Thursday, March 1, 2018

Application of the Federalist Papers in Consideration of Incremental and Elite Theories




Possibly the greatest responsibility Congress possesses is their constitutional right to levy and collect taxes from the American population.  However, great debate has ensued to determine what should be taxed, who should be taxed, and the level of tax to be applied to each of these.  This debate has had a pervasive effect on every policy and program affecting the lives of Americans and has been a driving factor of doctrine in every presidential administration.  The application of various political models can be used when assessing America’s tax system but two, in particular, the Incremental and Elite Theory offer significant insights into the development of the current tax system.
In a letter penned to George Washington by Thomas Jefferson discussing whether Congress had the constitutional right to establish a national bank as a matter of the “General Welfare” clause in the Constitution, Jefferson wrote, “To consider [general welfare]…as giving a distinct and independent power to do any act they please, which might be for the good of the Union, would render all preceding and subsequent enumerations of power completely useless.  It would reduce the whole instrument to a single phrase, that of instituting a Congress with power to do whatever would be for the good of the United States; and, as they would be the sole judges of the good or evil, it would be also a power to do whatever evil they please (Heffner, R., 2009).”
Clearly strong language, but Jefferson understood the dangers of incremental shifts of power from the states to the federal government, closing this argument with his fears of elitism as a result of unfettered legislation based on the proposed benevolence of legislation or policy for the people.  Unfortunately, Jefferson’s prophetic predictions have become part of the fabric of the bureaucracy that is the American political system today.  The rejection of our system is so poignant and the disgust so great, the electorate elevated a man to the nation's highest office who has never held political office or has military experience in the hopes of altering the status quo and returning the wealth and strength of America to her people.
Incremental Theory is an excellent political model to describe how far the US has progressed from those early Jeffersonian days.  Legislatures have long known that sweeping and drastic changes are generally rejected and ineffective if rolled out too quickly.  Instead, making small, seemingly insignificant, changes are recognized as much more palatable and stand the greatest chances of approval.  This approach to legislative “improvement” has not, however, stopped lawmakers from attempting big changes, and by 1913, The United States Congress adopted the sixteenth amendment to the Constitution that allowed the federal government to collect taxes on individual incomes, adding to the state tax burden already imposed on American citizens.
Assuming the need for additional revenues were necessary and justified does not legitimize Congress to use those taxes for anything they please.  Article 12 of the Federalist Papers that debates the appropriate vehicles by which Congress can and should levy taxes on the American People may have been somewhat shortsighted considering the magnitude of the world wars that have heretofore been fought, the increase in population, the demand for more social welfare, and the massive expansion of the federal government beyond the original scope of the constitution. The Article's author, Alexander Hamilton did not believe direct taxation of the American people by the federal government was an option. The country was in desperate need of funding and had been unsuccessful collecting enough revenues to fund the functions of government.  Initial propositions of a consumption tax and commerce tax have transformed into a tax system goliath where a single dollar earned can be taxed as much as 40% and more depending on an individual’s income and the state in which they live.  The amount Americans pay in taxes today is the result of incremental policies and the revenues the government takes in today, although the most ever, still come well short of the amount it spends.  It borrows to meet its spending habit as opposed to reducing its spending to match its revenues. 
Sometime later, discussions ensued regarding the most appropriate means to disburse the tax burden among the citizens of the 13 colonies.  In article 54, direct taxation based on the size of the state, today, represents an archaic and disproportionately unfair vehicle in which to collect taxes from the people.  Taxing in this manner actually emboldens the application of the Elite theory since it guarantees more influence based on wealth.  Today’s progressive tax system represents an equally unfair means of taxation because it redistributes tax revenues from tax providers to tax consumers in massive quantities.  The quest continues to determine the most effective tax vehicle that brings in the revenue the government requires and is also applied uniformly and fairly.
Arthur Laffer did an excellent job of describing the balance between revenues and taxation through the presentation of what has become known as the Laffer Curve.  The curve represents the changing proportionality of tax rates to tax revenues.  Zero taxation yields zero revenues.  As taxes are increased, revenues will increase to a certain point (the crest of the bell) until the amount of revenues decrease as a result of punishing taxation (www.laffercenter.com).  Recent Keynesian economic policies under the Obama administration have ballooned government spending that have resulted in huge deficits and pushed corporate tax rates to the highest in the world among the 34 nations belonging to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).  The unfortunate result of the deficits and taxation has been massive borrowing and an increase in the number of corporations moving jobs overseas where labor and tax rates are less.
