Economics for the Citizen by Dr. Walter E. Williams

“The first lesson in economic theory is that we live in a world of scarcity. Scarcity is a situation whereby human wants exceed the means to satisfy those wants. Human wants are assumed to be limitless, or at least they don’t frequently reveal their bounds. People always want more of something, be it: more cars, more food, more love, more happiness, more peace, more health care, more clean air or more charity. Our ability and resources to satisfy all those wants are indeed limited. There’s only a finite amount of: land, iron, workers and years in a lifetime.” – Dr. Walter E. Williams

“The first lesson in economic theory is that we live in a world of scarcity,” explains Dr. Walter E. Williams, an American economist, commentator, academic, and the former John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics at George Mason University, “Scarcity is a situation whereby human wants exceed the means to satisfy those wants.”

Economics is the study of how we use our limited resources (time, money, etc.) to achieve our goals. This definition refers to physical scarcity.

Americans always want more of something, be it: more cars, more food, more love, more happiness, more peace, more health care, more clean air or more charity. Our ability and resources to satisfy all those wants are indeed limited. There’s only a finite amount of: land, iron, workers and years in a lifetime.

Scarcity produces several economic problems: What’s to be produced, who’s going to get it, how’s it to be produced, and when is it to be produced?

There’s simply not enough resources to meet all the competing wants and uses. That means there’s conflict over limited resources and its uses. Basically, there are several methods of conflict resolution.

  • Market mechanism — let the highest bidder be the one who owns and decides how the land will be used.
  • Government fiat, where the government dictates who gets to use the land for what purpose.
  • Gifts might be the way where an owner arbitrarily chooses a recipient.
  • Violence has always been a way to resolve the question of who has the use rights to the coastline — essentially people get weapons and physically fight it out.

Many Americans would say, “Violence is no way to resolve conflict!” On the contrary, the decision of who had the right to use most of the Earth’s resources was settled through violence (wars). Who has the right to the income you earn has been partially settled through the threats of violence. In fact, violence is such an effective means of resolving conflict that most governments want a monopoly on its use.

The pertinent question that arise is what is the best method to resolve conflict issues surrounding the questions of what’s to be produced, how and when it’s produced, and who’s going to get it…is it the market mechanism, government fiat, gifts or violence, ask Dr. Williams.

Federal, state and local tax levies represent government claims on private property of American citizen, explains Dr. Williams.  In other words, taxes represent the government’s legal confiscation and theft of the private property of American citizens.


References:

  1. https://www.capitalismmagazine.com/2005/01/economics-for-the-citizen-part-1/

U.S. Has Vast Quantities of Untapped Oil

Prioritizing climate change and green energy means that Democrats actually like high gas and fossil fuels prices. ~ American Enterprise Institute

The United States is sitting on 264 billion barrels of untapped oil — more than any other country on the planet, according to a new report from Rystad Energy. The vast quantity includes oil in existing fields, new projects, recent discoveries as well as projections in undiscovered fields.

More than half of America’s untapped oil is unconventional shale oil, according to Rystad. Thanks to fracking and the shale oil boom, the U.S. is sitting on more oil reserves than Russia.

Yet, the Biden Administration’s vow to make Saudi Arabia a pariah nation, to reduce the world’s dependence, and to curtail domestic fossil fuels production has made the United States more dependent on energy from foreign sources, writes Marc A. Thiessen, Senior Fellow, American Enterprise Institute. The hostility towards domestic hydrocarbons has also resulted in higher gasoline prices at the pump and in higher prices to generate electricity with natural gas.

Since taking office, the Biden Administration has leased fewer acres of federal land for oil and gas drilling, suspended all oil and gas leases in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and announced plans to block new offshore oil drilling in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

And the Biden Administration might be preparing to implement a ban on exports of gasoline, diesel and other refined petroleum products — a move that energy groups warn would backfire by reducing domestic refining capacity and further raising prices for U.S. consumers, explains Thiessen.

Prioritizing climate change and green energy means that Democrats may actually prefer high gas and fossil fuels prices. Higher gas and fossil fuels prices would encourage Americans to abandon fossil fuels. Rising gas and hydrocarbon prices would theoretically curb and ultimately end Americans use of fossil fuels.


