January 2011

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — Jonathan Binder, chief investment officer at Consilium Investment Management, talks about the economic impact of the unrest in Egypt on Indonesia, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. Binder speaks with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read more:
Video: Binder Discusses Impact of Egypt Unrest on South Asia

{ 0 comments }

Here is a new article from %sourceexcerpt%

More here: Industry Expert, Carol Gibson, Joins Visionary Integration Professionals

Industry-News.org finds the best stories around the globe and distributes them to our readers. Most articles are published by third parties and these links will take you to other websites. In some cases, websites require their own registration to read their stories.

The headlines are provided as a service to readers. All rights reserved by source. We provide special newsletters on Distressed Debt and Loan Sales News, Distressed Multifamily Real Estate, Distressed Commercial Real Estate, Distressed Funds, Jobs & Employment Newsletter, Fundraising Newsletter, Deals Newsletter, Institutional News, Bankrupsky News, Distressed Housing and Condomimun News, Distressed Legal News, Hedge Fund Conferences Newsletters, Real Estate Conferences Newsletter

Other Partner & Related Sites:

Institutional Partners Jobs www.InstitutionalPartners.com: Real Estate Jobs, Private Equity Jobs, Hedge Fund Jobs

Distressed Marketplace www.DistressedMarketplace.com: Distressed Loans, Distressed Funds, Distressed Real Estate, Distressed Companies: Distressed Distressed Asset Coalition (DAC) www.DistressedCoalition.com: Debt, Distressed Real Estate, REO, Foreclosures, Distressed Funds, Distressed Loan Sales;

Distressed Events: www.Distressed-Events.com distressed-conferences, distressed webinars, distressed classes, distressed debt information, distressed real estate

Certified Courses: www.Certified-Courses.com: Leading e-learning classes on Real Estate, private Equity, Hedge Funds

Global Financial Radio www.GlobalFinancialRadio.com: Industry news for commercial real estate, distressed debt, private equity firms, hedge funds

If you want to add a news site, remove a site, or partner with us, email newspartners@industry-partners.org

www.Industry-Partners.org We Find The News For You!

{ 0 comments }

Howard Schweber: Laffer Curves and Tax Cuts: What Does It Take to Kill a Zombie?

January 31, 2011

I. The Theory: Laffer Curves, Supply Side Tax Cuts, and Demand Side Tax Cuts We are hearing a lot these days about the lessons of the Reagan tax cuts. We are also being treated to a revival of the Laffer Curve. Which is… interesting. There are two basic arguments for using tax cuts to stimulate the economy. One is the supply-side version: that’s the argument that cutting taxes for high earners will cause them to invest more in the economy, which will ultimately produce more jobs. You may recall this as the “trickle down” theory, later rebranded as the “rising tide lifts all boats” ideal. This argument makes sense so long as two things are true: that the economy is being held back by a shortage of capital available for investment, and that high earners are being held back from investing because they do not have the money to do so. Given that we are currently in a situation in which corporations are sitting on record amounts of uninvested capital and have just recorded the most profitable quarter in all of American history, it’s a little hard to see how those descriptions apply. The demand-side approach to tax cuts favors cuts for low and middle earners, in the hope that they will spend the extra money and thus stimulate the economy; this is essentially using tax cuts as a form of Keynesian stimulus. That argument makes sense so long as two things are true: that the economy is being held back by a lack of demand, and that there are lots of people who would buy more things if they had the money to do so. In the current economic climate, that seems like a fairly plausible pair of assumptions. But! The Laffer Curve provides supply-siders with a different explanation for why tax cuts for high earners will stimulate the economy. Laffer’s curve describes a theory about human motivation. It goes like this. Suppose you have someone earning $100 a year and paying 25 percent in taxes. That is, he gets to keep $75 out of that $100. Now suppose he has an opportunity to earn $120 next year, but the tax rate on that next $20 will be 35 percent. Laffer argued that a certain number of people would rather not earn that extra $20 if they only got to keep $13 of it — they would rather earn $100 and take home $75 than earn $120 and take home $88, maybe because there is extra work or risk involved in earning that next $13. As tax rates get higher, the number of people who are unwilling to earn more money if they will have to pay higher rates on that additional income goes up. At a certain point — the tipping point in the curve — cutting tax rates at the top of the scale will persuade enough people to be willing to make more money who otherwise would have refused to do so that the total tax revenues received will go up. Laffer never claimed that tax cuts will always result in increased revenue — it all depends on where you start on the curve. (To see the theory explained in Laffer’s own words, go here .) George H.W. Bush called this “voodoo economics,” and it’s not hard to see why (not that liberals talking about health care reform are above engaging in a bit of voodoo economics of their own.) On the one hand, it’s hard to quibble with Laffer’s contention that many people would decline to earn more money if it were going to be taxed at a rate of 100 percent — it’s what happens at other levels that becomes a matter for speculation, and perhaps some historical evidence. II. What Are Actual Tax Rates? There is something very strange about the way both Democrats and Republicans have been framing the conversation about tax cuts. The question a month ago was whether to retain all of the Bush tax cuts (the GOP’s position), or only those affecting income below $250,00 for a household and $200,00 for an individual. Here’s the strange part. Both sides were framing this in terms of distinguishing among persons, as in “we want a tax cut for the middle class but they want a tax cut for the rich.” But that is simply not true. We are talking about marginal tax rates here. That is, it is not the case that a household making more than $250,000 would pay the old, pre-tax cut rate on all their income, only on income above the $250,000 cap. On all their income up to that limit they would pay the same rate as everyone else. When we say that the top federal income tax rate is 37 percent, we don’t mean that the taxpayers who are in that bracket pay 37 percent in taxes on all their income, only on the income that the earn above the cut-off. The effective tax rates are quite different. Then, of course, there is the matter of the relentless focus on federal income taxes. Leaving aside state and local taxes (a significant omission given the importance of property taxes, state sales taxes, licensing fees, and so on). Focusing only on federal taxes, here are the effective rates as of 2005, according to the Congressional Budget Office. For each of several categories of households, I include the effective rates for all federal taxes, individual income taxes, payroll taxes, and corporate taxes. (I am not including federal excise taxes, which are not significant.) Note that these categories overlap, as the top 1 percent is included in the top 5% percent and so on. – top 1%: all taxes, 31.2%; income tax, 19.4%; payroll taxes, 1.7%; corporate tax, 9.9% – top 5%: all taxes, 28.9%; income tax, 17.6%; payroll taxes, 3.5%; corporate tax, 7.4% – top 10%: all taxes, 27.4%; income tax, 16.0%; payroll taxes, 4.8%; corporate tax, 6.1% – top 20%: all taxes, 25.5%; income tax, 14.1%; payroll taxes, 6.0%; corporate tax, 4.9% – everyone: all taxes, 20.5%; income tax, 9.0%; payroll tax, 7.6%; corporate tax, 3.1% That’s just the effective federal tax rates. A different question is what share of federal tax revenues, in each categories, come from each of these segments of the population? Again, these are 2005 data from the CBO: – top 1%: all taxes, 27.6%; income tax, 38.8%; payroll taxes, 4.0%; corporate tax, 58.6% – top 5%: all taxes, 43.8%; income tax, 60.7%; payroll tax, 14.4%; corporate tax, 74.9% – top 10%: all taxes, 54.7%; income tax, 72.7%; payroll tax, 25.8%, corporate tax, 81.6% – top 20%: all taxes, 68.7%; income tax, 86.3%; payroll tax, 43.6%; corporate tax, 87.8% (Source: Historical Effective Federal Tax Rates, 1979 to 2005 (Congressional Budget Office, December 2007), here . What about fairness? Don’t the highest earners pay more than their share in taxes? The answer is, “yes, by a little bit,” but not nearly as much as most people tend to think. Here is a look at the distribution of wealth, divided into all wealth, non-home wealth (known as “financial wealth”), and income. These data come from a study of 2007 Survey of Consumer Finance conducted by the Federal Reserve: – top 1%: all wealth, 34.6%; non-home wealth, 42.7%; income, 21.3% – top 5%: all wealth: 61.9%; non-home wealth, 71.4%; income, 36.9% – top 10%: all wealth, 73.1%; non-home wealth, 81.5%; income, 46.8% – top 20%: all wealth, 85.1%; non-home wealth, 91.6%; income, 61.4% (Source: Edward N. Wolff, “Recent Trends in Household Wealth in the United States: Rising Debt and the Middle-Class Squeeze–an Update to 2007,” Levy Economics Institute of Bard College working paper, March 2010.) So, for example, in 2006 (located neatly between the two years of the data presented above), the top quintile of households earned 55.7 percent of pretax income and paid 69.3 percent of federal taxes, while the top 1 percent of households earned 18.8 percent of income and paid 28.3 percent of taxes. But note that these last numbers are distorted by the fact they compare income to all taxes, not just taxes on income — If you look at the overall distribution of only federal taxes, the system is slightly progressive, and if you factor in the regressive effects of state and local property and consumption taxes, the entire system is even less progressive than that. III. What Did the Reagan Tax Cuts Actually Do? Historical discussions often lead into an impossible maze of information. For starters, there is the correlation-causation problem (if a tax cut is followed by growth, does that show that the tax cut caused the growth?) Nonetheless, we can at least look at some of the claims being made and try to focus more precisely on the areas of ambiguity. There are four major periods of tax cutting in modern history: the 1920s, the Kennedy administration, the Reagan administration, and the George W. Bush administration. I will focus primarily on the Reagan administration, with a few comments about the very large tax increases that were signed into law by Franklin Roosevelt. We frequently forget that in addition to several tax cuts focusing on income taxes, Reagan also signed off on about a dozen tax increases, primarily on payroll and excise taxes. Measured in dollar value, the tax increases were about half as large as the tax cuts. In one way, this complicates the picture: What if there had been no tax increases? (Or, conversely, what if there had been no tax cuts?) If our question is “what is the effect of tax cuts on economic growth,” this makes things complicated. On the other hand, if our focus is on the effects of tax rates on federal tax revenues — the Laffer Curve claim — we have a genuine experiment: by tracking the tax revenues that flowed in from the increased taxes and the decreased taxes, operating under the same economic conditions, we have an actual empirical test. Another question is how we separate the effects of tax cuts or increases from changes in the overall economy. Again, the fact that these cuts and increases occurred simultaneously helps solve that problem. It is also the case, however, that economists measure the effects of tax rates on revenues in terms of a percentage of GDP rather than in gross dollar amounts. During periods of growth, this begs a very large question: what if economic growth would not have occurred but for the tax cuts in question? On the other hand, Reagan approved both tax cuts and tax increased during a recession. I’ll come back to both of these points in a minute. A. Tax Cuts and Tax Revenue: the Reagan Case The main Reagan tax cut was the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981. That law had a number of elements that were phased in over time, reaching full implementation in 1983. By a nice coincidence, 1983 was also the year in which the most important tax increases took effect (the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility of 1982, raising payroll taxes and certain excise taxes) took effect. Those and other Reagan tax increase were seriously regressive : In 1980, according to Congressional Budget Office estimates, middle-income families with children paid 8.2 percent of their income in income taxes, and 9.5 percent in payroll taxes. By 1988 the income tax share was down to 6.6 percent — but the payroll tax share was up to 11.8 percent, and the combined burden was up, not down. To test the effects of the two laws, I looked at the average for the four years following complete implementation (1983-1986), and compared that to the average for the preceding four years (1979-1982), using data compiled by the Tax Policy Center. The results : – income tax revenues: 1979-82, 9.075% of GDP; 1983-86, 8.05% of GDP (down 11.29%) – payroll tax revenues: 1979-82, 5.925% of GDP; 1983-86, 6.275% of GDP (up 5.5%) – corporate tax revenues: 1979-82, 2.125% of GDP; 1983-86, 1.375% of GDP (down 35%) But actually, the corporate tax cuts took effect in 1982. If we shift the years to that 1982 is included in the post-tax-cut category, the results are even more stark: the average corporate tax revenues from 1979-81 were 2.33% of GDP; from 1982-86 that average falls to 1.4%. And just for comparison, for the four years from 2006-2009, the averages are: – Income tax revenue: 7.65% of GDP – Payroll tax revenue: 6.275% of GDP – Corporate tax revenue: 2.125% of GDP To repeat the point, during the very same years, in the very same economy, tax cuts resulted in a decrease in tax revenues measured as a portion of GDP while tax increases resulted in an increase in tax revenues measured in exactly the same way. Which, of course, leaves the question of the relationship between tax cuts and overall economic growth. B. Tax Cuts and Growth Here, we can range a bit more widely, recognizing that the larger the historical sweep of the discussion the more we are certainly omitting critical variables. Nonetheless, this exercise may be useful as an antidote to the kind of monocausal, ahistorical claims that are sometimes made on behalf of cutting taxes, such as this statement from the Heritage Foundation : There is a distinct pattern throughout American history: When tax rates are reduced, the economy’s growth rate improves and living standards increase…Conversely, periods of higher tax rates are associated with sub par economic performance and stagnant tax revenues…President Hoover dramatically increased tax rates in the 1930s and President Roosevelt compounded the damage by pushing marginal tax rates to more than 90 percent. The preceding discussion was premised on the idea that we should look at tax revenues as a share of GDP. What if, instead, we look at the average annual change in tax collections? Here I do not have data breaking everything down by specifics, but on the other hand we have some long-term historical data which is potentially informative: – FDR 121.3% – Truman, 3.7% – Eisenhower, 2.4% – Kennedy, 4.8% – Johnson, 6.9% – Nixon, 0.3% – Ford, 6.4% – Carter, 3.0% – Reagan, 2.4% (Source: U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Historical Table 2.1, Budget for FY 1997.) That figure for FDR is not a misprint — over 13 years, the total increase in tax revenues was 1,865%. FDR raised the top rate from 25 percent to 91 percent (that rate had been lowered in the 1920s from 75 percent). What about general rates of economic growth? Here are the figures for increase in real GDP during the key years of FDR’s administration, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis: – 1934,+10.9%; – 1935,+8.9%; – 1936, +13.0%; – 1937, +5.1%; – 1938, -3.4%; – 1939,+8.1%. What makes that 1938 figure so interesting is that in 1937, under pressure from conservatives in Congress, Roosevelt cut back on stimulus spending programs. Looking across a range of administrations , we get the following figures for overall economic growth: Kennedy-Johnson (49 percent over eight years), followed by Clinton (34 percent), followed by Reagan (32 percent), Nixon-Ford (24 percent) and Eisenhower (21 percent). IV. Conclusions(?) Actually, there are no clear affirmative conclusions to be drawn here except that we have overwhelming reasons to reject the claims being made by supply-side tax cut enthusiasts. The data certainly do not show that tax cuts never stimulate economic growth, nor even that they never stimulate economic growth enough to pay for themselves — the data on the Kennedy tax cuts suggest that this is exactly what happened. But those were primarily demand-side tax cuts, similar to the tax cuts that were the largest element in Obama’s stimulus package. The supply-sided, Laffer-curved theory of tax cuts as stimulus started out as voodoo economics 30 years ago. Today, Paul Krugman calls them ” zombie ” theories. Which brings us to the question that has been plaguing Hollywood and cable television lately: Just what does it take to kill a zombie?