The Election of Donald Trump to the presidency began a fundamental shift in the country's microeconomic policy and its macroeconomic approach to what Thomas Friedman calls a Flat World. America's shift in its trade agreements, corporate tax structures, and individual tax levels, although still progressive in nature, was responsible for the repatriation of trillions of dollars of corporate wealth, the lowest unemployment in more than 40 years, the lowest number of food stamp recipients, immediate increases to personal wages and a massive boom to the stock market indexes. The initial cost of these tax breaks is around one trillion dollars over 10 years but conservative economic theory has shown time and time again, that lower taxes garner increased government revenues. When the people have increased opportunity to determine how they expend they money, as opposed to government's punishing tax structures, government and the people both win.
            As the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have drawn to a close, the question now is what is driving the annual deficit spending.  Madison seems to be quite clear that the sole reason for borrowing money from foreign countries is to maintain the national defense.  Article 41 covers several topics but ultimately declares the issue of borrowing money in order to maintain a militia and for the national defense to be essentially “well established and universally agreed upon.”  However, there does not seem to be any mention of borrowing money from foreign countries in order to fund the myriad of social welfare, and infrastructure policies in the country.  This, apparently, was not a subject people in that day considered part of the normal sphere of government’s purpose and its intended involvement in the lives of the average citizen.  Rugged individualism was very much a part of the fabric that was America as was the pursuit of individual happiness and the opportunity to stake a claim in the rock of prosperity. There were no provisions in the federal government to provide all of life's necessities and it was generally considered among Americans too dishonorable to rely on others to provide for your needs. Fortunately, as our sensibilities toward slavery, equality, and government's role have matured, so too has our ability and desire to care for the nation's downtrodden. I digress.
Shouldn’t it be the responsibility of Congress to limit its expenditures to its total current revenues as opposed to increasing taxes to meet their expenditures?  Surely, the need for increased revenues must be met during extraordinary times in order to meet the demands of the nation’s protection as expressed by Madison, as well as its commerce, and other responsibilities expressly delineated in the Constitution, but it is no secret that the normative and historical realities of politicians involve, with few exceptions, men and women of mostly great prosperity, power, and prestige – a point Thomas Jefferson was keenly apprehensive of and a condition that has unfortunately brought dishonor and shame to the political community.  Yet, the power of the purse, in all its applications to fund numerous policies, agencies, and other measures, is rarely used to rally against the cause of spending.  Article 58 relates this power as a necessary weapon that can be wielded as a means to redress the government for grievances and in today’s economic environment of sequestration, continuing resolutions, massive deficit spending, and growing national debt, the call for spending restraint has been as loud as in any time in our history.  In recent elections, the massive surge of Tea Party officials elected to office demonstrates the call to action against continued, irresponsible spending.
Polished, wealthy politicians aren’t always necessarily a bad thing for national progression and its betterment.  Article 36 of the Federalist Papers expresses this point clearly.  Although specifically referencing taxes to be applied within a state, I believe the following statement could also be applied equally to other aspects of governance.  Section five of Article 36 states “Inquisitive, enlightened statesmen are believed, everywhere, best qualified to make a judicious selection of the proper objects of taxation.”  I believe the application of Elite theory is essential to ensuring the continued protection of America’s interests both domestically and abroad, primarily because of the general lack of understanding much of the American population possesses with respect to geopolitical strategies and socioeconomics.  
Insofar as the Elite Theory pursues these ambitions, it is a vital bridge between the externalities acting upon the United States and the ignorance of America’s citizens in the largely esoteric fields involving socioeconomic, geopolitical strategies, and domestic and international relations.  In this sense, I depart from the writing of Dye in his text Understanding Public Policy where he states “elites actually shape mass opinion on policy questions (Dye, T., 2013)”  and suggest my own, more accurate statement that “elites protect policy development from mass opinions that are based on emotional sentiment as opposed to rational thought ensconced in reality.“ 


