Time To Stop Using High Unemployment And Business Closures To Manage An Over Heated Economy And Irrational Exuberance

In a recent article, “How Trump Happened” by economics Prof. Joseph E. Stiglitz,  he wrote: we need to rewrite the rules of the economy once again.

I agree. 

Why is so important that we change how we manage Irrational Exuberance in our economy?

Irrational exuberance has played a primary role in all of our economy’s boom/bust cycles. From the boom of the roaring 1920s to the bust of the Great Depression.  To the primary home bubble of 2000 to 2007 to the financial crisis implosion of 2008,  resulting in the Great Recession. Irrational exuberance has also played a part in all of the lesser boom/bust cycles that occurred between the Great Depression and the Great Recession.
We have a flaw in our economy’s guiding policies.  The problem being, tax policy does not change as the economy progresses through its cycles of boom and bust.  Because fiscal policy doesn’t change with the cycles of the economy, tax policy is contributing to the creation of irrational exuberance and the  destruction of the middle class, and the American Dream.

I have been a successful real estate investor and have sold many of my real estate investments myself for the last 46 years.  I started investing in real estate in 1970.  I have experienced many boom/bust cycles over the last 4 decades.  From the high inflation of the 1970’s to the financial crisis of 2008 and the so-called recovery that followed.

I want to explain an idea I had in 1980, which I wrote a book about, (Inflation The Economy Killer).  When the first Great Recession, in the early eighties, was created after the Federal Reserve used monetary policy to raise interest rates higher than 18% to purchase a home. I thought to myself, “There has to be a better way to guide our economy than with wide changes in interest rates.

The first Great Recession created a higher unemployment rate and as much misery as the second Great Recession for the middle class and the working poor.  Foreclosures and bankruptcies increased dramatically.  The nation’s  “safety net” was stretched to its limit. The Federal Government ran a huge deficit for years.

Is it necessary to use high unemployment, business failures, foreclosures, and bankruptcies to manage “irrational exuberance?”  The answer is NO!!!

What is ‘Irrational Exuberance’

If you are not an economist or an investor,  you may not know what “irrational exuberance” is.  The following is Investopedia explanation of what irrational exuberance is and who coined the words to explain investors behavior when asset prices are increasing excessively.

Irrational exuberance is unsustainable investor enthusiasm that drives asset {housing, land, commodities, stocks, etc.) prices up to levels that aren’t supported by fundamentals. The term “irrational exuberance” is believed to have been coined by former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan in a 1996 speech, “The Challenge of Central Banking in a Democratic Society.” He said that low inflation reduces investor uncertainty, lowers risk premiums and implies higher stock market returns.

Greenspan gave this speech near the beginning of the 1990s dot-com bubble, a textbook example of irrational exuberance. “Irrational Exuberance” is also the name of a 2000 book by economist Robert Shiller that analyzes the broader stock market boom that lasted from 1982 through the dot-com years. Shiller’s book presents 12 factors that created this boom and suggests policy changes for better managing irrational exuberance. The book’s second edition, published in 2005, warns of the housing bubble burst.

Read more: Irrational Exuberance Definition | Investopediahttp://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/irrationalexuberance.asp#ixzz4Pu9ZEe2R

Read more: Irrational Exuberance Definition | Investopedia

What needs to be done to improve our boom/bust economy and manage irrational exuberance better.

We have “automatic economic stabilizer” programs to counteract recessions.  Unemployment insurance, food stamps, and Medicaid are three of the many automatic economic stabilizers programs that automatically expand when a recession occurs in our economy.  For our economy to work better for everyone, business owners, investors, and the working class, our economy needs an “automatic economic stabilizer” tax policy to counteract financialization, irrational exuberance,” and bubble formation as they begin to occur in our economy.

To correct this flaw in our economy’s guiding policies, we need to enact the 2% Appreciation/ Inflation Taxation Policy, to put tax policy in sync with monetary policy, and the economic cycles of the economy.  This change in fiscal policy will help prevent the financial bubbles, deep recessions, and financial crisis that are destroying our economy as the housing bubble did in the 2000’s.

The Fed’s monetary policies do not control the annual appreciation/inflation rate very well.  The increases in interest rates add higher cost of to production and consumption and reduce demand from the middle and working class.   As the middle class and the working poor become unemployed, because of these increased interest rates, state and federal government’s liabilities increase.

The Federal Reserve’s (Fed’s) monetary policies have not been able to maintain the annual increases in prices at the Fed’s stated annual target rate of 2%.  History has shown us that monetary policy alone cannot sustain an annual 2% appreciation/inflation rate. Prices have risen 1000% since 1960.  Wages have not increased 1000% since 1960. If prices do not rise too fast, wages do not have to increase very much to maintain a living wage.  A one thousand percent increase in prices is why our economy is not providing the “American Dream,” at an affordable price, as it did for the Boomer generation.  The flaws in our tax policy are causing our prices to rise too fast.  We need to fix the fiscal policy flaws first to prevent further deterioration of our economy.  Our economy needs more real growth, not higher prices, and more paper profits.  Workers need a living wage to maintain and improve their standard of living.  A living wage created by a stable economy where price increases are established after the enactment of the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy.  An economy where prices don’t rise too much and too fast annually.

How would the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy operate?

The tax rate changes would not be based on one person’s hard asset holdings but would be based on an index composed of things, that appreciate in price, and are commonly used for collateral to obtain mortgages and loans.  Since each state can have different appreciation/inflation rates, the appreciation/inflation index would be more accurate if an index was created for each state annually.  If we set a maximum annual target rate of appreciation at 4% for the “appreciation/inflation index,” then at that point interest income should have a tax rate of 0%, and the paid interest deduction should be decreased to zero.  If necessary, the top long-term capital gains (LTCGs) tax rate could also be automatically increased to the same rate as the top rate the taxpayer would pay on ordinary earned income to slow down an overheated economy.

What if the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy had been enacted in 2000 before the primary home bubble had been created?

When the Appreciation Index increased to 3%, the tax rate on interest earned would have decreased by 50%, or in other words, 50% of the interest earned would not be taxable income at the end of the year.  At the end of the year, the same thing would occur to the interest deduction, 50% of the interest paid would not be tax-deductible. The LTCGs tax rate would increase by 50%. If the 2% Index continued to rise the next year to 4%, the tax rate changes would be 100%.  When the 2% Appreciation Index returned to a 2% annual increase, the tax rates and interest deduction would again be as they previously were.  The change in tax rates would not decrease or increase tax revenue of the federal government. The debtor would pay more taxes, and the person who invested in the debt would pay fewer taxes.  It is known that during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, the debtor’s real capital investment is increasing in price and the debt (money) is losing purchasing power. The 2% Appreciation Taxation Policy will help rebalance this change in value between the lender and the debtor without increasing interest rates with monetary policy.

It is widely recognized that when tax rates and LTCGs tax rates are lowered after they have been raised, economic activity and tax revenues increase.  In this way, aggregate demand and employment will be maintained during all cycles of the economy.  If the automatic tax changes I am proposing had been used, to manage the irrational exuberance, that helped create the high appreciation/inflation cycle, of the primary home bubble during 2003/2007, we could have used the automatic reversal of the income tax changes to stimulate the economy when the economy cooled down. The lowering of the LTCGs, the higher taxes on interest income, and the 100% deductibility of paid interest would all be available to stimulate economic activity.  These fiscal policies have all been used in the past.  When the LTCGs tax rate and ordinary income tax rates were lowered in 1921, 1961, 1982, and 2003 to help end the recessions that occurred in the year before these years.

In recent history each time the economy “recovers” we have fewer jobs and fewer jobs that have a “living wage. ” The middle class has gotten smaller, and the number of people living at the poverty level has increased.  If we make this necessary tax policy change, we can rebuild the American economy and the American Dream.

It is time for new economic thinking.  We need to stop using increases in the unemployment rate and recessions to manage “irrational exuberance”  We need to reform the tax code, so investors and the general public don’t use excessive credit when real estate, single family homes, commodities, and other real asset prices rise more than 2% annually.  We need to enact the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy to help prevent financial bubbles and financial crisis in our economy.  We need to pass the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy to help make our exports more competitive in the world markets and to support full employment.  The 2% Policy will encourage people to have a balanced financial portfolio, so they have reserves to maintain themselves during downturns in the economy.

It is up to Congress to fix these flaws in our economic policies. They are the people who enacted the tax policies that created the problems.  It is our responsibility to inform and encourage Congress to change fiscal policy to improve our lives and our children’s future.

Leonard C. Tekaat

This article is a shortened version of the paper posted on this site (www.taxpolicyusa.wordpress.com) titled “Improve The Tax Code To Save The American Dream”

In a recent article, “How Trump Happened” by economics Prof. Joseph E. Stiglitz,  he wrote: we need to rewrite the rules of the economy once again.

I agree. 

Why is so important that we change how we manage Irrational Exuberance in our economy?

Irrational exuberance has played a primary role in all of our economy’s boom/bust cycles. From the boom of the roaring 1920s to the bust of the Great Depression.  To the primary home bubble of 2000 to 2007 to the financial crisis implosion of 2008,  resulting in the Great Recession. Irrational exuberance has also played a part in all of the lesser boom/bust cycles that occurred between the Great Depression and the Great Recession.
We have a flaw in our economy’s guiding policies.  The problem being, tax policy does not change as the economy progresses through its cycles of boom and bust.  Because fiscal policy doesn’t change with the cycles of the economy, tax policy is contributing to the creation of irrational exuberance and the  destruction of the middle class, and the American Dream.

I have been a successful real estate investor and have sold many of my real estate investments myself for the last 46 years.  I started investing in real estate in 1970.  I have experienced many boom/bust cycles over the last 4 decades.  From the high inflation of the 1970’s to the financial crisis of 2008 and the so-called recovery that followed.

I want to explain an idea I had in 1980, which a wrote book about, (Inflation The Economy Killer).  When the first Great Recession, in the early eighties, was created after the Federal Reserve used monetary policy to raise interest rates higher than 18% to purchase a home. I thought to myself, “There has to be a better way to guide our economy.”

The first Great Recession created a higher unemployment rate and as much misery as the second Great Recession for the middle class and the working poor.  Foreclosures and bankruptcies increased dramatically.  The nation’s  “safety net” was stretched to its limit.  The Federal Government ran a huge deficit for years.  Is it necessary to use high unemployment, business failures, foreclosures, and bankruptcies to manage “irrational exuberance?”

What is ‘Irrational Exuberance’

If you are not an economist or an investor,  you may not know what “irrational exuberance” is.  The following is Investopedia explanation of what irrational exuberance is and who coined the words to explain investors behavior when asset prices are increasing excessively.

Irrational exuberance is unsustainable investor enthusiasm that drives asset {housing, land, commodities, stocks, etc.) prices up to levels that aren’t supported by fundamentals. The term “irrational exuberance” is believed to have been coined by former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan in a 1996 speech, “The Challenge of Central Banking in a Democratic Society.” He said that low inflation reduces investor uncertainty, lowers risk premiums and implies higher stock market returns.

Greenspan gave this speech near the beginning of the 1990s dot-com bubble, a textbook example of irrational exuberance. “Irrational Exuberance” is also the name of a 2000 book by economist Robert Shiller that analyzes the broader stock market boom that lasted from 1982 through the dot-com years. Shiller’s book presents 12 factors that created this boom and suggests policy changes for better managing irrational exuberance. The book’s second edition, published in 2005, warns of the housing bubble burst.

Read more: Irrational Exuberance Definition | Investopediahttp://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/irrationalexuberance.asp#ixzz4Pu9ZEe2R

Read more: Irrational Exuberance Definition | Investopedia

What needs to be done to improve our boom/bust economy and manage irrational exuberance better.

We have “automatic economic stabilizer” programs to counteract recessions.  Unemployment insurance, food stamps, and Medicaid are three of the many automatic economic stabilizers programs that automatically expand when a recession occurs in our economy.  For our economy to work better for everyone, business owners, investors, and the working class, our economy needs an “automatic economic stabilizer” tax policy to counteract financialization, irrational exuberance,” and bubble formation as they begin to occur in our economy.

To correct this flaw in our economy’s guiding policies, we need to enact the 2% Appreciation/ Inflation Taxation Policy, to put tax policy in sync with monetary policy, and the economic cycles of the economy.  This change in fiscal policy will help prevent the financial bubbles, deep recessions, and financial crisis that are destroying our economy as the housing bubble did in the 2000’s.

The Fed’s monetary policies do not control the annual appreciation/inflation rate very well.  The increases in interest rates add higher cost of to production and consumption and reduce demand from the middle and working class.   As the middle class and the working poor become unemployed, because of these increased interest rates, state and federal government’s liabilities increase.

The Federal Reserve’s (Fed’s) monetary policies have not been able to maintain the annual increases in prices at the Fed’s stated annual target rate of 2%.  History has shown us that monetary policy alone cannot sustain an annual 2% appreciation/inflation rate. Prices have risen 1000% since 1960.  Wages have not increased 1000% since 1960. If prices do not rise too fast, wages do not have to increase very much to maintain a living wage.  A one thousand percent increase in prices is why our economy is not providing the “American Dream,” at an affordable price, as it did for the Boomer generation.  The flaws in our tax policy are causing our prices to rise too fast.  We need to fix the fiscal policy flaws first to prevent further deterioration of our economy.  Our economy needs more real growth, not higher prices, and more paper profits.  Workers need a living wage to maintain and improve their standard of living.  A living wage created by a stable economy where price increases are established after the enactment of the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy.  An economy where prices don’t rise too much and too fast annually.

How would the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy operate?

The tax rate changes would not be based on one person’s hard asset holdings but would be based on an index composed of things, that appreciate in price, and are commonly used for collateral to obtain mortgages and loans.  Since each state can have different appreciation/inflation rates, the appreciation/inflation index would be more accurate if an index was created for each state annually.  If we set a maximum annual target rate of appreciation at 4% for the “appreciation/inflation index,” then at that point interest income should have a tax rate of 0%, and the paid interest deduction should be decreased to zero.  If necessary, the top long-term capital gains (LTCGs) tax rate could also be automatically increased to the same rate as the top rate the taxpayer would pay on ordinary earned income to slow down an overheated economy.

What if the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy had been enacted in 2000 before the primary home bubble had been created?

When the Appreciation Index increased to 3%, the tax rate on interest earned would have decreased by 50%, or in other words, 50% of the interest earned would not be taxable income at the end of the year.  At the end of the year, the same thing would occur to the interest deduction, 50% of the interest paid would not be tax-deductible. The LTCGs tax rate would increase by 50%. If the 2% Index continued to rise the next year to 4%, the tax rate changes would be 100%.  When the 2% Appreciation Index returned to a 2% annual increase, the tax rates and interest deduction would again be as they previously were.  The change in tax rates would not decrease or increase tax revenue of the federal government. The debtor would pay more taxes, and the person who invested in the debt would pay fewer taxes.  It is known that during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, the debtor’s real capital investment is increasing in price and the debt (money) is losing purchasing power. The 2% Appreciation Taxation Policy will help rebalance this change in value between the lender and the debtor.

It is widely recognized that when tax rates and LTCGs tax rates are lowered after they have been raised, economic activity and tax revenues increase.  In this way, aggregate demand and employment will be maintained during all cycles of the economy.  If the automatic tax changes I am proposing had been used, to manage the irrational exuberance, that helped create the high appreciation/inflation cycle, of the primary home bubble during 2003/2007, we could have used the automatic reversal of the income tax changes to stimulate the economy when the economy cooled down. The lowering of the LTCGs, the higher taxes on interest income, and the 100% deductibility of paid interest would all be available to stimulate economic activity.  These fiscal policies have all been used in the past.When the LTCGs tax rate and ordinary income tax rates were lowered in 1921, 1961, 1982, and 2003 to help end the recessions that occurred in the year before these years.

In recent history each time the economy “recovers” we have fewer jobs and fewer jobs that have a “living wage. ” The middle class has gotten smaller, and the number of people living at the poverty level has increased.  If we make this necessary tax policy change, we can rebuild the American economy and the American Dream.

It is time for new economic thinking.  We need to stop using increases in the unemployment rate and recessions to manage “irrational exuberance”  We need to reform the tax code, so investors and the general public don’t use excessive credit when real estate, single family homes, commodities, and other real asset prices rise more than 2% annually.  We need to enact the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy to help prevent financial bubbles and financial crisis in our economy.  We need to pass the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy to help make our exports more competitive in the world markets and to support full employment.  The 2% Policy will encourage people to have a balanced financial portfolio, so they have reserves to maintain themselves during downturns in the economy.

It is up to Congress to fix these flaws in our economic policies. They are the people who enacted the tax policies that created the problems.  It is our responsibility to inform and encourage Congress to change fiscal policy to improve our lives and our children’s future.

Leonard C. Tekaat

This article is a shortened version of the paper posted on this site (www.taxpolicyusa.wordpress.com) titled “Improve The Tax Code To Save The American Dream”

Improve The Tax Code To Save the American Dream And Create A Stable Currency

John Maynard Keynes – British economist – Father of Keynesian Economics is on the left.

