NAR: Pending Home Sales Increase 2.2% in November; Up 6.9% Year-over-year

From the NAR: Pending Home Sales Moved Up 2.2% in November, Fourth Straight Month of Increases
Pending home sales gained 2.2% in November – the fourth consecutive month of increases and the highest level since February 2023 – according to the National Association of REALTORS®. The Midwest, South and West experienced month-over-month gains in transactions, while the Northeast decreased. Year-over-year, contract signings increased in all four U.S. regions, with the West leading the pack.

The Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI)* – a forward-looking indicator of home sales based on contract signings – advanced 2.2% to 79.0 in November. Year-over-year, pending transactions improved 6.9%. An index of 100 is equal to the level of contract activity in 2001.

“Consumers appeared to have recalibrated expectations regarding mortgage rates and are taking advantage of more available inventory,” said NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. “Mortgage rates have averaged above 6% for the past 24 months. Buyers are no longer waiting for or expecting mortgage rates to fall substantially. Furthermore, buyers are in a better position to negotiate as the market shifts away from a seller’s market.”
...
The Northeast PHSI fell 1.3% from last month to 67.8, up 5.6% from November 2023. The Midwest index increased 0.4% to 78.1 in November, up 1.6% from the previous year.

The South PHSI improved 5.2% to 94.5 in November, up 8.5% from a year ago. The West index rose by 0.5% from the prior month to 64.3, up 11.8% from November 2023.
emphasis added
Note: Contract signings usually lead sales by about 45 to 60 days, so this would usually be for closed sales in December and January.

Housing Dec 30th Weekly Update: Inventory down 2.5% Week-over-week, Up 26.8% Year-over-year

Altos reports that active single-family inventory was down 2.5% week-over-week.

Inventory will continue to decline seasonally until early next year and probably bottom in late January or February.

The first graph shows the seasonal pattern for active single-family inventory since 2015.

Altos Year-over-year Home InventoryClick on graph for larger image.

The red line is for 2024.  The black line is for 2019.  

Inventory was up 26.8% compared to the same week in 2023 (last week it was up 26.3%), and down 16.8% compared to the same week in 2019 (last week it was down 16.9%). 

Back in June 2023, inventory was down almost 54% compared to 2019, so the gap to more normal inventory levels has closed significantly!

Altos Home InventoryThis second inventory graph is courtesy of Altos Research.

As of Dec 27th, inventory was at 651 thousand (7-day average), compared to 667 thousand the prior week. 

Mike Simonsen discusses this data regularly on Youtube.

Should big Tobacco fund (and program) continuing medical education?

 Should physicians learn about tobacco from the source?

The Tobacco Industry Has No Business Funding Continuing Medical Education, by Robert K. Jackler, MD1,2; Pamela M. Ling, MD, MPH3,4, JAMA. 2024; doi:10.1001/jama.2024.9241 

"Recently, the for-profit medical media company Medscape promoted a series of continuing medical education (CME) courses (see the Supplement) funded by a grant from tobacco company Philip Morris International (PMI).1 These activities were certified (see the Supplement) by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) along with other health care professional education organizations (American Nurses Credentialing Center, Interprofessional Continuing Education, Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education, American Board of Internal Medicine). As cigarette sales decline, PMI is promoting “harm reduction” nicotine products. This superficially appealing slogan thinly disguises PMI’s campaign to promote company brands designed to sustain nicotine addiction among people who smoke and entice youth who do not smoke to adopt new nicotine products.

...

"The tobacco industry has a long history of undermining science to promote its products, the leading cause of preventable disease and premature death in the US, indicating inherently unresolvable conflicts incompatible with education of clinicians or sponsorship of certified CME. PMI’s hypocrisy in promoting a harm reduction agenda is highlighted by its aggressive marketing of Marlboro, the world’s leading cigarette brand, including campaigns manifestly targeting youth."

...


Salt Typhoon’s Reach Continues to Grow

The US government has identified a ninth telecom that was successfully hacked by Salt Typhoon.

What are these bubbles frozen into Lake Baikal? What are these bubbles frozen into Lake Baikal?


Monday: Pending Home Sales

Weekend:
Schedule for Week of December 29, 2024

Monday:
• At 9:45 AM, Chicago Purchasing Managers Index for December.

• At 10:00 AM, Pending Home Sales Index for November. The consensus is for a 0.7% increase in the index.

• At 10:30 AM, Dallas Fed Survey of Manufacturing Activity for December. This is the last of regional manufacturing surveys for December.

From CNBC: Pre-Market Data and Bloomberg futures S&P 500 and DOW futures are down slightly (fair value).

Oil prices were up over the last week with WTI futures at $70.43 per barrel and Brent at $73.80 per barrel. A year ago, WTI was at $72, and Brent was at $78 - so WTI oil prices are down slighty year-over-year.

Here is a graph from Gasbuddy.com for nationwide gasoline prices. Nationally prices are at $2.98 per gallon. A year ago, prices were at $3.11 per gallon, so gasoline prices are down $0.13 year-over-year.

Four-satellite Astranis launch signals shift toward scaled GEO deployments

SpaceX successfully launched four Astranis-built broadband spacecraft toward geostationary orbit Dec. 29, marking the first time a single commercial manufacturer has flown four of its own satellites on one mission to GEO.

The post Four-satellite Astranis launch signals shift toward scaled GEO deployments appeared first on SpaceNews.

After 60 years of spaceflight patches, here are some of our favorites

The art of space mission patches is now more than six decades old, dating to the Vostok 6 mission in 1963 that carried Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova into low-Earth orbit for nearly three days. The patch for the first female human spaceflight showcased a dove flying above the letters designating the Soviet Union, CCCP.

That patch was not publicly revealed at the time, and the use of specially designed patches was employed only infrequently by subsequent Soviet missions. NASA's first mission patch would not follow for two years, but the practice would prove more sticky for missions in the United States and become a time-honored tradition.

The first NASA flight to produce a mission-specific patch worn by crew members was Gemini 5. It flew in August 1965, carrying astronauts Gordon Cooper and Pete Conrad on an eight-day mission inside a small Gemini spacecraft. At the time, it was the longest spaceflight conducted by anyone.

Read full article

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Jimmy Carter Dies at 100

The New York Times:

While his presidency was remembered more for its failures than for its successes, his post-presidency was seen by many as a model for future chief executives. Rather than vanish from view or focus on moneymaking, he established the Carter Center to promote peace, fight disease and combat social inequality. He transformed himself into a freelance diplomat traveling the globe, sometimes irritating his successors but earning the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002.

 ★ 

★ OpenAI’s Board, Paraphrased: ‘To Succeed, All We Need Is Unimaginable Sums of Money’

From an un-bylined post from OpenAI’s board of directors on Friday:

The hundreds of billions of dollars that major companies are now investing into AI development show what it will really take for OpenAI to continue pursuing the mission. We once again need to raise more capital than we’d imagined. Investors want to back us but, at this scale of capital, need conventional equity and less structural bespokeness.

My take on OpenAI is that both of the following are true:

  • OpenAI currently offers, by far, the best product experience of any AI chatbot assistant.
  • There is no technical moat in this field, and so OpenAI is the epicenter of an investment bubble.

Thus, effectively, OpenAI is to this decade’s generative-AI revolution what Netscape was to the 1990s’ internet revolution. The revolution is real, but it’s ultimately going to be a commodity technology layer, not the foundation of a defensible proprietary moat. In 1995 investors mistakenly thought investing in Netscape was a way to bet on the future of the open internet and the World Wide Web in particular. Investing in OpenAI today is a bit like that — generative AI technology has a bright future and is transforming the world, but it’s wishful thinking that the breakthrough client implementation is going to form the basis of a lasting industry titan.

There’s even a loosely similar origin story. Netscape started life as Mosaic, a free-of-charge browser that debuted in January 1993 and instantly revolutionized the nascent-but-still-obscure World Wide Web by adding support for images. Mosaic was developed and released by a team led by Marc Andreessen at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA). A year later Andreessen and his team left NCSA and, with Silicon Graphics founder James Clark, founded Netscape Communications Corporation, using the Mosaic browser as the foundation for Netscape Navigator. OpenAI’s whole “forget about this being a public-benefit thing, let’s make it a for-profit thing” transition is very reminiscent of the Mosaic-to-Netscape transition.

The biggest difference is that Netscape went public quickly, and that’s when the investment money poured in. NCSA Mosaic debuted in January 1993 and Netscape’s IPO was just 2.5 years later, in August 1995. OpenAI has raised tens of billions of dollars already — $13 billion from Microsoft alone — while still in this uncertain transition from an ostensibly not-for-profit foundation to a totally-for-profit company.

OpenAI’s board now stating “We once again need to raise more capital than we’d imagined” less than three months after raising another $6.6 billion at a valuation of $157 billion sounds alarmingly like a Ponzi scheme — an argument akin to “Trust us, we can maintain our lead, and all it will take is a never-ending stream of infinite investment.

Links 12/29/24

Links for you. Science:

Rapid spread of H5N1 bird flu through California dairy herds suggests unknown paths of transmission
Surprisingly thick ice on Jupiter’s moon Europa complicates hunt for life
Here are 10 reasons why a child wanting a hippo for Christmas is a sign they are a budding evil mastermind.
Archaeologists discover possible ancient Israelite palace in Jordan
Long-COVID study shows high rates of cognitive change
If you had to store something for 100 years, how would you do it?

Other:

On vaccines, Trump wants RFK Jr. to explore a question that’s already been answered. The president-elect expects Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to pursue discredited theories about vaccines and autism. No good can come of this.
Economically struggling Trump voters hopeful that Trump will not enact Republican policies (and if Democrats stop him, of course they won’t get the credit for that)
After backing Trump, low-income voters hope he doesn’t slash their benefits
The Walmart Effect: New research suggests that the company makes the communities it operates in poorer—even taking into account its famous low prices. (lol: “When I reached out to [Jason] Furman about the new research, he said he wasn’t sure what to make of it and suggested I talk with labor economists.”)
What’s in It for Elon? The world’s richest man isn’t just trolling our democracy. He’s out for himself, and the press is letting him get away with it.
For some Latinos, ‘prosperity gospel’ led them to Trump
Donald Trump tells rightwing group that he’ll end women’s boxing “very quickly”
No, Trump and His Party Do Not Have a Mandate
Trump’s Rage at Liz Cheney Takes a Dark Turn—and Wrecks a Big GOP Lie
Remembering Tony Todd: The Legacy Of Candyman In His Own Words
On RFK Jr., vaccines and my son with autism and Down syndrome
Mass graves shed a light on Assad’s ‘killing machine’
And In The Party
What if Trump Does Everything He’s Promised—and the People Don’t Care?
Flying Was Already the Worst. Then America Stopped Using Headphones.
Trump’s Wish to Control Greenland and Panama Canal: Not a Joke This Time
I’ve Had A Few
‘Please take care of us’: Pennsylvania Trump voter begs GOP not to cut Social Security
Threats And Harassment Push Some Public Officials To Quit, Some To Change Their Vote On Issues
Greenland says no thanks to Trump purchase idea — again
Trumpism’s healthcare fracture-lines
Squeezed by high prices, a growing number of Americans find shelter in long-term motels
“Dire shortage”: Elon Musk sparks MAGA backlash after calling for more immigrant workers. The Tesla CEO argues the U.S. needs to court top talent after financing the loudest anti-immigration run in decades
In Trump’s America, There’s Democracy Only When He Wins
America Expands Settlements In Panama
Why did Bidenomics fail to deliver at the polls?

