Showing posts with label south korea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label south korea. Show all posts

Monday, September 23, 2013

NEWS,23.09.2013



Obama unlikely to name new Fed head soon


President Barack Obama is unlikely to unveil his pick to succeed Ben Bernanke as chairperson of the Federal Reserve this week, and the current Fed No. 2, Janet Yellen, remains the leading contender, a source familiar with the process said on Monday.
Bernanke's second four-year term at the helm of the US central bank comes to a close in January, and speculation has swirled around Obama's plans for the replacement.
Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, considered the president's preference, withdrew his name from consideration a week ago, saying his confirmation would incite acrimony.
Besides Summers, Yellen and former vice chairperson Donald Kohn are among those Obama said he has been considering for the job. Yellen is still the top prospect, the source said.
The Senate needs to hold hearings and confirm the nominee, and with a compressed legislative schedule before the end of the year, time is growing tighter.
Lawmakers are currently preoccupied with measures to keep government funding going beyond Oct. 1 to keep the government from shutting down and to raise the nation's debt ceiling ahead of a mid-October date, or face the risk of default.
Yellen had been scheduled to speak to the Economic Club of New York on Oct. 1, but her speech has been postponed.

Lithuania urges push on EU farm reform


Lithuania, which currently holds the rotating EU presidency, on Monday urged a final push on a major reform of the bloc's generous farm subsidy programme that is held up in talks with European lawmakers.
A reform of EU farm subsidies agreed by member states in June after three months of marathon talks favours young farmers and smallholders over big business and has been called a "paradigm shift" for Europe.
"This is the challenge we must meet," said Lithuanian Agriculture Minister Vigilijus Juknawho as he met fellow European Union ministers in Brussels.
The ministers are locked in a row with European lawmakers, who want the reforms to go further.
If a compromise is not found before the end of the month, the European Commission could choose to suspend payments to farmers.
The main sticking point is how the reform affects large-scale farmers, with lawmakers pushing for more redistribution of farm aid to small holdings and ministers maintaining the reform has gone far enough.
EU ministers were to discuss the matter further Monday with another session of talks with the Commission and lawmakers set for the evening.
Irish Agriculture Minister Simon Coveney, who spearheaded the reform during the Irish EU presidency earlier this year, said there remained little room for more compromise from states.
But he said he was confident the Lithuanian presidency could find a deal in the coming weeks.
If approved, the CAP reform is due to be implemented starting in 2014.
Under the current rules, 80 percent of CAP payments go to the top 20 percent of intensive farm businesses since several countries still link the subsidies to production levels.
As the reform stands, member states would have to ensure that by 2019 each farmer receives at least 60 percent of the average national or regional subsidy per hectare. This would remove the advantage written into the current system for the more productive industrial farms.
The deal also states that 30 percent of EU members' farm payments will also be spent on "green" measures such as crop diversification.
The CAP accounts for about 38 percent of the EU's budget.

Spain heads for record tourism year


Sunseekers spurning unrest in Egypt and Turkey flocked to Spain in record numbers last month, setting the country up for its best-ever year for visitors and giving a boost to the ailing economy.
"It is very likely that 2013 will be the best year historically for tourism," Industry Minister Jose Manuel Soria told a news conference on Monday, adding that estimates for the fourth quarter were positive.
Tourism contributed over 5% of Spain's economy or GDP in 2012 and provided around 900 000 jobs, according to Euromonitor, in a country where one in four is out of work, meaning a boost to tourist figures should be good news as other sectors flag.
The number of international tourist arrivals in August rose to 8.3 million, figures from the tourism ministry showed, lifting the total for January through August by 4.5% on the year before to 42.3 million.
Those visitors spent a total of €40.4bn ($54.6bn), up 7% from 2012.
Political upheaval in other destinations has also benefited other Mediterranean countries, such as Greece.
But not everyone in Spain is celebrating the increase. Domestic travel fell by 6.9% between January and July, hitting destinations off the main tourist trail, so businesses and hotels reliant on city tourism suffered.
Two ends of the travel spectrum in particular are cashing in on the influx of international visitors - homeowners taking advantage of a growing preference for low-cost rents, and luxury stores whose clients are shielded from the worst of the economy's woes.
Many tourists have been choosing to rent private homes advertised on the Internet. And despite government efforts to tighten regulation around private renting, the trend is becoming more ingrained, with the number of rentals by tourists up 15% in August year-on-year to 1.3 million properties.
The unregulated rental industry has its risks since landlords and renters have little recourse if things go wrong, but it is worth it for homeowners who rent out year-round.
"What's happening ... because of the economic crisis is that people are preferring smaller airlines, smaller hotels and they are paying less," said Dimitrios Buhalis, a professor and director of the e-tourism lab at Bournemouth University.
Kept afloat
Spain's economy has been highly dependent on tourism since beach destinations took off in the 1960s. While Britain, France and Germany continue to send the most visitors, there has been a huge leap in the number of Russian visitors.
Some of the main beneficiaries are luxury retailers, as big spenders splash out at high-end accessory and jewellery stores. Department store El Corte Ingles for instance has offered a 10% discount to foreign shoppers since 2012 and has employed Chinese-speaking personal shoppers in a nod towards an important group of rich clients.
Value Retail, which has luxury outlets in Madrid and Barcelona, reported an increase in non-European visitors, especially Russian and Chinese, last year.
"Without a doubt, Spain's luxury sector is being kept afloat thanks to tourism," said Ana Franco, editor of Spanish luxury portal Deluxes.
Boosted by luxury, average spending by tourists rose by 2% in the first seven months of the year, from the same period of 2012, to 103 euros per day.
Regions attracting the most visitors are coastal Catalonia, the Balearic islands and southern Andalusia, home to the Costa del Sol. But Madrid saw a 22% fall in foreign visitors in August to 290 494, hit by a collapse in business travel and a decline in Italian and Latin American travelers.
There is little respite in sight for hotels operating in cities unless the domestic economy picks up, according to Ramon Estalella, secretary general of the Spanish Hotels Association (CEHAT).
NH Hoteles, which is focused mainly on city hotels, said in half-year results that Spain was its worst performing market. And Melia Hotels International reported a decline in prices and occupancy in Spanish cities in the first half, even though revenue from resort locations rose.
"There has been a strong fall in demand in Madrid because Iberia has cut flights and low-cost airlines have disappeared because of an increase in airport taxes," a Melia spokesperson said.
Spain's loss-making flag carrier Iberia, part of International Airlines Group (IAG), is undergoing a major restructuring, with dozens of routes canceled and thousands of staff being laid off.

