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Edmontonfailarena

Edmonton’s Upcoming Fiscal Black Hole

Edmonton needs a new hockey arena about as much as an elephant needs that desperately sexy pair of high heels.   Before breaking metaphorical language any further, lets look at the price tag for this boondoggle in waiting.   Thanks to the Edmonton Journal for the numbers.

All in, $601 million. That breaks down as:

– Arena construction, $480 million

– Winter Garden pedestrian bridge across 104th Avenue, $53 million

– Arena land, $25 million

– Community rink attached to arena, $21 million

– Pedestrian corridor through the arena, $15 million

– Link to MacEwan LRT station, $7 million

$601 million so we can have rubber disk chasing in our downtown core.  I know I am terribly excited over the entire notion.  What is even more exciting is who gets to pay for these shiny new elephantine high-heels.

– The city: $219 million ($140 million for the arena, $25 million for the Winter Garden, $25 million for the land, $15 million for the pedestrian corridor, $7 million for the LRT and $7 million for the community rink).

– Katz Group: $143 million ($115 million for the arena, $28 million for Winter Garden).

– Ticket buyers, through a surcharge: $125 million.

– The province: $107 million ($100 million for arena, $7 million for community rink).

– The feds: $7 million for rink.

What is interesting to me, and by “interesting” I mean peeved, is that I fall into three categories that are donating to the Rubber Disk Arena construction fund.  I reside in Edmonton and thus pay municipal taxes, Edmonton also happens to be in Alberta thus I pay provincial tax aaaaaand Alberta happens to be in Canada and ‘Lo I also pay federal taxes.

Therefore, I get to pay $335 million while the dude that owns the team chips in $143 million to build a house for his team and he will get to keep all the revenue generated once the Rubber Disk Arena is built.   I need to get on the same plan as the Edmonton Oilers Owner; you know the one where you get to use public money to take the majority of risk and build stuff that will make me money once its built.

As the person indirectly responsible for funding this bedazzling misadventure, it would be sensical to point out that if private industry wants to build a new Rubber Disk Chasing Emporium, they should damn well pay for it themselves and not expect the public to fund their private ventures.

(ed.  Very proud not to have used the words “fucking insane waste of public money” in this article.)

Ayn-Rand Most of what Rand has to say about economics and politics is complete bunk.  The idea that we should not restrict the wealthy classes in their endeavours strikes me as the fast forward button on the decline of Western Civilization.  Altruism and empathy are the qualities that will save our civilization, their antithesis, aka much of what Rand proposes, will not.  Alter.net has a great article about Rand and what it is doing to our societies, I reproduce the section dealing with corporations and what they are actually mandated to do, as opposed to what they do now.

Ayn Rand envisioned a world without governments – a world where the super-rich are free to do as they wish.

We tried that during the so-called Gilded Age of the late 19th Century – before Ayn Rand was alive. If she’d watched the ruthlessness of the Robber Barons like she did the Bolsheviks, she may have reached different conclusions.

She may have realized that American Presidents like Teddy Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, and Dwight Eisenhower were right when they made sure that wealth was more evenly distributed and the Billionaire Class was held in check.

Or she may have come to understand that corporations and billionaires owe their wealth to the state and not the other way around. Without favorable patent and copyright laws, a court system, an educated workforce, and an infrastructure to move goods about the country, then no one would be able to get rich in America.  We’d be like the Libertarian paradise of Somalia.

As Harry Moser, the founder of the Reshoring Initiative, argued in The Economist, “Corporations are not created by the shareholders or the management. Rather they are created by the state. They are granted important privileges by the state (limited liability, eternal life, etc). They are granted these privileges because the state expects them to do something beneficial for the society that makes the grant. They may well provide benefits to other societies, but their main purpose is to provide benefits to the societies (not to the shareholders, not to management, but to the societies) that create them.”

 

 

Why do things happen the way they do?  Why do certain segments of society do well when everyone else is being hammered?  Some would say through being “smart” and “working hard”, but that is weapons grade bullshite of the highest order.  It is because, systematically, our system is being run for the benefit of one class of society and it does not matter who goes into the meat-grinder to keep this state of affairs going, as long as it is not them.

