Another compelling reason for clean energy: air pollution

For all those folks who insist climate change is a hoax and no good reason to embrace clean energy and electric vehicles, this one’s for you:  do you like clean air?  See:  Outdoor Air Pollution will kill 6.6m people each year by 2050.

Deaths caused by outdoor air pollution are already shockingly high, and they’re expected to keep rising. That’s despite efforts to clean up the world’s factories, roads, and energy supplies.

In 2010, about 3.3 million people around the world died from prolonged exposure to tiny bits of dust and chemicals floating through the air. That figure is set to double by 2050, according to the most comprehensive study yet of global outdoor air pollution and its causes, published today in the journal Nature.

If you live in a country such as the U.S., which has been cleaning up its coal-burning power plants and increasing the gas mileage of its auto fleet, don’t think you’re in the clear. Of the 15 countries with the most deaths from outdoor air pollution, the U.S. comes in at No. 7.

Air pollution deaths

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Defining political issue: reinstating Glass Steagall

Michael Lewis has said he believes that Barrack Obama did not push to break up the big investment banks when he had the opportunity as he came to power amid the great financial crisis, because Obama just didn’t understand that the change was foundational to rebuilding the global economy.  In my opinion this has been the greatest error of Obama’s tenure.  They had a rare opportunity to do something really transformational–and they didn’t take it.  Instead they endorsed the status quo and left the banking criminals to double down.  The world is now facing a next, larger wave of financial crisis. Only this time, ‘rescue’ options have already been exhausted.

As political campaigns progress in 2015/16, it is important that voters demand candidates take a public position on this issue now.  We can’t afford more fumbles, it is critical that the next public representatives understand what must be done.  Better Markets is helping to provide the context needed to educate the public in this area.  See  The American People need to know where candidates stand on Glass-Steagall:

For more than 60 years, the Glass-Steagall Act kept those activities separate and, during that time, the U.S. had the highest rate of economic growth in its history while the financial system avoided catastrophic crashes. But this law was effectively repealed with the passage of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act in 1999, which was part of a larger successful push by Wall Street and its bipartisan allies to dismantle many of the safeguards put in place to protect the American people after the Great Depression in the 1930s.

Once Glass-Steagall was repealed, large financial institutions were able to acquire other financial institutions and combine lower-risk traditional banking and higher-risk Wall Street trading and securities activities. These mergers are what threatened taxpayers and risked massive bailouts because, if the uninsured investment banking activities of a megabank got into trouble and threatened to take down the FDIC-insured part of the bank, then the government would inevitably have to save both parts to save the insured part.

Repealing Glass-Steagall unleashed an acquisition spree that made the biggest banks much bigger, more complex, more interconnected and much greater risks to the country…just the top 6 banks grew their assets from about 20% of GDP in 1997 to more than 60% of GDP by 2008.

This chart shows all of the many firms that have been consolidated to become 4 of today’s largest bank offenders. Click on the image for larger view.

2015-07-29-1438185047-7810059-GrowthBanks.jpg

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Capital exodus reveals fragile global economy

Kyle Bass, Hayman Capital Management founder and managing partner, told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” on Tuesday that Chinese banks will likely experience losses that may affect the country as a whole.

“Those that are watching whether Chinese stocks go up or down aren’t paying attention, in my opinion, to what the real problem is,” Bass said. “And the real problem is the loans in this banking sector.

…As the loan cycle forces emerging market banks to see steep losses, “the next two years are going to be tough,” he said.

“We talk about this race to the bottom and this currency war. Well it’s happening as we speak,” he said. “China literally just started with its devaluation process—wait until you see where that goes.” Here is a direct video link.


Currency races to bottom

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