Sudan almost doubles fuel, gas prices


Sudan almost doubled prices for fuel and cooking gas on Monday, struggling to bring its budget under control in an economic crisis that is stirring widespread discontent.

President Omar Hassan al-Bashir went on television for two hours to announce the plan. He has avoided an "Arab spring" uprising of the sort that has unseated other rulers in the region, but many in
Sudan complain about soaring food prices, corruption, violent conflicts and high unemployment.

"We've been just notified of the prices increases," said a petrol station worker, asking not to be named "It's huge leap and we worry that people will be angry."

The Arab African country lost three-quarters of its oil reserves - its main source of revenues and of dollars for food imports - when
South Sudan became independent in 2011.

Petrol stations in the capital
Khartoum raised the price of a gallon (3.8 litres) of petrol on Monday to almost $3 based on black market prices.

"The government...has no idea of what people are going through. I am ready to join any protest against the lifting," said 41-year old Ahmed Iassan, an unemployed worker.

The government started reducing some fuel subsidies in July 2012. Several weeks of small protests ended with a security crackdown.

It had hoped to sustain the remaining support by boosting gold exports to replace oil revenues, but was thwarted by the recent fall in global gold prices.

A gallon of gasoline now costs £14, up from £8.5, petrol station staff said. The prices for a cylinder of cooking gas rose to £25 from £15.

In a televised news conference, Bashir said late on Sunday Sudan was no longer able to afford the subsidies which he said cost the treasury $15.5bn every year based on the official exchange rate.

Sudan produces too little to feed its 32 million people. Even basic food imports arrive by ship in Port Sudan, before they get trucked for days across the vast country, spurring food price inflation.

The Sudanese pound is worth barely a third of its value against the dollar on the black market at the time of the south's succession.

Opposition activists have criticised the move to cut fuel subsidies but the weak opposition has yet to stir mass protest.

Singapore tightens rules for hiring foreigners


Singapore will require many companies operating in the city-state to consider Singaporeans for skilled job vacancies before turning to candidates from abroad, bowing to public pressure over a surge in foreigners over the past decade.

"The measures might mean more hassle and paperwork for companies, and it might even lower the long-term economic growth rate," said Michael Wan, an economist with Credit Suisse in
Singapore.

"But I don't think this will necessarily lower Singapore's attractiveness to companies because there are other factors that they take into account -- such as tax incentives, political stability and access to the Asean region."

Starting next August, firms with more than 25 employees must advertise a vacancy for professional or managerial jobs paying less than S$12 000 ($9 600) a month on a new jobs bank administered by the Singapore Workforce Development Agency for at least 14 days, the Ministry of Manpower said in a statement.

Only after that period can the company apply for an employment pass to bring in a foreign national.

Singapore will also raise the qualifying salaries for employment pass holders to at least S$3 300 a month, up from the current S$3 000, starting in January 2014, reducing the competition for entry-level jobs that typically require tertiary education.

Singapore, a global financial centre and the Asian base for many banks and multinationals, is one of the world's most open economies. Foreigners account for about 40% of the island's 5.3 million population and take up many senior and mid-level positions as well as most of the low-paying jobs that locals shun.

The Association of Banks in
Singapore, which represents financial institutions operating in the city-state, said banks will need to adjust their hiring processes to comply with the new rules.

