Massachusetts State Legislature Considers Fluffernutter

If you’re wondering how a state legislature that is in session all year fills its calendar, here is a Boston Globe story on a current bill that would make the Fluffernutter the official state sandwich of Massachusetts.

[The legislature had earlier this week occupied itself with undoing a bill that it passed in 2004. To avoid a Republic governor being able to appoint an interim Senator, the legislature amended state law so that only the voters via a special election could replace a Senator. With one of our U.S. Senate seats vacant and a Democratic governor in office, we apparently needed to return to the governor the power of appointing a replacement Senator. In order for the new law to be effective immediately, rather than in the standard 90 days, the governor had to certify that it was required for “the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety or convenience” (source). Presumably the most urgent issue for Massachusetts taxpayers is getting the Federal government to take over paying for health insurance for our poorer citizens. Two years ago we implemented the kind of mandatory insurance scheme that Barack Obama is now trying to institute for the entire nation. The expected cost savings did not materialize, however, and the “reform” is going to cost billions of dollars more than budgeted.]

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Chrysler Replacing Owner’s Manual with DVD

The New York Times today carries a story about Chrysler replacing paper owner’s manuals for its cars with DVDs. This sounded sensible to me when I read the headline, but then I thought about what would make sense…

  • most of the dashboard space devoted to speedometer, etc., replaced with an LCD screen
  • GPS navigation standard
  • wireless Internet receiver to connect to the free universal wireless Internet that perhaps some day the U.S. will construct and, until then, to open networks, the owner’s home network, and the dealer’s network
  • a bit of flash memory

Given these items of infrastructure, which an engineer who didn’t have any experience in the automotive industry would probably design in, the extra hardware cost of on-screen help would be $0. If a driver got confused about how to use the car, he or she could browse through a text/photo/video owner’s manual on the screen normally devoted to navigation (note that this is how Nikon digital SLRs work; you can press a Help button at any time). The manual and GPS would be kept up to date with trickled data through the Internet receiver. In the event of a total system meltdown or for stuff that needs to be done outside the car, e.g., changing a tire, there would be a 20-page printed quick reference guide.

With Chrysler’s design, the urban owner who is confused about his car will have to walk several blocks back to his apartment, put a DVD in a player (will the average person even have a DVD player in 5 years, once everything of interest can be streamed?), watch the DVD, try to remember what he saw, then trudge back to the car. Couldn’t he use his laptop computer in the car? That would be nice except that increasingly people are getting netbooks without DVD drives. And in any case shouldn’t a $25,000 car be able to explain itself?

So… it sounds as though finally a car company is adapting to the modern world, but actually they are adapting to the way things were in 1975 when a CRT would have added a lot of weight to the car, computer data storage and processing was expensive, and it would have made sense to send the consumer home with a Betamax cassette.

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Pensions: How states and local governments indulge in deficit-spending

I’ve finished While America Aged, whose last third is devoted to San Diego. GM was bankrupted by foolish executives, convinced that the auto market would continue to grow, that GM would continue as the leader of an oligopoly for North America, that health care costs would remain low, and that American life expectancy at age 48 would not grow. The New York transit system and then city were bankrupted intentionally by politicians, who were sure that handouts to public employee unions would win them reelection and that the collapse would come at a time when they’d moved on to higher offices. The City of San Diego is sort of the same story as New York, with public employees retiring earlier and earlier and the pension system not being sufficiently funded (though in reality it is almost impossible to fund a defined benefit pension for people who retire at age 50, especially if the benefits are adjusted for inflation; how can anyone know what interest rates or the economic situation will be like 50-80 years from the present?). Both New York and San Diego set up fenceposts every year. If between the fenceposts the stock market had done exceptionally well, the pension “surplus” would be paid out to retirees. If the market later fell back there was no way to recover the money. Given sufficient stock market volatility, both cities’ pension funds would have been reduced to zero within a few years (because after a big random upswing all of the money would have been paid out and then the remaining assets would have shrunk down to almost nothing).

