RIF Radio: General Treasurer candidate Seth Magaziner talks pensions, hedge funds, divestment, 38 Studios


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From left to right: Kristina Fox, Seth Magaziner, me and Mark Grey.
From left to right: Kristina Fox, Seth Magaziner, Bob Plain and Mark Grey.
Friday Dec 20, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Seth Magaziner, the socially responsible investment banker who is running for General Treasurer, joined me, Mark Gray and Kristina Fox for the RI Future Review, our weekly podcast.
Magaziner told us he doesn’t support divestment from fossil fuel companies in public investment funds, though he’d like to see such options for retirees in the defined contribution portion of their pensions. He also said he wouldn’t support defaulting on the 38 Studios moral obligation note if it would put struggling cities’ bond rating in jeopardy.He said pension reforms were tragic but necessary because the legislature didn’t properly fund the public sector retirement plan for decades. Magaziner added that Rhode Island taxpayers have been asked to pay about a third a cost of the reforms through re-amortization.On hedge funds he said the fees are “outdated and outrageously high” but as an investment strategy he said there may be times when it is a wise strategy. “Now, I think, is one of these times,” he said.

He also talked at length about what it means to be a socially responsible investor and how he would advocate for more partnerships between local banks, credit unions and the community to foster a better financial atmosphere for the Rhode Islanders who have been left behind by the current structure.

12th annual Rally4Recovery


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As part of National Recovery Month, Rhode Island will host the 12th annual Rally4 Recovery on Saturday September 21, 2013, starting at 2:00 p.m., at the Roger Williams National Memorial located at 282 North Main Street in Providence, RI.

The free, family-friendly festival helps build an attractive culture of recovery in Rhode Island, with the belief that everyone has a right to, and is capable of, recovery from addiction to drugs, alcohol and mental illness.

The Festival will have many activities for kids, there will be tables with educational information about treatment, community supports, signing up for health care as of October 1st, and other subjects important to adults and their families. Entertainment will be provided by the Drums of Freedom, The Senders, and the Dumpstaphunk Band featuring Ivan Neville. At the end of the Rally, a luminaria procession to Memorial Park will bring the celebration to a close.

For further information visit the website, http://rally4recovery.com/ or call 401-721-5100.rally pic

 

Helping the homeless for the holidays


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From Left to Right: Lynn Loveday (State V.P. AFSCME RI Council 94), Jim Ryczek (E.D. of RICH), Jean Johnson (E.D. House of Hope, CDC)

North Providence – When Lynn Loveday visited Harrington Hall (the state’s largest homeless shelter that routinely houses 88 men a night) she was appalled. She left that visit determined to do something to address a situation that seemed to her unacceptable and immoral. Fortunate for homeless advocates, Loveday’s compassion and commitment was backed by RI Council 94, AFSCME, AFL-CIO where Loveday serves as the State Vice-President.

After educating herself about the issue of homelessness, Loveday sought to work on addressing both the short and long-term problems of homelessness that led to 4,868 Rhode Islanders experiencing homelessness in 2012. To deal with the short-term problems, Loveday involved the Council in holding a donation drive to collect much-needed items for the shelters. The donation drive began prior to the Thanksgiving Holiday and concluded this week.On Wednesday, December 18th staff from various homeless shelters around the state came to the Council offices to collect the hundreds of donated items.

Speaking at the event, Loveday explained, “Rhode Island Council 94, AFSCME members and the State of Rhode Island conducted a donation drive to help the homeless this Holiday Season. The donation drive focused on clothing items that will help keep homeless citizens warm. Hundreds of items, including 200 jackets, scarves, hats, and shoes were collected. While these donations represent only a small step in combating homelessness, I am proud that state employees helped Rhode Islanders who lack shelter, the most fundamental necessity during winter.”

 

 

Rebuilding Rhode Island’s Economy, Part 1: Economic Development 101


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Unemployment LineI am of the mind that the biggest issue facing the state right now is the sluggish economy.  I know many share this belief.  With that in mind, I will be focusing my (unfortunately limited) time writing specifically on creative strategies to improve Providence’s and the state’s economy, and thinking about it from the perspective of the upcoming gubernatorial and Providence Mayoral campaigns (i.e., what do the candidates have to say about what I write?).  Before I delve into specific suggestions, I believe there are a few items relevant to economic growth that need to be clarified at the outset.