We have “automatic economic stabilizers” to counteract recessions.  For our economy to work for everyone, we need to enact an “automatic economic stabilizer tax policy” to manage “irrational exuberance” and bubble formation.

Ask yourself, “Are we going to continue to repeat the past, or are we going to make changes to improve our future?  Will your children, and grandchildren have a better life experience than you have had?  Will they be able to fulfill their perception of the American Dream?

Subjects covered:

The credit cycle (business cycle), in a credit money economy, can not be eliminated, but it can be managed better with an automatic fiscal policy change. Tax policies changes that will help maintain the value of money (debt) during periods of high appreciation/inflation expectations, thus creating more opportunities, and a sustainable recovery for all.

Full employment: How we get there and stay there longer, without unreasonable appreciation/inflation expectation.

Escaping lower bound zero interest rates, its like jail the Fed shouldn’t need to go there. Wide swings in interest rates are damaging to our economy.

Our economy has become financialized. What tax policies are driving this change to our capitalist economy?

We have “automatic economic stabilizers” to counteract a recession. We need an “automatic economic stabilizer tax policy” to manage “irrational exuberance,” and help prevent financial bubbles.

Financial bubbles take a long time to grow before they become dangerous to an economy. We can use the income tax to deflate a bubble annually to prevent it from bursting.

Automatically apply “The 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy” after a recovery, during the boom cycle, and before modern economies can create large financial bubbles, and the Federal Reserve raises interest rates excessively. The tax code can automatically stimulate the economy when it slows down.

How the tax policy can help the Federal Reserve maintain full employment, price stability, and reduce wide interest rate swings.

Why income fiscal policies must be in sync with the Federal Reserve’s monetary policies to make our economy less appreciation speculative, and more productive.  The financial sector needs to finance more production and service businesses and finance less appreciation expectation investments.

Why do the rich get richer; and the poor get poorer?  Are there policies that can be changed to help reduce the wealth inequality in our economy?

Many people believe we should not tax the rich, or help the poor.  Is it OK for the rich to help create a financial crisis, and then buy the distressed assets of the middle class and the working class to increase their wealth and income?

Our economy is no longer on a “Gold Standard Money System.”  We have a “Fiat Money System.”  The economy should no longer be managed primarily with interest rate changes. We need to modernize how we correctly control inflation, and excessive appreciation/inflation psychology to help reduce the occurrence of deep recessions, high appreciation/inflation rates, and to improve our trade, and budget deficits.

Keynesian economics doesn’t dictate continually stimulating the economy.  John Maynard Keynes advised us to change tax policy if the economy is overheating.  We need the correct fiscal policies to get our economy off the economic roller coaster of Gloom, Boom, Doom economics!!

A sound and stable money is a prerequisite for long-term prosperity for an economy.  The Federal Government can help maintain the purchasing power of our money without costing it a dime.  What is money and how is money created in our economy.

In America, the middle class, and the working poor are finding it harder and harder to get ahead in our economy.  Why is this happening in the “Land Of Opportunity.”

The American Dream: Restoring Responsibility And Opportunity For All.

Most of the papers written about the causes of the Great Depression, of the 1930’s, state that there was too much fraud, subprime credit, and speculative credit use before the crash. And not enough credit created by the private sector, and the government sector to stimulate the economy’s recovery. It took the massive government spending programs of World War II to end the worldwide Great Depression. I believe that if the correct tax policy had been applied to decrease the excessive credit use and speculation during the 1920’s, the Great Depression, of the 1930’s, could have been avoided.

The same excessive subprime and speculative credit use occurred before the bursting of the primary home bubble from 2003 to 2008, resulting in the financial crisis of September 2008, and the Great Recession, that we have not fully recovered from after eight years.

The Solution

In a recent article, “How Trump Happened” by economics Prof. Joseph E. Stiglitz,  he wrote: we need to rewrite the rules of the economy once again.

I agree.

We have a flaw in our economy’s guiding policies.  The problem being, tax policy does not change as the economy progresses through its cycles of boom and bust.  Without automatic annual self-balancing tax policies our economy becomes overheated during the boom cycle until it implouds, creating a recession or a depression.  Because tax policy doesn’t change with the cycles of the economy, tax policy is contributing to the destruction of the middle class, and the American Dream.

We have “automatic economic stabilizer” programs to counteract recessions.  Unemployment insurance, food stamps, and Medicaid are three of the many automatic economic stabilizers programs that automatically expand when a recession occurs in our economy.  For our economy to work better for everyone, business owners, investors, and the working class, our economy needs an “automatic economic stabilizer” tax policy to counteract financialization, irrational exuberance,” and bubble formation as they begin to occur in our economy.

To correct this flaw in our economy’s guiding policies, we need to enact the 2% Appreciation/ Inflation Taxation Policy, to put tax policy in sync with monetary policy, and the economic cycles of the economy.  This change in fiscal policy will help prevent the financial bubbles, deep recessions, and financial crisis that are destroying our economy as the housing bubble did in the 2000’s.

The stabilizer fiscal policy, I am proposing, will neutralize tax policies enacted during economic downturns, and will help prevent minor imbalances in supply and demand, during the boom cycle, from becoming major financial bubbles, and then financial crisis, as the housing bubble did in the 2000’s.

When the housing bubble burst in 2007/2008, it created the Great Recession, creating enormous worldwide misery, and the loss of an incredible amount of wealth by the middle class, and the working poor!!  The very high unemployment rate of the middle class and the working poor created the opportunity for the people at the top of the economic ladder to obtain more wealth, by purchasing the real estate, and other assets the middle class and working class lost after the credit crises of 2008.  The credit collapse that the people at the top of the economic ladder helped create!!

The tax code should change automatically as the economy changes between economic cycles.  Our economy is dynamic.  Our tax system is static.  The economy cannot wait for Congress, a 535 politically divided committee, to change the tax code, which can take years.  The 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy is an automatic income tax reform policy that will stabilize long-term interest rates, thus decreasing interest rate increase and decrease risk.   It will also help reduce the excessive use of credit during the high appreciation/inflation cycle.  The need for financial derivatives would be reduced, because our interest rates, Main St. economy, and the financial sector would be more stable.

Our economy and society are not providing a good standard of living for many of our citizens, and a better future for our children and grandchildren as it should be.  It is time for new economic thinking!!  It is the right time to enact policies that make our economy more inclusive.  Inclusive meaning; people can stay employed, or self-employed during all the cycles of the economy.  We should not increase unemployment to dampen “irrational exuberance.”  We must create an economy where the working middle class and working poor can grow, and retain their wealth by staying employed.  An economy where the money they earn and save maintains its purchasing power with slower price increases over an extended period.  An economy where collateral for mortgages and loans does not appreciate in price too fast and too much.  An economy where the collateral’s value does not crash below the unpaid balance of the mortgage.

Let me explain:

People make investments decisions guided by current tax policy and return on investment calculations. They have different opportunities to increase the amount of money they have, based on which cycle the economy is experiencing.  During the high appreciation/inflation cycle, and during a recession, people and financial institutions with money to invest, will invest in different things, but most of the time they will invest in things they hope will increase in price, (appreciate in value).

People with a lot of money will spend 10% of their income on consumption and then invest the other 90%.  If the investments are to increase production, services, and employment, these investments are good for the economy.  Investors don’t make investments in production, services, and jobs because the tax rate on profit from production and interest income is taxed as ordinary income during all the cycles of the economy. Currently, the top tax rate on ordinary income is 39.6%.  The people with a lot of money, invest 90%, or more, of their income in things that can increase in value. Appreciated value, when received, currently has a top tax rate of 20%.  The tax rate on appreciation income is almost 50 percent less than the rate on ordinary income, (earned income).

The extra demand from the “investments” in commodities, homes, real estate, farmland, metals, and many other things, increase prices.  These “investments” are fine as long as prices do not increase more than 2% annually.  It is when prices rise more than 2% a year, or the expectation is that the price will rise, that investors and financial institutions will start borrowing money to “leverage” their “investments” to make more paper profits, and long-term capital gains (LTCGs).  The excessive amount of these “investments” in the things that appreciate in price, rather than in production and services, is what is causing prices to increase faster than the wages of the middle, and the working class. If we are going to solve the many problems of our economy and society, we must change the tax policies that guide people to make these unproductive “investments” during the boom cycle.

The extra investment demand is increasing prices too fast of the things that the middle class, and working poor purchase to maintain their lives, shelter themselves, and their families.  If their incomes do not increase to match the price increases in the things they buy, they buy less, which decreases demand for products and services, which in turn reduces employment.  If they have purchased the things they need and want with credit, when employees lose their jobs, they usually, having lost their income, they must default on their debt.  Since, in a credit money economy, one person’s debt is another person’s income, as more people default on their credit obligations, more and more people lose their income, and they also can’t pay their bills.  Using unemployment to cool down an overheated economy is a major flaw in our economic policies.  It is also better for our capitalist economy, in a globalized economy, if prices and wages do not increase too fast because our products and services are competing in a world market.

It is up to Congress to fix these flaws in our economic policies. They are the people who enacted the tax policies that created the problems.  It is our responsibility to inform and encourage Congress to change fiscal policy to improve our lives and our children’s future.

Federal Reserve monetary policy, used without the needed tax rate changes, helps to create recessions.

When the Fed is trying to slow down the economy with monetary policy, it has to cause interest rates to rise higher than it would if the tax on interest earned, and high appreciation/inflation derived profits were taxed at the same rate.  The Fed has to raise interest rates high enough to make money (debt) investments worth as much as the inflation profit investment.  If there is a 50% difference between the two tax rates, then the interest rate must rise 50% more than what would be necessary without the differential tax rate between long-term capital gains, and interest income.  This difference in tax rates is why mortgage interest rates, in 1980, had to increase to 18%, to purchase a home, to decrease high appreciation/inflation psychology in our economy.  The inflation rate was 12%, in 1979, so interest rates had to go 50% higher, to a minimum interest rate of 18%, to make money (debt) investments as valuable as the high appreciation/ inflation profit investment.  Even after interest rates were raised to 18% to purchase real estate, in 1979, it took the elimination of the differential of the lower tax rate on long-term capital gains, in 1986, to eliminate inflation expectations in our economy, which allowed interest rates to decrease for years.

Excessively high interest rates, to overcome stimulative fiscal policy, reduces the economic activity of the middle and working class. The slowing economy causes less consumption, which in turn causes unemployment to rise, causing a spiraling down of production and service activity of our whole economy.  It would be much better if we would only target the excessive credit leveraging, and the excessive speculation when prices are rising more than two percent. To reduce these abuses, we should use the income tax code before the Fed must use monetary policies to change interest rates.

The Fed’s monetary policies do not control the annual appreciation/inflation rate very well.  The increases in rates add higher cost to production and consumption and reduce demand from the middle and working class.   As the middle class and the working poor become unemployed, because of these increased interest rates, state and federal government’s liabilities increase.

The Federal Reserve’s (Fed’s) monetary policies have not been able to maintain the annual increases in prices at the Fed’s stated annual target rate of 2%.  History has shown us that monetary policy alone cannot sustain an annual 2% appreciation/inflation rate. Prices have risen 1000% since 1960.  Wages have not increased 1000% since 1960. If prices do not rise too fast, wages do not have to increase very much to maintain a living wage.  A one thousand percent increase in prices is why our economy is not providing the “American Dream,” at an affordable price, as it did for the Boomer generation.  The flaws in our tax policy are causing our prices to rise too fast.  We need to fix the fiscal policy flaws first to prevent further deterioration of our economy.  Our economy needs more real growth, not higher prices, and more paper profits.  Workers need a living wage to maintain and improve their standard of living.  A living wage created by a stable economy where price increases are established after the enactment of the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy.  An economy where prices don’t rise too much and too fast annually.

In the 1960’s President Kennedy, and Congress, “to get the economy moving again,” after the recession of the late 1950’s, lowered ordinary income tax rates, and reduced the tax rate on long-term capital gains (LTCGs).  They also increased deficit spending.  The economy started to grow, and the unemployment rate decreased.  The economy was on its way to a boom cycle.  But a change in investments occurred during the boom period. During the boom cycle, since the 1960’s, our income tax code has been encouraging non-productive investments, financial investments, and speculation, because of the lower tax rate on long-term capital gains (LTCG), and the lower top tax rate of ordinary income. These tax rate changes, enacted during a recession or depression, along with the interest deduction, has encouraged people to use too much credit during the high appreciation/inflation cycle.  Over the years as the LTCGs tax rate has been lowered along with ordinary income tax rates, excessive credit use has helped drive prices up over 1000%, in the last 50 years.

We need to reform the tax code, so investors and the general public don’t use excessive credit when real estate, single family homes, commodities, and other hard asset prices rise more than 2% annually.  We need to enact the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy to help prevent financial bubbles, and financial crisis in our economy.  We need to pass the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy to help make our exports more competitive in the world markets and support full employment. The 2% Policy will encourage people to have a balanced financial portfolio, so they have reserves to maintain themselves during downturns in the economy.

How will the 2% Policy operate to manage high appreciation/inflation rates?

First a little bit about how the economy works.

The video,@ (www.taxpolicyusa.wordpress.com), will show you the economic cycles the economy goes through, through the years.  The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is depicted by the straight line sloping upward.  As the producer of the video, (Ray Dalio founder of Bridgewater Associates LP the largest hedge fund in the world) points out, the video is a simplified representation of the short and long debt cycles an economy goes through.  The graph shows the economic cycles as being the same height and depth. But this is not how GDP and economic cycles occur. GDP decreases and increases over the years.  The line should show up and downs in the line.  The economic cycles also will cycle through recessions, low inflation, high inflation, high appreciation/inflation rates, depression, and stagflation.  The economic cycles have different depths and heights.  Economic cycles can be very severe, or minor occurrences.

The cycles the economy goes through can be referred to economic periods of gloom, boom, and doom.  As the economic cycles occur, people’s attitude about money and debt changes.  During the gloom period, people don’t feel good about the economy, and their future.  During the boom period, people feel excellent about the economy and their finances.  During the doom cycle, they feel dreadful about the economy.  They believe the economy is never going to get better.

The points you need to remember are that the economic cycles are created, and affected by the amount of debt, tax policies, tax rates, and the quality and quantity of the debt in an economy.

What is money and how is money created in our economy.

Any discussion on how we correctly maintain the value of the US dollar, increase employment, and stabilize our economy must start with the question:  What is money in the United States of America?  Ninety-seven percent (97%) of our money is created by private banks as they make loans.  Three percent (3%) of our money is represented by paper Federal Reserve Notes and the US Treasury minted metal coins.  Because private banks create the majority of our money with debt, we must primarily be concerned with how much money is produced by banks, and when they create the money (debt) in the private sector.  We must change what people invest in, and when they make those investments during the high appreciation/inflation cycle to correctly control high appreciation/inflation psychology.  In real estate, it is “location, location, location!!  In macroeconomics, it is timing, timing, timing!!!

How the Federal Reserve’s monetary works, and how it affects the economy.

At some point in the future inflation pressures will build until inflation is higher than the Federal Reserve’s (Fed} target rate of 2% per year.  In the past, monetary policy has been used to raise interest rates to reduce appreciation/inflation rates and appreciation/inflation expectation.  Broad changes in interest rates are not beneficial for a capitalist economy.   It would be better for our economy if we changed tax policy before the Fed has to raise interest rates excessively to cool down a boom cycle, or lower interest rates too much to stimulate the economy, as it did in 2008 to near zero percent.

The raising of the Federal Reserve rate (the Fed Rate is the interest rate banks charge each other for very short-term loans, usually overnight) raises short-term interest rates.  By lowering the Fed Rate, the Fed can lower short-term interest rates.  Long-term interest rates are affected by the Fed when it buys or sells securities. Long-term interest rates rise when the Fed sells securities.  Long-term interest rates go down when the Fed buys securities.  The effect of higher interest rates causes the economy to slow down by reducing demand from the people located at the bottom, and the middle of the economic ladder. Employment opportunities decrease, and the unemployment rate increases, which causes demand to contract further.  This process continues until a recession is created. After the economy has cooled down sufficiently, and the appreciation/inflation rate has been reduced to the Fed’s target rate of 2%, or lower, the Fed loosens credit again by lowering the Fed Rate and buying securities.  Again the economy “recovers.”   The Fed has used this process and lately others financial methods to affect interest rates many times since it was created by Congress in 1913.

There has been much talk about making our tax code simpler. That would be all right, but economies are not simple. Economies are continually moving between the recession cycle, and the high appreciation/inflation cycle.  Sometimes economies stagnate into an economic cycle of a deep recession, high inflation, or stagflation. Tax policy must be in sync with monetary policy to have an efficient, and effective monetary policy.

The 2% Policy will allow business and our citizens to think and act in a long-term manner. The current Fed policies create higher and lower interest rate swings that produce short-term thinking.  The 2% Policy will enable people and business to think and act in a long-term manner when interest rates move in a narrower range, and the economy is more stable for longer periods of time.