It’s Not Really a MAGA Civil War, More Like a Battle Over the Steering Wheel

We’re seeing a range of headlines today about the “MAGA civil war” centered on immigration policy. Is the point to put America to work for Americans (MAGA-coded “real Americans,” of course)? Or is it to open the flood gates for engineers from Bangalore and Taiwan to achieve maximum efficiency and the global dominance of Silicon Valley? Vivek Ramaswamy baldly went there with a long post arguing that you simply can’t staff Silicon Valley with native-born Americans because the country is mired in a “culture of mediocrity.” “A culture that celebrates the prom queen over the math olympiad champ, or the jock over the valedictorian, will not produce the best engineers,” he continued. It’s worth reading because it distills a specific viewpoint, at least parts of which many people agree with and which has powerful backers in Silicon Valley.

But let me suggest that a “MAGA civil war” isn’t the right frame to understand any of this. MAGA of the 2024-25 era is more like an electoral machine built around Donald Trump. Itr runs very well. Who gets to run it and who does it work for? Good white folk from Middle America or the best and the brightest from South Asia? MAGA never really had core policies. It had impulses. A huge amount of canonical Trumpism, as it was articulated during the Biden years, was a raft of policies and goals that were little more than payback over the Mueller probe. With Trump now tired and on the way out, there’s an increasing free-for-all over who gets the keys. Musk? Bannon? Ramaswamy? The Project 2025 Heritage Crowd? JD Vance and Josh Hawley and anti-cat ladyism?

It’s of course true that every winning presidential campaign must assemble a coalition of interests to achieve victory. Those different factions vie for ascendency when it comes to divvying up the policy and personnel spoils. But this is different. It’s the flip side of Trump’s deep-seated and extreme transactionalism. Trump signed on lots of different groups more or less indifferent to the policy payoffs and promises he was handing out. Those groups could see the potential payoff of cutting deals with a guy who had a good shot of winning the presidency and didn’t really care about what his policies would be once he won.

He’s not talked about much in the current moment because immigration isn’t his thing. But consider Robert Kennedy Jr. Trump has handed over to him a huge chunk of the federal government, though certainly he’ll have minders with him at HHS. Is he MAGA? Kennedy and the made-to-order MAHA sidecar were grafted on to the movement in the last months of the final stretch of the campaign for narrowly electoral reasons. Silicon Valley, embodied by Musk, Thiel and the rest, really isn’t that different. Their agenda, while odious, is quite different from Trump’s. You see that in the whole DOGE clownshow. As I noted above, Trump’s whole interest in rooting out the Deep State is grounded on anger over the Mueller probe and its various successors, with additional buy-in and leg work from the older Norquistian part of the GOP. Musk and Ramaswamy’s DOGE is a very different kind of tech-libertarian reboot, which includes deeply unpopular things like wholesale cuts to social insurance programs which Trump has always been shrewd enough to avoid.

This is less a “civil war” than Bannon and Co. playing the role of Twitter’s then-employees the day after Musk finalized his purchase of the company. My point here isn’t to argue that each group is radically different or that the newcomers are “not that bad.” It’s more that what we’re seeing here is more the fallout of the fact that lots of players saw Trump as a vehicle that stood a good shot at winning the presidency, was old and increasingly worn out and wasn’t particularly invested in what happened once he was in the White House other than not going to jail and lording it over his foes. That leaves lots of openings for people who see the opportunity and take a ride in the car with the aim of making their way to the drivers’ seat because they know Trump is old, distracted and mostly doesn’t care. You could say it’s a Silicon Valley hostile takeover of MAGA. But I’m not even sure it’s hostile. There’s little sign Trump cares. He’s already gotten what he wants.

Live coverage: SpaceX to launch 21 Starlink satellites on Falcon 9 rocket from the Kennedy Space Center

File photo: A Falcon 9 booster stands ready for the Starlink 12-2 mission at launch complex 39A. Image: Spaceflight Now.

Updated Dec. 29 at 6:25 p.m. EST (2325 UTC): SpaceX delayed the launch by a day.

SpaceX is preparing to end its orbital launch year in the same way it began, by launching a batch of Starlink V2 Mini satellites including 13 featuring direct to cell phone capabilities.

The Starlink 12-6 mission will launch onboard the company’s 132nd and final Falcon 9 flight of 2024. Liftoff from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center is set for 12:34 a.m. EST (0534 UTC) on Tuesday, Dec. 31. Launch was original scheduled for 1:02 a.m. EST on Monday, Dec. 30, but appeared to slip to the end of the window because launch preparations were running behind schedule. As of 6:25 p.m. EST on Sunday, the rocket had not rolled out of its hangar.

Spaceflight Now will have live coverage beginning about an hour prior to liftoff.

On Dec. 28, the 45th Weather Squadron issued a forecast for the mission, suggesting a 60 percent chance of favorable weather at liftoff. Meteorologists cited cumulus clouds and anvil clouds as possible constraints to launch.

“The main weather feature this weekend is a cold front expected to reach down into the Florida peninsula on Sunday, passing the Spaceport early in the morning on Monday. Ahead of the front, we can expect scattered showers with a chance for some isolated storms,” launch weather officers wrote. “Most model solutions have the showers moving offshore just prior to the opening of the window, and a weak secondary line is expected to make its way through after the close of the window.

“Thus, for the primary launch attempt, concerns will be for lingering storm and anvil activity, especially near the beginning of the window.”

The Falcon 9 first stage booster for this mission, B1078 in the SpaceX fleet, will launch for a 16th time. Its previous missions included Crew-6, USSF-124 and 11 Starlink missions.

A little more than eight minutes after liftoff, B1078 will target a landing on the SpaceX droneship, ‘Just Read the Instructions.’ If successful, it will mark the 104th booster landing on JRTI and the 390th booster landing to date.

Another record year

With a successful mission, SpaceX will close out another record-breaking year for its Falcon family of rockets. It increased its launches year-over-year by nearly 40 percent ending 2024 with 134 orbital launches compared to 2023’s 96.

Here’s a breakdown of the year by quarter:

  • Q1 – 31
  • Q2 – 36 (one Falcon Heavy)
  • Q3 – 27
  • Q4 – 40 (one Falcon Heavy)

SpaceX faced a few stints during the year where the Falcon fleet was grounded due to anomalies that occurred in flight. Most notably was an upper stage failure on the Starlink 9-3 mission, which launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base on July 12 and resulted in the loss of the 20 Starlink satellites on board.

A notable amount of ice builds up around the Merlin Vacuum engine on the Falcon 9’s upper stage during the Starlink 9-3 mission. Image: SpaceX

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) grounded the fleet while SpaceX conducted a mishap investigation. The company was cleared to resume launches on July 25 while the investigation remained open. Its first launch following that happened on July 27.

The following month, a failed booster landing on the droneship, ‘A Shortfall of Gravitas,’ resulted in another fleet grounding, though this was cleared by the FAA within a few days.

Finally, following successful deployment of the Crew Dragon spacecraft on the Crew-9 mission on Sept. 28, there was another upper stage issue which caused a mistiming of the deorbit burn. A third mishap investigation was opened, but SpaceX was allowed to launch the Hera mission for the European Space Agency on Oct. 7 because the mission didn’t require a deorbit burn.

The FAA cleared a return to flight for SpaceX on Oct. 11.

The company is aiming to further ramp up its launch pace in 2025 while introducing new customers and more astronaut missions. SpaceX is poised to launch at least two commercial astronaut missions (Fram-2 and Ax-4) and two crew rotation missions to the International Space Station for NASA and its partners (Crew-10 and Crew-11).

There may also be another private astronaut mission before the end of the year, though that hasn’t been announced yet by NASA. Vast is vying fly a commercial crew to the ISS as it works towards achieving its own commercial space station.

Among its many customers in 2025, SpaceX is also poised to launch three batches of Project Kuiper satellites on behalf of Amazon. The online retail giant said in a December 2023 blog post that launches onboard Falcon 9 would take place beginning in mid-2025.

However, that post also noted that it intended to begin deployment of its satellite fleet in “the first half of 2024” and would “have enough satellites deployed to begin early customer pilots in the second half of 2024.” Amazon also said in late 2024 that its first operational batch of Project Kuiper satellites will launch on a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket in the first quarter of calendar year 2025.

MAGA Is Already Eating Its Own. Pass the Popcorn

Like many observers, I expected severe buyers’ regret fairly early in the second Trump administration. After all, many Americans who voted for Trump did so because they believed he would bring down grocery prices. He was never going to be able to deliver on that promise and stopped talking about the subject as soon as the election was over; sooner or later, voters were going to notice.

I did not, however, expect a MAGA civil war weeks before Trump had even taken office. But in retrospect I should have seen it coming.

Background: Every political movement is a coalition made up of factions with different goals and priorities. Normally what holds these factions together is realism and a willingness to compromise: Each faction is willing to give the other factions part of what they want in return for part of what it wants.

What’s different about MAGA is that I’m pretty sure that almost all of the movement’s activists (as opposed to the low-information voters who put Trump over the top) knew that he was a con man, without even concepts of a plan to reduce prices. But each faction believed that he was their con man, putting something over on everyone else.

But now the two most important factions — what we might call original MAGA, motivated largely by hostility to immigrants, and tech bro MAGA, seeking a free hand for scams low taxes and deregulation — have gone to war, each apparently fearing that they may themselves have been marks rather than in on the con.

The immediate issue was the H-1B visa program, which grants technical workers (I hate the term “high-skilled,” for reasons I’ll explain in a minute) temporary rights to work in the United States. It’s a program greatly favored by the tech bros, for obvious reasons, but hated by original MAGAts, who believe those jobs should be going to the native-born. But the rift surely runs much deeper. After all, billionaires like their cheap immigrant labor, but original MAGA will feel betrayed if Trump doesn’t deliver mass deportations.

News reports on this dispute get the facts right, but you don’t get a proper sense of the emotions and the character of the participants unless you read some of the posts on Elon Musk’s X, formerly Twitter — a toxic site these days, not to be entered without personal protection equipment, but still useful to get the pulse of the people taking over America. Here, for example, is an exchange between Musk and Steve Bannon:

One especially striking thing in this discussion has been the open contempt tech-bro MAGA has for U.S. workers, the people Trump supposedly champions (and the people who buy his sneakers and crypto.) Here’s Vivek Ramaswamy saying that we need foreign workers because American culture venerates “mediocrity over excellence”:

And here’s Musk endorsing the claim that American workers are “retarded”:

As usual, imagine the reaction if a prominent supporter of Democrats were to say anything remotely like this.

