Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- 2nd Day of Violence as Police Battle Protesters; Jordan PM Talks With Rivals; Yemen President to Step Down in 2013; Obama Abandons Mubarak
- California Budget Poker: Republicans May Raise the Stakes in Jerry Brown's Special Election Bet
- Atlanta Faces Plateful of Pension Reform Choices
- New Economic Model For Bloggers?
- Teacher Tenure Under Attack by GOP Governors; Perfect Rationale for Ending Tenure Comes from Obama
- China's "Borg Strategy" Seeks to Assimilate all Known Technology; US Seeks to Waste $Trillions More in Afghanistan
Posted: 02 Feb 2011 10:57 PM PST Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak is finding that it's difficult to give the people a "little bit of democracy". Millions of protesters want reform now, not 8 months from now. Following six days of mostly peaceful protests, Mubarak made a decision to counter protesters by unleashing the "baltageya" plainclothes police armed with rocks, knives, and clubs. With that, a peaceful ending that seemed possible two days ago took a sharp turn for the worse. And after days of sitting on the fence, President Obama finally took a decisive stand, calling for Mubarak to leave "Now". Mubarak Supporters Strike Back With Clubs, Rocks, Knives Violence took an unfortunate turn for the worse as Mubarak's Allies and Foes Clash in Egypt President Hosni Mubarak struck back at his opponents, unleashing waves of his supporters armed with clubs, rocks, knives and firebombs in a concerted assault on thousands of antigovernment protesters in Tahrir Square calling for an end to his authoritarian rule.Please read the rest of that story. Mubarak planned this violence. I suspect some will now want his head. Arab World Faces Its Uncertain Future The New York Times reports Arab World Faces Its Uncertain Future The future of the Arab world, perched between revolt and the contempt of a crumbling order, was fought for in the streets of downtown Cairo on Wednesday.Protest Gallery Stone Throwing ![]() Cairo Protest ![]() Those are 2 of 115 Photos From the Protests The count goes up every day, with new images added to the front. Obama Abandons Mubarak It took President Obama too long, but finally he got it right. Please consider Sudden Split Recasts U.S. Foreign Policy After days of delicate public and private diplomacy, the United States openly broke with its most stalwart ally in the Arab world on Wednesday, as the Obama administration strongly condemned violence by allies of President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt against protesters and called on him to speed up his exit from power.Hackers Shut Down Egyptian Government Sites The New York Times reports Hackers Shut Down Government Sites The online group Anonymous said Wednesday that it had paralyzed the Egyptian government's Web sites in support of the antigovernment protests.Yemen's President to Step Down in 2013 In a possible ploy to buy time, Yemen's president promises to step down in 2013. In another reverberation of the popular anger rocking the region, the longtime president of Yemen, Ali Abdullah Saleh, announced concessions on Wednesday that included suspending his campaign for constitutional changes that would allow him to remain president for life and pledging that his son would not seek to be his successor.Jordan Prime Minister Seeks to Contain Unrest Please consider Premier of Jordan Holds Talks With Rivals. Jordan's new prime minister began consultations with key political groups, including the Muslim opposition, on Wednesday. The talks came a day after King Abdullah II, caught in a regional wave of discontent, sought to stave off growing public unrest by firing his government and vowing reform.Superb Coverage from New York Times, Al Jazeer Coverage of these events by the New York Times has been superb. All of the above links, stories, and images are from http://www.nytimes.com/. Please also see excellent videos of Violence in Cairo Square on Al Jazeer. (click on the second image in the series and it will open up a video to play). Also see the Al Jazeer Live Video Stream and the Al Jazeer Live Blog Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
California Budget Poker: Republicans May Raise the Stakes in Jerry Brown's Special Election Bet Posted: 02 Feb 2011 06:56 PM PST The game of high stakes poker in California might get a lot more interesting. Governor Jerry Brown demanded Republican put his tax hike proposals to a vote. Brown said "let the voter decide". Now some Republicans are considering doing just that, provided the ballot also contains a provision to cut taxes. Please consider Republicans preparing to support Jerry Brown's special election -- on their own terms. California Republicans -- who initially balked at Gov. Jerry Brown's Monday call for a special election to "let voters decide" solutions to the state budget -- may be crafting their own ballot plan, complete with a new twist.Why Stop With Taxes? I strongly endorse this idea. But why stop with taxes? Mish Ballot Proposals
California Agencies Look at this disgusting list of California Agencies. I sorted out some but not all of the more ridiculous ones. Does the state need a ....