Macroeconomics is not an exact science. We have experienced that fact over the last 100 years, ever since the Federal Reserve (Fed) was created, and the Federal government has become proactive about keeping the economy moving. Sometimes the Fed is too early, or too late with their monetary policies.  Or they stimulate too much, or too little. They raise interest rates too high or keep them too low for too long.  The Federal government will use too much fiscal policy to stimulate the economy, or not enough stimuli.  The government will create tax policy that is ahead of the economy, or behind the economic cycle. The problem with our tax code is that the government does not eliminate, or neutralize fiscal policies, which were enacted during the recession period, as the economy changes, from recession to the high appreciation/inflation cycle, which overstimulates the economy after recovery and then the Fed must act with monetary policies.

What Is Needed?

To sustain prosperity in our economy, we need to enact an automatic tax policy neutralizer that will help make the Fed’s monetary policies more effective and efficient. It can be done by changing the tax code automatically annually as the economy changes from the recession cycle to the high appreciation/inflation cycle.  This automatic change in the tax code will help reduce the economic cycles of deep recessions, and high appreciation/inflation rates, and help keep people employed.  This automatic income tax reform policy would maintain normal consumption, and production, thereby preserving the standard of living, and the income, and wealth of the middle and working class, reducing the need for a bigger government “safety net” and larger deficits during the recession cycle.

The automatic tax policy neutralizer, as you already know, I have in mind is the “2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy.” First, let us see what it will do. This income tax reform policy would automatically change the income tax code from encouraging debt creation, and discouraging saving, and money investment, to a tax code that encourages saving, and money investment, during the high appreciation/inflation cycle. The tax code should discourage leveraging credit to make unproductive investments, during the high appreciation/inflation cycle. And then automatically revert to its original tax rates and deductions when the economy obtains an appreciation/inflation rate of 2%. This change in the tax code would help maintain stable prices, and full employment; unlike the Fed’s changing of monetary policies, which can create higher interest rates, unemployment, foreclosures, bankruptcies, and a recession.

It is now October 2016, and the Fed’s monetary policies have not yet succeeded in creating a 2% inflation rate to normalize interest rates. It has been eight years since the financial crisis occurred in Sept. 2008.  As a nation of free people, we can do better!!

How would the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy operate?

If real estate prices, commodities, and other hard asset prices were increasing more than 2% annually, the tax on savings and money investments (bonds and other debt investments) would automatically decrease based on the appreciation/inflation annual percentage rate. At the same time, the interest deduction would automatically decline based on the annual appreciation/inflation rate.

The tax rate changes would not be based on one person’s hard asset holdings but would be based on an index composed of things, that appreciate in price, and are commonly used for collateral to obtain mortgages and loans.  Since each state can have different appreciation/inflation rates, the appreciation/inflation index would be more accurate if an index was created for each state annually.  If we set a maximum annual target rate of appreciation at 4% for the “appreciation/inflation index,” then at that point interest income should have a tax rate of 0%, and the paid interest deduction should be decreased to zero.  If necessary, the top long-term capital gains (LTCGs) tax rate could also be automatically increased to the same rate as the top rate the taxpayer would pay on ordinary earned income to slow down an overheated economy.

This automatic adjustment in our tax code, annually, would slow the economy down without raising the cost of production, and consumption, as the higher interest rates do, currently used by the Federal Reserve to slow down an overheated economy.

What if the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy had been enacted in 2000 before the primary home bubble had been created?

When the Appreciation Index increased to 3%, the tax rate on interest earned would have decreased by 50% or 50% of the interest earned would not be taxable income at the end of the year. At the end of the year, the same thing would occur to the interest deduction, 50% of the interest paid would not be tax-deductible. The LTCGs tax rate would increase by 50%. If the 2% Index continued to rise the next year to 4%, the tax rate changes would be 100%. When the 2% Appreciation Index returned to a 2% annual increase, the tax rates, and interest deduction would again be as they were. The change in tax rates would not decrease or increase tax revenue of the federal government. The debtor would pay more taxes, and the person who invested in the debt would pay fewer taxes. It is known that during the high appreciation/inflation cycle the debtor’s real capital investment is increasing in price and the debt (money) is losing purchasing power. The 2% Policy will help rebalance this change in value between the lender and the debtor.

It is widely recognized that when tax rates and LTCGs tax rates are lowered after they have been raised, economic activity and tax revenues increase.  In this way, aggregate demand and employment will be maintained during all cycles of the economy.  If the automatic tax changes I am proposing had been used, to manage the irrational exuberance, that helped create the high appreciation/inflation cycle, of the primary home bubble during 2003/2007, we could have used the automatic reversal of the income tax changes to stimulate the economy when the economy slowed down. The lowering of the LTCGs, the higher tax rate on interest income, and the 100% deductibility of paid interest would all be available to stimulate economic activity. These fiscal policies have all been used in the past, when the LTCGs tax rate and ordinary income tax rates were lowered in 1921, 1961, 1982, and 2003 to help end the recessions that occurred in the year before these years.

Currently, our economy and the major economies of the world are stuck in a low growth and very low interest rate situation.  If the 2% policy had been enacted in 2000, interest rates would not have needed to be changed as much as they had been previously to manage a boom, and to stimulate the economy after a recession, or depression.  We would not have experienced the primary home bubble, the collapse of the economy, and the financial crisis.  Interest rates would not be near zero in the USA, and the major economy’s of the world would not be offering negative interest rates to stimulate their economies.  It is possible that economic growth would be at normal rates in the US, and around the world if the 2% Policy had been enacted in 2000.

The automatic tax policy changes I am proposing would maintain production, consumption, and employment, at the lowest possible interest rates, after considering our currency’s exchange rates, and current account balance.  The 2% Policy would allow production the time it needs to balance supply with healthy demand.  Employment would be maintained, as the economy balances itself. Therefore traditional consumption, by the middle class, and the working poor would continue with the 2% Policy enacted. Small imbalances in the economy would not increase into major bubbles, bursting, and then creating a financial crisis, as the primary housing bubble did in 2008.

A balancing of values would occur, because of the enactment of the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy. The transfer of purchasing power to the real asset leveraged investor, from the debt investor, that currently occurs due to our static tax rates, and other fiscal policies, would be reduced annually, during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, as each party filed their taxes annually.  The real asset leveraged investor would pay a little more taxes, and the debt investor would pay a little fewer taxes, due to the automatic changes in tax rates, during the high appreciation/inflation cycle.    Interest rates would remain in a narrower range, which would be beneficial to our capitalist economy, creating longer periods of full employment, and real wealth creation.

Capture of long-term capital gains sales will slow down during the high appreciation cycle and then increase during the average 2% appreciation periods, thus increasing, credit use, and economic activity when it is needed to maintain a 2% appreciation rate.  The tax code would be in sync with monetary policy.

In recent history each time the economy “recovers” we have fewer jobs and fewer jobs that have a “living wage. ” The middle class has gotten smaller, and the number of people living at the poverty level has increased.  If we make this necessary tax policy change, we can rebuild the American economy and the American Dream.

We are a nation of free people that can change laws and determine what laws will govern us. We can change our future by enacting this automatic economic stabilizer tax reform policy, which will shorten the length of recessions and reduce the depth of the recession cycle. The 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy will contribute to reducing the occurrences of financial bubbles and financial crisis, and very deep recessions and depression.

You can help.  Please send a copy of this part of the article to your representatives in Congress.  Inform your friends and neighbors about this article and suggest they read it. Together we can change the future for our children and grandchildren.

Thank you

Leonard Tekaat  leonardc.tekaat@outlook.com

Review of the benefits of the 2%Policy, and other thoughts on the economy.

The 2% Policy will increase money (debt) investment and the savings rate during the high appreciation/inflation cycle.  People will feel more secure about their money, and savings were retaining its purchasing power during the high appreciation/inflation cycle.  This change in our tax code will make available the financial capital, at the lowest possible interest rate, to increase supply, and services.

Speculation, and appreciation investment, with credit, would decrease during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, with the 2% Policy enacted.  Fewer people would feel as if they needed to spend their money or invest their money in appreciating hard assets, to protect their savings against high inflation, which increases demand unnecessarily, which increases the appreciation/inflation rate excessively.

The preference for the lower long-term capital gains tax rate would be eliminated, during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, because the return on investment (ROI) would be reduced on high appreciation/inflation derived profits. This change in ROI occurs when interest income is being taxed at a higher tax rate than long-term capital gains.  The almost 50% differential between the lower tax on long-term capital gains and savings and money (debt) investment would automatically be eliminated until the high appreciation/inflation rate was reduced to 2 percent.  Also during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, the interest paid on loans would not be 100% tax-deductible, which will reduce the stimuli in the tax code for people to increase their debt level for unproductive appreciation investments, and speculation reasons.

If we can enact the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy before interest rates increase, interest rates would not have to rise as much as if we don’t pass the 2% Policy. The cost of paying interest on the national debt would not increase too much. Current debt created with low-interest rates would not lose as much value as if interest rates were to go up excessively.

The World Money Markets

We have been using outdated monetary, and fiscal policies for too long. These outdated procedures do not work well with a modern global money market system, which can expand liquidity (the amount of readily available credit in an economy) as long as there are is willing buyers and willing sellers for securities.  Or it can contract liquidity very fast if there are more sellers of debt than buyers.  As economics, Professor Perry G .Mehrling of Columbia University states, ” The world’s dollar money markets fund the capital lending markets.”

World currency markets have the ability to considerably increase the money supply (credit) in an economy. Even when the Fed raises the Fed’s funds rate, US dollars continue to flow into our economy from around the world if there is a demand for more credit or safety.  It is the world dollar markets that determine the prices (interest rate) of money (long and short-term debt) in our economy.  The Fed has no direct control over the “shadow banking system,” which includes the world’s dollar money market funds.

The current out-dated monetary, and fiscal policies we are using created the bubble decade of the 2000’s, and the rise, and collapse of primary home prices in the same decade.  Thus helping to create the financial crisis of 2008, and the Great Recession. We need new fiscal policies that will make the Fed’s monetary policies more efficient, and effective.

Our economy and financial sector have changed considerably over the last 56 years.  Our economy is no longer a closed economy.  We are the largest economy in a global economy. Our GDP affects other country’s economies around the world, and their GDP affects our economy.  Our monetary and fiscal policies affect other country’s monetary and financial policies, and their monetary policies and economic policies affect our economy.  Our currency exchange rate affects our economy and other economies around the world. Country’s, around the world, currency exchange rates affect our economy and other country’s economies.  Our interest rates affect other countries currency value and economies and our currency value and economy.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) and The Middle Class

The CPI does not measure the cause of inflation. It tracks price increases of a basket of goods and services.  The increase in the prices of real estate and other assets create equity, which allows the financial sector, with the private banking system, to create the excessive money (debt), that creates high price appreciation and inflation.  As real estate and other asset prices rise it feeds upon itself, creating the ability of the financial sector to create more, and more debt/money, and higher appreciation/inflation rates.  The way to control this process is not to increase interest rates, but by reducing people’s desire to go into financial institutions, and take out a loan, during the high appreciation/inflation cycle.

The middle class is the backbone of our consumption economy. The middle class’s disposable income must be maintained to maintain prosperity, and our standard of living. Our military and economic strength are derived from the taxation of the middle class, and middle class’s ability to participate in the economy. The overhang of debt, and underwater mortgage debt of the middle class, created by the financial crisis, is depressing the economy.

The Fed is re-inflating real estate, and other asset prices to create the “wealth effect.” This process is not going to be a long-term solution to our economy’s problems because the increase in asset prices is investor driven, not consumption derived.  The middle class’s incomes are not rising to support the rising real estate, single family home prices, and other price increases.  If wages do not rise, the middle class will have to use credit to maintain their standard of living.  If the middle class takes on more debt, if they can obtain it, the increase in debt will work to increase Gross Domestic Product a little, and for a short time, and then demand will fall, because of the debt load.

How do we create a sustainable economic recovery?

You can think of the needed tax policy change, as an “automatic adjustment of tax policy,” to help correct domestic financial imbalances before they create a financial crisis. Preventing a financial crisis before they occur is something the Fed or Congress hasn’t been able to accomplish. Former Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said, “If there is a housing bubble, we will clean up the mess when it pops.”  When he made the previous statement, economic indicators looked good.  Money was flowing into the country, to fund the increasing public, and private sector debt, which was improving our current account balance.  The government was reporting that inflation was under control. Unemployment was low.

Congress couldn’t agree on anything to slow down the increasing prices of the primary home market.  To them, the economy was booming, and that meant more tax revenues to pay for two wars and other government liabilities.

There are many benefits to having the lowest possible interest rates in the current strong dollar, low inflation economic cycle our economy is currently experiencing.

Another problem with the Fed’s monetary policies is they can also increase a nation’s trade deficit if interest rates are raised to fight inflation psychology.  It would be much better for our economy if we used the 2% Policy to help control inflation, and high appreciation/inflation psychology.  By using the 2% Policy to fight inflation and high appreciation, we would be able to maintain employment, and not increase the value of the dollar with higher interest rates.  With a weaker dollar, relative to other currencies, our exports would increase, employment would increase, and the dollar would appreciate as our balance of trade payments improved.

Why excessively high, or low-interest rates, and excessive government deficits, in a global economy, are very counter-productive to global, and domestic economic growth rates are explained here in more detail. 2

Why we need to make tax policy changes ASAP

In September 2008 our nation’s economy and the world’s economies experienced the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression of 1929. The US economy is slowly improving, but it has come about by the housing market, and other asset prices being inflated with very low-interest rate money created with the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) monetary policy of “quantitative easing.”  The Fed is currently purchasing between 70 to 80 billion dollars of Mortgage Backed Securities, and Federal Government Debt combined, per month (Jan 2014).  This monetary policy is known as Quantitative Easing, which has the effect of lowering long-term interest rates.  When the Fed reduces the amount of Government Debt and Mortgage Backed Securities, that they are purchasing, interest rates may rise.  If interest rates do not rise, it means the economy is still in recovery mode and is not strong enough to stand alone on its real demand.  People’s attitude about the economy is still in the gloom phase. If interest rates rise, all the debt (money) that was created with a lower interest rate will decrease in value.  It is possible if interest rates rise too fast another financial crisis could be created as people sell their (debt) money investments in a panic, to protect their wealth.  A financial crisis could also be created if the collateral that is the security for the debt decreases in value!  As explained by Professor Mehrling in these video lectures.3

It is imperative that tax policy is changed before the Federal Reserve changes monetary policy to increase, or decrease interest rates, now, and in the future.  For decades the Federal Reserve and the Federal Government hasn’t used the proper tool to maintain normal economic activity and to prevent economic bubbles from forming.  We should be automatically adjusting the tax code, on an annual basis, as the economy changes from the recession cycle to the high appreciation/inflation cycle.  The tax code should then automatically revert to its previous tax rates on LTCGs, interest income, and the deductibility of interest paid, to maintain aggregate demand, and full employment as the economy cools down.

The Great Depression and the Great Recession were both the result of a financial crisis brought on by the excessive creation of debt (money) in the private sector.  In the last decade, 2000 to 2010, the US economy has had three financial bubbles.  The dot-com bubble, the commodities bubble, and then the primary home bubble. The primary home bubble is the financial bubble that did so much damage to our economy, and the world’s economy when it popped because it affected household wealth, income, and debt.

When the primary home bubble popped in the US in 2008, we heard the bust that was heard around the world.  Millions of people, around the world, lost trillions of dollars in equity in their homes.  Those families that were able to keep their homes were left with trillions of dollars of underwater debt when the selling prices of their homes decreased by as much as 60%, depressing our economy’s economic activity, and economic activity in many economies around the world.  Million of families lost their homes to foreclosure. Unemployment increased to 25 to 30 percent or higher in some countries. An enormous amount of misery was created for many people, while other people carted away what little wealth the middle class, and the working poor had accumulated.  The loss wealth by the middle class and the working poor has occurred each time our economy has gone through a boom/bust cycle.  The wealth and capital assets of our economy have moved up to the people at the top of the economic ladder each time the economy went bust. 4

The Great Recession is global, because other countries invested in our excessive debt, and their economies also had excessive amounts of debt.  Other developed economies also have some of the same income tax policies and economic policies as the United States.  By the Federal Government relying primarily on the Federal Reserve (Fed), a government-sponsored part of the private banking sector, to stimulate the economy with low interest rates, and to control the creation of economic bubbles, and inflation expectations with higher interest rates, the Federal Government has helped create a huge inequality of wealth in our economy.  We should be using the income tax to stimulate the economy and control the creation of financial bubbles before the Fed uses monetary policies to raise, or lower interest rates excessively.  To help prevent bubbles, help reduce income, and wealth inequality, have a more stable economy, create a more productive economy, maintain stable long-term interest rates, maintain employment, reduce interest rate decrease and increase risk, and control inflation and high appreciation/inflation psychology, we need to enact the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy.

The United States economy has gone through many boom/bust cycles.  To name a few; The Great Recession that started in 2007, and which we are still experiencing the effects of, 8 years later. The 1930 to 1942 Great Depression.  The high appreciation/inflation cycle of 1970 to 1979 is known as the high inflation and stagflation decade.  The Deep Recession of 1980 to 1984 was created by the Fed with very high-interest rates.  We are now in a cycle of very low-interest rates created by the Fed.