Read the full article →

Elinor Steele: Talking With Iraq’s Women: Big Dreams and Enormous Challenges

January 31, 2011

In my six years managing worldwide communications for Tupperware, I’ve met with businesswomen from around the globe, from accomplished cosmopolitan women in European capitals to incredibly resourceful women in places like Indonesia and South Africa with no formal education who practically willed themselves to succeed. I’ve always been moved and motivated by these wonderful women, but the women I met — in, of all places, Baghdad — have affected me like few others. First, let me explain what brought me to Iraq. Tupperware CEO, Rick Goings, and I were invited as part of the Department of Defense Task Force for Business and Stability Operations partnering with Business Executives for National Security Delegation. The goal of the delegation was to learn about Iraqi businesswomen, the challenges they face in their country’s rapidly changing (and rapidly growing) economy, and the potential business and investment opportunities there. As studies have repeatedly shown, providing earnings opportunities for women is critical to a country’s growth. The World Economic Forum’s 2009 Global Gender Gap report suggests that closing the gender gap could boost U.S. GDP by as much as 9 percent, European GDP by as much as 13 percent and Japanese GDP by as much as 16 percent. The potential for growth is even greater in developing countries. As the Atlantic pointed out in a powerful article last summer, the greater the economic and political power of women, the greater a country’s economic success. Iraq is an interesting case, because juxtaposed with its long history of empowering women and incorporating them into the traditionally male-dominated Arab society, is a disturbing increase in violence against women since the start of the war. Female Iraqi professionals are often targeted for abduction and murder. Solving this problem will be the first critical step toward the success of women in Iraq, and likely the success of the Iraqi economy as a whole. My natural orientation is to believe that with sheer determination anything is possible. I’ve seen that first-hand working at Tupperware. But seeing the challenges women in Iraq are up against puts my belief to the ultimate test. After 30 years of war, Iraq has become a brown, dusty and fractured country. The infrastructure to rebuild is nearly nonexistent. We stayed in a compound in the international zone. There are heavy and huge metal gates with round-the-clock armed guards — one of many security checkpoints that you must pass through to go in or out of the Green Zone. As many of you know, the Green Zone is a 5.6 sq. mile area in central Baghdad that is the main base for foreign and Iraqi government officials. The official name is the International Zone, or as referred to locally, the IZ. The Red Zone obviously connotes danger, and refers to anything outside the Green Zone — which, in practical terms, is the rest of the country. Parts of the IZ were originally home to the villas of government officials and a number of palaces belonging to Saddam Hussein and his family. It was the center of Ba’athist Iraq. Our visit began with an introductory session during which we spoke with nine Iraqi businesswomen. Nearly all of them own construction or supply businesses that they built through contracts with the American military or American companies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs). I was especially impressed with a strong and confident woman named Azza. Azza returned to Iraq from the United States with her husband in 2004. He is a government official who works on educational partnerships for Iraq and the U.S. She leads training and development seminars aimed at helping small and women-owned Iraqi businesses win contracts. She also coordinates with NGOs to fund Iraqi women’s initiatives. Azza has a bachelor’s degree in business administration and a master’s in information technology, and she is determined to use her knowledge to help Iraqi women develop and grow businesses. Best of all, Azza has been encouraging every woman she meets with to be a leader in her community and to work with other women. This is essentially the model we’ve used to grow the Tupperware business in emerging markets — provide one woman with an earning opportunity that gives her money and self-confidence, then encourage her to serve as a mentor to others so they can achieve the same things. However, Iraq has unique obstacles that could make this model, or any business model, difficult to implement. While the women we met are amazing, this group was much different than businesswomen in other countries, due to the nature of their work. Most of the women’s businesses are heavily dependent on one customer — the U.S. government. Our government is not only the source of much of their income, but also the root of many of their contacts. When the U.S. pulls out of Iraq at the end of the year, most, if not all, of these contacts will disappear and these Iraqi businesswomen will have to transition to either contracting with the Iraqi government or establishing their businesses in the private sector. Two major challenges with this are an inherent distrust of the Iraqi government and the fact that these women aren’t able to find banks to lend them money. There’s a vicious cycle at work here. These businesses can’t transition to the private sector without financing, yet no bank will lend them money without 30 percent collateral and a business plan that demonstrates proof that they can be profitable. We asked why the women we met can’t take the knowledge they gained working with the U.S. government and use it to generate contracts with the Iraqi government. They responded that they don’t know if the Iraqi government will pay on time — or at all. However, they all hope that things will improve with the new government in place and that corruption will decrease. Of course, the problems go deeper than just the business environment. There are social obstacles that must be overcome as well. I’ll talk about those in my next post. In the meantime, I’d love to hear your thoughts on how American businesses can help improve the situation in Iraq.

