Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Public Unions Reject Sweetheart Deal in Connecticut, 7,500 Layoffs Coming Up
- Biggest Banks Must Hold 2.5 Percentage Points More Capital in Basel Accord; Many banks “Vigorously Lobby” Against Branding as Systemically Important
- Expect Chaos
Public Unions Reject Sweetheart Deal in Connecticut, 7,500 Layoffs Coming Up Posted: 25 Jun 2011 11:01 AM PDT I am constantly in awe of the blatant stupidity of rank-and-file public union workers. In Connecticut, AFSCME and other public unions voted down a proposal negotiated over many months that contained a "no layoff" clause for 4 years in return for a pay freeze for 2 years. That was an amazingly generous offer. The state was silly to offer it. Nonetheless, Union Deal Shot Down; Malloy Pledges To Cut Close To 7,500 State Workers Gov. Dannel P. Malloy said Friday that he was moving "full steam ahead'' with plans to lay off 7,500 state employees, as leaders of the AFSCME union announced that their members had officially rejected a savings and concession deal that would have given them layoff protection for four years.Reflections on Good Public Policy Malloy was elected governor primarily on the back of votes from labor unions. That explains the sweetheart deal offer. Union stupidity explains why the deal was rejected. A good deal for taxpayers in Connecticut would be to get rid of unions, not guarantee no layoffs for 4 years. Malloy says "Listen, I don't want to be laying off 7,500 people or more. I think it's bad for the economy. I think it's bad public policy." Mish says laying off 7,500 public union workers is good public policy and good for the economy. Indeed, firing 100% of them would be the ultimate in good public policy. There is not a damn thing that public unions workers can do cheaper or better than private industry. Taxpayers foot the bill for the difference. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 25 Jun 2011 09:35 AM PDT The first big dream of every bank is to become too-big-to-fail. The second big dream is to avoid capital constraints that now go along with that designation. Please consider Biggest Banks Must Hold 2.5 Percentage Points More Capital in Basel Accord Global regulators said banks deemed too big to fail must hold as much as 2.5 percentage points in additional capital as part of efforts to prevent another financial crisis.Banks Already Capital Constrained Banks are already capital constrained. That is the primary reason they are not lending. Nonetheless, this is a small but important step in the right direction, assuming it sticks. Too-big-to-fail is the same thing as too-big. Moreover, banks should be banks, not trading vehicles. Bank of America has billions of dollars worth of exposure writing credit default swaps on Greek debt. That trade was a big winner in 2010, but seems to be blowing up in Bank of America's face right now. Please see Emergency Session Fails; Market Calls Trichet's Bluff; French Banks Under Downgrade Review; ECB Divorced From Reality; What is US Exposure to EU Mess? for details. Writing credit default swaps may or may not be lucrative, but banks have no business doing it. Bank of America and Citigroup should be busted apart. Goldman Sachs should not be a bank or a bank holding company at all. So why is Goldman a bank holding company? Because it suits the Fed's manipulative purposes, that's why. Of course, the proper thing to do is kill fractional reserve banking totally, but any steps in that direction are welcome. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 25 Jun 2011 08:36 AM PDT I remain amused by the complete silliness of statements coming from ECB officials. At best ECB proclamations are laughable, at worst they are completely counterproductive. With that introduction, please consider ECB's Mersch says Greek default would bring "chaos" European Central Bank Governing Council member Yves Mersch said on Saturday a Greek sovereign debt default would lead to chaos, adding it was up to the parliament to deliver on its austerity promises.Greece Default Irrelevant Here is a succinct summation of the current state of Euro-Zone affairs.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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