Please, tell me that society is not being run in the interests of the rich.  I double dog dare ya.. :)

 

SAP now coming to the USA

The US debt crisis is being oversimplified.  The message we here is we cannot pay our debts and therefore we need balance our spending and balance the budget.  Average people can understand that – but here is what has been done so far to combat debt via Whatever Works and a big thanks to Moe for her great work in compiling this list…  The debt has not just magically become a priority, but has been helped along by the policies listed below…

  • Irresponsible tax cuts.
  • Toothless regulation.
  • Interlocking directorates.
  • Boards hand picked by CEO’s.
  • Quarterly earnings now the fickle measure of a stock’s worth.
  • Perverse incentive systems.
  • A business media of enthralled groupies slavishly following and thrilling to rock star plutocrats.
  • The collapse of the  concepts of the common good and civics.
  • Devotion to profits above all.
  • The demonizing of any talk of fairness or social justice.
  • Purposefully ignoring our collapsing infrastructure while we prop up the economies of China and Brazil and their enormous investments in their own infrastructure (transportation, ports, broadband) that will ultimately make us even more uncompetitive than we are now. (After all, there’s no profit in proppingup a joint where workers demand a living wage.)
  • Our government’s committment to protect the ‘job creators’ who, during a decade of historically low tax rates have managed to lose more American jobs than at any time since the Depression.

Wealth is still being created in the US, but not for the average worker, or small business owner.  Let’s take a peek at this startling table glaned from The Centre for Labour Studies in Boston Massachusetts.

(This is a informative report btw, I would highly recommend you read the whole thing, or at least the summary at Sociological Images for the highlights.)

Table 3:

Growth in Real Annualized National Income, Corporate Profits, and Wage and

Salary Accruals in the First Six Quarters Following the End of Five Post-World War II Recessions from 1973-75 to 2007 – 09

(Numbers in Billions of Dollars in Constant 2010 CPI-U Dollars)

Recession’s Ending Quarter to Six to Seven Quarters Later (A)National Income Growth (B)Corporate Profits Growth (C)Accrued Wage and Salary Growth (D)Corporate Profits Share of Growth in National Income

(in %)

(E)Aggregate

Wage and

Salary Share

Of Growth in

National Income

(in %)

Six Quarters
1975 I – 1976 III $462 $148 $174 32 38
1982 IV – 1984 II $817 $227 $205 28 25
1991 I – 1992 III $237 -$4 $119 -1 50
2001 IV – 2003 II $333 $178 $50 53 15
2009 II – 2010 IV $528 $464 $7 88 1
Seven Quarters
2009 II – 2011 I $505 $465 -$22 92 0    [!!!]

The absence of any positive share of national income growth due to wages and salaries received by American workers during the current economic recovery is historically unprecedented. The lack of any net job growth in the current recovery combined with stagnant real hourly and weekly wages is responsible for this unique, devastating outcome.”

    The economy is working perfectly, or dysfunctionally depending on which class of people you belong to.  The debt crisis is will be the stick used to beat the middle class and poor out of social benefits and health care, all in the service of keeping the plutocracy drowning in profit.  The Republicans certainly are gung-ho about dismantling the social life preserving aspects of the state, as their backers (as well as the Democrats backers) are acting in the best interests of those who support them.

In a third world country this would be called “Structural Adjustment” and be headed by the IMP.  What lies within Structural Adjustment Programs is can be boiled down to this Austerity for the Poor and Wealth Engorgement for the rich.  Stay tuned for the hollowing out of Education, Social Security, Welfare, Public Health, Health Care and anything else that benefits the common good.  The funds will be funnelled up the ladder to the wealthy elite and oligarchy with lip-service being payed to the tough choices being made for the “good of the economy” while the majority of Americans and their children are saddled in economic misery with the debt continuing to increase on them due to the malfeasance of the rich.

SAP’s are no longer for the “other” peoples of the world, now they are made ‘in’ and ‘for’ the USA.

Is this a Craps game we should play?

“The consequences of the Japanese earthquake – especially the ongoing crisis at the Fukushima nuclear power plant – resonate grimly for observers of the American financial crash that precipitated the Great Recession. Both events provide stark lessons about risks, and about how badly markets and societies can manage them.

Of course, in one sense, there is no comparison between the tragedy of the earthquake – which has left more than 25,000 people dead or missing – and the financial crisis, to which no such acute physical suffering can be attributed. But when it comes to the nuclear meltdown at Fukushima, there is a common theme in the two events.

