মঙ্গলবার, ৩১ জুলাই, ২০১২

China to land first moon probe next year

China has said it will land an exploratory craft on the moon for the first time next year, as part of an ambitious space programme that includes a long-term plan to put a man on the moon.

China's third lunar probe will blast off in the second half of 2013 and attempt to land and transmit back a survey of the moon's surface, state television reported late Monday.

If it succeeds, experts said it would be the first craft to land on the moon as part of a mission -- as opposed to performing a controlled crash landing at the end of one -- since the Soviet space programme achieved the feat in the 1970s.

"They (China) want a space programme that can be considered one of the finest in the world," said Morris Jones, an independent space analyst based in Sydney, Australia.

"If you want to be world leader in space, then you have to do missions like this."

The landing planned for next year would be China's first on the lunar surface and mark a new milestone in its space development. It is part of a project to orbit, land on and return from the moon, the official Xinhua news agency said.

Beijing sees its multi-billion-dollar space programme as a symbol of its rising global stature, growing technical expertise, and the Communist Party's success in turning around the fortunes of the once poverty-stricken nation.

The Asian superpower has been ramping up its manned activities as the United States, long the leader in the field, has scaled back some of its programmes, such as retiring its iconic space shuttle fleet.

In its last white paper on space, China said it was working towards landing a man on the moon -- a feat so far only achieved by the United States, most recently in 1972 -- although it did not give a time frame.

It has spent about 39 billion yuan ($6.1 billion) on its manned space programme since it began 20 years ago, state media have said.

Most recently, a 13-day voyage of the Shenzhou-9 spacecraft became China's longest-ever space mission and was notable for including the nation's first woman astronaut among its three-member crew.

The crew also achieved China's first manual docking with an orbital module, the Tiangong-1, a highly complex manoeuvre first conducted by the Americans in the 1960s and essential to building a permanent manned space station.

The first key achievement in that programme came in 1999 with the launch of the unmanned Shenzhou-1 craft.

Two years later, Shenzhou-2 lifted off carrying small animals, and in 2003, China sent its first man into space. Since then, it has completed a space walk in 2008 and an unmanned docking between a module and rocket last year.

Next year's planned lunar probe launch will follow the Chang'e 1 in 2007 and Chang'e 2 in 2010, both named for the Chinese goddess of the moon.

Xinhua quoted the State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense as saying the project was proceeding smoothly.

"I think it's well within China's capability and budget," Chen Lan, an independent space analyst, told AFP of next year's planned mission.

He said, however, that the third stage that calls for landing and then returning from the moon would require further technical progress in launch capability.

Chen said he envisions a timeframe of 2015-2016 for China to be ready to carry out that mission. But he did not see a manned mission to the moon as China's near-term objective.

"It's not a technical decision," he said. "It's a political decision."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-land-first-moon-probe-state-media-054640495.html

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HTC closes office in South Korea following slow sales

Android Central

HTC has announced it is to close its office in South Korea, according to reports from Korean news agency Yonhap?. The move reportedly follows slow sales of HTC's smartphones in the country, and continuing difficulty in competing with Samsung in its own back yard.

In a market dominated by domestic manufacturers, analysts at Canalys estimate HTC had just one percent market share in South Korea in the first quarter of the year, down from two percent in 2011. By comparison, a recent report from Korea's ?MK? news site estimated up to a 70 percent share of the Korean market for Samsung by the end of July, following the recent Galaxy S3 launch in the country.

HTC has taken a beating in terms of profits and market share over the past six months, after it saw record earnings in 2011. The Taiwanese manufacturer saw a 57.8 percent year-on-year fall in net profits during the second quarter of 2012, a situation it blamed on lackluster European sales of the HTC One series, in addition to litigation from Apple which briefly delayed the phones' U.S. launch.

Source: Yonhap; via: ZDNet



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/5EOQCxfBoTE/story01.htm

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Pierogie board - Family Woodworking

I had never heard of a pierogie board, but my neighbour's wife, who is of Ukrainian descent, asked me last year if I could make one. She showed me a picture, and I slowly got started on it. You wouldn't think it would take that long, but with work, other projects, winter, health issues and necessities for SWMBO, as well as my inexperience with rabbett joints, I wrapped it up today, finished it with mineral oil, and took it over to her. She was over the Moon about it. Thinks it's wonderful. Her husband says that I got more hugs and kisses from her than he'd had all week. Anyway, next time I have to make a rabbett joint, it will go quickly. I have a feeling some of her relatives are going to ask me for one.

The board is a birch panel that I purchased ready made. The cleats at the end, which keep the board against the counter, are cherry.Glued together, no hardware.

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Lessons learned: use a good router bit, not a cheap one; think really hard about the reason the joint isn't fitting, it may not be what you assume is wrong; relax, you can do it over if it doesn't come out right the first time.

Source: http://familywoodworking.org/forums/showthread.php?28091-Pierogie-board

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সোমবার, ৩০ জুলাই, ২০১২

Fast And Healthy Weight Loss | Fitness. | How Can You Lose Weight

?

Fast and healthy weight loss is the top goal for people attempting to lose weight. There are so many quick fixes and fad diets available that overweight people become confused. They want to not only look and feel better, but alsohave a healthier future. They know that a healthy weight decreases their chances of developing serious health risks such as heart disease or diabetes. But how do they achieve these goals?

If you have tried all the fad diets and none were successful dont be discouraged. The key is that you need to go with weight loss plan that is fast and healthy so you are encouraged to stay on it.You need to avoid common diet pitfalls and make lasting lifestyle changes that can help you find long-term, healthy weight loss success.

Diets, especially fad diets or quick-fix weight loss programs, often set you up for failure because:

You feel deprived.

You plateau after losing a few pounds.

You lose weight, but cant keep it off.

After your diet, you seem to put on weight more quickly.

You lose money faster than you lose weight.

You crave all the bad foods and cant wait to start eating them again.

While fad diets and fasting may help you to fast weight loss, these methods can result in muscle wasting, loss of hair and illness.

Many people think that fast, safe and healthy weight loss is difficult to achieve, and that the only way to lose weight fast is by starving. That is not the case if you have the know-how. There is a new trend in the weight loss world that has everyone talking. It is a modern way to eliminate fats in our body. HCG (Human Chorionic Gondadotopin) is a naturally occurring hormone that makes losing weight simple, quick and safe. With this new supplement, people can rapidly lose fat in a short period of time.

The hormone eats stored fat rather than muscle and water. It tricks the body into thinking that it is getting more calories than it really is. It resets the metabolism of the human body. As a result many people who have completed the diet with HCG do not gain the weight back. It is actually possible to burn off one to two lbs every day without having to spend hours at the gym or fitness centre. This is also good for your wallet!

SOS Slender and SOS Slim are HCG drops that I can highly recommend because they are safe and natural with no side effects. While you follow a low calorie diet and take the drops you will find that the HCG hormone breaks down the stored fat and acts as an appetite suppressant and eliminates hunger pains. Thisweight loss plan works because the hormone signals the brain to release the stored fats into the blood stream while providing energy to the body.

Fast healthy weight loss with SOS Slender and SOS Slim is the answer for every person attempting to lose weight in a quick and healthy way.

Jay Peavler has always been someone with a passion to help people. After discovering in his 20?s that it definitely pays to buy quality products,he also became passionate about researching products to find the very best. His articles will be a combination of those two passions. He will strive to find the best tips and the most helpful information for you to make your life easier and better.

You can find out more about SOS Slender and SOS Slim by going to:
http://www.lylico.com/slim

More How Do I lose weight Fast And Healthy Articles


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Source: http://howcanyouloseweighttoday.com/2012/07/30/fast-and-healthy-weight-loss-fitness/

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Keeping Youth Active on the Ice | Hockey Agent | Hockey Sports ...

Posted by Scott Norton on Sunday, July 29, 2012 ? Leave a Comment?

Village of Endicott, NY (WBNG Binghamton) Some pro hockey players take on a different sport to raise money for a local community group.