References

  1. https://money.cnn.com/2016/07/05/investing/us-untapped-oil/index.html
  2. Marc A. Thiessen, With So Much Untapped US Oil, Why Does Biden Beg Dictators to Add Production?, The Washington Post, October 08, 2022

Simple Truths about Inflation

Five simple truths embody most of what we know about inflation, according to Milton Friedman, Ph.D, American economist and a Nobel Prize in Economic recipient:

  1. Inflation is a monetary phenomenon arising from a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output (though, of course, the reasons for the increase in money may be various).
  2. In today’s world government determines – or can determine – the quantity of money.
  3. There is only one cure for inflation: a slower rate of increase in the quantity of money.
  4. It takes time – measured in years, not months – for inflation to develop; it takes time for inflation to be cured.
  5. Unpleasant side effects of the cure are unavoidable. 

 

The money supply

The money supply is the stock of money in the economy. It is determined by the roles and uses to which certain physical and financial assets are put.

Money performs a number of roles in our economy. Money functions

  1. as a medium of exchange;
  2. as a unit of account;
  3. as a store of value; and
  4. as a means of making payments inter-temporarily, i.e., over time. Its most obvious role, the one everyone is familiar with, is as a medium of exchange

The Money Aggregates (M1, M2 and M3) are money supply measures are that are meant to reflect differing roles of money;

Money Stock M1 — M1 is made up of notes and coin and several other financial instruments that the general public may not consider to be money. However, the Federal Reserve includes them because they are used as a medium of exchange and thus, on that account, perform a monetary function. Consequently, M1 is composed of currency in the hands of the public, checking accounts at commercial banks, deposit accounts against which checks can be written, and traveler’s checks issued by institutions that are not banks.

Money Stock M2 — M2 is a broader measure of the money supply than M1. It counts as money not only those financial instruments that generally act as a medium of exchange but also act as a store of value, another important function of money. Therefore, M2 includes M1 plus three other types of financial assets. These are (i) savings deposits, including money market deposit accounts; (ii) fixed deposits less than $100,000; and (iii) and retail money market mutual funds.

Money Stock M3 — M3 consisted of time deposits $100,000 and over, repurchase agreements (RPs) larger than $100,000 and longer than one day (called term RPs), and institutional money market mutual fund accounts.

Sometimes, M0 is used to denote central bank money, which consists of coin and currency in circulation, cash in bank vaults, and balances held in reserve accounts at the central bank by commercial banks and other depository institutions. In the U.S., M0 is called the “monetary base (MB).”

MI measures money used as medium of exchange, while M2 measures money used as store of value.


References:

  1. https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/knowledge/economics/milton-friedman/
  2. https://businessterms.org/money-supply/

The War on Fossil Fuels

“Solar and wind power aren’t reliable sources of energy, simply because there are nights, clouds and windless days.” Bjorn Lomborg

“The developed world’s response to the global energy crisis has put its hypocritical attitude toward fossil fuels on display,” writes Bjorn Lomborg. Wealthy countries continue to admonish developing ones to cut their fossil fuels consumption and increase their use renewable energy, he states.

Last month the Group of Seven went so far as to announce they would no longer fund fossil-fuel development abroad.

Meanwhile, in response to the current energy supply constraints, Europe and the U.S. are begging Arab nations, specifically Saudi Arabia, to expand crude oil production. Germany is reopening coal power plants, and Spain and Italy are spending big on African gas production.

Over the past century, the developed world became economically wealthy through the pervasive use fossil fuels, which still overwhelmingly powers most of their economies. Fossil fuels still provide three fourths of wealthy countries’ energy consumption, while solar and wind provide less than 3% combined.

The reality is that solar and wind power aren’t reliable sources of energy, simply because there are nights, clouds and windless days. And, improving battery storage won’t help much: There are currently enough battery storage in the world today only to power global average electricity consumption for 75 seconds. By 2040, the battery storage capacity would cover less than 11 minutes of average global consumption.

