luni, 28 aprilie 2014

Seth's Blog : Taking your time doesn't scale

 

Taking your time doesn't scale

When you send a hand-written letter to your best friend on the occasion of her wedding, you don't rush the note.

When a long-term patient needs to hear your plan on how she will beat the cancer you just found, you don't rush the meeting.

When your best customer just discovered that his critical shipment is totally messed up, you don't rush the phone call.

The problem is this: we've scaled the number of contacts, of patients, of Christmas card recipients, of Twitter followers, of email correspondents, of investors, of backers, of Kickstarter supporters, of readers, of correspondents, of co-workers, of... we've scaled it all.

And the one thing we can't do is scale our ability to take time.

So, this year, when you sent out 500 cards, of course you didn't take the time to handwrite each one with a personal note. How could you? And recently, when you sent a blast to 500 donors announcing a matching grant, you didn't personalize each note and leave out the people you told personally, because, hey, it's a huge list... how could you?

Treat different people differently. You decided to get bigger, but you won't be able to treat everyone the way you used to. That was your decision, and it's one of the costs of bigger.

Treating different people differently is the only way you've got to be able to take your time with the few, because, alas, you can no longer take your time with everyone. And if you can't live with that, get smaller!

       

 

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duminică, 27 aprilie 2014

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Progressives Plan Huge Illinois Tax Hikes; Union Member on the "Fair Tax" Proposal

Posted: 27 Apr 2014 09:00 PM PDT

Via email, Ben VanMetre at the Illinois Policy Institute mentions huge tax hikes that Progressives are angling for. The tax hikes are so steep and so universal that even thinking union members are against the hikes.

From VanMetre
State Sen. Don Harmon and advocates for his progressive tax proposal argue that the progressive income tax will provide tax relief for Illinois' middle class.

Not only is the argument not true, but the progressive income tax was never about tax relief. The proof of that is in the numbers.

Under Illinois law, the individual income tax rate will be 3.75% in 2015. Under the progressive tax-hike plan introduced by Sen. Harmon — and endorsed by A Better Illinois — a higher 4.9% applies to income earned after $12,500.

Under Harmon's proposal, anyone with a taxable income of more than $22,000 will see their overall state tax bill increase. That plan targets Illinois' working- and middle-class residents.

So why didn't Harmon use the sunset rate (3.75%) for $12,500 in his rate structure?
The answer: because part of the progressive tax hike scheme is about making as much of the temporary tax hike permanent as possible while still calling it "tax relief."
And that's true for all of the popular progressive tax plans instructed in Illinois recently:

• State Rep. Naomi Jakobsson's plan makes permanent the 5% rate on income earned above $36,000.
• The Center for Tax and Budget Accountability's plan makes permanent the 5% rate on income earned above $5,000.
• Sen. Harmon's plan makes permanent nearly all of the 5% rate on income earned above $12,500.

It's time for taxpayers in Illinois to know the truth about the progressive income tax. It's not about tax relief — it's about making the temporary tax hike permanent and further increasing taxes on the middle class.

Ben VanMetre
Senior Budget and Tax Policy Analyst
"Unfair" Tax details



Everyone who makes more than $12,500 will see huge tax increases. Supposedly this is "fair".

Illinois Union Member on "Fair Tax" Proposal



Live in Illinois and want to fight the proposed tax hike?

If so visit unfairillinois.com today and complete three simple steps to stop Springfield's middle-class money grab.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

US Plans Sanctions on Putin's Inner Circle, Russia's Third Largest Lender, and Gazprom

Posted: 27 Apr 2014 10:25 AM PDT

Today the US announced more sanctions on individuals, businesses, banks and Gazprom. The one person not targeted is Putin, the alleged perpetrator of the crisis.

