Wednesday, September 21, 2011

September 21, 2011, Bob Brinker's Moneytalk Guest: More Taxes is the Solution

September 21, 2011...........................................................(comments)

Last Sunday, Bob Brinker's third-hour guest was Menzie Chinn who is with the University of Wisconsin. You will either love this guy's views or you will be infuriated by them.

Bob Brinker started the interview by reminding Chinn that the national debt is now over $14.5 trillion,  with $9 trillion of it being  held publicly -- which includes the paper held overseas. He said there doesn't seem to be any "true  political will" to do anything about it because for the third consecutive fiscal year,  we are going to chalk up well over a trillion dollars in national debt. 

Chinn replied:  "I think this is the natural outcome where you have a debt-lead boom that's unsustainable. There was an accumulation of house debt in the private sector under the premise that housing prices could go up indefinitely......A lot of that debt has been transferred to public sector.  Where times were unnaturally good before are now unnaturally bad now.  A big chunk of that shortfall is not specific discretionary measures but rather the fact that tax revenues have collapsed.....A lot of it that tax revenues are way down.....If we just let the current law stay in place a lot of these problems will be solved in the next two years if you let the tax-cuts of  '01 and '03 expire. You pull up tax revenues back up toward historical levels and that will shave off a lot of the accumulation of debt that we see."

Bob pointed out that things seem to be going the other way because the president has proposed a 50% payroll tax cut on both sides for 2012. He asked Chinn  if that doesn't make these policies at odds.

Chinn responded that it appeared so on the surface. In the  short-run, we don't want to stall the economy, but we need to look at the longer horizons where there are real problems with debt.


Chinn said: "It's the fact that entitlement will explode in after the next decade, particularly in the health area. What's true is even if we get tax cuts ended, the president's proposal was for temporary tax cuts, then let's also let the Bush tax cuts expire, that's good for a few years and that solves a lot of our problems. Then going forward into, let's say 2025, 2030, everybody agrees that's where the big problems are. And it's not really Social Security, that could be solved with relatively minor adjustments. It's really health care, Medicare..... A lot of the rhetorical right now is let's cut discretionary spending, let's cut defense, NOLA, the weather service, things like that. That may have the feeling of doing something good, but that's not going to face the true debt problem that the nation faces......We saw this debt coming a long time ago. I was in the White House ten years ago, serving as a staff economist and we saw that entitlements would explode in the 2020, 2030's. All that's happened is we've moved that up with the Bush-era tax cuts. It's a problem that's always been there. It's not really a debt problem that's completely because of the short policies we've had in the past three years."


Honey EC: Personally, I am sickened to know that this  blindly-biased man was an "economist in the White House" ten years ago and is now teaching these ignorant views in University. If he bent over any further backwards to keep from putting any blame for the state of our economy and national debt on the current administration, he would have been a pretzel.


Bob pointed out that in the first half of this year, real GDP  grew at  only 0.7%  annualized, and that his estimate is 1 to 2% for 2011. Bob asked: "I need to ask you what would we be looking to to justify a massive tax increase, an exceptionally massive tax increase when you consider this proposal to cut the payroll tax next year.  Some of which, if not all, is going to go into law. So you go into 2013 and the payroll tax goes back to where it was prior to this year, and then you also have the expiration of the tax cuts.....The question is, why should we believe that the economy will be ready for that kind of a tax increase?"


Chinn replied: "At some juncture, we do have to raise revenues. If you look at a graph, you know we're at an all time low in terms of total federal and payroll income tax revenues......I have a feeling that a lot of the  measures in the tax code right now are giving a gift to certain individuals and households without necessarily spurring economic activity. So what you want to do is raise revenue in a smart way that doesn't hurt growth over the longer-term."

Honey EC: Looks like Mr. Chinn believes that the money that the government doesn't take from "individuals and households" is a gift from the government! Now where are my smelling salts??

Bob abruptly changed the subject and reviewed everything that he said earlier about Warren Buffett (please see Sunday's summary for Bob's take on this).

