[no subject]
>it's unclear that the economy can sustain positive real short-term interest >rates. I was thinking of Jim's assertion that there are speculative bubbles in some real estate markets, and my suggestion that the same might be true in some commodity markets. A speculative bubble exists whenever a market is dominated by investors ("noise traders" in the economics literature) with short time horizons who have taken highly leveraged long positions. Real positive short-term interest rates would force noise traders to unwind their positions. The Fed's task, when it decides to raise interest rates, will be to goad noise traders into unwinding their long positions gradually, as opposed to the more likely panicked stampede for the exits. An apt metaphor is trying to let some air out of a balloon without either popping or deflating it. Edwin (Tom) Dickens
[no subject]
Date: Sat, 10 Apr 2004 09:09:37 -0500 From: dmschanoes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --=_NextPart_000_0043_01C41EDB.8C4AF410 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit First a little point for point - Original Message - From: soula avramidis To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Saturday, April 10, 2004 6:19 AM Subject: Re: [PEN-L] Mark Jones Was Right That oil is a finite resource is not a question; I hope. because if we were to argue it is not, then that is a doosy per se. so what is the problem here, that oil will peak in 2006, 2010, or 2015 etc. is Hubbert's an imprecise forecast method. this is just like saying the bubble will burst but I do not know when give or take five years. dms: Or it's like predicting that the stock market is going to fall, or that it's going to rain. Make the prediction every day and eventually, maybe, you'll be right, but only half as right as a stopped clock which is right twice a day, with exactly the same lack of meaning. The point is not the predictive accuracy for yes, oil is indeed finite. The point is whether or not the current actions of the bourgeois order, of capital, are determined by the finite capacity of a "natural" resource, or by those contradictions inherent to a system where the means of production are organized as a property form requiring the aggrandizement of wage labor. In simpler language-- is the determinant of the current situation based on the falling rate of profit in the oil industry based on the growth of constant capital, or is the determinant some quickly approaching depletion of the "natural" supply? ___ so what next, that production will peak and that bringing in new capacity to past levels will cost more per unit of output. and that oil price and control is relevant since oil is a principal commodity in all production. it is precisely the point at which cheap oil production evaporates when alternative energy sources are too costly to smooth the transition from one mode of energy dependency to another in the process if you like of capital accumulation. it is not like as if we were going to wake up tomorrow and find that oil is gone. it is like when it becomes more expensive to draw oil out of the ground, going for control of high reserves of cheaply mined Arab oil (1 dollar per barrel) makes for a hell business, both in itself and insofar as you strangle others with it. that is why Iraq and the gulf where cost of production is cheap is the big prize for US bourgeoisie dms: There have been three OPEC price spikes since 1973. None of them had anything to do with increased costs of production. In fact, the latest one 1999 was in fact triggered by overproduction, itself a result of the declining cost of production below the 1949 post WW2 low. You can look it up. Further, the historic trend for finding and lifting costs for US petroleum majors has been downward since 1973, with an upturn around 1996-97 as more US effort went into deepwater drilling. The recent trend has resumed its downward costs. You are right. We sure aren't going to wake up and find the oil gone. And the bourgeoisie and the markets do NOT react to predicted 30 year scarcities. Capital does not allow that. It's all about fear and greed for capital, today's fear and greed, today's cash. Markets have no memory and less imagination. If it were otherwise, there would never be overproduction, or bubbles, or the repitition of the same old same old scams. __ . that is why Mark Jones was not only right.. his little peace on the castration of Japanese capital was one good piece of Leninist analysis, but he like I fall into the trap of becoming natural scientist when we are not. the point is not about natural science however, it is about the process during decline. dms: Don't know if I read that piece, but yes OPEC 1 in particular sure smacked the Japanese around, and OPEC 2 had some impact, but moreso in the 1986 price break, leading to the Plaza Accords, and the gutting of the USSR> __ And now for the another, perhaps, bigger issue: The scarcity argument, and Mark Jones' argument was/is NOT about cost--the depletionist argument, which Jones embraced, is about an absolute zero of petroleum/hydrocarbon availability. That supposed Marxists can endorse this assertion without considering its meaning for all of Marx's work and critique, including that most important critique, the necessity of proletarian revolution, is mind-boggling. The depletionist argument is that the end is near, repenting won't help, and the future looks a lot like George Miller's Mad Max ser
[no subject]
My nephew asks: Do you know of any good articles or web sites that comprehensively discuss the Romanian transition and expelling of Ceaucescu? I answer, "No, but I know lots of smarties on PEN-L who surely will". If I remember, Ceaucescu was shot, not expelled, for starters... Bill
[no subject]
Gassler Robert wrote: The problem is that concepts like heteroskedasticity refer to samples and how well they reflect the total population. Here we have the total population of US presidential elections, so we do not need statistical inference. Actually we do need statistical inference. We do not have the "total population." In the context of this discussion, the "total population" is the "voters" in recent U.S. electoral history *and* in the coming elections. So these "voters" include people who voted, people who may vote in November (including those who will actually vote), *and* people who *might have* voted (had some chance of voting) in previous elections but who actually didn't vote. That would be the "total population" and we don't have it. David was using samples of this population (the voting frequencies in previous elections) to draw inferences about the likely behavior of voters in 2004. Every time there's a presidential election (or every time there's a poll) the random variable (voting choice of an individual voter) takes one and one value only. It's like drawing a sample from the population. The voting results in previous elections are samples of this population. The tricky part in David's exercise is that he was implicitly assuming that the probability distribution of voting behavior was stationary or -- more generally, if you forgive me for using this term -- ergodic, which is not. "Stationarity" means that some characteristics of the probability distribution remain fixed. (What Sabri would call "homoskedasticity" or same-variance is a strict case of variance-covariance-stationarity... ooph!) In plain words, we don't have one and the same bucket with marbles of different colors from which we draw samples every time there's a presidential election. No. The bucket changes, the marbles change, the colors change -- many things change in ways that we cannot easily pin down. Julio _ Charla con tus amigos en línea mediante MSN Messenger: http://messenger.latino.msn.com/
[no subject]
Louis Proyect wrote: Well, who else is supposed to criticize the Democrats? Salon.com? The Nation Magazine? Bill Moyers? [clip] I think that the point of Counterpunch (and PEN-L) is to address the necessity of transforming the system. We are facing a downward spiral in bourgeois politics that has been going on for decades. Richard Nixon's domestic policies were far more "liberal" than either Clinton's or Dean's. Yeah, everybody should slap the Democrats when they're screwing things up in the relevant issue of the day. How's Krugman doing? Learn from him -- he's trying to drive a wedge between the army (and their families) and the administration. That's trying to get the biggest bang for your buck. To draw the proper economic and political lessons from the Clinton years is an important strategic task. But it's not the burning issue of the day. You can seriously do it now without shooting yourself in the foot. How about picking on Greenspan? He's the one who gave a free pass to the tax cuts for the rich. So, what's Counterpunch? I suppose the name says it all -- it's definitely not the Journal of Recent Economic History. Only children and junkies need not care about context. As for PEN-L, I don't know, but it seems to me like a group of professional conspirators bent on taking over the galaxy -- just look at the e-mail address of their leader: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Weird... Julio _ Las mejores tiendas, los precios mas bajos y las mejores ofertas en MSN Latino. http://latino.msn.com/compras
[no subject]
F A C I N G S O U T H A progressive Southern news report September 4, 2003 * Issue 61 Published by the Institute for Southern Studies and Southern Exposure magazine. To join the Institute and get a year's worth of Southern Exposure and Facing South, visit www.southernstudies.org/support.asp _ INSTITUTE INDEX * If this is a recovery, don't show me a recession Year that the Bush Administration says the recession ended: 2001 Amount by which the number of people in poverty grew last year, in millions: 1.4 Number of jobs that have been lost since the "recovery" started, in millions: 1 Number of manufacturing jobs lost in North and South Carolina since January 2001: 180,000 Last time the country experienced a "hiring slump" this bad: 1939 Sources on file at the Institute for Southern Studies. _ DATELINE: THE SOUTH * News Around the Region THE TEXAS STALEMATE: IT'S ALL ABOUT RACE The Democratic boycott of the Texas legislature over a redistricting battle isn't just about party politics -- it's also about race. As one Republican confides: "We have 10 years until Hispanics take over." (Salon, 9/3) http://www.truthout.org/docs_03/090403F.shtml GOP OWNS "NASCAR DAD" VOTE They are middle- to lower-class white males, mostly from rural areas, who analysts call "NASCAR dads." They make up a demographic that Democrats want, much as they sought the suburban "soccer mom" vote in 2000. But their Republican leanings may make roadkill of the Democratic bid for the Whitehouse. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 8/31) http://www.ajc.com/news/content/news/0803/31nascardads.html FLORIDA TOPS U.S. FOR LAW-BREAKING FARM LABOR BOSSES Florida, America's citrus capital, is also America's capital for lawless and ruthless farm labor contractors. The state is home to more than four of every 10 farm contractors currently barred from doing business for skirting migrant farmworker laws. Florida is also home to the largest hub of these crew-boss contractors, more than one of every three nationwide. (Miami Herald, 9/1) http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/state/108.htm RECONSTRUCTION MONUMENT RILES SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS An effort to highlight South Carolina's Beaufort County as the national birthplace of the South's Reconstruction era has stirred tension in the Lowcountry. The Sons of Confederate Veterans wants to stop the effort to federally protect several sites honoring the area's prominent historical roles in the post-Civil War period. (The State [Columbia, SC], 8/22) http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/6591076.htm VOTING MACHINE MAKER A MAJOR REPUBLICAN BOOSTER The head of a company vying to sell voting machines in various states told Ohio Republicans in a recent fund-raising letter that he is "committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year." Walden O'Dell is chief executive of Diebold Inc., a company contracted to install machines in Georgia, North Carolina and other states. (Cleveland Plain Dealer, 8/28) http://www.cleveland.com/search/index.ssf?/base/news/106207171078040.xml?nohio SOUTHERN UTILITY GIANT HIRES EPA REGULATOR Georgia energy giant Southern Co. hired a new congressional lobbyist this week -- John Pemberton, chief of staff of the division of the federal Environmental Protection Agency that delivered a key Clean Air Act victory last week to the nation's coal-fired utility industry, led by Southern Co. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 9/4) http://www.ajc.com/business/content/business/0903/04southern.html MORE THAN HALF OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY FOREIGN-BORN Florida's largest county is the only county in the country where more than half the residents are foreign-born, according to a U.S. Census Bureau survey. Miami-Dade's foreign-born residents account for 51.4 percent of its population of 2.3-million. That tops counties in larger metro areas in New York and California. (St. Petersburg Times, 9/3) http://www.sptimes.com/2003/09/03/State/Born_in_USA_Not_in_Mi.shtml THE TEXAS MACHINE They brought you G.W. Bush, Karl Rove, and Tom DeLay, and other leaders of the country. Welcome to the story of the Texas Machine, or how a small group of politicians and corporations bought themselves a legislature and took over the world. (Texas Observer, 8/29) http://www.texasobserver.org/showArticle.asp?ArticleID=1434
(no subject)
"We hold these truths to be self evident. That all men are created unequal, and that the capitalist class is endowed with ceratin natural rights; that among these rights are the right to hoard, exploit, and market life, liberty, pursuit of happiness, air, water, food, clothing, shelter, and employment" The Independent 23 March 2003 Activists rage against global 'water wars' By Peter Popham in Rome Campaigners met in Florence this weekend to condemn the notion that water is a resource to be bought, sold and monopolised by wealthy nations and corporations. Disgusted with a World Water Forum in Kyoto that they say is "one more celebration of market forces, capital and private investment," 1,000 campaigners and activists streamed into Florence to flesh out their vision of water as "the basic common good". They have descended on the medieval castle in the city centre taken over last November by tens of thousands of participants at the European Social Forum. The organisers say the forum showed that, "despite efforts over the past decade to discredit and marginalise alternative movements, their voices are part of a credible process". Florence is a symbolic setting for the inauguration of the People's World Water Forum. Exactly 500 years ago, during a war between Florence and Pisa, Machiavelli and Leonardo da Vinci planned to divert the River Arno from Pisa, hastening that city's defeat. That was an early water war. But speakers at the forum voiced their fear that the world is now heading for an endless succession of such wars to control access to "blue gold". They believe that participants at the official Water Forum in Kyoto, also taking place this week, are committed to the control of water by governments and corporations - at the permanent expense of the Third World poor. One speaker at the forum, Riccardo Petrella, a professor of political economy at Leuven University in Belgium, defined water as "the basic element of solidarity. Sharing water is not something you do for others to make yourself feel good - it's something that shows you have things in common with that person. You don't assert that solidarity until you see yourself as part of the same biological and territorial unit." The oppositional, bipolar perspective of the Cold War, he said, has been replaced by a growing sense of the inevitability of war. "They say that water will be the next object of conquest by the year 2020, when the world's population reaches eight billion," he said. "But water is not 'blue gold'. Water is just water, the greatest common good. We don't have to believe in the World Bank's scheme of permanent belligerency." The forum's goal is to implant the notion of "a right to water for all - a global good - as a principle recognised universally", and to fight against "all forms of privatisation and merchandisation of water". They want to see the setting up of a World Water Authority with judicial, legislative and sanction powers - not the "purely technocratic approach of the disputes settlement body of the World Trade Organisation". The forum's goals were unwittingly endorsed by research published this week showing that tap water in Italy's major cities is as good or better than the mineral water on which millions of euros are spent every year.