Johnson City native Jerry D?Amigo of the AHL?s Toronto Marlies was joined by Philadelphia Flyers? Tom Sestito and others in trading in the sticks for nine irons at En Joie this afternoon.

It?s all for the group called S.C.O.R.E (Skating Community for Opportunities in Recreation and Enrichment), which is raising money to build a local ice rink and community center in Endicott.

?It?s a great cause. It?s for a great thing and I?m glad to be out here golfing and it?s on a beautiful course, so why not,? said D?Amigo.

?Grippen Park provided so much recreation and activities for kids for years here in this part of Endicott, Western Broome. We?re trying to recreate that with our own community grass roots project,? said President Jim Tofte.

The event concluded Friday evening with a block party. Featured auction items included a signed NHL All Star Jersey and autographed Barry Sanders Jersey.

Source: http://nortonsports.com/keeping-youth-active-on-the-ice/

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Getting to Your Whole Potential ? Self-Empowerment | Soft Skills ...

WordPress.com

This blog has been archived or suspended for a violation of our Terms of Service.
For questions or concerns, contact WordPress.com Support.

Freshly Pressed: The best of 430,168 bloggers, 943,008 new posts, 1,050,338 comments, & 234,074,643 words posted today on WordPress.com.

Source: http://selfempowermentdaily.wordpress.com/2012/07/29/getting-to-your-whole-potential/

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রবিবার, ২৯ জুলাই, ২০১২

US cruises to lead in men's gymnastics qualifying


Essential News from The Associated Press

? ?Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-07-28-OLY-GYM-Men's-Qualifying/id-14596722ba9d4f1dba31e8483a6f9e24

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Romney can expect warm Israeli reception

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks to reporters in front of 10 Downing Street after meeting with British Prime Minister David Cameron in London, Thursday, July 26, 2012. (AP PhotoCharles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks to reporters in front of 10 Downing Street after meeting with British Prime Minister David Cameron in London, Thursday, July 26, 2012. (AP PhotoCharles Dharapak)

U.S. Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney, left, and his wife Ann arrive for the Opening Ceremony at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Friday, July 27, 2012, in London. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

FILE - In this Jan. 22, 2008 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks to the Republican Jewish Coalition of Florida in Boca Raton, Fla. Mitt Romney is trying to win over a tiny sliver of a small _ but powerful _ section of the American electorate on a trip to Israel. President Barack Obama is doing the same at home. Romney?s international trip is unlikely to change the broader campaign with Obama but Romney is looking to close the gap among a Jewish electorate. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

Avoiding a traffic jam, Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney is recognized by a bystander as he walks down Grosvenor Place to meet Ireland's Prime Minister Enda Kenny at the Embassy of Ireland in London, Friday, July 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Avoiding a traffic jam, Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney walks down Grosvenor Place in London to meet Ireland's Prime Minister Enda Kenny at the Embassy of Ireland in London, Friday, July 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

(AP) ? Mitt Romney's support for Israel will likely earn the presumptive Republican presidential nominee a warm welcome from Israeli leaders when he visits on Sunday - and a frosty reception from Palestinians, who fear he would do little to advance their stalled statehood dreams.

Romney is visiting Israel as part of a three-nation foreign tour that includes Britain and Poland. He hopes it will boost his credentials to direct U.S. national security and diplomacy.

The visit to Israel comes at a time when its leaders are weighing a military attack on Iran, the neighboring regime in Syria is looking increasingly shaky and Mideast peace talks are going nowhere.

Romney, a longtime friend of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, is expected to play up his critique of President Barack Obama's posture toward the Jewish state and his handling of Iran's suspected nuclear weapons ambitions.

Israeli political scientist Abraham Diskin says Romney can expect an "enthusiastic" reception, both because of his solid record of pro-Israel comments - and because he's not Obama.

"What interests Israelis is Israel," Diskin said. "Romney has a very pro-Israel stance. He is very suspicious of the Arab world. (Israelis) are very suspicious of Obama."

In an effort to upstage Romney a day before he landed in Israel, the White House announced it was signing legislation expanding military and civilian cooperation with Israel.

Still, with polls showing a close race, Romney hopes this showcase for his pro-Israel stance will help him to woo votes from traditionally Democratic Jewish voters and evangelical Christians who zealously defend Israeli government policy. Obama has not visited Israel since he became president.

Romney already has stumbled in his first international swing as presidential contender by suggesting that British officials might not be prepared to pull off a successful Olympics. In an interview with NBC News, he called London's problems with games preparation "disconcerting," and the remark sparked sharp responses from Britain's top officials. Romney attended swimming events in London on Saturday morning ahead of his planned flight to Tel Aviv.

In Israel, Romney will be meeting with Netanyahu, Defense Minister Ehud Barak, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, President Shimon Peres and Israeli opposition leaders.

He will not see Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Abbas aide Nimr Hamad said, though he will be sitting down with the Palestinian prime minister, Salam Fayyad, in Jerusalem. The Romney campaign said the likely GOP nominee only had time in his schedule to meet with one Palestinian leader and that Fayyad has an existing relationship with Romney. The Abbas camp did not offer an explanation for why no meeting was planned.

Romney's relationship with the U.S.-educated Netanyahu dates back decades, when they briefly overlapped in the 1970s at Boston Consulting Group, and the two men share conservative outlooks. A Romney bankroller, Sheldon Adelson, is financing a free Israeli newspaper that reflects Netanyahu's views.

Netanyahu has refused to endorse either presidential candidate, although his ties with Obama have been fraught.

"I will receive Mitt Romney with the same openness that I received another presidential candidate, then-Senator Barack Obama, when he came almost four years ago, almost the same time in the campaign, to Israel," he said when asked about the visit last Sunday on Fox News. "We extend bipartisan hospitality to both Democrats and Republicans."

Romney ? like most politicians who make the trek to Israel ? is likely to face questions such as whether he would endorse calls by some fellow Republicans to move the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and his stance on Israeli calls for Washington to release convicted spy Jonathan Pollard.

Romney has consistently accused Obama of putting too much pressure on Israel to make concessions to the Palestinians and of being too weak on Iran. He says he wants to present a clearer military threat to the Islamic Republic, with a stronger naval presence in the Gulf. Tehran denies it is seeking nuclear weapons.

At a war veterans' convention in Nevada this week, Romney accused Obama of being "fond of lecturing Israel's leaders."

"He has undermined their position, which was tough enough as it was," Romney said. The "people of Israel deserve better than what they have received from the leader of the free world."

Obama rejects the criticism and points to unprecedented security cooperation with the Jewish state.

Three years after he came into office with Israeli-Palestinian peace at the top of his foreign policy priorities, Obama recently acknowledged that his efforts there have failed. Peace talks have been deadlocked more than three years.

Obama, who tried to persuade the Arab world that he was an honest broker, lost the Palestinians' trust by refusing to follow up tough talk with action when Israel defied his call to halt settlement construction on occupied land Palestinians seek for a future state.

The Palestinian leadership in the West Bank has refused to resume negotiations without a settlement construction freeze and went ahead with a statehood campaign at the United Nations, over the president's objections.

Palestinians fear Romney would be softer on Israel than Obama. Palestinian politician Hanan Ashrawi said that would doom any chance for resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and establishing a Palestinian state on lands Israel captured in the 1967 war.

"American foreign policy in the region is shaped by Israel and determined by what's good for Israel, and not even what's good for the U.S.," Ashrawi complained.

Romney "will probably try to take it a notch higher," she said, and if the U.S. refuses to put any pressure on Israel, "then there's no chance for peace."

Obama's tense relations with Netanyahu have created the perception that U.S.-Israeli relations have deteriorated. During one of Netanyahu's White House visits, Obama extended none of the trappings, like a joint news conference, usually accorded to an important ally.

__

Associated Press writer Kasie Hunt in London contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-07-28-Romney-Israel/id-64b4dae7dec940f1b165768c850437de

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Chinese pollution protesters clash with police

Carlos Barria / Reuters

A demonstrator smashes a car window during a protest against an industrial waste pipeline under construction in front of the local government building in Qidong, Jiangsu Province on Saturday.

