Monday, February 28, 2011

On Outsourcing, Protectionism and Robot Insurance

About a week ago, Princeton's Uwe Reinhardt wrote in the New York Times about the amazing victory that is the almost-universal acceptance among economists of "the theory that every country gains by unfettered international trade."  Reinhardt explains:
Relative to a status quo of no or limited international trade, permitting full free trade across borders will leave in its wake some immediate losers, but citizens who gain from such trade gain much more than the losers lose. On a net basis, therefore, each nation gains over all from such trade.

Economists assert that over the longer run, the owners of businesses that lose their markets in international competition and their employees will shift into new economic endeavors in which they can function more competitively.
Yet despite these benefits, Reinhardt asserts that there may be a problem with free trade, even among some economists, when national boundaries and identity are considered:
In their work, economists are typically are not nationalistic. National boundaries mean little to them, other than that much data happen to be collected on a national basis. Whether a fellow American gains from a trade or someone in Shanghai does not make any difference to most economists, nor does it matter to them where the losers from global competition live, in America or elsewhere.

I say most economists, because here and there one can find some who do seem to worry about how fellow Americans fare in the matter of free trade.

In a widely noted column in The Washington Post, “Free Trade’s Great, but Offshoring Rattles Me,” for example, my Princeton colleague Alan Blinder wrote:

"I’m a free trader down to my toes. Always have been. Yet lately, I’m being treated as a heretic by many of my fellow economists. Why? Because I have stuck my neck out and predicted that the offshoring of service jobs from rich countries such as the United States to poor countries such as India may pose major problems for tens of millions of American workers over the coming decades. In fact, I think offshoring may be the biggest political issue in economics for a generation. When I say this, many of my fellow free traders react with a mixture of disbelief, pity and hostility. Blinder, have you lost your mind?"

Professor Blinder has estimated that 30 million to 40 million jobs in the United States are potentially offshorable — including those of scientists, mathematicians, radiologists and editors on the high end of the market, and those of telephone operators, clerks and typists on the low end. He says he is rattled by the question of how our country will cope with this phenomenon, especially in view of our tattered social safety net.

“That is why I am going public with my concerns now,” he concludes. “If we economists stubbornly insist on chanting ‘free trade is good for you’ to people who know that it is not, we will quickly become irrelevant to the public debate. Compared with that, a little apostasy should be welcome.”
While Blinder's concerns certainly sound plausible enough, they're actually rife with problems.  First, I don't know what free traders Blinder's been talking to, but I simply can't imagine that a single one of them would react with shock and horror at the basic idea that an increasing number of Americans will face international competitive pressures in the next few years.  It seems far more plausible, however, that those free traders would respond with the totally obvious observation that, while those job pressures might occur and might make many Americans nervous, the economist's job is to explain, through empirical, anecdotal and historical evidence, why such anxiety is unfounded.  Of course, this is a difficult challenge, but it's no different from what occurs now with respect to American manufacturing jobs, and the alternative (protectionism) has proven again and again to be an abject failure.

Second, Blinder's concerns ignore reality: while there might be 30-40 million "potentially offshorable" services jobs out there, those jobs aren't, you know, actually being outsourced.  For example, the WSJ's political diary noted last week that fears of Indian outsourcing are far more fiction than fact:
NBC's "Outsourced" is a situation-comedy about an American call center that's been relocated to India. The show is ranked No. 85 on Nielsen's recent list of prime-time network television programs, suggesting perhaps that the theme of jobs shipped to India isn't resonating with American viewers. Maybe that's because the Indians are sending us more work than we're sending to them.

During a recent visit to The Wall Street Journal, Indian Ambassador to the U.S. Meera Shankar pointed out that America actually runs a small trade surplus -- yes, a surplus -- in services with India. Total two-way trade between the countries amounts to roughly $38 billion annually in services, with U.S. exports of financial, accounting and other business services slightly exceeding India's famous provisioning of information technology assistance, call centers and the like. Meanwhile, the roughly $50 billion two-way trade in goods yields a modest surplus for India, putting the overall U.S.-India trading relationship in almost perfect balance, for those who fret about such things.

Yet Washington continues to restrict a particular Indian import that carries enormous benefits for America: talent. Ms. Shankar reports that for Indian engineers applying for a so-called H-1B visa, reserved for those with high-tech skills wishing to work in the U.S., the application is so lengthy that "it's almost a novel that you have to write." Policy makers would be wise to give skilled engineers an easier path to join our labor force. The innovations they create will encourage India and the rest of the world to outsource even more production to the U.S.
Other studies show that outsourcing has proven, in the aggregate, to be beneficial for the American economy.  In short: yes, outsourcing occurs, but it's nothing to be worried about from both a theoretical and practical perspective.  So any attempts to stop or mitigate it waste valuable resources and distract us from far more important issues (like our very real failures re: education or high-skilled immigration).

In this way, Blinder's dire warnings, and any protectionist responses based on them, remind me of that classic SNL skit where Old Glory Insurance shows horrible/hilarious scenes of robot attacks in order to sell elderly citizens insurance against such acts of (again, hilarious) robo-violence.  Blinder and many protectionists are peddling fake anxiety and, unsurprisingly, the only solutions are the unnecessary (indeed, costly!) insurance that they're selling.



Awesome.  The same goes for outsourcing and trade (although not nearly as humorously).  Yes, it's real and it happens every day, but it's hardly the great menace that some would have us believe, and in both theory and practice it's a net plus for the American economy.  So until economists have some actual proof that free trade is harmful, maybe it's best for them to, you know, tell the American people the truth about trade and outsourcing rather than placate their misplaced fears and sell them insurance against an extremely unlikely calamity.

Winans Pleads Guilty To Elderly Carthage Couple's Brutal Murder:

Ellen and Robert Sheldon

One of the men who killed an elderly couple from Carthage in October of 2008 has been spared the death penalty after pleading guilty to second-degree murder today.

Darren Joseph Winans, 23, of Jasper and Matthew Laurin of Springfield were both charged with two counts of first-degree murder for the stabbing deaths of Robert and Ellen Sheldon. The family dog was also killed in the attack.

Jasper County Prosecutor Dean Dankleson says the pair went to rob the couple and steal weapons from their business, The Old Cabin Shop, that sat adjacent to their home. 


Darren Joseph Winans (l.) and Matthew D. Laurin
 Laurin pleaded guilty to frst-degree murder, armed criminal action and burglary his part in the crime last July. He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Shortly after that plea jailers found him dead...hanging from a bedsheet in his jail cell. 

