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Democrats to Escalate Their War on the American Economy


Democrats didn’t even bother to wait for their 2024 National Convention in Chicago to appoint their replacement presidential candidate, Kamala Harris, and to tout the new economic planks to be added to the party’s platform. In her August 16th speech on the economy, she pledged her loyalty to the party’s current interventionist agenda, professing that the Biden regime’s policies have supposedly been good for the middle class and that she will continue to support Democrat principles of state-guaranteed economic security for them ( “…your salary should be enough to provide you and your family with a good quality of life”; “No child should have to grow up in poverty”; and “After years of hard work, you should be able to retire with dignity.”). However, Harris acknowledged that the cost of living had soared during Biden’s tenure, so she proclaimed that Democrats would now commit themselves to inflicting a whole new set of interventions on the productive sector to supposedly make certain essentials—food, healthcare, and housing—more affordable.

Curiously, Harris correctly argued that Republican protectionism would make foreign-made goods more expensive, and thus drive the cost of living up further, while conspicuously failing to apply the same irrefutable economic logic to her own proposed assaults on domestic productivity or to the assaults already inflicted on domestic producers by the Biden regime. One must infer from this that Harris is very likely not ignorant of the economic problems caused by interventionism (notwithstanding Donald Trump’s characterization of her as being a “stupid” copycat), rather she and other “progressive” activists know that the multiplication of problems caused by interventionism offers a golden political opportunity to advance their agenda.

The goal served by piling intervention upon intervention is to institute a corporatist form of socialist central planning, as Austrian economists F. A. Hayek (The Road to Serfdom) and Ludwig von Mises (Middle-of-the-Road Policy Leads to Socialism), demonstrated more than a decade before Harris was born. From a “progressive” point of view, however, the prospect of instituting socialism as a consequence of ever-multiplying interventions is a feature, not a bug, of their proposals. The political calculation is that if Democrats can convince enough voters—who are largely ignorant of the problems caused by interventionism—that they are the party solving economic problems, even as their interventionist “solutions” are making such problems worse. Following this, Democrats will be able to win enough support to achieve socialism via gradualist, democratic methods without having to take the revolutionary step of formally seizing ownership of the means of production.

Regarding food affordability, Harris espoused the conspiracy theory that food companies (presumably she meant food processors and wholesale distributors) and large retail chains of grocery stores are “bad actors” who took advantage of COVID supply chain disruptions to hike prices, but then used their market power to keep prices high after supply chains were restored. Her proposed ban on “price gouging” is aimed at the presumed “monopoly gains” of these allegedly wicked middlemen, while failing to explain why these middlemen weren’t able to squeeze consumers prior to the pandemic or how they were able to cause price increases in non-food goods. She also failed to acknowledge that post-pandemic supply chain disruptions of grains and fertilizers were caused by Western sanctions against Russia and by egregious “net zero” carbon policies being directed against farmers and that a huge increase in the money stock during the pandemic and an accelerating post-pandemic loss of confidence in the fiat dollar can account for the magnitude of price increases of necessities during the Biden years, quite apart from any issues unique to food supply.

Harris also proposed government subsidies to increase competition from smaller food distributors, which is a tacit admission that whatever market concentration is enjoyed by larger food distributors is, in fact, in the interest of minimizing costs to consumers. As Murray Rothbard explained in Man, Economy, and State, the only coherent definition of monopoly necessarily involves the government creating artificial barriers to entry or artificial economies of scale to the gain of the private monopolist allied with the state. None of Harris’s proposals seek to eliminate any existing taxes, regulations, or subsidies that are responsible for private gains via artificially-generated market concentration.

On the healthcare affordability front, Harris once again proposed piling price controls on top of existing interventions and, once again, blamed allegedly wicked “middlemen” for driving up prices. She neglected to mention that healthcare is already one of the most heavily-subsidized, patent-restricted, licensing-restricted, and regulation-restricted sectors of the economy, and that getting rid of existing subsidies and restrictions on competition would significantly reduce prices. Harris also proposed spending $200 billion to purchase and cancel medical debts owed by millions of Americans, thus expanding the ranks of beneficiaries who receive “free” stuff from the state and presumably swell the ranks of grateful Democrat voters, much like the Biden regime’s repeated attempts to cancel federal student loan debts.

