星期六, 三月 28, 2009

Anita--似是故人来


似是故人来
曲:罗大佑词:罗大佑
唱:梅艳芳

同是过路,同做过梦
本应是一对
人在少年,梦中不觉
醒后要归去
三餐一宿,也共一双
到底会是谁
但凡未得到
但凡是过去
总是最登对

台下你望,台上我做
你想做的戏
前世故人,忘忧的你
可曾记得起
欢喜伤悲,老病生死
说不上传奇
恨台上卿卿
或台下我我
不是我跟你

俗尘渺渺
天意茫茫
将你共我分开
断肠字点点
风雨声连连
似是故人来

何日再追,何地再醉
说今夜真美
无份有缘,回忆不断
生命却苦短
一种相思,两段苦恋
半生说没完
在年月深渊
望明月远远
想象你忧郁

留下你或留下我
在世间上终老
离别以前
未知相对当日那么好
执子之手
却又分手
爱得有还无
十年后双双
万年后对对
只恨看不到

星期二, 三月 24, 2009

From 陈丕显 Regarding 59-61...

按:陈丕显,"中国共产党优秀党员,久经考验的忠诚的共产主义战士,无产阶级革命家,中国共产党第十二届中央委员会书记处书记,第六届全国人民代表大会常务委员会副委员长"(引自官方评价),在上世纪三年大饥荒之时,任华东局书记处书记。本文摘自他的回忆录。 

上世纪的三年大饥荒,四川省委第一书记李井泉治下的四川省,以及河南省委第一书记吴芝圃治下的河南省,才是大饥荒的重灾区。而陈丕显先生本文中所描述的福建省,远不是重灾区。 

1960年4月下旬......回到了久别的福建家乡。一路上,我每到一地除了听汇报外都要去参观农民的食堂,到农民家里揭开锅盖看看,看他们吃的什么。邵武、三明、永安的情况还好,尽管三餐的稀饭稀得可以当镜子,稀得"浪打浪",但毕竟还有饭吃。可是一进入闽西境内,情况就十分不妙。许多人家无隔夜粮,靠野菜充饥,群众叫苦连天。我的心情很是沉重。...... 

4月30日,我在龙岩地委听取了地委、行署领导同志的工作汇报。他们汇报了闽西的大好形势,也说了存在的一些问题,其中提到有些群众生活有一定困难,但他们又把这归咎于这些农民瞒产私分。从他们闪烁其词、吞吞吐吐的汇报中,我深知他们怕戴上"右倾"帽子,不敢多谈问题。我初来乍到,对情况不是十分了解,所以也不便深问....... 5月2日,我在地区行署代理专员李应槐、上杭县委副书记李升亮等同志的陪同下驱车去南阳。 

由于从南阳到我家官连坑是乡间小道,不能行车,我到南阳之后便步行回家。当我路经田间时,便主动向正在劳动的群众问候,问他们生产、生活情况。他们异口同声地诉说没饭吃,吃不饱,饿得不能劳动。有人甚至大声地问我:"陈书记,现在是怎么搞的,弄得我们种田人没饭吃?"我心里真不是滋味。在一片哀怨声中,我们一行来到官连坑,住到了我堂兄陈家梅的家里。事后才知道,我的两位兄弟为我回来住在哪里,颇费了一番心思。按理,我应当住在自己兄弟家里,可是我家住房年久失修,且又拥挤,两位兄弟实在挤不出能让我们一行七、八人住的地方。后来还是我的堂兄陈家梅为他们解了这个难题。因为陈家梅前几年盖了新房,较干净、宽敞。落座后,大家诉说了一番悲欢离合之情。 

之后,我便在村子里转了一圈,看望了一些乡亲。我离别二三十年的家乡至今没有多大变化,眼前仍是一派衰微破败的景象。看到群众吃糠咽菜,有的瘦骨嶙峋、面有菜色,有的叫苦连天,我原先那份重返故乡的兴致早已荡然无存,取而代之的却是痛心和内疚!解放十多年了,没想到农村仍然如此破旧,农民仍然如此贫困!快到吃晚饭时,我听说公社领导为我准备了一桌酒菜。我一听此情况,气就不打一处来,严肃地批评公社领导:"群众吃糠咽菜,你却叫我吃肉喝酒,我能吃得下去吗?我要他们立即把酒菜撤去,只留米饭和一盘青菜,并重申从明天开始只准吃稀饭和青菜,不准吃干饭,更不准摆酒肉。实际上,这顿晚餐我基本没吃,因为看着家乡父老吃糠咽菜,我哪里还吃得下啊! 