Laurin's suicide left no witnesses or victims for prosecutors - Winans girlfriend and her mother, whom he allegedly confessed to, both died of drug overdoses. Teresa Adkins testified that at Winan's preliminary hearing that in December of 2008 Winans told she and her daughter Amanda that he and Laurin went to Carthage to kill Robert and Ellen Sheldon and their dog because their drug dealer wanted guns in exchange for drugs.
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Sources say Laurin's first time in Carthage was the night the Sheldon's were murdered

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When Laurin changed his plea, he had to write a statement of facts for the prosecutor and the judge, it reads: “Darren Winans and I wanted to buy some cocaine and marijuana. We needed money to do it so we planned to rob a gun shop that Darren knew about near Carthage, and steal some guns and sell them.“On Oct. 11, 2008, around 10 p.m., I drove Darren and myself to the property owned by Robert and Ellen Sheldon. Both Darren and I had bought masks and gloves to wear, and both of us brought knives in case we needed them.“The alarm system was on in the gun shop so we went to the house the Sheldons lived in. The door wasn’t locked so I just opened the door and went in. I asked Ellen Sheldon and Robert Sheldon for the keys to the gun shop, but neither would give them to me so I stabbed both of them until they died. Then Darren went upstairs and found a couple of guns and a safe and we took those and left

Today Winans pleaded guilty to amended charges of two counts of second-degree murder and armed criminal action.  He also pleaded guilty to burglary.  The maximum sentence he could receive is life in prison, which is thirty years in the state of Missouri, on each of the murder and armed criminal action convictions.

The judge will have to decide if those will be served concurrently (at the same time) or consecutively (one after the other.)  We will find that decision out on May 4th when Judge Gayle Crane sentences Winans.

Soldier Who Met Girl On Social Network Site Charged With Statutory Rape:

Daryl Sage Waldron (mug shot TCSO)


A 27 year-old soldier from North Carolina is behind bars in Taney County for allegedly having sex with a girl who just turned fourteen.

Authorities throughout the Ozarks searched for the teenager, who lives with her grandparents, and Daryl Sage Waldron for over a week.  Waldron, who has been charged with four counts of statutory rape, was busted as he attempted to return a rental car at Springfield-Branson National Airport last week.

The teen and the soldier met on the social networking site MySpace last year and began corresponding regularly. 

Officers attempted to track the teen, who was missing from February 15- 23, using her cell phone.  They located her after she was dropped off near a post office in Ridgedale. 

After he was read his rights,Waldron allegedly admitted to officers that he had sex with the girl at Fall Creek Resort during the time she was missing and at the Radisson Hotel in Branson in October of last year when the girl was thirteen.

Waldron is being held on $500,000 bond because prosecutors consider him a flight risk citing his ability to flee the county as a member of the Army Reserves and their belief that he is a danger to the community.  He has also been ordered not to contact the victim or any other children and ordered to steer clear of intoxicants.

Ten Branson Businesses Cited For Selling Alcohol To Minors



During a random compliance check of thirty three restaurants and a winery in Branson on February 25th local police officers found only ten that served alcohol to minors.  Chief Carroll McCullough said in a news release that the department was aided by three minors in the sweep last week.  He also says the department will continue to conduct random checks to catch businesses that violate the law.

Citations for the sale of intoxicants to minors were issued to clerks at the following business who allegedly broke the law:

  • Branson Grand Bar & Grill, 245 N. Wildwood
  • Sharkey's, 239 Shepard of the Hills Expressway
  • Bleu Olive, 204 N. Commercial St.
  • Old Chicago, 801 Branson Landing
  • Pizza Hut, 1050 Branson Hills Parkway
  • Tijuana Willie’s, 2001 Missouri 248
  • Buckingham’s Restaurant & Oasis, 2820 W. Missouri 76
  • Charlie’s Steak Ribs & Ale, 3009 W. Missouri 76
  • Little Hacienda, 9 Treasure Lake
  • Stone Hill Winery, 601 S. Missouri 248.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Man Searching For Scrap Metal Stumbles Upon Badly Decomposed Body In Polk County:

Crime scene tape surrounds the area where a badly decomposed boy was found (courtesy KY3)

Authorities in Polk County have asked for help from the Missouri Highway Patrol in a death investigation after a man looking for scrap metal stumbled upon a badly decomposed body not far from where Highways 215 and 13 intersect about 4 p.m. today.

Sheriff Steve Bruce says it appears the body, which was discovered about 300 feet off the highway in some woods near Brighton, has been there for an extensive period.

Investigators found no identification on or around the body and medical examiners will most likely have to rely on dental records to make an identification.

A highway patrol spokesman says it doesn't appear that homicide is the cause of death at this point, but adds that officers are in the early stages of their investigation

American Manufacturing Decline: Media/Politician-Driven Myth vs. Undeniable Reality

One of this blog's most prominent themes is the identification and destruction of protectionist myths that, despite being totally and utterly fallacious, remain firmly planted in the American psyche due to constant manipulation repetition by lazy media and certain opportunistic politicians.  Perhaps the biggest myth of all is the unfounded assertion that the American manufacturing sector is in tatters, due mainly to a hyper-competitive China that has eaten our collective lunch.  For anyone paying attention (or living here or in places like it), this assertion is a complete joke.  Yet the myth doesn't just endure; it thrives.

Case in point...

All next week, the braintrust at ABC will run on its evening news program a new segment called "Made in America," in which they will (a) bemoan the current state of American manufacturing; and (b) challenge Americans to devote their daily lives to buying only American-made stuff (Ford Pintos for everyone!).  They've kicked off this hackneyed festival of inanity new segment with a website where you can do all sorts of awesome stuff like surf an interactive map to find where certain items are made in America, or meet American families who make American stuff, or take an (American!) quiz to find out "what classic brands are no longer made in America."  (I also think there's a chat room where you can just type "AMERICA" over and over and over, but I couldn't find the link right now.)  ABC News also ran an introductory segment on Thursday's program lamenting the sad fact that all the kitschy, low-quality souvenirs that you buy in Washington, DC are - gasp! - made in China, Taiwan and, well, everywhere but the USA.



I forced myself - Clockwork Orange-style - to watch this segment, and to read the accompanying story, and it is just as awful and misleading as you'd expect.  If you'd like to spare yourself the misery, here's a completely unbiased and accurate summary:
The cheap American flag pins and other hideous souvenirs sold in our nation's capital are made in China/Mexico/Taiwan/etc and not in the dear ol' U.S. of A.  This is obviously disgraceful for lots of jingoistic reasons that we can't say on the air, but - wink wink - you true American patriots get the idea.  America's souvenir-making impotence is undeniably indicative of our nation's overall manufacturing demise.  If only there were something we could do to save America and its good, hardworking workers from the Great Red Souvenir-making Menace.  If only there were a second-rate evening news program that could save us all.  ABC to the rescue.  We'll be right back.
The video segment also notes that a push to Americanize DC's foreign-occupied souvenir industry has emerged from a "US Senator."  The story's print version illuminates that this "Senator" is none other than self-avowed socialist (gee, I wonder why they left that out of the TV version?) Bernie Sanders of Vermont who wrote an angry letter to the Smithsonian saying, among other things:
It appears that a museum owned by the people of the United States, celebrating the history of the United States, cannot find companies in this country employing American workers that are able to manufacture statues of our founding fathers, or our current president...  That is pretty pathetic!  I was not aware that the collapse of our manufacturing base had gone that far.
And there you have it, folks.  The media/politician manufacturing-myth exacta.  Well done, ABC.  Well done indeed.

