From Charles Kupchan, at Foreign Affairs , ” The Democratic Malaise: Globalization and the Threat to the West “: Globalization has expanded aggregate wealth and enabled developing countries to achieve unprecedented prosperity. The proliferation of investment, trade, and communication networks has deepened interdependence and its potentially pacifying effects and has helped pry open nondemocratic states and foster popular uprisings. But at the same time, globalization and the digital economy on which it depends are the main source of the West’s current crisis of governability. Deindustrialization and outsourcing, global trade and fiscal imbalances, excess capital and credit and asset bubbles — these consequences of globalization are imposing hardships and insecurity not experienced for generations. The distress stemming from the economic crisis that began in 2008 is particularly acute, but the underlying problems began much earlier. For the better part of two decades, middle-class wages in the world’s leading democracies have been stagnant, and economic inequality has been rising sharply as globalization has handsomely rewarded its winners but left its many losers behind. These trends are not temporary byproducts of the business cycle, nor are they due primarily to insufficient regulation of the financial sector, tax cuts amid expensive wars, or other errant policies. Stagnant wages and rising inequality are, as the economic analysts Daniel Alpert, Robert Hockett, and Nouriel Roubini recently argued in their study “The Way Forward,” a consequence of the integration of billions of low-wage workers into the global economy and increases in productivity stemming from the application of information technology to the manufacturing sector. These developments have pushed global capacity far higher than demand, exacting a heavy toll on workers in the high-wage economies of the industrialized West. The resulting dislocation and disaffection among Western electorates have been magnified by globalization’s intensification of transnational threats, such as international crime, terrorism, unwanted immigration, and environmental degradation. Adding to this nasty mix is the information revolution; the Internet and the profusion of mass media appear to be fueling ideological polarization more than they are cultivating deliberative debate. Voters confronted with economic duress, social dislocation, and political division look to their elected representatives for help. But just as globalization is stimulating this pressing demand for responsive governance, it is also ensuring that its provision is in desperately short supply. For three main reasons, governments in the industrialized West have entered a period of pronounced ineffectiveness. First, globalization has made many of the traditional policy tools used by liberal democracies much blunter instruments. Washington has regularly turned to fiscal and monetary policy to modulate economic performance. But in the midst of global competition and unprecedented debt, the U.S. economy seems all but immune to injections of stimulus spending or the Federal Reserve’s latest moves on interest rates. The scope and speed of commercial and financial flows mean that decisions and developments elsewhere — Beijing’s intransigence on the value of the yuan, Europe’s sluggish response to its financial crisis, the actions of investors and ratings agencies, an increase in the quality of Hyundai’s latest models — outweigh decisions taken in Washington. Europe’s democracies long relied on monetary policy to adjust to fluctuations in national economic performance. But they gave up that option when they joined the eurozone. Japan over the last two decades has tried one stimulus strategy after another, but to no avail. In a globalized world, democracies simply have less control over outcomes than they used to. I like Kupchan, but he errs badly here: In the United States, partisan confron­t­ation is paralyzing the political system. The underlying cause is the poor state of the U.S. economy. Since 2008, many Americans have lost their houses, jobs, and retirement savings. And these setbacks come on the heels of back-to-back decades of stagnation in middle-class wages. Over the past ten years, the average household income in the United States has fallen by over ten percent. In the meantime, income inequality has been steadily rising, making the United States the most unequal country in the industrialized world. The primary source of the declining fortunes of the American worker is global competition; jobs have been heading overseas. In