"We need to assess the impact these rules will have," a spokesman for the association added.

Discrimination

Singapore, Asia's main centre for private banking as well as commodities trading, has seen a sharp increase in foreigners over the past decade, triggering a backlash from Singaporeans unhappy about congestion on roads and trains as well as competition for jobs.

There have also been complaints about foreign managers who prefer to hire their fellow countrymen rather than employ Singaporeans.

Earlier this year, several banks admitted to "hot spots" within their organisations "where clusters of employees from the same country appeared to have developed over time", according to advertisements taken up by an organisation backed by the manpower ministry.

The ministry said it will scrutinise all companies, including smaller firms, for signs of discriminatory hiring practices. Firms that fall into this category include those that "have a disproportionately low concentration of Singaporeans" in professional or management positions compared with others in the industry.

"Even as we remain open to foreign manpower to complement our local workforce, all firms must make an effort to consider Singaporeans fairly," Acting Manpower Minister Tan Chuan Jin said in a statement.

"Singaporeans must still prove themselves able and competitive to take on the higher jobs that they aspire to," Tan added, as officials took pains to stress that the new framework is not aimed at forcing firms to hire Singaporeans first.

Singapore has already been making it harder for employers to recruit cheap workers from abroad in a bid to push up the pay of low-income Singaporeans. The measures include lowering the ratio of foreigners a firm can hire relative to the number of local employees and raising the levy firms must pay to hire lesser-skilled foreigners.


Bangladesh pay protests force factory closures


More than 100 Bangladeshi garment factories were forced to shut on Monday as thousands of workers protested to demand a $100 a month minimum wage and about 50 people were injured in clashes, police and witnesses said.
Garments are a vital sector for Bangladesh and its low wages and duty-free access to Western markets have helped make it the world's second-largest apparel exporter after China.
But the $20bn industry, which supplies many Western brands, has been under a spotlight after a series of deadly incidents including the collapse of a building housing factories in April that killed more than 1 130 people.
Workers took to the streets for a third day on Monday, blocking major roads and attacking some vehicles in the Gazipur and Savar industrial zones on the outskirts of the capital, Dhaka.
At least 50 people - including some policemen - were injured, witnesses and police said, as police fired teargas and rubber bullets, and workers responded by throwing broken bricks.
Some workers also vandalised factories, witnesses said.
"We had to take harsh actions to restore order as the defiant workers would not stop the violence," an Gazipur police officer said.
The monthly minimum wage in Bangladesh is $38, half what Cambodian garment workers earn.
The government is in talks with unions and factory owners on a new minimum wage.
Bangladesh last increased its minimum garment-worker pay in late 2010 in response to months of street protests, almost doubling the lowest pay.
Recently, factory owners offered a 20% pay rise which workers refused, calling it "inhuman and humiliating".
"We work to survive but we can't even cover our basic needs," said a protesting woman worker.
The recent string of accidents has put the government, industrialists and the global brands that use the factories under pressure to reform an industry that employs 4 million and generates 80% of Bangladesh's export earnings.
The April 24 collapse of Rana Plaza, a factory built on swampy ground outside Dhaka with several illegal floors, ranks among the world's worst industrial accidents and has galvanised brands to look more closely at their suppliers.
This month, a group of retailers and clothing brands failed to establish compensation funds for the victims of Bangladesh factory disasters, as many companies that sourced clothes from the buildings decided not to take part in the process.
Very low labour costs and, critics say, shortcuts on safety, makes the country of 160 million the cheapest place to make large quantities of clothing, with 60% of clothes going to Europe and 23% to the United States.

UK wants to ease sanctions on gas field


Britain could be close to agreeing a deal to ease sanctions that have stopped gas production from the North Sea's Rhum field, jointly owned by BP and the National Iranian Oil Company, the Mail on Sunday newspaper said.

Production from the field, which once supplied 5 percent of
Britain's gas output, has been suspended since 2010 as a result of international sanctions against Iran.

But with signs of a thaw in relations between Iran and the West, the government now hopes to win agreement from the European Union and the United States for a sanctions waiver in the near future, the newspaper said, citing people close to the talks.

One stumbling block to a deal, however, could be concerns from companies involved in financing and servicing the field that any exemption for the producers would not fully protect them from legal action, it added.

A Department of Energy and Climate Change spokesman said: "We are working to ensure the long-term security of the Rhum gas field but no decision has been made at this time on a solution."

A spokesman for BP declined to comment on the possibility of a waiver being granted.

"As operator of the field our priorities are two-fold - to ensure the field remains safe and that we remain compliant with the law," he said. "It is up to the government to decide on the longer-term options."

Sudan to host German business conference


Sudan will host a business conference with German firms to boost economic ties with Europe's largest economy, state media said on Sunday, the second such event between Berlin and the isolated African country this year.

Sudan is trying to attract more investment to overcome an economic crisis after losing most oil reserves with South Sudan's secession in 2011. Most Western firms shun the country due to a U.S. trade embargo over Sudan's human rights record.