Experts in both the nuclear and finance industries assured us that new technology had all but eliminated the risk of catastrophe. Events proved them wrong: not only did the risks exist, but their consequences were so enormous that they easily erased all the supposed benefits of the systems that industry leaders promoted.”

The elites who are insulated from many of the problems they cause, continue to promote ideas and systems that are destructive to the people and very societies that allow them to become wealthy.

“Before the Great Recession, America’s economic gurus – from the head of the Federal Reserve to the titans of finance – boasted that we had learned to master risk. “Innovative” financial instruments such as derivatives and credit-default swaps enabled the distribution of risk throughout the economy. We now know that they deluded not only the rest of society, but even themselves.”

Not a bad description of the state of the financial sector in North America these days.  Deluded, self-absorbed and self interested individuals dedicated to getting their profits at any cost.

“These wizards of finance, it turned out, didn’t understand the intricacies of risk, let alone the dangers posed by “fat-tail distributions”- a statistical term for rare events with huge consequences, sometimes called “black swans”. Events that were supposed to happen once in a century – or even once in the lifetime of the universe – seemed to happen every ten years. Worse, not only was the frequency of these events vastly underestimated; so was the astronomical damage they would cause – something like the meltdowns that keep dogging the nuclear industry.”

Yep, with less regulation and less government interventions the cycles become even more unstable and prone to catastrophic failure.

“Research in economics and psychology helps us understand why we do such a bad job in managing these risks. We have little empirical basis for judging rare events, so it is difficult to arrive at good estimates. In such circumstances, more than wishful thinking can come into play: we might have few incentives to think hard at all. On the contrary, when others bear the costs of mistakes, the incentives favour self-delusion. A system that socialises losses and privatises gains is doomed to mismanage risk.”

Ah, but socialism for the rich is GOOD.   It is what the keeps the country running, it is the heroic investment/business class that is building society… except, while on its never-ending quest for profit,  it is actively destroying the fundamental supports and institutions required to keep society running.

“Indeed, the entire financial sector was rife with agency problems and externalities. Ratings agencies had incentives to give good ratings to the high-risk securities produced by the investment banks that were paying them. Mortgage originators bore no consequences for their irresponsibility, and even those who engaged in predatory lending or created and marketed securities that were designed to lose did so in ways that insulated them from civil and criminal prosecution.”

For politicians who preach responsibility, it would seem that the message is only for the poor who have to continually tighten their belts, while the message of irresponsibility aka the status quo, is maintained for the financial sector.

“This brings us to the next question: are there other “black swan” events waiting to happen? Unfortunately, some of the really big risks that we face today are most likely not even rare events. The good news is that such risks can be controlled at little or no cost. The bad news is that doing so faces strong political opposition – for there are people who profit from the status quo.

We have seen two of the big risks in recent years, but have done little to bring them under control. By some accounts, how the last crisis was managed may have increased the risk of a future financial meltdown.”

Oh hey you really screwed up, just keep doing what you’re doing we’ll let the public take care of the herculean pile of debt you amassed while shuffling your paper around.  And yet at the same time conservative politicians preach austerity for poor people and deride people on welfare for  ‘abusing the system’.  The irony is galling.

“Too-big-to fail banks, and the markets in which they participate, now know that they can expect to be bailed out if they get into trouble. As a result of this “moral hazard”, these banks can borrow on favourable terms, giving them a competitive advantage based not on superior performance but on political strength. While some of the excesses in risk-taking have been curbed, predatory lending and unregulated trading in obscure over-the-counter derivatives continue. Incentive structures that encourage excess risk-taking remain virtually unchanged.

So, too, while Germany has shut down its older nuclear reactors, in the US and elsewhere, even plants that have the same flawed design as Fukushima continue to operate. The nuclear industry’s very existence is dependent on hidden public subsidies – costs borne by society in the event of nuclear disaster, as well as the costs of the still-unmanaged disposal of nuclear waste. So much for unfettered capitalism!”

Ah yes, externalities, the Capitalists best friend.  See the concept of private profits and public risk…gambling with other peoples money is always so much easier.  Given the course of our society, I think a serious reevaluation of the concept of limited liability is in order.

Another monument to Socialism for the Rich!