Read the full article →

Sunshine Heart Appoints New US Board Member

January 31, 2011

Paul Buckman Brings More Than 20 Years of Cardiology Industry Experience

Read the full article →

Video: Chambliss, Warner Discuss U.S. Debt, Deficit Commission

January 31, 2011

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Senators Saxby Chambliss, a Georgia Republican, and Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat, talk about efforts to reduce the federal budget deficit and recommendations by the bipartisan deficit commission. Warner and Chambliss talk with Peter Cook on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (This is an excerpt from the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: U.S, Stocks Rally on Consumer Data, Exxon Mobil Profit

January 31, 2011

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Deborah Kostroun reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks rose, extending the second straight monthly gain for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, as businesses expanded at the fastest pace since 1988 and consumer spending and Exxon Mobil Corp.’s profit beat estimates. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Jodie Allen: Who’s Really to Blame for the Housing Crisis?

January 31, 2011

The nominally bipartisan Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission released its findings last Thursday in tripartite form. One section, the output of the Democratic end of the panel, will focus on the Wall Street and banking sector abuses that contributed to the ongoing crisis. A second take on the troubles, the product of three centrist-leaning Republican panel members, focused on global influences. But the third, by the American Enterprise Institute’s Peter Wallison, repeated the now familiar GOP mantra that the entire blame falls on Democrats and their nurturing of Fannie Mae and its brother-in-housing-market-crime, Freddie Mac. No doubt Fannie and Freddie have plenty to answer for when it comes to squandering taxpayer dollars. But as New York Times columnist Joe Nocera pointed out last month, Wallison’s views on the two government-backed mortgage guarantors have undergone a strange sea change in the last few years. Back in the pre-crisis years of the Bush administration, Wallison would typically fault Fannie and Freddie not for liberal-leaning efforts to encourage home buying among the financially challenged, but for not doing enough to foster widespread home acquisition. A typical Wallison criticism in 2004: “”Study after study have shown that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, despite full-throated claims about trillion-dollar commitments and the like, have failed to lead the private market in assisting the development and financing of affordable housing.” Nor was Wallison, a lonely voice among his fellow conservative Republicans. Here, for example, is Stephen Moore, president of The Club for Growth, a preeminent supporter of supply-side tax cuts, writing on the subject in his 2004 book, Bullish on Bush . “Homeownership is at the heart of the American dream,” Moore wrote, while applauding “the decline in mortgage rates [that] has spurred a boom in refinancing that allowed many families to tap tens of thousands of dollars in equity, while in many cases still lowering their money payments.” Gee, and here I thought all that refinancing played a big role in creating the housing debacle! Quite the opposite, Moore assured us: “The result was an economic stimulus that has played a large part, along with Bush’s tax cuts, in fueling the rapid economic growth of the last two years. But the most important impact of lower mortgage rates is that more Americans are for the first time able to own their own homes.” Very touching. So maybe it wasn’t entirely the fault of those mushy-hearted Democrats after all? In fact, I seem to recall that both Moore and Wallison had far higher-level support for their home-ownership boosterism. Didn’t one George W. Bush, then the nation’s president, spend a fair amount of time on the hustings promoting his “Ownership Society”? Indeed, the very subtitle of Moore’s book asserts that this same Bush plan “will make America stronger.” Well, let’s let the president speak for himself. Here he is at a 2003 dinner in the Wings Over the Rockies Air and Space Museum: “This administration will constantly strive to promote and ownership society in America. We want more people to own their homes. I’m troubled by the fact we have a minority home ownership gap in America…” None of this is to say that measures aren’t needed to restrain the public as well as the private financial sectors. But it might be somewhat easier to enact sensible reforms if the fingers of blame were pointed in a more equitable direction.

Read the full article →

Video: Boksen Says Small-Cap Market `Attractive’ in Long Term

January 31, 2011

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — Bert Boksen, managing director and portfolio manager at Eagle Asset Management Inc., and independent trader Andrew Keene, talk about the outlook for the U.S. stock market. They speak with Matt Miller, Carol Massar, Dominic Chu and Adam Johnson on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Ajami Says Mubarak May Have Triggered Anti-U.S. Terror

January 31, 2011

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — Fouad Ajami, director of Middle East studies at Johns Hopkins University, talks about the anti-Mubarak uprising in Egypt and the outlook for that country’s political future and relationship with the U.S. He speaks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Gates, Buffett Ask India’s Big Shots To Chip In On Polio Eradication

January 31, 2011

Over the next six months, Bill Gates and Warren Buffett will travel to to India to ask top business officials to ante up to end polio. Gates highlighted in his annual letter the $720 million gap in the Global Polio Eradication Initiative. The Gates Foundation will ask Indian billionaires to be part of the Giving Pledge and donate most of their fortunes to charity. As one of the countries with the highest rate of polio transmission, India’s government, alongside the Gates Foundation, is the biggest contributor to wiping out polio . In 2010, India cut cases by 95 percent , and the disease is close to being stamped out, which would make it the second disease in history to be wiped out, after small pox. Gates calls it “good progress” but says there’s still more work to be done. “If eradication fails because of a lack of generosity on the part of donor countries it would be tragic. We are so close, but we have to finish the last leg of the journey.”

Read the full article →

Lori Pottinger: Grand Illusions for African Energy in Davos

January 31, 2011

The ongoing World Economic Forum — the annual gathering of global decision-makers and business leaders — is the place to discuss big ideas for economic development. Some African participants are using the forum to promote the gigantic Grand Inga hydropower dam , proposed for the Congo River in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The South African water minister told a reporter in Davos that “the sooner we do something about [building Grand Inga], the better.” The mantra that this project will “light up Africa” was repeated. No mention was made of the huge risks this dam poses, especially for the people of Congo. DR Congo is one of the world’s riskiest places to invest. To build the world’s biggest dam here and expect it to light the entire continent is like building the world’s biggest nuclear plant in the land of the Taliban — or the world’s biggest medical marijuana farm in Mexico’s borderlands. The great tagline notwithstanding, Grand Inga doesn’t have much of a chance of “lighting up Africa,” much less lighting up Congo. The biggest obstacle to the project succeeding in a way that benefits ordinary Africans is corruption. Decades of plundering state coffers and natural resources in DR Congo have institutionalized corruption. Public officials systematically misuse their offices for private gain. In the mining sector alone, at least $200 million of annual taxes go uncollected due to illicit negotiations and corrupt oversight. And despite the huge power supplies that Inga could generate, most Africans still live too far from national grids to take advantage of a big, centralized project in a faraway country. Building necessary distribution systems to make use of the dam’s electricity would be cost-prohibitive to say the least. If built, the dam will power big mines and industries, not small businesses, homes and hospitals. DR Congo’s state power utility, SNEL, is at this writing on the verge of bankruptcy. The utility has long been marked by corruption and unaccountability. In 2008, two of SNEL’s top directors were interrogated after the disappearance of $6.5 million earmarked for Inga 2 rehabilitation. The scandal triggered a parliamentary inquiry into SNEL’s management and finances. SNEL’s revenues reportedly plunged by 30% thereafter. In a country of 66 million people, currently, less than 6% of DRC’s population uses electricity from the grid. “The challenge for African policy makers who participate in the World Economic Forum is to work out strategies of translating the forum’s initiatives into policies that benefit the ordinary people,” writes Sam Makinda. The US$80 billion Grand Inga would buy a lot of clean cook stoves, micro-hydro turbines, small solar panels, drip-irrigation systems, clean LED lanterns, malaria nets and the like. These are the kinds of investments that would help ordinary Africans. Ritzy Davos might not be the best place to encourage this kind of “small is beautiful” thinking. Maybe future talks on “lighting up Africa” should be held in Kibera, Nairobi’s biggest slum. Or in a typical village, 20 kilometers and a century away from being connected to the electricity grid. Or in a rural hospital, where doctors deliver babies in the dark. Bring your own solar panel and clean cook stove.

Read the full article →

Video: Brandt Warns Investors Not to Overreact to Egypt Unrest

January 31, 2011

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — Cameron Brandt, director of markets research at EPFR Global, discusses the impact of political unrest in Egypt on global fund flows and emerging market investment strategy. Brandt speaks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Robert Stavins: Pursuing Real Environmental Justice in California

January 31, 2011

California Governor Jerry Brown plans to move forward with the implementation of Assembly Bill 32, the Global Warming Solutions Act, under which California seeks to take dramatic steps to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions. Questions have been raised about the wisdom of a single state trying to address a global commons problem, but with national climate policy developments having slowed dramatically in Washington, California is now the focal point of meaningful U.S. climate policy action. California’s Plan A key element of the mechanisms to be used for achieving California’s ambitious emissions reductions will be cap-and-trade, a promising approach with a successful track record, despite its recent demonization as “cap-and-tax” by conservatives and other opponents in the U.S. Congress. Under this approach, regulators restrict emissions by issuing a limited number of emission allowances, with the number of allowances ratcheted down over time, thus assuring ever-larger reductions in overall emissions. Pollution sources such as electric power plants and factories are allowed to trade allowances, and as a result, sources able to reduce emissions least expensively take on more of the pollution-reduction effort. Experience has shown that cap-and-trade programs achieve emissions reductions at dramatically lower cost than conventional regulation. Concerns Yet some groups in California have been very uneasy about the prospect of cap-and-trade. In particular, the Environmental Justice movement has opposed this approach, citing concerns that it would hurt low-income communities. Professor Lawrence Goulder of Stanford University and I addressed such concerns in an article in The Sacramento Bee . One expressed concern has been that a cap-and-trade policy might increase pollution in low-income or minority communities. The apprehension is not about greenhouse gases (the focus of AB 32), since these gases spread evenly around the globe and thus would have no discernible impact in the immediate area. Rather, it’s about “co-pollutants,” such as nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, and particulates, which can be emitted alongside greenhouse gases. Because a cap-and-trade system would reduce California’s overall greenhouse gas emissions, it would also lower the state’s emissions of co-pollutants. Still, it’s possible, though unlikely, that co-pollutant emissions would increase in a particular locality. But here it’s crucial to recognize that existing air pollution laws address such pollutants, and so any greenhouse gas allowance trades that would violate local air pollution limits would be prohibited. If current limits for co-pollutants are thought to be insufficient, the best response is not to scuttle a statewide system that can achieve AB 32′s ambitious targets at minimum cost. Rather, the most environmentally and economically effective way to address such pollution is to revisit existing local pollution laws and perhaps make them more stringent. While much attention has rightly been given to the effects of potential climate policies on environmental conditions in low-income communities, it’s also important to consider their economic impacts on these communities. Reducing greenhouse gas emissions will require greater reliance on more costly energy sources and more costly appliances, vehicles and other equipment. Because low-income households devote greater shares of their income to energy and transportation costs than do higher-income households, virtually any climate policy will place relatively greater burdens on low-income households. But because cap-and-trade will minimize energy-related and other costs, it holds an important advantage in this regard over conventional regulations. Moreover, a cap-and-trade system gives the public a tool for compensating low-income communities for the potential economic burdens: If some emission allowances are auctioned, revenues can be used to mitigate economic burdens on these communities. The Way Forward All in all, cap-and-trade serves the goal of environmental justice better than the alternatives. This progressive policy instrument merits a central place in the arsenal of weapons California employs. Beyond helping the state meet its emissions-reduction targets at the lowest cost, it offers a promising way to reduce economic burdens on low-income and minority communities.