With respect to housing affordability, Harris didn’t have the logical consistency to propose price controls—which would lose her millions of votes from existing homeowners—like she did with food and healthcare, but she did come up with another whopper: the government should give a subsidy of $25,000 to first-time home buyers and tax reductions to home builders who cater to them. Evidently, an existing homeowner is not supposed to notice that the prices of maintaining a home or of moving to another home will be made less affordable by Harris’s preference for stimulating demand by first-time buyers. It also seems that memories have faded of the previous occasion when home buyers could easily take out mortgages without having any skin of their own in the game, namely, the infamous subprime mortgage bubble that burst in 2008.

Harris also condemned the role of large corporations that invest in rental housing and promised stricter regulations for them. However, she failed to recognize that the same Wall Street-Federal Reserve financial system that funds the federal government also uses its privilege of creating dollars and dollar-substitutes out of thin air to fund the systematic acquisition of capital assets, including rental housing stock, by itself and by the corporate cronies it funds. This also has the effect of crowding out thrift-financed investors by driving interest rates down. Again, Harris expressed no desire to repeal the privileges enjoyed by crony corporatists.

Overall, Harris’s speech indicates that Democrats want to accelerate the long-term trend towards increasing the share of GDP devoted to assuring economic security at the expense of capital accumulation. This began when Medicare was enacted in 1965, continued when the dollar was put on a fiat basis in 1971, and then proceeded with annual Social Security benefit increases were put on auto-pilot in 1975. The long-standing “progressive” principle of collectivizing responsibility for guaranteeing economic security and minimum incomes, however, stands in stark opposition to the crucial discoveries of Austrian economists regarding the essential role of time in productivity (cf. Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, 1889) and the impossibility of economic calculation under central planning of production (Ludwig von Mises, 1920; independently co-discovered in the same year by the Russian economist Boris Brutzkus and German sociologist Max Weber).

Responsibility for providing for future needs cannot be collectivized for any substantial span of time simply because the future productivity required to redeem such promises can only be achieved through private decisions to restrain present consumption (save). These are essential to making labor and natural resource inputs physically available for investment in the present production of capital goods. The argument that we can have investment without thrift via fiat money creation is a cruel hoax, one that ignores the necessity of thrift for making inputs available. Credit expansions, fed by money creation, merely bid up capital goods prices without making more capital goods available in the long run (though in the short run it causes capital-wasting boom-bust cycles). The argument that we should legislate lower prices or liberate debtors from the costs of their consumption is perhaps too ridiculous to even be considered a hoax. Nevertheless, Democrats now want to embrace such increasingly crude measures for plundering the economy for the benefit of particular constituencies, with little regard to how such a racket or confidence in the sinking fiat dollar can be sustained.

The grim realities of decades-long stagnation of personal savings rates, of rapidly falling real median household incomes since 2019, of increasing frequency and intensity of supply chain disruptions over the past decade, and increases in the relative costs of capital-intensive goods and services, are evidence that America needs a drastic turn away from welfare statism towards the virtues of thrift and private investing if it is to reverse its crisis of capital consumption and deindustrialization—precisely the opposite of what the Democrats intend to do.

 


Originally Posted at https://mises.org/


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Key Battle On Election-Betting Market Heads To Appeals Court

Key Battle On Election-Betting Market Heads To Appeals Court

Key Battle On Election-Betting Market Heads To Appeals Court

Authored by John Haughey via The Epoch Times,

A legal battle over the future of a website’s election prediction market is set to continue on Sept. 19, when an appeals court hears the case of Kalshi v. CFTC, a decision that could reshape how Americans engage in political discourse.

The three-judge U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit will be considering whether individuals should be permitted to purchase contracts to participate in predictive markets that trade on the outcome of elections. If so, should these markets be regulated like other financial exchanges and commodity markets or as a form of gambling?

New York-based KalshiEx LLC argues that the elections market section of its website is a derivatives trading platform where participants buy and sell contracts based on projected outcomes of events, such as elections, and should be regulated no differently than grain futures that investors purchase as hedges against price fluctuations.

These markets provide a “public benefit” by gauging public sentiment in real-time, Kalshi maintains, a valuable guide for policymakers, politicians, and pundits in charting the public pulse.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which regulates the U.S. derivatives markets, argues that Kalshi’s platform blurs the line between commodity trading and gambling, and should not be viewed the same as futures contracts.

