27 Sep 2011

The Only Person Stopping a Downtown Hockey Arena in Edmonton? Daryl Katz

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If I hear any more gnashing of teeth or rending of hair by distraught Oilers fans to just "GET THE DEAL DONE" in regards to a downtown arena in Edmonton I will go Office Space on my computer screen.

This is the type of non-thinking dunderfan that loves the Khabibulin contract, casually brushes off the fact that Katz doesn't actually live here, thinks Steve Tambellini is just carefullly biding his time and buys into the fallacies around downtown redevelopment.

Let's make this clear. This deadline of October 31. It's bollocks. Daryl Katz can negotiate to extend his option on the land or pursue any other number of legal means to hold on to the parcel of land slated to become his own private $450 million fantasy land.

It's a negotiating tactic from someone who has proven himself incompetent at negotiating from the very get-go, despite a more than willing partner in Mayor Mandel and the city of Edmonton.

Let's be clear. The city's administration is begging for a downtown arena. The city is kicking in $125 million worth of cash (and lending Katz another $125 million by the way) in an an extremely generous deal but, just like some reverse Steve Jobs, there is always just one more thing when to comes to the deal.

The Oilers have gone cap in hand to the city but have refused to open their books, their claims of penury easily disprovable. Then the Katz Group promised $200 million for the arena, then it was $100 million, then it was another $100 million for "development" around the arena. Then they wanted a non-compete from Northlands for concerts. Then the news leaked that they had been speaking to the people at the Enoch Cree as a possible alternative site. Then the VP of Communications for the Katz Group starts calling MLA's caucus offices, offering help when it comes to communications. Just one more thing.

I'd like to remind people that want the deal to get done that no such chicanery happened on the city's side of negotiations. They readily agreed to a very generous framework that would see one of the most expensive arenas in NHL history get built.

If Daryl Katz really wants a new downtown arena he's going to have to moderate his expectations or come up with $100 million dollars from either his own pocket or some stupid politician. If Katz wants his shiny, fancy, new, ultra-expensive arena he's going to have to pay for it. If you want something similar to the Air Canada Centre in Toronto you can pay $330 million dollars (Built completely with private funds I might add).

Look, it's truly unfortunate that Ed Stelmach resigned and provincial politics was in such a state of flux that a big bag of cash wasn't easily forthcoming. It's a tough business being the owner of an NHL franchise, I know (I don't). However, if a downtown arena doesn't get built you can't blame the city of Edmonton, you can't blame Simon Farbrother, you can't even blame Stephen Mandel. Blame Daryl Katz.

 

 

8 Sep 2011

A History of Violence (and debt)

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I like to argue.I'm not one to flip a table over but I do enjoy the heave and fro between two opposing viewpoints especially if I don't mind the other human being on the other end of the argument. I like to be challenged but I like to go to bed happy.

With that in mind the work of economic anthropologist and author David Graeber is invaluable in the many arguments I get into with my friend and colleague Max Fawcett.

First off, let's destroy the myth that money was created to replace the barter system and move on from there to more interesting venues of debate.

All excerpts are taken from an interview between David Graeber and Irish journalist Phillip Pilkington, which appeared on nakedcapitalism.com.

Philip Pilkington: Let’s begin. Most economists claim that money was invented to replace the barter system. But you’ve found something quite different, am I correct?

David Graeber: Yes there’s a standard story we’re all taught, a ‘once upon a time’ — it’s a fairy tale.

It really deserves no other introduction: according to this theory all transactions were by barter. “Tell you what, I’ll give you twenty chickens for that cow.” Or three arrow-heads for that beaver pelt or what-have-you. This created inconveniences, because maybe your neighbor doesn’t need chickens right now, so you have to invent money.

The story goes back at least to Adam Smith and in its own way it’s the founding myth of economics. Now, I’m an anthropologist and we anthropologists have long known this is a myth simply because if there were places where everyday transactions took the form of: “I’ll give you twenty chickens for that cow,” we’d have found one or two by now. After all people have been looking since 1776, when the Wealth of Nations first came out. But if you think about it for just a second, it’s hardly surprising that we haven’t found anything.

Think about what they’re saying here – basically: that a bunch of Neolithic farmers in a village somewhere, or Native Americans or whatever, will be engaging in transactions only through the spot trade. So, if your neighbor doesn’t have what you want right now, no big deal. Obviously what would really happen, and this is what anthropologists observe when neighbors do engage in something like exchange with each other, if you want your neighbor’s cow, you’d say, “wow, nice cow” and he’d say “you like it? Take it!” – and now you owe him one. Quite often people don’t even engage in exchange at all – if they were real Iroquois or other Native Americans, for example, all such things would probably be allocated by women’s councils.

So the real question is not how does barter generate some sort of medium of exchange, that then becomes money, but rather, how does that broad sense of ‘I owe you one’ turn into a precise system of measurement – that is: money as a unit of account?

