The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

Month: December 2022 Page 3 of 4

The Long Term Effects of Covid On the Economy Are Going To Be Devastating

An estimate, but…

2 million to 4 million full-time workers are out of the labor force due to long Covid. (To be counted in the labor force, an individual must have a job or be actively looking for work.)

The midpoint of her estimate — 3 million workers — accounts for 1.8% of the entire U.S. civilian labor force. The figure may “sound unbelievably high” but is consistent with the impact in other major economies like the United Kingdom, Bach wrote in an August report. The figures are also likely conservative, since they exclude workers over age 65, she said.

As she says, this correlates to estimates elsewhere.

I want to be as clear as possible about this: the effect of Long Covid on the economy is going to dwarf that of closures or of  Covid TrueZero (a policy of cleaning up our air with filters and UV light, while using proper N95 masks, travel bans and other public health measures in the meantime.) Remember, Long Covid is still going on. It could go on for years, or even decades. There is no guarantee it mutates into a form which does not cause immunity and organ damage.

Further, the effect of Covid on people over 50 is going to be massive, and that means you if you’re under 50 when you get to being over 50, because the evidence coming in is that Covid damages the immune system: depletes t-cells and disorganizes recognition of pathogens.

That effect becomes more pronounced as you get older, and the tipping point is somewhere around the age of 50. This is going to lead to a further significant decline in lifespans if we can’t find a cure, but don’t assume we will: we’ve spent trillions and not found a cure for cancer and our society has passed its tipping point and is now in decline (this is true globally.)

 

(I am fundraising to determine how much I’ll write this year. If you value my writing and want more of it, please consider donating.)

 

China did ZeroCovid STUPID, as a number of people have pointed out, and have now reduced their efforts. We’ll see if they stay reduced after the Chinese population discovers what happens when you “let’er rip”, but if China continues, that’s the end of one of the last major population blocs which wasn’t riddled with Covid. Remember, again, that Covid can do significant damage which you don’t notice, that has no symptoms now. But it will later.

China’s Zero Covid policy was the right policy, done wrong, and when you do the right thing the wrong way, you discredit it. China’s anti-Covid policies took longer to be discredited than Western ones because while stupid they weren’t as stupid as ours, but they still overly relied on lockdowns rather than infrastructure improvement and refused to use n95 masks.

So, globally, this is going to lead to long term economic issues, both in lack of workers and supporting unhealthy people, or just letting them suffer and die, which will still have economic effects. (It’s obvious that en-masse we don’t really care about the morality of it).

And you, personally, will probably live less years and be less healthy. The more times you get infected, the more true this will be.

 

2022 Fundraiser

It’s been a tough year for the world and a tough year at Chez Ian (cancer, housing issues, blah.) Personally, I’m just beginning to recover from cancer treatment, though some of it will be ongoing, and sucking, for another six to twelve months. China, deciding to the right thing (Zero Covid) stupid, is now releasing some restrictions and that’s going to go badly. Russia invaded Ukraine, ground forward and will likely wind up with less than it’d like and more than the West wanted.

Europe has been the big loser in the Ukraine war, which many of us predicted, and is looking forward to a brrrrrr, and very expensive winter, hosting a few million more Ukrainian refugees and watching some of its most important industries move away, while in America they’re looking forward to receiving said industry and smiling happily about how the EU is now firmly in the US camp.

It’s been a busy and important year, and I have covered, ummm, some of it, and said some things that needed to be said.

So it’s fundraising time. I did an emergency fundraiser earlier in this year, and I’m grateful at how people helped me. About $2,300 was raised, so that’s where the fundraising total for the annual fundraiser starts, as the intention was never to raise more money, just to move it to where I needed it.

The goal this year is $11,000.

If we hit $6,500, I’ll write a big summary article on the world’s current position and outlook, and if we hit $11,000 I’ll write an article on reasons for hope for humanity’s future.

