Archive for the ‘World Politics’ Category

15 April 2016   Leave a comment

German Chncellor Merkel has decided to allow German prosecutors to pursue a case against Jan Boehmermann, a comedian, who had recited a poem about Turkish President Erdogan suggesting that Erdogan watch pornography and engaged in bestiality.   There is, in fact, a German law prohibiting insults to foreign leaders, but the code allows discretion in pursuing such cases.  Many in Merkel’s ruling coalition believe that Merkel has failed to protect freedom of speech and is instead capitulating to Erdogan because of the refugee crisis.

Last February smashed all previous records for high monthly temperatures for the month and everyone though that the increase was incredible (1.04° C).  Unfortunately, February has now lost the record to March which ended up 1.07ºC higher than the previous March.  There is evidence to suggest that the temperature increase may be due to the record-setting el Niño.  Even so, the temperature increase is truly troubling.

Last month, Russia declared that its military operations in Syria were over and the mission had been accomplished.  There is evidence that the Russians have in fact decreased the number of jets stationed in Syria.  But overall, the Russian military forces in Syria remain unchanged and the number of Russian attack helicopters has in fact increased.  We now are left with an interesting question: Was the mission left unaccomplished because the Russians thought there was more left to do, or because Syrian President Assad demanded that the Russian forces remain.  The second possibility has been something that the US experienced in Vietnam and Afghanistan.  Being hostage to a government that needs outside support is usually a losing proposition.

Posted April 15, 2016 by vferraro1971 in World Politics

14 April 2016   Leave a comment

The General Accountability Office, a US government office that does research for Congress and which has a very high reputation for its objectivity and professionalism, undertook a study of corporate tax rates in the US.  The study was undertaken at the request of Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT).  Apparently Senator Sanders requested the study because US corporations have argued that US corporate tax rates are too high.  The facts are that the nominal corporate tax rate in the US is 35% which is unquestionably one of the highest rates in the world.  But the effective tax rate–the amount that corporations actually pay after credits and deductions are applied–is remarkably low.  According to the GAO:

“In each year from 2006 to 2012, at least two-thirds of all active corporations had no federal income tax liability. Larger corporations were more likely to owe tax. Among large corporations (generally those with at least $10 million in assets) less than half—42.3 percent—paid no federal income tax in 2012. Of those large corporations whose financial statements reported a profit, 19.5 percent paid no federal income tax that year.”

The accompanying chart is revealing:

Percentage of Corporations That Reported No Tax Liability after Tax Credits, Tax Years 2006 to 2012

U:\Work in Process\Teams\FY16 Reports\SI\100252_363\Graphics\HI-5-100252.tif

 

Corporations paying fewer taxes

Nicholas Kristof offers additional information on this topic in the New York Times.  Referring to a new study by Oxfam, Kristof writes:

“A study to be released Thursday says that for each dollar America’s 50 biggest companies paid in federal taxes between 2008 and 2014, they received $27 back in federal loans, loan guarantees and bailouts.”

I wish I had that tax rate.

President Robert Mugabe has been the leader of Zimbabwe since its independence in 1980.  He has clung to power despite crippling inflation, a poorly performing economy, and charges of widespread economic and political corruption.  He has been challenged several times, most recently by Morgan Tsvangirai in a widely discredited election in 2013.  It appears, however, that discontent is boiling over with large protests–themselves a rare event in Zimbabwe’s politics.   Mugabe is 92 years old, and while he should be admired for his role in leading Zimbabwe out of white minority control, he is obviously not competent to lead the country any longer.

 

The US and China have an annual exchange of official papers that accuse each other of human rights abuses.  Americans are regularly informed about the constraints on the political rights of Chinese citizens.  The Chinese, however, have a list of human rights that most Americans would not recognize:  the right to be free from gun violence, the right to be free from poverty, and the right to health insurance.  These differences are very important, and should be recognized as such.  For its part, the Chinese have explicitly rejected the idea of universal human values, believing instead that all human rights are culturally determined.

Posted April 15, 2016 by vferraro1971 in World Politics

13 April 2016   Leave a comment

Russian jets flew “dangerously” close to US naval vessels in the Baltic Sea.  The Washington Post has a video of the episode and it is quite extraordinary.   The passes were made in international waters and it is not clear what message the Russian pilots were trying to convey or whether they were ordered to make the dangerous passes.  Quite clearly, some message was intended, but the risks of an unanticipated accident were very high.  No doubt the American naval vessels are no on a higher stage of alert for self-protection.  Those higher levels, however, merely make the hair-trigger more sensitive.  Or, to use the language of Gizmodo:

“If you were wondering how to be the biggest and possibly most dangerous dick while flying a $19 million piece of military hardware, that’s it.”

Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has played her last political card in a desperate attempt to avoid impeachment.  She has promised to create a government of national unity if she survives the impeachment vote in the Congress.  The gambit is designed to appeal to any last minute waverers in the impeachment vote, but it looks increasingly likely that it will fail.  More members of her coalition have defected and it does not appear that she has the votes to survive.  In some sense, impeachment would be a relief to the Brazilian economy.  Right now, affairs are too problematic for most investors.

Documents recently found indicate that the Stanford Research Institute presented a report to the American Petroleum Institute (API) in 1968 that warned that the burning of fossil fuels could trigger a serious climactic problem.  This document suggests that the Petroleum industry knew about the issue of global warming a good 20 years before NASA scientist James Hansen made the issue a public concern.   Despite this information, the petroleum industry continued to deny that there was a serious problem for many years.

Posted April 13, 2016 by vferraro1971 in World Politics

12 April 2016   Leave a comment

The International Monetary Fund has issued a warning on global economic growth in the coming year.  It revised its prediction for economic growth to 3.2% from its earlier estimate of 3.4%.  That may not sound like a significant drop, but the lower prediction comes on the heels of earlier downgrades as well.  If growth continues to shrink, the global economy becomes increasingly vulnerable to unanticipated disruptions such as national disasters, currency depreciations, and political surprises.  The ice keeps getting thinner.

The 8th Annual ASDA’A Burson-Marsteller Arab Youth Survey 2016 was recently published.  It is a poll of young people in the following countries: Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Palestine, Tunisia and Yemen.  The results are quite striking.  By a very wide margin, Arab youth have no affection for Daesh (the Islamic State) and in fact regard it as the most serious issue facing the Middle East.   The charts in the Washington Post are quite dramatic. 

The United States and India are inching closer to greater military cooperation.  India has long been leery of closer military ties with the US, a fear conditioned by its experience as a colony of Great Britain.  But it appears as if the fear of growing Chinese maritime power is affecting the Modi government in much the same way that Vietnam and the Philippines have been pushed toward the US.  For right now, the agreement between India and the US is quite limited–it only refers to the possible opening up of “each other’s land, air and naval bases for resupplies, repair and rest.” That agreement is a far cry from the possible creation of military bases.

 

Posted April 13, 2016 by vferraro1971 in World Politics

11 April 2016   Leave a comment

Income inequality is not simply a matter of economics and politics.  It is also a matter of life and death.  Recent studies have indicated that life expectancy for men at mid-life is much lower for poorer individuals than for richer individuals.  The data are actually quite dramatic and show that where one lives is also an important determinant of life expectancy.  The correlation between income and life expectancy is very strong, but can be mitigated with strong action to help low income individuals.

We should all be very careful when we read articles in newspapers and other media.  We almost automatically assume that the articles and op-eds reflect the considered views of the authors.  But, in many cases, the materials we read are in fact written by paid lobbyists who are deliberately trying to influence the political decision-making process.  For example, lobbyists in favor of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement that is being pushed by the Obama Administration have written materials that have been directly quoted without attribution by politicians who have written in favor of the trade deal.  Everyone has the right to argue for policies they support.  They should, however, have the decency to use their own words and not those of a paid shill.

Something very unusual happened recently.  Egypt handed over two islands in the Gulf of Aqaba to Saudi Arabia.  The peaceful transfer of territory is incredibly rare in world politics, and many Egyptians are outraged that General Sisi made the gesture.  Saudi Arabia has bankrolled the Egyptian economy since the overthrow of President Morsi who the Saudis regarded as a dangerous politician because of his relationship to the Muslim Brotherhood.  The Egyptian economy, however, remains incredibly weak and the transfer of the islands is viewed as a gesture of appreciation.  It was probably not the right move to make for many Egyptians since it surrenders something permanent for the transitory good will of another state.

Posted April 12, 2016 by vferraro1971 in World Politics

10 April 2016   Leave a comment

Measuring global income and wealth inequality has always been a problematic issue:  the data are not reliable and often measure different things in different countries.  Despite the problems with the metrics, virtually all of them suggest that global inequality has gotten significantly worse in recent years.   According to Jason Hickel:

Using data from the Maddison Project, we see that in 1960, at the end of colonialism, people living in the world’s richest country were 33 times richer than people living in the poorest country. That’s quite a substantial gap. But then by 2000, after neoliberal globalisation had run its course, they were a shocking 134 times richer. And that’s not counting extreme outliers, like small oil-rich kingdoms in the Middle East or tiny offshore tax havens. This isn’t convergence. To quote Lant Pritchett, it’s divergence, big time.