The assault on fossil fuels has shrunk U.S. refining capacity and the refinery shortage is driving up fuel prices. Basic economics should inform politicians that “prices rise when supply doesn’t meet demand”.

With oil and gas prices on the New York Mercantile Exchange are at five-year highs, you would expect that it would be in oil and natural-gas companies interest to ramp up production, given the current high prices,.

But, oil and gas companies expect that as soon as the current energy turmoil subsides, the Biden administration will shift back to hostile rhetoric, anti-energy legislative proposals, and oppositional regulatory policies.

By forcing up the price of fossil fuels, policymakers have put the proverbial cart in front of the horse. Instead of driving up fossil fuel prices higher, policymakers need to make green energy much cheaper and more effective.

Humanity has relied on innovation and technological breakthroughs to solve other big challenges. We didn’t solve air pollution by forcing everyone to stop driving but by inventing the catalytic converter that drastically lowers pollution.


References:

  1. https://www.wsj.com/amp/articles/the-rich-worlds-climate-hypocrisy-energy-fossil-fuel-wind-solar-panel-india-poverty-power-battery-storage-11655654331
  2. https://www.wsj.com/amp/articles/is-6-a-gallon-gasoline-next-gas-prices-refining-shortage-fossil-fuels-11654806637
  3. https://www.wsj.com/amp/articles/why-energy-companies-wont-produce-oil-natural-gas-biden-administration-fossil-fuel-inflation-prices-11654720932
  4. https://nypost.com/2022/06/19/fossil-fuel-price-spikes-are-causing-pain-but-little-climate-payoff/

Student Loan Debt Forgiveness…Shifting the Burden to American Taxpayers

Americans collectively owe more than $1.7 trillion in student loan debt, more than three times what it was just 15 years ago.

Many progressive Congressional lawmakers have called for President Biden to forgive all federally owned student loans.

Others lawmakers have argued for up to $50,000 in forgiveness per borrower.

Recent reports suggest the White House is more likely to forgive $10,000 and include an income cap that limits relief to high level borrowers. This more limited approach of forgiving $10,000 would provide relief to people who need it most while ensuring that high-earning borrowers like doctors and lawyers don’t get a bailout.

The White House has also repeatedly extended a pause on loan payments that was put in place by the Trump administration in the early days of the pandemic. That pause has included a freeze on interest, which on its own has saved the average borrower about $5,500, according to one estimate.

Why there’s debate

Supporters of student loan debt forgiveness say the enormous financial burden of loans, many with onerous interest rates, make it impossible for college graduates to get ahead.

Debt relief would directly affect around 43 million Americans. It is believed that forgiving student loan debt would free those people to spend their money on goods and services and would create significant economic benefits for everyone.

Many also argue that debt relief would help reduce racial inequality, since people of color tend to borrow significantly more than their white peers.

Opponents of student debt forgiveness say it would be unfair to the vast majority of Americans who don’t have student debt — particularly those who paid off student loans on their own. Additionally, federal student Liam debt forgiveness doesn’t erase the debt, it only shifts the burden from the borrowers to the American taxpayers, who are already burdened with the tad of inflation.

Some make the case that there are much more effective ways to reduce inequality. Others argue that it would be wasteful to forgive student debt without also taking on the much more difficult task of fixing problems in the higher education system that created the student debt crisis in the first place.

What’s next

If Biden does choose to forgive some student debt, it’s not clear whether the courts will uphold the executive branch’s authority to do so.


References:

  1. https://finance.yahoo.com/student-loan-debt-how-much-should-biden-forgive-213848402.html

Canceling Debt Just Shifts the Burden

Debt is never completely canceled or forgiven, someone (in the case of student loan debt, it would be taxpayers) always pays the debt or incurs the burden.

About 43 million people, according to CNN.com, are waiting to find out if President Joe Biden will wipe away all or part of their federal student loan debt.

President Biden is “taking a hard look” at canceling or forgiving hundreds of billions of dollars in federal student loan debt — a decision his advisers believe would be “a complete disaster” for the Democratic Party in the midterms.