The Primary Home Bubble of 2000 to 2007 was created by government housing policy, tax policy changes, the deregulation of our economy’s financial sector, a change in global money flows, fraud and greed.  The Stock Market Bubble of 1922 to 1930 has many similarities to the primary home bubble of 2000 to 2007. (I will explain later).  These are just a few of the economic boom/bust cycles that have occurred in the US economy in the last 100 years.  We must change tax policies to create a more stable economy, to help reduce the boom/bust cycles, to reduce poverty, to have a better future for ourselves, and our posterity.

Currently, people with money to invest, use the tax code to protect their money from inflation, and taxation all the time.  It would be better for our economy, during the high appreciation cycle, if they would be guided to keep their money in money investments. This change in tax policy would help stabilize our economy and create more real wealth to raise more of our citizen’s standard of living.

I am not faulting the people at the top of the economic ladder for what they do with their money under current tax policies.  The income tax code is misguiding them on where to invest their money during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, therefore more inflation and higher collateral prices are created.  This allows the financial sector to create more debt/money during the wrong economic cycle, which creates higher appreciation/inflation rates, and higher collateral prices.  The 2% Policy’s automatic adjustments to our tax code would slow this process down, and create longer periods of prosperity, by correctly managing the high appreciation/inflation cycle.

When prices are expected to rise more than 2% annually, or people’s expectations are that prices will rise more than 2% annually, the tax code super-charges people to make purchases, and invest with credit, when it becomes very profitable to invest in hard capital assets, land, housing, single family homes, commodities, and other assets.  As the economy heats up people’s attitude about money (debt) changes.  If asset prices are increasing more than 2%, people will reduce their money investments. and then purchase hard capital assets of land, housing commodities, and other assets to obtain long-term capital gains, which are taxed, under current policy, at a 50% lower tax rate than interest income, or purchase products, or assets before prices increase further.  But as more buyers enter these markets, the pressure on prices to increase increases.  Irrational Exuberance is created.  As prices rise, more poverty is created, if wages do not increase.  Again, to slow down the excessive credit use (money creation) the Fed uses monetary policies to increase interest rates, which can create a recession, unemployment, foreclosures, bankruptcies, and more poverty.

The Tax Code Should Change Automatically

The tax code can guide people to invest, and spend money to speed up economic recovery. But, tax policies that are enacted to stimulate the economy, during the recession cycle, can become destructive during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, if left in force too long, by over-stimulating the economy with the use of excessive debt (money) creation in the private sector.  It is important for the tax code to counter-act what economic cycle the economy is moving through.  The tax code should automatically adjust before the economy creates financial bubbles and before the Fed must raise, or lower interest rates excessively to slow down an overheated economy, or to stimulate our economy.

The tax code should encourage money (debt) investment, and savings to help increase production; to help increase supply and reduce demand during the high appreciation/inflation cycle.  During the recession cycle, the income tax should encourage people to spend money, make all kinds investments, and use credit to expand the money supply.  The tax code should be in sync with the economy’s cycles to make our economy work for all our citizens.

The 2% Policy will help slow down the economy in the correct way, without adding cost, when the economy is expanding too rapidly. This change in the tax code will also decrease the wealth gap between the impoverished, the middle-income people, the working poor, and the people at the top of the economic ladder, without unnecessary tax increases.  (As explained later).

Raising and lowering of interest rates excessively is very damaging to a capitalist economy, the middle class, working poor, the world economy, and small businesses.

In the 1990\s when the long-term capital gains tax rate was again made lower than the tax rate on interest income, the Fed had to cause interest rates to rise when the economy showed signs of creating high appreciation/inflation rates, because of excessive debt (money) creation in the private sector.  When interest rates increased, in the 1990’s, the higher interest rates created a recession. Again, higher than necessary interest rates create unemployment, foreclosures, bankruptcies, closure of small businesses (which reduces competition), and depresses world trade.

Higher than necessary interest rates damage other countries’ economies by not only creating a recession in the United States but by also creating a recession in their economies.  Higher or lower than necessary interest rates create problems with capital flows between nations.  Too much money flows toward the country that has the strongest currency with the highest interest rates based on its inflation rates.  Then the other nations of the world must lower, or raise their interest rates to maintain their domestic economy, and their exports to obtain the needed gross national product to help maintain prosperity. 5.

QWhen the Fed tries to stimulate the economy with very low interest rates it is also very damaging to a capitalist economy.

Lower bound zero interest rates deprive retirees of needed income, reducing their ability to consume, which reduces demand, and consumption during the recession cycle.  Very low-interest rates increase senior poverty rates.  With less income from interest income, seniors spend their savings.  After their savings are depleted seniors must turn to government programs to maintain themselves.  As the baby boom generation retires at 10,000 people or more a month, this situation will become worse.  The depletion of the savings of seniors increases government expenditures and deficits unless taxes are raised.

Very low interest rates discourage the young, and the working poor to save the money needed to get a leg up on the economic ladder.  When interest rates are very low people wanting/needing higher returns on their capital will make riskier, and undesirable investments, which can destabilize the economy, with the possibility of creating another financial crisis in the future.

People at the top of the economic ladder have money to invest or make debt (money) investments, unlike the people at the bottom of the economic ladder.  Implementing the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy would reduce excess demand, for real capital assets, from the top of the economic ladder during the high appreciation/inflation cycle rather than from the bottom of the economic ladder, as high-interest rate policies do.

With the 2% Policy enacted, people with money investments would remain in money investments, or productive investments, during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, which increases supply, and reduces demand, without raising the cost of production and consumption as higher interest rates do.

When the Fed has to raise interest rates excessively, to overcome the effects of the long-term capital gains tax rate, the cost of interest on the national debt rises more than necessary, which reduces the ability of Congress to fund other necessary programs. State government debt is affected in the same manner. nThe 2% Policy would rectify this operational flaw in our economic system.

When the Fed is making interest rates increase or decrease, the Fed is making an educated guess on how the economy will be performing up to six months in the future. nThe Fed tries to be correct in its predictions, but most of the time their monetary policies are lagging, or premature to the economic cycle.

The 2% Policy is a better way of stimulating the economy, and controlling inflation and high appreciation/inflation psychology.

The 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy would be based on how the economy was performing each year.  The income tax code concerning interest income and the deduction of interest paid would remain as it is now, during the recession cycle, and while the economy is in near balance to maintain production, productive investment, and increase consumption in the economy.  The tax rates on interest income, and long-term capital gains would remain the same as they currently are until the economy started to become over-heated, and assets and real estate prices began to increase more than 2% a year.  The income tax would automatically change annually based on the asset appreciation/inflation rate before the Federal Reserve raised short-term interest rates, and tightened credit to the banks, to increase interest rates. If the automatic tax adjustments did not cool down the overheated economy sufficiently then the Fed would help with the minimum application of monetary policy.  The same order of change would occur if the economy were slowing down.  Tax policy would automatically change annually before the Fed used monetary policy to lower interest rates excessively.

To increase aggregate demand during a recession, and a very low inflation cycle, the interest deduction for interest paid on credit used for personal consumption should be made available.  In this way, the tax code would encourage more purchases of automobiles, trucks, and the consumption of other products and services would take place, securing the debt by those objects.  Before the financial crisis of 2008, homeowners would increase the debt on their homes to obtain the tax deduction for interest paid to pay for products and services.  The use of their home’s equity to acquire other goods and services created many of the underwater mortgages during primary home price collapse of 2008 and beyond, which contributed to the foreclosure crisis.

During the high appreciation/inflation cycle, if interest rates are not raised excessively to control inflation and inflation psychology, people living on interest income will not have an income increase.  Therefore they will not increase demand in the economy when less demand is needed to balance the economy.

The cost of government programs that are indexed to inflation will not increase as much when inflation and high appreciation/inflation psychology are correctly controlled with the 2% Policy.

What happened and what should happen.

The US economy has had a couple of periods in our history where the long-term capital gains tax rate was the same as the tax rate on interest income, and other forms of revenue. From 1913 to 1921 and 1988 to 1993 the tax rates for both forms of income were the same. When we lowered the long-term capital gains tax rate, lower than other types of income, economic activity increased, reducing the length and depth of the recession.  But if the lower LTCGs tax rate was left at, the lower rate for too long it contributed to the extreme debt (money) creation, speculation, and high appreciation/inflation rates in the private sector.

Long term capital gains taxes were lowered in the recession of 1921 which helped end the recession.  The lower long-term capital gains tax rate was reduced to 12.5 % in 1922 from 73% in 1921. The tax on interest and earned income remained at 73%. The lower tax rate for long-term capital gains income was left enforce for too long, from 1922 to 1931.  Also, the top income tax rates on earned income, and other types of revenue was lowered each year until 1931 to 25%, which left more money in the hands of speculators, increasing speculation, ending with the creation of the financial crisis of 1929, and the Great Depression.  The surge in primary home prices from 2000 to 2007 has a distinct similarity with the stock market price surge from 1922 to 1928, and the rapid price decline in 1929.

Some of the similarities between tax policies before the financial crisis of 1929 and the financial crisis of 2008 are:

The government regulation of the financial sector was very limited in the 1920s.  In 1999 Congress and President Clinton eliminated some of the laws the federal government had enacted in the 1930s, during the Great Depression. In 1920 our economy was in recession. Congress lowered the long-term capital gains tax rate (LTCGTR) from 73% to 12.5% to stimulate the economy in 1920.  Interest income was taxed at 58%.  By 1929 the tax rate on interest income was lowered to 24%.  In 1999 Congress, and President signed into law, to stimulate the primary home market, elimination of long-term capital gains taxes on up to $500,000.00 on the sale of a primary home. In 2001 the LTCGTR was reduced from 29% to 21%. Interest income was taxed at 43%.  In 2003 the tax on interest income was lowered to 35%, and the LTCGTR was reduced to 15%.

The economy was in recession in 2000.  The Fed lowered interest rates.  The 0% long-term capital gains tax rate, for primary homeowners and the 15% tax rate for LTCGs for investors, made the selling and buying of primary homes, and other real estate properties more profitable than holding debt as an investment.  Leaving the differential in the tax rates in the tax code for so long, with a deregulated financial sector, is what triggered the creation of the primary home price bubble from 2003 to 2007.  In 2008 when nobody was willing to hold the over-leveraged mortgage debt as an investment, the debt was not able to be refinanced or rolled over, causing the rapid decrease in the prices of primary homes. The same process occurred in 1929 with the over-leveraged margin debt of the stock market of the 1920’s could not be refinanced.

The financial sector is involved in the creation of economic bubbles by doing what it was created to do, make loans.  The problem is it doesn’t know when to slow down making loans.  It feels it is providing a service, which allows the economy to grow.  If collateral prices are increasing excessively, it can make larger and larger loans, on existing assets, which increases its profits. The financial sector felt the loans on primary homes were secure, because primary home prices, in the past, had increased nationally over an extended period.

There have been times in our history, which there have been major price drops, and price increases in home prices in individual States, and geographical areas.  What was different between 2003 and 2007 was that the US Congress had enacted a tax policy that affected the taxation of the profit from the sale of primary homes nationally. The Federal government had made up to $500,000.00 of long-term capital gains tax-free from the sale a person’s main home in 1999.

Because of global money markets, banks, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and Wall St. were selling the Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS), and our other debts all over the world.  The low reported inflation rates, during 2000 to 2007, that was being reported by the government, even though primary home prices were rising 30% annually in some markets, gave the Fed no reason to limit private sector debt.  The AAA rating on the MBSs satisfied bank regulators for reserve requirements.  With responsible borrowers and willing Mortgage Backed Security investors, primary home prices began to rise dramatically. After the financial crisis had occurred the Fed, and the Federal Government managed to prevent another Great Depression with fiscal, and monetary policies. These policies have worked somewhat, but the asset, primary home prices, and the debt bubble are being inflated again.

When appreciation rates are higher than two percent the “Animal Spirits,” John Maynard Keynes, the British economist referred to in his writings, are released.  An investor herd begins to gather until an investor stampede is created to cash in on the easy paper profits to be had with the lower tax on long-term capital gains.  The herd bids up the prices of real estate, commodities, and other assets until prices are unsustainable, and then the bubble burst, and prices collapse.

A fraudster will tell you, the easiest, and fastest way to motivate people to act or to defraud people is to offer something for free or include them in the idea they will reap a reward without working for it.  With the tax changes that were made to the tax code, concerning the sale of a person’s primary home, people were persuaded to take on more debt than they could afford to pay back, with the promise of tax-free money when the home was sold two years later.  The primary home bubble was created by the financial and the real estate sectors in this way to increase their profits and bonuses.

The person or persons that benefit the most are the fraudsters. They are in control of the whole scam. In regards to the primary housing bubble, Wall St. and the Bank directors are the people who walked away with billions of dollars of bonuses, and stock options at the expense of the shareholders, and taxpayers. It was the financial sector that lobbied Congress, and President Clinton to deregulate the financial sector. 5

The tax code changes of the 1990’s, and the early 2000’s not only brought more investors into the single family home market, but families also realized they could receive tax-free money by selling their highly appreciated home.

Home buyers also realized that in a couple of years, because of the high price appreciation rates of single-family homes during 2003 to 2007, it was possible that they also could receive tax-free money. Buyers were not too concerned about what price they were paying for the home.  Considering interest, and property taxes were 100% tax-deductible, and they would be using the “investment in the property “as a home to live in” made the “investment” even better.  When the financial sector created the debt (money) for the buyer to purchase the home, the financial sector flooded the economy with new money by monetizing the equity in the homes.

With higher collateral prices, the financial sector can create larger loans, creating more money (debt).  As the high appreciation/inflation cycle progresses the middle class and the working poor’s, “Animal Spirits” are excited, and they then put it “all on the line” by increasing their debt beyond what they can afford.

You guessed it! The banks, Wall St. the entire financial sector, and the real estate sector profits go up. During this period, the working poor and the middle class can’t earn enough money, fast enough, to maintain their debt load, or their standard of living without both parents working or using more credit.  Because since the mid-1980’s the only interest deduction allowed individuals has been mortgage interest, many of the middle-class homeowners will go further into debt, if they can obtain a larger loan on their homes, as the selling price of their home increases.  If the mortgage has a balloon payment or an Adjustable Interest Rate Mortgage, the homeowner may not be able to make the balloon payment, or the higher mortgage payments, if interest rates rise.  It is possible that the homeowner could lose their home to foreclosure.  Underwater mortgages became very burdensome because Congress passed a law which disallows homeowners from using bankruptcy courts to discharge or modify the mortgage. The result is that the economy and society are increasingly becoming more unstable.

The 2% Policy would help reduce wealth inequality

The 2% Policy tax change would help create more real wealth and fewer paper profits. When the middle class and the working poor can stay employed during all economic cycles, the middle class, and the working poor would be able to accumulate, and maintain their wealth.  It would help close the wealth gap between the people at the top of the economic ladder, and everyone else in the economy, because the economy would maintain a closer balance.  The middle class and the working poor would stay employed as the economy balanced supply and demand.  The money that the middle class and the working poor earned would maintain its value over a longer period after the 2% Policy was enacted. If there were a recession, caused by over-supply, the excesses would be used up quicker if more people remained employed earning a higher income than if they were drawing unemployment insurance.  Only certain sectors of the economy would be affected by the over-supply.  Economies are local therefore tax policies should be applied locally.  The entire national economy would not be affected as when interest rates are raised to slow down an overheated economy.

State governments should adopt the 2% Policy to maintain demand, employment, productive investment, and production.  The 2% Policy would reduce the economic cycles that reduce the income and wealth of the middle and working class.  The 2% Policy would help subdue the economic cycles that increase the wealth of the upper-income people, as we are currently witnessing with the foreclosure crisis and the massive investment by investors in single family homes.

In some single family home markets, we have seen the middle-income people, and the working poor being outbid by investors, and Wall St. hedge funds with all cash offers as they buy 40% or more of the single family homes for sale.  We need to empower qualified families, and the working poor, with new mortgage terms, to purchase the single family homes, as I have written about in the article “Resolving Underwater Mortgages Without Inflating Asset And Primary Home Prices Excessively” posted on this site.

The single family home market should be made up of those people who want to live in the home.  Single family home prices should reflect their purchasing power.  Investors have many other multi-unit housing investments available to them.  The single family home market should not include investors and hedge funds.  Encouraging investors to get into the single family home market during a recession, with tax incentives and other financial incentives, to inflate single family home prices, is short-sighted and will lead to another sell-off, and a possible financial crisis.  The sell-off could happen when investors decide to sell, and families can’t qualify for a mortgage to purchase the single family homes at their current inflated prices.

We should eliminate the tax deductions that investors currently have that allow investors to deduct the cost of repairing a single family home.  Homeowners should have the deduction, so neighborhoods do not deteriorate.  Homeowners will hire contractors to do the work, thereby reducing unemployment and neighborhood blight.  All tax incentives for investors, or Wall St. firms to invest in a single family home should be eliminated from the tax code.  This tax code policy change would not affect investors that own existing single family homes.  Only new purchases of a single family home by an investor would be affected by the tax policy change.  If an investor does buy a single family home, they will quickly build multi-unit housing on the property, if zoning codes allow it, thereby increasing the supply of housing.

