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31 August 2010

Timnas Tantang Produta

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Timnas Sepak Bola Indonesia memastikan akan melakukan uji coba dengan Produta FC, 5 September nanti. Alasan timnas tantang klub asal Yogyakarta itu sebagai lawan tanding, lantaran jarak yang dekat.

Asisten Pelatih Timnas, Wolfgang Pikal menuturkan, Produta akan menjadi klub lokal yang akan menjajal kekuatan timnas dalam ajang uji coba kedua kontra klub lokal. “Mereka menyatakan siap untuk melakukan ajang uji coba. Pertandingannya akan dilakukan tanggal 5 September,” ujar Pikal usai memberi latihan, di Lapangan Timnas, senayan, Jakarta, Senin (30/8).
“Persita dan Produta memiliki jarak yang dekat dengan Jakarta. Hal itu, yang menjadi pertimbangan timnas memilih untuk melakukan uji coba dengan kedua tim tersebut,” tambah Pikal.

Sebelumnya, timnas memastikan diri bakal melakukan uji coba lawan Persita Tangerang 2 September mendatang. Namun, ketika itu timnas masih menimang siapa lawan berikutnya. Meski banyak klub lokal yang bersedia, tapi akhirnya pilihan mengerucut menjadi Produta dan semen Padang.

“Timnas akan melakukan uji coba pada tanggal 2 lawan Persita dan 5 September lawan antara Pro Duta atau Semen Padang. Persiapannya sudah mencapai 90 persen,” ujar Pikal kepada Bolanews.com beberapa waktu lalu.

“Rencananya pertandingan itu akan digelar di Gelora Bung Karno. Waktunya, pukul delapan malam karena disesuaikan dengan bulan Ramadan,” pungkas Pikal.

Saving

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by Laurence J. Kotlikoff
Saving means different things to different people. To some, it means putting money in the bank. To others, it means buying stocks or contributing to a pension plan. But to economists, saving means only one thing—consuming less out of a given amount of resources in the present in order to consume more in the future. Saving, therefore, is the decision to defer consumption and to store this deferred consumption in some form of asset.
Saving is often confused with investing, but they are not the same. Although most people think of purchases of stocks and BONDS as investments, economists use the term “INVESTMENT” to mean additions to the real stock of capital: plants, factories, equipment, and so on.
Between 1990 and 2005, the annual rate of U.S. net national saving (net national income less private consumption expenditures less government consumption expenditures, all divided by net national income) averaged only 5.3 percent. In contrast, the nation’s saving rate was 7.6 percent in the 1980s, 10.3 percent in the 1970s, and 13.0 percent in the 1960s.
The 2004 rate of U.S. saving of just 2.2 percent is remarkably low, not only by U.S. standards, but also by international standards. Differences in how the statisticians in different countries define income and consumption make comparisons across nations difficult. But, corrected as well as possible for such data problems, America’s saving rate is significantly lower than that of other industrialized countries. This explains, in large part, why the United States has run a very large current account deficit (see INTERNATIONAL TRADE) in recent years. The U.S. current account deficit measures the amount that foreigners invest in the United States net of what Americans invest abroad. Because Americans are not saving very much, they do not have much to invest in the United States, let alone abroad. Foreigners are making up the difference by investing heavily in the United States.
Why do countries save at different rates? Economists do not know all the answers. Some of the factors that undoubtedly affect the amount people save are culture, differences in saving motives, ECONOMIC GROWTH, demographics, how many people in the economy are in the labor force, the insurability of risks, and economic policy. Each of these factors can influence saving at a point in time and produce changes in saving over time.
Motives for Saving
The famous life-cycle model of Nobel laureate FRANCO MODIGLIANI asserts that people save—accumulate assets—to finance their retirement, and they dissave—spend their assets—during retirement. The more young savers there are relative to old dissavers, the greater will be a nation’s saving rate. Most economists believed for decades that this life-cycle model provided the main explanation of U.S. saving. But in the early 1980s, Lawrence H. Summers of Harvard and I showed that saving for retirement explains less than half of total U.S. wealth. Most U.S. wealth accumulation is saving that is ultimately bequeathed or given to younger generations. The motive for bequests and gifts from older to younger Americans is unclear. A very large component of the bequests may be unplanned, simply reflecting the fact that many people do not spend all their savings before they die. In this case, people save to consume, not bequeath, but end up bequeathing nonetheless.
In recent years, a much larger fraction of the retirement savings of the American elderly has been annuitized. That is, the savings take the form of company PENSIONS or SOCIAL SECURITY that pay regular checks until death, with no payments after the person dies. Having your retirement finances come in the form of an annuity eliminates the risk of living longer than your money lasts. One possible result of the increased annuitization of retirement assets may be that people, especially those who have already retired, have less incentive to save more in case they “live too long.”
The precautionary motive—that is, the motive to save in order to be prepared for various future risks—is one of the key reasons people save. Besides the risk of living longer than expected, people save against more mundane risks, such as losing their job or incurring large uninsured medical expenses. Computer simulation studies show that the amount of precautionary saving can be very sensitive to the availability of INSURANCE against these and other kinds of risks. For example, the decision not to insure low-risk but high-cost health expenditures such as nursing-home care can lead to a 10 percent increase in national saving.
Another issue related to motives and preferences for saving is the role of the rich in generating aggregate saving. Do rich Americans account for most of U.S. saving? Not really. Relative to their incomes, some of the rich save a lot, and some dissave. So, too, for the poor. There is considerable mobility of wealth in the United States, at least over long periods of time (see HUMAN CAPITAL). The fact that the ranks of the rich are continually changing suggests that some of those who are initially rich dissave and dissipate their wealth, while others who are not initially rich save considerable sums and become rich. Former heavyweight champion Michael Tyson, for example, grossed an estimated $400 million during the heyday of his boxing career but ended up declaring BANKRUPTCY. Sam Walton, who started Wal-Mart, started life in poverty and ended as one of the richest people in the world.
Economic Growth and Demographic Change
A country’s saving rate and its economic growth are closely connected. This follows from the life-cycle model. If there are more young people around than old people because the POPULATION is growing, there will be more workers saving for their retirement than there will be retirees who are dissaving, that is, spending down their assets. This will leave overall net saving positive. The higher the population growth, other things equal, the higher will be the saving rate. The same is true of technical change. Suppose there are the same number of young people around as old people, but the young earn more than did the old because of technological change. Then the young will save more than the old dissave, which, again, will imply a positive saving rate.
In an economy not experiencing growth in technology or population, one would expect, at least in the long run, saving to be zero, with the exception of the saving needed to replace depreciating capital. If there is no engine for growth, in the long run the saving the young do for retirement, to leave bequests, or for any other reason would exactly offset the dissaving of retirees, leaving the economy’s total saving at zero. The economy would have positive assets (claims to capital) but would experience no increase or decrease in the level of these assets over time.
That an economy’s overall long-run saving rate is zero does not mean that no one saves or dissaves. Rather, it means that the positive savings of those accumulating assets exactly balance the negative savings of those decumulating assets. For growing economies, long-run saving is likely to be positive to ensure that the stock of capital assets keeps pace with the number and PRODUCTIVITY of workers.
Recent years have seen a large increase in the number of workers and in productivity per worker. The increase in the number of workers is due to baby boomers entering the workforce. The increase in productivity is due to the fact that baby boomers are in their peak years of productivity, and also due to a growing capital stock and to technological improvement, especially in information and communications technology. The fact that these factors did not suffice to raise U.S. saving rates means that other forces, to be discussed below, reduced national saving.
Labor-Supply Decisions
National saving is the difference between national income and national consumption. Labor income represents about three-quarters of national income. So changes in labor income, if not accompanied by equivalent changes in consumption, can greatly affect an economy’s saving rate. Take, for example, the recent remarkable increase in U.S. female labor force participation. In 1975 half of the women age twenty-five to forty-four participated in the labor force; by 1988 more than two-thirds were in the labor force. This increase in the female labor supply is a major reason, if not the main reason, for the rise in U.S. per capita income since 1975.
If the additional net-of-tax income these women earned had all been saved, the U.S. saving rate after 1980 would have exceeded 20 percent. Because much of the increase in labor supply was by women age eighteen to thirty-five, particularly married women, one would expect them to have saved some portion of that income for their old age. Assuming this did occur, we need to look elsewhere to understand the puzzle of why U.S. saving fell.
Adding to the puzzle is the ongoing increase in the expected length of retirement. More and more Americans, particularly men, are retiring in their late fifties and early sixties. At the same time, life expectancies continue to rise. Today’s thirty-year-old male can expect to live to age seventy-six, 5.3 years longer than the typical thirty-year-old could expect in 1960. If he retires at age fifty-five, today’s thirty-year-old will spend almost half of his remaining life in retirement. Economic models of saving suggest that aggregate saving should depend strongly and positively on the length of retirement. Thus, with the retirement age decreasing and life expectancy increasing, economists would expect people to save a lot more—not a lot less.
Economic Policy
Government policy also can have powerful effects on a nation’s saving. To begin with, governments are themselves large consumers of goods and services. In the United States, federal, state, and local governments account for more than one-fifth of all national consumption. More government consumption spending does not, however, necessarily imply less national saving. If the private sector responds to a one-dollar increase in government consumption by reducing its own consumption by one dollar, aggregate saving remains unchanged.
The private sector’s consumption response depends critically on who pays for the government’s consumption and how the government extracts these payments. If the government assigns most of the tax burden to future generations by borrowing in the present and repaying principal plus interest on the borrowing in the future, current generations will have little reason, other than concern for their offspring, to reduce their consumption expenditures.
If current generations are forced to pay for the government’s spending, the size of the private-sector consumption response will vary according to which generation foots the bill. The older the people who are taxed, the larger will be the reduction in consumption. The reason is that older people, being closer to the ends of their lives, consume a higher share of their remaining lifetime resources than do younger ones. Thus, taxing retirees, say, instead of forty-year-old workers, will reduce private-sector consumption and increase national saving.
Finally, different taxes have different incentive effects. For example, the government might raise its funds with taxes on capital rather than taxes on labor income. By lowering the after-tax return to saving, taxes on capital income discourage saving for future consumption and thus reduce saving.
Explaining the Decline in U.S. Saving
What explains the recent decline in U.S. saving? One cause that can quickly be dismissed is increased government consumption. In the 1960s, when the national saving rate was 13.0, the ratio of government consumption to national income was 18.6 percent. Since the 1990s, the government’s consumption rate has been 17.5 percent but the saving rate has averaged only 5.5 percent.
Could disincentives to save be responsible for the decline in U.S. saving? Not likely. Marginal personal tax rates on taxable capital income have fallen dramatically over the past two decades. In addition, the effective marginal tax on capital income earned on saving done within a retirement account, such as an Individual Retirement Account, is zero.
The main explanation for the decline in national saving appears to be the major and ongoing government policy of taking an ever larger share of resources from young and future Americans and giving them to older Americans. Because the elderly are close to the ends of their lives and have much higher propensities to consume than younger people and the unborn, redistributing from young and future U.S. generations to older generations raises national consumption and lowers national saving.
The distribution of resources across generations arises through a host of fiscal policies, including deficit finance, the pay-as-you-go finance of Social Security and Medicare benefits, shifts in the tax structure away from consumption and capital income TAXATION toward wage taxation, and even capital depreciation and expensing provisions. In recent decades, increased distribution to the current elderly has come primarily in two forms. The first is giving the elderly additional medical benefits under the Medicare and Medicaid programs. The elderly receive these benefits in kind, which means the only way they can get the benefits is to use them; one cannot “save” a Medicare payment. The second is cutting the taxes the elderly pay.
The Implications of Low Saving for Baby Boomers
Americans used to save at a fairly high rate. As a consequence, the collective stock of U.S. wealth holdings is still quite large—roughly thirty-five trillion dollars. This is enough to finance all Americans’ consumer expenditures for about five years. But about 60 percent of this wealth is owned by people who are fifty or older, who appear to be spending a good deal of it on themselves. If the elderly do end up spending rather than bequeathing the bulk of existing U.S. wealth, will younger Americans, particularly baby boomers, accumulate enough savings to maintain the standard of living they currently enjoy in their old age?
Based on current evidence, the answer appears to be no. Compared with their parents, baby boomers can expect to retire earlier, live longer, rely less on inheritances, receive less help from their children, experience slower real wage growth, face higher taxes, and replace a smaller fraction of their preretirement earnings with Social Security retirement benefits. Unless baby boomers change their saving habits substantially and relatively quickly, they may experience much higher rates of poverty in their old age than those currently observed among U.S. elderly.
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About the Author
Laurence J. Kotlikoff is a professor of economics and chairman of the Department of Economics at Boston University, a research associate with the National Bureau of Economic Research, and president of Economic Security Planning, Inc. He was previously a senior economist with President Ronald Reagan’s Council of Economic Advisers.
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Further Reading
Ando, Albert, and Franco Modigliani. “The Life Cycle Hypothesis of Saving: Aggregate Implications and Tests.” American Economic Review 53, no. 1 (1963): 55–84.
Auerbach, Alan J., and Laurence J. Kotlikoff. Dynamic Fiscal Policy. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1987.
Bernheim, B. Douglas. “Taxation and Saving.” In Alan J. Auerbach and Martin S. Feldstein, eds., The Handbook of Public Economics. Amsterdam: North-Holland, 2002. Vol. 3, pp. 1173–1249.
Kotlikoff, Laurence J. Essays on Saving, Bequests, Altruism, and Life-Cycle Planning. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2001.
Kotlikoff, Laurence J. Generational Accounting: Knowing Who Pays and When for What We Spend. New York: Free Press, 1992.
Kotlikoff, Laurence J. What Determines Savings? Cambridge: MIT Press, 1989.
Kotlikoff, Laurence J., and Scott Burns. The Coming Generational Storm. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2004.
Kotlikoff, Laurence J., and Lawrence H. Summers. “The Adequacy of Saving.” American Economic Review 72, no. 5 (1982): 1056–1069.
Kotlikoff, Laurence J., and Lawrence H. Summers. “The Role of Intergenerational Transfers in Aggregate Capital Formation.” Journal of Political Economy 89, no. 4 (1981): 706–732.

