Showing posts with label world cup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world cup. Show all posts

Thursday, June 20, 2013

NEWS,20.06.2013



Japan's female labour goals hit backlash


Days after Kaoru Shimada and other Japanese mothers rallied in Tokyo this year to press for more public daycare, she was shocked to read a local politician's blog blasting their "shameless" demands and asserting kids should be raised at home.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has vowed to take steps, including expanding daycare, to help mobilise women power as part of his "Abenomics" plan to end economic stagnation and engineer growth in a country beset by an ageing, shrinking population.
But that economic imperative is colliding with a conservative worldview, shared by many ruling party politicians as well as top business executives, that sees women's proper place as in the home, not in offices, factories or boardrooms.
"My first impression was that he was mocking us," said Shimada, a 29-year-old system engineer with a toddler son, referring to the comments by blogster Yutaro Tanaka, a local assembly member from Abe's Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).
"He has no idea of the reality," Shimada - who found a daycare spot about a week before she had to resume work in April - told Reuters at a gathering of young parents exchanging information on daycare options and related headaches.
Opposition lawmakers, experts and even some from Abe's own party say such conservative views are common inside the LDP.
"Their view of women is basically as tools to boost the birth rate, reduce social security spending and increase growth. Women have a role because they are key to solving these three problems," said Mari Miura, a political science professor at Sophia University in Tokyo.
"But they have a strong idea of the traditional family as a core ideology of conservatives. That ideology and reasonable solutions do not match, so the policy is always schizophrenic at best."
Hidden message?
Experts and working women laud Abe's goal of mobilising women power even as they note the moves are long overdue in a country where female board members account for only about 1% of the total and women's employment rate of 60% is among the lowest in developed nations.
Abe has pledged to eliminate daycare wait lists - which official data put at 25 000 nationwide and private experts much higher - in five years. The plan is to provide fiscal support for non-government facilities and ease regulations to give private operators more scope.
He has set a target of having women in 30% of leadership posts in all sectors of society by 2020 and also urged Japan Inc to put more women on corporate boards. His initial goal: one woman director per firm.
"At the end of the day, it's the first administration that I can think of that even mentioned women's participation. So that's a step forward," said Kathy Matsui, chief Japan strategist at Goldman Sachs.
She estimates that raising female labour participation rates to the same 80% seen for males could boost Japan's gross domestic product by as much as 14%.
"Obviously, this is going up against a tidal wave of potential opposition, but at the end of the day, what other choice do they have?"
Critics, however, say parts of Abe's agenda send a different message and would have the opposite effect to his stated goal.
Among the moves critics question is Abe's request for firms to increase childcare leave from a maximum of one-and -a-half years to three and an LDP proposal to make private nursery schools, which hold only morning sessions, free for pre-schoolers.
"They are saying: 'Stay home until the child is three, then put the child in nursery school and take care of him or her yourself in the afternoon,'" said opposition Democratic Party lawmaker Renho, a former TV announcer and mother of teenage twins, who goes by one name.
"The message is: 'Don't think about working full-time'."
While some women might welcome the prospect of three years' childcare leave, many say the notion is unrealistic given the need for double incomes and the likely damage to careers from a three-year gap. Currently, those taking childcare leave get a government allowance equal to half their salary.
"Practically speaking, three years would be tough," system engineer Shimada said. "I took off 18 months and there was a gap that made me feel like a rookie employee when I returned."
Silver democracy
Japanese firm Benesse Corp, where one-third of managerial staff are women, found that a three-year childcare leave programme introduced in 1990 had the opposite effect to that intended: fewer female employees returned to their jobs.
"Some did return and what they said was that it was really difficult to catch up," said a company spokesperson, Yuko Onizawa. Five years later, Benesse shortened the leave system to one year and has since found that more women return to work.
Corporate attitudes also need to change for Abe's pitch to work. Although some major firms are taking diversity policies seriously as one key to boosting profits, business lobby Keidanren is blocking a proposal to require listed firms to disclose their gender statistics.
"Keidanren is greatly opposed  I think because it would be obvious how few women they have," Yuriko Koike, a former defence minister who heads the LDP's PR department and advocates bolder steps than those favoured by many in her party, told Reuters.
With public debt already twice Japan's $5trn economy, finding government funds to subsidise programmes to promote daycare and advance women in the workforce could also be tough.
The metropolis of Yokohama near Tokyo last month announced it had eliminated its daycare wait list three years ago the worst in the country through deregulation and bigger spending.
Abe has touted Yokohama as a model case others should follow, but the national government and other municipalities may be reluctant to follow through with similar spending rises.
"It's a kind of 'Silver Democracy' dilemma," said Hiroki Komazaki, founder of non-profit daycare provider Florence who sits on one of Abe's advisory panels.
"They have to cut spending on the elderly and invest in the future. But young people only vote at half the rate of the elderly."
A basic lack of understanding of the issues among many politicians remains, the LDP's Koike says, a big barrier to change.
Recalling a session of an LDP panel on policies concerning women, she said ruefully: "I explained the notion of 'diversity' and one of the men asked me 'Where is that?' He thought we were talking about a place called 'Diver City'."

