.comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

Confederacy of Dunces USA

Welcome to the confederacy of dunces usa. This blog is inspired by the effects of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans and the Gulf Coast USA and named after the novel A Confederacy of Dunces by New Orleans native John Kennedy Toole. Certainly the disaster response efforts have been led by the dunces....

Thursday, July 27, 2006

FEMA Skimps on Future Disaster Relief

FEMA, in its infinite wisdom, this week announced that it was reducing the amount of cash it was giving to disaster evacuees from $2000 to $500. The rationale for this change is apparently the degree of fraud. This amounted to around 16% of the total monies distributed after Katrina. I'm not actually convinced this was fraud; maybe it was just more convenient to use the government issued card to buy porn. Does FEMA dictate how you spend the money.

FEMA can do a better job of rooting out fraudulent claims. However, in the aftermath of a disaster some degree of fraud is inevitable. In this situation, is our objective to minimize the number of dollars given to the undeserving, or to provide sucor to the needy. The role of FEMA is the latter, but this new policy is clearly targeted at the former.

If we are concerned about overpaying for aid, reduce the total everyone gets by 16% and try to rein in the fraud. Reducing aid by 75% is going to cause massive problems next time there is a disaster; $500 is barely enough to drive out of the path of a storm these days. Problems lead to ad hoc aid programs; ad hoc programs are open to fraud because the needed checks and balances are not in place. Wait, isn't that what happened after Katrina. We must learn from history, not use history to repeat it.

Are we concerned here about the fraud or the amount of money that was given out? Shouldn't

Middle class wage stagnation

Recent economic reports indicate what many of us have already experienced – middle class wage stagnation. A recent article entitled That Raise Might Take 4 Years to Earn as Well discusses trends that confirm my own personal observations on the recent job market.

Earnings for workers with four-year degrees fell 5.2% from 2000 to 2004 when adjusted for inflation, according to White House economists ….

Offshoring, which has shifted manufacturing and call-center jobs to such nations as Mexico and India, is increasingly affecting white-collar sectors such as engineering and software design.

And companies have continued their long effort to replace salaried positions with lower-paid, nonsalaried jobs, including part-time and freelance positions without benefits. Those contingent positions make up nearly half of the 6.5 million jobs created since 2001, said Paul Harrington, a labor economist at Northeastern University in Boston.

Harrington said the number of salaried jobs increased an average of 11.5% during the last five economic recoveries, compared with 2.5% during the current recovery.

"There's clear deterioration in the college labor market," he said. "The American economy just does not generate jobs the way it has historically."

…wage erosion is likely only to intensify as the number of college graduates rises in China, India and other offshoring hubs. China alone expects the number of college graduates to increase by 22% this year, with 4.13 million job candidates entering a domestic market with only 1.66 million jobs available, according to a Chinese government report released in May.


The Bush advisor’s comments on the trend, as usual, make no sense to me.

Bush's advisors say graduates are earning less because their ranks are swelling and they face tougher competition for better-paying jobs.

But the advisors say it is a good sign that productivity is increasing, because a rise in wages tends to follow.

"Whether or not new college graduates are making more than they were five years ago, we do know the same people will be making more five years from now," said White House spokesman Ken Lisaius.


They state a defense that increased productivity of corporations will drive a rise in wages. But in my experience skilled worker wages are driven by 1. revenue and profit margins which allow employers to invest in more projects and workers 2. Supply of available workers with skills to do the job. While increased productivity can drive revenue and profit, there are many other factors that contribute to profitability, such as competitive pressures, and cost of goods. It is unlikely in the short term that any productivity increases could offset increased costs of energy. The White House expresses optimism that college graduates will have wage increases over the next 5 years. Yet the statistics indicate the average college educated worker experienced a decrease in wages over the past 4 years.

I am not an isolationist, and I do not think that we can somehow stop the offshoring of jobs. But we do need to create incentives to companies to employ US workers, and make sure that we are not subsidizing offshoring through granting tax breaks to companies who are locating workers elsewhere.

Here is the actual economic report if you wish to read more.
Economic Report

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Spike Lee on Katrina

I'm sure Spike Lee will deliver a controversial and compelling story of Katrina with his documentary premiere of parts 1 and 2 on Aug 16 at the New Orleans Arena. We will have to wait till the HBO airing to see parts 3 and 4.

If we like it maybe there will be more to come, apparently Spike may be doing an NBC series on post-Katrina New Orleans.

Now that would definitely make my TIVO list.

Monday, July 24, 2006

Dunces Discover Email

We have finally enabled our email mailboxes at confereracyofduncesusa. We have deleted the 155 emails directed to postmaster regarding viagra and hoodia and turned on the spam guard. I think we may be ready to join the internet age! We generally use our work emails for communications but this seemed inappropriate for general web posting. Of course we need to get on the Rising Tide email list and so now we are ready. If anyone wants to contact us we are liz at confederacyofduncesusa dot com and fatcat at the same.

Sadly, we are still involved in our involuntary project to breed a new, insecticide resistant strain of fleas at Dunce HQ. Hence the continued delays in posting. We hope to be flea free soon and back to our usual selves.

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

More destruction and evacuation

What is worse, inadvertent destruction and evacuation due to Mother Nature and sloppy human design, or that due intentionally to intransigent religious groups and uncooperative governments? The destruction in Lebanon and Israel right now is tragic and sad.

Apparently the Dutch and French are best at evacuations, and the US and British are the worst, judging from the recent performance in Lebanon. The parallels to Katrina evacuation incompetence are starting to flow on CNN.

The Dunce in Chief doesnt have anything to say about any of these subjects, other than that Hezbollah should stop this shit, but is instead making a long speech currently about protecting stem cells.

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Fleabags

Our posting lull is hopefully over, we had to break for an unexpected house cleaning and fumigation process after adopting many extra pets - of the flea variety. They seemed to find our daughter a tasty friend and our cats a good taxi. Hopefully we will have something to say about the world soon.

Today the middle east seems ready to erupt into war again with the Israelis and Lebanese taking shots at each other, Westchester NY is cleaning up from tornados that seemed to touch down on every single north-south road in the county, and I pretty much just want to take a nap.