30 August 2010

Supply

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by Al Ehrbar
The most basic laws in economics are the law of supply and the law of demand. Indeed, almost every economic event or phenomenon is the product of the interaction of these two laws. The law of supply states that the quantity of a good supplied (i.e., the amount owners or producers offer for sale) rises as the market price rises, and falls as the price falls. Conversely, the law of demand (see DEMAND) says that the quantity of a good demanded falls as the price rises, and vice versa. (Economists do not really have a “law” of supply, though they talk and write as though they do.)
One function of markets is to find “equilibrium” prices that balance the supplies of and demands for goods and services. An equilibrium price (also known as a “market-clearing” price) is one at which each producer can sell all he wants to produce and each consumer can buy all he demands. Naturally, producers always would like to charge higher prices. But even if they have no competitors, they are limited by the law of demand: if producers insist on a higher price, consumers will buy fewer units. The law of supply puts a similar limit on consumers. They always would prefer to pay a lower price than the current one. But if they successfully insist on paying less (say, through PRICE CONTROLS), suppliers will produce less and some demand will go unsatisfied.
Economists often talk of “demand curves” and “supply curves.” A demand curve traces the quantity of a good that consumers will buy at various prices. As the price rises, the number of units demanded declines. That is because everyone’s resources are finite; as the price of one good rises, consumers buy less of that and, sometimes, more of other goods that now are relatively cheaper. Similarly, a supply curve traces the quantity of a good that sellers will produce at various prices. As the price falls, so does the number of units supplied. Equilibrium is the point at which the demand and supply curves intersect—the single price at which the quantity demanded and the quantity supplied are the same.
Markets in which prices can move freely are always in equilibrium or moving toward it. For example, if the market for a good is already in equilibrium and producers raise prices, consumers will buy fewer units than they did in equilibrium, and fewer units than producers have available for sale. In that case producers have two choices. They can reduce price until supply and demand return to the old equilibrium, or they can cut production until the quantity supplied falls to the lower number of units demanded at the higher price. But they cannot keep the price high and sell as many units as they did before.
Why does the quantity supplied rise as the price rises and fall as the price falls? The reasons really are quite logical. First, consider the case of a company that makes a consumer product. Acting rationally, the company will buy the cheapest materials (not the lowest quality, but the lowest cost for any given level of quality). As production (supply) increases, the company has to buy progressively more expensive (i.e., less efficient) materials or labor, and its costs increase. It charges a higher price to offset its rising unit costs.
Are there any examples of supply curves for which a higher price does not lead to a higher quantity supplied? Economists believe that there is one main possible example, the so-called backward-bending supply curve of labor. Imagine a graph in which the wage rate is on the vertical axis and the quantity of labor supplied is on the horizontal axis. It makes sense that the higher the wage rate, the higher the quantity of labor supplied, because it makes sense that people will be willing to work more when they are paid more. But workers might reach a point at which a higher wage rate causes them to work less because the higher wage makes them wealthier and they use some of that wealth to “buy” more leisure—that is, to work less. Recent evidence suggests that even for labor, a higher wage leads to more hours worked.1
Or consider the case of a good whose supply is fixed, such as apartments in a condominium. If prospective buyers suddenly begin offering higher prices for apartments, more owners will be willing to sell and the supply of “available” apartments will rise. But if buyers offer lower prices, some owners will take their apartments off the market and the number of available units will drop.
History has witnessed considerable controversy over the prices of goods whose supply is fixed in the short run. Critics of market prices have argued that rising prices for these types of goods serve no economic purpose because they cannot bring forth additional supply, and thus serve merely to enrich the owners of the goods at the expense of the rest of society. This has been the main argument for fixing prices, as the United States did with the price of domestic oil in the 1970s and as New York City has done with apartment rents since World War II (see RENT CONTROL).
Economists call the portion of a price that does not influence the amount of a good in existence in the short run an “economic quasi-rent.” The vast majority of economists believe that economic rents do serve a useful purpose. Most important, they allocate goods to their highest-valued use. If price is not used to allocate goods among competing claimants, some other device becomes necessary, such as the rationing cards that the U.S. government used to allocate gasoline and other goods during World War II. Economists generally believe that fixing prices will actually reduce both the quantity and the quality of the good in question. In addition, economic rents serve as a signal to bring forth additional supplies in the future and as an incentive for other producers to devise substitutes for the good in question.
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About the Author
Al Ehrbar is a principal in EVA Advisers LLC, an investment advisory firm. He formerly was editor of Corporate Finance magazine and a senior editor of Fortune magazine.
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Further Reading
Alchian, Armen. “Costs and Outputs.” In Choice and Costs under Uncertainty. Vol. 2 of The Collected Works of Armen A. Alchian. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2006. Pp. 161–179.
Robinson, Joan. “Rising Supply Price.” Economica 8 (1941): 1–8.
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Footnotes
1. Finis Welch, “In Defense of Inequality,” American Economic Review 89, no. 2 (1999): 1–17.