Brazil backs down on transport hikes


Bowing to mass protests, authorities of Brazil's two biggest cities Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro on Wednesday decided to roll back transport fare hikes that had triggered widespread unrest.
Sao Paulo state governor Geraldo Alckmin told reporters that metro, train and bus fares would revert to $1.35 from $1.44 from next Monday, according to the current exchange rate, while Rio mayor Eduardo Paes said bus fares would go back to $1.24 from $1.33.
The decisions marked a major victory for the tens of thousands of citizens who have taken to the streets of both cities to vent their anger at the fare increases.
Several other Brazilian cities, including Porto Alegre and Recife, had already cancelled the fare hikes.
The current wave of unrest began nearly two weeks ago in Sao Paulo and rapidly spread to other cities just as the country on Saturday kicked off the Confederations Cup, a dry run for next year's World Cup.
The nationwide anger also focused on the $15bn the government has earmarked for the Confederations Cup and the World Cup, which many Brazilians feel would have been better spent on health and education.
The fare increases may appear modest but they were seen by many as a major burden in a country where the minimum monthly wage is currently only $306.

Bernanke: Fed likely to ease bond buying


Federal Reserve chairperson Ben Bernanke said on Wednesday the US economy is expanding strongly enough for the central bank to begin slowing the pace of its bond-buying stimulus later this year.

Bernanke's confirmation that the Fed is getting closer to pulling back on its $85bn in monthly asset purchases confirmed investor fears, sending stocks and bonds sharply lower and pushing benchmark Treasury yields to a 15-month high.

Moderate growth should lead to a further healing in the job market as headwinds facing the economy ease, Bernanke said. He also said policymakers expect inflation to move back up toward their long-term 2% goal.

The Fed's willingness to dial back on the amount of stimulus it is pumping into the economy reflects growing confidence in the sustainability and strength of the recovery. Since cutting interest rates to near zero in late 2008, the central bank has more than tripled its balance sheet to about $3.3trn to drive borrowing costs down and spur hiring.

"The committee currently anticipates that it will be appropriate to moderate the monthly pace of purchases later this year, and if the subsequent data remain broadly aligned with our current expectations for the economy, we will continue to reduce the pace of purchases in measured steps through the first half of next year, ending purchases around mid-year," Bernanke said.

He added that the jobless rate should have declined to near 7% from its current rate of 7.6% by the time bond purchases are halted. If its forecasts proved too optimistic, the Fed could stop reducing its bond purchases or even raise them again, Bernanke said.

In a change of policy, Bernanke also said a majority of Fed policymakers believe the central bank should hang onto the mortgage assets it acquired through its unconventional monetary stimulus when it decides to tighten monetary policy.

He made the statements at a news conference on the Fed's decision to continue buying $40bn in mortgage-backed securities and $45bn in longer-term
US government securities each month.

After a two-day meeting, the Fed's policy-setting panel offered a more upbeat assessment of the risks facing the economy than it have given after the last meeting in May. "The committee sees the downside risks to the outlook for the economy and the labour market as having diminished since the fall," it said.

A Reuters poll of 17 top Wall Street bond dealers found that 16 expect a reduction in the Fed's asset purchases by year-end, with a plurality pegging the central bank's September meeting as the starting point. These dealers saw the Fed slowing its bond purchases by $10bn to $28bn on that first pass, with a median response of $20bn.

Rate rise not seen until 2015

Bernanke stressed that a slower pace of bond buying would still be adding support to the economy, and that any decision to begin removing stimulus remained a long ways off. Any eventual increases in interest rates would also be gradual, he added.

