Monday, October 10, 2011

American Airlines to cut capacity and retire 11 planes

  Aa

Responding to an unsteady economy and high fuel costs, American Airlines announced that it planned to cut overall capacity this year and retire 11 older Boeing jets next year.

The capacity cuts, made by canceling unpopular flights, among other changes, will reduce the number of seats available on planes by 3%, compared with projections made by the airline in January, the airline announced Monday.

The move was also in response to an unusually high number of pilots retiring in October.

"While our advance bookings are generally in line with last year, we are taking these additional steps in light of the uncertain economic environment, ongoing high fuel costs and to ensure we run a reliable schedule for our customers given additional pilot retirements we anticipate throughout the fourth quarter,” said Virasb Vahidi, American's chief commercial officer.

The Fort Worth, Texas-based airline also announced it planned to retire up to 11 Boeing 757 aircraft in 2012 to make way for some of the 460 newer, more fuel-efficient planes the airline ordered in July.

The capacity cut comes only a week after stocks for American's parent company, AMR, dropped 33% on rumors that the troubled airline might be considering filing for bankruptcy protection. The company's stock has since rebounded and recovered most of the losses.

Related:

Airlines protest fee increase plan

American Airlines changes its boarding process

Airline stocks drop, led by 33% decline of American parent AMR


Photo: An American Airlines jet at Los Angeles International Airport. Credit: Los Angeles Times

 

 

 

 

Household income fell more in recovery than in recession: study

Unemployment
Some recovery: Household income fell more after the official end of the recession than it did during the recession itself, according to a new report.

Between December 2007 and June 2009, median annual household income slumped 3.2% to $53,518, according to a report from two former Census Bureau officials.

From that point until June this year, incomes fell to $49,909 — a 6.7% decline, according to Gordon Green and John Code of Sentier Research.

So while the economy technically has been growing, the good news has yet to reach average Americans, who have been saddled with three straight months of 9.1% unemployment as well as a volatile stock market and high prices.

The recovery has been difficult for many, according to the report. Jobless household heads saw their income plunge 18.4% to $33,487 annually, compared to a 5.1% slide to $68,454 a year for full-time workers.

Single parents are making 7.3% less — just $36,465, the report found. Married households are pulling in $73,324, a 4.5% drop.

RELATED:

Economy adds 103,000 jobs but jobless rate remains at 9.1%

Americans cut college and retirement savings amid bad economy

 -- Tiffany Hsu

Photo: Job seekers wait in a line at a job fair in Southfield, Mich. Credit: Paul Sancya / Associated Press

Stocks close up sharply as optimism grows

Stocks_blog_lsprdmp7
 
U.S. stocks saw their biggest gains in over a month after European leaders signaled a willingness to tackle the financial crisis brewing there.

The Dow Jones industrial average ended Monday up 330.06 points, or 3%, to 11,433.18. The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index jumped 3.4%, or 39.43 points, to 1,194.89.

Over the weekend, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced in Berlin that they would come up with a plan to help stabilize and recapitalize struggling European banks. They gave few specifics but said a definite plan would be ready by a Nov. 3 meeting of the Group of 20.

In another sign of the willingness of European governments to act, the French and Belgian governments stepped in over the weekend to carry out an orderly breakup of Dexia, one of the banks that has encountered the most problems.

Leading indexes closed up 3% in Germany and 2.1% in France.

Last week, the S&P 500 rose on three consecutive days after almost falling into bear-market territory, 20% down from highs reached in spring. The market's latest gains have been helped by a series of U.S. economic indicators that have suggested that the economy is in better shape than many analysts expected.

Bank shares, which have been leading stocks down in recent weeks, helped lead the charge up Monday. One of the most beleaguered bank stocks, Morgan Stanley, ended the day up 5.1%.

Stocks rose sharply in the morning and, after trading in a narrow range all day, surged again near the close.

Trading volume was modest, however, with banks closed for the Columbus Day holiday.

The market's next big test: earnings reports. The season kicks off Tuesday with a report from aluminum giant Alcoa Inc.