我回到家乡的消息不胫而走,众乡亲不约而同地来看我。许多人被县、社警卫的同志劝到了生产队食堂。我得知后就来到食堂看望乡亲。当我们来到生产队食堂时,村里及邻近村子的群众不请自到,一下子聚集了五六百人。我看人来了这么多,乱哄哄的,不好谈话,便请公社副书记陈从忠把原定第二天召开的群众会,提前到当天。这样既省得浪费大家的时间,我也可以听听大家的意见。陈从忠简单讲了几句之后,我便请大家随便谈了起来。于是,大家七嘴八舌地议论开了。 

许多人不客气地问我,知不知道群众没有饭吃?怎么会弄成这个样子?一位名叫陈从明的中年社员更是激动得爬坐在桌子上,喊着我的乳名大声说道:"春分妹子,我有很多话要对你说,就不晓得该不该讲真话?" 看着这位苦出身的乡亲这么激动,我深知他有许多话要说,便对他说:"你有话尽管讲。" "我讲了真话,你走后公社会不会把我打成反革命呀?" 我望了望在场的地、县、社领导,说:"你反映真实情况,怎么会成反革命呢?" 接着陈从明便一五一十地诉说起来:去年发大水又下冰雹,粮食减产,可是公社却向上级浮夸说粮食跨《纲要》,并按《纲要》的指标来征购。我们完成征购任务之后,就没有多少粮食了。现在饭吃不饱,靠挖野菜充饥,许多人得了浮肿病,射山村已饿死了十多个人。公社领导只顾扛红旗争先进,不顾群众肚皮,不管群众死活。说着又指着我说:"春分,你当那么大的官,究竟知道不知道群众没有饭吃呀?我们实在想不通,为什么会弄成这个样子啊!" 

陈从明一席话,说出了许多群众积郁在胸中多时、想讲又不敢讲的话,引起了在场群众的强烈共鸣全场顿时出现一片呼喊声:"陈从明说得对呀!""陈从明说得好呀!"大家纷纷争相诉说饿肚皮的痛苦。突然,一位头发花白、瘦骨嶙峋的老大娘跌跌撞撞地挤到厅堂中央,"扑通" 一声跪在我的面前,抱住我的腿泣不成声。这突如其来的举动把我吓了一大跳,我赶忙用双手把她扶起来。定眼一看,原来是我的一位叔婆。我一边扶着她一边说:"三妹婆婆,你不能这样,我担待不起,受不了呀,你有话起来慢慢说。" 老人家站起来拉着我的手说:"春分,我这六十多岁的老太婆从来都没有饿得这样透(厉害)呀!我一家饿得不行,上山采山苍子树叶磪糠吃,头都被磪打破流血呀!这样的日子怎么过啊!你要救我们呀!"老大娘的哭诉深深地感染了在场的群众,许多群众伤心落泪,会场上出现一片哭泣声。面对此情此境,我再也无法抑制自己的感情,辛酸的泪水刷刷地流了下来。 

(下面几段,陈丕显同志谈到自己心情的难受,其弟泪流满面、泣不成声地向他讲述,当地官员知道陈丕显回乡,事先拨了九千斤谷子给南阳公社。) 

......与南阳毗邻的旧县、白砂等公社的一些社员群众,误以为我已到了南阳。许多群众匆匆赶来,挽着乞食的碗筷、竹筒直奔官连坑,见着李应槐专员,不分青红皂白,不管三七二十一,倒头便跪在他的面前,异口同声地哭着喊着:"陈书记呀,救救我们吧!我们没有饭吃呀!"一位群众当场哭诉说:"我家里人都饿死了,只剩下我孤独一人了,走投无路才出来讨饭吃呀,陈书记你大恩大德救救我们吧!"...... 

听了这些情况,我心中有一种说不出的滋味。我们一行吃过早饭--稀饭配酸菜,就告别乡亲来到南阳公社,参加了公社召开的烈军属代表和基层干部会议。到会的有一百多人,把公社会议室挤得满满的。 ......我刚讲完,军烈属代表刘富玉便抢先发言。他说:"我们公社在‘三面红旗'照耀下,形势一片大好,粮食亩产800斤,跨了《纲要》,群众生活比过去好多了......" 