Bloomberg reports U.S. Plans to Hit Putin Inner Circle With Sanctions.
Deputy White House National Security Adviser Tony Blinken pledged "news for Monday" on sanctions as the focus on the ground in Ukraine turned to a team of international observers seized by pro-Russian separatists. Among those that may be hit are Russia's third-largest lender, OAO Gazprombank, development lender Vnesheconombank, and Igor Sechin, the chief executive officer of OAO Rosneft (ROSN), according to people familiar with developments. Sechin is a confidant of the Russian president.

"We will be looking to designate people who are in his inner circle, who have a significant impact on the Russian economy," Blinken said on CBS's "Face the Nation" program today. "We'll be looking to designate companies that they and other inner-circle people control. We'll be looking at taking steps as well with regard to high-technology exports to their defense industry. All of this together is going to have an impact."

Representatives of the 28 European Union nations will also meet tomorrow to widen a list of people subject to asset freezes and travel bans, an official from the bloc said yesterday. The sanctions will target 15 Russians in positions of power, another diplomat said. Both asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter.

"What we will hear about in the coming days is an expansion of existing sanctions, measures against individuals or entities in Russia," U.K. Foreign Secretary William Hague told Sky News television today. "Already we have seen more than $60 billion of capital flight out of Russia so far this year, and serious falls in the Russian stock market. So no one should underestimate the impact on Russia and Russia's own interests of continued escalation of this crisis."

In the wake of those capital outflows and a credit-rating downgrade by Standard & Poor's, Russia's central bank unexpectedly raised its key interest rate to 7.5 percent on April 25. The ruble has lost almost 9 percent this year against the dollar, the second-worst performance among 24 emerging currencies tracked by Bloomberg after Argentina's peso.

Sechin may be among those facing travel bans and asset freezes tomorrow, according to a U.S. official familiar with the situation. Executives at Gazprombank are preparing for possible sanctions, two people with knowledge of the deliberations said last week, while Vnesheconombank is taking precautionary measures, according to a person familiar with talks at the lender.

U.S. Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee, the top Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee, called on President Barack Obama's administration to impose sanctions on four of Russia's largest banks and OAO Gazprom (OGZD), the country's gas-export monopoly.

"It's going to be more effective if everybody signs on and everybody's committed," Obama told a news conference today in Putrajaya, Malaysia. "We're going to be in a stronger position to deter Mr. Putin when he sees that the world is unified and the United States and Europe is unified, rather than this is just a U.S.-Russia conflict."

The planned EU moves are not set to include broader trade, financial and economic measures against Russia, known as "stage three" sanctions. Hague said work on those is continuing.
It's not clear why striking back at friends and associates of someone who allegedly committed a crime should be legal, but legalities do not stop this president, nor have they stopped any president.

That aside, if Gazprom is shut off from the world, then what's the point of Russia delivering any gas to Europe?

Things can get out of hand in a hurry if the US keeps turning the screws. Desperate people do desperate things. Of course, that is exactly what some warmongers want.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

Seth's Blog : The most difficult work many professionals do...

 

The most difficult work many professionals do...

is getting someone else to agree with their point of view and take action.

The second most difficult work professionals do is developing a point of view in the first place.

       

 

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sâmbătă, 26 aprilie 2014

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Number of New Mortgage Loans in Spain Down 33% From Year Ago

Posted: 26 Apr 2014 02:38 PM PDT

Those who think the Spanish economy is poised to turn around need only take one look at mortgage loans to see reality.

Via translation from La Vanguardia please consider New Mortgages Drop 33% in February, 46 Consecutive Months of Declines

New mortgages for home purchases fell in February by 33% over the same month in 2013. This marks 46 months of declines according to data released today by the National Statistics Institute (INE).

The average amount of these loans reached 102,443 euros, 0.8% less than in January and only up 1.1% from a year earlier.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

Ukraine PM Accuses Russia of Wanting WWIII; Kiev Forces Block Rebel Town; Russia Issues Downbeat Economic Statement

Posted: 26 Apr 2014 08:56 AM PDT

Ukraine and Russia remain in the spotlight this weekend. Here are the top stories.

