Showing posts with label spending. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spending. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

The US Is Now Spending 26% Of Available Tax Revenue To Pay Interest

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The US Is Now Spending 26% Of Available Tax Revenue To Pay Interest

Friday, March 21, 2014

Pricele$$: The Failure of U.S. Healthcare Spending (w/Infographic)

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Pricele$$: The Failure of U.S. Healthcare Spending (w/Infographic)

Friday, March 7, 2014

Global military spending is now an integral part of capitalism

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Global military spending is now an integral part of capitalism

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Publius Huldah: Balanced Budget Amendments (BBA) Gut Our Constitution And Don’t Reduce Spending

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Publius Huldah: Balanced Budget Amendments (BBA) Gut Our Constitution And Don’t Reduce Spending

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

U.S. retailers face pressure to raise cybersecurity spending

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Target Corp’s decision to speed up a $ 100 million program to adopt the use of chip-enabled smart cards is just a drop in the bucket when it comes to what retailers need to do to defend themselves against future cyber attacks, according to security experts and IT service providers.






Reuters: Top News



U.S. retailers face pressure to raise cybersecurity spending

Monday, December 23, 2013

Japan"s record budget spending highlights balancing act

Japan"s record budget spending highlights balancing act
http://s1.reutersmedia.net/resources/r/?m=02&d=20131224&t=2&i=823963417&w=580&fh=&fw=&ll=&pl=&r=CBRE9BN053U00





TOKYO Mon Dec 23, 2013 8:52pm EST



Japan

Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speaks during a news conference to wrap up the ASEAN-Japan Commemorative Summit Meeting at his official residence in Tokyo December 14, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Toru Hanai




TOKYO (Reuters) – Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Tuesday secured cabinet approval for a draft budget for the next fiscal year that aims to split the benefits of higher tax revenue between trimming fresh borrowing and stimulating the economy with record spending.


The government’s second annual budget since Abe’s election triumph a year ago marks a balancing act between boosting growth and doing just enough to show it is keen to rein in public debt, which is more than twice the size of the economy.


Of projected record spending of 95.88 trillion yen ($ 921.97 billion) in 2014/15, about one-third will be spent on social security while debt servicing costs will account for nearly one-quarter.


“Abe vows to seek both growth and fiscal consolidation, but the focus now needs be on stimulus,” said Hidenori Suezawa, analyst at SMBC Nikko Securities. “Hasty fiscal tightening could derail the economy and foil the sales tax plan in 2015.”


Spending in the general-account budget for the year starting April 2014 will rise more than 3 trillion yen from this year’s initial budget, the Ministry of Finance said, with higher outlays for public works, military and social security.


Ministry officials played down the rise, however, saying it was inflated by technical factors such as the transfer on-budget of outlays from special accounts, and allocations from a planned April sales tax hike to shore up social security funding. Interest payments also rose while welfare costs increased as Japan’s population ages.


Tax revenue is estimated at 50 trillion yen, rising 6.9 trillion yen from this year to a seven-year high, reflecting both expected economic growth of 1.4 percent and an increase in the sales tax to 8 percent from 5 percent that kicks in April.


New bond sales will be cut by 1.6 trillion yen from the current fiscal year to 41.25 trillion yen, a second consecutive decrease, but the government still relies on borrowing to cover 43 percent of its spending, down from 46.3 percent this year.


A “flexible fiscal policy” combining near-term stimulus with longer-run consolidation is part of Abe’s economic recipe that also mixes in hefty monetary easing and pro-growth reforms.


Analysts expect budgets to stay loose for the time being to help the economy manage the planned two-step doubling of the sales tax to 10 percent, with the first increase due in April.


Earlier this month, the government approved 5.5 trillion yen in extra spending for the current fiscal year to cushion the first increase in the sales tax. The second part of the increase to 10 percent is penciled in for October 2015.


Some analysts worried about a lack of measures to help the world’s third-largest economy sustain growth.


“We want to see more wise spending in areas with growth potential,” said Naoki Iizuka, economist at Citigroup Global Markets Japan. “We cannot rely on public works forever.”


The public works budget will rise to 5.96 trillion yen from this year’s 5.28 trillion yen, including new bullet train lines, quake-proofing of infrastructure, and projects linked to the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.


ELUSIVE BUDGET GOAL


Analysts and ministry officials say the government is making progress towards its goal of halving the primary budget deficit, which excludes new bond sales and debt servicing costs, by fiscal 2015/16.


The government estimates its primary budget deficit at 18 trillion yen in fiscal 2014/15, down 5.2 trillion yen from this year for the second biggest decrease on record.


Still, calculations by both analysts and the government suggest Tokyo would miss its goal of a primary surplus in 2020/21 without further tax increases and spending cuts.


SMBC Nikko’s Suezawa said social security spending must be streamlined in order to get runaway debt and spending under control to meet the 2020/21 target.


“The Abe administration, like the previous government, will struggle with cuts to welfare spending that could risk alienating the growing ranks of elderly voters,” he said.


Social security outlays to cover healthcare and pensions for the fast-ageing population will top 30 trillion yen for the first time, up 1.4 trillion yen from this year and accounting for roughly a third of the budget.


Debt servicing costs – interest payments and redemptions – are expected to rise to 23.2 trillion yen, up 1 trillion yen from this year and the budget’s second-biggest item.


Defence outlays amount to 4.78 trillion yen, up 2.2 percent on the year and marking the biggest increase in 18 years, amid simmering tensions between Japan and China over tiny islands that both claim in the East China Sea.