By the time the curtain goes up on the historical record in ancient Mesopotamia, around 3200 BC, it’s already happened. There’s an elaborate system of money of account and complex credit systems. (Money as medium of exchange or as a standardized circulating units of gold, silver, bronze or whatever, only comes much later.)

So really, rather than the standard story – first there’s barter, then money, then finally credit comes out of that – if anything its precisely the other way around. Credit and debt comes first, then coinage emerges thousands of years later and then, when you do find “I’ll give you twenty chickens for that cow” type of barter systems, it’s usually when there used to be cash markets, but for some reason – as in Russia, for example, in 1998 – the currency collapses or disappears.

As Graeber lays out, the myth of money replacing barter is just that, a myth. Coinage (or physical money) was actually created to pay soldiers. Elaborate systems of debt, credit and interest existed in the times of Hammurabi, more than 3000 years before the time of Jesus Christ. Graeber has an intersesting theory about why this developed in Mesopotamia and not Egypt (namely the uneven development of the Babylonian state compared to Egypt which was able to extract taxes from the beginning) but that's neither here nor there. The function of this excerpt is simply to excise the myth of the barter economy. However, even with the genesis of interest bearing loans the Mesopotamians fell into a familiar problem, one of the debt trap.

This was the great social evil of antiquity – families would have to start pawning off their flocks, fields and before long, their wives and children would be taken off into debt peonage. Often people would start abandoning the cities entirely, joining semi-nomadic bands, threatening to come back in force and overturn the existing order entirely. Rulers would regularly conclude the only way to prevent complete social breakdown was to declare a clean slate or ‘washing of the tablets,’ they’d cancel all consumer debt and just start over. In fact, the first recorded word for ‘freedom’ in any human language is the Sumerian amargi, a word for debt-freedom, and by extension freedom more generally, which literally means ‘return to mother,’ since when they declared a clean slate, all the debt peons would get to go home.

Max tends to get pretty sanctimonious about the idea of paying one debts. It's a bit of an irony considering how imporant that idea is to creation of religion but we'll forgive him for his cultural programming. However, the anthropologic history of jubilee, or debt forgiveness, is an interesting one. Without getting into the development of Athens and John Ralson Saul and blah, blah, blah let's get back to Graeber.

One could tell the history like this: eventually the Egyptian approach (taxes) and Mesopotamian approach (usury) fuse together, people have to borrow to pay their taxes and debt becomes institutionalized.

Taxes are also key to creating the first markets that operate on cash, since coinage seems to be invented or at least widely popularized to pay soldiers – more or less simultaneously in China, India, and the Mediterranean, where governments find the easiest way to provision the troops is to issue them standard-issue bits of gold or silver and then demand everyone else in the kingdom give them one of those coins back again. Thus we find that the language of debt and the language of morality start to merge.

In Sanskrit, Hebrew, Aramaic, ‘debt,’ ‘guilt,’ and ‘sin’ are actually the same word. Much of the language of the great religious movements – reckoning, redemption, karmic accounting and the like – are drawn from the language of ancient finance. But that language is always found wanting and inadequate and twisted around into something completely different. It’s as if the great prophets and religious teachers had no choice but to start with that kind of language because it’s the language that existed at the time, but they only adopted it so as to turn it into its opposite: as a way of saying debts are not sacred, but forgiveness of debt, or the ability to wipe out debt, or to realize that debts aren’t real – these are the acts that are truly sacred.

And here is where the headline starts to make more sense. Guess how the idea of "I owe you one" gets quantified? Through the threat of violence. When you give a generous gift and someone doesn't take the proper effort to repay it you might think that they're a cheapskate, you might not lavish another gift on them but you're unlikely to start making specific demands. However, it's when you start coming up with exact compensation schemes that things go south.

Well, remember I said that the big question in the origins of money is how a sense of obligation – an ‘I owe you one’ – turns into something that can be precisely quantified? Well, the answer seems to be: when there is a potential for violence. If you give someone a pig and they give you a few chickens back you might think they’re a cheapskate, and mock them, but you’re unlikely to come up with a mathematical formula for exactly how cheap you think they are. If someone pokes out your eye in a fight, or kills your brother, that’s when you start saying, “traditional compensation is exactly twenty-seven heifers of the finest quality and if they’re not of the finest quality, this means war!”

Money, in the sense of exact equivalents, seems to emerge from situations like that, but also, war and plunder, the disposal of loot, slavery. In early Medieval Ireland, for example, slave-girls were the highest denomination of currency. And you could specify the exact value of everything in a typical house even though very few of those items were available for sale anywhere because they were used to pay fines or damages if someone broke them.