addition, many of the most competitive companies in the digital economy do not have long coattails. Facebook’s estimated value is around $70 billion, and it employs roughly 2,000 workers; compare this with General Motors, which is valued at $35 billion and has 77,000 employees in the United States and 208,000 worldwide. The wealth of the United States’ cutting-edge companies is not trickling down to the middle class. These harsh economic realities are helping revive ideological and partisan cleavages long muted by the nation’s rising economic fortunes. During the decades after World War II, a broadly shared prosperity pulled Democrats and Republicans toward the political center. But today, Capitol Hill is largely devoid of both centrists and bipartisanship; Democrats campaign for more stimulus, relief for the unemployed, and taxes on the rich, whereas Republicans clamor for radical cuts in the size and cost of government. Expediting the hollowing out of the center are partisan redistricting, a media environment that provokes more than it informs, and a broken campaign finance system that has been captured by special interests. The resulting polarization is tying the country in knots. President Barack Obama realized as much, which is why he entered office promising to be a “postpartisan” president. But the failure of Obama’s best efforts to revive the economy and restore bipartisan cooperation has exposed the systemic nature of the nation’s economic and political dysfunction. His $787 billion stimulus package, passed without the support of a single House Republican, was unable to resuscitate an economy plagued by debt, a deficit of middle-class jobs, and the global slowdown. Since the Republicans gained control of the House in 2010, partisan confrontation has stood in the way of progress on nearly every issue. Bills to promote economic growth either fail to pass or are so watered down that they have little impact. Immigration reform and legislation to curb global warming are not even on the table. Ineffective governance, combined with daily doses of partisan bile, has pushed public approval of Congress to historic lows. Spreading frustration has spawned the Occupy Wall Street movement — the first sustained bout of public protests since the Vietnam War. The electorate’s discontent only deepens the challenges of governance, as vulnerable politicians cater to the narrow interests of the party base and the nation’s political system loses what little wind it has in its sails. Kupchan relies less on his globalization variable in the American case than he does on rising inequality and partisanship. And you’d have to code “protests” by leftward or rightward orientation for Occupy Wall Street to be “the first sustained bout of public protests since the Vietnam War.” Actually, by that logic it was the tea parties that were the first sustained protests since Vietnam, but if you code “public protests” only as left-wing, one can forget about the tea parties — a protest movement that dominated all of 2009 and is widely considered to have formed the grassroots constituency driving the GOP to the House majority in the 2010 elections. Beyond that, I agree there’s a crisis of governability in the industrial democracies. I just don’t think Kupchan’s focusing on the most important causes. The unsustainability of the European social welfare state model is probably a more important factor in the political turmoil in Europe in 2011. Globalization is important as well, no doubt, but the EU nations can only blame themselves for digging the kinds of debt holes in which they found themselves unable to climb out. Kupchan just barely touches on this, and he blames the economic crisis more so than the ultimately flawed social welfare commitments. Governments like Greece and Italy fell not just from economic and social crisis but because leaders lacked independence from EU institutions, which have enforced continued commitments to a continental bargain whose fundamental failures are finally being revealed. And for the wider systemic challenge facing the Western democracies, Kupchan suggests more statism and accommodation to globalization — the same variable he posits as the number one factor causing the decline of industrial competitiveness and economic dynamism. In other words, Kupchan’s recycling failed theories of a sort of globalist Keynesian bargain: “state-led investment” in the domestic economies and “progressive populism” in the political systems of these states. It sounds fancy. But that’s the kind of thing that got these nations into trouble in the first place.

