I attended as Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, the notion invariably induced extended debates. Today in similar communiques such language is accepted boiler plate and rarely the focus of discussion. This shift in attitudes and understanding provided political support in 1980 and thereafter for the type of monetary policy required to rebalance the economy.

 

Despite waxing and waning over the decades, a deep-seated tension still exists over government's role as an economic policymaker. This tension is evident in Congressional debates, campaign rhetoric, and our ubiquitous talk shows.

 

It should not be a surprise that the very same ambiguities and conflicts that characterize the rest of our political life have their reflection in the nation's current view of its central bank, the Federal Reserve. With regard to monetary policy, the view--or at least the suspicion--still persists in some quarters that an activist, expansionary policy could yield dividends in terms of permanently higher output and employment.

Nonetheless, there is a grudging acceptance of the degree of independence afforded our institution, and an awareness that unless we are free of the appropriations process that our independence could be compromised. It is generally recognized and appreciated that if the Federal Reserve's monetary policy decisions were subject to Congressional or Presidential override, short-term political forces would soon dominate. The clear political preference for lower interest rates would unleash inflationary forces, inflicting severe damage on our economy.

 

Notwithstanding, the central bank has not been immune from the suspicion and lack of respect that has come to afflict virtually all institutions in our society since the traumas of Vietnam, Watergate, and the destabilizing inflation in the 1970s.

 

The Federal Reserve's most important mission, of course, is monetary policy. I wish I could say that there is a bound volume of immutable instructions on my desk on how effectively to implement policy to achieve our goals of maximum employment, sustainable economic growth, and price stability. Instead, we have to deal with a dynamic, continuously evolving economy whose structure appears to change from business cycle to business cycle, an issue I shall return to shortly.

 

Because monetary policy works with a lag, we need to be forward looking, taking actions to forestall imbalances that may not be visible for many months. There is no alternative to basing actions on forecasts, at least implicitly. It means that often we need to tighten or ease before the need for action is evident to the public at large, and that policy may have to reverse course from time to time as the underlying forces acting on the economy shift. This process is not easy to get right at all times, and it is often difficult to convey to the American people, whose support is essential to our mission.

 

Because the Fed is perceived as being capable of significantly affecting the lives of all Americans, that we should be subject to constant scrutiny should not come as any surprise. Indeed, speaking as a citizen, and not Fed Chairman, I would be concerned were it otherwise. Our monetary policy independence is conditional on pursuing policies that are broadly acceptable to the American people and their representatives in the Congress.

 

Augmenting concerns about the Federal Reserve is the perception that we are a secretive organization, operating behind closed doors, not always in the interests of the nation as a whole. This is regrettable, and we continuously strive to alter this misperception.

 

If we are to maintain the confidence of the American people, it is vitally important that, excepting the certain areas where the premature release of information could frustrate our legislated mission, the Fed must be as transparent as any agency of government. It cannot be acceptable in a democratic society that a group of unelected individuals are vested with important responsibilities, without being open to full public scrutiny and accountability.

 

To be sure, if we are to carry out effectively the monetary policy mission the Congress has delegated to us, there are certain Federal Reserve deliberations that have to remain confidential for a period of time. To open up our debates on monetary policy fully to immediate disclosure would unsettle financial markets and constrain our discussions in a manner that would undercut our ability to function. Nonetheless, we continue to look for ways to expand the flow of information to the public without compromising our deliberations and purposes. We have recently commenced to announce all policy actions immediately (federal funds rate changes as well as discount rate changes) and have expanded the minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee.

 

For many years, the Federal Reserve has maintained what we trust is a highly sophisticated day-by-day, near real-time, evaluation of the American economy and, where relevant, of foreign economies as well. We are able, partly through our twelve Reserve Banks, to monitor continuously developments in the real world. The information supplied about local conditions by the directors of the Reserve Banks has been frequently useful in identifying emerging national trends and in evaluating their underlying regional implications.

 

The issues with which we are confronted differ in urgency over time. Inflation concerns were not a dominant factor in economic forecasting in the 1950s and early 1960s, for example. Since the late 1970s, however, such concerns have become an important element in policymaking. More recently inflation has been low, but its future course remains uncertain. The development of comfortable product, but tight labor, markets has been a crucial factor in short-term economic forecasts of recent months--a phenomenon for which there is scant historic precedent.

There is, regrettably, no simple model of the American economy that can effectively explain the levels of output, employment, and inflation. In principle, there may be some unbelievably complex set of equations that does that. But we have not been able to find them, and do not believe anyone else has either.

 

Consequently, we are led, of necessity, to employ ad hoc partial models and intensive informative analysis to aid in evaluating economic developments and implementing policy. There is no alternative to this, though we continuously seek to enhance our knowledge to match the ever growing complexity of the world economy.

 

At different times in our history a varying set of simple indicators seemed successfully to summarize the state of monetary policy and its relationship to the economy. Thus, during the decades of the 1970s and 1980s, trends in money supply, first M1, then M2, were useful guides. We could convey the thrust of our policy with money supply targets, though we felt free to deviate from those targets for good reason. This presumably helped the Congress, after the fact, to monitor our contribution to the performance of the economy. I should add that during this period we maintained a fully detailed analysis of the economy, in part, to make sure that money supply was still emitting reliable signals about the state of the economy.