[no subject]
Hey Tom I'm teaching Mike Lebowitz's old Marxist economics course at SFU this semester. Any chance you would enjoy coming to talk to 40 economics students about the world-historic issue of shorter work time on a Tuesday or Thursday between 1.30 and 3.30? I can't really offer any benefit other than as much beer as you can drink in one sitting and vague notions of karma. Bill
(no subject)
from single payer quote of the day... Health Affairs November/December 2002 How And Why The Health Insurance System Will Collapse By Humphrey Taylor, Chairman of the Harris Poll Abstract The advocates of defined-contribution health plans extol the virtues of consumer-driven health care, consumer choice, and empowered consumers as solutions to the problems--particularly the rapidly growing costs--of employer-sponsored health benefits. This paper argues that the widespread use of defined contribution plans, with more consumer choice and more knowledgeable consumers, will lead to the erosion of the social contract on which health insurance must be based, with healthier employees subsidizing the care of older and sicker ones, and a death spiral of adverse selection. If unchecked by government intervention, these trends will lead to the collapse of employer-sponsored health insurance. http://www.healthaffairs.org/1130_abstract_c.php?ID=http://www.healthaffairs .org/Library/v21n6/s28.pdf
[no subject]
We presented to the public the new market segment included by SA Supply. Tattoo Flash of several artists' drawings, all numbered and with certificate of authenticity. Commercial drawings with guaranteed quality. Satisfied customer and profit certain. PRICES OF COLOR SETS Option 1 - 11 Sheets A3 - US$ 100,00 Option 2 - 11 Sheets A3 + 11 Sheets A4 - US$ 150,00 - plus S/H PRICES OF B&W SETS Kanjis - Names in Korean - Black Henna - US$ 30,00 - plus S/H PAYMENT OPTIONS BANK TRANSFER - WESTERN UNION VISA CREDIT CARD http://www.satattoo.com/menu/botoes/produtos/catalogodesenhosenglish.htm
(no subject)
This is about Roberto Rodrigues, future Minister for Agriculture. The Minister for Development is Luiz Fernando Furlan, currently president of Brazilian agribusiness titan Sadia; foreign minister is Celso Amorim. All of them are conservative economic nationalists, most of them arent even PT; the only sort of leftwinger in the government is the minister of the environment, Marina Silva This guys defends the right of property owners to take up arms against the MST. Thiago Oppermann Portuguese original at: http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/brasil/ ult96u43530.shtml Lulas Minister was Secretary under Fleury and is Opposed to MST Farm Occupations Sílvia Freire Folha Online Agronomist Roberto Rodriges ,50, was nominated today for the Ministry of Agriculture by president-elect Luiz Inácio da Silva, and arrives at the top echelon of the new government bringing with him the experience of having been secretary for Agriculture and Supply in the State of São Paulo between 1993 and 1994, during the governorship o Luiz Antonio Fleury Filho (ex-PMDB, now PTB [ie. Ex-centrist, now rightwing of the centre-left *sigh*]) Rodrigues is an agricultural engeneer with qualifications in rural administration obtained at the UNAERP in Ribeirão Preto, and professor in the Department of Rural Economy in the UNESP, in Joboticabal, where he currently leaves. The future minister is also an agriculturalist in the municipalities of Jaboticabal and Guariba, in São Paulo and in Balsas in the state of Maranhão. Since 1999, Rodrigues has presided over the ABAG (Brasilian Association of Agribusinesses), and entity which represents 45 large businesses and cooperatives in the agricultural sectors, including Monsanto, the fertiliser and biotech enterprise; banks and agricultural cooperatives. Rodrigues represents the private sector in the Foreign Trade Business Council, and between 1992 and 1993, was the sectors representatie in the National Monetary Council. In an article published by the magazine Agroanalysis, of the FGV (http:// www.abagbrasil.com.br/) in march, Rodrigues criticised the farm occupations under the respectable, but debatable flag of agrarian reform and argued a defense of the property-ownders who end up arming themselves to defend themselves. In the text, Rodrigues criticises the workers rights legislation which construes rural employers as debtors, as victims of specialist lawyers. In another article, published in august in the same magazine, the future minister defended the association of government and private enterprise to increase the competitiveness of Brazilian products in the international arena, so as to increase exports. In this text, Rodrigues says that the federal government has been timid in its actions in the funding, logistical and in international negotiations and criticises the Government for having refused to presen the WTO with a document composed by the Ministry of Agriculture about losses caused by American protectionism. Rodrigues was one of the organises of the first national congress of rural economy, which for 18 years has defined the trajectories for development of agrobusiness in Brazil. This year he organized the first Brazilian Congress of Agribusiness, which will discussed policies to increase the competitiveness of the country internernally and externally. - This mail sent through IMP: www-mail.usyd.edu.au
(no subject)
[no subject]
Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] & http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine
[no subject]
Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] & http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine
(no subject)
Unsubscribe. Thanks
(no subject)
SIGNOFF PEN-L
[no subject]
(no subject)
unsubscribe
[no subject]
Where I wrote >There's no reason to think that Marx understands "a bourgeois system of ethics" to embrace the notion "that every commodity sells at its [labor] value," and some significant reasons to believe to the contrary. First, Marx associates the former primarily with *formal* (as opposed to quantitative) equality in the exchange relationship (and the bourgeoise political economist par excellence, Adam Smith, did not insist that commodities should exchange at their [labor] values);< Jim responds what Smith thought is indeed a non sequitur, since Marx was dealing with mid-19th century bourgeois thought (especially Ricardo, with Lockean moral overtones, as when the businessman asserts that his property arose from his own labor). Marx himself cited obscure thinkers such as Mercier de la Riviere who represented the crude political economy of his time... Uh, Jim, Mercier de la Riviere published the work cited by Marx in 1767, 9 years before Smith published the Wealth of Nations. And the other "contemporary" economists Marx cited in his Ch. 5 discussion are Condillac (1776) and Le Trosne (1777). You were saying...? Anyway, my basic point still holds--there is no evident basis for believing that Marx associated any ethical connotations, bourgeoise or otherwise, with the condition that commodities exchange at their respective values. Later, where I wrote >In KI, Chapter 5, Marx advances arguments *justifying* his subsequent assumption that commodities exchange at their respective values. He doesn't actually invoke this assumption analytically until the beginning of KI, Ch. 6, [i.e., immediately after the quote above.] that is, *after* he's justified this stipulation. The passage that Jim quotes here is the conclusion of the argument intended to justify this assumption, not the assumption itself. < Jim responds I don't think that Marx presents his ideas that way, like some sort of deductive process. As I've said before and for brevity's sake will not repeat at length, that part of CAPITAL should best be seen as written like a mystery. I won't dispute that this part of CAPITAL reads like a mystery to you, Jim. But the fact remains that Marx *is* making a deductive argument here, and he advertises it as such. He isn't simply asserting that surplus value *can* be explained on the basis that commodities exchange at their values, as you suggest; he's insisting that the explanation *must* be made on this basis. This reading is nicely corroborated in the sentence just before the passage you cite from Chapter 5: "The transformation of money into capital *has to be developed* on the basis of the immanent laws of the exchange of commodities, in such a way that the starting-point is the exchange of equivalents." [I, 268-9, emphasis added] The claim is reiterated in the final footnote of the chapter, where Marx says "If prices actually differ from values, we *must* first reduce the former to the latter, i.e., disregard this situation as an accidental one in order to observe the phenomenon of the formation of capital on the basis of the exchange of commodities in its purity..." [emphasis added] Now, clearly Marx isn't saying this assumption "has to be" made, "must" be imposed, to satisfy the demands of etiquette, or on ethical grounds, or because somebody will break your legs if you don't; Marx is saying that this conclusion is *logically* entailed by the argument he develops in the chapter. And as I pointed out, this argument is logically invalid. Gil >And for what it's worth, as he painstakingly spells out in the final footnote of Chapter 5, Marx justifies this assumption on the basis that price-value disparities are "incidental" to the existence of surplus value. The warrant he gives for this conclusion, developed at length in the body of Chapter 5, is that price-value disparities are not of themselves *sufficient* to account for the existence of surplus value.< I'm quite familiar with that quotation. He doesn't see value/price deviations as contradicting his theory of exploitation. Instead, he ignores them as part of his mode of presentation. >One could, with exactly parallel logic, conclude that the presence of oxygen in the earth's atmosphere is "incidental" to the existence of human life on the planet, since it is not of itself sufficient to account for the existence of human life... < no, that's a false analogy, since in CAPITAL volume I, Marx shows that exploitation can exist _despite_ an assumed price/value equality. No-one has shown that life on earth can exist despite a hypothesized lack of oxygen. JD
(no subject)
unsuscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[no subject]
BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS, DAILY REPORT, MONDAY, MAY 13, 2002: A sharp decline in food prices out-weighed the increase in gasoline and tobacco prices, causing the producer price index to drop 0.2 percent in April, compared with a 1.0 percent increase in March, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The prices of consumer foods dropped 3.2 percent in April, compared with a 0.6 percent increase in March, BLS said. The so-called core rate of wholesale inflation -- finished goods minus food and energy -- increased 0.1 percent in April. Over the year, the core PPI has risen 0.4 percent (Daily Labor Report, page D-1). Wholesale prices fell 0.2 percent in April, led by the biggest drop in food costs in nearly 3 decades. The decline in the producer price index was a big turnaround from the sharp 1 percent increase registered in March, the Labor Department reported. Excluding volatile food and energy prices, the "core" rate of wholesale inflation rose 0.1 percent for the second straight month (The Washington Post, May 11, page E2). Producer prices fell unexpectedly in April as food costs showed the biggest decline in almost 3 decades and sluggish demand made it harder for companies to charge more, the government reported today. The Producer Price Index, which measures prices paid to factories, farmers, and other suppliers of goods and materials, dropped 0.2 percent after gaining 1 percent in March, the Labor Department said. Excluding food and energy, the index rose 0.1 percent, the 11th consecutive reading of that size or smaller (Bloomberg News, The New York Times, May 11, page B2). April's unexpected decline in U.S. wholesale prices, which includes the biggest drop in food prices in 28 years, suggests inflation is abating even as the economy rebounds. The Labor Department said Friday the producer price index for finished goods fell 0.2 percent, the first decline in 4 months. The drop largely reflected a 3.2 percent fall in food prices and a slowdown in the growth of energy prices: When food and energy items are excluded, the "core" index rose 0.1 percent, the same rate as in March. Excluding a 3.9 percent increase in tobacco prices, core prices declined 0.1 percent; according to Morgan Stanley (The Wall Street Journal, page A6). Writing on trade unions Mary Ellen Slayter (The Washington Post "Career Track" feature, page E4) says "Although a 1999 survey by Peter D. Hart Research Associates, Inc. found that young adults (18 to 34) are twice as likely to think positively about unions than negatively, many young workers don't quite understand how unions work." In her article, she quotes Bureau of Labor Statistics' data, saying "...union members made 15 percent more than nonunion workers in 2001, according to the U.S. Labor Department. On average, union workers made $718 a week in 2001; nonunion workers made $575." One commonly cited complaint (about union membership) is the cost of dues. "Most unions set dues as a percentage of pay. Those who make more, pay more," says Slayter. Another common objection is that unions aren't suitable for "professionals" or intellectual workers, that they are only appropriate for factory workers. White-collar workers generally believe they should negotiate individually based on their talent and skills, not based on where they fall under the union contract. This is one reason why there are fewer union workers today than 10 years ago. In a service economy, individual talents, which are often hard to judge objectively, allow some to advance in their careers faster than others. In 2001, 13.5 percent of wage and salary workers were union members, unchanged from 2000, according to the U.S. Labor Department. This is a significant decline from the high of 20.1 percent in 1983, the first year such statistics were reported. Maintaining a gradual rate of improvement, hiring plans for most industries are stronger for the third quarter than they have been in more than a year, the latest Manpower, Inc. survey shows. It was the second consecutive quarter in which job prospects improved. In its second-quarter survey, Manpower projected a turnaround as many industries pulled out of recession. Manpower's survey of nearly 16,000 firms showed that 27 percent plan to add employees in the third quarter, up by 6 percentage points from the second-quarter reading of 21 percent. Only 8 percent of employers said they plan layoffs for the third quarter, down from 10 percent reporting such plans for the second quarter. Manufacturing employment gains projected by the latest survey are especially encouraging, given the long-running downturn in that sector, Manpower Chairman Jeffrey Joerres said (Daily Labor Report, page A-9; Melissa McCord, Associated Press, http://www.nypost.com/apstories/business/V4788.htm). DUE OUT TOMORROW: College Enrollment and Work Activity of 2001 High School Graduates <>
[no subject]
Unsubscribe
(no subject)
set pen-l mail ack
(no subject)
It is not that Engels misunderstood Marx. Marx unfolded a new law system. Marx ame first. Engels agreed to the best of his ability. To continue. >MIYACHI TATSUO >PSYCHIATRIC DEPARTMENT >KOMAKI MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL >KOMAKI CITY >AICHI Pre. >JAPAN [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>Below is from "Capital" >>"The specific economic form, in which unpaid surplus-labour is pumped out of >direct producers, determines the relationship of rulers and ruled, as it >grows directly out of production itself and, in turn, reacts upon it as a >determining element. Upon this, however, is founded the entire formation of >the economic community which grows up out of the production relations >themselves, thereby simultaneously its specific political form. It is always >the direct relationship of the owners of the conditions of production to the >direct producers -- a relation always naturally corresponding to a definite >stage in the development of the methods of labour and thereby its social >productivity -- which reveals the innermost secret, the hidden basis of the >entire social structure and with it the political form of the relation of >sovereignty and dependence, in short, the corresponding specific form of the >state. This does not prevent the same economic basis" >>Brenner's reductionism is clear. He only analyze market, finance, or credit. >This tendency can ascend to Stalin's formula that economic process is >natural and to proceed without people's will. Certainly capitalist system is >reversed world in which Sachen (commodity, money and capital=== In any >English translation of " Capital" there is no distinction between Sachen and >Ding, but the two are different category, Sachen means occupying property, >and Ding is mere physical matter, and identifying Sachen with Ding, we can >not distinguish Versacherling and Verdinging, which is important to >understand Marx's critique of fetishism) rule people, and people >unconsciously and collectively produce Sachen which produce self-destructive >power for people. >>And finally Marx described >>"In capital -- profit, or still better capital -- interest, land -- rent, >abour -- wages, in this economic trinity represented as the connection >between the component parts of value and wealth in general and its sources, >we have the complete mystification of the capitalist mode of production, the >conversion of social relations into things, the direct coalescence of the >material production relations with their historical and social >determination. It is an enchanted, perverted, topsy-turvy world, in which >Monsieur le Capital and Madame la Terre do their ghost-walking as social >characters and at the same time directly as mere things. It is the great >merit of classical economy to have destroyed this false appearance and >illusion, this mutual independence and ossification of the various social >elements of wealth, this personification of things and conversion of >production relations into entities, this religion of everyday life. It did >so by reducing interest to a portion of profit, and rent to the surplus >above average profit, so that both of them converge in surplus-value; and by >representing the process of circulation as a mere metamorphosis of forms, >and finally reducing value and surplus-value of commodities to labour in the >direct production process" >>We works with will, although its result is self-alienated. It is clear. But >Stalin neglect this fundamental fact. >"Crisis theory" was produced from experience of Marx, and Lenin. Marx >firstly expected economic panic as condition of revolution, but in Capital, >>"As soon as this process of transformation has sufficiently decomposed the >old society from top to bottom, as soon as the laborers are turned into >proletarians, their means of labor into capital, as soon as the capitalist >mode of production stands on its own feet, then the further socialization of >labor and further transformation of the land and other means of production >into socially exploited and, therefore, common means of production, as well >as the further expropriation of private proprietors, takes a new form. That >which is now to be expropriated is no longer the laborer working for >himself, but the capitalist exploiting many laborers. This expropriation is >accomplished by the action of the immanent laws of capitalistic production >itself, by the centralization of capital. One capitalist always kills many. >Hand in hand with this centralization, or this expropriation of many >capitalists by few, develop, on an ever-extending scale, the co-operative >form of the labor-process, the conscious technical application of science, >the methodical cultivation of the soil, the transformation of the >Instruments of labor into instruments of labor only usable in common, the >economizing of all means of production by their use as means of production >of combined, socialized labor, the entanglement of all peoples in the net of >the world-market, and with th
(no subject)
This is too much, but for a suggestion from a reader in Honolulu's Honolulu Advertiser: Then again, it beats 'retaliate with the military' ideas that have been floated thus far... Fighting terrorism with our checkbooks The nation sat riveted to the television on Sept. 11 as news of terrorist attacks reached homes, offices and schools nationwide. Rage, sadness, fear and helplessness ensued. What could we do? Desperately call friends and family members in New York and D.C.? Sit and watch the television coverage? Send a check to the Red Cross? I say, go shopping. It's obvious that the terrorists were intent on disrupting the biggest, most powerful economy on Earth. Perhaps the terrorists thought they could strike a fatal blow to an economy already injured by the dot-com crash, the layoffs, the so-called "downturn." Fatalistic economists say the attacks could push the United States into an official recession. And because our economy is so powerful, we could take the rest of the world down the tubes with us. The only thing that had been keeping us in the black, they tell us, was consumer confidence. We can't afford to have our confidence shaken. The world can't afford it. Citizens were the victims in this act of war, and citizens must be the soldiers fighting back ... with our credit cards and checkbooks. Keep the economy alive. It's the patriotic thing to do. Monique Cole Stephen Philion Lecturer/PhD Candidate Department of Sociology 2424 Maile Way Social Sciences Bldg. # 247 Honolulu, HI 96822
(no subject)
from the Boston Globe Train stopped in Providence Man arrested not connected to attacks, authorities say PROVIDENCE, R.I. - A man allegedly carrying a knife aboard an Amtrak train was arrested Wednesday, but authorities said he had no apparent connection to this week's terrorist attacks. Train No. 173 heading from Boston to Washington, D.C., was stopped by local authorities in Providence, its passengers were ordered off, and city police arrested the unidentified man. Police said three other men were released after questioning. A man with a long beard was taken in handcuffs from the train station at about 3:20 p.m. The man, who was wearing a green turban, green shirt and dark pants, was put into a Providence police cruiser. In Washington later, FBI Director Robert Mueller said individuals had been detained and questioned but there had been no arrests by investigators probing the terror attacks. Col. Richard Sullivan, the police chief, said Providence police were contacted by Boston police, who said there were some people on board the train they considered suspicious. Providence Mayor Vincent Cianci Jr. said police told him they were looking for as many as four suspects who eluded authorities in Boston. Two of the hijacked planes that crashed Tuesday took off from Boston. "I don't know if any of these people have anything to do with the events that happened yesterday," Cianci said. The train was due in Washington at 8:50 p.m. After being stopped for about 90 minutes, it resumed service. Ê Ê Stephen Philion Lecturer/PhD Candidate Department of Sociology 2424 Maile Way Social Sciences Bldg. # 247 Honolulu, HI 96822
Re: (no subject)
ravi wrote: > > set pen-l mail postpone > > terribly sorry about that (and for this email also). that was supposed to go to the list processor, not the list. to not entirely waste this message, here's an interesting piece of news regarding EU investigation of microsoft. --ravi http://news.lycos.com/news/story.asp?section=MyLycos&pitem=BUSINESS%2DTECH%2DMICROSOFT%2DEU%2DDC&rev=20010830&pub_tag=REUTG EU Probes Microsoft Use of Media Player by David Lawsky Thursday, August 30, 2001 12:46 a.m. EDT [Reuters] BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Commission is investigating whether Microsoft Corp is trying to damage rivals by embedding its proprietary audio/video software, Media Player, into its Windows operating system, it said on Thursday. The Commission, announcing an expansion of an earlier investigation into Microsoft, said Media Player cannot be readily removed by computer makers or consumers. It said that places at a disadvantage rivals in the market for watching video and listening to audio over the Web like Real Network's RealPlayer or Apple's QuickTime. The Commission said it is also investigating whether one version of the firm's operating system, Windows 2000, is designed to work better with its own servers than those of rivals. The Commission said it was combining the newer case, in which it issued a formal Statement of Objections, with a similar case covering Windows 98. For now, however, the Commission said it was stopping short of expanding its investigation to cover a new Windows version, XP. A number of firms say that Windows XP excludes them in the same way -- or worse -- than earlier systems did. "At this stage the Commission is not conducting an investigation into Windows XP," Commission spokeswoman Amelia Torres said in response to a question at the Commission's daily briefing. No interim measures would be taken against the company while the probe went on. The company expressed confidence it would be cleared by the Commission of any wrongdoing. "We are confident that once it has completed its investigation, the European Commission will be assured that we run our business in full compliance with EU law," said Jean Philippe Courtois, president of Microsoft in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. Microsoft stock was down nearly $3 in morning trading to $57.26 in a weak market. Competition Commissioner Mario Monti said the investigation was necessary to create a fair marketplace in an arena vital to computing and communications. "Server networks lie at the heart of the future of the Web and every effort must be made to prevent their monopolization through illegal practices," Monti said in a statement. "The Commission also wants to see undistorted competition in the market for media players," he said. Spokeswoman Torres said the Commission's case was unrelated to actions in the United States, where an appeals court ruled unanimously that Microsoft illegally abused its monopoly power. The appeals court threw out a plan to break up the company in part because a lower court judge made procedural errors. Next month in Washington a new judge will consider what actions should be taken to remedy the firm's illegal practices. SERVER COMPETITION Microsoft is competitive but not dominant in the market for inexpensive servers. Servers are computers that help run PC networks, storing files, printing documents, operating Web sites and providing Web access. A large number of servers use one of the Unix family of operating systems, such as Linux, but experts say Microsoft's share has grown steadily, from about half the market to nearly 60 percent. Microsoft designed its systems to work well with Microsoft server software but the Commission said it has withheld necessary information from rivals. It said those who want to use rivals' products must still buy Microsoft servers. "If customers choose not to use an all-inclusive Microsoft scenario for PCs and servers, but decide to use competing server products they are forced to bear a double cost," the Commission said. The company's strategy may "artificially drive customers toward Microsoft server products, reducing choice to the detriment of the final customer," the Commission said. Media Player is software that permits the viewing of moving pictures or listening to audio, without waiting for it to download first. The Commission said Microsoft is depriving "PC manufacturers and final users of a free choice over which products they want to have on their PCs, especially as there are no ready technical means to remove or uninstall the Media Player." John Frank, an associate general counsel with Microsoft in Paris, said his firm's Media Player uses a format that is "far more open than our competitors due to our broad licensing." He said it was helpful for programmers to have Media Player built into the system.