New York City was bankrupted by Democrats who taxed their residents at some of the highest rates in the nation, spent all of that money, and then spent a lot more in the form of unfunded pension promises. The taxes were so high and services and crime in the city so bad that businesses and residents began migrating to Connecticut and New Jersey even before the financial house of cards collapsed in the mid-1970s. San Diego was bankrupted by Republicans who taxed their residents at comparatively low rates. The city kept growing but not at a rate fast enough to keep up with the growing unfunded pension liability. The problems were exacerbated by fraudulent disclosures in bond offerings, e.g,. “we are not underfunding pensions”, and conflicts of interest, e.g., the president of the fireman’s union was on the board of the pension fund and proposed then approved changes that would add $30,000 per year to his pension and have no effect on any other city employee, past or present.

One message of the book is that the corporate managers who agreed to massive pension commitments were uniquely short-sighted. They were mostly in industries with little competition, either due to oligopoly or government regulation. As soon as competition developed (autos, steel) or government deregulated (airlines), the companies would go bankrupt, a disaster for the shareholders but not for the country. Smart modern companies don’t offer pensions because they’ve have figured out what should have been a simple fact: the only enterprises that should be offering to send people a check every year for the rest of their lives are insurance companies (if they write annuities and end up paying twice as much as planned because of an innovation that extends human life they will save a corresponding amount by not having to pay out life insurance claims) and ones that have a printing press for money (i.e., the federal government).

Cities and states have a tougher time escaping pension commitments and traditional bankruptcy protection may not be available to them. If every household in San Diego owes $6,000 for unfunded pension liabilities, property owners and residents will have to cough it up in the form of higher taxes. If the pension fund does poorly in the stock market, the households will have to pay again.

We the people share a lot of responsibility for pushing our towns and states into insolvency. We vote for politicians who promise the moon but don’t immediately tax away all of our income and wealth. A politician who promises $2 in benefits and $1 in taxes will win an election over one who promises benefits equal to taxes. The federal government respects voters’ wishes by running a visible deficit, borrowing or printing money to cover shortfalls. The Federal government can’t become insolvent because it can simply print money to pay everyone back.

Local and state governments, however, are generally prohibited from running deficits. If they borrow, it is supposed to be for capital projects such as building roads or schools. They can do some Enron-style accounting to make it look like they are borrowing to build a new library and then skim money off to pay operating costs, but a city or state cannot simply say “We’re going to spend more than we’re taking in.” They can’t say it, but they can do it. The key is offering and then underfunding pensions for governnment workers.

If a worker is eligible to retire at age 41 (Boston bus driver) or 50 (many California state workers) and receives a lifetime pension comparable to final year’s salary, actuarially roughly half the cost of employing that worker is from the pension. If payroll is half of a state or local government’s budget, not funding the pension at all is financially equivalent to spending $1.50 for every $1 of taxes collected or running a deficit of 33% of total spending. By choosing a funding percentage every year, a government can elect to engage in deficit spending between 0% and 33% of its budget.

The early retirement ages agreed to by governments inevitably exacerbate the financial challenge. Because health insurance is tied to employment and our 41-year-old retired MBTA worker won’t have a job, the MBTA’s customers are now responsible for his health care up to age 65 when Medicare takes over most of the cost. For a worker who is currently aged 20, the MBTA is promising to pay whatever health care costs prevail in the years 2030 through 2054, both for the worker but also anyone whom he chooses to marry and for any number of children that he chooses to have. How can they possibly know what this will cost? Blue Cross won’t sell insurance for more than one year ahead. What does the MBTA know about health care costs in the year 2054 that Blue Cross doesn’t know?

A lot of newspaper ink and television time is spent fretting about Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid. These programs, however, cannot implode. The government at any time can raise the age of eligibility for Social Security and immediately any funding problems disappear. It might be 75 in 2020, 80 in 2030, and 85 in 2040. Similarly the government can decide not to cover expensive procedures or drugs under Medicare/Medicaid. Alternatively, the federal government can print money and hand it out to those entitled to Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid.

The more serious problem is with state and local governments. Their obligations for pensions cannot be ducked and will fall on the shoulders of residents unlucky enough to remain within the taxing jurisdiction that owes the money.