她的发言引起许多干部、代表的不满,不少人摇头叹气,有的干脆说:"刘富玉呀,你现在还在为公社吹牛皮,你不觉得脸红吗?" 在众人的指责下,她才不得不结束了背诵式的发言。事后我才得知,原来她是按公社领导的意图抢先带头发言的,以起示范、导向作用,发言的内容也是公社领导事先授意的。结果却是适得其反,被大家哄了下来。接着一位叫黄启智的白发老人发言。他毫无顾忌地说:"有人说我们公社的粮食亩产800斤,除非把田里的泥土挖出来凑数!我们的实际产量不过是二三百斤,公社领导不是不知道,为什么还要这样吹牛皮呢?这是因为干部为了争取先进,可以提拔当官。他们昧着良心汇报,却苦了我们老百姓。现在群众吃不饱,不少人筛糠、摘树叶当饭吃。丕显,我们真不明白,人民政府怎么会弄成这个样子?种田人连饭都吃不饱呀?" 

(下面说到一位公社副书记在党委扩大会议上仍然胡吹亩产跨《纲要》,被陈丕显问得无言以对,面红耳赤。) 

5月4日上午,我回到母校--南阳龙田书院,即后来的龙田小学参观。当我们走出校门口,路经洪田村时,只见数十个衣衫褴褛、拖儿带女的群众跪在路旁,大声哭喊着:"陈书记呀,我们没有饭吃,快饿死啦,请求政府救救我们啊!" ......几位老者捧上手中的糠菜,塞给我说:"陈书记,你尝尝我们吃的是什么?"我和秘书、警卫员各自拿了一块,掰了一些吃了,那谷糠和野菜的滋味真是又涩又苦,叫人难以下咽。看着眼前这几位瘦骨嶙峋、面黄肌瘦的老人,我心如刀绞,泪水忍不住又淌了下来。...... 

几位公社领导都说,看着群众没饭吃,饿死人,他们心里也难过、也着急,早就想反映,但是又不敢说。我很理解他们的心情。于是我便提议把各县县委书记请来,汇总一下情况。各县县委书记来了以后,都谈了情况,统计了缺粮人数,浮肿、生病、饿死人的数字。据当时统计,全区七县,除龙岩、漳平两县情况稍好之外,其他五个县缺粮情况十分严重,全区饿死--8000人左右(下面陈丕显同志说到要求省委书记叶飞救济,省里决定马上拨粮给龙岩地区1300万斤) 

遗憾的是,福建省委拨给龙岩地区粮食后,龙岩地委个别领导同志认为情况没有这么严重,迟迟不肯要这些粮食。实际上是他过去向上面吹了牛,结果露了馅,感到下不了台,不好意思,怕影响今后的前程。到后来情况越来越严重,饿死的人越来越多,群众知道省里已拨了粮食,却盼星星盼月亮一般盼不到,纷纷提意见。这时,他才不得不要了粮食。结果迟了一个多月时间,全区多饿死了几万人。

------------------------------------------------------------

陳丕顯1916年3月20日1995年8月23日),漢族。1916年3月20日生於福建省上杭縣南陽區官連坑(現福建省上杭縣南陽鎮官余村)一個農民家庭,曾用名陳家煜,化名阿丕。

1929年加入中國共產主義青年團1931年轉為中國共產黨黨員。曾任鄉兒童大隊大隊長,上杭縣蘇維埃政府宣傳隊分隊長,中共長汀縣委區、縣兒童局書記,共青團長汀縣委巡視員,共青團福建省委少先隊訓練部部長、兒童局書記。1934年任共青團中央分局委員兼兒童局書記。1934年10月中央紅軍主力長征後,在贛粵邊地區參加了三年游擊戰爭。曾任共青團閩贛邊太寧地區中心縣委書記、青年團贛南省委書記。

抗日戰爭爆發後,1937年底,任中共中央東南分局(後改稱東南局)青年部部長、青委書記。1940年到蘇中抗日根據地,1941年3月任蘇中區黨委副書記,1945年4月任區黨委書記兼新四軍蘇中軍區政委。

1947年任華東野戰軍第七縱隊政委、中共中央華中分局委員兼組織部副部長、華中南線後勤司令部政委、中共華中工委書記。1948年3月兼任華東野戰軍第四兵團(又稱蘇北兵團)政委、蘇北軍區政委。1949年4月任蘇南軍區政委。

中華人民共和國成立後,任蘇南區黨委書記兼蘇南軍區政委。1952年任中共上海市委第四書記,1954年任第二書記,1956年起任市委書記、第一書記兼上海警備區第一政委。1960年後,任中共中央華東局書記、上海市政協主席。「文化大革命」時期被江青張春橋等打擊下台。1975年10月任上海市革命委員會副主任,1977年2月任中共雲南省委書記、省革委會副主任,7月任湖北省委第二書記、省革委會第一副主任,1978年8月起,任中共湖北省委第一書記、省革委會主任、武漢軍區政委、湖北省軍區第一政委,1980年兼任湖北省人大常委會主任。

中共第八屆候補中共委員,第十一、十二屆中央委員,第十二屆中央書記處書記。1983年兼任中央政法委員會書記,同年任第六屆全國人民代表大會常務委員會副委員長,負責全國警察、治安、司法、情報工作,1985年俞強聲事件發生後,被撤銷中央政法委員會書記職務,其職務由喬石接替。1987年11月當選為中共中央顧問委員會常委。著有回憶錄《贛南三年游擊戰爭》、《蘇中解放區十年》。

1995年8月23日逝世,享年79歲。

星期一, 三月 23, 2009

雷,雷你无止境...