I would like to point out this fact.  If families could not maintain the payments on the inflated home prices before the financial crisis of 2008 occurred, they won’t be able to afford to purchase and make the mortgage payments on homes with the same inflated prices.  If interest rates rise, it will make primary homes less affordable.  In the last 20 years personal income for millions of people have decreased, yet in recent years home prices have increased due to investor demand.

Think about it. If we can create an economy where people can stay employed, housed, and productive, they will be able to provide for themselves and their families.  More taxes do not need to be collected, or tax rates do not have to be increased to support a larger government “safety net.”

Our country is the “Land of Opportunity.” We must take this opportunity to change policies that have reduced opportunities for people to provide for themselves, and their families.  The crowding out of families in the single family home market by investors must be corrected. Monetary policies and tax policies that help create high housing cost, unemployment, bankruptcies, foreclosures, and the closing of small businesses must be changed to increase opportunity in the economy of our great nation.

I suggest that we say it out loud more often, and to set a goal for our nation.  We should add two words to the Pledge of Allegiance. The Pledge should reflect what America is committed to.  The words that many of our Presidents, Governors, and Representatives repeatedly speak of.  The words Responsibility and Opportunity should be included in the last sentence of the Pledge. The last sentence of the Pledge should read, ” WITH LIBERTY, JUSTICE, RESPONSIBILITY, and OPPORTUNITY FOR ALL.”

With the 2% Policy in place, the people at the top of the economic ladder would have to make money the “old-fashioned way,” they would have to “earn it.”  More long-term investments would be made to create products and services, which would create good paying jobs and “real wealth” rather than “paper profits” and higher prices.  The financialization of our economy would be reversed.  Our economy would once again become more productive and work for all our citizens.

The 2% Policy is a better way to guide people’s financial decisions, than the Fed’s policy of changing interest rates.  Instead of interest rates changing by excessive amounts, the 2% Policy would help maintain interest rates in a much narrower range.  The 2% Policy would allow businesses, and consumers to make long-term financial decisions.

Tax policy would automatically change, when needed, rather than interest rates changing after the damage has already been done.  After the 2008 financial crisis occurred is when we found out that consumers, investor, businesses, banks, Wall St., and the entire financial sector had created too much private sector debt (money).    That is too late and is very damaging to people lives, and our economy.

Improving opportunities for individuals in the Euro Zone.

Euro Zone countries should use the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy to stimulate & cool down different countries at different times instead of excessive interest rate changes.  One interest rate for all countries in Europe will not work because the different countries are not experiencing the same economic cycle at the same time.  Tax policy can change the value of the euro the same as having different interest rates in each country. The 2% Policy can change people’s consumption, investment and financial decisions the same as interest rate changes can.  People will move their money and asset investments to the country with the best tax policy.  As the tax policies automatically change, as economic cycles change in each country, money will move to where it will be used to increase the standard of living without excessively raising the cost of living with excessive speculation, or unproductive investment.

The USA can use one interest rate because the Federal government collects money from all states and sends it back to the states through construction, military complexes, federal government employment, and social programs to stimulate economic growth in the different states.  There is no Federal government in Europe that can tax all the different countries and redistribute the funds to the each country.  Therefore the countries must borrow money from the Euro countries that have surplus Euros.  Excessive sovereign government debt, if a country does not create its own currency, and excessive private debt can create a financial crisis, and broad changes in interest rates, which is damaging to capitalist economies in Europe if the debt exceeds the country’s ability to repay the debt when it is due.

The US economy would be more efficient if all 50 states would adopt the 2% Policy.  Instead of money moving to states where prices are increasing excessively to fuel more speculation, resulting in higher prices; money would move to areas in need a greater supply.

Conclusion

It makes no sense to retain tax policies, which were enacted to stimulate an economy to end a recession, during the high appreciation/inflation cycle.  Tax policies that encourage nonproductive credit use, that allow people to gain the tax benefit of the lower long-term capital gains tax rate, and discourage money investment and savings, during high appreciation/inflation cycle must be automatically changed or neutralized.  These policies stimulate our economy too much until our economy blows up during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, and then it has to go through a balancing process during a deep recession, creating untold misery.  By automatically changing tax policy we can slow down the economy, without creating a deep recession, or financial crisis, by using tax policy rather than higher interest rates.

The 2% Policy is not designed to lower billionaires taxes.  The objective of the tax policy is to reduce the number of buyers in a market economy that is experiencing price increases of more than 2%.  When prices are gaining more than 2% annually, people move from fixed income securities to real capital assets.  These new buyers increase demand in a market that already has too much demand.  Excess demand is why prices are increasing excessively.  The economy needs a greater supply to stabilize annual price increases at 2%.

The idea of the 2% Appreciation/Inflation tax policy is to encourage the holders of fixed income investments to stay in the dollar debt securities, so production has the time, and the money, at the lowest possible interest rate to increase supply to balance healthy demand with supply.  In this way, we contain inflation expectation without raising cost with higher interest rates.

When the Fed causes, interest rates to rise, to encourage people to stay in fixed income securities, higher interest rates raises the cost of production and consumption.  The Fed’s monetary policy raises the cost, slows down the economy, which creates unemployment, and less consumption from the bottom, and the middle of the economic ladder.

The 2% Policy only stays in effect until the economy is experiencing 2% annual appreciation/inflation rates.  After the economy returns to 2% annual appreciation/inflation rates, the tax rate on interest income automatically returns to its previous rate, and the tax deduction for interest paid returns to 100%, to maintain aggregate demand.

You might think of the economy as a car engine. To make the car go faster, or slower you would give it more gas, or less gas. The amount of fuel is the incentive for the motor to speed up, or slow down. You would not raise the price of gasoline to slow the engine down. Increasing the cost of money to slow down an economy is also wrong.

To slow down an economy that is overheating you need to cut the number of buyers that are in the marketplace, and increase supply. You do not want to reduce consumers from the bottom, or from the middle of the economic ladder.  You would want to decrease buyers from the top of the economic ladder first, because you want to maintain employment, to increase supply and sustain healthy consumption.  You want to reduce the extra demand that is coming from the top of the economic ladder when the economy is in the high appreciation/inflation cycle.  Not from the bottom, or the middle of the economic ladder.

We currently reduce demand from the bottom of the economic ladder first. There is a reason why this is occurring. It has to do with the income tax code. The tax code is structured to continually stimulate people to hold their wealth in real assets, and not in money (debt). Encouraging people to keep their wealth in real assets is fine during the recession cycle, or when the economy is in near balance. But if the tax incentives are continually applied to encourage people to hold real capital assets as a store of wealth, the economy becomes too unbalanced, and then too much credit (money) is created in the private sector. High appreciation and inflation rates begin to occur. And then high appreciation/inflation psychology is formed (people protecting their money from inflation and taxation). The more the economy becomes unbalanced, the more buyers from the top of the economic ladder enter the marketplace to increase their paper profits, to protect their money from inflation, to use the lower long-term capital gains tax rate to lower their income tax bill, and to get a better return on their investment money. If this process continues for too long, the banks start to make loans to unqualified buyers. The financial sector begins to make loans to unqualified buyers. Because of the high appreciation rates of the collateral, the financial sector feels their loans are secure. They continue making riskier loans as prices increase further. It all comes to an end when nobody will increase the debt on the collateral, or people realize prices are not going to continue to rise.

The speculation and short-term investment continue because interest income is continually taxed at the highest tax rate. Currently, approximately 39.6% and long-term capital gains are taxed at 20%, or at a lower tax rate. Also, the speculation continues because interest on loans remains 100% tax-deductible for businesses, investors, and homeowners. And there is easy “paper profit” money to be made which is taxed at the lower tax rate if the investment is held for one year, then sold

The 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy would correctly stabilize the value of money (debt). The 2% Policy would decrease the ability of banks, and other financial institutions to create too much money (debt) during the high appreciation/ inflation cycle. Because the 2% Policy would automatically change tax policy, thereby reducing the number of people who want to obtain more debt during the high appreciation/inflation cycle.

Instead of encouraging people to increase their debt, and reduce their savings rate during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, the enactment of the 2% Policy would support people to save money, and hold debt as an investment. Thereby reducing the amount of money being created during the high appreciation/inflation cycle, without creating more unemployment and a recession, or raising the cost of production and consumption, as the increasing interest rate monetary policies of the Federal Reserve do now.

The lower long-term capital gains tax rate also devalues money (debt) in the domestic economy.  When you continuously tax high appreciation/inflation derived profits at a lower tax rate than interest earned on debt investments , money becomes worth less and less, because of the return on investment. Money (debt) has less value, because of the higher tax on interest income, and the purchasing power that the money (debt) is losing as prices increase during the high appreciation/ inflation cycle. Fewer and fewer people are willing to hold money (debt) as an investment, so they become a buyer in the economy, increasing demand in an economy that already has too much demand.

When the Fed raises interest rates, the value of all the debt (money) that was created at a lower interest rate loses value, which can make a long-term debt investment riskier. Because of interest increase risk, this requires long-term debt (30-year mortgages, and other long-term debt) to have a higher than necessary interest rate.  Too much uncertainty in the financial sector is why derivatives and swaps were created and are widely used in the financial sector.  Derivatives and swaps are similar to insurance against default, or interest rate increase or decrease.

When the high appreciation/inflation cycle is occurring in an economy, money (debt) is losing purchasing power. The 2% Policy is a way for borrowers, and the government to partially maintain the purchasing power of money (debt) without raising interest rates excessively.  If the private sector and the government create too much money (debt), which creates inflation, and unsustainable real estate and other asset prices increases, the debt investor, or the saver will pay a little less income tax, with the 2% Policy in effect, at the end of the year.  At the end of the year, the borrower will pay a little more tax, with the 2% Policy in effect.  There will be no loss of revenue to the government.  Therefore the 2% Policy will reduce high appreciation/inflation psychology during the high appreciation/inflation cycle by partially maintaining the purchasing power of debt investments and savings without increasing interest rates too much.

With the 2% Policy enacted, employment will be continued while the economy balances itself. Therefore the States and Federal Governments will have less social expenditures maintaining the safety net, such as unemployment insurance, welfare, medical payments, food stamps, and many other programs that help people when they become unemployed. The government also helps people if a person or family cannot earn enough money to maintain a reasonable standard of living.

All people and businesses would be included by the 2% Policy. The same as they are when interest rates change. All debt investors, savers, and borrowers would be affected by the 2% Policy. It is more beneficial for a capitalist economy to have stable interest rates than the 100% tax deduction of interest cost.  After the economy slows down, all the stimuli the tax code has in it, to invest in real capital assets, will return as the tax rate on interest earned on savings, and money investments increase to their previous tax rate, and the interest deduction becomes 100% tax-deductible again, to maintain aggregate demand.

Instead of an interest deduction during the high appreciation cycle, to increase supply when needed, the tax code could include a tax credit.  Equal to the tax deduction if the interest paid on loans used to expand the amount of a product, commodity, or housing during the high appreciation/inflation cycle.

If we want to make the financial sector more stable, the interest deduction, for lenders, should be reduced as the appreciation/inflation rate increases, so they will create less short-term debt to finance long-term loans. This change in our tax code will encourage the financial sector to make more loans by using capital obtained by stock sales. Using short-term loans to finance long-term debt can cause a financial crisis, as short-term interest rates rise higher than the interest rate the long-term loan is earning.

The debt investor and the saver are as important as the borrower in a Capitalist economy. They both should be taxed appropriately depending on which cycle the economy is experiencing. It is important to note in which economic cycle people are saving and investing in money (debt) and then automatically have the tax code change when the economic cycle changes to encourage debt investment, and saving in the correct economic cycle.

As the high appreciation/inflation cycle progresses, there is an exchange of value between the real asset purchaser and the debt investor. The debt investor is losing purchasing power, and the real asset purchaser is gaining purchasing power. With the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy enacted, we would be correcting the balance of values between the borrower, and the debt investor each year, rather than allowing the imbalances of value to increase year after year until very few people will invest in debt without demanding higher interest rates.

When very few people invest in other people’s debt, a deep recession or depression is created.  The economy then has to go through years of large increases in Federal Government deficits, foreclosures, debt restructuring, debt refinance, business closures, lawsuits, criminal trials, high unemployment, and bankruptcies, and people experience years of misery, as millions have experienced the last eight years, to re-balance itself.

In 1939 the world went to war. The war created enough employment to end the Great Depression.  Considering the destruction, and death that occurred in the countries where the war was fought, we do not want to repeat history to re-balance our economy and the world’s economies.

War and many of the things I have mentioned add to the incomes of the people at the top of the economic ladder and reduce the wealth and life span of the middle-income people, and the working poor.

It has been said, “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” Never again should we allow economic bubbles to be created, and then do what Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said, “If there is a housing bubble, we will clean up the mess after it pops.”  Too much misery is created if we wait for the financial crisis to occur.  The income tax must automatically change before an economic bubble is created, and the Fed changes interest rates excessively.

John Maynard Keynes, the British economist, whose writings advised President Roosevelt about improving the economy during the Great Depression, wrote that an economy gets into trouble when it’s members save excessively, all at the same time, for too long.  My point is that if people are encouraged by the tax code to create too much debt (money) in the private sector, for too long, the economy also gets into trouble.

Too much debt in the private sector can create a financial crisis.  This point is supported by work by Professor Steve Keen, Professor Minsky, and Professor Ann Pettifor.  Here is a video by Prof. Keen youtu.be/aWgjM31Ss5I?a (copy and then put in your browser). Ann Pettifor and Prof. Keen have many other videos posted on UTube, and on the internet. Their books are also available at Amazon.com  They explain the technical basis of the argument about how money is created, how excessive private sector debt can create a financial crisis, and why money should be a part of our economic modeling.

I present a possible cause and solution to the problem of excessive debt (money) creation in the private sector. Main St. needs this information, and the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Tax Policy change now to create a sustainable recovery before the economy begins to heat up again, and another financial crisis or recession  is created.

We also need to resolve the underwater mortgage problem that is creating a drag on Main Street’s economy. The capital gains tax on primary homes should be taxed at the same rate as other long-term gains income to prevent another bubble from forming in the primary home market. The underwater portion of all underwater mortgages should be reduced as outlined in the article on this site. ” Underwater Mortgages Resolved Without Excessively Inflating Asset And Primary Home Prices”

Zero percent long-term capital gains tax rates on homes and low tax rates on other long-term capital gains for low-income people should be retained to increase their wealth so that they can move up the economic ladder. Employee’s wages and disposable income must be maintained to have an economy that produces more opportunity for all.

We need to enact the 2% Policy, so prices do not rise too fast. Prices in our economy have increased a thousand percent in the last 50 years. If prices had increased 2% a year in the same period, prices would have risen 100% in the previous 50 years. The wages we would have earned would have slowly increased, maintaining our income’s purchasing power, and our production capabilities in the USA. Our production jobs may not have been moved to other countries.

We still want to buy products to have a reasonable standard of living, but we are purchasing them from other countries, improving their wealth, and standard of living, while our middle class is shrinking. If we had enacted the 2% Policy 50 years ago, our exports would be more competitive in the world market. We could reduce our trade deficit. Our nation’s trade deficit is making our nation into a debtor nation, and most of us are becoming poorer.

The People’s Economic Recovery Plan also presents a better procedure to dispose of the underwater mortgage situation without costing the taxpayers a dime.  Perhaps, since the Fed now owns the Mortgage Back Securities (MBS) that include many of the underwater mortgages, not the banks or other entities, they could do the famous “helicopter money drop” (debt reduction) recommended by former Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke.  The Fed should implement the People’s Economic Recovery Plan, which calls for a monthly reduction of underwater mortgage principal amount each month as the homeowner makes their lower interest rate monthly principal and interest payment.  The Fed can do this because the Fed is an independent private organization charged by the federal government to maintain stable prices, and maintain maximum employment.  It could modify the underwater mortgages without government approval, nor would it have to borrow money in the capital markets.  The money would come from the money the Fed returns to the Federal Government each year. In 2012 the amount of money the Fed returned to the Federal Government, after paying it’s operating cost, was 77 billion dollars.  The amount of money returned in 2013 was probably higher because interest rates were higher in 2013, and Quantitative Easing (QE) continued in 2013 and 2014.  Many of the MBSs the Fed has purchased since it started QE have very low-interest rates.  The same low-interest rates could be provided to all underwater mortgage homeowners.  The reduction in revenues the Fed returns to the Federal government each year would be replaced by the tax revenue collected from a more robust recovering economy.

If it is necessary for the US Treasury to release the money the Fed returns to federal government, then the Congress should earmark the money to be used to decrease unpaid balances of all underwater mortgages of primary homes, as outlined in the previously mentioned article posted on this site.  All the fines that financial institutions pay the federal, and state governments relating to the primary home bubble, should also be earmarked for the same purpose to remove the economic drag that the underwater mortgages are exerting on our economy.