Sigh.

There are so many things wrong with this news segment, and ABC's entire "Made in America" special, that I can't possibly hit on all of them here.  For one, it's never really clear to me why ABC so desperately wants America to be the world's number one maker of cheap crap (and trust me, if you've ever been in a DC souvenir shop, you know that calling that stuff "crap" is actually doing a disservice to excrement).  Second, and more broadly, the folks at ABC never stop to ponder the economic problems that would result from making everything - especially low-end consumables - in America.  (More on that here, here and here.)

But for my non-economist money, the most egregious problem with ABC's program is that they never once inform their trusting viewers of the undeniable fact that, while America might have a comparative disadvantage at flag-pin manufacturing (nooooo!), the US manufacturing sector as a whole is absolutely dominating.  This, of course, is an issue on which I and many others have blogged repeatedly, but, hey, ABC's producers and researchers are busy, so maybe they missed all of that.  Maybe they also were too busy talking with Senator SocialistSanders to read Mark Perry's excellent (and well-timed!) op-ed in yesterday's Wall Street Journal on the "The Truth About US Manufacturing":
Is American manufacturing dead? You might think so reading most of the nation's editorial pages or watching the endless laments in the news that "nothing is made in America anymore," and that our manufacturing jobs have vanished to China, Mexico and South Korea.

Yet the empirical evidence tells a different story—of a thriving and growing U.S. manufacturing sector, and a country that remains by far the world's largest manufacturer....

International data compiled by the United Nations on global output from 1970-2009 show this success story. Excluding recession-related decreases in 2001 and 2008-09, America's manufacturing output has continued to increase since 1970. In every year since 2004, manufacturing output has exceeded $2 trillion (in constant 2005 dollars), twice the output produced in America's factories in the early 1970s. Taken on its own, U.S. manufacturing would rank today as the sixth largest economy in the world, just behind France and ahead of the United Kingdom, Italy and Brazil.

The truth is that America still makes a lot of stuff, and we're making more of it than ever before. We're merely able to do it with a fraction of the workers needed in the past.

Consider the incredible, increasing productivity of America's manufacturing workers: The average U.S. factory worker is responsible today for more than $180,000 of annual manufacturing output, triple the $60,000 in 1972.

These increases are a direct result of capital investments in productivity-enhancing technology, which last year helped boost output to record levels in industries like computers and semiconductors, medical equipment and supplies, pharmaceuticals and medicine, and oil and natural-gas equipment.
Perry's blog provides some backup visuals to really hammer his op-ed points home:


And, heck, since we're sharing pretty pictures, here's one more from my blog to further destroy ABC's meme du jour:


This important graph shows that the decline in manufacturing jobs is a worldwide phenomenon that is unrelated to trade deficits or surpluses (and, just so we're clear, China's losing manufacturing jobs too).  As I said at the time of posting, "According to the CIA's World Factbook, Germany, the United States, Japan, Italy, France, the Netherlands and the UK are all among the world's top ten merchandise exporters; according to the OECD, some are net importers, and others are net exporters. Yet the long-term employment trend for each country is decidedly downward (but for a few random upticks).  So neither a country's total exports output nor its trade balance is a magical recipe for increasing - or even retaining - manufacturing jobs."

And yet, you'll never hear any of this reality-based sanity on ABC or any other TV network.  It's for this reason that, upon reading Perry's new WSJ op-ed, Cato's Dan Ikenson (who's valiantly fought the manufacturing myth for years nowblogged:
University of Michigan economist and American Enterprise Institute scholar Mark Perry has an excellent oped in today’s Wall Street Journal [$] about how U.S. manufacturing is thriving. It can’t be emphasized enough how important it is to present such illuminating, factual, compelling analyses to a public that is starved for the truth and routinely subject to lies, half-baked assertions, and irresponsibly outlandish claims about the state of American manufacturing.

The truth matters because U.S. trade and economic policies—your pocketbook—hang in the balance.
Indeed.  You see, it's ridiculous, lazy segments like ABC's that cause many unwitting Americans to support protectionism and other horrid economic policies peddled by economic snake-oil salesmen like Bernie Sanders and others.  And it's these policies that, while clearly benefiting discrete and well-connected interest groups (like American flag pin-makers!), are just awful for the rest of us because they retard the free market's natural - and immensely beneficial - evolutionary process.  As Perry noted in his op-ed:
Our world-class agriculture sector provides a great model for how to think about the evolution of U.S. manufacturing. The U.S. produces more agricultural output today—with only 2.6% of our work force involved in farming—than we did 100 years ago, when farming jobs represented almost 40% of the labor force. Likewise, we're able to produce twice as much manufacturing output today as in the 1970s, with about seven million fewer workers. That means yesterday's farmhands and plant workers can become today's computer engineers, medical doctors and financial managers.
Sanders and others seek to deny the American citizenry this obvious improvement.  They would prefer that our farmers and plant workers remain "in their place," rather than move up the economic food chain to their, and our society's, obvious benefit.  And ABC (who is certainly not alone) helps them do it with Made in America and the myriad "news" segments just like it.

ABC and other mainstream media outlets would do the nation a great service by escaping their bubbles of conventional wisdom and reporting on America's awesome market evolution, or on the truly amazing advances in American manufacturing productivity and our nation's continued industrial dominance.  But don't hold your breath waiting for that story.  Nope, ABC is far too busy lamenting our fake flag-pin-failures to notice our real, and far more important, successes.

No wonder nobody watches the "news" anymore.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Branson Man Sentenced To Prison For Stabbing Elderly Stepfather:

Michael A. Sharpe ( mug shotTCSO)


A forty six year-old man from Branson has been sentenced to seventeen years in prison for stabbing his stepfather multiple times in January of 2010.

Authorities say a short time after Michael A. Sharpe and his wife showed up at the home of Wendell Clare he attacked the elderly man with a pocket knife.  Sharpe sliced Clare in the face, arms and hands with the knife. 

Clare fired two shots from a gun to defend himself. One of those rounds went into the ceiling, the other lodged in Sharpe's foot which required surgery.

Just as his trial was set to begin last November Sharpe entered a guilty plea
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Sharpe, who was sentenced as a prior and persistent offender, was sentenced on February 24th, to seventeen years for domestic assault and another seventeen year term for armed criminal action.  Those sentences will be served concurrently (at the same time.)

Former Teacher And Convicted Sex Offender Jailed AGAIN:


Alison M. Peck February 2011 mug shot (GCSO)
 A former band teacher in Greenfield found herself behind bars again for failing to follow the terms of her probation.