(no subject)
set pen-l mail postpone
No Subject
Anti-racism Conference Expected to Reach Agreement on Slavery Compensation: Official Xinhua News Agency 2001-08-14 Sipho Pityana, director-general of the South African Foreign Affairs Department, said on Tuesday he was certain the World Conference Against Racism would find an agreement on the issue of apology and compensation for slavery and colonialism. "The divide between the different parties has been narrowed substantially," he told reporters in Pretoria, briefing them on the outcome of the third preparatory committee meeting recently held in Geneva, Switzerland. "If we had more time in Geneva, we would probably have agreed on more issues. On one of the most difficult issues, that of the reparation and compensation for slavery, we came very close to an agreement," he said. The United States earlier threatened it would not attend the conference if the issue of reparation for slavery and that of equating Zionism with racism were put on the agenda. On the latter issue the preparatory committee had agreed to abide by a decision of the United Nations not to equate Zionism with racism, Pityana said. However, the conference still had to find a way to reflect on the situation in the Middle East in a way acceptable to all parties concerned, he added. According to the director-general, as far as he knew, the U.S. government was sending a delegation of about 50 people to the Durban conference, which will be held from August 31 to September 7. The preparatory committee invited and encouraged all countries to take part in the conference, but did not try to persuade anyoneto do so, Pityana said. Those gathering in Durban had different views which they could express there. If all agreed, there would be no need for such a conference, he explained. At the Geneva meeting, 60 of the 131 paragraphs of the declaration and 85 of the 106 paragraphs of the program of action for the conference were adopted. The rest remained to be resolved,according to Pityana. But Pityana said the groundwork done so far had laid a good basis to reach agreement at the conference. "We are looking forward to a successful conference," he said. The two issues dogging the process were that of the Middle Eastand of slavery and colonialism. Pityana said there was a reluctance from former colonial powersto extend an apology for slavery and colonialism on the grounds ofthe legal implications, as well as implications for compensation and reparation. In a so-called non-paper -- a document which could be withdrawnif agreement is not reached on it -- the African countries excluded demands for individual compensation, but elaborated on trans- national compensation. The African non-paper played a central role in bringing partiestogether, Pityana said. The African bloc, he said, wanted an acknowledgment that slavery, slave trade and colonialism played an important part in laying the foundation for the kinds of racial discrimination stillseen today. Colonialism, which was often down-played, involved the take-over of countries, dispossessing and displacing people and their regimes, segregating communities and creating inequality among them, he said. "The legacy of this persists," Pityana noted, adding that "colonialism was also the take-over of resources which contributed to the enrichment of the developed North." "It is not just about aid; but about altering the structural relations between Africa and the developed world," he said. As it now stood, the former colonial powers were willing to express themselves in language of regret and remorse, in what cameclose to an apology, the South African official said, adding "the debate is whether that constitutes sufficient apology. That debatewill continue in Durban." Another debate is on whether slavery, slave trade and colonialism can be regarded as crimes against humanity. Some hold the view that at the time these actions were committed, they were not regarded as such, but now they are. "I am certain we will reach agreement on all of these issues," Pityana said.
No Subject
I am still cut off from my normal access to e-mail. I was thinking this morning about what would happen in the power of the US relative to the IMF and World Bank were reduced by 99%. What would a structural adjustment plan for the US look like? Also, I thought that one good thing about the US abrogating treaties was that it would make retreat from WTO, NAFTA, etc. easier. Michael Perelman Economics Department California State University Chico, CA 95929
(no subject)
Mark: << Did you read them? >> I don't imagine any of us have read them yet. Just going by your publicists' synopsis. Leo Casey United Federation of Teachers 260 Park Avenue South New York, New York 10010-7272 (212-598-6869) Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never has, and it never will. If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation are men who want crops without plowing the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its waters. -- Frederick Douglass --
(no subject)
<< Leo, what on earth are you trying to say? >> I has thought that the parallels between the oil/energy crises of your novels and the imminent energy crisis you have been predicting here were pretty obvious. Seems like fiction and social analysis seem to seamlessly fade into each other... Leo Casey United Federation of Teachers 260 Park Avenue South New York, New York 10010-7272 (212-598-6869) Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never has, and it never will. If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation are men who want crops without plowing the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its waters. -- Frederick Douglass --
(no subject)
<< so if Zhirinovsky says it's bad, it must be good? >> I can think of worse rules of thumb. But what I find so interesting here is how the Mark of fiction and the Mark of social analysis so closely follow each there. Why it is almost down right lit-crit pomo, to invoke a much overused stereotype. It makes you wonder: is the Mark of fiction really the Mark of social analysis, or is the Mark of social analysis really the Mark of fiction? Leo Casey United Federation of Teachers 260 Park Avenue South New York, New York 10010-7272 (212-598-6869) Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never has, and it never will. If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation are men who want crops without plowing the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its waters. -- Frederick Douglass --
No Subject
No Subject
John Landon wrote: >[...] I have made no inductive >leap, because I have read old Popper and don't use historical law theory, or >predictions of the future. Therefore the status of these intervals is >analogous to, say, the economic cycle. We look backward, measure economic >facts, and see a periodicity in them. [] Every time you assume that a periodic occurrence observed in past events will continue in the future, you've made an inductive leap. In fact, maybe it's not a "leap." Maybe it's just a step. I prefer to say leap, however. >[...] Take a long close look at Classical antiquity >ca. -600 plus and minus, by my method. It will surprise you. Really surprise >you. Darwin-style thinking is so far off it isn't funny. [...] What _is_ your method? I'm begging you. Please explain it. I don't understand it. What is "Darwin-style thinking?" I honestly don't know what you mean. >[...] the current Darwin regime is nosediving. What is the Darwin regime? Is that the same as Darwin-style thinking? By nosediving, are you suggesting that the theory of evolution is dropping in popular acceptance? Or that the theory of evolution is in a Kuhnian crisis? Thanks. Andrew Hagen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Fwd) (Fwd) Fwd: No Subject
--- Forwarded message follows --- From: "Paul Phillips" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date sent: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 22:44:09 -0500 Subject: (Fwd) Fwd: No Subject Priority: norma >Bush should pull troops from Balkans > >By Marjorie Cohn > >Despite President George W, BushÄôs rhetoric about withdrawing our forces >from >the Balkans, we can expect a strong U.S presence there. >Why? ItÄôs all about the transportation of massive oil resources from >the >Caspian Sea through the Balkans, maintaining U.S. hegemony in the region. > Although NATO ostensibly bombed Yugoslavia to stop ethnic cleansing, the >bombing was actually part of a strategic containment, to keep the region safe >for the Trans-Balkan oil pipeline that will transport Caspian Sea oil through >Macedonia and Albania. The pipeline is slated to carry 750,000 barrels a day, >worth about $600 million at the current prices. >Cooperation of the Albanians with the pipeline project was likely >contingent on the U.S. helping them wrest control of Kosovo from the Serbs. >The U.S. seeks to contain Macedonia as well supporting both sides in the >conflagration there. >Military Professional Resources International, a mercenary company on >contract to the Pentagon, has trained both the Kosovo Liberation Army and the >Macedonian army. MPRI also supplied and trained the Croatian army in 1994 and >1995 before the Croatians cleansed more than 100,000 Serbs from Krajina >region. >The bombing was not aimed at ethnic cleansing. It was part of U.S-run >NATOÄôs eastward expansion as a counterweight to Russia, which wants the >Caspian oil pipeline to run through its territory. NATO, created during the >Cold War to protect Western Europe from the Soviets, should have disbanded >after the breakup of the USSR. >But a 1992 draft of the PentagonÄôs Defense Planning Guidance continued >U.S. leadership in NATO by Äúdiscouraging the advanced industrialized >nations >from challenging our leadership or even aspiring to a larger regional or >global role.Äù >Secretary of State Colin Powell recently said, if we decide to expand >NATO, Äú we should not fear that Russia will object; we will do it >because it >is in our national interestÄù. >Bush is walking a delicate tightrope. He calls for Europe to do the >grunt work in the Balkans, but also wants to prevent European Union to become >more powerful than the U.S.-led NATO. A U.S. Army officer stationed in >Bosnia, speaking anonymously to The Los Angeles Times, observed dryly, Äú >The >only thing the Europeans need us Americans is the leadershipÄù. >The United States has invested too much into the region to pull out. >After the NATO bombing campaign, The United States spent $36.6 million to >build Camp Bondsteel in southern Kosovo. >The largest military base constructed since the Vietnam, Bondsteel was >built by the Brown & Root Division of Halliburton, the world biggest oil >service corporation, which was run by Richard Cheney before he was tapped for >vice president. >NATOÄôs bombs, never sanctioned by the United Nations, were not >ÄúhumanitarianÄù intervention. The alleged mass graves were never found >by the >FBI, and the 10,000 to 11,000 bodies NATO touted turned out to number about >2,000 to 3,000 mostly ion KLA strongholds. >Even the Marine Corps Gazette concluded after the bombing >That the Äúresulting deaths of thousands of Serbian soldiers, civilians and >Kosovar Albanians can hardly be viewed as humanitarianism.Äù > >It is the purview of the United Nations, not the United States, to >authorize humanitarian intervention. If the United States really wanted to >provide humanitarian assistance to the people of Yugoslavia, it would >encourage the International Monetary Fund to forgive $14 billion in loans >from prior regimes, finance reparations to rebuild the infrastructure >destroyed by its bombs, and remove U.S. troops from the region. > > >Marjorie Cohn is the associate professor at the Thomas Jefferson School of >Law in San Diego. > _ Dr. Jovan Jovanovich, Professor of Physics (retired and adjunct) Office: Physics Department, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Man., Canada R3T 2N2 Phone: (204) 474-6201 Fax: (204) 474-7622 E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Home: 66 Fordham Bay, Winnipeg, Man., Canada R3T 3B7 Phone/Fax: (204) 269-2255 E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] _ --- End of forwarded message --- --- End of forwarded message ---
No Subject
Is this Aristotle or Proyect? Worms and spiders are insects? Computer science - A Biology - F Within insects, you have worms, spiders, moths, etc.
Re: No subject was specified.
With your growing CV, you should apply for the City College job! David >From: Eugene Coyle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >To: Pen-L Pen-l <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Subject: [PEN-L:8912] No subject was specified. >Date: Sat, 10 Mar 2001 11:30:08 -0800 > >Below is a review I just published in the Jan 2001 BLS' "Monthly Labor >Review." > > >Gene Coyle > > > >Work-time reduction > >Sharing the Work, Sparing the Planet. By Anders Hayden. New York, >St. >MartinÕs Press, 2000, 234 pp. $65, cloth; $22.50, paper. > >Canadian author Anders Hayden adds a powerful new dimension to the >array of >arguments for reducing hours of work. Sharing the Work, Sparing the >Planet >stands out for that reason from the recent stream of books >advocating >cutting the hours of work. Hayden shares the concerns of many >writersÑjob >creation, improved quality of life for the employed, balancing work >and >family, and equity between North and SouthÑbut adds a >compelling >environmental basis for cutting working time. It is among the very >best >books on the subject of working time. > >Many recent books have offered work-time reduction as a single solution >for >multiple problems. Unemployment, declining quality of life, and >stress on >the family and individuals have each been the focus of books >advocating >cutting hours of work. HaydenÕs is a more encompassing vision, taking in >all >these issues and more, and his voice adds a rich new dimension to >the >symphony. > >The book focuses on the role of reducing time in achieving >ecologically >sustainable development, addressing at the same time equity between >the >North and the South. Hayden demonstrates a wide-ranging command of >the >multiple issues that reduction of working time can address, and >adds a >mastery of the literature. > >Hayden begins by recalling that since the beginning of the >Industrial >Revolution, people have had two motives for a reduction in working >time, >getting more hours away from work, and creating more jobs through a >better >distribution of the available work. These remain every bit as >pertinent, he >says, but this focus is on the ecological gains to be achieved by >work-time >reduction. > >The stress that consumption in the North puts on the earthÕs ecology is >the >main concern of the book, and Hayden develops a powerful thesis to >address >it. Acknowledging a rift in the environmental community about how to >deal >with ecological problems, Hayden draws a distinction between >two >campsÑ"sufficiency" and "efficiency." The latter group, he argues, >believes >that environmental impacts can be reduced by better use of inputs, so >that >material sacrifice is unnecessary, and unlimited economic >growth is >possible. In contrast, the "sufficiency" camp of the green >movement, to >which Hayden clearly belongs, believes that reducing inputs per >unit of >goods and services, while good in itself, must ultimately fail to save >the >earth. He asserts that "although the ecological crisis does clearly call >for >a more efficient use of non-human nature, this response has >serious >limitations. Growth in GNP without input growth is little more >than a >theoretical possibility at present, and in any case zero input growth is >not >enough. Significant reductions in input in the North are necessary." >The >author argues that achieving that end can come through reductions in >working >time. > >Make no mistake, this book is about work-time reduction, though sparing >the >earth is a main goal. The headings of the remaining chapters make the >bookÕs >scope clear: "Working Less, Consuming Less, and Living More"; >"Work-time >Reduction and an Expansionary Vision"; "Why ItÕs So Hard to Work >Less"; >"Work-time Policy and Practice, North and South"; "EuropeÕs New Movement >for >Work-time Reduction"; and "With or without Loss of Pay? With or >without >Revolution?" > >It is outside the scope of the book to provide a history of the struggle >for >the shorter work dayÑfor that, in the United States, see Roediger >and >FonerÕs Our Own Time: A History of American Labor and the Working Day >(pp. >44?49.) But Hayden does trace some important voices who have spoken out >for >work-time reduction over the past two centuries. This enriches his >argument >and provides a brief background for t
No subject was specified.
