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We're become so far removed that it is a foreign concept really.

Creative destruction in the economic sense is greatly lagging because of the market distortions.

Cruz is filled with warts but for all of them, he seemed to understood and be committed to this principle more than anyone.
[h=1]Morgan Stanley: "Creative Destruction, Once The Backbone Of Capitalism, Is No Longer Considered"[/h]The following brief comment by Morgan Stanley's chief FX strategist Hans Redeker is one of the best summaries of the sad state the centrally-planned world finds itself in after 7 years of constant central bank manipulation to push risk assets higher no matter the cost.
Global imbalances have stayed strong but these imbalances are no longer expressed by current account differences and worries concerning foreign funding needs. Instead, current account differentials have developed into output gap differentials. Concretely, Asia’s current account surpluses have converged into supply, which within a world of demand deficiency has created overcapacity and falling investment returns.
Theoretically, there are three possible outcomes to deal with overcapacity. Austrian School-like destruction, increasing exports and finally providing debt-funded domestic demand. Creative destruction, once the backbone of a functioning capitalist system, is no longer seriously considered as the social costs of this approach appear unacceptably high. What remains are adjustments via exports and increasing local demand against ever-rising balance sheets.
Translation: since politicians are spineless cowards (and would much rather have the Fed do their work for them) and will never agree to kill zombie companies (or capital markets) and be exposed to the ire of their newly unemployed constituents, the only options are currency devaluation (exports) and even recorder debt, which makes the original problem even worse.
Oh, and next time Deutsche Bank laments that "capitalism is in a crisis", please first read the bolded sentence above.
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It's our destiny, it's in the genes

We eventually end up with capitalist communism or non-capitalist communism

The more things change, the more they stay the same :Karr
 

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Some of the wave Mr Trump is riding

What's killing white middle-aged American women?

The rich world has got used to health and longevity getting better, and death rates falling for everyone.

But over the past few years, data has been accumulating which suggests that this trend has stopped for poorly-educated, white Americans.

And for one group in particular - middle-aged women - death rates are going up.

"This epidemic is almost completely white. It's so white that it's fair to say that it's protective in some ways to be African-American or Latino.

"What I think may be happening is that if the patient is black, the doctor is more concerned about the possibility of the patient becoming addicted or of the patient selling their pills.

"Racial stereotyping is having a protective affect on non-white populations."

"I've been to central Pennsylvania, rural Ohio, Texas, Oregon and Minnesota, and in most of these places the jobs have left and families are trying to cope with what comes next.

"When you look at the grandparents' generation, you see very stable communities, stable marriages, often the grandfathers worked in the coal mines or on the railroads and had a very rich community life where people were embedded in their unions and their churches and their ethnic clubs.

"Some of the remaining good blue collar jobs - such as fire-fighter or police officer or joining the military - do seem to be pretty male-dominated jobs. For women, it is more difficult to see a job that would pay good wages or give you benefits, whether retirement or good health insurance, So women end up with the lower-paid service jobs.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-36255143
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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Quite obvious why eek...

obesity up, having to work some shitty paying job you hate just to make ends meet up vs being a stay at home mom, broken homes/single moms, general stress level up...

the days of stable happy middle class families dad works mom WORKS raising kids in a comfortable lifestyle are over for America are increasingly over..
 