Efficiency

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by Paul Heyne
To economists, efficiency is a relationship between ends and means. When we call a situation inefficient, we are claiming that we could achieve the desired ends with less means, or that the means employed could produce more of the ends desired. “Less” and “more” in this context necessarily refer to less and more value. Thus, economic efficiency is measured not by the relationship between the physical quantities of ends and means, but by the relationship between the value of the ends and the value of the means.
Terms such as “technical efficiency” or “objective efficiency” are meaningless. From a strictly technical or physical standpoint, every process is perfectly efficient. The ratio of physical output (ends) to physical input (means) necessarily equals one, as the basic law of thermodynamics reminds us.

Consider an engineer who judges one machine more efficient than another because one produces more work output per unit of ENERGY input. The engineer is implicitly counting only the useful work done. “Useful,” of course, is an evaluative term.
The inescapably evaluative nature of the concept raises a fundamental question for every attempt to talk about the efficiency of any process or institution: Whose valuations do we use, and how shall they be weighted? Economic efficiency makes use of monetary evaluations. It refers to the relationship between the monetary value of ends and the monetary value of means. The valuations that count are, consequently, the valuations of those who are willing and able to support their preferences by offering money.
From this perspective a parcel of land is used with maximum economic efficiency when it comes under the control of the party who is willing (which implies able) to pay the largest amount of money to obtain that control. The proof that a particular resource is being used efficiently is that no one is willing to pay more in order to divert it to some other use.
Those who object that this is an extremely narrow definition of efficiency often fail to recognize that every concept of efficiency has to employ some measure of value. The monetary measure used by economics turns out to be both broad and useful. It enables us to take account of and compare the evaluations made by many different persons and to respond appropriately.
What kind of structure should sit on the corner lot at Fifth and Main: a gas station, a condominium, a florist shop, or a restaurant? The owner can make a defensible decision even if everyone in town has a slightly different preference. The owner simply accepts the highest money bid that various prospective users of the land (the florist, the restaurateur, etc.) make for it. Effective social cooperation requires interpersonal comparisons of value, and monetary values supply us with a common denominator that works remarkably well.
The crucial prerequisites for the generation of these monetary values are private ownership of resources and relatively unrestricted rights to exchange ownership. When these conditions are satisfied, competing desires to use resources establish money prices that indicate each resource’s value in its current use. Those who believe that particular resources would be more valuably (more efficiently) employed in some other way can raise the price and bid them away from the current users.
In the 1930s, for example, a small group of people who placed a high value on hawks bought a mountain in Pennsylvania and thereby converted it from a hawk-hunting area to a hawk sanctuary. Today our laws protect hawks and other predators, but in the 1930s hawks were in danger of extinction because they were hunted as vermin that ate chickens. If the only option for those who formed the Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Association in 1934 had been to persuade politicians and the public to change the laws, hawks could well be extinct today in that area. The association was able to save the hawks because its members demonstrated, through competing money bids, that a sanctuary was the most efficient—that is, the monetarily most valuable—use for the mountain.
Perhaps the importance of private ownership to achieving economic efficiency can be seen most clearly by looking at what happens when we try to work together without an effective system for assigning monetary value to resources. Take the example of urban automobile traffic. How can we arrive at a judgment about the overall efficiency or inefficiency of the commuting process when we have to compare one person’s convenience with another’s delay, time saved for some with carbon monoxide inhaled by others, one person’s intense dissatisfactions with another person’s pleasures? To find out whether Jack values clean air more than Jill values a speedy commute requires a large set of interpersonal value indicators. Urban commuting creates congestion as well as air pollution problems in our society because we have not developed a workable procedure for weighing and comparing the positive and negative evaluations of different people.
The crucial missing element is private property. Because so many of the key resources employed by commuters are not privately owned, commuters are not required to bid for their use and to pay a price that reflects their value to others. Users pay no money prices for resources such as urban air and urban streets. Therefore, those goods are used as if they were free resources (see TRAGEDY OF THE COMMONS). But their use imposes costs on all the others who have been deprived of their use. In the absence of money prices on such scarce resources as streets and air, urban dwellers “are led by an invisible hand to promote an end that was no part of their intention,” to apply ADAM SMITH’s famous generalization. In this case, however, the end is not the public interest but a result that no one wants.
Critics of economic efficiency contend that it is a poor guide to public policy because it ignores important values other than money. They point out, for example, that the wealthy dowager who bids scarce milk away from the mother of an undernourished infant in order to wash her diamonds is promoting economic efficiency. The example is strained, not least because the pursuit of economic efficiency almost always makes milk available to the infant as well as the dowager. Most economists would agree that such dramatic examples can remind us that economic efficiency is not the highest good in life, but that does not mean we should discard the concept.
The moral intuitions that enable us to arbitrate easily between the child’s hunger and the dowager’s vanity cannot begin to resolve the myriad issues that arise every day as hundreds of millions of people attempt to cooperate in using scarce means with varied uses to achieve diverse ends. Moreover, the remarkable feats of social cooperation that actually make wholesome milk available to hungry infants far removed from any cows would be impossible in the absence of the monetary values that express and promote economic efficiency.
The social usefulness of well-defined PROPERTY RIGHTS, free exchange, and the system of relative money prices that emerges from these conditions has perhaps been demonstrated most convincingly by the catastrophic failure in the twentieth century of the societies that tried to function without them (see SOCIALISM).
About the Author
The late Paul Heyne was a senior lecturer in economics at the University of Washington in Seattle. He held a Ph.D. in ethics and society from the Divinity School of the University of Chicago. He died in 2000.
Further Reading
Hayek, Friedrich A. “The Use of Knowledge in Society.” American Economic Review 35, no. 4 (1945): 519–530. Reprinted in Hayek, Individualism and Economic Order. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1948. Available online at: http://www.econlib.org/library/Essays/hykKnw1.html
Jouvenel, Bertrand de. “Efficiency and Amenity.” Earl Grey Memorial Lecture, delivered at King’s College, Newcastle upon Tyne, England, 1960. Reprinted in Kenneth J. Arrow and Tibor Scitovsky, eds., Readings in Welfare Economics. Homewood, Ill.: Richard D. Irwin, 1969. Pp. 100–112.

Raihlah Keutamaan di Sepuluh Hari Terakhir Ramadhan!

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Keutamaan Lailatul Qadar

Lailatul Qadar adalah suatu malam yang penuh dengan keutamaan dan barokah. Allah Subhanallahu wa Ta’ala Yang Maha Pemberi barakah telah menjelaskan hal itu dalam surat Al Qadr (artinya):
“Dan tahukah kamu apa malam lailatul qadar itu?. Yaitu suatu malam yang lebih baik dari seribu bulan. Pada malam itu turunlah para malaikat dan ruh (malaikat Jibril) dengan izin Rabbnya untuk mengatur segala urusan. Malam itu penuh dengan kesejahteraan sampai terbit fajar.” (Al-Qadr: 2-5)

Sehingga malam itu pun dipenuhi barakah yang berlimpah ruah, sebuah ibadah yang dilakukan pada malam itu dengan ikhlas dan sesuai dengan petunjuk Nabi Muhammad Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam lebih baik daripada ibadah yang dilakukan selama seribu bulan selain Ramadhan. Tentu keutamaan yang amat besar ini akan membuat hati yang jernih dan akal yang sehat terdorong dan berharap untuk dapat meraihnya.

Kapan terjadinya lailatul qadar?

Malam lailatul qadar terjadi pada bulan Ramadhan, sekali dalam setahun. Rasulullah Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam bersabda:
الْتَمِسُوهَا فِى الْعَشْرِ الأَوَاخِرِ – يَعْنِى لَيْلَةَ الْقَدْرِ – فَإِنْ ضَعُفَ أَحَدُكُمْ أَوْ عَجَزَ فَلاَ يُغْلَبَنَّ عَلَى السَّبْعِ الْبَوَاقِى

”Carilah lailatul qadar pada sepuluh malam terakhir bulan Ramadhan, jika ada diantara kalian lemah, maka jangan sampai luput dari tujuh malam yang tersisa (terakhir).” (HR. Al-Bukhari dan Muslim)

Dalam riwayat Al-Imam Muslim yang lain, Rasulullah Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam bersabda:
… فَاطْلُبُوهَا فِى الْوِتْرِ مِنْهَا

…. maka carilah pada malam yang ganjil dari sepuluh malam terakhir bulan Ramadhan.”

Al-Hafizh Ibnu Hajar rahimahullah berkata dalam Fathul Bari: “Pendapat yang paling kuat tentang terjadinya lailatul qadar adalah pada malam ganjil dari sepuluh malam terakhir bulan Ramadhan dan terjadinya tidak menetap pada malam tertentu dalam setiap tahunnya.”

Adapun memastikan suatu malam dari bulan Ramadhan bahwa ia adalah malam lailatul qadar (di tahun tersebut), maka membutuhkan dalil (yang shahih dan jelas) dalam penentuannya. Namun malam-malam ganjil pada sepuluh terakhir itu hendaknya lebih dijaga dibanding selainnya, dan malam keduapuluh tujuh hendaknya lebih dijaga lagi daripada malam-malam ganjil selainnya yang dimungkinkan bertepatan dengan lailatul qadar. (Lihat Fatawa Al-Lajnah Ad-Da`imah li Al-Buhuts wa Al-Ifta`)

Apa yang seharusnya dilakukan di malam tersebut?

Pertama: Bersungguh-sungguh pada sepuluh malam terakhir melebihi kesungguhan pada malam-malam selainnya, dalam hal shalat, membaca Al-Qur’an, berdo’a, dan ibadah-ibadah yang lainnya. ‘Aisyah s menceritakan:
كَانَ رَسُولُ اللهِ -صلى الله عليه وسلم- إِذَا دَخَلَ الْعَشْرُ أَحْيَا اللَّيْلَ وَأَيْقَظَ أَهْلَهُ وَجَدَّ وَشَدَّ الْمِئْزَرَ

“Dahulu Rasulullah Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam jika memasuki sepuluh malam terakhir, beliau menghidupkan malamnya, dan membangunkan keluarganya, serta mengencangkan tali pinggangnya.” (HR. Al-Bukhari dan Muslim)

Dalam riwayat Al-Imam Ahmad dan Muslim: “Dahulu beliau Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam bersungguh-sungguh pada sepuluh malam terakhir yang tidak sama kesungguhannya dengan malam-malam selainnya.”

