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NITA: Bush Straps On His Anti-Gravity Belt

Not Important? Think Again
Where common sense meets economics

31 July 2002
Sanders Research Associates

Bush Straps On His Anti-Gravity Belt

America: abandoning civil aviation?

Puzzling over the president’s vow to “crush” the world’s “worst” leaders, we wondered if the following story about Boeing’s research might explain it. He is just a little giddy, as are the idiots who put this out in this summer’s silly season. This says a lot about Boeing, which is finding it increasingly difficult to compete in civil aerospace and is becoming a defence contractor pure and simple. This may well be great news for the company and its stockholders, but it is a real pity for the American economy. Boeing’s acquisition of McDonnell Douglas propelled them into the Pentagon’s commercially unreal world of cost-plus contracting, where higher costs mean more profits. It is not hard to see the day coming when the United States will no longer produce civil aircraft. They are going the way of shipping, computers, machine tools, railways, and other useful things. Anyone wondering about a longer-term investment reason to own euros instead of dollars might well ponder this.

http://www.janes.com/aerospace/civil/news/jdw/jdw020729_1_n.shtml

http://www.iht.com/articles/65997.html

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Congress finds its voice

Senator Fritz Hollings did nothing more than call a spade a spade in calling government accounting practice fraud in the pages of the Financial Times. Frankly, he didn’t go far enough, but the fact that the shock of last year’s anthrax attacks on Congress is finally wearing off is encouraging. As we have reported on a variety of occasions, the anthrax came from the US military and the most likely suspects are home grown. When you combine that with the fact that the most prominent characters to receive it were senior Democrats, then you have an interesting chain of inference. What Hollings doesn’t say is that the budget deficit’s size relates largely to increased benefits for American military personnel legislated in 2000. On an accrual accounting basis, defence spending in FY2001 was some 7.5% of GDP. Why Congress should be paying the military more is beyond us, when neither the military nor the intelligence community are capable of doing their job properly. Witness 911.

http://news.ft.com/servlet/ContentServer?pagename=FT.com/StoryFT/FullStory&c=StoryFT&cid=1027953260766&p=1012571727085

Don’t pick a fight you can’t pay for

The economics of the War on Terror have gone largely unremarked, but that seems to be changing. The Gulf War in 1990 was paid for by Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Germany and Japan. Why any of those countries should be willing to pony up for round two is a mystery. The Bush administration’s idea of finance is to monetise new debt issuance, which was an idea of relevance when Keynes first proposed it as a means of financing Britain’s mobilisation for World War Two, but seems more than a little anachronistic when applied to the US today.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/30/international/30COST.html

The enemy of my oil company is my enemy?

One school of thought has it that the Saudi government’s program to open up gas exploration in the Kingdom is the real reason behind recent American hostility. This is not completely implausible, as it represents the first time since the forging of the Aramco concession fifty years ago that the oil and gas business in the Kingdom will be opened up to outside competition. On the other hand, it is very hard to understand why the United States would assume a belligerent posture over this. The American majors are well represented, and it is difficult to imagine that instability in the Kingdom is preferable to just doing the deal. One wonders indeed who wins by the constant portrayal of the Kingdom as a powder keg waiting to blow up. The country’s financial position is often cited as a reason for this, but at current levels of crude production in excess of 8 million barrels a day and an oil price that has averaged (WTI) over $23 a barrel, Saudi Arabia’s budget problems are manageable.

http://www.forbes.com/markets/newswire/2002/07/30/rtr680064.html

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/2146848.stm

Making Clinton look good (moral: Never give up. Nothing is impossible)

Paul Krugman is easy to disagree with, so it is very interesting to see him picking up on the corruption them that we have been writing about for the last five years. The mess that many of the US states are in now has to be seen to be believed, but it is only a sideshow compared to what is happening in Washington. To hear Krugman tell it, Bush is the Author of Evil, economic at least. The Democrats and their fellow travellers are smart to keep pounding on the theme of the balanced (or unbalanced) budget. What is so interesting is that this should have been a Republican issue. Clinton “balanced” the budget, all right, at the price of fuelling the biggest financial asset bubble in history. Only the manifestly incompetent or corrupt could have failed to turn that into a political issue. If Bush is playing the role of Herbert Hoover, then Clinton is the Calvin Coolidge of the piece. Truthfully, though, this is an insult to both Hoover and Coolidge.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/30/opinion/30KRUG.html


© Copyright Sanders Research Associates Ltd. 2002. The contents of the following, either in whole or in part, may not be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the written permission of Sanders Research Associates. While considering the contents to be reliable, SRA take no responsibility for the information set forth herein.

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