The commission maintains that Kalshi’s market puts it in a position to be a de facto elections regulator, which it is not designed to be. Such contracts provide no “public interest” and, in fact, pose a risk to electoral integrity and could potentially incentivize manipulation and fraud, the CFTC argues.

Those conflicting contentions are the core of what the appellate panel will deliberate on before it decides to lift or sustain its stay on U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb’s Sept. 6 ruling in favor of the platform. Judge Cobbs found that the defendant, CFTC, exceeded its statutory authority as a Wall Street regulator when it issued a September 2023 order stopping Kalshi from going online with its market because it is a “prohibited gambling activity.”

Judge Cobbs on Sept. 12 also denied CFTC’s motion for a stay while it mounts an appeal.

After the initial stay request was rejected, Kalshi wasted little time getting its market online. Attorneys for the CFTC were also busy, and within hours secured a stay from the appeals court, setting the stage for the 2 p.m. Sept. 19 hearing.

In the brief time before trading was paused “pending court process” late Sept. 12, more than 65,000 contracts had been sold on the questions, “Which party will control the House?” and “Which party will control the Senate?

The appellate panel will essentially be engaged in a technical legal debate over the definition of “gaming” and “gambling,” and how they would apply, in this case, to any potential regulation.

In its Sept. 13 filing calling for the stay to be lifted, Kalshi rejected CFTC’s definition that trading on election prediction markets is “gaming.”

“An election is not a game. It is not staged for entertainment or for sport. And, unlike the outcome of a game, the outcome of an election carries vast extrinsic and economic consequences,” it maintains.

The CFTC said in its Sept. 14 filing that because “Kalshi’s contracts involve staking something of value on the outcome of elections, they fall within the ordinary definition of ‘gaming.’”

‘Horse Has Left the Barn’

Regardless of how the panel rules, “The horse has left the barn,” said data consultant Mick Bransfield, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who trades on Kalshi’s website and purchased a “Senate control” contract.

There are ample opportunities to place election wagers on offshore websites such as New Zealand-based PredictIt, which imposes strict spending limits; on websites such as Polymarket, a New York-based platform that cannot legally accept wagers from within the United States; or the American Civics Exchange, where businesses and high net worth individuals can purchase “binary derivative contracts” through proxies tied to policy and electoral outcomes as hedges against “unpredictable electoral, legislative, and regulatory events.”

Predictit.org/Screenshot via The Epoch Times

“Elections predictive markets have been around since 1988 in the United States,” Bransfield told The Epoch Times, adding that the issue is “more nuanced than people realize.”

That nuance, said Carl Allen, author of The Polls Weren’t Wrong, is that Kalshi’s platform would be the first federally regulated U.S.-based predictive elections market open to all individuals without spending limits.

“To me, the question is not should it be regulated, the question is how? I think that is where we are,” Allen, who writes about predictive markets on substack, told The Epoch Times.

“It’s challenging to get your arms around this because there are so many organizations involved with it,” he said. “We’re reaching a really interesting point with sports betting going from totally disallowed, except for in Vegas and a few brick-and-mortar [stores], to being everywhere; crypto currency drastically growing; ETFs [Exchange-Traded Funds] getting big;” and Kashi attempting to open a predictive market on election outcomes.

Prediction market trader and Kalshi community manager Jonathan Zubkoff, who also writes about predictive markets and wagering, said the CFTC’s claim that elections markets are betting websites is mistaken.

“It’s not the same as sports betting” where there is “a line posted and billions of dollars are traded against it across different time zones,” prompting the odds to fluctuate, he told The Epoch Times.

“If you are looking at a line [to bet] on a Friday night for a Sunday game, there’s no hedge whatsoever.”

In elections markets, “there actually is a hedge” that gives people an opportunity to put money where “their bias is,” Zubkoff said.

Coalition For Political Forecasting Executive Director Pratik Chougule said another difference between sports betting and other types of gambling and predictive elections markets is that “unlike many other forms of speculation, the wagering here has a real public interest benefit. These markets inform in a way that is very beneficial.”

In October 2023, Chougule told The Epoch Times that elections markets reflect predictive science, citing numerous studies documenting that political betting websites are better indicators of public sentiment than any other measure except the election results themselves, including a study by Professor David Rothschild of the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business.

“Polling is very unreliable,” he said. “And so we basically believe that, in order to promote good forecasting for the public interest, we believe that political betting is one solution to that because, at the end of the day when you have people wagering their own money on the line, that creates incentives that are very hard to replicate through other ways.”

