Showing posts with label Peter Dekom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Dekom. Show all posts

Friday, October 24, 2008

Your Tax Dollars at Work



We've already looked at one reason banks have hoarded the cash – they want cash reserves for possible credit default swap calls and other “rainy day” scenarios. We know the top lending institutions, infused with fresh bailout capital from the Department of the Treasury, have openly stated that they have no intention of trickling that infusion downwards into the local lending markets – all this is documented in prior blogs. Here is another example of how they are spending that bailout gift from us humble taxpayers (according to an Associated Press posting on AOL this morning):

PNC Financial Services Group Inc. said Friday it is acquiring National City Corp. for $5.58 billion, in one of the first concrete signs of how banks could use fresh investments from a U.S. government bailout program.

“The deal comes within hours of PNC Financial receiving approval for $7.7 billion in cash from the government under the $750 billion government program aimed at relieving the ongoing credit crisis.”

Kind of makes you feel warm and fuzzy all over, doesn't it? And the Federal Reserve is on the verge of another rate cut – money will get cheaper for the big boys, but trust me, most of us will continue to look at a credit debacle that has frozen us out. Markets are down all over the world, because the financial world feels that we are officially in a recession at last. Not sure how you all feel about all this, but it sure looked like a recession even last summer.

Companies and governments played with the numbers to make it look like this could easily be reversed, but if you are down in the salt mines, trying to operate a small business, pay your mortgage, retire on your pension and “investments,” get some minor financing from a bank for any bona fide purchase, want to put your kids through college by using your home equity line of credit or just clinging to your job and income by a slender thread (which has snapped for way too many of us), it’s been a deep recession for quite a while now. Even where you can find a loan, take a good look at the effective interest rates; I thought they were supposed to be falling?!

We still looking for a bottom, and I suspect the “flat, lean growth period” that will follow is likely to drag on for a long while, before it staggers very slowly upwards in a distant full recovery. I believe we will get there, but it won't be easy or fun for most. Lots of panic and overreaction in the markets, but the news, basically, isn't good. Where's there any relief in sight?

There’s a lender-opt-in federal HOPE for Homeowners Program on the table that allows lenders to reduce principal on loans to 90% of the appraised value of a house (lenders hate to devalue principal, by the way) and lower interest to an affordable level (a mortgage that will be insured by the Federal Housing Administration – the FHA). Unfortunately, unless lenders are in actual foreclosure scenario – where a huge loss is certain – it is unlikely that this structure will make much difference to those who have not defaulted.

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) Chair, Sheila Blair has noted that in the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (the big bailout bill), there are tools that can reach even beyond the above HOPE for Homeowners Act:

“Loan guarantees could be used as an incentive for servicers to modify [real estate] loans. Specifically, the government could establish standards for loan modifications and provide guarantees for loans meeting those standards. By doing so, unaffordable loans could be converted into loans that are sustainable over the long term. The FDIC is working closely and creatively with Treasury to realize the potential benefits of this authority.”

We will keep our eyes on the horizon, but someone really needs to accelerate the implementation of plans impacting ordinary working folks and homeowners. We need to intersect mortgages before they fail, freeze foreclosures now, cap interest rates on home loans... and the Treasury, FDIC and the FHA need to provide immediate federal lender guarantees to support homeowners who can sustain some meaningful level of monthly mortgage payments (the banks can tell us who they are). It’s all about the timing - now.

I’m Peter Dekom, and I approve this message.

Friday, October 3, 2008

Bail or Fail?









So is the “rescue” plan a good one? Are we going to be fine now? No and no! But I’m glad they did “it.” The value is that Congress did a “something” that the markets needed, but the financial world is still looking at a longer term mess. Had our lawmakers not passed “some relevant” legislation, the frozen credit markets would have killed the payrolls of thousands and thousands of businesses, forcing them to close and miss payrolls. And missing those payrolls, laying off workers, would have been a tipping point – probably of no return. We would have seen a ripple effect as laid-off workers, just before a Christmas shopping season, would have accelerated the foreclosure debacle and killed the economic reality of America ’s most significant retail season. We would have had an instant severe, very deep and long term recession, maybe even a depression.