 

Unfortunately, money supply trends veered off path several years ago as a useful summary of the overall economy. Thus, to keep the Congress informed on what we are doing, we have been required to explain the full complexity of the substance of our deliberations, and how we see economic relationships and evolving trends.

 

There are some indications that the money demand relationships to interest rates and income may be coming back on track. It is too soon to tell, and in any event we can not in the future expect to rely a great deal on money supply in making monetary policy. Still, if money growth is better behaved, it would be helpful in the conduct of policy and in our communications with the Congress and the public. In the absence of simple, summary indicators, we will continue our detailed evaluation of economic developments. As we seek price stability and maximum sustainable growth, the changing economic structures constantly present more analytic challenges.

 

I doubt the tasks will become any easier for the Federal Reserve as we move into the twenty-first century. The Congress willing, we will remain as the guardian of the purchasing power of the dollar. But one factor that will continue to complicate that task is the increasing difficulty of pinning down the notion of what constitutes a stable general price level.

 

When industrial product was the centerpiece of the economy during the first two-thirds of this century, our overall price indexes served us well. Pricing a pound of electrolytic copper presented few definitional problems. The price of a ton of cold rolled steel sheet, or a linear yard of cotton broad woven fabrics, could be reasonably compared over a period of years.

 

But as the century draws to a close, the simple notion of price has turned decidedly ambiguous. What is the price of a unit of software or a legal opinion? How does one evaluate the price change of a cataract operation over a ten-year period when the nature of the procedure and its impact on the patient changes so radically. Indeed, how will we measure inflation, and the associated financial and real implications, in the twenty-first century when our data--using current techniques--could become increasingly less adequate to trace price trends over time?

 

So long as individuals make contractual arrangements for future payments valued in dollars, there must be a presumption on the part of those involved in the transaction about the future purchasing power of money. No matter how complex individual products become, there will always be some general sense of the purchasing power of money both across time and across goods and services. Hence, we must assume that embodied in all products is some unit of output and hence of price that is recognizable to producers and consumers and upon which they will base their decisions. Doubtless, we will develop new techniques of price measurement to unearth them as the years go on. It is crucial that we do, for inflation can destabilize an economy even if faulty price indexes fail to reveal it.

 

But where do we draw the line on what prices matter? Certainly prices of goods and services now being produced--our basic measure of inflation--matter. But what about futures prices or more importantly prices of claims on future goods and services, like equities, real estate, or other earning assets? Are stability of these prices essential to the stability of the economy?

 

Clearly, sustained low inflation implies less uncertainty about the future, and lower risk premiums imply higher prices of stocks and other earning assets. We can see that in the inverse relationship exhibited by price/earnings ratios and the rate of inflation in the past. But how do we know when irrational exuberance has unduly escalated asset values, which then become subject to unexpected and prolonged contractions as they have in Japan over the past decade? And how do we factor that assessment into monetary policy? We as central bankers need not be concerned if a collapsing financial asset bubble does not threaten to impair the real economy, its production, jobs, and price stability. Indeed, the sharp stock market break of 1987 had few negative consequences for the economy. But we should not underestimate or become complacent about the complexity of the interactions of asset markets and the economy. Thus, evaluating shifts in balance sheets generally, and in asset prices particularly, must be an integral part of the development of monetary policy.

The public examination of Federal Reserve actions extends well beyond our stewardship of monetary policy. Our overall management of the Federal Reserve System should, and does, come under considerable scrutiny by the Congress. Since we expend unappropriated taxpayer funds, we have an especial obligation to be prudent and efficient with the use of those funds. I am not particularly concerned about the one-third of our annual $2 billion budget that is expended to provide financial services to the private sector in competition with other providers. Such services include the clearing of checks, the operation of the Fedwire system, and the processing of automated clearing house payments. We are reimbursed for those services, and at competitive prices still make a reasonable profit for the Treasury. If we became inefficient and uncompetitive, we would be priced out of the market, and eventually out of that line of business.

 

An additional one-sixth of our expenses are for providing services to the Treasury and other agencies of government for which we are subject to reimbursement with appropriated funds. For the remainder, which mainly covers monetary policy, supervision and regulation of banks, and currency operations, we have to be especially diligent, for there is no external arbiter.

 

The rapidly changing technologies of recent years are pressing us to review thoroughly our structure and operations. We have already engaged in major consolidations of operations when such consolidations have been made cost effective by the newer technologies. Although in my experience the Federal Reserve System has been responsible, efficient, and has performed well, the rapidly changing external environment frequently requires us to rethink our role and mission. Even where we can be competitive, it is not the role of a government agency, especially one vested with an unsurpassable credit rating, to seek out all available market opportunities. Accordingly, where specific priced services have become effectively and competitively provided by private sector suppliers, the Federal Reserve needs to reassess whether the extent of our participation in those services fulfills a reasonable public purpose. There are, of course, certain services that the Congress has, and will in the future, deem appropriate for us to subsidize. But these areas presumably will remain circumscribed.