What about the actual economics? The Steve Bannon/Laura Loomer view that immigrants are taking jobs away from white Americans (let’s not be euphemistic) is wrong. Although Loomer accuses Musk of “wanting us to live like a bunch of welfare queens,” immigration makes most native-born Americans, including most blue-collar workers, richer, although there are surely a few losers, including, yes, American-born engineers competing with H-1B hires.

But the benefits from immigration don’t come from immigrants being smarter or having a better work ethic than the native-born. They come from the fact that immigrants bring skills that are relatively scarce among native-born workers. And I mean skills of any kind, including the skills required in many kinds of manual work, which is why I hate applying the term “skilled” only to jobs that require an engineering degree.

When workers with these skills come here, those native-born workers who do have similar skills face increased competition — but their losses, while real, are outweighed by the gains to the much larger number of Americans who aren’t competing with the immigrants.

Imagine, for example, that America were to experience a large influx of Polish plumbers. (As I said, skill isn’t the same as having a degree.) This would push down wages for plumbers already here, but it would reduce the cost of plumbing, raising real wages for everyone else, and overall real income for the native-born would increase.

There would be some losers in this case. And many economists, myself included, used to believe that immigration of workers with low formal education put downward pressure on wages of all less-educated workers. But at this point it’s clear that immigrants tend to concentrate in very different industries and occupations than native-born workers with similar amounts of schooling, suggesting that they have different skills, and that the number of native-born workers hurt by immigration is relatively small. For the most part, immigrants are complements, not substitutes, for native-born workers.

So original MAGA is wrong to claim that immigration is impoverishing “real Americans” in general. But tech-bro MAGA is wrong as well as offensive in saying that we need foreign workers because Americans are stupid or lazy. Furthermore, the availability of less expensive foreign tech workers does reduce the incentive of tech firms to train a home-grown work force and undermines the political incentive to improve our education system.

I’d still argue that something like H-1B makes America richer and stronger, especially given the spillovers generated by a successful technology sector. But Muskaswamy and friends aren’t helping their case by insulting Americans’ culture and intelligence.

So where is Trump coming down on all this? It has always been clear that he shares the tech bros’ contempt for ordinary Americans, but is he willing to openly sell out his MAGA base? Why, yes:

Trump is, of course, lying — the workers on his properties are mainly on a different kind of visa, and he’s rewriting his own history of hostility to H-1B. But the main point is that after Elon Musk told Trump loyalists to fuck themselves in the face, Trump sided with … Musk.

Up next: China. Wanna bet whose interests will be served?

Dear Laura Loomer, Steve Bannon et al: You weren’t in on the con. You were among the marks.

MUSICAL CODA

Obviously:

But I’m ashamed to admit that, great as it is, this song also makes me think of this:

I feel BAD

In 2025, Your Boss Will Launch a Podcast

Important events in the digital culture rarely get announced in press releases anymore. In the current state of play, most companies do NOT want you to know what they’re doing.

I call it stealth culture.

I wrote about this new climate of deception a few days ago with regard to Spotify. But this is now happening everywhere—especially in emerging media and alt platforms.

So I search for hidden clues—trying to put the pieces together. Every so often, I share my findings and observations with you in these “arts and culture briefing papers.”

These updates are usually for premium subscribers, but today’s installment is free for everybody.

Let’s start with disturbing signs that indie culture is getting infiltrated by corporate grifters.


If you want to support my work, consider taking out a premium subscription—for just $6 per month (even less if you sign up for a year).

Subscribe now


Every company now wants its own podcast.

Do you remember the golden age of infomercials? People watched advertisements for a full half hour (or more) because they were so entertaining.

I shamefully admit to doing this myself. Along the way, I bought a ShamWow cleaning cloth, a Juiceman juicer, and BluBlocking sunglasses.

But now corporations are using podcasts in the same way—as a kind of infomercial for alt culture audiences.

According to David Pierce of The Verge:

There’s something strange happening these days in the podcast world….companies that deal in money have been using podcasts not just as an entertainment medium but also as a weird hybrid of marketing, thought leadership, and networking….

It’s becoming a strangely central part of business in more ways than you might think. It’s kind of a weird, complicated web that goes both ways, and it’s not getting any less weird or less complicated once you add stuff like crypto and politics to the mix.

The most striking example is in the world of venture capital, where top firms are now using podcasts to connect with entrepreneurs and boast about their expertise.

Pierce calls this trend, the nefarious business-to-business podcast.

Of course, the trend goes both ways. Many alt media influencers are now turning into financiers themselves. One podcaster recently decided to launch his own venture capital fund—and raised $400 million.

This trend will spread faster than a fire in a toothpick factory. Every marketeer in the world spent 2024 trying to get on Joe Rogan. In 2025, they will try to become Joe Rogan themselves.

So get ready for your boss to launch a podcast (or a Substack).

I think I’ll stick with the ShamWow. At least it cleans up messes.

And on a related note…


Your next podcast might be a meeting in disguise.

There’s a new way of soliciting business—and it just requires a microphone and a Zoom connection

According to Bloomberg:

Over the past couple years, some enterprising entrepreneurs have turned to podcasts as a way to introduce themselves to an otherwise impossible-to-reach client. A cold call, email or direct message on LinkedIn likely would go unanswered. But when asked to be on a podcast, suddenly, people are intrigued.

This scam won’t go away—for the simple reason that it works. When you tap into corporate ego and vanity, you find that they are inexhaustible resources.

But this is just one of many ways businesses are manipulating indie culture….


Media outlets tried to kill Substack—now they want to imitate it.

I was taken aback when I saw the latest media initiative from The Verge.

It looks like Substack. It smells like Substack. It quacks like Substack.

Quack! Quack!

Hey bros, why don’t you just join Substack? You save on overhead, and get to tap into the community here.

And it’s not just The Verge.

On the other extreme, ChatGPT is considering a $2,000-per-month subscription fee. I don’t think that duck is gonna fly, but people who spend their days talking to chatbots tend to lose touch with reality.


Influencers will now sell you moldy meals.

The idea seems so simple—why don’t influencers launch their own products? If they are really so immensely popular, they should shill for themselves, not corporate bosses.

But trust me, you don’t want your meals prepared by an influencer. They may be great at clicks—at bites, not so much.

MrBeast has tried to do just that. First he launched the MrBeast Burger—which resulted in a $100 million lawsuit. Then he took on Hershey in the chocolate wars, with mixed reviews.

And now he joins forces with Logan Paul to displace Lunchables, the popular school lunch meal kits.

But let the luncher beware. “Early reviews of the product are flooding in,” according to MSN, “and some customers said they found mold in their Lunchly packs.”

Kids are not digging the new penicillin flavor.

It doesn’t help that MrBeast has recently been accused of crypto fraud and putting people in danger with unsafe filming conditions for his new Amazon show.

Not long ago, MrBeast acted like a rule-breaking outsider ready to topple the system. But with each passing month, he looks more like those familiar money-grubbing insiders who will do anything for a buck.

This is the inevitable result of boom times in alt media, where new voices could be part of a cultural renaissance but just as often will fall flat faster than you can say hawk tuah.


The new music counterculture is rejecting algorithms, and celebrating human creativity.

“A new music counterculture is emerging, rejecting algorithms and perfection for raw, authentic creativity,” according to Hyperbot.

Mark Mulligan, of the Music Industry Blog, reports that DJs are at the center of the revolt.

He explains:

We are seeing a blossoming of scenes, both on and offline. While the former are shaped by platforms’ algorithms, the latter are inherently more human in nature and form part of a growing analogue revival…

In 2023, DJ equipment was the only major music hardware category to see strong growth (most other categories declined). Meanwhile YouTube is abuzz with DJ sets from a new crop of young, often female, DJs. DJs are an alternative to the algorithm: pure, human curation.

This is an inevitable response. It starts at the grass roots, but expect to see it spread elsewhere in the music business.


James Bond faces a crisis he can’t solve—as the family controlling 007 battles with Amazon.

When Amazon acquired MGM, it got rights to the lucrative James Bond films. But it can’t release new installments without the support of spy movie heir Barbara Broccoli.

Until she gives her okay to the story, no movie can be made.

And she despises Amazon.

Amazon truck
Is it equipped with an ejector seat?

“These people are f— idiots,” she told a friend, according to the Wall Street Journal. She distrusts the algorithm-driven business model of the huge digital retailer (who is now in bed with MrBeast, see above).

According to WSJ reporters Erich Schwartzel and Jessica Toonkel:

Broccoli has complained that Amazon isn’t a good home for Bond, since the company’s core business is selling everything from toilet paper to vacuums—a perspective Amazon executives find unfair. But since she makes the creative calls that come first—script, casting, story—Broccoli can hold Bond hostage from Amazon for as long as she sees fit.

I don’t blame her. I’ve already seen what Amazon did after acquiring my beloved Whole Foods—you can read the declining employee morale in their facial expressions at the checkout counter.

I’d hate to see the same thing happen to 007.

Screenshot of tweet
Meanwhile at Amazon-owned Whole Foods (Source)

The Barnes & Noble turnaround is really happening—and everybody in the culture business should learn from it.

More than a year ago, I celebrated the arrival of a new boss at Barnes & Noble who actually loves books.

This led him to do all sorts of brave things. He stopped promoting new titles based on kickbacks from publishers, and instead showcased books that people might actually enjoy reading.

This was an example of stealth culture mentioned above. Shoppers had no idea that the promoted books at the front of the store were chosen on the basis of financial incentives, not quality. And new boss Jamie Daunt shook the entire publishing business by turning down the cash.

He also empowered employees in the store, giving them freedom to feature books that they loved. He told his local booksellers to remove every title from every shelf, and “weed out the rubbish.” He wanted the staff to be excited about the books they sold.

I now have a happy update to my previous report.

Barnes & Noble has more than 60 new locations opening this year, and store foot traffic is improving steadily.

In an especially inspiring move, the company recently reopened a huge retail space in DC it had abandoned in 2013. After more than a decade, it returned to the same location and opened a flagship store.

When he took over, Daunt saw that the stores were “crucifyingly boring.” But now the excitement is back. Some visitors even compare Barnes & Noble nowadays to a theme park for books.

According to CNN:

Kendra Keeter-Gray, a BookTok content creator with over 100,000 followers, told CNN that she and her friends could spend anywhere between 30 minutes to a few hours inside a Barnes & Noble, usually in the BookTok section where they trade recommendations and flip through currently trending novels.

“When you go to Barnes, it’s like an excursion almost. I would equate it to when I was little and my parents would take me to Six Flags,” she said.

Meanwhile here’s a completely different strategy for the book business…


In Japan, writers can rent out their own shelf at a local bookstore.

The new trend in Japanese bookstores is to sublease the shelves to outsiders. The result is the exact opposite of algorithm-chosen books. Every shelf is filled with surprises.

According to the South China Morning Post:

“Here, you find books which make you wonder who on earth would buy them,” laughs Shogo Imamura, 40, who opened one such store in Tokyo’s bookstore district of Kanda Jimbocho in April.

“Regular bookstores sell books that are popular based on sales statistics while excluding books that don’t sell well,” says Imamura….“We ignore such principles.”