Alison M. Peck, 25, pleaded guilty to several sex charges in Greene, Lawrence and Dade counties for having sex with a 16 year-old student.

In December of 2009 a judge sentenced Peck to five years probation and ordered she receive counseling and register as a sex offender.

Peck failed to meet two separate dates to register as a sex offender and a warrant was issued for her arrest.

Today Judge Calvin Holden said Peck had also been kicked out of counseling and failed drug tests and ordered that she be taken into custody and held on $75,000 bond.

Holden has three options available to him when Peck appears before him again next Friday.  He can order she serve 120 days shock incarceration, she be placed in a drug rehabilitation facility for 120 days or he can revoke her probation and send her to prison for five years.

In a civil suit filed by the family of the victim, Peck was ordered to pay $250,000 plus attorney's fees.  The insurance company for the Greenfield School District settled with the family for an undisclosed amount.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Former Highway Patrol Trooper Facing New Charges In Christian County:

Kenny Lynn Dean newest mug shot (CCSO)
A former Highway Patrol Trooper who was sentenced to five years probation after pleading guilty to  domestic assault on February 18th is facing new charges in Christian County.

Prosecutors have charged Kenny Lynn Dean with burglary following a high speed chase on Tuesday that began in Nixa and ended in Ozark.

Detective Jason Hartsell with the Nixa police department says they received a phone call from a family member of Dean's estranged wife Tracy saying the were concerned for her well being.

As police officers arrived at the woman's home (who had an active protection order against Dean) they found her running to a neighbor's house to call for help after she was allegedly held against her will for at least 24 hours by Kenny Dean.  Officers attempted to apprehend Dean, who fled in a vehicle, "But he wasn't havin' any part of that and sped up," according to Hartsell.

Dean's former colleagues were called in to assist in the chase as was the Ozark police department.  That chase ended at 2405 W. Westwind Drive in Ozark after his car was disabled by spike strips.  Dean then bailed out of his vehicle and attempted to steal a pickup truck parked in the driveway.  Unsuccessful, he ran into the open garage of strangers and picked up a large metal object and assaulted Trooper Scott Rice and Ozark police officer Tim Fielden.

In February of 2009 prosecutors in Stone County charged Dean with first-degree domestic assault, second-degree felonious restraint and second-degree domestic assault for an incident that left Tracy Dean with bleeding on her brain and a fractured wrist.

Dean, who was assigned to Troop D (southwest Missouri) from January of '01 to March of '04, was charged last June with kidnapping, burglary and assaulting Tracy Dean in Christian County.  Those charges were amended to second degree domestic assault which he pleaded guilty to last week.

In July he was charged with defrauding a secured creditor in Christian County and last month he was charged with theft for allegedly stealing a flatbed trailer from his ex business partner in December.

Christian County chief assistant prosecutor Donovan Dobbs says they are waiting on additional reports from Nixa and Ozark and anticipate filing additional charges that could include assault of a law enforcement officer, resisting arrest and attempting to flee.  Dobbs says they will ask a judge to revoke his probation.

One of Dean's former wife's says she's concerned that he will kill Tracy Dean, their children and will commit suicide by cop if he is let out on bond.

Dean is currently being held without bond in the Christian County jail.

Bomb Scare At Crane High School A Hoax:

School officials in Crane are offering five hundred dollars to the person who can tell them who is responsible for leaving left a note at the high school saying there was a bomb in the school Wednesday (02-23-11) morning.

Crane police chief John Elmore says a company the school contracts with to conduct drug searches has a dog that is certified to locate bombs.

Elmore says, "The dog made a full sweep of the school and found nothing.  Due to the location and the time it was discovered all indications at this point lead us to believe it was a student that left it."
 
An automated system alerted parents and advised them they could pick up their children. However, most decided to let them spend the day at school.

Calls to Superintendent Billy Redus have not been returned.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Is the WTO Obsolete?

Daniel Altman has a thought-provoking piece in Newsweek, in which he argues that the WTO is "obsolete."  The whole piece is worth reading, but his thesis can (I think) be summarized as follows:
The WTO's consensus principle (i.e., the firmly-enshrined rule that all decisions must be based on unanimous agreement among Members) dooms future multilateral trade negotiations like the Doha Round because of a few "obstructionist" nations.  Thus, the future of global trade will be defined by a few large trading blocs (i.e., coalitions of the willing), and the WTO will eventually die.
Altman elaborates on this idea in a short interview here.  There, he adds that the WTO's eventual demise is also due to an increased and emboldened membership that has prevented a few rich countries from dominating the negotiations and completing them.  Although Altman provides additional nuance in the interview, he sticks to his general thesis about the WTO's increasing and inevitable obsolescence.

And while I admire his willingness to provoke debate and his unequivocal acceptance of the value of free trade for developed and developing nations alike, I find Altman's overall argument to be pretty lacking.

WorldTradeLaw.net's Simon Lester lays out several good reasons for this conclusion here:
First off, it's no doubt true that it's easier to reach agreement among just a couple countries than it is among 153. I don't know if that justifies calling smaller deals "pragmatic" and global deals "utopian," though. We are currently operating under a complex and detailed set of global rules that all the major trading countries agreed to not very long ago. So, it can be done, and has been done in the recent past.

Second, he seems to want to draw a distinction between "regional" and "global" trade deals. But just to be clear, what's going on now is, for the most part, not regional economic integration agreement, such as the EU, NAFTA and MERCOSUR. Rather, it is a spaghetti bowl/noodle bowl involving a massive web of agreements between and among hundreds of countries. It is not clear how this will result in trade "blocs" that could negotiate with each other in the future. More likely, it will just lead to preferential treatment for some countries at the expense of others, and lots of confusion in customs administration.

And speaking of "preferential treatment," it is important to recognize that just because an agreement has "free trade" in the title, that doesn't necessarily mean this is what it achieves. There's a pretty good argument that what these bilateral and regional trade agreements accomplish is preferential and discriminatory trade, not free trade, with more trade diversion than trade creation. So while it's easier to get them signed, they may not be anywhere near as valuable as a global deal would be in terms of economic welfare benefits.

Along the same lines, Altman suggests that one of the hold-ups with a global deal is certain countries resisting trade liberalization, for example France and agriculture subsidies. It is true that bilateral and regional deals avoid these issues, but these are important issues, and perhaps they shouldn't be avoided. If you go with bilateral and regional agreements that don't address subsidies and other hard issues (e.g., anti-dumping) that must be dealt with multilaterally, you create a system where international trade rules allow these kinds of measures to undermine trade liberalization. There's no question that some of these issues are difficult. But sticking to the easier issues seems a bit like "free trade lite."

