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Watch my debate with Max Keiser on bitcoin: is it a currency going to replace the dollar (Max view) or is it a classical commodity speculative financial bubble, along with emerging bubbles in stocks, emerging market bonds, and other markets today as the global economy enters a late credit cycle (Rasmus view). Is it driven by technies and philosophy nerds, or is it driven by retail buyers in Asia buying on margin. What are the contagion potentials to other financial asset markets (Rasmus explains). Is it an answer to the massive central bank liquidity explosion of recent decades (Max) or is it just another reflection of the flood of currency ($25 trillion) by central banks (Rasmus view)

To listen to the 15 minute Youtube debate on RT, go to:

For my view of the potential contagion effects of Bitcoin, via the ETF channel, on the stock market and commodity futures market, read the full text of my article, “Bitcoins, Cryptos and Financial Asset Bubbles” in the December issue of the European Financial Review, now available at:.

http://www.europeanfinancialreview.com/?p=20652

What do the Trump Tax cuts and the US Federal Reserve Bank’s 8 years of near zero interest rates 0.15% have in common? Both policies’ primary objective is to subsidize capital incomes–i.e. profits, stock buybacks and equity prices, dividend payouts, bonds prices, pass through business income, corporate interest payments, business rents, and other capital gains. Listen to my Alternative Visions radio show of Friday, December 15, 2017 discussion how the State (Congress, president, central bank, etc.) in the 21st century are playing an increasing direct role in subsidizing capital incomes of the wealthiest 1% households and their corporations. Is the increasing subsidization due to slowing of capital incomes growth, or is the acceleration of capital incomes occurring simply because they can?

To Listen to the show, Go To:

http://prn.fm/?s=Alternative+Visions

Or go to:

http://alternativevisions.podbean.com

SHOW ANNOUNCEMENT

The two major economic US events of the past week were the Trump tax cuts and the Federal Reserve’s latest interest rate hike. What do they have in common? Dr. Rasmus explains both share the common result of an escalating subsidization of capital (corporations, investors, and the wealthiest 1% households) by the State in the 21st century: Congress and the president subsidizing via increasingly massive tax cuts, as the central bank slows its rate of subsidization by raising rates. Rasmus explains how the Fed policy since 2008 has resulted in $6 trillion in direct purchases of investor securities through its ‘QE’ program while enabling, via its low 0.15% interest rate policy, corporate America to issue more than another $6 trillion in low interest bonds. Together with tripling of corporate profits, the $12-$15 trillion has enabled corporations to distribute $6 trillion plus to investors in dividend payouts and stock buybacks. Now that Fed rates are rising (but won’t exceed 3% without a credit crunch), the policy shift is to subsidize corporate America via even more tax cuts–$4.5 trillion in the Trump bill. With corporations hoarding $4.8 trillion still, Rasmus debunks Trump claims the tax cuts will result in more investment, jobs, and $4000 wage increases. If $4.8 trillion hasn’t had the result, why will $4.5 trillion more achieve it? Rasmus debunks the notion of the ‘wage conundrum’, explaining why wages are not really growing. (Next week: dissecting the final version Trump corporate hand out).

Here’s a thought on the financial asset bubbles and Bitcoin-Exchange Traded Funds toxic derivatives today in historical context to 2008 events:

Is Bitcoin the new ‘Subprime Mortgage Bomb’? Just as subprime mortgage bonds precipitated a crash in the derivative, Credit Default Swaps (CDS), at the giant insurance company, AIG, in September 2008, setting off the global financial crash that year—will the Bitcoin and crypto-currency bubble precipitate a collapse in the new derivative, Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) in stock and bond markets in 2018-19, ushering in yet another general financial crisis?

The US and global economy are approaching the latter stages in the credit cycle, during which financial asset bubbles begin to appear and the real economy appears to be at peak performance (the calm before the storm). This scenario was explained in my 2016 book, Systemic Fragility in the Global Economy, Clarity Press, 2016. And in my follow-on, just published August 2017 book, ‘Central Bankers at the End of Their Ropes: Monetary Policy and the Coming Depression, Clarity Press, in which I predict should the Federal Reserve raise short term US interest rates another 1% in 2018 (1.25% now),that the rate hikes will set off a credit crash leading to Bitcoin, stock, and bond asset price bubbles bursting by late 2018.