By NBC News staff and wire reports

QIDONG, China -- Angry demonstrators occupied a government office in eastern China on Saturday, destroying computers and overturning cars in a violent protest against an industrial waste pipeline they said would poison their coastal waters.

The demonstration was the latest in a string of protests sparked by fears of environmental degradation and highlights the social tensions the government in Beijing faces as it approaches a leadership transition this year.


Thousands of protesters marched through the coastal city of Qidong, roughly one hour north of Shanghai by car, shouting slogans against the planned pipeline that would empty waste from a paper factory in a nearby town into the sea.

Wife of ousted China politician charged with Briton's murder

Demonstrators rejected the government's stand that waste from the factory would not pollute the coastal waters.

"The government says the waste will not pollute the sea, but if that's true, then why don't they dump it into Yangtze River?" said Lu Shuai, a 25-year-old protester who works in logistics.

China's 7.6 percent growth rate is the lowest in three years ? but the country's economic problems appear more dire than the latest numbers indicate. Some believe the government will counter the downturn with a massive stimulus package, a strategy that has left China's local banks saddled with bad debt in the past. NBC's Ian Williams reports from Beijing.

"It is because if they dump it into the river, it will have an impact on people in Shanghai and people in Shanghai will oppose it."

The state-run Global Times newspaper quoted local residents who said the sewage discharge from the pipeline was expected to be as much as 150,000 tons per day, according to the AFP news agency.

Cars overturned, cops beaten
Several protesters entered the city government's main building and were seen smashing computers, overturning desks and throwing documents out the windows to loud cheers from the crowd.

China begins to admit 'fog' is really smog

An AFP photographer described the scene, saying demonstrators seized bottles of liquor and wine from the offices, along with cartons of cigarettes -- all of which Chinese officials frequently receive as bribes.

Reuters witnessed five cars and one minibus being overturned. Over 1,000 police -- some paramilitary -- guarded the city government office compound in lines.

At least two police officers were dragged into the crowd at the government office and punched and beaten enough to make them bleed.

'Opportunity for democracy': Rebel Chinese village votes

According to the AFP, searches including "Qidong" on China's popular microblogging site?Sina Weibo were blocked Saturday. Sina Weibo has over 250 million subscribers.

Earlier posts on Weibo and on Twitter indicated that the protesters had stripped the clothes off the local party secretary, but these reports could not be immediately verified.

On Friday, in an effort to stave off the protest, the Qidong city government announced it would suspend the project for further research.

But many protesters said on Saturday that postponement was not enough.

Carlos Barria / Reuters

A police car lies overturned as protesters occupy a government building during a protest against an industrial waste pipeline under construction in Qidong, Jiangsu Province on Saturday.

"If the government really wanted to stop this project, they should have done it right from the beginning. At this point they are too late," said Xi Feng, a 17-year-old protester.

Local officials took steps to ward off the demonstration and residents received text messages and letters warning that any public demonstration would be illegal.

Rising discontent
Environmental worries have stoked calls for expanded rights for citizens and greater consultation in the tightly controlled one-party state.

The outpouring of public anger is emblematic of the rising discontent facing Chinese leaders, who are obsessed with maintaining stability and struggling to balance growth with rising public anger over environmental threats.

The protest followed similar demonstrations against projects the Sichuan town of Shifang earlier this month and in the cities of Dalian in the northeast and Haimen in southern Guangdong province in the past year.

China tells US Embassy to stop reporting Beijing pollution

In Shifang, the government halted construction of a copper refinery following protests by residents that it would poison them. It also freed most of the people who were detained after a clash with police.

The leadership has vowed to clean up China's skies and waterways and increasingly tried to appear responsive to complaints about pollution. But environmental disputes pit citizens against local officials whose aim is to lure fresh investment and revenue into their areas.

Behind The Wall: Full NBC News coverage from China
Pictures from China on NBCNews.com's PhotoBlog

Fen Jianmei was seven months pregnant when she was forcibly taken to hospital and her child aborted, because she and her husband couldn't afford the fine imposed in China when couples have a second child. NBC's Angus Walker reports from the Shanxi Province, China.

NBC News researcher Tianzhou Ye, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

More world stories from NBC News:

News on NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/07/28/13002897-chinese-pollution-protesters-turn-violent-in-clash-with-police?lite

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শনিবার, ২৮ জুলাই, ২০১২

Angry Chinese occupy government office, smash computers in environment protest

QIDONG, China (Reuters) - Angry demonstrators occupied a government office in eastern China on Saturday, destroying computers and overturning cars in a violent protest against an industrial waste pipeline they said would poison their coastal waters.

The demonstration was the latest in a string of protests sparked by fears of environmental degradation and highlights the social tensions the government in Beijing faces as it approaches a leadership transition this year.

About 1,000 protesters marched through the coastal city of Qidong, about one hour north of Shanghai by car, shouting slogans against the plan pipeline that would empty waste from a paper factory in a nearby town into the sea.

Demonstrators rejected the government's stand that waste from the factory would not pollute the coastal waters.

"The government says the waste will not pollute the sea, but if that's true, then why don't they dump it into Yangtze River?" said Lu Shuai, a 25-year-old protester who works in logistics.

"It is because if they dump it into the river, it will have an impact on people in Shanghai and people in Shanghai will oppose it."

Several protesters entered the city government's main building and were seen smashing computers, overturning desks and throwing documents out the windows to loud cheers from the crowd.

Reuters witnessed five cars and one minibus being overturned. Over 1,000 police - some paramilitary - guarded the city government office compound in lines.

At least two police officers were dragged into the crowd at the government office and punched and beaten enough to make them bleed.

On Friday, in an effort to stave off the protest, the Qidong city government announced it would suspend the project for further research.

But many protesters said on Saturday that postponement was not enough.

"If the government really wanted to stop this project, they should have done it right from the beginning. At this point they are too late," said Xi Feng, a 17-year-old protester.

Local officials took steps to ward off the demonstration and residents received text messages and letters warning that any public demonstration would be illegal.

Environmental worries have stoked calls for expanded rights for citizens and greater consultation in the tightly controlled one-party state.

The outpouring of public anger is emblematic of the rising discontent facing Chinese leaders, who are obsessed with maintaining stability and struggling to balance growth with rising public anger over environmental threats.

The protest followed similar demonstrations against projects the Sichuan town of Shifang earlier this month and in the cities of Dalian in the northeast and Haimen in southern Guangdong province in the past year.

In Shifang, the government halted construction of a copper refinery following protests by residents that it would poison them. It also freed most of the people who were detained after a clash with police.

The leadership has vowed to clean up China's skies and waterways and increasingly tried to appear responsive to complaints about pollution. But environmental disputes pit citizens against local officials whose aim is to lure fresh investment and revenue into their areas.

(Additional reporting by Carlos Barria; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/angry-chinese-occupy-government-office-smash-computers-environment-060626092.html

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Veblen's Institutionalist Elaboration of Rent Theory | Michael Hudson

Michael Hudson?s new book The Bubble and Beyond has just been released and can be purchased via here.

Speech given at the Veblen, Capitalism and Possibilities for a Rational Economic Order Conference, Istanbul, Turkey, June 6th, 2012

Simon Patten recalled in 1912 that his generation of American economists ? most of whom studied in Germany in the 1870s ? were taught that John Stuart Mill?s 1848 Principles of Political Economy was the high-water mark of classical thought. However, Mill?s reformist philosophy turned out to be ?not a goal but a half-way house? toward the Progressive Era?s reforms. Mill was ?a thinker becoming a socialist without seeing what the change really meant,? Patten concluded. ?The Nineteenth Century epoch ends not with the theories of Mill but with the more logical systems of Karl Marx and Henry George.[1] But the classical approach to political economy continued to evolve, above all through Thorstein Veblen.