"They do indeed plan to taper purchases later this year and hope to be done by next summer. Bernanke wants to communicate that this is not necessarily tightening, but the market may not see it that way," said Axel Merk, president and chief investment officer of Merk Investments in
Palo Alto, California.

Esther George, the president of the Kansas City Fed, again dissented against the Fed's expansion of its support for the economy, expressing concern it could fuel financial imbalances and hurt the central bank's goal of keeping inflation contained. She has dissented at every policy meeting since January.

But in a surprise, the
St. Louis Fed chief, James Bullard, also dissented, though in the opposite direction, arguing the Fed should have signalled more strongly its willingness to keep its stimulus in place to defend its 2% goal for inflation.

In its statement, the Fed repeated that it would not raise rates until unemployment hits 6.5% or lower, provided that the outlook for inflation stays under 2.5%.

Bernanke made clear that threshold was merely for considering a rate hike, not a trigger for necessarily making one. In fresh quarterly projections, 14 of the 19 members of the Fed's policy panel said they did not think it would be appropriate to raise rates until some time in 2015.

In a sharp downgrade, the Fed forecast the PCE price index, its preferred gauge of the price pressures facing consumers, would rise just 0.8% to 1.2% this year. However, it saw inflation heading back to 1.4% to 2.0% in 2014 and 1.6% to 2.0% in 2015.

A low inflation rate could allow the Fed to keep interest rates lower for longer and could even force additional monetary easing if low inflation persists or inflation falls further.

In a slight upgrade to their economic projections, officials forecast unemployment to average 6.5% to 6.8% in the fourth quarter of next year, and 5.8% to 6.2% in the final three months of 2015.

They forecast
US economic growth of between 3.0% and 3.5% next year and 2.9% to 3.6% in 2015.

Analysts think
US growth slowed a bit in the second quarter of this year in the face of fiscal drag from government spending cuts and higher taxes; recent readings from the economy have been mixed.

The labour market, a central focus of Fed efforts to boost growth, has notched steady improvement with 175 000 new jobs added in May. But US manufacturers have been hurt by softer overseas demand, and inflation has fallen even further beneath the Fed's goal.

The consumer price index was up 1.4% in May from a year ago. But the PCE price index rose just 0.7% in the 12 months through April, the most recent reading.

Outgoing BoE chief calls for bank reform


Britain's economic recovery is not yet secure and more needs to be done to ensure the country's banks no longer pose a threat to taxpayers, Bank of England (BoE) governor Mervyn King said in his final speech on Wednesday.
King steps down at the end of this month after more than 20 years at the bank, to be replaced by former Canadian central bank chief Mark Carney, and the 65-year-old stuck to familiar themes in an annual address to London's financial elite.
"There is a powerful case for more stimulus in the short run," said King, who has spent the last five months at the helm of the BoE's monetary policy committee as part of a dissenting minority calling for a new round of asset purchases.
"A recovery in the UK, albeit modest, is under way ... (but) growth is not yet strong enough to reduce the considerable margin of spare capacity in the economy. Nor is recovery at an adequate rate fully assured."
While Carney has been hired by Finance Minister George Osborne with a brief to find new ways for the BoE to boost Britain's economy, his appetite for asset purchases is less clear, and economists think there may be no more this year.
But King said unnecessarily high unemployment was now a bigger threat to Britons' well-being than inflation  which has exceeded the BoE's 2% target for most of the past five years and that eurozone weakness and a troubled banking system remained the main obstacles to growth.
While global market interest rates had risen in recent weeks due to uncertainty about the US Federal Reserve's future bond purchases, the world economy was too unhealthy to talk of rates returning to normal pre-crisis levels anytime soon, King added.
"Bond yields have risen. But such market moves should not be confused with a return to normality," he said.
Banking on reform
King was speaking just after Osborne told the same audience at Mansion House, the Lord Mayor of London's ornate official residence, about his plans to shake up Britain's two state-controlled banks.
King said he welcomed Osborne's plans to sell the government's 39% stake in Lloyds Banking Group and consider restructuring Royal Bank of Scotland - a step he has previously said should have been taken years ago.
But more needed to be done. On Thursday the central bank's regulatory arm will publish details of how much new capital Britain's banks need to raise, with media reports suggesting that Lloyds, RBS and Barclays will bear the brunt.
"There is clearly some way to go before we can claim to have a really well-capitalised banking system," King said, rejecting some banks' view that higher capital requirements are acting as a brake on their ability to support the economy.
A longer-term problem was the size of some British banks, which are still too large and complex to be able to collapse without causing financial chaos, King said.
"We must restore trust in our banking system," he said. "It is not in our national interest to have banks that are too big to fail, too big to jail, or simply too big. Solving these problems is the work of a generation."
Earlier on Wednesday, British legislators called for laws to imprison "reckless" bankers in a report welcomed by King, who has often criticised the culture in banking.
King's speech focused on future challenges, and not the main criticism laid against him: that he paid insufficient attention to bank stability before the financial crisis.
He also wished his successor well. "The Bank of England is in safe hands, and the country will be the better for it."

