Bringing morality to the markets

Posted by Christie Malry on October 30, 2011 at 9:13 pm

In an interesting, but ultimately flawed, blog post, Colin Talbot says:

Today I heard a Lib Dem MEP say something to the effect of “what are we going to do, stop the markets from doing certain things”? Well, er, yes. We stop ‘the markets’ from trading in human body parts, or in whole humans for that matter. We don’t allow them to freely trade nuclear weapons, or other WMDs. In other words there are all sorts of moral and practical restrictions placed upon the markets, for our own protection.

Markets don't "do" anything. They're merely a place where people interact. And, as ideas go, the idea of the free market is fundamentally unobjectionable. Why shouldn't people be able to buy and sell things to each other without interference? Markets are inherently a good thing.

Now, sometimes the outcome of a free transaction is inconsistent with society's norms. For example, the case of nuclear weapons given above. Although there may be a willing seller of nuclear weapons and a willing buyer of nuclear weapons, we collectively don't want the technology behind these weapons - or indeed the weapons themselves - to spread. So we intervene to forbid such transactions taking place in our free market.

There are a load of other examples . We don't allow buying/selling of slaves, some drugs, sex and children because these (rightly, in my view) offend our moral sensibilities. But that's not the fault of the market. It's just a place where people buy and sell. It has no ethical sense at all. The ethics of a market transaction depend on the buyer, the seller, and society's interpretation of it.

Blaming "the markets" for stuff society doesn't like is an unacceptable cop-out. We should regulate sellers of stuff we don't like, or we should regulate buyers of stuff we don't like. It's not the fault of "the markets". What we consider acceptable or not is, after all, a societal construct.

So, with that in mind, let's turn to Talbot's three suggestions for fixing "the markets":

You should not be able to sell stuff you don’t own.

The whole basis of ‘short-selling’ is you sell something you don’t own now, in order to drive down the price of the things you don’t own so you can later buy them for less than you just sold the things you don’t own for.

I can’t for the life of me see how this generates any value to anybody except allowing the short-sellers to rip everyone else off. Their ‘bet’ that the price will fall is not based on anything ‘real’, like the value of the item, but simply on their ability to manipulate the market. On the contrary, if the thing being sold is something like a companies shares it is doing a lot of damage. What is it good for?

Nope. Totally wrong. There are all sorts of legitimate reasons for short-selling. And, indeed, plenty of businesses sell stuff they don't own. At the risk of reiterating material I already wrote in an earlier blog post, here are some instances of short-selling in business:

  • Just-in-time manufacturing. Efficient manufacturing businesses sell goods they don't own, then manufacture them quickly once they've been ordered. This helps businesses by reducing their need to hold significant quantities of inventory (which might fail to sell, go bad or get stolen).
  • Bespoke printing. I understand that Amazon will print up books for you 'to order'. They don't exist at the time of ordering, but they'll print them, bind them and send them to you.
  • Airlines. Airlines don't actually have "a seat on a flight from London to New York at 8:50am on 23 February 20X2" when you order it. But we don't seem to have a problem with allowing people to buy one.
  • University courses.  Similarly for university courses. Professor Talbot doesn't actually have any of the courses his university is selling. Nor, to the extent that they're examined courses, have any of the exam papers yet been written.
  • Writers. Publishers often provide advances to authors, sometimes before even a single word has been written. What's that, if not short-selling?

In all of these cases, while the seller doesn't actually have what he's selling in his grubby little hands at the point of sale, he does have the capacity to provide it. And, if he fails to provide it, he is liable to breach of contract. That's as true for these cases as it is for short-selling of shares. A short-seller of equities has the capacity to acquire the shares in question. If, for any reason, he fails to do so, he must pay the financial consequences.

If you need an introduction to how short-selling works, and why it's not problematic, you should acquaint yourself with three girls, two cups.

You shouldn’t be able to insure things you don’t own either.

