Should I renew the WSJ?

I have enjoyed the Wall Street Journal online edition for many years.  Their reporting was poignant, accurate, and generally kept within the scope of how a particular effort would have some economic impact on peoples’ lives.  There weren’t excessive numbers of fluffy stories, and the right wing bent of the editors was largely kept to the editorial page.  The web site itself wasn’t flashy (pun intended), and gave me a pretty good understanding of the important events of the day.

Seemingly with the takeover of the News Corporation, however, the web site has taken a turn for the worse.  With more flash, more video, and more interactive grahics, it has become hard to actually find the news stories.  With me reading less and less, I wonder, therefore, why I should pay more and more.  The price of the Online Journal this year is going up by a honking 50%.

With the former editor of the Wall Street Journal under the previous ownership now at the Washington Post, I wonder if I should read that web site instead.  And so my question to you; what is your primary news source?  And what is your primary online news source in print?  Aside from the WSJ, I also read the New York Times and Google News.  Of course, one can always count on CNN for the “Man bites dog” stories…

Should we limit bankers’ salaries?

Bureau of EconomicsToday the Voice of America reported (amongst others) that President Obama will seek to cap executive pay at $500,000 for any company that accepts bailout money.  This after a storm of criticism has washed over Citigroup and Bank of America about bonuses, corporate planes, and my favorite, trips to Las Vegas.

While it certainly seems to me that anyone who requires a bailout should at least have some humility, few CEOs in my own experience do.  What they have is a competitive urge and drive to succeed.  While in theory humility and drive do not conflict, in practice I am hard pressed to name a CEO who has both, with one exception that proves the rule, Warren Buffett.

Were we to impose humility on CEOs I would be concerned that we would end up with second string players in a Superbowl situation.  On the other hand, bonuses in the face of a bailout are insulting to those taxpayers who effectively have paid them.  And so some balance should be struck.  My own thinking is that these guys should be capped so long as (a) they’re taking money, and (b) their company is not profitable.  Shareholders shouldn’t get bonuses either, however.  And so while a company is taking money it should not issue a dividend, and the money it takes shouldn’t come for free.  I wonder whether the U.S. should require options of a certain amount or actual stock.  This way we share in the company’s successes as well as failures.

What are your thoughts?

Recipe: Lamb in pepper sauce

This recipe is another one from Mom. Really it is better done with beef than with lamb, but I don’t eat much beef. This is another one-two-three go! sort of meal, but some prep is required with a marinade.  For dinner the longest part of the work is the rice you might serve with this.

Ingredients:

  • 500 grams lamb filet
  • 1 large onion, sliced thinly, lengthwise
  • 1 large green pepper, sliced thinly, lenthwise
  • 2 tbsp sesame oil
  • 2 tsp low-sodium soy sauce
  • 1/2 cup sherry

Slice lamb filets thin, and mix with soy sauce, 1 tsp sesame oil, and sherry.  Let sit for at least four hours, preferrably longer.

Heat a large pan to high.  Add remaining teaspoon of sesame oil, and stir fry peppers and onions for about three minutes.  Drain marinade from lamb and add lamb.  Cook for about one minute.  Add marinade back in and allow to boil for two minutes.

Serves four with/over rice and a veg.

YAR (Yet Another Recipe, by request): Mom’s no-name chicken

My mom makes this dish, although she might not admit to it.  And so I am posting this recipe while she is on vacation.  I’ve ruthlessly stolen it.  It has no cutsy name, but suggestions are welcome.  This dish takes a little bit of forethought, but doesn’t take that much effort.

Ingredients

  • Eight chicken thighes on the bone
  • Juice of one lemon
  • 1/2 tsp fresh crushed black pepper
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 tbsp olive oil

Directions

Mix lemon juice, pepper, salt, and olive oil in a bowl that is samll enough to submerge chicken.  Add chicken and press down until the marinade covers it. Cover and place in refrigerator.  Marinade for at least 4 hours but no longer than a day.  Consider flipping chicken once, but keep it submerged.

Preheat oven to 180°C with fan, or 195°C without.  Place chicken in a pan, covering with any remaining marinade and cook uncovered for 45 minutes.

Serves four people.

Is that fat blathering idiot right about something?

rush_limbaughOf course we’re talking about Rush Limbaugh.  In an Op-Ed piece in the Wall Street Journal he argues that a stimulus package should satisfy both “supply-siders” and “Keynesians”.  He also makes the argument that Obama didn’t win the election by that much.

I find both arguments unpersuasive.  Let’s start with the last one first.  No matter how you break down the percentages of the presidential election, Obama won.  I don’t recall Mr. Limbaugh making an argument that President Bush should reach out to the Democrats when Al Gore won the election in 2000.  In addition, Republicans had their clocks cleaned in both the House and the Senate.  A sufficient mandate exists that the Republicans will not stop President Obama.  As I’ve previously written, congressional Democrats will be opposition enough.  Limbaugh knows this, which is why he then tries to base his argument on a poll, which says that 59% of Americans think Congress and the president will spend too much.  Whatever.  Nobody ever got thrown out of office for growing the deficit.

But is Mr. Limbaugh correct when he suggests that both supply side and direct government investment in various efforts is the right way to go forward?  Normally, I would view taking both roads as failing the Yogi Berra test: when you come to a fork in a road, take it.  And yet this is often something that politicians can’t do.  They often can’t make a stand.  This is, for instance, why no declaration of war has been made by the Congress since World War II.

The theory behind supply-side economics is that when businesses have lower costs (say through lower taxes), either they will receive more revenue, in which case they will invest it and end up hiring more people, and thus help GDP and jobs, or they will cut their prices, in which case the consumer will spend the money somewhere else and also increase GDP and drive businesses to create more jobs.  This assumes that the obstruction to investment today is somehow related to a lack of cash.  This is not the case, today.

Many companies are sitting on fortunes that they are not spending, and those that would like to spend – generally start-ups, are unable to get credit from banks.  No amount of tax cuts will help a start-up right now.  No amount of tax cuts will cause companies to expand in the current environment.  Everyone is scared that the consumer lacks cash.

And so while under some circumstances it might make sense to play the supply-side game, the more direct approach is to address consumer confidence by seeing that they have have jobs.  The problem with government spending models is that they tend to produce jobs that we as Americans don’t think much of.  When was the last time you worked on a crew that built a road, for instance?

Some of the president’s initiatives go into health care and education.  It is a sure bet that such money will find its way back into the economy.  In fact, nearly all of the programs will bring money to the economy.  But a restructuring seems inevitable.

Sadly Mr. Limbaugh couldn’t get past his own partisan blinders to offer a candidate assessment of the situation.