Kedua: Menegakkan shalat tarawih dengan penuh keimanan dan hanya mengharapkan pahala dari Allah. Nabi Muhammad Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam bersabda:
مَنْ قَامَ لَيْلَةَ الْقَدْرِ إِيمَانًا وَاحْتِسَابًا غُفِرَ لَهُ مَا تَقَدَّمَ مِنْ ذَنْبِهِ

“Barangsiapa yang menegakkan shalat pada malam lailatul qadar dengan penuh keimanan dan hanya mengharapkan pahala dari Allah, maka pasti akan diampuni dosa-dosanya yang telah lalu.” (HR. Al-Jama’ah, kecuali Ibnu Majah).

Ketiga: Membaca do’a sebagaimana yang diajarkan Nabi Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam kepada ‘Aisyah radliyallahu ‘anha. ‘Aisyah radliyallahu ‘anha berkata: “Wahai Rasulullah, bagaimana pendapatmu jika aku menjumpai suatu malam bahwa itu adalah malam lailatul qadar, apa yang harus aku baca pada malam itu? Rasulullah Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam menjawab: “Ucapkanlah (berdo’alah):
اللَّهُمَّ إِنَّكَ عَفُوٌ كَرِيمٌ تُحِبُّ الْعَفوَ فَاعْفُ عَنِّي .

“Ya Allah! Sesungguhnya Engkau Maha Pemaaf Maha Mulia lagi suka memaafkan, maka maafkanlah aku.” (HR. At-Tirmidzi)

I’tikaf

I’tikaf adalah usaha untuk senantiasa menetap di masjid disertai dengan menyibukkan diri dengan ibadah (seperti menegakkan shalat-shalat sunnah disamping shalat lima waktu, memperbanyak membaca Al Qur’an, memperbanyak dzikir, do’a, dan istighfar), meninggalkan hal-hal yang kurang bermanfaat (seperti mengobrol, cerita, senda gurau dan semisalnya), dan tidak keluar dari masjid selama i’tikaf, kecuali bila ada keperluan yang mengharuskan untuk keluar (seperti buang hajat atau semisalnya).

‘Aisyah radliyallahu ‘anha berkata: “Yang disunnahkan bagi orang yang beri’tikaf adalah tidak menjenguk orang sakit, tidak berta’ziyah, tidak menggauli dan mencumbu istrinya, serta tidak keluar dari masjid untuk sebuah kebutuhan kecuali perkara yang mengharuskan untuk keluar.”

Padahal dalam agama Islam, menjenguk orang sakit dan berta’ziyah keduanya merupakan perkara yang sangat dianjurkan. Namun demikian, ia menjadi gugur ketika menjalankan ibadah i’tikaf di masjid. Hal ini menunjukkan betapa pentingnya perkara i’tikaf tersebut. Sehingga orang yang beri’tikaf hendaknya bersungguh-sungguh menggunakan waktunya untuk bermunajat kepada Allah Subhanallahu wa Ta’ala.

Ini merupakan sebuah sunnah (ibadah) yang perlu kita hidupkan dan semarakkan, karena hampir-hampir sunnah ini menjadi asing ditengah-tengah umat Islam. Padahal Rasulullah Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam selalu beri’tikaf di bulan Ramadhan.

Abu Hurairah radliyallahu ‘anhu berkata: “Dahulu Rasulullah Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam beri’tikaf pada setiap bulan Ramadhan selama sepuluh hari, dan pada tahun wafatnya, beliau beri’tikaf selama dua puluh hari.” (HR. Al Bukhari, Abu Dawud, Ibnu Majah, dan Ahmad)

Zakatul Fitri (Zakat Fitrah) dan Takarannya

Zakat Fitrah diwajibkan atas setiap muslim, baik merdeka maupun budak, laki-laki maupun perempuan, dewasa maupun anak-anak, sebagaimana pernyataan shahabat Ibnu Abbas radliyallahu ‘anhuma: ”Rasulullah Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam telah mewajibkan zakat fitrah sebanyak 1 sha` kurma atau 1 sha` sya’ir (gandum), (dan diwajibkan) baik atas orang merdeka ataupun budak, laki-laki ataupun perempuan, dewasa ataupun anak-anak.” (HR. Al-Bukhari dan Muslim)

Takaran Zakat Fitrah adalah 1 (satu) sha` (2,5kg). Sebagian ulama berpendapat 1 sha` sama dengan 3 kg makanan pokok, seperti beras.

Manfaat Zakat Fitrah

Manfaat zakat fitrah adalah:

1. Sebagai pembersih atau penyuci jiwa orang yang berpuasa dari perkataan yang tidak ada manfaatnya dan perkataan yang keji.

2. Sebagai subsidi makanan bagi orang-orang miskin

Shahabat Ibnu Abbas radliyallahu ‘anhuma berkata:
فَرَضَ رَسُولُ اللهِ -صلى الله عليه وسلم- زَكَاةَ الْفِطْرِ طُهْرَةً لِلصَّائِمِ مِنَ اللَّغْوِ وَالرَّفَثِ وَطُعْمَةً لِلْمَسَاكِينِ مَنْ أَدَّاهَا قَبْلَ الصَّلاَةِ فَهِىَ زَكَاةٌ مَقْبُولَةٌ وَمَنْ أَدَّاهَا بَعْدَ الصَّلاَةِ فَهِىَ صَدَقَةٌ مِنَ الصَّدَقَاتِ

”Rasulullah Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam telah mewajibkan zakat fitrah sebagai penyuci jiwa orang yang berpuasa dari perkataan yang tidak ada manfaatnya dan perkataan yang keji dan sebagai makanan bagi orang-orang miskin. Barangsiapa yang menunaikannya sebelum shalat Id, maka terhitung sebagai zakat yang diterima (sah sebagai zakat fitrah, red), dan barangsiapa menunaikannya setelah selesai shalat Id, maka itu adalah shadaqah dari shadaqah-shadaqah biasa.” (HR. Abu Dawud dan Ibnu Majah)

Kapan Zakat Fitrah Dibayarkan?

Zakat Fitrah dibayarkan pada hari raya Idul Fitri sebelum shalat Id dilaksanakan, atau sehari/dua hari sebelum Idul Fitri. Oleh karenanya dinamakan Zakat Fitrah karena pembayarannya pada hari Idul Fitri (ini adalah waktu yang paling utama), atau dekat dengan Idul Fitri. Dahulu, setelah umat Islam semakin banyak, sebagian para shahabat membayarkan Zakat Fitrah sehari atau dua hari sebelum hari raya Idul Fitri, sebagaimana disebutkan dalam atsar Ibnu Umar radliyallahu ‘anhuma yang diriwayatkan oleh Al-Imam Al-Bukhari dalam Shahih-nya. Kapan saja zakat fitrah dibayarkan pada salah satu dari waktu-waktu tersebut, maka terhitung sebagai zakat fitrah yang sah. Sebagaimana dalam hadits di atas: ”Barangsiapa membayarnya sebelum shalat Id, maka ia adalah zakat yang diterima (sah sebagai zakat fitrah, red).”

Kepada Siapa Zakat Fitrah Diberikan?

Zakat Fitrah tidak seperti zakat-zakat lain dalam hal sasaran pembagian. Karena Zakat Fitrah hanya diberikan kepada fakir-miskin, tidak kepada selainnya. Hal ini sebagaimana dalam hadits di atas: ”Zakat Fitrah sebagai makanan bagi orang-orang miskin.”

Bolehkah Zakat Fitrah dibayar dengan uang tunai?

Mayoritas ulama tidak membolehkan zakat fitrah dibayar dengan uang, karena yang demikian tidak pernah dicontohkan oleh Rasulullah Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam, sementara sangat memungkinkan di masa beliau Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam zakat fitrah dibayar dengan uang (dinar atau dirham). Namun, beliau memerintahkan untuk membayar Zakat Fitrah dengan kurma atau sya’ir (gandum, bahan makanan pokok di masa itu). Sebaik-baik petunjuk adalah petunjuk Nabi Muhammad Shalallahu ‘alaihi wa Sallam. (Lihat Fatawa Asy-Syaikh Bin Baz dan Asy-Syaikh Al-‘Utsaimin).Wallähu a’lam bish showäb.

Penutup

Semoga Allah Subhanallahu wa Ta’ala menerima amalan-amalan ibadah kita semua, mengampuni dosa-dosa kita semua, dan menggolongkan kita kepada golongan orang-orang yang bertaqwa dengan shaum Ramadhan yang kita laksanakan. Amïn Yä Mujïbas Sä`ilïn..

Kesabaran

0 comments
Sekalipun ada keuntungan untuk menjadi yang pertama, tetapi
terdapat lebih banyak keuntungan dalam menjadi yang terbaik.
Di dunia yang serba instan dan segera ini, layaklah kita melihat
bagaimana melakukan sesuatu secara sepantasnya.

Terburu-buru dan ketidak sabaran adalah bisa berakibat fatal
dan rentan terhadap kesalahan. Pelajarilah nilai kesabaran.
Sekalipun rasanya seperti anda tertinggal jauh di belakang,
tetapi dengan usaha yang terukur dan tekun, lebih mungkin
anda akan berada di depan.