Below is a review I just published in the Jan 2001 BLS' "Monthly Labor Review." Gene Coyle Work-time reduction Sharing the Work, Sparing the Planet. By Anders Hayden. New York, St. MartinÕs Press, 2000, 234 pp. $65, cloth; $22.50, paper. Canadian author Anders Hayden adds a powerful new dimension to the array of arguments for reducing hours of work. Sharing the Work, Sparing the Planet stands out for that reason from the recent stream of books advocating cutting the hours of work. Hayden shares the concerns of many writersÑjob creation, improved quality of life for the employed, balancing work and family, and equity between North and SouthÑbut adds a compelling environmental basis for cutting working time. It is among the very best books on the subject of working time. Many recent books have offered work-time reduction as a single solution for multiple problems. Unemployment, declining quality of life, and stress on the family and individuals have each been the focus of books advocating cutting hours of work. HaydenÕs is a more encompassing vision, taking in all these issues and more, and his voice adds a rich new dimension to the symphony. The book focuses on the role of reducing time in achieving ecologically sustainable development, addressing at the same time equity between the North and the South. Hayden demonstrates a wide-ranging command of the multiple issues that reduction of working time can address, and adds a mastery of the literature. Hayden begins by recalling that since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, people have had two motives for a reduction in working time, getting more hours away from work, and creating more jobs through a better distribution of the available work. These remain every bit as pertinent, he says, but this focus is on the ecological gains to be achieved by work-time reduction. The stress that consumption in the North puts on the earthÕs ecology is the main concern of the book, and Hayden develops a powerful thesis to address it. Acknowledging a rift in the environmental community about how to deal with ecological problems, Hayden draws a distinction between two campsÑ"sufficiency" and "efficiency." The latter group, he argues, believes that environmental impacts can be reduced by better use of inputs, so that material sacrifice is unnecessary, and unlimited economic growth is possible. In contrast, the "sufficiency" camp of the green movement, to which Hayden clearly belongs, believes that reducing inputs per unit of goods and services, while good in itself, must ultimately fail to save the earth. He asserts that "although the ecological crisis does clearly call for a more efficient use of non-human nature, this response has serious limitations. Growth in GNP without input growth is little more than a theoretical possibility at present, and in any case zero input growth is not enough. Significant reductions in input in the North are necessary." The author argues that achieving that end can come through reductions in working time. Make no mistake, this book is about work-time reduction, though sparing the earth is a main goal. The headings of the remaining chapters make the bookÕs scope clear: "Working Less, Consuming Less, and Living More"; "Work-time Reduction and an Expansionary Vision"; "Why ItÕs So Hard to Work Less"; "Work-time Policy and Practice, North and South"; "EuropeÕs New Movement for Work-time Reduction"; and "With or without Loss of Pay? With or without Revolution?" It is outside the scope of the book to provide a history of the struggle for the shorter work dayÑfor that, in the United States, see Roediger and FonerÕs Our Own Time: A History of American Labor and the Working Day (pp. 44?49.) But Hayden does trace some important voices who have spoken out for work-time reduction over the past two centuries. This enriches his argument and provides a brief background for the reader new to the issue of work-time reduction. For readers more conversant with the issue, the long chapter on steps taken by European countries for reducing hours of work will be very useful, as it goes into great detail on what is happening now outside the United States. France, where a series of laws over the past 10 years have made real changes in work time, gets 11 pages of reporting. Germany, where changes have come more through collective bargaining, also gets full coverage, as do the Netherlands, Denmark, and other European countries. In short, Sharing the Work is engaging reading for both specialists and neophytes. And as concern with global warming takes its place on the international agenda, HaydenÕs book provides an input to the discussion from a different perspective than the usual tax and carbon-trading schemes being put forward. Not that Hayden ignores
(no subject)
unsubscribe
Re: (no subject)
I wrote: > >>One of the reason why economics is bombarded by so much worthless > research is because people do it simply to climb up the academic ladder > rather than because they're genuinely interested in it.<< Saith Ian: >Isn't it more accurate to say that economists "bombard" one another with >useless theory driven facts because they [male bashing alert] enjoy >setting up arguments in order to try and win them? The term academic >ladder says it all. Productive dialogue/multilogue is rare, esp. in the US >'cause the king of the hill model of communication is so internalized. In my experience, most female academics have totally been acculturated. Maybe as the female/male ratio rises, the nature of academia will change, but I haven't seen that yet. Maybe I'm excessively pessimistic. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] & http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine
(no subject)
>>One of the reason why economics is bombarded by so much worthless research is because people do it simply to climb up the academic ladder rather than because they're genuinely interested in it. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] & http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~JDevine * Isn't it more accurate to say that economists "bombard" one another with useless theory driven facts because they [male bashing alert] enjoy setting up arguments in order to try and win them? The term academic ladder says it all. Productive dialogue/multilogue is rare, esp. in the US 'cause the king of the hill model of communication is so internalized. As for interdisciplinary dialogue...political ecology for 100 please, Alex. Ian
(no subject)
i'll be back armed with the collective wisdom of Friedman and LaRouche to roll back the Red Tide at PEN-L. norm -Original Message- From: Rob Schaap [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, December 11, 2000 12:29 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [PEN-L:6010] Re: still trying to unsub Whatever made you think we'd let a sleeper within the trenches and fortifications of the bourgeoisie, the very seat of the state apparatus, leave us, comrade Mikalac? To quote a great revolutionary anthem: you can check out any time you like but you can never leave. MWAUHAHAHA! Love and reeducation, Comrade Commissar Rob. >still getting PEN-L posts. > >moderator or poster: please tell me how to unsub. also, how to sub again >next year. > >have a nice holiday season. > >thx, norm > >
Re: (no subject)
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 12/04/00 07:52AM >>> thx, charles, for the lenin comments on Marx. i've printed and collected a bunch of poster comments like yours, printed a bunch of essays from louis's marxmail last night and ordered about 20 books on the subject via the internet. also, i started to read about marxism in some philosophy books that i have at home over the last weekend. my intent is to put all other reading aside for the time being and concentrate on my "unfinished business" of understanding the marxist and socialist positions in depth. i'll be taking my mass of reading material with me over a 10 day Xmas vacation when i can develop a large part of my time to this subject. when i sub back onto pen-l on 1/2, (i'm unsubbing on 12/22) be prepared for lots of questions! norm ((( CB: Nice going , Norm. Did anyone mention _Value, Price and Profit_ yet ? It was explicitly a popular lecture by Karl Marx on the fundamental's of his approach to political economy.
(no subject)
subscribe digest
(no subject)
thx, charles, for the lenin comments on Marx. i've printed and collected a bunch of poster comments like yours, printed a bunch of essays from louis's marxmail last night and ordered about 20 books on the subject via the internet. also, i started to read about marxism in some philosophy books that i have at home over the last weekend. my intent is to put all other reading aside for the time being and concentrate on my "unfinished business" of understanding the marxist and socialist positions in depth. i'll be taking my mass of reading material with me over a 10 day Xmas vacation when i can develop a large part of my time to this subject. when i sub back onto pen-l on 1/2, (i'm unsubbing on 12/22) be prepared for lots of questions! norm -Original Message- From: Charles Brown [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, December 01, 2000 2:29 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [PEN-L:5267] RE: Re: Marxism-Socialism-Capitalism reading list (rev A) (historical laws? you gotta show me!) >>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 12/01/00 01:51PM >>> norm: "no, but " we're reasoning by analogy here and therefore we have to be careful. when i compare two supposedly identical, controlled scientific or social scientific experiments that test a single and simple hypothesis, it is easy for me to see whether or not the analogy between the two tests is valid and therefore that they can be declared "identical" for supplying evidence for a hypothesis. in contrast, there are few historical analogies that i would accept as analogous enough to submit as sufficidnt evidence for testing a hypothesis about forecasting human behavior. i'd have to be shown the specific ones before giving my opinion, of course. your extract of Marxian "dialectic" does not do that, but i recognize that it is out of context and i have the further disadvantage of being unfamiliar with the terminology as described below. maybe on further study i'll change my mind. hence, my "short" reading list. CB: Here's a reply from Karl M. to the epistemological issues you raise. Interestingly, with historical science, abstraction must substitute for artificial experimentation. But ultimately, Marx is famous for demanding that practice must be the test of theory ( will get the theses on Feuerbach for you). Karl Marx Capital Volume One 1867 PREFACE TO THE FIRST GERMAN EDITION -clip- Every beginning is difficult, holds in all sciences. To understand the first chapter, especially the section that contains the analysis of commodities, will, therefore, present the greatest difficulty. That which concerns more especially the analysis of the substance of value and the magnitude of value, I have, as much as it was possible, popularised. [1] The value-form, whose fully developed shape is the money-form, is very elementary and simple. Nevertheless, the human mind has for more than 2,000 years sought in vain to get to the bottom of it all, whilst on the other hand, to the successful analysis of much more composite and complex forms, there has been at least an approximation. Why? Because the body, as an organic whole, is more easy of study than are the cells of that body. In the analysis of economic forms, moreover, neither microscopes nor chemical reagents are of use. The force of abstraction must replace both. But in bourgeois society, the commodity-form of the pr! oduct of labour — or value-form of the commodity — is the economic cell-form. To the superficial observer, the analysis of these forms seems to turn upon minutiae. It does in fact deal with minutiae, but they are of the same order as those dealt with in microscopic anatomy. ( my comments should not really be surprising. think of all the spilled ink over various "justifications" for social forecasting that failed. why? because the analogies weren't worth much. another problem with "interpreting" historical events is that, unlike a controlled scientific experiment, historical events have multiple causes. that is what makes reading polemical writers (e.g., Chomsky) so frustrating for me. in the case of Chomsky, whose 5 books i have i'm now re-reading for closer scrutiny, his facts are impeccable, but he chooses the causes among a multitude of causes for historical events that suit his conclusions. same with Howard Zinn in his People's History, IMO. that's standard practice for ideologues, of course, but it's unsat for me in arriving at my beliefs. CB: When you say "too abstract for me", do you mean you don't use abstractions or the terminology is unfamiliar to you ? --- norm: i mean the terminology is unfamiliar to me. of course i use abstractions (and generalizations), but in a
(no subject)
> BLS DAILY REPORT, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2000: > > A new study of Internet use by job seekers shows that in 1998, about 15 > percent of all unemployed people actively looking for new jobs turned to > various World Wide Web sites in conducting their search. About 7 percent > of employed persons had used the Internet to look for a new job in 1998, a > higher proportion than shown in earlier studies of traditional job-search > methods, according to economists Peter Kuhn and Mikal Skuterud in an > article published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The economists find > little impact so far of increasing use of the Internet on public > employment agencies (Daily Labor Report, page A-3. Text of the article, > "Job Search Methods: Internet vs. Traditional", from the October 2000 > issue of BLS's "Monthly Labor Review" is on page E-1. Kuhn is described > as professor of economics, Department of Economics, University of > California at Santa Barbara. Skuterud is described as a graduate student, > Department of Economics, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada). > > Employees can look forward to about as much paid time off this Christmas > and New Year's season as last, according to the Bureau of National > Affairs' latest annual survey of year-end holiday plans. Almost half of > the responding employers (49 percent) will grant 3 or more paid days off > for the holiday season this year, little changed from 50 percent in > 1999-2000, when the national holidays fell on Saturdays, and slightly more > than the 47 percent of employers in 1995-96, when Christmas and New Year's > landed on Mondays. Employers' holiday scheduling continues to be slightly > more conservative than a decade ago, when, in 1989-90, a year when the > national holidays also fell on Monday, 6 out of 10 firms gave workers at > least 3 paid days (Daily Labor Report, page B-1). > > "While doing research on teenagers a few years ago, I left a question on > an Internet message board, asking young people who work about their > on-the-job experiences. The replies were overwhelmingly positive," writes > Thomas Hine, author of "The rise and Fall of the American Teenager" > recently published by HarperPerennial, in The Washington Post (November > 26, page B5). But the arrangement has less appealing and sometimes > serious consequences, which even the most enthusiastic student workers and > their parents should consider, Hine continues. These young people come > largely from families with middle class incomes or better, in which > parents make few demands on their children's earnings. But these high > school students are putting in long part-time hours and constitute a > distinct American working class, one that receives low wages and few > benefits. According to a 1999 study by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, > nearly a quarter of 14-year-olds and 38 percent of 15-year-olds have > regular scheduled employment (as opposed to casual baby-sitting or yard > work) during the school year. By the time they are seniors, another BLS > study found, 73 percent of young people work at least part of the school > year. A few of these young people, the ones who get featured in news > stories, are making good money in challenging high-tech and Internet jobs. > But the great majority are working for low wages, doing just about what > you would expect. The top three jobs for boys, according to BLS, are > cook, janitor and food preparers. For girls, they are cashier, waitress, > and office clerk. These jobs may help teens understand the value of work, > but they have little intellectual content, with electronic cash registers > and scanners, even cashiers hardly have to deal with numbers. The average > employed American high school student works 17 hours at week during the > academic year. (Partly because of the proximity of jobs, the students who > work the most tend to come from higher-income areas). During the holiday > season, many young people find themselves under pressure from their > supervisors to work extra hours. And since school vacations don't start > until the shopping season is nearly over, many students will be juggling > final exams, term papers, and a heavier work schedule. > > As the ranks of the rich grow, the business of "wealth management" is > reaping huge rewards, with fat fees and loyal customers, says The > Washington Post (November 26, page H1). The nation's 18.4 million affluent > households -- defined as those with an annual income of $100,000 or with a > net work of at least $500,000, not including primary residence -- control > 80 percent, or $14.6 trillion of the estimated $18.1 trillion in > investable assets in the country, according to the Spectrem Group, a > research and consulting firm specializing in affluent markets. > Millionaires, a subset of the affluent group, have more than doubled in > the United States since 1994, to more than 7 million households, according > to Spectrem. And "pentamillionaires,"
(no subject)
I am not sure when Michael Hoover and I discovered that we shared a passion for Hong Kong cinema but it probably dates back to the time of the wild and woolly days on the original Marxism list when I announced in the middle of a fight with some sectarians that I had perfected the drunken Tai-Chi Marxist style of polemics, inspired by the great Jackie Chan movie. Shortly thereafter Michael informed me that he had begun work on what would turn out to be the definitive study of Hong Kong cinema. Written with Lisa Stokes, who teaches with Michael at Seminole Community College in Orblando, Florida, "City on Fire" is sensitive to both the esthetic and socio-political side of what appeared to be a cult phenomenon. Their exploration of the genre is a virtual guidebook for how Marxists can shed light on popular culture. Indeed, the book convinces you that this is not a cult phenomenon at all, but one of the more important contributions to film art in the 20th century that deserves to stand side by side with Italian neorealism or American silent movie comedies of the Chaplin era. A Hong Kong movie festival in NYC last weekend prompted me to give Michael a call and share impressions. It was the first time I had spoken to him since his trip to NYC last year promoting "City on Fire". To make sure he wouldn't prejudice me against any of the films I would be seeing, he told me that he would reserve judgement until I spoke to him on Sunday after the festival was finished. As it turned out--not surprisingly--we were both big fans of the films I was to see. Before giving you a brief overview of what I saw, it would be useful to give you a flavor of the Hoover-Stokes oeuvre, which mixes together in bravura fashion insights into the art-form with knowing references to the Marxist classics: "Chang Chehs One Armed Swordsman (1967) is generally acknowledged as the movie that launched the 1970s martial arts phenomenon. While the films title announces that this is a swordplay movie nothing new in itself the heros disability (his sins jealous daughter has chopped off his right arm) produces a different type of character. Forced to undergo a strict and tough rehabilitative training program, the protagonist (Jimmy Wang-Yu) becomes a lean mean fighting machine with a blade. Notably brutal for its time, Changs picture ushered in an era of the self-reliant individualist that, according to Sek Kei, simultaneously destroyed the image of the weak Chinese male by featuring beefcake heroes in adventure and violence. Within a few years, flying fu swordplay flicks gave way to kung fu movies. The transfiguration of the martial hero from a mythic character endowed with magical powers to a mortal fighter engaged in personal hand-to-hand combat was consonant with the post-World War II generations economic materialism as well as with its growing suspicion of traditional values. Both more individualistic and competitive, the 1970s variant expressed capitalist modernity, what Engels called 'a battle of life and death ... fought not between the different classes of society only, but also between the individual members of these classes. Each is in the way of the other, and each seeks to crowd out all who are in his way, and to put himself in their place.'" The film festival was organized by something called Subway Cinema, a collective of New Yorkers who sought to maintain a venue for Hong Kong movies after the closing of the legendary Music Palace in Chinatown. Because of the emergence of home videos and changing immigration patterns, the theater could no longer stay in business. This was the only theater in NYC in which smoking was tolerated and where soy milk and dried squid could be purchased at the concession stand. The movie industry in Hong Kong seemed to be on the downward spiral as well. When Michael and Lisa spoke to an audience last year at the Anthology of Film Archives, where the festival was being held, they worried about the viability of the industry in face of the Asian financial crisis. As it turns out, the evidence of the films shown at the festival last weekend points to the artistic health of the industry, even if belt-tightening might result in fewer films being produced. All of the films being shown dated from 1997 and later. They were all produced by Milkyway Studios, which operates within the stylistic parameters of the genre while pushing it to the limit. 1. EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED Directed by Patrick Yau, this film is a cops-and-robbers yarn set on the streets of Hong Kong. There are two gangs being pursued. One from Hong Kong and the other just arrived from the mainland and regarded as harmless amateurs by comparison. There is a memorable scene in which the top cop gets a confession out of one of the mainland criminals by softening him up with a hot meal (he hasn't eaten in over a day.) He has been driven to crime by economic necessity. No longer able to farm, nor support his wife and 8 children, he