Today, in testifying to Congress, outgoing Federal Reserve Chair, Janet Yellen, announced the Fed will raise interest rates today another 0.25%,bringing them to 1.5%, with three more raises in 2018. That will mean an additional 1% rate hike–and beyond the 2% threshold I predict that will set off another credit crunch a year from now. Recession 2019 is growing increasingly likely.

Dr.Jack Rasmus
copyright 2017

The following is an excerpt from my forthcoming article by the same title in the december-january issue of the European Financial Review. Many of the themes covered in my last friday’s Alternative Visions radio show on the topic of the Bitcoin-Crypto bubble are addressed in the article in print form.

The US and global economy are approached the latter stages in the credit cycle, during which financial asset bubbles begin to appear and the real economy appears to be at peak performance (the calm before the storm). This scenario was explained in my 2016 book, ‘Systemic Fragility in the Global Economy‘. In coming weeks I will be posting in serial form the concluding chapter of that book for readers on this blog, entitled ‘A Theory of Systemic Global Fragility‘.

Here’s the excerpt from the forthcoming European Financial Review article; (a book review of my most recent book, ‘Central Bankers at the End of Their Ropes?’ by Dr. Larry Souza will also appear in that coming EFR issue).

………………………..
Is Bitcoin a Bona Fide ‘Bubble’?
……………………………
“What’s a financial asset bubble? Few agree. But few would argue that Bitcoins and other crypto currencies are today clearly in a global financial asset bubble. Bitcoin and other crypto currencies are the speculative investing canary in the global financial asset coalmine.

One can debate what constitutes a financial bubble—i.e. how much prices must rise short term or how much above long term average rates of increase—but there’s no doubt that Bitcoin price appreciation in 2017 is a bubble by any definition. At less than $1000 per coin in January, Bitcoin prices surged past $11,000 this past November. It then corrected back to $9,000, only to surge again by early December to more than $15,000. Given the forces behind Bitcoin, that scenario is likely to continue into 2018 before the bubble bursts. The question of the moment, however, is what might be the contagion effects on other markets?”

……………………………..
What’s Driving the Bitcoin Bubble?
……………………………..
If Blockchain and software tech company ICOs are driving Bitcoin and other crypto pricing, what’s additionally creating the bubble?…..Who is buying Bitcoin and cryptos, driving up prices, apart from early investors in the companies? ……the absence of government regulation and potential taxation of speculative profits from price appreciation has served as another important driver of the Bitcoin bubble bringing in still more investors and demand and therefore price appreciation. No regulation, no taxation has also led to price manipulation by ‘pumping and dumping’ by well positioned investors….. Another factor driving price is that Bitcoin has become a substitute product for Gold and Gold futures……But what’s really driving Bitcoin pricing in recent months well into bubble territory is its emerging legitimation by traditional financial institutions………futures and derivatives trading on Bitcoin are set to begin in December 2017 in official commodity futures clearing houses, like CME and CBOE…..Bitcoin ETFs derivatives trading are likely not far behind……….big US hedge funds are also poised to go ‘all in’ once CME options and futures trading is established…… Declarations of support for Bitcoin has also come lately from some sovereign countries………While CEOs of big traditional commercial banks, like JPM Chase’s Jamie Dimon, have called Bitcoin “a fraud”, they simultaneously have declared plans to facilitate trading in the Bitcoin-Crypto market.

…………………………………………….
Bitcoin as ‘Digital Tulips’
…………………………………………….
Bitcoin demand and price appreciation may also be understood as the consequence of the historic levels of excess liquidity in financial markets today. Like technology forces, that liquidity is the second fundamental force behind its bubble. To explain the fundamental role of excess liquidity driving the bubble, one should understand Bitcoin as ‘digital tulips’, to employ a metaphor.

The Bitcoin bubble is not much different from the 17th century Dutch tulip bulb mania. Tulips had no intrinsic use value but did have a ‘store of value’ simply because Dutch society of financial speculators assigned and accepted it as having such. Once the price of tulips collapsed, however, it no longer had any form of value, save for horticultural enthusiasts.

What fundamentally drove the tulip bubble was the massive inflow of money capital to Holland that came from its colonial trade in spices and other commodities in Asia. The excess liquidity generated could not be fully re-invested in real projects in Holland. When that happens, holders of the excess liquidity create new financial markets in which to invest the liquidity—not unlike what’s happened in recent decades with the rise of unregulated global shadow banking, financial engineering of new securities, proliferating liquid markets in which securities are exchanged, and a new layer of professional financial elite as ‘agents’ behind the proliferating new markets for the new securities.