Most years I have more tiers than that, but I have articles left from last years fundraiser. They’ll get done, my word on it, and I’ll excuse myself by mumbling “ummm, cancer and radiation and so on”. I don’t want to add too much to the pile, but the articles above are the highest level summary articles I can write.

It’s also true that if you like my writing and want to see more of it, it’s donating or subscribing (like everyone I like subscriptions) that tells me “write more at the blog.”

My current plans for the blog include more articles about what can be done, along with more book reviews.

Anyway, it’s been a lousy year, but I hope it’s been a good one for you personally. As always, if your financial situation is such that you’re worried about your own necessities, please don’t give!

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Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – December 11, 2022

by Tony Wikrent

 

“The People Cheering For Humanity’s End”

[The Atlantic, via Naked Capitalism Water Cooler 12-8-2022]

“From Silicon Valley boardrooms to rural communes to academic philosophy departments, a seemingly inconceivable idea is being seriously discussed: that the end of humanity’s reign on Earth is imminent, and that we should welcome it. The revolt against humanity is still new enough to appear outlandish, but it has already spread beyond the fringes of the intellectual world, and in the coming years and decades it has the potential to transform politics and society in profound ways…. The first is Anthropocene anti-humanism, inspired by revulsion at humanity’s destruction of the natural environment…. Transhumanism, by contrast, glorifies some of the very things that anti-humanism decries—scientific and technological progress, the supremacy of reason. But it believes that the only way forward for humanity is to create new forms of intelligent life that will no longer be Homo sapiens.” • I don’t use the phrase “death cult” that often, but perhaps I should start. The exact perspective we should expect from The Atlantic: “It’s easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism.” –Mark Fisher, Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?

 

Global power shift

Robbing The Global South, Then Scorning Its Poverty: Notes From The Edge Of The Narrative Matrix 

Caitlin Johnstone [via Naked Capitalism 12-7-2022]

 

China’s Xi on ‘epoch-making’ visit to Saudi as Riyadh chafes at U.S. censure 

[Reuters, via Naked Capitalism 12-8-2022]

 

The semiconductor industry and the China challenge 

[Asia Times, via Naked Capitalism 12-10-2022]

“Part 2 at https://asiatimes.com/2022/12/the-chip-industry-and-national-security/

Open Thread

Use to discuss topics unrelated to this week’s posts.

Understanding Absolute Vs. Comparative Advantage & Why It Matters

There are two types of advantages.

A comparative advantage is when you have or can produce more of something than someone else. (Person, country, whatever.)

An absolute advantage is when you have or can do or produce something others can’t. This can be threshold matter: in World War II the Allies had more than enough oil and the Axis didn’t have enough to run their war machine. While in numbers terms it looked like a comparative advantage, it was actually an absolute advantage: it strangled Axis production and their ability to field mechanized troops, aircraft and ships. Up until the nuclear bomb, in terms of tech, the opposing great powers were about equal, but in terms of the key resource required to run everything, the Allies were in surplus and the Axis never had enough.

Firearms were an absolute advantage. Once they spread, European firearms were usually still better and Europeans understood how to use them properly, while their opponents rarely did. Cultural understanding is often necessary to get the most out of a technology. In India, the British East India company often faced off against Indian armies with the same weapons as them, but they deployed them atrociously: they didn’t know how to use them properly.

Machine guns, when first deployed, were an absolute advantage. The Maxim gun, deployed in Africa, let British troops defeat armies literally 100 times larger than it.

Horse archers, properly deployed, were an absolute advantage. Genghis Khan didn’t just united Mongolia (making many tribes all into Mongols), he changed society and military organization and how horse archers were deployed. For about a century the Mongols were essentially undefeated, creating the largest land empire in history, and when the first real loss happened, the Mamluks inflicted it by using a Mongol style army effectively against the Mongols.