不得不承认,有些Financial Blogger太他妈能写了;你丫的,写的不累,老子看的还累,懂不?

不得不,删去1些从我的Reader里,Nnd.

害人,简直是

星期日, 三月 22, 2009

Daily Activities...


1. Stock and Company 1 Each Day
2. Words 10 Each Day
3. A note 1 Each Day

For the 1st time, i see some real hope...

Thoughts from the Frontline Weekly Newsletter
Solving the Housing Crisis
by John Mauldin
March 21, 2009
Visit John's MySpace Page

In this issue: 
Solving the Housing Crisis
Housing Could Drop Another 20% in Pricing
Buy A Home, Get a Green Card
A Real Stimulus Package
Las Vegas, La Jolla, and the OC

This last Tuesday the Wall Street Journal published an op-ed by my friend Gary Shilling and Richard LeFrak. They offer a simple solution for the housing crisis: give foreigners who will come to the US and buy a home resident status (green cards). This is a very important proposal and one that deserves national attention and action. Gary was kind enough to send me two lengthier white papers offering more facts. In this week's letter we are going to look at this proposal in more detail than the small space that an op-ed can offer. And while this letter will be somewhat controversial in some circles, I ask that you read it through, giving me the time to make the case. I will also add a few thoughts as to why this could not only help solve the housing crisis, but help put the nation back into growth mode.

Long-time readers know that I have been growing more and more bearish of late. I have been writing for a long time that we are in for a long period of slow Muddle Through growth as the twin crises of the housing bubble and credit bubbles require time to heal. Today we look at a serious proposal for cutting the time to healing for at least one of those bubbles (housing), and at least keep the other (credit) from getting worse. This is the most serious idea I have seen that could actually make a real positive contribution to the economy and help put us back on a growth path.

I will post Gary's papers and a link to the actual op-ed piece for those who want to do further research, but let me make one point at the beginning that he did not emphasize: the US is already allowing roughly 1 million immigrants a year into the country (which for a variety of reasons I and most serious economists of all stripes believe is a very good thing). We are suggesting that we simply change the nature of what constitutes the conditions for acceptance, so as to jump start the housing industry and the economy. We are not suggesting additional immigrants, although nothing would be wrong with that. I will also post a link for you to send this e-letter to your congressmen and senators.

Let me put up front a few benefits of a program that would allow legal status to immigrants buying a home. Housing values would stabilize and in many cases rise. The massive losses because of bad loans that are being subsidized by US taxpayers would be stemmed, saving many hundreds of billions, if not a trillion or more dollars. The excess inventory of homes would quickly disappear and the millions of jobs that were lost as home construction fell into a deep depression would come back. If housing values rise, many families would be able to refinance their homes at lower rates and have more income left over after paying their mortgages. $12 billion in commissions would end up in real estate agents' pockets, helping a very battered and bruised group. Hundreds of billions will flow into local businesses, as these new immigrants will need to furnish their homes. This could mean as much as a half trillion dollars in sorely needed stimulus in the next few years, without one penny of taxpayer money and actually adding taxes back to governments from local to national. And we are not bringing in 1 million foreigners, we are attracting 1 million mostly middle-class new Americans, which, if we are smart in how we do this, will result in more jobs for all Americans. So let's jump right in and look at the details.

Housing Could Drop Another 20% in Pricing

Let's review the situation as it will be if we do nothing. Shilling shows that we built 6.7 million more homes in this country between 1996-2005 than the normal trend would have projected, partially because we underbuilt the decade before that. New housing starts average about 1.5 million in normal times but have fallen to 500,000 recently, and could fall further as unemployment rises and demand declines. Even so, Shilling estimates that we still have about 2.4 million excess homes.

This compares rather well with estimates by independent analyst John Burns, which I cited in the e-letter early last year. What they both agree on is that it will take at least until 2012 to work through this excess inventory, and that assumes that foreclosures do not increase as housing prices drop.