Friday, December 21, 2012

NEWS,21.12.2012



Obama nominates Kerry for Secretary of State


President Barack Obama has announced the nomination of US Senator John Kerry to replace Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State, calling him the "perfect choice" to guide American diplomacy in the years ahead.Obama settled on Kerry, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the 2004 Democratic presidential candidate, after UN Ambassador Susan Rice withdrew from consideration last week.He said he expected quick Senate confirmation of the Massachusetts lawmaker."As we turn the page on a decade of war, he understands that we have to harness all elements of American power," Obama said at the White House.Even as Obama put in place one important piece of his revamped national security team, he held off on naming a new defense secretary.The delay comes in the face of a growing backlash from critics of former Republican Senator Chuck Hagel, considered a leading candidate to replace Leon Panetta at the Pentagon.Kerry, 69, a stalwart Obama supporter known to have long coveted the job of America's top diplomat, will take over from Clinton, who has been consistently rated as the most popular member of the president's cabinet.But he will also have to pick up the pieces after a scathing official inquiry found serious security lapses by the State Department in the deadly September 11 attack on the US consulate in Benghazi, Libya a report that has tarnished the final days of Clinton's tenure.Kerry's nomination follows a political firestorm that engulfed Rice, seen as the early favorite for the State job, spearheaded by Republicans fiercely critical of her role in the administration's early explanations for the Benghazi assault.Rice, defended by Obama, said last Thursday she was withdrawing her name from consideration to avoid a potentially lengthy and disruptive confirmation process.Kerry, known nationally through his presidential run and for his role as a Democratic power broker in the Senate, offers no such challenges.The selection of Kerry sets a pragmatic tone as Obama begins reshaping his national security team, which will include a new CIA director.Kerry will be the leading Cabinet member charged with tackling a range of thorny global challenges, including Middle East upheaval, Iran's nuclear standoff with the West and winding down the war in Afghanistan all at a time of fiscal austerity at home. 

US economy showing 'surprising' signs of resilience


The US economy showed surprising signs of resilience in November despite the approach of the so-called fiscal cliff, as consumer spending rose by the most in three years and a gauge of business investment jumped. Consumer spending rose 0.6% when adjusted for inflation, while new factory orders for capital goods outside the defence and aerospace sectorsa proxy for business spending plans jumped 2.7%, the Commerce Department said today.Economists had pinned earlier weakness in investment plans on worries lawmakers and the White House might fail to strike a deal to avoid the brunt of tax hikes and government spending cuts scheduled to begin in January.They also worried consumers would hold back as the end-of-the-year deadline approached with both parties far apart on how to avoid the potential hit to the economy. But today's data suggests both consumers and businesses had mostly shrugged off the cliff, at least in November."It appears that the looming fiscal cliff hasn't been nearly as disruptive as we had feared," said Paul Ashworth, an economist at Capital Economics in Toronto. Still, another report provided ample reason for caution as US consumer sentiment slumped in December, with households apparently rattled by on-going negotiations to lessen the fiscal tightening that could easily trigger a recession next year. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan's final index of consumer sentiment in December tumbled more than expected to 72.9 from 82.7 a month before. US stocks fell sharply after a Republican proposal for averting the fiscal cliff was abandoned late yesterday, eroding optimism that a deal could be reached quickly. At the same time, US government debt prices rallied and the dollar gained ground as investors sought a safe haven. Economists still expect economic growth to cool in the fourth quarter as companies slow the pace at which they have been re-stocking their shelves, but the data suggests consumers are offsetting some of that drag. Consumer spending is on track to grow at a 2.2% annual rate in the fourth quarter, faster than during the prior three months, said Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan in New York. Forecasting firm Macroeconomic Advisers raised its forecast for fourth-quarter economic growth by four tenths of a point to a 1.4% annual rate. In the third quarter, the economy expanded at a 3.1% rate. "The economy is holding in here at the end of the year despite the concerns about the fiscal cliff," said Gary Thayer, an economic strategist at Wells Fargo Advisors in St. Louis. Those concerns are not going away. In November, many analysts on Wall Street said they expected Washington would largely avert the fiscal cliff, and optimism had grown over the last week that a deal was within reach. Since Wednesday, however, negotiations have fallen into disarray. If Congress and the White House do not reach a deal in time, taxes will go up for all Americans beginning in January and the government will cut spending on a host of programs. Running off the fiscal cliff would slash the nation's trillion-dollar budget deficit nearly in half in just one year. The impact would only come gradually, but economists expect it would be enough to knock the country into recession in the first half of the year. So far, uncertainty over the talks appears to have had only a limited impact on the economy. New orders for durable goods, items meant to last three years or more, rose a greater-than-expected 0.7% in November due to gains in machinery, fabricated metal products, and computer and electronic products. Those increases were offset by a decline in volatile aircraft orders. The report also showed a rise in shipments, brightening the prospects for fourth-quarter economic growth. Shipments of non-defence capital goods orders excluding aircraft, used to calculate equipment and software spending in the government's measures of gross domestic product, gained 1.8%, after rising by a softer 0.6% in October.

