October 2011

Thailand leaves interest rate at 3.5%

October 19, 2011

Thailand leaves interest rate at 3.5%

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Goldman posts deeper-than-expected Q3 loss

October 19, 2011

Goldman posts deeper-than-expected Q3 loss

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Portugal may not meet 2011 deficit target: Rehn

October 19, 2011

Portugal may not meet 2011 deficit target: Rehn

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Gas beating oil in shipping as users expand stockpiles

October 19, 2011

Gas beating oil in shipping as users expand stockpiles

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Feminist Author Naomi Wolf Detained At Occupy Wall Street Protest

October 19, 2011

NEW YORK — Feminist author Naomi Wolf has been taken into custody by police at an anti-corporate greed protest outside an award ceremony held to honor New York’s governor. Wolf and a companion were handcuffed outside Skylight Studios in Manhattan where Gov. Andrew Cuomo was to accept the “Game Changer of the Year Award” from The Huffington Post. She was detained after ignoring police warnings to stay off the street in front of the building where the awards ceremony was being held and where a crowd of about 50 Occupy Wall Street protesters were rallying. Charges Wolf might face were unclear. Most people detained during the protests have been arrested on misdemeanors. Wolf is a political activist and author of the best-selling book “The Beauty Myth.” She also blogs for The Huffington Post.

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An old carousel’s new life by the Brooklyn Bridge

October 19, 2011

An old carousel’s new life by the Brooklyn Bridge

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US Cree Inc Q1 net income drops 78% to USD12.8m

October 19, 2011

US Cree Inc Q1 net income drops 78% to USD12.8m

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Euro rescue in jeopardy on French credit review

October 19, 2011

Euro rescue in jeopardy on French credit review

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Two escaped zebras return to exhibit at Boston zoo

October 19, 2011

Two escaped zebras return to exhibit at Boston zoo

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Thai city offers bounty for fugitive crocodiles

October 19, 2011

Thai city offers bounty for fugitive crocodiles

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China police arrest man for hugging wife-to-be

October 19, 2011

China police arrest man for hugging wife-to-be

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Brothers charged with stealing US bridge

October 19, 2011

Brothers charged with stealing US bridge

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Michele Bachmann: ‘I Want To Completely Abolish The Tax Code’

October 19, 2011

During Tuesday night’s GOP presidential debate on CNN, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) said the tax code needs to be entirely rewritten and replaced with a system where everyone pays federal income taxes, regardless of how much money they make. “I believe absolutely every American benefits by this magnificent country,” she said. “Absolutely every American should pay something, even if it’s just a dollar.” Of course, all Americans do pay some form of tax, whether in the form of payroll taxes, sales tax, or various other fees. But Bachmann said the government needs to throw out its tax code and rewrite it completely so that all residents pay the same rate. “I want to completely abolish the tax code,” she said. “I want to flatten the tax for all Americans. Simplify the tax for all Americans.”

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Intel’s Q3 net income up 17% to USD3.47b

October 19, 2011

Intel’s Q3 net income up 17% to USD3.47b

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Turkey- PKK suspected in deadly Turkey blast that killed 8

October 19, 2011

Turkey- PKK suspected in deadly Turkey blast that killed 8

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Apple’s Q4 net income surges 54%

October 19, 2011

Apple’s Q4 net income surges 54%

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Pakistani PM Lays Foundation Stone of Bhasha Dam

October 19, 2011

Pakistani PM Lays Foundation Stone of Bhasha Dam

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S. Korea, Brazil to Hold Talks to Boost Economic Cooperation

October 19, 2011

S. Korea, Brazil to Hold Talks to Boost Economic Cooperation

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India Urges Europe, US. to Resolve Debt Mess

October 19, 2011

India Urges Europe, US. to Resolve Debt Mess

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Moody’s lowers Spain’s debt ratings to A1

October 19, 2011

Moody’s lowers Spain’s debt ratings to A1

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Japan PM says free trade deals needed for growth

October 19, 2011

Japan PM says free trade deals needed for growth

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AmeriGas to acquire propane unit for $2.9 billion