I support a yes-no vote on cutting off funding for every one of those agencies, individually, not in a group, preferably with a provision that "no vote" (nothing checked) counts as "a no vote". I say stick it to Brown big time. He wants a vote, well so do I. Let's have one, and not just on taxes but rather about all issues that affect taxpayers. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Atlanta Faces Plateful of Pension Reform Choices Posted: 02 Feb 2011 03:08 PM PST Atlanta is in deep trouble over pensions that consume ever-increasing portions of the city's budget. The Business Chronicle discusses a plateful of pension reform choices that Atlanta is considering. The Pension Review Panel wrapped up a year-long effort by laying out alternatives from a simple reduction of the maximum cost-of-living adjustment to scrapping the retirement system altogether.Digging out of a Deep Hole The only plan that will work in the long haul is killing defined benefit pension plans entirely. Atlanta assumes its pension program is funded at 53 percent. I strongly suggest it is 53% funded by the same actuarial madness that says Illinois pension plans are 50% funded (smoothed returns and 8% annualized future returns). For a look at state pension plans, please see Interactive Map of Public Pension Plans; How Badly Underfunded are the Plans in Your State? That report says Illinois is 29% funded. The state say 50%. Laws in Congress on sound actuarial processes for states will show 29%. The reality is smoothing is a fraud and 8% annualized returns are not going to happen. Illinois pension plans are in aggregate only 29% funded. I suspect Atlanta is in the same boat. At least Atlanta is discussing the issue. The only thing Illinois does is raise taxes. To get out of a hole the first thing you have to do is stop digging. Atlanta needs to kill defined benefit pension plans going forward (capping all accrued benefits) and scrap COLAs for existing pensioners as well. Anything else just kicks the can down the road, making the problem worse in the meantime. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
New Economic Model For Bloggers? Posted: 02 Feb 2011 12:01 PM PST Barry Ritholtz posed an interesting question for bloggers in Blogonomics: A New Chapter I had a good blogonomics idea several years ago. I pitched it to numerous media outlets, but to no avail. The Street.com, NYT, Conde Nast, WSJ, CNBC. The idea was for a mainstream media outlet, with their ready-built ad sales team, to extend their advertising umbrella to the blogosphere. We bloggers provide content/inventory/page views for free — remember, the MSM is spending millions to crank out content themselves — and they provide high CPM adverts. The bloggers capture 50-60% of the revenue, and the balance goes to the MSM ad teams. For them, its cost-free content to serve the ads they sold anyway — it not only brings the MSM deeper into the internet, it should be found money for them.Forbes Tried and Failed Hello Barry Recall that Forbes tried and failed. To your credit, you spotted problems with Forbes in advance. Calculated Risk and I did give Forbes a whirl. It did not work out particularly well and you stayed away from it. Ironically, Forbes was not even a good model for bloggers but a good model for Forbes. They took 55% and gave bloggers 45%. In spite of an advantageous split for them, Forbes struggled to fill ads. I bet Forbes filled 10-15% of my space at most although they insisted they be listed first in hierarchy. After Forbes, I cascaded to Tribal Fusion, then to Google. I now have a different sole-provider relationship with a few exceptions. Here is my question: If Forbes could not fill ads, could a group of bloggers? In terms of size, beyond the top 5 or so there is not much size. I assume you have seen these Blog Traffic Rankings, perhaps not. Notice how sharply traffic drops off. The top 3 are clustered (Calculated Risk, Big Picture, Mish). Naked Capitalism and Marginal Revolution are clustered at 4-5 with 50-60% of the top blog traffic. The number 6 blog drops dramatically and only has 20% of the traffic of the #1 blog. The number 10 blog has 14% of the traffic of the #1 blog. That number 10 spot barely enough traffic to interest an ad network like Tribal Fusion. Those rankings do not include aggregators or content providers like Seeking Alpha, ZeroHedge, or Minyanville. Nor does it include corporate blogs like Krugman. The list is restrictive, on purpose, to compare individual, non-corporate sponsored bloggers. It is not easy to break into the top 10 or even top 20. Yet the number 20 blog only has 5% of the traffic of the top blog, and little traffic to interest any advertisers other than Google. Thus you are really seeking a consortium of say 10 bloggers at most, and possibly only 5. Otherwise you are back to the failed Forbes model. Maybe this is your answer, maybe not, but arguably it explains why Forbes going after hundreds of bloggers failed. Excellent Content The thing is, there are some really excellent blogs out there. I read articles all the time and wonder why isn't this person's traffic higher. To answer my own question, I have a list of reasons:
It takes years to attract a following although there are some exceptions like Zero Hedge. However, ZeroHedge has a dozen authors or guest bloggers (at least) and cannot realistically be compared to an individual blogger. Word of Thanks to Barry On a side note, Barry Ritholtz is a friend. Many read too much into our disagreement regarding regulation. We simply disagree on the issue of regulation in general. However, we do agree on some pieces of individual regulation. Moreover, we agree many other things, including the role and responsibility of the Greenspan Fed and Bernanke Fed in this mess. Barry was an early proponent of my blog. He helped build my traffic at a critical time. I have publicly and privately stated that on many occasions. Thanks again Barry. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Teacher Tenure Under Attack by GOP Governors; Perfect Rationale for Ending Tenure Comes from Obama Posted: 02 Feb 2011 10:18 AM PST Teacher tenure is under attack by governors in New Jersey, Florida, Idaho, and Nevada. Moreover, New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg, Newark mayor Cory Booker, and Los Angeles mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa have all jumped on the tenure reform bandwagon. Please consider G.O.P. Governors Take Aim at Teacher Tenure Seizing on a national anxiety over poor student performance, many governors are taking aim at a bedrock tradition of public schools: teacher tenure.Obama Praises Colorado School Turnaround In president Obama's State of the Union address, he mentioned the Bruce Randolph school in Denver which went from being one of the worst schools in Colorado to graduating 97 percent of its seniors in three years. You see, we know what's possible from our children when reform isn't just a top-down mandate, but the work of local teachers and principals, school boards and communities. Take a school like Bruce Randolph in Denver. Three years ago, it was rated one of the worst schools in Colorado -- located on turf between two rival gangs. But last May, 97 percent of the seniors received their diploma. Most will be the first in their families to go to college. And after the first year of the school's transformation, the principal who made it possible wiped away tears when a student said, "Thank you, Ms. Waters, for showing that we are smart and we can make it." (Applause.) That's what good schools can do, and we want good schools all across the country.Firing Teachers Key to Success of School's Turnaround What the president forgot to tell you was that ability to fire teachers regardless of tenure was the reason for a successful turnaround of Bruce Randolph. Please consider the Real Story with Obama's Colorado School Turnaround During the state of the union address, Obama praised the Bruce Randolph school in Colorado for turning themselves around rather dramatically in a few short years.While bad teachers are guaranteed to fail, so are bad parents. Nonetheless, efforts to stick with a corrupt tenure system that makes it all but impossible to get rid of any teachers has to go. The success story of Bruce Randolph should make that clear. I applaud the efforts of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, Florida Governor Rick Scott, Idaho Governor C. L. Otter, and Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval. It's nice to see the president provide the perfect example for those governors. Now we need the perfect example from the President to get rid of public union collective bargaining as well. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 02 Feb 2011 12:16 AM PST While the US is hell-bent on meddling (at tremendous expense) in the affairs of at least 140 countries where its troops are stationed, China seeks to assimilate technology at little expense. The Wall Street Journal puts it much more politely. Please consider U.S. Firms, China Are Locked in Major War Over Technology. China's bureaucrats have been rolling out an array of interlocking regulations and state spending aimed at making their country a global technology powerhouse by 2020.China's "Borg Strategy" Inquiring minds are reading China's Drive for 'Indigenous Innovation': A Web of Industrial Policies for details of China's Borg-like strategy. Here are some snips from the 45 page PDF. Indigenous innovation is a massive and complicated plan to turn the Chinese economy into a technology powerhouse by 2020 and a global leader by 2050. The landmark document that launched the campaign carries the bureaucratic title "The National Medium- and Long-Term Plan for the Development of Science and Technology (2006-2020)" (now known in the West as the MLP). Bland as the title may be, the MLP describes itself as the "grand blueprint of science and technology development" to bring about the "great renaissance of the Chinese nation."While China accumulates patents by hook or by crook, the US is bogged down in Afghanistan and Iraq. Moreover, we have troops stationed in 140 countries around the globe in a futile attempt to be the world's policeman. Does China waste money on troops stationed elsewhere? Instead of building bridges like China does, we bomb bridges to smithereens in places like Iraq and Afghanistan, then rebuild them at US taxpayer expense. Bear in mind I certainly am not in favor of China's state-owned-enterprises (SOEs) or its massive unsustainable spending on infrastructure and housing. However, one can make a case that at least China gets something useful out of its investments while the US sends $trillions down a black hole of 100% useless military endeavors, making millions more enemies in the process. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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