Excess supply of anything means lower and continuously falling prices, and that has certainly been the case in housing. Here is what Shilling writes:

"We believe that if nothing is done to eliminate surplus housing, prices will fall another 20% between now and the end of 2010 for a total peak-to-trough decline of 37% (Chart 1 below). The resulting further negative effects on the economy will be devastating. At that point, almost 25 million homeowners, or almost half the 51 million total with mortgages, will be underwater… That's also a third of the 75 million total homeowners, with the remaining 24 million owning their houses free and clear. It would take a little over $1 trillion to reduce their mortgages to the value of their houses, compared to $449 billion for the almost 14 million currently underwater."

This is not inconsistent with similar projections by other acknowledged experts and independent analysts like John Burns and Professor Robert Shiller of Yale. If nothing happens to stimulate buying, there is a great deal more pain ahead for American homeowners.

Case-Shiller U.S. National House Price Index

For the great majority of Americans, their homes represent the largest portion of their assets. This is particularly true of Americans of more modest means, who have been hit the hardest. Watching their single biggest assert drop another 20% will be devastating and for many will mean they will not be able to retire as they had planned. More Americans own homes (68%) than own stocks (50%). This helps explain a recent poll which shows more Americans are worried about house prices than about the decline in stock prices.

Falling home prices means that consumers have to save more for retirement, which results in lower consumer spending, which translates into lost jobs and more homeowners coming under stress -- a vicious spiral that is increasing unemployment. Realistic estimates of unemployment rising to over 10% within the year abound.

Two years ago I and a few others foresaw the current housing crisis (and an accompanying credit crisis), predicting a protracted recession and a slow, multi-year Muddle Through recovery. Sadly, I was right about the housing crisis. Without some intervention, there is little to suggest that the prediction of a long, protracted recovery will not come true.

Lowering rates, as is being discussed in various circles, will help homeowners who can make their payments, but it does nothing to really bite into excessive inventory. Until we reduce the inventory, housing prices in many neighborhoods all across America are going to continue to come under pressure. And as Barry Habib points out, while the Fed may be lowering rates for securitized packages of loans, those low rates are not available to the average home buyer. The cost of packaging and securitization adds considerable cost.

Shilling discusses the "traditional" options for reducing home inventories, but in the end there is no real solution other than time, or massive amounts (read trillions) in taxpayer money being given to homeowners, which will be very unpopular, as homeowners who were responsible and are paying their mortgages would get no benefits. Waiting another two and a half years for the excessive inventory to sell will keep this country in a very slow or no-growth economy, and devastate the wealth of millions of homeowners.

But there is a solution. There are millions of foreigners throughout the world who would like to come to live in the US. In 2006, there were 1.1 million immigrants allowed into the US, some 63% of whom were allowed in simply because they already had relatives here. Only 13% of visas were granted to people because of their skills. While allowing relatives of current residents to come to the US may be a humane and reasonable policy, it does nothing to assure they bring more than that relationship to help them make their way in the US.

Buy A Home, Get a Green Card

What if we changed the rules for a few years? Starting as soon as possible, we should allow anyone to come into the country who would buy a home. They would be given a temporary visa which would become permanent if they had no problems after, say, five years.

While Gary proposes that they be allowed to borrow against the value of their homes, I lean toward suggesting that initially we take those who buy their homes outright (with a few exceptions). That means they have enough capital to purchase a home to begin with, which probably means they are educated and have skills. In fact, if they have enough cash to buy a home, that means they would have more actual savings than most US citizens. We would be attracting future citizens with the capital to invest in job-creating businesses and/or who have useful skills to assist in the recovery of the US economy.

Of course, there should be some rules that go along with this proposal. Background checks and references should be required. The home could not be rented for a period of time (at least two years), to help reduce the supply of available housing, and could not be resold for at least two years unless another home was purchased. There should be a minimal price, which could be somewhat different for various regions, but $100,000 would seem to be a good minimum for most areas, with higher minimums in certain areas.

The immigrant should demonstrate the ability to support himself and his family for a period of time (at least one year, preferably two), including the purchase of health insurance. Cash or letters of credit or other guaranteed commitments would be required. Only immediate family members (spouse and children) would be allowed to come with the immigrant. Cousins and siblings must buy their own homes. The permanent visa should be contingent on not having gone on welfare or public assistance at any time in the past five years. We are trying to solve a housing problem, not looking to create others.

