Kautilya

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Katrina foreign aid unused

Posted On: August 25, 2006 - 7:34am by kautilya

This is for people who believe that government has a use for providing charity...

It seems that a total of $166million was given by foreign governments to the US government as aid for Katrina. Also, a lot of gifts in kind were given. What is the result?

Here are the quotes--

And it wasn’t just cash that poured in. Other countries sent planeloads of tents, blankets, and Meals Ready to Eat, but the United States was ill-prepared to handle the largesse while residents were still trying to evacuate. Some offers were declined. But oftentimes the government accepted supplies like bandages, food, and cots and then allowed them to sit for months in Arkansas warehouses. According to a report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released in April, FEMA and the State Department paid tens of thousands of dollars in warehouse storage fees in the months after Katrina to house unused supplies from foreign countries.
The donated cash met a different fate. By late October, the State Department had allocated $66 million of the $126 million in international assistance to FEMA, which then granted it to the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR), the nonprofit aid arm of the United Methodist Church. With the funds, UMCOR established Katrina Aid Today, a consortium of nine national aid agencies dedicated to case-management work for Katrina evacuees. But to date, only $13 million has actually been disbursed, and it has been allocated almost exclusively to salaries and training for case workers, not to evacuees.
As for the rest of the funds, some $60 million languished for more than six months in a non-interest-bearing account at the U.S. Treasury. Had the money been placed in Treasury securities, the GAO report notes, their value would have increased by nearly $1 million by the end of February. Instead, inflation meant the funds actually decreased in value as the government stalled. In mid-March, the Department of State finally agreed to sign over the remainder to the Department of Education for teacher salaries, books, and new school buildings along the Gulf Coast. But the Department of Education has yet to spend a dime. In response to inquiries from Foreign Policy, a spokesperson said that an announcement will be made this week regarding how the department intends to use the money.

Now, some countries adopted the smarter approach. Here is an example --

A smarter approach, perhaps, would have been to bypass the federal government altogether. That’s what Qatar did in May when it granted $60 million directly to New Orleans universities, hospitals, and charities. With its portion of the cash, Children’s Hospital of New Orleans has already renovated two clinics and picked up the medical bills for hundreds of local children. Perhaps Gulf Coast residents should rid themselves of their reconstruction czar and appoint a reconstruction emir in his place.

The original article is here Money for Nothing

Thanks to mises.org for the link.

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Hug a hummer save a tree...

Posted On: August 20, 2006 - 8:03pm by kautilya

It seems that Spinella spent two years on the most comprehensive study to date – dubbed "Dust to Dust" -- collecting data on the energy necessary to plan, build, sell, drive and dispose of a car from the initial conception to scrappage. This study found that hybrid costs more in energy then a hummer. Why? Well, the main reasons are
a) Hybrid only lasts 100,000 miles (Prius life as claimed by Toyota) instead of 300,000 miles that a typical "normal" car costs
b) It is more costly to make a hybrid as it is a more complicated technology due to need of both electric and gas components
c) The real world mileage of hybrids is much less then claimed. In fact 62 % of hybrid owners are dissatisfied with the mileage

And, finally, the dust-to-dust energy cost of the bunny-sized Honda Civic hybrid is $3.238 per mile. This is quite a bit more than the $1.949 per mile that the elephantine Hummer costs. The energy cots of SUVs such as the Tahoe, Escalade, and Navigator are similarly far less than the Civic hybrid.

Of course, these numbers will probably look very different in a few years. But, looking at these numbers, it does not make sense to buy a hybrid today.

This is the article and this is the study

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The role of private sector in India

Posted On: August 13, 2006 - 12:33pm by kautilya

I love this article about how in all areas in India that were traditionally controlled by the government, and now opened to the private sector we see massive improvement. Also, the single area which government should have been playing a good role at, i.e. law, the government has been a dismal failure. He almost says that even law should be privatized, but stops short.
This is the article and some selected quotes fomr the article below:

The private sector has done more than expected. India's software industry is world class. Indian manufacturing has finally become competitive: exports have grown by over 30% annually for three years. Indian companies are making foreign acquisitions galore and becoming MNCs - Tata Steel, Bharat Forge, Tata Motors and Ranbaxy are a few examples.
Power was long a state monopoly, and state electricity boards were bankrupt when reforms began in 1991. They sought refuge in independent power producers like Enron, but these degenerated into a fiasco. How then did India produce enough power for record economic growth? Well, old power stations improved their load factor. But the main reason is that corporations decided they could not rely on government supplies, and set up 20,000 MW of captive power.
The second green revolution is being energised by the private sector, not the public sector. Reliance has led the charge into rural areas in Punjab with a farm-to-fork operation - managing the chain from seeds and crops to processing and hypermarket sales. ITC is rapidly expanding its e-choupals, computerised kiosks for farm information and for buying produce. The Mahindras, Tatas and Shrirams are setting up rural supermarkets.
The government developed the idea of deficiency payments for roads, with the contract going to the bidder requiring the lowest toll subsidy. But now some bidders are willing to pay a fee rather than demand subsidies
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update on housing inventory

Posted On: August 2, 2006 - 8:21am by kautilya

The inventory is really shooting up in portland. Here are the graphs...

This data is from NAR website that I have been tracking and shows inventory increase since 5/14/2006
portland inventory graph

This data is from this web site and shows inventory increase since 8/14/2006
pdx metro inventory graph

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Mr Draker's party

Posted On: July 17, 2006 - 4:36pm by kautilya

Let me ask you a question, or actually a series of situations, and ask your opinion about them –

Mr. Draker buys a house with income that he has rightfully earned. He is pretty wealthy, so he buys a big house, with large open grounds around it. He is honest, family loving, and does not bother his neighbors. One day he decides to have a big party, where he invites a lot of his friends. This is a big smoking, drinking party, where he provides all the stuff including food, cigarettes, drinks etc. and makes it clear to his friends what kind of party it is going to be. Since the house has big open grounds, with large trees and walls around it, we can assume that the neighbors are not going to be bothered with the noise. In fact he has invited all of the neighbors to the party and they have al accepted. Since this is a big party he invites caterers to take care of the party, and the caterer also sends a few servers to help with the party. The party starts normally, but in the middle of it suddenly there cops drop by and stop the party and give the following conversation goes on between Mr. Draker and the cop –
...CONTINUED(use read more link below)...

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India Blogstreet

Posted On: July 13, 2006 - 1:47pm by kautilya

Just added myself to

You might also want to try it out

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Another Portland housing inventory graph

Posted On: July 9, 2006 - 10:35pm by kautilya

Here is another graph of Portland metro inventory. I got the data from this website which tracks inventory and median data for a lot of areas in the US

This shows the inventory increase in % since 8/14/2005 for the complete Portland metro region.

PDX metro inventory graph

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Philisophy of liberty

Posted On: July 6, 2006 - 10:01am by kautilya

A must see cool animation on philosophy of liberty

Please watch it, it is only a few minutes long. Let me know what you think.

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WSJ interview: Properties in some markets could fall 50%

Posted On: July 5, 2006 - 11:58pm by kautilya

Interview of Kenneth Heebner, who since 1994 has managed the $1.2 billion CGM Realty Fund. It has the best 10-year record of all real-estate-focused mutual funds.
Quote—

A significant decline in prices is coming. A huge buildup of inventories is taking place, and then we're going to see a major [retrenchment] in hot markets in California, Arizona, Florida and up the East Coast. These markets could fall 50% from their peaks.

WSJ interview

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For all you organic food, clean environment lovers

Posted On: July 4, 2006 - 8:30pm by kautilya
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