Chinn's response: "The fact of the matter is you have to get additional revenue. Where is the additional revenue? It's people at the higher income deciles. Personally, I'd say don't stop at millions. Go further down on the income distributions, but it sounds like those at one million and above is at least a reasonable place to start."

Honey EC: Obviously, Chinn does NOT agree with Brinker's take on Buffett or the phony-baloney about how he pays less than his secretary. Just the opposite, he totally contradicted what Bob said. 

Chinn went on to blame the exorbitant increase  in debt between 2007 and 2011 on President Bush. He blamed the Bush tax-cuts, the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars, but mostly Iraq -- no doubt because Obama has been in charge of the Afghanistan War.  He blamed Medicare Part D, which of course gave Bob another chance to complain about it.

Chinn also said he would be all for doing away with the household mortgage deduction and claimed that we  could double income tax revenue, as of 2010, if you got rid of "every expenditure of that nature."  But he said that won't close the deficit gap -- that we absolutely  have to raise tax rates unless we want to do without "a national weather or US geological survey."

Honey EC:  LOL!  Mr. Chinn, while you're at it, you could threaten to close all first-responders, fire, police and libraries. And don't forget the young sprouts who will never eat again when we're forced to  close public schools. Come the think of it, not a bad idea. Why not start with the University of Wisconsin. :)

Some of the callers disagreed with Chinn, but the best caller was Jackie.   FrankJ has written some excerpts from that great call: 

Menzie D. Chinn from the University of Wisconsin was the guest in the 3rd hour.  He co-authored a book titled, “Lost Decades: the Making of America’s Debt Crisis.” 

In his response to some of Bob’s questions, the guest referred to certain deductions as “giving a gift” to the taxpayer.  This is what might have gotten Jackie’s attention.  She was calling from Atlanta, and was about the 4th caller for this guest, coming in at about 44 minutes into the third hour.   

Jackie:    “Bob, first I want to tell you how much I like your program and I’m on my way to work, I work all night…I’m close to retirement age so I have a lot of mental history about this country and the times we’ve gone through.
It’s a good thing I didn’t come on first, because I would have said some things about this person that I would have regretted…”
Brinker:  “Wait a minute, now I want you to talk directly to Manzie our guest, he’s on the line with you.”
Jackie: “OK, well the only 2 deductions I can take on my income tax are the mortgage deduction and charitable giving.  I take my return, because I have a sizeable mortgage and I pay my local property taxes which amounted to $13,000 last year, and I work very hard, I work all night. 
I have just retrained myself at my own expense to become a respectable person in the healthcare industry and I spent $250,000 of my own money to go back to school.  I didn’t take one penny of unemployment when the company for which I worked, after 128 years in business closed because the entire textile industry went to China.
I don’t know what you think my political leanings are, but I can tell you they are in contradistinction to you, Menzie.”
Brinker took over and told the guest author that there were millions of people like Jackie who are sick and tired of the whole thing and they feel they’ve paid their taxes and now with this huge debt, the government wants more, and they’re unhappy campers. 
The guest said he understood the anger and then went on to say that he thought it would be good to make income taxes more progressive.  People making $1 million and above can bear an extra burden… he’s not proposing to raise taxes on the lowest income deciles… people below median income, “I’d prefer they have no increase in income tax.” 
 Honey here:  Thank you for that, FrankJ! 

Bob never contradicted or blatantly argued with Chinn, but his voice seemed stressed  at various times,  and he often spoke in a clipped manner.  You can download the third hour (3-4pm slot) of Moneytalk from KGO if you want to listen to it.... It will be available until next Saturday.

Moneytalk on demand and to go with Bob Brinker, is available for FREE audio/podcasting at KGO810 radio for seven days after broadcast.  (At the KGO website, go to "listen/podcast" to download.)

FrankJ's daughter took this beautiful photograph at Gilpin Lake, near  Steamboat Springs, Colorado.  Click to enlarge:  


41 comments:

birdbrain said...