The steam engine plus factories produced goods in such quantities that it was a relative advantage which become an absolute advantage. Factories had existed before steam, indeed we have evidence of factories in India before the Aryan invasion, thousands of years ago. But add steam, and BOOM. (Oil and electricity merely increased production, but they weren’t the quantum leap.)

In the invasion and conquest of the Americas, the absolute advantage wasn’t cannons and firearms nearly so much as it was European diseases, which the Europeans had some immunity to and the natives had no immunity to. End result, 90% of the population killed off by disease. Without that Europeans might have done an “India” and conquered various North American areas, but they would never have been able to colonize all of it and drive most of the population to extinction so they could keep it in the long run.

Cannons were an absolute advantage for a time. The monarchs of the early Renaissance were able to use them to reduce the noble power massively and turn them from semi-independent rulers (feudalism) into aristocrats dependent on the king, since castles could no longer hold out in sieges for any length of time.

Further back, the European Knight had an absolute advantage over peasants and most European infantry (minus the Scots and Swiss and a few exceptions.) That advantage didn’t extend much out of Europe. Knights were better than Byzantine cataphractoi and Muslim cavalry, but not so much as to allow lasting conquest. However, against internal enemies in Europe, their superiority was massive, especially against peasant armies.

Absolute advantage is about having something or being able to do something your competitors don’t have or can’t do. The current imbroglios over computer chips and airplane manufacture are the West’s attempt to keep the few places where they still have an absolute advantage over China, since they’ve given (sold) the rest to China, and lost most of their comparative advantages.

In eras of absolute advantage, small societies can do astounding things. The Mongols conquered vastly more populous areas and so did Europeans in general and the British in particular.

Eras of relative advantage, on the other hand, are eras of the most and the biggest.

Reader question. Are we in an absolute or relative era?

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Podcast Interview On US Politics and the Midterms

I sat down with Chris Oestereich for a fairly long interview. He’s split it into three parts.

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The Decline Of the European Garden

A while back EU foreign-policy chief Josep Borrell said “Europe is a garden.” He was fairly widely attacked, but I agree. Some parts are much less of a garden, but Europe is a garden.

However, Europe’s status as a garden is based on factors which are no longer true:

1) Vast military superiority.

2) Vast productive superiority

3) Vast technological superiority at producing and fighting.

This needs some unpacking. Prosperity is just how much goods and services you have. If a society has relatively low inequality, and enough goods and services, almost everyone may share in the prosperity, if not only some part of the society may be prosperous, and those will obviously be the people who have the most power within the society, though that doesn’t mean the richest people are the most powerful—the powerful people may just be prosperous enough. Nancy Pelosi is worth about $120 million. You and I will never see such money, absent hyperinflation, but she isn’t Jeff Bezos rich. Still, she and almost all members of Congress are inside the charmed circle.

To be prosperous, then, you have to create rather a lot of goods and services. If you don’t bother with radical inequality, you may need less of certain kinds and more of other kinds: comparing the 60s to the 2010s is instructive. Not a lot of private jets or mega-yachts and rent and houses were cheap, but there were a lot less luxury condos.

Now roughly speaking, there are three inputs to producing goods and services: labor, capital (meant here as machines and buildings and so on) resources. Any economics 101 textbook will tell you so, and it’s one of the few things in an economics 101 textbook that isn’t wrong.

Europe’s not a large place compared to the rest of the world. For most of its history, certainly after the collapse of the Roman Empire (and really a couple centuries before) it was a primitive and very nasty backwater. But starting in the late 1400s or so the Europeans became very good at warfare and seafaring. Having spent a millenium fighting each like cocks in a pit, they had an advantage over pretty much everyone else (and where they didn’t yet, like China, they walked small.) Along with spreading disease to the New World, killing upwards of 90% of the population) they were able to grab a lot more resources than they had before.

Understand that at this point Europe does not have a productive advantage: China and even India are much more productive. Before the European invasion, India has more industry than England.