Read the full article →

Top Affiliate Marketer Joins IC Places Board

January 31, 2011

WINTER PARK, FL–(Marketwire – January 31, 2011) – IC Places, Inc. ( OTCQB : ICPA ) ( PINKSHEETS : ICPA ) — IC Places announced today that Affiliate Marketing and SEO guru David Kaye has accepted a two year position on the company’s Board of Advisors. In his role Mr. Kaye will assist the company with enhancing revenues and search engine ranking. Mr. Kaye has the unique ability to understand the psychology of affiliate marketing. His sites, through affiliate programs, send tens of millions of people every month to sites like Amazon and eBay. According to an article on Mr. Kaye in Entrepreneur Magazine he sends as many as 60 million people a month to eBay alone.

Read the full article →

Top Affiliate Marketer Joins IC Places Board

January 31, 2011

WINTER PARK, FL–(Marketwire – January 31, 2011) – IC Places, Inc. ( OTCQB : ICPA ) ( PINKSHEETS : ICPA ) — IC Places announced today that Affiliate Marketing and SEO guru David Kaye has accepted a two year position on the company’s Board of Advisors. In his role Mr. Kaye will assist the company with enhancing revenues and search engine ranking. Mr. Kaye has the unique ability to understand the psychology of affiliate marketing. His sites, through affiliate programs, send tens of millions of people every month to sites like Amazon and eBay. According to an article on Mr. Kaye in Entrepreneur Magazine he sends as many as 60 million people a month to eBay alone.

Read the full article →

Even After Record Growth, Hedge Funds Don’t Pose Risk, Group Says

January 31, 2011

Even as hedge fund assets grew at a record-breaking pace last quarter, no firm is so big that its failure would pose a threat to the financial system, a hedge fund trade group asserts. The comment comes after two regulators — the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission — proposed new rules that would require advisers to hedge funds to regularly disclose financial information to a government watchdog. More than two years after the near-failure of widely interconnected financial firms prompted a taxpayer bailout, many of these firms are larger than ever. But this danger doesn’t apply to hedge funds, the trade group said. “I don’t believe there is a firm that would be systemically relevant today,” Richard Baker, president of the hedge fund industry group Managed Funds Association, told the New York Times . The issue of “systemic risk,” the phenomenon of a firm’s being so large or interconnected that its failure would take down the system, was graphically displayed in the fall of 2008, when the U.S. government gave the financial industry a more than $700 billion taxpayer rescue. While hedge funds were not direct recipients of the bailout, they remain a key component of the financial system, managing trillions in assets. Baker defended the way hedge funds do business, saying transparency is already a central tenet. “Hedge funds are the last corner of financial free market enterprise,” he said, according to the NYT . Even in the wake of the financial crisis, hedge fund growth has broken records. In the fourth quarter of last year, hedge fund assets grew by a record $149 billion, Reuters reported this month. The global industry now manages more than $1.9 trillion. John Paulson , the hedge fund manager who made billions betting against the housing market, reportedly earned roughly $5 billion last year, logging not only a personal best but also a record for the industry. His firm, Paulson & Co., manages $35.9 billion in assets, according to Bloomberg News . A decade before the government bailout of the financial system, Wall Street banks pooled their resources to bail out Long-Term Capital Management, a fund on the verge of failure. If the firm had gone under, banks would have been exposed to “tremendous — and untenable — risks,” writes Roger Lowenstein in the book When Genius Failed . “Undoubtedly, there would be a frenzy, as every bank rushed to escape its now one-sided obligations.”

Read the full article →

Elizabeth Warren: Pricing Needs To Be Clearer

January 31, 2011

WASHINGTON — No tricks. Less fine print. Clearer agreements. That’s how banks should market products to consumers, says Elizabeth Warren, the Harvard law professor in charge of setting up a new federal agency that will police credit cards, mortgages and other financial services. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was created as part of the sweeping overhaul of financial regulations last year known as the Dodd-Frank Act. Proponents said such an agency could have sounded an early warning for the abusive lending practices that precipitated the economic meltdown. It’s not clear when a permanent head will be named to lead the new agency. Warren, a vocal consumer advocate who first championed the creation of the agency, is a possibility but is regarded as a contentious choice. President Obama did not need Senate confirmation when he named her in September as a special adviser to help oversee the creation of the agency. The CFPB won’t be able to exercise its rule-making powers until July 21. In the meantime, Warren has been making key appointments and meeting with banking executives and consumer groups to get the agency up and running. In an interview with The Associated Press, Warren said one of the first goals will be to make the true cost of financial products easier to understand. She said that should eventually drive down prices for consumers. Here is an excerpt: ___ Q: You’ve said improving the disclosure of credit card terms is going to be a top priority. How is the CFPB going to change what’s provided to consumers? A: Think about how long a credit card agreement has become – it’s become pages and pages and pages of largely incomprehensible fine print. In effect, it’s paperwork that says “Don’t read me,” and that’s a real problem. Because hiding in that fine print can be anything. So one of the things we want to push toward is trying to clear out that kind of shrubbery. So that if there are real changes that a company is proposing, they stand out. They’re not camouflaged by all those other words. Q: And what’s the timetable for when consumers can expect to see such changes? A: Well, it’s interesting. I think people are starting to see somewhat clearer disclosures. For example, there are a couple of major credit card issuers who – following our early conversations last fall – went back and voluntarily rewrote their own credit agreements and began to shrink them down. There have been others who’ve advertised their credit products along the lines of “No Tricks,” “Less Fine Print,” “Clearer Agreements.” This agency, even before it has its full legal authority, has driven a conversation and driven a direction for the industry. And it’s toward a better informed customer who can make apples-to-apples comparisons among products. Q: In terms of the required disclosures – do you see new forms replacing the Schumer box, which is already intended to clearly lay out the APR, fees and other terms for a credit card? A: We’re having conversations with credit card issuers right now and talking through what the Schumer box does and how it might be improved. You know, even the Schumer box has gone from smaller and skinnier to longer and more complicated. So I will readily admit it’s an uphill walk to try to get there. But I think we’re developing a path in working with the companies. In terms of a timetable, I just have to remind you. We won’t have legal authority to do anything by way of rule-making authority until after July 21. But we’ve started now with the industry and with consumer groups and with other stakeholders, investors – talking with them, showing them what we have in mind, asking for their input, asking for their data, asking for information. Q: More banks began to cut back on free checking last year in response to new regulations. Do you think further regulation by the CFPB will drive up the price of banking? A: If the consumer knows the price of a good, the risk associated with it, and can make apples-to-apples comparisons, that’s what makes markets work for consumers. They can figure out who’s offering the most expensive product and who’s offering the cheapest product. And I’m of the belief that over time, that’s going to make financial products cheaper for consumers, not more expensive. Q: Online banking is top-of-mind right now. With so many new mobile and online banking options, is the CFPB dedicating a team to ensure these options are safe? A: We’ve organized the new consumer agency to be market facing. That means that we have divisions dealing with (1) revolving debt and credit cards, (2) mortgages and installment loans, like student loans (3) with payments and deposits and (4) credit reporting and (5) debt collection. We want to be a very data driven agency around those five markets. Technology and innovation is hitting all of them. And so a big part of what we’re doing is hiring people who are technology savvy and actually deeply interested in it. Q: Another area the CFPB will be reviewing is services for people who don’t have a bank account. How do you regulate services like payday loans and still ensure people have access to small loans? A: Well you know, access to small dollar loans is critical to many families. The notion that we somehow try to eliminate that, it’s just not going to happen. It can force people into unregulated markets, including “Jimmy the Leg Breaker,” which is not where we want people to be. So it is important from a regulatory standpoint that people are not at the mercy of lenders who build business models around fooling people. They’re drawn in the front door thinking they’re going to pay one price and then beat about the head and ears, financially speaking, so that they’re paying much, much more. On the other hand, there’s a real problem. And that is how to get good, small dollar lending started in areas where there’s great need. Sometimes that’s going to be by community banks. Sometimes it’s going to be by non-bank lenders and sometimes it’s going to be innovations and new technology that’s going to open up markets for the currently underserved population. I anticipate a lot of change in this area. Q: Is the idea to bring the unbanked population into the traditional banking world? Or is there a valid place for services like check cashing? A: I think the traditional banking world concept is going to change over the next 10 years. I think technology changes it and I think the needs of an unmet population (change it). I’m going to take a little bit of a side step from the question. The basic paradigm in which we’ve thought about this is actually starting to break apart.