 

As a step in our periodic reassessment, a special committee of Federal Reserve Board governors and Reserve Bank presidents has been set up to review our priced services operations and other Systemwide activities.

 

Another step has been to engage outside accounting firms to audit the Federal Reserve Board and the twelve Reserve Banks. We had been quite satisfied with the Board as general auditor of the Reserve Banks since 1914. But the range of activities and the reach of the Federal Reserve in recent years requires us to address the perception that we are auditing ourselves without the full arm's length relationship deemed appropriate in today's environment.

 

Finally, the substantial changes under way in bank risk management are pressing us to continuously alter our modes of supervision and regulation to keep them as effective and efficient as possible.

 

Most importantly, all of our recent initiatives, especially the strengthening of the payments system and supervision, are critical to a central mission of the Federal Reserve, to maintain financial stability and reduce and contain systemic risks. This mission is an extension of our monetary policy. Our country can not enjoy the long-run "maximum employment and stable prices" objectives we are given for monetary policy if the financial system is unstable. In this regard, the successes that most please us are not so much the visible problems that we solve, but rather all the potential crises that could have happened, but didn't.

 

Doubtless, the most important defense against such crises is prevention. Recent mini-crises have identified the rapidly mushrooming payments system as the most vulnerable area of potential danger. We have no tolerance for error in our electronic payment systems. Like a breakdown in an electric power grid, small mishaps create large problems. Consequently, we have endeavored in recent years, as the demands on our system have escalated (we clear $1-1/2 trillion a day on Fedwire), to build in significant safety redundancies. This has been costly in terms of equipment and buildings.

 

Along with our other central bank colleagues, we are always looking for ways to reduce the risks that the failure of a single institution will ricochet around the world, shutting down much of the world payments system, and significantly undermining the world's economies. Accordingly, we are endeavoring to get as close to a real time transaction, clearing, and settlement system as possible. This would sharply reduce financial float and the risk of breakdown. Meaningful progress has already been made in this direction.

 

This evening I have tried to put current central banking issues in historical context. Monetary arrangements, including central banks, naturally are under constant scrutiny and criticism. This is no less true of the Federal Reserve in 1996 than of the gold standard in 1896. Central banks need to respond patiently and responsibly to the commentary, and we need to adapt to changing circumstances in markets and the economy.

 

A democratic society requires a stable and effectively functioning economy. I trust that we and our successors at the Federal Reserve will be important contributors to that end.

 

Sunday 5 July 2015

The Watusi

Genesis 6
King James Version (KJV)

6 And it came to pass, when men began to multiply on the face of the earth, and daughters were born unto them,

2 That the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which they chose.

3 And the Lord said, My spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he also is flesh: yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years.

4 There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown.


VI-XI. The Fall of the Angels: the Demoralisation of Mankind: the Intercession of the Angels on behalf of Mankind. The Dooms pronounced by God on the Angels: the Messianic Kingdom (a Noah fragment).

CHAPTER VI.

1. And it came to pass when the children of men had multiplied that in those days were born unto them beautiful and comely daughters.

2. And the angels, the children of the heaven, saw and lusted after them, and said to one another: 'Come, let us choose us wives from among the children of men and beget us children.'

3. And Semjâzâ, who was their leader, said unto them: 'I fear ye will not indeed agree to do this deed, and I alone shall have to pay the penalty of a great sin.'

4. And they all answered him and said: 'Let us all swear an oath, and all bind ourselves by mutual imprecations not to abandon this plan but to do this thing.'

5. Then sware they all together and bound themselves by mutual imprecations upon it.

6. And they were in all two hundred; who descended ⌈in the days⌉ of Jared on the summit of Mount Hermon, and they called it Mount Hermon, because they had sworn and bound themselves by mutual imprecations upon it.

7. And these are the names of their leaders: Sêmîazâz, their leader, Arâkîba, Râmêêl, Kôkabîêl, Tâmîêl, Râmîêl, Dânêl, Êzêqêêl, Barâqîjâl, Asâêl, Armârôs, Batârêl, Anânêl, Zaqîêl, Samsâpêêl, Satarêl, Tûrêl, Jômjâêl, Sariêl.

8. These are their chiefs of tens.




"[...]generations of gene flow obliterated whatever clear-cut physical distinctions may have once existed between these two Bantu peoples – renowned to be height, body build, and facial features. With a spectrum of physical variation in the peoples, Belgian authorities legally mandated ethnic affiliation in the 1920s, based on economic criteria. Formal and discrete social divisions were consequently imposed upon ambiguous biological distinctions. To some extent, the permeability of these categories in the intervening decades helped to reify the biological distinctions, generating a taller elite and a shorter underclass, but with little relation to the gene pools that had existed a few centuries ago. The social categories are thus real, but there is little if any detectable genetic differentiation between Hutu and Tutsi."

"The Tutsi were in all likelihood once a Nilotic speaking population, who switched to the language of the Bantus amongst whom they settled."