But they have a military advantage, multiplied by plague and are able to grab much of two additional contents, the Americas, and then get (thru coercion and commerce, African slaves were mostly sold by their compatriots) slaves and peasants made out of the Americas people to labor for them, while colonizing with Europeans at the same time.

Then, in the 19th century, when England was the first country to properly industrialize, they exploded, conquering or subjugating essentially everyone. Even places which weren’t formally conquered, like Thailand or much of China (the century of humiliation) knew their place.

The world’s resources belong to Europe. There was that upstart semi-European colony the US and the peripheral semi-European Russians, but basically Europe, Russia and the US controlled the majority of the world’s resources, even where they didn’t rule. The world sent them raw goods, they sent back manufactured goods and “provided” services like government.

Then the Europeans fought two internal wars, and were divided up by the corner powers: the USSR and America. And yes, that is what happened. European countries in the West and East were (and still are) satrapies. Nominally independent, but not really, and operations like Gladio, which ensured governments wound up in charge that were friendly to the US, or the Red Army crushing Eastern European independence movements make that clear.

The USSR collapse, the Eastern European countries mostly joined the EU, and the EU grew in power, but Europe still remained a satrapy, pointed almost entirely now towards America. From this point of view, the Ukraine war is nothing but a conflict over whether Ukraine will be a Russia or American satrapy, as its desperate desire to join NAT and the EU indicate.

Europe had a window, especially in the 2000s where it could have become truly independent, but it chose not to and during the Ukraine war it has so far, with some grumbles, subjugated itself further to America. No longer willing to buy energy from Russia it has become vastly dependent on the US. Problem is that that Americans charge Europeans four times as much as the Russians did for natural gas. As a consequences, a great deal of industry is planning to move out of Europe, because they aren’t viable. Much of it is going to America, helping America re-industrialize by sucking away industry from its satrapies.

Likewise, as Europe had not built a large army and was dependent on American military manufacturing or military tech and manufacturing licensed from the US, to support Ukraine it needed America assistance. (US whining aside, not having to maintain a large military is one of the primary advantages of being a satrapy, and smart overlords don’t really want their satrapies to be too strong militarily.)

Going back to prosperity, you are prosperous when you have more stuff. Europe’s problem is that it’s gone from controlling the majority of the world’s resources, to having a lot less resources than it needs. It imports more than half of its energy requirements, for example, and it doesn’t have the minerals and rare resources it needs. For a long time, because of a remaining technological need, it was still more productive than most of the rest of the World and that meant nations had to send it their resources and get them back in completed form, and as satrapies of the overlord, they still received preferential access thru the methods of coercion used by the American empire.

And so, because for so long Europe had access to most of the world’s resources at preferential rates (directly, or in the American era because they were the favoured satrapies) and had among the highest tech and thus were highly productive, they were able to create their “garden.” And an amazing and beautiful garden it was, and to some extent remains.

But, now that they are just satrapies, without colonial empires and with limited ability coerce other nations if the US doesn’t help them (France, really, is the only one to still maintain a decent unilateral ability to kick around a few minor African nations), their access to resources is based on the strength and generosity of their satrap.

This worked pretty well for a long time, but then there was the rise of China. China became the world’s foremost manufacturing power, caught up in almost all technologies (chips and aviation are being fought over so fiercely because they are almost the last bastions where China has not caught up), and nations had options: they didn’t have to sell thier raw resources to the US, Europe and to countries hosting outsourced and offshored Western industry. They could go to China. And China offered and offers cheaper loans, cheaper good and builds ports, railroads, hospital, power generators and even entire cities and does it for far less than the West.

The American empire has involved a lot of military coercion, but the primary coercion was economic. Up until the nineties it was usually of the “you can only get it from us” variety, and since the 90s it has been “we’ll lock you out if you don’t cooperate”, but all of it was based on “you have no choice. Only we can really make the things you need, plus you can’t defend yourself against us, and we have so much money we can buy a faction of your elite to coup your government if you don’t cooperate.”