RELATED:

Few places to hide as bear growls

European crisis tests investors' "go global" strategy

Businesses add jobs, but unemployment rate unchanged in September

-- Nathaniel Popper in New York

Photo: Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Credit: Spencer Platt / Getty Images

Fired Hotel Bel-Air workers ask Occupy L.A. to join their cause

HotelBelAir

Union workers who were laid off from the Hotel Bel-Air called on protesters from Occupy L.A. to join a protest of the famed five-star hotel.

The hotel laid off about 250 union workers when it closed for a two-year renovation project in 2009. It plans to reopen on Friday, having rehired only about a dozen former union workers.

The union representing the dismissed workers, Unite Here Local 11, claims the hotel used the renovation project to oust the union. It has called for a boycott of the hotel and plans to picket and march around the hotel Friday evening.

"We are asking everyone not to eat, sleep or meet here," Manuel Roman, an organizer for the union.

The union has invited Occupy L.A., the group that is camped out around Los Angeles City Hall to protest corporate greed, to join the demonstration at the hotel.

The union plans to send a bus to City Hall on Friday to take interested Occupy L.A. activists to the pink, Mission-styled hotel frequented by celebrities and presidents.

Occupy L.A. has no formal leader but protesters at City Hall said they recognize the situation at the hotel as another example of rich companies abusing poor workers.

"I'm going to join them," Ryan Rice, a participant at Occupy L.A. said of the protest at the Hotel Bel-Air.

Hotel officials have said they offered laid-off workers a severance package when they closed the hotel but could not promise to rehire them.

Related:

Hotel Bel-Air holds a garage sale

Hotel Bel-Air taking reservations for autumn reopening

Hotel Bel-Air to reopen without most of its old union staff

-- Hugo Martin

Photo: Laid-off Hotel Bel-Air workers talk to reporters after a news conference. Credit: Los Angeles Times

Behind a Surprising Income Trend

Anyone with detailed knowledge of the annual Census Bureau data on household income may be surprised by the new study Robert Pear describes in today’s Times. From the article:

In a grim sign of the enduring nature of the economic slump, household income declined more in the two years after the recession ended than it did during the recession itself, new research has found.

Between June 2009, when the recession officially ended, and June 2011, inflation-adjusted median household income fell 6.7 percent, to $49,909, according to a study by two former Census Bureau officials. During the recession — from December 2007 to June 2009 — household income fell 3.2 percent.

DAVID LEONHARDT
DAVID LEONHARDT

Thoughts on the economic scene.

The annual Census data, which is better known than the monthly data that forms the basis of the study, presents a somewhat different picture. It shows that inflation-adjusted median income fell 3.6 percent from 2007 to 2008, more sharply than in any year since. From 2008 to 2010 — a two-year period — income fell 2.9 percent.

Thoughts on the economic scene.

What explains the difference between the two surveys?

For one thing, the monthly data (which goes through June of this year) is more current than the annual data (which ends in 2010) and reflects the economy’s continued weakness.

But there is also a second, more surprising reason for the difference: The annual data may be less reliable in some ways than the monthly data.

The authors of the study, Gordon W. Green Jr. and John F. Coder, point out that people are asked about their prior year’s income a few months into the next year. If the economy has weakened during the window between the end of the year and the survey date, some respondents may incorrectly describe their income from their previous year. Their answers will be affected by the economy’s deterioration, and they will tell the surveyor that they made less the previous year than they actually did.

A similar dynamic happens in surveys about health insurance. When people are asked about their insurance status from the previous year, they sometimes misunderstand and instead describe the coverage they have at the time of the survey.

You can see how this would affect the Census income survey, given that the economy was weakening so much in 2009. When asked about their 2008 income, some instead may have described their 2009 income.

In an e-mail to Mr. Pear, the two researchers offered more detail:

In household surveys, respondents are often asked to report events retrospectively for some given time period. When a respondent forgets the exact dates for a sequence of events, this often results in a known survey bias called “telescoping” in which the reporting of the events is telescoped either forward or backward.

The reference periods between the Census Bureau’s annual estimates of income and our monthly estimates of income are quite different. The Census Bureau’s survey is conducted in February, March and April of a given year and respondents are asked to report their income during the previous calendar year. The reference period for the monthly estimates is the 12-month period immediately prior to when the question is asked. Thus, the Census Bureau’s approach requires people to recollect events over a longer reference period.

