"Jim
Dandy To The Rescue"--- Of The Economy
More
than fifty years ago, LaVern Baker & The Gliders, brought Jim Dandy into
the fray to lasso runaway horses, dry the tears in little girls' eyes, and to
save special mermaids from the hooks of villainous fishermen.
(Black
Oak Arkansas' rendition on You Tube will help you understand what your parents
and grandparents survived.) Go, Jim Dandy! Go, Jim Dandy!
This
generation's "runaway train" is a slip sliding housing market
victimized by lender's greed, Wall Street's creative dark side, and
congressional tinkering with a process that worked well for centuries--- and
all by its lonesome, George.
Our
little girls' tears are those of small, vulnerable, main-street-residing
investor's whose retirement dreams have been shattered by securities markets
that are little more than casinos, and instruments of mass financial
destruction that even their creators cannot explain.
The
mermaids? They are the taxpayers who have been victimized too long by the
financial institutions, tax collectors at all levels of existence, and a
congress that won't rest until it regulates our democracy into oblivion.
Jim
Dandy is in the house--- The White House. Go, Jim Dandy!
Barack
Obama captured the presidency, and brightened the political mood of America,
with the promise of change--- the economic mood continues to suffer. In some
areas, we need simply to rollback recent change that has failed; in others,
suggestions of change that have been ignored need to be given some big time
media attention. Here are a few instant winners:
One:
Get rid of SFAS (Statement of Financial Accounting Standards) Rule # 157, which
works something like this: While my bank owns my mortgage, it's worth full
value. As part of a Ginny Mae--- still full value. But once it crosses over
into the ether of CDOs and other multi-level, Frankensteinesque monstrosities,
my paid in advance mortgage becomes indistinguishable, and nearly worthless.
Fully
paid to date loans cannot be deemed valueless because some other body part is
delinquent. It is madness to mark the value of 95% of the mortgage debt in the
country to near zero because a small minority of borrowers are in trouble;
"underwater" on a property is more a function of the real estate
cycle than it is of the foolish loans themselves.
Why
aren't the highways clogged with underwater SUVs? Which loan would you stop
paying on first, home or auto? Most would answer: neither. Income securities
cannot by valued as if they were common stocks, and all debt must remain
clearly identifiable.
Roll
back the toxic accounting rules; unwind the mad scientists' creations and ban
them from the planet; move back to realistic mortgage qualification standards;
classify all multi-level derivatives as much too speculative, even for hedge
funds--- and think about getting rid of them as well.
Go, Jim
Dandy! Go, Jim Dandy!
Two:
Income Tax and Social Security Reform legislation has been ignored by congress
for years--- possibly because most of the fat cats just don't pay all that much
anyway. Congress, you'll recall, has a fully funded program for retirement and
lobbyist dollars to cover their current expenses.
Change
Social Security into a guaranteed fixed annuity program that is professionally
managed within the private sector--- a whole new sub-industry without worries
of healthcare and a captive market for all forms of government securities.
Employee contributions would be smaller and employer contributions gone
forever.
SSRIAs
would provide tax-free retirement income, and could become a viable alternative
investment option for a portion of IRA, 401(k), and other corporate sponsored,
private retirement programs. No retirement income from any source should ever
be taxable.
At the
same time, and about time, let's recognize how little the very wealthy (tax
attorney and off-shore-investment protected) actually contribute to the
Treasury. Let's appreciate as well that an underground, cash only, economy
still flourishes in the heartland.
Why not
boost the economy (and eliminate 50,000 pages of gibberish) right now by
replacing the IRC with a Flat Tax of 7% on all non-retirement income--- 10% max
with the addition of state and local taxes. A year later, all taxation of
investment income, including rents and royalties, is abolished at all levels of
collection.
Relax---
we create a Federal Sales tax of 10% on consumption of every thing except food,
shelter, and clothing (and possibly health care and higher education). Yeah,
we'll have to create a few thousand APE (Audit Police Everywhere) jobs to
enforce the intent of the new rules, but it’s a start. Also, minimum wage
earners would pay no federal or state income taxes.
Go, Jim
Dandy! Go, Jim Dandy!
Three:
The corporate form of organization, at all levels and sizes, is a force of
growth, productivity, and prosperity. It must be encouraged to employ more
people at fairer salaries while it contributes wealth to society in an
eco-friendly manner. We need to nourish business, not browbeat it into submission.
The
elimination of all forms of taxation and fees could be engineered to require
additional jobs and to lower prices. But it is essential that corporate boards
of directors play a more pro-active role in monitoring and controlling the
excesses of higher-level managers, executives, and bonus recipients.
There
are more corporate stockholders in the trenches of organizations and in the
factories than there are in executive suites. They control fewer shares and
wield less influence, its true, but more 401(k) participants than CEOs were
crushed by the congressional murders of Lehman and WaMu. Give them more of the
corporate compensation pie--- the wizards can make due on much less than 10
million per year.
It is
essential, with regard to all business enterprise, that corporations are
protected from the axis of economic terrorism: over zealous regulators,
ambulance chasing class action attorneys, crybaby shareholders, and protectionist
trade agreements--- theirs and ours.
Go, Jim
Dandy! Go, Jim Dandy!
Steve
Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com/
http://www.kiawahgolfinvestmentseminars.com
Professional
Investment Management from 1979
Author
of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street
Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret Investment
Strategy"
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plan,pension,retirement income,Fair Tax,Flat
tax,investment,government,employee,employer,contributions,fixed
income,private
sector,politician,reform,disposable income
"Jim
Dandy To The Rescue"--- Of The Economy
Get rid
of SFAS (Statement of Financial Accounting Standards) Rule # 157, which works
something like this: While my bank owns my mortgage, it's worth full value. As
part of a Ginny Mae--- still full value. But once it crosses over into the ether
of CDOs and other multi-level Frankensteinesque monstrosities, my paid in
advance mortgage becomes indistinguishable.