When a recession occurs in an economy, interest rates decrease.  All single family home mortgages should include a clause that lowers the interest rate, as the Federal Reserve lowers interest rates to the financial sector to increase aggregate demand on Main St., to the shorten the length, and reduce the depth of the recession or financial crisis. This change will eliminate refinancing cost, and increase economic activity, and aggregate demand on Main St. rather than primarily increasing economic activity in the financial sector, increasing its profits and bonuses.  As the economy improves, if the Fed has to increase the cost of funds to the financial sector, even after the 2% Policy has been applied, the interest rate should slowly increase until it rises to the current interest rate of the 30-year fix rate mortgage. Or raise the interest rate to the original interest rate of the mortgage.

Many people want the Fed to control the quantity of money in our economy, and let the market determine interest rates.  If the supply of money is fixed at a certain amount, as when our economy was using the “Gold Standard” interest rates rose causing unemployment and recessions to be created.  Our economy uses fiat money.  Fiat money expansion needs different policies to manage the money supply.  It is demand for credit during the boom cycle that can cause interest rates to rise.  To help prevent wide swings in interest rates, we need to reduce speculation with credit by automatically changing the tax code during the boom cycle to help prevent a financial crisis, and economic bubbles before they are created.  If we continue to encourage people with the tax code, to use excessive credit during the boom cycle, our economy will continue to repeat the gloom, boom, and doom cycles that it has been experiencing for the last 100 years.  The income and the wealth of our nation will continue to flow to the people at the top of the economic ladder during these boom and bust cycles.

Please read the other articles on this blog at http://www.taxpolicyusa.wordpress.com for more information.

Please read the following article “Why The Dot Com Bubble Started And Why It Popped” Note the similarities between the Dot Com Bubble, and The Primary Home Bubble!

Leonard C. Tekaat is an author, a real estate investor, small business man, and working partner of Tax Policy-USA.

His book “INFLATION THE ECONOMY KILLER” How to Create, Control, and Stop High Inflation was written in 1982 after interest rates went to 18% to buy a home. It can happen again. Ask yourself, “Are we going to repeat the past, or are we going to make changes to improve our future?   Will your children, and grandchildren have a better life experience than you?  Will they be able to fulfill their perception of the American Dream?  You can obtain a copy from http://www.amazon.com for $9.95 plus S&H

Tax Policy USA Leonard C. Tekaat

References

1. Pay close attention to the last 5 video lectures in Part 2 https://class.coursera.org/money2-002/lecture Part 1

https://class.coursera.org/money2-002lecture Part 2

2 .https://class.coursera.org/ucimacroeconomics-005/lecture Please view all video lectures. Pay close attention to Lectures 10 and 11.

3. Pay close attention to lectures 21-6,7,8,9&10 Part 2 https://class.coursera.org/money2-002/lecture

4. This chart will shock you!! ttp://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2014/09/remarkable-chart-ive-seen-time-rich-gain-ground-every-us-expansion.html

5. http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2014/09/ilargi-fed-kills-emerging-markets-profit.html

6. http://www.salon.com/2014/09/07/finally_wall_street_gets_put_on_trial_we_can_still_hold_the_0_1_percent_responsible_for_tanking_the_ec

 

Video – Billionaire Explains How The Economy Currently Works

VIEW THESE TWO VIDEOS BEFORE YOU READ THE FOLLOWING ARTICLE!

Economies get into trouble after asset prices rise excessively. The Fed either raises interest rates to decrease speculation, or lets the economy implode, as it did in 2008.  It then has to lower interest rates excessively to help heal the economy. The process of relying solely on the Fed to stimulate, and slow down the economy is flawed. There is a better way to maintain stable prices, and full employment, (the Federal Reserves mandates.)

View these two videos before reading the article “Proposed Solution For Modern Economies That Create Financial Crisis And Bubbles!!” posted at www.taxpolicyusa.wordpress.com

“How The Economic Machine Works”

http://www.businessinsider.com/ray-dalio-explains-capitalism-2015-2?nr_email_referer=1&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_term=Markets%20Chart%20Of%20The%20Day&utm_campaign=Post%20Blast%20%28moneygame%29%3A%20 This%20is%20what%20%2411.83%20trillion%20worth%20of%20household%20debt%20looks%20like&utm_content=COTD

Link to a second video, “Money From Nothing” that explains how the Federal Reserve and banks create money, set interest rates, controls the money supply, and helps to create boom and bust economic cycles.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BnlYsYlfVJs

If video does not load copy link and paste in browser, or search for the title on UTube

Chris Hall Petition At Change.Org Introduction And Location Letter

make-a-difference-reminder-5f266e

Hello! All Groups, Members, and Fellow Americans

My name is Chris Hall, I have stared a petition on Change.org to increase affordable housing, and home ownership.

Will you and your membership, if you are a group, PLEASE take 30 seconds to make a difference in people’s lives!! Right now?

  Sign and read the complete petition here.

Short Link to this page. Please feel free to use it to direct people to this page, or to tweet about this petition. http://wp.me/p42WQA-4x

Please inform your members of this very important petition, or forward this letter to all your contacts, members, and concerned parties.

 The petition on Change.org.

“Increase Home Ownership And Affordable Housing Safely – Change Tax Code To Stop Wall St. Firms, Hedge Funds, and Investors From Investing In Single Family Homes” and I need your help to get it off the ground.

Congress will be debating income tax reform very soon. Unless the people raise their voices , Wall St. and accredited investors will continue reducing affordable housing, and home ownership by the middle class, and the working poor. We will become a nation of renters.

First we need to petition Congress to remove all tax benefits that investors enjoy when purchasing a single family home after 11/9/2014. Empower families with new mortgage terms to purchase, or refinance an owner occupied home. And then to repair the home they buy, if needed, a tax deduction should be enacted for the cost of repairing the home, as investors have now.

Repairing the homes will increase economic activity, and employment. Hundred of thousands, perhaps millions, of single family homes will be repaired, and improved by owner occupied owners, or contractors.  Home values will be maintained.  Neighborhoods will be improved, and maintained. The supply of housing will increase.  Homes will become more affordable.  Home ownership will increase in a rational and secure, manner.

PREVIEW VIDEO  http://america.aljazeera.com/watch/shows/fault-lines.html
Watch full episode of “Wall St. Landlords” on Aljazeera America channel 219 on ATT U-VERSE. If video does not load, it means Aljazeera America has had to take it down.  Search on the internet for similar videos on Aljazeersa America, You Tube, or for the title “Wall Street Landlords.” People are video documenting the economic imbalances of Wall St., and accredited investors investing in single family homes!! Prices of homes, and rents are rising too fast in some housing markets again.

Please join your neighbors, and make a positive change for your family by signing this petition. It will only take you 30 seconds.

The current process of maintaining employment, and economic activity is not efficient. It is better to help prevent deep recessions, financial crisis, and high inflation than to wait until they happen, and then rebuild employment by restarting, or expanding existing businesses, and creating more new businesses to get back to full employment again. Is that what we call progress?

The foreclose crisis has given the rich the opportunity to grab more income producing assets to increase their wealth. We need to change this economic injustice NOW!!!

Think ahead! Single family homes have increased in price 1000% since 1960 because of excess demand, and speculation. You, your children, or your grand children will want to buy a home some day! It is time you start looking out for yourself. Wall St. and investors are at the front of the line. Speak up, that is the only way we will be heard!!. Tell Wall St,, State and Federal Congresses, HUD, and the President that you have had it up to here, you know where that is, and you are not going to take it any more. You are ready to fight back. Enough is Enough; Let them know, You are mad as hell, and that you, and your family are not go down again without a fight.

After you sign the PETITION.go to http://www.taxpolicyusa.wordpress.com for more ground breaking ideas to help people succeed, and prevent foreclosures. If people create policies for a market economy that creates opportunities for people to succeed, fewer people become government dependent.

Short Link to this page. Please feel free to use it to direct people to this page, or to tweet about this petition. http://wp.me/p42WQA-4x

Will you and your membership please take 30 seconds to sign it right now? Here’s the link where you can also read the complete petition here.

Thank You!
Chris Hall

Here’s Why The Dot Com Bubble Began And Why It Popped

 

 

 

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This article appeared in Business Insider on Dec 15, 2010 by Ironman Calculations

We’ve long known that the U.S. stock market’s “Dot Com Bubble” really began in April 1997 and ended in June 2003, but we’ve never addressed two key questions about the event:

  1. What caused it to begin?
  2. What caused it to end?

Today, we can answer those two questions. Let’s begin by revisiting and tweaking our operational definition of just what an economic bubble is:

An economic bubble exists whenever the price of an asset that may be freely exchanged in a well-established market first soars then plummets over a sustained period of time at rates that are decoupled from the rate of growth of the income that might reasonably be expected to be realized from owning or holding the asset.

By applying that definition and noting the last month that changes in stock prices were coupled with changes in their underlying dividends per share before the Dot Com Bubble began, we identified April 1997 as the true starting point in time for the Dot Com Bubble. Likewise, we identified June 2003 as being the first month following the end of the period in which changes in stock prices and their dividends per share were decoupled from one another.

Political Calculations

Having now identified those key months, we can look toward the specific events that occurred either during that month or the month preceding these months to identify the specific causes of the Dot Com Bubble’s beginning and end.

As it happens, we discovered the specific cause behind the rapid expansion of the Dot Com Bubble in what we’ll describe as a landmark paper by Zhonglan Dai, Douglas A. Shackelford and Harold H. Zhang. In Capital Gains Taxes and Stock Return Volatility: Evidence from the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, Dai, Shackelford and Zhang describe the events that led to the Dot Com Bubble’s inflation:

We use the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 as our event to empirically test the impact of a change in the capital gains tax rate on stock return volatility. TRA97 lowered the maximum tax rate on capital gains for individual investors from 28 percent to 20 percent for assets held more than 18 months. TRA97 is particularly attractive for an event study because the capital gains tax cut was large and relatively unexpected, and the bill included few other changes that might confound our analysis. Little information was released about TRA97, until Wednesday, April 30, 1997, when the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) surprisingly announced that the estimate of the 1997 deficit had been reduced by $45 billion. Two days later, on May 2, the President and Congressional leaders announced an agreement to balance the budget by 2002 and, among other things, reduce the capital gains tax rate. These announcements greatly increased the probability of a capital gains tax cut. On Wednesday, May 7, 1997, Senate Finance Chairman William Roth and House Ways and Means Chairman William Archer jointly announced that the effective date on any reduction in the capital gains tax rate would be May 7, 1997. As promised, the lower tax rate on long-term capital gains (eventually set at 20 percent) became retroactively effective to May 7, 1997, when the President signed the legislation on August 5, 1997.

Empirically testing stock market return data before and after the key date of 7 May 1997, when investors would suddenly have a reasonable expectation that a reduction in the capital gains tax rate would become effective, the authors made a stunning finding:

To provide more compelling evidence that the 1997 tax cut affected volatility (and mitigate concerns about omitted correlated variables), we focus on cross-sectional tests which are designed to detect the differential responses in return volatility of stocks with different characteristics. We hypothesize that the effect of a capital gains tax change on stock return volatility should vary depending upon dividend policy and the size of the unrealized capital losses (or gains). Consistent with expectations, we find that non and lower dividend-paying stocks experienced a larger increase in return volatility than high dividend-paying stocks. We also find that stocks with large unrealized capital losses had a larger increase in return volatility after a capital gains tax rate reduction than stocks with small unrealized capital losses. However, we do not find a similar relation with unrealized capital gains.

The difference in volatility between high dividend-paying stocks and non-or-low dividend paying stocks provided the key evidence pointing the finger at the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997:

We infer from the findings in this study that the volatility left, after controlling for every known determinant, reflects the influence of the 1997 capital gains tax rate cut. Stock return volatility was substantially greater after 1997. Furthermore, firms most affected by the rate reduction showed the greatest change in volatility. Specifically, non-dividend paying firms had a greater increase in volatility than dividend-paying firms and firms with large unrealized capital losses experienced a greater increase in volatility than firms with small unrealized losses.

The reason we find that conclusion to be significant is because the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 left dividend tax rates unchanged – they continued to be taxed at the same rates as regular income in the United States, which provided a powerful incentive for investors to treat the two kinds of stocks very differently, favoring the low-to-no dividend paying stocks over those that paid out more significant dividends.

At least, until May 2003, when the compromises that led to, and ultimately the signing of the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 would set both the tax rates for capital gains and for dividends to once again be equal to one another, as they had been in the years from 1986 through 1997:
political calc

Political Calculations

With the disparity in taxes assessed against dividend paying compared to non-dividend paying stocks now gone, stock prices once again resumed their closely-coupled relationship with their dividends per share, and volatility was reduced.

Of course, that raises the question of why a bubble didn’t exist in the pre-1986 period where both capital gains and dividends were taxed at different rates. We would however point out that a very large percentage of publicly-traded companies paid dividends in that earlier period, limiting the effect of such a disparity.

By contrast, the founding and rapid growth of new computer and Internet technology-oriented companies in the early 1990s, which grew rapidly to become large companies and which as growth companies, did not pay significant dividends to shareholders, provided the critical mass needed for the 1997 capital gains tax cut to launch the Dot Com Bubble. We can see this in the size of Initial Public Offerings in each year since 1980, beginning from a very low level at the beginning of the 1980s, to their peak at the height of the Dot Com Bubble:
political calcThomson Reuters

In the end however, we find that it took an act of Congress to launch the stock market bubble of the late 1990s, and that it took another act of Congress to undo its disruptive effect. The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 and the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 are quite literally the bookends defining the period of disorder in the U.S. stock market known as the Dot Com Bubble.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/heres-why-the-dot-com-bubble-began-and-why-it-popped-2010-12#ixzz3Dz8c2GWR

 

Underwater Mortgages Resolved Without Excessively Inflating Asset And Primary Home Prices