We think that a telescoping problem may explain the discrepancy between the Census Bureau’s reporting of annual changes in household income between 2007 and 2008 and our monthly estimates. The Census Bureau reports a sharp drop (3.6%) in the annual amount of median household income over this time period whereas the monthly estimates are relatively flat.

Between January 2007 and the Spring of 2009 (when the Census Bureau collected its annual income estimates for 2008), the unemployment rate (seasonally adjusted) increased dramatically. The unemployment rate was in Jan. ’07 was 4.6%, in Jan. ’08 was 5.0%, in Dec ’08 (the end of calendar year reference period) was 7.3%, and continued to rise into the Spring of 2009 when the Census Bureau conducted its survey: Feb ’09 (8.2%), Mar. ’09 (8.6%), and Apr. ’09 (8.9%)

Now, if some of the respondents to the Census Bureau’s survey in the Spring of 2009 erroneously “telescoped” their current unemployment experience back to the previous year’s calendar income, this could have resulted in a calendar year 2008 estimate for income that was too low, hence producing the 3.6% decline in household income between 2007 and 2008 in the Census Bureau’s estimates. The monthly estimates do not have this telescoping problem to the same degree because the reference period is the 12 months immediately prior to interview and the data are collected in real time. This could explain why the Census Bureau estimates are different than the monthly estimates over this time period.

Your Economic Outlook: Mixed Up

Contradictory data are nothing new in economics, but amid the slump in the United States and Europe, readers may find themselves paying increasing attention to indicators that seem to point every which way.

Corporate earnings in the United States grew in 2011 — but that growth has slowed. Household income has fallen farther since the recession officially ended in June 2009 than it did during the recession itself. The American economy gained 103,000 new jobs in September, according to figures released Friday, but unemployment remained high at 9.1 percent. And of course, all this information is available through more and more channels, media, devices and platforms.

With this in mind, The Times last week presented an interactive feature, “What’s Your Economic Outlook?” We asked readers to express their views on four topics: their job status, their upcoming spending plans, job prospects for the next generation and the state of the economy next year. Participants were asked to choose from a list of words to summarize their view, and to explain in a few words.

More than 5,600 completed submissions, and the results show a broad range of results. Some of the results were unsurprising: people who described themselves as unemployed were mostly more pessimistic than people with jobs. But the distinctions between groups were suggestive: respondents in their 60s seemed a bit more pessimistic about the next generation than did respondents in their 20s.

Even more notable, perhaps, were the comments that readers left to explain their views. Readers who seemed most optimistic often explained themselves with reference to plans they were following or had made. One wrote:

We scaled back our lifestyle years before the downturn, so this recession hasn’t affected us like people who are in debt.

Another:

We have budgeted well for upcoming expenses and I feel comfortable with our income streams.

Many comments from readers with a negative outlook described dire circumstances, and more than a few sounded a note of desperation:

Seven people used to do my job. Now there are only two of us. Nobody cares. Drowning.

And:

I have no money. Barely buying food. No help available for single men.

Many younger contributors saw their own opportunities as narrowing, with high levels of debt and few well-paying jobs:

Because previous generations have left my generation with crushing burdens and almost no safety net.

And:

There is nothing left for the next generation, only a small percentage will see the success of previous generations.

A few young contributors sounded an exuberant note about potential development:

There are so many incredible opportunities arising in new fields.

And:

Because my generation was raised to be innovative, and we will find a way to improve the current landscape.

In what could be interpreted as a sign of optimism, on the whole, contributors seemed to be slightly more hopeful about their own prospects — for work and for spending — than for the economy as a whole or for the next generation. That view jibes with some recent statistical evidence, suggesting that the disparity in outlooks reflects sentiments just as mixed as the other economic signals.

The full interactive feature will remain online.

Americans cut college and retirement savings amid bad economy

Shuffleboard-MarkBoster-LAT
A sad old joke holds that people worried about their finances stuff their savings under their  mattresses.

Sadder still is that many Americans actually may be doing that.

More than one-quarter of Americans polled in a new survey said the best place to stash their limited savings is underneath their mattresses.

As with other recent studies of consumer attitudes in the troubled economy, the survey released Monday by Allianz Life Insurance Company of North America reflects the grim financial outlooks of many Americans, particularly toward their retirement and college-savings prospects.