The International Monetary Fund estimates Japan’s general budget deficit at 9.5 percent of GDP in calendar 2013, among the worst in the developed world, and narrowing to a still-elevated 6.8 percent in 2014. Public debt already exceeds 240 percent of GDP, by far the highest among major economies.


($ 1 = 103.9950 Japanese yen)


(Editing by Tomasz Janowski and John Mair)






Reuters: Business News




Read more about Japan"s record budget spending highlights balancing act and other interesting subjects concerning Business at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Senate passes budget deal, focus shifts to spending




WASHINGTON Wed Dec 18, 2013 7:03pm EST





Senators John McCain (R-AZ) (L) and Thomas Carper (D-DE) talk outside of the Senate chamber after voting on the U.S. budget bill in Washington December 18, 2013. REUTERS/Gary Cameron


1 of 9. Senators John McCain (R-AZ) (L) and Thomas Carper (D-DE) talk outside of the Senate chamber after voting on the U.S. budget bill in Washington December 18, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Gary Cameron




WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Senate passed a two-year budget deal on Wednesday to ease automatic spending cuts and reduce the risk of a government shutdown, but fights were already breaking out over how to implement the budget pact.


By a vote of 64-36, the Senate sent the measure to President Barack Obama to be signed into law, an achievement for a divided Congress that has failed to agree on a budget since 2009.


The deal, passed in the House of Representatives last week by an overwhelming margin, restores overall fiscal 2014 spending levels for government agencies to $ 1.012 trillion, trimming the across-the-board budget cuts that were set to begin next month by about $ 63 billion over two years.


Now, there will be a mad dash by the House and Senate Appropriations committees to cobble together a massive spending bill that implements the deal and carves up the funding pie among thousands of government programs from national parks to the military.


Without the new spending authority, the federal government on January 15 could partially shut down, as it did for 16 days last October.


Not surprisingly, one of fights ahead involves funding of President Barack Obama’s healthcare law, according to Republican and Democratic aides in the House and Senate.


“It’s one of many flashpoints,” said a House Republican aide who asked not to be identified, adding, “But it’s not insurmountable.”


Republicans are warning that they will not tolerate any increase in funding for administering the troubled healthcare program.


Democrats hope to maintain or add small amounts of money for the program they say will provide insurance for millions of previously uninsured people.


As is the case with all spending bills in a deeply divided Congress, there are plenty of other disagreements besides the Obamacare funding level.


Among the most difficult will be money for the Internal Revenue Service, the nation’s tax collector; funds for western wildfire fighting and for the Yucca Mountain, Nevada, nuclear waste repository.


Separate battles also could be waged over policy proposals that House Republican leaders are likely to attach to the funding bill.


These could include forcing the Obama administration to approve a controversial Keystone oil pipeline from Canada to the U.S. Gulf of Mexico.


There also could be moves to stop the Environmental Protection Agency from enforcing carbon emissions regulations that the coal industry hates and to block federal money for building a California high-speed train.


Given all of the disagreements, one House Democratic aide familiar with the appropriations process that is under way warned: “Nobody should be getting ahead of themselves; it’s not a given that we’re out of the woods” in passing the bill that would carry out the budget deal and avoid a January 15 government shutdown.


The budget plan negotiated by Democratic Senator Patty Murray and Republican Representative Paul Ryan won overwhelming support from House Republicans, including some of the chamber’s most conservative ones.


Murray said the deal “breaks through the partisanship and gridlock, and shows that Congress can function when Democrats and Republicans work together to make some compromises for the good of the country.”


But congressional aides said there nonetheless are worries that some of those conservatives might balk at the prospect of voting for a $ 1 trillion spending bill that wraps a slew of controversial programs into one gigantic package.


“There was broad bipartisan support for the (budget) deal. There should be the same broad bipartisan vote for the package implementing that deal,” said the House Democratic aide, adding, “This is a very open question.”


The House Republican aide echoed those concerns.


(Editing by Fred Barbash, Cynthia Osterman and Vicki Allen)






Reuters: Politics



Senate passes budget deal, focus shifts to spending

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Republican Delusions About Spending and Deficits


It is understandable that the public is disgusted with Washington; they have every right to be. At a time when the country continues to suffer from the worst patch of unemployment since the Great Depression, the government is shut down over concerns about the budget deficit.


There is no doubt that the Republicans deserve the blame for the shutdown and the risk of debt default. They decided that it was worth shutting down the government and risking default in order stop Obamacare. That is what they said as loudly and as clearly as possible in the days and weeks leading up to the shutdown. In fact, this is what Senator Ted Cruz said for 21 straight hours on the floor of the US Senate.


Going to the wall for something that is incredibly important is a reasonable tactic. However, the public apparently did not agree with the Republicans. Polls show that they overwhelmingly oppose their tactic of shutting down the government and risking default over Obamacare. As a result, the Republicans are now claiming that the dispute is actually over spending.


Anywhere outside of Washington DC and totalitarian states, you don’t get to rewrite history. However, given the national media’s concept of impartiality, they now feel an obligation to accept that the Republicans’ claim that this is a dispute over spending levels.


But that is only the beginning of the reason that people should detest budget reporters. The more important reason is that they have spread incredible nonsense about the deficit and spending problems facing the country, causing most of the public to be completely confused on these issues. If budget reporters were held to the same standards as school teachers, with the expectation that they would be able to convey information, they would all be fired in a minute.