Like Marx and George, Veblen?s ideas threatened what he called the ?vested interests.? What made his analysis so disturbing was what he retained from the past. Classical political economy had used the labor theory of value to isolate the elements of price that had no counterpart in necessary costs of production. Economic rent ? the excess of price over this ?real cost? ? is unearned income. It is an overhead charge for access to land, minerals or other natural resources, bank credit or other basic needs that are monopolized.

This concept of unearned income as an unnecessary element of price led Veblen to focus on what now is called financial engineering, speculation and debt leveraging. The perception that a rising proportion of income and wealth is an unearned ?free lunch? formed the take-off point for Veblen to put real estate and financial scheming at the center of his analysis, at a time when mainstream economists were dropping these areas of concern.

Veblen?s exclusion from today?s curriculum is part of the reaction against classical political economy?s program of social reform. By the time he began to publish in the 1890s, academic economics was in the throes of a counter-revolution sponsored by large landholders, bankers and monopolists denying that there was any such thing as unearned income.[2] The new post-classical mainstream accepted existing property rights and privileges as a ?given.? In contrast to Veblen?s argument that the economy was all about organizing predatory schemes, this approach culminated in Milton Friedman?s Chicago School defense the pro-rentier argument: ?There is no such thing as a free lunch.?

This blunt denial rejected the preceding three centuries of classical value and price theory, along with its policy conclusions promoting taxation of land and other natural endowments, and financial reform. Dropped from view was rentier overhead in the form of predatory and unproductive forms of wealth seeking. The post-classical mainstream treats all income as ?earned,? including that of rentiers. Lacking the classical concepts of unproductive labor, credit or investment, today?s textbooks describe income as a reward for one?s contribution to production, and wealth is being ?saved up? as a result of someone?s productive investment effort, not as an unearned or predatory free lunch.

This shift in theory has shaped the seemingly empirical National Income and Product Accounts to indulge in a circular reasoning that treats recipients of rent and interest as providing a service, an economic contribution equal to whatever rentiers receive as ?earnings.? There are no categories for unearned income or speculative asset-price gains.

Veblen described the largest sectors of the economy where quick fortunes were made as being all about organizing rent-seeking opportunities to obtain income without real cost. He viewed psychological utility as social in character. In contrast to food or other satiable bodily needs characterized by diminishing marginal utility ? e.g., from eating food and becoming satiated ? his concept of conspicuous consumption emphasized the insatiable drives to raise one?s social status.

The desire for consumer goods was characterized by fads for the most pricey goods as trophies of one?s wealth. The result was mercenary vulgarity. Wealthy Babbitts turning culture into a arena for shifting fashion to impress others. The largest factor defining status was the neighborhood where one?s home was located. Housing was not simply a basic living space ?use value.? It established one?s position in society, duly enhanced by civic boosterism, public subsidy and infrastructure spending.

To deal with these issues and preserve the critique of rentier income, speculation and insider dealing, Veblen helped lead economics into the new discipline of sociology.

The central role of real estate
As the economy?s largest asset, real estate was the great popular arena in which to seek speculative gains. Nowhere was this more visible than in small towns, which Veblen found to have had ?a greater part than any other in shaping public sentiment and giving character to American culture.? The country town was basically a project to puff up real estate prices.

Its name may be Spoon River or Gopher Prairie, or it may be Emporia or Centralia or Columbia. The pattern is substantially the same, and is repeated several thousand times with a faithful perfection which argues that there is no help for it ?

The location of any given town has commonly been determined by collusion between ?interested parties? with a view to speculation in real estate, and it continues through its life-history (hitherto) to be managed as a real estate ?proposition.? Its municipal affairs, its civic pride, its community interest, converge upon its real-estate values, which are invariably of a speculative character, and which all its loyal citizens are intent on ?booming? and ?boosting,? ? that is to say, lifting still farther off the level of actual ground-values as measured by the uses to which the ground is turned. Seldom do the current (speculative) values of the town?s real estate exceed the use-value of it by less than 100 per cent.; and never do they exceed the actual values by less than 200 per cent., as shown by the estimates of the tax assessor; nor do the loyal citizens ever cease their endeavours to lift the speculative values to something still farther out of touch with the material facts. A country town which does not answer to these specifications is ?a dead one,? one that has failed to ?make good,? and need not be counted with, except as a warning to the unwary ?boomer.?[3]

Describing real estate as being ?the great American game,? Veblen focused on how future prices were enhanced over present values by advertising and promotion. ?Real estate is an enterprise in ?futures,? designed to get something for nothing from the unwary, of whom it is believed by experienced persons that ?there is one born every minute.?? Farmers and other rural families from the surrounding lands look ?forward to the time when the community?s advancing needs will enable them to realise on the inflated values of their real estate,? that is, find a sucker ?to take them at their word and become their debtors in the amount which they say their real estate is worth.? The entire operation, from individual properties to the town as a whole, is ?an enterprise in salesmanship,? with collusion being the rule.[4]

Retailers in small towns collude to exploit farmers, a practice broken by the spread of mail order catalogues. But monopoly power is achieved most rigorously in local banking. Most loans are for mortgages to inflate land prices. ?And the banker is under the necessity ??inner necessity,? as the Hegelians say ? of getting all he can and securing himself against all risk, at the cost of any whom it may concern, by such charges and stipulations as will insure his net gain in any event.?

Land prices were rising in larger cities as a result of overall prosperity and the easier availability of mortgage financing, while public spending on roads, subway and bus systems, parks, museums and other prestigious activities were organized to enhance neighborhood values.[5]

Veblen?s context in the American School of Political Economy and institutionalism
Veblen wrote in the tradition of the self-described American School of economists. Focusing on technology and the rising productivity of labor and energy-driven capital, its members developed an alternative to Ricardian doctrine.[6] Describing diminishing returns and British class antagonisms as a special case, they focused on increasing returns as the universal wave of the future. I attribute the failure of most historians of economic thought to relate Veblen to this school (or even to acknowledge its existence) to its protectionist policy conclusions.

Liberal historians such as Joseph Dorfman have dismissed this school for describing the United States as an ?exception? to the British rule. But the opposite is more accurate. Patten accused British political economy of assuming universal validity for peculiarly British institutions and practices, above all by identifying wages, rent and profits with particular social classes, advocating universal free trade and assuming that all public spending was overhead (as in war spending), not capital investment in infrastructure. The result was that Britain was behind the times, holding on to an intolerantly ?monist? (one size fits all) outlook. Patten urged an ?economic pluralism? that followed the German historical school ? which became known as institutionalism in the United States ? in recognizing that economies were organized in a wide variety of ways.[7]

From Patten to Veblen, critics of rentiers were so diverse that it would be misleading to refer to them as a ?school? as such. Their common denominator was a focus on unearned income and exploitation, which required government policy to reform. Their analytic scope encompassed social institutions, legal and tax systems, educational and public policy priorities headed by subsidies and tariffs. The result was a more complex and also more empirical view than that which characterized the individualistic, abstract and indeed simplistic marginal utility school that was replacing classical political economy from the 1870s onward.

Nowhere was this more the case than in land rent, natural resource rent and monopoly rent. Ricardo described land rent as stemming from diminishing returns widening the margin between high-cost producers (who set the price of food) and low-cost landowners who received the economic rent from rising crop prices. The American School cited progress in chemical fertilizers, mechanized farm production and the development of transport infrastructure as increasing productivity in agriculture as well as industry. Instead of fertility being ?original and indestructible? as Ricardo claimed, soil chemistry and capital investment in farm equipment and public support services were turning land into capital, yielding returns in the form of profit.

The Ricardian-Malthusian ?Iron Law of Wages? used a simplistic supply-and-demand analysis to imply that population growth and chronic unemployment would keep wages near subsistence levels. American economists developed an Economy of High Wages theory to explain the nation?s rising wage levels. Instead of attributing high wages to the ?backwoods? availability of free land, Henry Carey pointed out that unless labor was sufficiently productive to sustain higher output, industry could not afford to pay high wages. He attributed the nation?s wage levels to technological progress requiring highly skilled labor to operate high-productivity capital. The result was a universal theory of progress, becoming global as higher-paid labor undersold pauper labor ? thus forcing laggard countries to join the wave of progress.