Slightly more than half of working-age Americans question whether 401(k) and similar retirement plans will provide enough money for secure retirements.

Nearly half say the troubled economy has had an influence on their retirement saving. One in five people has cut spending to maintain their retirement savings levels, while 30% have either reduced their retirement contributions or stopped making them altogether.

“Given the gut-wrenching events and market volatility of late summer, consumers are questioning traditional retirement savings vehicles and changing their savings habits,” said Katie Libbe, a consumer expert at Allianz Life. “Recent events have only deepened the uncertainty many have felt about retirement since the market meltdown of 2008.”

The picture isn’t much better for college savings, with one in four people reducing or stopping their college contributions.

RELATED:

Weak stock market may be hurting weak economy, report suggests

Golden years take on new meaning: Americans expect to work

In paying for college, better to be lucky than smart

-- Walter Hamilton

Photo: A game of shuffleboard. Credit: Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times

Kicking hybrids from carpool lanes slows everyone down

A single occupant Toyota Prius southbound on the 405 Freeway during rush hours. For good traffic flow, a new UC Berkeley study suggests, that is exactly where you want him to be. Lori Shepler, Los Angeles Times 
If you're like many California motorists, you probably looked on with envy or perhaps some stronger emotion when those single-occupant hybrids zipped by in the carpool lane. Others who had gone to the trouble of coordinating schedules and establishing real carpool relationships probably weren't too happy with their solitary HOV brethren either.

Surely, fairness was restored over the summer when the interlopers lost their HOV rights; the real carpoolers have seen their speeds increase, right? Wrong.

A new UC Berkeley study released Monday says that banishing those lone hybrid drivers from carpool lanes is making traffic slower for everyone. As an example, they cited a four-mile stretch of carpool lane on Interstate 880 in Hayward, which has seen a 15% reduction in speed since single-occupant hybrids were expelled since July 1.

What gives?

Researchers at UC Berkeley's Institute of Transportation Studies said they used traffic-flow theories and six months of data from roadway sensors measuring speed and congestion along all freeway carpool lanes in the San Francisco Bay Area to reach their conclusions.

Among other things, the report's authors found that the additional vehicles in the regular traffic lanes slowed speeds substantially. That slower traffic made it more difficult for the carpool drivers to move in and out of the HOV lanes, slowing them down as well. The report's authors were Michael Cassidy, UC Berkeley professor of civil and environmental engineering, and Kitae Jang, a doctoral student in civil and environmental engineering.

They were examing the end of a program that began in 2005 and ended July 1 that gave consumers an extra incentive to buy low-emission cars. By 2011, about 85,000 low-emission vehicles were carrying the coveted yellow stickers that gave them access to carpool lanes.

"Our results show that everybody is worse off with the program's ending," Cassidy said. "Drivers of low-emission vehicles are worse off, drivers in the regular lanes are worse off, and drivers in the carpool lanes are worse off. Nobody wins."

Related:

MTA plans to convert carpool lanes to toll roads

Electric cars to cost more in California

Gasoline prices at or near record highs for autumn

-- Ronald D. White

Photo: A single-occupant Toyota Prius southbound on the 405 Freeway carpool lane during rush hour, before the July 1 end to a program that allowed such access to solitary drivers of low emission vehicles. For good traffic flow, a new UC Berkeley study suggests, that's exactly where you wanted him to be. Credit: Lori Shepler / Los Angeles Times.

 

Optimism about European crisis sends stocks surging

Wall walkers getty images
Stock prices around the world rose on Monday after European leaders signaled a willingness to tackle the financial crisis brewing there.

In the first hour of trading, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 251.50 points, or 2.3%, to 11354.62. The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index and the technology-heavy Nasdaq composite index jumped even more sharply.

Over the weekend, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Prime Minister Angela Merkel announced in Berlin that they would come up with a plan to help stabilize and recapitalize struggling European banks. They gave few specifics but said a definite plan would be ready by a Nov. 3 meeting of the Group of 20.

In another sign of the willingness of European governments to act, the French and Belgian governments stepped in over the weekend to carry out an orderly breakup of Dexia, one of the banks that has encountered the most problems.

Leading indexes were recently up 3.1% in Germany and 2.0% in France.