(no subject)
Unsubscribe pen-l winmail.dat
(no subject)
SET pen-l MAIL POSTPONE
Population, racism and capitalism (no subject) (fwd)
>From a Marxist piont of view, Steven Rosenthal comrade responds to defenders of over-population thesis, one them being, I may include, _Bartlett._.. Mine - >I agree with most of what Andy and Mine have said during the debate about >population. The problems of the world today are due to capitalism, not >to >overpopulation. >During the past week, the New York Times ran several stories that >substantiate this point. First, U.S. president Clinton has been unable to get European government leaders to agree with any of the military or economic proposals he brought with him on his current trip. The Europeans want the U.S. to discontinue its $5 billion a year tax subsidy to exporting US corporations. The Europeans don't want the U.S. to break the anti-missile treaty by embarking on a missile shield for protection against "rogue states." The U.S. wants Europeans (especially Germany) to increase military spending but only within a NATO framework led by the U.S., while Europeans want to take steps toward building a more independent military force. >These developments illustrate the continued development of inter-imperialist rivalry. >Second, the World Bank released a report acknowledging the immense decline in living standards in sub-Saharan Africa during the last decades of the 20th century. They noted that, even if some progress is made in checking the AIDS epidemic in Africa, which accounts for some 70% of all AIDS cases worldwide, the epidemic will reduce life expectancy by 20 years. The World Bank acknowledged that its policies and those of the IMF have contributed to some extent to the worsening conditions. >Nothing more profoundly illustrates the devastating effect of racism in the world capitalist system. Imperialist exploitation of Africa, with the collusion of local capitalist elites in African countries, is destroying more lives in Africa today than during the height of the slave trade. >A note of clarification here: I'm not suggesting that the AIDS virus was created by imperialists to inflict genocide on Africans. It is possible that the AIDS virus crossed over into the human population during imperialist experimental programs in sub-Saharan Africa during the early or middle part of the 20th century. What is more important, however, is that the epidemic has been shaped by contemporary imperialism and capitalism in Africa. Migrant labor, prostitution and sex slavery, wars and the creation of large populations of refugees, the decline of already small health budgets at the insistence of IMF structural adjustment plans--these are factors that have concentrated the epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa. >Third, UNICEF reported in "Domestic Violence Against Women and Girls" that up to half of the female population of the world comes under attack at some point in their lives from men. The report estimated that there are more females than males infected with AIDS in Africa. >What connects these three developments? >First, global capitalism is the most racist and sexist system the world has ever known. Despite all the hype about the efforts capitalist countries have made during the past century to reduce racism and sexism and to end colonialism, capitalism is worse than ever today. This is proof that the system cannot be reformed, which means that its central problems cannot be ameliorated. >Second, as inter-imperialist rivalry sharpens--as illustrated by the first point--imperialists are driven to intensify racist and sexist super-exploitation of the working class. This deepening crisis demands the growth of revolutionary organization of the working class as the only solution. >Third, leading biological determinists--including many proponents of the overpopulation thesis--have promoted the ideological argument that male domination of women, racism, nationalism, and wars are naturally evolved genetic traits of human nature. This ideology represents an attempt to portray inter-imperialist conflict, racism, and sexism as natural, rather than as part of capitalism in crisis and decay. >Steve Rosenthal -- Mine Aysen Doyran PhD Student Department of Political Science SUNY at Albany Nelson A. Rockefeller College 135 Western Ave.; Milne 102 Albany, NY 1
(no subject)
Apologies for cross posting. Fu'ad, this article provides a partial response to your question about the social status of Arab women and the recent economic restructuring in the Middle East.. Mine Al-Ahram Weekly 11 - 17 May 2000 Issue No. 481 http://www.allnewspapers.com/middeast/ Women's work By Fatemah Farag It is 7.00am in front of a ready-made garments factory in Shubra Al-Kheima. Droves of young women, clutching little money purses tightly in their hands are making their way through the factory gates to begin a long day's work. "We must be at our machines at 7:30am and work goes on to seven or eight at night. Each one of us is responsible for a specific section in the garment, such as a hem or a button, and I usually process 700 to 800 pieces per day and make between one to two piastres a piece," explained 23-year-old Fatheya. Fatheya is part of a new generation of women workers who have found job opportunities in the new private sector textile factories. "It is good to have the opportunity to make some money, but I hope that once I am married my husband will make enough money to keep me at home. My back hurts all the time from bending over the machine for such long hours," she said. According to the most recent Human Development Report issued by the UN, in 1998/1999, women constituted 15 per cent of the labour force. This indicates a decline from figures published by the Central Authority for Mobilisation and Statistics (CAPMAS) in 1996, which show that, between 1984 and 1994, women represented 22 per cent of the labour force. Further, according to the 1996 Labour Sample Survey, issued by CAPMAS, the highest unemployment rates are among women. The survey documented that between 1988 and 1995, for every five unemployed men, there were 20 unemployed women. "The highest unemployment rates are among women despite the government's policy to encourage women's work. The general environment is against her working and reflects a very different attitude from that of the sixties, when women were very much encouraged to become prominent players in development," said Aisha Abdel-Hadi, member of the executive council of the General Federation of Trade Unions (GFTU) for women's affairs. The context of this change in attitude is provided by Fardos El-Bahnasi, social researcher and director of the Women's Development and Empowerment Association in the working class district of Manshiet Nasser. "When women were encouraged to work in the sixties, social services to help her out in her role within the family were not provided. The result was that women took on a double burden. This has not been a positive experience and young girls who have seen their mothers carry this burden will feel that the better option is to choose only one of these roles," explained El-Bahnasi. Add this to working conditions such as those described by Fatheya and the attitude cannot be expected to be very positive. But, of course, what drives people into the job market is not so much prevalent attitudes as material need. According to official statistics, the largest percentage of women's work is in the informal agricultural sector, while 32 per cent is in the government, with the private sector accounting for only 16 per cent. "Much of women's work is unpaid, such as when she works in agricultural fields for the family. It is also difficult to determine the exact number of women actually working outside the home," explained Samia Assal of the Union for Agricultural Workers. El-Bahnasi adds that even in the formal sectors, since employers do not always register the total number of workers to evade social security payments, the figures available are bound to be inconclusive. "Still, we can see that there are factories, such as those for ready-made garments, which employ women almost exclusively. These are the women who are driven onto the job market as a result of extreme poverty," said El-Bahnasi. Abdel-Hadi completes the description of the vicious circle faced by female labourers, "With high unemployment in women's ranks and because of their need, there is bound to be violation of the law which stipulates equal wages, social and health insurance for both genders." The women interviewed by Al-Ahram Weekly on their way to work in Shubra Al-Kheima had not heard of legal protection, or even the GFTU, for that matter. "In the security room, there is a framed copy of the Ministerial Regulation for Women's Work. It has nothing to do with our lives," one said. El-Bahnasi points out that women are treated as inferior on the job because they are, for the most part, unskilled labour and also because their work is considered only a supplement to family income. "This last point is of particular importance since official statistics show that one qua
(no subject)
No Subject
Interested listers might check out below website for documentary entitled "Roll on Columbia: Woody Guthrie and the Bonneville Power Administration." Film explores great piece of musical, political, & economic history. My friends Denise Mathews and Bill Black were involved in the project. Denise was co-producer/director on the film and Bill designed the website. http://libweb.uoregon.edu/med_svc/wguthrie/index.html Michael Hoover
Re: (no subject)
Michael Perelman wrote, > I think that none of the three bachelors succeeded in their quest. I guess I was expecting some sort of a twist on the cinderella tale. Tom Walker
Re: (no subject)
I think that none of the three bachelors succeeded in their quest. Timework Web wrote: > Michael Perelman wrote, > > >Didn't Churchill and Roosevelt refer to him as Uncle Joe? As I recall > >the inventor of the condom left his estate to the Bolsheviks. His family > >appealed and his estate went to his three daughters. In order to reclaim > >their rightful wealth, the Bolsheviks dispatch their three months > >eligible bachelors to court the young women. Stalin was one of the > >three. > > And the punch line is . . . ? > > Tom Walker -- Michael Perelman Economics Department California State University Chico, CA 95929 Tel. 530-898-5321 E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
(no subject)
Michael Perelman wrote, >Didn't Churchill and Roosevelt refer to him as Uncle Joe? As I recall >the inventor of the condom left his estate to the Bolsheviks. His family >appealed and his estate went to his three daughters. In order to reclaim >their rightful wealth, the Bolsheviks dispatch their three months >eligible bachelors to court the young women. Stalin was one of the >three. And the punch line is . . . ? Tom Walker
[PEN-L:12783] (no subject)
More poop on the tax cuts the Repugs have folded into the minimum wage bill. http://www.cbpp.org/10-19-99tax.htm mbs
[PEN-L:10150] (no subject)
Michael Perelman has asked me to introduce my web site and post new additions. About five years ago I while teaching the history of economic thought at McMaster, posted a number of readings for my students. With the encouragement of Michael and Tony Brewer, I made the text available to everyone. Subsequently that grew into a large collection of texts. (Now over 200 titles) The goal was to accumulate material of interest to those studying the history of economic thought. This is defined very broadly. About one year ago I was burnt out and stop posting new material. Now rested and ready to get back at it I have posted four new titles. I can continue to announce new postings to pen-l if there is sufficient interest. And of course if any one would like to contribute a text please let me know. I have added the following books to the History of Economics Archive at McMaster. I have not made the connections to the page yet, but these URLs do work. John Acton, Lectures on the French Revolution http://socserv2.mcmaster.ca/~econ/ugcm/3ll3/acton/FrenchRevolution.pdf Harold Laski, Studies in the Problem of Sovereignty http://socserv2.mcmaster.ca/~econ/ugcm/3ll3/laski/Sovereignty.pdf Catharine Macauley, Observations on the Reflections of Edmund Burke on the Revolution in France http://socserv2.mcmaster.ca/~econ/ugcm/3ll3/macauleycath/Observations.pdf John Figgis, Political Thought From Gerson to Grotius http://socserv2.mcmaster.ca/~econ/ugcm/3ll3/figgis/PoliticalTheory.pdf Rod Hay [EMAIL PROTECTED] The History of Economic Thought Archives http://socserv2.mcmaster.ca/~econ/ugcm/3ll3/index.html Batoche Books http://members.tripod.com/rodhay/batochebooks.html http://www.abebooks.com/home/BATOCHEBOOKS/ __ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
No Subject
rev pen-l
[PEN-L:7883] (no subject)
Thursday June 10 7:05 AM ET U.S. Marines Face Anti-NATO Protest In Greece By Karolos Grohmann EVZONI, Greece (Reuters) - A huge banner saying ``U.S. killers go home'' greeted U.S. marines heading for Kosovo when they landed in Greece Thursday, but there were no other anti-American incidents as they traveled across the country. Greece is a member of NATO but it is also a traditional friend of the fellow-Christian Orthodox Serbs and has contributed no troops or aircraft to NATO's Yugoslav campaign, which has been highly unpopular among the Greeks. ``The first thing we saw on the beach was a giant banner which had 'U.S. killers go home' written on it,'' a marine told Reuters as members of the 2,200-man force entered Macedonia at this frontier post after travelling through Greece. ``We are a peacekeeping force. There is a misunderstanding here,'' the marine said. Previous protests blocked the passage of U.S. troops heading through Greece for neighboring Macedonia for a time. Greece this week blocked the disembarkation of the 2,200 marines for several days, saying they could only cross its territory when it was certain they would enter Kosovo as peacekeepers only. The government in Athens has been particularly wary of letting the U.S. troops through this week, seeking to win favor with voters before European Parliament elections Sunday. The marines had been kept waiting since last Sunday aboard three U.S. ships off the port of Thessaloniki. Before they landed on Litohoro beach near Thessaloniki, the main transit point for NATO troops and supplies into Macedonia, hundreds of Greek riot police pushed about 500 demonstrators back from the beach. The protesters, mostly from the Greek Communist Party, chanted slogans like ``Yankees go home'' and ``American murderers'' as they were pushed back. The marines traveled some 175 miles across northern Greece to the Macedonian frontier to join the NATO-led force of some 50,000 troops preparing to enter Kosovo. There were no more protesters at the Greek-Macedonian border and the marines' progress through Greece appeared to have gone without a hitch. Reporters at the border saw two convoys cross with marines in buses and at least 12 of the amphibious assault craft they had earlier used to land at Litohoro beach near the port city of Thessaloniki. ``These marines will be among the first to enter Kosovo,'' a NATO official told Reuters as the first members of the 26th Marine Expeditionary Force waded up the beach at Litohoro. Earlier Stories U.S. Marines Land In Greece On Way To Kosovo (June 10) Yugoslavs Sign Kosovo Pull-Out Terms (June 9) Bombing Set To Stop As Kosovo Peace Signed (June 9) Yugoslavia To Start Pullout In Hours -- Minister (June 9) Serbs To Start Kosovo Pullout Thursday-Yugo Formin (June 9)
[PEN-L:6797] (no subject)
>From New Scientist, 15 May 1999 Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 20:39:41 -0700 To: (Recipient list suppressed) From: Camp Responsible Tech <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (by way of Michael Eisenscher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) Subject: New Scientist: The chips are down Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable =A9 Copyright New Scientist, RBI Limited 1999 =20 ,,The chips are down ,,Rob Edwards ZACHARY RUFFING was born almost blind. The bones in his head and shoulders are deformed and he has difficulty using his mouth, but according to his lawyer, Amanda Hawes, he's bright. "He wants to be an astronomer," she says.=20 Thirteen-year-old Zachary and his parents are trying to pin the blame on one of the world's most powerful corporations. When he was conceived and born in 1985 both his parents worked at an IBM semiconductor plant in East Fishkill, New York, where they claim they were exposed to a variety of solvents and other toxic chemicals. Along with 140 other workers and children, they are now suing Big Blue for compensation. Their case, the first of its kind, will come to court this October.=20 Across the Atlantic in Scotland, Grace Morrison, aged 57, blames another American company, National Semiconductor, for the cancers that killed her sister and her friend--and nearly killed her. She is leading a group of 70 women who say they were exposed to chemicals at the company's plant in Greenock. The women are launching a legal battle in Scotland for compensation. "The manufacture of semiconductors is a dirty, dangerous business," Morrison says.=20 Birth defects=20 Both IBM and National Semiconductor deny responsibility for birth defects and cancers amongst workers and their children--and it will be hard to prove them wrong. But there is mounting evidence that women in the chip-making industry do suffer an increased risk of spontaneous abortion and that exposure to solvents may cause congenital deformities.=20 The increasing use of computers over the past few decades has fuelled an explosive growth in the microelectronics industry. From its origins in California's Silicon Valley, it has spread throughout Europe and Asia, and now employs more than a million people worldwide. There are 900 chip-making plants and a further 100 planned, supplying a worldwide market worth more than $150 billion a year. "Because of its growth and size," says Douglas Andrey of the US's Semiconductor Industry Association, "the chip industry is the pivotal driver of the world economy."=20 The semiconductor industry may also be a world leader in another way, according to Joseph LaDou, director of the International Center for Occupational Medicine at the University of California in San Francisco. "What was once thought to be the first 'clean' industry is actually one of the most chemical-intensive industries ever conceived," he says. In the process of making, etching and doping silicon chips, workers can be exposed to hundreds of chemicals, including solvents, LaDou says.=20 Campaigners fear that as the industry expands rapidly in the Far East--where safety standards are generally slacker--birth defects will be the unfortunate growth industry following right behind. Ted Smith, executive director of the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, a campaign group in California, says: "The dirtier and more labour-intensive processes are increasingly being shuffled to underdeveloped countries throughout the global South, creating a whole system of environmental and economic injustice." LaDou points out that many of the chemicals present in the factories, such as arsenic and benzene, are known carcinogens.=20 In a semiconductor plant, much of the work takes place in "clean rooms" in which everyone has to wear head-to-toe bunny suits. Unfortunately, this environment is designed to protect sensitive chips, not the health of employees. The air in such rooms is usually recirculated through filters to remove dust, but not replenished with clean air from outside, says LaDou. Toxic fumes are simply recycled. He thinks this may explain why US Department of Labor statistics show that rates of occupational illness in American semiconductor plants caused by "caustic, noxious and allergenic substances" are three times as high as in other manufacturing industries.=20 The most recent study to raise doubts about the safety of semiconductor workers is one of the most dramatic. In Canada, doctors at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto reported in March this year that 13 out of 125 pregnant women exposed to workplace solvents gave birth to children with major congenital malformations, such as spina bifida or deafness. This compares to only one out of 125 women in jobs where they were not exposed to solvents (The Journal of the American Medical Association, vol 281, p 1106).=20 Hawes says this evidence will help Zachary Ruffing and her other clients in their claims against IBM because many of the solvents t
[PEN-L:6555] (no subject)
Hi. The Journal of Economic Perspectives (from the American Economic Association) is considering a symposium on topic in econometrics. Part of my job is to get input from a subset of *non--econometricians* on topics that they might actively choose to read about if published in the JEP. That is, this is not intended to be interesting to *econometricians* -- it is intended to be interesting and accessible to JEP readers (a tiny subset of which are econometricians). I would welcome any suggestions at [EMAIL PROTECTED] John DiNardo
[PEN-L:6536] (no subject)
China Protesters Attack US Embassy ..c The Associated Press By JOHN LEICESTER BEIJING (AP) -- More than a thousand demonstrators attacked the U.S. Embassy in Beijing with rocks, smashed up embassy cars and scuffled with hundreds of police officers today in a protest over the accidental NATO bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Yugoslavia. Police pushed back demonstrators who tried to ram a van and hurl a burning American flag through the embassy gate. Protesters used pieces of concrete that had been left in piles by workers rebuilding sidewalks to break many of the windows in embassy buildings spread over one block. A group of protesters tried to set a car on fire and started shoving police who stopped them. Several cars were smashed with chunks of concrete. AP-NY-05-08-99 0917EDT Copyright 1998 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without prior written authority of The Associated Press.
