On Putin, Ukraine, and the Cuban Missile Crisis

As I understand it, Nikita Khrushchev made the decision to install missiles in Cuba more or less on his own. His colleagues on the Politburo were less than thrilled by the crisis and its resolution. As a result of this and other fiascos, Khrushchev was removed from power by a coup within the CCCP.

Could the same thing happen as a result of Putin’s foolhardy war against Ukraine? Not exactly, because Putin is not constrained by a party, an ideology, and a bureaucracy in the same way; he runs the whole show himself. The only hope would be that the military and the security apparatus would be sufficiently appalled to refuse to obey orders. That’s a big lift.

A Communist Party as a restraining force in history? It seems implausible at first, but it’s actually true. It is one of the big differences between Xi and Putin.

How Putin Screwed Up

The way to win a war is to destroy your opponent’s will to fight and to substantially degrade its capacity to do so. Shock and awe attacks do both, which is why I assumed Putin would approach Ukraine in the same way we dealt with Iraq. He didn’t, presumably because he was overconfident and thought he could avoid the global fallout with a less impressive opening. Now he’s facing the worst possible option: a continuing escalation focusing on destroying Ukrainian cities and starving their residents. The horrible footage will be on TV every night. The entire Ukrainian population has been mobilized against him. The world is outraged. A long and expensive occupation is now his best case scenario. It will be a nightmare.

It couldn’t happen to a nicer guy.

Impressions of D.C.

When we went to New York in 2019, I posted about how it felt like the center of the world. The pace of life was fast and intense; every possible ethnicity was represented; there was lots of activity on the street; and the power of the place was represented vertically, in skyscrapers.

Washington, D.C. is the antithesis of New York. It’s a company town, and it all revolves around political power. Nobody lives there permanently. There is little activity on the street. Culture only really exists there to serve the wealthy. Unlike New York, power in architecture is expressed horizontally; the massive concrete and stone government buildings are kind of overwhelming in their own way.

Washington doesn’t remind me of any European or Asian capital that I have seen. The visibility and size of the Capitol building, and the presence of the Washington Monument, suggest a vastly larger and more powerful version of the Vatican. That’s a company town with influence all over the world, as well.

On a Ukraine Analogy

“Ireland is ours!” said Boris Johnson, as he announced that the UK was invading Ireland. “We have a common culture and a common language. We controlled Ireland for centuries. Anyway, we can’t let the EU have a bridgehead in an island that is so close to us. We have no choice but to engage in a special military venture!”

Think this sounds ridiculous? No more than Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

A Ukraine Paradox

Putin takes the position that Ukraine has no right to exist as a separate nation due to its ethnic and cultural ties to Russia. The vast majority of Ukrainians, of course, beg to differ.

As a result, the Russian military is being ordered to kill their relatives. It sounds a bit like a domestic dispute involving a guy who would rather kill his girlfriend than let anyone else have her. How inspiring a cause is that? Based on the state of affairs on the ground, not very.

NOTE TO MY READERS: I will be on vacation for the next week. Postings will be sporadic at best until 3/15.

Who Could Save Ukraine?

There is every reason to believe that Vladimir Putin is in Ukraine to win it. The Ukrainians and their allies can force the Russians to pay a heavy price, but in the end, they cannot prevail in a purely military sense. That leaves the question–can anyone at home change Putin’s mind as to the costs and benefits of the invasion?

Here are the possibilities:

  1. A POPULAR UPRISING: Don’t hold your breath. Putin, as far as we know, has complete control over the means of repression, and most of the population is supporting the war, albeit tepidly.
  2. THE OLIGARCHS REBEL: In another society, this would be a major source of concern. In Russia, however, the oligarchs owe their position to Putin–not the other way around. They will undoubtedly grumble about their frozen assets, but they probably won’t try to get rid of him, because the risks of failure would be too great.
  3. MILITARY COUP: Could the leadership of the military decide that Ukraine is a bridge too far? If the war goes badly, and Putin appears to be out of touch . . . maybe.
  4. THE SOLDIERS ON THE GROUND MUTINY: It’s doubtful things could get bad enough on the ground for that to happen. Military discipline is a very powerful thing.

Realistically, there isn’t much hope here, unless Putin is less committed to the invasion than he appears to be at this time. The best chances are #2 and #3; the most realistic alternative is a grubby compromise that trades NATO and EU membership for sovereignty on other issues.

On Putin’s Blank Check

Kaiser Wilhelm II gave one to the Austro-Hungarian government in 1914; you know how that one turned out. Donald Trump gave one to MBS in Yemen; things didn’t go much better there. It is a really bad idea to give your unconditional support to an unreliable actor, because it turns you into a hostage of fortune.

That’s exactly what Xi has done with Putin in Ukraine. He’s going to be viewed as an accomplice to a crime in the countries that, in the long run, really matter to the Chinese. That’s the opposite of soft power.

On Rent and the Fed

Real estate prices are soaring; rent, predictably, has followed. It is becoming an increasingly large component of our current inflationary episode; it also creates serious social problems. Can the Fed do anything about it?

This one is complicated. On the supply side, the problems are the rising cost of materials, the lack of available labor, and density constraints imposed by local governments. The Fed can’t do anything about these issues; in fact, by making financing more difficult for multi-family projects, it might actually make things worse by raising rates. On the demand side, raising interest rates would increase the cost of buying a unit, and thus reduce sales and, ultimately, prices; on the other hand, prices have already gone up dramatically without crushing demand, due largely to demographics and the impacts of the pandemic, so who is to say that increasing the cost of financing would make much of a difference? In addition, a substantial number of sales in the recent past have been for cash. The Fed has no control over those.