Dr. Tschudi offers, "...physiologists are undoubtedly in error, who suppose (dolichocephaly in) the Peruvian race is exclusively artificial. This hypothesis rests on insufficient grounds; its authors could have made their observations solely on the crania of adult(s) ... (however) two mummies of children (analyzed in England) ... belonged to the tribe Aymaraes. The two crania (both of children scarce a year old), had in all respects, the same form as those of adults. We ourselves have observed the same fact in many mummies of children of tender age..."
"More still: the same formation of the head presents itself in children yet unborn; and of this truth we have had convincing proof in sight of a foetus enclosed in the womb of a mummy of a pregnant woman, ... which is, at this moment, in our collection." The foetus was aged 7 months! (6)


Lloyd Pye - Everything You Know Is Wrong from Spike EP on Vimeo.
And it came to pass, when men began to multiply on the face of the earth, and daughters were born unto them,

That the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which they chose.

And the Lord said, My spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he also is flesh: yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years.

There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown.

VI-XI. The Fall of the Angels: the Demoralisation of Mankind: the Intercession of the Angels on behalf of Mankind. The Dooms pronounced by God on the Angels: the Messianic Kingdom (a Noah fragment).

CHAPTER VI.

1. And it came to pass when the children of men had multiplied that in those days were born unto them beautiful and comely daughters.

2. And the angels, the children of the heaven, saw and lusted after them, and said to one another: 'Come, let us choose us wives from among the children of men and beget us children.'

3. And Semjâzâ, who was their leader, said unto them: 'I fear ye will not indeed agree to do this deed, and I alone shall have to pay the penalty of a great sin.'

4. And they all answered him and said: 'Let us all swear an oath, and all bind ourselves by mutual imprecations not to abandon this plan but to do this thing.'

5. Then sware they all together and bound themselves by mutual imprecations upon it.

6. And they were in all two hundred; who descended ⌈in the days⌉ of Jared on the summit of Mount Hermon, and they called it Mount Hermon, because they had sworn and bound themselves by mutual imprecations upon it.

7. And these are the names of their leaders: Sêmîazâz, their leader, Arâkîba, Râmêêl, Kôkabîêl, Tâmîêl, Râmîêl, Dânêl, Êzêqêêl, Barâqîjâl, Asâêl, Armârôs, Batârêl, Anânêl, Zaqîêl, Samsâpêêl, Satarêl, Tûrêl, Jômjâêl, Sariêl.

8. These are their chiefs of tens.

Saturday 4 July 2015

Rupert Murdoch, Rhodes-Rothschild and De Beers


"After cashing out of the diamond business, Nicky Oppenheimer has moved into investing. The Oppenheimer family ended its 85-year reign atop diamond giant De Beers in 2012 when Nicky sold his 40% stake to mining conglomerate Anglo American for $5.1 billion in cash. Anglo American, which Nicky's grandfather founded, now controls 85% of De Beers; the government of Botswana owns the remaining 15%. Nicky Oppenheimer served on Anglo American's board for 37 years through 2011, and he retains an estimated 1.8% stake in the company. His E. Oppenheimer & Son entity controls investment arms Stockdale Street Capital and Tana Africa Capital, a joint venture with Singapore government-owned investment firm Temasek. Tana holds minority interests in African food manufacturers Promasidor and Regina Co."



"Is there a connection between Rupert Murdoch and the House of Rothschild...?

Interestingly enough, in the history of South Africa, there was a White man of the Jewish religion by the name of Barney Bonarto...." 


"...who, when the rich Whites decided that he wasn't operating in a certain sort of 'professional' way, all of a sudden, his boat to England, he went overboard.

Rupert Murdoch, the way that he got his start in America was that another White Man of the Jewish religion, Robert Maxwell - who was deep in debt & mystery - went overboard, on his way to.... Somewhere. And Murdoch gathered up his assets.


Murdoch has unlimited finance - he bought the [LA] Dodgers, didn't he? 

He bought Football off of NBC, or whatever.

Murdoch has more money than he has assets - Murdoch's unlimited financing comes from his relationship with De Beers Diamond Mines of Australia, his predominant financier.

That's the connection.

- Bro. Steve Cokely





http://murderiseverywhere.blogspot.co.uk/2010/04/barney-barnato.html

South Africa has had its share of colorful characters, many of whom have been associated with the mining industry. Usually the person whose name first comes to mind is Cecil Rhodes, one of the founders of diamond giant De Beers. I plan to write about him later in the year because he was one of the most influential people in Southern Africa.

Today I want to say a few words about the other man who founded De Beers – Barney Barnato. One of the unusual things about him is that he still enjoys a good reputation even though he has been dead for over a hundred years. This is in contrast to Rhodes, whose reputation is mixed at best.

Barnato was born in London with the name Barnet Isaacs in one of three years. He claimed he had the same birthday as Rhodes – 5 July 1853. Most biographies put the date a year earlier, but Wikipedia claims that his birth certificate says 21 February 1851. His family was poor – his father a seller of second-hand clothing, and he left school – the Jews’ Free School – very young to help support the family.

He and his brother Harry became entertainers, Harry doing magic tricks and Barnet acrobatics. It was as a result of their shows that Barnet became known as Barney Barnato. Records relate that Harry always took the bow at the end of their act. Eventually the theatre manager shouted, “and Barney too”. The brothers liked the sound of that and became Harry and Barney Barnato – the Italian entertainers.