Last week, the S&P 500 rose on three consecutive days after almost falling into bear-market territory, 20% down from highs reached in spring. The market's latest gains have been helped by a series of U.S. economic indicators that have suggested that the economy is in better shape than many analysts expected.

RELATED:

Few places to hide as bear growls

European crisis tests investors' 'go global' strategy

Businesses add jobs, but unemployment rate unchanged in September

-- Nathaniel Popper

Photo credit: Getty Images

About That 99 Percent ...

I received an e-mail over the weekend from a reader asking for some statistical context for the Occupy Wall Street protesters’ “99 Percent” rallying cry. Who exactly are the people in the top 1 percent of the economy? How much do they make, and how much are they worth?

CATHERINE RAMPELL
CATHERINE RAMPELL

Dollars to doughnuts.

Here are some numbers:

Dollars to doughnuts.

American households right at the 99th percentile (that is, the cut-off for the top 1 percent) will earn about $506,553 in cash income this year, according to a Tax Policy Center analysis. The income curve is very steep at the high end, meaning that people just a few tenths of a percentile point above that make much, much more. A family at the 99.5th percentile, for example, makes $815,868; its neighbor at the 99.9th percentile makes more than double that, at $2,075,574 a year.

The top 1 percent of American earners receive about a fifth of the country’s income, according to Thomas Picketty and Emmanuel Saez, two economists who study inequality.

But as we’ve noted before, economic inequality isn’t just about what you make each year. It’s about how much wealth you have already accumulated, too. And inequality is far, far greater when you include wealth.

According to an analysis of Federal Reserve data by the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal research organization, the top 1 percent of Americans by net worth hold about a third of American wealth.

The cutoff for the 99th percentile in net worth was $19,167,600 as of 2007, based on this research.

That means, of course, that the bottom 99 percent of Americans includes an awful lot of millionaires.

Wall Street: Stocks and gold rising

Wall Street
Gold: Trading now at $1,668 an ounce, up 2.0% from Friday. Dow Jones industrial average: Trading now at 11,360.94, up 2.3% from Friday.

Big Monday. Stocks are having a big day as investors grow encouraged about the rescue effort in Europe and financial data in the U.S.

Recession averted? Bloomberg thinks the good economic data of the last week is enough to say that a recession has been averted. 

Earnings season. Bank earnings season begins again this week, and the results are not expected to be good.

Lehman averted? A struggling Belgian bank was broken up in a surprisingly peaceful fashion over the weekend, averting what some thought would be a calamitous collapse.

Nail in the coffin. One of the last vestiges of Bernie Madoff's empire -- a trading division that had been sold off after Madoff's Ponzi scheme was exposed -- has now bitten the dust.

Paulson's bad year. For John Paulson, the hedge fund magnate who made billions of dollars betting against the subprime mortgage market, the bad news keeps coming -- one of his funds has lost almost 50% since the beginning of the year.

-- Nathaniel Popper in New York
Twitter.com/nathanielpopper

Photo credit: Stan Honda / Getty Images

Venture capital fundraising drops to 8-year low

The U.S. venture capital industry raised its lowest amount of money in eight years
The U.S. venture capital industry raised its lowest amount of money in eight years, stymied by a recent panoply of economic bad news.

Firms raised $1.7 billion in the third quarter, said the National Venture Capital Assn. That's 53% less than the $3.5 billion raised in the same period a year earlier and the smallest pot since the third quarter of 2003.

The year started out with heavy fundraising, garnering $7.6 billion in the first quarter.

But then the economic recovery began to sag. Europe found itself mired in a debt crisis. U.S. credit was downgraded. Companies began delaying or calling off anticipated initial public offerings -– Zynga, Groupon and Facebook have all yet to go public, despite rampant speculation.

"Economic instability continues to impact the ability of venture-backed companies to go public which, in turn, has prevented many venture firms from delivering solid returns to their investors," Mark Heesen, president of the venture capital group, said in a statement.

The industry, he said in a blog post, has been investing more than it's been raising since 2008 -– an overhang that will reach $20 billion by the end of the quarter.

"Just like a bubble," he wrote in the post, "this imbalance is not sustainable."

The report was conducted with Thomson Reuters.