The
Khartoum conference, from October 28 to 31, is likely to irk human rights activists who criticized Berlin for inviting top Sudanese officials to a similar forum in January.

The
Berlin event had been open to South Sudan, but Juba only sent its ambassador in Berlin to avoid contact with arch foe Sudan at time of bilateral tensions, diplomats said. Sudan had sent a high-level delegation to Berlin.

The conference is organized by German and Sudanese business groups with support from both governments, according to the German-African Business Association.

While foreign investors in
Sudan often complain of a massive dollar scarcity and shrinking state infrastructure projects, the Berlin-based association painted a much brighter picture.

"
Sudan's economic perspectives have developed positively recently. ... The economy has been recovering since southern secession," the German-African Business Association said on its website. It cited opportunities for German firms as Sudan planned to expand its oil, gas and mining sectors.

Most Western countries have only limited ties to
Sudan. President Omar Hassan al-Bashir faces charges of war crimes in Darfur at the International Criminal Court.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

NEWS,11.08.2013



Iran beefs up oil tanker fleet


Iran has beefed up its oil tanker fleet with vessels from China and is selling more crude to Beijing as Tehran struggles under international sanctions, the IEA said in a report Friday.
Iran's once lucrative oil sector has been crippled by sanctions imposed by the United States and the European Union over Tehran's controversial nuclear drive. Despite Iranian denials, the West is convinced Tehran is pursuing a nuclear bomb.
In its monthly oil market report, the International Energy Agency said Iranian crude oil production in July fell back to 2.6m barrels per day (mbd)  50 000m barrels less per day from June.
In contrast, however, the IEA said that preliminary data show that Iranian crude oil exports climbed to 1.16 mbd from just 960 000 barrels per day in June, mainly owing to a rebound in Chinese imports which last month rose to 660 000 barrels of oil per day from 385 000 the month before.
"Just five countries reported importing crude from Iran in July China, Japan, South Korea, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates," the IEA said, noting the number of countries totalled as many as 16 in January 2012.
Despite this, the IEA said "Iran continues to expand its shipping fleet in a bid to sustain crude sales in the wake of increasingly stringent international sanctions".
Since May, it has added four more supertankers, known as VLCCs, to its fleet, which now totals 37 VLCCs and 14 smaller crude tankers.
Most of the additions come from China as part of a 2009 deal to buy 12 VLCCs for $1.2bn.
"The expanding shipping fleet should provide the state oil company more flexibility in marketing its crude and for use in floating storage," the IEA said.
In his first news conference since taking office, Iran's new President Hassan Rowhani earlier this month said he is determined to find a solution to the nuclear programme issue. The IEA said that although analysts are still sceptical, "markets warmed to the tone".

New permit proposals could slow shale drilling


Britain's Environment Agency (EA) proposed new guidance on Friday that could further delay the already lengthy application process for launching shale and other unconventional oil and gas exploration.
Beset by protests that have made the question of whether to allow shale drilling a national issue, shale firms complain that the UK's complex application process takes months longer than in the United States, discouraging investment.
In a technical guidance document on its website, the EA proposed taking longer than normal to decide whether to give an environmental permit for onshore oil and gas exploration if a site is of "high public interest".
If approved, the agency said that the new guidance could increase the time scale for granting environmental permits from the current 13 weeks to six months or more to give it time to consult properly with local communities.
That would be just the latest blow to an industry that the government, keen on the jobs and revenue that Britain's theoretically substantial shale gas reserves could generate, has said it is keen to support.
"This has the potential to delay the exploration of shale gas resources in the UK," said Simon Colvin, an expert on energy and environmental regulations at law firm Pinsent Masons.
"The high public interest status could mean an extremely lengthy process, taking into account a number of rounds of community consultation."
The proposal is part of a consultation document which people can comment on until October 23. The agency will then consider the responses before publishing a final version of the guidance later this year.
"Given the current level of public interest in unconventional gas and oil exploration, it's likely that we will treat such sites as being of high public interest," the agency said in the document on its website.
Fracking
It has been estimated that Britain might have major shale reserves but the amount which could be developed commercially is still uncertain.
The government is looking to shale gas to reduce its reliance on natural gas imports and unveiled tax breaks last month for shale gas developers, which analysts said could attract more companies.
British exploration firms IGas and Cuadrilla are at the exploration stage in shale gas, while other firms are watching developments with interest. But they continue to face significant barriers.
Fracking, which retrieves gas and oil trapped in tight layered rock formations by injecting high-pressure water, sand and chemicals, has already been banned for a year in 2011 after triggering small earthquakes. Protestors successfully blocked access to a Cuadrilla site in southern England last month.
Developers already need to make nine separate applications to the EA for a single exploratory well. They also have to get planning permission from the Department of Energy and Climate Change and the Health and Safety Executive.
"Delaying the process further is simply another layer of red tape at the early stages of exploration," said Colvin.