When the government’s Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC), a an administrative agency within the Executive branch of government under the control of the President, horribly deregulated our financial institutions in 2004 (allowing such institutions to carry debt loads equal to 33 times their equity – imagine if we “ordinary people” lived like that), and Congress knowingly let that market slide into this deregulatory abyss without insisting on or applying any necessary oversight… when funds pushed mortgage lenders to lower their standards to create more deal flow (and more fees to Wall Street traders) in the housing market (and home prices went up because more buyers – the demand side – fought for a fixed set of homes)… well those problems still exist to some very significant extent.


What this means for the rest of us is that there will be some letting loose of the harsh impact of the real costs of borrowing after “teaser rate” mortgage structures expired and that more homeowners should be able to negotiate their way to stay in their homes, even though Congress did not provide what I perceived to be a highly desirable moratorium on foreclosures to give people time to take advantage of this new system. There will be a bit more lending going on, but the standards for loans might still prevent qualified borrowers from accessing that capital. Some kids are not going to get money for college based on their parents’ ability to take equity out of their homes, and some businesses are not going to get the capital they need to grow and create new jobs. Getting money for a new home purchase is not going to be easy enough so that housing prices are going to recover any time soon.


So how do we think of all this? First, and this is essential, if you think of the $700 trillion as a write off, you might as well find another country to live in. Assuming that our government is even mildly competent (a big assumption), that sum has to be viewed as a longer term investment, supported by underlying assets (mostly real estate and the mortgages that are still working). In time we should be able to generate most of that “investment” back, and we may even make a small profit. So we really have to swallow hard and ignore this as a huge black hole.


That means, with fiscal restraint, the government must now shift to creating a platform for viable growth in the near term. I still think we're going to be in a recession for no less than 15 months, but the government has opportunities to incentivize growth though encouraging job creation in the places we need it most: infrastructure, alternative energy and health care. The government also has to stop playing with words in the educational arena. If we want to stop exporting jobs, we need to up the ante in our vested skill-sets, and that means education has to become and remain a priority. Our representatives have to figure out how to make this happen under the perception of the impact of a $700 trillion bailout. And we as taxpayers and citizens have to help them get there.


I’m Peter Dekom, and I approve this message

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Can This Really be Happening?








Not the financial meltdown; we know that it is and the recovery is going to take a lot of time and effort! I’m talking about Republicans and Democrats saying nice things about their mutual efforts in securing the overwhelming passage of the Senate version of the bailout bill on this first day of October. Could America actually work like that? Or are we like the petty and shameful voices of the House of Representatives that eroded in mutual derision and over-simplifications that drew justifiable criticisms in the same effort earlier in the week?


Are we looking for the differences between and among us or trying to find the “tie that binds”? Are we trying to impose our religious or doctrinaire views on others or willing to respect that others may disagree? Exactly who are we? And if the “other party” wins the election, what is our commitment to the United States of America ?


How will Americans behave after the bailout legislation, in whatever form, passes (I believe it will) and after the November elections? We're not going to step into a world of fat jobs, juicy paychecks, easy credit and ever-escalating real estate prices. Prosperity is not just around the corner. This time, we have to earn it, each and every one of us.


So as we watch candidates promise what they probably cannot deliver and see others “getting away with murder,” do we throw up our hands bitterly and walk away or do we pull together to make it work? The Senate today gave America what it really wanted: Unity and Leadership. They didn't promise this as the complete fix, but they also didn't stare into the cameras pointed at them and tell us that the world would end.


We need our citizens to have at least two goals: 1. fix themselves and 2. help others who need help in dealing with this crisis. It’s selfish, really, helping others… it is what makes it all work so that the whole becomes where we really want to be, where we want our sons and daughters, our grandchildren, to live and grow. It’s what makes America … well… America again. Remember how that felt? I want it back.


I’m Peter Dekom, and I hope you approve this message.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

When “It’s Just Them” becomes “Just Like Me”












I saw a photograph today – a man holding a banner that read “[expletive] jump!” – beneath the hallowed halls of a Wall Street tower. It was sent as a joke, but the message was clear: a huge segment of Americans thinks the government is seeking to bail out “them.” “Them” is bad folk, who for reasons of greed and power, created an artificial market that eventually and justifiably collapsed. “They” deserve to be punished, even go to jail, and if our pensions suffer a bit for while, it’s got to be worth it.

And that’s the problem with the government’s plan. The order of the fix just looks bad. The theory is to shore up the institutions, revive the fundamental borrowing power that is the life blood of American commerce and homeownership, and the new stronger structures will then resuscitate the poor homeowners whose property values have been driven down, who cannot get loans for simple business needs or to buy or sell a home.


