sábado, 12 de marzo de 2011

Wisconsin: 3 años atrás se decía


The war in Iraq has cost trillions. But the US - and the world - will be paying the price of the conflict for decades to come



Joseph Stiglitz guardian.co.uk, Thursday 13 March 2008 18.00 GMT Article history

With March 20 marking the fifth anniversary of the United States-led invasion of Iraq, it's time to take stock of what has happened. In our new book The Three Trillion Dollar War, Harvard's Linda Bilmes and I conservatively estimate the economic cost of the war to the US to be $3 trillion, and the costs to the rest of the world to be another $3tn - far higher than the Bush administration's estimates before the war. The Bush team not only misled the world about the war's possible costs, but has also sought to obscure the costs as the war has gone on.



This is not surprising. After all, the Bush administration lied about everything else, from Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction to his supposed link with al-Qaida. Indeed, only after the US-led invasion did Iraq become a breeding ground for terrorists.



The Bush administration said the war would cost $50bn. The US now spends that amount in Iraq every three months. To put that number in context: for one-sixth of the cost of the war, the US could put its social security system on a sound footing for more than a half-century, without cutting benefits or raising contributions.



Moreover, the Bush administration cut taxes for the rich as it went to war, despite running a budget deficit. As a result, it has had to use deficit spending - much of it financed from abroad - to pay for the war. This is the first war in American history that has not demanded some sacrifice from citizens through higher taxes; instead, the entire cost is being passed onto future generations. Unless things change, the US national debt - which was $5.7tn when Bush became president - will be $2tn higher because of the war (in addition to the $800bn increase under Bush before the war).



Was this incompetence or dishonesty? Almost surely both. Cash accounting meant that the Bush administration focused on today's costs, not future costs, including disability and health care for returning veterans. Only years after the war began did the administration order the specially armoured vehicles that would have saved the lives of many killed by roadside bombs. Not wanting to reintroduce a draft, and finding it difficult to recruit for an unpopular war, troops have been forced into two, three, or four stress-filled deployments.



The administration has tried to keep the war's costs from the American public. Veterans groups have used the freedom of information act to discover the total number of injured - 15 times the number of fatalities. Already, 52,000 returning veterans have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress syndrome. America will need to provide disability compensation to an estimated 40% of the 1.65 million troops that have already been deployed. And, of course, the bleeding will continue as long as the war continues, with the healthcare and disability bill amounting to more than $600bn (in present-value terms).



Ideology and profiteering have also played a role in driving up the war's costs. America has relied on private contractors, which have not come cheap. A Blackwater security guard can cost more than $1,000 per day, not including disability and life insurance, which is paid for by the government. When unemployment rates in Iraq soared to 60%, hiring Iraqis would have made sense; but the contractors preferred to import cheap labour from Nepal, Philippines, and other countries.



The war has had only two winners: oil companies and defence contractors. The stock price of Halliburton, vice-president Dick Cheney's old company, has soared. But even as the government turned increasingly to contractors, it reduced its oversight.



The largest cost of this mismanaged war has been borne by Iraq. Half of Iraq's doctors have been killed or have left the country, unemployment stands at 25%, and, five years after the war's start, Baghdad still has less than eight hours of electricity a day. Out of Iraq's total population of around 28 million, 4 million are displaced and 2 million have fled the country.



The thousands of violent deaths have inured most westerners to what is going on: a bomb blast that kills 25 hardly seems newsworthy anymore. But statistical studies of death rates before and after the invasion tell some of the grim reality. They suggest additional deaths from a low of around 450,000 in the first 40 months of the war (150,000 of them violent deaths) to 600,000.



With so many people in Iraq suffering so much in so many ways, it may seem callous to discuss the economic costs. And it may seem particularly self-absorbed to focus on the economic costs to America, which embarked on this war in violation of international law. But the economic costs are enormous, and they go well beyond budgetary outlays. Americans like to say that there is no such thing as a free lunch. Nor is there such a thing as a free war. The US - and the world - will be paying the price for decades to come.