If I were to insure a camera I didn’t own, but actually belonged to my mate, and then he had it stolen whilst on holiday, I don’t know any insurance company that would pay me. Au contraire, I’d probably get a visit from Sgt Plod asking me why I was trying to rip off the insurance company. As with so much else, this doesn’t seem to apply in the topsy-turvy moral universe of finance capital.

Anyone can purchase a CDS, even buyers who do not hold the loan instrument and may have no direct “insurable interest” in the loan. The buyer of the CDS makes a series of payments (the CDS “fee” or “spread”) to the seller and, in exchange, receives a payoff if the loan defaults.”

Again, I fail to see any utility in this transaction for the real world the rest of us inhabit and if I tried to pull this stunt with a car I’d end up in prison.

Well, I have some sympathy with this line of thinking, and I take great solace from the fact that Frances Coppola does too, However, Talbot's reasons fail the basic standard that we set out in the beginning. He's saying that we should ban CDSs because he "fail[s] to see any utility" in them. But there are plenty of other things that he probably can't see any utility in; say the selling of marmite-flavoured chocolate. Should we ban that too?

No, the only reason to ban something is if we can point to the specific way that it offends society. Beyond the fact that it just feels 'iffy', Talbot fails to make the case.

You should pay tax on every transaction that supposedly ‘adds value’.

One of the main reasons for financial systems running amok is the volume of trades – these have spiraled to unprecedented levels. When the rest of us buy and sell things we (mostly) pay VAT on the transaction, which, in case you have forgotten is “value added” tax. So if these financial transaction as ‘value adding’ as their proponents claim, why don’t they have to pay tax on them? When a car component manufacturer sells a car widget to the manufacturer they have to pay a whopping 20% VAT. Why doesn’t this apply to financial ‘products’?

This betrays a fundamental understanding of how value added tax works. VAT is a tax paid by consumers on the value added to a good or service during its manufacture. So the car component manufacturer doesn't pay "a whopping 20% VAT". The VAT, if any, will be paid by the purchaser, not the seller. And, in turn, the seller will account for that input VAT when it sells the final product on to customers. Customers are the end of the chain: they cannot reclaim their input VAT so ultimately they must pay VAT 1.

Businesses do, of course, have a sort of 'value added' tax of their own. It's called corporation tax, and is payable on the taxable profits made by businesses. So our car component manufacturer (presuming they're incorporated) will pay corporation tax on the profit it makes between buying in metal, shaping it into widgets and selling those widgets to other companies.

Contrary to popular belief, financial businesses do pay corporation tax on the sum of all those little profits they make from super-fast transactions. So Talbot's desire to see added value being taxed is already reality.

And, again contrary to popular  belief, financial services businesses don't dodge VAT. The provision of financial services is VAT-exempt, which means financial services businesses cannot recover their input VAT. Their prices therefore effectively include VAT already to allow them to recover it in an economic sense 2.

There may yet be a case for introducing a financial transaction tax. I don't buy it, myself. But inaccurately stating that financial transactions aren't subject to a tax on the value added isn't the way to make the case.

Notes:

  1. Whether they ultimately bear VAT is a much more complex issue and is well beyond the scope of this blog post.
  2. The Mirrlees review suggested that the VAT status of financial services businesses ought to be changed.

How quickly reputation is lost - an Android case study

Posted by Christie Malry on April 27, 2011 at 9:53 pm

In the world of Android mobile phones, lots of essential software is provided not by the operating system itself but by third party programmers. The operating system doesn't provide an easy way to turn off mobile data, which can be problematic if you don't have an unlimited data plan or you are travelling in a foreign country. Under those circumstances it can be a very costly mistake to leave your phone connecting to the Internet via its 3G modem.

The de facto gold standard solution is a little fix called APNdroid. This tricks your phone by temporarily renaming its data settings so that it simply cannot connect when you don't want it to. When you want to connect again, it renames them back. APNdroid is so widely used that other software providers often provide hooks to it in their software so you can use them together.