RELATED:

Groupon, Zynga reportedly delay IPOs

Report: Facebook delays IPO until late 2012

Venture capital funding and deals rise in 2010

-- Tiffany Hsu

Photo credit: Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times

Consumer Confidential: Netflix says oops; iPhone orders

Netpic 
Here's your misfit-toys Monday roundup of consumer news from around the Web:

-- Give Netflix points for knowing it was wrong. The company says it will drop plans to split its mail-order DVD and Internet-streaming services. The change is an acknowledgment of the anger that Netflix triggered in subscribers, first with Chief Executive Reed Hastings’ plan to raise prices and the subsequent Sept. 18 announcement detailing the split of the services. Customers will be able to access the streaming and mail-order services from Netflix.com, with one account and password, the company says. Netflix on Sept. 18 said people who wanted DVDs would have to sign up for a new service called Qwikster, requiring a separate account and billing. Now if the company could just do something about getting more up-to-date movies.

-- Dr Pepper prefers hanging out with guys. That's apparently the idea behind Dr Pepper Ten, a 10-calorie soft drink Dr Pepper Snapple Group is rolling out with a macho ad campaign that proclaims, "It's not for women." The soft drink was developed after the company's research found that men shy away from diet drinks that aren't perceived as "manly" enough. To appeal to men, Dr Pepper made its Ten drink 180 degrees different from Diet Dr Pepper. It has calories and sugar, unlike its diet counterpart. Instead of the dainty tan bubbles on the diet can, Ten will be wrapped in gunmetal grey packaging with silver bullets. And while Diet Dr Pepper's marketing is women-friendly, the ad campaign for Ten goes out of its way to eschew women. So there.

-- Apple took some heat for not unveiling an iPhone 5 but, instead, debuting an upgraded iPhone 4S. But apparently the company knew what it was doing. Apple says first-day preorders of the iPhone 4S topped 1 million, breaking the record set by last year's model. Apple and various phone companies started taking orders for the phone last Friday. It hits stores this Friday. First-day orders for the iPhone 4 were 600,000 when it launched last year. It was then sold in the U.S. only by AT&T. The iPhone 4S is also sold by Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel. The base model of the iPhone 4S costs $200 with a two-year contract. It has a faster processor and an improved camera compared to last year's model.

-- David Lazarus

Photo: Netflix is dropping plans for a Qwikster service. Credit: Paul Sakuma / Associated Press

 

Further Reading on the Nobel Economics Laureates

CATHERINE RAMPELL
CATHERINE RAMPELL

Dollars to doughnuts.

The spotlight today is on Christopher A. Sims of Princeton University and Thomas J. Sargent of New York University, the winners of the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.

Dollars to doughnuts.

The two new laureates have very similar academic pedigrees: They both received their Ph.D.’s from Harvard in 1968, and both previously studied at the University of California, Berkeley. Several years later they both landed at the University of Minnesota. They are currently jointly teaching a graduate course in macroeconomics at Princeton.

The prize committee has published a description of their work for the general public, as well as a more technical version.

Here is the only paper the two wrote together, from 1977.

Some other links for Dr. Sargent:

And some links for Dr. Sims:

Steve Jobs drove a Mercedes without license plates

Steve Jobs Mercedes-Benz
For years, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs drove around Silicon Valley in a a silver 2007 Mercedes-Benz SL55 AMG without a license plate.

Paula Skier, the digital marketing executive at automotive data and consulting firm R.L. Polk & Co., reports that Jobs, who passed away last week,  got away with a clear violation of California state law -- we suspect for security reasons.  Can you imagine how many people would have liked to have swiped the tech guru’s license plate?

Skier wanted to know how Jobs could drive a plateless car for four years without ever getting ticketed for the infraction.

“A search of traffic records confirms that he successfully avoided plate-related fines. Again, theories abound, but I think it's just a matter of playing the odds,” Skier said.

Skier noted that “one blogger” obtained the vehicle identification number of Jobs’ Mercedes and ran it through Polk’s  Carfax vehicle history division to see what it could learn about the car. Not much, it turns out.  It was purchased in 2006 and had about 21,800 miles on the odometer as of August.
 