The problem is one of perception. Because the plan does not start with the homeowners, placing some kind of moratorium on foreclosures, the “bailout” is not viewed as one that helps the common man, the small business or the homeowner… even if that will be one major result of the current proposed legislation. The fact that small businesses pay their employees from receivable financing, that jobs depend on borrowing power just to exist, that real estate has no value if no one can buy it and the fact that growth-directed investments – the kind that create jobs – cannot operate in a vacuum without lending ability, well, the legislation on the table pumps money into the institutions, so the fact that Main Street benefits just as much as Wall Street seems totally lost.


As I’ve said before, if homes lose more value, then the mortgages that the government is buying in a bailout have to be worth less too. Foreclosures kill home values, so we better start there. The message is better too; it doesn’t look like greedy pigs are getting a second helping. The “institutions” – the “them” – have to come second. The punishments for failed management and misleading the public into this mess need to be clear to the electorate. And right now, we need some major remedial economic legislation, if for no other reason, to begin to rebuild the economic trust that vaporized in the last few weeks… a trust that must exist if we are to have a viable economy.


I’m Peter Dekom, and I approve this message.

Leader Hosin’ - When “Incumbent” Should Mean “In Trouble”











When Congress prefers to find blame and rely on failed doctrinaire policies that have been proven incredibly wrong (with political ads that only focus on divisiveness), when the bastions of this nation (like the SEC) knowingly allow an absurd debt-to-equity ratio reign supreme in financial institutions, when our legislators let the special interests they are supposed to regulate draft the statutes and regulations, when our most senior “leaders” have secret meetings with those they are supposed to control (and do not tell us what they agreed to), when the cost of running for office requires candidates to sell their souls to special interests just to get elected, when our Representatives are busy trying to figure out what they need to do to stay elected rather than what is necessary for this country to make it across the line, and when the proposed “fix” goes directly to institutions that “should” benefit homeowners and small business but leaves the foreclosure mess without a much-need moratorium… what is clearly missing is LEADERSHIP.


We clearly need more regulation. Sorry, deregulation, underscored by a vast array of loopholes and exceptions (from farm subsidies to unregulated hedge funds, from oil depletion allowances to disproportionate taxes on working for a living versus investing your wealth), does not work.

But most importantly, we need leaders to do what is right, not what they think they need to do to avoid turning off one or more of their constituency groups. If they stop the hemorrhaging, that they did not do precisely what their electorate thinks they want… will be more than enough. It is what leadership is all about. Do what’s right for the country, not what’s necessary to get reelected even if the country will suffer by not taking the correct path. Succumbing to expediency is not leadership.


At this point, with the markets up from the massive crash, the world wants “something.” The psychology of the markets does not expect THE solution – just that there is a significant piece of legislation that offers a few solutions. We will not get perfection, and the preliminary compromises at the House were clearly in the right direction, but it is time to bring it home. We don’t need Republicans and Democrats fixing blame and clinging to their old world and failed “theories;” we need responsible legislators. We need both sides of the aisle to “get real.” We need LEADERSHIP. NOW! NOW! NOW! Or maybe we need to look at the incumbents who are voting against a solution… and remember.



I'm Peter Dekom, and I approve this message.


Monday, September 29, 2008

Instant Gratification? Not this Time







The bailout is necessary, and I’ve said that before. But the bailout does not mean that the good times will be “here again,” at least not in the immediate future. The difference is between a possible 1929-style depression (no bailout) and an uncomfortably long (15-24 months I suspect) recession (with a bailout). To have growth, we need value. That means retraining and education, fixing broken infrastructure, and encouraging job growth.


We've got lots that needs to be done, in both the public and private sectors, but a slow economy and tough money with sluggish leading indicators (even with a bailout) make achieving those goals that much more difficult. And with the rest of the world pointing their fingers at greedy Wall Street and the government that refused to regulate them until it was too late, the international capital markets are not likely going to help much.


We have energy and health care issues that can create massive new jobs, roads, highways, bridges, dams and levees that need to be repaired and expanded. Whatever the long term result, most of the bailout will be recaptured if the government makes the right moves, but we now have to focus on getting this nation into a place where it can grow, build jobs and sustain hope. Climate change, with the irony of drought and battering hurricanes, only makes that job more difficult. But we can, and we must.


The next President will be faced with the issue of priorities, as questions from the debate so clearly indicate. Choices must be made, spending cuts must be implemented, but we need tax dollars and capital investment to move from bailout to success. This is a multi-step process, and it will take both cash and patience. It will also take courage.