In cooperation with Project Syndicate, 2008.




Notwithstanding President Bush's response, our original estimate of the cost of the Iraq war was too conservative: in reality, it will be much higher


Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes guardian.co.uk, Sunday 6 April 2008 12.00 BST

President Bush has tried to give the impression that the $3 trillion dollar estimate of the total cost of the war that we provide in our new book may be exaggerated.



We believe that it is, in fact, conservative. Even the president would have to admit that the $50 to $60 billion estimate given by the administration before the war was wildly off the mark; there is little reason to have confidence in their arithmetic. They admit to a cost so far of $600 billion.



Our numbers differ from theirs for three reasons: first, we are estimating the total cost of the war, under alternative conservative scenarios, derived from the defence department and congressional budget office. We are not looking at McCain's 100-year scenario - we assume that we are there, in diminished strength, only through to 2017. But neither are we looking at a scenario that sees our troops pulled out within six months. With operational spending going on at $12 billion a month, and with every year costing more than the last, it is easy to come to a total operational cost that is double the $600 billon already spent.



Second, we include war expenditures hidden elsewhere in the budget, and budgetary expenditures that we would have to incur in the future even if we left tomorrow. Most important of these are future costs of caring for the 40% of returning veterans that are likely to suffer from disabilities (in excess of $600 billion; second world war veterans' costs didn't peak until 1993), and restoring the military to its prewar strength. If you include interest, and interest on the interest - with all of the war debt financed - the budgetary costs quickly mount.



Finally, our $3 trillion dollars estimate also includes costs to the economy that go beyond the budget, for instance the cost of caring for the huge number of returning disabled veterans that go beyond the costs borne by the federal government - in one out of five families with a serious disability, someone has to give up a job. The macro-economic costs are even larger. Almost every expert we have talked to agrees that the war has had something to do with the rise in the price of oil; it was not just an accident that oil prices began to soar at the same time as the war began.



We have been criticised, but for being excessively conservative, for including only $5 to $10 of the $75 to $85 increase in the price of oil since then. Money spent on the war - on a Nepalese contractor working in Iraq - does not stimulate the economy as much as money spent on hospitals or research or schools at home. These contractionary effects were temporarily covered up, hidden, by the flood of liquidity and lax regulations that led to a housing bubble and a consumption boom - with household savings plummeting to zero. But this simply postponed paying these costs - and increased them.



With the exception of a few lonely surviving supply-siders, most economists believe that deficits matter, and the huge deficits to finance the war will have their toll in the long run. Deficits matter in both the short run and the long. They help crowd out private investment that would have stimulated the economy far more than the war expenditures; and the reduced investments reduce long-run productivity. With 40% of the funds borrowed from abroad, Americans will be sending interest payments abroad - lowering living standards at home. Finally, even Fed Chair Bernanke (formerly the president's economic adviser) admits that the deficits have reduced the room to manoeuvre - the ability of the government to respond to the looming economic crisis.



Spending so much on the war has economic consequences, even if you don't think there is any connection between the war and the economy's current woes.



In adding up the quantifiable costs of the war, it is hard not to come up with a number in excess of $3 trillion. In putting a $3 trillion price tag on the war, we believe we have been excessively conservative - a $4 or $5 trillion tag would be more reasonable. And remember - this is just the cost for America.

miércoles, 2 de marzo de 2011

Tea Party






AlterNet spoke with some of the attendants who came on Saturday to stand up for the middle class and the democracy protests in Wisconsin.
 