Read the full article →

Video: Wyman Says Investors See Egypt as a Risk for Markets

January 31, 2011

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — Ann Wyman, head of emerging markets research for Europe at Nomura Holding Inc., talks about the unrest in Egypt and implications for markets. She speaks with Mark Crumpton on Bloomberg Television’s “Bottom Line.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Rajiv Khemani Appointed Chief Operating Officer of Cavium Networks

January 31, 2011

MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA–(Marketwire – January 31, 2011) –   Cavium Networks ( NASDAQ : CAVM ), a leading provider of semiconductor products that enable intelligent processing for networking, communications, and the digital home, announced today the appointment of Rajiv Khemani as Chief Operating Officer of Cavium Networks effective immediately. Mr. Khemani previously served as Vice President and General Manager of Cavium’s Networking and Communications Division. In the expanded role of COO, he will oversee both the Networking and Communications Division and the Broadband & Consumer Division as well as manufacturing operations. He will continue to report to Syed Ali, Chairman, President and CEO.

Read the full article →

Rajiv Khemani Appointed Chief Operating Officer of Cavium Networks

January 31, 2011

MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA–(Marketwire – January 31, 2011) –   Cavium Networks ( NASDAQ : CAVM ), a leading provider of semiconductor products that enable intelligent processing for networking, communications, and the digital home, announced today the appointment of Rajiv Khemani as Chief Operating Officer of Cavium Networks effective immediately. Mr. Khemani previously served as Vice President and General Manager of Cavium’s Networking and Communications Division. In the expanded role of COO, he will oversee both the Networking and Communications Division and the Broadband & Consumer Division as well as manufacturing operations. He will continue to report to Syed Ali, Chairman, President and CEO.

Read the full article →

AUDIO: Dem. Rep: Mortgage Crisis Won’t Be Solved Until Banks Help

January 31, 2011

The financial industry keeps defeating attempts at reform, according to North Carolina Rep. Brad Miller (D – North Carolina). “I have just about pulled my hair out trying,” Rep. Miller said, speaking to MSNBC’s Dylan Ratigan ‘s “Radio Free Dylan” podcast posted today. “But until we get something in place that is not entirely voluntary for the banks, we just are not going to get an orderly resolution of the household debt tied up in mortgages.” The congressman, who represents North Carolina’s 13th District, said the financial industry defeated several attempts at resolving troubled mortgage debt since the housing crisis first took hold. Miller cite the 2009 bankruptcy modification bill, also known as “cramdown,” which would have helped homeowners beat foreclosures through bankruptcy and failed in congress . “And people just feel tormented like they’re a mouse captured by a cat,” Miller told the MSNBC host during the radio discussion. “I mean they are in torment over mortgages they cannot pay and cannot get out of and they keep getting offered modifications that just deal their mis-payments into … the principal.” Many people ended up with modifications they still couldn’t afford, he added. “The Dylan Ratigan Show” is running a weeklong ” No Way To Live” series on the financial crisis and its impact on ordinary Americans, in partnership with The Huffington Post . Check back here regularly for new posts in the series. LISTEN to the broadcast here .

Read the full article →

Marc Van Ameringen: This Generation’s Sputnik Moment

January 31, 2011

Around the world, food prices are surging, with protests breaking out across Northern Africa and the Middle East. Against this backdrop, the scourge of malnutrition continues to ravage more than one billion people globally, contributing to more than three million deaths in children under the age of five each year — a number equal to the entire population of Chicago. Adding up these deaths and the preceding incapacity, malnutrition costs the world billions in lost GDP and productivity each year. For a young child, the impact is more personal. Without adequate nutrition in the first 1000 days of life — from conception to age two — she will lose over 10 percent of her lifetime earnings. During President Obama, State of the Union address this week, he called for recognition of this generation’s “Sputnik moment,” recalling a time when Americans focused their minds and economic resources on creating unrivaled technological breakthroughs in the latter half of the 20th century. And, as much as we need these technological breakthroughs to generate economic opportunity and mitigate the waste of a diminishing supply of natural resources, we must not lose focus on bringing to scale cost-effective solutions available today to mitigate some of the world’s greatest challenges. In my own experience at the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition, I have found the greater challenge is building effective multi-stakeholder platforms that bring together public and private sector actors around a common cause. Developing the skills to work in these diverse, multi-cultural, and often decentralized partnerships takes years of experience and experimentation, but are well worth the effort. For when these multi-stakeholder initiatives work, they transform nations and communities where no single actor has the capabilities to accomplish the goal alone. For example, in less than a decade, through the power of public-private partnerships, GAIN has been able to scale our operations by investing in and working alongside more than 600 companies. In total, this includes 36 large-scale collaborations in 27 countries, reaching almost 400 million people with nutritionally enhanced food products. These investments are not only improving lives, they are returning profits for our private-sector partners, demonstrating the sustainability and cost-effectiveness of our market-based investments. These partnerships cut across geographies and types of organizations. They include pacts with large multinationals, like Cargill India, which currently reaches 25 million people each month with fortified vegetable oil. Meanwhile, fortified Baladi bread in Egypt ensures that 45 million individuals are getting the micronutrients they need to thrive. GAIN also works with regional manufacturers, such as Britannia in India, where more than 600 million people are now being reached with their fortified biscuits and bread products. Finally, our direct investments in both local medium-size enterprises and social mobilization activities have increased both access and demand for these products. In short, global organizations interested in impact should focus less on “whom” and more on “how.” Effective partnerships can involve global partners, local ones, and sometimes both. It’s about determining how to most efficiently accomplish your goal and then dividing responsibility along the lines of who is most capable and can ensure the impact is sustainable. I’ve spent this past week in Davos, Switzerland, where each year, thousands of the world’s leaders in businesses, philanthropy, media, government, and academia, gather for the World Economic Forum to share ideas and makes plans to address the largest opportunities and challenges facing the planet. On this big stage, leaders shared successes ranging from sustainable green technology in remote regions of the world to simple micronutrient solutions to improve the health and well-being of generations. For the newest generation in the developing world, these opportunities are the start of their “sputnik.” We must take these proven and tested cost-effective solutions and scale them to reach every vulnerable woman and child in every corner of the world.

Read the full article →

Dean Baker: Debts Should be Honored, Except When the Money is Owed to Working People

January 31, 2011

This seems to be the lesson that our nation’s leaders are trying to pound home to us. According to the New York Times , members of Congress are secretly running around in closets and back alleys working up a law allowing states to declare bankruptcy. According to the article, a main goal of state bankruptcy is to allow states to default on their pension obligations. This means that states will be able to tell workers, including those already retired, that they are out of luck. Teachers, highway patrol officers and other government employees, some of whom worked decades for the government, will be told that their contracts no longer mean anything. They will not get the pensions that they were expecting. Depending on the specific circumstances, they may find their pensions cut back 20 percent, 30 percent, perhaps even 50 percent. There would be no guarantees if a state goes into bankruptcy. There has been a concerted effort to bash public sector employees by either highlighting the few instances where pensions actually are exorbitant or just making things up. Untruths about Goldman Sachs, General Electric or any other major company rarely appear in the media, and are usually quickly corrected when they do. However, exaggerations or outright fabrication are a standard practice for those who report on state and local budgets when it comes to public employees. The public has been bombarded with stories of public employees retiring with six-figure pensions while still in their early 50s. There may be some instances of such inflated pensions, but that is far from the typical story. If we look to New York State, the hotbed of bloated public budgets, we find that the state’s main retirement system pays an average pension of $18,300 a year . For many workers this is their whole retirement income since they were not covered by Social Security. This is the general story of public pensions. Public sector workers are often better situated than their private sector counterparts, in that they even have pensions. But study after study shows that these workers paid for their pensions with lower wages than their private sector counterparts. It is tragic that so many private sector workers cannot count on a secure retirement, but it won’t help them to make workers in the public sector equally insecure. And, there is the matter of paying debts. State governments are legally obligated to pay retirees the pensions they worked for just like any other debt. It is fascinating to see the interest by many pro-business conservative types in defaulting on this debt. Many of these same people have been determined to argue that homeowners who are underwater in their mortgages should pay their debts. They certainly have not been offering them any assistance in staying in their homes. In fact, back in 2005, some of the same crew were busy re-writing the bankruptcy law. They wanted to make it harder for individuals to get out of their debt through bankruptcy. They felt it was so important the people paid their debts to credit card companies and other lenders that they actually applied the law retroactively. People who took out debt under one set of bankruptcy rules suddenly found that Congress had changed the rules after the fact and they would now be subjected to a much harsher set of bankruptcy rules. Let’s see if we can find a pattern here. When families take out a mortgage in the middle of a housing bubble, which may have been misrepresented at the time of sale, the homeowner has an obligation to repay the money to the bank. When people take on credit card debt, they absolutely have an obligation to repay the bank – even if it means changing the rules after the fact. However, when the government signs a contract with workers, it doesn’t have to pay the workers’ pensions if it proves to be inconvenient. Of course, we may also throw in the fact that when the flood of bad mortgage loans issued by the banks threatened to push them into bankruptcy, the Treasury and the Fed give them trillions of dollars of loans at below market interest rates. There certainly seems to be a pattern here. The story has nothing to do with preferences for the market or government intervention. The picture here is very simple: The rules get changed whenever it is necessary to make sure that money flows upward from ordinary workers to the rich. In 21st century America, upward redistribution seems to be the guiding principle.