Contrary to the widely repeated stories of out-of-control deficits and spending, deficits have plunged in the last four years falling from 10.1% of GDP in 2009 to just 4% of GDP in 2013. The Congressional Budget Office projects the deficit to be just 3.4% of GDP in 2014. The latest projections show the debt-to-GDP ratio falling for the rest of the decade.


In other words, the story of out-of-control debts and deficits is just plain wrong. Less polite people would call it a lie, but it stands at the center of the public debate because the media consider it rude to point out a truth that would embarrass so many important politicians. The idea that we face a longer term deficit problem of enormous proportions has little better grounding in reality. First, it is worth noting that we have not had a constant upward path of spending as is widely asserted in Washington, and widely believed around the country, due to the incompetence of budget reporters.


During the Reagan presidency spending averaged more than 22% of GDP, peaking at 23.5% in 1985. This year it is projected to be 21.6% of GDP. The latest CBO projections show spending rising back to Reagan era levels towards the end of the 10-year budget window.


Over a longer term, spending is projected to rise further due to projections of rising health care costs and a growing interest burden, which is the result of a growing debt. The deficit fear mongers like to hype these projections of large deficits decades in the future to advance their agenda of cutting Social Security and Medicare.


The reality is that the story of exploding interest burdens is utter nonsense since there is zero precedent for the country ever allowing the debt to expand in this way. This makes as much sense as arguing that someone driving west in New Jersey risks falling into the Pacific Ocean. People driving west in New Jersey invariably turn or park their cars before ending up in the Pacific Ocean and the United States has always taken measures to reduce deficits long before they posed a fundamental threat to the economy.


The real question is why the primary (ie non-interest) deficit rises and this is the story of the broken US healthcare system. We pay twice as much per person for our health care as the average for other rich countries, with nothing to show for this money in terms of outcomes. We pay 2.5 times as much as the UK. If our costs were at all in line with those in other wealthy countries, we would be looking at explosive budget surpluses running into the trillions of dollars annually.


This fact raises the obvious question, why are projections of deficits based on unaffordable healthcare costs always treated in the media as a basis for cutting benefits to seniors rather than a reason for cutting payments to providers like doctors, drug companies, and medical device companies?


There is no explanation except the bias of the media. Obviously they identify much more with rich doctors and the people who profit from the bloated prices charged in the United States by drug companies and medical equipment providers than with the seniors who are dependent on Social Security and Medicare.


Yes, the public has every right to be disgusted.


Dean Baker is the co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR). He is the author of Plunder and Blunder: The Rise and Fall of the Bubble Economy and False Profits: Recoverying From the Bubble Economy.


This essay originally ran in the Guardian.


Copyright: Counterpunch




RINF Alternative News & Alternative Media Breaking Real News



Republican Delusions About Spending and Deficits

Sunday, September 8, 2013

British military wastes 1.58 billion amid wide spending cuts - report



Published time: September 08, 2013 12:26

Royal Navy nuclear-powered submarine HMS Astute (Reuters / David Moir)

Royal Navy nuclear-powered submarine HMS Astute (Reuters / David Moir)




Britain’s Ministry of Defense has been implicated in 1.58 billion pounds ($ 2.47 billion) of wasteful spending over the last two years, which comes at a time when the country faces stringent defense cuts, UK media reported.


Accounts from the 2012-2013 books obtained by The Daily Mail show that while the country was getting rid of older regiments, firing thousands of armed forces personnel and sending historical equipment to the junk yard, it was doing so to balance out losses, bad spending and accounting errors.


And while some personnel were getting the sack, hundreds of others were being overpaid because of a clerical blunder, with the sum totaling 640,000 pounds and no plans to recover it.


Losses in the anti-missile storage department have led to the MoD writing off more than half a billion pounds, adding to that the purchase of the wrong types of bombs for training programs and almost 400,000 pounds for lost equipment in Canada. 


Various other items on the list simply pile up on top of the mistakes: 100,000 pounds in security at the G8 summit, 1.5 million pounds in overpaid tax by the revenue department and almost 500,000 pounds for a dispute over computer services at one of the academies of the armed forces. 


In the last financial year, 33.5 million pounds allocated for military purposes got misplaced by the bookkeepers. The balance had to be written off as, according to a note in the books, there is no information on where it went.


Also, while the MoD withdrew large amounts of military equipment from service – including ships and planes – it was giving other equipment away as gifts, namely 50 Leyland DAF trucks worth 450,000 pounds each to Uzbekistan and counter-terrorism training equipment to Pakistan priced at 294,000 pounds. 


While some other costs related to the early withdrawal of several expensive aircraft models are projected to be in the billions, the MoD said that money would be saved in the long term.


However, the biggest loss of money was incurred in a deal with Germany, in which old army barracks and compounds previously belonging to the British had been handed back. The reduction in the value of the buildings because of plans for early British withdrawal from the country came to 1.5 billion pounds. Similar to the scrapping of expensive equipment, the MoD believes the above gifts will eventually save on long-term costs, because the German estate is no longer needed following a decision to withdraw troops. They promise taxpayer savings of 240 million pounds a year, cutting back on the cost of returning personnel and their families to home soil earlier.


Shadow Defense Secretary, Jim Murphy, lashed out at the blunders on Saturday, saying that “this incompetent waste will come as a shock to a country angry at defense cuts… Multi-million pound mistakes at a time of mass sackings of service personnel and defense equipment being scrapped.” The Secretary went on to say that “Ministers should minimize waste and prioritize protection for those who serve and their families.”