Their father also taught them how to box, and Barney fancied himself as a good boxer and fought a number of times, probably for money. But he was very short – I’ve found one reference that puts him at 5’ 3” (about 1,6 metres) - and did not do very well.

When diamonds were discovered in South Africa in 1866, Harry and his cousin David Harris went off to make their fortunes. Neither were successful as amateur diamond traders. But David won a large bet in a gambling establishment and returned to England with a reasonable amount of money – enough to tempt Barney to go to Kimberley too. When he arrived, having walked for a month from Cape Town, he had very little money. But he had a very outgoing personality and was a superb salesman. And he was hard working. He and Harry started putting on theatrical shows again to make a little money, while Barney got to know the diamond business and, more importantly, the diamond people.

He joined forces with a Louis Cohen, starting a small company. They wold tour the diggings in and around the Big Hole, buying and selling stones. Barney always sealed a deal with both parties taking a swig from a brandy bottle he carried around. About this time, the flow of diamonds from the yellow sand started to dry up. But Barney had listened to a geologist, Dr. Atherstone, who told him how diamonds were formed and pushed to the surface in pipes. Barney basically bet all the company’s money on buying up some claims and started to dig the blue soil (Kimberlite) below the yellow. At first few diamonds were found, then they flowed freely. 

By the end of the year they had sold £100 000 worth – a fortune at the time.

Of course, success brought notoriety – and people accused Barney of dealing in stolen stones. He always denied this, and no charges were ever laid.

This success brought him into conflict with Rhodes, who wanted the money from diamonds to finance his sweeping political ambitions in Southern Africa. After a battle lasting several months, in which the shares of Barney’s company soared as a result of take-over attempts, Rhodes outmaneuvered Barney, forcing him to sell his share of the company in return for positions in De Beers – the company that resulted from the various mergers. Barney took home a cool £4,000 000. Some historians believe that Rhodes eventually clinched the deal by offering Barney membership in the prestigious Kimberley Club, something that Barney had wanted as proof of his acceptance in the community. 

He also became a member of the Cape parliament.

A while later Barney was tempted by the gold that had been found in the Johannesburg area in 1886, and started the Johannesburg Consolidated Investment company (JCI), which also became very successful and profitable.

The gold rush caused great tensions between the miners, called uitlanders or foreigners, and the Boers in whose country the mines had been found. Soon the uitlanders outnumbered the locals, and President Kruger and his parliament changed the voting laws to make it difficult for the foreigners to get the vote. Obviously they were scared of being ousted. Rhodes saw this as an opportunity and encouraged a raid into the Transvaal by a small force led by a Dr. Jameson. It was a total fiasco, and some of the some of the supporters of the raid in Johannesburg were tried for treason and sentenced to death. 

Barney threatened President Kruger that he would pull all his businesses out of Johannesburg unless these death sentences were commuted. Eventually Kruger capitulated and the men were spared. At the time JCI employed 20,000 Whites and 100,000 Blacks on the mines.

In 1897 Barney and his family sailed for England. Somewhere near Madeira he was lost overboard and drowned. Officially he committed suicide, but there is circumstantial evidence that he may have been murdered. Travelling with him was a Solly Joel who was walking with him at the time of his fall overboard. He was related in some way to Barney. Nine months later Barney’s nephew Woolf Joel was murdered and Joel inherited the bulk of Barney’s estate.

Throughout his life, Barney never forgot his roots and provided funds for various Jewish institutions in London, including his old school. Today there is a school and a suburb named after him in Johannesburg – Barnato Park.

The mystery surrounding Barney’s death remains just that. At least old Barney was true to the theatrical maxim by which he lived: 

"Always wind up with a good curtain, and bring it down before the public gets tired - or has had time to find you out."

Barney Barnato is buried in the Jewish Cemetery in Willesden, London.

Stan – Thursday

PS. Am going to listen to Car tonight at Once Upon a Crime in Minneapolis.

http://murderiseverywhere.blogspot.co.uk/2010/04/barney-barnato.html




"Rupert Murdoch, the global media mogul who is now a kingmaker in American politics, was brought into those power circles by the infamous lawyer/activist Roy Cohn who arranged Murdoch’s first Oval Office meeting with President Ronald Reagan in 1983, according to documents released by Reagan’s presidential library.



“I had one interest when Tom [Bolan] and I first brought Rupert Murdoch and Governor Reagan together – and that was that at least one major publisher in this country … would become and remain pro-Reagan,” Cohn wrote in a Jan. 27, 1983 letter to senior White House aides Edwin Meese, James Baker and Michael Deaver. “Mr. Murdoch has performed to the limit up through and including today.

The letter noted that Murdoch then owned the “New York Post – over one million, third largest and largest afternoon; New York Magazine; Village Voice; San Antonio Express; Houston Ring papers; and now the Boston Herald; and internationally influential London Times, etc. Cohn sent the letter nine days after Murdoch met Reagan in the Oval Office along with Cohn, his legal partner Thomas Bolan, and U.S. Information Agency Director Charles Wick.
In a photograph of the Jan. 18, 1983 meeting, Cohn is shown standing and leaning toward Reagan who is seated next to Murdoch. Following that meeting, Murdoch became involved in a privately funded propaganda project to help sell Reagan’s hard-line Central American policies, according to other documents. That PR operation was overseen by senior CIA propaganda specialist Walter Raymond Jr. and CIA Director William Casey, but the details of Murdoch’s role remain sketchy partly because some of the records are still classified more than three decades later.


