All posts by Christopher Angle

About Christopher Angle

I grew up in Elk Grove, California in the 70's and 80's, before moving to Fairfield, California at the age of 14. I assisted in my dad in building the house that we moved into and helped my grandfather with his pumpkin farm. By the age of 16 I was running the business, which consisted of 2 acres of pumpkins. After graduating high school, I expanded the business to 6 acres of pumpkins and ran the business while going to college. I financed my entire undergraduate education through this business. In 1997, I graduated from U.C. Davis with a degree in International Relations and a minor in German. I graduated with honors and was inducted into the academic honor society Phi Beta Kappa. After graduation, I worked for 3 years in South San Francisco for an international freight forwarder. In this capacity, I spent my time organizing air freight shipments around the world. In the summer of 2000, I worked for a company in Zuerich, Switzerland that had an agency agreement with my employer in South San Francisco. In the fall of 2001, I moved to Boston to continue graduate studies at Brandeis University. During this two year program, I spent one semester as an exchange student in Koblenz, Germany. In the spring of 2003, I graduated from Brandeis with a master's degree in International Economics And Finance. After moving back to California, I spent some some looking for work and taking on odd jobs before landing a job as a commercial credit analyst at a local bank. I have spent the last few years in this capacity and am now the Equipment Finance Manager for a bank headquartered in Walnut Creek, California. My professional and life experiences have been varied and unique. I have worked along side illegal alien workers in agriculture, I have worked a minimum wage job in an industrial environment, I have been a banker, a Civil Service Commissioner (Solano County), worked with truck drivers, worked in Switzerland, studied in Germany, been involved in politics, given finance lectures inside the California State Capitol, was involved in a political debate in front of 200 high school kids in the Office Of The California Secretary Of State, and have given a lecture to a high school class in Vallendar, Germany. My hobbies at various times have included basketball (I was on the high school basketball team), chess (I was on the high school chess team), hunting (ducks, rabbits, doves & pigeons), history, & politics. I have extended family around the world in Switzerland, Japan, Canada, Italy, and adopted family in Germany. I also had a step-grandmother, now deceased, from Mexico. My maternal grandfather was born in Canada. In summary, I view life as a buffet from which one should sample as many different things as possible. Only from that does one gain a variety of perspectives through which to view life and the people around you.

Congressional Budget Office: Affordable Care Act Hurts Economic Growth

Watching the problematic rollout of the ACA and the political jockeying that has accompanied it over the last few months has been fascinating as people on various sides of the political spectrum have rushed to put their spin on each new fact that is revealed. Still, the CBO’s report that the ACA would hurt economic growth and the spin from some quarters that slow economic growth may actually be a good thing appears to have caught many people (on both sides of the political aisle) by surprise.

In many ways, it is surprising that the report was as surprising as it was, because the CBO is still seen as a non-partisan arbiter. Those who have been saying for years that the ACA would damage economic growth should have been expecting a report such as this for some time. However, what is even more surprising was the positive face that the White House tried to put on this news. Stating that people now had the option of more free time on their hands as they don’t have to stay working just for the health benefits (also known as ‘job lock) was part of a unique argument. It is not that this is necessarily untrue (although the verdict is still out on that), but the unique part was the implication that lower economic growth resulting from this is a good thing. If people are losing their jobs or if they are deciding not to work because they don’t need a job for health benefits, this cannot possibly be an economic positive. Economic growth, and the associated higher standards of living, occurs when more people work producing more things. To the extent that people are not working (whether voluntary or involuntary), economic growth, living standards, etc all are lower than what they would otherwise be.

Trying to pretend that this is a good thing, especially when we are currently in a problematic employment environment, is fundamentally dishonest from the standpoint that the White House cannot truly believe this. Whether the ACA ends up ultimately being a drag on economic growth in the long run remains to be seen. However, those of certain political persuasions lose credibility when they try and pretend that slow economic is a good thing, and imply that perhaps that this was what the ACA was intended to produce all along.

The Limits Of The GDP Statistic

Last week, GDP numbers were released showing that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.2% in the 4th quarter. This follows an expansion of 4.1% in the 3rd quarter. Overall, the last 6 months of the year show an economy expanding at its best rate since 2003. In fact, the numbers are so good that the Fed is continuing to unwind the extraordinary measures that it put in place after the financial crisis to prop up the economy. Although this is certainly good news, one is still left with the sense that there is still something wrong with the economy in spite of the numbers.