  1. Russia hiked interest rates 50 basis points on Friday accompanied with a warning about inflation and a sluggish economy.
  2. Russian Markets Have Worst Week Since Crimea.
  3. Ukraine's acting prime minister accused Russia of wanting to start WWII.
  4. Ukraine forces barricade the rebel stronghold of Slavyansk

Russia Issues Downbeat Economic Statement

The World Politics Journal notes Russia's central bank issues a downbeat statement on the Russian economy.
On Friday, April 25th, Russia's central bank raised its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points to 7.5 per cent, giving higher inflation risks as a reason behind its decision.

'The probability of inflation exceeding the 5% target at the end of 2014 has increased substantially', the Russian central bank said in a statement.

Annual inflation stood at 7.2 per cent as of Monday, April 21st. However, the central bank estimates that inflation would not exceed 6 per cent by the end of 2014.

The Russian economy expanded 1.3 per cent in 2013, the slowest pace of growth since a 2009 recession. For comparison, the economy grew by 3.4% in 2012. The Bank of Russia said in a downbeat statement on the economy: 'Labour productivity growth is sluggish, while fixed capital investment continues to contract because of declining profits in the real sector, limited access to long-term financing in both international and domestic markets, as well as low producer and consumer confidence.

The Russian central bank predicts that the country 'will continue to witness a downward trend in economic growth' in 2014, adding 'Amid economic uncertainty and declining producer confidence there is a strong probability of a reduction in fixed capital investment. Combination of slower growth in real wages and a decline in household lending growth rates will have a dampening effect on consumer activity'.

Russian Markets Have Worst Week Since Crimea as S&P Cuts Rating

Bloomberg reports Russian Markets Have Worst Week Since Crimea as S&P Cuts Rating.
Russian bonds and stocks suffered their worst weekly rout since mid-March as the truce forged to ease tension in eastern Ukraine unraveled, fueling concern that President Vladimir Putin faces stiffer international sanctions.

Benchmark ruble bond yields climbed to the highest since March 14, prompting the Finance Ministry to abort plans to return to the local debt market on April 23, two days before Standard & Poor's cut Russia's credit rating to one level above junk. The central bank's surprise half-point interest-rate increase yesterday failed to stem the ruble's weekly retreat, the biggest among 24 emerging markets after South Africa's rand.

"The past few days have been particularly painful for Russian fixed income," Benoit Anne, the London-based head of emerging-market strategy at Societe Generale SA, said by e-mail yesterday. The failed debt auction "badly damaged investor confidence. In addition, the geo-political situation continues to deteriorate with a war of words and a tougher rhetoric employed between various parties," he said.

The Micex Index (INDEXCF) dropped 5.6 percent for the week, the most since the period ended March 14, the last trading day before the Crimean referendum that paved the way for Putin to annex the Black Sea peninsula. The yield on government bonds due February 2027 jumped 29 basis points yesterday to 9.65 percent, extending the weekly increase to 65 basis points, following the central bank's move to raise its key rate to 7.5 percent.

The ruble suffered its steepest weekly retreat against the dollar since the five days ended March 9, depreciating 1.2 percent to 36.0450 by 9:08 p.m. in Moscow yesterday. The currency, whose three-month implied volatility rose to an almost six-week high, slumped 8.8 percent this year, the most for an emerging-market currency after Argentina's peso.
Ukraine PM Accuses Russia of Wanting WWIII

The Financial Times reports Kiev Forces Blockade Rebel Town as Rhetoric Rises
Ukraine pursued its operation to flush out separatists in the east for a second day on Friday, surrounding the rebel stronghold of Slavyansk, as the interim prime minister accused Russia of "wanting to start a third world war".

Serhiy Pashynsky, acting head of Ukraine's presidential administration, said a decision had been made to blockade Slavyansk – which on Friday was still in the control of the pro-Russian "people's mayor" Vyacheslav Ponomarev – by positioning its security forces around the town.