Team Murdoch or team Freud? Who backs whom in the divorce of the decade



Friends in high places: from top left, Emily Oppenheimer, Claudia Winkleman, David and Samantha Cameron, Tony and Cherie Blair, Andre Balazs and Jeremy Clarkson flank Matthew Freud and Elisabeth Murdoch (Picture: Rex/Richard Young/David Fisher/xposurephotos.com/David M. Benett/Getty)
It’s the £250 million divorce that is set to divide not just the assets of one of Britain’s most high-profile media couples but will also split London’s elite social circles, and disrupt a political power nexus.
Elisabeth Murdoch and Matthew Freud are due to be granted a decree nisi this week, ending their 13-year marriage.
The couple, who have two children together, met in 1997 when both were married to other people — Murdoch, now 46, was pregnant with her second child by Ghanaian financier Elkin Kwesi Pianim. PR guru Freud, now 50, had two sons with Caroline “Pidge” Hutton.
They split in 2000, shortly after Murdoch gave birth to their daughter Charlotte, but were reunited in 2001 and married later that year at Blenheim Palace in a ceremony attended by the great and the good. Since then, they have become one of the most powerful media couples in Britain — their break-up will disrupt a party power nexus that has taken root over the past 13 years. Their sphere of influence straddles the high-octane Primrose Hill gang, the well-connected Chipping Norton set, political friends from both sides of the spectrum (Tony Blair and David Cameron are regulars at the couple’s soirées and weekends) and everyone else from TV titans Jeremy Clarkson and Claudia Winkleman to former London Mayor Ken Livingstone.
There is speculation that the split was over a massive falling-out between Freud and his father-in-law Rupert Murdoch over the friendship between Rupert’s now ex-wife Wendi Deng and Tony Blair. Freud has stuck with the ex-PM — Rupert was absent from Freud’s 50th birthday party last year (Tony and Cherie were among the guests). The row is said to have caused huge tension between Murdoch and Freud. Last week Murdoch announced she was stepping down from Shine, the TV production company she founded and sold to her father’s company. Now she is also stepping away from her marriage. So who else will be affected by the Freud-Murdoch divorce?
The BLAIRS
The Blairs have been a regular guests. Tony apparently likes “dossing about in jeans” at Burford Priory but also loves the celebrity crowd that congregates there and at the London parties. His friendship with Freud goes back more than two decades. Freud provided Blair with offices in Mayfair after he stepped down as PM and has continued to advise him in the years since.
Likely to side with: Freud
THE CAMERONS
The couple’s country home in the village of Dean is just a borrowed horse ride away from Burford Priory and the phone-hacking scandal exposed just how close the PM and his wife were to the Freud-Murdochs.
Sam Cam is said to get on well with Murdoch but is said to be cooler to Freud. Cameron attended Murdoch’s 40th birthday at Burford as well as Freud’s 50th bash last year and as leader of the opposition in 2008 used Freud’s private jet to fly to a private meeting with Rupert on a yacht in Greece.  The PM may now not want to be too closely associated with Rupert but he considers Elisabeth to be the next generation. Murdoch senior isn’t so keen — he recently tweeted that he “hopes” his daughter isn’t friends with the PM.
Likely to side with: Murdoch
NICK JONES AND KIRSTY YOUNG
In summer 2011, the Freud-Murdochs threw one of their famous bashes. Notable guests included Nick Jones and his wife, Desert Island Discs presenter Kirsty Young: Jones — the entrepreneur behind the Soho House group — is a long-term client of Freud’s and a former neighbour from those heady Notting Hill years, and had provided two extravagant marquees containing miniature versions of his restaurants Pizza East and Cecconi’s to fire the hungry guests (like most Freud-Murdoch bashes, the soiree apparently continued till 4am).
Likely to side with: Freud
CLAUDIA WINKLEMAN
The Strictly Come Dancing host met the couple through her husband. Mr Claudia Winkleman, Kris Thykier, used to be Freud’s right hand man and they are still pals, despite him leaving to pursue a career in film production. The WAGs hit it off and Winkleman is a regular at Murdoch’s dinner parties and always brings a treat, whether it’s homemade sponge cake studded with Smarties or a bag of sausages and wine from the corner shop. An awkward split in the Winkleman/Thykier house.
Likely to side with: Murdoch
ANDRE BALAZS
Mr Chiltern Firehouse started out on Team Murdoch — Rupert and Wendi Deng stayed at his New York hotel The Mercer for months while their Soho apartment was being refitted. But when Balazs opened Chiltern Firehouse in London, his mate Matthew was the natural choice to do the PR. The two were seen laughing together at the GQ Men of the Year Award at the Royal Opera House last month. Balazs lived in the Chiltern Firehouse hotel for the best part of a year, and it looks like Freud will be welcome any time.
Likely to side with: Freud
EMILY OPPENHEIMER
The De Beers diamond heiress, painter and socialite is a close friend of Murdoch (the pair are horse-mad) and now also shares another common bond with her — Oppenheimer’s 13-year marriage to film producer Will Turner ended in divorce last year.
Oppenheimer, 45, is part of the Chipping Norton set  — Rebekah and Charlie Brooks have holidayed with her at her St Tropez villa and Murdoch often likes to moor her yacht nearby during the summer.
Likely to side with: Murdoch
GEORGE OSBORNE
It was the heady summer of 2008: the Freud-Murdochs were holidaying on their yacht, which was moored off the coast of Corfu; George Osborne was staying nearby at the home of banking heir Jacob Rothschild. Cue the now-infamous “meeting” with Oleg Deripaska to discuss donating to the Tory party — placing the Freud-Murdochs within tantalising proximity to political scandal.
Osborne also attended Freud’s mega 50th birthday bash — he was apparently mocked mercilessly by the Tory illuminati for behaving like a star-struck teen and recording a duet by Bono and Bob Geldof.
Likely to side with: Freud
JEMIMA KHAN
With her home the Oxfordshire village of Woodstock, Khan is part of the Chipping Norton set and also a close friend of Freud. Following the phone hacking scandal she is said to be more wary of Murdoch. Khan and then-boyfriend Russell Brand were guests at the now-notorious post-GQ Awards party held at the Freud-Murdochs’ London home last year. Neighbours complained about the raucous bash, at which Khan and Brand were apparently told to “get a room”.
Other Primrose Hill set members including Kate Moss and Stella McCartney are tipped to side with Murdoch but Khan is said to remain loyal to Freud.
Likely to side with: Freud
JEREMY CLARKSON
Another Chipping Norton neighbour, the Top Gear presenter is one of Matthew’s “bloke mates”  — loathed by Murdoch but tolerated because as a television executive she recognises his cachet as a celebrity.
Fellow Chipping Nortonites include Blur’s Alex James, who is said to get on especially well with Murdoch, and of course Rebekah Brooks, whose close relationship with Rupert is not exactly replicated with this daughter.
Likely to side with: Freud