October 19, 2011

AmeriGas to acquire propane unit for $2.9 billion

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US- Citigroup reports $3.8 Billion net income for third-quarter

October 19, 2011

US- Citigroup reports $3.8 Billion net income for third-quarter

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Rev. Dr. Katharine Rhodes Henderson: Helping Each Other Find The Way At Occupy Wall Street

October 19, 2011

“How can there be a march and I’m not there?” This was the question that came from my mother, a feisty but proper Southern lady, when I told her I was headed downtown to see Occupy Wall Street for myself. Her question was rhetorical since being in such a crowd would have exceeded the limits of her strength. And yet, it is what she, a civil rights activist in her day, has been asking for some time now: “How long will it be before people are marching in the street?” Marching for her was a default in times of national crisis, an appropriate collective cry of anguish “when the earth groans in travail and we ourselves” (Romans 8:22-23) and, in the same moment, an opportunity to draw energy and courage from the shared experience of being together. “You make the way by walking,” the saying goes. My mother, a Depression baby, remembers meeting her father on the streets of Wilmington, N.C., right after the 1929 stock market crash, when he reported that $100 was all the money they had. She knows something of the fear and want that many Americans are experiencing today. I guess it’s in my DNA because at Occupy Wall Street I found the crowd energizing and welcoming. “Tell me what democracy looks like?” “This is what democracy looks like,” was the through line of the chants and songs. And it was an apt description: a panoply of marchers of all colors and sizes, union members, nurses, students and organizers, talking about living wages, tax codes, corporate greed and the observation on a poster held by children who seemed to know from firsthand experience that “shelters are not family friendly.” The crowd was purposeful but not goal oriented, which seems right given the complexity of our current situation to which there are no easy solutions. We are beyond winnowing it all quickly down to bullet points and a neat list of demands. And it was heartening that though movements are aided by Facebook and Twitter, people need to be together in real time. What I fantasized about mid-march was a surprise appearance by Warren Buffet. I am aware that some of those who have made their millions on Wall Street have actually traveled to Occupy Wall Street, perhaps incognito. And I have spoken to other Wall Street people who are fearful, curious, disdainful or defensive about Occupy Wall Street, not knowing how to engage it. Many across the economic spectrum are wrestling with how to find our way back to valuing the public good over individualism; a just economy over unbridled greed; compassion enacted through public policy. The Christian tradition offers insight into the proper relationship to wealth: No one can serve two masters; for a slave will either hate the one and love the other, or be devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon.” Wealth is not to be hoarded, either by individuals or institutions, but used productively for the common good. In a world of enormous poverty, wealth is relative, and we all have to make peace with how we define generosity individually and how we enact justice collectively. Whatever you think about Occupy Wall Street, people are talking about it — a lot. This was true for my colleague and her husband. Their conversation with their two kids was how was it that Dad was working on Wall Street when Mom was marching in Occupy Wall Street? It made for a complex, ethical, soul-deep conversation at the breakfast table. My hope is that the protest will be a rallying cry for all Americans to remind us of our shared values, not simply the occasion for replicating the political polarization that already grips our country, our neighborhoods and even our families. At a time when there are 46.2 million people in the U.S. living in poverty , we cannot afford to demonize, stereotype and dismiss each other. We need everyone to come to Liberty Square and help each other find our way to a future where abundance is shared, no one is in need and the future looks brighter than today.