Turning back to his suggestion of negotiations between trade blocs, the idea that a few regional trade blocs will eventually negotiate with each other is an old one. Putting aside the earlier objection that regional trade blocs is not what we are seeing with the current trade deals, let's assume that these blocs do develop. If we want these blocs to negotiate with each other, it would be very helpful to have some sort of forum where they could talk about the trade that occurs not just within their region, but world-wide. Some kind of organization to support these talks, and to enforce the new world-wide rules, would also be useful. It occurs to me that what might be good in this regard is some kind of ... hmm, what to call it? ... I know, a World Trade Organization!
I agree wholeheartedly with all of Lester's concerns, and have a few more of my own.  Most importantly, I think Altman mistakenly characterizes the WTO as a monolithic entity whose only value lies in its ability to generate new trade liberalization beyond its existing agreements and Members' existing commitments.  By this metric, the WTO is a "failure" whenever it ceases to produce new agreements/commitments through negotiations.  And while I and many other free traders are sympathetic to the argument that the WTO's value as a negotiating vehicle may be coming to an end, that's hardly all that the WTO is.

In fact, I'd argue that there are at least three other "pillars" of the WTO that are far more valuable to the global economy than the "future negotiations/agreements" pillar that Altman solely emphasizes.  First, the WTO is immensely important for what it's already achieved in terms of free trade.  Its numerous trade disciplines, including fundamental non-discrimination principles, and Members' basic commitments (which they're required to make when they join the organization) serve as a broad and impressive baseline of trade liberalization - one far broader and deeper than many, if not most, of the bilateral/regional trade agreements being negotiated right now.  Indeed, FTA negotiations discuss "WTO-plus" arrangements because the WTO's agreements are the standard by which all other FTAs are measured.  Without that important baseline, what would prevent backsliding?  (And try to say "politicians' commitment to free trade" without laughing - I dare you.)

Second, the WTO accession process is an important economic and diplomatic tool that nations can use to help turn certain, ahem, "outsider" nations into more responsible global stakeholders.  Because of the diplomatic and economic benefits that come with WTO membership (under existing - not new - agreements, mind you), nations like China, Russia and Iran are willing to open their books, reform their laws and embrace significant economic liberalization (e.g., privatization, the elimination of subsidies, trade barriers and other market distortions, intellectual property protections, investment protections, etc.).  The result: economic growth (for both WTO Members and the acceding nations) and enhanced global stability.  And it's achieved without a single shot fired.  Not bad.

Third, the WTO is and will remain a vitally important mechanism for resolving global trade disputes without self-defeating protectionism (or worse).  There have been over 400 disputes at the WTO, many of which have been resolved through consultations.  The ones that weren't so easily resolved went to formal dispute settlement, and almost all of those resulted in Members' voluntary reformation of the measure(s) found to violate WTO rules.  Sure, a few high profile cases haven't been amicably resolved and instead resulted in retaliatory tariffs, but the fact that there have been only a few such cases - and that the WTO has absolutely no coercive power to enforce its decisions - is a testament to just how much the WTO's membership values the organization.  And in a world of regional trading blocs and no WTO, just who exactly would adjudicate disputes among the different blocs?  Or would they simply not trade with each other (or trade in limited, economically-insignificant volumes)?  And wouldn't that result in just the sort of trade diversion that Lester and many economists warn about?

Look, I'd never argue that the WTO is without fault, and the problematic Doha Round is a perfect example of some of the trade body's problems.  Indeed, we free traders have always said that, in an ideal world, the WTO would be obsolete because everyone would pursue unilateral trade liberalization.  Of course, we live in a world not of perfection but of other "Ps," like politicians, protectionists and public choice theory.  So the WTO still has value - a lot of value - just maybe not as the next great vehicle for ambitious trade liberalization.

And it's certainly not going to be "obsolete" anytime soon, contrary to Altman's bold prediction.

Maybe Altman recognizes the weaknesses of his broader arguments about the WTO, or maybe he really is just criticizing the WTO's "negotiations" pillar.  Indeed, he concludes his interview (entitled "Why the WTO Is Obsolete") by saying (emphasis mine):
The WTO has outlived its usefulness as a setting for trade negotiations. It can still be a good place to resolve disputes (though this can take years) and share ideas, but most countries would be better off choosing their own trading partners and lowering trade barriers at their own pace.
I'd say that the organization still holds more value that Altman admits here, but at least he has recognized that the WTO is more than just a trade negotiating vehicle.

Hey, it's a start, but in the future Altman might want to think about painting with a finer brush (and using more accurate titles to his op-eds).

Nixa PD Needs Your Help In Identifying Suspect Who Tried To Rob Pharmacy:

Authorities In Nixa Need Your Help Identifying This Man

Police in Nixa are asking for the public's help in identifying a suspect who attempted to rob the pharmacy at Price Cutter in Nixa this afternoon (02-23-11.)

Detective Jason Hartsell says a white male approximately 19 to 25 year-old demanded two types of narcotics from a clerk and told her not to push any alarms.

The clerk told the suspect no.  A manager of the store chased after the man as he fled.  Hartsell says the suspect ran into a car on the Cox Health lot as he made his getaway.

The suspect is believed to be driving a light colored (possibly tan) SUV (possibly a Lexus). 

Witnesses were able to give police officers the first three characters on the license plate, FD8. Hartsell says the suspect a car on the Cox Health lot as he made his getaway. 

The man is described as six feet tall and was last seen wearing a black stopping cap with light stripes on it and a North Face jacket.

If you can help police identify the suspect you're asked to call the Nixa Police Department at 417-725-2510 or 9-1-1.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Tuesday Quick Hits

Since I was traveling last week, you might be behind on your reading. Here are some headlines to catch you up:
Enjoy.

New Details Emerge In Text Message Murders Of Nevada Teens:

Kylie Leyva (l.) and Anne "Annie" Reed
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Nearly two years after two teen aged girls from Nevada were allegedly stabbed to death over text messages,  new details are emerging in the case. 

Leviathon Lee Dipman, 20, of Nevada has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder in connection to the deaths of fourteen year-old Kylie Leyva and eighteen year-old Anne "Annie" Reed and court documents indicate it was a conpiracy.
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Leviathon "Levi" Dipman (mug shot VCSO)
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Garrett Matthew Mason, now 19, was charged with two counts of first-degree murder and armed criminal action for the May 24, 2009, murders of his classmates.

Authorities say Dipman's arrest was due to information received from a confidential informant.  Officer Pamela Miller with the Nevada Police Department writes in the probable cause statement against Dipman, "Prior to Mr. Mason leaving the residence (Allan Harper's) to go to Ms. Reed's residence, Mr. Dipman, Mr. Mason and Mr. Harper had conversation on how Mr. Mason was going to kill both Ms. Reed and Ms. Leyva."