A new conspiracy theory claims ancient literature is fake.

Is it possible that Aristotle never existed, and his surviving books are just fakes? I’ve never met anyone who believed that….until now.

Image of Aristotle
Aristotle—did he really exist?

According to the South China Morning Post:

Chinese academics studying the Western classics are battling an increasingly popular conspiracy theory that Greek and Roman literature, philosophy and even famous monuments are hoaxes.

It’s worth noting the larger context. Western culture is often taken more seriously in Chinese universities than it is in the US. And these books tend to support an open society and free debate.

So—as strange as it sounds—you should expect more hit pieces on Aristotle and his ancient colleagues. His enemies think he’s too dangerous, and they just might be right.


Are chatbots destroying your home appliances?

What happens when AI companies set up huge energy-sucking data centers near your home?

Guess what—they disrupt your own energy sources. And with unpleasant consequences.

According to Bloomberg:

AI data centers are multiplying across the US and sucking up huge amounts of power. New evidence shows they may also be distorting the normal flow of electricity for millions of Americans….

The problem is threatening billions in damage to home appliances and aging power equipment, especially in areas like Chicago and "data center alley" in Northern Virginia, where distorted power readings are above recommended levels.

If you live within 20 miles of a data center, there’s a fifty percent chance that you’re impacted by its power use.


Chess champion Magnus Carlsen is ejected from a NY tournament for wearing jeans.

Can this be real? Are chess players really more uptight than country clubs and fancy restaurants?

Yes they are. According to The Guardian:

Magnus Carlsen, the world No 1, has been disqualified from the World Rapid Championship in New York due to a dress code violation, refusing to change from jeans….

Carlsen responded with indifference—but did take a pot shot at New York:

“Honestly I’m too old at this point to care too much. If this is what they want to do I’ll probably set off to somewhere where the weather is a bit nicer.”

By the way, we have no dress code at The Honest Broker, and Mr. Carlsen is welcome here any time.

w/e 2024-12-29

We’ve been in Essex this week for Christmas and right now I’m trying to type this while also keeping a very needy cat happy.

Christmas was nice, considering, and I successfully wrangled a good Christmas dinner in the little kitchen. With my sister also visiting there were four of us there, filling the chairs round the dining table, so it didn’t feel too much like someone was missing, despite being surrounded by Dad’s books, files, papers, books, stationery, souvenirs, bags, books, cards, notebooks, etc. etc. It’ll never be the same but we had a good time.


§ I forgot to mention last week that we finished watching Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light which was, of course, excellent. It’s a shame that slow, thoughtful drama is such a rarity but there we go. So much happened and so little.


§ That’s about it. See you in a couple of days for 2024notes I guess.


Read comments or post one

China’s firms are taking flight, worrying its rulers

Policymakers at home and abroad are anxious about offshoring

Question #6 for 2025: What will the Fed Funds rate be in December 2025?

Earlier I posted some questions on my blog for next year: Ten Economic Questions for 2025. Some of these questions concern real estate (inventory, house prices, housing starts, new home sales), and I posted thoughts on those in the newsletter (others like GDP and employment will be on this blog).

I'm adding some thoughts and predictions for each question.

Here is a review of the Ten Economic Questions for 2024.

6) Monetary Policy: The FOMC cut the federal funds rate four times in 2024 from "5-1/4 to 5-1/2 percent" at the beginning of 2024, to "4-1/4 to 4-1/2" at the end of the year. Most FOMC participants expect around two 25 bp rate cuts in 2025. What will the Fed Funds rate be in December 2025?

As of December, looking at the "dot plot", the FOMC participants see the following number of rate cuts in 2025:

25 bp Rate Cuts FOMC
Members
2025
No Change1
One Rate Cut3
Two Rate Cuts10
Three Rate Cuts3
Four Rate Cuts1
More than Four1

The main view of the FOMC is for two rate cuts in 2025.

Goldman Sachs economists still think there will be 3 rate cuts in 2025:
"The bond market took the meeting as hawkish and is now pricing just 32bp of cuts in 2025, down from 50bp yesterday, and broader financial conditions tightened substantially. We left our more dovish forecast of three more cuts in March, June, and September 2025 unchanged, though we acknowledge that better inflation news or worse employment news will be needed for a March cut."
A key question: Is current policy restrictive (as Fed Chair Powell has said)?  With core PCE inflation at 2.8% year-over-year in November and the "neutral rate" at 2%+ would suggest a Fed Funds Rate at around 4.75% to 5.0% (Of course, estimates of the neutral rate vary widely).  

Currently the target Fed Funds rate range is '4-1/4 to 4-1/2' percent.  And the FOMC projections show core PCE inflation only declining to 2.5% to 2.7% by the end of 2025 (Q4-over-Q4).

However, the FOMC believes inflation will come down, partially because of an expected decline in housing inflation.   Asking rents have been flat for almost two years, and measures of rent (housing / shelter) are slowly declining.

If we look at recent readings over the last 6 months annualized (through November):
PCE Price Index: 2.1% 
Core PCE Prices: 2.5%
Core minus Housing: 2.3%

Also, in Q1 2024, PCE inflation was very high.  There might be some residual seasonality in Q1, however, it seems likely inflation will be lower in Q1 2025, lowering the YoY measures.

The next FOMC meeting ends on January 29th, and the FOMC will likely hold rates steady at that meeting.   The FOMC might cut rates in March if inflation readings for January are favorable.

With inflation still above target over the last 6 months, my guess is there will be 1 or 2 rate cuts in 2025.

I also expect the FOMC to slow balance sheet runoff in 2025. 

FOMC policy will depend on what happens with inflation and employment in 2025.  

Here are the Ten Economic Questions for 2025 and a few predictions:

Question #6 for 2025: What will the Fed Funds rate be in December 2025?

Question #7 for 2025: How much will wages increase in 2025?

Question #8 for 2025: How much will Residential investment change in 2025? How about housing starts and new home sales in 2025?

Question #9 for 2025: What will happen with house prices in 2025?

Question #10 for 2025: Will inventory increase further in 2025?

"Rhino horns are a renewable resource." Would a legal market help save endangered rhinoceroses?

 Right now it is illegal to buy or cell rhino horn, to protect endangered rhinoceroses from poachers who kill them.  But could a legal, tightly regulated market work better? It's controversial...

From Science:

Protect white rhinos by legalizing horn trade  by Martin Wikelsk  Science
10 Oct 2024, Vol 386, Issue 6718, p. 157, DOI: 10.1126/science.adq5925

 "Rhino horn is a renewable resource that grows like fingernails. To protect white rhino populations effectively, the international trade of rhino horn should be legalized and carefully monitored, including the tracking of each sample sold. Legal trade—the preferred option of horn consumers (3)—will derail international trafficking syndicates and enable essential private rhino guardianship. Legalized trade provides the best chance for the future of white rhino populations ."

 

 

And here's a companion story from the Guardian:

‘We have to change our attitude’: wildlife expert says rhino horn trade must be legalised
Call for illicit market to be taken out of hands of criminals as numbers continue to fall drastically due to poaching 
by Robin McKie 

"International trade in rhino horns should be legalised, a leading wildlife expert has urged.

...

“A few years ago, I was very much against this idea but now looking at the grim situation we are in I believe we have to change our attitude to the issue of trade in rhino horn,” said Wikelski, of the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour in Germany.

“International crime syndicates have overcome every countermeasure that conservationists have mounted to defend rhinos from poachers. The result has been a drastic drop in numbers of animals. By legalising trade in rhino horn we can take back control of the market and halt the loss.” 

"Wikelski’s idea would be to remove the horn and allow a new one to grow while selling the horn to make money. This could be used to fund protection for the rhino. At present, removed horn is stored in secure vaults.

"However, the proposal to use stocks to create a legitimate trade in rhino horn has triggered worried responses from many conservationists, who reject the idea that such a scheme would save the rhino from the attention of poachers. 

...

“In addition, a legal rhino horn market could increase demand, provide opportunities for money laundering, and complicate law enforcement’s ability to distinguish legal sources from illegal sources,” Rascha Nuijten, director of Future For Nature Foundation, wrote in a response to Wikelski’s arguments that was also published in Science."

A December Winter Night

A December Winter Night A December Winter Night


SpaceX launches 4 Astranis satellites on Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral

A Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) to begin the Astranis: From One to Many mission on Sunday, Dec. 29, 2024. Image: Pete Carstens/MaxQ Productions for Spaceflight Now

Update 12:45 p.m. (0545 UTC): SpaceX deployed the four satellites.

Following a rare pad abort on Dec. 21, SpaceX launched four satellites to a geosynchronous transfer orbit from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station at midnight on Sunday morning. Prior to the mission moving forward, the company had to swap the first stage booster for another.

Liftoff of the Falcon 9 rocket from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) happened at 12 a.m. EST (0500 UTC) on Sunday, Dec. 29.

Coming into the launch attempt, the 45th Weather Squadron forecast an 85 percent chance of favorable weather at liftoff. The only concern of note was the presence of cumulus clouds.

“Surface high pressure will continue to push off the Northeast coast today. Although isolated showers are possible near the Spaceport today, conditions should improve overnight during the primary launch window,” launch weather officers wrote. “A cold front will approach from the northwest on Sunday, helping to increase moisture across the region.

“While the main line of showers and thunderstorms is expected to clear the area before the backup launch window opens, scattered showers are expected just ahead of the front which could affect the backup launch window.”

Following the scrubbed launch, SpaceX switched Falcon 9 first stage booster B1077 for B1083. The latter launched for a seventh time after previously supporting Crew-8 for NASA; the commercial astronaut mission, Polaris Dawn; the CRS-31 flight to the International Space Station and three Starlink missions.

SpaceX did not publish any additional information regarding the reason for the scrubbed first launch attempt nor information about the necessity to swap the boosters.

Nearly 8.5 minutes after liftoff, B1083 landed on the SpaceX droneship, ‘A Shortfall of Gravitas.’ This marked the 91st booster landing on ASOG and the 389th booster landing to date.

The mission patch for the Astranis: From One to Many mission. Graphic: SpaceX

Small package, big mission

The four satellites onboard the FOTM mission are called MicroGEO satellites since they are each roughly the size of a washing machine. They were built in Astranis’ Pier 70 facilities in San Francisco, CA, and are designed to operate for about eight to ten years.

Two of the satellites, named NuView Alpha and NuView Bravo, are designed to serve aviation and marine customers of Anuvu. The agreement between the two companies was announced back in July 2021 and will service the area in North America and the Caribbean.

Four MicroGEO satellites from Astranis are integrated on a Falcon 9 payload adaptor prior to being incapsulate inside the payload fairings. Image: SpaceX

“We aim to expand our connectivity network in a way that is scalable and agile for our mobility customers” said Josh Marks, CEO of Anuvu in a 2021 press release. “Astranis and its MicroGEO satellites will offer Anuvu customers freedom from decades-long contracts or outdated legacy systems. Most significantly, they are quick to market, have a mission life of seven to ten years, and can be controlled and updated from the ground, enabling our mobility clients to pivot their business model as new technology is introduced.”