Kesabaran bukan berarti menunda-nunda pekerjaan. Kesabaran
berarti mengambil tindakan SEKARANG, yang akan membawa hasil
di masa depan. Kesabaran berfokus pada hasil terbaik – bukan
pada hasil tercepat atau termudah. Kesabaran berarti mengerti
bahwa perjalanan panjang memiliki hasil yang panjang pula.

Mulailah dari sekarang, dan bersabarlah. Siapa yang mencari
hasil segera – akan segera pula kehilangan hasilnya – itupun
kalau mereka bisa mendapatkan hasil.

Memang makan waktu untuk menghasilkan yang terbaik, tetapi
anda sendiri yang akan menikmati hasilnya…

Ya Alloh am
billah kesombonganku dariku.
Alloh berka
ta, "Tidak. Bukan Aku yang mengambil, tapi kau yang harus menyerahkan nya."

Ya Alloh se
mpurnakanlah kekurangan anakku yang cacat.
Alloh berkata, "Tidak. Jiwanya telah sempurna, tubuhnya hanyalah sementara."

Ya Alloh beri aku kesabaran.
Alloh berkata, "Tidak. Kesabaran didapat dari ketabahan dalam menghadapi cobaan; tidak diberikan, kau harus meraihnya sendiri ."

Ya Alloh beri aku kebahagiaan.
Alloh berkata, "Tidak. Kuberi keberkahan, kebahagiaan tergantung kepadamu sendiri."

Ya Alloh jauhkan aku dari kesusahan.
Alloh berkata, "Tidak. Penderitaan menjauhkanmu dari jerat duniawi dan mendekatkanmu pada Ku."

Ya Alloh beri aku segala hal yang menjadikan hidup ini nikmat.
Alloh berkata, "Tidak. Aku beri kau kehidupan supaya kau menikmati segala hal."

Kadang kala kita berpikir bahwa Alloh tidak adil, kita telah susah payah memanjatkan doa, meminta dan berusaha, pagi-siang-malam, tapi tak ada hasilnya. Kita mengharapkan diberi pekerjaan, puluhan dan bahkan ratusan lamaran telah kita kirimkan tak ada jawaban sama sekali.
Kita sudah bekerja keras dalam pekerjaanmengharapkan jabatan, tapi justru orang lain yang mendapatkannya tanpa susah payah. Kita mengharapkan diberi pasangan hidup yang baik dan sesuai, berakhir dengan penolakkan dan kegagalan, orang lain dengan mudah berganti pasangan. Kita menginginkan harta yang berkecukupan , namun kebuAlloh terus meningkat. Coba kita bayangkan diri kita seperti anak kecil yang sedang demam dan pilek, lalu kita melihat tukang es. Kita yang sedang panas badannya merasa haus dan merasa dengan minum es dapat mengobati rasa demam (maklum anak kecil). Lalu kita meminta pada orang tua kita (seperti kita berdoa memohon pada Alloh) dan merengek agar dibelikan es. Orangtua kita tentu lebih tahu kalau es dapat memperparah penyakit kita. Tentu dengan segala dalih kita tidak dibelikan es. Orangtua kita tentu ingin kita sembuh dulu baru boleh minum es yang lezat itu.
Begitu pula dengan Alloh, segala yang kita minta Alloh tahu apa yang paling baik bagi kita. Mungkin tidak sekarang, atau tidak di dunia ini Alloh mengabulkan nya. Karena Alloh tahu yang terbaik yang kita tidak tahu. Kita sembuhkan dulu diri kita sendiri dari "pilek" dan "demam".... dan terus berdoa.
"There's a time and place for everything, for everyone. God works in a mysterious way. We wont know what is God plan, but one thing we have to believe God always give us the best way eventhough it will hurt us.."

Keajaiban Bersyukur

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Hidup ini mudah jika kita terbuka. Terbuka melihat hal-hal kecil di sekitar kita, terbuka menerima cobaan yang sedikit menghambat perjalanan kita, terbuka dalam berpikir begitu beruntungnya kita jika dibandingkan dengan orang lain, dan masih banyak lagi keterbukaan yang harus kita lakukan dalam menyikapi hidup. Untuk selanjutnya kita perlu berterima kasih kepada Tuhan atas takdir-Nya yang indah untuk kita. Itulah Bersyukur…

Dengan bersyukur, ibarat kata punya uang seribu saja kita merasa kaya. Selain itu, bersyukur merupakan obat ampuh untuk mengobati sifat iri. Yup..sifat dimana kita merasa cemburu ketika orang lain bahagia, sifat yang menunjukkan kalau kita tidak punya sesuatu yang bisa kita banggakan atau bahkan sifat yang bisa menghambat kehidupan kita. Tidaklah sulit untuk melakukan ini. Hanya perlu kepekaan terhadap apa yang telah kita miliki dan peka terhadap sekitar kita.

Akhirnya, Anda akan merasakan keindahan hidup seperti orang dan nyanyian katakan. Inilah keajaiban bersyukur

Keynesian Economics

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by Alan S. Blinder
Keynesian economics is a theory of total spending in the economy (called aggregate demand) and its effects on output and INFLATION. Although the term has been used (and abused) to describe many things over the years, six principal tenets seem central to Keynesianism. The first three describe how the economy works.