What hope does the author give us for a solution? Precious little. You know that a problem is tough any time that hundreds of pages of descriptions of the problem flow easily and the suggestions seem tacked on as an afterthought. He says that public employeers unions are now so large, entrenched, and politically powerful (literally able to vote their bosses out of a job) that it is hopeless to consider reducing pensions for government workers. The only hope is to put massive amounts of money aside at the time pension commitments are made, relying on actuarial calculations. He fails to note that actuaries are forced to make a lot of assumptions, all of which proved to be untrue in the Crash of 2008. The stock market might collapse. Interest rates might fall to zero. The U.S. economy might go into a prolonged period of decline and deflation. All of these contingencies could be insured or hedged against, but the counterparty risk would be significant. What good would it do for a state to get an insurance company to agree to pay $100 billion in pensions thirty years in the future? The insurance company might not be solvent in 30 years and the federal government might not decided to bail them out. The state or local government is promising to protect the lifestyle of a present-day 19-year-old worker in the year 2100 when he turns 110. “State government” here includes basket cases such as Michigan and “local government” includes Flint, Michigan (very likely to have be reclaimed by forest before 2100).

More postings on the same book: “History of Public Employee Unions”; one on the General Motors section.

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Harvard and Yale, Black and White

In July, a black employee of Harvard University was arrested in Cambridge. What evidence was sufficient to justify the arrest? Henry Louis Gates was tired, frustrated, and apparently not very hospitable. More: Wikipedia.

This month, a white employee of Yale University was suspected of murdering Annie Le. Raymond Clark was, according to badge swipe records, the only person in the same parts of the building as the victim at the same time. He had deep scratches on his chest, arms, and back. Did this motivate the police to arrest him? Take some DNA samples, yes, but arrest, no. (He was finally arrested after the DNA test results came back.)

As the old housekeeper said in the movie “Being There”, upon seeing her old simpleminded charge (Peter Sellers) on television being put forward as a potential Presidential candidate, and noting that he had never learned to read or write, “All you have to be in this world is white.”

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When computer illiterates become spammers

The early days of spam were dominated by sophisticated computer users or at least people who could write a Perl script. Now that “email marketing” services are available to anyone with a product to hawk, we’re faced with a new phenomenon, the computer illiterate spammer. You’d think that a spammer with no computer skills would be a less formidable opponent, but that’s not always true.

I was getting spammed by “The Jetstream Group” in Chino, California. Every week they would send an email asking “Do your clients need a Mustang type rating or Mentor Pilot?” After a dozen or so I finally wrote back to the sender, Anthony Digati, asking him to take me off the list. He replied “I have no way to do it manually. Sorry”, suggesting that I go through an apparent-too-complex-for-him removal process ostensibly available through some links at the bottom of his unsolicited emails.

If we assume that Mr. Digati is representative of a new breed of spammers, it would appear that the Internet faces a new wave of pestilence. There are commercial enterprises with enough energy to purchase spamming services and learn how to send out emails. But they don’t have enough technological sophistication or interest to learn how to remove anyone from their lists. Or perhaps Mr. Digati’s email was literally correct and the services themselves don’t allow the spammer any control over the list (these spams were coming from iContact, a Chapel Hill, North Carolina company). Either way it seems as though the average Internet user could spend half the day getting him or herself off spam lists.

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Massachusetts Health Care Reform Results

About two years ago, Massachusetts implemented a health care reform scheme very similar to the one being proposed in Washington. Everyone would be forced to buy insurance. If they couldn’t buy insurance, the taxpayers would pay for it. Since everyone would now be insured, health care providers wouldn’t get stuck with expenses for the uninsured anymore. This was supposed to result in cost reductions. A hospital wouldn’t have to charge paying customers more to compensate for those who didn’t pay. Insurance rates would fall but the total amount of money collected by insurance companies would remain about the same (more customers times less money).