Friday, May 13, 2016

Minimum Wage Costs Too Much

Minimum Wage Discussion
    At the heart of any discussion regarding minimum wage is where a person's sensibilities lie with respect to socialism and capitalism.  For those people making minimum wage it seems an easy position to take.  "Pay me more money."  For the employer, the conundrum of self-preservation ensues.  Consider for a moment a small business owner who genuinely cares for the well-being of other people.  He hires the number of people he needs to run his business efficiently and effectively.  He enters into a contract with each person to pay them a certain amount  for their efforts.  The employee can either choose to accept the offer, negotiate for a better offer, or simply turn the offer down and seek other options.  The great thing about capitalism is the contractual nature in which employers and employees enter into.  Either can break the contract at anytime when they feel they are not getting their money's worth for the labor that is provided.  As long as the employer can get quality applicants at a certain wage rate, there is no need for them to pay more. 
    Minimum wage jobs are no different. Most people have held a minimum wage job at some point in their lives.  Society views many of these jobs as stepping stones for future jobs with greater responsibility and subsequently, greater pay.  Generally speaking, they require little skill and little education.  They simply are not the kind of jobs you will support a family on.  They certainly weren't designed that way.  It is disingenuous to agree to work somewhere for a certain wage and then fain outrage about the amount of money you are being paid!  If someone doesn't like the money they are making, they have the right to seek a better paying job elsewhere. 
    Of course there are always those who claim there are no other jobs and they are forced to work for minimum wage.  This can hardly be verified and in fact can largely be disputed.  It is true that you will be hard pressed to find job at a convenience store, fast food chain, or at a car wash that will pay you $60,000 a year.  If you are wanting to make that kind if money, you need to develop a skill, a trade, or even better, start your own business.  Are there any guarantees you will make $60,000 as a business owner?  Absolutely not.  I can absolutely guarantee that if you don't try, you won't make anything.
    You see, success for the vast majority of Americans was predicated on risk.  Its a risky proposition to fork over $70,000 or more on an education in hopes you will one day have a career that will pay you a salary that will support you and a family as well as leave you a bit left over to enjoy life's tertiary pleasures.  But guess what, there are no guarantees.  There are no promises of guarantees in the Constitution.  If you want guarantees, move to Greece.  The entitlement programs of that country make it almost not worth having a job.  It's a nanny state providing the necessities and comforts of life from cradle to grave.  The entitlements have been so exorbitant, they are now facing serious repercussions.  Not long ago, Sweden was headed for imminent doom but after some soul searching and very pragmatic leadership, they now have a fighting chance to remain solvent.  But I digress.
   Many people earning minimum wage are also recipients of redistributed wealth.  Due to the extremely progressive nature of the U.S. income tax system, nearly half of all eligible tax payers pay nothing in income tax and often receive returns larger than what was deducted from their checks throughout the year.  These returns result in their effective tax rate being negative and increases their overall annual salary.  This is not by accident and not always a bad thing.  The goal, of course, is to lift people out of poverty.  Proportional tax rates (flat tax) sound like the perfect solution on the surface.  Everyone pays the same tax rate regardless of income level.  And although this is truly the fairest way to apply tax laws to the citizenry, it can also be quite punishing to lower-income people.  A flat tax of say...10% impacts people much differently.  Imagine two tax payers, one makes $200,000 a year and the other $20,000.  A 10% tax impacts the individual making $20k much more than the individual making $200k, even though the higher earner has a tax bill as high as the lower earner's entire annual salary.  But, I digress again.  Look for future article on taxes.
    Now that Seattle has increased their minimum wage to $15 p/hr, there are so many positions on whether the impact has been harmful or whether the increase was totally absorbed by the economy without blemish to employment or inflation.  After a year in, it may be too early to really say either way.  However, what may not be an apocalyptic fiscal tragedy today, will become a nightmare tomorrow if common sense does not prevail.  At some point, forced wage increases WILL negatively impact overall employment and if not employment, inflation.  Either way, the result is the same, increased numbers of unemployed and reduced purchasing power for everyone else.
    Don't be fooled  my friends.  We are all part of a great socio-political experiment where politicians establish policy and see how the people respond.  Likes rats in a cage, we, our families, the market, are being measured and assessed to determine how we react to stressors.  Politicians are pushing the envelope of the rate-revenue curve in order to determine just how much tampering the free market will tolerate before it breaks down.  Concept Conservative believes the free market can and will determine fair wages commiserate to the jobs being performed, and each person, both employed and employer can enter into and exit out of contracts according to the dictates of their conscience and personal ambitions.  An economic environment that creates equal opportunity, not equal outcome, is in direct agreement with the tenets of the U.S. Constitution.

