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Frankenmuth, Michigan: Kitschy, Quaint, and Cute

From a trip there last month.

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America Isn’t a Corporation. Hear That, Mr. Romney?

America Isn’t a Corporation

“And greed — you mark my words — will not only save Teldar Paper, but that other malfunctioning corporation called the U.S.A.”  That’s how the fictional Gordon Gekko finished his famous “Greed is good” speech in the 1987 film “Wall Street.” In the movie, Gekko got his comeuppance. But in real life, Gekkoism triumphed, and policy based on the notion that greed is good is a major reason why income has grown so much more rapidly for the richest 1 percent than for the middle class.

Today, however, let’s focus on the rest of that sentence, which compares America to a corporation. This, too, is an idea that has been widely accepted. And it’s the main plank of Mitt Romney’s case that he should be president: In effect, he is asserting that what we need to fix our ailing economy is someone who has been successful in business.

In so doing, he has, of course, invited close scrutiny of his business career. And it turns out that there is at least a whiff of Gordon Gekko in his time at Bain Capital, a private equity firm; he was a buyer and seller of businesses, often to the detriment of their employees, rather than someone who ran companies for the long haul. (Also, when will he release his tax returns?) Nor has he helped his credibility by making untenable claims about his role as a “job creator.”

But there’s a deeper problem in the whole notion that what this nation needs is a successful businessman as president: America is not, in fact, a corporation. Making good economic policy isn’t at all like maximizing corporate profits. And businessmen — even great businessmen — do not, in general, have any special insights into what it takes to achieve economic recovery.

Why isn’t a national economy like a corporation? For one thing, there’s no simple bottom line. For another, the economy is vastly more complex than even the largest private company.

Most relevant for our current situation, however, is the point that even giant corporations sell the great bulk of what they produce to other people, not to their own employees — whereas even small countries sell most of what they produce to themselves, and big countries like America are overwhelmingly their own main customers.

Yes, there’s a global economy. But six out of seven American workers are employed in service industries, which are largely insulated from international competition, and even our manufacturers sell much of their production to the domestic market.

And the fact that we mostly sell to ourselves makes an enormous difference when you think about policy.

Consider what happens when a business engages in ruthless cost-cutting. From the point of view of the firm’s owners (though not its workers), the more costs that are cut, the better. Any dollars taken off the cost side of the balance sheet are added to the bottom line.

But the story is very different when a government slashes spending in the face of a depressed economy. Look at Greece, Spain, and Ireland, all of which have adopted harsh austerity policies. In each case, unemployment soared, because cuts in government spending mainly hit domestic producers. And, in each case, the reduction in budget deficits was much less than expected, because tax receipts fell as output and employment collapsed.

Now, to be fair, being a career politician isn’t necessarily a better preparation for managing economic policy than being a businessman. But Mr. Romney is the one claiming that his career makes him especially suited for the presidency. Did I mention that the last businessman to live in the White House was a guy named Herbert Hoover? (Unless you count former President George W. Bush.)

And there’s also the question of whether Mr. Romney understands the difference between running a business and managing an economy.

Like many observers, I was somewhat startled by his latest defense of his record at Bain — namely, that he did the same thing the Obama administration did when it bailed out the auto industry, laying off workers in the process. One might think that Mr. Romney would rather not talk about a highly successful policy that just about everyone in the Republican Party, including him, denounced at the time.

But what really struck me was how Mr. Romney characterized President Obama’s actions: “He did it to try to save the business.” No, he didn’t; he did it to save the industry, and thereby to save jobs that would otherwise have been lost, deepening America’s slump. Does Mr. Romney understand the distinction?

America certainly needs better economic policies than it has right now — and while most of the blame for poor policies belongs to Republicans and their scorched-earth opposition to anything constructive, the president has made some important mistakes. But we’re not going to get better policies if the man sitting in the Oval Office next year sees his job as being that of engineering a leveraged buyout of America Inc.

Ds

 

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On This Day: January 13

Updated January 12, 2012, 1:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On Jan. 13, 1990, Douglas Wilder of Virginia became the nation’s first elected black governor as he took the oath of office in Richmond.
Go to article »

On Jan. 13, 1870, Ross Granville Harrison , the American zoologist and pioneer in embryonic transplantation , was born. Following his death on Sept. 30, 1959, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date By The Associated Press