On balance, the case for reducing rents by raising rates is unpersuasive.

On Gas Prices and the Fed

Gas prices are already soaring, and are about to get worse, as a result of the invasion of Ukraine. This is a classic supply side shock that will inevitably filter through the entire economy in the form of higher prices. What should the Fed do?

The Fed can’t do anything to address supply problems created by geopolitical crises. Crushing demand won’t solve the problem. The American public will respond to higher gas prices by driving and buying less regardless of what the Fed does with interest rates. The best thing the Fed can do is . . . nothing.

On “Skewers,” “Overheaters,” and the Fed

The rule is that inflation results when demand overtakes supply. No one disputes that the current inflationary episode is following the rule–at least as to goods. The debate is whether demand in the aggregate (i.e., for both goods and services) is too high, and should be reduced by interest rate hikes, or whether demand for goods has been increased artificially by the pandemic at the expense of services, in which case interest rate hikes will do nothing but punish the markets. Paul Krugman appropriately calls adherents of the first opinion “Overheaters” and the second opinion “Skewers.” Who is correct here?

Based on GDP data and inflation rates in comparable countries, 5 percent of our 7 percent inflation rate is caused by “skewing,” and the remainder by “overheating.” This means only a small portion of the inflation rate can be addressed through interest rate increases. In addition, much of the heightened demand for goods is being financed by pandemic savings, not by borrowing; increasing interest rates won’t solve that problem, either.

The bottom line is that the Fed can do a lot of collateral damage to the economy by raising rates sharply, but it cannot address the root cause of most of the inflation–the pandemic. Increasing rates to their pre-pandemic level is appropriate, as the economy no longer needs extra fuel to burn, but it would be a mistake to do anything more than that.

On Making America Florida

Supporters of Ron DeSantis were waving “Make America Florida” signs and banners during the CPAC convention. What would that mean, in practice?

Well, over the last year or so, DeSantis and the Florida Legislature have done the following:

  1. Banned abortions after 15 weeks;
  2. Criminalized participation in street protests which end in violence, even if the individual in question was not involved in any of the violence;
  3. Banned local government and business mask mandates, and fought vaccine mandates;
  4. Proposed a highly gerrymandered electoral map;
  5. Imposed new restrictions on trans people in schools; and
  6. At a time when public school teachers are leaving in droves, citing, among other things, a lack of respect from the community, Florida plans to put them under surveillance through the “Don’t Say Gay” and “Stop Woke” pieces of legislation.

Those are just the ones that come to mind quickly. DeSantis and his followers refer to this as the “Freedom Agenda.” What they mean by that is freedom for reactionaries and the virus, and cudgels for everyone else.

On Rick Scott’s Poll Tax

When Richard II’s government (the king himself was a minor) implemented it, the result was the Peasants’ Revolt. When Margaret Thatcher pushed one through, it led to riots and serious divisions in her government. Yes, the poll tax has a history of being a political disaster. And yet, Rick Scott’s proposed GOP agenda includes one. What is he thinking?

First of all, it proves that he is ignorant of history–not that we should be surprised. Second, he thinks we’re living in 2010, and the Tea Party is all the rage on the right, which it isn’t. Finally, and most importantly, in addition to passionately hating government at all levels, Scott is completely committed to the makers/takers distinction that Mitt Romney made famous in 2012. Scott believes that businessmen create all the wealth in this country, and that those of us who no longer work for a living (or work for entities which don’t make a profit) should just die and stop mooching off the economically productive people. That’s the key to his political identity.

Two points are relevant here. First of all, Donald Trump wouldn’t be eligible to vote under the Scott proposal, as he typically does not pay income taxes–he thinks that’s for losers. Second, there is no corresponding proposal for a minimum tax on large corporations. It would seem that businesses don’t need any “skin in the game” to be major political players in the Scott universe.

A Grim Prediction

After Putin is finished blowing up a large portion of Ukraine and impoverishing its remaining residents, can you guess who’s going to be asked to pay to put the pieces back together? You! He will weaponize our humanitarian instincts against us. It’s going to happen.

Herbert Hoover fed millions of starving Russian peasants after the Russian Civil War, thereby subsidizing the Bolshevik regime. Assad tried it in Syria. The Taliban are putting on a full court press for American aid today. Get ready for it in Ukraine.

Who Wins in the End?

Assume the following conditions exist 30 days from now:

  1. Ukraine is completely occupied by Russian troops, who will stay there indefinitely.
  2. The urban areas of the country have been largely destroyed.
  3. There are millions of refugees.
  4. An insurgency has begun, along with acts of terrorism within Russia’s borders.
  5. The Russian economy is still struggling with the impacts of sanctions.
  6. The Russian military suffered tens of thousands of casualties during the war.

Who won? Not the Ukrainians, for obvious reasons. Not Russia, whose military has seriously underperformed and is now tied up in Ukraine, whose economy has collapsed, which faces a united and angry NATO, and which no longer even pretends to be a democratic state. Not Biden, even though he handled the crisis masterfully; the GOP is denouncing him as the man who lost Ukraine. Not China, which has been deterred from attacking Taiwan. Not the “New Right,” which has been discredited by its admiration for Putin.

It’s hard to find a winner here, but the best answer is . . . American hawks, who thought their chance to fight the USSR had evaporated when it collapsed. They’re back, baby! The defense budget is about to soar! Let the good times roll!

A Limerick on the Invasion

So now Putin invaded Ukraine.

Some people aren’t sure that he’s sane.

I hope that we’ll see

That Ukraine will stay free

And the Russians will lose more than gain.