The cost of complexity


Simple: conquering the crisis of complexity by Alan Siegel and Irene Etzkorn

THE subtitle of this book is conquering the crisis of complexity, and a crisis it is.

Are you paying for things you did not order because the account is too complex to understand? Americans are paying $2bn each year for services they did not request or use on their phone accounts, because the format is confusing.

Research into insurance policy holders indicates that a third to a half of them misunderstood what they have bought.

Most medicine warning labels and inserts are insufficient warning to all but the medically trained.

The solution to these problems is to reduce or eliminate complexity. Simplification is not degeneration into the simplistic. The distinction lies in understanding what is essential and meaningful as opposed to what is not, and then ruthlessly eliminating what is not essential and meaningful.

Why has everything we encounter become so complex? The authors cite many factors, one of which is that simplicity is hard to achieve, which is why Leonardo da Vinci is referred to as “the ultimate sophistication”.

We also need to accept that it is deliberately used as a money-making tactic by those who wish to extract what we would not hand over, if we only knew. On the other hand, many think that more information equals greater clarity, which it definitely does not.

Simplification involves removing complications, unnecessary layers, or distractions while focusing on the essence of  what people want and need in that situation.

Are some industries and offerings too complicated to be simplified? Consider air travel with the various forms of reservation, seating, meals, check-in, landing rights, disembarking and embarking, plane maintenance, fuel volatility, and more. Add to this the overcrowding in the industry.

Southwest Airlines have made their mark through simplifying everything from booking to the maintenance of their planes, from meals to their baggage policy. The result is that they are one of the world’s few consistently profitable airlines.

There are probably very few things that cannot be further simplified. What simplification requires is a thorough and persuasive commitment by an organisation to “empathize, distil, and clarify”.

Consider the following situation. You are asleep on the 20th floor of a hotel in a foreign city. At
03:30 you are awoken by a fire alarm. You can smell smoke. You recall seeing the evacuation instructions on the door.

You try desperately and unsuccessfully to decipher what map is describing, as the alarm is blaring in your ears and the smell of smoke is becoming more intense.

The map was designed by a safety agency in a well-lit office, by a relaxed and cheerful safety officer. When he was done, he was sure he had a good piece of work. It was clear and accurate. So, what went wrong?

He had not considered how one feels on the 20th floor of a hotel in a foreign city at
03:30, when you are woken up by a fire alarm and can smell smoke. Your emotional state was not considered; the safety officer had not empathised with the condition of the reader of the map under duress.

Empathising with the clients, whether it is the intake at a hospital or your monthly bank or cellphone statement, requires an understanding of how the recipient will experience what you are communicating.

The second factor in simplification is to distil the information or procedure down to its essentials. These essentials are defined by the user’s requirements, not those of the company.

In the Siegel+Gate 2011 Global Brand Simplicity Index, one brand stood out above the rest: Google. Using Google is a simple and a rewarding experience. Visit their landing page and then the landing page of other search engines. Google’s is uncluttered and simple.

To keep it this way, any new features staff wish to add to the landing page must go through an “audition”. The goal is for the home page to have the fewest number of points, because more points mean less simplicity.

This is not only an aesthetic consideration - rather, it has been proven to be an economic one. Studies in the
USA have shown that consumers are willing to spend about 20 minutes trying to work out how to operate a new toy. After that, they give up and return the toy to the store.

The cost of returned products in the
USA is $100bn a year, excluding the reputational damage.

Flip, a video camera, has only one button. Press it and you start videoing and press it again to stop. That is it. A primary school child and an adult can use it, but it is not a cheap, crude toy.

Rather, it is a highly sophisticated camera with proprietary, built-in exposure control algorithms to make sure the picture maintains a smooth look over a range of lighting conditions. You do not see all the complexity, all you see is the elegant simplicity, the distillation of the user’s needs into a convenient video camera.

Two million units were sold in the first six months it was on the market, and it held an impressive 37% of the camcorder market in 2011. 

The third part of the simplification process is the clarification aspect. According to health research organisation NEIH, people’s inability to follow prescription drug instructions cost $290bn in medical expenses each year. The instructions are obviously not clear enough for the users.

The problem is compounded when you have multiple drugs in your medicine cupboard, all in very similar-looking vials.

A pioneer in this field was alerted to the problem when her grandmother took ill from mistakenly using her grandfather’s similar-looking medication. The medicine labelling, she discovered, was practically unreadable even for her, a young woman.

She devised a very simple format that would occupy most of the size of the label and contain only three pieces of information. What is the name of the person for whom then medicine is intended? What is the name of the medicine and the dosage prescribed? How should it be taken?

Any business or service can increase its appeal to customers merely by simplifying the engagement with them. The number of touch-points where improvement can be made inexpensively and quickly is substantial.

The range includes product instructions, invoicing, correspondence, and even finding your contact details. The simplicity of getting information on how you can serve potential customers is widely indicated.

There is gold in this book. Read it. 