Yet recently, APNdroid's author, Martin Adamek, has been trying to increase the meagre amount of advertising revenue he makes from APNdroid. He has been experimenting with different formats; each time this has pushed an 'update' through the Android Marketplace encouraging users to upgrade to the latest version. This has upset some users. But the very latest update has got them erupting in fury. Because, unlike previous versions, this one sticks an advertisement in the status bar once a day. When users click on the advertisement, it takes them to a webpage where they can buy ringtones. 

Having been a very highly rated application, recent reviews have given it and its author a right kicking. 

apndroid_complaints

Martin has, to his credit, gone into damage limitation mode, firstly pointing out that users can pay for an ad-free version (although £1.50 is perhaps a bit steep for something that the operating system really ought to provide by itself), then dealing with disgruntled customers on Twitter.

But a lot of users will just walk away and, if Martin ever decides to revert to a less intrusive system, they'll never see it. Alternatives to APNdroid are now available, including one that looks virtually identical to it. Having become the market leader, it's just possible that he's squandered his advantage by getting just a bit too greedy.

For the technically minded, the offending service is called Airpush, which has an extensive list of questions and answers about its service here. Curiously, they don't seem to have an answer to "Will Airpush irritate my users and get them to uninstall my software in rage?" 

Our conceit about speeding drivers

Posted by Christie Malry on January 6, 2011 at 10:26 am

Most people have been horrified at the news of a kindly gentleman, who warned other drivers of a speed trap, being fined in the courts for obstructing the police. Perhaps you have been warned of speed traps in this way before. Maybe you've even helped others.

So imagine some other (made up) scenarios:

A friend of yours works at HMRC. He lends you his USB stick. You find a folder containing a list of names and addresses of suspected tax avoiders that HMRC will be investigating.  Do you ring them up to warn them of the investigation?

Or, perhaps another friend of yours invites you round to his house. He works for the Professional Oversight Board. While he's getting you a drink, you spot a note among his papers outlining the audits of major firms that are due for inspection. Do you take a copy of the list with your mobile and send it to the Big Four?

Now, I may be wrong, but I suspect people would answer emphatically "no" to both. So what is different about speeding drivers that makes us sympathetic to their law breaking compared to tax cheats or bad auditors? 3,000 people die on Britain's roads every year in "accidents", virtually all of which wouldn't happen if drivers followed the Highway Code. Tax avoidance and dodgy auditing, as far as I'm aware, never killed anyone.

Seriously, what's the difference?

Written on my Android mobile phone. Article may be edited later.

The grinches that want to ruin Christmas for ordinary people

Posted by Christie Malry on December 20, 2010 at 9:51 am

The ukuncut campaign rumbles along. Last Saturday, on paper at least one of the busiest shopping days of the year, protestors once again disrupted shops across the UK, including Vodafone and Topshop.

This is unacceptable. I've explained before why the ukuncut cases against Vodafone and Topshop are unfounded. The case against Vodafone is so flimsy that even Richard Murphy won't validate their figures.

Given that their two specific cases are so pathetically weak, you might be wondering whether their general campaign holds water either. But, this being the season of goodwill and all, I recognise their right to protest. Yet, in these circumstances, their current methods are completely unsupportable.

Their chosen tactics don't hurt David Cameron. They don't hurt the coalition. Nor do they hurt HMRC. They barely scrape Vodafone bosses or Sir Philip Green. Nope. Instead they frustrate and wreck one of the final pre-Christmas shopping days for thousands of ordinary people. And they make work even more hellish for thousands of retail workers, as if their conditions aren't bad enough already.

To base an entire tax campaign on two utter howlers would be bad enough. But their methods betray the rank cowardice in the hearts of the ukuncut protestors. They know their figures don't stand up to scrutiny, so they're merely trying to be as disruptive to ordinary people as possible. This is a disgrace, and we should resist these selfish Grinches. They're not on our side; they are bullies who will do anything - even wreck Christmas for thousands - to get their way. 