Read the full article →

Andrew Winston: Wal-Mart Plays With Our Food

January 31, 2011

Every week, 140 million people — about the population of England and Germany combined — shop in a Wal-Mart store. Soon, all of these people will be eating healthier, and the environmental impact of their food will be lessened. That’s because in recent months, the world’s largest grocer (and company) has started to fundamentally change the food on its shelves. Wal-Mart’s recent announcements continue a five-year campaign to green the supply chain, but they add in some interesting new twists as well. The entire agricultural sector, and everyone who, well, eats, will feel the ripples of these moves. Some of Wal-Mart’s initiatives increase profitability while hitting sustainability goals; for others, the societal benefits are real, but the business benefits are not as clear, at least on the surface. Three initiatives in particular demonstrate a strategic focus on food sustainability. (1) In October, Wal-Mart announced that it would double the amount of locally-sourced produce on its shelves . There’s some legitimate debate about whether shortening distances alone really reduces the environmental footprint (a fascinating new study says that cutting back on meat is far more effective in lowering impact than buying local). But Wal-Mart says the initiative will reduce spoilage and increase shelf-life. Those changes, by reducing the total amount of food needed, will certainly reduce overall environmental impacts throughout the value chain. As is the case with most of Wal-Mart’s sustainability initiatives, this one fits the company’s mission and strategy perfectly. It will reduce environmental impacts, but also reduce logistics and supply chain costs (in part because what’s noticeably absent from this announcement is anything about increasing sales of organic food, which usually costs more). Wal-Mart can pass on these operating savings to customers, so it all fits nicely within the company’s normal business model. But some more recent announcements are not as clear-cut on the business side. (2) Last week, Wal-Mart said it will both lower the prices of fruit and vegetables (saving customers $1 billion) and reduce the amount of saturated fat, sugar, and salt in its private label products . On the latter point, Wal-Mart was not the first to the table, with companies such as Kraft and Pepsi setting similar goals last year. It’s more of a stretch to fit this announcement neatly into a sustainable/profitable business framework. The sustainability benefits are real — on the green side, reducing ingredients like sugar should have sizable ripple effects up the supply chain in saved energy and water. The business benefits are in there also, but are fuzzier. Improving health of course fits a social goal, but it also demonstrates caring for your customers, which can drive loyalty, sales, and brand value. It’s also not purely cheeky to suggest that keeping your customers alive longer, and healthier, will help your bottom line. (3) The third recent announcement falls much more clearly in the pure corporate social responsibility world. In a fascinating display of smart philanthropy, Wal-Mart is helping the hungry by helping food banks lower their energy bills . The company donated $2 million to 16 food banks to, in the company’s words , “upgrade their lighting, refrigeration or heating and air conditioning with equipment that performs better, uses less energy and costs less to operate.” Wal-Mart estimates annual energy savings of $625,000, which will buy 300,000 more meals every year from now on. The $2 million donation is in reality dwarfed by Wal-Mart’s own $2 billion of cash and in-kind donations to reduce hunger. But I hope that this extremely clever model of philanthropy — where you give a gift that keeps on giving — will take hold even more. Lowering the footprint and operating costs for non-profits is pure win-win. In short, as is always the case, sustainability initiatives do not fit neatly into one box within a company. Are they for social good or to make money? The answer is, invariably, yes. Again, pressing its supply chain to do more, faster, is what Wal-Mart has always done, but in recent years the pressure has been focused on sustainability. All these food initiatives expand on that approach, but also show Wal-Mart “walking the walk” and finding opportunities for smart philanthropy to round out the story. It’s a robust strategy for covering many angles on the sustainable food movement. The benefits to all possible bottom lines are substantial. If Wal-Mart and the other companies in its supply chain succeed in reducing fat, sugar, and salt in food; improving access to food for the poor; and sourcing it locally and using less energy to do so, both the planet and its inhabitants will be healthier. This post first appeared at Harvard Business Online .

Read the full article →

iMFdirect: ‘Combination of Worries’ Gets Attention in Davos (Video)

January 31, 2011

Europe’s sovereign debt crisis, fiscal challenges in advanced economies, concerns about overheating in emerging market countries, and the impact of rising food prices. These were the hot topics at this year’s World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and a clear sign of the tensions and risks as the global economy recovers. In an interview from Davos, the IMF’s First Deputy Managing Director John Lipsky tells us that, with the return of global growth, the mood was certainly more optimistic than it was a year or two ago. But there was also a clear sense among delegates that this had not solved some of the world’s important economic problems. These issues echo many of those highlighted in recent updates of the IMF’s World Economic Outlook and Global Financial Stability Report . On the European debt crisis, Lipsky said that delegates “hope the worst is over, but not certain yet.” Markets are looking to see the success of policy programs in some countries and for further action, including on a “so-called comprehensive set of measures to deal with these problems in the future,” he said. As outlined in the latest update of the IMF’s Fiscal Monitor , advanced economies face significant challenges in reducing their budgets over medium-term. For them, Lipsky said, “it’s time to start laying out credible plans.” On the other hand, many emerging market countries have been growing rapidly, but there is now a “combination of worries”–the potential for rising inflation and even overheating, plus the recent run-up in food and energy prices. Perhaps the real worry for the longer-term health of the global economy is that the lingering global imbalances show “no sign” of letting up. So, there is a desire among policymakers to “address the underlying issues that gave rise to these imbalances,” Lipsky said. From iMFdirect blog

Read the full article →

Hagen Realty Group Opens Washington DC Office

January 31, 2011

CARROLLTON, GA–(Marketwire – January 31, 2011) – Industry veteran W. Ronald Evans, CAI-AARE-CES, has joined Hagen Realty Group as vice-president of the firm’s new Washington DC office, which will service the DC and Maryland area.

Read the full article →

Hagen Realty Group Opens Washington DC Office

January 31, 2011

CARROLLTON, GA–(Marketwire – January 31, 2011) – Industry veteran W. Ronald Evans, CAI-AARE-CES, has joined Hagen Realty Group as vice-president of the firm’s new Washington DC office, which will service the DC and Maryland area.

Read the full article →

SS+K Hires Kash Sree as Chief Creative Officer and Partner

January 31, 2011

He Has Been at the Forefront of World-Famous Campaigns for Nike, Lego, Corona Light, Vaseline and Axe

Read the full article →

SS+K Hires Kash Sree as Chief Creative Officer and Partner

January 31, 2011

He Has Been at the Forefront of World-Famous Campaigns for Nike, Lego, Corona Light, Vaseline and Axe

Read the full article →

Leo W. Gerard: Making America the Best Place on Earth to Work

January 31, 2011

Not the wars. Not greenhouse gasses. Not even the deficit. The issue most important to Americans is jobs. Despite that, jobs failed to make an appearance in the State of the Union address. The talk was all about business. Business was doing better. Business needed taxpayers to help pay for research and innovation. Business will get government help to eliminate pesky regulations. Business must have lower taxes. The most telling statement was this: “We have to make America the best place on Earth to do business.” Especially because it wasn’t matched by a companion: “We have to make America the best place on Earth to work.” The speech expressed a policy in which business is the focus of government, taking precedence over workers. The American colonists created a government for their own benefit; they did not constitute an agent to serve business. A policy giving corporations primacy is risky for American workers. The state of the union noted that happy days are here again for corporations and banks: “Two years after the worst recession most of us have ever known, the stock market has come roaring back. Corporate profits are up. The economy is growing again.” Never mentioned, however, were the 14.5 million unemployed Americans, the sustained record rate of foreclosure , and the increasing poverty and food bank reliance among citizens of the richest nation in the world. The state of the union outlined a plan under which the government will coddle corporations, essentially proving companies government welfare using American workers’ tax dollars. If businesses create jobs for workers as a result, fine. If they don’t, there’s no plan to exact a penalty. For example, under the policy described in the speech, American workers will fork over tax dollars to pay for research and development for businesses that are sitting on a record $1.8 trillion in cash reserves — hoarding it rather than creating jobs. The president said: “Two years ago, I said that we needed to reach a level of research and development we haven’t seen since the height of the Space Race. And in a few weeks, I will be sending a budget to Congress that helps us meet that goal. We’ll invest in biomedical research, information technology, and especially clean energy technology — an investment that will strengthen our security, protect our planet, and create countless new jobs for our people.” Maybe it will create new jobs. Hopefully. But no guarantees were offered. Mentioned as a business success story in the speech was a Michigan company, Luma Resources, which began manufacturing solar shingles with the help of a $500,000 government grant. It created 20 jobs , $25,000 a job. American taxpayers might think that’s a little pricey, but what’s worse is the potential for Luma Resources to go the way of Evergreen Solar, squandering the corporate welfare. Evergreen, the third largest maker of solar panels in the U.S. and recipient of at least $43 million in corporate welfare, announced earlier this month it would close its main American factory in Massachusetts and move manufacturing to China. Eight hundred Americans will lose their Evergreen jobs by April. Evergreen officials said China will give the company even higher amounts of corporate welfare, which, of course, makes sense since China is not a capitalist country. Its economy is government controlled. And that government routinely violates international trade regulations – by providing banned subsidies to industries and by deliberately devaluing its currency. No matter how better educated American workers get. No matter how much more innovative. No matter how much more productive. No matter how many tax dollars the government spends on research and development, if the corporations that benefit move manufacturing overseas, the American workers who paid for it will suffer. In fact, it’s more than suffering; it’s betrayal by their government that provided tax benefits to companies for off-shoring jobs. It is betrayal by their government that fails to stop violations of trade laws by countries like China that lure away firms like Evergreen. At the end of the State of the Union speech, the president said: “From the earliest days of our founding, America has been the story of ordinary people who dare to dream.” An ordinary American dreams of a family-supporting job, owning a home, saving enough to pay for a child’s college education, helping to build a safe community. Corporations aren’t Americans, no matter how often the U.S. Supreme Court grants them rights that the U.S. Constitution guarantees to human beings. Businesses aren’t citizens. Their allegiance isn’t to America. It’s to profits. They dream only of dollars. They concede no responsibility to family, community or country. They were not included when the president said: “Tucson reminded us that no matter who we are or where we come from, each of us is a part of something greater — something more consequential than party or political preference. We are part of the American family.” The top priority of the American government must be making America the best place on Earth for Americans. If that’s good for corporations, great. The government must never place American citizens second.