……………………………………………
Bitcoin Potential Contagion Effects to Other Markets
…………………………………………….
A subject of current debate is whether Bitcoin and other cryptos can destabilize other financial asset markets and therefore the banking system in turn, in effect provoking a 2008-09 like financial crisis………….Deniers of the prospect point to the fact that Cryptos constitute only about $400 billion in market capitalization today. That is dwarfed by the $55 Trillion equities and $94 trillion bond markets. The ‘tail’ cannot wag the dog, it is argued. But quantitative measures are irrelevant. What matters is investor psychology. ……For example, should cryptos develop their own ETFs, a collapse of crypto ETFs might very easily spill over to stock and bond ETFs—which are a source themselves of inherent instability today in the equities market. A related contagion effect may occur within the Clearing Houses themselves. If trading in Bitcoin and cryptos as a commodity becomes particularly large, and then the price collapses deeply and at a rapid rate, it might well raise issues of Clearing House liquidity available for non-crypto commodities trading. A bitcoin-crypto crash could thus have a contagion effect on other commodity prices; or on ETFs in general and thus stock and bond ETF prices.”

copyright Jack Rasmus, 2017

Bitcoin prices surge over $15,000 (a 1500% rise in 2017) while real wages rise only 0.5% the past year. That sums up succinctly what the 21st century US Trump economy is fundamentally about!

Listen to my Friday, December 8, 2017 Alternative Visions radio show for an in depth analysis of what’s behind the bubble in Bitcoin, and where it’s going.

GO TO:

http://prn.fm/?s=Alternative+Visions

or Go To

http://alternativevisions.podbean.com

SHOW ANNOUNCEMENT

Dr. Rasmus goes in depth on the bitcoin mania and the bubble, now at more than $15,000 a coin—a 1500% increase in speculative profits in 2017…and rising. What are the determinants and drivers of the Bitcoin mania, the ‘digital tulips’ bubble of today? Rasmus discusses the fundamental causes as blockchain technology and central bankers’ decades of massive liquidity injection into the global economy, incenting speculative investors to search ever more desperately for ‘yield’, with inflows to digital currencies absorbing more and more of the massive liquidity accumulated on the sidelines today by the professional investing class (aka new global finance capital elite). Additional ‘enabling’ factors have been driving prices as well, including proliferating ICOs, entry of traditional investor-speculators, diversion of financing from gold futures, and most important, increasing legitimation of Bitcoin and crypto currencies by established commodity clearing houses in the US (CME, CBOE), some countries’ direct endorsement and plans(Japan), hedge funds preparation to enter the market, and even commercial banks (Chase, Goldman) announcing partial participation. Bitcoin is a commodity, not yet a currency, and a speculative ‘play’ not unlike oil futures, gold futures (as were tulips in 17th century Holland). Rasmus concludes with a discussion of government regulation, taxation, and potential channels of contagion to other financial asset markets (also approaching bubble territory), when the Bitcoin and cryptos price busts occur. Capital gains from Bitcoin commodity speculation at 1500% contrasts sharply with today’s just announced real wage gains of only 0.5% in the US. (Next week: the House-Senate final Trump Tax Cuts and latest acceleration of income inequality)

Trump has often been described as playing ‘fast and loose’ with the facts. That would be too polite a description. When it comes to statements about the economy, what we get from ‘The Trump-et’ is more often inane and absurd statements and declarations.

On my twitter account (@drjackrasmus) I’ve initiated a running commentary on the Trumpet’s continuing stupidities concerning economics.

Here’s the first five, commenting on his press conference today, Wednesday, December 5, where he bragged about the (‘very, very, great, incredible, fabulous, very great, very fabulous) US economy that doesn’t exist except in his own mind:

“Trump Economic Absurdity #5
: most ridiculous of all Trump claims today is that a 6% GDP growth rate will now occur. What can one say besides, just more inane hyperbole from the ‘Trump-et’!

“Trump Economic Absurdity #4: Trump says he’ll now focus on getting jobs for 100 million not working. With US labor force at 166m and population 320m, that means all retirees, prisoners, and mentally ill will go back to work.