 
A MoveOn organizer tells AlterNet that at least 50,000 people came out in the streets across the country for today's Rally to Save the American Dream. Old and young, rich and poor, they braved the cold to stand with embattled public workers and raise their voices against the GOP's merciless budget cuts – cuts that would drive the economy deeper into recession.
Earlier, US UNCUT – a new grass-roots movement with the simple message that we shouldn't be cutting services while corporate tax cheats dodge their responsibilities – engaged in civil disobedience at Bank of America branches across the country. They pointed out that anyone with a dollar in their pocket has more money than the mega-bank paid in federal taxes last year.
Outside the San Francisco Civic Center, one of the dozens of protests in all 50 states drew a boisterous crowd of approximately 2,000 people. AlterNet interviewed a cross-section of the protesters about why they had come, what they knew of Wisconsin governor Scott Walker's union-busting bill and where they got their information.
Only two of the 12 participants with whom we spoke had a clear picture of the details of Wisconsin's union-busting bill, but all of the people who turned out on this chilly day told AlterNet that they understood that the states' budget woes are being used as a premise for breaking the unions. None of them relied on the corporate media for their information.
Elaine, 61, is a nurse from Berkeley, California. She's not a member of a union.
Why are you here?
elaineI think that collective bargaining is something people fought and died for. That's why we have a weekend, that's why we get to go home at night and make dinner. If we didn't have collective bargaining, or a labor movement or unions, we'd all be working 14 hour days, 6 or maybe even 7 days a week.
Where do you get your information?
I didn't know very much until I listened to Democracy, Now! And then I learned the kinds of things [Walker] was trying to do—disassembling the cabinet and appointing his own people, making it so he could give really big contracts without oversight and taking away people's negotiating rights. So, I feel like I'm moderately well informed, but I didn't get that information from television.
Joel, 68, is a retired teacher who was a union member during his career. He lives in Berkeley, California.

Why are you here?
joelI oppose what's going on in Wisonsin and I oppose what's going on with workers across the United States.
Where do you get your info?
The mainstream coverage is very lousy. I checked the MSM and saw very little. I get my information from Lawrence O'Donnel, KPFA and NPR. 
What about Governor Walker's claim that his hand is being forced by the budget deficit?
I don't agree with that. I think he's just another pawn for the Koch brothers and all these corporations.
Douglas, 64, is a non-union computer engineer from San Francisco

Why are you here?
douglasI'm down here because I'm against what's going on in Washington with the Tea Party. I was totally against the tax cuts given to the rich and the bailouts of the corporations. Also: the tendency of the new House to vote with corporations and the rich and to deny most of the American people of their right to be part of the American Dream.
Where do you get your information?
I get almost all of the information that I depend on off of public stations and C-Span – media that I consider to be independent of the monied interests.
What does your sign mean?
I think a lot of people have been hoodwinked in the last election. They were sold a bill of goods, they were lied to and deceived and I think people are starting to realize that the tea parties are not for the people but for the big corporations. The whole tea party was backed by big oil interests like the Koch brothers. And basically, the big polluters.