New trade route to Europe


A 19 000-ton cargo vessel is making the first journey by a Chinese merchant ship to Europe via the Northeast Passage, a shortened route that could revolutionise trade, state media reported Saturday.
The Arctic route has become navigable due to global warming melting sea ice and promises to slash journey times by around 12 to 15 days, saving shipping companies and Chinese exporters millions in lower fuel bills and reduced operating costs.
A freighter belonging to Chinese shipping firm Cosco left the northeastern port of Dalian on Thursday and was expected to take 33 days to reach Europe via the Bering Strait and Russia's northern coastline, the official China Daily reported.
The SinoShipNews website said the vessel was headed for Rotterdam and was due to arrive on September 11.
The new route, which is now navigable for around four months of the year from the end of July, avoids the politically unstable pinch point of the Suez canal, and trims around 7 000 kilometres off the journey, according to the China Daily.
Around 90% of China's foreign trade is carried by sea and Beijing is also hoping the new shipping route can help develop the northeast.
In 2012, 46 ships used the Northeast Passage, compared with four in 2010, according to Rosatomflot, a Russian operator of icebreakers.
But the traffic is still negligible compared with traditional commercial shipping routes, such as the Suez Canal, which has 19 000 ships pass through it a year.
Previous estimates have suggested up to 15% of Chinese foreign trade could use the Arctic route by 2020.
Europe is one of China's largest trading partners, with two-way trade last year worth nearly $550bn.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

NEWS,24.07.2013



US bill threatens government shutdown


The US senate on Tuesday advanced a $54bn measure that increases funding for transportation and housing projects, setting up a spending clash with Republicans in the House of Representatives that threatens a government shutdown on October 1.
The senate voted 73-26 to clear a procedural hurdle that allows for consideration of amendments and a simple majority vote on the funding bill, drawing the support of 19 Republican senators.
The funding measure for basic infrastructure projects, block grants for cities and public housing draws a sharp contrast between the spending paths laid out by Senate Democrats and House Republicans, who are considering a $44bn measure.
The House Republicans are passing their 12 appropriations bills for the new fiscal year under a discretionary spending cap of $967bn in an effort to keep savings from the automatic "sequester" spending cuts in place.
They want to divert a larger share of that reduced spending pie to defence and security agencies, subjecting domestic programmes to bigger cuts.
Senate Democrats, meanwhile, assume that the sequester cuts will be replaced by tax hikes and savings elsewhere and are applying a $1.058trn cap to their bills - $91bn more than the House.
There is little chance of that difference being resolved as the September 30 fiscal year-end approaches, so Congress would need to pass a stop-gap funding measure to avoid a government shutdown on October 1.
The senate measure would mark an increase of $2.3bn in spending on transportation and housing  mostly urban  over the 2013 level. The House measure would cut it by $7.7bn.
Democrats argued that delaying needed work on airports, roads and public housing will simply cost more in the future, and say such projects help the economy.
"Steel rusts, asphalt wears out, buildings need to be repaired and maintained," said Senate Appropriations Committee Chairperson Barbara Mikulski, a Maryland Democrat. "It's not politics, it's physics. We have to make investments today so that our nation can grow."
Both Tuesday's procedural vote and an Appropriations Committee vote drew significant Republican support, indicating that the party's appetite for continuing the deep spending cuts may be waning in the Senate.
But top senate Republican Mitch McConnell said any spending deal must maintain savings from the sequester about $1.2trn over 10 years  which were set in motion by a budget deal two years ago. He dismissed Democratic demands for additional revenue.
"I have no interest in reopening the subject of additional taxes. The government in my view doesn't need more revenue," McConnell told reporters after the senate procedural vote.

US opens probe into steel pipe imports


The US commerce department on Tuesday launched one of its biggest trade investigations in years into charges that manufacturers in South Korea, India and seven other countries are selling steel pipe used by oil and natural gas producers at unfairly low prices in the United States.
Imports of oil country tubular goods (OCTG) from the nine countries totalled nearly $1.8bn in 2012, more than double their total in 2010, as rising US oil and natural gas production have increased demand for the pipe.
In 2010, the United States slapped duties on imports of OCTG from China after they hit about $2.8bn in 2008. The duties slapped on imports from China created an opening for the other foreign suppliers.
The latest case targets South Korea, which exported about $831m worth of the pipe to the United States last year, as well as India, Vietnam, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey and Ukraine.
US producers are asking for anti-dumping duties as high as 240% on India, 158%t on South Korea, 118% on Thailand and 111% on Vietnam to offset what they say is below market pricing, and lesser but still hefty duties on the other five countries.
For two countries, Turkey and India, US producers are seeking additional countervailing duties to offset alleged government subsidies.

