Categories
Music

If they were smart….

For those of you who don’t live in the Twin Cities, Minnesota Public Radio recently purchased 89.3 WCAL, an independent classical music station, and converted its format to a highly eclectic mix of indie music, country, lounge, and local music. While I wasn’t a big fan of losing WCAL, the new station has its pluses.

As a public radio station, they don’t run ads of course, and this week they did their first fund drive which seemed much more low key than they usually do on their other stations. If they really want to take advantage of their format, they should become an iTunes affiliate and try to push music sales through their website.

Their format is uniquely set up to do this. Most radio stations just play the same crap over and over and over, and what they do play is easy to find in stores. 89.3 is very contrarian in their playlist, and as a result introduce people to a lot of stuff they haven’t heard before. I’ve personally purchased 2 songs off iTunes based on what I heard listening in the car. I’m sure I’m not the only one who has purchased music based what I’ve heard.

If they are going to be eclectic, then they should go whole hog and make it a business model. Introduce people to new music, then show them where they can buy it. It could be Amazon, or iTunes or whatever. They get their 5-15% cut and its that much less they have to beg for money.

Milk the long tail.

MPR likes to say they work for tips. There’s my tip.

Categories
General

Taking the trust out of trust fund

I’m posting this on my site as a response to Geoff on ParanoidAndroid. Explaining how and why social security is screwed is complicated and justice can’t be done in the comments section.

There is no social security trust fund for all practical purposes. Despite what you might hear there is nothing saved up. Here is why…

The “trust fund” can by law only buy Treasure notes. Treasury notes are sold by the Treasury department to raise cash for revenue shortfalls. If the government is running a surplus, then the Social Security Administration (SSA) has to go to public markets to purchase previously issued treasury notes.(if you got to the SSA website, they call it special issues and private issues. Special issues are notes only available to the SSA)

At some point in the future the amount coming into the SSA will be less than the payments they make. At that point they will have to raise cash to pay cover the checks they write to social security recipients. Where will the cash come from? They will have to start selling off the “surplus” which means selling US Treasury notes on secondary bond markets. (A secondary market is for buying and selling bonds which have already been released)

So what’s the problem you say?

Conduct the following thought experiment. What would the government do if there was no “trust fund”? The same thing they do whenever they have to raise money they don’t have…..they sell treasury notes.

That is why there is no trust fund (and why I put it in quotes). They method of raising money is exactly the same as if there was no trust fund. Either way, they have to go to public markets and sell debt. The only difference is that if there was no “trust fund”, they would have auctions for new notes as opposed to going to secondary markets with old notes.

This is what people mean when they say the trust fund has been spent.

You may ask, “how is this different than if you or I go to sell a bond to raise cash?” Good question. If the bonds we sold were issued by us, it would be the same. If a company owns its own bonds, on the ledger its all cancels out. The assets equals the liability. Same for the government. From an accounting standpoint, there is no surplus, and the debt should be reduced by and equal amount. For the heck of it, write yourself a trillion dollar IOU. You will owe a trillion dollars, but you also have a trillion dollars in assets. Your net worth is the same.

Over the last several decades, the social security surplus has absorbed about 1/3 the amount of total debt that the US has accumulated. By this I mean for about 1/3 the amount of the debt the government never had to go out to public markets and sell notes because they used the money in the social security surplus to buy the notes they sold.

The surplus has acted like a buffer and has mitigated the investment crowding out effect over the last 30 years. When social security revenues stop exceeding payments, not only with the crowding out mitigation stop, but all that debt which the SSA has stored up will have to be unleashed.

This is why Alan Greenspan is going ape shit right now about the deficit.

The fact that the government honors debt and such doesn’t really matter too much. They still need people to buy the bonds in the first place, regardless of eventually paying them back.

There are a whole bunch of other issues tied up into this that I’m not going to bother to go into such as the trade deficit (which puts dollars into the pockets of foreigners to buy US debt), the value of the dollar, and the rate of spending (any deficits will get compounded with the notes sold by the SSA). All of these can effect what will happen in the future for better or worse.

I’m not advocating any particular solution, but social security is most definitely screwed.

Categories
General

Coming Soon

I got a new digital camera last night. I had my old digital camera for a few years now. It was cool at the time, but now its just low quality (2 megapixel) and clunky. The new one is a Sony DSC-T1.

I’m taking a photo journal of my day today. I’ll have it up tonight or tomorrow morning.

Categories
General

Now Watch This

PBS has released an excellent miniseries on the history of the 20th Century economy. It also the first time I’ve ever seen a mainstream media (if PBS can be called that) outlet give any sort of props to Friedrich Hayek, who rightfully deserves to be considered one of the foremost thinkers of the 20th Century.

You can watch all 6 hours of the miniseries online one chapter at at time.

Categories
Academia General

Test your science literacy

Here is a quick collection of science questions I’ve cobbled together after having a discussion last night with someone going into teaching. Try to answer them before you look at the answer. I’ve picked a few simple things that I think people should know in area of Earth Science:

  1. What is the single largest factor that contributes to the warming of the earth? Answer: the Sun.
  2. What gas in the Earth’s atmosphere is responsible for trapping the most heat? Answer: water vapor.
  3. To within a few percent, what percentage our atmosphere is made up of CO2? Answer: approximately 0.036%.
  4. What is the most abundant gas in the Earth’s atmosphere? Answer: Nitrogen. Approximately 80%
  5. What is the closest star to Earth? Answer: the Sun
  6. Why is it warmer in the summer than in the winter?Answer: the tilt of the Earth. The Earth is actually closest to the Sun in January.

Enjoy. Highlight the end of the question to get the answers.