Written on my Android mobile phone. Article may be edited later.

The deluded and irritating world of Toby Ord

Posted by Christie Malry on December 14, 2010 at 9:48 am

Meet Toby Ord. He's an Oxford academic who believes that people can and should donate much more money to charity over their lifetimes.  He is aiming to give away £1 million over his, despite earning £25,000 (soon to be increased), an amount many might consider to be paltry.

So, as someone who also loves philosophy, who appreciates off-the-wall thinking, and who believes that the Big Society can work, why - in thinking about Ord's campaign - do I find him to be the most insufferable tossbag?

Firstly, I cannot accept that it's right - whether economically, socially, or rationally - to encourage people to give so much of their own earned money away to charity before they've been able to put the prospect of their own poverty beyond reach.  It seems daft to me to give lots away only to have to turn to other people's charity at some later date.

Secondly, Ord's campaign rests in no small part to his university flat which, at a monthly rental of £416, is significantly below the market rent, even in a slum city like Oxford.  It's all very well to call others to arms, but it's unfair to do so using privileged access to assets from which others can't benefit.

Thirdly, and most seriously, I strongly object to the mixing of "savings and tax" in the BBC graphic.  Savings are totally different to tax.  They could hardly be more different.  Savings are amounts put aside from current earnings to fund your own future expenditure.  Tax represents amounts put aside from current earnings to fund society's current expenditure.  That's not to say that some taxes weren't at one time savings-like.  National insurance, for example, started life as a scheme to encourage people to provide for their own retirement benefits via a national scheme.  Over time, though, we can see that the scheme has been totally subverted by government meddling, such that now it's just another tax.  You have to pay national insurance, but it now really doesn't purchase you any direct benefits over and above what other people can get.

I would be happier if Ord were encouraging people to make generous bequests in their wills.  It's better to get people to save up their own money and then donate from that, rather than getting them to hand it over now when they might need it later.

And with tax representing the biggest bill for virtually every citizen as well as being an individual's donation to society, it would be better to treat tax payments as part of one's lifetime donation to charity.  If you did that, you'd see that lots of higher earners already donate £1 million or more to other people.  Why the ukuncut protestors and other left-wingers can't appreciate that, is a much better question to be asking.

The public interest

Posted by Christie Malry on November 9, 2010 at 10:23 am

What is the public interest? Perhaps it's one of those concepts, like true love, that you can't quite describe but you reckon you'll know when you see it. Well, never fear, because IFAC, the International Federation of Accountants (which also sets International Standards on Auditing), has written a snappy little paper about the subject.

Sadly, it's not very good. It achieves its brevity by sacrificing any pretence at academic rigour. Incredibly, it contains no external references whatsoever. So, while its three criteria - "consideration of costs and benefits for society as a whole", "adherence to democratic principles and processes", and "respect for cultural and ethical diversity" - seem plausible enough, it just feels underbaked given the weight of previous literature on this subject.

Diversity is a necessary cop-out if IFAC is to avoid irritating its Islamic members. But it does introduce a dangerous relativism to the concept of public interest, which we might imagine to be a more universal notion. It brings to mind the Adam Curtis documentary, The Trap, in which James M. Buchanan denies that there is such a concept, merely the self interest of those in charge. They use the public interest as a reason to justify what they want to do in their own interest.

There is a fatal lack of detail in the document. There's so little, in fact, that it's hard to imagine how it could be developed into a usable framework. Luckily, I have one of my own: my view is that accountants serve the public interest by making complex things simpler to understand and by helping people trust information that might otherwise be unreliable. In my view, that provides a way forward in deciding how IFAC should approach its standard-setting responsibilities.

Written on my Android mobile phone. Article may be edited later.