I'm Peter Dekom, and I approve this message.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Pain, Not so Exquisite Pain










So I have a big mouth, some have observed, and I am complaining all the time. I’ve been told I better start talking solutions to America ’s current economic crisis, so here goes, short, down and dirty:

1. Put a moratorium on foreclosures.


2. Get the government to take over the mortgages contained in the derivative market (pay a flat rate to the institutions based either on a formula or a set fraction like 60% of face value), lower the rates for those homeowners who can pay and stop the flood of foreclosures - foreclosures are driving down the net worth of real estate and this country. Give the originating banks a quarter of one percent to administer, but require them to.


3. Make sure that those who caused the problem don't get golden parachutes or high compensation. Sue or prosecute those who have already. Don't bail out those who lied on their income statements or knowingly supplied incorrect statistics.


4. Give the taxpayers equity and/or upside in everything they support.


5. While imposing severe restrictions on how much equity or cash one (person or company) needs to have versus how much they can borrow, supply liquidity to the marketplace so that homes can still be bought and sold and lend properly to fuel viable business growth. Deal flow in the housing and corporate growth market will restore some stability and create a price for residential real estate – no loans = no sales = further depreciating values. Define debt widely and equity narrowly. Fixing the debt-to-equity ratios is mission critical.


6. Focus on job creation.


7. Create bi-partisan oversight over all major bailout packages. Do not vest that authority in one man without oversight or accountability.


Not acting risks the collapse of the stock market (lots of pensions are built here), the massive failure of many more banks and financial institutions, the further drastic collapse of home values, vastly higher unemployment (and lots of hidden under-employment) and the collapse of the dollar (everything we import, from oil to steel, will explode in price).


If I can do it, so can Washington . Life is suffering. Buddha.


Next!


I’m Peter Dekom, and I approve this message.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Short Cuts and Shredded Wheat


I’m a practicing lawyer, and by all accounts, I am in one of the shadiest and most despised professions on earth… until this week, when Wall Street hedge fund managers and investment bankers shoved me and my disliked brethren into a relative breath of fresh air. What’s going on here? What’s the bigger picture?

When it comes right down to it, our country seems to be divided into those who work to make this a better country for us all, and those who work this country to make a better living for a relative few. It’s not about what’s right or makes sense – it’s about finding the loophole that will make a few folks rich, about creating the loopholes to benefit the special interests that really are running this country.

Think about it. Do oil companies swimming in cash really need the tax breaks that give them huge benefits? We call that the “oil depletion allowance” that lets big oil avoid big taxes. Did we really need to leave a huge gaping hole in our regulatory schema to let hedge funds tell savings and loans, banks and real estate brokers that they had the “numbers-defying secret” to blend high risk mortgages from unqualified borrowers destroy their lives by purchasing overvalued real estate without any hope of paying the monthly nut?

Lie on those income statements! Take on mortgages with interest rates sure to skyrocket. Those fund managers actually told everyone that if you blend enough bad mortgages into one huge pile, sell units in that pile (derivatives), they can’t all be bad! The blended power of the masses would correct for the default of the expected few. They couldn’t possibly default in numbers that could tank the economy! But they did. These folks’ actions represent one of the greatest massive ethical lapses in American history.

We trust people to do the right thing, even when everyone knows “this cannot last.” Leave them alone; the market will make it right. Well, folks do not seem to do the right thing… and if enough people do the clearly wrong thing, it becomes accepted practice. Would factories really stop belching smoke into the air because it’s bad for the environment… even their competitors could make cheaper products because they didn’t have to pay for pollution controls? Special interests hire lobbyists and create massive fund-raising moments for aspiring politicians. What chance does an ordinary taxpayer have?

Why does it take a total meltdown for our voices to be heard? Where were our Congressmen and women, our President and cabinet, before this obvious problem occurred? Where were the regulations that should have prevented this debacle? Why did our Congress and the executive branch accept the words of the oil industry, the finance industry and ignore what simple addition, subtraction, division and multiplication could have told an average tenth grader presented with the same numbers? Why is there a problem that needs such a massive fix in the first place? And why do I feel like a bowl of shredded wheat without the comfort of milk, cream or even a spoonful of sugar?!

I’m Peter Dekom, and I approve this message.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Now What? Shoot the Wolf at Our Door?