1. A Keynesian believes that aggregate demand is influenced by a host of economic decisions—both public and private—and sometimes behaves erratically. The public decisions include, most prominently, those on monetary and fiscal (i.e., spending and tax) policies. Some decades ago, economists heatedly debated the relative strengths of monetary and fiscal policies, with some Keynesians arguing that MONETARY POLICY is powerless, and some monetarists arguing that FISCAL POLICY is powerless. Both of these are essentially dead issues today. Nearly all Keynesians and monetarists now believe that both fiscal and monetary policies affect aggregate demand. A few economists, however, believe in debt neutrality—the doctrine that substitutions of government borrowing for taxes have no effects on total demand (more on this below).
2. According to Keynesian theory, changes in aggregate demand, whether anticipated or unanticipated, have their greatest short-run effect on real output and employment, not on prices. This idea is portrayed, for example, in PHILLIPS CURVES that show inflation rising only slowly when UNEMPLOYMENT falls. Keynesians believe that what is true about the short run cannot necessarily be inferred from what must happen in the long run, and we live in the short run. They often quote Keynes’s famous statement, “In the long run, we are all dead,” to make the point.
Monetary policy can produce real effects on output and employment only if some prices are rigid—if nominal wages (wages in dollars, not in real purchasing power), for example, do not adjust instantly. Otherwise, an injection of new money would change all prices by the same percentage. So Keynesian models generally either assume or try to explain rigid prices or wages. Rationalizing rigid prices is a difficult theoretical problem because, according to standard microeconomic theory, real supplies and demands should not change if all nominal prices rise or fall proportionally.
But Keynesians believe that, because prices are somewhat rigid, fluctuations in any component of spending—consumption, INVESTMENT, or government expenditures—cause output to fluctuate. If government spending increases, for example, and all other components of spending remain constant, then output will increase. Keynesian models of economic activity also include a so-called multiplier effect; that is, output increases by a multiple of the original change in spending that caused it. Thus, a ten-billion-dollar increase in government spending could cause total output to rise by fifteen billion dollars (a multiplier of 1.5) or by five billion (a multiplier of 0.5). Contrary to what many people believe, Keynesian analysis does not require that the multiplier exceed 1.0. For Keynesian economics to work, however, the multiplier must be greater than zero.
3. Keynesians believe that prices, and especially wages, respond slowly to changes in supply and demand, resulting in periodic shortages and surpluses, especially of labor. Even MILTON FRIEDMAN acknowledged that “under any conceivable institutional arrangements, and certainly under those that now prevail in the United States, there is only a limited amount of flexibility in prices and wages.”1 In current parlance, that would certainly be called a Keynesian position.
No policy prescriptions follow from these three beliefs alone. And many economists who do not call themselves Keynesian would nevertheless accept the entire list. What distinguishes Keynesians from other economists is their belief in the following three tenets about economic policy.
4. Keynesians do not think that the typical level of unemployment is ideal—partly because unemployment is subject to the caprice of aggregate demand, and partly because they believe that prices adjust only gradually. In fact, Keynesians typically see unemployment as both too high on average and too variable, although they know that rigorous theoretical justification for these positions is hard to come by. Keynesians also feel certain that periods of recession or depression are economic maladies, not, as in real business cycle theory, efficient market responses to unattractive opportunities.
5. Many, but not all, Keynesians advocate activist stabilization policy to reduce the amplitude of the business cycle, which they rank among the most important of all economic problems. Here, however, even some conservative Keynesians part company by doubting either the efficacy of stabilization policy or the wisdom of attempting it.
This does not mean that Keynesians advocate what used to be called fine-tuning—adjusting government spending, taxes, and the MONEY SUPPLY every few months to keep the economy at full employment. Almost all economists, including most Keynesians, now believe that the government simply cannot know enough soon enough to fine-tune successfully. Three lags make it unlikely that fine-tuning will work. First, there is a lag between the time that a change in policy is required and the time that the government recognizes this. Second, there is a lag between when the government recognizes that a change in policy is required and when it takes action. In the United States, this lag can be very long for fiscal policy because Congress and the administration must first agree on most changes in spending and taxes. The third lag comes between the time that policy is changed and when the changes affect the economy. This, too, can be many months. Yet many Keynesians still believe that more modest goals for stabilization policy—coarse-tuning, if you will—are not only defensible but sensible. For example, an economist need not have detailed quantitative knowledge of lags to prescribe a dose of expansionary monetary policy when the unemployment rate is very high.
6. Finally, and even less unanimously, some Keynesians are more concerned about combating unemployment than about conquering inflation. They have concluded from the evidence that the costs of low inflation are small. However, there are plenty of anti-inflation Keynesians. Most of the world’s current and past central bankers, for example, merit this title whether they like it or not. Needless to say, views on the relative importance of unemployment and inflation heavily influence the policy advice that economists give and that policymakers accept. Keynesians typically advocate more aggressively expansionist policies than non-Keynesians.
Keynesians’ belief in aggressive government action to stabilize the economy is based on value judgments and on the beliefs that (a) macroeconomic fluctuations significantly reduce economic well-being and (b) the government is knowledgeable and capable enough to improve on the FREE MARKET.
The brief debate between Keynesians and new classical economists in the 1980s was fought primarily over (a) and over the first three tenets of Keynesianism—tenets the monetarists had accepted. New classicals believed that anticipated changes in the money supply do not affect real output; that markets, even the labor market, adjust quickly to eliminate shortages and surpluses; and that BUSINESS CYCLES may be efficient. For reasons that will be made clear below, I believe that the “objective” scientific evidence on these matters points strongly in the Keynesian direction. In the 1990s, the new classical schools also came to accept the view that prices are sticky and that, therefore, the labor market does not adjust as quickly as they previously thought (see NEW CLASSICAL MACROECONOMICS).
Before leaving the realm of definition, I must underscore several glaring and intentional omissions.
First, I have said nothing about the RATIONAL EXPECTATIONS school of thought. Like Keynes himself, many Keynesians doubt that school’s view that people use all available INFORMATION to form their expectations about economic policy. Other Keynesians accept the view. But when it comes to the large issues with which I have concerned myself, nothing much rides on whether or not expectations are rational. Rational expectations do not, for example, preclude rigid prices; rational expectations models with sticky prices are thoroughly Keynesian by my definition. I should note, though, that some new classicals see rational expectations as much more fundamental to the debate.
The second omission is the hypothesis that there is a “natural rate” of unemployment in the long run. Prior to 1970, Keynesians believed that the long-run level of unemployment depended on government policy, and that the government could achieve a low unemployment rate by accepting a high but steady rate of inflation. In the late 1960s, Milton Friedman, a monetarist, and Columbia’s Edmund Phelps, a Keynesian, rejected the idea of such a long-run trade-off on theoretical grounds. They argued that the only way the government could keep unemployment below what they called the “natural rate” was with macroeconomic policies that would continuously drive inflation higher and higher. In the long run, they argued, the unemployment rate could not be below the natural rate. Shortly thereafter, Keynesians like Northwestern’s Robert Gordon presented empirical evidence for Friedman’s and Phelps’s view. Since about 1972 Keynesians have integrated the “natural rate” of unemployment into their thinking. So the natural rate hypothesis played essentially no role in the intellectual ferment of the 1975–1985 period.
Third, I have ignored the choice between monetary and fiscal policy as the preferred instrument of stabilization policy. Economists differ about this and occasionally change sides. By my definition, however, it is perfectly possible to be a Keynesian and still believe either that responsibility for stabilization policy should, in principle, be ceded to the monetary authority or that it is, in practice, so ceded. In fact, most Keynesians today share one or both of those beliefs.
Keynesian theory was much denigrated in academic circles from the mid-1970s until the mid-1980s. It has staged a strong comeback since then, however. The main reason appears to be that Keynesian economics was better able to explain the economic events of the 1970s and 1980s than its principal intellectual competitor, NEW CLASSICAL ECONOMICS.
True to its classical roots, new classical theory emphasizes the ability of a market economy to cure recessions by downward adjustments in wages and prices. The new classical economists of the mid-1970s attributed economic downturns to people’s misperceptions about what was happening to relative prices (such as real wages). Misperceptions would arise, they argued, if people did not know the current price level or inflation rate. But such misperceptions should be fleeting and surely cannot be large in societies in which price indexes are published monthly and the typical monthly inflation rate is less than 1 percent. Therefore, economic downturns, by the early new classical view, should be mild and brief. Yet, during the 1980s most of the world’s industrial economies endured deep and long recessions. Keynesian economics may be theoretically untidy, but it certainly predicts periods of persistent, involuntary unemployment.
According to the early new classical theorists of the 1970s and 1980s, a correctly perceived decrease in the growth of the money supply should have only small effects, if any, on real output. Yet, when the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England announced that monetary policy would be tightened to fight inflation, and then made good on their promises, severe recessions followed in each country. New classicals might claim that the tightening was unanticipated (because people did not believe what the monetary authorities said). Perhaps it was, in part. But surely the broad contours of the restrictive policies were anticipated, or at least correctly perceived as they unfolded. Old-fashioned Keynesian theory, which says that any monetary restriction is contractionary because firms and individuals are locked into fixed-price contracts, not inflation-adjusted ones, seems more consistent with actual events.
An offshoot of new classical theory formulated by Harvard’s Robert Barro is the idea of debt neutrality (see GOVERNMENT DEBT AND DEFICITS). Barro argues that inflation, unemployment, real GNP, and real national SAVING should not be affected by whether the government finances its spending with high taxes and low deficits or with low taxes and high deficits. Because people are rational, he argues, they will correctly perceive that low taxes and high deficits today must mean higher future taxes for them and their heirs. They will, Barro argues, cut consumption and increase their saving by one dollar for each dollar increase in future tax liabilities. Thus, a rise in private saving should offset any increase in the government’s deficit. Naïve Keynesian analysis, by contrast, sees an increased deficit, with government spending held constant, as an increase in aggregate demand. If, as happened in the United States in the early 1980s, the stimulus to demand is nullified by contractionary monetary policy, real INTEREST RATES should rise strongly. There is no reason, in the Keynesian view, to expect the private saving rate to rise.
The massive U.S. tax cuts between 1981 and 1984 provided something approximating a laboratory test of these alternative views. What happened? The private saving rate did not rise. Real interest rates soared. With fiscal stimulus offset by monetary contraction, real GNP growth was approximately unaffected; it grew at about the same rate as it had in the recent past. Again, this all seems more consistent with Keynesian than with new classical theory.
Finally, there was the European depression of the 1980s, the worst since the depression of the 1930s. The Keynesian explanation is straightforward. Governments, led by the British and German central banks, decided to fight inflation with highly restrictive monetary and fiscal policies. The anti-inflation crusade was strengthened by the European monetary system, which, in effect, spread the stern German monetary policy all over Europe. The new classical school has no comparable explanation. New classicals, and conservative economists in general, argue that European governments interfere more heavily in labor markets (with high unemployment benefits, for example, and restrictions on firing workers). But most of these interferences were in place in the early 1970s, when unemployment was extremely low.
________________________________________
About the Author
Alan S. Blinder is the Gordon S. Rentschler Memorial Professor of Economics at Princeton University. He was previously vice chairman of the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors, and before that was a member of President Bill Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers.
________________________________________
Further Reading
Blinder, Alan S. “Keynes After Lucas.” Eastern Economic Journal 12, no. 3 (1986): 209–216.
Blinder, Alan S. “Keynes, Lucas, and Scientific Progress.” American Economic Review 77, no. 2 (1987): 130–136. Reprinted in Mark Blaug, ed., John Maynard Keynes (1833–1946), vol. 2. Brookfield, Vt.: Edward Elgar, 1991.
Gordon, Robert J. “What Is New-Keynesian Economics?” Journal of Economic Literature 28, no. 3 (1990): 1115–1171.
Keynes, John Maynard. The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. London: Macmillan, 1936.
Mankiw, N. Gregory, and others. “A Symposium on Keynesian Economics Today.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 7 (Winter 1993): 3–82.
________________________________________
Footnotes
1. “The Role of Monetary Policy,” American Economic Review 58, no. 1: 13.

Pedrosa Menangi Motogp Indianapolis

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Dani Pedrosa tidak mendapat perlawanan berarti untuk memenangi Motogp Indianapolis, Senin (30/8) dini hari WIB. Ia mengungguli pebalap pujaan tuan rumah, Ben Spies, di tempat kedua dan pemimpin klasemen, Jorge Lorenzo, di tempat ketiga..

Berlaga di kandang sendiri, Ben Spies memendam asa untuk meraih podium puncak pertamanya di Motogp. Modal pebalap berusia 26 tahun tersebut cukup baik dengan meraih pole position di sesi kualifikasi.

Saat lomba dimulai, Spies mampu melakukan start dengan baik. Ia berhasil mempertahankan posisi pertama dari serbuan Jorge Lorenzo, Nicky Hayden, dan Andrea Dovizioso.

Namun, di lap ketujuh harapan Spies sirna. Ia disalip Dani Pedrosa, yang start dari peringkat kelima tapi bisa berada di belakang Spies dengan memecundangi tiga pebalap.

Setelah menyalip Spies, Pedrosa tak terkejar hingga chequered flag dikibarkan.

Peringkat kedua untuk sementara jadi posisi terbaik untuk Spies di Motogp. Sebelumnya, ia hanya pernah menempati posisi ketiga di GP Brno.

Sedangkan bagi Pedrosa, kemenangan di Indianapolis jadi yang ketiga di musim ini setelah GP Mugello dan Jerman. Kini, Pedrosa telah mengumpulkan 183 angka. Namun, ia masih terpaut 68 angka dari pemimpin klasemen, Jorge Lorenzo, yang untuk pertamakalinya terlempar dari podium dua besar di Motogp musim ini.