Tea Party

The Koch's Tea Party libertarianism is actually a thin veneer for the company's long running history of manipulating the market to pad Koch profits. 
 Koch Industries, the international conglomerate owned by Charles and David Koch, is not only the second largest private company in America, it is the most politically active. As ThinkProgress has carefully documented over the last three years, Koch groups have spent tens of millions to influence government policy — from financing the Tea Parties, to funding junk academic studies, to undisclosed attack ads against Democrats, to groups promoting climate change denial, to a large network of state-based and national think tanks. In an opinion column for the Wall Street Journal Tuesday, Koch Industries CEO Charles Koch fired back at his critics, who have grown more vocal as it has become clear that Koch groups are providing the political muscle for Gov. Scott Walker’s (R-WI) union-busting power grab.
In his piece, Charles portrays himself as simply an ideological advocate, and says his money to political groups is only meant to “enhance true economic freedom.” He chides special interests that have “successfully lobbied for special favors,” claiming “crony capitalism is much easier than competing in an open market.” But in reality, the focus of the Koch political machine is geared towards “crony capitalism” — corrupting government to make Charles and his brother David Koch richer. Koch’s Tea Party libertarianism is actually a thin veneer for the company’s long running history of winning special deals from the government and manipulating the market to pad Koch profits:
– The dirty secret of Koch Industries is its birth under the centrally-planned Soviet Union. Fred Koch, the founder of the company and father of David and Charles, helped construct fifteen oil refineries for Joseph Stalin before expanding the business in the United States.
– As Yasha Levine has reported, Koch exploits a number of government programs for profit. For instance, Georgia Pacific, a timber company subsidiary of Koch Industries, uses taxpayer money provided by the U.S. Forestry Service to provide their loggers with taxpayer-funded roads and access to virgin growth forests. “Logging companies such as Georgia-Pacific strip lands bare, destroy vast acreages and pay only a small fee to the federal government in proportion to what they take from the public,” according to the Institute for Public Accuracy. Levine also notes that Koch’s cattle ranching company, Matador Cattle Company, uses a New Deal program to profit off federal land for free.
Koch Industries won massive government contracts using their close relationship with the Bush administration. The Bush administration, in a deal even conservatives alleged was a quid pro quo because of Koch’s campaign donations, handed Koch Industries a lucrative contract to supply the nation’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve with 8 million barrels of crude oil. The SPR deal, done initially in 2002, was renewed in 2004 by Bush administration officials. During the occupation of Iraq, Koch won significant contracts to buy Iraqi crude oil.
– Although Koch campaigned vigorously against health reform — running attack ads, sponsoring anti-health reform Tea Parties, and comparing health reform to the Holocaust — Koch Industries applied for health reform subsidies made possible by the Obama administration.
– The Koch brothers have claimed that they oppose government intervention in the market, but Koch Industries lobbies aggressively for taxpayer handouts. In Alaska, blogger Andrew Halcro reported that a Koch subsidiary in Fairbanks asked Gov. Sarah Palin’s administration to use taxpayer money to bail out one of their failing refinery.