Garrett Matthew Mason (mug shot VCSO)
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The informant says that Dipman  made the comment, "To go kill them, cut them up and make their blood decorate the walls."  She [the confidential informant] says that Dipman, Mason and Harper,  "Spoke about a butcher knife" that was in the trunk of a vehicle the group had taken on a camping trip to Stockton Lake and that "the keys to the vehicle were still in the car and all he had to was get the knife when he left."

At Mason's preliminary hearing in August of 2009 Amanda Sandoval testified that she, Mason, Harper and Dipman had been camping and that when they returned Leyva and Reed began sending insulting text messages to her and that Mason had gone to Reed's apartment to get them to stop.

Sandoval, who at one time lived with Annie Reed and Mason, said Harper was a former boyfriend and Dipman was her ex-fiance. Dipman and Leyva had also once been boyfriend and girlfriend but had broken up.  Sandoval testified that Leyva had been one of her best friends.

Sandoval said she and Leyva had made a pact never to date Levi again, but she broke that promise when she went camping with him.

Sandoval, Dipman and Harper testified that as they were leaving to return a beer keg, Mason came running back to Harper's home as authorities with their sirens blaring were making their way to Reed's apartment.

A few hours before she was found stabbed to death Leyva had sent her mother a message saying she was having fun at Reed's watching movies.  Witnesses say Reed ran from her apartment after the attack and named Mason as the person who killed her and her friend.


Friends left momentos on the steps of Reed's apartment

Mason allegeldy told his friends he needed to change clothes because he had been in the same ones all weekend.  Harper popped the trunk and Mason changed behind the car then slipped into the backseat.

Sandoval said Mason initially acted like he didn't not know what was going on, asking them what was up with the police, but then told the group they needed to say he had been with them the last few hours.

Dipman testified “That’s when I turned around and noticed there was blood on his arm."

Officer Miller interviewed Garrett Matthew Mason again on February 16, 2011, about Reed and Leyva's murders.  He stated, "Mr. Dipman, Mr Harper and the informant were involved in the planning of the murders of Ms. Reed and Ms. Leyva.

When asked if Dipman perjured himself on the stand at Mason's prelim and if would affect his case against Mason, Vernon County Prosecutor Lynn Ewing said, "I don't see how....he just didn't give a full and complete disclosure of what happened."

Ewing says the investigation into Reed and Leyva's murders is ongoing and would not comment on whether any charges would be filed against Sandoval or Harper.

Mason's trial was scheduled to begin in April, but that trial setting has been canceled and replaced with a motion hearing on March 7th.  When asked if Mason was going to plead guilty and testify for the state, Ewing responded, "Ethically, I cannot comment on that."

Monday, February 21, 2011

America's Cotton Problem

A little heralded congressional vote last week shows just how hard it will be to reform America's bloated, trade-distorting farm subsidy programs and, more generally, get the US government's insanely profligate spending problem in check.  On Friday, the US House of Representatives overwhelmingly rejected a bi-partisan amendment to the 2010 continuing budget resolution that would have ended $140 million in annual bribespayments to Brazilian - yes, Brazilian - cotton farmers.  The payoffs, which I've repeatedly blogged on, resulted from a ludicrous deal between the Obama administration and the Brazilian government to stave off Brazil's imposition of retaliatory tariffs on US exports due to the United States' refusal to amend its cotton subsidy programs so that they complied with WTO rules (the cotton subsidies had been repeatedly ruled WTO-inconsistent in dispute settlement proceedings).

Cato's Sallie James provides some good analysis (and much-needed hostility) on the amendment's failure:
Republicans -- those stalwart fiscal conservatives! -- voted 75 in favor and 164 against. The Democrats showed more courage and voted in favor of the amendment 108 to 82. (These numbers are according to C-SPAN; I will post an update if they prove to be incorrect)....

The Hill article (linked to in the first paragraph of this post) points out that some members (presumably the Republicans who voted against the amendment) were concerned that "the move [to cease the payments to Brazil] could create a trade war if Brazil decided to retaliate."  It doesn't seem to occur to those concerned members that one way to avoid a trade war would be to abide by international obligations and cease subsidizing U.S. cotton farmers. It would also shave a few million from that huge deficit about which they profess to be concerned.
Sallie's point is exactly right.  If House members are truly concerned about a trade war with Brazil, then the sane, fiscally-conservative approach is not to continue paying $140 million in Brazilian hush money but instead to eliminate the offending cotton programs (and other US farm programs that are either unnecessary or WTO-inconsistent).  That this very sensible thought didn't even register in the US Congress is a testament to just how entrenched agriculture interests are on Capitol Hill.

And unfortunately, it gets worse.

Congress' latest vote on, and apparent support for, cotton subsidies is particularly egregious given the fact that the current environment for reform is pretty much perfect.  First and most obviously, the US government is flat broke, and the new Congress has a massive new contingent of Tea Party-driven budget cutters who - one would think! - would be open to ending the Brazilian bribes and embracing significant and immediate cuts to WTO-illegal US farm subsidy programs.  Second, those bribes and the US cotton program are taking place during a period of record cotton prices and unprecedented investment in American cotton production:
[Cotton] prices hit a 150-year-high last week, more than double what it was a year ago. (What happened 150 years ago? The Civil War began, and cotton jumped to $1.89 a pound. What do you think Rhett Butler was trying to smuggle past those Union gunships?)

Also having an effect: droughts and flooding in China, Pakistan and Australia, plus restrictions on exports from India. Plus, the world’s economy looks a little better than it has in the recent past. People can afford clothes.

At the same time, the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services announced today that cotton acreage in the state is expected to increase by nearly 27 percent, from 82,250 acres in 2010 to an estimated 105,000 acres this year. In 2007, Virginia farmers planted only 58,000 acres. The last time the state topped 100,000 acres was 2006. Part of this is smarter agriculture and innovative research. Part of it is supply and demand.
Third, the WTO's Doha Round negotiations will probably die if not completed by the end of 2011, and as Phil Levy and I wrote in December, a bold US commitment on farm subsidy cuts and cotton reforms will be essential to completing a final deal.

Given these facts, there might never be a better time than right now for cotton subsidy cuts, and yet the House - and all those new fiscal conservatives - have once again refused to address the broader cotton issue and instead prefer to continue embarrassingly paying off Brazilian cotton farmers.  Awful.

Moreover, the House's latest cotton episode reveals a far more serious problem with the future of America's inefficient, outdated farm policies and US budget-cutting efforts more generally.  If the US House of Representatives can't make some basic cuts to American cotton subsidies amidst serious budget shortfalls, a wave of new budget-conscious GOP freshmen, record high cotton prices, unprecedented private investment in American cotton, and a Doha Round on life support, then what hope is there for a serious US farm subsidy reform proposal as part of Doha or otherwise?  And if (allegedly) fiscally conservative House Republicans can't defund the WTO-illegal US cotton programs or, at the very least, stop the insanity of sending 140 million in taxpayer dollars to Brazil's farmers every year, then why should we think that they'll have the courage to tackle the much more politically-sensitive and important budget reforms that will be absolutely essential to getting our crippling budget deficit in check?