Anuvu ordered the two satellites launching on Friday (originally planned to launch in “early 2023”) in addition to six more that will be added in the future.

Also onboard the FOTM launch is one called ‘AGILA,’ which is the name of national bird of the Philippines. This is the second satellite providing service to that country through a partnership with Orbits Corp.

The first of these two satellites launched, initially planned for launch in the first quarter of 2024, will be followed by a second at a later date.

“Expanding our Philippines program to include an additional Astranis MicroGEO satellite means that Orbits Corp will be able to double the number of people that it connects in the most remote islands of the Philippines,” wrote John Gedmark, Astranis Founder and CEO in a November 2023 blog post. “Millions of people, many of whom live on less than $5,000 per year, will be able to connect to the internet as a direct result. 

“Orbits Corp estimates that this two-satellite program will bring up to 10,000 direct and indirect jobs to the Philippines, accelerating economic growth and jumpstarting economic development in many of the smallest and most remote communities in the fast-growing nation.”

GEO mobility

The final satellite launching onboard the FOTM mission is called ‘UtilitySat,’ which will initially be used in service of Astranis customer, ISP Apco Networks in Mexico.

This is the first of two MicroGEO satellites sold to the company, which has the ability to “connect up to five million people,” Gedmark said in a 2023 blog post.

The four MicroGEO satellites shown in an Astranis cleanroom prior to shipping to Cape Canaveral for the ‘Astranis: From One to Many’ mission launch. Image: Astranis

“A number of our employees at Astranis come from Mexico, some from small communities where connectivity is very poor, or non-existent,” he said. “As they told us, and as we found from further research, the need for better connectivity in Mexico is self-evident — more than 30 percent of the country does not have internet access today, and satellite is often the only way to connect the remote and rural communities scattered across the rough, mountainous terrain of Mexico’s 32 states.

“And the nation itself is focused on improving satellite internet availability. Connectivity is a constitutional right in Mexico, and the President has made connectivity a national priority.”

UtilitySat is unique from the other three satellites on this mission because it is designed to adjust its orbital position and support a different mission than its original one at launch.

“UtilitySat is the world’s first multi-mission commercial GEO satellite, capable of conducting fully operational broadband connectivity missions in Ka, Ku, and Q/V bands,” Astranis wrote on its website. “A fully maneuverable satellite with onboard propulsion, UtilitySat will perform multiple such missions throughout its life on orbit — relocating or repointing each year, month, or day to serve urgent customer needs.”

The company said it plans to launch “a fleet of UtilitySat satellites in the coming years.”

Is this what will become of our Sun? Quite possibly. Is this what will become of our Sun? Quite possibly.


Blue Origin test fires New Glenn first stage ahead of inaugural launch

New Glenn static fire

Blue Origin says it is ready for the first New Glenn launch after completing a static-fire test Dec. 27, hours after receiving a launch license.

The post Blue Origin test fires New Glenn first stage ahead of inaugural launch appeared first on SpaceNews.

After a 24-second test of its engines, the New Glenn rocket is ready to fly

After a long day of stops and starts that stretched well into the evening, and on what appeared to be the company's fifth attempt Friday, Blue Origin successfully ignited the seven main engines on its massive New Glenn rocket.

The test firing came as fog built over the Florida coast, and it marks the final major step in the rocket company's campaign to bring the New Glenn rocket—a privately developed, super-heavy lift vehicle—to launch readiness. Blue Origin said it fired the vehicle's engines for a duration of 24 seconds. They fired at full thrust for 13 of those seconds.

"This is a monumental milestone and a glimpse of what’s just around the corner for New Glenn’s first launch," said Jarrett Jones,  senior vice president of the New Glenn program, in a news release. "Today’s success proves that our rigorous approach to testing—combined with our incredible tooling and design engineering–is working as intended."

Read full article

Comments

Links 12/28/24

Links for you. Science:

The last resort antibiotic daptomycin exhibits two independent antibacterial mechanisms of action
Three more possible cases of bird flu in LA County cats; 4 cases confirmed
Post-COVID Condition Risk Factors and Symptom Clusters and Associations with Return to Pre-COVID Health—Results from a 2021 Multi-State Survey
Key warning signs about bird flu are all going in the wrong direction
Improving a Fundamental Method for Comparative Genomics: Introducing OrthoHMM
Uropathogenic Escherichia coli causes significant urothelial damage in an ex vivo porcine bladder model, with no protective effect observed from cranberry or d-mannose

Other:

Are We Being Punished For A Feminist Utopia That Never Even Happened? And how long will this ‘masculinity crisis’ last?
I survived polio and fear children will be in danger if Senate confirms RFK Jr.
Anti-vaccine group with ties to RFK Jr. saw another windfall last year, records show
When will the leaders of the white community acknowledge its pathologies?
Democratic Capitulation Is Contagious. Who’s going to stand up to Trump if his actual opponents have embraced “strategic silence” regarding all of his spiraling abuses?
Denmark boosts Greenland defence after Trump repeats desire for US control
25 MPH May Be Too Fast For City Centers: Higher front-end heights make the median pickup truck dramatically more lethal in pedestrian collisions compared to the median car
A Constitutional Convention? Some Democrats Fear It’s Coming.
Return to Office Mandates and Brain Drain
ABC News Just Showed Trump Exactly How to Silence Journalists. A multimillion-dollar settlement proves corporate media will choose profits over press freedom every time.
Assad is gone, but a revolution that doesn’t free women is no revolution at all. The women celebrating the destruction of jails and dungeons will now be wondering why their own oppression cannot also be dismantled
The FAA Head’s Resignation is Another Massive Gift to Elon Musk
A low, low point for ABC News
Trump Will Likely Kill a Federal Reporting Rule That Revealed the Staggering Number of Tesla Crashes
Weakness Is a Provocation/ ABC News, billionaires, media orgs, and CEOs are surrendering to Trump because they think he’s a lame duck. They’re making a terrible mistake.
Democracy Democrats’ Policies Help Americans. The Right Wing Echo-Chamber Drowned Them Out
On Christmas Eve, 1988, a group of German criminals took hostages at an L.A. office party. The making of story behind DIE HARD is bigger than the Nakatomi…
Trump’s Budget Director Pick Would Restructure Government to Aggressively Push a Christian Nationalist Agenda. Russell Vought believes revolutionary statism, not conservatism, should define the right today
We suspected data centers were creating an energy crisis for Virginia. Now it’s official.
Who is Lindy Li? (a helluva grifter)
Indiana bakery still using Commodore 64s originally released in 1982 as cash registers — Hilligoss Bakery in Brownsburg sticks to the BASICs
He’s anti-democracy and pro-Trump: the obscure ‘dark enlightenment’ blogger influencing the next US administration
Why “Die Hard” Is the 2024 Christmas Movie
Merry Slopmas! AI-generated Christmas classics that dwell in the uncanny valley are giving listeners the creeps.
Taking on Tulsi: Conspiracy theories are blinding Democrats to the real danger posed by Donald Trump’s pick for director of national intelligence
2024 might be the year American democracy ended and fascism began

SpaceX launches final 2024 mission from Vandenberg

File: A Falcon 9 rocket stands ready to launch a Starlink mission. Image: SpaceX

Update 10:04 p.m. EST (0304 UTC): SpaceX confirmed deployment of the 22 Starlink satellites.

SpaceX completed its first of three planned Falcon 9 launches before the end of year. The trio began with a Starlink mission from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.

The Starlink 11-3 mission added another 22 V2 Mini satellites to the megaconstellation in low Earth orbit. Liftoff from Space Launch Complex 4 East (SLC-4E) happened at 5:58:30 p.m. PST (8:58:30 p.m. EST, 0158:30 UTC).

The Falcon 9 first stage booster supporting this mission, tail number B1075 in the SpaceX fleet, launched for a 16th time. It previously supported the launches of Transporter-11, SARah-2 and 12 Starlink missions.

A little more than eight minutes after liftoff, B1075 touched down on the droneship, ‘Of Course I Still Love You,’ which was positioned in the Pacific Ocean. This marked the 115th booster landing on OCISLY and the 388th booster landing to date.

SpaceX has one more Starlink mission scheduled before closing out 2024. The Starlink 12-6 is positioned to launch from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida at midnight to begin Dec. 30, barring weather or technical delays.

In between these Starlink flights, SpaceX will make another attempt at launching the ‘Astranis: From One to Many’ from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. The company had a pad abort during the Dec. 21 launch attempt, which prevented the launch.

Without any fanfare, or explanation on the root cause of the issue, SpaceX decided to switch the booster being used on the Astranis flight. It swapped out B1077 and brought up B1083 in its place.

Assuming all three launches can take place before New Year’s Day, SpaceX will close out 2024 with a total of 134 orbital launches using its Falcon family of rockets, which is 10 shy of the company’s goal set at the beginning of the year. Two of that total were Falcon Heavy flights with the rest being Falcon 9 launches.

In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Kiko Dontchev, SpaceX’s Vice President of Launch, noted that achieving these three will also mark “a record quarter for both Falcon and SpaceX.” The company is on track to complete 41 orbital launches this quarter.

Manmohan Singh was India’s economic freedom fighter

India’s most consequential finance minister, who later rose to PM, has died aged 92

Real Estate Newsletter Articles this Week: New Home Sales Increase to 664,000 Annual Rate in November

At the Calculated Risk Real Estate Newsletter this week:

New Home SalesClick on graph for larger image.

New Home Sales Increase to 664,000 Annual Rate in November

FHFA’s National Mortgage Database: Outstanding Mortgage Rates, LTV and Credit Scores

Lawler: New Census Population Estimates Show Massively Higher Population Growth

Question #8 for 2025: How much will Residential investment change in 2025? How about housing starts and new home sales in 2025?

Question #9 for 2025: What will happen with house prices in 2025?

Question #10 for 2025: Will inventory increase further in 2025?

This is usually published 4 to 6 times a week and provides more in-depth analysis of the housing market.

Baja Revisited

I first came to San José del Cabo (“San Jose”) 36 years ago in my newly-acquired Toyota Tacoma 4X4 truck. It was a sleepy yet refined little town, dating back to 1730 when the Jesuits founded a mission there. It had a certain elegance —the buildings, the people, its history.

In Baja California Sur, “Los Cabos” is a term meaning ”The Capes,” and referring to the region consisting of Cabo San Lucas (“Cabo“) to the west, and San José, about 20 miles to the east — where the pavement ended until recently. At that time, Cabo was starting to transform from a fishing village to a party town. (In 1990, musician Sammy Hagar opened the cantina “Cabo Wabo,” with his own brand of tequila, and Cabo was on its way to becoming a get-drunk-and-dance-on-the-bar destination.)

Chilón el Chilango

I had come down to visit my friend and neighbor from Bolinas, Alan Maxey, who had built a palapa on land 12 miles east of San José on a dirt road.

After stopping off at Alan’s, I went on into San José and met a young guy who’d recently relocated from Mexico City, and had a small shop. His name was Chilón, and we seemed to have a lot in common, especially about exploring the area: beaches, the desert, canyons, cave paintings, fossils, remote ranchos. (He was the age of my son Peter.)