The Fate of a Nation - by David Friedman (1995)




The Fate of a Nation : On the eve of the 21st Century, three economies--the Wired, the Kluge and the Provincial--are struggling for dominance in America. Only one of them promises high wages and continued growth, but it does not have a political voice.

August 20, 1995|David Friedman | David Friedman, an urban economist, was director of the New Economy Project and is president of an international business consulting firm

More than class or race, three divisions increasingly define America:

The Wired economy . The densely packed concentration of entrepreneurs and companies in America's urbanized states that generate virtually all the nation's globally competitive, high-wage industries, such as multimedia, design, software, entertainment, computers, biomedical, engineering, finance and business services.

The Kluge economy . Slang for Rube Goldberg-like computer code that barely, if ever, achieves its purpose, Kluge describes the economy of major media, public-sector bureaucracies and universities that dominates urban politics.

The core urban states, where the Kluge and the Wired economies are centered, generate about 45% of total U.S. nonfarm employment, or about 50 million jobs. Of those jobs, about 15%-18%, on average, are directly accounted for by government and closely allied employment (including education)--the core Kluge constituency.

The Provincial economy . The rapidly growing Southern and Intermountain Western regions of the country that now dominate national politics. This economy now accounts for about 35% of total U.S. nonfarm employment, or 40 million jobs.

It is the struggle among these economies, not tired conservative and liberal rhetoric, that will determine the nation's future.

The Wired economy grew up because cutting-edge industries demand a large concentration of specialized, creative firms and individuals that can rapidly team to design and produce products for world markets. Only urban regions offer the critical mix of bottomless talent and proximity that supercharges high-wage, high-skill sectors. It is no accident that the world's most technologically sophisticated economies are found in metropolises like Tokyo, Seoul, Taipei and Los Angeles.

Unlike its Asian neighbors, however, America's Wired economy is constantly under attack by the Kluge economy. Composed of the last surviving caste systems in the United States--government, education institutions, major media--the Kluge economy was once instrumental in fostering metropolitan development. Over time, however, it stagnated; today, its long decline feeds one of the most self-defeating politics in American history.

Public-employee unions, for example, seem to think nothing of endangering their constituents' future by threatening an ever-expanding parade of plagues, from race riots to Dark Age epidemics, if jobs are cut from the public rolls or options for more efficient government are pursued. Universities, once an urban magnet, now frequently repel creative firms and entrepreneurs with their contempt for the private economy. The media too eagerly seize on such perspectives, because they think that declining readership or viewership can only be reversed by sensationalizing every negative aspect of the communities where their customers live.

It is the collision between the Wired and Kluge economies that generates the chronic urban pathologies all too apparent in modern America.

Turned off by Kluge rhetoric, the Wired economy migrates from central cities to less dysfunctional areas, like New York-adjacent New Jersey, Sonoma County, north of San Francisco, or Burbank and Santa Monica. Rather than play to its strength and foster Wired industries, the Kluge economy tries to compensate by increasing the volume of its negativity to induce government bailouts. This, in turn, further alienates the Wired economy, reduces the local tax base and produces yet another round of Kluge apocalyptic rhetoric.