A general view of the MI6 headquarters in London (Reuters / Kieran Dohert)


The sweeping cuts are taking place in the military at a time when the intelligence budget has just received its largest boost. British Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osbourne, has come out with a review of public spending for 2015-2016, which shows health, science, education and the military slashed, while the country’s spy agencies –MI5 and MI6 – are set to receive around 100 million pounds in bonuses. Intelligence is now at the top of the British government’s spending agenda.


The MoD reacted to the criticism by saying that “the vast majority of write-offs are not items lost or wasted but occasions where we have sold off or scrapped redundant military equipment or gifted equipment to another country” and that “for the first time the MoD has a balanced budget” with a 10-year equipment plan for the military estimated at 160 billion pounds.


Problematic, however, is also the issue of public anger at Britain’s austerity program, which has intensified since George Osborne came to power in 2010. Weak economic growth and a costly welfare system disturbed the government’s original plans to wipe out a budget deficit which it inherited at 11.2 percent of GDP, according to the International Business Times. 


Britain has also recently lost its triple-A credit rating, having to ask the International Monetary Fund to postpone its cuts and increase investment into infrastructure.


Late June saw thousands take to the streets – teachers, doctors, unions and activists – to protest against Britain’s austerity policy.




RT – News



British military wastes 1.58 billion amid wide spending cuts - report

Monday, September 2, 2013

Oregon flunks transparency in education spending, study says


FAIL: Oregon

FAIL: Oregon’s Department of Education gets a failing grade for spending transparency



By Shelby Sebens | Northwest Watchdog


A new study by the Cato Institute claims Oregon’s Department of Education is failing when it comes to transparency of spending.


The Cato Institute, a libertarian-leaning think tank based out of Washington D.C., gave Oregon an F-  or a score of 47 out of 100 for the information the department provides on per pupil spending, total spending, salaries and public accessibility.


The study says that while Oregon’s data is easily accessible on its website, it lacks instructions and a clear way for the public to maneuver and understand the data. The state also fails to provide district level average salary and benefit data as well as statewide spending data, the study finds.


Oregon’s neighbor Washignton faired much better in the study, scoring a B. Some of the main differences between the states are that Washington provides average salary data and the state got a 15 out of 15 for public accessibility. Oregon got a 10.5 out of 15.


The study charges that because of incomplete data, the public is not fully aware of the true cost of education.


When the state education departments provide incomplete or misleading data, they deprive taxpayers of the ability to make informed decisions about public school funding. At a time when state and local budgets are severely strained, it is crucial that spending decisions reflect sound and informed judgment.


Half of all states report a “per pupil expenditures” figure that leaves out major cost items such as capital expenditures, thereby significantly understating what is actually spent. Alaska does not even report per pupil expenditure figures at all.



Contact Shelby Sebens at Shelby@NorthwestWatchdog.org


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Oregon flunks transparency in education spending, study says

Monday, July 8, 2013

The Pentagon Is Spending Your Tax Dollars to Keep You in the Dark About Its Sprawling Empire



Requests for info from the Pentagon on its activities across the planet are met with obstruction and obfuscation.








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There are hundreds, possibly thousands of U.S. personnel — the military refuses to say how many — stationed in the ochre-tinted country of Qatar.  Out in the searing heat of the desert, they fly fighter jets or fix them.  They equip and arm troops headed to war.  Some work in a high-tech command-and-control center overseeing U.S. air operations in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and elsewhere in the Greater Middle East.  Yet I found myself sitting in a hotel room in Doha, Qatar’s capital, about 30 miles east of al-Udeid Air Base, the main U.S. installation in the country, unable to see, let alone talk, to any of them.


In mid-May, weeks before my arrival in Qatar, I sent a request to the public affairs office at the base to arrange a visit with the 379th Air Expeditionary Wing, the unit that, according to the military, carries out a “criti­cal combat mission that spans nearly 6,000 miles from the Horn of Africa to Northern Afghanistan.”  Or at least I tried to.  Day or night, weekday or weekend, the website refused to deliver my message.  Finally, I dug up an alternate email address and sent in my request.  Days passed with no word, without even an acknowledgement.  I followed up yet again and finally received a reply — and then it began.


The initial response came on May 28th from the Media Operations Chief at Air Forces Central Command Public Affairs.  She told me that I needed to contact the 379th Air Expeditionary Wing’s Public Affairs liaison, Captain Angela Webb, directly.  So I repeatedly wrote to Captain Webb.  No response.  On June 10th, I received an email from Susan Harrington.  She was, she told me, “taking over” for Captain Webb.  Unfortunately, she added, it was now far too close to my arrival in Qatar to arrange a visit.  “Due to time constraints,” she wrote me, “I do not think it will be possible to support this request since we are likely already within that 30 day window.”


Don’t think I was surprised.  By now, I’m used to it.  Whether I’m trying to figure out what the U.S. military is doing in Latin America or Africa, Afghanistan or Qatar, the response is remarkably uniform  – obstruction and obfuscation, hurdles and hindrances.  In short, the good old-fashioned military runaround.  I had hoped to take a walk around al-Udeid Air Base, perhaps get a glimpse of the jumbotron-sized screens and rows of computers in its Combined Air and Space Operations Center.  I wanted to learn how the drawdown in Afghanistan was affecting life on the base.


Instead, I ended up sitting in the climate-controlled comfort of my hotel room, staring at a cloudless sky, typing these words behind double-paned glass that shielded me from the 106 degree heat outside.  For my trouble, on my return to the United States, I was detained at Kennedy Airport in New York by agents of the Department of Homeland Security.  Their question for me: Was I planning to fight against U.S. forces in Afghanistan?