It is very difficult to imagine any market-based process that would reverse this trend.  Only active political action can offer any hope of change.

For the first time in 25 years, the US has deployed B-52s to the Middle East.  The B-52 is a strategic bomber that the US has used in the past to conduct massive bombing raids in Vietnam and in Iraq in 1991.  The bombers will be based in Qatar and be used against Daesh (the Islamic State).  Although the B-52 is associated with carpet bombing (which would be essentially useless against a diffuse force such as Daesh), it is also capable of dropping precision-guided bombs.  Nonetheless, the deployment is an index of the intention to use massive force.

The B-52 and Its Maximum Payload

The Ukranian Prime Minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, has announced that he will resign.  His tenure has not been marked by much success, particularly on the economic front.  Ukraine continues to suffer from corruption, the Russian-led rebellion in the eastern part of the country, and the lack of effective support from the European Union, the IMF, and the US.  The continued deterioration in Ukraine will pose serious problems for Europe if people begin to leave the state to enter the EU.

Posted April 10, 2016 by vferraro1971 in World Politics

9 April 2016   Leave a comment

I apologize for obsessing about the Panama Papers, but the episode points out one of the essential truths of world politics: the international global economy, particularly capital in that economy, pays no attention to territory; the international political system is hopelessly rooted in territoriality.   Gabriel Zucman, an economist and the author of The Hidden Wealth Of Nations: The Scourge Of Tax Havens, has estimated that about $7 trillion worth of wealth is hidden in states that allow capital to be completely disguised from any political authority (other authors estimate that the number is likely 2 or 3 times that amount).  His breakdown is as follows:

Offshore Wealth and Resulting Tax-Revenue Loss (in Billions), 2014

Region                 Offshore Wealth                  Share of Wealth Held Offshore               Revenue Loss

Europe                  $2,600                                  10%                                                               $78

USA                        $1,200                                   4%                                                                $35

Asia                         $1,300                                   4%                                                                $34

Latin America         $700                                    22%                                                              $21

Africa                        $500                                    30%                                                              $14

Canada                     $300                                      9%                                                                 $6

Russia                       $200                                     52%                                                               $1

Gulf Countries        $800                                      57%                                                               $0

Total                      $7.600                                        8%                                                             $190

Source:  Uri Friedman, “The Geography of Financial Secrecy,” The Atlantic, 9 April 2016, accessed at:  http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2016/04/panama-papers-tax-havens-world/477042/

James S.Henry of the Tax Justice Network  (no quiz questions will be asked about this source) argued that:

A significant fraction of global private financial wealth–by our estimates, at least $21 to  $32  trillion  as  of  2010–has been invested virtually tax-free through the world’s still expanding black hole of more  than 80 offshore secrecy jurisdictions. We believe  this  range to be conservative, for reasons discussed below.  Remember:  this is just financial wealth. A big share of the real estate, yachts, racehorses, goldbricks–and many other things that count as non-financial wealth–are also owned via offshore structures where it is impossible to identify the owners.

He goes on to argue:

[P]rivate banking has long since become virtual. So the term “offshore” refers not so much to the actual physical location of private assets or liabilities, but to nominal, hyper-portable, multi-jurisdictional, often quite temporary locations of networks of legal and quasi-legal entities and arrangements that manage and control private wealth—always in the interests of those who manage it, supposedly in the interests of its beneficial owners, and often in indifference or outright defiance of the interests and laws of multiple nation states. A  painting or a bank account may be located inside Switzerland’s borders, but the all-important legal structure that owns it—typically that asset would be owned by an anonymous offshore company in one jurisdiction, which is in turn owned by a trust in another jurisdiction, whose trustees are in yet another jurisdiction (and that is one of the simplest offshore structures)—is likely to be fragmented in many pieces around the globe.

In short, one of the key assumptions of world politics–that states control what goes on within their borders–no longer appears to be valid for a major source of power in the world.

I have received some questions about how rich someone has to be to enjoy the benefits of offshore banking.  In truth, the states that host shell companies do not charge a great deal.  But the legal costs of setting up those shell companies are formidable.  Joe Pinkser gives an estimate of what it typically costs:

“So how big would your garden have to be for it to make sense to buy a backhoe? ….individuals start being able to afford Mossack Fonseca-level wealth defense once their annual earnings (from both work and assets combined) cross a threshold of about $3 million to $5 million.”

It doesn’t make sense for ordinary wage earners to contemplate setting up a shell company.

Even though violence has flared up between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the contested region of Nagorno-Karabakh, Russia plans to keep selling military equipment to both sides.   Russia clearly intends to maintain its influence in these two states which were once part of the former Soviet Union.  Unfortunately, violence between the two states only serves to consolidate Russian influence over them.