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The Crisis of Governability in the Industrial Democracies

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AP – President Barack Obama’s campaign-style drive for another batch of economic stimulus spending is facing defeat yet again at the hands of Republicans in the Senate.

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Senate to block competing infrastructure plans
(AP)

Solar Energy School Propaganda 101

On September 30, 2011, in Stimulus Spending, Uncategorized, by Richard Riker

My latest column investigates the green-washing of the government-funded solar energy racket going in America’s schools. Do you know what your kids are being taught — or rather, not being taught about failed eco-subsidies? Find out below. First, a quick Solyndra Watch link round-up: The White House is doing a Chu-step – sending Energy Secretary Steven Chu to “take responsibility,” but without doing anything to hold him accountable. Look for House hearings just around the corner. You’ve heard, of course, about the Pelosi tie to one of the latest DOE loan guarantee recipients. But Ron Pelosi is small-fry compared to the heavy-hiting, deep-pocketed Democrat Party donors working the system from the inside. IWatchNews.org, in partnership with ABC News, has the scoop on the meddling bundlers with hugetastic conflicts of interest. More at Hot Air . These should be required enviro-class reading assignments. Print, share, enlighten. *** Solar Energy School Propaganda 101 by Michelle Malkin Creators Syndicate Copyright 2011 The Obama administration’s crony green subsidy scandal is erupting like a solar flare in Washington. But do you know what your kids are learning in their environmental education classes about this red-hot taxpayer eco-scam ? Chances are: not much. Instead, the U.S. Department of Energy and the Democratic apparatchiks at the National Education Association are disseminating solar power propaganda masquerading as math and science curricula. Titled “ Solar Power and Me: The Inherent Advantages ,” the lesson plan for middle-school and high-school students directs them to “take note of how solar energy is incorporated into the infrastructure of various cities nationwide and write a short essay about how they would encourage solar energy use in their own town.” A worksheet labeled “All About Solar!” makes the blanket assertion that solar technologies are “a sound economical choice as they can reduce or eliminate exposure to rising electricity rates, or even eliminate one’s need to pay an electrical bill! In addition, solar panels can be a smart long-term investment, with many solar vendors offering 20-30 year warranties on their products.” The only warranties worth anything from bankrupt, half-billion-dollar solar company Solyndra Inc. are the warranties on the Disney whistling robots and saunas that adorned its Taj Mahal headquarters. But I digress. Another worksheet cheerleads the “financial savings” of “solar power and me” and coaches students to “imagine you live in amazing and sunny Anaheim, CA, where the combination of local and federal rebates covers 74 percent of your total cost of a solar panel system!” The exercise then entices the student to take out a 20-year loan on a new solar panel system to produce even greater illusory savings. Yet another question-and-answer key reads: “How would switching to solar energy affect energy use at your home and school?” Answer: “In general, switching to solar energy would lower your home’s electrical costs and reduce your emissions, thus saving money and improving the environment.” But as Brian McGraw of the free-market Competitive Enterprise Institute points out: “There might be a small niche market, but solar energy is still largely incapable of producing reliable electricity at rates that are even in the ballpark of cost competitiveness compared to coal or natural gas.” Energy Secretary Steven Chu, the force behind billions of dollars’ worth of rushed green energy loans overseen by deep-pocketed Obama bundlers, himself acknowledged that solar tech will need to improve five-fold before it even begins to have a cost-competitive shot. After examining decades’ worth of failed subsidized solar efforts at home and around the world, the Institute for Energy Research concludes: “Although stand-alone solar power has a certain free-market niche and does not need government favor, using solar power for grid electricity has been and will be an economic loser for ratepayers and a burden to taxpayers .” The DOE/NEA curriculum encourages students to pressure politicians to pour more money into supposedly underfunded green energy schemes. But the House Budget Committee reported last week ( PDF here ): “The president’s stimulus law alone included tens of billions in new government subsidies for politically favored renewable-energy interests: $6 billion in loan guarantees for renewable energy investments; $17 billion for the Department of Energy’s energy efficiency and renewable energy programs; $2 billion for energy-efficient battery manufacturing; and billions more on other ‘clean-energy’ programs for a total of $80 billion. Two years later, the president’s promise of millions of jobs stands in stark contrast with reality.” A more useful homework assignment would be to have these future taxpayers calculate how much their moms and dads are spending to prop up Obama’s green jobs industry and its elite Democratic campaign finance donors/investors. The White House projected 65,000 new jobs from nearly $40 billion in green job stimulus spending. Instead, fewer than 3,600 jobs were created . Get out your calculators, kids: That’s $4.85 million per job. Investor’s Business Daily crunches the numbers further on the taxpayers’ return on its DOE green loan guarantee “investments” and finds that the program will cost a whopping $23 million per job . A separate NEA solar energy lesson plan marketed with Dow Corning teaches 5th- through 8th-graders “how solar panels work.” A more apt, real-world lesson would teach them how they don’t work. The myth that this alternative energy source “pays for itself” is busted with just a cursory glance at the Denver Museum of Science and Nature. President Obama staged a photo-op on the facility’s solar panel roof in 2009 when he signed the green jobs goodie-stuffed stimulus law. The museum refused to disclose electric bills before and after installation of the solar array. But after digging into the lavishly taxpayer-funded project, the Colorado-based Independence Institute discovered that the panels—which only last 25 years—wouldn’t “pay for themselves” until the year 2118, more than a century from now. It’s elementary. The government shouldn’t be in the business of picking any eco-winners or losers. “Too Green To Fail” redistributes wealth from viable private projects to pipe dreams, forces higher taxes and energy costs on everyone, and rewards partisan funders at public expense. Teach your children well. They’re inheriting the bill.

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Solar Energy School Propaganda 101

ContributorNetwork – If the buzz in weekend news shows is correct, President Barack Obama is planning to introduce another stimulus spending package as soon as he gets back from vacation. The 2009 federal spending plan was touted as a boon to the “green” jobs movement. Statistics released earlier this week pertaining to funds still unspent and the lack of jobs created from the Recovery and Investment Act, will another stimulus aid the “green” job growth in America or be another disappointment?

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Would Another Stimulus Plan Create ‘Green’ Jobs?
(ContributorNetwork)

The fact is that President Obama has been pursuing job killing policies like an energy tax, the health care bill, and wasteful stimulus spending.

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How Fast Can We Turn Things Around?