New Mortgage Terms and Tax Policies Help Reduces Unemployment and Foreclosures

The Federal Government has failed to develop a viable national plan to resolve the underwater mortgage problem nationally.
For years the Federal Reserve has been using monetary policies to maintain low interest rates to help revive the economy.  Monetary policies alone cannot provide our economy with a sustainable recovery.  Government deficit spending policies have not fully revived the economy either.  For the Main St. economy to benefit from the long term low interest rates the Federal Reserve has created with its monetary policies, better mortgage terms, and the correct principal reduction plan for underwater mortgages are needed.  To jolt the economy back to life we need to increase aggregate demand. Our economy also needs a change in our taxation policies to have a sustainable recovery.
The Federal Reserve has been using quantitative easing to create long term low interest rates, which, used by itself, will re-inflate housing prices, which is currently occurring in the housing market, and eventually cause interest rates to rise, which will cause another recession.
We can have a sustainable economic recovery by creating a mortgage with a lower starting interest rate, and then a fixed interest rate for the remaining term of the mortgage.  We can also maintain lower long term interest rates with a change in our tax code as explained later.  The Fed’s monetary policies should not be the only tool we use to control inflation, and to stimulate the economy. https://wp.me/p42WQA-7c
I am sure the Fed would agree that an infusion of confidence, and purchasing power into the middle class will go a long way in obtaining their goal of lowering the unemployment rate, and price stability.  We have all the necessary institutions in place to help the Fed make it happen, if we fully utilize these institutions.
The backbone of any modern consumption economy is its middle-income population.  If they are financially strong, the economy will be strong, and the government will have the revenue to pay its debt and current expenditures.  70% of the economic activity in our economy relies on the consumer.  It is consumer demand that drives increases in employment, and productive investment.
The financial sector needs to adopt a mortgage, with new terms that are more appealing to investors than the 10 year US Treasury Note, to provide people with a mortgage with a lower starting mortgage interest rate, and then a long-term fixed interest rate. The Home Owners Loan Corporation, (HOLC) a federal agency, created new mortgage terms  in the 1930s by adopting the thirty year fixed interest rate mortgage, and a principal reduction plan to help improve the economy, and reduce unemployment.  We need to do the same thing now!  A monthly principal reduction plan needs to be put in place for all underwater mortgages to reduce strategic abandonment, to quicken the balancing of the primary home market, and to hasten an economic recovery.
A mortgage-backed security (MBS) needs to be created that the interest rate increases each year until the interest rate equals the thirty year fixed rate mortgage interest rate, or a little above it.  A guaranteed annual increase in the interest rate is something a 10 year US Treasury Note doesn’t have.  If the mortgages are securitized by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, the Mortgage Backed Security should be guaranteed by the full faith and credit of the federal government, similar to US Treasury notes and bonds, after certain conditions are met, as explained later.  Mortgages that are collateralized with less than 10% equity should be insured, if possible, with a mortgage payment insurance policy, rather than mortgage insurance, to guarantee payment of the payment each month if the homeowner is unable to make the payment. We should also consider a combination of the two types of insurance to insure the mortgage.
To improve Main Street’s economy and reduce unemployment, people’s monthly disposable income, and confidence needs to improve, to increase aggregate demand. By restructuring, or refinancing almost all primary home mortgages.  With the correct mortgage terms people’s purchasing power would be increased on Main St., which would speed-up economic recovery without increasing the money supply.  Increasing the money supply, without increasing the supply of products and services, debases the currency, which leads to higher prices.
How the “Plan” increases people’s monthly disposable income and confidence, to increase aggregate demand, is by making available, to all qualified homeowners, and home buyers, a mortgage with new terms. The primary home buyers, and those homeowners that want to refinance need terms that they can succeed at, unlike the previous mortgages that created the collapse of our economy, and the collapse of most of the world’s economies.
The risk of default of the new mortgage is near zero, because the borrower would qualify at the highest rate of interest the mortgage interest rate would rise to, which would be the 30 years fixed rate mortgage interest rate, or a little above it. The two types of mortgage insurance would also decrease the possibility of the taxpayers losing any money, after the mortgage originator has assumed the first 10% of the losses of a defaulted mortgage.
The new mortgage terms would be similar to other mortgages that are available to home owners, and home buyers It starts out at a low-interest rate, but, and this is important, the Ascending Interest Rate Mortgage is not indexed after a few years. as the current 5/1 Adjustable Rate Mortgage is. The lower starting interest rate would allow the homeowner the time needed to build equity, establish their household, and begin a family. The stronger the family is the stronger our economy is.
Do we want a nation of renters, or do we want people involved in our capitalist system? Do we want people, and families that are solidly tied to the neighborhood?  The mortgage terms I am proposing would encourage home ownership for qualified people, and stability for our economy.
If it is profitable for the financial sector to offer the 5/1 ARM that maintains interest rates at 2.75% for 5 year, and the 15 year fixed interest rate mortgage at about 3%, the mortgage originators should be able to offer the following mortgage terms without any lost to their profit margin.
What mortgage terms should be offered to the public, to improve the primary home market, reduce foreclosures, and unemployment, with the 10 year US Treasury Note yielding about 2% and with the Fed rate at .25%?
The Ascending Interest Rate Mortgage has a starting interest rate of around 2.75% or lower, based on the ten-year US Treasury Note. Currently the 10 year Treasury Note is about 2%. That would make the interest rate for the first year lower than 2.75%. The interest rate would increase .25% per year, unlike a Treasury Note which has no increase in the interest rate during its term. The interest rate would stop increasing at 5%, which will take 9 years to obtain, or at the 30 year fixed rate mortgage interest rate, or a little higher, whichever is lower.
Underwater mortgage principal reduction should be done on a monthly basis based on 33.33% of the interest and principal monthly payment. If a person was making a $1500.00 monthly P&I mortgage payment, an additional $500.00 principal amount would be subtracted from the underwater mortgage each month, for a total of $6000.00 a year. For a total, if warranted, of $60,000.00 maximum over a ten year period. This policy would encourage people to stay in their homes, and continue to make their mortgage payments.  It would give them hope that their mortgage would, sooner than later, equal the sale price of their home, without re-inflating primary home prices. Primary home prices rising too fast, based on wage increases, fraud, and an over leveraged financial sector is what created the financial crisis.  We do not want to repeat history. We need to re-balance our economy, reduce the debt overhang, and change tax policy to have a sustainable economic recovery. wp.me/p42WQA-1E
There is no lost in purchasing power of the mortgage investor’s invested money if the unpaid principal amount is reduced 6% in one year, or the price of primary homes increase 6% in one year. With the Fed’s very low interest rate policy, created with it purchasing mortgage backed securities and government debt, mortgage investors are losing a greater amount of purchasing power, because, in the last couple years, primary home prices have increased an average of more than 20%, in some markets, in one year.
As the economy improves the Ascending Interest Rate Mortgage will decrease people’s purchasing power with a .25% higher interest rate each year to help prevent too much aggregate demand from being created, which would help create another cycle of inflation, or a primary home price bubble.
The new mortgage terms would only be available to owners, or buyers of owner occupied homes. The home buyers, or the homeowner will embrace the new mortgage terms, because they will know what their housing cost will be for years to come. With predictability comes confidence in taking on the responsibly of a mortgage. They will also prefer the AIR Mortgage over the 30 year fixed rate mortgage, because of the lower starting interest rate. A simple letter of modification stating the old terms, and the new terms is all that is needed to modify those mortgages that have remained current, and are held in Fannie and Freddie’s portfolio of mortgages. Because of low starting interest rate, the risk of default, or foreclosure would be drastically reduced.
I believe investors would embrace the new terms, because of the reduced risk of default, and the reduced interest rate change risk as outlined later in the new taxation policy I am proposing.
With the AIR Mortgage available, more homes will be sold and refinanced. The AIR Mortgage will increase economic activity in the primary home sector, which will help the primary home market, and the economy to improve. The foreclosure rate should decrease. The foreclosure inventory would be quickly sold to owner occupied home buyers. The primary home market will stabilize, and then home values will slowly increase 1 to 2% a year if the “Plan” is fully implemented.
For the AIR Mortgage to become available, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and other government home financing agencies will need to offer to purchase the mortgage from the banks, and other mortgage originators, before the banks and mortgage brokers will offer the new mortgage terms to the public. If the Fed agrees that they will purchase the AIR Mortgage securities from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and other housing agencies, there is no reason for F&F, and other government housing financing agencies not to offer the AIR Mortgage to the public.
The Director of the FHFA, Mr. Mel Watt, needs to be replaced if he fails to allow F&F to purchase the AIR Mortgage, and use the monthly principal reduction procedure to quicken the restructuring of, and the stabilization of F&F’s mortgage portfolios.
We should take Fannie and Freddie out of conservator-ship and use them to improve the economy, and the primary housing market. We made a mistake when we allowed the government to privatize Fannie Mae. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should be foreclosed upon, and then used for the public benefit, as they were originally created for, instead of for profit.
With the housing market improving, and F&F earning more money than it is costing to operate F&F, we will be able to repay the 160 billion F&F have borrowed from the US Treasury. When HOLC was shut down in the 1950s, it returned the excess funds it had collected, after all the mortgages they held were paid off, back to the US Treasury.
If the restructuring, mortgage monthly principal reduction, and refinancing of the mortgages is done quickly, and the housing market and the unemployment rate begin to improve, we may be able to let the Bush Tax Cuts expire, without creating a recession, because of the increase in aggregate demand the new mortgage terms will create with an increase in disposable income on Main Street.
Investors will invest in the AIR Mortgage securities, because the securities will increase in value as the annual interest rate increases .25% a year, unlike the 10 yr. treasury note, and other fixed rate debt instruments, which will decrease in value, as interest rates increase. Also the Ascending Interest Rate Mortgages that are securitized in the MBS would have a near zero default rate, because of the lower starting interest rate.
Banks and mortgage brokers do not hold all the mortgages they originate. They sell most of them to investors, or they are securitized into Mortgage Backed Securities (MBSs). If investors don’t see the value in the AIR Mortgage security, the Fed should sell the mortgage securities they are holding with higher interest rates, because they will become more valuable when the new mortgage terms are made available. The Fed would then hold the new AIR Mortgage securities until their interest rate increases to the 30 year fixed interest rate. The Fed would then sell the mortgages to investors.
The “Plan” would be more efficient if it was adopted nationally, because F&F would be able to offer the lowest possible interest rates, but a State, or county could adopt the Plan by selling bonds, and then using the money to purchase the underwater mortgages at fair market value from investors and banks, and then restructure the mortgages as outlined in the Plan.
Purchasing the underwater mortgages may not be necessary.  Investors will want to stay invested in the mortgages after they accept the new terms, and the monthly principal reduction plan, because of the benefits this plan has over a full principal reduction of the underwater mortgage to market value, or an eminent domain procedure or foreclosure.
The monthly principal reduction plan can be thought of as an appreciation sharing plan, because the mortgage is not reduced to the current sale value of the home, but to a value that equals the unpaid balance of the mortgage in the future after the home appreciates to the reduced mortgage amount, which is being reduced monthly for a maximum of 10 yrs., or until the sale price of the home, and mortgage are the same monetary amount.
The other possibility would be to create a State, regional, or a county wide bank that would have access to the Fed’s discount window to borrow the funds to start the mortgage restructuring. North Dakota has a state bank. California is considering a state bank, and has created a study group to take a closer look at the benefits, and pitfalls of having a state bank. North Dakota’s economy is doing very good with a 4.5% unemployment rate, and a normal foreclosure rate.
It is very possible, that because the underwater mortgage’s unpaid balance will be reduced monthly, under the terms of the Plan, that the total return on investment will be much more than the spread between the cost of funds, and the interest rate the homeowners will be paying, if the underwater mortgages are purchased at market value. The increase in return on investment occurs, because of the increase in a home’s value  will have over a few years, using the Plan. The mortgage may have only been reduced by a small percentage, using the monthly principal reduction procedure, when the underwater mortgage equals the resale value of the home, if compared to a full discount to the market value of the home, when the mortgage is restructured. This makes the mortgage more valuable for resale purposes. Not only would the investor be collecting interest on a larger principal balance, the investor will receive a larger principal pay off when the loan is paid off, or the home is sold. The homeowner will be paying a lower interest rate on a larger principal amount, but the monthly payment will be much lower than their current monthly payment. The mortgage principal and interest payment may be reduced 50% if the current interest rate of the mortgage is 100% higher than the starting interest rate of the new Air Mortgage. If the homeowner is paying $1500.00 P&I per month, the P&I payment on the new Air Mortgage will be $750.00.
When a recession occurs in an economy, interest rates decrease. To increase demand on Main St., to reduce the length, and depth of the recession, or financial crisis, all single family home mortgages should include a clause that lowers the interest rate, as the Federal Reserve lowers interest rates to the financial sector. This change will eliminate refinancing cost, and increase economic activity, and aggregate demand on Main St. rather than primarily increasing economic activity in the financial sector, increasing it’s profits, and bonuses. As the economy improves, the Fed will increase the cost of funds to the financial sector, the interest rate should then increase slowly until it rises to the interest rate of the 30 year fix rate interest rate, or the prior interest rate the mortgage interest rate was at prior to the interest rate being lowered, which ever is the lowest interest rate.
As I mentioned earlier: You can think of the monthly principal reduction procedure as a future equity sharing plan. Therefore the mortgage could be readily sold to FHA, or private investment funds after the mortgage has been restructured.
The county or cities tax base would also be maintained at a higher value if home values are not decreased. When the homeowner sells the home in the future the home should sell for a higher price if surrounding homes have not been decreased in price.
The new mortgage should be able to be assumed by a qualified buyer to increase mobility of the current homeowner, so they will be able to find work in other areas of the country. Having the AIR Mortgage assumable would also assure a continuation of mortgage payments.
The primary single unit home market should be composed of people wanting a home to live in. In this way they will not be competing with investors for a home to live in. Investors have many multi- unit housing opportunities to invest in. All tax deductible expenses should be eliminated from the tax code for investors in single unit family homes. If homeowners are given the tax deduction, that investors now have, to repair their homes, they will buy the homes that need repairs, and fix them up, there-by stabilizing and improving neighborhoods. Single family home prices would be based on the purchasing power of the people that want to live in the home. Not the greater purchasing power of investors.
The private financial sector, Fannie and Freddie and the other government housing financing agencies could save millions of dollars by preventing millions of unnecessary foreclosures by adopting the AIR Mortgage terms, with monthly principal reduction, to restructure most of the underwater mortgages they hold in their portfolios. The financial sector, and F&F would win the support of millions of families if they succeeded in this endeavor.
Our economy would be on a defined road to recovery. The deficit would decrease as employment improved.
The People’s Economic Recovery Plan presents a better procedure to dispose of the underwater mortgage situation, and create a more productive and stable economy, without costing the taxpayers a dime. Please read the Plan to learn all the benefits of a monthly principal reduction program, and the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy. Go to http://www.taxpolicyusa.wordpress.com/  for more information!
Chris Hall is an author, real estate investor, and retired small businessman.

Plan first written 12/1/2008 since then it has been updated
Copyright 12/1/2008

Finally, Wall Street gets put on trial: We can still hold the 0.1 percent responsible for tanking the economy

This article by Thomas Frank  was posted  www.salon.com on:,

Too Big To Fail bailouts let them get away with it. The amazing result of California fraud trial could change that

TOPICS: TEA PARTY, BARACK OBAMA, WALL STREET, 1 PERCENT, TOO BIG TO FAIL, THOMAS FRANK, TOM FRANK, EDITOR’S PICKS, BENJAMIN WAGNER, LIAR’S LOANS, BILL BLACK,

Finally, Wall Street gets put on trial: We can still hold the 0.1 percent responsible for tanking the economyJamie Dimon (Credit: Reuters/Yuri Gripas/AP/Eric Risberg)

The Tea Party regards Barack Obama as a kind of devil figure, but when it comes to hunting down the fraudsters responsible for the economic disaster of the last six years, his administration has stuck pretty close to the Tea Party script. The initial conservative reaction to the disaster, you will recall, was to blame the crisis on the people at the bottom, on minorities and proletarians lost in an orgy of financial misbehavior. Sure enough, when taking on ordinary people who got loans during the real-estate bubble, the president’s Department of Justice has shown admirable devotion to duty, filing hundreds of mortgage-fraud cases against small-timers.

But high-ranking financiers? Obama’s Department of Justice has thus far shown virtually no interest in holding leading bankers criminally accountable for what went on in the last decade. That is ruled out not only by the Too Big to Jail doctrine that top-ranking Obama officials have hinted at, but also by the same logic that inspires certain conservative thinkers—that financiers simply could not have committed fraud, since you would expect fraud to result in riches and instead so many banks went out of business.

“Benjamin Wagner, a U.S. Attorney who is actively prosecuting mortgage fraud cases in Sacramento, Calif., points out that banks lose money when a loan turns out to be fraudulent,” reported a now-famous 2010 story in the Huffington Post. “But convincing a jury that executives intended to make fraudulent loans, and thus should be held criminally responsible, may be too difficult of a hurdle for prosecutors. ‘It doesn’t make any sense to me that they would be deliberately defrauding themselves,’ Wagner said.”

So forget those thousands of hours of Congressional investigation and those thousands of pages of journalism on the crisis. It doesn’t make any sense to the man in charge. No jury would be convinced. Case closed.

As it happens, a trial just ended in Sacramento in which a jury was convinced that “executives intended to make fraudulent loans.” Here’s the thing, though: It wasn’t the government that made the case against the financiers; it was the defendants.

The case started as a routine mortgage-fraud prosecution, brought by none other than the aforementioned U.S. Attorney Benjamin Wagner. A group of eastern European immigrants had bought houses in California in 2006, in a real-estate market that was in the early stages of collapse. According to the indictment, filed in 2012, these people’s mortgage applications contained blank spots and wrong information; they were accused of getting the mortgages in order to sell the houses to one another at pumped-up prices in what is called a “straw buyer” scheme. Also, they defaulted on the loans.

However, members of the immigrants’ legal defense team—several of them appointed by the state—had read the newspapers over the years and were aware of the kinds of things that had gone on in real estate during the bubble. They knew, for example, that in the go-go days of the last decade, the mortgage origination industry routinely cranked out “stated income” loans—also known as “liar’s loans”—to people who were obviously unable to make the payments. The bankers back then almost never checked on whether the borrower was telling the truth about their income; they just wanted to make the loan. So the defense team in Sacramento came up with a novel strategy: How can the borrower have committed fraud on a mortgage application if the lender didn’t care whether their answers were truthful?

And lenders so didn’t care back in the bubble days. They invented liar’s loans and blanketed the country with them during the Oughts not because the poors talked them into doing it, or because the liberals in the Bush Administration forced them to do it—on the contrary, the government warned them against issuing these things, just as the government warns us against swallowing arsenic. The reason bankers did it was because liar’s loans were making bankers rich.

This is a difficult thing to understand—indeed, not understanding it is the stated reason Obama Administration officials have made no effort to send financiers to jail—so let us take this slowly. Executives at the mortgage origination companies got huge bonuses in those days for writing lots of loans. OK? They wanted to write more of them, and the only way to really crank out mortgages on a vast scale was by giving one to anyone who wanted one, regardless of their ability to pay, a feat that is only possible by means of the “liar’s loan.” So: Liar’s loans = rich bankers.

Now, it just so happens that liar’s loans are a lousy product, something that is virtually guaranteed to fail when prices stop rising, something that everyone knew at the time would fail when the bubble burst. That’s why you don’t see liar’s loans when banks are honest and regulators are on the job. Because the bank that makes liar’s loans—and the investor who buys a security based on liar’s loans—will eventually lose their money. That’s why they are banned today. So: Liar’s loans = dead banks. Liar’s loans = slow-acting arsenic. But on the other hand, the immediate bonuses that mortgage execs were collecting for making these poisonous loans were so sweet that they didn’t really care about the long-term effects. So while those awful loans they wrote eventually sank all the big subprime houses—and wrecked the global economy to boot, with Europe still in ruins, etc.—the bankers themselves lived to sail away into the sunset, their yachts laden with bullion.

Do you see what I’m saying? Executives do not always share the interests of the corporation that employs them. They weren’t “defrauding themselves,” as our federal protector laughs, they were defrauding the suckers that paid their bonuses, the shareholders that invested in them, the European pension funds that believed their excreta was Grade A Prime.