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[h=1]The Washington Post Accuses Stingy Americans Of Ruining Obama's Recovery[/h]Every year it's the same: some legacy mainstream media mouthpiece muses on how great Obama's recovery would be... if only it wasn't for stingy US consumers refusing to spend like the drunken sailors of days gone by. Last June, it was the WSJ's Jon Hilsenrath who actually wrote a letter to American consumers, confused by their unwillingness to spend and explicitly accused them of being "stingy" even as the "Federal Reserve was counting" on them to spend, spend, spend. For those who have forgotten this absolute pearl, here it is again:
Dear American Consumer,
This is The Wall Street Journal. We’re writing to ask if something is bothering you.
The sun shined in April and you didn’t spend much money. The Commerce Department here in Washington says your spending didn’t increase at all adjusted for inflation last month compared to March. You appear to have mostly stayed home and watched television in December, January and February as well. We thought you would be out of your winter doldrums by now, but we don’t see much evidence that this is the case.
You have been saving more too. You socked away 5.6% of your income in April after taxes, even more than in March. This saving is not like you. What’s up?
We know you experienced a terrible shock when Lehman Brothers collapsed in 2008 and your employer responded by firing you. We know stock prices collapsed and that was shocking too. We also know you shouldn’t have taken out that large second mortgage during the housing boom to fix up your kitchen with granite countertops. You’ve been working very hard to pay off this debt and we admire your fortitude. But these shocks seem like a long time ago to us in a newsroom. Is that still what’s holding you back?
Do you know the American economy is counting on you? We can’t count on the rest of the world to spend money on our stuff. The rest of the world is in an even worse mood than you are. You should feel lucky you’re not a Greek consumer. And China, well they’re truly struggling there just to reach the very modest goal of 7% growth.
The Federal Reserve is counting on you too. Fed officials want to start raising the cost of your borrowing because they worry they’ve been giving you a free ride for too long with zero interest rates. We listen to Fed officials all of the time here at The Wall Street Journal, and they just can’t figure you out.
Please let us know the problem. You can reach us at any of the emails below.
Sincerely,
The Wall Street Journal’s Central Bank Team
-By Jon Hilsenrath
In retrospect, we can't help but chuckle at the part about "Fed officials want to start raising the cost of your borrowing because they worry they’ve been giving you a free ride for too long with zero interest rates."
That said, one year later, it's the turn of that other administration mouthpiece (owned no less by the man who has converted US consumerism into a business empire, Amazon's Jeff Bezos) the Washington Post, to dwell on precisely the same topic: why are Americans so paralyzed from fears over a recession that ended so long ago, that instead of spending, American consumers are rushing to save in the process preventing Obama's wonderful recovery from blooming.
While it does not go so far as Hilsenrath in explicitly accusing consumers of being "stingy", it does so indirectly when the author of what appears to be a hit piece aimed at the US middle class, or all those who no longer believe in maxing out their credit card, Robert Samuelson says that the real drag in the US economy is "us", by which he means all those Americans refusing to go out and buy "stuff" (well, maybe not Samuelson: we are confident Samuelson is well compensated by Jeff Bezos to inspire even more AMZN bottom-line boosting consumerism). As a result, "American consumers aren’t what they used to be .... and that helps explain the plodding economic recovery."
You see, dear American consumers, it's all your fault. Not soaring, record rents, not spiking health insurance premiums that are eating away at your last disposable dollar, not that the so many of the "jobs created" in recent years have been part-time or minimum wage, not the fact that under ZIRP you can't generate any interest income and are forced to save even more for retirement, not that as a result of central bank policy pension and retirement funds are unveiling cuts to retiree benefits, not that real disposable incomes have gone nowhere in the past decade, not even that a third of US households can no longer even afford the basics of food, rent and transportation...
It's your unwillingness to spend; it is - in the words of the WaPo author - "the surge in saving that is the real drag on the economy."
Really. Here is the full article:
American consumers aren’t what they used to be — and that helps explain the plodding economic recovery. It gets no respect despite creating 14 million jobs and lasting almost seven years. The great gripe is that economic growth has been held to about 2 percent a year, well below historical standards. This sluggishness reflects a profound psychological transformation of American shoppers, who have dampened their consumption spending, affecting about two-thirds of the economy. To be blunt: We have sobered up.
This, as much as any campaign proposal, may shape our economic future. There’s an Old Consumer and a New Consumer, divided by the Great Recession. The Old Consumer borrowed eagerly and spent freely. The New Consumer saves soberly and spends prudently. Of course, there are millions of exceptions to these generalizations. Before the recession, not everyone was a credit addict; now, not everyone is a disciplined saver. Still, vast changes in beliefs and habits have occurred.
A Gallup poll shows just how vast. In 2001, Gallup began asking: “Are you the type of person who more enjoys spending money or who more enjoys saving money?” Early responses were almost evenly split; in 2006, 50 percent preferred saving and 45 percent favored spending. After the 2008-2009 financial crisis, the gap widened spectacularly. In 2016, 65 percent said saving and only 33 percent spending.
What’s happening is the opposite of the credit boom that caused the financial crisis. Then, Americans skimped on saving and binged on borrowing. This stimulated the economy. Now, the reverse is happening. Americans are repaying old debt, avoiding new debt and saving more. Although consumer spending has hardly collapsed, it provides less stimulus than before. (A conspicuous exception: light-vehicle sales, which hit a record 17.4 million in 2015).
Consider the personal savings rate: the difference between Americans’ after-tax income and their spending. If a household has income of $50,000 and spends $45,000, its savings rate is 10 percent. Here are actual figures. From 1990 to 2005, the savings rate dropped from 7.8 percent to 2.6 percent. Since then, the savings rate has risen; it was 5.1 percent in 2015.
Federal Reserve figures on debt tell a similar story. From 1999 to 2007, household borrowing (mainly home mortgages and credit card debt) increased nearly 10 percent annually, far faster than income gains. People mistakenly believed that they could safely borrow against the inflated values of their homes and stocks. Now, borrowing is subdued. In 2015, household debt of $14 trillion was unchanged from 2007. While many consumers borrowed, others repaid or defaulted.
The surge in saving is the real drag on the economy. It has many causes. “People got a cruel lesson about [the dangers] of debt,” says economist Matthew Shapiro of the University of Michigan. Households also save more to replace the losses suffered on homes and stocks. But much saving is precautionary: Having once assumed that a financial crisis of the 2008-2009 variety could never happen, people now save to protect themselves against the unknown. Research by economist Mark Zandi of Moody’s Analytics finds higher saving at all income levels.
In theory, it’s easy to replace lost consumer demand. In practice, it’s not so easy. Businesses could build more factories and shopping malls. But with weaker consumer spending, do we need them? More exports would help, but economies abroad are weak.
Government policies are also frustrated. The Fed’s low interest rates don’t work if people don’t want to borrow. Ditto for tax cuts. During the Great Recession, Congress enacted several temporary tax cuts to boost consumer spending. The effect was modest, as studies by Shapiro and his collaborators found. Take the case of the two-percentage-point suspension of the Social Security payroll tax in 2011 and 2012. Two-thirds of the tax cut went to saving and repaying debt — not spending.
The horror...
There is more but we'll cut off here, wondering why the WaPo article did not have a disclaimer that it is owned by the world's largest retailer by market capitalization, and will instead add to the scorn.
Yes, dear broke American consumers which once made up the world's most vibrant middle class: please stop being such a nuisance and source of confusion to nice Op-Ed columnists at the WaPo, the WSJ and, of course, the Fed and their $4.5 trillion in direct injections into the offshore bank accounts of America's wealthiest 1%, and instead go ahead and splurge all your savings on trinkets, gadgets and gizmos you don't need.
Only that way will Obama's recovery be truly complete.