Read the full article →

Largest Nevada Casinos Lose $3.4B During Fiscal 2010

January 31, 2011

LAS VEGAS — Nevada’s largest casinos lost $3.4 billion during the fiscal year that ended June 30, cutting costs by nearly $4.5 billion to help narrow losses from an even worse stretch in late 2008 and early 2009, state gambling regulators said Monday. During the year that ended June 30, 2009, the largest casinos in the Silver State lost nearly $6.8 billion. The Nevada Gaming Control Board said in its Gaming Abstract on Monday that the 256 casinos that grossed at least $1 million in gambling revenue combined for nearly $21 billion in total revenue, including money earned from hotel rooms, restaurants, bars and other sources. That was down more than 5 percent compared with just over $22 billion taken in by 260 large casinos in fiscal 2009, regulators said. The report said 76.2 percent of the total gambling revenue came from 68 casinos owned by publicly-traded companies. The casinos paid $777.6 million in taxes – 7.8 percent of their gambling revenue, the report said. Gambling revenue made up nearly $10 billion, 47.5 percent of casinos’ total revenue. Most of the cost cuts – nearly $4 billion – came from general and administrative expenses, which were 25.8 percent less in fiscal 2010 than in fiscal 2009. Casino, food and other expenses were also down, while room and bar expenses rose. The largest 148 casinos in Clark County, Nevada’s most populous county which includes Las Vegas, lost $3.36 billion and generated $18.2 billion in total revenue, the report said. On the Las Vegas Strip, casinos lost $2.57 billion on revenue of $13.3 billion. In Washoe County, which includes Reno, 31 casinos combined to lose $27.5 million on revenue of $1.5 billion. Only large casinos in Elko County, Laughlin – a Colorado River resort town 100 miles south of Las Vegas near the Arizona border – and other places not classified by region showed profits.

Read the full article →

Rep. Brad Miller: Republican Amnesia on the Financial Crisis

January 31, 2011

Sometimes party loyalty asks too much, even among today’s rigidly unforgiving Republicans. In December, the four Republicans on the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) appeared to accept the Republican agitprop explanation, or “narrative,” of the financial crisis: government regulators, under pressure from liberal Democrats like Barney Frank and Maxine Waters, bullied banks into making foolish, “politically correct” loans so poor folks could buy homes that they couldn’t afford. But when the FCIC issued its final report last week, three of the four Republican commissioners flinched, apparently unwilling to sacrifice forever their scholarly reputations to the cause of partisan hackery. Instead, the three Republican commissioners argued that the financial crisis was caused by a combination of dimly understood macroeconomic forces, an unforeseeable “perfect storm.” Was this crisis preventable? ” We don’t know ,” said Republican FCIC commissioner Keith Hennessy. That argument has also been justly mocked by economics bloggers as “hoocoodanode?” (“Who could have known?”), but is far less laughable. Only one commissioner, Peter Wallison, stuck with the Republican agitprop narrative. Republican politicians with little scholarly reputation to protect are undeterred , of course, by the defection of three of the four Republican FCIC commissioners or by the repeated demolition of the narrative by economists. But here’s a question Republicans in Congress don’t want to hear: why haven’t they reminded us that they warned before the financial crisis that subprime mortgages would come to grief? And why haven’t banks, happily exculpated by the narrative, reminded us that they warned at the time that they were being forced to make foolish loans that would endanger their solvency? The answer is simple: the Republican narrative was created from scratch after the financial crisis. During the height of subprime lending, the lending industry, conservative commentators and Republican politicians celebrated subprime mortgages as the triumph of the innovation that comes from unfettered capitalism. Subprime mortgages, they said, made homeownership possible for millions of American families who could never own their own home under the dreary, stultifying rules that Democrats like me proposed. Robert Crouch testified at a congressional hearing on behalf of the Mortgage Bankers Association on November 5, 2003. Crouch said that “through innovations in the mortgage finance industry, and through various financing and risk enhancing tools created for the specific purpose of extending credit to our more needy communities, credit-impaired individuals now have ample opportunity to obtain loans through this ‘non-prime,’ or ‘sub-prime’ market.” The growth of the subprime market, Crouch said, “disproportionately benefited low-income and minority borrowers, as these groups are much more likely to rely on subprime credit. One clear and visible outcome has been an increase in homeownership rates for low-income and minority borrowers.” William M. Dana testified at a congressional hearing on March 30, 2004, on behalf of the American Bankers Association. Dana said that “the ABA believes that the development of the subprime market has been a positive development for American consumers.” Market innovation “has made credit available to many consumers who had previously been left out of the marketplace,” he said. “The development of the subprime market has assisted those borrowers tremendously.” What Republican politicians said was so similar it was almost like bank lobbyists wrote their remarks for them. “I need not remind my colleagues on the committee that Americans currently enjoy the highest rate of homeownership in the history of America,” Congressman Jeb Hensarling said at a congressional hearing on May 24, 2005. “The benefits of free enterprise and competition have been plentiful. With the advent of subprime lending, countless families have now had their first opportunity to buy a home or perhaps be given a second chance. The American dream should never be limited to the well-off or those consumers fortunate enough to have access to prime rate loans.” Nor was there a discouraging word about subprime mortgages from conservative commentators. The Republican narrative puts much of the blame for the financial crisis on the Community Reinvestment Act (“CRA”), a 1977 civil rights law aimed at “redlining.” At the time, banks literally drew red lines on city maps around neighborhoods in which they would not lend. But in 2000, the conservative CATO Institute published an article that said “CRA” should stand for “Community Redundancy Act.” The article argued that “progress predicated on technology, financial innovation, and competition — not CRA — has broadened the U.S. financial marketplace,” including lending in neighborhoods that had once been redlined. If a lender discriminated against a low-income neighborhood, “the profit motive would lead another lender to move in and fill the void.” It’s true that Republicans were critical of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the principle culprits in the Republican agitprop narrative. But Republicans’ criticism was that Fannie and Freddie weren’t buying enough mortgages for riskier, low-income borrowers. Fannie and Freddie were shareholder owned corporations run for a profit, but they began as government agencies that bought mortgages from banks so banks could lend more money and more families could buy homes. Both were “privatized” in the sixties, and both did very well by doing good. In 2001, Fannie was 13 and Freddie was 18 on Fortune Magazine’s list of the most profitable corporations. But by the nineties, Fannie and Freddie did not have the business of buying mortgages to themselves. Others in the industry were also buying mortgages and selling mortgage-backed securities, also quite profitably. The competition was bitter. Fannie’s and Freddie’s competitors argued that despite the subsidy from the government’s implicit guarantee, Fannie and Freddie were neglecting affordable housing for low-income Americans for the sake of profits. Fannie’s and Freddie’s competitors urged that Fannie’s and Freddie’s business be largely limited to affordable housing for low-income borrowers. Republican criticism of Fannie and Freddie was part of an internecine battle in the financial industry between Fannie and Freddie on one side, and their competitors, companies like AIG and Lehman Brothers, on the other. Fannie’s and Freddie’s competitors — and their Republican allies — argued that Fannie and Freddie had an “implicit guarantee” from the federal government that amounted to an unfair subsidy. Peter Wallison (yes, same guy) wrote an article in the American Banker on March 3, 2006 opposing an increase in the “conforming loan” limit that was typical of the criticism of Fannie and Freddie at the time. Fannie and Freddie were already “doing less than conventional lenders in helping the underserved,” Wallison said. Fannie and Freddie “only provided about 4% of credit going to minority borrowers.” Rather than compete with other lenders for profitable mortgages for upper-income borrowers, “Fannie and Freddie should do a much better job of providing affordable home financing to a neglected portion of the mortgage market.” If political bullying is to blame for Fannie’s and Freddie’s conduct, Republicans were at least equally guilty. The financial crisis occurred seven years and eight months into a Republican administration that let the financial industry write its own rules. A narrative of the financial crisis that absolves Republicans and the financial industry requires an acrobatic and brazen imagination. Believing the narrative requires willful amnesia.

Read the full article →

Vending Machines: The Latest Recession Victim

January 31, 2011

Vending machine thefts are rocketing, thanks to hard times. Criminal gangs in Georgia, South Carolina, Mississippi and New York are targeting vending machines according to the Wall Street Journal. Although vending machine owners factor in the assumption that 3 percent of sales will disappear thanks to sticky-fingered employees and petty thefts, the problem is getting worse, according to the WSJ , with criminals using welding torches and bolt cutters to break into machines. “My sense is that theft is on the rise as there are so many people in desperate times,” Mark Manney, chief executive of Loss Prevention Results Inc., told the WSJ . Vending machine operators told the WSJ that the trend was exacerbated by several instructional videos on YouTube offering vending machine-looting expertise. The snack attacks come as vending machine sales fall. According to figures from trade magazine Automatic Merchandiser , U.S. sales fell 10 percent, from $22 billion in 2008, to almost $20 billion in 2009. With razor thin profit margins of 1 percent, every theft makes a difference, and with thefts usually amounting to just a few dollars, cops stay away. The WSJ reports on vending machine owners who are responding with wireless security systems that can send mid-heist alerts. One such owner, Marcus Whitener, retrofitted 4,000 of his vending machines with wireless devices: When a vending door is opened at unauthorized times or power is cut, Mr. Whitener receives a text message and email. Within nine months of installing the systems, Mr. Whitener said, seven of his 25 route drivers quit or were fired. Five quit after he started asking questions about cash shortages.

Read the full article →

Bob Meighan: Free Tax Prep to Help You Get and Save More

January 31, 2011

As W-2s begin arriving in mailboxes around the country, American consumers’ thoughts turn to taxes. It’s no wonder. It’s estimated that taxpayers spend more than 3.5 billion hours and almost $30 billion annually to comply with Uncle Sam. But today, there are more free tax preparation options available than ever before, significantly reducing the burden on U.S. taxpayers. Free tax preparation is available for millions of taxpayers, including low and middle-income filers, those on active military duty and those who file simple tax returns, like a 1040EZ. Through the IRS Free File Program, 70 percent of all taxpayers — about 95 million people — can get free online tax preparation and e-filing. The Free File program is a public-private partnership between the federal government and about 20 private tax preparation companies. People with an adjusted gross income (AGI) of $58,000 or less can select from more than a dozen online tax preparation services. Additionally, anyone, regardless of their income, can use the Free File Fillable Forms at www.irs.gov . It’s a free, simple forms utility that’s basically the electronic equivalent of a paper 1040 along with associated schedules and forms. Intuit has supported this program for nearly a decade. In that time, the company has donated more than 22 million federal and state tax returns to low and middle-income taxpayers. For tax year 2010, anyone who qualifies for the Earned Income Tax Credit, or is on active duty military with an AGI of $58,000 or less, or has an AGI of $31,000 or less can use TurboTax Online Tax Freedom Edition through the Free File program. Additionally, through the IRS web site, TurboTax offers free state tax preparation to qualified taxpayers who file returns in 21 states: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia and West Virginia. Many commercial tax software providers also offer free federal tax preparation and e-filing to those with simple returns through their web sites. This is a smart option for people with simpler returns who can save money by doing their own taxes. In fact, last year, taxpayers who filed a 1040A or 1040 EZ paid an estimated $2.5 billion in preparer fees. These taxpayers could have easily and accurately done their taxes themselves with software for a fraction of the cost, saving an estimated $1.5 billion. With all these options available, don’t wait. See if you’re eligible for free tax filing at www.taxfreedom.com . Take advantage of the many ways that filing your taxes can be easy — and maybe free. As vice president for consumer advocacy for Intuit’s TurboTax business, Bob Meighan works with customers to help ensure TurboTax products meet their needs. A Certified Public Accountant, Meighan holds a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of North Carolina.

