Smart Links 22 July 2012

Commentary on the state, from abortion to contraception, the tongue in cheek guide to effective banking, Spanish yields and German tempers, what corporate bonds tell us about the future of equity prices, and Canada’s bull loonie run.

The state, can’t live with it, can’t live without it.

Financial Times -- The right must learn to love the state again
When asked to contribute to this series on the future of conservatism, I hesitated because it seemed to me that in both the US and Europe what was most needed was not a new form of conservatism but rather a reinvention of the left.

Related.

Project Syndicate -- What Role for the State?
The financial crisis of 2008 has spurred a global debate on how much government regulation of markets – and what kind – is appropriate.

Russia’s mafia state.

Economist -- The empty Kremlin
Vladimir Putin’s regime has run out of ideas, but not of nasty tactics.

Take your pick.

New York Times -- From Abortion to Contraception
Eka, a short brunette with brown eyes highlighted by green eyeliner, is by several measures the average Georgian woman. She has a high-school degree, a job, a husband, two children, and at age 30, has had, over the course of her eight years of married life, four abortions.

The new golden rules.

Vanity Fair -- The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Bankers
Lessons from the book that the late Stephen Covey didn’t get around to writing.

Spanish yields rising and so are German tempers.

Telegraph -- Spanish debt crisis returns as Germany nears bailout fatigue
Spanish borrowing costs have surged to euro-era highs despite draconian fiscal cuts and backing from the German parliament for the country’s €100bn (£78bn) bank rescue package.

Global deflation here to stay?

Charlie Fell – Reflation or deflation?
The financial markets are in disagreement.

The Canadian dollar rebounds.

Globe and Mail -- Canadian dollar on 'full-fledged secular bull run'
The Canadian dollar almost made it back to parity this week, but pulled back Friday amid a general malaise in the markets.

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Twin Virtues: Inequality of Outcomes & Equality of Opportunity©

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Ultimately, the most successful societies find the balance between the twin virtues of inequality of outcomes and equality of opportunity.
 
The new politics must marry the twin virtues of unequal outcomes and equality of opportunity.
 
When too few get too much everybody ends up with less.
 
Can it be that striving for equality of opportunity however imperfect the process not only benefits the individual but also creates benefits for the society as a whole that are unintended but wonderful?
 
Economics must be a 'moral enterprise' as much as politics claims to be. Economic outcomes need to be framed in terms of right and wrong not just efficiency if only because these often align in surprising ways.
 
My vision of Canada is that any Canadian child from a family of limited circumstance can expect to have a chance at lifetime of unlimited opportunities.
 
Tax policy should be founded on the principle of generating steady tax revenues sufficient to maximise environmentally sustainable economic growth in order to fund fair government.
 
Public policy should be designed to decrease inequality before the law and increase equality of opportunity.
 
Capitalism is not the problem; the problem is what we do with capitalism.
 
Content is always more difficult to argue than conspiracy.
 
Let the state regulate and the market operate (most things).
 
Welfare strategies are best designed as a hand up not as a hand out.
 
Political debate should not be fact free fighting.
 
Explanation lasts longer than eloquence.
 
Always favour empowerment over dependency.
 
The most enduring public figures are embraced for the causes they fought for and not the concept of themselves they hoped others would remember them by.
 
Find your voice and don't be the echo of somebody else.