[PEN-L:6326] (no subject)
[PEN-L:4610] Re: (no subject)
Nathan, you have to send the request to [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- Michael Perelman Economics Department California State University Chico, CA 95929 Tel. 530-898-5321 E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[PEN-L:4599] Re: (no subject)
Thanks. I continue to find the near silence in the media about this "stealth" vote rather amazing. It appears that there were three Dems voting no, Bingaman, Feingold, and Hollings, of whom only Feingold can be said to be at all on the left. Of course one could get cynical and say that it was an appeal to the non-trivial Serb vote in Milwaukee, but then Feingold was the only Dem in the Senate to oppose Byrd's "end the impeachment" motion. Barkley Rosser -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Thursday, March 25, 1999 9:03 PM Subject: (no subject) > Barkley Rosser wrote > >There was a vote about this in the US Senate, approving >>it by 58-41. Somehow in the midst of all its stories the W. Post >>failed to say who voted how, although obviously this was not >>party line. I gather most (if not all) of the 41 were Republicans. >>But, is there anybody out there who knows what the actual >>lineup was? > >Here is the vote from the Senate webstite: > >*** > > (Rollcall Vote No. 57 Leg.) > >March 23, 1999, 7:55 PM > >BILL NO.: S.CON.RES.21 > >TITLE: S.Con.Res. 21 > >REQUIRED FOR MAJORITY: 1/2 > >RESULT: Concurrent Resolution Agreed to > > YEAS---58 > >Abraham HagelMikulski >AkakaHarkin Moynihan >Baucus HatchMurray >Bayh Inouye Reed >BidenJeffords Reid >BoxerJohnson Robb >Breaux Kennedy Rockefeller >BryanKerrey Roth >Byrd KerrySarbanes >Chafee Kohl Schumer >Cleland Landrieu Shelby >Conrad Lautenberg Smith Gordon H >Daschle LeahySnowe >DeWine LevinSpecter >Dodd LiebermanTorricelli >Dorgan Lincoln Warner >Durbin LugarWellstone >Edwards Mack Wyden >FeinsteinMcCain >Graham McConnell > > NAYS---41 > >Allard Enzi Kyl >Ashcroft Feingold Lott >Bennett Fitzgerald Murkowski >Bingaman FristNickles >Bond Gorton Roberts >BrownbackGrammSantorum >Bunning GramsSessions >BurnsGrassley Smith Bob >Campbell GreggStevens >Collins HelmsThomas >CoverdellHollings Thompson >CraigHutchinson Thurmond >CrapoHutchisonVoinovich >Domenici Inhofe > > NOT VOTING---1 > >Cochran > >*** > K. Mickey >
[PEN-L:2206] (no subject)
pen-l will be down over the weekend until 5:00 pm California time. -- Michael Perelman Economics Department California State University Chico, CA 95929 Tel. 530-898-5321 E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[PEN-L:1181] (no subject)
I just forwarded an article on the y2k and military. Maybe Clinton is in a rush to send the missles to Iraq or N. Korea rather than having them reprogrammed. -- Michael Perelman Economics Department California State University Chico, CA 95929 Tel. 530-898-5321 E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[PEN-L:947] (no subject)
I've been asked the following question re Southern California Edison, a California electric utility which has operations in Australia, is building coal plants in Indonesia and Thailand, and other plants around the world. >Edison says, in its lliterature, that it is the first fossil-fuel plant in >the world to receive accreditation under both iso 14001, a rigorous >international environmental standard, and iso9001, a certification for >operations and maintenance. > >is this significant? what does it mean? I don't know the "ISO" rules and what they mean. Can anyone help, particularly on the environmental standard part of the question. Is iso14001 equal to, say, USA standards, better, worse? How does it compare with a better European country? Gene Coyle
[PEN-L:113] [Fwd: (no subject)]
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --1DE524154FC48680DA10BE9F There is a big and quite miraculously interesting debate going on on H-World about the Frank v. Landes thing. While I agree with James Devine and others complaints about cross-posting (Lou Proyect is the worst offender: and Doug H sends a zillion posts a day to his own list, including implorings of us to be more restrained... come on, boys! Play the game!) I think this may be an exception. Anyway, Michael has promised to respond so that's reason enough. Mark --1DE524154FC48680DA10BE9F Date: Tue, 19 May 1998 17:54:50 +0100 From: Mark Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: H-W <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: (no subject) From: Mark Jones [EMAIL PROTECTED] I am grateful for this debate, which has more than just historiographical significance. The EH-Net threads on Re-thinking 18th Century China marked a turning-point in general preconceptions. Gunder Frank's thesis has done more: it has put the provenance of the Industrial Revolution firmly back centre stage. Nevertheless, it is flawed. Frank has not managed to hypothesize the dynamic producing the punctuation-point he has again dramatised, and the result is the debate is sidetracked into a discussion about 'institutions', the residual left when trade winds, coal, steam and British brutishness are factored out. Institutions *are* important. An evidence of the vitality of European culture before even the English, never mind French, revolution, is in the stance of imperial Russia, whose ambiguous east-west orientation was a litmus test of contemporary valuations of the merits of Europe and the orient. Why, if Chinese science, productivity, technology and culture was superior, did Peter the Great (1672-1725) open his window on the world facing the Baltic? He was aware of China and Russia was the first western state to undergo sinification of trade, adoption of eastern dress, manners, colloquialisms, trade practices etc. Even Peter's grandfather, the moderniser tsar Alexei Mikhailovich (1645-76)sought European assistance, importing Dutch engineers and shipbuilders like Kashtren Brandt in 1680s. The Romanov urge to modernise transcended traditional fear and envy of the east, so the choice of Europe is instructive. Despite this evidence of European institutional dynamism, the real issue was not the specificity of institutions but their *negation*. This is what Frank and Landes and the schools they front, totally fail even to understand let alone acknowledge. This absolute failure of historical vision is connected in Frank's case with his dismissal of Marx. Marx was not eurocentric either by inclination or as theorist. Marx saw capitalism as a global phenomenon. British capitalism was all there was in 1857, by when he'd completed his theorising of the phenomenon. It was not as clear than as later [after Marx!] that industrial capitalism which emerged *first* in Britain, was the future-wave. Marx was therefore neither eurocentric nor an orientalist. His achievement was in his characterisation of the dynamics of the capitalist accumulation-regime. Frank never addresses this in his [erroneous] dismissal of Marx. To substantiate it Frank needs to do deconstruct Marx's holistic analysis not merely attack Marx's claims at universality. Marx never saw capitalism as a euro-phenomenon, speaking of 'capital-in-general' and seeing it as ONLY a world-system. This is why all the world-sytem theorists without exception as well as their world-history camp-followers owe such a huge intellectual debt to Marx even while denying it. Pomeranz's wonderful analyses remind us there was nothing in Chinese development of irrigation, aquaculture, solutions to energy-deficits [efficient stoves] -- which is not -- ESPECIALLY today -- at the forefront of our imaginings of a post-capitalist, sustainable future. Marx wrote similarly for example in his correspondence with Zasulich in which he lauded the example of the Russia peasant commune, the zemstvo seen as a short cut to a humane, sustainable socialism, without a detour thru capitalism. A progressive civilization did not require either the savagery or the institutions of European capitalism. Marx was prepared for the kind of thought-experiments Pomeranz encourages. There are always alternatives. This is so even though capitalism is unique in being the first social formation in which accumulation is not a by-product of secular productivity trends, but the main aim of the social actors, and an institutionalised matter of life and death. For the institutions of capitalism: the banks, discount-houses, commerce, technology, state, even the academy, are not supports of a settled way of life and its received truths, but market mechanisms, bankrupting failure, thru stock markets in particular making it impossible
[PEN-L:117] Re: [Fwd: (no subject)]
I for one missed Mark's posting on this to this list. Perhaps this had something to do with the list problems and a repost might be in order. However, this discussion raged at some length and with some intelligence not too long ago on marxism-international, a list that Louis P. now derides and which the creation of his list has helped to weaken. Barkley Rosser On Tue, 19 May 1998 14:30:25 -0700 michael <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Mark Jones's post is extraordinary. The history list has been throbbing with > this debate. Mark does an excellent job of putting it into perspective. > > Where he goes wrong is in expecting me to have anything to add. I can only > throw out a few comments. > > I believe that historical, geographical and social accidents might well > explain why capitalism took root in the west. There were hints of an emergent > capitalism in India, and probably elsewhere although I am not aware of where > that might be. > > Once it took hold, as Mark/Marx shows very well, it took on a logic of its > own, but a contradictory logic that runs into limits. > > Mark is doing an excellent job in discussing those limits on Doug's list. > Capitalist technology is [economic] growth enhancing and ecologically > destructive. The latter factor is increasing faster than the former. > > Even if the destructive part does exceed the productive part, the way this > technology fits into the economy, still gives the masters of capital an > increasing surplus with which to play. > > So our globalizers are busy taking out the forests, the minerals and the > fossil fuels of the far flung corners of the world. The debate on the history > list still smacks of capitalist triumphalism. We are the exception ones. > Others must follow. > > Mark offers a welcome corrective. > > > -- > Michael Perelman > Economics Department > California State University > Chico, CA 95929 > > Tel. 530-898-5321 > E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- Rosser Jr, John Barkley [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[PEN-L:116] Re: [Fwd: (no subject)]
Mark Jones's post is extraordinary. The history list has been throbbing with this debate. Mark does an excellent job of putting it into perspective. Where he goes wrong is in expecting me to have anything to add. I can only throw out a few comments. I believe that historical, geographical and social accidents might well explain why capitalism took root in the west. There were hints of an emergent capitalism in India, and probably elsewhere although I am not aware of where that might be. Once it took hold, as Mark/Marx shows very well, it took on a logic of its own, but a contradictory logic that runs into limits. Mark is doing an excellent job in discussing those limits on Doug's list. Capitalist technology is [economic] growth enhancing and ecologically destructive. The latter factor is increasing faster than the former. Even if the destructive part does exceed the productive part, the way this technology fits into the economy, still gives the masters of capital an increasing surplus with which to play. So our globalizers are busy taking out the forests, the minerals and the fossil fuels of the far flung corners of the world. The debate on the history list still smacks of capitalist triumphalism. We are the exception ones. Others must follow. Mark offers a welcome corrective. -- Michael Perelman Economics Department California State University Chico, CA 95929 Tel. 530-898-5321 E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: -- No Subject --
Boddhi, The fact that the T-bill sale by the Japanese went through the New York Fed in a single block proves that it was coordinated. Essentially the Fed incorporated this sale, which could have been spread out, into its own open market operations which are carried out by the New York Fed. Barkley Rosser On Fri, 17 Apr 98 5:02:45 EDT boddhisatva <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > > > C. Rosser, > > > > I don't think that there is a shortage of treasuries out there. > Selling treasuries doesn't do the Yen any good unless you then use the > proceeds to buy Yen. If treasury sales raise U.S. interest rates, the > spread between Japanese and American yields gets wider. I think the > Japanese were using the big sale to threaten the markets with their > immense reserves. I'm sure Washington approves of anything that keeps the > Yen higher (note recent earnings reports' citing for-ex losses), but I > don't think this is coordination. > > > > > > peace > > -- Rosser Jr, John Barkley [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: -- No Subject --
C. Rosser, I don't think that there is a shortage of treasuries out there. Selling treasuries doesn't do the Yen any good unless you then use the proceeds to buy Yen. If treasury sales raise U.S. interest rates, the spread between Japanese and American yields gets wider. I think the Japanese were using the big sale to threaten the markets with their immense reserves. I'm sure Washington approves of anything that keeps the Yen higher (note recent earnings reports' citing for-ex losses), but I don't think this is coordination. peace
Re: -- No Subject --
As I mentioned in an earlier post, the likely story to watch is the BOJ selling US government securities, of which it holds several hundred billions worth. It is now clear that the 12.1 billion sale through the New York Fed the other day was very much a coordinated deal. It not only served to prop up the yen, but apparently with the new surplus in the US budget, there is now an actual SHORTAGE of US government securities in the financial markets. Apparently they get used as collateral for all kinds of transactions, and there are now not enough. So, the BOJ's sales were most welcome. No wonder the New York Fed helped out. Barkley Rosser On Thu, 16 Apr 98 2:37:25 EDT boddhisatva <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > To whom..., > > > > Late night reports of official Japanese reaction to the G7 > communique on for-ex make the Japanese mind-set a little clearer. Either > they are playing it extremely cute or they are living in a dream world. > The latter seems more likely. The communique quite clearly emphasized the > view that the Yen should be strengthened through Japanese internal > economic policy. While it left open the possibility of concerted > intervention, it did so only in the case of imbalances in the market. The > Japanese officials, however, emphasized the very small opening left for > concerted intervention and expressed surprise that Japan's situation was > the focus of so much discussion. I fear these guys are living in a > fantasy where staying the course will produce renewed Japanese economic > strength. That seems to include staying the strong Yen course, but the > BoJ seems to be alone in that effort whether it knows it or not. > > > > The Yen was bid to as low as 131/dollar, but moved back up a bit > to around 130. It's 2:00 a.m. EST and the trend on Globex has been > bearish since I first checked it at midnight, however no break-out is > evident at the moment and I don't know what the actual exchange rate was > at midnight since I was getting the June future. Reuters reported of a > poll of economists which was interesting, showing a bearish trend on the > Yen despite BoJ intervention and suggesting that Yen outflows could offset > downward pressure on dollar/Yen caused by the current account deficit. It > is a brave new world in Tokyo. > > > > > > > peace > > -- Rosser Jr, John Barkley [EMAIL PROTECTED]
No Subject
To whom..., Late night reports of official Japanese reaction to the G7 communique on for-ex make the Japanese mind-set a little clearer. Either they are playing it extremely cute or they are living in a dream world. The latter seems more likely. The communique quite clearly emphasized the view that the Yen should be strengthened through Japanese internal economic policy. While it left open the possibility of concerted intervention, it did so only in the case of imbalances in the market. The Japanese officials, however, emphasized the very small opening left for concerted intervention and expressed surprise that Japan's situation was the focus of so much discussion. I fear these guys are living in a fantasy where staying the course will produce renewed Japanese economic strength. That seems to include staying the strong Yen course, but the BoJ seems to be alone in that effort whether it knows it or not. The Yen was bid to as low as 131/dollar, but moved back up a bit to around 130. It's 2:00 a.m. EST and the trend on Globex has been bearish since I first checked it at midnight, however no break-out is evident at the moment and I don't know what the actual exchange rate was at midnight since I was getting the June future. Reuters reported of a poll of economists which was interesting, showing a bearish trend on the Yen despite BoJ intervention and suggesting that Yen outflows could offset downward pressure on dollar/Yen caused by the current account deficit. It is a brave new world in Tokyo. peace
No Subject
Date:Sun, 29 Mar 98 16:39 LCL From:PHILLPS To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]< Subject: Kosovo (corrected) I had trouble with my e-mail and the previous post was cut off and the last part garbled. So let me please correct it. But this relates back to Barkley's message. From what I have been able to find out from anecdotal evidence so far there has been little change in Yugoslavia from self-management institutions (though I don't know aabout the state of property relations.) I suspect that part of the American antipathy to Serbia is due to the lack of reforms in the economic system. Yet, our evidence is that it is (at least in part) the retention of much of the self- management institutions in Slovenia which has eased its transition without the gutwrenching declines that some of the other transitionary economies have experienced. If that is the case, then to what extent is American policy willing to accept that maintenance of some form of self-management and workers' control or will it require an abandonment of worker participation as an ideologically acceptable constraint before the US will abandon sanctions. What worries me is that when I was in Slovenia in December I attended a seminar with the US ambassador who was leaving to take up the Yugoslav Desk in Washington. In his talk he basically said, if I interpreted him correctly, that even Slovenia which 'had made great strides' had not liberalized (i.e. privatized) sufficiently to satisfy American goals -- that is, worker participation in management had to go! If that is the case, then one can understand the basic 'cold-war' mentallity that is driving US-Serb relations and the US intervention in Kosovo. Paul Phillips, Economics, University of Manitoba
No Subject
The winter issue of SCIENCE & SOCIETY contains: John L. Stanley, "Marx's Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Nature" Alan Shandro, "Karl Kautsky on the Relation of Theory and Practice" Jerry Harris, "First Reaction: U.S. Communists & the Khrushchev Revelations" John Callaghan, "Colonialism, Racism, the C[ommunist] P[arty of] G[reat] B[ritain] and the Comintern" A debate about elite and class in Poland, by Jacek Tittenbrun and Francisco Gutierrez Sanin; Jie-Hyun Lim, Left Historiography in Poland Today Books reviewed include Alan Wald's RESPONSIBILITY OF INTELLECTUALS, 2 biographies of William Morris. Peter Beckman's and Francine D'Amico's WOMEN, GENDER & WORLD POLITICS; David Kettler's & Volker Maja's KARL MANHEIM & LIBERALISM; Cathy Schneider"s SHANTYTOWN PROTEST IN PINOCHET'S CHILE; David Wellman's THE UNION MAKES US STRONG: RADICAL UNIONISM ON THE SAN FRANCISCO WATERFRONT; Fobert Zeiger's CIO; Kevin Anderson's LENIN, HEGEL & WESTERN MARXISM; Melvin Olivers's & Thomas Shapiro's BLACK WEALTH/WHITE WEALTH; Donald MacKenzie, KNOWING MACHINES: ESSAYS ON TECHNICAL CHANGE. -- SCIENCE & SOCIETY John Jay College City Univ. of N.Y, 445 West 59 St. room 4331 New York, NY 10019 212/246-4932 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
No Subject
