REMINDER: All investment, economics, and finance related material now appears at the new IaconoResearch.com. For the time being at least, this has become a personal blog covering a variety of mostly unrelated topics.

Tom, Pennsylvania, and Taxes

Now, this is pretty spooky and, unfortunately for people like Tom, it’s pretty real – maybe not the ad, but the program. Just go to the Pennsylvania Tax Amnesty website for more info.

People would probably be better at paying their taxes voluntarily if there wasn’t a widespread belief that the rich don’t pay theirs due to an extraordinarily complicated tax system that works in their favor. Moreover, the fact that some of the best and brightest young people in the country are gravitating toward government jobs (because they have them) won’t make it any easier for people like Tom to avoid paying their fair share.

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Kanellos, the Greek Protest Dog

One of the constants in the regular Greek demonstrations that have been going on for months now has been a yellowish canine named Kanellos who, apparently, doesn’t mind loud noises and isn’t too keen on the government’s austerity measures.

There are a couple of related reports here and here where it is learned that this is not the original Kanellos but, rather, a dog that looks a lot like another protest dog named Kanellos who died sometime last year. It is unclear whether the Riot Dog Facebook page refers to the old Kanellos, the new Kanellos, or both.

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The key to our economic well-being has been and will continue to be higher stock prices and the “blossoming of finance” according to former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan in this interview with Al Hunt at Bloomberg.

Higher asset prices have been the central component of his view of “prosperity”, however transient that prosperity turns out to be. Here’s a gem from about the 7 minute mark:

Remember that, the bursting of a bubble, by itself, is not a big catastrophe. We had a dot-com bubble – it burst – and the economy barely moved and the result of this is it’s hard to tell, when that bubble bursts, what the consequences will be.

Warning: This video becomes hazardous to your health just after the fall of the Berlin Wall is again cited as the root cause of the bursting housing and credit market bubble.  I became physically ill at about the 9:30 mark and had to rush to the bathroom.

And Now for Something Completely Different

It’s not exactly clear what this is or why it’s been sitting in the draft folder for the last week, but now seemed to be as good a time as any to throw it up.


The young girl certainly seems talented, but, since I don’t understand the language and didn’t watch this all the way to the end, it’s not exactly clear what she’s talented at.

The Guardian reports that there’s more than just career risk when you fail at monetary reform in North Korea – you could lose your life, as Pak Nam-gi apparently just did.

North Korea has executed a senior official blamed for currency reforms that damaged the already ailing economy and potentially affected the succession, a news agency in South Korea reported today.

Pak Nam-gi was killed by firing squad last week, said Yonhap, citing multiple sources. The Workers party chief for planning and the economy had not been seen in public since January.

The 77-year-old was put to death as “a son of a bourgeois conspiring to infiltrate the ranks of revolutionaries to destroy the national economy”, the agency said.

But it reported that many North Koreans did not believe the explanation, citing one source who said: “The mood is the leadership has made Pak Nam-gi a scapegoat.”

If you’re not familiar with the story, you might be interested to know that North Korea introduced a new local currency a while back that could be exchanged for the old currency at 1-to-100 in an attempt to control inflation and drive out foreign currencies that were thriving on a very active black market.

Like most such attempts, this move did not produce the desired results – prices soared, hoarding increased, people starved – and, in the process, it wiped out the meager savings of many citizens while benefiting state workers who were paid in the new currency.

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Dollar Rises on New Dollar Fears

I, for one, will be quite happy to someday see a completely new global monetary system, a much-needed development that is not likely to be painless or voluntary. Then, at least, we can stop reading reports like this one from the Associated Press:

Moody’s warning on US, UK ratings lifts dollar
The dollar got a lift Monday morning after a leading credit ratings agency warned that the U.S. and the U.K. could see a downgrade of their top AAA credit rating.

That triggered a pull-back from riskier assets such as emerging-market currencies and stocks as investors sought safety in the dollar.

While Moody’s Investors Service said the U.K. and the U.S. don’t face an immediate threat to their AAA ratings because they are still able to service their debts. Rising interest interest rates could make it more expensive to do that, however.

Investors fled riskier assets into the less-risky dollar that could lose its AAA rating…

Of course, it only works this way for the world’s reserve currency – the U.S. dollar – which is, in itself, a big part of the problem.

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