We cooked up an idea to have a bookstore/espresso café, since there was no coffee shop anywhere within hundreds of miles then. (We never did get it going.)

Over the years, in my many trips down there, we’ve had numerous adventures, and he’s became one of my closest friends. We’re family; his sons are like my nephews.

Note: I have been informed by Substack gatekeepers that this post is too long for an email. To get the full post, click on the title in the email and you’ll see this on your browser (where it looks a lot better anyway).

In fact, I have a book on Baja on my bucket list, provisionally titled Deep in the Heart of Baja, covering my 12 years of Baja exploration — a period in Baja (mostly the ‘90s) way different from today’s tourist-choked reality — and me hanging out with my three very different Mexican friends.


Chilón is extraordinary, and I’ve been able to view Baja, and Mexico, through the eyes of a true Mexican. For 12 years, he had a radio show for kids, calling himself Perequín (the parrot), and it was immensely popular.

He would speak in a funny voice, telling the kids to obey their parents, do their homework, “…and now for the latest song from the Rolling Stones…”

Kids on remote ranchos loved the show (Sundays from noon to 2 PM). Now, 20 years later, the kids have grown up and they invariably recognize him on the streets.

In Praise of Laughter

He’s locally popular and tells jokes amd makes people laugh wherever he goes. Hanging with him is like moving around in a bubble of laughter and good cheer. Which is doubly good for me, because I’m not that confident with strangers.

Different Mode of Travel

As opposed to a 4-week trip I took in my truck this March, I flew down this time, rented a car, and spent a week in a small hotel in San José.

I went swimming every day, hung out with Chilón and wasn’t exhausted by driving 1500 miles (from San Francisco) on dangerous roads. I think this is my new M.O. for Baja,

“It is impossible to account for the charm of this country or its fascination. but for those who are familiar with the land of Baja California are either afraid of it or they love it, and if they love it, they are brought back by an irresistible fascination time and time again.”

-Earl Stanley Gardner

Local Fiesta

Serendipity was at work: two days after I arrived was La Fiesta de Dia de la Virgen de Guadalupe in the small nearby town of Miraflores. Many people (pilgrims) walk the 20 or so miles from San José, arriving at Miraflores late at night or in pre-dawn hours.

Pilgrims bring their paintings or statues of the virgin to be blessed in the church — and then party.

“The Virgin of Guadalupe is considered the patron saint of Mexico. Also known as the brown-skinned virgin, she is depicted with brown skin, an angel and moon at her feet and rays of sunlight that encircle her. The Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe has become the recognized symbol of Catholic Mexicans. Today, her image is found everywhere throughout Mexico, gracing churches, homes, restaurants, and even vehicles.”

-Medium

Miraflores residents have created their own lit-up tributes, which we passed on our way (along with the walking pilgrims), into the town center.


Above: pilgrims streaming into town, after walking for hours (or all night)

We got there late at night and the fiesta was in full swing. There were maybe 1,000 people there and as far as I could tell, I was the only gringo. Yeah!

A dynamic 12-piece Norteño band (with a tuba — yahoo!) from San José was playing and people were dancing (“…characterized by a bouncing step and continuous turning of partners in a slotted embrace.” -Dance Life DanceMap

It was a powerful scene, maybe one of the best musical events I’ve ever witnessed. These were all local people — Choyeros and Choyeras — rancheros, cowboys and their sweethearts — people born and raised in the Los Cabos area. The dancers were amazingly together, moving in sync, as if glued together. I’ve never seen anything like it. I was in heaven — feeling privileged to witness such authenticity.

Chilón the Trickster

My good friend Chilón, always looking for laughs, tricked me big time at the Fiesta. We were having tacos, and the waitress, who had been lightly flirting, came up and said something to me which I didn’t understand.

Mi amigo Chilón jumped in with a translation: “She’s asking if you want to dance,” he said.

She was standing there, big smile, so I thought, why not? We had a minute or two of fun (isn’t that one of the goals of life?), with Chilón filming and goading me on.

It was only afterwards he told me about the trick — she’d asked if I wanted anything more.

“You motherfucker!”

Later, I got a big laugh from his wife Carolina, saying:

“Con amigos con este, quién necesita enemigos?”

It was actually a lot of fun — something I wouldn’t have done on my own — but don’t tell Chilón that.

Talk to Locals

I realized something about travel in general. Wherever you go, unless you’re in the company of a native, you ‘re not likely to get to the heart of things.

La jefa de la ranchero

And this leads me to conclude that this is true anywhere. I can have an amazing time in Florence, or Hong Kong, or Costa Rica, but unless I can hook up with a local, I’m gonna get the tourist — even if a respectful and informed (internet) tourist — take on life in these places.

Come to think of it, the principle even applies to American cities I visit. The first time I went to Portland, I pulled up next to a cool-looking guy on a bike and asked where I could get some good coffee. “Stumptown Coffee Roasters,” he said, and, sure enough — cool place. Over a strong latte, I started talking to a skateboarder and learned about Mt. Tabor, a long fairly easy downhill run right in the heart of the city. And while skating there I met and made friends with a Portland skateboard maker…

So the idea is, wherever you go — talk to locals. Where can I get good coffee, a good hamburger, or taco, or go swimming, or hear music? If you start getting into the local thread of things, it’ll make a world of difference.

AND — speak the local language, no matter how imperfectly. I once met a beefy gringo in Mulegé who called himself Pancho and was driving a honker of a Cadillac (he said it had 500 hp). (I sussed out that he was on the run from American authorities).

He was hanging out with a local fisherman and had a little Spanish/English dictionary, and said “Stick to Spanish, even if you get the words or tenses wrong. Don’t be embarrassed. Blunder your way along. People will appreciate it. It’s a sign of respect.” I’ve done that ever since, even if they’re speaking English, and it creates good vibes.

Here are some photos from the trip:

The Glass Half Full

I’ve been saddened and distressed at the huge population growth in Los Cabos of late (doubled in 10 years in San José, tripled in Cabo from 2010-2020). But as with San Francisco, where I spent 10 years being pissed off at the changes, but then realized that SF is still one of the most beautiful and culturally vibrant cities in the world.

You've got to accentuate the positive
Eliminate the negative
Latch on to the affirmative
Don't mess with Mr. In-Between…

-Song by Bing Crosby and the Andrew Sisters (also covered by Dr. John and Van Morrison)

So in Los Cabos, when I quit focussing on the negativity of uncontrolled growth, I realized I still loved the subtle beauty of the tropical desert, the beaches, the sea, the arroyos —and the people.

It’s just necessary to thread one’s way to the Real Baja.

GIMME SHELTER Newsletter in the Works

I’m working on my next newsletter, which I send out on an irregular basis to about 6500 people. The last one was 4 months ago. (If you want to get on this mailing list, send email address to lloyd@shelterpub.com.)

It’s different from anything of mine on Instagram or Substack; it’s the state of affairs of my life and work at the time— and I’ve got a lot of plates in the air these days.

BTW, after the first of the year, I plan to get more regular with Substack posts.

And yeah,I’m gonna say it for the umpteenth time, “I would have composed a shorter post, but I didn’t have enough time.”

Ain’t it the truth?

Live From California with Lloyd Kahn is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Salton Sea statistics

I wanted to gain better insights into the Salton Sea level, evaporation, inflows and outflows.

Step one was to gather publicly available data about its level, and collate it into a single graph.

Here we see that despite the continual formation of Salton Sea advisory committees, the water level increased about 12′ after 1950, flooding many coastal resort towns, and then began a precipitous drop in about 2000.

[Edit: If you enjoy this kind of thing, you may find a career at my company, Terraform Industries, rewarding. We’re hiring smart ambitious people in Los Angeles to bridge the gap between solar energy and unlimited oil and gas – making fuel from sunlight and air.]

The lake, which formed in 1905-1907 from an irrigation systems failure, has been unable to support fish since about 2009.

Despite concerns about environmental sustainability since the 1970s, the trend has been only in one direction.

Of course, water level decreases leaving exposed playa and harmful windblown dust is only part of the story. Let’s talk about bathymetry! Here’s a map of the sea floor in one foot intervals.

With a bit of coding, we can convert this to a capacity vs depth graph, then translate the level to capacity over time.

We can see here that the lake has lost almost half its total volume since 2000, a total deficit of 3 million acre-feet. For reference, annual inflows are typically about 1.3 maf, matched (and then some) by evaporation. The deficit, leading to continuous level reduction, is about 170000 acre-feet per year, or 13%. This is less than the total flow of the Los Angeles Aqueduct, which also led to the disappearance of Owen’s Lake and reductions of the level of Mono Lake.

All this evaporation leads to salt concentration.

As of 2024, the Salton Sea salinity is about 60 g/L, which is almost twice that of the Pacific Ocean, at 35 g/L. For reference, fresh water is about 0.2 g/L, 100x less salty. All the salt in the Salton Sea, if extracted and dried, would form a conical pile about a mile across!

If we were to top up the Salton Sea through releases of fresh water from, eg, the nearby Coachella Canal, the restoration of its volume to 7.4 maf would dilute its existing salinity to that of the Pacific Ocean, allowing restocking with salt water fish, reduction of dust loss from the playa, and reduction of eutrophic conditions. The Coachella Canal, constructed in the 1930s and 1940s by the Six Companies (Henry Kaiser and co!), carries only 250,000 acre-feet per year, compared to the 1.25 maf of the Colorado River aqueduct and 3.1 maf of the All American Canal.

Ideally, water supply in the Imperial Valley can be augmented with a large-scale desalination program, providing both adequate inflows to the area as well as a mechanism for brines exploitation (they are incredibly rich in critical minerals) and disposal. At the end of the day, the Salton Sea drinks last after the cities and farms have their share, and its ongoing environmental catastrophe will only intensify barring drastic corrective action.

On the other hand, taking decisive action to bring 21st technology to bear on this problem will deliver wins to all involved!

  • Win for industry: Develop energy resources, fresh water, critical minerals from brine processing, and ancillary industries.
  • Win for local communities, who bear the burden of terrible respiratory disease from dust from the exposed lake bed and stench from rotting fish.
  • Win for land owners (including state and federal government) by transforming ~worthless land into prime real estate. There’s a trillion dollars on the table here.
  • Win for taxpayers – appreciation of federal land value can easily self-fund the project, with plenty left over.
  • Win for farmers, who no longer have to curtail irrigation.
  • Win for the federal government, who no longer has to pay to mediate endless zero-sum fights between states over water.
  • Win for the environment – the toxic lake can be remediated, birds and fish can exist there without instantly dying. 
  • Win for US-Mexico water relations – an option to source seawater through Mexico can bring water abundance and prosperity to both sides of the border. 
  • Win for the incoming federal administration – an ideal scale project to execute within four years.

Five possible reasons China's productivity slowed down

I’m traveling, so here’s a timely repost.

China’s economy is having major problems. Despite the country’s dominance of global manufacturing, its living standards are starting to stagnate at a level far below that of developed countries. China’s growth has slowed down dramatically, from around 6.5% before the pandemic to 4.6% now, and there are credible signs that even that number is seriously overstated.