One must take note that while the unemployment rate recently dropped to 6.7%, this was largely due to people leaving the labor force. Since 2008, America’s GDP has increased by $1.7 trillion dollars (12.34%) and yet the number of people employed has increased by only 7.5%. While about 10 million more people are employed today than was the case in 2008, the American population has expanded by 12 million. While this might seem okay, consider that there are roughly 2 million fewer people in the labor force now than when the population was 12 million less. This situation points to an extraordinary pool of discouraged workers who have dropped out of the labor force.

What all of this implies is that the GDP statistic as a measure of national prosperity appears to perhaps be reaching some limits. In the post-war period, rising GDP numbers pointed to broadly rising prosperity for most Americans. Today, while a rising GDP number is better than a falling one, it doesn’t necessarily mean what it once did. In earlier generations, rising GDP may have been more visible to most people. A recent poll revealed that 74% of Americans think that the U.S. is still in a recession. This is incredible!! What would cause a result such as this? It can’t be that these folks are looking at their investments and drawing this conclusion as the stock market has been on a tear over the last year. It certainly can’t be that 74% of Americans are listening to Republicans and conservative media outlets describing how terrible the economy is. The only thing that can truly explain a number like this (barring an epically inaccurate poll) is that what 74% Americans are seeing in their own lives and in the lives of people that they know is more consistent with a recession than with an expansion (even an anemic one).

If true, the political usefulness of the GDP statistic may be different going forward than has traditionally been the case. While a rising tide in the post-war period did traditionally lift all boats, that general rule may no longer apply. If so, while the GDP statistic may continue to be useful for stock market investors and others, it may no longer be useful as a gage of prosperity for a broad swath of the population. New measures will have to be found.

Will China Really Overtake The U.S. Economically?

Over the last decade or so, it has become conventional wisdom that the U.S. is doomed to lose its status as the world’s largest economy, and that the 21st century will belong to the dragon in Asia. China, perhaps feeling the inevitability of its rise has become much more assertive in the geopolitical arena, even going so far as to declare a no-fly zone late last year. But there are reasons to doubt the conventional wisdom. In fact, while some not so long ago were predicting that China would overtake the U.S. by 2016/2017, some now believe that it may not happen until 2028 or later. China faces certain headwinds before they can become the world’s largest economy such as:

1.)    Over the last few years, China has undertaking massive infrastructure and building projects. However, reports out of China are beginning to indicate that there has been massive overbuilding and that many buildings stand empty. What this means is that Chinese banks are likely sitting on billions of dollars of bad loans. While this may not mean that the Chinese economy is going to collapse, a massive economic slowdown cannot be ruled out which would put off the day that the Chinese pass the U.S.

2.)    The shale boom in the U.S. has dropped the cost of energy in the U.S., leading many energy intensive manufacturing industries to view the U.S. as a place to “re-shore” production. Even more amazing, the U.S. is projected to surpass Saudi Arabia as the world’s #1 oil producer in a couple of years. A future U.S. administration more friendly to fossil fuels (approving the Keystone oil pipeline for example) would likely lead to more cheap energy increasing the attractiveness of the U.S. as a manufacturing location relative to China. While nobody is predicting that the situation will return to what it was in the 1950’s when the U.S. had more than 50% of the world’s manufacturing capacity and China had none, the increased manufacturing footprint in the U.S. will slow China’s economic rise relative to the U.S.

3.)    China is suffering its own bout of off-shoring. Wages have risen in China relative to surrounding countries that some production is off-shoring to Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, and even Mexico as the economic recovery in the U.S. has increased the attractiveness of locating manufacturing near there. While China isn’t going to lose its title of “Workshop Of The World” to these countries, it isn’t a positive thing for China that companies are moving manufacturing away.

4.)    China is facing a large demographic problem. Put simply, the one-child policy that China has had for a generation has created a society that is aging rapidly. Further exacerbating this is that the Chinese cultural preference for male children meant that there is estimated to be(as was reported a few years ago) around 50 million Chinese men for whom there is no corresponding Chinese woman. The upshot is that Chinese are now facing a declining labor force. Historically, demographic developments such as this have tended to result in slowing of extraordinary economic growth rates. True, the U.S. is facing its own demographic challenges. However, the U.S. has historically been the preferred destination of immigrants, which could mitigate some of these effects.

