Treasury secretary Snow attackes Hamiltn projct and former Treasury secretary Rubin

リンク: Angry Bear.

Treas. Sec. Snow Attacks the Hamilton Project and Former Treas. Sec. Rubin

If you are wondering what the Hamilton Project is ・go here. On April 12, John Snow states:

On the one hand are those who believe that the future of our economy is best served by a larger role for government in the economy. On the other side are those, like myself, who maintain that while the role of government is to create the conditions for prosperity, the citizens and taxpayers are the best judge of how to spend their own money, not the government. One view necessitates higher taxes, a more expansive role for government, and more government spending. The other holds that low tax rates, a reduced role for government and a vibrant private sector is the best path to prosperity for all Americans. Recently the former view was exemplified in a presentation in Washington by a number of past officials of the previous Administration. They styled their undertaking the so-called "Hamilton Project," drawing on the name of the first U.S. Treasury Secretary. Based on what was said, it appears that Hamilton's name may have been misappropriated. Hamilton after all was foremost among the founding fathers in seeing that the new republic's future depended upon the vitality of commerce and the private sector while the authors of the Hamilton Project argue for a larger government role. The stated goal of this group was to put policy for our economy on a course "diametrically opposed to the current policy regime," calling the current path "on the wrong track on almost every front." They argued for a deceptively simple approach as an alternative, calling for both "fiscal discipline, and for increased public investment in key growth-enhancing areas." Well, if you do the math, growing the public sector--that is, making government bigger--and achieving fiscal discipline, can only lead to one thing: higher taxes. And higher taxes always mean a larger role for government and a smaller role for the private sector. Is that the way we want to go? I don't think so. They also claim to want economic growth to be "broad based." But, they intend a recipe of more government and higher taxes that is antithetical to growth itself. In that scenario, the only way for some to have more, is for others to do with less. That sounds to me like nothing more than the same old "class warfare." Hamilton on the other hand saw the boundless opportunity for all to benefit from an expanding economy.



Snow continues with the usual propaganda about how great the economy is doing. Brad DeLong starts his reply to this garbage from the 努orst Treasury Secretary in living memory・with a history lesson:

Does John Snow really have no clue that Hamilton believed that a big, activist government--regulating the financial system, supporting science and industry, encouraging manufactures, assuming the national debt--was essential for the health of the American economy? Is it really the case that nobody in John Snow's entourage knows that Hamilton was always on the "big government" side in his fights with Jefferson? That Jefferson believed that a big government was a threat to liberty, but that Hamilton did no--Hamilton was not interested in either big government or small government per se but rather in effective government?


Let痴 also recall what Sec. Hamilton said in the First Report on the Public Credit, 1790:

Persuaded, as the Secretary is, that the proper funding of the present debt will render it a national blessing, yet he is so far from acceding to the position, in the latitude in which it is sometimes laid down, that "public debts are public benefits" - a position inviting to prodigality and liable to dangerous abuse - that he ardently wishes to see it incorporated as a fundamental maxim in the system of public credit of the United States, that the creation of debt should always be accompanied with the means of extinguishment. This he regards as the true secret /or rendering public credit immortal.


Sec. Robert Rubin understood this fundamental maxim, but Sec. Snow seems to have forgotten it ・alas! Sec. Snow also seems to not understand two facts. The share of GDP going to government spending is higher today than it was in 2000 and the share of GDP captured by investment spending is lower than it was in 2000. The lack of fiscal responsibility embedded in the Bush Administration痴 phony claim that they are 堵iving us our money back・clearly has something to do with the reduction in national savings. It is too bad that our current Treasury Secretary fails to understand what Secretary Hamilton and Secretary Rubin realized.

http://blog.washingtonpost.com/achenblog/2006/04/daddy_wars.html
どこも仕事と家庭の両立に悩む人は多い。女性だけでなく男性も。



http://www.asahi.com/business/update/0415/012.html?2006

13日から一橋大で始め、秋からは早大と慶大でも半年間、傘下の銀行や証券、総合研究所の役職員が講義する。複数の銀行による協調融資(シンジケートローン)や資産の流動化、企業の合併・買収(M&A)の指南といった、最近注目を集める金融機関の機能について紹介する。

みずほFGの話。良いこと。


http://www.zakzak.co.jp/gei/2006_04/g2006041217.html

有名タレントが来れば、学生の勉学の妨げにもなり得る

これは仕様がないなあ。


http://flash24.kyodo.co.jp/?MID=RANDOM&PG=STORY&NGID=poli&NWID=2006041501003947

麻生太郎外相は、中国に対する円借款などの政府開発援助(ODA)供与について「環境問題に絞る」と述べ、--- 中国で公害が深刻になっていることを指摘し「環境問題を十分支援するだけの金を用意する気はあるし、技術指導も可能。向こうのニーズもあり、日中共益につながる」と強調した。

環境問題だけでも相当のニーズがある筈。むしろ双方のメリットは大きいし、将来のニーズを先取りしている面もあるのではないだろうか。


http://book.shinchosha.co.jp/foresight/web_kikaku/u115.html

行き方、勉強の仕方の大きな変化。興味つきない。

中国人の人材育成には褒めるのが一番

難しいところですね。ほめるにしても待遇には差を付ける必要がどうしても出てきます。



http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/15/world/europe/15bird.html?ei=5090&en=4d013235193e0df5&ex=1302753600&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss&pagewanted=print
密輸された鶏が鳥インフルエンザの広がりに一役。


http://www.nikkei.co.jp/news/main/20060415AT2C1402X14042006.html

生命保険各社の2006年度の運用計画が14日までに出そろった。外国債券から国内債券への資金シフトが鮮明になっている。

長期金利上昇を食い止めるのにどの程度の力があるだろうか?