Brazil to privatise airports


Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff on Thursday announced that airports in Rio and Belo Horizonte, two host cities for the 2014 World Cup, will be privatized during a September 2013 auction."International experience shows that airports are good business," Rousseff said, recalling that last February, 20-year concessions were granted to manage three airports, two in Sao Paulo and one in Brasilia.Brazil, a continent-sized country of 194 million people, is seeking to upgrade its creaking infrastructure ahead of the 2014 World Cup.The previously granted concessions, valued at a total of $14bn, will upgrade congested terminals in preparation for handling the tens of thousands of tourists expected for the World Cup. Rousseff said Thursday that any private entities participating in the September auctions will have to include at least one international partner "with experience in running an airport handling at least 35 million passengers a year."This operator must have "at least a 25% stake" in the consortium.Companies with majority stakes in operations of other airports will not be allowed to take part in next year's auction. Rousseff said Brazil was now a "middle class country" in which more and more people will fly, including many of the "40 million Brazilians lifted out of poverty over the past decade".Civil Aviation Minister Wagner Bittencourt said the government hopes to raise $5.7bn through the concessions: $3.3bn for Rio's Tom Jobim airport and $2.4bn for Belo Horizonte's Confins airport.Brazil has announced huge investments in airport, highway and rail projects in partnership with the private sector to modernize its creaking infrastructure and jumpstart a sluggish economy expected to grow a mere one percent this year.Bittencourt said that in an initial phase, the government plans to invest $3.6bn to modernize 270 small airports. The longer term objective is to upgrade 689 public airports, he added.Experts meanwhile warn that the aviation sector has to contend with higher taxes and fuel costs, inadequate infrastructure and a leveling-off of demand."2012 can be seen as the worst year for commercial civil aviation," Paulo Kakinoff, president of Gol, the country's second biggest airline, said last week."This is due to a series of factors: a nearly 60 percent hike in fuel costs, the 10% depreciation of the real in relation to the dollar, higher taxes and new taxes."


Tuesday, November 27, 2012

NEWS,27.11.2012



OECD: Eurozone crisis to hamper recovery


The OECD cut growth forecasts for most countries in the European Union's eastern wing on Tuesday and urged Hungary to do a deal with international lenders even as most analysts give such a deal less than even odds of happening.The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development said the euro zone crisis and austerity drives by emerging Europe's governments would sap recovery in most of the region.In a regular report, the group said the economies of Poland, Slovakia, and Estonia would grow both this year and next.It said inflationary pressure implied monetary easing was on the cards for Poland, but interest rate cuts in Hungary could destabilise price stability and undermine policy credibility.