Not surprised to learn that Mr Chinn received his doctorate in Economics from the University of California Berkeley, and taught at UC Santa Cruz before his appointment to Wisconsin-Madison.

Three well known "progressive" institutions.

"A lot of the measures in the tax code right now are giving a gift to certain individuals and households."

Less confiscation of tax dollars a gift? Oh, my.

Anonymous said...

"A lot of the measures in the tax code right now are giving a gift to certain individuals and households."

When a certain group of high income people are taxed at a rate way lower than other lower paid workers it is indeed, a gift to them.

About 1,500 people made over a million dollars last year but paid ZERO in Federal income taxes.

If that's not a gift, I don't know what is.

CARL

jeffchristie said...

Bill Clinton Snubs Obama's Millionaire Tax, Undercuts His Economic Message.


“I personally don’t believe we ought to be raising taxes or cutting spending until we get this economy off the ground,” Clinton said. In just 23 words, Clinton undercut his party’s current standard-bearer—and Obama’s current negotiating chit with Republicans. And to add injury to insult, the silver-tongued, silver-haired 42nd president with the Arkansas drawl did it in a magazine favored by conservative critics of the current president.

Honeybee said...

Copy of DanG's market comments from the prior thread this morning:

* Dan G said...

It will not be pretty today, at least on the opening, unless you have a short position. My only regret is that I don't have more than a moderate position in SDS.

If the Dow closes near where it is bound to open, it will complete that H&S continuation pattern. If that happens, a good strategy should be to wait for a rally back to the "neckline" and then go short. I do plan to add heavily if that occurs.

OK, it's about to open. Hang on to your hats!

September 22, 2011 6:28 AM


* Honeybee said...
Dan,

No way could I get in this morning. Dow opened about 300 points lower....And now, I'm leery of a bounce back.

September 22, 2011 6:50 AM


* Dan G said...

Agreed, HB. It's just too late for now. But there are bound to be more opportunities. This drop is likely to be just in its infancy.

Unless things change drastically during the day, IBD will surely change their view from market under pressure to market in correction.

And also if this drop does not plunge the monthly MACD into a sell position, I will be totally surprised. It was on the verge on September 1, but October 1 should see the negative crossover.

- Dan G

September 22, 2011 7:03 AM

Honeybee said...

CARL,

Why don't you call Bob Brinker (if he is on the air next week) and tell him how you disagree with him?

Honeybee said...

Birdbrain,

I wondered how it happened that Bob Brinker had this kind of a guest on the same week that he spent the first two hours hammering the "Buffett Tax."

Yes, Berkeley and UC Santa Cruz are definitely out there when it comes to pushing socialist and anti-American agendas.

Traitor Angela Davis is a retired UC Santa Cruz professor who still "lectures." Justice for her would have been a life sentence in San Quentin.

Honeybee said...

Jeffchristie,

I never thought the day would come when I would agree with Bill Clinton, but it has.....LOL!

Pig said...

I never thought the day would come when I would agree with Bill Clinton,

The enemy of my enemy is my friend.

I love Bill Clinton.

BTW, I'd love to post more but it takes me hours to scroll to the bottom of this long section. :--)

Anonymous said...

“I personally don’t believe we ought to be raising taxes or cutting spending until we get this economy off the ground,” Clinton said.

So just sit there and do nothing says Slick Willy?

He's just softening up the territory for Hillary when she runs. He always did feel Obama stole the office right out of Hillary's hands.

Gohillary

Anonymous said...

Oooooeeee! Bill Gross and all those folks who dumped the long treasury bonds because interest rates were going up are re-thinking that notion today.

It looks like they are going to be on the wrong side for at least a couple more years. Maybe more.

45ni6

birdbrain said...

Bob Brinker Jr tweets on Sep 19 that Hulbert's Digest ranks his fixed income letter #1 on a risk-adjusted basis for the last five years through 8/31.

Someone should call his father to congratulate him. Mr B would utter a simple "thank you, what's your question?"

