In the first paragraph of a post explaining why he won't see The Adjustment Bureau:
"But I can't believe in guys in suits with the ability to plan things."
The whole piece is worth reading, although it's mostly focused on Congress and the President, not the bureaucracy.
Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Friday, March 04, 2011
Thursday, March 03, 2011
Why So Many Different Government Programs?
GAO has a report out this week outlining duplication in programs among different government agencies. They find lots of duplication. I seem to remember similar concerns back in the Nixon and Reagan administrations; one of the reasons for replacing programs with block grants, which Reagan tried to do, was to eliminate such duplication.
Why do we have such duplication? There's no doubt good and necessary reasons for the programs, but I'd suggest one reason is human ego. Consider a politician, a Congressperson politician. Consider an activist. Now imagine a " need" for government action, and ask the activist to work for such action and the politician to pass a law implementing such action. I put "need" in quotes to recognize the word is just a placeholder for different categorizations according to the political philosophy of the onlooker.
The activist and politician face an immediate strategic choice:
All things considered, it will be easier for the activist and the politician to go with a separate program, preferably labeled in honor of the pol. Politicians don't campaign on improving existing programs; they campaign on creating new ones or shutting old ones down. That's the way our government works.
Why do we have such duplication? There's no doubt good and necessary reasons for the programs, but I'd suggest one reason is human ego. Consider a politician, a Congressperson politician. Consider an activist. Now imagine a " need" for government action, and ask the activist to work for such action and the politician to pass a law implementing such action. I put "need" in quotes to recognize the word is just a placeholder for different categorizations according to the political philosophy of the onlooker.
The activist and politician face an immediate strategic choice:
- do they identify the existing government program and agency which is most closely related to the "need" and try to modify and enhance the program and agency accordingly?
- do they create a new program to be assigned to an existing agency?
- do they create a new agency to handle the new program?
All things considered, it will be easier for the activist and the politician to go with a separate program, preferably labeled in honor of the pol. Politicians don't campaign on improving existing programs; they campaign on creating new ones or shutting old ones down. That's the way our government works.
US as Scapegoat
We seem to be fulfilling our destiny: every nation has a destiny and ours is to become a scapegoat whenever dueling parties within a country (i.e., Muslim pols and secular pols) amp up the heat. That's my takeaway from this study. Remembering the politics of what we used to call the "Third World", I can well believe it. Nehru and Sukarno, the leaders of the third world, used to beat up on the U.S. regularly.
Wednesday, March 02, 2011
Reducing Payment Acreage
This bit from Farm Policy raises a possibility I missed earlier: reducing payment acreage.
“Congress may also wish to consider reducing the portion of a farm’s acres eligible for direct payments. In 2009, GAO reported that reducing the portion of eligible acres to 80 percent from 83.3 percent might save millions of dollars annually. Further reducing the portion of eligible acres to 75 percent could save millions more each year. Such an across-the board reduction would affect all recipients. Moreover, Congress may wish to consider terminating the payments. Some agriculture organizations, including the National Farmers Union and the Iowa Farm Bureau, have recommended phasing out or terminating the payments altogether and using the savings to bolster other farm programs.”This would perpetuate a device Congress first use way back in history: achieving budget savings by reducing the payment acreage and/or payment yield formulas. Instead of being obvious what they're doing, they do it the sneaky way. Never underestimate the capacity of a politician to be sneaky.
401k for Governments
The Times has an article on states looking to 401K type defined contribution plans [employee kicks in a percentage of pay, employer may match part or all of it, retiree gets back the results of investing the contributions, good or bad]. I assumed, as usual wrongly, that most states had gone to defined contribution plans decades ago.
Reagan's breaking of the air traffic controllers union is widely remembered. What's less remembered is the redo of the federal retirement system. Old timers, like me, are under the Civil Service retirement system, a defined benefit system [annuities are based on length of service and salary] with no social security. During Reagan's time (1986) new employees were put on a three level system: social security, a smallish federal defined benefit annuity, and a 401K type investment plan, with matching from the government.Unlike social security, the government doesn't have a pension fund to cover my civil service annuity or the FERS annuity; those payments come out of the yearly budget. As it turns out, what I first wrote was wrong. I decided to do a little more research before posting and found this link, which explains the unfunded government liability for CSR annuities will rise to about 850 billion dollars in 2030. But the actuaries say that's okay.
The change was better for the government and employees got more flexibility through the 401k/TSP plan, though they assumed some risk.
From the Times article it seems many states are still where the Feds were before 1986. I'm not clear whether the state pensions are indexed for inflation, which the CSR annuities.
Reagan's breaking of the air traffic controllers union is widely remembered. What's less remembered is the redo of the federal retirement system. Old timers, like me, are under the Civil Service retirement system, a defined benefit system [annuities are based on length of service and salary] with no social security. During Reagan's time (1986) new employees were put on a three level system: social security, a smallish federal defined benefit annuity, and a 401K type investment plan, with matching from the government.
The change was better for the government and employees got more flexibility through the 401k/TSP plan, though they assumed some risk.
From the Times article it seems many states are still where the Feds were before 1986. I'm not clear whether the state pensions are indexed for inflation, which the CSR annuities.
Pigford Is an Urban Legend?
Snopes.com has a post on Pigford, linking to the Congressional Research Service's report.
Tuesday, March 01, 2011
Army Chow Has Changed Since 1966
Matt Yglesias passes on a Slate piece on the military's food program. Turns out today's recruits have choices
in what they eat. The modern generation is spoiled, spoiled, spoiled.
in what they eat. The modern generation is spoiled, spoiled, spoiled.
How Great We Are
Apparently, in addition to being the, or one of the, wealthiest county in the country, we also are healthy, according to this piece in the Reston Patch. The discussion is actually based on Congressional districts, not counties, but it's much the same. Joe Moran's district includes the Dems closer to the Potomac as well as Reston. According to the map, I should have a few more good years before I kick the bucket, which is nice to know.
Extension.org Goes Piggy
The RSS feed at extension.org has been going wild over the past few days; I'd guess 2-300 posts on hogs, mostly in a QandA format. Here's their answer to the question:
The same reasons can be used for the increase in average size of farms for many crops.
Why have pork production units become larger and the industry become more vertically integrated?
from eXtension by Contributors
Economies of size resulting in higher profits ? through purchasing inputs cheaper and reducing marketing risk (through contractts), more efficient use of resources, greater access to capital, specialization of labor.The same reasons can be used for the increase in average size of farms for many crops.
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