Hungary

The OECD said closing an aid deal with the European Union and IMF was "critical to growth" because it would lower Budapest's borrowing costs, improve investor confidence and boost domestic lending.Under the assumption that a deal will materialise, the organisation forecast economic contractions of 1.6% this year and 0.1% in 2013.In May, the OECD forecast shrinkage of 1.5% for 2012 and growth of 1.1% next year. Analysts give only a 30% chance that Prime Minister Viktor Orban will sign a deal.The OECD said the fiscal deficit would narrow from 3% of gross domestic product (GDP) this year to 2.7% in 2013 and 2014.It said recent interest rate cuts by the central bank risked upsetting price stability and undermining policy credibility, and it added that rate setters should ease monetary policy only once inflation fell back below the bank's 3% target."Failure to conclude a financial agreement with the multilateral organisations could undermine already weak confidence, endanger fiscal sustainability and destabilise the exchange rate," the OECD said.

Poland

The weak European economy and fiscal consolidation will hit Poland, according to the OECD, which cut its growth forecast for the region's biggest economy to 2.5% this year, from 2.9% in May. It saw growth of 1.6% in 2013.It said headline inflation would fall to the lower end of the central bank's 1.5% to 3.5% target band. Along with the slowdown in growth, that implies that rate setters should ease policy to support the economy, the OECD said.The fiscal deficit should fall to 3.5% of gross domestic product  in line with the government's target  before falling to 2.9% next year.The organisation also said the government should push on reforms to sell state owned assets, improve the tax structure, reduce red tape for businesses, end special pension schemes and reform farmers' health and pension systems to boost growth.

Czech Republic

The OECD deepened its forecast for a Czech economic contraction to 0.9%, from an estimate of 0.5% in May. It sees a recovery emerging in 2013 with 0.8% growth, expanding to 2.4% in 2014.The organisation said the public finance deficit should stagnate at 3.3% of gross domestic product this year and next, above the European Union's 3% ceiling.It will fall to 2.7% of GDP in 2014, it said, because of structural improvements in the budget and stronger growth.

Estonia

Estonia should lead EU OECD countries with growth of 3.1% in 2012, the OECD said, raising its forecast from 2.2% in May. That should accelerate to 3.7% next year.The country's public finances should fall into a deficit of 1 percent of GDP this year, but then creep closer to a balanced result over the next two years.

Slovakia

The OECD sees Slovakia's car-export-driven economy expanding by 2.6% this year, unchanged from a May forecast. It said a weak labour market and fiscal retrenchment would squeeze growth to just 2% in 2013, down from an earlier estimate of 3%. The following year, however, growth should pick up to 3.4%, the OECD said.

Slovenia

Austerity measures and deleveraging by foreign-owned banks and companies will hit Slovenia's economy next year, the OECD said, predicting a contraction of 2.1%. It saw the fiscal deficit hitting 4.3% of GDP in 2012 and falling to the EU's 3% ceiling only by 2014.

Israel

The OECD said growth should slow from 3.1% this year to 2.9% in 2014, while an acceleration in price growth that should begin in the second quarter of next year would require monetary tightening.It added that the government's deficit targets of 3% and 2.75% for 2013 and 2014 would be hard to hit, and instead forecast shortfalls of 4.1% and 4%.

 

OECD warns of downward spiral in Portugal



Portugal's economy will contract twice as much as previously expected in 2013 and the bailed-out country risks falling into a fiscal and financial downward spiral, the OECD said on Tuesday.The Paris-based Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development also warned in its economic outlook that further budget tightening will "likely" be needed to meet deficit targets set out under the €78bn EU/IMF bailout.The OECD now forecasts a 1.8% contraction in 2013, more than the 0.9% it forecast in July and far more than the -1% predicted by the Portuguese government."If the demand effects of the required fiscal retrenchment turn out higher than expected, this could lead the economy into a downward spiral of worsening economic, financial and fiscal conditions," the OECD wrote.It said Portugal will only return to growth late next year as export growth eventually offsets weak domestic demand.The economy contracted 1.7% last year and is expected to fall 3.1% in 2012, marking debt-burdened Portugal's worst recession since returning to democracy in 1974.Lisbon has slashed spending and raised taxes since it received the bailout last year but economists have warned of a recessive spiral which could mean the country needs more aid.The Portuguese face the biggest tax hikes in their modern history in 2013, which the OECD said could drag on growth and private consumption, which it forecast would fall by 3.5% next year, more than the 2.2% the government estimates."Compliance with the headline deficit targets of 4.5% and 2.5% of GDP for 2013 and 2014, respectively, are likely to require additional consolidation measures due to the weak economy," the OECD wrote.Record unemployment will also rise further, it said.Besides updating its macroeconomic scenario, the OECD said deleveraging of Portugal's financial sector was inevitable but that it should work to prevent credit from contracting too fast."The economy will remain sensitive to a further deterioration in credit conditions and worsening conditions in other euro area economies," it said.