How did it work out? Todays Boston Globe story “Health costs to rise again” show that we succeeded in getting more people into the system as paying customers. Prices, however, will rise by about 10 percent and will be the highest in the United States (and therefore the world). They will be double what they were in the year 2000:

“State health care reform has had some unexpected results,’’ suggested Tim O’Brien, senior vice president at Blue Cross Blue Shield’s headquarters in Boston. “The actual costs have been much higher than what were anticipated when health care reform went into effect in 2007.’’

The article mentions that a state commission proposes paying HMOs for annual care rather than for individual procedures, just as proposed in my personal health care reform plan. However, no steps have been taken in this direction.

In the discussion of the costs of the Massachusetts reform, no calculations are typically made of the costs incurred by each taxpayer in the state in securing a certificate proving that he or she has paid for insurance, the costs of organizing that certificate in with one’s tax filings, the costs of the people at insurance companies who have to prepare and mail out these certificates (and replacements as necessary), the cost of postage for mailing, the salaries of people in state government who try to figure out if someone is breaking the law by not buying insurance, the pensions for those people, the salaries of government workers who dispute with taxpayers as to whether or not they have complied with the law, the accountants and attorneys that taxpayers hire to defend themselves agains the public employees accusing them of not complying with the law by buying insurance, etc., etc.

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The Leica M9, one for the marketing textbooks

Canon released the world’s first practical full-frame (24x36mm) digital single lens reflex camera, the EOS 1Ds, late in 2002. Canon currently sells a greatly improved version of this camera, the 5D Mk II, for $2700.

Suppose that you introduced a similar product 7 years after Canon. Though you were 7 years late, you decided to price your me-too camera at $7000. Because you don’t have a lot of in-house technical expertise, you buy the critical sensor from an external supplier instead of designing and making it the way that Canon does.

Would you expect the world to stop and pay attention to your product?

Check the discussion in the photo.net Leica forum about the just-announced Leica M9, then do a Google search for “Leica M9” to see the 325,000 documents talking about this sensational innovation (basically an old Leica rangefinder body with a Kodak (are they still in business?) CCD sensor stapled to the back). If General Motors and Chrysler were this good at marketing they wouldn’t have any trouble paying back our $100 billion!

[Note that CCD was what Japanese companies were using 10-15 years ago. A CMOS sensor is the heart of a modern Canon, Nikon, or Sony digital SLR.]

[November 2009 Update: The December issue of Popular Photography has arrived in the mail. This issue put the Sony A850 and the Leica M9 through their standardized test protocol. The Sony is the world’s cheapest full-frame digital SLR, selling for $2,000 (compared to about $2,650 for the Canon 5D Mark II). The Leica is the world’s most expensive, at $7,000. How did the cameras compare on Pop. Photo’s test bench? The Sony, with a 24 MP Sony-built CMOS sensor, achieved “low” noise through ISO 1600. This is greatly inferior to the 5D Mark II, which had a very similar noise measurement at ISO 6400 (two f-stops more sensitive). The Sony delivered 3135 lines of resolution and a superb “7.7” on color accuracy, albeit still inferior to Canon’s.

How did the Leica perform, at 3.5X the price of the Sony? Noise from the 18MP CCD sensor became “moderate” at ISO 1600 and “unacceptable” at ISO 2500. The noise of the M9 at ISO 800 was comparable to the Canon 5D Mk II at ISO 6400. Leica’s color accuracy and resolution were significantly inferior to the Sony.

How did Popular Photography deal with the embarrassingly poor image quality results of the $7000 Leica compared to the Japanese cameras? “They’re completely differently tools for completely different styles of photographer. We don’t categorize the M9 as a pro model–think of it as the ultimate (deep-pocketed) enthusiast’s camera.”]

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President Obama: Please take your Aunt Zeituni off our hands

Barack Obama has taken pains to assure Americans that illegal immigrants won’t be able to buy health insurance on his new exchange. They’ll still get free emergency care but they will be prohibited from paying the world’s highest prices for health care. What else are illegal immigrants going to be denied now? Will they be barred from the Apple Store and prevented from spending $3000 on a laptop? Prevented from buying Leica cameras? No haute couture, only prêt-à-porter?