He takes the credit and no one, outside of this blog, is the wiser.

Honeybee said...

Birdbrain said: "Bob Brinker Jr tweets on Sep 19 that Hulbert's Digest ranks his fixed income letter #1 on a risk-adjusted basis for the last five years through 8/31."

There's more to the story than what's in Jr's Tweet. Research in progress....

I subscribe to Hulbert's Financial Digest (only so that I have the fact for this blog) and have the copy in hand, but "stuff" doesn't add up...

Anonymous said...

Well tomorrow marks the last day of the second year of the summer of recovery.

Isn't hope and change awesome!!!

tfb

But Honey Badger doesn't care :)

Anonymous said...

Btw, since I sort of have an inside track on this I should point out to you all, they are at it again. The Obama administration is starting to sniff around banks again and looking at the skin color of those you make loans to and expecting loans to be made in proportion to the % of the ethnicity in the population. In other words banks are once again being expected to put progressive race relations before economic scores when making a loan - sigh.

tfb

smile_1 said...

Well I have to admit that after watching the Republican debate tonight, that if any one of those idiots gets elected to anything besides dogcatcher this country will be worse off than if George Bush was given another go - which thankfully is not possible.

Perry was destroyed tonight - we should see his star fading quickly.

Romney looked the best, relative to Perry.

I would say Cain as Honeybee has pointed to in the past, also looked good but who in their right mind would want a 9% federal sales tax - in his 999 plan (great biblical referance I must say) would the 9% individual, 9% sales & 9% corporate tax be it - no payroll tax, no property tax - which is at the state level and I think is absolutely ridiculous in theory and practice. Just pointing out that some of what you hear may sound good at first blush but if you gave it a moment of thought you would reject, or at least question the viability of the solution.

Surprisingly Gingrich's glib responses sound great but they don't hold up to much under scrutiny.

Not a single viable solution to any of the problems which face the US, just more rhetoric.

Slap... find some new Republican candidates none of them stand much of a chance to win @ 11/12

What we need to do is replace all of Congress - kick em all out, change who gives them pay raises, and make them live with social security and medicare.

Rexx said...

WOW Brinker e alert all in buy opportunity. Who is feeling brave

Rexx said...

Brinker e alert buy opportunity

investor said...

Bob Brinker put out another bulletin tonight I don't subscribe anymore. My guess would be its a buy signal the trading range is correct but how does that solve recession fears, euro problem, and so forth. I know people must think how could he call a buy if he is fully invested. If someone knows what he said could you please tell us and talk about it.
Thanks
Investor

Honeybee said...

Rexx said: "WOW Brinker e alert all in buy opportunity."

Rexx,

Are you aware that Bob Brinker has never issued any "sell signals" since January 2000?

Are you aware that all Marketimer model portfolios have been fully invested since March 2003?

Are you aware that he issued FIVE EVER-LOWER "all-in buy signals" during the bear market three years ago?

Are you aware that he has been constantly recommending dollar-cost-averaging new money into the market?

Are you aware that Brinker said this on July 31, 2011, less than 3 months ago?

Brinker replied: "And just for the record, I’m right with John. I was doing the exact same thing that John was doing. When we saw that weakness on the correction test into the low-1300’s and that very, very minor weakness that we had just below that level for a very short window of time, I was doing the same thing that John was doing – which was adding to positions."

So what I want to know is how does a reasonable man find the utter chutzpah to now "issue an ebuy-signal?

The very idea of such shyster tactics is nauseating to this Honey Badger.

Anonymous said...

The very idea of such shyster tactics is nauseating to this Honey Badger.

And the hottest Honey Badger of all!

tfb

Honeybee said...

Definition: shy·ster (sh st r)n. Slang An unethical, unscrupulous practitioner

Anonymous said...

another great call by brinker ! I wonder if ever gets tired of being wrong ! market timer my a_s. I don't think this guy could time an egg.....Oct. 7 4yrs and counting hiker on brinker mountain

Jim said...