Saturday, July 4, 2015

The Emerging Chinese Threat







China’s Political-Economic Future:
Is China’s Emerging Economy a threat to U.S. Primacy




Abstract

China’s impressive economic growth as a result of currency devaluation, artificial labor costs, and massive exports of cheap goods has created an unfair playing field for global markets and at the same time made the global markets largely dependent on China’s sustainability.  As China’s economy continues to prosper, their demand for finite resources will cause severe reaction to global price increases in commodities such as oil, steel, and food.  But, can China sustain its growth? Or will its rising food costs, restrictive population controls, and a massive inflation eventually slow this economic powerhouse?  I try to address these questions and several others in this paper.





US-China Political-Economic Future:
Is China’s Emerging Economy a threat to Primacy




Following the economic reforms instituted in China in 1978, the world has witnessed an incredible economic engine turning relentlessly in the East. With the introduction of China into the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001, global markets had access to the world’s most populous nation; a prospect that promised significant economic boosts not only to China’s economy but to other economies benefiting from China’s cheap exports.  Aside from these tremendous steps toward globalization and free market principles, Chinas economic future is fraught with challenges that could help to ensure the balance of influence in Eurasia remains largely in America’s favor and ensuring America’s global primacy.
China is massive.  With a population of 1.3 billion and an area of 9,596,960 square miles (Factbook) it boasts the largest population and the 4th largest land mass on the planet.  Its economic growth has been unprecedented and by many accounts, largely unsustainable.  Several sectors of China’s economy, including massive inflation, artificial labor rates, devalued currency, substantial poverty and income disparity, declining workforce, negative birthrates, an aging population, and an increased democratic awareness among its people, cast dark shadows on its potential for a promising future and are bleeding into its foreign policy initiatives.  Indeed, the challenges China must overcome to ensure its political-economic model survives are somewhat mind-boggling.
China’s near-term foreign policy will be regulated largely on its domestic economic policies.  The paramount economic concern for China is inflation as cautioned by World Bank President, Robert Zoellick and echoed by Chinese Premier, Wen Jiabao (Kurtenbach, 2011).  Posting consumer price increases of 6.5% for 2009 and 6.2% for 2010, China is scrambling to trim back the flow of money.  As is the case with inflation, it is causing substantial increases in everything from food to fuel.  With a significant proportion of per capita income going to the purchase of food, consumer purchasing power of other goods has steadily decreased, causing China to become ever-more reliant on its export market to sustain its GDP.  John Stepak, Money Week Editor, nicely summarized the dilemma China faces stating:
The danger facing the country is clear. If it tightens too late, inflation takes off, and social unrest explodes, setting the stage for a hard landing. If it tightens too hard and fast, economic growth collapses, bad debts surge…(Stepak, 2011).