I would make an exception in having 100% financing for immigrants with advanced degrees or special skills, especially those who did their schooling in the United States. If the US is to remain competitive in an increasingly technological world, we need more scientists and engineers. But getting permission to stay is becoming increasingly difficult. We are seeing a brain drain of those who would like to stay and create new jobs and technologies (and buy houses) here in the US. Shilling and Le Frak write:

"The authors of this report believe that a number of people have given up waiting for those visas or don't want to put up with the hassle and are leaving the country. This "brain drain" is unfortunate since many of these foreigners are highly productive. In 2006, foreign nationals residing in the U.S. were named as inventors or co-inventors on 25.6% of the 42,019 international patent applications filed from this country, up from 7.6% in 1998. Studies of the authorship of academic papers show the same trend.

"U.S. educational institutions are considered the best in the world by many and are magnets for foreign students, especially at the graduate level. Many of them are inclined to settle and work in this country after completing their studies, if they can obtain permanent resident status.

"The Council of Graduate Schools survey revealed that in the fall of 2007, 241,095 non-U.S. citizens were enrolled in graduate programs. Technological progress and the productivity it generates depends on people educated in biological sciences, engineering and physical sciences, but only 16% of U.S. citizen graduate enrollment was in these three disciplines. In contrast, 55% of total non-U.S. citizen enrollment was in those fields. Conversely, 53% of graduate enrollment by Americans was in education, business and health sciences while those three fields accounted for only 24% of foreign graduate students."

(There is a great deal more background detail in the second white paper. See link below.)

Much can be learned from similar programs already in place in immigrant-hungry countries such as Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. The United Kingdom has recently added new programs. Many countries realize that in the coming years there is going to be increasing competition for the best and brightest of the world. Again, there are more details in the white papers, but let's turn to the effects that would result from such a program.

A Real Stimulus Package

First, upon Congressional approval, it would almost immediately stop the seemingly inexorable slide in house prices, as initial demand would be significant. Let's assume one million new immigrants would buy homes. At an average price of almost $200,000, that would be $200 billion injected into the economy. And each of those homes has to be furnished, food has to be bought, clothing will be needed, local taxes will be paid. Airplane tickets to research potential areas, hotels needed during the interim period, and other related expenditures would add up. Over two years, this could easily be another $100 billion.

Couple 1 million new buyers with current US demand, and the excess inventory would be worked through within a year, and possibly faster. This puts a floor under the housing market, and home values could once again to begin to rise in line with a growing economy.

Such a program would have a salutary effect on the value of the dollar, as not only the initial purchases of homes and materials would need to be converted to dollars, but it is likely that immigrants would bring even more capital into the country.

By stemming the fall of home values, it would decrease the likelihood of foreclosures and help homeowners get refinancing at lower rates. Refinancing now is difficult because most lenders want a substantial slice of equity to go along with any new mortgage. If your home value has dropped 20% and is likely to fall another 20%, it is hard to have enough equity to qualify for a new mortgage. Stopping the fall in prices is critically important; and maybe if prices rise in some areas, homeowners will be able to refinance at better rates, giving them more cash each month to save or spend.

As I have written in previous letters, the psyche of the American consumer is permanently scarred. We are on our way back to a savings rates that will look more like 1987 than 2007, when it was almost zero. Just a few decades ago, we saved 7-10%. Consumer spending was only 64% of US GDP in 1987. It was 71% in 2007. It is on its way back to that lower level.

Lower consumer spending will be a drag on growth for years. But bringing in 1 million already middle-class new immigrant families will help make up for a lot of that reduced spending. If you can spend $200,000 on a home, you are likely skilled at something and well-educated. You will find a job, or create one, as many immigrants do, and then you will add to our total consumer spending.

If you are a real estate agent, you should love this proposal, as it would result in an additional $12 billion in commissions.

If you are a home builder, what a great way to reduce inventory and get back to the conditions where there is a demand for your product. This would help put back to work those who have lost their jobs in the home construction collapse. Home Depot and Lowe's and local stores? It would help them to increase sales, which leads to more jobs.

We are on the cusp of the Baby Boomers beginning a huge wave of retirement, both in the US and elsewhere in the developed world. There is going to be a need for skilled workers to replace those Boomers, as well to provide services to the retirees. Further, the promised Social Security and Medicare expenditures are going to start increasing at a significant rate. We are going to need immigrants to help pay for those benefits. Given the controversy over immigration, we will look back with some irony in ten years when we find we are in a serious competition with other nations to attract skilled immigrants. We should start now. I think the concept is, let's not waste a good crisis.

Let's look at some of the potential critics of this proposal. I was on Yahoo Tech Ticker yesterday talking about this, and got a few irate emails and phone calls.