A Ukrainian military transport helicopter, parked at an airport in nearby Kramatorsk where separatists are barricaded inside the town hall, exploded in a fireball on Friday after being hit by a sniper bullet, dealing a symbolic blow to Kiev's campaign to clear cities of rebels.

Ukraine's interior minister said law enforcement officials were taking a cautious approach in the crackdown, which continued amid fears of an imminent Russian military intervention . "The key principle in the antiterrorist operation . . . is minimising risk for the peaceful population," Arsen Avakov said.

Ukrainian officials described their crackdown as the "second stage" of an operation that began on Thursday. Their deliberation suggests Kiev is trying to avoid casualties that might provoke Russia to retaliate.

However, officials engaged in fiery rhetoric, capping a week that saw tensions between Moscow and Kiev rise to perhaps their highest level since Russia annexed Crimea in March.

"The world has not forgotten [the] second world war," Arseniy Yatseniuk, Ukraine's acting prime minister, said on Friday. "Russia wants to start a third world war."
Ukraine Handling Situation Well

Recent polls support the notion the regions want more political autonomy not outright independence.  If that's what the majority want, who I am I to judge differently? I would say the same thing if the regions wanted to rejoin Russia. Simply put, it is not my place or the US's place to judge what is in the best interest of people thousands of miles away, in a place most US citizens could not even find on a map.

For now, it appears Ukraine is handing the situation well.

A blockade may take a while to work, but anything that acts to reduce tensions is welcome.

Talk of World War III, is likely just that, talk. At least let's hope so.

Finally, with the Russian economy crumbling, rash escalation of sanctions may be counterproductive.
Russia may easily decide to shut off gas to Europe if pressured enough.

Instead, this may quietly blow away by November in the absence of serious policy mistakes by one side or another. In that regard, excessive US pressure is unlikely to help.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


This Is How You Celebrate 420 The Right Way

Posted: 25 Apr 2014 07:54 PM PDT

Every year 4/20 is a huge holiday for pot smokers so if you're going to party on 4/20 you better make sure you do it right.














Congress Needs to Act on Minimum Wage

 
Here's what's going on at the White House today.
 
 
 
 
 
  Featured

Weekly Address: Congress Needs to Act on Minimum Wage

In this week's address, the President highlights small business owners across the country acting to raise wages for their workers, and calls on Congress to give America a raise so more hard-working Americans have the opportunity to get ahead.

Click here to watch this week's Weekly Address.

Watch: President Obama delivers the weekly address


 
 
  Top Stories

The Eggs They Are A-Rollin'

Sports were played, books were read, and eggs were rolled on Monday as the President and the First Lady welcomed more than 30,000 guests to the South Lawn of the White House for the 136th White House Easter Egg Roll.

Video player: The 2014 White House Easter Egg Roll

See more from the Easter Egg Roll, and make sure to check out President Obama's inspired reading of "Where the Wild Things Are."

READ MORE

540,000 Veterans and Military Spouses Hired

The First Lady and Dr. Biden visited Fort Campbell in Kentucky earlier this week for the Veterans Jobs Summit and Career Forum — and made some big announcements while they were there. First:

Video player: The 2014 White House Easter Egg Roll

On top of the more than half a million veterans and military spouses hired, FLOTUS and Dr. Biden announced a brand new online tool to help servicemembers and veterans find new careers.

READ MORE

The VP Heads to Ukraine

Vice President Biden traveled to Ukraine earlier this week for meetings with government leaders and to speak at the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv.

Video player: The 2014 White House Easter Egg Roll

"I came here to Kyiv, to let you know...that the United States stands with you," said the Vice President at the Embassy.

READ MORE

As always, to see even more of this week's events, watch this week's episode of West Wing Week:

Video player: West Wing Week

WATCH NOW


 

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