Lingling Wei has a great article in the Wall Street Journal about China’s economic struggles. A few excerpts:

Some are calling it a “Lost Decade.”

More than 10 years into the Xi Jinping era, it has become clear that much of China’s growth under his watch was driven by unsustainable borrowing, real estate speculation and investments in factories and infrastructure the country didn’t really need. Difficult reforms that could have unlocked more durable growth, such as steps to increase consumer spending, were neglected in favor of policies designed to bolster Communist Party control.

Now, China is drowning in debt, reeling from a property bust that wiped out trillions of dollars of household wealth, and verging on a deflationary spiral. Growth has slowed, Western investment has collapsed and consumer confidence is near a record low.

The piece is very much worth reading in full, especially for its portrait of Xi Jinping’s strategy for responding to the slowdown — basically, doubling down on subsidies for investment in export manufacturing, rather than Keynesian remedies to boost aggregate demand.

As I wrote a week ago, this strategy might make China militarily stronger by forcibly deindustrializing China’s rivals, but it’s unlikely to solve the country’s macroeconomic problems — overcapacity will just worsen deflation, exacerbating the debt burden on China’s households, banks, and companies. Anyway, for more about China’s macroeconomic situation, I recommend this short overview by Krugman:

Krugman wonks out
Stagnation With Chinese Characteristics
This is a nerdier, wonkier post than usual. Also not about America. Consider yourself warned…
Read more

And I also recommend this longer deep dive by Alexander Campbell:

Campbell Ramble
A Depression with Chinese Characteristics
Almost a year ago, my former boss and mentor Ray Dalio put out an article called “China Needs to Engineer a Beautiful Deleveraging.” It was a follow up to the book he, Bob Elliot and the team over at Bridgewater put together called Principles for Navigating Big Debt Crises…
Read more

I think everyone here is broadly in agreement.

But in the background, China has another problem that’s weighing on its people’s prosperity, and also making it harder to respond to the macroeconomic crisis. This is the problem of chronically low productivity growth. I don’t quite believe the official numbers that say China’s total factor productivity has fallen over the past decade and a half, but it’s undeniable that it has growth much more slowly than in previous periods.

Why? Krugman points to a sectoral shift toward real estate — an industry with slow productivity growth — after the global financial crisis of 2008. I think that’s definitely a part of the story, but probably not all of it. Back in 2022, I wrote a post thinking through various possible reasons why China’s productivity growth declined long before it reached rich-world living standards:

So in light of China’s current struggles, which have only gotten worse in the intervening 2.5 years, I thought it might be helpful to repost it now. I think what I wrote holds up pretty well.


It’s always an interesting experience to read books about China’s economy from before 2018 or so. So many world-shaking events have changed the story since then — Trump’s trade war, Covid, Xi’s industrial crackdowns, the real estate bust, lockdowns, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Reading predictions of China’s evolution from before these events occurred is a little like reading sci-fi from 1962.

When I started China's Economy: What Everyone Needs to Know®, by the veteran economic consultant Arthur Kroeber, I was prepared for this surreal effect. After all, it was published in April 2016 — not the most opportune timing. So I was pleasantly surprised by how relevant the book still felt. Most of the book’s explanations of aspects of the Chinese economy — fiscal federalism, urbanization and real estate construction, corruption, Chinese firms’ position within the supply chain, etc. — are either still highly relevant, or provide important explanations of what Xi’s policies were reacting against. Dan Wang was not wrong to recommend that I read it.

But China’s Economy is still a book from 2016, and through it all runs a strain of stubborn optimism that seems a lot less justifiable six years later. Most crucially, while Kroeber acknowledged many of China’s economic challenges — an unsustainable pace of real estate construction, low efficiency of capital, an imbalance between investment and consumption, and so on — he argued that China would eventually overcome these challenges by shifting from an extensive growth model based on resource mobilization to one based on greater efficiency and productivity improvements. This was despite his acknowledgement of the fact that productivity growth had already slowed well before 2016, and that Xi’s policies so far didn’t seem up to the challenge of reviving it.

In many ways, productivity growth is the thread that ties together the entire story of the Chinese economy since 2008. Basic economic theory says that eventually the growth benefits of capital accumulation hit a wall, and you have to improve technology and/or efficiency to keep growth going. Some countries, like Japan, South Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan, have done this successfully, and are now rich; other, like Thailand, failed to do it and are now languishing at the middle income level. For several decades, Chinese productivity growth looked like Japan’s or Korea’s did. But slightly before Xi came to power, it downshifted to look a bit more like Thailand. Here’s a graph from the Lowy Institute’s recent report:

In fact, the Lowy Institute’s numbers are more optimistic than some other sources. The Penn World Tables has China’s total factor productivity growth at around 0 or negative since 2011:

And the Conference Board agrees.

Personally, I suspect these sources probably underestimate TFP growth (for all countries, not just for China). But even Lowy’s more reasonable numbers show a huge deceleration in the 2010s. If this productivity slump persists, it will be very difficult for China to grow itself out of its problems — such as its giant mountain of debt — in the next two decades.

The question then becomes: Why has Chinese productivity growth slowed to a crawl? There are several main candidate explanations, and they have important implications for whether Xi will turn things around.

The first reason, of course, is that China had several tailwinds that were helping them become more productive, and these are mostly gone now.

Reason 1: Hitting natural limits

One thing helping Chinese productivity growth was simply their distance from the technological frontier. When you don’t even know how to do fairly simply industrial processes, it’s pretty easy to learn these quickly. China imported basic foreign technology by insisting that foreign companies set up local joint ventures when they invest in China, by sending students overseas to learn in rich countries, by reverse-engineering developed-country products, by acquiring foreign companies, etc. Also by industrial espionage, of course, but there are lots of above-board ways to absorb foreign technology too.

The problem is, this has limits. As you reach the frontier, the remaining technologies you need to absorb to keep growing productivity quickly become more and more complicated — not the kind of thing you can easily learn from looking at blueprints or taking a class. Companies guard these higher-level secret-sauce technologies much more carefully. A case in point is that China has had trouble building its own fighter jets, because the metallurgy to build the specialized jet engines that make modern top-of-the-line fighters possible is only known to a few companies in a few countries. So over time, the ability to absorb foreign technology peters out and it becomes necessary to start inventing your own stuff.

A second tailwind was demographics. Everyone (including Kroeber) talks about China’s unusually large demographic dividend in terms of labor input — when you have a ton of young people with few elders or kids to take care of, they can go work a lot — but it’s also probably a factor in productivity. Maestas, Mullen & Powell (2016) shows a negative relationship between population age and productivity at the U.S. state level, while Ozimek, DeAntonio & Zandi (2018) find that the same is true at the firm level. The mechanism is unknown, but the pattern is pretty robust. In any case, China began to age rapidly rapidly right around 2010, when its working-age population peaked as a percentage of the total (and peaked in absolute terms shortly afterward):

A third tailwind for productivity was rapid urbanization. As Arthur Lewis famously noted, simply moving people from low-productivity agricultural work to high-productivity urban manufacturing work raises productivity a lot. Agglomeration economies are another force by which urbanization raises productivity. And economists find that China hit its “Lewis turning point” — i.e. ran out of surplus agricultural laborers to move to the cities — right around 2010. Of course, China also limited urbanization unnecessarily by using its hukou (household registration) system to keep migrant laborers from settling permanently in cities. But in any case, this tailwind also appears to be over.

So in the last decade, three big tailwinds that were driving Chinese productivity growth probably dried up. And there’s not really anything that Xi Jinping or any leader can do about that. But there are probably other factors dragging down China’s productivity growth as well, that might be more amenable to policy fixes.

Reason 2: Low research productivity

If you can no longer import foreign technology, one thing you can do is to invent your own. In fact, this is a good thing to do even if you do import foreign technology, since companies should create new products and new markets instead of just aping foreign stuff. And indeed, China has been spending a lot more on research and development in recent years. Here’s a chart from the blog Bruegel:

Source: Bruegel

Unfortunately, research input doesn’t always lead to research output. A 2018 study by Zhang, Zhang & Zhao finds that Chinese state-owned companies have much lower R&D productivity than Chinese private companies, which in turn have much lower productivity than foreign-owned companies. And a 2021 paper by König et al. finds that while R&D spending by Chinese companies does appear to raise TFP growth, the effect is quite modest:

The authors suggest misallocation of resources as a major culprit in low R&D productivity — in other words, a lot of this spending is being done by state-owned companies that are just throwing money at “research” because the government tells them to, but not really discovering much. They also note that some companies simply reclassify normal investment as “R&D” in order to take advantage of tax breaks (note that companies do this everywhere).

What about university research? This is an extremely important part of how the U.S. keeps its technological edge. And China has indeed been throwing huge amounts of money at university research, such that its expenditure now nearly rivals that of the U.S. China recently passed the U.S. in terms of published scientific papers, including highly cited papers.

But the quality of this research has been called into question. Investigations regularly find that despite all this publication activity and all this spending, Chinese universities are not the leaders in most fields of research. Basically, the story is that Chinese scientists are under tremendous pressure to publish a ton of crappy papers, which all cite each other, raising citation counts. In the words of Scientific American, this has led to “the proliferation of research malpractice, including plagiarism, nepotism, misrepresentation and falsification of records, bribery, conspiracy and collusion”.

So the low productivity of Chinese R&D may help explain why the country’s domestic innovation hasn’t risen to take the place of foreign technology absorption.

Reason 3: Limited export markets

As everyone who reads this blog knows, I’m a big fan of the development theories of Joe Studwell and Ha-Joon Chang. A pillar of the Chang-Studwell model is the idea of “export discipline”. Basically, when companies venture out into global markets, they encounter tougher competition and also ideas for new products, new customers, and new technologies. This raises their incentive (and their ability) to import more foreign technology, and in general makes them more productive and innovative.

After the global financial crisis of 2008 and the recession that followed, the U.S. wasn’t able to absorb an ever-expanding amount of imports from China. So Chinese exports to the U.S. market slowed in the 2010s, and then Trump’s trade war slowed them even more. China’s exports to the EU rose a bit, but not that much. Developed-country markets simply became saturated with Chinese goods, and there wasn’t much more room for expansion. Developing countries are buying somewhat more Chinese goods, but they simply don’t have the purchasing power of the rich countries. So China’s exports as a share of GDP has actually fallen quite a bit since the mid-2000s:

Many people (including Kroeber) talk about this as a shift from export-led growth to growth led by domestic investment. And so it is. But if productivity benefits from exporting, then this is also a challenge for long-term growth, because there’s less opportunity for export discipline to work its magic.

In fact, this might be one reason that it’s harder for big countries to grow relative to small countries. It’s a lot harder to be an export-led economy when you have 1.4 billion people than when you only have 50 million people (as South Korea does), because the world simply gets saturated with your exports. Which raises the question of why the U.S. manages to be so productive — more productive even than most European and rich East Asian economies. Consumption might have something to do with that.