Meanwhile, we taxpayers in Massachusetts are stuck with the bill for housing Obama’s Aunt Zeituni. The Wikipedia entry on this illegal immigrant has a good explanation of how she has avoided deportation thanks to the U.S. court system taking years to process even the simplest cases, e.g., Should a woman who has already twice been ordered deported, but did not leave, be… deported? (Put some judges and lawyers like that into a tire factory and pretty soon you need tariff walls to protect them against the Chinese.)

Massachusetts taxpayers have been paying for Aunt Zeituni’s housing for six years. Ever since Barack Obama’s ascendancy to the White House, we’ve also been paying for extra police details to deter the curious and the press. The Obama family inflicted further cost and inconvenience on folks in this state during their family vacation in Martha’s Vineyard, when roads and airspace were shut down for up to a week.

What could Barack Obama do to help Massachusetts? He owns a 14-room, 6500 square foot house in Chicago (using fossil fuels to heat 6500 square feet for a family of four in one of the coldest parts of the U.S. is apparently a demonstration of one’s commitment to reversing global warming) that presumably sits vacant nearly all year. The house is guarded 24/7 by Secret Service agents. The street is closed to non-residents. Why can’t Aunt Zeituni live there? She wouldn’t be bothered by the rabble or the press. She wouldn’t be a drain on Massachusetts citizens.

If Barack Obama wants to convince Americans that his health care plan won’t burden national taxpayers with the cost of caring for illegal immigrants, wouldn’t it be good for him to relieve the taxpayers of Massachusetts of the cost of caring for his illegal immigrant relative?

Via this posting I hereby offer to pay for Aunt Zeituni’s round-trip transportation to Chicago. I will pick her up in her public housing complex, drop her off at the new Southwest Airlines terminal at Logan Airport, buy her a ticket on Southwest, and arrange for my friend Jen to pick her up at Midway. Jen will drop Aunt Zeituni off at the Secret Service barriers and they can escort her to Obama’s house. We will reverse the process to get her back to Boston for her February 4, 2010 immigration hearing (source).

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Why it makes sense for the government to redistribute income

I was teaching a helicopter instrument flying lesson today and the student commented that the air traffic controller on Boston Approach sounded like he had a cold. I said “I’m not sure how he could have caught anything. His office is way up in Merrimack, New Hampshire and at an average salary of $117,000 per year (plus benefits) he should be able to live in a house that is at least a few hundred feet away from any neighbor.”

We got to talking about the morality of government paying its workers so much more than the private sector would and giving those workers pay raises during the depth of a recession, raises that would be paid for, in part, with taxes on people earning $25,000 per year.

I had an epiphany then. Some people complain about the government redistributing wealth from rich to poor. But as government employment grows to become an ever larger percentage of the American workforce, the very existence of government is redistributing wealth in the opposite direction. For example, government workers in California get paid, including pension liability, more than double what private sector workers earn (more). As the California government gets bigger and/or its pool of retirees (many can retire at age 50) grows, the government inherently is a mechanism for stealing from the poor (Walmart workers, landscapers, restaurant workers, operators of small businesses) and giving to the rich (schoolteachers, policemen, firefighters, bureaucrats at all levels).

The government needs to take some money from the rich and give it to the poor because the government’s habit of paying “public servants” 2-4X what it needs to is one of the principal causes of impoverishment.

[Anticipating some comments of the form “the poor don’t pay much income tax”, let me point out that poorer Americans pay a large proportion of their income in sales tax, property tax, excise taxes, and various fees. Both a poor person and a rich person pay the same $13.70 toll to travel on the Massachusetts Turnpike and ensure that its average toll taker can earn $71,000 per year (plus benefits and pension), but the $13.70 is more sorely missed by the poor person than by the rich person.]

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The cost of Government-run airport security

In “TSA: Taxes Spent Absurdly”, Becky Akers asks “How do you turn an industry that costs $700 million annually into one that eats $6 billion?” The answer turns out to be “Nationalize it, as Congress did airport screening after Sept. 11, 2001.” She goes on to note that “The TSA’s nearly 50,000 screeners have delayed, frustrated and harassed passengers at airport checkpoints from Maine to Hawaii. What they haven’t done after eight years and $48 billion is catch a single terrorist.”