Gleefully exploiting the self-destructiveness of urban regions is the vast Provincial economy, which self-consciously styles itself as a more moral, less "Klugy" alternative for Wired businesses and entrepreneurs. At first glance, its conceit seems justified: Over the last few years, the nation's fastest nonfarm-employment growth almost exclusively occurred in the South and Intermountain West. At the bottom of the heap, with growth rates far below the national average, are the most urbanized states--New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois and California among them.

But although the Provincial economy sells itself as the new center of its Wired counterpart, a closer look shows that it's largely unplugged. Utah, for example, the fastest-growing Provincial state, has been relentlessly hyped as the new software capital of the nation. The recently released U.S. economic census, however, shows that the state is home to just 78 prepackaged software companies. New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco each have more than 1,000.

Provincial economic development is driven by the redeployment of less competitive businesses and retirees to low-cost areas, not by building globally competitive industries. Its high-growth core is an honor roll of low-skill, low-wage states: Nevada, Louisiana, Georgia, Arizona and Oregon. Self-congratulatory and smug, the Provincial economy actually offers America a 19th-Century answer for 21st-Century competition.

The interplay of the three economies creates crucial, but still unrecognized challenges for America. The nation's high-skill, high-wage industrial growth is throttled by the dominance of Kluge politics in urban centers. The Provincial industries that America fosters outside of its stalemated urban regions offer the nation a one-way ticket to a second-class society. And the American pattern of slow Wired-economic growth, coupled with rapid Provincial expansion, generates fewer and fewer surplus resources that can be used to cope with the country's underclass, a problem even the most remote Provincial states cannot hope to evade.

Yet, the peculiar feature of American politics is that there is no voice for the Wired economy. Democrats are the standard-bearer for the Kluges. Trapped by their bureaucratic, public-sector base, they can offer only the most leaden, 1930s-era metaphors--the "information superhighway" or the "National Information Infrastructure," for example--when they discuss Wired issues.

The Provincial economy is solidly Republican. Superficially, it promises the Wired economy a high-tech but family-value world, combining the security of small-town America with Internet links to maintain urban contacts. Wired businesses know, however, that not only are faxes and e-mail poor substitutes for the constant interpersonal transactions that drive their sectors, they are also competing against other countries, like Japan, where companies enjoy both global network access and dense physical proximity. To lead the pack, a firm has to be wired where the action is, not surfing the web from an Idaho bunker.

Many of the people creating the nation's high-wage urban industries are so alienated from mainstream parties, in fact, that they have become anti-politics, living in the quixotic hope that government will simply ignore them if they ignore it. Indeed, scores of interviews with Wired-business owners and their top employees reveal a common message of indifference, if not contempt, for conventional politics.

"Government doesn't understand us," many say, "and it is largely irrelevant to what we do." When government or universities announce yet another bureaucratic "high-tech" program, it is often dismissed out of hand by Wired businesses, which discount the possibility that out-of-touch academics, using outmoded equipment in projects managed by slow-motion public bureaucracies, could possibly generate anything of value for them.

Living in the shadow of urban Kluge politics, much of the Wired economy has simply shifted to stealth mode, or has even gone underground. Given current choices, as mayoral elections in Los Angeles and New York dramatically illustrate, the Wired economy will increasingly vote--in a desultory fashion, to be sure--for the candidates who will least harm it, generally the Republicans. Stuck between the archaic nostrums offered by both the Kluges and the Provincials, the Wired economy treat politics as an unpleasant nuisance.

A far more positive result, and one with tremendous potential payoffs for the politicians who can embrace it, is to directly address the concerns of the Wired economy. To do this, the mainstream parties will have to reshape their philosophies, or a third alternative may be necessary. A central goal of Wired politics, for example, is to unshackle the cities from the remarkably disproportionate tax and regulatory burdens years of Kluge and Provincial political rule have imposed. This would return funds from federal and state governments to the regional firms that actually invest in local businesses and create jobs--at the cost, to be sure, of tax "grants" to Kluge constituencies.

Meanwhile, the Provincial economy will have to accept that income-based tax and government spending, plus America's regulatory structure, greatly tilt the economic playing field in favor of low-wage, elderly populations living in more rural states. These burdens must be equalized, in real terms, so that tax and regulatory arbitrage alone does not artificially pump resources from the Wired economy into the much less dynamic, marginally productive Provincial states.

Finally, a Wired political agenda would unite urban regions that, against all logic, persist in attacking each other, rather than dealing with their real competitors in the Provincial economy. New York and Los Angeles share an overriding common agenda in responding to the cultural, political and economic challenges mounted by Georgia, Utah and other Provincial states, an agenda they, and other major metropolises, have yet to pursue.

As the United States girds for its next national elections, much of the nation's future prosperity and social stability will depend on rediscovering its forgotten, but critical, Wired constituency. Given the alternatives, it is increasingly clear that America can ill-afford to treat its most productive, competitive economy as an afterthought rather than as the central focus of national politics.*