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See Uber banned from Austin, TX?

Even if you got the most limited gov't libertarian president ever, you still got clowns and special interests at every level of state and local gov't calling shots.
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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It wasn't banned

they passed a law that driver would have to submit fingerprint background checks

and uber and lyft decided to take their ball and go home.. And will try to drum up more support to overturn it..

always gonna be lotsa political squabbles during massive disruptions to the status quo such as uber .. Let the locales decide what they want.. Like the bathroom crap in NC.. Not the Feds...
 

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Samething really. Obviously the law was meant to specifically be hostile towards Uber/Lyft because taxi cartel has the local politicians in their back pocket. Usually what happens in these situations is that Uber is such a superior product that the residents demand it. That is basically what happened in NY. Tough for a place that wants to be seen as "hip" to not have Uber. Why the Austin thing surprised me.
 

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They'll be back eventually .. uber and lyft will just wait it out till they back off from fingerprint needed.. Just local politics playing out..
 

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Here’s how it usually works: Last May, Uber withdrew all service from Kansas after the state Legislature passed comprehensive safety regulation. Less than three weeks later, the Legislature revised the bill to drop a requirement, among other changes, that drivers be checked out by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. Gov. Sam Brownback left the capital on a celebratory Uber ride.


The company’s departure from San Antonio last year, after unhappy negotiations with regulators, followed a similar script. Uber left the streets but never left city hall. Six months later, “in the spirit of collaboration we’ve come to expect from the company,” Alison Griswold wrote in Slate, “Uber got just about everything it wanted."
 

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Nother bad jobs data point with year high in weekly initial claims ... Tip toeing at the edge of the cliff as the 1 1/2 year market topping process continues...

--------

long detailed report about shrinking middle class.. Only gonna get worse after the 3rd fed bubble since 2000 bursts...


America’s Shrinking Middle Class: A Close Look at Changes Within Metropolitan Areas

May 11, 2016
The middle class lost ground in nearly nine-in-ten U.S. metropolitan areas examined

http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2016...se-look-at-changes-within-metropolitan-areas/
 

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Goog now number 1 in market cap as Apple woes continue.. Report out today said the sole supplier of a10 chips used in iPhone 7 and 6s will likely shrink to 70-80% of that reached in 2nd half of 2015...
 

