Friday, January 18, 2019

Dean Baker: The Green New Deal Is Happening in China [feedly]

The Green New Deal Is Happening in China
http://cepr.net/publications/op-eds-columns/the-green-new-deal-is-happening-in-china

The Green New Deal Is Happening in China

Dean Baker
Truthout, January 14, 2019

See article on original site

One of the Trump administration's talking points about global warming is that we're reducing greenhouse gas emissions, while the countries that remain in the Paris accord are not. Well, the first part of this story is clearly not true, as data for 2018 show a large risein emissions for the United States. The second part is also not very accurate, as most other countries are taking large steps to reduce emissions.

At the top of the list is China. The country has undertaken a massive push to convert to electric powered vehicles and clean energy sources.

China's progress in this effort is truly extraordinary. In the case of electric cars, it has used a carrot-and-stick approach where it offers consumers large subsidies for buying electric cars while also requiring manufacturers to meet quotas for electric car production as a percent of their total fleet of cars. It has also invested in the necessary infrastructure, ensuring that there are a large number of charging stations widely dispersed across the country so that drivers don't have to worry about being unable to recharge their cars.

The result has been a massive increase in the sale of electric cars. Electric car sales are projected to be 1.1 million this year, almost equal to sales in the rest of the world combined. The country expects sales to continue to rise rapidly, with annual sales hitting 11.5 million in 2030. By comparison, electric car sales are expected to be just 480,000 in the United States this year, less than half the number in China.

There is a similar story with solar and wind energy. China added more solar capacity last year than the rest of the world combined. In 2018 it already surpassed the goal it had set for 2020. It is now looking to double its capacity over the next two years.

China also has almost as much wind power capacity as the rest of the world combined. Its capacity is more than three times as great as in the United States. However, even with the extraordinary growth in clean energy, wind and solar together still account for less than 20 percent of China's generation capacity and less than half the amount of electricity produced by burning coal.

Nonetheless, China's enormous progress in promoting electric cars and clean energy should tell us a great deal about the potential in these areas in the United States. While China's economy has grown rapidly over the last four decades, on a per person basis its income is still less than one-third that of the United States.

This means that a relatively poor country was able to make massive gains in reducing greenhouse gas emissions compared with its baseline growth path. The focus on electric cars and clean energy also did not impair the country's growth in any obvious way.

Over the last decade, China's GDP growth has averaged 7.9 percent annually. Perhaps there is a story where China's economy would have grown even more rapidly without the subsidies and other measures to promote green growth, but obviously, these measures could not have been very serious impediments if the country could still sustain one of the fastest growth stretches the world has ever seen.

If China could make such enormous progress in a short period of time, surely the United States could make comparable gains with the resources at its disposal. This doesn't mean that the necessary reductions in greenhouse gas emissions will be costless: People willhave to change lifestyles. This means doing without SUVs and eating much less meat. But China's success is an impressive example.

This brings up another issue directly related to Donald Trump's trade war with China. One of the biggest complaints that Trump has is that China is "stealing" our technology. Most media commentators have widely endorsed this complaint.

China already spends almost as much as the United States on research and development. With a much more rapidly growing economy, China is virtually certain to pass the United States in research and development spending in the very near future, if it has not already done so.

Rather than spending so much effort worrying about what China is taking from us, we should be thinking about what we can get from China, especially in the area of green technologies where it has made such enormous progress. Rather than looking to lock up our technologies to maximize the profits US corporations get from their patent and copyright monopolies; a modern trade deal would look to maximize the flow of technology across national borders.

That would be the focus of a trade deal if we were concerned about economic prosperity and the future of the planet. Unfortunately, that is not likely to be the agenda of the people involved in trade negotiations.