Europe rode piggyback on that, and after some lessons after WWII understood that if they didn’t want to be couped, they would make sure their governments were acceptable the US. Only France ever dared significantly buck the system and even they eventually came back into the fold, albeit muttering curses under their breath.

Now, let’s talk about Europe and Russia. Russia was providing energy cheaper than Europe can get it anywhere else. A lot of it, and had Nord Stream 2 come on line, they would have been able to double it, which would have made Europe’s energy bill even cheaper and most importantly, Germany’s, since Germany is the productive and industrial powerhouse of Europe.

This is why German politicians especially, before the war, resisted US efforts to shut down Nord Stream 1 and 2 and its why the pipelines were sabotaged (probably by the US, though the formal investigations will never say that.)

Even if Europe wanted to remain an American satrapy, and all indications are that current EU elites do want to, they wanted to reduce the cost of important resources and assure access to them because Russia, again, was willing to sell them for a lot less than anyone else and way less than the US was.

This made industry viable. It is no longer a world where people have to buy from the US/Europe/Japan/Taiwan/hangers on because they (we) are the only game in town. They can buy from China, and China is cheaper. To compete, Europe had to keep its costs in control and in some areas offer better quality or some of the few goods that China can’t create (often to China, as it happens.)

Without trade, Europe, which no longer has coercive ability, cannot get what it needs. The Euro is not the dollar. People take it because they expect they can do business with the EU at some point. It’s relatively liquid, but it is only secondarily backed up by the US military.

The European garden was based on having access to more resources and to being more productive than all or most of the rest of the world with those resources. This was based on having a tech and military lead, allowing for coercion. After WWII it was based on “we are the favored satraps of the US empire and still have a tech and productive lead so we have access to the resources.”

Bu that is going away. The tech lead is almost gone. The productive lead is gone in most industries and the access to resources is declining, because China can now make better offers in most cases. Now add in refusing to buy cheap Russian energy and minerals and replacing them with more expensive substitutes, when substitutes can be found at all, and consider the European future.

Europe doesn’t have enough resources, and doesn’t have a productive or technological advantage significant enough to maintain its “garden” in the face of the rise of China. The trade alliance between Europe/Germany and Russia was an attempt to keep European industry viable by keeping costs down.

At this point, Europe is in a race where they must either be cheaper (by being more productive) or have an absolute advantage (you can’t get this from anyone else, or at least not from China), in order to maintain their industrial base. Without cheap Russian energy and minerals, this is going to be a lot harder.

So then, you may ask, what about moving to renewables.

Well, they will work to some extent but they still require resources, just not as much fuel. Europe recently sanctioned imports from Xinjiang in China for human rights reasons. Turns out most of the silica required for solar panels comes from there. Then, of course, there is the refusal to use nuclear power, which is required to make renewables work by providing baseline power. In the middle of a crisis where German industry is fleeing to the US because of high energy prices, Germany will not turn back on its nuclear reactors for even a few years to transition over.

But bottom line, even with renewables, resources are still needed as inputs for industry in order to produce goods and if you don’t have a lot of military or economic coercive power (like the US had and still  has, though it is declining precipitously) that means  you wind up losing your prosperity and becoming like all those countries in African, Asia and Latin America who can never seen to get to developed status.

You “un-develop.” My money is on Britain (soon England) to be the world’s first undeveloped nations.

But the smart money is that over the next few decades, that will be true of much of the EU. Perhaps a few countries in Europe will manage to hang on, but not most.

Happens to everyone eventually. All eras come to an end. The job of modern EU politicians was to keep it going and to make it possible for the next generation to keep it going.

Looks to me like they’re failing.