As will be asked several times throughout this paper, the question of “How does this
affect America?” will be addressed. Regardless of the direction China takes with its monetary policy, America may find itself back in a position of greater economic leverage in Southeast and Central Asia.  The doomsday scenario involving China’s inflation may result in future investments shifting away from China and placed in India.  Although not directly influencing American markets, a shift by foreign investors from China to India would have significant geostrategic implications on the balance of power in Central Asia, a key aspect to US Eurasian geostrategic initiatives.
Domestically, China’s inflation problem will have substantial effects on the Chinese population’s perception of its government.  As the cost of living continues to climb, the potential for massive public unrest exists and could severely hamper the growth of the Chinese economy, especially if wages are not increased to keep pace with the inflation rates.  What’s more, the Chinese economy is so dependent on the condition of the global market, current economiconditions like the one we’ve been experiencing the past couple of years have had a substantial impact on China’s growth.  With most Chinese citizens unable to afford the products China exports, the portion of GDP as part of domestic purchases remains extremely low considering the massive population and impacts China’s ability to hedge itself against external market conditions.
Several other economic concerns currently plague China’s future growth potential.  The reforms of 1978 implemented a very restrictive family planning law that has limited Chinese families to one child.  In an attempt to control an exploding population, the “One child” policy is now beginning to show its effects thirty years later.  Meant to last only one generation, Three generations have passed under a policy that has mandated a national negative birth rate which has resulted in a shrinking labor pool and an ever-increasing aging population.  Many of the nation’s working class have migrated to city life and careers, allowing China’s rural population to command higher wages, subsequently causing further increases in the cost of food (Stepak,
2011).
The results of China’s population control aren’t limited solely to the number of people available to continue the nation’s robust growth.  It is also having a substantial effect on the tax base.  The average Chinese female fertility rate of 1.75, (Chang, 2008) although it could be as low as 1.4 for the decade between 2000 and 2010, falls well short of the 2.1 needed to sustain or stabilize the population. Unfortunately, these restrictive family policies have impacted Chinese females more than their male counterparts.  According to a scholarly journal by Mina Chang, the need of rural families to have male children is viewed as critical to the sustainment of the family’s existence and patriarchal dominance. Male children are seen as future providers for their elderly parents and grandparents.  As a result, orphanages are inundated with little girls and female infanticide is a stark reality.  The resulting gender balance could mean big problems for the continued ascendancy of China on the global stage.
Getting past the population problem will be challenging but the hurdles do not end there. As a participant in the WTO, China agreed to adhere to certain international rules consistent with free-trade principles.  According to Thea Lee of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), China’s government is not playing by the rules of the WTO, causing significant trade imbalances (Brown, 2011).  She goes on to say China’s artificially evaluation of its currency, egregious violations to labor rights, and an unwillingness to allow the same unfettered access to its markets that it enjoys of so many other nations is partly to blame for high unemployment in the US and around the world.  Myron Brilliant, Deputy Chief of Staff of the Chamber of Commerce, disagrees somewhat here by stating “China is good for America” but concedes China needs to abide by the rules it agreed to when it joined the WTO.
These sorts of statements are not unique to the US and the longer China ignores the international community, the more it stands to ostracize itself.  British Prime Minister David Cameron echoes the sentiments of many around the globe.  He believes a “dangerous tidal wave of cash” from one side of the globe to the other risks pushing economic growth back into reverse (Chapman, 2010).  In todays economic climate, it is easy to assume diplomatic relations would also sour and potentially isolate China from foreign markets, especially western markets. China must either raise interest rates to stem the tide of borrowing or it must allow inflation to take hold, forcing it to raise the prices of its exports which will necessarily raise the value of the Renminbi.  In either case, China should start to expect reductions in its historic growth over the next decade. In an International Monetary Fund Working Paper, Kai Guo and Papa N’Diaye discuss in great detail and draw the conclusion that in order for China to maintain its impressive growth, China will need to focus more attention on the percentage of GDP from domestic consumer spending (Guo, N’Diaye, 2009).
So how does the US mitigate the growth of China and if it can’t mitigate its growth, what options does the US have to ensure regional security?  The answer involves food and energy. Already a major head-hurter for the Chinese government, China is importing a massive amount of wheat in order to feed its people due to overgrazing, over-logging and the substantial loss of groundwater (Pocha, 2006).  According to The International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) China has sufficient arable land to cultivate its need of approximately 500 million cubic tons of wheat per year, but it makes clear there is no guarantee China will do so (Heilig, 2004).  In the six years following Heilig’s article, China was importing millions of tons of soybeans wheat and corn, not only to feed its people but also to feed large-scale hog farms to meet the country’s increasing demand for meat (Wui Yap, 2011).  As shortages of food become
more prevalent, food costs necessarily go up and could eventually mean the beginning of an even larger problem of social revolution.
Liu Rui, Economics Professor at the People’s University of China, in an interview with the Associated Press (AP), discussed the disparity between the rich and the poor as indicated by the difference between civilian dinner tables and posited the very real danger of social unrest if the food crisis is not averted (Sloan, AP, 2011).  According to Karen Sloan of the AP, Chinese leadership is well aware of the dangers inherent of food shortages and has acknowledged the crisis in Egypt in May 2011 being caused, in part, to the high cost of food. Massive income gaps seem to be par-for-the-course in the communist model and so are, to the detriment of its leaders, revolutions.  If China does not get a handle on food prices, which is most likely a result of its inflation, there is little, if any, reason for the U.S. to fret over an emerging China.  China will fall victim to a self-induced diet.
America is not immune to hikes in food prices. It is expected overall food prices will rise between 2% and 3% in 2011(Andrejczak, 2010) [UPDATE: Actual Food at home Index rose 6.2% according to Bloomberg. (Scheuble, 2011)] which will further dampen America’s economic recovery.  But even in these economic times, the average American still has vastly more wealth than the average Chinese, making America much more capable of weathering food inflation.  As one of the world’s largest exports of corn, wheat, soybeans and other commodities, China’s holding of $1 trillion dollars in treasury bonds (debt) as leverage begins to lose some of its sting.  How would China react to massive starvation of its people?  Would it forgive the US of some of this debt or would it allow its people to starve just to spite the US?  Would the US continue to export to China if China is unable to pay its grocery bill? or would China begin chipping away at the debt it holds in exchange for food exports at a reduced rate?  The point is, all the talk about China demanding repayment due to a loss of faith in the dollar is premature when considering the ramifications that decision may have on commodities exports from the U.S.
After food, China needs far more energy to meet the demands of millions of new drivers each year and its massive industrial sector.  As the number of vehicles in China increases and the assumption China’s industry will continue to grow, China’s demand for world commodities like steel and oil will rise.  Already a major player in the New Great Game, China has a vested interest in the Caspian Sea and its oil.  However, as games often go, there are competitors seeking to siphon off as much of the energy from the area as possible and these competitors are major players on a global scale.  Russia, India, Turkey, The EU, Iran, and last but not least, the U.S. all have valid, very different reason for their interest in the Caspian, but a common thread through all players is the desire to tap into the Caspian’s $5 trillion potential (Lavelle, 2007).
China’s looming economic problems present some serious roadblocks to its sustainable development over the next 10 to 20 years and considering the magnitude of the issues listed throughout this paper, it becomes poignantly clear the direction China is headed when we considered the items not necessarily mentioned in this paper.  Based on the assessments made concerning China’s inflation problem, population demographics, and food shortages, there is good reason to believe China’s ascension as the next global superpower may never come to fruition.  For now, the U.S. should continue to interact with China to the extent America’s purposes are served.  However, there is absolutely no reason for the U.S. to kowtow to the Chinese because of what they ‘might’ become.  There is more reason to believe China will be the catalyst to their own demise than to speculate their demise would come by the hands of another power which means ultimately America needs to do nothing to mitigate the emerging Chinese threat.