Chougule, who hosts the podcast Star Spangled Gamblers, believes that, while not always accurate, election predictive markets are the best gauge of public sentiment in real-time.

“When they make a prediction, they are putting their money on the line,” he said. “It’s a pretty clear barometer of how an election is going.”

‘Gray Area’ Needs Rules

Chougule said he was “pessimistic” that Kalshi’s elections market would be online by Nov. 5.

“I think when you look at the landscape at the federal and state level, at Congress, at federal agencies, [there is] fear and skepticism and concern about what widespread elections betting could mean for our democratic institutions,” he said. “I don’t agree but it’s a fact.”

Bransfield said he was surprised by Cobb’s ruling against the regulators. “It did not seem the district court would side with Kalshi after the oral arguments in May,” he said. “The judge referred to elections contracts as ‘icky.’ That gave me the assumption that it would be unpalatable to her.”

But there is reason to be deliberative, Bransfield said.

“We should always be concerned about the integrity of our elections but these elections contracts have been around for so long,” he said, noting that more than $1 billion in 2024 U.S. elections contracts have already been purchased in the United Kingdom alone. “All those concerns already exist and have for a long time.”

Certainly, Allen said, “there are a lot of downstream effects that we are going to see from this,” but some fears are unfounded.

Unlike a sports contest where one player can affect the outcome, it would take a widespread concerted effort to “fix” an election, he said. Nevertheless, there is “potential for unscrupulous actors to release a hot tip” that could affect predictive markets.

Allen cited speculation about when former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley would end her presidential campaign during the Republican primaries, whether Robert F. Kennedy would pull the plug on his independent presidential campaign, and who both parties would pick as their vice presidential candidates as examples.

“A handful of people knew about [vice president picks] before it was public. It would be financially beneficial for someone to throw a couple [of] thousand dollars into that market,” he said.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak (C) and his wife Akshata Murty (in yellow) at the launch of the Conservative Party general election manifesto at Silverstone race track in Northamptonshire, England, on June 11, 2024. James Manning/PA

The CFTC, in its challenge, noted that bets had been placed on the July 4 British general election date before Prime Minister Rishi Sunak officially announced it in May.

“It is very hard to see this gray area without some rules,” Allen said.

“Claiming that betting in elections is going to lead to issues with democracy and election integrity is one of the most ridiculous things I ever heard,” Zubkoff said, calling them “elections integrity dog whistles.”

Critics “are sort of lashing out,” he continued.

“It is a total misunderstanding. As someone who has traded in these markets, I haven’t seen anything that remotely constitutes a threat” to election integrity.

Zubkoff said Kalshi “very clearly has the better arguments” and cited the Supreme Court’s Chevron repeal as momentum that “bodes well for the future” of predictive elections markets.

He believes the appellate court will deny CFTC’s motion to extend the stay, and placed the odds of Kalshi getting a “yes” to go online before November’s elections at 60 percent.

Zubkoff noted that just like predictive elections markets, those odds could change in real-time during the hearing. “I could give you much better odds while listening to the hearing just based on the questions the judges ask,” he said.

Allen said the odds are “better than 60-40” that Kalshi will win its case, before qualifying that prediction with the ultimate hedge: “I don’t know how much money I would put on that.”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 09/19/2024 – 09:30

Lebanon PM urges UN to take firm stance over Israel's 'technological war'

Lebanon PM urges UN to take firm stance over Israel’s ‘technological war’

Lebanon’s Prime Minister called Thursday for the United Nations to oppose Israel’s “technological war” on his country ahead of a Security Council meeting on exploding devices used by Hezbollah that killed 32 people. Najib Mikati said in a statement the UN Security Council meeting on Friday should “take a firm stance to stop the Israeli […]

The post Lebanon PM urges UN to take firm stance over Israel’s ‘technological war’ appeared first on Insider Paper.

Russia's Shadow Fleet Is A Ticking Geopolitical Timebomb

Russia’s Shadow Fleet Is A Ticking Geopolitical Timebomb

Russia’s Shadow Fleet Is A Ticking Geopolitical Timebomb

Authored by Antonio Garcia via OilPrice.com,

  • Despite Western sanctions and oil price caps, Russia continues to use an aging “shadow fleet” of tankers to circumvent restrictions, allowing for stable oil exports.