Patten?s idea that technology was transforming economies from a ?pain? to a ?pleasure? society led naturally to Veblen?s idea of an ?instinct of workmanship.? Machines were taking over many of the drudgery tasks, freeing human labor for higher, more intellectually absorbing work. Patten and Veblen anticipated Schumpeter in viewing rent as super-profit created by the increasing returns resulting from the advance of science and technology.[8] Lowering costs created opportunities for innovators to earn what Alfred Marshall termed quasi-rents ? rewards for innovation in contrast to income raked off by idle rentiers. Gutenberg?s innovation of movable type to print the Bible and other books, for example, enabled him to sell them at the same price as competitors using more costly hand copying and engraving systems.

This line of analysis prompted Veblen to describe increasing returns as leading to the monopolies being organized by Wall Street. It was in this financial arena that progress became untracked by monopoly rent used for financial speculation and trust building.

Marshall?s generation treated current production and consumption as the ?real? economy. Despite the transformative role that finance has played, subsequent mainstream economists treat markets as if most money is paid for goods and services, not real estate, bonds, stocks or other assets. Money and prices appear only as a veil, as ?counters.? Price changes are viewed merely as replacing pounds with kilograms (or pounds sterling with dollars). Production and consumption constitute the ?real? economy, while money and prices ? and debt ? are only a means of circulating goods and services, not as imposing a debt overhead. Debt is a matter of choice ? to consume in the present rather than later, or to invest to make a profit, not as unnecessary ?watered costs? or unproductive loans or debts.

Yet all money and credit is debt, after all ? and debt determines who gets what, and how income is distributed or siphoned off. By excluding this line of analysis, the mainstream approach diverts attention from the financial speculation and debt overhead on which Veblen focused.

Elaborating the concept of economic rent to focus on unearned fortunes
Writing two decades before Veblen, the journalist Henry George obtained a popular following by denouncing landlords and urging taxation of the land?s full rental value. But lacking grounding in classical value and rent theory, he was unable to express his ideas in formal economic terms, and adamantly opposed extending the concept of economic rent to the banking sector. And George soon turned to attacking socialists and other Progressive Era campaigners for promoting reforms other than his Single Tax panacea. Nonetheless, his campaigning inspired fear among landlords, bankers and other rentiers that the concept of economic rent would be used to limit their gains. Veblen (along with Patten) fought a rear-guard effort against the new mainstream. While George?s followers retained a Ricardian focus on agricultural land, he emphasized financial speculation, recognizing that land rent was being capitalized into mortgages and paid to bankers.

Veblen described how credit was being created for speculative reasons rather than to finance the production of goods and services. Pre-Ricardian political economy had focused on debt and interest (especially James Steuart, Malachy Postlethwayt and Adam Smith). But post-classical economists turned their attention away from the monetary and financial dimension of life, which Veblen termed ?pecuniary.? Mainstream economics strips away these embedded characteristics.

Denial of the classical distinction between value and price (and hence, between earned and unearned income) was led by John Bates Clark in the United States, and by a similar ?pragmatic? tradition in European supply and demand analysis. From Veblen?s perspective this attempt at ?universals? trivialized economics. Criticizing business schools for teaching how to make money by creating extractive financial tollbooths without increasing society?s productive powers, he found rentier interests behind the narrow-mindedness that ignored the predatory character of rent and interest. The emerging ?individualistic? orthodoxy had a pro-rentier bias, endorsing practices that bled the productive economic core to support a neo-rentier class.

To recognize charges over and above the economy?s necessary engineering costs, analysis must take into account institutional factors ? especially financial dynamics and other rentier overhead. There are many ways to embed a given mode of production, and some are freer of rentier charges than others. Soviet Russia, America, Japan, Britain and Germany shared a similar technological repertory of power production, automotives, air transport and computer science in the 1970s and 1980s, yet had different property and banking systems, and price regulation for public infrastructure and other monopolies. Land rent, mineral rent, financial returns and monopoly pricing are country-specific and time-specific, and hence find little role in models seeking to depict economics as an abstract natural science on universal principles like physics and chemistry.

By placing rent in its financial context and political setting, Veblen became part of the sociology discipline, consigned to the basement of the social sciences to exclude from the core curriculum discussion about tax reform and other checks or regulation concerning how economic rent was obtained by ownership rights and privileges, monopolies and political corruption.

The rentiers seek to limit the scope of economic analysis to make themselves invisible
The post-classical school accused its institutionalist critics and social reformers of being ?anti-theoretical.? Geoffrey Hodgson opens his Evolution of Institutional Economics by citing representative statements from mainstream economists claiming that institutionalism is more descriptive than analytic, succumbing to a plethora of facts and therefore belonging more to the sphere of sociology than economics. Ronald Coase?s complaint that institutionalism ?was ?not theoretical but anti-theoretical? has been repeated uncountably by others ??[9]

The empirical trend among the American School of protectionists economists had a long pedigree going back to Daniel Raymond and Friedrich List (in the time he spent in Pennsylvania in association with Mathew Carey).[10] In 1848, Calvin Colton (a protectionist economic writer close to Henry Clay) wrote that economic generalities applicable to Britain and other European nations were ?entirely inapplicable? to the United States. The differences in economic and social structure between the United States and Britain had not ?been duly weighed as an element of public economy.? Rather than the precepts of British political economy being universal in scope, ?public economy has never been reduced to a science, and ? all the propositions of which it is composed, down to this time, are empirical laws.?[11]

Economics thus finds little objective universally agreed-upon principles to analyze the costs and benefits of protective tariffs, industrial subsidies or privatized versus public ownership or operation. Models of economic rent and the political context for economic policy are ideological. This opens up discussion of progressive alternatives to British free trade economics and political assumptions rationalizing the status quo as equilibrium.

Taking the lead in developing new general laws for how industry was becoming financialized, Veblen countered the post-classical conflation of rent and interest with profits (?earnings?) on three major grounds:

  1. (1) The timeless and decontextualized generalities drawn by the pro-rentier logic used circular reasoning to justify the status quo as being natural and in equilibrium. By definition, there was no rentier exploitation, even as economies were polarizing. Assuming that every income recipient is paid for a contribution to production implies that the existing distribution of property and mode of financing are optimum. There thus seems to be no need for reform or regulation, either socialist or protectionist.
  2. (2) It is not a virtue for post-classical economics to be value-free. Denying the concept of economic rent as the excess of market price over cost value leads to a conflation of land with capital, rent with interest. Land is treated as a ?factor of production,? not a monopoly right independent of production, a privilege to put an economic tollbooth in place to extract rent.
  3. (3) Excluding the political dimension of classical political economy is implicitly laissez faire. It leaves no role for government ? the only power able to regulate and tax land rent and prevent the financial sector from turning itself into an oligarchy. ?Free market? opposition to government regulation blocks reforms aimed at bringing prices in line with costs so as to make economies more efficient. ?One-size-fits all? generalities lead to Margaret Thatcher?s intolerant and censorial assertion: ?There is no alternative.?

In sum, over-simplicity in excluding discussion of the rentiers? free lunch achieves a higher level of abstraction by ruling out concepts that would deem rentier income to be unearned and hence unnecessary. All such revenue ? economic rent ? is ?institutional? in the sense that it is not based on the universals of technological costs of production or abstract ?supply and demand.? Institutions, especially banking and tax systems, are not universal but are historically determined.

Focusing on status quo costs burdened with heavy rentier charges implies that an input is worth whatever the buyer pays for it. In practice, this means whatever a bank will lend against its collateral value or income stream. This depends on the terms on which loans are made and regulated. Taking the prices of land or monopoly ?tollbooth? rent-extracting rights as ?givens? means accepting whatever investors must lay out as a valid cost, including payments for rent-extracting privileges or bank credit created with little inherent production cost. Rentier privileges are capitalized without regard to necessary labor cost on which classical economists focused in isolating the ?free lunch? element of price not reducible to labor.