3G lack hampers West Bank smartphones


Like many young Palestinians, Amir was excited to get his first smartphone, despite the heavy price tag. But he did not keep it long after realising the lack of 3G network meant its applications were largely unusable.
"I sold my iPhone because I just couldn't use it when I was out and about," said the internet cafe worker, who asked to be given a pseudonym.
"It's expensive to buy a smartphone, so without the full benefits there's no point having one," he added.
With the latest Samsung Galaxy or iPhone costing $400 (€300) it is a considerable investment, but for those keeping pace with developments on Twitter and Facebook, a smartphone has become the tool of choice.
As telecom companies in the Middle East prepare to launch the next generation of high-speed mobile phone internet services, commonly known as 4G, the Palestinian territories still have no access to 3G, meaning they are unable to fully use their smartphones on the go.
As a result, most mobile phone owners simply do not use 3G. And many feel the cost of a smartphone is hardly worthwhile.
"I can't get 3G with a Palestinian provider, so I have to have two contracts, one Palestinian and one Israeli, which is cumbersome and expensive," said 27-year-old Jeryes, who runs a bookshop in Ramallah.
Israel's refusal to give Palestinian mobile companies access to the necessary frequencies for 3G means West Bank residents must sign up with an Israeli company to get mobile internet, but calling rates are more expensive in the territories.
Palestinian mobile operators do not include the price of a phone in their monthly packages, adding to the expense.
Sabri Saidam, telecommunications adviser to Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, said Israel had repeatedly refused to grant 3G access to Palestinian phone companies for "security" reasons.
"Over the past few years several requests have been made and have been denied" to import the technology and get access to the frequencies needed for 3G, he said.
"Israel persistently refuses the application for 3G on the basis of security," Saidam told AFP.
"This is even though there are Israeli companies illegally operating in the Palestinian territories providing 3G for their customers," he said, referring to the more than 500 000 Israeli settlers living in the West Bank and annexed east Jerusalem.
'If you're disconnected you're half dead'
But despite being a nuisance for those who want to use 3G, the issue for most Palestinians is primarily political.
Mobile phone shop worker Alaa Qawasmi, 27, said he was more angry about what the Israeli stranglehold on 3G represented.
"The main reason we don't have 3G is because of the occupation," he said. "Meanwhile, the technology Israeli phone users have is far better, and there are so many services we can't use."
But the obstacle can be overcome, thanks to wireless technology.
"It doesn't affect me much," said Omar, an IT worker in hospitals who did not wish to give his real name.
"Almost everywhere has wireless internet."
Mobile users can sit in cafes or at home, using connections there to have full access to their smartphone features - though some such as digital maps are not updated for West Bank residents, meaning the usefulness of the smartphone is limited, said Omar.
3G "would be nice to have, but we have more important problems here", he said.
A campaign launched by an IT expert during a visit by US President Barack Obama in March to draw attention to the lack of 3G in Ramallah was dismissed by some commentators as potentially overshadowing more crucial political issues.
Ruba Abu Roqqti, visiting her local phone shop, said what was more important was having internet access at all, let alone on the move.
"If you're disconnected from the Web it means you're half dead," she jested - before asking what 3G actually was.
"If it were available, that would be good," she said, "but it's not a big problem, I hadn't even heard of it."
Hamdi Awad, a teenage student, said it could be "good for flirting with girls" in real time.
"You could add them on Facebook and go from there," he laughed.
Though the 3G issue looks far from being sorted, the Palestinians did celebrate a more significant Web-based victory in May, as internet giant Google recognised their upgraded United Nations status, placing the name "Palestine" on its search engine instead of "Palestinian Territories".
Posters on the way into Ramallah from the Israeli-controlled Qalandia checkpoint in the West Bank urged internet users to "log on" to Google.ps and support the Palestinian cause of achieving full independent statehood.

FDA tightening rules on menthol smokes


Shares of US tobacco companies fell on Tuesday after the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said it is considering tightening regulations on menthol cigarettes following a scientific review that showed the products are likely to be more addictive than regular cigarettes.
Shares of Lorillard, which makes the Newport brand of menthol cigarettes, fell as much as much as 5% while shares of Altria Group, which makes a menthol version of its Marlboro brand, fell as much as 3%.
The FDA published preliminary results from a study it conducted that suggest "menthol cigarettes pose a public health risk above that seen with non-menthol cigarettes."
The report found that while menthol cigarettes are no more or less toxic than regular cigarettes, menthol's cooling and anesthetic properties can reduce the harshness of cigarette smoke, increasing their appeal to new smokers.
Still, at least some tobacco company analysts see the tone of the report as positive for the industry in so far as it did not recommend an outright ban.
"We believe it's unlikely that menthol will be banned," said Bonnie Herzog, an analyst at Wells Fargo Securities, in a research report.
"We see this as a buying opportunity as we expect the stock to recover as investors digest this report," she said, referring to Lorillard shares.
The FDA's move comes during a trade dispute in which Indonesia charges that the United States illegally allowed menthol cigarettes to remain on the market while banning the import of clove-flavored cigarettes from Indonesia.
In 2012, the World Trade Organization ruled that the United States should either end its ban on Indonesia's imports or impose a ban on US menthol cigarettes. So far the United States has stopped short of a ban.
"The United States has been clear that it would comply with the WTO findings in a way that is appropriate for the public health," said a statement from Andrea Mead, a spokesperson for the Office of the United States Trade Representative, which negotiates with foreign governments to create trade agreements and resolve disputes.
The FDA is seeking public comment on whether a limit could be set on the amount of menthol in cigarettes. It is also seeking information on how menthol cigarettes are marketed to the young and minority communities.
Lorillard Chief Executive Murray Kessler said in a statement that the company is "encouraged" by the FDA's "science-based approach."
"It is Lorillard's long-held belief that the best available science demonstrates that menthol cigarettes have the same health effects as non-menthol cigarettes and should be treated no differently," he said.
A spokesman for Altria, David Sylvia, said the company had only just received the FDA's report and was reviewing the information.
Lorillard's shares were trading down 4.2% at $44.23 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Earlier they fell as low as $43.77. Altria's shares were down 2.5% to $35.94, after dropping as low as $35.73.