Base Desires in Africa


If you are an American citizen, you’re really not supposed to know about operations at al-Udeid Air Base.  The men and women there on your dime can’t even “mention the base name or host nation name in any unsecured communications.”  Instead, they’re instructed to say that they are at an “undisclosed location in Southwest Asia” instead of “the Deid,” as they call it.


It isn’t the only base that the Pentagon wants to keep in the shadows.  You’re also not supposed to know how many bases the U.S. military currently has in Africa.  I learned that the hard way.  As a start, let me say that, officially speaking, there is only a single U.S. facility on the entire continent that the military formally calls a “base”: Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti, a tiny nation in the Horn of Africa.  U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) is adamant about this and takes great pains to emphasize it.  Internally, however, they do admit that they also have forward operating sites (aka “enduring locations”), contingency security locations (which troops periodically rotate in and out of), and contingency locations (which are used only during ongoing operations).  But don’t try to get an official list of these or even a simple count — unless you’re ready for the old-fashioned runaround.


In May 2012, I made the mistake of requesting a list of all facilities used by the U.S. military in Africa broken down by country.  Nicole Dalrymple of AFRICOM’s Public Affairs Office told me the command would look into it and would be in touch.  I never heard from her again.  In June, Pat Barnes, AFRICOM’s Public Affairs liaison at the Pentagon, shot down my request, admitting only that the U.S. military had a “a small and temporary presence of personnel” at “several locations in Africa.”  Due to “force protection” issues, he assured me, he could not tell me “where our folks are located and what facilities they use.”


That July, with sparing assistance from AFRICOM, I published an article on “Secret Wars, Secret Bases, and the Pentagon’s ‘New Spice Route’ in Africa,” in which I attempted to shed light on a growing U.S. military presence on that continent.  This included a previously ignored logistics network set up to service U.S. military operations, with critical nodes in Manda Bay, Garissa, and Mombasa in Kenya; Kampala and Entebbe in Uganda; Bangui and Djema in the Central African Republic; Nzara in South Sudan; and Dire Dawa in Ethiopia.   I also drew attention to posts, airports, and other facilities used by Americans in Arba Minch in Ethiopia, Ouagadougou in Burkina Faso, and the Seychelles Islands in the Indian Ocean.


U.S. Africa Command took great exception to this.  Colonel Tom Davis, their director of public affairs, wrote a detailed, irritated response.  I replied to him and once the dust had settled, I asked him for, among other information, a full listing of what he called “temporary facilities” as well as all other outposts, camps, warehouses, supply depots, and anything else that might be used by U.S. personnel in Africa.  He ignored my request.  I followed up.  Four days later, AFRICOM spokesman Eric Elliott emailed to say Colonel Davis was on leave, but added, “Let me see what I can give you in response to your request for a complete list of facilities.  There will [be] some limits on the details we can provide because of the scope of the request.”


Were there ever!


That was August 2012.  For months, I heard nothing.  Not an apology for the wait, not a request for more time.  A follow-up in late October was ignored.  A note in early November was finally answered by still another AFRICOM spokesman, Lieutenant Commander Dave Hecht, who said he was now on the case and would get back to me with an update by the end of the week.  You won’t be shocked to learn that the weekend came and went without a word.  I sent another follow up.  On November 16th, Hecht finally responded:  “All questions now have answers.  I just need the boss to review before I can release.  I hope to have them to you by mid next week.”


Take a guess what happened next. Nada. Further emails went unanswered.  It was December before Hecht replied:  “All questions have been answered but are still being reviewed for release.  Hopefully this week I can send everything your way.”


He didn’t.


In January 2013, answers to some other questions of mine finally arrived, but nothing on my request for information on U.S. bases.  By now, Hecht, too, had disappeared and I was passed off to AFRICOM’s chief of media engagement, Benjamin Benson.  When I asked about the ignored questions, he responded that my request “exceed[ed] the scope of this command’s activities, and of what we are resourced to research and provide under the Public Affairs program.”  I should instead file a request under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).  In other words, I should begin what was guaranteed to be another endlessly drawn-out process.


I was, shall we say, irritated.  Somehow, it had taken six months to get me nothing and send me elsewhere — and somehow neither Colonel Davis, nor Eric Elliott, nor Dave Hecht had realized this.  I said as much to Benson.  He wrote back: “Lastly, you state, ‘I"ve been led astray for the better part of a year and intend to write about it’, which of course is your right to do in our free society. We expect that as a professional, you convey the correct facts, and ask that you note that we did research, and provide answers to the questions you posed.”


Well, here you go, Ben. Duly noted. But of course, the “correct facts” are that neither Benson nor anyone else at AFRICOM ever provided answers to the crucial basing questions I posed.  And Benson continues not to provide them to this very day.


When we last spoke by telephone, several weeks ago, I reiterated that I understood he couldn’t offer me a list of the locations of American bases in Africa due to “security of operations,” so all I now wanted was a simple count of facilities in Africa.  “That’s tricky.  We have teams coming in and out of Africa to different locations all the time,” he replied. “Places that they might be, the range of possible locations can get really big, but can provide a really skewed image of where we are… versus other places where we have ongoing operations.  So, in terms of providing number, I’d be at a loss of how to quantify this.”


It seemed easy enough to me: just count them and include the necessary disclaimers.  So I asked if AFRICOM kept a count of where its troops were located.  They did.  So what was the problem?  He launched into a monologue about the difficulty of ascertaining just what truly constituted “a location” and then told me: “We don’t have a way that we really count locations.”