There is word of two potential Republican campaigns in today's Albuquerque Journal (reading the article requires sitting through an ad): Albuquerque City Councilor Dan Lewis has announced that he is forming an exploratory committee — also known as a pre-campaign fundraising apparatus — that will look at the possibility of running for Congress in the Albuquerque-based 1st Congressional District. Lewis, a Republican, said in statements on his exploratory committee website that he is unhappy with Democratic incumbent Rep. Martin Heinrich's record. “The incumbent says he has finally discovered the enormous financial disaster looming over us from the national debt, but that didn't stop him from voting for Obama's trillion-dollar health tax and trillions of more dollars in government bailouts and so-called stimulus spending,” Lewis said. “It was incumbent Martin Heinrich who championed the government health care boondoggle, the colossal cost of which we are only now beginning to comprehend.” Lewis was elected to the Albuquerque City Council in 2009 and just finished the first year of his term. Former Rep. Heather Wilson, R-N.M., who used to hold Heinrich's seat, says she is considering another run for U.S. Senate, but that it wasn't a done deal. “I am considering running for Senate, as well as other opportunities,” Wilson said. Incumbent Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., has not yet said whether he will seek another six-year term in 2012. Wilson, a former Air Force captain, ran for New Mexico's other Senate seat in 2008, losing in the Republican primary to Rep. Steve Pearce, R-N.M. Pearce lost to Sen. Tom Udall in 2008, but won his old congressional seat back in November. New Mexico is likely to be a swing state in the 2012 presidential election, and is likely to get a lot of attention, resources, and visits from Obama and his Republican rival. Obama carried it by a surprisingly wide margin (15 percentage points) but George W. Bush narrowly carried it in 2004 and Al Gore won it by the thinnest of margins in 2000. The state has voted for the winning candidate in eight of the past ten presidential elections. Jim Geraghty

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In New Mexico, Heather Wilson for Senate, Dan Lewis for House?

After decades of indulgent public floggings and ideological fishing expeditions led by chief congressional inquisitor Henry Waxman (see here here here here for starters), Democrats are suddenly worried about abuse of investigative powers. Let’s all let out a hearty New Year’s snort : The top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee is warning GOP leaders against partisan “witch hunts” when they take over the panel this year. Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) said Sunday that such investigations might play well politically, but they ultimately undermine the bipartisanship required to tackle the many problems facing the country. “We can’t have witch hunts. We can’t have these fishing expeditions,” Cummings said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” …Cummings, a 14-year veteran of the Oversight panel, cited the GOP investigations of the Clinton administration, where witnesses, he said, “were dragged in to depositions — people making $50,000 a year had to pay $25,000, $30,000 to hire a lawyer.” “We’re just going to have to be careful with this power,” he said. Call the concern troll patrol. Meanwhile, incoming GOP House Oversight and Reform Committee chairman Darrell Issa is garnering lots of attention — and provoking much left-wing media angst — over his extensive probe plans. Here’s his priority list via Politico. Issa and his staff have done stellar work exposing corruption and malfeasance while in the minority. Will they be able to live up to the Drudge-headlined hype now that they’ve got subpoena powers? Rule #1 in politics: Manage expectations. It’s a smart rule not only for politicians in the limelight, but also for voters. Already, Issa has flip-flopped on his promise to probe the Joe Sestak/White House bribe scandal and softened his criticism of corruption in the Obama administration. And Doug Powers called attention to his strange comments quoted in a post-midterm conference call in November: “I want to prove the pundits wrong. My job is not to bring down the president. My job is to make the president a success.” Just a humble reminder: Issa’s job — and this goes for every GOP House leader — is not to mollify Beltway pundits. Their job is not to manage White House p.r. and “reach across the aisle” and “get things done” for the sake of bipartisanship. Their job is to protect taxpayers’ best interests, rein in a bloated, out-of-control federal government, and abide by their oaths of office. *** Gabriel Malor at Ace of Spades reviews the Issa list and asks, “Is this what you had in mind?”: The to-do list is: “1. Impact of regulation on job creation … 2. Fannie/Freddie & the Foreclosure Crisis … 3. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission and the failure to identify origins of the financial crisis … 4. Combating corruption in Afghanistan … 5. WikiLeaks … 6. FDA/Food & Drug Safety.” Notable omissions: Sestak bribery probe. AG Holder and the voter intimidation case. The stimulus spending and mismanagement. Pigford II. The GM dealerships kerfuffle. Kevin at Hillbuzz is not happy: It’s time to say no to Sharpton, Jackson, Henry Gates, and the rest of the Race Industry. It’s time to bring investigations into Sestak, the Black Panthers, and Pigford. It’s time to expose the truth about Obama to Americans. Maybe Republicans are stymied because they know the media won’t report on anything negative related to Obama, so they believe that even if they bring the investigations, that Obama will not fall in the eyes of voters since the media won’t cover the story. The Republican Party earns the name “the Party of Stupid” in moments like this…because the media can be forced to cover these stories if enough people on the grassroots level gin the country up to demand their coverage. The media is walking a precariously fine line with shilling for Obama: already the media has a historically high distrust recorded from the public. The bias towards Democrats has never been clearer. If the media continues to protect Obama indefinitely, it does so at its own direct peril. Republican leaders need to be aware of this, and grow a spine and do what the people want them to do. No more go-along-to-get-along/letting Democrats do whatever they damn well please because Republicans are afraid of calling them out for it. “No more being afraid to speak up” should be the motto of the Republican Party. The trick is, speaking up makes you a target of the Democrats’ Alinsky machine, which Republicans really and truly are terrified of. How do we change that? We have a new year, a new start…how do we use both to change business as usual for the meek Republican Party?