5.)    The last major hurdle I will mention is the data itself. Those who predict that China will overtake the U.S. are largely taking Chinese economic data at face value. While nobody doubts that the Chinese economy has come a long way in the last 30 years (the evidence is there on the Shanghai skyline and various other industrialized cities around China), China claims that real economic growth has only been less than 7% in 2 of the last 30 years. Is this realistic? Perhaps. However, a government whose legitimacy rests on providing stellar economic growth rates would not likely shrink from padding the numbers here or there. The absence of an effective opposition in China makes the likelihood of such slight “exaggeration” over time more, not less, likely. Even a very slight exaggeration in growth rates, if carried out over a generation, would result in today’s official Chinese GDP numbers being substantially different than the reality. While I am not asserting that this is, in fact, the case, the possibility that the Chinese have been fudging the economic numbers should not be completely ruled out either.

In conclusion, perhaps it may be inevitable the Chinese will overtake the U.S. as the number 1 economy. However, there are still several headwinds that China must overcome to get there. If they fail to navigate these challenges competently, they may find their dream of being the number one economy deferred far into the future.

The Case For National Sales Tax & Reining In IRS

Over the last week, the FBI indicated that it was not going to bring criminal charges in the matter of the IRS allegedly targeting Tea Party and other conservative groups. It appears that this determination was made without even interviewing any of the alleged victims. Whatever the truth of the harassment allegations (and the actions of the government since the story broke gives the impression of some sort of a cover-up), the fact that there is now serious doubt about the impartiality of the IRS in political fights serves to undermine our system of voluntary tax compliance on which our entire governing apparatus depends.

In addition to this, it is also worth noting that America spends over $100 billion dollars per year on compliance with the byzantine tax code. When one considers that the ultimate goal of taxation is to move money from one place (the populace) to another place (government coffers), this is an extremely inefficient way of doing it. This $100 billion is a dead-weight loss (in economist-speak) to the economy.

Replacing the current income tax code with a national sales tax would have a couple of benefits. Firstly, it would allow us to collect the same amount of revenue as we currently do (the rate could be set to ensure this outcome), without effectively torching $100 billion dollars in economic output to do it. Since America’s companies would be collecting the revenue, tax compliance rates would tend to approach 100%. This system would be able to be administered for a fraction of the cost of the current system.

Secondly, it would prevent the government from using the tax code to micro-manage the economy, as well as remove the appearance of using the tax code to suppress political opponents. This perception, if allowed to continue, could eventually grow to the point where massive non-compliance with tax law could become a problem. An agency that comes to be seen as a partisan political actor, will cease to be seen as legitimate by a certain fraction of the population. A government that allows these activities to continue will also cease to be seen as legitimate. While one might suppose that harsh sanctions and jail time might deter would-be tax cheats (and currently it seems to be doing an okay job as of this writing), a situation where 10 million taxpayers felt put upon, suppressed and decided not to file taxes would not be one that the IRS could cope with. Just as the U.S. isn’t going to round up 10 million illegal aliens and deport them, it would simply not be logistically (or likely politically) feasible to jail 10 million otherwise law-abiding taxpayers.  By basically removing much of the IRS’ power, you remove the danger that the other side decides the use the agency to settle political scores when its’ turn in power comes (and in a democracy split 50/50, the other side’s turn always comes eventually).

For all of these reasons, it is time to start considering an alternate tax system; one that doesn’t have a large role for the current IRS.

 

Potential Political & Economic Consequences Of Declining Labor Force Participation

On Friday, January 9th, a disappointing jobs report came out showing only 74k new jobs were created in December, instead of the more than 200,000 that economists were expecting. While the unemployment rate fell to 6.7%, the lowest since 2008, this was due to more people leaving the labor force. The decline in the labor force participation rate in December ( 62.8%) resulted in this statistic reaching a level last seen in 1978. While some would like to lay this impact at Obama’s door (and as President for the last 5 years, he is not blameless), the fact is that the labor force participation rate has been falling since peaking in 2000 at around 67.3%. Clearly something else is going on than just the Obama Administration. And whatever is going on is not likely to be politically insignificant.

If one looks at the numbers, one will find that 63 million were not in the labor force in 1990. Today, 91 million are not in the labor force. If labor force participation rate were 66.3% (as in 1990, around the same time as another recession), there would be 8.8 million more people in the labor force today. This number represents 2.8% of the U.S. population; a segment that has just given up. To put this into perspective, if we were to have a war that killed the same percentage of our population as WWII did, we would be looking at about 1 million dead (i.e. they would have “dropped out” of the labor force). The effects of the last 20 years are as if we had a foreign war that was almost 9 times as bloody as WWII. This is a tremendous amount of lost output, and an additional strain on our social welfare system.