Housing and land ownership were more widely distributed in the United States than in Europe, largely on credit as banking entered into a symbiosis with real estate and other rent-extracting activities. Mortgage credit often absorbs the entire land rent. Financing charges are built into the acquisition price of property or rentier rights, but are not intrinsic to production and have no counterpart in an engineering view of the economy. Wall Street insiders refined the practice of simply issuing bonds to themselves (?watered stock?). These unnecessary ?false costs of production,? were factored into the cost of operating railroads and industrial trusts.

Such practices prompted Veblen to criticize Clark and also Marshall for ignoring the ?pecuniary? financial dimension of life. This was a glaring error of omission in the new mainstream, along with monopolies and large real estate frauds started in colonial times, highlighted by the Yahoo land fraud early in the Republic, and capped by the railroad land grants. As Henry Liu describes how Veblen emphasized the predatory role of high finance:

Veblen put forth a basic distinction between the productiveness of ?industry? run by skilled engineers, which manufactures real goods of utility, and the parasitism of ?business,? which exists only to make profits for a leisure class which engages in ?conspicuous consumption?. The only economic contribution by the leisure class is ?economic waste?, activities that contribute negatively to productivity. By implication, Veblen saw the US economy as being made inefficient and corrupt by men of ?business? who deviously put themselves in an indispensable position in society.[12]

Changing evaluations of Veblen in academia ? Dorfman and his critics
?If the eye offend thee, pluck it out? ? or at least, distract attention from Veblen?s line of analysis that opened the path for thinking about how institutions might be changed. Rather than dealing with Veblen?s ideas that offended the post-classical mainstream, his critics ignored those with which they disagreed, and shifted attention to his striking personality. It is an old rhetorical trick of lawyers: character assassination of unfriendly witnesses. As Aldous Huxley quipped in Brave New World: ?Great is truth, but still greater, from a practical point of view, is silence about truth. By simply not mentioning certain subjects ? totalitarian propagandists have influenced opinion much more effectively than they could have by the most eloquent denunciations.?

Columbia University professor Joseph Dorfman?s long-standard biography of Veblen made him non-threatening by taking his ideas out of their 19th-century political context that focused on land, finance and monopolies with a view to minimize rentier charges. Rejecting this intellectual context on ideological grounds, Dorfman wrote an anecdotal soap opera that found favor with Columbia?s Economics Department?s prevailing pro-rentier ideology.

The department always had been free trade and pro-British. As the early center for opposition to Henry George?s land-tax advocacy ? and hence to the analysis of land rent as unearned income ? most professors found Veblen?s analysis of land speculation anathema. Dorfman?s dissertation advisor was Wesley Mitchell. Trained by Veblen, his lectures on Types of Economic Theory provide a good fair-minded treatment. But he was on leave out of the United States most of the year when Dorfman was writing his book.[13] The result sanitized Veblen from a perspective typical of his Columbia colleagues, airbrushing out Veblen?s focus on rentiers. Dorfman did the same thing with his five-volume overview of American economic thought, censoring the protectionist and technology mainstream that dominated U.S. policy and political debates throughout the 19th century. On balance, he was the kind of academic whom Veblen?s Higher Education in America skewered for being so narrow-minded.[14]

The past decade has seen a reaction against Dorfman?s treatment of Veblen. The 4th Conference of the International Thorstein Veblen Association, held at The New School on May 12, 2002, was highlighted by Steven Edgell?s paper on ?Dorfman?s Account of Veblen.? Russell and Sylvia Bartley?s biographical study of ?Veblen?s Formal Education at Carleton College 1874-1880? also criticized Dorfman?s treatment of Veblen. (Alas, these proceedings were not published.) Their point was that Veblen was in the majority in his own context. Although America is not very Norwegian, Minnesota certainly was. The Bartleys characterize him as a ?folk savant,? a common phenomenon in Norwegian communities ? a brilliant exception to the conformist norm. This role would have provided Veblen with self-confidence to take on the establishment. It certainly helps to be an outsider to recognize dysfunctional social dynamics, economic hypocrisy and egotism ? and to see that what most people accept as natural will have to be changed if the economy is to be made more fair, lower-cost and hence more competitive.

Veblen?s disparaging view of the business mentality and academia
Veblen criticized academic economists for having fallen subject to ?trained incapacity? as a result of being turned into factotums to defend rentier interests. Business schools were painting an unrealistic happy-face picture of the economy, teaching financial techniques but leaving out of account the need to reform the economy?s practices and institutions.

In a conclusion recalling Veblen?s Higher Education in America, Herman Kahn describes how peer pressure leads experts to accept explanations that deviate from accepted concepts:

Educated incapacity often refers to an acquired or learned inability to understand or even perceive a problem, much less a solution. The original phrase, ?trained incapacity,? comes from the economist Thorstein Veblen, who used it to refer, among other things, to the inability of those with engineering or sociology training to understand certain issues which they would have been able to understand if they had not had this training.[15]

Kahn adds that this phenomenon occurs especially ?at leading universities in the United States ? particularly in the departments of psychology, sociology, and history, and to a degree in the humanities generally. Individuals raised in this milieu often have difficulty with relatively simple degrees of reality testing.? The problem is greatest in economics, of course.

Non-industrial character of today?s financial crisis
Today?s bank privileges and the financial sector?s rise to dominance are a survival of these pre-capitalist conquests and royal war debts that took root in Europe?s Crusades. From antiquity to the sacking of Byzantium in 1204, the characteristic mode of financial accumulation was to loot the temples and palaces where societies stored their savings, and extract taxes as tribute from conquered populations. Military conquest evolved into the levy of land rent, while creditors used their gains to purchase monopoly privileges.

Industrial capitalism was more productive, although just as cruel in creating an urban labor force by driving cultivators off the land and forcing them to work for wages to live. This exploitation of wage labor at least employed workers, and took a great step forward by accumulating capital as part of the production process.. In due course, employers found that increasing labor productivity (so as to create more surplus value) requires raising wages and living standards to provide higher education, better health and diets ? and at a point, more leisure. So despite the aim of cutting costs to undersell competitors, technological innovation was accompanied by high-wage labor underselling pauper labor. That is why American manufacturers undersold their British counterparts ? not only because of higher labor productivity, but because of the thriving domestic market as labor rose into the middle class.

This was done by a combination of government sponsorship and largely productive credit, including lending for home ownership. Mixed economies were out-competing those lacking strong public sectors to subsidize industry, sponsor rising productivity and prevent landlords, bankers and monopolists from imposing heavy rentier charges. By the turn of the 20th century it seemed that the destiny of industrial capitalism was to evolve into socialism. Pensions, health care, roads and basic infrastructure, public education ? all were coming to be provided outside of ?the market.? Industrial capital backed this policy as a means of shifting as many ?external? costs as possible onto the public sector.

Writing earlier than Veblen, Marx was more optimistic that the imperatives of industrial capitalism would industrialize banking to fund industrial production. Nobody of his period expected the financial sector to mount a counter-revolution against the Progressive Era?s reforms. From Ricardo to Henry George, Marx noted, industrialists had an innate hatred of land rent. Their aim was to obtain the economic surplus for industry, not leave it in the hands of a landed aristocracy. And the interest of banks seemed to lie with industry, not real estate.

Along with mineral rights and basic infrastructure, natural monopolies were expected to become part of the public sector, including the bankers? privilege of creating credit and charging interest with no corresponding cost of production. Followers of Saint-Simon hoped that banks would finance capital investment more by equity participation than by interest-bearing debt. The economic program of enlightened industrial capitalism was to tax away rent and develop basic infrastructure, including banking, as a public utility and provide its services at cost or at subsidized rates (e.g., free roads rather than toll roads). This seemed to be the road along which industrial nations were moving in the years leading up to World War I. Economic democracy promised to liberate society from the hereditary land ownership, privatization of natural resources and monopoly privileges surviving from feudal epochs.