Is China ripe for unrest?



RECENTLY, it seems no developing country is safe from sudden, unexpected protests.

In
Brazil and Turkey, empowered middle classes pushed back against perceived governmental injustice; protests erupted, and leaders’ approval ratings dropped precipitously.

In
Egypt, the economic picture was as ugly as the political one, and the military’s ouster of president Mursi has fomented conflict and instability.

China may look like a candidate for the type of protests currently sweeping the developing world. Not only is a newly empowered middle class demanding better services and more accountability from government, growth has also tapered off in recent quarters.

Don’t hold your breath. At least for the time being,
China is well-positioned to navigate such challenges far better than its emerging market competitors.

Let’s start with the economy. For years pundits, and many Chinese government officials, thought that if
China’s gross domestic product growth rate ever fell below 8%, it would set off an unemployment crisis that would raise the risk of social and political instability in the country.

Well,
China’s finance minister was in Washington last week and said that the Chinese economy could handle 7% or even 6.5% growth a lower rate than China has experienced in 23 years.

But unlike many other emerging markets,
China views slower growth as a manageable challenge. The government actually recognises that a slowdown is necessary to meet its reform and rebalancing goals, and is working now to score political points among the population by arguing that it’s doing so.

In particular,
Beijing hopes that the slowdown will force industrial consolidation and less resource consumption, which could slow environmental degradation which has been a major point of political vulnerability for the government.

Slower growth should also calm the real estate sector, where rising prices have been a major sore point for urban Chinese.
China’s new leadership is betting that progress on these fronts will outweigh the downside risks they’ll face as job losses tick up in the face of slower growth.

From a global perspective, there is a strong case to be made that
China’s slowing growth rate is actually a good sign.

Bubbles allowed to shrink

The fact that
Beijing hasn’t just reflexively pumped capital into the system to keep growth rates up shows that it is willing to begin undertaking modest economic reforms; it is, in effect, letting bubbles shrink rather than grow until they pop.

This approach is characteristic of the new leadership that took charge in March of this year: they are less risk averse and they have a more long-sighted handle on the necessary economic changes that
China will have to undertake.

The new president himself is a cause for optimism. Xi Jinping has a more assertive, off-the-cuff style; he is a more spontaneous, charismatic leader than his predecessors, and early reviews in
China’s blogosphere suggest a favourable first impression.

Xi is using this boldness to work to consolidate his support within the Communist Party. And the extent to which he is successful will mean even more capacity for even more reform over time.

All of this doesn’t mean that
China’s stability should be taken for granted, or that there aren’t looming problems on the horizon. The very fact that China doesn’t face significant near-term instability could lead to complacency and give it wiggle room to delay necessary reforms.

China still needs long-term and significant economic and political transformations to get it from “developing” to “developed.” It has too many changes coming to its demographics, manufacturing costs, and environmental needs to get away with ignoring them in perpetuity. (The US can sympathise.)

While it’s a good sign that the current leadership is allowing lower growth rates in order to implement some economic reform, thus far, all changes are happening inside the system, not to the system itself. Easy growth was the low-hanging fruit for
China over the past thirty years.

Now the government is reaching a bit further up the tree. But they still have a very long way to go to get to the upper branches.

China’s other major threat is the stratification that any developing country has to navigate. As I’ve written about in the past, the growth of the Chinese economy has created a new middle class that has different demands from the largely rural population that China is still trying to lift out of poverty.

In the near term the new government’s tolerance for slower growth is actually positive for helping to address some of these concerns. But eventually,
Beijing will have to reconcile two increasingly divergent populations.

This, again, is a long-term issue. But as these issues go unaddressed, and as more Chinese become rich enough to prioritise new sorts of rights and privileges, the chances of unrest will rise.

Don’t believe the idea that
China is a ripe victim for this wave of developing world protests, or that China’s slowing growth rate is a sign of an imminent hard landing. China’s near-term picture looks surprisingly bright.

But after that, the larger question still looms: can Xi Jinping and his government handle the looming storm clouds while they are still a good way off?