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For the first time this century, we are drinking less alcohol





The world drank 248bn litres of alcohol in 2015





12 MAY 2016 • 3:02PMGlobal alcohol consumption has declined for the first time this century amid the slump in oil and commodity prices, currency volatility and economic headwinds in China.
The volume of alcoholic beverages drunk in 2015 fell by 0.7pc to 248bn litres as the worldwide population imbibed 1.7bn litres less than the year before, according to Euromonitor International.
This follows an increase of 0.2pc between 2013 and 2014 and is the first decline since Euromonitor started tracking this data in 2001.














Growth rate of global alcohol consumptionAlcohol consumption fell for firsttime this centurySource: Euromonitor International (2016 onwardsprojected)2005201020152020-2%0%2%4%6%



Highcharts.com





China recorded a 3.5pc decline amid economic difficulties and a clampdown in extravagant lifestyles.
The Asian powerhouse is the world's biggest alcohol market, at almost twice the size of the US, and accounts for around a quarter of global consumption.
China's growth slowed last month to its weakest pace since the financial crisis and Shanghai stocks continue to languish far below pre-summer sell-off levels.















China drinks almost a quarter ofthe world's alcoholSource: Euromonitor International










ChinaUSABrazilGermanyRussiaJapanUnited KingdomMexicoIndiaFranceRest of world



Highcharts.com





Alcohol consumption in Russia and Ukrainefell by 8pc and 17pc respectively as political tensions, economic sanctions and tumbling oil prices took their toll on the countries' economies.
Russia's shrinking alcohol market spelt bad news for vodka, which relies on Russia for around a third of its global sales.
Globally, vodka and rum were among the worst performers, while tequila and bourbon remained at healthy levels and a resurgence in cognac helped boost the spirits sector by 0.8pc.
Cider consumption jumped by 4.5pc although beer lost 1.3pc as young consumers turned to "aspirational" and "exotic" alternatives.






“While terms such as authenticity and craftsmanship are losing traction, the trajectories of sophistication, moderation, perceived exotic credentials, accessibility and aspirational attributes remain the key driving forces fuelling pockets of buoyancy,” said Spiros Malandrakis, senior alcoholic drinks analyst at Euromonitor.
Premium English gin, Irish and Japanese whiskey and dark and non-alcoholic beerare the flag bearers of growth and it is no coincidence that those also happen to be the segments gaining further momentum with the ever-important millennial demographic in mature western markets.”
Euromonitor expects alcohol consumption to recover this year, rising by 1.3pc to 251.3bn litres.





 

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Obviously I don't care if weed is legal but there is a similar dynamic to alcohol prohibition repeal as there is to legalizing weed.

Becomes more of a movement for society to want to legalize a vice like that when people just have nothing better to do all day. Big reason why it got repealed in 1933 and not 1928.
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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Weed way less harmful to public health than alcohol and tobacco.. Only reason it's been prohibited so long is due to tobacco/alcohol lobby..

Boils down to same old story as always big corporate interests protecting their turf/status quo which is bad for society/economy as a whole...

the biggest drug problem now was created by pharmaceutical/medical industry via painkillers/opiates... And once addicted many then turn to heroin cause it's cheaper than the prescribed pills...
 

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Alcohol got repealed so quickly because of how blatant a failure it was.. People kept drinking ..crime went up ...governments didn't get a cut ...and had to spend lots on enforcement etc..

As for today now that we in debt as much as possible on government side mode.. War on drugs although a blatant failure much like "war on terror".. is big business for many corporate interests/government contractors etc...

Main reason weed loosened up somewhat recently is many liberal locales/states that like lots of government are looking for new ways to generate revenue as many are struggling.. And weed is bringing in big bucks as well as the plus that they no longer need to worry about expenses of enforcement/jailing people etc..
 

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Yeah I wasn't saying weed shouldn't be legal, it's fine to me.

I was just saying I do think heightened support and economic stagnation aren't mutually exclusive.

I am surprised how fast compassion for heroin users came around. Probably because it is mostly middle class/rural white people. Although obviously a lot of that is just the realization by many that the drug war is a massive failure rather than racially motivated. Easier to have compassion when it hits close to home though.
 

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If your a teenager popping pills that are prescribed and thus give an illusion of being more "safe" than that leading to heroin its naturally much easier to understand/be compassionate about the addiction.. Not a race thing

if your a poor meth/crack head black or white you pretty much know what you are getting into.. And you'd rather just get high till you die.. Have fun and compassion won't be there ...

the weed thing just economic in nature.. States looking to generate revenue reason it happening.. And they are willing to give a finger to federal laws for that revenue..

States don't have a printing press like federal government...
 

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