It couldn’t have been clearer by then.  They had a count of all locations, but couldn’t count them.  They had lists of where all U.S. troops in Africa were based, but not a list of bases.  It was a classic runaround in action. 


The First Casualty


And don’t think that was the worst of it.  The most dismissive response I’ve gotten recently from anyone whose salary we pay to keep us (nominally) informed about the U.S. military came from Marco Villalobos, the FOIA manager of U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), responsible for Central America and South America. 


Last year, reports surfaced of civilians killed during operations conducted or overseen by U.S. personnel in Honduras.  In at least one instance, the Honduran Air Force shot down a civilian plane thanks in part, it seems, to intelligence provided by SOUTHCOM.  Since the U.S. military is heavily involved in operations across Latin America, I requested records relating to civilian casualties resulting from all operations in the region. 


That was in July 2012.  In February 2013, I got a peculiar response from Villalobos, one I’ve never seen otherwise in hundreds of replies to FOIA requests that I’ve ever received from various government agencies.  He didn’t say there were no such records.  He didn’t tell me that I had contacted the wrong agency or bureau.  Instead, he directed me to the United Nations Statistics Division for the relevant data.


The trouble is, the U.N. Statistics Division (UNSD) doesn’t collate U.S. military data nor is it devoted to tracking civilian casualties.  Instead it provides breakdowns of big datasets, like the Food and Agriculture Organization’s figures on how many hectares of apricots were harvested in Afghanistan in 2007 (3,400) or the prevalence rate of contraceptive use for women ages 15 to 49 in Uganda in 2005 (19.7%). 


I was surprised to say the least.  And I wasn’t alone.  When I checked in with the U.N., the Statistics Division wrote back: “could you please forward us the email you received from SOUTHCOM in which they suggest UNSD as a source, so we can contact them if they continue to give our address out in response to such inquiries which don"t pertain to our work.”


So I called Villalobos to complain.  It wasn’t his fault, he quickly assured me.  The decision had been made, he claimed, by the director of personnel.  I asked for his name, but Villalobos refused to give it: “He’s not a public person.” 


That’s the nature of the runaround.  Months later, you find yourself back in the same informational cul-de-sac.  And when it comes to the U.S. military, it happens again and again and again.  I had a similar experience trying to embed with U.S. units in Afghanistan.  I was rebuffed repeatedly for reasons that seemed spurious to me.  As a result, however, a never-used Afghan visa for that trip sits unstamped in my passport — which brings me back to my recent trip to Qatar.


The American Taliban?


In the airport upon returning to the United States, I was singled out by a Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agent. He directed me to a “girl” at a far counter.  When I got there, I was admonished by her for being in the wrong place.  Finally, I was sent to see a third CBP officer at a different workstation.  Think of it as the runaround before the runaround.


This agent proceeded to question me about the contents of my bag, pulled out my papers and began reading them.  She also wanted to know about my profession.  I said I was a writer.  What did I write about?  National security issues, I told her.  She asked what I thought about national security and the role of the U.S. military in the world.  In my estimation, I said, it tended to result in unforeseen consequences.  “Like what?” she asked.  So I described my most recent article on blowback from U.S. military efforts in Africa. 


Did I write books? 


“I do,” I replied. 


“What are the titles?” 


“The latest one is called Kill Anything That Moves.” 


“Kill what?”  


Kill Anything That Moves.” 


She turned to her computer, promptly Googled the book, went to the Amazon page, and began scrolling through the customer reviews.  She asked if my book was, as the page said, a New York Times bestseller.  I assured her it was.  After a short while, she told me to stay put and disappeared into a back room with my personal papers — writings, notes, reading materials.  When she returned, she told me that she couldn’t conduct the rest of my “examination” in public.  She would have to bring me “back.”  I asked if there was a problem.  No.  Could I have my papers back?  The answer was again no.


I was soon deposited in “Area 23” of New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport and I was definitely the odd one out.  Not that there weren’t plenty of other people there.  The Muslim man in the taqiyah.  Three women in head scarves.  Another wearing a niqab.  Everyone’s skin color was at least several shades darker than mine.


I waited for a while, taking notes, before my name was called by an Officer Mott.  The badge on his shirt made that clear, but he spelled it out for me anyway.  “It seems like you’re taking notes on everything, so I might as well get that out of the way,” Mott said visibly perturbed, especially when I asked for his full name. “I’m not giving you my first name,” he said with palpable disgust.


Like the previous CBP agent, he also asked about my writing interests.  I told him it mostly centered on U.S. foreign policy. 


Are you for or against it?” 


“Am I for foreign policy?” I asked. 


“Well, I’m reading that your last book is Kill Anything That Moves.  That was about what?” 


“The Vietnam War.”  


“What about the Vietnam War?” 


“Civilian casualties.” 


“Sensitive topic,” he said. 


“Especially for the Vietnamese,” I replied.


“Well, in this day and age with the whole war going on, that’s a sensitive issue you’re writing about…  Do you get any heat or problems writing about war and civilian casualties?” 


“It comes with the territory,” I told him.


As he typed away at his computer, I asked why I was singled out. “I think because some of the material you have is of interest… What you’re writing, traveling with.”  I asked how they would know what was in my bag before I was detained.  “Why the officer stopped you is beyond me, but what the officer discovered is something of interest, especially for national security… It’s not every day you see someone traveling with information like this.” 