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Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – December 4, 2022

by Tony Wikrent

 

Professional Management Class war on workers

Railroading workers

[Popular Information, via Naked Capitalism Water Cooler 11-29-2022]

“The dispute boils down to one issue: paid sick leave. … Railroad companies have adamantly refused to include any short-term paid leave. That means rail workers must report to work, even when they are sick, or forfeit their pay. “It’s an insane and cruel system, and these guys are fed up with it,” Peter Kennedy, chief negotiator for the maintenance workers union, which rejected the deal, said. Rail workers say that some colleagues come to work with COVID because they can’t afford to take time off. The maintenance workers are seeking a deal with at least four paid sick days. The railroad companies, according to the union, are unwilling to negotiate.”

 

Biden Breaks His Promise, Betrays Rail Workers 

Matthew Cunningham-Cook, Andrew Perez, Rebecca Burns & Julia Rock, November 29, 2022 [The Lever]

In 2020, Biden called the lack of decent paid sick leave “a national disgrace” — now he’s siding with railroad barons to crush rail workers seeking those benefits….

With Democrats in full control of Congress for just a few more weeks, Biden could be using this moment to push lawmakers to pass the party’s landmark union rights legislation or implement a national paid leave policy. Instead, he is calling on Democrats and Republicans alike to side with highly profitable railroad companies and crush their workers.

 

Senators Help Donors Derail Paid Sick Days

Matthew Cunningham-Cook & Rebecca Burns & Julia Rock, December 1, 2022 [The Lever]

“In August, a federal report prepared by the Biden administration stated that the railroads contend that their enormous profits do not reflect “any contributions by labor.” The railroads, meanwhile, have waged a full-court press to have Congress implement an agreement negotiated by the Biden administration that only includes one day of paid sick leave, after refusing to agree to any paid sick days in three years of talks with unions. Buffett’s BNSF, a wholly-owned subsidiary of his nearly $700 billion conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway, raked in $1.4 billion in the last quarter… Another major rail operation, the Atlanta-based Norfolk Southern, reported $958 million in profits in the quarter ending September 30…. Union Pacific, based in Omaha, Nebraska, brought in $1.9 billion in profits in the quarter, up $200 million from the same period a year ago…. Jacksonville, Florida-headquartered CSX generated $1.1 billion in profits in the quarter ending on September 30, up $143 million from the same period the year before…. Canadian Pacific brought in $664 million in profits in the quarter — double the haul from the same period last year…. Finally, Montreal-based Canadian National brought in more than $1 billion in profits in the quarter, a 44 percent increase over the same period last year…. Railroad workers will return to the bargaining table again in 2025. Railway union sources told The Intercept Thursday that their next step would be to push for sick leave in an anticipated Biden executive order mandating a week of paid sick days for federal contract workers.

 

Betrayal 

Steve Waldman [Interfluidity, via Naked Capitalism 12-3-2022]

The dispute is over how railworkers are treated. Which, in a word, is like shit. For decades, the rail industry has been achieving “efficiencies” by in large part by dumping nonfinancial costs onto its workforce. It’s great when productivity increases because of some new invention: A construction firm buys a steam shovel, and becomes genuinely more efficient. It accomplishes the same work with fewer workers. But it’s a different thing entirely when the same firm buys a whip, and then is able to accomplish the same work with fewer workers by beating the crap out of those desperate enough to remain. Both get scored as “productivity increases” by statisticians, but the second one is a regressive transfer from workers to shareholders, not a real efficiency gain. Railroads’ vaunted “precision-scheduled railroading” is the whip rather than the steam shovel. It puts ever fewer workers on ever longer trains, magnifying the responsibility and hazard each worker must bear. Railworkers are on call to be dragged from home for days or weeks 75% of their lives, and harshly penalized if life supervenes and they can’t show up. You try living that way.

The unions were asking for up to fourteen paid sick leave days, rather the one that the current deal provides. Fourteen was an opening bid. Had Congress actually done what Democrats only pretended they were trying to do, and included seven paid days in the Congressionally imposed deal, it would have been fine. Congress would have been taking away railworkers’ leverage to strike, but giving much of their very modest ask in compensation. Instead, Congress stole all of railworkers’ bargaining power and gave them nothing….

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