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Apple Slams iPhone Rumors

October 19, 2011

By Poornima Gupta and Edwin Chan SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Apple Inc stunned Wall Street by reporting results that missed expectations for the first time in years, blaming rumors of the new iPhone for hurting demand in the September quarter. Shares of Apple fell 7 percent in extended trading on Tuesday, wiping some $27 billion off the value of the world’s largest technology company. It was Apple’s first quarterly earnings under Chief Executive Tim Cook, who took over from Steve Jobs in August at a critical juncture for the company. Apple is battling Google Inc in the mobile arena, as well as other challengers such as Samsung and Amazon.com Inc. “Investors are going to start to speculate that there is change under way now that Jobs is gone, and that there’s trouble ahead. We don’t share that point,” said Channing Smith, co-manager at Capital Advisors Growth Fund, which holds Apple shares. “The iPhone is where the weakness was and it’s an explainable one. The strong demand for the iPhone 4S set up strong demand for the holiday season.” Apple said it sold 17.07 million iPhones in its fiscal fourth quarter ended September 24 — well short of the roughly 20 million forecast by analysts. The iPhone is Apple’s flagship product, yielding some 40 percent of annual sales. Revenue rose 39 percent to $28.27 billion, lower than the average analyst estimate of $29.69 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. It was the first time Apple missed revenue expectations since the fiscal fourth quarter of 2008. Net profit was $6.62 billion, or $7.05 a share. That fell shy of expectations for earnings of $7.39 per share. The last time Apple missed EPS estimates was in the first quarter of 2001, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. “Expectations for this company were red-hot, that is why we downgraded it,” said BGC Partners analyst Colin Gillis, who lowered his rating on the shares days before. “The reality is their business is not an annuity. They have to sell their quarter’s worth of revenue every 90 days.” “They had a big upgrade cycle with the iPhone, the numbers came in weak. They need to set records every time they report to keep up the momentum.” Apple executives said consumers had postponed purchase decisions until the crucial holiday quarter because of speculation that a new phone was on the way. Apple unveiled the iPhone 4S in early October, and it hit stores last Friday. Apple — which typically offers projections so conservative they are disregarded — on Tuesday forecast December quarter revenue and earnings above Wall Street’s estimates. “There’s no question this was a transition quarter ahead of the 4S,” said WP Stewart portfolio manager Michael Walker. “With the early pace of iPhone 4S sales, my guess is that disappointment is relatively short-lived.” “I’m not going to call Q3 a throwaway quarter for iPhones, but it was definitely a transition.” A PERIOD OF TRANSITION Cook started his first earnings conference call as CEO by honoring Jobs, who died on October 5 after a years-long battle against pancreatic cancer. He said he was “very confident” of posting record iPhone sales in the current quarter. The company moved 4 million iPhone 4S units — more than double its predecessor — in its first three days, despite lukewarm reviews. Another area for optimism for Apple was iPads. The company moved 11.12 million units during the quarter despite attempts by various manufacturers, including Samsung, to capture a slice of the tablet market. Now Amazon.com has also entered the fray with its Kindle Fire tablet. Acknowledging the competition, Cook said it was “reasonable to say” none of Apple’s rivals have gained any traction, and he expected the tablet market to be bigger than personal computer in the long term. Cook also told analysts that Greater China — mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan — was becoming an all-important region for Apple as it has “quickly become No. 2 on our list of top revenue countries very, very quickly.” Revenue from the region increased four-fold to $4.5 billion during the quarter. The new CEO fielded questions on Apple’s cash pile of over $81 billion, saying the money provided flexibility for acquisitions and investing in the supply chain. “That said, I’m not religious about holding cash or not holding it,” he added. “It’s a topic for the board on an ongoing basis.” Apple’s Mac sales saw a large spike during the September quarter but it failed to lift earnings. Apple sold 4.89 million Macs, up 27 percent from a year ago. Gross margin came to 40.3 percent — a tad higher than Wall Street’s forecast of 39.74 percent. International sales accounted for 63 percent of the quarter’s revenue. “We expected iPhone sales to decline in the September quarter from the June quarter as a result of the announcements we made … in June, where we said we would launch iOS 5 and iCloud in fall,” Peter Oppenheimer, Chief Financial Officer, said in an interview with Reuters. “That basically created the rumor of the day across the September quarter, especially at the end.” Apple said it expected December quarter earnings of $9.30 a share on revenue of about $37 billion. Wall Street is projecting $9.01 for the period, but it was unclear if that was comparable. “What is interesting is the guidance is less conservative than usual for their next quarter. It’s a timing issue, where it looks like the business that people thought would be in the September quarter is occurring in the December quarter,” said Sterne Agee analyst Shaw Wu. Apple shares fell to $394.78 in after-hours trading, after closing at $422.24 on the Nasdaq. (Additional reporting by Edwin Chan in Los Angeles, Liana Baker and Jennifer Saba in New York; Editing by Gary Hill, Bernard Orr) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions

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TRAGEDY: Brothers Who Work Side-By-Side Die After Plant Accident

October 19, 2011

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. — Kern County coroners say a worker who was left brain dead after an accident at a recycling plant last week was taken off life support and has died. The accident killed his younger brother, 16-year-old Armando Ramirez, on Wednesday. The two were working side-by-side, cleaning out a tunnel at the Community Recycling and Resource Co. in Lamont. Armando was overcome by the gas and Heladio was injured trying to save him from the tunnel. Rescuers had to use breathing equipment to bring the brothers out of the tunnel. State and federal labor officials have opened investigations into the accident. ___

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Major currencies lost momentum after Moody’s announcement

October 19, 2011

Major currencies lost momentum after Moody’s announcement

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Occupy Wall Street Planning A National Convention, Releases Demands

October 19, 2011

WASHINGTON — While an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 Occupy Wall Street protesters flooded into Times Square on Saturday, there was still a regular New York general assembly at 7 p.m. During that meeting, according to sources who contacted The Huffington Post, the Zuccotti Park General Assembly — though at a reduced presence due to the Times Square march — approved the formation of a new working group. This “ Demands Working Group ” then immediately “established a website and fairly educated/articulated list of solutions.” A separate group out of Zuccotti Park has also been working on a list of possible proposals, but a member of the Education and Empowerment Working Group said he suspects the Demands Working Group’s list will become the national platform. They’ve posted the list online but they’ve also made this announcement under the radar — a national convention to be held July 4, 2012: WE, THE NINETY-NINE PERCENT OF THE PEOPLE of the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, in order to form a more perfect Union, by, for and of the PEOPLE, shall elect and convene a NATIONAL GENERAL ASSEMBLY beginning on July 4, 2012 in the City Of Philadelphia. They plan to elect delegates by direct vote, one male and one female per each of the 435 Congressional Districts. The office would be open to any United States citizen over the age of 18. The 870 delegates would then compose a petition of grievances that would be non-partisan. The posted “demands” are only a working list of “suggestions,” however. Number one and two are a ban on private contributions to politicians seeking or holding federal office and instead public financing for campaigns, and a constitutional amendment to reverse the Citizens United decision by the Supreme Court. The list then goes on to suggest single-payer national health care, immediate passage of the DREAM Act, a jobs plan, a deficit reduction plan and recalling military personnel at all non-essential bases. The movement would also reinstate the Glass-Steagall Act, increase regulation and increase taxes by way of eliminating corporate tax loopholes. The idea of coming up with a list of demands has been controversial among protesters . David Sauvage, who directs videos for the Occupy Wall Street protests and supports the movement, said he viewed demands as being too similar to talking points. But Daniel Lerner, a physicist and member of the Demands Working Group, argued to Mother Jones that their demands would have wide appeal . In their list, however, they close with one last warning: if Congress, the President and the Supreme Court do not act on the settled grievances the movement eventually comes up with, its members are prepared to form a third, independent political party to run in every Congressional seat in 2014 and 2016.

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Jed Kolko: What Really Mattered: October 10-14, 2011