It was probably true.  The contents of my bag were splayed out before us.  The most prominent and substantive document was “Qatar: Background and U.S. Relations,” a report prepared last year by the U.S. Congressional Research Service. 


Agent Mott rifled through my papers, tapped at his keyboard some more, breathed in deeply and then launched into a series of questions designed to make sure, he told me, that nothing “jeopardizes our national security.”    


“How long have you been writing about wars and things like that?” 


“About 10 years.” 


He did a double take, looked at my passport, and typed feverishly.  “I thought you were younger,” he told me.  I took it as a compliment.  He wanted to know if I’d traveled anywhere in the last five years as he flipped through my passport, filled as it is with visas and entry and exit stamps from around the world.  The answer was obviously yes.  “Pakistan?  Afghanistan?” he asked. 


Immediately, I thought of the unused Afghan visa in my passport and started to explain.  After instructing me to get a visa, the U.S. military had strung me along for months before deciding I couldn’t embed with certain units I requested, I told him. 


“Doing journalistic stuff, not fighting with them or anything like that?” 


Fighting?  Was I really being accused of heading to Afghanistan to join the Taliban?  Or maybe plotting to launch an insider attack?  Was I really being questioned about this on the basis of having an Afghan visa and writing about national security issues?  “Nope.  I’m a writer,” I told him.  “I cover the U.S. military, so I was going to cover the U.S. military.” 


Agent Mott seemed satisfied enough.  He finished his questions and sent me on my way. 


The next morning, I checked my email, and found a message waiting for me.  It was from the Media Embed Chief in Afghanistan.  “You are receiving this email because in the past you have been an embed with ISAF [International Security Force in Afghanistan] or requested an embed,” it read.  “Your opinion and satisfaction are important to us.” 


“You can’t make this shit up,” an old editor of mine was fond of saying when truth — as it so often does — proves stranger than fiction.  This sequence of events certainly qualified.  I could hardly believe my eyes, but there it was: a link to a questionnaire about how well served I was by my (nonexistent) 2012 embed in Afghanistan.  Question number six asked: “During your embed(s) did you get the information and stories you require? If no please state why.”


Let me count the ways.


 

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The Pentagon Is Spending Your Tax Dollars to Keep You in the Dark About Its Sprawling Empire

Friday, June 14, 2013

Coburn to Holder: Slash Spending on Conferences

Sen. Tom Coburn sent a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder Thursday, demanding the Justice Department cut its spending on conferences.

The letter asks for an accounting of the $ 58 million the department doled out for conferences in fiscal 2012, saying the trips were too expensive, according to Yahoo News.


“In FY 2012, DOJ spent more than $ 58 million on conferences,” the Oklahoma Republican wrote. “Such spending should be significantly reduced, especially during times of fiscal challenges.”


“For example, DOJ’s conferences last year included nearly $ 500,000 for 30 DOJ employees to attend a conference in Indonesia, nearly $ 200,000 for just four DOJ employees to attend a seminar in Senegal, and more than $ 100,000 on a summit in the Northern Mariana Islands that did not include a single DOJ attendee,” Coburn added.


While the Justice Department has been able to avoid furloughing law enforcement officers in the wake of the government sequester, it previously said it might have to do so, Coburn noted, adding that the department “should not be threatening to furlough law enforcement agents while . . . sending bureaucrats on international junkets.”


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



Coburn to Holder: Slash Spending on Conferences

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Merkel coalition partner warns against higher state spending



BERLIN (Reuters) – The leader of Chancellor Angela Merkel‘s junior coalition partner chided her over spending promises made ahead of September’s federal election and said now was not the time to abandon “economic sense”.


Merkel, whose center-right Christian Democrats (CDU) are well ahead in opinion polls, has signaled that more funds will be made available for families and for infrastructure projects if she wins a third term in office.


“I urgently advise staying in the realm of economic sense. Social policy promises like those now being proposed by the CDU have to be financially feasible,” Philipp Roesler of the liberal Free Democrats (FDP) told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper.


Germany must not abandon its aim of achieving a balanced budget, said Roesler, whose pro-business party is a staunch advocate of fiscal discipline.


The top-selling Bild daily on Saturday put a price tag of 28 billion euros on Merkel’s spending promises and said it showed Germany’s election campaign had finally begun.


“The euro and financial market crises are already yesterday. Four months before the federal election the parties criss-cross the country promising citizens what they supposedly want to hear,” said Bild in a commentary in Sunday’s edition.


Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, a close Merkel ally, denied in a statement to Reuters any weakening of government resolve to cut public debt, though he said he saw scope for some modest additional spending in priority areas.


In Sunday’s interview, Roesler criticized the European Commission’s decision to grant France and Spain more time to reduce their budget deficits, saying it sent a “wrong signal” that could harm confidence in Europe’s readiness to reform.


Strong economic growth, buoyant tax revenues and lower unemployment have helped Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, to reduce its borrowing costs despite the ongoing euro crisis. German public debt nevertheless remains well above the EU’s 60 percent ceiling at over 80 percent of gross domestic product.


In some good news for Roesler, an opinion poll conducted by the Emnid pollster for the Bild am Sonntag newspaper showed support for his FDP at 5 percent, just enough to win seats in the Bundestag lower house in September’s election.


The FDP has sometimes dipped below the 5 percent threshold in opinion polls, raising doubts over whether Merkel will be able to renew the current center-right coalition.


The most likely outcome if the FDP fails to get back into parliament would be a ‘grand coalition’ between Merkel’s conservatives and the main opposition Social Democrats (SPD) like the one she led from 2005 to 2009.