Permafrost Friday: The Kochtopus in Alaska

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October 15, 2010: An article written by the New Yorker's Jane Mayer, ties the billionaire Koch brothers to the funding behind the Tea Party Express movement.
In her August 30, 2010 column, Mayer writes, "Indeed, the brothers have funded opposition campaigns against so many Obama Administration policies—from health-care reform to the economic-stimulus program—that, in political circles, their ideological network is known as the Kochtopus."
The money bombs dropped by the Tea Party Express that attacked incumbent Lisa Murkowski in the August GOP U.S. Senate primary, was the sole reason Joe Miller won a close race. 
Score one for the Koch boys, or should we?
What is interesting about the Koch brothers strong support of the Tea Party, which assails government bail outs, is that eighteen months ago the Koch brothers were asking Alaskan taxpayers to bail out their Fairbanks refinery.
From andrewhalcro.com January 19, 2009...
The Koch brothers own Koch Industries. A company that boasts annual sales of $90 billion in the United States. The company’s sectors include forest products, energy, plastics, ranching, and finance, with such well-known brands as Dixie Cups and Lycra. If it were a public company, Koch would rank about 16th on the Fortune 500, ahead of such behemoths as Procter & Gamble and Boeing
These are bothers who have established themselves as staunch Libertarians. Defenders of the free market and generous benefactors to such notable free market advocacy groups as the Cato Institute, to whom together, the brothers have donated over $21 million.
As David Koch explained to National Journal (May 16, 1992): "My overall concept is to minimize the role of government and to maximize the role of private economy and to maximize personal freedoms." 
Today, the billionaire brothers appear to be trying to maximize the role of government in looking for a helping hand from the State of Alaska.
The Koch's own a few refineries in the United States including the Flint Hills Refinery in Fairbanks. In 2003, they paid $265 million in purchasing the refinery from the Williams Companies.
Less than three years later, Flint Hills began asking for relief from the Murkowski administration. In Februrary of 2006, Flint Hills sent a letter to the state asking for a change to their oil supply contract with the state so that payments owed wouldn't be required.
In an immediate response, State's Oil & Gas Director Bill Van Dyke responded by saying that all parties, including Flint Hills, knew the oil supply contract was negotiated in early 2004, that disputes before federal regulatory agencies over pipeline tariffs were likely and could affect the oil price retroactively.
One Fairbanks lawmaker even introduced legislation (SB314) in April of 2006 to prohibit such retroactive billing adjustments in order to help out the home team refinery. The bill died in committee.
Today the refinery is back, asking the Palin administration for relief.
Returning to the well
On December 10, 2008, then Governor Sarah Palin released a statement announcing a "Cooperative effort aimed at positioning the North Pole Refinery for success."
The governor's announcement came quickly on the heels of a statement issued by the refinery that they had decided it was not economically feasible to invest the necessary money to upgrade the refinery.
A quick side note; not economically feasible? Doesn't that seem at odds with the accusation that Alaska refineries have been price gouging?
I digress...back to the issue.
Flint Hills was looking at a major investment needed to bring their refinery up to EPA standards by a June 2010 deadline. These upgrades to promote low sulfer diesel could run well over $100 million.
Flint Hills was considering three options; to make the needed investments in the refinery, to sell the refinery or to shut the refinery down. After publicly announcing they would not sink anymore money into the refinery, the panic spread throughout the railbelt as both consumers and commercial interests started to panic.
The refineries impact is significant.
It provides home heating fuel to the Fairbanks market, aviation fuel used at the Anchorage International Airport and some gasoline. The aviation fuel segment of the refineries business accounted for 36%of the Alaska Railroad's combined freight and passenger revenue in 2007.
In a press interview on December 12, 2008, the governor's special assistant Joe Balash said one possibility under consideration is for the state to take ownership.
State ownership? It's way too early to even speak of such extreme action. 
While saving Flint Hills is important, there is a private sector solution that hasn't even been discussed.
One of Flint Hills declared options was to sell the refinery. But according to my sources there have been no such discussions with suitable buyers here in Alaska.
I'm sure if Flint Hills is willing to toss the keys to the refinery to the state or take the radical third option of simply shutting the refinery down, others would be willing to step in.
A quick look at Flint Hills competitors show companies who have dealt with increased cost of operating as well as having to invest in bringing their refineries up to EPA standards.
On the Kenai Peninsula, the Tesoro plant at Nikiski has already made the necessary investments to bring their refinery up to code. In Valdez, the Petro Star refinery, owned and operated by ASRC, recently received board approval to invest $100 million in refinery upgrades to meet 2010 EPA standards.
Due to the economic importance and the sense of urgency put off by the Flint Hills Refinery, there will be significant political pressure from interested groups which will create the environment for a risky move by the state.
All private sector options must be considered first. 
In press interviews, the Palin administration has stated they have retained a Dallas energy consulting firm to help analyze the financials from Flint Hills refinery and expects the process to take three to six months.  
Lawmakers need to scrutinize this deal carefully and remember the words of two of the countries richest men who also happen to own the Flint Hills refinery
In a 1992 interview with the National Journal, David Koch said, we need "to minimize the role of government and to maximize the role of private economy."
Maximizing the role of the private economy is not accomplished by a state sponsored bailout.
In a 2007 interview with the American, Charles Koch said, "One of the big problems with government activities is that if something does not work, rather than applying analysis to see why and eliminating it or changing it, the answer’s always, “Well, the reason it did not work is we did not put enough money into it.” That is crazy. It would be like having an experiment that failed and then building a full-scale plan."
Today it seems like Flint Hills is asking government to put more money into something they say does not work.
Lawmakers and state officials must be aware of the downside economics facing the Flint Hills refinery. The refinery gets 100% of its oil from the state's royalty share, that will continue to decline as North Slope production declines.
In fact when you look at the same legislative voices that are supporting state involvement is assisting the refinery, they are the same voices that voted to jack up taxes on production in 2007 which will do nothing to help generate additional production for the refinery.
Any idea to put state dollars at risk, should under go stringent scrutiny.
And so it goes it comes full circle.