"Why," I was asked, "do I hate American workers? Isn't there enough unemployment? Why do we need more immigrants taking American jobs?" And there was considerable angst about illegal immigrants.

First, I am suggesting we transform the already existing legal immigrant flow, which is going to happen anyway, into a form which helps us solve a major crisis. I am not talking about adding another 1 million immigrants on top of the current legal inflow. Just change the nature of that inflow until the excess housing inventory is settled, and then we can go back to the current program, if that is what is wanted (more on that below).

Second, I am not suggesting we bring in or condone illegal immigrants. That is another issue altogether, for another debate at another time.

If we do nothing, unemployment is going to rise to at least 10%. That is certainly not good for the American worker. Home values are going to continue to fall. That is certainly not good for the American worker. The economy is likely to be stagnant for an extended period of time, which means job growth in a Muddle Through recovery will be slow and stagnant. That is not good for the American worker.

Hundreds of billions more of taxpayer dollars will have to go to banks to keep them solvent as falling home prices and increasing unemployment increase foreclosures. That is not good for the American worker and taxpayer.

And further, I am not talking about bringing 1 million foreigners to this country. I am talking about bringing 1 million future Americans, who want to work hard and live the American dream.

Let me say a few words to those who are opposed to immigration -- and I have heard from you. With few exceptions, US citizens reading this have an immigrant in their genealogies. Some of mine go back to the 1600s. Some of mine were not exactly considered welcome. "No Irish and Dogs allowed" read the signs. But immigrants and their children have been the driver for growth in this country for generations. It is hard-working immigrants who leave their homes for the dream of being Americans that have been the backbone of the building of the nation -- the hewers and shapers, if you will.

It is precisely that melting pot of human diversity that is the strength of the American idea. Each new wave of immigrants has been viewed with trepidation or scorn, yet within one generation they have become American. And in turn, their children's children forget that their forebears had to deal with discrimination.

America -- the US -- is not so much a country as it is an idea, the idea that anyone, regardless of race or religion or gender, can come here and with hard work and determination make their own way. Some end up owning the local deli, and some end up founding Google. Some 25% of Silicon Valley start-ups, I am told, are by immigrants, creating jobs at the bleeding edge of technology. They see the US as a land of opportunity. That is why so many want to come and that is why we can attract a new generation of affluent, self-reliant immigrants who can help us solve a problem that we created.

I can see no downside to changing our immigration policy for a few years. We solve the housing crisis, stabilize home values, brings hundreds of billions in stimulus to the US, and with no taxpayer outlay. For a short time, we substitute one class of immigrant for another, to solve a serious crisis. It is not a matter of immigrants or no immigrants, just which immigrants

So which do you want? 10% unemployment and a decade of lower home values and increasing foreclosures, with a slow, Muddle Through, jobless recovery, or a stable housing market and home construction back to trend?

If you agree with me, I suggest you contact your Congressman. You can go to http://www.visi.com/juan/congress/ (selected at random from many such sites) and type in your address and get the name of your congressperson and senators. Just tell them you like this idea, and cut and paste the link where you read this into the letter. And tell them to get into gear! I would like to point out that this proposal is not Republican or Democrat, it is just common sense. I hope we can get broad bipartisan support.

The link to the Wall Street Journal editorial is: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123725421857750565.html

The links to the white papers are:

http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/pdf/Housing_Whitepaper_1.pdf 
http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/pdf/Housing_Whitepaper_2.pdf

Immigrants Can Help Fix the Housing Bubble

The Obama administration should seriously consider granting resident status to foreigners who buy surplus houses in this country. This makes more sense than the president's $275 billion housing bailout plan, which Americans greeted with a Bronx cheer.

The federal bailout forces taxpayers to subsidize overextended homeowners who bet on ever-rising house prices and used their abodes as ATMs, and it doesn't get to the basic problem -- the huge inventory of excess houses. We estimate that 2.4 million houses over and above normal working inventories are left over from the 1996-2005 housing bubble. That's a lot, considering the long-term average annual construction of 1.5 million single- and multi-family units.

Excess inventory is the mortal enemy of house prices, which have already fallen 27% since the peak in early 2006. We predict another 14% drop through the end of 2010 if nothing is done to eliminate the surplus.

Doing nothing to eliminate the excess inventory might well push the recession through 2010 and into a depression. Declining home values, for example, are eliminating the home equity that has funded oversized consumer spending for years.

As consumers retrench, production is cut, payrolls are slashed, and consumer confidence, incomes and spending are savaged in a self-feeding downward economic spiral. But if the government buys surplus houses and sells them at low market-clearing prices, other house prices will drop, destroying more home equity and driving many more mortgages under water. Bulldozing excess houses would be an inefficient end for perfectly habitable structures.