One of the most worrisome trends in the world today is the decline of center-left politics.  The right-wing and the center-right seem to be in ascendancy, and there are signs that the left is slowly coming alive (Bernie Sanders, Syriza in Greece, Podemos in Spain).  But, at least in European politics, the center-left has been the guardian of income protections for the middle and lower middle classes.  Its share of the votes in recent elections seems to be declining precipitously.

Posted April 9, 2016 by vferraro1971 in World Politics

8 April 2016 Musical Postscript   Leave a comment

 

Posted April 9, 2016 by vferraro1971 in World Politics

8 April 2016   Leave a comment

I am constantly looking for articles that shed light on how international politics pervades our daily lives and I sometimes find quirky angles that bemuse me.  One such article popped up in The Washington Post that contained this fascinating factoid: “there are more Chinese restaurants in the United States than McDonald’s, Burger King, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and Wendy’s—combined.”  It appears as if the quintessential American food–the hamburger–is a second cousin to Chinese cuisine.  Unfortunately, there are some places in the US that lack a Chinese restaurant: the poor, benighted souls in North Dakota.

Syrian refugees have become the latest pawn in the power struggle between Turkey and the European Union.  Turkish President Erdogan has bluntly threatened to disregard the plight of the refugees if the EU does not honor its side of the bargain which includes visa-free travel to the EU for all Turkish citizens.  There is little question that Turkey should demand monetary relief for the extraordinary burden of caring for the refugees and the EU should be generous in providing such aid.  But visa-free travel has nothing to do with the refugees and ignores the difficult circumstances in Europe regarding open borders given the recent terrorist attacks.  The refugees should not be held hostage to this peripheral demand which ought to be pursued in in another venue.

Boko Haram continues to wreak havoc in Nigeria and the best efforts of the Nigerian government to respond effectively to its attacks have not been effective.  It is unlikely that a purely military response to the extremists would ever be effective.  Ikechukwu Odigbo suggests an alternative course of action that might be more effective, but it is a difficult and long-term solution that requires patience and dedication.  Commitment in the face of atrocities is difficult to maintain.

Posted April 8, 2016 by vferraro1971 in World Politics

7 April 2016   Leave a comment

Dutch voters, by an almost 2-1 margin, voted not to approve a relationship between the European Union and Ukraine.  Only 32% of the electorate participated in the referendum, just barely above the 30% required to consider the outcome valid.  But the vote will certainly delay any economic relationship for the hard-pressed Ukraine.  The vote seemed to be primarily motivated by a dislike of Ukranian President Poroshenko rather than a repudiation of Ukraine as a whole.  The Dutch government seems to favor the relationship, so we should expect some negotiations between the Netherlands and the EU to try to make the arrangement more palatable to Dutch voters.

There are times when it is very difficult to determine how citizens make political decisions.  But there is extensive evidence that most people are capable of believing some rather extraordinary things.  For example, 4% of the American people (12.5 million people) believe that lizard people control American politics. And 13% of voters think that President Obama is the Anti-Christ.

Conspiracy Percent believing Number of Americans believing
JFK was killed by conspiracy 51 percent 160,096,160
Bush intentionally misled on Iraq WMDs 44 percent 138,122,178
Global warming is a hoax 37 percent 116,148,195
Aliens exist 29 percent 91,035,072
New World Order 28 percent 87,895,931
Hussein was involved in 9/11 28 percent 87,895,931
A UFO crashed at Roswell 21 percent 65,921,948
Vaccines are linked to autism 20 percent 62,782,808
The government controls minds with TV 15 percent 47,087,106
Medical industry invents diseases 15 percent 47,087,106
CIA developed crack 14 percent 43,947,966
Bigfoot exists 14 percent 43,947,966
Obama is the Antichrist 13 percent 40,808,825
The government allowed 9/11 11 percent 34,530,544
Fluoride is dangerous 9 percent 28,252,264
The moon landing was faked 7 percent 21,973,983
Bin Laden is alive 6 percent 18,834,842
Airplane contrails are sinister chemicals 5 percent 15,695,702
McCartney died in 1966 5 percent 15,695,702
Lizard people control politics 4 percent 12,556,562

 

They are controlling your lives!!

Tokers

The Washington Post has a heart-breaking article on the devastation of the city of Homs in Syria.  There are photographs and a video that illustrate the destruction of a once vibrant and vital city.  Whenever we discuss matters of war and peace, it is imperative that we do not allow the abstractions of theory or strategy to divert us from the central reality of war:  the innocents invariably pay the highest price of any conflict.

 

Posted April 8, 2016 by vferraro1971 in World Politics