After last Friday's vote on the cotton bribes, the answers to these bigger questions don't look too promising.

McDonald County Authorities Investigating Homicide Of Elderly AR Man:

McDonald County Sheriff Robert Evenson

Authorities in McDonald County are working a homicide in a rural part of the county.
Sheriff Robert Evenson says that a passerby called 9-1-1 at 4:01 p.m. on Sunday February 20th and said there was a man lying on the side of Gobbler's Knob Road near Powell.
When deputies arrived they found 67 year-old Jack McCain of Rogers, Arkansas dead. "I can't release the cause of death, but we don't believe it was accidental and he obviously didn't walk there."
Rogers is about 20 miles from where McCain's body was found and Powell is approximately five miles from the state line.  
Southwest Missouri Forensics will conduct an autopsy at 1 p.m. autopsy to determine the mans cause of death.  
Investigators from Missouri Highway Patrol are assisting the McDonald County Sheriff’s Office in the case.  
Anyone with any information regarding this death investigation is urged to call the McDonald County Sheriff’s Office at 417-223-7420 or 9-1-1.  
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UPDATE 02-23-11:
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Investigators say that McCain was shot more than once.  Highway Patrol investigators continue to assist authorities in McDonald County and Arkansas in the investigation into McCain's murder.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Second Person Charged In Leyva and Reed Murders:

Leviathon Lee Dipman (mug shot VCSO)

It was almost two years ago that two teen aged girls from Nevada were stabbed to death and a friend of the girls was charged with their murders.


Authorities say the investigation into the murders of Kylie Leyva, 14 and Anne "Annie" E. Reed, 18, has been ongoing and detectives arrested a second man in connection to the May 24, 2009, double homicide last week.


On Thursday February 17th, Leviathon  Lee Dipman, 20, of Nevada was charged with two counts of first-degree murder in connection to Leyva and Reed's deaths.  He is being held on a $1 Million dollars cash only bond.


Another man, Garrett Matthew Mason, 19, also of Nevada was charged with two counts of first-degree murder and armed criminal the day of his classmates murders.
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Garrett Matthew Mason (mug shot VCSO)
 In the probable cause statement filed with the charges against Mason, Nevada Police Officer Pamela Miller writes she and two other officers found Kylie Leyva and Anne "Annie" Reed suffering from multiple serious stab wounds at Reed's North Cedar Street apartment.
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Kylie Leyva (l.) and Anne E. Reed

Just a few hours before the attack, Kylie had called her mother to tell her she was having fun watching movies with Annie.


Court documents reveal that Mason told investigators he had spent several hours with the girls at Reed's apartment before he allegedly stabbed them.
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After she was stabbed, Reed was able to get out of the apartment and run to a neighbors house for help.  She told the neighbor that Garrett Mason stabbed her and her friend.
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Three other witnesses told authorities in written statements that Mason came to their home with what appeared to be fresh blood on his body and his clothes. The witnesses told investigators that Mason changed his clothes and put them in a backpack, which he placed in the trunk of his car.  Those friends told authorities that Mason wanted them to provide an alibi for him by telling authorities he was with them at the time of the double murder. 


When investigators arrived at Mason's mother's house he was sitting on the curb waiting for them.  Mason's trial is scheduled to begin in April. However, several sources say that Mason may plead guilty on March 7th.


More information on Dipman's arrest and his role in the murder will be available tomorrow when documents can be obtained from the Vernon County Circuit Clerks Office. 


Authorities say additional arrests in the murders of Kylie Leyva and Annie Reed could be made.  They are asking anyone who may have information in this case to call them at 417- 448-2700.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Former Educator Convicted Of Rape Being Sough For Failure To Register As Sex Offender:

Alison Peck is wanted for failure to register as a sex offender:

A former educator who pleaded guilty to sex charges involving one of her students in several counties in southwest Missouri is being sought by authorities.

Alison M. Peck, 24, pleaded guilty to rape and statutory sodomy charges in November of 2009 and was placed on five years probation.  She failed to register as a sex offender in December of 2010 and a warrant has been issued for her arrest.  Online court records show that prosecutors want Peck's probation revoked.

In the probable cause statement filed with the charges, authorities say that a 16-year-old boy started texting Peck, who worked in Greenfield, during the 2008 Christmas break.

In January, the teenager told authorities that he began visiting Peck's home in Mt. Vernon and that the two had sex at the teachers residence on numerous occasions.

Prosecutors in Dade County filed two statutory rape charges against Peck earlier this year and the Lawrence County Prosecutor filed one count of statutory rape and another statutory sodomy charge against the former band teacher.

Greene County prosecutors charged Peck with statutory rape charge after friends of the woman's arranged a liaison between the teacher and the same victim in the other cases at the American Inn in Springfield. One of Peck's friends rented the room in her name after Peck told her that she was being watched by authorities.

The father of the victim hired attorney Craig Heidemann who filed a civil lawsuit against Peck in Greene County for $1.9 MILLION dollars plus attorneys fees. Judge Mark Fitzsimmons ordered Peck to pay $250,000 plus $25,000 in attorneys fees.

In December of 2009, Peck's attorney, Steve Meier, said Peck had lost her certification to teach.  "She just went ahead and mailed it [her teaching certificate] in. Alison has taken accountability for her actions and has taken the necessary steps to try and make this right. Hopefully, she can pick herself up and find a new passion and become a productive member of society."

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Where Have All the Good Trade Salesmen Gone?

Among the videos that I posted last week in honor of President Reagan's 100th birthday was one of him defending free trade and denouncing protectionism.  After watching that video again, I'm re-posting it here because I was surprised by just how good Reagan's free trade sales pitch was back then, particularly considering the mercantilist speeches of our allegedly pro-trade politicians today and the fact that President Reagan, although he certainly supported free markets generally and sowed the seeds for both the WTO and the NAFTA, was hardly what you'd consider to be an unabashed ideological free trader (unapologetically documented here).