Reason 4: Not enough consumption

The U.S. is a very large economy that is geographically distant from most other major economies. This explains why the U.S. has a very low amount of trade relative to GDP — just 23%, compared to 81% for Germany and 69% for South Korea. But the U.S. is also a highly productive economy, more productive than all but a few small rich nations. Exports certainly helped the U.S. grow, but to a large extent it simply sold stuff to itself.

As the chart above shows, China increasingly does the same. But unlike the U.S., China’s domestic economy is heavily weighted towards investment in capital goods — apartment buildings, highways, trains, and so on. China’s final consumption is only 54% of GDP, compared to over 80% in the U.S. And private household consumption accounts for only 39% of China’s GDP, compared with 67% in the U.S. Of course, China is still at an earlier stage of development, but as Kroeber notes in his book, even countries like Japan and South Korea had significantly higher consumption shares at equivalent stages of their own growth stories.

Usually this gets discussed in the context of “imbalances”. But what if it also affects productivity? Consumers have a preference for differentiated goods that spurs companies to develop new products, increase quality, offer new features, and so on. The strategy professor Michael Porter argues that when companies compete by differentiating their products instead of simply competing on costs, it results in higher value added — in other words, it makes them more productive.

Over the past decade, China has been building a lot of buildings and a lot of infrastructure. But it hasn’t been developing a lot of innovative and high-quality cutting-edge consumer products. Various government policies that funnel resources toward domestic investment rather than domestic consumption may inadvertently be holding back Chinese productivity.

And the biggest such policy might be macroeconomic stabilization.

Reason 5: Macroeconomic stabilization

It’s important to stabilize the economy. Recessions throw people out of work and create tons of suffering, and probably also lead to underinvestment by companies. They can damage the cohesion of entire societies. The U.S. rediscovered this lesson the hard way in 2008-11, when our insufficient fiscal stimulus resulted in a recession that was longer and more painful than it had to be.

But there may be such a thing as too much stabilization. As I explained in a post last September, China avoided going into recession both in 2008-11 and again in 2015-16 (after a big stock market crash) by pumping money into real estate, via lending by state-controlled banks, often to SOEs and to local governments.

This likely saved the Chinese economy from experiencing recessions in 2008-11 and 2015-16. But it had a big negative effect on productivity growth, for three reasons. First, SOEs simply aren’t very productive compared to other Chinese companies. Second, the money was shoveled out the door very quickly, meaning that there wasn’t much time or incentive to figure out which projects were worth investing in. And third, real estate and construction are sectors of the economy with notoriously low rates of productivity growth. This last is probably the scariest, as it led China’s economy to be more dependent on real estate than any other in recent memory:

Anyone who has followed the saga of China’s Covid lockdowns will sense a familiar pattern here. The Chinese government, eager to preserve the appearance of invincibility, often goes overboard in unleashing the tools of control. But while recessions are not healthy things, the lengths to which Chinese policymakers went to make absolutely 100% sure they never had even the slightest recession may have left their economy with a huge hangover of low-productivity industry.

Will Xi bring back productivity growth?

So there are plenty of reasons why China’s productivity growth crashed to a low level in the 2010s and 2020s. But speeding it back up again — which every analyst, including Kroeber, seems to recommend — will be no easy task. The tailwinds driving productivity higher are gone. And China’s misallocation of resources toward low-quality research and low-quality real estate industries will not be easy to reverse; these systems have a way of getting entrenched.

Xi Jinping, of course, is going to try. Part of his effort consists of industrial policy — the Made in China 2025 initiative and the big push for a domestic semiconductor industry. It remains to be seen whether those will bear fruit.

But in the last three years, Xi has undertaken a second, more destructive effort to reshape China’s industrial landscape. Instead of simply boosting the industries he wants, he has attacked the industries he doesn’t want. He has cracked down on consumer internet companies, finance companies, video games and entertainment. And he has attempted to curtail the size of the real estate industry, resulting in a slow-motion crash that’s still ongoing.

Essentially, Xi is trying to crush industries he doesn’t like, in the hopes that resources — talent and capital — flow to the industries he does like. This is a new kind of industrial policy — instead of “picking winners”, Xi is stomping losers. One of the saddest things about optimistic 2016-era analyses like Kroeber’s is how much hope they place in internet companies like Alibaba, Tencent, and Baidu as heralds of a new, more innovative China. Xi has declared that these companies are not, in fact, the future.

But it’s far from clear that an economy works like a tube of toothpaste, where smashing one end will send resources squirting out the other end. If you’re a budding entrepreneur, do you really think that starting a semiconductor company instead of an internet company will win you Emperor Xi’s favor? What if next week he decides that he doesn’t need more chip companies, and that your company isn’t one of his preferred champions? What if after you get rich and successful, Xi decides you’re a potential rival and appropriates your fortune?

An economy where the leader is always smashing companies and industries he doesn’t like is inherently an economy full of risk. Yes, Chinese engineers and managers will obey Xi’s will and go into the industries he wants them to go into. But the loss of entrepreneurship and initiative might make this a pyrrhic victory.

In other words, escaping China’s low-productivity-growth trap is going to be tough, and Xi’s strategy doesn’t fill me with a ton of confidence so far.


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Schedule for Week of December 29, 2024

Happy New Year! Wishing you all the best in 2025.

The key reports this week are the October Case-Shiller house price indexes, the December ISM manufacturing survey and December vehicle sales.

----- Monday, December 30th -----

9:45 AM: Chicago Purchasing Managers Index for December.

10:00 AM: Pending Home Sales Index for November. The consensus is for a 0.7% increase in the index.

10:30 AM: Dallas Fed Survey of Manufacturing Activity for December. This is the last of regional manufacturing surveys for December.

----- Tuesday, December 31st -----

9:00 AM: FHFA House Price Index for October. This was originally a GSE only repeat sales, however there is also an expanded index. 

Case-Shiller House Prices Indices9:00 AM ET: S&P/Case-Shiller House Price Index for October.

This graph shows graph shows the Year over year change in the seasonally adjusted National Index, Composite 10 and Composite 20 indexes through the most recent report (the Composite 20 was started in January 2000).

The consensus is for an 4.1% year-over-year increase in the Composite 20 index for October.

----- Wednesday, January 1st -----

The NYSE and the NASDAQ will be closed in observance of the New Year’s Day holiday

----- Thursday, January 2nd -----

7:00 AM ET: The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) will release two weeks of results for the mortgage purchase applications index.

8:30 AM: The initial weekly unemployment claims report will be released. The consensus is for an increase to 223 thousand from 219 thousand last week.

10:00 AM: Construction Spending for November. The consensus is for a 0.3% increase in construction spending.

----- Friday, January 3rd -----

10:00 AM: ISM Manufacturing Index for December. The consensus is for the ISM to be at 48.3, down from 48.4 in November.

Vehicle SalesAll day: Light vehicle sales for December.

The Wards forecast is for 16.7 million SAAR in December, up from the BEA estimate of 16.50 million SAAR in November (Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate).

This graph shows light vehicle sales since the BEA started keeping data in 1967.  The dashed line is the current sales rate.

Pardon me: JAMA Network Statement on Potentially Offensive Content

 JAMA asks your pardon. (I don't know when they started including this statement, but I just noticed it...)

JAMA Network Statement on Potentially Offensive Content
This journal's previously published content may include language, information, or terms that are offensive, insensitive, or unethical and may reflect attitudes, biases, or conventions that were deemed acceptable at the original time of publication. The JAMA Network regrets any offense or harm caused by any previous publication with potentially offensive content or language, which do not reflect the current core values of the JAMA Network journals. The JAMA Network stands against all forms of racism and discrimination. In support of this commitment, the journals are actively addressing these and related concerns of diversity, equity, and inclusion.

Socks: The Art of Care and Repair

Excellent segment on Woman's Hour yesterday about this show: Socks: The Art of Care and Repair by Celia Pym. Looks great. And talked about with such energy and, well, care.

December 27th COVID Update: COVID in Wastewater Increasing

Mortgage RatesNote: Mortgage rates are from MortgageNewsDaily.com and are for top tier scenarios.

For deaths, I'm currently using 4 weeks ago for "now", since the most recent three weeks will be revised significantly.

Note: "Effective May 1, 2024, hospitals are no longer required to report COVID-19 hospital admissions, hospital capacity, or hospital occupancy data."  So I'm no longer tracking hospitalizations.

COVID Metrics
 NowWeek
Ago
Goal
Deaths per Week🚩451438≤3501
1my goals to stop weekly posts.
🚩 Increasing number weekly for Deaths.
✅ Goal met.

COVID-19 Deaths per WeekClick on graph for larger image.

This graph shows the weekly (columns) number of deaths reported.

Although weekly deaths met the original goal to stop posting, I'm continuing to post now that deaths are above the goal again - and at a minimum, I'll continue to post through the Winter.  

Weekly deaths had been declining but increased slightly this week (no surprise given the sharp increase in wastewater testing results).  Weekly deaths are still above the low of 313 in early June 2024.

And here is a graph I'm following concerning COVID in wastewater as of December 26th:

COVID-19 WastewaterThis appears to be a leading indicator for COVID hospitalizations and deaths.

COVID in wastewater is "HIGH" according to the CDC - and more than double the lows of last May - and increasing sharply.  Something to watch.

Due

My thanks to Junjie for sponsoring last week at DF to promote Due, their excellent reminder app for the Mac, iPhone, and iPad. I first linked to Due back in 2010, writing this short post:

I’ve been trying this $3 app for a few days and digging it — a convenient, low-friction way to set short-term reminders and timers. Sort of like Pester but for iPhone. Focused and thoughtful design.

A lot of apps have come and gone since then. But Due has thrived. I never would have expected it when I penned the short blurb above, but here we are at the very end of 2024 and I’ve been relying upon Due for 14 years and counting. I started using it then and haven’t stopped. Due has long held a permanent position on my iPhone’s first home screen. And for several years now, Due has been available, with seamless iCloud syncing, on the Mac.

You might ask why use Due instead of Apple Reminders. For me the answer is simple. Due’s conception and presentation of “reminders” works for me and my way of thinking in a way that Apple Reminders does not. I have tons of to-do items in Reminders. But for a certain type of recurring and one-off tasks that I want to be reminded about at a certain time, they go in Due.

For example, our trash gets picked up on Monday and Thursday mornings. So I have recurring Due reminders to take out the trash every Sunday and Wednesday night. I don’t want these in my calendar. I just want them in Due, and Due makes sure I see notifications at 9:00pm every trash night. Due’s intuitive snoozing options make it easy to postpone one of these by a day during weeks when trash pickup is delayed by a holiday. I also keep my reminders related to Daring Fireball’s weekly sponsors in Due — posting the new sponsor’s ad at the start of the week, and writing my thank-you post at the end of the week — which reminders were quite meta this week.

It turns out, that brief blurb I wrote about Due 14 years ago was meaningful to the success of Due. Reading Junie’s remembrance about that post made me sit up a bit straighter, I’ll admit. I’ll accept some small measure of credit for discovering Due back then, but Due is so good, so distinctively original and useful, that I firmly believe its success was inevitable. Go check it out.

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