Akers is certainly understating the cost of aviation security imposed after 9/11. At our little airport there is a state trooper employed to fingerprint student pilots. An average Massachusetts State Trooper, including pension, is paid over $200,000 per year. A couple of airport employees help with background checks, security education, and issuing badges. Until a student or renter gets a badge, which takes at least four weeks, the customer must be escorted by a flight school employee at a cost of perhaps $25 per hour. The customer who does a thorough pre-flight inspection of an airplane may take all of the profit out of the rental.

Then the airport management decided that student pilots shouldn’t be allowed to keep their badges at home. What if they abandoned flight training and never returned to the airport. The flight school would have to pay an employee to file away each badge after a student’s flight and then hand it back when the student next showed up at the airport.

[A little background on comparative risk management: The four-seat planes that the students are renting can carry approximately 400 lbs. plus the pilot and fuel. A terrorist with a tractor-trailer, by contrast, can carry approximately 100,000 lbs. of whatever weapons or explosives he chooses. Aviation is subject to new regulations every year while there are virtually no regulations on purchasing or renting a truck and loading it up in the privacy of your own home, field, or warehouse.]

On Sunday we had to cancel a sightseeing tour that we had scheduled. The Boston Red Sox moved their game from 1:35 to 12 noon, which meant that we could not get anywhere near downtown Boston at 11:15 am, due to the “Temporary” Flight Restriction imposed after September 11th that prevents aircraft from flying within 3 nautical miles of a professional or NCAA Division I sports stadium. This is on the theory that a determined terrorist won’t mind engaging in destruction and murder from the air, but will carefully check the NOTAMs to make sure he isn’t violating  a regulation. Unlike with the Presidential TFRs there are no F-16s or surface-to-air missiles to protect spectactors at such an event and a terrorist in a jet would travel through the 3 nautical miles in about 30 seconds. The FAA does not broadcast these TFRs. Nor does the FAA identify professional sports or NCAA Division I stadiums on its charts. To be legal, a pilot flying at lower altitudes would have to figure out where stadiums are located and check the schedules for every college and professional sports team that might be playing along his or her route of flight. [Note that the professional sports teams owners had been trying to get a restriction for many years in order to obtain a monopoly on in-stadium advertising and eliminate competition from airplanes towing banners. After September 11 they were able to get it for “security”.]

When a college or professional team wants to fly its own helicopter in or out of a stadium, they have to research the process for obtaining a waiver. They have to draft the waiver, which requires specialized aviation knowledge, after discussions with a pilot. The waiver application goes to the TSA to be reviewed by a taxpayer-funded employee.

If something isn’t done exactly right, either the FAA or TSA will have to prosecute a pilot for violating the policy against banner towers that had to be drafted instead as a security policy. Now at least five Americans are occupied in the dispute: (a) judge, (b) bureaucrat, (c) lawyer for government, (d) lawyer for pilot, (e) pilot. Instead of developing solar power systems or more efficient ways to make tires, five Americans are arguing about whether a pilot should have known that Wake Forest was having a football game and where Wake Forest’s stadium was.

I recognize that this posting relates only to a tiny slice of the American economy, but it is a slice that I have direct experience with. I imagine the rest of the economy is suffering from similar new regulatory burdens. The government adds regulations but almost never removes any, so the possible ways to violate a regulation grow every year. (This was a point made in the reviled book Bell Curve; in the old days it was pretty obvious what was a crime and easy to avoid running afoul of the law even if your IQ was 80; nowadays the legal system is so complex and prosecution so uncertain (marijuana and crack cocaine are equally illegal but somehow people are supposed to know that possession of marijuana is less likely to be prosecuted) that dumber-than-average people are screwed.)

One theory for how Americans can survive competition with Chinese workers who are better educated and get paid less is that the U.S. somehow has a more favorable environment for business and people have more freedom to do whatever it is that they need to do. As government keeps adding regulations, many of them in the name of security, one wonders if our environment is indeed more favorable.

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