But the war deflected the path of Western civilization. Taxes on land, natural resources and the financial sector have been unwound. Labor is exploited fiscally by a regressive income tax (the early U.S. income tax fell only on the well to do at its inception in 1913, not on wage earners), and by sales taxes on consumption such as Europe?s Value Added Tax (VAT) as taxes are shifted off property. Property has been democratized ? on tax-deductible credit while its price gains are taxed at lower rates than wages and profits, if at all. The 1% have managed to fight back and drive the bottom 99% into debt, headed by mortgage debt and a tax shift off property and financial wealth. Instead of industrial investment and public spending spurring expansion, finance capital?s strategy is to find borrowers to purchase rent-extracting tollbooth opportunities.

The end result is austerity as business as well as governments become deeply indebted. Debt pressures are leading governments to privatize public services, enabling a new class of debt-leveraged rentiers to make their gains by inflating the cost of living and doing business.

It wasn?t supposed to be this way. Bank debts are not the result of prior savings emerging from the dynamic of industrial capitalism. Modern bank credit is created on computer keyboards. Unlike industry employing labor to, this electronic credit has almost no cost of production. It is empty ?price without value? as defined by the classical economists, and is extractive rather than productive. It is lent against collateral already in place, not to create new means of production.

Aimed at reversing the Progressive Era?s reforms, today?s neoliberal (that is, anti-classical) counter-reforms have over-layered the industrial exploitation of wage labor, by finance capitalism indebting it via mortgage loans, student loans, auto loans, credit card overdrafts and other bank debt. Labor is exploited as saver as well as debtor, with its pension fund set-asides turned over to financial managers. The pretense is that this turns labor into capitalists-in-miniature. But the dynamic is part of finance capitalism, not industrial capitalism. Instead of investing directly in means of production or giving pension contributors the voice in management that true ownership does, pension savings are lent out to indebt the industrial economy. Hedge funds and corporate raiders borrow to downsize companies, outsource and offshore employment.

The result is a race to the bottom in terms of working conditions and living standards. Instead of making economies more competitive, austerity shrinks markets and leads to loan defaults, foreclosures ? and emigration. The resulting crisis is being used as an opportunity to force yet more privatization of the public domain ? on tax-subsidized credit. Neither Marx nor Veblen imagined that capitalism would take so self-destructive a path.

From Marx to Veblen
Early (and most non-Marxist) socialism aimed to achieve greater equality mainly by taxing away unearned rentier income and keeping natural resources and monopolies in the public domain. The Marxist focus on class conflict between industrial employers and workers relegated criticism of rentiers to a secondary position, leaving that fight to more bourgeois reformers. Financial savings were treated as an accumulation of industrial profits, not as the autonomous phenomenon that Marx himself emphasized in Volume 3 of Capital.

Headed by Lenin, Marx?s followers discussed finance capital mainly in reference to the drives of imperialism. The ruin of Persia and Egypt was notorious, and creditors installed collectors in the customs houses in Europe?s former Latin American colonies. The major problem anticipated was war spurred by commercial rivalries as the world was being carved up.

It was left to Veblen to deal with the rentiers? increasingly dominant yet corrosive role, extracting their wealth by imposing overhead charges on the rest of society. The campaign for land taxation and even financial reform faded from popular discussion as socialists and other reformers became increasingly Marxist and focused on the industrial exploitation of labor.

Home ownership was rising in the cities, on credit, and commercial investors mounted a campaign to persuade homeowners that cutting property taxes would benefit them as well as absentee owners. But what the tax collector relinquished became available to be pledged as interest to the banks. Mortgage debt soared as property taxes were cut ? to a point where most rental value is now capitalized into mortgage loans and paid to the banks.

The Single Taxers slipped off the right wing of the political spectrum as they failed to link their campaign to see that bankers were the major contenders against landlords and the government to end up with the land rent, by capitalizing it into bank loans. They followed Henry George in becoming libertarian anti-government and anti-socialist ideologues ? a self-contradictory political stance, because government was the only power strong enough to tax and regulate land and monopolies, and counter the banking lobby. Veblen accordingly poked fun at the Single Taxers as ineffective idealists and out-of-touch sectarians.[16]

Veblen described how the rentier classes were on the ascendant rather than being reformed, taxed out of existence or socialized. His Theory of Business Enterprise (1904) emphasized the divergence between productive capacity, the book value of business assets and their stock-market price (what today is called the Q ratio of market price to book value). He saw the rising financial overhead as leading toward corporate bankruptcy and liquidation. Industry was becoming financialized, putting financial gains ahead of production. Today?s financial managers use profits not to invest but to buy up their company?s stock (thus raising the value of their stock options) and pay out as dividends, and even borrow to pay themselves. Hedge funds have become notorious for stripping assets and loading companies down with debt, leaving bankrupt shells in their wake in what George Ackerlof and Paul Romer have characterized as looting.[17]

After a wave of financial speculation and corporate fraud led the dot.com stock market bubble to burst in 2000, banks nurtured an even larger and more burdensome real estate bubble. Indebting the economy has enabled the financial sector to absorb most of the revenues squeezed out by the insurance and real estate sectors, along with the major monopolies (minerals, fuels and power, radio and television, telephones and transport) and privatized infrastructure sold off from the public domain to become rent-extracting opportunities. On top of the landlords ? and now over industry ? stand the bankers, lording it over them and using debt leverage to take control of governments as well. Yet neither socialist critiques nor those of mainstream economic futurists have focused on the financial takeover of society and its symbiosis with real estate and monopolies to which Veblen pointed. By the 1960s, theorists of the postindustrial ?service economy? were focusing on information technology, not on the financial sector.

In emphasizing how financial ?predation? was hijacking the economy?s technological potential, Veblen?s vision was as materialist and culturally broad as that of Marxists, and as rejecting of the status quo. Technological innovation was reducing costs but breeding monopolies as the Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE) sectors joined forces to create a financial symbiosis cemented by political insider dealings ? and a trivialization of economic theory as it seeks to avoid dealing with society?s failure to achieve its technological potential. The fruits of rising productivity were used to finance robber barons who had no better use of their wealth than to reduce great artworks to the status of ownership trophies and achieve leisure class status by funding business schools and colleges to promote a self-congratulatory but deceptive portrayal of their wealth-grabbing behavior.

Yet Veblen was as optimistic as Marx when it came to the prospects for industrial capitalism to uplift society. Whereas Marx expected it to subordinate banking and finance to promote industrial objectives ? and for revolution to be led from below, by the working class (or its political party representatives) ? Veblen anticipated that a managerial class of industrial engineers might lead the world toward a more rational, socially functional economy. As Ahmed Oncu observes in his remarks to the Istanbul 2012 Veblen conference:

In his chapter ?A Memorandum on a Practicable Soviet of Technicians? published in The Engineers and the Price System [1921], Veblen talks about a possible future scenario. According to Veblen, capitalists will give up, albeit reluctantly, the ownership of industries not by force but by their own choice. Veblen offers this reasoning: ?It should, in effect, cause no surprise to find that they will, in a sense, eliminate themselves, by letting go quite involuntarily after the industrial situation gets quite beyond their control.?

But contrary to Veblen?s expectation, industry has been financialized, and planning has been centralized in Wall Street, the City of London, the Paris Bourse and Frankfurt rather than in public hands or those of industrial engineers. Stock and bond markets, and even the mortgage market have been turned into arenas for gambling, with debt leveraging being the new means of appropriating property, using junk bonds as the weapon of choice. Opportunities for rent extraction and for capital gains that are taxed at only half the rate of profits, if at all. The upshot of this ?economic game,? as Veblen put it, is not capital investment in new plant and equipment to produce profits by employing labor, but speculative ?capital? gains in asset prices ? an exercise in promotion and collusion not unlike his country town example on a more gigantic financial scale.