Hasil GP Indianapolis

Pos Rider Tim Waktu/Gap
1. Dani Pedrosa Honda 47m31.615s
2. Ben Spies Tech 3 Yamaha + 3.575s
3. Jorge Lorenzo Yamaha + 6.812s
4. Valentino Rossi Yamaha + 12.633s
5. Andrea Dovizioso Honda + 21.885s
6. Nicky Hayden Ducati + 35.138s
7. Marco Simoncelli Gresini Honda + 36.740s
8. Alvaro Bautista Suzuki + 36.825s
9. Aleix Espargaro Pramac Ducati + 44.905s
10. Hector Barbera Aspar Ducati + 51.368s
11. Loris Capirossi Suzuki + 55.386s
12. Hiroshi Aoyama Interwetten Honda + 57.903s
13. Randy de Puniet LCR Honda + 1m04.139s

Gagal Finis:

Mika Kallio Pramac Ducati 18 laps
Colin Edwards Tech 3 Yamaha 16 laps
Casey Stoner Ducati 7 laps
Marco Melandri Gresini Honda 1 lap

Bari Menghajar Juventus

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Juventus tunduk 0-1 dari Bari di laga perdana Serie A di Stadion San Nicola, Minggu (29/8). Gol tunggal Massimo Donati pada menit ke-43 memberikan setumpuk pekerjaan rumah kepada Juve 'baru' arahan Luigi Del Neri.

Del Neri memainkan enam pemain anyar, termasuk striker yang baru bergabung selama 48 jam, Fabio Quagliarella. Namun, asa tifosi untuk melihat performa apik I Bianconeri harus diredam.

Pertahanan jadi lini yang harus dibenahi Del Neri karena kuartet Marco Motta, Giorgio Chiellini, Leonardo Bonucci, dan Paolo De Ceglie mudah sekali ditembus para pemain tuan rumah.

Selain itu, pemasangan para pemain baru semisal Milos Krasic dan Quagliarella terkesan dipaksakan oleh Del Neri. Kedua pemain tersebut jelas belum nyetel dengan permainan Si Nyonya Tua.
Jalannya Pertandingan

Pada menit ke-3, Bari nyaris membuka skor. Umpan terobosan eks pemain Juve, Sergio Almiron, diterima oleh Paulo Vitor Barreto. Namun tembakan Barreto masih melambung.

Peluang Abdel Ghezzal pada menit ke-22 dengan memanfaatkan umpan terobosan Barreto masih bisa ditangkal Marco Storari.

Juve membuka peluang pertama pada menit ke-34. Setelah bekerjasama satu-dua dengan Del Piero, Felipe Melo melepaskan tendangan yang masih melenceng.

Cederanya Alessandro Gazzi pada menit ke-15 malah memberikan berkah kepada Bari. Pengganti Gazzi, Massimo Donati, lantas mencetak gol pada menit ke-43.

Sedikit di luar kotak penalti Juve, Donati mengecoh Claudio Marchisio sebelum melepaskan tendangan kaki kiri yang gagal diantisipasi Storari.

Skor 1-0 untuk Bari mengakhiri babak pertama. Del Neri melakukan perubahan dengan memasukkan pemain baru lainnya, Jorge Martinez, menggantikan Milos Krasic.

Juve coba meningkatkan intensitas serangan di babak kedua, namun pertahanan mereka malah semakin rentan. Beberapa kali para pemain Bari mampu menembus pertahanan Juve lewat serangan balik.

Misalnya saja pada menit ke-62, ketika Baretto lolos dari jebakan offside dan mampu mengecoh Storari. Namun, bola tendangan Barreto mampu disapu Chiellini dari garis gawang.

Peluang emas untuk menyamakan kedudukan diperoleh Juve pada saat injury time. Dari set piece tendangan bebas Del Piero, Chiellini beridiri bebas untuk menyundul bola. Sayang, bola sundulan Chiellini masih melambung.

Susunana Pemain:

Bari: Gillet; S Masiello, A Masiello, Rossi, Belmonte; Alvarez (Pulzetti 90), Gazzi (Donati 15), Almiron, Ghezzal; Barreto (Castillo 76), Kutuzov

Juventus: Storari; Motta, Chiellini, Bonucci, De Ceglie; Pepe (Lanzafame 58), Felipe Melo (Sissoko 63), Marchisio, Krasic (Martinez 46); Del Piero, Quagliarella

Kegembiraan Hamilton

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Kegembiraan luar biasa dirasakan Lewis Hamilton setelah sukses meraih kemenangan di GP Belgia yang berlangsung Ahad (29/8). Meraih kemenangan di Sirkuit Spa-Francorchamps sama artinya ia merebut kembali posisi pemuncak klasemen dari Mark Webber.

Hamilton memang pantas gembira. Selain menang di tengah lomba yang berlangsung dalam cuaca yang sulit ditebak, ia juga mampu tampil dominan. Padahal, banyak yang memprediksi Red Bull justru akan berjaya di sirkuit legendaris di hutan Ardenes, Belgia itu. "Saya sangat gembira bisa ada di posisi ini. Jika kamu ada di situasi seperti itu dan berlomba seperti itu, maka itu seperti sebuah lotere. Bisa meraih hasil terbaik di situasi yang sulit, saya sangat gembira," sebut Hamilton.

Satu-satunya situasi yang sempat membuatnya kecut adalah ketika sempat melakukan kesalahan di tikungan Rivage pada lap 35, sesaat setelah hujan tahap kedua mulai turun dan beberapa saat sebelum Safety Car keluar menyusul peristiwa yang menimpa Fernando Alonso.

"Kondisi menjadi sangat tricky ketika hujan mulai turun. Saya kehilangan suhu ban dan tidak tahu seberapa besar saya memaksanya. Saya terlambat mengerem dan ban mengunci dan keluar trek di tikungan 8. Beruntung saya bisa kembali dengan selamat," katanya.

Keuntungan bagi Hamilton, juga Webber dari sudut pandang klasemen adalah ketika Sebastien Vettel, Jenson Button, dan Alonso gagal meraih angka. Vettel hanya sanggup finis ke-15 setelah menabrak Button. Sementara Alonso gagal di saat-saat terakhir. Keduanya kini memimpin klasemen dengan keunggulan 29 angka dari Vettel (Hamilton) dan 25 angka (Webber).

Hasil Lomba

GP Belgia
Spa-Francorchamps
44 lap, 308,052 km
Cuaca: Cerah/hujan

Klasifikasi

Pos Pebalap Tim Waktu
1. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1:29:04,268
2. Webber Red Bull-Renault +1,571
3. Kubica Renault +3,493
4. Massa Ferrari +8,264
5. Sutil Force India-Mercedes +9,094
6. Rosberg Mercedes +12,359
7. Schumacher Mercedes +15,548
8. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari +16,678
9. Petrov Renault +23,851
10. Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes +34,831
11. De la Rosa Sauber-Ferrari +36,019
12. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari +39,895
13. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari +29,457
14. Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth +1 lap
15. Vettel Red Bull-Renault +1 lap
16. Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth +1 lap
17. Di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth +1 lap
18. Glock Virgin-Cosworth +1 lap
19. Trulli Lotus-Cosworth +1 lap
20. Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth +2 lap

Fastest lap: Hamilton, 1:49,069

Tidak terklasifikasi

Pebalap Tim Pada lap
Alonso Ferrari 38
Button McLaren-Mercedes 16
Senna HRT-Cosworth 6
Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 1


Klasemen Sementara:

Pebalap: Konstruktor:
1. Hamilton 182 1. Red Bull-Renault 330
2. Webber 179 2. McLaren-Mercedes 329
3. Vettel 151 3. Ferrari 250
4. Button 147 4. Mercedes 146
5. Alonso 141 5. Renault 123
6. Massa 109 6. Force India-Mercedes 57
7. Kubica 104 7. Williams-Cosworth 40
8. Rosberg 102 8. Sauber-Ferrari 27
9. Sutil 45 9. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 11
10. Schumacher 44
11. Barrichello 30
12. Kobayashi 21
13. Petrov 19
14. Liuzzi 13
15. Hulkenberg 10
16. Buemi 7
17. De la Rosa 6
18. Alguersuari 3

Taufik Gagal Beri Gelar Buat Indonesia

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Sebagai pebulutangkis Indonesia terakhir yang tersisa di Kejuaraan Dunia Bulutangkis 2010, Taufik Hidayat gagal mempersembahkan gelar bagi Merah Putih, setelah tunduk dari Chen Jin (Cina) di final, Ahad (29/8).

Pada kejuaraan itu, Taufik ditumbang oleh Chen Jin di partai final tunggal putra. Pada pertandingan itu, Taufik harus mengakui keunggulan Chen Jin dengan kalah dua set berturut-turut, 21-13, 21-15.

Kegagalan Taufik ini tentunya menjadi pukulan yang sangat berat bagi dunia bulutangkis Indonesia yang kini tengah menata kembali kekuatan mereka. Pasalnya dunia bulutangkis Indonesia tidak pernah bisa bangkit dalam dua tahun ke belakang.

Sebaliknya bagi Cina, kemenangan Chen Jin membuat negara Tirai Bambu itu mengumpulkan dua gelar berturut-turut pada kompetisi itu. Sebelumnya Cina juga berhasil meraih gelar di ganda campuran lewat Zheng Bo/Ma Jin.

Barcelona Tangguh

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Barcelona behasil meraih poin maksimal di laga perdana musim 2010/2011, Senin (30/8) dinihari WIB. El Barca memukul tuan rumah, Racing Santander, 3-0.

Meski bermain di kandang lawan tidak membuat tim besutan Pep Guardiola itu tampil tertekan. Malahan, jawara musim lalu ini berhasil mendominasi pertandingan yang digelar di Stadion El Sardinero tersebut. Tercatat, Lionel Messi cs. unggul dalam ball possession sebesar 63 %.

Gol pertama El Barca dicetak saat laga baru memasuki menit ke-2. Penyerang asal Argentina, Lionel Messi, berhasil mencetak gol pertamanya di musim 2010/2011. Top skorer La Liga musim 2009/2010 itu. Messi berhasil menaklukan kiper Racing setelah mendapatkan umpan matang dari Andres Iniesta.