From social cleansing to slave labour - the hyperbolic rhetoric continues

Posted by Christie Malry on November 8, 2010 at 9:04 am

Last week it was social cleansing and idiotic talk of a final solution for the poor.  This week similar ludicrous claims are being made in the Guardian about some pitifully cautious proposals to encourage the unemployed to take their first steps out of a lifetime on benefits.

The government's side of the bargain will be the promise of a new "universal credit", to replace all existing benefits, that will ensure it always pays to work rather than stay on welfare.

In return, where advisers believe a jobseeker would benefit from experiencing the "habits and routines" of working life, an unemployed person will be told to take up "mandatory work activity" of at least 30 hours a week for a four-week period. If they refuse or fail to complete the programme their jobseeker's allowance payments, currently £50.95 a week for those under 25 and £64.30 for those over 25, could be stopped for at least three months.

Old nazi dudeIt's not exactly a concentration camp, is it?  In return for continuing to demand handouts from other taxpayers, jobseekers will be required to undertake a minor amount of work.  In doing so, this will boost their confidence and improve their fitness to rejoin the workplace.  It's good for them and it's good for us.  What's not to like?

Well, the main thing not to like, if you're a Labour supporter at least, is the fact that this skewers a main tenet of their political philosophy - that there are people who are so useless and incompetent that society must look after them from cradle to grave, no matter what it costs.  The idea that people might be able to fend for themselves, to become self-sufficient, happy members of society is fatal to them.

Yet we can take some minor amusement from the very idea that it's somehow evil to require people to work 'for nothing'.  The Adam Smith Institute calculates Tax Freedom Day, which is the first day that a taxpayer hypothetically starts working for himself, having first settled his annual tax liability.  In 2010 TFD was 30 May, although if the government had covered all of its expenditure with tax receipts instead of running a deficit, TFD would have been 8 July.  30 May!  That means that UK taxpayers are working for five whole months without being paid, just to feed the stomachless many-tentacled monster that is our bloated state.

So take your four weeks of work and swallow it.  Those of us who actually pay for the welfare benefits you cherish contribute far far more, and you don't hear us complaining about it.

Tax evasion - a noble cause?

Posted by Christie Malry on November 3, 2010 at 10:22 am

Richard Murphy is upset again. This is because a think tank director suggested that he might like to see a bit more tax evasion.

I wonder where, but in the hall of a City of London Livery Company could you openly promote your opinion that law breaking is a good thing and expect a welcome reception for your ideas?

Yet again, I suspect Richard is too puffed up with righteous indignation to think clearly. Because there's no moral problem with breaking the law if the law itself is immoral. Even more curiously, the idea that the law should be obeyed slavishly come what may is a peculiarly right wing point of view.

Civil disobedience has long been a part of our society, and occasionally it can go too far. Few on the left would apologise for the worst excesses of, say, the Poll Tax riots. Instead, they would argue that, on balance, it was fair. More recently, we have seen the ludicrous sight of middle class students protesting against "tax cheat" Vodafone even while both Vodafone and HMRC state categorically that no more tax is due. And it's commonly argued that it is justified for a starving pauper to steal.

Civil rights movements have often had to rely on some shady practices to fulfil their objectives. And now the world is a better place for it. One's conscience is a higher authority than the law. As a Christian, Richard will know that ultimately it won't be his compliance with secular rules that is important.

Most damning, Richard himself calls on us to look beyond the letter of the law. He would seek to deny legitimate deductions from companies that qualify for them, because he thinks that overall it gives a better, fairer outcome. How odd that he complains when someone looks to apply his own argument back to him.

Written on my Android mobile phone. Article may be edited later.

Why are people squeamish about paying drug addicts to be sterilised?

Posted by Christie Malry on October 19, 2010 at 9:34 am

Would you like £200?  It's yours if you're a drug addict or alcoholic, but there's a catch.  You've got to consent to a course of long-term contraception. If you're a man, that means the snip.