“That means Steve Jobs drove only 5,500 miles per year, well under the 12,000-mile U.S. average. Why is this important? Because it means that Mr. Jobs did not drive his car very much, which significantly lowered his odds of getting ticketed,” Skier  said.

It’s also not clear that he would have needed much privacy, because there are many similar expensive SL55s in California, Skier said.

“No personal information can be gleaned from a license-plate number,” she said. “The best way to remain anonymous would be to keep the plates on. And this, in the end, is the great paradox of the mystery. Not displaying plates made Steve Jobs' car just as conspicuous and identifiable as a man who, say, always wore jeans, a black turtleneck and New Balance sneakers.”

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-- Jerry Hirsch
twitter.com/LATimesJerry

Photo: Steve Jobs' Mercedes-Benz. Credit: R.L. Polk & Co.

The 4-Trillion-Euro Fantasy

Peter Boone is chairman of the charity Effective Intervention and a research associate at the Center for Economic Performance at the London School of Economics. He is also a principal in Salute Capital Management Ltd. Simon Johnson, the former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, is the co-author of “13 Bankers.”

Some officials and former officials are taking the view that a large fund of financial support for troubled euro-zone nations could be decisive in stabilizing the situation. The headline numbers discussed are 2 trillion to 4 trillion euros — a large amount of money, given that the gross domestic product of Germany is 2.5 trillion euros and that of the entire euro zone around 9 trillion euros.

Today’s Economist

Perspectives from expert contributors.

This approach has some practical difficulties. The European Financial Stability Facility as currently devised has only around 240 billion euros available (and this will fall should more countries lose their AAA credit ratings). The International Monetary Fund, the only ready money at the global level, would be more than stretched to go “all in” at 300 billion euros.

Perspectives from expert contributors.

Never mind, say the optimists — we’ll get some “equity” from the stability fund and then leverage up by borrowing from the European Central Bank.

Such an approach, if it could get political approval, would buy time, in the sense that it would hold down interest rates on Italian government debt relative to their current trajectory. But leaving aside the question of whether the European Central Bank — and the Germans — would ever agree to provide this kind of leverage and ignoring legitimate concerns about the potential inflationary impact of such measures, could a 4 trillion-euro package, for example, stabilize the situation?

Think through the best-case scenario, in which the big package is put in place and, at least initially, believed to be credible. Proponents of this approach argue that the “market would be awed into submission”; business as usual would prevail, meaning that Italy and other potentially troubled sovereigns could resume borrowing at low interest rates; and the 4 trillion-euro fund would not actually need to be used.

This seems implausible. If the big government money shows up, and this pushes down yields on Italian government debt, what will the private-sector holders of that debt do? Some of them will sell, taking advantage of what they worry may be only a temporary respite and, for those who bought near the bottom, locking in a capital gain (as interest rates fall, bond prices rise).

So the European/International Monetary Fund bailout fund would acquire a significant amount of Italian, Portuguese, Spanish and other debt (including perhaps that of Greece and Ireland). If the credit used from this fund, with its central bank backing, reaches — let’s say — 1 trillion euros, how will the Germans feel about the situation?

Their worries will only be heightened by continuing budget deficits, made worse by recessions, throughout the periphery. Someone will need to finance those deficits, and the stabilization fund is likely to be the financier.

On current form, the Italians will have promised moderate austerity but delivered little. Stories about corruption in Italian public life — perhaps exaggerated but with more than a grain of truth — will become pervasive and continue to grate on northern European taxpayers.

In fall 1997, the International Monetary Fund — with the backing of the United States and Europe — provided what was then regarded as a substantial package of support to the Suharto government in Indonesia. But the government refused to close banks as agreed — and after one of President Suharto’s sons finally lost one failed bank, he immediately popped up with another banking license. Articles about Indonesian corruption and the ruling family were on front pages of major newspapers in the United States.

Donor fatigue set in. In January 1998, when the Indonesian government announced a budget that had slightly less austerity than planned, it was roundly castigated by the international community, setting off further sharp depreciation in Indonesia’s rupiah. This worsened the debt problems of Indonesia’s corporate sector, which had borrowed heavily and at short maturities in dollars.

Panic erupted, social unrest became increasingly manifest, and the real economy declined further.