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Snort: Now the Dems are worried about wasteful “witch hunts”

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From Arthur Laffer, at Wall Street Journal : For now: Extend the Bush tax cuts, repeal ObamaCare, support free trade. After 2012: Enact a flat tax, stabilize prices, balance the budget, give politicians incentive pay . ***** Since its cyclical zenith in December 2007, U.S. economic production has been on its worst trajectory since the Great Depression. Massive stimulus spending and unprecedented monetary easing haven’t helped, and yet the Obama administration and the Federal Reserve still cling to the book of Keynes. It’s an approach ill-suited to solving the growth problem that the United States has today. The solution can be found in the price theory section of any economics textbook. It’s basic supply and demand. Employment is low because the incentives for workers to work are too small, and the incentives not to work too high. Workers’ net wages are down, so the supply of labor is limited. Meanwhile, demand for labor is also down since employers consider the costs of employing new workers—wages, health care and more—to be greater today than the benefits. Firms choose whether to hire based on the total cost of employing workers, including all federal, state and local income taxes; all payroll, sales and property taxes; regulatory costs; record-keeping costs; the costs of maintaining health and safety standards; and the costs of insurance for health care, class action lawsuits, and workers compensation. In addition, gross wages are often inflated by the power of unions and legislative restrictions such as “buy American” provisions and the minimum wage. Gross wages also include all future benefits to workers in the form of retirement plans. For a worker to be attractive, that worker must be productive enough to cover all those costs plus leave room for some profit and the costs of running an enterprise. Being in business isn’t easy, and today not enough workers qualify to be hired. But workers don’t focus on how much it costs a firm to employ them. Workers care about how much they receive and can spend after taxes. For them, the question is how the wages they’d receive for working compare to what they’d receive (from the government) if they didn’t work, plus the value of their leisure from not working. The problem is that the government has driven a massive wedge between the wages paid by firms and the wages received by workers. To make work and employment attractive again, this government wedge has to shrink. This can happen over the next two years, even with a Democratic majority in the Senate and President Obama in the White House, through the following measures… More at the link . RELATED : Paul Krugman, ” The Hijacked Commission ,” and the additional commentary at Memeorandum .

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A Growth Agenda for the New Congress

**Written by Doug Powers Why the Ritz? Because the Waldorf Astoria was booked solid. From Byron York : Members of a key panel created by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, better known as the stimulus bill, have scheduled a meeting on November 22 to consider ways to prevent “fraud, waste, and abuse of Recovery Act funds.” The meeting will be held at the super-luxe Ritz Carlton Hotel in Phoenix, Arizona. The group is the Recovery Independent Advisory Panel, a sub-committee of the larger Recovery Accountability and Transparency board (sometimes known as the RAT board). The stimulus bill set up the Recovery Independent Advisory Panel, or RIAP, to make recommendations to identify and prevent waste of the bill’s $814 billion in stimulus spending. So I guess that “boycott Arizona” thing is over, eh? Rooms at the Phoenix Ritz run anywhere from around $300 to $500-plus a night, and that expense doesn’t include the signs that might be placed on Ritz grounds to alert the public that a Recovery Act project is underway. This meeting is expected to save or create countless bellboy, waiter, maid, bartender, cab driver and masseuse jobs. “Identify and prevent waste”? It’s probably too much to hope for that anyone on the panel will jot down “meeting at a 5-star hotel to discuss how to cut unnecessary expenditures” as waste that could be prevented, isn’t it? **Written by Doug Powers Twitter @ThePowersThatBe

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Next Meeting of ‘Stimulus Waste Prevention’ Panel: Ritz Carlton Hotel, Phoenix

AP – Any more stimulus spending by President Barack Obama and Congress is dead, after this week’s election blowout by the Republicans. Yet, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s “Hail Mary” pass to pump $600 billion into the banking system is really stimulus spending under another name.

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Federal Reserve now the only stimulus game in town
(AP)