Relevant and even prescient commentary on news, politics and the economy.

Allawi: Bush-Cheney 527

OK, I borrowed the title from Josh Marshall who covered the Iraq’s Prime Minister’s visit to Washington with several posts yesterday including his interview with Jim Lehrer where Allawi suggested the continuation of a Saddam regime would have meant more 9/11’s. Allawi told Congress they had 100,000 trained troops as if being in training is […]

Kerry’s Record on Iraq

The press may finally be catching on to the fact that the Bush campaign’s characterization of Kerry’s position on Iraq is untrue. The Bush campaign says “John Kerry has taken at least eight positions on the Iraq War, and there are still seven weeks left in the campaign.” But in the last couple of days, […]

Postcards from Old Europe – Al Quo Vadis? The recent FOMC statement reiterated the Fed’s view that economic weakness is mostly attributable to higher energy prices and the high measure of geopolitical risk. As soon as these brakes on economic growth are gone everything will be just fine and the economy will continue to zoom […]

Bush shows his “values” at the UN

There were three things that embarrassed me as an American about Bush’s trip to the UN. His speech to the General Assembly was bad enough, but Fred Kaplan’s Sweet Nothings covers the speech quite well. That Bush told reporters the NIE report was only a guess and then lied about what it said was well […]

Tax Cuts Extended

The conference committee working on a bill to extend the expiring tax cuts has reached an agreement. The Congress looks set to vote on it over the next few days. The biggest elements of the deal include keeping the $1000 child tax credit for five more years; keeping the 10% tax bracket for six years; […]

Froomkin Nails It

Dan Froomkin comes up with a beauty in his column today: In a soaring, eloquent, upbeat speech from the marble podium at the United Nations, President Bush yesterday put forth the purest distillation yet of his foreign policy views. And depending on your own world view, I’m betting you either loved it or hated it. […]

Is It Really Time to Raise Interest Rates?

Yesterday Greenspan raised short-term interest rates by 0.25%. He essentially gave a two-part justification for this move. First, the Fed announcement said that the economy is still doing pretty well: “Output growth appears to have regained some traction, and labor market conditions have improved modestly.” Second, the announcement argued that even with this increase in […]

Lucrative Degrees

The National Association of Colleges and Employers released its report on starting salaries, by major, of new college graduates last week. Who’s doing well? Many business disciplines saw increases in starting salaries. For example, business administration graduates received a 6.2 percent increase, for an average starting salary of $38,254. Management information systems graduates’ average starting […]

Seeing the Forest

So it turns out that the CBS memos are almost surely fake (yes, I’ve been away from the news for a while.) The Boston Globe, which originally reported the “Missing Year” story in May of 2000. Today, the Globe puts the fake memo story in context: The Globe’s Spotlight Team has painstakingly documented the preferential […]

The Fed Moves

The Fed has just announced their decision to raise short-term interest rates by 0.25%. From their statement: The Committee believes that, even after this action, the stance of monetary policy remains accommodative and, coupled with robust underlying growth in productivity, is providing ongoing support to economic activity. After moderating earlier this year partly in response […]