Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – March 27, 2022
by Tony Wikrent
Strategic Political Economy
In a World on Fire, Stop Burning Things
Bill McKibben [New Yorker, via The Big Picture 3-26-2022]
The truth is new and counterintuitive: we have the technology necessary to rapidly ditch fossil fuels….
…the era of large-scale combustion has to come to a rapid close. If we understand that as the goal, we might be able to keep score, and be able to finally get somewhere. Last Tuesday, President Biden banned the importation of Russian oil. This year, we may need to compensate for that with American hydrocarbons, but, as a senior Administration official put it,“the only way to eliminate Putin’s and every other producing country’s ability to use oil as an economic weapon is to reduce our dependency on oil.” As we are one of the largest oil-and-gas producers in the world, that is a remarkable statement. It’s a call for an end of fire.
“Beauty and wonder of science boosts researchers’ well-being”
[Nature, via Naked Capitalism Water Cooler 3-21-2022]
“Scientists’ ability to experience wonder, awe and beauty in their work is associated with higher levels of job satisfaction and better mental health, finds an international survey of researchers. Brandon Vaidyanathan, a sociologist at the Catholic University of America in Washington DC, and his colleagues collected responses from more than 3,000 scientists — mainly biologists and physicists — in India, Italy, the United Kingdom and the United States. They asked participants about their job satisfaction and workplace culture, their experience of the COVID-19 pandemic and the role of aesthetics in science. The answers revealed that, far from the caricature of scientists as exclusively rational and logical beings, “this beauty stuff is really important”, Vaidyanathan says. “It shapes the practice of science and is associated with all kinds of well-being outcomes.'”
Fed headed for crack up? [video]
Mike Norman [Mike Norman Economics 3-26-2022]
Mike doing some projections this week on by how much or perhaps how fast the Fed can increase its policy rates while avoiding insolvency, ie a situation where their current interest income would be exceeded by their current interest payable…
You can see here current UST yields are less than the Fed’s overnight rates (inverted) out to 8 weeks … no bueno…
To be safe they may want to somehow pivot from the current perhaps implied policy of an acceleration in the increase in their policy rates to a policy of acceleration in their rate of asset/liability reduction… keep an eye out for this pivot…
(the not-so-hidden agenda. reassertion of unquestioned American primacy in the world. Not that this is anything new.)