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Gloom Ahead of World Economic Storm [feedly]

Gloom Ahead of World Economic Storm
http://triplecrisis.com/gloom-ahead-of-world-economic-storm/

By Jomo Kwame Sundaram and Anis Chowdhury
Cross-posted at Inter Press Service.
In light of the uncertainty caused by the US-China trade war, the IMF expects the US economic growth to slow from a three-year high of 2.9 per cent in 2018 to 2.5 per cent in 2019, while China's expansion has already slowed in recent years, albeit from much higher levels.
Trump stimulus dissipates
US President Trump and the previous GOP-controlled US Congress claimed to be breathing new life into the US economy with generous tax cuts. The US economy is now overheating, with inflation rising above target, causing the Federal Reserve to continue raising the federal funds rate to dampen demand.
As most families hardly gained from the tax changes, US purchases of houses and consumer durables continued to decline through 2018. Instead of investing in expanding productive capacity, US companies spent much of their tax savings on a $1.1 trillion stock buy-back spree in 2018.
Hence, the positive impacts of tax cuts were not only modest, but are also diminishing. Nearly half of 226 US chief financial officers recently surveyed believe that the US will go into recession by the end of 2019, with 82 per cent believing that it will have begun by the end of 2020. Wall Street's biggest banks, JP Morgan and Bank of America, are also preparing for a slowdown in 2019.
As if to confirm their concerns, both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 had their worst ever December performance since 1931, when stocks were battered after the Great Crash.

European recession

Meanwhile, the European Central Bank is expecting sluggish 1.7 per cent regional growth in 2019. Europe is close to recession with the collapse of industrial output in Germany, France, UK and Italy.
Germany's industrial output fell by 1.9 per cent month-on-month in November 2018, and was in negative territory in 5 of the 6 months before December. Its GDP fell by 0.2 per cent in the 3rd quarter of 2018. France's industrial production fell 1.3 per cent in November 2018, reversing a 1.3 per cent growth recovery in October from a 1.7 per cent decline in September. Italy, Europe's third largest economy, recorded negative growth in the 3rd quarter of 2018 as GDP fell by 0.1 per cent in July-September 2018 with weaker domestic demand.
As the UK remains mired in its Brexit mess, GDP growth was dragged down to 0.3 per cent in the three months to November with the biggest industrial output contraction since 2012. 2018 final quarter growth is expected to be 0.1 per cent, i.e., negligible.
Not preparing for the inevitable?
David Lipton, the first deputy managing director of the IMF, warned in early January 2019, "The next recession is somewhere over the horizon, and we are less prepared to deal with that than we should be . . . [and] less prepared than in the last [crisis in 2008]."
Although the IMF had projected 3.7 per cent global economic growth for 2019 in October 2018, Lipton's statement suggests that the IMF is likely to revise its 2019 growth forecast downward.
There have also been growing concerns over the continued efficacy of unconventional monetary policy since the 2008-2009 global financial crisis (GFC). Undoubtedly, countries now have less fiscal space than in 2009, and overall borrowing, including public debt has risen since.

Reaping what you sow

The policy blunders since the GFC have only made things much worse. The ideologically driven case for fiscal consolidation did not boost investor confidence for a robust recovery, as promised.
Despite acknowledging false claims cited to justify fiscal consolidation, including the IMF's admission that its early advice was based on faulty calculations, there was no recommended change in policy course.
Instead, all responsibility for recovery was put on the monetary authorities who resorted to unconventional policies, especially 'quantitative easing' (QE). However, the global economic recovery since then has remained tepid and easily reversible.
Additional liquidity, made available by QE, has largely been used to buy financial assets and for speculation, amplifying the financial vulnerability of emerging market economies, which have experienced increased volatility.
Governments also failed to take advantage of historically low, even negative real interest rates to borrow and invest to boost productive capacity in the longer term.
By mainly benefiting financial asset holders, QE has exacerbated wealth concentration. Meanwhile, cuts in public services and social spending have worsened social polarization, as tax cuts for the rich have failed to generate promised additional investments and jobs growth.
The failure to achieve a robust recovery has not only worsened the debt situation, but also made lives harder for ordinary people. Growing polarization has also worsened resentments, eroding trust, undermining solidarity and progressive alternatives.