Read the full article →

IMVU Named Red Herring Global 100 Tech Startup

January 31, 2011

Popular Online Social Entertainment Destination Also Promotes Kevin Henshaw to VP of Business Development and Announces Key Statistics for Its Virtual Goods Catalog

Read the full article →

IMVU Named Red Herring Global 100 Tech Startup

January 31, 2011

Popular Online Social Entertainment Destination Also Promotes Kevin Henshaw to VP of Business Development and Announces Key Statistics for Its Virtual Goods Catalog

Read the full article →

Alan Zucker Promoted to Senior VP of IMG Clients Group

January 31, 2011

Manages Some of the Most Iconic Names in Sports and Entertainment

Read the full article →

ColoHouse Appoints Vice President of Sales and Marketing

January 31, 2011

ColoHouse Expands Its Leadership Team to Optimize Its Growth, Providing Customers With an Enterprise-Class Data Center, Innovative Products and Excellent Customer Service

Read the full article →

Miles Hall Named Principal at McKeon Meunier

January 31, 2011

Atlanta IP Law Firm Elevates Associate to Partner Position

Read the full article →

‘The Watchdog’: Raw Milk Is A Cosmetic? FX Fraud May Be Next Big Scandal

January 31, 2011

Welcome to our new blog, “The Watchdog,” which will keep a close eye on regulatory agencies and how their actions impact the lives of everyday Americans. Though the rules and regulations they write — from determining how much arsenic is allowable in your drinking water to whether your favorite TV show can drop the F-bomb in primetime – affect all of us, their deliberations and the way that lobbyists influence their decisions receives very little coverage. To make sense of these debates, follow the implementation of health care reform and financial reform and decipher the minutia of the Federal Register, “The Watchdog” is on the case. If you have any tips or suggestions, send them to marcus@huffingtonpost.com .

Read the full article →

Timberlake Energy Solutions Inc. Appoints Interim Management to Assume Corporate Operations

January 31, 2011

OVERLAND PARK, KS–(Marketwire – January 31, 2011) – Timberlake Energy Solutions Inc. ( PINKSHEETS : TLKE ) regretfully confirms that company president Robert “Bob” Edward Bowersock, 74, passed away on Dec 21, 2010 after battling cancer. Bob was born on Valentine’s Day 1936 in Parkersburg, WV.

Read the full article →

10 Industries In Which The U.S. Is No Longer No.1

January 31, 2011

Americans are used to being No.1 in nearly all the world’s businesses, and athletic endeavors. The foundation of that certainly began to erode in the 1970′s, when much of America’s manufacturing industry started to move overseas.  Many U.S. companies wanted to cut costs, including high-priced manufacturing jobs. That contributed to the rise of the Japanese and, more recently, the Chinese economies. As U.S. manufacturing eroded,  so did other critical parts of society. American children are no longer the best educated in the world. America’s health care system no longer produces the healthiest population. US GDP no longer grows as quickly as it once did, particularly in the recoveries that follow recessions. China now has the fastest growing large economy in the world. It has passed Japan into the No.2 spot and economists are forecasting how long it will take to pass the US.

Read the full article →

TBA Global Names Joseph Lugo as New Chief Financial Officer

January 31, 2011

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwire – January 31, 2011) – TBA Global , a leading engagement marketing and communications agency, today announced that Joseph Lugo has joined the company as Chief Financial Officer. He joins TBA Global from Interbrand, where he worked as a CFO since 2009. Prior to that, he served as VP of Finance in Europe, for Saatchi & Saatchi Worldwide.

Read the full article →

Chevron Leaving Coal Mining Industry

January 31, 2011

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Petroleum giant Chevron Corp. said Friday it plans to get out of the coal industry by the end of the year. The decision came after the company determined that new coal technologies were developing too slowly to make staying in the industry a good strategy, Chevron Mining Inc. spokeswoman Margaret Lejuste said. One of the technologies is known as coal-to-liquids, in which coal is processed into diesel, gasoline or other fuels. “Those technologies are so far into the future, 10 to 15 years in the future, they made the strategic decision to focus on other operations other than mining,” she said of the company. Chevron intends to sell off three coal mines in Wyoming, New Mexico and Alabama. The sites include the company’s open pit mine outside Kemmerer in western Wyoming, which has been on the market for about a week. “It’s my understanding there are a number of interested parties who are looking at the mine,” Lejuste said. The company also is closing a deal with Tampa, Fla.-based Walter Energy to sell its North River underground mine in western Alabama. A tentative agreement with Walter Energy was announced last year. San Ramon, Calif.-based Chevron also may sell reclaimed land from a surface coal mine in northwestern New Mexico that has been closed since 2009. The three mines together produced nearly 10 million tons of coal in 2009. Chevron also intends to sell its 50 percent stake in a proposed coal mine outside Sheridan in northern Wyoming. The Kemmerer mine, which employs about 300 people and produces around 5 million tons of coal a year, is one of the world’s largest open pit coal mines. Even so, it’s a small producer compared with the strip mines of northeast Wyoming, which can yield upward of 100 million tons of coal a year. Wyoming produces 40 percent of the nation’s coal, more than any other state, and has invested heavily in coal technologies. Coal-to-liquids should be viable at today’s oil prices, said Mark Northam, director of the University of Wyoming School of Energy Resources. But questions remain about the performance and long-term viability of coal-to-liquids plants, Northam said. “Some folks can stomach that uncertainty and some can’t,” he said. A company such as Chevron has other business besides coal to fall back on, he said, whereas a company such as St. Louis-based Arch Coal is all about coal. Arch Coal has invested in a planned $2.7 billion coal-to-liquids plant tentatively set to open in southeast Wyoming in 2014. “If you were looking at it from the point of view of Arch Coal, where coal is your product and you’re looking to expand the market and protect its position, you would have a different view,” Northam said.

Read the full article →

More Judges Halting Foreclosure Proceedings In Fraud Search

January 31, 2011

Three Ohio judges are forcing lawyers to double-check foreclosure documents. Judges in Franklin County, Ohio, are making lawyers verify documents for residential foreclosures, and asking lawyers to sign certifications that verify that clients said the documents were accurate . The Columbus Dispatch reports: The judges told the lawyers that they must “personally certify the authenticity and accuracy of all documents” in support of a residential-foreclosure filing. If a lawyer doesn’t comply, the judge will not grant a motion for default or summary judgment, but will instead schedule the case for trial. Lawyers are arguing that the order forces them to reveal communications protected by attorney-client privilege, and are fighting the order, the paper said. “Before we sign off on foreclosures, we want to make sure we are diligent in confirming the accuracy of those filings,” judge Kimberly Cocroft told the Dispatch . “It’s a life-changing event.” The move is a response to families being fraudulently foreclosed on, after it was revealed that mortgage providers and law firms failed to follow procedures. Bank employees in mortgage departments inundated with foreclosures say they signed foreclosure affidavits without reviewing the cases, or in some cases, without even looking at the documents — earning the label ” robo-signers .” In October, regulators from all 50 states launched an investigation into possibly deceptive foreclosure practices that may have illegally evicted families from their homes. The investigation has found families who were not in default foreclosed on, and lenders foreclosing on loans they did not hold. Lawyers in New York State have been required to check that foreclosure documents are accurate since October. In Nevada, judges are blocking foreclosures by Bank of America-owned companies after complaints that homes are being fraudulently foreclosed on.

Read the full article →

David Lam Joins MicroProbe’s Board of Directors

January 31, 2011

SAN JOSE, CA–(Marketwire – January 31, 2011) – MicroProbe, a leading supplier of wafer test technology to the global semiconductor industry, today welcomed Dr. David Lam to the Board of Directors of its parent company, Astria Semiconductor Holdings. Best known for founding semiconductor capital equipment giant, Lam Research, Dr. Lam now heads a Silicon Valley-based investment and advisory firm for high-tech companies. Lam rounds out a Board which also includes Trevor Loy of Flywheel Ventures, Gidu Shroff, formerly of Intel Corporation, David Millet of Gemini Investors, and MicroProbe CEO, Dr. Mike Slessor.

Read the full article →

Chile-IT Announces New CEO and Expands Executive Team

January 31, 2011

IT Veteran Carlos Fernandez to Lead Chilean IT Organization, Chad Walter to Develop Partnerships to Drive Further Growth

Read the full article →

Pacific Biomarkers Names Sheri’ DuMond as Its New Director of Business Development

January 31, 2011

SEATTLE, WA–(Marketwire – January 31, 2011) – Pacific Biomarkers, Inc. (PBI) ( OTCBB : PBMC ), a provider of biomarker laboratory services to the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and diagnostics industries, has promoted Sheri’ DuMond to Director of Business Development following her role as Senior Associate Director of Business Development at PBI.

Read the full article →

Pacific Biomarkers Names Sheri’ DuMond as Its New Director of Business Development

January 31, 2011

SEATTLE, WA–(Marketwire – January 31, 2011) – Pacific Biomarkers, Inc. (PBI) ( OTCBB : PBMC ), a provider of biomarker laboratory services to the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and diagnostics industries, has promoted Sheri’ DuMond to Director of Business Development following her role as Senior Associate Director of Business Development at PBI.

Read the full article →