Industrial engineers have been superseded by financial engineers as economic planners. MIT started as an engineering institution, but ended up with Paul Samuelson and other anti-classical writers teaching that economics was purely abstract and deductive ? precisely what Veblen attacked. Virginia Tech founded a College of Business in 1961 and used the term ?rent-seeking activity? to describe public activity (e.g., James Buchanan at the ideological Center for Public Choice), not for private-sector rentiers.

The financial sector is unwilling to relinquish its hold simply because the economy is shrinking. Its dynamic is now crashing in a wave of debt deflation, imposing economic austerity and unemployment. Debts are going bad, and foreclosure time has arrived. But instead of restructuring the economy to free it for renewed progress, the financial class sees today?s crisis as an opportunity for a property grab to vest itself as a new elite to rule the 21st century.

It would be a mistake to view today?s finance capitalism as the ?final stage? of industrial capitalism. The name of the new game is neofeudalism and austerity, and its preferred mode of exploitation is debt peonage Like creditors in ancient Rome, today?s financial power is seeking to replace democracy with a financial oligarchy. The result is a resurgence of pre-capitalist ?primitive accumulation,? by debt creation and foreclosure rather than the military conquests of past epochs.

Conclusion
As the heirs to classical political economy and the German historical school, the American institutionalists retained rent theory and its corollary idea of unearned income. More than any other institutionalist, Veblen emphasized the dynamics of banks financing real estate speculation and Wall Street maneuvering to organize monopolies and trusts. Yet despite the popularity of his writings with the reading public, his contribution has remained isolated from the academic mainstream, and he did not leave a ?school.? The rentier strategy has been to make rent extraction invisible, not the center of attention it occupied in classical political economy. One barely sees today a quantification of the degree to which overhead charges for rent, insurance and interest are rising above the cost of production, even as this prices financialized economies out of world markets.

The narrowing of Chicago-style monetarism and neoliberalism has left the economics discipline in much the state that Max Planck applied to physics from Maxwell to Einstein: Progress occurs one funeral at a time. The old conservatives die off, freeing the way for more progressive successors to take the steering wheel. But what makes today?s economics different is that it actually would help to look backward, to the epoch before the financial sector and its allied rentier interests hijacked the discipline. The most systematic analysis of this process was that of Veblen nearly a century ago. It remains sufficiently relevant that Marxists and more heterodox critics have incorporated his theorizing into their worldview.

Footnotes

Simon Patten, ?The Reconstruction of Economic Theory? (1912). in Essays in Economic Theory, ed. Rexford G. Tugwell (New York, Alfred A Knopf: 1924):274. See also The Development of English Thought (New York, Macmillan?s 1899):339.

On the tendency of post-classical economics to reject the idea of unearned income, see Simon Patten, ?Another View of the Ethics of Land Tenure,? International Journal of Ethics 1 (April 1891). I discuss this doctrinal shift in ?Simon Patten on Public Infrastructure and Economic Rent Capture,? American Journal of Economics and Sociology 70 (October 2011):873-903.

Absentee Ownership and Business Enterprise in Recent Times (1923:142ff.).

Other contemporaries described how the great American real estate fortunes were obtained by fraud and insider dealing. Gustavus Myers? History of the Great American Fortunes (1907-09) focused on John Jacob Astor in New York and the land that Trinity Church vestrymen gave themselves, and how Leland Stanford and his California gang in Congress obtained land grants for their railroads. Frank Norris?s 1901 novel The Octopus described the railroads? exploitation of California.

Robert Fitch?s The Assassination of New York (New York: Verso, 1996) analyzed of how real estate elites planned the gentrification of New York City?s real estate over the 20th century. Today, the value of New York City real estate exceeds the book value of all the plant and equipment in the United States.

I discuss this School?s contribution in America?s Protectionist Takeoff, which includes a review of how Dorfman misrepresented and misunderstood it.

Patten, ?The Reconstruction of Economic Theory,? in Essays in Economic Theory:278f.

Patten, The Theory of Prosperity (New York, 1902):139f.: ?Rent is constantly being created by social progress, but in any particular form it is steadily being cut down by the increase in the power of substitution? as businessmen developed substitutes for monopolized goods and services.

Geoffrey Hodgson, The Evolution of Institutional Economics (Routledge: 2004):3, citing Ronald Coase, ?The New Institutional Economics,? Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics 140 (1984):230, and Richard N. Langlois, ?What Was Wrong With the Old Institutional Economics (and What is Still Wrong With the New)?? Review of Political Economy 1(3), November 1989:5: ?The problem with the Historical School and many of the early Institutionalists is that they wanted an economics ? without theory.?

In his Outlines of American Political Economy (1827) Friedrich List wrote: ?American national economy, according to the different conditions of the nations, is quite different from English national economy.? I discuss this early period of institutionalism in Hudson (1975):115-32 and 45-54.

Calvin Colton, Public Economy for the United States (1848), pp. 18, 46 and 38.

Henry Liu, ?The Rise and Decline of Institutional Economics,? Asia Times on-Line, April 7, 2011, http://henryckliu.com/page246.html and http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/MD07Dj03.html.

Dorfman published his study of Veblen before submitting it as a dissertation, which explains why the dissertation did not cite page numbers or other references ? not even the title of Veblen?s own doctoral dissertation at Yale (which was stolen from the library the following year). Columbia dutifully applauded, awarding Dorfman the Seligman Prize for distinguished scholarship in 1935.

My own impression on meeting Dorfman on a number of occasions was that he was somewhat like how he described Veblen: outsiderish.

Herman Kahn, ?The Expert and Educated Incapacity,? World Economic Development: 1979 and Beyond (Westview Press, 1979) pp. 482-484.

Theory of Business Enterprise, Kelley ed.:351-52fn, and ?The Nature of Capital? in The Place of Science in Civilization:337.

George Ackerlof and Paul Romer, ?Looting: The Economic Underworld of Bankruptcy for Profit,? Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Vol. 1993, No. 2 (1993):1-73, also published as NBER Working Paper No. R1869 (April 1994). This article is thoroughly in Veblen?s tradition.

Bibliography
Bartley, Russell and Sylvia, ?Stigmatizing Thorstein Veblen: A Study in the Confection of Academic Reputations,? International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society 14 (Winter 2000):363-400.

? ?The Formal Education of Thorstein Veblen: His Carleton Years, 1874-1880,? paper presented at the 4th Conference of the International Thorstein Veblen Association, May 12, 2002 (unpublished).

Colton, Calvin, Public Economy for the United States (New York: 1848).

Dorfman, Joseph, The Economic Mind of American Civilization (5 vols., 1946-59)
? Thorstein Veblen and his America (New York: 1934).

Edgell, Steven, ?Dorfman?s Account of Veblen: An Evaluation of a Problematic Intellectual Legacy,? paper presented at the 4th Conference of the International Thorstein Veblen Association, May 12, 2002 (unpublished).
? Veblen in Perspective: His Life and Thought (Armonk: M.E. Sharpe, 2001)
?
Hodgson, Geoffrey, The Evolution of Institutional Economics (Routledge: 2004)

Hudson, Michael, ?Simon Patten on Public Infrastructure and Economic Rent Capture,? American Journal of Economics and Sociology 70 (October 2011):873-903.

? America?s Protectionist Takeoff: 1815-1914 (ISLET, 2010)
Kahn, Herman, ?The Expert and Educated Incapacity,? World Economic Development: 1979 and Beyond (Westview Press, 1979) pp. 482-484.

List, Friedrich, Outlines of American Political Economy (Philadelphia, 1827).

Liu, Henry, ?The Rise and Decline of Institutional Economics,? http://henryckliu.com/page246.html.

Mitchell, Wesley Clair Types of Economic Theory (New York, A. M. Kelley: 1967).
Simon Patten, The Theory of Prosperity (New York, 1902):139f.

? ?The Reconstruction of Economic Theory? (1912), in Essays in Economic Theory, ed. Rexford G. Tugwell (New York, Alfred A Knopf: 1924).

Tags: Economic Theory, infrastructure, rentier, Simon Patten

Source: http://michael-hudson.com/2012/07/veblens-institutionalist-elaboration-of-rent-theory/

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