December 03, 2007

The NOLA rental market

New Orleans hurt by acute rental shortage:

More than two years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans is suffering from an acute shortage of housing that has nearly doubled the cost of rental units in the city, threatening the recovery of the region and the well-being of many residents who decided to return against the odds. Before the storm, more than half of the city’s population rented housing. Yet official attention to help revive the shattered rental home and apartment market has been scant.

March 02, 2007

Vulture Funds

Since two of the bloggers of Hypothetical Bias have done some academic work ( here and here) dealing with debt for nature swaps, a post dealing with a vulture fund & Zambia seemed like a natural choice.   

What's a vulture fund?  In the case of Zambia, a company bought Zambian debt (deeply discounted level: $4m) and then sued Zambia for a $42m repayment. Financial savvy?  Sure.  Poor form?  Yes.  I won't shy away from the normative issues.  See the BBC story.

Also, here's the transcript for the Zambia/vulture fund story that appeared on America Public Radio's Marketplace:

KAI RYSSDAL: If something can be bought or sold, you can bet some clever businessman will try to make a market for it. Everything from stocks to student loans. It might be mortgages. Or derivatives.

Or the Zambian national debt.

Some smart businessman bought part of that. And now he's trying to collect. From London, Marketplace's Stephen Beard reports on a lawsuit that could affect Third World debt forgiveness programs everywhere.


STEPHEN BEARD: Having lost the case, Zambia is now bracing itself for the final tab. If it's anywhere near the $55 million claimed, it will hit the country hard, says Gracewell Mwansa, a Zambian who lives in the U.K.

GRACEWELL MWANSA: What it will mean is 6,000 teachers not recruited. There will be no medicine for health centers, especially in the rural areas. And poverty-reduction program are going to severely suffer.

It wasn't meant to be like this. Zambia has had vast quantities of its debt written off. The country's supposed to be benefiting from a high profile and widely-supported campaign.

NELSON MANDELA: There is a unique opportunity for making an impact. Make poverty history in 2005.

Nelson Mandela at a rally organized by Christian Aid in London put his moral authority behind calls to cancel Third World debt. But he and other campaigners may not have reckoned with one of the more colorful characters on the financial scene.

SFX MUSIC: Goldfinger . . .

An American financier Michael Sheehan — who has jokingly used the name of the James Bond villain — has been linked to an investment fund that snapped up some of Zambia's debt before it could be written off. The fund bought it for just over $3 million, and then sued the Zambian government for $55 million — the full face value of the debt, plus interest and penalties.

TRISHA ROGERS: For a commercial company to come in and try and make a huge profit and take this money away so that it can't be spent on health and education, we feel is just completely disgraceful.

Trisha Rogers of the Jubilee Debt Campaign says this obviously is a "vulture fund" in action.

ROGERS: For somebody to swoop in and snatch that money away, to feather their nest and making, you know, what is it . . . 1,600 percent profit or something that they were trying to make on their original investment. I think is totally reprehensible.

MANDELA: Our objective here today is crystal clear: Make poverty history!

Campaigners have called on governments to clip the vultures' wings — to make it illegal for them to buy up deeply-discounted Third World debt. But, says Alan Beattie of the Financial Times, this is a legal minefield. Governments would be advised to steer clear.

ALAN BEATTIE: To change contract law in just in the case of certain countries, of low-income countries, would be enormously difficult. And it might have all sorts of repercussions of which they would be unaware.

He says having different rules for different countries is asking for trouble. But, says Gracewell Mwanza, something must done. He claims other so-called vulture funds are circling. They must be deterred.

MWANZA: It is, you know, totally unacceptable in my view — in a civilized world — to have such arrangements where . . . it's getting money by extortion.

If Zambia has to cough up $55 million, he says, that would blow all of the money the country would have saved this year by not paying interest on the cancelled debt. Debt forgiveness, he says, was not intended to line the pockets of wealthy financiers.

October 26, 2006

Just in time for Halloween, a spooky international trade example

Headstones Too Go Global, and One City Pays the Price:

For decades, the granite industry made Barre, near Montpelier, a boomtown and Vermont’s biggest melting pot, drawing immigrants from Italy, Ireland, Poland and Canada. During their heyday, in the early-to-mid-20th century, the manufacturers here employed about 3,000 people.

Today the number is only 1,500, said John P. Castaldo, executive director of the Barre Granite Association, and most of those are in sales or administration. Roughly 300 actually make headstones and memorials, working with heavy machinery, and those who still hand-carve granite are no more than six or so.

The biggest problem during the last decade has been imported headstones, mostly from China and India, which cost about half as much as those made in Barre (pronounced BEAR-ee).

“The labor costs in China are significantly lower than they are here, and it’s taking its toll on the American manufacturers,” said Pennie Sabel, president of the International Cemetery and Funeral Association, a trade group.

Barre’s manufacturers describe the quality of the imported stones as poor and say it shows, but to the typical customer the only difference is price. Further, Chinese companies are also producing black granite headstones, which are becoming more popular than gray ones.

August 31, 2006

Alpine/Ice Climbing as a Motive for Reduction in Carbon Emissions???

Within the past year issues of the magazines, Rock and Ice and Climbing, both have featured articles about the loss of famous climbs due to the shrinking of ice and snowfields.  The North Face of Eiger is out of condition during the summer.  It appears that the famous snowfields on the Eiger including the White Spider, is gone (at least for a while).  Why is this a concern?  On alpine climbs, snow and ice (permafrost) act as an important "glue", in that, it maintains position of rocks.  When climbs melt out, rockfall increases.  Even in good years, alpine starts are important to avoid rockfall.  What's an alpine start?  A 2 or 3 am start, with headlamps, on alpine climbs with the plan to finish before the sun kicks in.  If the night before involves a few brews, the alpine climb may be replaced with a day cragging on pure rock routes (not a bad option after all of those Odell Cutthroat Porters.)

The Diamond Couloir of Mount Kenya has large portions of it melted out.  In the Climbing article, Jim Donini quotes Yvon Chouinard, who said, "The Diamond Couloir on Mount Kenya, which was a great ice climb thirty years ago, is completely gone."

Will climbers will become more environmentally concerned as there are losses of prime climb areas?  The cynical view: most of us are somewhat environmentally concerned, in that, we are concerned with access issues ( www.accessfund.org); however, Dean Potter's recent ascent of Delicate Arch didn't help.  For a discussion of Potter's climb, see the dirtbag climber post in env-econ.net.  The economics literature shows this access focus with papers such as Grijalva, Therese A., Robert P. Berrens, Alok Bohara, Paul M. Jakus, and W. Douglass Shaw. 2002. "Valuing the Loss of Rock Climbing  Access in Wilderness Areas: A National-Level Random Utility Model." Land Economics, 78(1):103-120.
Paul
P.S.  There are no alpine routes in my future.  Next on my tick list is the Red Rock's classic Epinephrine 5.9 IV.

August 24, 2006

Economists decide that the "law of demand" is not a law

Astronomers Decide Pluto Is Not a Planet:

Leading astronomers declared that Pluto is no longer a planet under new guidelines that downsize the solar system from nine planets to eight.

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