--=_886623136==_ --=_886623136==_ ***1998 SOCIALIST SCHOLARS CONFERENCE*** A World to Win: From the MANIFESTO to New Organizing for Socialist Change ***CALL FOR PANELS*** http://www.soc.qc.edu/ssc Dear Friends, Scholars, Activists, The 1998 Socialist Scholars Conference will take place this year from Friday March 20 to Sunday March 22, at Borough of Manhattan Community College, 199 Chambers Street, New York City. This year's theme is "A World to Win: From the MANIFESTO to New Organizing for Socialist Change," and we encourage panels to address issues covered by it. We are also eager to have panels on any and all subjects of interest to socialists, radical democrats, activists and intellectuals who want a better world. Last year 1800 activists, scholars, socialists, and radical democrats from more than a dozen countries met for a weekend of dialogue and debate about changes in the labor movement at the top and bottom; independent politics; struggles for survival and justice in Asia, Africa, and Latin America; bringing culture back in; and dozens of others on race, ecology, gender, class, and the struggle for liberation. At more than 120 panels speakers and participants exchanged ideas, honed tactics, and discovered new ways to look at old problems. This year the aim of the Conference is modest: we would like to reintroduce organizing into the socialist project. The recent Teamster victory in the U.P.S. strike illustrates the efficacy of rank and file organizing: educating, agitating, and persuading. Yet, in this increasingly fragmented and complex world where virtual communities supplant face-to-face communication, where membership implies no commitment, organizing is a radical act. Two anniversaries will be important components of this year's Conference: the one hundred and fifty years since the birth of the COMMUNIST MANIFESTO, and the thirty years since the events of 1968 -- the Prague Spring, Paris, Chicago, the Tlatelolco Massacre. We encourage wide-ranging discussion. Debates are more interesting for speakers and audience. Diversity of opinion and experience, as well as in race, class, and gender, give your panel and the Conference strength. We have participants organize panels rather than submit papers because panels with coherent themes are more interesting; they allow for meaningful debate and encourage participation from the audience. Panels are an hour and fifty minutes long and typically have three to five speakers, sometimes including a moderator. Talks of less than twenty minutes per speaker work best. They allow for exchange among and between panelists and the audience. Videos, slide presentations, and/or overhead projections can be accommodated with advance notification. **Deadline for panel submissions is February 27, 1998.** To submit a panel, please include a panel title, a list of panelists with one -and only one- affiliation per panelist, an address with email for each panelist, a sponsoring organization (if applicable) and a contact person with address, phone number, and email. Panels take place on Saturday March 21 and Sunday March 22, from 10:00 AM to 11:50 AM, 1:00 PM to 2:50 PM, and 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM. Please let us know your preference, and, given early notification, we will do everything possible to meet your needs. The cost of a panel is $100. The fee includes admission for each of the panelist for the entire three day conference. There are no additional charges for panelists. Please make your checks payable to: Socialist Scholars Conference c/o Dept. of Sociology/ CUNY Grad Center 33 West 42nd Street New York, NY 10036-8099 If you have further questions, please look for our web page at: http://www.soc.qc.edu/ssc or contact us at the above address, phone us at (212) 642-2826, or email us at: [EMAIL PROTECTED] --=_886623136==_--
No Subject
Vox populi, according to the NYT: But most people here said private sin has little to do with public statesmanship. "I might not think of him[Clinton] as a good husband," said Scott Inman, a 36-year-old warehouse worker, "but I approve of him as a president." And some might judge Clinton more harshly, they acknowledged, if the economy was in trouble. "As long as he's running the country and I'm working and making money," said Arthur Johnson, a 49-year-old carpenter, "he can do whatever he pleases in his spare time." Tom Kruse / Casilla 5812 / Cochabamba, Bolivia Tel/Fax: (591-42) 48242 Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
No Subject
Dear Conrad: Rose Ann and I enjoyed seeing you in Chicago, and we hope that you will find meaningful and lucrative employment to follow your stint at Simon Fraser. Be sure to check the job postings on the web site of THE CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION every Friday, and most of all, don't give up!!! Best wishes, Steven Zahniser POB 9936 Oakland, CA 94613-0936 tel. 510-567-8727 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
No Subject
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 1998 15:34:05 +1100 From: WISE <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: Tracy Quan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: In a NUTshell Dear Tracy, Please forward my comments on to the appropriate list. Jim Craven wrote: > >So of course a few hookers who attempt to sanitize it all with the > >title sex worker as part of the entertainment "industry" can work > >under conditions and with protections that few if any prostitutes and > >sexual slaves will ever know; it is they who are the truly insulated > >and even arrogant ones. To the extent to which they attempt to > >generalize and rationalize from their very limited and privileged > >market niches, conditions and sentiments simply not found among the > >many involved in prostitution, they play the same role as the rich > >Jews who purported to extrapolate and rationalize from their > >insulated and privileged positions what the vast majority of Jews > >would likely face when dealing with Nazis as they purport to speak to > >the issue of what the vast majority of prostitutes will face and > >endure under the normal conditions and with the usual clientele and > >extreme risks with which they have to deal. I find Craven's self-proclaimed knowledge of the sex industry laughable! It could have come straight from the pages of a moral majority propaganda tract. Likening whore activists to Nazi jews is not only extremely insulting and offensive, but so totally incorrect that I wonder what his real agenda is here. I am a whore. I am a whore activist. I live in Canberra, Australia, where we have a decriminalised sex industry. Brothels, outcalls to clients homes/hotels, and working as a prostitute from your home are all legal. Street soliciting is not legal, but Canberra has never had a street scene (for many reasons, but largely because we don't NEED it - so many other forms of viable prostitution - street working is not a favoured option for Canberra whores). In our legal industry, only 10% of the workers use illegal drugs. Notice I said, "use" illegal drugs (not abuse - I have no figures as to which of the 10% actually find their drug use problematic). Sex workers in Canberra come from every background - many are students working their way through tertiary education, many are parents whose partners are absent or unemployed. Some are working as whores because they do not think they have any other choice - but not anywhere near the majority. Most work as whores because they enjoy the financial freedom, flexible work hours, client contact, improving communication skills, sex, dressing up, being desirable and a host of other reasons. To cast the majority of us as poor exploited creatures may fit into Craven's masturbatory fantasies, but it is far from the truth. As a whore activist who works for a sex worker rights organisation, I access every single brothel in Canberra on a weekly basis, providing condoms, lubricant and other tools of the trade, as well as offering education and information on STDs, laws in Canberra and other states, industrial issues etc. If ANYONE is in a position to provide accurate information about the reality of the sex industry, it is me. The members of Workers In Sex Employment in the ACT (WISE), my employers are sick and tired of justifying their decisions to work where they choose. How dare someone who has never turned a trick in his life come and tell us how sad, sick and sorry we are? The real victims of prostitution - and there are victims - are there because of the outdated laws that fail to protect us while lining the pockets of the lawyers, police and other anti-prostitution folk. Here are some facts: In Canberra, a city where prostitution is decriminalised but has no rigid regulations about where, who, and how whores ply their trade (ie. it is an offence to coerce someone to work as a prostitute, or to employ a minor, or to knowingly infect - either as client or whore - someone with an STD), we have rare incidences of violence towards sex workers, not one single case of a sex worker infecting a client with HIV or vice versa, discrimination legislation that makes it offence to discriminate against someone because of their "trade, occupation or calling", and by far and away the large majority of whores happily and gainfully employed. Canberra is not unique. The main reason that whores are unhappy, IN ANY CITY, is anti-prostitution laws and self appointed moral guardians who make it their business to put us down. What offends me most about Cravens's blithe assertions is the notion that we are selling out our sister whores by forming sex worker rights organisations, providing peer education, information, advocacy and support. I will not be told I am a pseudo nazi for sticking up for the basic civil rights of my sister whores! WE ARE THE SEX EDUCATORS OF THE WORLD- and we demand and deserve your respect! Sera Pinwill WISE Whore [EMAIL PROTECTED]
No Subject
Regarding LatAm reaction to FT defeat, I made the following notes for Doug H. It might be of interest for the rest of the list, so here goes. >Tom - > >Hmm, this might be interesting. How much attention is Bolivia paying to the >fast track thing? How does Bolivia fit into proposals for LatAm integration? > >Doug > Doug: Bolivia (read: elite managers, owners and operators of Bolivia) is a member of Mercosur, and as such is very interested in questions of integration, trade, etc. The past president (favorite of Wall Street, U Chicago educated Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada) rushed the country into the pact before we (read: NOT the owners/operators of Bolivia) knew what it was or might mean. The impact is still unclear. Bolivia's tarrifs are already very low, and we're flooded with Argentinian, Brazilian, Chinese, etc. imports (largely contraband). So the impact will probably be more in terms of access to Brazilian, Argentinian, Peruvian and Chilean markets. A note on Mercosur. As you may know, it's basically a tariff union (shared rules of the game) the involves about 50% of the population of South America, 60% of the region's gross product, and 40% of the region's foreign trade. Members are allowed to enter into other trade agreements, of course, as is the case with Chile, which has been bucking for entrance to NAFTA. Thus, of the region's countries, Chile is perhaps the hardest hit by fast track going down. Various business sectors here were opposed to joining (often those used to comfy govt. subsidies), but the Bolivian chapter of the transnationalized economic elites (lots of MBAs from the US and Chile, Mitsubishi 4x4s for city driving, cell phones and Christmas shopping in Miami) carried the day. In thinking about all this, a couple of basic points need to be emphasized. First, while Bolivia (read: ...), like the rest of LatAm and the "developing" world, is staking its future on export led growth, free trade, etc., it is very small country (under 7 million pop., $770 GNP/cap in 1994), with very few products the world is interested in (except coca/cocaine), and loaded with a good deal of debt. For 1996 Debt/GNP was 61.4%; Debt/Exports 408.2%, in 1995 the debt grew by 12.4%, in 1996 by 2.6%. Bolivia's exports are still over 40% minerals. If you add oil and gas, over 50% are extractive products. 1996's exports were (estimates): Minerals40.2% Oil and Gas 11.8% Soy 14.2% (much goes to feed Brazilian cows) Wood 6.6% Jewelry 3.6% Other 23.6% "Other" includes all sorts of stuff: furniture, ceramics, artesanal goods, rainforest products (oils, nuts), and -- get this! -- coffins made from precious hardwoods. The value added in such goods varies a lot, but is assumed to be higher than for just wood, say. Thus, Bolivia remains overwhelmingly an exporter of raw materials and low value added goods. Point 2: Thanks to the work of Rhys Jenkins, we now have a somewhat clearer picture on trade's impact post struct. adj. He found that trade liberalization has NOT led to improved export performance and has NOT led to increases in productivity. Improvements in trade performance are instead attributed to "more realistic and more stable real exchange rate[s] after 1985, while the trade policy reforms [tariff reductions, etc.] have had little impact." (Note: this was before entering Mercosur.) As for productivity increases, he concludes simply that "there is no evidence that the Bolivian trade reforms [again, pre Mercosur] have led to improved productivity performance." There were productivity increases in the period studied but is was attributed largely to "increased intensity of work and a result of reduction in personnel." (Jenkins in Journal of Intl. Dev., 7(4) 1995:594). Informed opinion would, presumably, consider such things in thinking about integration, export led growth models, etc. Point 3: Living here I sometimes feel like I'm in a dreamland when presented with econ. data. Reason: the coca/cocaine economy is enormous, ubiquitous, and largely unmeasured and perhaps unmeasurable -- if one fancies living. Still, every reasonable economist, sociologist or anthropologist here (and the US Embassy) admits that the impact is enormous. Most commonly it is suggested that without coca/cocaine, the structural adjustments of the mid 1980's would have resulted in upheaval. Reform of the financial sector in 1985-6 allowed for unhampered buying and selling of dollars (in fact, it produced a complete "dollarization" of the banking system -- CDs bought and sold in dollars, checking in dollars, and scads of dollar changers on every downtown corner, moving $10-30,000 daily) and, most significantly, the *repatriation of capital no questions asked*. The latter has kept Bolivia liquid through the ups and downs of savage restructuring in the 80s and 90s. Thus, the implications of integration, trade, etc. are rather complex. At the same time, some old patte
No Subject
--=_878781881==_ --=_878781881==_ ***1998 SOCIALIST SCHOLARS CONFERENCE*** A World to Win: From the MANIFESTO to New Organizing for Socialist Change ***CALL FOR PANELS*** http://www.soc.qc.edu/ssc Dear Friends, Scholars, Activists, The 1998 Socialist Scholars Conference will take place this year from Friday March 20 to Sunday March 22, at Borough of Manhattan Community College, 199 Chambers Street, New York City. This year's theme is "A World to Win: From the MANIFESTO to New Organizing for Socialist Change," and we encourage panels to address issues covered by it. We are also eager to have panels on any and all subjects of interest to socialists, radical democrats, activists and intellectuals who want a better world. Last year 1800 activists, scholars, socialists, and radical democrats from more than a dozen countries met for a weekend of dialogue and debate about changes in the labor movement at the top and bottom; independent politics; struggles for survival and justice in Asia, Africa, and Latin America; bringing culture back in; and dozens of others on race, ecology, gender, class, and the struggle for liberation. At more than 120 panels speakers and participants exchanged ideas, honed tactics, and discovered new ways to look at old problems. This year the aim of the Conference is modest: we would like to reintroduce organizing into the socialist project. The recent Teamster victory in the U.P.S. strike illustrates the efficacy of rank and file organizing: educating, agitating, and persuading. Yet, in this increasingly fragmented and complex world where virtual communities supplant face-to-face communication, where membership implies no commitment, organizing is a radical act. Two anniversaries will be important components of this year's Conference: the one hundred and fifty years since the birth of the COMMUNIST MANIFESTO, and the thirty years since the events of 1968 -- the Prague Spring, Paris, Chicago, the Tlatelolco Massacre. We encourage wide-ranging discussion. Debates are more interesting for speakers and audience. Diversity of opinion and experience, as well as in race, class, and gender, give your panel and the Conference strength. We have participants organize panels rather than submit papers because panels with coherent themes are more interesting; they allow for meaningful debate and encourage participation from the audience. Panels are an hour and fifty minutes long and typically have three to five speakers, sometimes including a moderator. Talks of less than twenty minutes per speaker work best. They allow for exchange among and between panelists and the audience. Videos, slide presentations, and/or overhead projections can be accommodated with advance notification. **Deadline for panel submissions is February 27, 1998.** To submit a panel, please include a panel title, a list of panelists with one -and only one- affiliation per panelist, an address with email for each panelist, a sponsoring organization (if applicable) and a contact person with address, phone number, and email. Panels take place on Saturday March 21 and Sunday March 22, from 10:00 AM to 11:50 AM, 1:00 PM to 2:50 PM, and 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM. Please let us know your preference, and, given early notification, we will do everything possible to meet your needs. The cost of a panel is $100. The fee includes admission for each of the panelist for the entire three day conference. There are no additional charges for panelists. Please make your checks payable to: Socialist Scholars Conference c/o Dept. of Sociology/ CUNY Grad Center 33 West 42nd Street New York, NY 10036-8099 If you have further questions, please look for our web page at: http://www.soc.qc.edu/ssc or contact us at the above address, phone us at (212) 642-2826, or email us at: [EMAIL PROTECTED] --=_878781881==_--
No Subject
--=_878781820==_ --=_878781820==_ 1998 Socialist Scholars Conference March 20-22 "A World to Win: >From the MANIFESTO to New Organizing for Socialist Change" http://www.soc.qc.edu/ssc The sixteenth annual Socialist Scholars Conference will be held at Borough of Manhattan Community College, 199 Chambers Street in downtown Manhattan from March 20 to 22, 1998. The theme of the Conference is "A World to Win: From the MANIFESTO to New Organizing for Socialist Change." One hundred and fifty years after the "Communist Manifesto" first appeared the call for "workers of all countries, unite" is as compelling as ever. The unparalleled strength of capital along with the concomitant rise in inequality, insecurity, and environmental degradation demands a response. The aim of the Conference is modest: we would like to reintroduce organizing into the socialist project. The recent Teamster victory in the U.P.S. strike illustrates the efficacy of rank and file organizing: educating, agitating, and persuading. Yet, in this increasingly fragmented and complex world where virtual communities supplant face-to-face communication, where membership implies no commitment, organizing is a radical act. Organizing is NOT simply a question of technique. Whom we organize and for what shapes how we organize. Can socialists build solidarity around universal interests, and which ones? Are particular identities -- class, race, gender, generation, and nation -- mutually supportive or antagonistic to building a better world? What sorts of organizations lend themselves to political independence? Who are our allies, our adversaries? How do we organize in a globalized economy and culture? Two anniversaries will be important components of this year's Conference: the one hundred and fifty years since the birth of the COMMUNIST MANIFESTO, and the thirty years since the events of 1968 -- the Prague Spring, Paris, Chicago, the Tlatelolco Massacre. Join us as we discuss and debate strategies and tactics for socialist change. Learn from those who are struggling against domination, both here and abroad. Share your successes. Ask hard questions about failure. Help sustain a culture of communication and activism. Last year 1800 activists, scholars, socialists, and radical democrats from more than a dozen countries met for a weekend of dialogue and debate. At more than 120 panels, speakers and participants exchanged ideas, honed tactics, and discovered new ways to look at old problems. The Socialist Scholars Conference is a great place to renew old acquaintances, meet new comrades, and share ideas. We hope to see you there! DETAILS: When: 6:00 PM Friday March 20 to 6:00 PM Sunday March 22, 1998 Conference material will be available only at the door. Where: Borough of Manhattan Community College 199 Chambers Street New York City Cost: Pre-registration (postmarked by March 6, 1998) Regular Income $30 Low Income $20 Undergraduate/HS $8 One Day $15 On-site Registration Regular Income $45 Low Income $30 Undergraduate/HS $8 One Day $20 Checks should be made payable to: Socialist Scholars Conference c/o Sociology, CUNY Graduate Center 33 West 42nd Street New York, NY 10036 For further information look for our web page at: http://www.soc.qc.edu/ssc write to the above address, or call (212) 642-2826, or email us at [EMAIL PROTECTED] + PLEASE REGISTER ME FOR THE 1998 SOCIALIST SCHOLARS CONFERENCE Name: Address:_ _ City: State:__ Zip: Amount Enclosed:__ For one day admission, which day? Fri: Sat: Sun:___ Return registrations with payment to: Socialist Scholars Conference, c/o Sociology/GSUC 33 West 42nd Street New York, NY 10036-8099. Early registrations must be postmarked by March 6, 1998. Registration material to be picked up at the door. The majority of panels each year are put together by participants and not the organizers. Here is your chance to combine theory and practice. Write to us for further details. --=_878781820==_--