In Sunday’s survey, Merkel’s Christian Democrats and their Bavarian allies the Christian Social Union (CSU) remained steady at 40 percent, the SPD was on 26 percent, its Green allies on 14 percent and the former communist Left on 7 percent.


(Reporting by Gareth Jones; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)




Economy News Headlines – Yahoo! News



Merkel coalition partner warns against higher state spending

Saturday, March 9, 2013

In Case You Needed More Proof That It"s Stupid To Cut Government Spending In A Weak Economy...

There are two basic approaches to fixing our crappy economy.

The first approach is called “austerity.”

This logic for this approach rests on the theory that our economy is crappy because our government is spending more than it takes in and that the resulting deficit is creating “uncertainty.” Once this deficit spending is reduced, this theory goes, uncertainty will ease, and confidence will return. And then our economy can recover in earnest.

The second approach is called “stimulus.”

The logic for this approach rests on the theory that our economy is crappy because consumers are unemployed and broke and have little money to spend. Because consumers have little money to spend, this theory continues, the government should take up the slack and deficit-spend until unemployment drops and consumers have more money to spend. This government spending, in other words, will keep the blood flowing until the patient is healthy again.

Five years ago, economists were locked in a fierce debate about which approach was better–”stimulus” or “austerity.”

Thankfully, that question has now been answered.

The “stimulus” approach is better.

Importantly, this question has not just been answered theoretically.

It has been answered empirically.

In 2008-2009, you will recall, the U.S. and Europe both went into a deep recession.

In response, the U.S. tried “stimulus.”

Europe, meanwhile–and most notably the United Kingdom–tried “austerity.”

You know how well “austerity” has worked in southern Europe. The collapse of the Greek economy, and the ongoing weakness in Italy and Spain and much of the rest of the Eurozone, illustrates clearly that you can’t cut your way to prosperity.

What you might not know is how poorly “austerity” has worked in the European economy that is perhaps most like our own: The UK.

Economist Paul Krugman put up a chart this morning that reminds us how well it has worked.

The red line in the chart below shows the progress of the United States economy over the past five years. The United States, you will recall, enacted stimulus in response to the crisis. And, today, the U.S. economy is significantly larger than it was before the recession.

The blue line in the chart, meanwhile, is the UK economy. The UK, you will recall, tried “austerity” as a way of fixing its economy. The UK economy has performed very poorly for the last several years, and is still smaller than it was before the crisis.

This chart should make everyone who still believes that the way to fix our economy today is to cut government spending question their thinking.

Unfortunately, in the past five years, these two approaches have been “politicized,” which means that the people who advocate them never question their thinking.

They just look at their party “talking points” and start talking.

That’s too bad.

Because what it means is that, while each political team tries to score political points by reading from their party teleprompters, the rest of us have to suffer through a crappy economy.


Politics


In Case You Needed More Proof That It"s Stupid To Cut Government Spending In A Weak Economy...

Friday, March 1, 2013

America Is Officially Freaking Out About Sequestration

CA_OT

Newseum

After lamenting in a press conference Friday that he could not do more to avert the forced spending cuts known as sequestration, President Barack Obama will sign a sequestration order sometime later in the day. 

Obama and both parties of Congress have been warning about the cuts of the sequester for the past few weeks. Local publications have also started warning about the state-by-state and community-by-community effects. 

On Friday, as the cuts were set to begin kicking in, newspapers from California to New York began bracing their readers for the effects.


Politics


America Is Officially Freaking Out About Sequestration

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Can you find the sequester cuts?

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The truth is out: The threat that “sequester” will decimate the nation is a fraud, according to former presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani.

On Fox News tonight, he said it’s “totally absurd” that Americans should be worried about the cuts, because they’re not cuts at all, just a slower increase in spending.

“Why the American people can’t see through…” he said. “This is fraud.”

Sharing that opinion was former Sen. Jim DeMint, now chief of the Heritage Foundation.

He said the American media is “so sold out to Obama they’re missing the obvious.”

“Spending under the sequester continues to go up,” he said. “Instead of $ 1.7 trillion [more] in the next decade, we’re going to spend $ 1.6 trillion.

“Yet the president is making this look like it’s an apocalyptic situation,” he said, “because he wants to do what they’re doing in Europe, which is to blame their economic woes on the reduction in government spending so it feeds into his philosophy [that] we’ve got to keep growing spending.”

DeMint told Fox that the tax increases implemented under Obama on Jan. 1 of 2013 will make a bigger impact on the economy than any sequester.

He said those tax hikes “are going to hurt our economy, probably going to bring it down.”

He said the truth is that there are no cuts in spending.

“Very few people are telling the truth,” he said.

The Congressional Budget Office, in fact, documents his perspective.

In the following chart, the CBO reveals that the “sequester” savings are an infinitesimal portion of the nation’s coming spending plans.

The gray tip of the green spending column is what would be saved, the agency reported.

DeMint, in fact, told Fox that the spending needs to be cut a lot more than the sequester envisions.

“We need to accept the fact we have to cut more than the sequester,” he said.

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WND


Can you find the sequester cuts?

Monday, February 25, 2013

Obama to governors: Tell Congress to stop spending cuts

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama urged state governors on Monday to pressure Congress to prevent $ 85 billion in across-the-board government spending cuts from going into effect on Friday, saying he is willing to reach a compromise with Republicans.


Reuters: Top News


Obama to governors: Tell Congress to stop spending cuts