 

Parking spots become latest investment


Ivestors looking for new places to park their cash in Hong Kong are driving up prices for parking spaces, sparking fears of a bubble in the Asian financial center.Prices for parking spots in Hong Kong are nearing historic highs, the side effect of government curbs to cool the housing market amid worries of overheating following the latest round of monetary stimulus in the US two months ago.There are "a lot of speculators in the market, especially for car parks," said Buggle Lau, senior analyst with Midland Realty. A bubble is "definitely forming."Over the weekend, a developer sold about 500 parking spots at a new suburban apartment complex at prices up to 1.3 million Hong Kong dollars ($167 000) per space.In a commercial building near the city's financial district on Hong Kong Island, an investor has put 34 parking spaces on sale for HK$100m ($12.9m), according to a report last week in the Ming Pao newspaper. A parking spot in the exclusive Repulse Bay neighborhood sold for HK$3m, the paper also said, citing Land Registry data.On Thursday, a single parking spot in a building in the popular Mid-Levels residential neighborhood will be auctioned off with the opening bid at HK$680 000.Second-hand parking spaces changed hands in the third quarter for an average of HK$640 000. That's up 16.4% over the year before, according to research by property company Centaline. It's also not far off the record HK$660 000 in the fourth quarter of 1997, shortly before the city's property market collapsed.The rising prices are a side-effect of recent measures to cool Hong Kong's housing prices, which have doubled since the end of 2009 and are among the highest in the world.Hong Kong's government has introduced three separate sets of curbs on property purchases since the summer in a bid to cool the market. US policymakers' continuing efforts to stimulate the economy by keeping interest rates at an ultralow level and buying tens of billions in bonds each month has raised concerns in Hong Kong about money flooding into the southern Chinese city, pushing asset prices higher as investors chase profits in the property market.The latest curbs don't cover nonresidential properties such as parking spots so investors have been piling in as they look for higher returns. Hong Kong had the world's third-highest monthly parking charges last year, according to real estate company Colliers International."In some car parks, especially in urban areas where supply is limited, the sales price of some car parks can be as high as two to three million (Hong Kong) dollars" each, said Lau of Midland Realty.Nearly 8 400 parking spaces worth HK$5.6bn changed hands in the first 10 months of this year, compared to 8 300 such transactions worth HK$5.4bn for all of 2011, according to Land Registry data compiled by Midland.Some of that increase comes from developers like Cheung Kong Holdings, Sun Hung Kai Properties and Chinachem Group selling off parking spaces at their apartment complexes. It's a break from the usual practice of renting them out to residents, and is a sign that the developers realize it's a "pretty good time" to sell because of the prices they can get, Lau said.Because Hong Kong's currency is pegged to the US dollar, policymakers cannot take conventional measures to cool property prices like raising interest rates.So the government tightened restrictions on property purchases, including bringing in a new stamp duty on foreign buyers. But parking spots and other non-residential property are exempt."The latest overseas buyers' stamp duty will just put some fuel onto that fire, and is making the whole parking space investment market go out of control," said Josh Wong, whose Hong Kong City Parking owns about 200 parking spots at eight lots around Hong Kong.Many investors who buy spaces rent them out to car owners. Wong said he typically looks for an annual yield, or return, of 5% to 6%, but because prices have risen, yields have been falling to about 4% to 5%. He said has even heard of investors making as little as 1.8% on their investment.Wong, who also runs Parkinghk.com, a website for buyers and sellers of parking spots, said the market was heating up because investors didn't need a lot of money to get started."One million Hong Kong dollars ($129 000) cannot buy anything in Hong Kong. You cannot buy a shop, you cannot buy anything except car parking and that would help the car park investment go even more crazy," he said.