No Subject
On Mon, 13 Oct 1997, James Devine wrote: > I thought that Heilbroner's NATION commentary on Mankiw was in many ways > More interesting (to me, at least), was the criticism of Mankiw in BUSINESS > WEEK: Mankiw leaves recessions, inflation, etc. to the end because he > thinks they're unimportant and sees Keynesian economics as having a weak > scientific basis. (Barro did this kind of thing in an intermediate macro > text about 15 years ago. One of the Ph.D. macro classes that I took utilized Barro's text. I found the book's exposition of its "scientifically grounded" alternative to be somewhat muddy. It is interesting how supposedly superior economics often is bogged down in clumsy pedagogical tools. But Mankiw has described himself as a "New > Keynesian"!) Mankiw's focus is long-term economic growth, based of course > on the ultra-scientific Solow growth model (irony intended). I guess one can only go "So-low." To the strains of "Roll Out the Barro," Steven Zahniser [EMAIL PROTECTED]
No Subject
Doug Henwood: > >Of course South Korean growth wouldn't have been possible without support >from the U.S., and even before the Vietnam war - Korean firms learned how >to do large construction projects in part by building bases for the U.S. >military in Korea itself. I share your admiration of Cuba, Lou, but it's >very hard to hold up North Korea as much of a model for development; yes it >did grow for a while, but not all that spectacularly. > The problem in making any kind of comparison at all in this context is that is altogether impossible to isolate the countries in question from the Cold War and its impact on economic development. For example, on the face of it West Germany "proves" that capitalism is superior to socialism, given the example of East Germany. At least that was what I was taught in high school. What I wasn't taught is that Stalin stuck to the letter of the law and prohibited re-industrialization of the East under terms of the treaty ending WWII. Furthermore, East Germany was primarily agricultural. Also, there was nothing quite like the Marshall Plan for East Germany and other European East Bloc nations. The Soviet Union had lost all of its industrial infrastructure in the Western 1/3 of the country and the death of millions of its citizens. This is the same sort of discussion we were having a while back on judging the success of the East Asian tigers. There are all sorts of mitigating circumstances that have to be taken into account when judging Singapore, for example. Jim Devine pointed out that a lot of Singapore's success is related to the exploitation of Malaysia. One of the unique features of an economic system such as the kind that prevailed in East Germany is that it not plunder or pillage other countries. Instead it donated trucks, printing presses, medicine, fertilizer, etc. to Cuba and the African National Congress in exile. Meanwhile, West German banks were bleeding Yugoslavia dry during the 70s. Louis Proyect
No Subject
Tim Stroshane wrote: > > anyone have any information on privatization of health care in > prisons? > On prisons, see John Donahue, The Privatization Decision (book), and his report for EPI. A public administration prof, Van Johnston (can't dance, as far as I know) at the Air Force Academy has done work that is worth getting. Also check into Janet Rothenberg Pack (U of P) for non-ideological research. I'm writing about privatization in local public education myself. My book with Craig Richards (Columbia Teachers) and Rima Shore will be out this summer, God willing. Max B. Sawicky [EMAIL PROTECTED] Economic Policy Institute 202-775-8810 (voice) 1660 L St., NW, WDC, 20036 202-775-0819 (fax)
No Subject
Forwarded mail received from: Anyone have ideas for this inquiry from another list? anyone have any information on privatization of health care in prisons? thanks in advance > Date: Thu, 2 May 1996 13:10:27 -0500 > Reply-to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > From: FM <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Subject: Re: privatization data base > > You may recall that a few weeks ago I suggested that it might be possible > > to put together a data base which could be drawn upon when people are > > dealing with privatization issues. Putting together a useful data base > > would require expertise and credibilty, a position the AFL-CIO, as > > the umbrella organization of most US unions occupies if no one else. > > > > I spoke with Paul Hughes of the Public Employee Department of the AFL-CIO > > a week ago about this project. He has just come over to the AFL-CIO from > > SEIU and is trying to determine what projects would be useful. He > > professes agnosticism on this idea for the moment. It might be useful if > > those interested in getting such a project going would contact Hughes and > > discuss it with him. Giving him a sense whether unions could or could > > not make use of information and what information they might need would be > > helpful to his decision whether to commit resources to this project. > > ---ellen dannin > > REPLY: > I think it would be useful as a national database. However, we might want > to check our own national unions to see if a like-base is being considered. > If so, maybe those national unions could agree to co-build and share a > national database through the AFL-CIO. What do you think? > ---Federico > > *** j o h n e l f r a n k - d a n a [EMAIL PROTECTED] (personal/business) [EMAIL PROTECTED] (school) http://www.bway.net/~elf/ (personal) http://mbhs.bergtraum.k12.ny.us (school)
No Subject
Forwarded message: Date: Fri, 09 Feb 96 19:17 CDT From: Robert W McChesney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sid, I couldn't figure out what this guy's email address was to reply to him. Could you dorward this reply? Tim, In 600 words I could only focus on the theme of corporate concentration. That doesn't mean I am unconcerned about the censorship issue. But it does mean that in this case I think the censorship issue ranks beneath the corporate concentration issue in importance. Why? Because the global communication oligopoly that this bill sanctions will impose a commercial censorship over communication vastly more significant than Henry Hyde's anti-abortion move. It will directly effect the range and nature of political debate and the rise and fall of governments across the planet. As bad as censorship is, it is not at this time the primary threat to freedom in the United States or much of the western world. The primary threat to democracy in the area of communications comes from a corporate set-up that has implicit biases against ideas critical of the existing order. A question we might want to ask is why a society with very little formal state censorship has such a stilted political culture. The anti-censorship plank of this bill will probably get tossed out by the courts; the green light to unfettered corporate domination (as much as can be accomplished, that is) will not only fail to be rejected by the courts, it will scarcely receive comment in our political culture. It might be interesting to ponder why that is. Bob McChesney >From:IN%"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" "D Shniad" >To: (robert mcchesney) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >Forwarded message: >From: Tim Stroshane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >MMDF-Warning: Parse error in original version of preceding line at >ci.ci.berkeley.ca.us >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >MMDF-Warning: Parse error in original version of preceding line at >ci.ci.berkeley.ca.us >Date: Fri Feb 9 15:00:59 1996 >Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Content-Type: text >Content-Length: 241 > >McChesney doesn't even touch on the encroachments on free speech >contained in this bill. It's not just for the owners of large >mass communications companies, computer giants, etc.; it also >dramatically curtails speech through these media. > >
[PEN-L:2801] ...no subject...
Forwarded to: smtp[[EMAIL PROTECTED]] cc: Comments by: NJWollman@Faculty@MC -- [Original Message] - MUST DEMOCRATS MOVE TO THE RIGHT TO WIN IN '96? NOT ACCORDING TO A NEW ANALYSIS OF THE 1994 ELECTIONS Contrary to the perceptions of the public and many political observers, a recently completed study reveals that it was not because Democratic incumbents were too liberal that they lost the U.S. House in 1994. Being a liberal, as opposed to a moderate Democrat, actually enhanced significantly one's liklihood of election success. It is true, however, that those 15% of Democratic incumbents who would be considered conservative also fared better than moderates, though not as well as liberals. Thus, at least for Democrats, "moderation in all things" is not a wise policy. (A separate analysis for Republican incumbents revealed a near negligible relationship between liberal/conservative ideology and election success.) Statistical analyses had correlated incumbent political ideology (using ratings by the conservative American Conservative Union and liberal Americans for Democratic Action) not only with incumbents' wins and losses, but also with their percentage of votes received. So why did the Democrats lose in '94? There is no one easy explanation. Consistent with other studies, our analyses did find that Democratic incumbents lost in districts in which they were vulnerable or in which President Clinton had done poorly in '92. Certainly other factors were important too--regional differences, the economy, and cynicism about government, to name a few. But the important point is that, while Republican challengers did make significant gains in 1994, it was not because the Democrats in office were too liberal. Recent polls showing dissatisfaction with conservative legislation is consistent with such a conclusion. Many political observers said that the lesson of '94 was that Democrats must move to the right to win. While that strategy might work for moderates, they'd actually be better off, other things being equal, becoming more liberal. However, since all things are not equal, other factors actually correlate even more strongly with election success than does political ideology. This study was conducted by two professors at Manchester College. Leonard Williams has published work on political ideology and campaign ads. Neil Wollman has written on the application of psychological principles to the political process. Leonard Williams, Ph.D. Neil Wollman. Ph.D. History & Political Science Dept.Psychology Dept. Manchester College Manchester College N. Manchester, IN 46962 N. Manchester, IN 46962 219-982-5335 219-982-5346 [EMAIL PROTECTED][EMAIL PROTECTED]
[PEN-L:5845] *** No Subject ***
How about lessons on Escape.com for those of us who aren't sure of what you are doing? As I recall Monday is a day you can be there at nite? Let's talk. (E-Mail) -- John R. Ernst
[PEN-L:4027] No subject
to what extent is Clinton's bail-out of Mexico cancelled out by the Fed's hiking of interest rates? sincerely, Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] or [EMAIL PROTECTED] Econ. Dept., Loyola Marymount Univ., Los Angeles, CA 90045-2699 USA 310/338-2948 (daytime, during workweek); FAX: 310/338-1950 "One knows so much and comprehends so little." -- Einstein
No Subject
How could I subscribe to PEN? HELP!
No Subject
Original message THE NATION, Vol. 259, No. 22, December 26, 1994, pp. 784-85. TALKING UNION Early results of the Worker Representation and Participation Survey show a strong employee desire for more power in the workplace, frustration with management opposition to letting them have it and three times the demand for unions than what current union membership reflects. But you might not know this from reading many press accounts of the WRPS findings ~ like the Washington Post story headlined "Study: Unions Views as Obsolete" ~ which focused only on workers' desire to live in peace with their employer. Of course workers want "cooperative" dealings with management. If someone had a lot more power than you, wouldn't you want them to be in a cooperative mood? If you had the sensible view that the enterprise was a joint endeavor, wouldn't you want to realize gains to be had through cooperation in making it run? But workers also want respect from management, shared benefit from cooperation, and the power to command both through independent organization. The real problem highlighted by the WRPS is not that federal law bars cooperative workplace practices but that it no longer gives workers in the growing nonunion sector any real ability to influence the terms on which cooperation is offered. The WRPS, a survey of private-sector workers in companies of twenty-five employees or more, found a massive "representation/participation gap" in America's workplace ~ a shortfall between the influence workers have in decision-making and the influence they want. Workers believe more influence will improve company performance, not just the quality of their own jobs. This finding held across all workplace decisions ~ from training and technology use to health and safety and wages and benefits ~ and all kinds of employees. And it was robust even for those operating under the most advanced forms of nonunion human resource policies. By better than 80 percent, for example, even nonunion participants in advanced employee involvement (EI) programs want more influence "as a group" in how those programs are run. But employees don't think management is prepared to give them the power they want. Given "the way things are set up now" in their companies, a majority of those wanting more influence believe they couldn't get it on their own, "even if [they] tried." And super-majorities believe that attempts to form unions will be resisted by management, often by illegal means. What is management resistance weren't a barrier? Given the opportunity, 40 percent of employees would join unions tomorrow ~ about three times the actual level of private-sector unionization. Even those not wanting unions generally favor independent ~ as against company dominated ~ forms of worker representation. While they favor joint worker-management organizations, they don't want management selecting their representatives or having the final say in conflicts. Six decades ago the federal government offered American workers a New Deal on workplace rights: Associational freedoms would be guaranteed inside the company; what workers did with them was their business. Six decades later, many things have changed: The economy is no longer dominated by manufacturing; the work force is more diverse; internationalization and urban divestment, along with technology, have opened new sources of wage competition. One thing that hasn't changed, however, is that workers don't enjoy being pushed around. The WRPS does not stand for the proposition that unions ~ the only form of independent worker organization available in America ~ are obsolete. What it describes are the consequences of government not keeping faith with the old deal on workplace rights, and the urgency of workers' demand that it do so. Joel Rogers Joel Rogers, a contributing editor of THE NATION, is professor of law, political science and sociology at the University of Wisconsin. With Richard Freeman, he directs the Worker Representation and Participation Survey. GRAPHIC: WHAT WORKERS WANT Workers % Want more say in workplace decisions 63 Believe they can't get desired say "the way things are set up now" 56 Think more power in decisions would make firm more competitive 76 Think more power would increase their own job satisfaction87 Nonunion who think increased power would improve EI programs 82 Want to join unions40 Think a majority of their colleagues do too40 Nonunion who think management would oppose union drive at their company 66 Want to choose their o
No subject
Tavis Barr writes: "I'll buy your prediction of a death of the DP, ecxept that it is no more 'out of office (except for the presidency)' than the Republicans were during the Reagan/Bush years." Yes, but unlike the DP these days, the GOP has grass roots in the country clubs, fundamentalist churches, and the like all across the country. The GOP is strongly allied with organized money. Now, the DP can try to link up with these organizations and sectors (and has been doing so for awhile) but that brings up the problem that when given the choice between a Republican and a Republican, people usually vote for the real thing. To save itself, the DP would have to do what Marion Barry did in DC: try to mobilize the poor and other groups that have been feeling disenfranchised. This would be a major shift, especially given the nature of the folks who currently run the party. Heather Grob asks: "Doesn't anyone think that this time will give the Dems a chance to revitalize, especially if some common ground is found among public interest groups? Environmental and health and safety issues would be rather important to this aim." Good idea, though the President and other DP leaders would oppose this. However, IMHO, I don't think the DP is worth saving. Frankly, what's needed is mass pressure (outside of the bounds of narrowly-defined politics) to counteract the power of money, the fundamentalists, etc. This might have the side-effect of saving the DP and also shifting it to the left (as in the 1930s). But my interest is not in saving the DP but rather in understanding what's happening in narrowly-defined politics (which is relevant even if one doesn't think that should be the main arena of political work). Sam Pooley asks: "Perhaps some additional questions are, what is the theoretical structure the Republicans (Gingrich) will use in trying to turn Congress into an executive body (presumably the Cato Foundation and the Heritage Foundation have published on this topic), and what kind of political science framework do the Democrats have to reinvent themselves?" On the latter, see above. On the former, I think we will see a new kind of gridlock (with the executive at war with the legislative branch), with the legislation that does get signed being even more right-wing than in the last 2 years. Look for a federally-financed voucher plan that takes money from public schools to pay for private & religious schools. in pen-l solidarity, Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] or [EMAIL PROTECTED] Econ. Dept., Loyola Marymount Univ., Los Angeles, CA 90045-2699 USA 310/338-2948 (daytime, during workweek); FAX: 310/338-1950
No Subject
subscribe Bruno Venditto room 1.19 School of Economic and Social Studies University of Manchester tel ++ 61 275 4847
No Subject
This article was forwarded to you by [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dale Wharton): - cut here - Path: dale.CAM.ORG!altitude!newsflash.concordia.ca!news.mcgill.ca!mcrcim.mcgill.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!spool.mu.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!cs.utexas.edu!not-for-mail From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jace Crouch) Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy Subject: Top Ten Good Things about the New World Order Date: 23 Nov 1994 20:25:15 -0600 Organization: UTexas Mail-to-News Gateway Lines: 28 Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED] NNTP-Posting-Host: news.cs.utexas.edu Forwarded for a friend. -- Forwarded message -- Subject: top ten good things about the New World Order #10 - no more *national* crises. # 9 - the trains will run on time. # 8 - more organ donors. # 7 - New World Anthem is 'Dueling Banjos'. # 6 - we won't have to wonder about conspiracy theories anymore. # 5 - A.I.D.S. won't seem so scary. # 4 - parents are allowed to plea-bargain if child informing on them is under 5. # 3 - your 'right to die' will be protected. # 2 - lots of high-quality red, white, and blue toilet paper. and , the # 1 good thing about the New World Order is: ... ROLLERBALL !! - cut here -
No Subject
Date: Fri, 11 Nov 94 11:08:34 EST From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: job 1 at University of Vermont To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] The Department of Economics invites applications for one tenure track opening at the assistant professorlevel, subject to budgetary approval, beginning fall 1995. We seek a stron macroeconomist, familiar with the broad traditions of macroeconomic theory and oreinted to policy analysis. We are particularly interest in the above fields, but other qualified candidates are welcome toapply. All candidates should have a strong orientation to research and a commitment to excellence in undergraduate, liberal arts education. We encourage candidates with interdisciplinary interests. Applications should include a vitae (including a description of the dissertation of other research endeavors), 3 letters of recommendation, and a sample of written work. The closing date for the receipt of completed applications is December 1, 1994. We will interview at the ASSA meetings. An equal opportunity-affirmative action employer. Contact: Ross Thomson, chair, Department of Economics, University of Vermont, 479 Main St., Burlington, VT 05405. Or you can send an e-mail inquiry to Elaine McCrate (EMCCRATE @ UVMVM.UVM.EDU).