Investor said:
Bob Brinker put out another bulletin tonight I don't subscribe anymore. My guess would be its a buy signal the trading range is correct but how does that solve recession fears, euro problem, and so forth.

You are right. It doesn't solve the problems you mention. Brinker is simply thinking that we hit a double-bottom yesterday so it's time to buy. Sometimes double-bottoms hold and other times not. I would say the odds are no better than 50-50.

jeffchristie said...

Hi Bob. Thanks for taking my call. I subscribe to both of your newsletters. Congratulation on your fixed income letter being rate number 1 by Hulbert on a risk adjusted basis for 5 years.


Now about that buying in the stock market that you talked about on July 31, 2011. How is that working out?

Brinker replied: "And just for the record, I’m right with John. I was doing the exact same thing that John was doing. When we saw that weakness on the correction test into the low-1300’s and that very, very minor weakness that we had just below that level for a very short window of time, I was doing the same thing that John was doing – which was adding to positions."

Dan G said...

"Sometimes double-bottoms hold and other times not. I would say the odds are no better than 50-50."

It could be a double-bottom, but I think the head-and-shoulders continuation pattern trumps the double-bottom.

So while I "covered" my SDS early this morning for a good profit, the plan now is to await a return to the area of the neckline and, if that occurs and the volume is low to moderate, re-establish another position in
SDS or similar "short" ETF.

So, happy trading, folks. Probably not a good time for a long term investment, but I think the big money is still to be made on the downside. BUT...I could be wrong, in which case I'll cut those losses short. At least that's the plan.

Anonymous said...

Silver heading for record fall

September 23, 2011, 10:54 AM
.


Silver prices are sliding sharply for a second straight day.

The metal SI1Z is off $3.75 an ounce, or 10.3%, at $32.83 in recent action.

Friday’s slide would be among the 10 worst percentage falls for the metal in the past 20 years and the second largest nominal decline, after Thursday’s drubbing, according to data compiled from FactSet Research.

Silver’s 10 worst percentage declines:

-13.75%

4/20/2006



-13.05%

6/13/2006



-12.92%

10/02/2008



-11.10%

4/21/2004



-10.74%

10/10/2008



-9.94%

8/15/2008



-9.61%

9/22/2011



-9.39%

12/08/2004



-9.18%

4/24/2006



-9.12%

8/05/1993


AG

Honeybee said...

Anonymous...I published your post even though it wasn't signed because I think I know who you are.

Please sign your comments. You can use any handle you want. Allen sounds like a good name. :)

Honeybee said...

Jim posted:

Investor said:
Bob Brinker put out another bulletin tonight I don't subscribe anymore. My guess would be its a buy signal the trading range is correct but how does that solve recession fears, euro problem, and so forth.

You are right. It doesn't solve the problems you mention. Brinker is simply thinking that we hit a double-bottom yesterday so it's time to buy. Sometimes double-bottoms hold and other times not. I would say the odds are no better than 50-50."


Thanks Jim,

As you said, Investor's "guess" is right. And thanks for your analysis of Bob Brinker's thinking on this double-bottom.

Also, yesterday the S&P dropped real close to bear market territory again. It's good for Brinker that he only uses closing prices because (without verifying numbers)I think that we dropped into bear territory this morning.

It's a gamble for Brinker. If the market rallies here -- where many think it will -- he can brag about "upgrading" the market to "attractive for purchase" as long as the S&P stays above yesterday's closing price.

If however, as per your 50-50 odds, it goes down, he will never mention it again, either on Moneytalk or in Marketimer.

Honeybee said...

Remember friends....One of Bob Brinker's hard and fast rules is to never sell into weakness

Anonymous said...

Remember friends....One of Bob Brinker's hard and fast rules is to never sell into weakness

No, his hard and fast rule is never to above board and ethical.

tfb

Dan G said...

So Mr. Bunny, if you have an opinion about Brinker, let's hear it. Quit beating around the bush! :-)

Anonymous said...