This has got virtually all left-wingers and a lot of right-wingers very upset.  How dare Project Prevention, a US charity, muck about with our fertility like this?  Needless to say, they're all wrong.  This is a pragmatic and compassionate solution to a very sorry state of affairs.  And the social liberals, who think they're so kind to everyone as they hose other people's money all over the place, are - yet again - making everything worse.

People generally find anything to do with reproduction or body parts icky.  As a result, our policy in this area is a mess.  We don't let women sell eggs commercially, we don't let men sell sperm commercially, and we don't let people sell body organs, even ones that they don't need.  The thinking behind this, inasmuch as it exists at all, is that people need to be protected from themselves because they're incapable of making such profound choices about their own bodies.

This is paternalistic nonsense.There is clearly a market for high quality sperm and eggs.  Clearly, some women are prepared to pay more for, say, the sperm from a good looking, youthful, Oxbridge educated chartered accountant than from some bum-faced footie fan who needed the (paltry) money available.

And the consequences of our squeamishness are appalling.  Newsnight showed a number of children whose lives had been ruined from birth by their parents' drug habits.  A mother was in tears as she recalled her own weakness - taking crack even as her baby was crowning.  And her nine year old son had the mental age of a five year old, directly as a result of her own abuse.

We are to blame.  We are worse than the US, because we have a higher level of welfare benefits than the US.  We take money off hard-working middle-class people and hand it to poor people with no strings attached.  And, while many use the money to better their lives and work their way out of poverty, many use the money to subsidise their drug habits.  We don't test welfare recipients for drugs, so it's our fault that drug addicts spend the money we give them on their habit.  Our welfare system presumes that recipients are rational, sensible people who can make proper judgements in their own best interests.  So why do we suddenly doubt that a drug addict can make judgements in their own best interests? And, if we do, why do we give them benefits with no strings attached?

The left-wing argument is intellectually incoherent.  It's cruel to babies, expensive to taxpayers, does nothing for addicts and blights society. We should applaud Project Prevention for having the courage to take action where we, collectively, have chickened out.

Isn't it also possible that many addicts, faced with the reality of being presented with a choice between their future as a reproductive human being and a drug addict choose to quit drugs?  Project Prevention might be the jolt they need to convince them that drug-taking is a bad life choice.

Jacks

Posted by Christie Malry on October 4, 2010 at 10:06 am

A common charge levelled against Conservative policies is that they embody the "I'm alright, Jack" philosophy. In other words, they just reflect an individual's own selfishness. And That Will Not Do.

There are more than a few problems with this line of argument. Firstly, it's on very shaky philosophical ground. Regardless of your world view, selfishness is just what human beings do, even if they see themselves as acting selflessly. Take Franny Armstrong, the hapless leader of the 10:10 organisation, recently eviscerated in the press for their stupid and ill-judged No Pressure campaign. Even someone like Frannie, who might claim to be acting in the greater good, can be redefined in terms of her own desires and beliefs which she is acting out. And, by that measure, she does what she wants rather than what anyone else wants, which is the dictionary definition of selfish.  (we can pass over, for now, the fact that she herself is responsible for many many times the carbon emissions of a 'normal' citizen).

So, given that selfishness is a necessary consequence of free will (at least as we ordinarily understand it), how can we usefully categories the Conservatives?  Conservative philosophy rests on the basic idea that society, not the state, is best placed to help others and create prosperity.  Conservatives believe that ordinary people are brilliant and, left to their own devices, will more or less just get on with their lives as they want.  It's the "You're alright, Jack" philosophy - the belief that people can - and will - succeed.

Compare this to the Labour message.  Labour believes that the state must help people. Left to their own devices, people will fail.  They are stupid, useless and incompetent and must be assisted by the state at every turn, or they will surely die.  This is the "You're not alright, Jack" philosophy, which seeks to enslave everyone to the state.

So, do you believe people can, or cannot? Whose side are you on?