State House

First, there isn’t much the government can do to improve the economy directly, particularly in this climate of economic distress and innovation paralysis.  When the economy is running smoothly, most folks want the government to “stay out of the way.”  But when the economy tanks, policymakers are the first to be blamed (this is a disingenuous and undeserved complaint), and everyone wants them to “fix it.”  First, you can’t have it both ways people.  Second, there is no magic solution to “fixing” the economy.

Second, economic growth takes time, commitment, alignment on a vision, and the autonomy to make things happen.  It is unlikely to see radically positive results in a few months or even a couple years.  Economic development is a decades-long strategy, that often requires partnerships and long-term planning that are challenging for public officials, policymakers, and civil service staff.  While the pain of recessions, joblessness, and foreclosures is real, there are often few options for state and local officials to ease that pain.

Third, everything matters to economic development: education, transportation, infrastructure, workforce, land-use, zoning, existing markets, history, taxes, regulations, natural assets, etc.  But each of these matter to varying degrees depending on the industrial sector and individual businesses.  To assume that “lowering taxes” or “reducing regulations” is the most important of considerations is foolish, ill-advised, offensive, and immeasurably distracting from the various other issues that are generally much more important for long-term economic success.  While everything is important, some things are more important than others.

winner and loserFourth, every strategy comes with trade-offs and there are always winners and losers with any policy change.  Typically, those with wealth and power can influence policy to their benefit.  And while this may benefit them personally, or as a group, there are long-term consequences for the economy that are generally ignored.  The incremental policy decisions that have been made in the past have led to our little state to lack the sufficient resiliency to bounce back from the recent and ongoing depression/recession.  The economic conditions in which Rhode Island finds itself will take many, many years to rectify.

Fifth, demand for goods and services drives the supply of goods and services.  If no one wants to buy stuff, stuff doesn’t get made, and people lose their jobs.  Most tools that are deployed by cities and towns and the state try to stimulate the economy do not address economic demand, and as such they are largely inefficient and/or ineffective.

Sixth, underlying everything is an often ignored but crucial criterion: the importance of inclusive and dispersed economic growth.  The benefits of economic growth need to be broadly shared because the more people who earn money, and the more money that they earn, the higher the level of economic growth.  When economic growth benefits a small (and shrinking) number of people, aggregate demand declines and the economy suffers.  When a rising tide actually lifts all boats, something that the post-WWII economy was notable for, everyone benefits.  When a growing number of boats are chained to the bottom of the ocean, as has been the experience from the mid-1970s onward (with a notable exception during the 1990s), the economy flounders, people fall deeper in debt to maintain their standard of living, and the economy slows.

"I must break you."
“I must break you.”

Seventh, the ONLY way the state (or any state, region, city, etc.) can be successful in the long-run is by improving its competitiveness in particular economic areas.  This can be done by increasing the productivity of existing businesses through innovation or better trained employees or achieving higher workforce participation rates, while ALSO supporting the high and rising wages and living standards of Rhode Islanders.  Period.  This is hard to do, but not impossible.  The role the city and state can play is to lay the groundwork for an iterative process of successive improvements to support business productivity gains and assist with the dispersion of economic benefits.

Eighth, when we discuss economic development, it’s important to differentiate between locally-traded clusters, sectors, and industries and those that are subject to larger markets, regional, national, or global in scope.  The first group includes restaurants, local health services, residential housing construction, etc. while the second group includes software development, manufacturing, higher education, etc.  The success of the first group is largely dependent upon the success of the latter.  To put it another way, an economy can only grow by exporting lots of high-value goods and services and bringing in money to the state from other parts of the country / world.  The degree to which the economy is exposed to and successfully competes in global markets is the single largest factor that explains how successful its local economy is.  This isn’t to say that the local economy isn’t important, just that everyone selling hamburgers to each other does not grow the economy.

Finally, businesses grow at various points over their lifecycle.  The only businesses that are guaranteed to have net positive job growth are new businesses, for the obvious reason that they will employ at minimum the owner of the business and they have no current employees to let go.  Many businesses grow to a certain size and stay there for their entire existence.  Many businesses have dramatic fluctuations in their employment based on seasonal or market demand.  Some businesses have limited but sustained growth.  And only a few businesses experience pronounced growth, and that growth is generally limited to a short period of time.  All of this is important when it comes to growing jobs because there are only limited opportunities to identify and support existing businesses during their growth phases.  But the opportunities are innumerable to support new business growth, and it is new business startups that have been responsible for net new job growth in the past decade.

There are additional factors that contribute or impede economic growth, but in my mind, the 9 above are of paramount importance.  Feel free to bookmark this post as I will update it as I begin listing specific strategies to Rebuild Rhode Island!