Italy is not Indonesia, and Silvio Berlusconi is not President Suharto — who ended up leaving office. But the comparison still has value. Will the countries backing the enhanced and highly leveraged European Financial Stability Facility be willing to face substantial credit losses, i.e., actual and continuing transfers from their taxpayers to Italians and others?

Lech Walesa famously remarked that it was easier to make fish soup from fish than to do the reverse. So it is with fiscal crises — once fear prevails and markets start to think hard about the stress scenario, it is hard to solve the problem simply with reassuring words or financial support that never needs to be used.

Crisis veterans like to say, quoting former President Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico, that when markets overreact, policy needs to overreact in the stabilizing direction. But what really matters is not overreacting; it is making sure you do enough.

In Europe, the first thing peripheral governments need to do is stop accumulating debt, and quickly. Italian fiscal plans to balance the budget in 2012 look implausible, as they assume unrealistic growth. The planned Greek debt restructuring and increased taxes will not turn that economy around, nor prevent Greece from accumulating further debt. Despite all the reported austerity, the Irish government is still running a budget deficit near 12 percent of gross national product in 2011, while nominal G.N.P. actually declined in the first half of 2011.

Europe’s periphery also needs to recognize that it signed up to a currency union, and that requires a new approach to adjustment. Instead of having huge devaluations like those suffered in Mexico under Mr. Zedillo, in Indonesia under Mr. Suharto or in Poland under Mr. Walesa, Europe’s troubled nations need to raise competitiveness by reducing local costs.

That must primarily come through wage reductions and more competitive tax systems. In Ireland a pact with the major unions is preventing further wage reductions, while in Greece the government is strangling corporations with taxes in order to avoid deeper wage and spending cuts. The proposed Portuguese “fiscal devaluation” — meaning lower payroll taxes to reduce labor costs and an increase in the value-added tax to replace the revenue — looks like a weak attempt to avoid talking about the need to cut public spending and wages much more sharply in real, purchasing-power terms.

Putting in place a huge financial package is not enough. Policies have to adjust across the troubled euro-zone countries so that nations stop accumulating debt, and the periphery moves rapidly from being among the least competitive nations in the euro area to the most competitive — and this includes lower real wages, even if debts are restructured appropriately.

The European leadership is a long way from even recognizing this reality, let alone talking about it in public.

Nobel economics prize won by two American academics

NOBEL
Two American scholars Monday won the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for their separate research examining the cause-and-effect relationships between economic policies, such as tax cuts and interest rate hikes, and the broader economy.

Thomas J. Sargent of New York University and Christopher A. Sims of Princeton University, both 68 years old, will share the $1.5 million award.

In announcing the prize, the last of the Nobel awards announced this year, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said Sims and Sargent's pioneering work in the 1970s and '80s had been adopted by researchers and policymakers throughout the world and helped in understanding how economic shocks and systematic policy shifts affect the economy in the short run and long run.

Sargent and Sims conducted their research independently, and one of the big challenges they faced was the-chicken-or-the-egg problem in economics, that is, whether policy affects the economy or the other way around. Because economics experiments are difficult to perform in the real world, the Nobel committee said "the laureates' foremost contribution has been to show that causal macroeconomic relationships can indeed be analyzed using historical data, even in cases with two-way relationships."

Their work is relevant today as the United States and Europe grapple with anemic growth, high unemployment and budgetary woes in the wake of the recent global financial crisis and recession.

The Nobel committee said analytical methods developed by Sargent and Sims could help answer such questions as: How are gross domestic product and inflation affected by a temporary interest-rate hike or a tax cut? And what happens if a central bank makes a permanent change in its inflation target or a government changes its goals in budget balancing?

Sargent, a native of Pasadena, and Sims, who was born in Washington, D.C., both received their PhD degrees from Harvard University in 1968.

Sims said he was sleeping when he got the call from the Nobel committee early Monday informing him of the award.

"Actually, at first we were called twice and my wife couldn't find the talk button on the phone so we went back to sleep," he said, speaking by phone to a news conference in Stockholm, where the prize was announced.

Last year’s Nobel economics prize went to three researchers, including two Americans, for helping to explain such phenomena as high unemployment.  

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Photo: Thomas Sargent, right, and Christopher Sims are awarded the 2011 Nobel economics prize. Credit: AFP/Getty Images.

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