  • Russian oil is now primarily heading to ‘friendly markets’ like China, India, and Turkey.

In response to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the European Union and several other Western countries imposed extensive sanctions on Russia, attempting to stop the trade of Russian oil. In December 2022, the G7 countries decided on an oil price cap. However, Russia has found ways to circumvent these sanctions, primarily through the creation of a “shadow fleet” of oil tankers.

Despite robust US Treasury sanctions targeting the shadow fleet, Russia continues to expand it by incorporating new tankers, allowing for stable exports and further evasion of oil price caps. Only 36% of Russian oil exports were shipped by IG-insured tankers. For other shipments, Russia utilized its shadow fleet, which was responsible for exports of ~2.8 mb/d of crude and 1.1 mb/d of oil products in March 2024.

Kpler data shows that in April 2024, 83% of crude oil and 46% of petroleum products were shipped on shadow tankers. The shrinking role of the mainstream fleet fundamentally undermines the leverage of the price cap.

The shadow fleet is a collection of aging and often poorly maintained vessels with unclear ownership structures and lack of insurance. The number of old, outdated ships departing from Russia has increased dramatically. The EU has recently introduced legislation aimed at cracking down on the sale of mainstream tankers into the Russian shadow trade, but the problem persists. Russia managed to expand its shadow tanker fleet, adding 35 new tankers to replace 41 tankers added to OFAC’s SDN list since December 2023. These tankers, all over 15 years old, are managed outside the EU/G7. With 85% of the tankers aged over 15 years, the risk of oil spills at sea is heightened.

The shadow fleet poses a significant and rising threat to the environment. The aging and underinsured vessels increase the risk of oil spills, a potential catastrophe for which Russia would likely refuse to pay. The vessels can cause collisions, leak oil, malfunction, or even sink, posing a threat to other ships, water, and marine life. With estimates suggesting over 1,400 ships have defected to the dark side serving Russia, the potential for environmental damage is substantial. For instance, since the beginning of 2022, 230 shadow fleet tankers have transported Russian crude oil through the Danish straits on 741 occasions. Also, a shadow fleet tanker on its way to load crude in Russia collided with another ship in the strait between Denmark and Sweden. Last year, a fully loaded oil tanker lost propulsion and drifted off the Danish island of Langeland for six hours. Recovery after any potential oil spill could take decades.

Added to the environmental issue, seaborne Russian oil is almost entirely heading to the Asian markets, with India, China, and Turkey being the biggest buyers. In 2023, 86% of oil exports went to friendly countries compared to 40% in 2021, and 84% of petroleum product exports compared to 30% in 2021. This shift in export destinations highlights the changing geopolitical landscape of the oil market due to the sanctions and the rise of the shadow fleet.

Several measures have been proposed to address the challenges posed by the shadow fleet. These include stricter sanctions on individual vessels, increased scrutiny of financial institutions involved in Russian oil deals, and fines that would limit sales or decommission tankers. The G7 countries are taking measures to tighten control over the price cap and further pressure Russia. The US has introduced a series of sanctions against ships and shipowners suspected of violating the price cap. However, concerns remain that these measures could lead to higher energy prices and escalate tensions with Russia. The Danish foreign ministry has stated that “The Russian shadow fleet is an international problem that requires international solutions.”

The shadow fleet has allowed Russia to circumvent Western sanctions and continue profiting from its oil exports, but it has come at a significant cost. The environmental risks posed by these aging and poorly maintained vessels are alarming, and the shift in oil trade patterns is reshaping the geopolitical landscape. Addressing this complex issue will require concerted international efforts and a delicate balance between maintaining sanctions and ensuring stable energy markets. The situation is unsustainable, and the need for action is becoming increasingly urgent.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 09/19/2024 – 03:30

North Korea claims it tested ballistic missile with 'super-large' warhead

North Korea claims it tested ballistic missile with ‘super-large’ warhead

North Korea claimed Thursday that its latest weapons test had been of a tactical ballistic missile capable of carrying a “super-large” warhead, and a strategic cruise missile, state media reported. Leader Kim Jong Un “guided the test-fires”, the official Korean Central News Agency said, of the “new-type tactical ballistic missile Hwasongpho-11-Da-4.5 and an improved strategic […]

The post North Korea claims it tested ballistic missile with ‘super-large’ warhead appeared first on Insider Paper.