1794 President George Washington approved a measure adding two stars and two stripes to the American flag, following the admission of Vermont and Kentucky to the union.
1808 Salmon P. Chase, U.S. senator, secretary of the treasury and chief justice of the Supreme Court, was born in Cornish, N.H.
1893 Britain’s Independent Labor Party, a precursor to the Labor Party, first met.
1898 Novelist Emile Zola’s “J’accuse” – a defense of Captain Alfred Dreyfus, a French Jew falsely convicted of treason – was published in a Paris newspaper.
1964 Karol Wojtyla, the future Pope John Paul II, was appointed archbishop of Krakow, Poland, by Pope Paul VI.
1966 Robert C. Weaver became the first black Cabinet member as he was appointed Secretary of Housing and Urban Development by President Lyndon B. Johnson.
1968 Country musician Johnny Cash recorded a live concert at Folsom Prison in California.
1982 An Air Florida 737 crashed into the 14th Street Bridge in Washington, D.C., after takeoff and fell into the Potomac River, killing 78 people.
1989 New York City subway gunman Bernhard H. Goetz was sentenced to one year in prison for possessing an unlicensed gun that he used to shoot four youths he said were about to rob him.
1990 L. Douglas Wilder of Virginia, the nation’s first elected black governor, took the oath of office in Richmond.
2000 Microsoft chairman Bill Gates stepped aside as chief executive.
2002 The off-Broadway musical “The Fantasticks” ended a run of nearly 42 years and 17,162 performances.

Current Birthdays By The Associated Press

Patrick Dempsey, Actor (“Grey’s Anatomy”)

Actor Patrick Dempsey (“Grey’s Anatomy”) turns 46 years old today.

AP Photo/Evan Agostini

Trace Adkins, Country singer

Country singer Trace Adkins turns 50 years old today.

AP Photo/Peter Kramer

1930 Frances Sternhagen, Actress, turns 82
1934 Rip Taylor, Comedian, turns 78
1938 Billy Gray, Actor (“Father Knows Best”), turns 74
1943 Richard Moll, Actor (“Night Court”), turns 69
1954 Trevor Rabin, Rock musician (Yes), turns 58
1961 Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Actress (“Seinfeld,” “The New Adventures of Old Christine”), turns 51
1964 Penelope Ann Miller, Actress, turns 48
1972 Nicole Eggert, Actress, turns 40
1977 Orlando Bloom, Actor (“Pirates of the Caribbean” and “The Lord of the Rings” movies), turns 35

 

Historic Birthdays

Ross Granville Harrison 1/13/1870 – 9/30/1959 American zoologist.Go to obituary »
60 Jan van Goyen 1/13/1596 – 4/27/1656
Dutch artist
77 Christoph Graupner 1/13/1683 – 5/10/1760
German composer
81 Sir Isaac Goldsmid 1/13/1778 – 4/27/1859
English financier
65 Salmon Chase 1/13/1808 – 5/7/1873
American politician/lawyer
67 Horatio Alger 1/13/1832 – 7/18/1899
American author
51 Felix Tisserand 1/13/1845 – 10/20/1896
French astronomer
82 Sophie Tucker 1/13/1884 – 2/9/1966
American entertainer
68 Elmer Davis 1/13/1890 – 5/18/1958
American broadcaster/writer
90 A.B. Jr. Guthrie 1/13/1901 – 4/26/1991
American novelist

 

 

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276/365/01

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Vijay Iyer Trio: Live In Concert via @NPR

via npr.org

By Patrick Jarenwattananon

Pianist and composer Vijay Iyer leads a trio that traffics in grooves, crackling and heavy. He has a distinctive way of exploiting dissonance and rhythmic space at the piano; he’s joined by a deeply resonant, gut-punching bassist (Stephan Crump) and a drummer with an advanced understanding of time (Marcus Gilmore). The results are beats that feel borrowed from a future age; alternately, they’re new lenses on jazz’s big-picture history.

The band led off its packed-house performance at Le Poisson Rouge with a number by the disco-funk band Heatwave (“The Star of a Story”), created a sort of acoustic Detroit techno (“Hood”), stretched out a Michael Jackson classic (“Human Nature”) and played Ronnie Foster’s “Mystic Brew” with full knowledge of its sampling by A Tribe Called Quest. A few more originals rounded out this slightly abbreviated set, a partial preview of the upcoming album Accelerando. Full of stutter steps and snare claps, power chords and low end, the concert proved a clear highlight of the 2012 NYC Winter Jazzfest.
Set List

“The Star Of A Story” (R. Temperton)
“Lude” (Iyer)
“Optimism” (Iyer)
“Hood” (Iyer)
“Human Nature” (Porcaro/Bettis)
“Actions Speak” (Iyer)
“Mystic Brew” (R. Foster)

Personnel

Vijay Iyer, piano
Stephan Crump, bass
Marcus Gilmore, drums

Credits

Producers: Mito Habe-Evans, Patrick Jarenwattananon; Audio Engineer: Kevin Wait; Executive Producers: Anya Grundmann, Keith Jenkins. Recorded Jan. 7, 2012 at Le Poisson Rouge in New York, N.Y.

via npr.org

Iyerlive_wide

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Clouds in My Eye and My Mouth: Or Puffed Rice Crackers, If You Insist

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