A better idea is to offer permanent residence status to the many foreigners who are clamoring to get into the U.S. -- if they buy houses of minimal values (not shacks). They wouldn't need to live in those houses, but in order to remove the unit from the total housing market, they couldn't rent them. Their temporary resident status granted upon purchase would become permanent after, perhaps, five years, if they still owned the houses and maintained clean records. The mere announcement of this program might well stop the ongoing collapse in house prices, especially in cities such as Las Vegas, Miami, Phoenix and San Francisco, where prices are down 40% -- but where many foreigners like to live.

Each year, 85,000 H-1B visas are granted for foreigners with advanced skills and education, and last year, 163,000 petitions were filed in the first five days after applications were accepted. The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation estimates that as of Sept. 30, 2006, 500,040 residents of the U.S. and 59,915 individuals living abroad were waiting for employment-based visas. Many would buy homes if their immigration conditions were settled.

These people tend to be highly productive. In 2006, foreign nationals residing in the U.S. were listed as inventors on 25.6% of the patent applications filed in the U.S., up from 7.6% in 1998. A Council of Graduate Schools survey found that in the fall of 2007, 241,095 non-U.S. citizens were enrolled in graduate programs. Some 55% were in engineering and the biological and physical sciences, compared with only 16% of U.S. citizens. In 2007, more people on temporary visas received doctorates in physical sciences and engineering than U.S. citizens.

There is a high correlation between education and incomes, and in today's uncertain economic climate, many wealthy foreigners desire U.S. resident status just as a number in Hong Kong secured residences in Singapore and Canada before the British handover to China in 1997. They rapidly became over a quarter of Vancouver's population, and brought in billions of dollars to buy houses and make other investments.

We could benefit from such an influx. Merrill Lynch estimates that in 2007 there were 10.1 million individuals in the world, 7.1 million outside the U.S., with at least $1 million in financial assets that totaled $29 trillion. If new immigrants bought the 2.4 million excess houses at today's $184,000 median price with funds from abroad, they would bring untold billions. The immigrants would also buy consumer goods, pay taxes, and start many new businesses.

The blueprint for a program to sell surplus housing to immigrants is already in place with the EB-5 visa program. Each year, 10,000 EB-5 visas for this country are available for foreigners who each invest $1 million in a new enterprise ($500,000 in economically depressed areas) that creates at least 10 full-time jobs. After two years, the entrepreneur and his family can become permanent residents.

America's relatively open immigration policy makes this country better off than many other developed lands whose governments also must fund the pensions and health care for growing numbers of retirees. Yet there's still a huge need for more productive and skilled people, both current residents and immigrants, who will produce enough goods and services to provide for their own needs and for those in retirement. Otherwise, entitlement spending eventually will touch off intergenerational warfare.

Granting permanent resident status to foreigners who buy houses in this country will curtail a primary driver of the deepening recession and financial crises -- excess house inventories and the resulting collapse of prices. Since the people who will buy these houses will tend to have money, education, skills and entrepreneurial talents, they will be substantial assets to America in both the short and long runs.

Mr. LeFrak is chairman and CEO of LeFrak Organization, a real estate builder and developer. Mr. Shilling, an economic consultant and investment adviser, is president of A. Gary Shilling & Co.

I hope this won't really happen in this way...


The Amazing TALF Bait And Switch

The greatest bait and switch of this generation in all its visual splendor. As a result of the TALF's non-recourse nature, a hedge fund X can buy Bank X's MBS Portfolio which is marked on the bank's books at 80 cents on the dollar (but has a market price of 20 cents) for the marked price with a 3% equity check and TALF filling the balance. A day later, Bank X repurchases the portfolio from hedge fund X at the 20 cent market price, pays a $5 million fee for the "trouble" and waits for the portfolio to appreciate to 50 cents on the dollar by 2014. Hedge fund X takes a 75% loss on its nominal equity stake but more than makes up in transaction fees. The TALF portion takes a 75% loss with no recourse and no margin to fall back on. 

As a result Bank X takes no writedown now, and in 5 years may book an equity profit of as much as $25 million (net of transaction fees paid to the Hedge Fund X), while Hedge Fund X books a profit of $3.2 million for one day's work...

Lastly the U.S. taxpayer loses $54.3 million on a $77.6 million TALF Investment, or 70% (net of 5 years of interest income).

Note: the maximum TALF size is $1 trillion. Will U.S. taxpayers suffer $700 billion in losses from the TALF? Ask your congressman. 

Nothing Important, 没什么大不了的...