 

French unemployment hits 14-year high


The number of people out of work in France soared again in October to hit its highest level in 14 and a half years, piling pressure on Socialist President Francois Hollande who has promised to halt the relentless rise by the end of 2013.Labour Ministry data showed the number of jobseekers in mainland France rose by 45,400, or 1.5%, to hit 3.103 million, marking the 18th consecutive monthly increase and taking the total to its highest level since April 1998.The increase was only slightly smaller than in October which saw the biggest jump in jobless rolls since April 2009, showing the deterioration in the job market is accelerating as recession in the broader euro zone hits demand.France's 1.9 trillion euro ($2.99 trillion) economy has been virtually stagnant since grinding to a halt at the end of last year, and many economists expect it to contract in the months ahead despite a surprise 0.2% rise in the third quarter.With the economy still struggling, the Labour Ministry said there was a risk the figures could get even worse.But it noted that new measures to bolster company investment and the youth job market that will kick in from next year have yet to produce results."This run of negative figures on employment only increases our resolve to do something to reverse the trend between now and the end of next year," Labour Minister Michel Sapin said in a statement.Hollande won power in May on a pledge to cut unemployment, but has since had to grapple with a wave of layoff announcements that have damaged his popularity and sapped public morale.The government unveiled a set of measures at the start of November, including sweeping tax rebates for companies, aimed at boosting industrial competitiveness and safeguarding jobs.French business newspaper Les Echos said Hollande was now planning a faster rollout of the rebates so that they reach full speed within two years instead of the three year build-up initially envisaged.Meanwhile, Industry Minister Arnaud Montebourg has been increasingly vocal in his criticism of companies mulling job losses. He shocked steelmaker Arcelor Mittal this week, fanning tensions over two threatened blast furnaces, by saying its CEO was no longer welcome in France.With the pace of job losses rising steadily, surveys show the public wants more than promises to save the economy, and economists want deeper structural reforms.The Labour Ministry data is the most frequently reported domestic jobs indicator for France, although it is not prepared according to widely used International Labour Organisation (ILO) standards nor expressed as a rate of the number of job seekers compared with the total work force.

Thousands march in Rio over oil dispute


As many as 200 000 people demonstrated in Rio de Janeiro on Monday to urge Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff to veto a bill that local officials say could cost Rio state billions of dollars in lost oil revenue and cripple plans to host the World Cup and Olympics.Late on Monday, a person familiar with the president's plans said Rousseff is planning to veto at least part of the bill, particularly a portion that redefines royalty payments for existing oil production in Brazil. The president, the person added, instead will propose that Rio and Espirito Santo, the two states with most of Brazil's oil output, continue to get a level of royalties from current production similar to what they received last year. The partial veto would not change parts of the bill that redefine oil royalties from production at new fields.For Rousseff, the protest raised the stakes on what may be the most sensitive decision she has faced in her nearly two-year-old government: How to distribute tens of billions of dollars in expected revenues from a massive offshore oil field that Brazil discovered in 2007.The bill, passed by Congress this month, would spread the windfall more evenly to Brazil's 26 states and federal district. As submitted for her approval, however, it would also alter royalties on existing production, angering Rio and other southeastern states where most of Brazil's oil is located.Rousseff has until Friday to veto the bill, but is expected to decide on the partial veto on Thursday, the person said.Monday's event had attracted about 200 000 demonstrators by early evening, according to police calculations.The protest began with a march through Rio's colonial centre and was followed by a series of speeches, concerts, and impromptu revelry that at times gave it a festive air. In recent days, state officials plastered streets and buildings with banners advertising the protest in large black and white lettering and a command in red for the president: "Veto, Dilma."Rio is spending tens of billions of dollars to build stadiums and other infrastructure for the 2014 soccer World Cup and the 2016 Summer Olympics - two marquee events expected to attract hundreds of thousands of visitors.Rio Governor Sergio Cabral, an ally of the president, led the protest. He has cast the debate in dire language that analysts say may exaggerate the financial stakes but has nonetheless intensified political pressure on Rousseff.The bill "would devastate the state budget and compromise the future of Rio. The state would be inviable," Cabral told journalists after the protest.He urged Rousseff to veto parts of the bill dealing with royalties for existing production, which he said would cost producer states and cities 6.5bn reais ($3.1bn) in 2013 alone.Approving the bill could hurt Rousseff's relations with Cabral's PMDB party, a large and ideologically shape-shifting group that is a linchpin of the broad coalition that supports her ruling Workers' Party.Rousseff has vowed to further Brazil's efforts to reduce poverty, in part by redistributing the windfalls from its growing commodity exports - from oil and iron ore to foodstuffs.Throughout the day on Monday, police had cordoned off large swaths of Rio's centre, along the river-like bay that gives the city its name. State and municipal officials facilitated attendance by waiving subway and ferry fees and providing buses from far-flung towns outside the capital.