“Trump Economic Absurdity #3: In press conference today Trump declares his tax cut will mean middle class gets “tremendous benefit”. In fact, middle class taxes will rise $3 trillion from ending exemptions, deductions, education credit, & raising rates from 10% to 12% for poorest

“Trump Economic Absurdity #2: Trump today claimed more than $4T in cash is held by US multinational corps offshore to avoid paying taxes. Trump tax cuts will bring all that back per Trump. Actual cash hoard by MNCs is $2.8T. How they will bring back >$4T is another Trump mystery.

“Trump Economic Absurdities #1: today in his press conference Trump claims he’s created 2mil jobs so far. Then says for every 1% rise in US GDP, 10 mil. jobs are created. 1% further rise in GDP in 2017 over 2016 produced 2mil. 10m minus 2m = 8 mil. shortfall in Trump logic”

To get all my daily tweets on Trump and the US economy, sign on to my twitter account at: @drjackrasmus

With the Senate and House all but assured to pass the US$4.5 trillion in tax cuts for businesses, investors, and the wealthiest 1 percent households by the end of this week, phases two and three of the Trump-Republican fiscal strategy have begun quickly to take shape.

Phase two is to maneuver the inept Democrats in Congress into passing a temporary budget deficit-debt extension in order to allow the tax cuts to be implemented quickly. That’s already a ‘done deal’.

Phase three is the drumbeat growing to attack social security, Medicare, food stamps, Medicaid, and other ‘safety net’ laws, in order to pay for the deficit created by cutting taxes on the rich. To justify the attack, a whole new set of lies are resurrected and being peddled by the media and pro-business pundits and politicians.

Deficits and Debt: Resurrecting Old Lies and Misrepresentations

Nonsense like social security and Medicare will be insolvent by 2030. When in fact social security retirement fund has created a multi-trillion dollar surplus since 1986, which the U.S. government has annually ‘borrowed’, exchanging the real money in the fund created by the payroll tax and its indexed threshold, for Treasury bonds deposited in the fund. The government then uses the social security surplus to pay for decades of tax cuts for the rich and corporations and to fund endless war in the middle east.

As for Medicare, the real culprit undermining the Medicare part A and B funds has been the decades-long escalating of prices charged by insurance companies, for-profit hospital chains (financed by Wall St.), medical devices companies, and doctor partnerships investing in real estate and other speculative markets and raising their prices to pay for it.

As for Part D, prescription drugs for Medicare, the big Pharma price gouging is even more rampant, driving up the cost of the Part D fund. By the way, the prescription drug provision, Part D, passed in 2005, was intentionally never funded by Congress and George Bush. It became law without any dedicated tax, payroll or other, to fund it. Its US$50 billion plus a year costs were thus designed from the outset to be paid by means of the deficit and not funded with any tax.

Social Security Disability, SSI, has risen in costs, as a million more have joined its numbers since the 2008 crisis. That rise coincides with Congress and Obama cutting unemployment insurance benefits. A million workers today, who would otherwise be unemployed (and raising the unemployment rate by a million) went on SSI instead of risking cuts in unemployment benefits. So Congress’s reducing the cost of unemployment benefits in effect raised the cost of SSI. And now conservatives like Congressman Paul Ryan, the would be social security ‘hatchet man’ for the rich, want to slash SSI as well as social security retirement, Medicare benefits for grandma and grandpa, Medicaid for single moms and the disabled (the largest group by far on Medicaid), as well as for food stamps.

Food stamp costs have also risen sharply since 2008. But that’s because real wages have stagnated or fallen for tens of millions of workers, making them eligible under Congress’s own rules for food stamp distribution. Now Ryan and his friends want to literally take food out of the mouths of the poorest by changing eligibility rules.

They want to cut and end benefits and take an already shredded social safety net completely apart–while giving US$4.5 trillion to their rich friends (who are their election campaign contributors). The rich and their businesses are getting $4.5 trillion in tax cuts in Trump’s tax proposal—not the $1.4 trillion referenced in the corporate press. The $1.4 trillion is after they raise $3 trillion in tax hikes on the middle class.

Whatever financing issues exist for Social Security retirement, Medicare, Medicaid, disability insurance, food stamps, etc., they can be simply and easily adjusted, and without cutting any benefits and making average households pay for the tax cuts for the rich in Trump’s tax cut bill.