The White House floated loan forgiveness of $10,000 per student borrower. The debt forgiveness would add $245 billion to federal government debt, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

Digging deeper, it appears that the top 40 percent of wage earners hold the majority of student debt and would be the major benefactors of this Presidential Executive Order. Of student-debt holders between the ages of 25 and 40, the top 40 percent bears half of the total debt.

According to the IRS, if you borrow money and are legally obligated to repay a fixed or determinable amount at a future date, you have a debt. You may be personally liable for a debt.

If your debt is forgiven or discharged for less than the full amount you owe, the debt is considered canceled in the amount that you don’t have to pay.

In general, if you have cancellation of debt income because your debt is canceled, forgiven, or discharged for less than the amount you must pay, the amount of the canceled debt is taxable and you must report the canceled debt on your tax return for the year the cancellation occurs.

A majority Americans are opposed to blanket federal student loan debt forgiveness or cancellation. Because, it doesn’t seem fair to them if millions of student loans are forgiven, yet the money to pay the debt is going to have to come from somewhere, and it most likely will be on the backs of the middle class tax payers.

Many Americans made sacrifices so that they and their children could attend college and would not need student loans, largely because they sacrificed and saved enough money to help pay for college costs.

Additionally, many economists opine that you or the government simply cannot cancel debt, you can only move the obligation around. This simple economic principle seems completely loss on many Congressional politicians.

Debt cancellation — it’s a noble yet dangerous concept. Basically, the financial burden may not fall solely on the students with debt. Who would pay for it? Every U.S. taxpayer would pay for this relief. 

So the Executive Order wouldn’t really forgive or cancel debt. It would simply make every American obligated to pay this federal student loan debt they didn’t sign-up for or reap the benefits from.

In short, student loan debts that are forgiven do not go to “debt heaven”. The obligations will fall onto the backs of American taxpayers.


References:

  1. https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2022/06/well_lend_them_more_money_to_pay_the_higher_tuitions.html
  2. https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc431
  3. https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/heres-what-it-would-mean-to-these-americans-if-biden-canceled-student-loan-debt/ar-AAYBK7N?ocid=uxbndlbing
  4. https://www.forbes.com/sites/forbesfinancecouncil/2020/08/06/you-cant-cancel-debt—you-can-only-move-it-around/?sh=7fdfa9c64616

Miscalculating Risk: Confusing Scary With Dangerous | Brian Wesbury, First Trust Economics Blog

“Coronavirus…is the first social media pandemic.”

The coronavirus kills, everyone knows it. But this isn’t the first deadly virus the world has seen, so what happened? Why did we react the way we did? One answer is that this is the first social media pandemic. News and narratives travel in real-time right into our hands.

Brian Wesbury, Chief Economist

This spreads fear in a way we have never experienced. Drastic and historically unprecedented lockdowns of the economy happened and seemed to be accepted with little question.

We think the world is confusing “scary” with “dangerous.” They are not the same thing. It seems many have accepted as fact that coronavirus is one of the scariest things the human race has ever dealt with. But is it the most dangerous? Or even close?

There are four ways to categorize any given reality. It can be scary but not dangerous, scary and dangerous, dangerous but not scary, or not dangerous and not scary.

Clearly, COVID-19 ranks high on the scary scale. A Google news search on the virus brings up over 1.5 billion news results. To date, the virus has tragically killed nearly 100,000 people in the United States, and more lives will be lost. But on a scale of harmless to extremely dangerous, it would still fall into the category of slightly to mildly dangerous for most people, excluding the elderly and those with preexisting medical conditions.

In comparison, many have no idea that heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States, killing around 650,000 people every year, 54,000 per month, or approximately 200,000 people between February and mid-May of this year. This qualifies as extremely dangerous. But most people are not very frightened of it. A Google news search for heart disease brings up around 100 million results, under one-fifteenth the results of the COVID-19 search.

Read more: https://www.ftportfolios.com//blogs/EconBlog/2020/5/26/miscalculating-risk-confusing-scary-with-dangerous


Brian Wesbury is Chief Economist at First Trust Advisors L.P.