"If however, as per your 50-50 odds, it goes down, he will never mention it again, either on Moneytalk or in Marketimer."

It doesn't really matter since his portfolios have been fully invested forever. His results will still be those of a buy-and-holder.

So if his buy call is somewhere near the actual bottom he will brag about it, if not he will just issue another one.

Don't you all remember Brinker saying that if you are going to make a market call, make a lot of them?

Why do you pay any attention at all?

AndyW

Anonymous said...

A bit off topic but interesting - 5 worst places to retire.

Las Vegas anyone?

Vegas

Grandpa tokes:

then I got high

tfb

Dan G said...

Omigod, I'm getting addicted...to day trading!

Seeing the Dow so oversold and seemingly at a temporary bottom, I bought some Diamonds, they rallied, and I sold them within 5 minutes for $100 profit! Hey, that's $600 an hour! How long has this been going on?

Well, I'm through for the day. It's fun, but I want to quit today while I'm ahead. And I don't want to have to go to rehab to get off this "habit"!

Bozo Bob said...

Bob can pick em! This shows a picture of his condo in front of empty land

The 5 worst places to retire in the US

A golf community goes off course -- Lake Las Vegas, Nev.
Even when judged by the dizzying promises made standard by boom-era planned communities, Lake Las Vegas was a doozy. Conceived in 1972, the development -- including an artificial lake carved out of the desert that cost $2 million a year to keep filled -- became a reality, and a hit, in the 1990s.

Lake Las Vegas has become a well-heeled version of limbo. Golf courses nationwide have suffered since the recession, and for the fifth straight year, more closed than opened in 2010. But all three of the Lake Las Vegas golf courses went into foreclosure, and only the Golf Club at South Shore is back in operation -- no longer as a private club, but as one open to anyone willing to pay a $600 annual fee. Initiation fees dropped from $175,000 to, um, zero dollars. The development's casino, Casino MonteLago, closed in March of 2010, and the Ritz-Carlton Lake Las Vegas shut down two months later. The lake isn't going anywhere, and the triple-digit temperatures are also there to stay.


I wonder if Brinker paid the $175,000 initiation fee to play golf there in addition to the $1.06M price tag for his home now worth less than $200K?

More

Honeybee said...

Bozo Bob,

Robert J. and Hilary Brinker paid over one million dollars for that penthouse condo in 2006:

Clark county Real Property Parcel Record

Now, some condos in that area are going for $60 - $80,000. The Brinker's unit is going for less than $200,000, but the taxes have come down considerably:

Zillow for 20 Via Mantova #405, Henderson, Nevada

Strangely, the Brinker's address on the deed is listed as what appears to be an office on a business street in Henderson. Does that mean that they no longer reside in the condo?

Clark County Nevada Parcel Report

Anonymous said...

I love when Brinker starts talking about how he saw the housing bubble. The the reality is he purchased a 2000 square foot cookie cutter condo for over $1M at the very top of the housing market.

He could not even short sale that sucker for $70K now because no one wants the condo maintenace fee.

Joey

keith♠ said...

I would like to point out most recessions were preceded by a reduction in income tax rates.
Before the crash of 1929, the top rate was 20 per cent.
Reagan reduced taxes in the Eighties and recession followed.
Again the Bush administration reduced taxes to be followed by this present quagmire.
Had rates not been reduced, would the US be in such financial difficulties?

Honeybee said...

Keith,

ROFLOL! Thanks for the humor of the week.

Anonymous said...

Keith, instead of blaming tax reductions for recessions, why don't you go to your local library, get a copy of Reckless Endangerment, and read it.

You may get a clue as to the reasons for the financial collapse in 2008 that brought on the recession.

-- Frankj

Honeybee said...

I was asked why there haven't been any Dixiegeezer photos for awhile.

Dixiegeezer has been having a health problem which keeps him off his feet and unable to go on his photo-hunting jaunts, but he hopes to get better soon.

So I may review my files of his pictures and be sure I haven't missed any. If I find some I missed, I will begin posting them again.