Social security retirement, still in surplus, can be kept in surplus by simply one measure: raise the ‘cap’ on social security to cover all earned wage income. Today the ‘cap’, at roughly US$118,000 a year, exempts almost 20 percent of the highest paid wage earners. Once their annual salary exceeds that amount, they no longer pay any payroll tax. They get a nice tax cut of 6.2 percent for the rest of the year. (Businesses also get to keep 6.2% more). Furthermore, if capital income earners (interest, rent, dividends, etc.) were to pay the same 6.2% it would permit social security retirement benefits to be paid at two thirds one’s prior earned wages, and starting with age 62. The retirement age could thus be lowered by five years, instead of raised as Ryan and others propose.

As for Medicare Parts A and B, raising the ridiculously low 1.45 percent tax just another 0.25 percent would end all financial stress in the A & B Medicare funds for decades to come.

For SSI, if Congress would restore the real value of unemployment benefits back to what it was in the 1960s, maybe millions more would return to work. (It’s also one of the reasons why the labor force participation rate in the U.S. has collapsed the past decade). But then Congress would have to admit the real unemployment rate is not 4.2 percent but several percentages higher. (Actually, it’s still over 10 percent, once other forms of ‘hidden unemployment’ and underemployment are accurately accounted for).

As for food stamps’ rising costs, if there were a decent minimum wage (at least US$15 an hour), then millions would no longer be eligible for food stamps and those on it would significantly decline.

In other words, the U.S. Congress and Republican-Democrat administrations have caused the Medicare, Part D, SSI, and food stamp cost problems. They also permitted Wall St. to get its claws into the health insurance, prescription drugs, and hospital industries–financing mergers and acquisitions activity and demanding in exchange for lending to companies in those industries that the companies raise their prices to generate excess profits to repay Wall St. for the loans for the M&A activity.

The Real Causes of Deficits and the Debt

So if social security, Medicare-Medicaid, SSI, food stamps, and other social safety net programs are not the cause of the deficits, what then are the causes?

In the year 2000, the U.S. federal government debt was about US$4 trillion. By 2008 under George Bush it had risen to nearly US$9 trillion. The rise was due to the US$3.4 trillion in Bush tax cuts, 80 percent of which went to investors and businesses, plus another US$300 billion to U.S. multinational corporations due to Bush’s offshore repatriation tax cut. Multinationals were allowed to bring US$320 billion of their US$750 billion offshore cash hoard back to the U.S. and pay only a 5.25 percent tax rate instead of the normal 35 percent. (By the way, they accumulated the US$750 billion hoard was a result of Bill Clinton in 1997 allowing them to keep profits offshore untaxed if not brought back to the U.S. Thus the Democrats originally created the problem of refusing to pay taxes on offshore profits, and then George Bush, Obama, and now Trump simply used it as an excuse to propose lower tax rates for repatriated the offshore profits cash hoard of US multinational companies. From $750 billion in 2004, it’s now $2.8 trillion).

So the Bush tax cuts whacked the U.S. deficit and debt. The Bush wars in the middle east did as well. By 2008 an additional US$2 to US$3 trillion was spent on the wars. Then Bush policies of financial deregulation precipitated the 2007-09 crash and recession. That reduced federal tax revenue collection due to collapse economic growth further. Then there was Bush’s 2008 futile $180 billion tax cut to stem the crisis, which it didn’t. And let’s not forget Bush’s 2005 prescription drug plan–a boondoggle for big pharmaceutical companies–that added US$50 billion a year more. As did a new Homeland Security $50 billion a year and rising budget costs.

There’s your additional US$5 trillion added by Bush to the budget deficit and U.S. debt–from largely wars, defense spending, tax cuts, and windfalls for various sectors of the healthcare industry.

Obama would go beyond Bush. First, there was the US$300 billion tax cuts in his 2009 so-called ‘recovery act’, mostly again to businesses and investors. (The Democrat Congress in 2009 wanted an additional US$120 billion in consumer tax cuts but Obama, on advice of Larry Summers, rejected that). What followed 2009 was the weakest recovery from recession in the post-1945 period, as Obama policies failed to implement a serious fiscal stimulus. Slow recovery meant lower federal tax revenues for years thereafter.

Studies show that at least 60 percent of the deficit and debt since 2000 is attributable to insufficient taxation, due both to tax cutting and slow economic growth below historical rates.