Ethno-populist jingoism undermines cooperation

But lack of preparedness can hardly be due to ignorance as there have been many such predictions recently, certainly more than in 2007-2008, before the GFC.
The cooperation that enabled co-ordinated actions to prevent the Great Recession from becoming a depression has not only waned, but major countries are now at loggerheads, preventing collective action.
National political environments are also more hostile. In Europe, the rise of ethno-populist nationalism is making it harder to pursue EU-level policies and to act together to prevent and mitigate the next financial crisis and downturn.
The "new sovereigntists" and false prophets of American exceptionalism are undermining multilateral cooperation when needed most. Thus, a recession in 2019 may well elevate geo-political tensions, exacerbating the negative feedback loop for a 'perfect storm'.
Anis Chowdhury, Adjunct Professor at Western Sydney University and the University of New South Wales (Australia), held senior United Nations positions in New York and Bangkok.
Jomo Kwame Sundaram, a former economics professor, was United Nations Assistant Secretary-General for Economic Development, and received the Wassily Leontief Prize for Advancing the Frontiers of Economic Thought in 2007.

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The number of unionized U.S. workers edged lower to 16.4 million in 2018 [feedly]

The 1937 and 1947 laws governing unions were written for an industrial system which has disappeared from most work in the US economy.

A new law, and order, are needed: Untill then unionism will be playing like most of the working class, on the margins of survival.

_____________________________

The number of unionized U.S. workers edged lower to 16.4 million in 2018
https://www.epi.org/blog/the-number-of-unionized-u-s-workers-edged-lower-to-16-4-million-in-2018/

The number of American workers represented by a labor union ticked down last year, extending a decades-long trend.

New data on union membership from the Bureau of Labor Statistics released on Friday showed 16.38 million unionized workers in 2018, down from 16.44 million in 2017. However, because employment of wage and salary workers grew by 1.6 percent between 2017 and 2018, the share of workers represented by a union declined by a more significant amount, from 11.9 percent to 11.7 percent.

In the private sector, the number of workers represented by a union ticked up slightly (+18,000). But due to the 1.7 percent increase in employment in the private sector, the share of private sector workers represented by a union declined, from 7.3 percent to 7.2 percent.

The losses were greater in the public sector. The number of public sector workers represented by a union declined by 83,000, while the share of public sector workers represented by a union declined by seven-tenths of a percentage point, from 37.9 percent to 37.2 percent. The drop was largest at the state government level, with the share of state government workers represented by a union dropping from 33.4 percent to 31.8 percent.

Do these numbers show us anything about the impact of last summer's Supreme Court decision in Janus v. AFSCME Council 31The short answer is no. The Janus decision prohibits state and local government unions from requiring that workers who benefit from union representation pay their fair share of that representation (it was already illegal for members of a bargaining unit to be required to either be union members or to pay for any political activities). The intended effect of the decision by those who backed it was to undermine the finances of public sector unions by exposing them to the "free rider" problem. The BLS data do not, however, provide any information on whether workers are paying fair-share fees, simply whether they are members of a union or represented by a union.

When BLS has released their data on union membership in prior years, EPI has typically taken a deeper dive into the data than what is available online from BLS, for example providing union coverage numbers by sector and demographic characteristics like gender and race. However, one of the many negative effects of the government shutdown is that the release of the Current Population Survey (CPS) public microdata files—the data needed to do additional tabulations—has been delayed.

EPI strongly urges the president to end the government shutdown—most importantly so federal employees and contractors can receive their paychecks again, but also so that timely, accurate data produced by our government statistical agencies is again fully available so households, businesses, organizations and policymakers are able to make informed decisions.

For more on the importance of unions to a fair economy and some of the forces behind the erosion of union coverage, see "How today's unions help working people."