But once you understand that taxes and money largely begin with war it becomes easier to see what really happened. After all, every Mafiosi understands this. If you want to take a relation of violent extortion, sheer power, and turn it into something moral, and most of all, make it seem like the victims are to blame, you turn it into a relation of debt. “You owe me, but I’ll cut you a break for now…” Most human beings in history have probably been told this by their debtors. And the crucial thing is: what possible reply can you make but, “wait a minute, who owes what to who here?” And of course for thousands of years, that’s what the victims have said, but the moment you do, you are using the rulers’ language, you’re admitting that debt and morality really are the same thing. That’s the situation the religious thinkers were stuck with, so they started with the language of debt, and then they tried to turn it around and make it into something else.

If you've ever taken a second year psych class this is probably all starting to ring a bell. In The Genealogy of Morals Nietzche famously said that all morality was founded upon the extraction of debt by violence. Without debt, and the obligation to pay it back, Nietzche finds the genesis of civilization. It's a cynical view of society and Nietzche was probably just trying to unsettle his bourgeois audience however it is a useful argumentative construct. If morality begins with Shylock's pound of flesh what does that say about morality?

So, if the barter economy was a fiction and present day morality is founded on ancient idea around debt repayment what then? What did people do before the imbroglio of the present day debt economy? There has been much academic work on the gift economy, specifically by Marcel Mauss. Graeber thinks of himself as an anthropologist very much in the Maussian tradition.

What fascinated Mauss was that this seemed to be universally true, even today. If I take a free-market economist out to dinner he’ll feel like he should return the favor and take me out to dinner later. He might even think that he is something of chump if he doesn’t and this even if his theory tells him he just got something for nothing and should be happy about it. Why is that? What is this force that compels me to want to return a gift?

This is an important argument, and it shows there is always a certain morality underlying what we call economic life. But it strikes me that if you focus too much on just that one aspect of Mauss’ argument you end up reducing everything to exchange again, with the proviso that some people are pretending they aren’t doing that.

It's an interesting, and funny, bit of history. When gifts were given to people clearly below the gift-giver in terms of hierarchy there was no expectation of recompense. However, where it gets really interesting is when competing leaders start giving extravagant gifts to each other. It was not through feats of strength or battlefield heroics where these leaders battled, it was through the proxy of gift giving. There are Greek accounts of Celtic societies where the gifts given to a rival chief or leader were so extravagant, with no chance of being repaid, that the leader would kill himself and the gift (or gifts) would be distributed amongst his followers.

So where does that leave us in today's context? What should we think about the ridiculous amount of household debt in the Global North?

From an historical perspective, it’s pretty ominous. One could go further than the Clinton era, actually – a case could be made that we are seeing now is the same crisis we were facing in the 70s; it’s just that we managed to fend it off for 30 or 35 years through all these elaborate credit arrangements (and of course, the super-exploitation of the global South, through the ‘Third World Debt Crisis’.)

As I said Eurasian history, taken in its broadest contours, shifts back and forth between periods dominated by virtual credit money and those dominated by actual coin and bullion. The credit systems of the ancient Near East give way to the great slave-holding empires of the Classical world in Europe, India, and China, which used coinage to pay their troops. In the Middle Ages the empires go and so does the coinage – the gold and silver is mostly locked up in temples and monasteries – and the world reverts to credit. Then after 1492 or so you have the return world empires again; and gold and silver currency together with slavery, for that matter.

What’s been happening since Nixon went off the gold standard in 1971 has just been another turn of the wheel – though of course it never happens the same way twice. However, in one sense, I think we’ve been going about things backwards. In the past, periods dominated by virtual credit money have also been periods where there have been social protections for debtors. Once you recognize that money is just a social construct, a credit, an IOU, then first of all what is to stop people from generating it endlessly? And how do you prevent the poor from falling into debt traps and becoming effectively enslaved to the rich? That’s why you had Mesopotamian clean slates, Biblical Jubilees, Medieval laws against usury in both Christianity and Islam and so on and so forth.

Since antiquity the worst-case scenario that everyone felt would lead to total social breakdown was a major debt crisis; ordinary people would become so indebted to the top one or two percent of the population that they would start selling family members into slavery, or eventually, even themselves.

Well, what happened this time around? Instead of creating some sort of overarching institution to protect debtors, they create these grandiose, world-scale institutions like the IMF or S&P to protect creditors. They essentially declare (in defiance of all traditional economic logic) that no debtor should ever be allowed to default. Needless to say the result is catastrophic. We are experiencing something that to me, at least, looks exactly like what the ancients were most afraid of: a population of debtors skating at the edge of disaster.

And, I might add, if Aristotle were around today, I very much doubt he would think that the distinction between renting yourself or members of your family out to work and selling yourself or members of your family to work was more than a legal nicety. He’d probably conclude that most Americans were, for all intents and purposes, slaves.

I apologize for the broad quotations but I think the point has been made for at least the one person this post was meant for. While I don't harbour the dark view of the future that Graeber does I think it's useful to examine the present economic context with a bit of history.

I hope you enjoyed it.

Cheers.

-dk

Duncan Kinney's Space

Hi, I'm an Edmonton based writer, this is my website.

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I'm interested in finance, energy and the environment as well as the systems, people and communities that connect them together.