We know why we sit in the financial basement, and we know that there is more debt with less equity that even the most astute economic analysts could have ever envisioned. But the Treasury Secretary, Henry Paulson, seems to think that if someone gave him a blank check, he’s the prescient guy to know what to do with $700 billion of taxpayer guarantees – yes, the same man who gave us assurances just a few weeks ago that the worst was over – without any court or administrative review. Crazy!

Yes, we have to act now, but remember the fallout when everyone panicked after the 9/11 attacks and we got a solution to every terrorist issue we faced with a very patriotic name – a travesty called the “Patriot Act,” a statute that was passed with almost no one in Congress having read this law. We need a bailout… the world is watching, and the economy cannot be jump-started without a lot of help.


But we cannot let one man act without accountability; there needs to be oversight that does not favor one political party over another. And we cannot waste any of that money rewarding corporate officers who pull the cord on their golden parachutes, even if they pull that cord before the bailout passes. American taxpayers need to own something for their efforts, stand to recoup and perhaps benefit from the investment in the companies and mortgages that receive that governmental help. Finally, we need to make sure that the ratio of equity to debt in future financing is carefully limited… back door debt and over-borrowing must be treated as the ridiculous structures they really are. This has to apply equally to companies in the mergers and acquisitions and business growth space as it does to people buying homes.


We need the government to take over defaulting mortgages as fast as they can, so that we do not further tank the cornerstone of our economic recovery – viable and sustainable home ownership. It is cheaper for us to allow people to pay what they can (lower the interest rates) and keep their homes rather than letting the market further destroy home values by allowing more defaults. The government has to insure that there is enough money in the system (“liquidity”) to create the ability for people to continue to buy and sell homes. No money…. no sales… no demand… the prices will continue to fall. This is not a drill… we have one good shot at fixing this or we will face a whole lot more than a recession.


I’m Peter Dekom, and I approve this message.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

America: Addicted to Debt


It’s un-American not to be in debt over your eyeballs! We, as individual consumers, borrow more than we earn! For four years in a row, an event that has not occurred since the Great Depression. That alone is an alarming fact. People believed that real estate could only rise. Everyone seemed to borrow more than was prudent, even beyond the sub-prime market. As the January 23, 2008 New York Times noted: “Everyone from first-time home buyers to Wall Street chief executives made bets they did not fully understand, and then spent money as if those bets couldn't go bad. For the past 16 years, American consumers have increased their overall spending every single quarter, which is almost twice as long as any previous streak.”


We all follow the lead of our government that borrowed 100% of the cost of the Iraq War. The United States currently owes $9.5+ trillion of “national debt” (the aggregation of unpaid deficit-borrowings), which in turn generates a massive $350-$400 billion dollars in annual interest payments, mostly to other countries that have politely funded our deficits. Put another way, the national debt currently grows by $1 million a minute or $1.4 billion a day!


We Americans have another form of debt; we call it a “trade deficit” – it runs about $60-$70 billion a month – what happens when you import much more than you export. The November 30, 2006 Business Week predicted that “[f]or the first time in recent memory, the cost of imported goods and services will exceed federal revenues. In other words, Americans will soon pay more to foreigners than they do to their national government.” That happened this year. Even with the slowdown from the recession/depression (whatever you want to call this total meltdown). With massive amounts of our national debt in foreign hands, with global competition accelerating at the expense of U.S. workers and with oil reserves predominantly in antagonistic foreign hands, the future of our economy is decreasingly within our own control. We live based upon the “kindness” of strangers.


So enter Wall Street. Not only did they encourage all the above consumer borrowing, they repacked the debt and sold “derivatives” (including aggregations of risky mortgage loans), making fees creating, buying and selling these “derivatives,” but they fell so much in love with debt, that investment bankers (who make the big bucks when companies are bought and sold – mergers and acquisitions) decided that you really didn't need a whole lot of equity to buy huge companies either – you could use stock and, gotta love ‘em, debt. Lots of it, not a whole lot different from people buying houses without much of a down-payment.


They even figured out how to make even more money by creating layers of debt – the top guys (senior debt) got paid 100% with interest before the next level (mezzanine debt) gets paid off with its higher rate of interest (being in second position is always riskier than being on top). The shareholders (the equity) sit at the bottom, hoping their management made the right decision.