Unlike those who are disparaged in some quarters as lazy, these dropouts are not lazy, but more likely depressed. They are the sort of people who have tried, failed, and have been beaten down. When one is unemployed for long periods, one simply stagnates. For the ones who had skills once upon a time, their skills degrade. Even if they are able to claw their way back into the labor force somehow (an outcome by no means guaranteed), their life path has been irreversibly altered. They will most likely never enjoy the success that they could have had, and the economy will not benefit from the wealth that they could have created under other circumstances. In short, some of the human capital that they possessed, a major factor in economic growth and societal prosperity, has been irretrievably lost.

Long-term politically, this may not be an insignificant development. A person who has tried hard, failed, and given up is a person who has lost faith in the American system. This alienation may take several forms, none of them good. A person who feels that a system has failed him may not support or defend that system and support people promising radical solutions.  Or the person may become a permanent welfare case, maintaining that he is owed this support by a system that has failed him (and vote accordingly). Or in extreme cases, such a person may even turn to violence as an expression of frustration. While these 8.8 million people are not going to overthrow a system supported by the other 309 million Americans, the fact is that recent years have seen many indications that more and more Americans are feeling alienated, one of the most prominent expressions of this being the Tea Party. If present trends continue and the economy continues to struggle to create jobs for a growing population, this 8.8 million group is going to grow. If left unchecked, this segment could potentially grow to the point that it would be a challenge to social stability. The good news is that such an outcome is not pre-ordained. The economy could start creating jobs again and this trend could be reversed. Policies that drastically reduce the regulatory burden on businesses enabling them to grow faster and hire more people would be a step in the right direction. Only time will tell.

New Year’s Resolution

As we head into the new year, people are making resolutions which will promptly be forgotten within a few days (hours) as more comfortable (for them) and routine behavior sets in. The reason for this is that apart from habits being comfortable (they wouldn’t be habits otherwise), the commitment to change is usually a commitment to obtain a result rather than a commitment to the process that would obtain the result. For example, a resolution to “lose 20 pounds” is not the same as a commitment to “spend one hour at the gym every day while maintaining my current intake of food”. One is a goal (and once one obtains that goal, then one goes back to the old habits with the same result), and the other is a habit. Without changing the habit, the accomplishment of the goal will not be permanent.

What is an appropriate New Year’s resolution for badass? In short, to be financially independent. Think of almost every movie badass out there. He/She is independent. Nobody is out there crying for help, or begging someone to put their own interests aside to come to his/her rescue. Can you imagine John Wayne whining about not having an adequate retirement because of a bunch of jerks who crashed the Social Security Program? How about Clint Eastwood crying for a bail-out because of his own irresponsibility? True, these actors portrayed an ideal, but it was (and is) an ideal worth pursuing; that of independence.

In order to be independent, one must have money and not be dependent on others. In other words, one must save money, save more money, and save even more money. In my upcoming book “You, Inc.”, I talk about how to achieve personal financial independence. At its heart is the act of saving money. For many people, it requires a change of mindset. It requires a mindset that says, “I don’t care what happens to Social Security, I am going to save enough money so that I will be okay whatever happens”. The year 2014 is sure to be bumpy. The world is a dangerous place and the economy, while improving, is still not what I would describe as smooth. Becoming a saver and taking control of your financial destiny will eventually lead to that most badass of badass qualities: financial independence.

Happy New Year.

 

Slow Growth For A Generation?

Over the last 5 years, while the stock market has fully recovered from the financial meltdown and then some, a significant fraction of America has remained convinced that we are still in a recession. While the official employment rate has come down to around 7%, improvement has often come in part due to people giving up looking for work, rather than employment actually increasing. Economic growth, while real, has been sluggish, as opposed to the more spectacular growth rates seen coming out of previous recessions. What has caused this, and will America ever return to the growth rates with rising
standards of living that generations of Americans have come to expect?

The first issue is that the ‘Great Recession’ was caused by a financial/banking crisis, rather than a cyclical recession. Recessions caused by a banking crisis tend to be more severe and the recovery more sluggish than typical cyclical recessions of the sort experienced by most Americans prior to 2008. In this way, the sluggish recovery is not simply a product of Barack Obama. A President McCain or a President Romney would have presided over a sluggish recovery as well. Exactly how sluggish is a matter of conjecture, but commentators would have been dubbing it ‘the worst recovery in post-war history’ in any case.