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West Virginia Federal Workers Meet with Senator Manchin -- the Threat of national emergency

West Virginia Federal Workers Meet with Senator Manchin -- the Threat of national emergency

jcase

West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin held a meeting with furloughed, and essential unpaid, federal workers today in Martinsburg, West Virginia. Roughly 100 workers turned out on short notice to hear a frankly dismal report form our Senator on the deadlocked state of US government.
Senator Manchin introduced the matter by saying "its all about immigration".
That's an easy statement against which to raise objections. But in a narrow sense he is right. Border issues have never been separate, in real life, from immigration and the status of 14 million undocumented people in the United States. 

According to Senator Manchin, the Senate bill included 1.5 billion for border security, and a larger amount too, in exchange a plan to support the Dreamers --undocumented immigrants brought to the US a children -- having a path to citizenship while attending their already useful work, military service, or possession and training in much needed skills. Trump rejected this deal, even though he previously said he would support compromise on the Dreamers, alleging his base was promised "no amnesty". The Republican led house refused to take it up before the holiday season. Speaker Pelosi, "in a masterful stroke of strategy", had the house adopt the already passed Republican Senate budget.

"Why are things not moving?" numerous workers asked. Senator Manchin's response (close, from my notes): "Both sides think they are winning politically. So far. This is the worst showdown in my memory. I do not see the end. It will be up to you to do your part and tell the full story of this disaster to all your elected representatives. In another week, key security and infrastructure services will begin going down. There may not be an immigration emergency, but very soon a real emergency will emerge. Expect the the next week to be the most intense in our recent history."

The workers present from IRS, Customs, Coast Guard, and other agencies gave testimony to  the immediate and threatening hardships and their already widening effects in communities. Let us say that Joe Manchin is a man unafraid to stand before his constituents and engage honestly in direct dialog with multiple points of view. A true political pro who understands the issues, he is a skilled listener, he does not dodge the details, bir the real life impacts, nor the real hard questions (oversimplifies them, maybe).  In this meeting he defended the Dreamers, rejected any aspect of the immigration dispute as grounds for a shutdown of government, defended the Affordable Care Act, and encouraged everyone in their calls and activity to accept nothing less than the override of a Presidential veto.

Manchin has an interesting approach to hard things. His empathy is there, and appears sincere. But its a bit on a scale of a skilled quarterback considering the least painful, but direct assessment, and one that infers the next call, and the level of effort measured.  

On the subject of hard truths, Senator Manchin made it clear there is one we all must learn now, if democratic government is to survive:  The Meeting began discussing immigration but moved toward a very serious and dangerous question: should the President be encouraged to in fact declare a national emergency, at which Trump alone, will be LAW. Senator Manchin leans toward "letting this emergency happen" since, if Mitch McConnell continues refuse to hold a vote -- which he knows will pass -- an actual emergency WILL arise. 

The biggest pushback from workers at the meeting came here as several challenged the idea of granting any additional authority to Trump under any circumstances. Manchin admitted that it was a very dangerous move. He believed the courts would reject it as without foundation (on the border question anyway. But there was resistance to congress endorsing something Trump can do on his own.

Folks -- this is over within a week, or unimaginable things are going to happen.

Add to this the potential revelations of Trump being a Russian and/or Saudi compromised asset, and ordered people to lie to Congress: Manchin's remark: "If Mueller's report, which I believe is coming soon, shows this is true ----- we are all accountable to law. Trump and I took the same oath of office."

sleep well.


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John Case
Harpers Ferry, WV
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Thursday, January 17, 2019

Progress Radio:The Diner is Snowbound -- The Federal Workers Lockout

John Case has sent you a link to a blog:



Blog: Progress Radio
Post: The Diner is Snowbound -- The Federal Workers Lockout
Link: http://progress.enlightenradio.org/2019/01/the-diner-is-snowbound-federal-workers.html

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Manchin Martinsburg to meet with furloughed workers




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John Case
Harpers Ferry, WV
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Wednesday, January 16, 2019

Will China’s Economy Hit a Great Wall? [feedly]

Important questions, and not from an adversarial perspective.

Will China's Economy Hit a Great Wall?
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/15/opinion/will-chinas-economy-hit-a-great-wall.html

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