The investment bankers figured out how to get still higher fees by structuring and supplying the high interest mezzanine debt. And giant hedge funds were created, some within these very investment banks, to raise all that capital needed to fuel the mortgage demand, the mezzanine debt demand and all of the other “needs.” A little equity, not a whole lot of government interference (the government even made interest rates so cheap, why not borrow?!), the debt just got higher and higher.


As long as the marketplace was going up, who cared about the debt load? You got a new house or a nice new company or a nice new investment. The housing market woke up in 2007; the financial markets awoke slightly after Bear Stearns went down, but went back to sleep only to awaken to one of the greatest market crashes in American history in the last few days. Lehman Bros. was gone. AIG, an insurance company alive only by government intervention. There was blood in the streets and no short term “fixin’s” gonna right a ship that has run so far aground.


Bottom-line: The laissez-faire lending markets do not work. The derivative markets are a disaster. Without government oversight, required limits on how much real equity you need to borrow and how you will pay it back, we will watch the markets react over time, minus a whole lot of companies and homeowners, until the next debacle. What kind of America will we be then? Competitive? Vibrant? Hopeful? Or a worse version of what the unregulated economy gave us this week?


I'm Peter Dekom and I approve this message.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Government-Speak Meets “Miles per Gallon”


There’s English, and then there’s “government English.” Congress wanted much more in the way of mandating that car manufacturers build more fuel efficient cars than did the current administration. They passed a bill in November of 2007 providing a newest of measurable fleet mileage mandates (moving from the current fleet average for new cars of 27.5 MPG for cars/22 MPG for light trucks to 35 MPG for both cars and light trucks and SUVs by 2020) to be imposed on manufacturers. The fact that this is a long time line for a relatively modest improvement does not augur well for the priority we have placed on these issues, but wait, there’s more.


You should know how fleet mileage is measured. Miles per gallon… per gallon of what? The government looks at gasoline consumption, not fuel efficiency – across the designated manufactures’ vehicle output. So “flex-fuel” vehicles, capable of running partially on non-gasoline biofuel alternatives, even when there are almost no filling stations equipped to provide cars with products like bio-diesel, give an artificial boost to fleet averages! We really need to stop playing games and get down to business; failure to act sufficiently won’t result in an inconvenience; it will create a radical decline in the quality of our lives.


And then there is the Brazilian “energy independence” story – how are large nation with lots of cars made it work simply with ethanol-based fuel generated from sugar cane. Aside from the fact that the number of cars per person are a whole lot fewer in Brazil than in the U.S. or that sugar cane produces six times more ethanol than a comparable amount of corn (which also sucks huge amounts of water from aquifers that are running out of that precious substance), Brazil also has massive off-shore oil reserves making it one of the richest countries in the Americas! That’s another part of government English… spinning ain’t sinning!


I’m Peter Dekom and I approve this message.


Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Taxes, We All Hate ‘Em


If you like paying taxes, chances are pretty good you’re laundering money! So the notion of one political party assessing higher taxes and another championing lower taxes is kind of a red herring. The real question has to be: does what you have left after paying your taxes buy you more or less than you used to be able to buy?

Sounds simple, doesn’t it? But whoever asks such an obvious question? You should! After all, if the government can pay for its excesses without raising taxes, that should be a good thing, right? Not if what happens has a worse impact on your lifestyle than paying a bit more in taxes!!! If a country has to borrow, pay lots of interest - particularly to foreign governments - instead of fixing highways or funding more schools, if the value of your dollar falls in relationship with most of the rest of the world so you have to pay more money for internationally-valued stuff (like oil, clothes, electronics, food), then maybe that sneaky government is making you pay a hidden tax, while all the time they are taking credit for not raising the rates. Let’s call them on it!


It gets more interesting when you think of those interest payments as the debt of a wild and crazy youth – nothing in it for the adult who emerged – instead of investments in our future. After all, when you owe a lot of money, who cares as long as you are making a pile and your investments are soaring?!


But when those who generate the value are under-skilled, when the educational system doesn’t train them for the future, when our infrastructure slows the movement of trucks and cars, sucking up wasted gasoline and delaying commerce… well, you get it. To be “all that we can be,” we need to repair our infrastructure, modernize it and make sure our citizens are competitive, generating real earning power.


So next time a politician tells you how they haven’t raised taxes or even cut them to the bone, ask yourself: “Did they create a hidden tax for me? Does my dollar really buy what it used to be?” Don’t let them hide behind the form… look behind them to find the substance!


I’m Peter Dekom and I approve this message.