The people of Edmonton do not need to fund a new arena.  We have an arena that seems to do just fine for watching overpaid athletes chase a rubber disk around while on ice-skates.

This whole hoopla has started because of the Edmonton Oilers owner, Daryl Katz decided that he wants his overpriced jock-shack downtown as opposed to the current site.  Katz would contribute to building the surrounding infrastructure as well.

I’m just not sold on the idea.  I am leery of having my tax dollars going toward funding sports teams that show little or no loyalty to the town and could possibly leave at any time (that pesky market you know).  I do like the idea of adding a ticket surcharge to hockey tickets, because then those who want this monstrosity will be the ones paying for it.  It seems to be a more fair solution to recouping the costs for the proposed downtown arena.

As far as reasonable entertainment is concerned lets compare a season with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra:

A                 B                 C                D                  E

Encore & Applause Adult (12 concerts) $684 $552 $432 $372 $252
Encore & Applause Stu/Sen (12 concerts) $684 $516 $408 $360 $240
Encore OR Applause Adult (6 concerts) $348 $282 $240 $204 $126
Encore OR Applause Stu/Sen (6 concerts) $348 $264 $216 $192 $120
Single Ticket Price $71 $61 $52 $38 $28 $20
Ticket fees apply to single ticket purchases

Or the Opera…

The Edmonton Opera 2010-11 Season

And then of course, the beloved Oilers…

Wow, $1250 dollars for the the worst seats in the house, and that is before transportation and food.  What a deal.

Keep in mind that this is for some 40 odd home games of hockey, however it is still overpriced.

Comparatively speaking, you could go 12 symphonies and 4 operas at the highest tier and still come out ahead financially, not to mention a better more cultured person.

Oh! A smooth ride ahead for the citizens of Alberta. Now the Deregulated Powah!

Alberta, Alberta, Alberta… The home of batshite crazy capitalist thinking and tomfoolery in general when it comes to fiscal policy (among many other things).

It is amazing to me that we are in such a mad rush to get back to the good ole’ days of being gouged by private utilities for what should be a public corporation.  The Alberta Government has changed the rate structure in an attempt to scare and intimidate Albertans into signing long term contracts with private power companies, whose rates, of course, are higher than the current regulated rate.

I just laugh now when people start to whinge and complain about how unresponsive their government is to their demands.  To make thinks perfectly clear, we do not have a democracy in Alberta, but rather a hepped up redneck Failarchy that believes, honest to god and jebus, that the only policies that are worth doing come solely from the right end of the political spectrum.  And we (F’n) LOVE it here in Alberta as we continue to vote them in again and again.

The Calgary Herald has some interesting information about the power rates in Alberta:

“The concern stems from the regulated rate option changing in July to be fully based on short-term market prices, rather than a mix of short-and long-term contracts.”

Essentially, lets add instability into the price of power and see how many people we can scare into signing up with the private power companies.  People should be up in arms, marching in the street, righteously pissed off with this sort of over-the-top pandering to the business class.  But no, past a few irate letters to the local paper the Alberta sheep bleat on, blissfully happy with their Tory Kleptocracy.

Please notice the wonderful phrasing of what in short stands for “Bend Over Here Comes the  Spiny Shaft of Capitalism.

“The intent that we expressed with this change is that this would give consumers a clearer picture of the market price of electricity,” Cummings said. “It gives them a clearer understanding of the cost of electricity so they can adjust their usage, and understand better when prices are high and can adjust accordingly.”

Boo!  Aaaaaah!  Quick run (don’t even think about walking you seniors and low income families) to the private sector to pay them more money for the same power you were getting before!  Did you ever wonder who the Government of Alberta represents?  If you are not incorporated Buck-O, it ain’t fracking you.

However there is a bit of bright side to the naked ratbaggery that is going on here.

“Consumers choosing to remain on the regulated rate could see more fluctuations in monthly bills, but, historically, electricity rates in Alberta have ranged between six cents and eight cents per kilowatt hour, Wachowich noted. And spikes in price are generally short-lived.”

So those who have more than two neurons to rub together and decide to stay on the regulated rate will be fine, but need to plan ahead accordingly for the minor fluctuations ahead.   Crisis put on hold until the insipid clowns politicians that lead us decide we need to more directly fund the corporate elite become more competitive.

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