Obama then extended the Bush-era tax cuts another US$803 billion at year-end 2010 and then agreed to extend them another decade in January 2013, at a cost of US$5 trillion. The middle east war spending continued as well to the tune of another $3 trillion at minimum. Continuing the prescription drug subsidy to big Pharma and Homeland Security costs added another $500 billion.

In short, Bush added US$5 trillion to the US debt and Obama another US$10 trillion. That’s how we get from US$4 trillion in 2000 to US$19 trillion at the end of 2016. (US$20 trillion today, about to rise another US$10 trillion by 2027 once again with the Trump tax cuts fast-tracking through Congress today).

To sum up, the problem with chronic U.S. federal deficits and escalating Debt is not social security, Medicare, or any of the other social programs. The causes of the deficits and debt are directly the consequence of financing wars in the middle east without raising taxes to pay for them (the first time in U.S. history of war financing), rising homeland security and other non-war defense costs, massive tax cuts for businesses and investors since 2001, economic growth at two thirds of normal the past decade (generating less tax revenues), government health program costs escalation due to healthcare sector price gouging, and no real wage growth for the 80 percent of the labor force resulting in rising costs for food stamps, SSI, and other benefits.

Notwithstanding all these facts, what we’ll hear increasingly from the Paul Ryans and other paid-for politicians of the rich is that the victims (retirees, single moms, disabled, underemployed, jobless, etc.) are the cause of the deficits and debt. Therefore they must pay for it.

But what they’re really paying for will be more tax cuts for the wealthy, more war spending (in various forms), and more subsidization of price-gouging big pharmaceuticals, health insurance companies, and for-profit hospitals which now front for, and are indirectly run by, Wall St.

Jack Rasmus is the author of the recently published book, “Central Bankers at the End of Their Ropes: Monetary Policy and the Coming Depression.” He blogs at jackrasmus.com and his twitter handle is @drjackrasmus.

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by Dr. Jack Rasmus,

Republicans will now ‘sharpen their knives’ to go after grandma and grandpa, to cut social security and medicare–and medicaid for single moms and disabled, to pay for $2T deficit (not $1 or $1.5T) in Trump tax cuts

Senate bill means beginning of the end of ACA healthcare Act: Ending individual mandate will raise premiums for all by minimum 10% in 2018 and more thereafter. 4 million will immediately drop; 13m will drop by 2027, per independent estimates.

Senate tax bill means 3200 of the richest 0.1% households no longer will pay inheritance tax whatsoever; the remaining 1800 will have new threshold of $22 million before paying. Fewer than 0.1% households will now pay Inheritance tax.

Senate version off Trump Tax cuts reshuffles the House bill: Corps still get $1.5T; pass thru business $476B;Multinational corps $500B + bigger loopholes for real estate, autos, oil, depreciation=$3T business cuts paid by $3T tax hikes for middle class.

Trump’s latest ‘big lie’: the tax cuts “will cost me millions”. Trump’s 2005 tax returns show he paid only paid taxes due to AMT; doubling AMT exemption will halve his taxes. Trump’s 500 ‘business income pass through’ companies also gain from rate cut from 39.6% to 25% (or less 23% in Senate)

Multinational US corps past history with 2005 repatriation tax windfall tax cut (from 35% to 5.25%) showed 90% of windfall was used for stock buyback, dividends, and financing mergers and acquisitions.

Trump Tax cut based on faulty economic theory: give business more disposable income & they will invest it short run, leading to jobs, wages, GDP. US businesses now sit on $2 trillion cash in US +$2.8T offshore. If they aren’t investing with $4.8T, why would they with another $3t?

Senate tax bill deficit of $1 trillion based on absurd assumptions of economic growth. Past historical GDP trend for next decade will at least double the $1 to $2 trillion deficit or more. Decade from now, US debt will exceed $30 trillion

Listen to my 20 minute interview friday, December 1, on KPFK-LA ‘Beneath the Surface’ show, and my take on the Senate version of the Trump tax cuts. Where the tax cuts of $3 trillion minimum for business are paid by $3 trillion tax hikes on the middle class. The tax cuts in historical context, and their relation to central bank monetary policy, and the growing subsidization of capital incomes by government policy (fiscal and monetary) int he 21st century.

To listen to the show, GO TO: http://archive.kpfk.org/index.php?shokey=bts_friday