Works Cited:





-Brown, Jeffrey (Jan, 2011). As China's Economy Grows, How Hard Should U.S. Push on Currency, Human Rights? Aired on PBS News Hour, January 20, 2011.  Retrieved from http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/politics/jan-june11/china_01-20.html

Chang, Mina (2008).  Tipping the Scale: Gender Imbalance in China. Harvard International Review, 30(1), 10-10-11.  Retrieved from http://ezproxy.libproxy.db.erau.edu.login?url=http:search.proquest.com/docview/230903439?acc ountid=27203

-Chapman, James (Nov, 2010). Tidal wave of cash risks us all: Cameron warns globalization will


-Guo, Kai & N’Diaye, Papa (Aug, 2009). Is China’s Export-Oriented Growth Sustainable? IMF Working Paper WP/09/172. Retrieved from http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2009/wp09172.pdf


-Heilig, G.K. (2004): RAPS-China. A Regional Analysis and Planning System. Luxemburg, Austria. Retrieved from  http://www.iiasa.ac.at/Research/SRD/ChinaFood/concl/con_1.htm

-Kurtenbach, Elaine (Sep, 2011). China’s Inflation Rate eases as Economy Cools

Lavelle, Peter (May, 2007). Caspian Basin as aired on Russia Today’s series In Context.  May
19, 2007.

-Pocha, Jehangir S (Sep, 2006). China’s Dangerous Dustbowl: Overgrazing, logging, and Loss of Ground Water Turn Nearly a Million Acres Into Desert Every Year, Displacing Millions and Cutting Global Food Supply.  The Boston Globe online. Retrieved from http://www.boston.com/yourlife/health/other/articles/2006/09/18/chinas_dangerous_dustbowl/?p age=2

Scheuble, Kristy (Oct, 2011). U.S. October Consumer Price Index Report (Text).  Retrieved 27

Sloan, Karen (May, 2011).  Food Gap between China’s Rich and Poor a Problem.  Associated Press video posted to YouTube on May 11, 2011.  Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DGz5GPE30DA

Stepak, John (April, 2011). What China’s inflation problem means for you. Money Week Asian
Economy. April 18, 2011.

Stewart, Heather (Feb, 2011). Record £9.2bn Trade Deficit Dents Hope of Export-Driven Recovery. Retrieved from http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/feb/09/uk-trade-deficit-hits- record

Wei Yap, Chuin (Jan, 2011). Chinese Agriculture Imports See Sharp Rise.  The Wall Street Journal Online. Retrieved from http://online.wsj.com/article/sb10001424052748704754304576095220668417458.html



World Fact Book from the Central Intelligence Agency