The second broad issue going forward is that America (and the West in general) is facing some secular economic headwinds that it has not had in the past. First among these is the aging of society. As a society gets older, the portion of the population that has to be “carried” by the rest of society increases and creates an economic drag (money spent to sustain the elderly is not available to fund an expansion of the productive economic base of society, such as more industrial machinery for example). A second headwind is that the economy is not producing enough jobs to keep pace with the number people coming out of college and entering the labor force. The result is often people moving back in with their parents or scraping by in jobs that they are over-qualified for (under-employed). This too is a drag on the economy and a loss of economic potential.

The third major issue, which is related to the prior paragraph, is that a large fraction of the American population is currently engaged in economically unproductive activity. I am not just talking about retirees, unemployed, and welfare recipients, but rather people who work (sometimes work very hard) in areas that add little to no economic value. For example, take federal tax compliance. Americans spend over $100 billion dollars a year in tax compliance, from companies that help people fill out simple tax forms, tax attorneys, tax accountants, IRS clerks, etc etc. This money is spent to simply move dollars from the taxpayer to the Treasury. Simply throwing out the tax code and instituting a national sales tax in its place would produce the same result at a fraction of the cost. Almost this entire industry is economically unproductive. And this is just one example. As America has moved from an industrial economy that makes things to a post-industrial service-based economy, the fraction of the labor-force engaged in economically unproductive activities has increased. Going forward, this also will continue to be a drag on the economy.

To sum up, the American economy has certain headwinds that are secular in nature and have been decades in the making. Furthermore, some of these issues are really beyond the ability of policy-makers to address in a politically relevant (to them) time horizon. While the negative economic impact of the financial/banking crisis will fade as we move forward and the numbers should improve, the long-term secular problems will remain and will likely continue to make economic expansions less satisfying and feel less “spectacular” than what our parents and grandparents were used to.

Will California Be 6 States?

On December 20, 2013, the Business Insider reported that venture capitalist Tim Draper is trying to float an initiative in California that would split the state into 6 political entities. While Mr. Draper’s dream has little chance of being realized in the short term, his initiative is a pragmatic reaction to what is becoming increasingly clear: namely that California is too big and too diverse to govern effectively.

The reason for this is that California’s population is largely concentrated in 2 highly-urbanized enclaves. Life in these enclaves looks different than it does in more rural parts of the state. For example, environmental regulations that make sense to tech workers and academics in the Bay Area who worry (rightly or wrongly) about climate-change, rob good-paying manufacturing jobs from people in less populous and less affluent parts of the state. Whatever the merits or demerits of these regulations, the cost is borne by people outside of these urban enclaves who didn’t vote for them and lack the population and the political power to do anything about them. The recent vote in two Northern California counties to at least start looking at secession options is an indication that certain parts of the state don’t feel that they are being adequately represented. When your county could vote 100% for something and have it not mean anything, is there really any difference between this and simply having your right to vote formally revoked?

Representative democracy, at the time that this country was founded, was being tried in a country whose citizens had similar day-to-day life experiences, whatever else their individual political and economic interests might have been. Today, someone who lives in downtown San Francisco might as well be on a different planet from someone who lives in a small town in the Central Valley. What is more, those in one world tend not to mix with those in the other world, and so each group’s concerns appear illegitimate and ‘crazy’ to the other group (in an upcoming book, ‘I Want A Divorce-Why America Needs To Go Its’ Separate Ways’, I examine this on a national level). Another way to look at it is that 5 San Francisco Bay Area counties plus Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, San Bernadino, and Riverside counties account for 68% of the population in California. If you add in Sacramento County, the number rises to 72%. Also, I would point out that 22 of the 58 counties in California have populations less than 100,000.  The average person in one of the eleven ‘urban’ counties can’t really have much in common with the average person in one of the 22 ‘rural’ counties. What is more, the 22 ‘rural’ counties wouldn’t even likely have much impact if they voted 100% for something. In short, they have no voice.

The resolution for 6 Californias is a proposal that is attempting to address a real problem. It is questionable as to whether a state can be said to truly consist entirely of free citizens if people concentrated in one part of the territory can impose costs on those who live far away from them and differently from them, without the consent of those who will be made to bear the cost. While this state of affairs did not arise overnight and is not necessarily the fault of any individual politician, it is a problem and one that will eventually need to be addressed. Whether ‘6 Californias’ is the right solution or not is certainly debatable. However, proposals such as this one will continue to be brought up, until some sort of answer is found.