Kendati telah unggul, Lionel Messi cs. tidak mengendurkan serangan. Hasilnya, pada menit ke-33, kiper Racing Santander, Tono, mesti menghalau usaha Messi untuk menyundul bola. Namun, bola malah jatuh di berada di dalam penguasaan Andres Iniesta. Pemain asal Spanyol itu pun dengan mudah menempatkan bola ke gawang yang kosong.

Tidak mau kehilangan muka di depan pendukungnya sendiri, pasukan Racing terus berusaha menembus pertahanan El Barca. Tusukan bek kanan Los Racinguistas, Francis, ke kotak penalti Barcelona pun mesti dihentikan oleh Maxwell. Alhasil, wasit menunjuk titik putih. Akan tetapi kesempatan penalti itu terbuang percuma lantatan Mohamed Tchite gagal menaklukan kiper Barcelona, Victor Valdes. Skor 2-0 pun tetap bertahan hingga babak pertama usai digelar.

Babak kedua, Barcelona masih meneruskan dominasinya atas Racing. Para pemain El Barca dengan leluasa memainkan operan-operan pendek di lapangan tengah. Laga ini pun menjadi ajang pembuktian bagi David Villa. Penyerang yang baru didatangkan dari Valencia itu berhasil membukukan gol pertamanya di musim ini bersama Barcelona. Villa berhasil menanduk bola hasil umpan silang Daniel Alves. Papan skor pun berubah menjadi 3-0 untuk keunggulan Barcelona dan bertahan hingga laga usai.

****

Starting line up:

Racing Santander: Toño; Marc Torrejón, Henrique, Domingo, Francis; Papa Kouly Diop, Gonzalo Colsa (74'Alexandros Tziolis), Manuel Arana Rodríguez (62'Adrian Gonzalez), Kennedy Bakircioglü (63'Ariel Nahuelpán); Pedro Alvarez Munitis, Mohamed Tchite.

Pemain pengganti: Pablo Pinillos, Medhi Lacen, Alexandros Tziolis, Christian Fernández, Adrian Gonzalez, Fabio Coltorti, Ariel Nahuelpán.

Barcelona: Victor Valdés; Eric Abidal, Gerard Piqué, Maxwell, Dani Alves; Sergio Busquets, Seydou Keita, Xavi (45'Pedro); Andrés Iniesta (82'Adriano), David Villa (79'Bojan Krkic), Lionel Messi.

Pemain pengganti: José Manuel Pinto, Carles Puyol, Gabriel Milito, Adriano, Bojan Krkic, Jeffrén Suárez, Pedro

Milan Hantam Lecce

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Pelatih Massimiliano Allegri mengawali kiprahnya di Milan dengan meyakinkan. Ia membawa Ronadinho cs. menang telak 4-0 atas Lecce di giornata pertama Serie A 2010-11, Senin (30/8) dini hari WIB.

Disaksikan secara langsung oleh bomber anyar, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, trio Ronaldinho, Alexandre Pato, dan Marco Borriello tampil penuh semangat. Mereka berniat unjuk kebolehan demi mempertahankan tempat di dalam tim utama I Diavolo Rosso dari eks Barcelona tersebut.

Pato mencetak gol pertama pada menit ke-16. Menerima umpan Massimo Ambrosini, Pato hanya membutuhkan satu sentuhan untuk masuk ke kotak penalti Lecce dan melepaskan tendangan ke tiang jauh Antonio Rosati.

Selang tujuh menit, Milan menggandakan kedudukan. Sepak pojok Ronaldinho dipantulkan Pato. Borriello luput menyambar bola, namun tidak dengan Thiago Silva. Tendangan kaki kanan dari jarak dekat bek asal Brasil itu kembali merobek gawang Rosati.

Pada menit ke-28, koneksi Brasil kembali menimbulkan prahara bagi Lecce. Umpan terobosan Dinho membuat Pato lolos dari jebakan offside dan berhadapan satu lawan satu dengan Rosati. Tanpa kesulitan Pato mencetak gol keduanya.

Kembali berawal dari umpan Dinho, striker veteran, Filippo Inzaghi, yang menggantikan Borriello pada menit ke-61, nyaris mencetak gol. Namun, tendangan chip Pippo hanya membentur mistar gawang Lecce.

Pato ditarik keluar pada menit ke-76 diiringi standing ovation dari penonton. Pengganti Si Bebek adalah pemain debutan, Kevin-Prince Boateng.

Andil pemain asal Ghana itu terasa di penghujung laga. Kerja keras Boateng dengan pemain pengganti lainnya, Gennaro Gattuso, membuat Pippo bisa menyumbangkan gol pada menit ke-90.

Milan menutup laga dengan kemenangan 4-0. Dari sumbangsih di atas lapangan, Borriello pantas was-was tempatnya bakal diambil Ibra.

Susunan Pemain

Milan: Abbiati; Thiago Silva, Nesta, Antonini, Bonera; Pirlo, Seedorf, Ambrosini (71' Gattuso); Ronaldinho; Borriello (61' Borriello), Pato (76' Boateng).

Lecce: Rosati; Ferrario, Sini, Donati; Giacomazzi, Grossmuller, Vives; Corvia, Mesbah, Chevanton (89' Brivio), Munari (54' Piatti).

***

Hasil-hasil giornata I Serie A

Bari 1-0 Juventus

Chievo 2-1 Catania

Fiorentina 1-1 Napoli

Milan 4-0 Lecce

Palermo 0-0 Cagliari

Parma 2-0 Brescia

Roma 0-0 Cesena

Sampdoria 2-0 Lazio

Udinese 0-1 Genoa

Madrid Ditahan Mallorca

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Real Madrid memulai Liga Spanyol musim 2010/2011 dengan raihan satu angka. Pasukan Jose Mourinho hanya bermain imbang dengan Real Mallorca 0-0, Senin (30/8) dinihari WIB.

Kedatangan sejumlah punggawa baru agaknya belum memberikan angin segar untuk Real Madrid. Bermain di Stadion Ono Estadi, pasukan Los Blancos tidak mampu merobek gawang tim tuan rumah. Alhasil, Real Madrid pun harus puas dengan raihan satu angka di pekan perdana Liga Spanyol musim 2010/2011.

Pada awal laga, Jose Mourinho menurunkan tiga pemain barunya, yaitu Ricardo Carvalho, Sergio Canales, dan Angel Di Maria. Sedangkan, di lini depan ada nama penyerang asal Argentina, Gonzalo Higuain. Tidak ketinggalan pemain termahal saat ini, Cristiano Ronaldo, juga turun ke lapangan. Namun, segenap nama-nama beken ini tidak mampu menembus pertahanan tim besutan Michael Laudrup itu.

Peluang pertama Los Blancos didapat saat Cristiano Ronaldo berhasil melepaskan sebuah tendangan mendatar. Tapi, sayang bolanya hanya melebar di sisi kanan gawang Mallorca. Setelah itu, Ronaldo mendapatkan kesempatan kedua, yaitu lewat sebuah tendangan bebas dari luar kotak penalti. Namun, sayang kiper Mallorca, Dudu Aouate, masih mampu menyelamatkan gawangnya. Skor kacamata pun bertahan hingga turun minum.

Demi meraih tiga angka di laga debutnya menukangi Real Madrid, Mou pun langsung menurunkan pemain anyar lainnya, Mesut Ozil dan Sami Khedira. Ozil masuk menggantikan Angel Di Maria. Sedangkan, Khedira menggantikan Alvaro Arbeloa pada babak kedua. Tidak hanya itu, Karim Bnezema pun masuk menggantikan Sergio Canales. Hasilnya, penyerangan Madrid lebih bervariasi. Terbukti ada delapan peluang yang tercipta di paruh kedua pertandingan. Akan tetapi, semuanya menemui kegagalan.

Kesigapan kiper dan koordinasi pemain bertahan Mallorca membuat punggawa Madrid frustasi. Beberapa kali, para penyerang Los Merengues terjebak dalam perangkap offside. Alhasil, skor 0-0 bertahan hingga wasit David Fernández Borbalán meniupkan peluit panjang tanda laga usai.

****

Starting Line Up:

Real Mallorca: Dudu Aouate; Nunes, Pablo Cendros Lopez, Ayoze, Ruben Gonzalez; Jose Luis Marti, Emilio Nsue, Jonathan De Guzman, Víctor Casadesús (62'Pereira); Gonzalo Castro (72'Tomás Pina), Sergi Enrich (45'Fernando Cavenaghi).

Pemain cadangan: Enrique Corrales, Pierre Webo, Fernando Cavenaghi, Martí Crespí, German Lux, Tomás Pina, Pereira.

Real Madrid: Iker Casillas; Ricardo Carvalho, Sergio Ramos, Marcelo, Álvaro Arbeloa (70'Sami Khedira); Lassana Diarra, Xabi Alonso, Sergio Canales (59'Karim Benzema), Ángel Di María (59'Mesut Özil), Cristiano Ronaldo; Gonzalo Higuaín,

Pemain cadangan: Jerzy Dudek, Karim Benzema, Mesut Özil, Sami Khedira, Pedro León, Esteban Granero, Mateos.

Hasil lengkap pekan pertama Liga Spanyol musim 2010/2011:

Hercules 0 - 1 Athletic Bilbao
Málaga 1 - 3 Valencia
Levante 1 - 4 Sevilla FC
Deportivo La Coruña 0 - 0 Real Zaragoza
Espanyol 3 - 1 Getafe
Osasuna 0 - 0 Almeria
Real Sociedad 1 - 0 Villarreal
Racing Santander 0 - 3 Barcelona

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