A transcript of the speech - a radio address to the nation from May 1987 - is available here.  In it, Reagan touts the benefits of both exports and imports and explains how free trade spurs competition, productivity and innovation.  He also rejects protectionism outright.  Here's the money paragraph:
When you hear talk about a tough trade bill, remember that being tough on trade and commerce, the lifeblood of the economy, will have the worst possible consequences for the consumer and the American worker. First, it will drive up the price of much of what we buy. But worse than that, it could drag us into an economy-destroying trade war. I'm old enough to remember the last time a so-called tough trade bill passed Congress. It was called Smoot-Hawley, and it helped give us, or at least deepened, the Great Depression of the 1930's. Well, the way up and out of the trade deficit is not protectionism, not bringing down the competition, but instead the answer lies in improving our products and increasing our exports. The Government should work to create the conditions in which fair trade will flourish. We should be trying to foster the growth of two-way trade, not trying to put up roadblocks, to open foreign markets, not close our own.
By Dan Ikenson's and my unreasonably high standards, Reagan's speech certainly isn't a perfect 10, most notably because he harped on the trade deficit and glorified "fair trade" (although in his defense, it's possible that the term "fair" hadn't become the four-letter word that it is today).  But the speech was still a good, solid 7.5, particularly given that the President's very first point was on the benefits of trade for American consumers, and that he mentioned removing obstacles to imports and the inevitably deleterious effects of global trade disputes.  And compared to most pro-trade politicians these days (whose singleminded, troublesome focus on exports earns them maybe a 5 on the Lincicome-Ikenson scale), Reagan's speech deserves more than a little love.

Exit question: Since Reagan's era, the United States has become far more globally integrated and the benefits of free trade are even more universally accepted among (and promoted by) American businesses and economists.  So if Reagan - who, again, was certainly not a free trade dogmatist - could avoid the self-defeating rhetoric of mercantilism when trying to sell free trade and denounce protectionist, then why can't today's elected officials at least do the same?  Why have our politicians' sales pitches regressed?

I have my theories, but they'll have to wait for another blog post.

Bracker Promoted To Lieutenant:

Dan Bracker - Missouri Highway Patrol


On March 1, 2011, Sergeant Daniel S. Bracker will be promoted to the rank of lieutenant.  He will remain assigned to Troop D.

Bracker was appointed to the Patrol on January 1, 1992, as a member of the 64th Recruit Class.  Upon graduating from the Patrol’s Law Enforcement Academy in Jefferson City, he was assigned to Troop D, Zone 14, serving Barry County.  In 1994, he transferred to Zone 12, Christian County, and in 1997, he was promoted to corporal and designated assistant zone supervisor for the Christian County zone.  In 2001, Bracker was assigned as one of two public information and education officers serving Troop D. He was promoted to the rank of sergeant in 2003 during that assignment.

A native of Joplin, Lieutenant Bracker graduated from Parkwood High School in 1982.  In 1987, he graduated from Missouri State University, Springfield, with a bachelor’s degree in communications. 
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Lieutenant Bracker and his wife, Tamara (Schafer), are the proud parents of two daughters:  Abby and Hannah.  He is the son of Bob and Connie Bracker, of Springfield.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Valentines Quick Hits

Here are a few headlines for your romantic night with that special someone.  Maybe you could even read a few of them to him/her to get in the mood:
  • For those of us out there who waited until the last minute and bought our wives some surprisingly-cheap-yet-high-quality Valentines Day roses from your neighborhood Whole Foods (a "fair trade" advocate, by the way), I hope you checked where the flowers were from.  I did: Colombia.  Heritage's Bryan Riley explains that "Americans saved more than $16 million on roses last year thanks to U.S. trade policy toward Colombia.... As Valentine’s Day approaches, with Mother’s Day not far behind, it is a good time to consider the benefits of the proposed U.S.–Colombia Free Trade Agreement not just for U.S. flower buyers but for the Colombian workforce and U.S. exporters as well."
  • Don Boudreaux and David Henderson refute Ian Fletcher's ridiculous claim that, while American manufacturing is at an all-time high and remains the world's largest by value, the problem is that the sector just ain't growing fast enough.  Next up, Fletcher will argue that whether protectionism is idiotically self-destructive depends on what your definition of "is" is.  Seriously.
  • Keith Hennessey provides a detailed analysis of the President's allegedly pro-trade statements before the US Chamber of Commerce and arrives at a depressing conclusion that some of us have known for a while now: "This sounds like a free trade agenda, or at least a pro-trade agenda, which would be good from a President whose party often leans heavily toward protectionism. The problem is that the U.S. already has trade agreements with Panama and Colombia. The President is in reality saying that he is undoing those deals. He also appears to be saying that 'unprecedented support from … labor [and] Democrats …' is a precondition to further progress on free trade."  Thus, we're doomed.
  • Here's a telling update on that sketchy Chevron-Ecuador dispute that I mentioned a few weeks ago (and further proof that third-party dispute settlement of investment disputes is not as horrible and pernicious as some trade skeptics breathlessly allege).  The Hague is still reviewing the case, but the domestic court has ordered Chevron to pay billions.  And guess who really wins big from the domestic ruling: "The court also ruled that Chevron should pay the Amazon Defense Front, a coalition formed by the plaintiffs, an additional 10% in damages, or about $860 million. The judgment says the amount of the damages could be doubled if Chevron doesn't apologize publicly to plaintiffs by advertising in the next 15 days in newspapers in the U.S. and Ecuador.  Pablo Fajardo, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said his team was still reviewing the 200-page document and couldn't give a full opinion until Tuesday. He said that although he didn't rule out the possibility of appealing to ask for a higher amount, the fact that the judge issued a ruling favorable to the plaintiffs was a 'very positive step.'  Last summer the plaintiffs asked the court for $113 billion in damages."  Ahh, social justice.
  • The Economist has a fascinating cover story on a new technology called "3D printing" and how it could totally revolutionize manufacturing.  After reading it, ask yourself this: "Is it really smart for the White House to pin the hopes of America's economic recovery on a dramatic increase in manufacturing employment?"
  • I kinda pity Randy Erwin, the founder of the "Buy American Challenge."  I mean, the guy seems well-intentioned and, unlike most anti-traders, he's advocating a purely voluntary import embargo (rather than one produced by political lobbying and enforced by government coercion).  Nevertheless, he's still really, really misguided, as Don Boudreaux and Mark Perry demonstrate.
  • The NYT reports that "Over the last decade, the [USDA's Market Access Program] has provided nearly $2 billion in taxpayer money to agriculture trade associations and farmer cooperatives. The promotions are as varied as a manual for pet owners in Japan and a class at a Mexican culinary school to teach aspiring chefs how to cook rice for Mexican consumers. Money also went to large farmer-owned cooperatives like Sunkist, Welch’s and Blue Diamond, which grows and sells almonds. Combined, the three companies had over $2 billion in sales in 2009."  Awesome.
  • China's now the world's #2 economy (by country).  Razeen Sally explains in the WSJ that, if China ever wants to become a world leader, it needs to ditch the childish protectionism.
  • Harvard professor Martin Feldstein provides a laundry list of reasons why the President needs to dramatically lower the corporate tax rate if he's serious about re-invigorating the American economy.  And he drops this little nugget: "Eliminating every loophole in the taxation of domestic corporate profits identified by the administration's own Office of Management and Budget would raise less than $60 billion of extra revenue in 2011, enough to lower the combined federal-state corporate rate to 35%. The U.S rate would still be higher than in every other country but Japan, and a full 10 percentage points higher than the average in other industrial OECD countries."  
Happy V-Day, everyone.