The name for this kind of scheme is a “control fraud”; it happens when the officers who control a firm use their power over the firm to enrich themselves while driving the firm itself to the boneyard. The country has seen control frauds many times before; indeed, the man who invented the term was a regulator of S&Ls during the S&L meltdown of the 1980s, and he saw the pattern so many times back then that he wrote a book about it. I am referring to my friend Bill Black, a professor of economics and law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and also a Distinguished Scholar in Residence for Financial Regulation at the University of Minnesota’s School of Law. Control fraud, Black says, always follows the same recipe, with banks growing rapidly by making vast numbers of extremely risky loans, executives immediately getting rich with big bonuses, and the bank eventually collapsing under the weight of those malicious loans.

The last decade’s epidemic of crap financial instruments—liar’s loans, NINJA loans, interest-only ARMs and all the rest—fit the pattern perfectly. “It makes no sense for an honest banker to lend in this fashion,” Black told me. “If you lend in this fashion, you will suffer catastrophic losses. So honest banks don’t make loans without effective underwriting. But dishonest banks find, under the fraud recipe, that it optimizes their fraud scheme. To make not just a few bad loans, but to have a regular practice of making, day in and day out, enormous numbers of bad loans. . . . You’re mathematically guaranteed to make the officers rich and then they can walk away while the place collapses.”

Bill Black worked for many years as a bank regulator and a lawyer for the Federal government, but these days the Federal government has little interest in litigation against bankers. That’s why the mortgage-fraud case in Sacramento saw him appearing as an expert witness for the defense, on whose behalf he testified at great length about the role of control fraud in pumping the real-estate bubble.

The defense wanted the jury to hear Black’s theory because the essence of our government’s law-enforcement work on mortgage fraud is that banks were the victims. Those poor unfortunate financiers were tricked by little people like the “neighbor” that Rick Santelli once ranted against, trying to get an extra bathroom that he didn’t deserve.

What the defense team sought to prove was that this picture was completely upside-down—that the banks didn’t care if people lied on liar’s loans. According to the legal definition of fraud, the lie in question has to be “material,” meaning it has to influence the decision-makers. When a bank is honest, that is an easy thing to show. But it’s different if the decision-makers are themselves trying to crank out lousy (but profitable) loans. Bill Black again, on the control-fraud formula:

“Not only are they not distressed by crappy loans, they must make crappy loans. That’s the fraud recipe. . . . If the decision-makers are running a fraud in which they want this outcome, then they’re going to approve these loans. And they will create a system designed to approve loans that are 90 percent fraudulent.”

What would such a system look like? Well, indiscriminately handing out stated-income loans is part of it. A weak underwriting system is another element. In the case in Sacramento, the court heard testimony from an underwriter at one of the mortgage firms in question and learned that in certain cases she was actually forbidden to ask the borrower’s employer how much the borrower made—in other words, forbidden to check on the income that was stated in the stated-income loan. Here is how Bill Black reacted to that testimony, according to court transcripts:

Q. And do you have an opinion on the quality of the underwriting at GreenPoint [one of the lenders in the case] ?

A. Using the word “quality” in the sentence is an injustice to the word quality.

This was an utter sham in which underwriters were instructed not to underwrite. They were instructed, according to the testimony, that even if they called the employer, had them on the phone, that they were not permitted to ask about the income.

That’s insane.

No honest banker would ever do that.

A mortgage company advertising flier that had been plucked from the sloshing depths of the last decade’s Internet offered further evidence of the bankers’ regard for facts. It is illustrated with a crude computer rendering of the three wise monkeys, next to the words, “Hear No Income, Speak No Asset, See No Employment.” (“Don’t Disclose Your Income, Assets or Employment on this hot new flexible adjustable rate mortgage!”) Look, kids—monkeys! This arsenic must be extra tasty!

The obvious way for the federal prosecutors to head off this argument would have been to describe the lender’s business practices and show that its executives were not, in fact, simply churning out vast numbers of super-high-risk liar’s loans in order to ring some bonus bell. That, in truth, the bankers really cared that facts be represented accurately on loan applications. Unfortunately, the Federal agent who had investigated the case—a man with plenty of experience detecting mortgage fraud—told the court that he had not talked to executives at the firms in question and, indeed, had not interviewed any top mortgage executives, ever.

Q. People in control of a company. So the person who calls the shots at the very top of a company. How many of those have you interviewed in your career?

A. As relates to mortgages?

Q. As to mortgages, yeah.

A. I can’t recall any.

A while later, with a different defense attorney asking questions, here is what the Federal agent had to say about the subprime mortgage lenders:

Q. So you were not concerned at all about the people who were loaning the money and their conduct; is that right?

MR. COPPOLA [the Federal prosecutor]: Objection. Argumentative.

THE COURT: Overruled. You may answer.

THE WITNESS: No. I would consider — they’re the victims in this case. That’s how I consider them.

What kind of snarky remark can I append to that, reader? Sarcasm fails me.

This was the first criminal proceeding to examine the basic facts of the mortgage meltdown, and the transcript suggests that some of the people in the courtroom knew it was a historic occasion. After reciting a list of iffy lending practices that were common in the subprime market 10 years ago, the transcript tells us that Bill Black testified as follows:

But for every one of those crazy things that I just described, they’re not crazy for the controlling officers because all of them come with higher fees.

Q. They contribute to the bonuses?

A. They contribute to the phony income that produces the bonuses, but they produce massive increases in losses. That’s why all of the lenders in this case suffered massive losses. Not, you know: Oh, gosh, things got bad. They fell off the table. Disastrous. Billions of dollars of losses in the case of GreenPoint.

But they also pumped out at least 20 billion dollars of this toxic waste. And they are one of the major contributors to the failure of Bear Stearns, one of the largest investment banks in the world.

So you finally have a case in which you are actually looking at the causes of the financial crisis. It’s the first criminal case.

MR. COPPOLA [the Federal prosecutor]: Objection to the relevance of the last remark. Ask it be stricken.

THE COURT: Denied.

The defense put Wall Street’s practices on trial, and the defense won. The jury in Sacramento eventually acquitted all the defendants of all charges.

When I got Bill Black on the phone last week, he talked about the case as a watershed moment. “I came out there to say, ‘Look! there are lions roaming the campsite!’ They took down the global economy!,” he told me. “And jurors can understand this. You say that you can’t get a prosecution. We will come to your back yard and show you how to get a prosecution. Because we’ll do it as a defense. Even though we have no FBI agents, no subpoena authority. . . , we’ll put on a successful prosecution. And we’ll show to you that jurors can understand this.”

U.S. Attorney Benjamin Wagner had this to say, according to the Sacramento Bee: “We respect the criminal process, and accept the jury’s verdict in this case. It will not dissuade us from pressing forward in the many other mortgage fraud cases currently pending in this courthouse.”

Have no fear. The government is on the case. They’re going to track down people who lied on a loan application in the last decade and go after them. Unrelenting pursuit of the people at society’s bottom.

And bailouts for the victims in the C-suites, should some new round of unpleasantness arise.

Of course, the result in the Sacramento case might knock those beautiful plans off the track. Up till now it has been covered as a kind of man-bites-dog story, because “an acquittal in Sacramento federal court is rare,” as the Bee put it. But maybe, in the weeks to come, acquittals like this will become more common. Already, says John Balazs, a member of the defense team, he has been contacted by other attorneys arguing similar cases. Maybe lawyers all over the country will soon be reminding juries that a borrower’s alleged misstatements can’t have been “material” to a lender if the lender was a control fraud dealing in liar’s loans. Maybe one day the courts of this land will acknowledge what the public has known for years: That the fraud that wrecked the world actually happened in the offices of the shadow banks and the Wall Street investment firms.

It all depends, says Toni White, one of the defense attorneys in Sacramento, on “if the judge lets it in.”

“This is what happens when defendants get a fair trial,” she continues. “Where are the CEO’s? Why aren’t they here?”

It’s a good question. The government’s near-complete failure to prosecute the true villains of the Great Recession will surely go down as the Obama administration’s grandest disappointment. It has convinced a generation that the fix is always in, that the government patrols some neighborhoods with a finger on the trigger, showing no mercy ever, but that in other precincts a kinder, gentler law prevails. It gets worse when people realize that the officers who ran the subprime lenders before the disaster are back in the mortgage business today. Taken as a whole, the crisis and its aftermath have given the lie to the president’s oft-repeated faith in meritocracy. The people see what’s happened and they get it: there is no meritocracy without accountability. What we’ve got instead is a society dominated by thieves.

 

Thomas FrankThomas Frank is a Salon politics and culture columnist. His many books include “What’s The Matter With Kansas,” “Pity the Billionaire” and “One Market Under God.” He is the founding editor of The Baffler magazine.

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Keynes’ Liquidity Preference Trumps Debt Deflation in 1931 and 2008

Fixing the Economists

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I have pointed out before that the meaning of the term ‘liquidity trap’ has today become completely altered — with said alteration mainly coming from Paul Krugman’s bizarre redefinition which seems tied up with his idea about a natural rate of interest and the central bank being unable to hit this natural rate due to their coming up against the zero-lower bound.

In actual fact, a liquidity trap occurs when people rush out of assets and instead hold money. This leads to a fall in asset prices and high interest rates which then do not respond to central bank action. We encountered a liquidity trap proper very briefly in late-2008 but due to unprecedented central bank interventions we had exited this liquidity trap by early-2009.

In this post I want to spell out exactly why Keynes thought his liquidity trap idea so important. In order to understand this we must…

View original post 1,541 more words

A Letter To President Obama And A Short Article

Description: Newspaper clipping USA, Woodrow W...

Woodrow Wilson signs creation of the Federal Reserve. Source: Date: 24 December 1913 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Dear President Obama:

I listened to you talking about the need to extend unemployment insurance this morning 1/7/14. I agree unemployment  benefits should be extended. At the same time we should change a couple of our income tax laws to help prevent the next financial crisis, and to increase the financial strength of the middle income people, and the working poor.

The question is :  Are  we using the correct tool to  maintain economic growth?

Hi my name is Chris Hall.  I have been in the real estate market since 1970 when I bought my first home.

I am writing you not to tell you my story, but the story of millions of families that have been affected by a flaw in our economic operational and guiding polices.

I believe “the flaw” is one of the reasons why poverty in our economy is increasing and the middle class is shrinking .

We need to use the income tax code to correctly control Inflation and inflation psychology and not only rely on the Federeral Reserve’s monetary policies. We need to change a couple of our income tax laws to help prevent the next financial crisis, and to increase the financial strength of the middle income people, and the working poor.

Enclosed you will find a short article outlining the income tax changes that are needed before the Federal Reserve changes monetary policy, which will increase interest rates! Higher interest rates could trigger another financial crisis.

Please stroll down the page at http://www.taxpolicyusa.wordpress.com to read the other articles about “Household Formation and Why We Have A Failure To Launch Generation”– “Government Policies That Keep  You Homeless And Make Your Money Worth Less” and “ Underwater Mortgages Resolved Without Inflating Asset And Primary Home Prices”

Would you please sponsor the legislation to enact the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy, and the other tax reforms needed to improve the operation of our economy, and to maintain the value of our money (debt). If you can’t do it for America, please pass this information on to someone who will. Thank you

Sincerely1/11/2014
Chris  HalL

The  Federal Reserve  Cannot Control  inflation, Inflation Psycholgy and Economic Bubbles  By Themselves!

Ninety seven percent of our money is created by private banks as they make loans. Financial crisis are created by the excessive creation of private sector debt. (money) Therefore we should be concerned with how much private sector debt is being created in the private sector, and in which economic cycle it is being created, to control economic bubbles, high inflation, and deep recessions.

The question is: Are we using the correct “tools” to maintain economic growth?

The US economy is slowly improving, but it has come about by housing, and asset prices being inflated with very low interest rate money created with the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy of quantitative easing.

The Fed is currently purchasing between 70 to 80 billion dollars of Mortgage Backed Securities, and Federal Government Debt combined, per month. This monetary policy is known as Quantitative Easing, which has the effect of lowering long term interest rates.

Low interest rate have benefited Wall St. and investors.  In some US housing markets investors have bought more than 40% of the single family homes for sale. Single family home prices have increase, in some markets, as high as they were before the financial crisis occurred, due to investor demand. Encouraging investors to invest in single family homes with tax incentives, and other financial ploys during a recession is shortsighted, and could lead to another sell off in single family homes. The single family home market should only include the families that want to live in the homes. Single family home prices should reflect their purchasing power, not the greater purchasing power of investors.

The tax  deduction that investors currently have, that allows investors to deduct the cost  of repairing  a house should be  given to homeowners. so neighborhoods do not deteriorate. Homeowners will hire contractors to do the work, thereby reducing unemployment  and neighborhood  blight.

Investors have many opportunities to invest in multi-unit housing. All tax incentives in the tax code for investors to invest in single family homes should be eliminated. If an investor does buy a single family home in an area that allows multi-unit housing, they will quickly build multi-unit housing on the land, which will increase the housing supply during the high appreciation cycle.

We have had one primary home bubble, do we really want to repeat history again?

Consider this, If we could create an economy that allowed people to stay housed, employed, and productive, taxes would not have to be collected, or increased to pay for a larger government “safety net.”

We should eliminate the high appreciation/inflation cycle, and deep recessions, control the creation of economic bubbles, and the excessive creation of debt (money) with the “2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy.”

History has shown us that the Fed does not have the correct tools to control high appreciation/inflation rates, or stimulate the economy correctly. In the last 50 years prices have increase 1000%. If the 2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy had been enacted 50 years ago, prices may have increased only 100%. Even if prices had increased 200%, our wages would have maintained their purchasing power with affordable raises, and our manufacturing capabilities would have remained in the USA. Our production jobs would not have been outsourced to other countries. Our wages, and products would have remained competitive in the world market place. We probably would not have become a debtor nation.

We need good paying jobs in our economy. Not policies that create “paper profits” and higher prices. We need to enact the “2% Appreciation/Inflation Taxation Policy,” Now!!!; before the Fed changes monetary policy, and interest rates rise further. Higher interest rates will decrease the value of all the money (debt) that has been created with a lower interest rate. This situation could create another financial crisis as money (debt) investors sell their money investments, in a panic, to preserve their wealth. We need to create a sustainable recovery on Main St.

The 2% Policy would work like this: If asset, and real estate prices were increasing more than 2% a year, the tax on savings and money investments would decrease based on the appreciation/true inflation rate. At the same time the interest tax deduction would decrease based on the appreciation/true inflation rate. This tax policy reform change would automatically change the tax code as our economy changes from the recession cycle towards the high appreciation/inflation cycle. This change in the income tax code would reduce the stimuli in the tax code for people to create excessive amounts of debt (money), which creates high inflation, and high appreciation rates. Money (debt) would become more valuable because of the lower tax rate on money investments and savings. More real wealth would be created. Our economy would become more productive, and less speculative. After annual appreciation/ inflation rates returned to 2%, the tax rate on interest income , and the interest deduction would automatically return to their previous tax rate and deductibility, to maintain demand.

It is a major flaw in the financial operation of our economy to rely primary on the Fed to stimulate, and control inflation and inflation psychology with interest rate changes. Instead of interest rates changing by excessive amounts, the 2% Policy would help maintain interest rates in a much narrower range. This would allow businesses, and consumers to make long term financial decisions. The middle class, and working poor would be able to stay employed as the economy balanced itself. They would be able to retain and increase their wealth, and climb the economic ladder. The 2% Policy would reduce government’s interest cost on the national debt, government social expenditures, and decrease government deficits by reducing unemployment insurance cost, food stamps, Medicaid, and welfare usage.

With the 2%Policy enacted we would not be relying primarily on the Fed to stimulate the economy, and control inflation and inflation psychology with lower, or higher than necessary interest rates. Changing interest rates excessively up, or down has proven to be very damaging to a capitalist economy by creating unemployment, foreclosures and bankruptcies, as higher interest rates reduce demand from the bottom of the economy, which reduces the ability of people to climb the economic ladder.

Very low interest rates increase senior poverty. With lower interest income, seniors deplete their savings, they then turn to government programs to sustain themselves, increasing government dependency, and their deficits. With less interest income senior’s demand for products and services decreases when the economy needs more aggregate demand. The baby boom generation is retiring by tens of thousands in this decade and beyond. It will be very important for our economy to increase employment, that seniors are able to maintain themselves, and increase their consumption as the next generation matures. The baby boom generation will remain a very large portion of our economy for many years. Their consumption will add many jobs to our economy if they remain economic viable, and do not become government dependent.

This is a shortened version of the complete article posted at http://www.taxpolicyusa.wordpress.com  ” Government  Policies That Keep You  Homeless And Make Your Money  Worth Less”

You will find the other articles posted there also.

Please share this article with your friends, to get them involved. Ask them to send this letter to their representatives in Congress to show their support. President Obama’s e-mail is: whitehouse.gov/contact   We don’t want to keep repeating history. There, has to be a better way than Gloom, Boom, and Doom economics. What are your ideas! Please comment!