October 18, 2011

Finally, some good news on jobs, and the hard truth about getting low-risk, high returns from investing in a home. More job openings, and more quitting The housing market won’t improve until the job market does. Unemployment is creeping down only slowly. But last week had some good job news. Job openings — the number of unfilled positions being advertised — are almost 7% higher than a year ago, which is good news for job seekers. But employers are picky and could be having a hard time finding the right workers. Even though openings are up 7%, they’re advertising for jobs more than they’re hiring: the number of hires rose only 3% in the last year. On the other side of the human resources department, layoffs and firings are down 8% from a year ago, and back to the way things were before the recession. But workers aren’t returning the loyalty: the number of workers voluntarily quitting is up 10% from a year ago, and up almost 20% from June 2009 when the recession officially ended. They say nobody likes a quitter, but the uptick in quitting might ironically be a sign that people feel confident that they can find a better job or have found one already. Most workers don’t voluntarily quit unless they feel like they have other options. With this glimmer of confidence in the job market, it’s only a matter of time before people start feeling better about the housing market as well. Link: BLS August 2011 Job Openings and Labor Turnover (released 10/12/11) Volatility: Can you get low-risk high returns? Like everyone, I’ve been watching the ups and downs of the stock market. Stock prices ratcheted down in early August around the time of the debt ceiling debate in Congress, but volatility shot up and stock prices have been a roller coaster ever since. A good measure of how much the market is bouncing around — the VIX index — has been at its highest sustained level for the last two months since the darkest days of the financial crisis in the fall of 2008. For investors, volatility means risk: investors want to make lots of money with little or no risk. In other words, it’s better to have an investment that dependably returns 5% a year than one that has a 50/50 chance of returning 10% and returning nothing (unless you’re a thrill-seeking gambler). You should think about home values the same way. Even though home prices aren’t volatile day to day the way the stock market can be, they are over a long period of time. In cities with volatile housing prices, you run the risk of losing all the money you put into your house — everything from your down payment to all the upgrades you made — if you can’t stay put long enough for the market to bounce back up again. Across the U.S., some markets are a lot bouncier than others. Home prices in Sacramento and Nashville , for instance, both increased around 3.3-3.4% a year on average for the last 25 years. But the similarity ends there. Over those 25 years, Sacramento prices swung big (up or down at least 10%) in 11 of those years, while Nashville prices never did. For the same average return over this period, buying a home in Nashville was a much less risky investment than buying a home in Sacramento. Why does this matter? Well, if you were CERTAIN in 1986 that you would stay put in a home until 2011, then Nashville and Sacramento were equally good bets. But people move all the time, and if you want to minimize the chance that your home will lose value, low volatility matters. With housing as with any other investment, you want a high return with low risk. But long story short, you can’t have it all. Looking over 25 years, no local real estate market has offered a high return with low risk. Among larger metros, NONE of the top 10 metros where prices increased most over time is also in the top 10 in low volatility: (Note: Home price growth is annualized growth rate in home prices, 1986-2011.) (Note: Volatility is the standard deviation of annual home price changes, 1986-2011. All data from the Federal Housing Finance Agency home price index.) Among the metros with the highest long-term price growth, Portland OR had the lowest volatility. But Madison WI would have given you still pretty high growth with less volatility — a good place for the risk-averse. But the bottom-right part of the graph — where average growth is high and volatility is low — is pretty empty. Even though you can’t get high returns with low risk, you could get the worst of all worlds. Over the past 25 years, Las Vegas NV, Bakersfield CA and Phoenix AZ offered low overall price growth with very high volatility. Here’s hoping to a better next quarter-century in those places.

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Report Pours Cold Water On Herman Cain’s Grand Plan

October 18, 2011

WASHINGTON — Herman Cain’s 9-9-9 tax plan would raise taxes on 84 percent of U.S. households, according to an independent analysis released Tuesday, contradicting claims by the Republican presidential candidate that most Americans would see a tax cut. The Tax Policy Center, a Washington think tank, says low- and middle-income families would be hit hardest, with households making between $10,000 and $20,000 seeing their taxes increase by nearly 950 percent. “You’re talking a $2,700 tax increase for people with incomes between $10,000 and $20,000,” said Roberton Williams, a senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center. “That’s huge.” Households with the highest incomes, however, would get big tax cuts. Those making more than $1 million a year would see their taxes cut nearly in half, on average, according to the analysis. Among those in the middle, households making between $40,000 and $50,000 would see their taxes increase by an average of $4,400, the report said. Those making between $50,000 and $75,000 would see their annual tax bill go up by an average of $4,326. “It’s very, very regressive compared to the current system, and that’s largely because we’re exempting capital gains, and we’re taxing your spending with the sales tax,” Williams said. “People at the top end don’t spend all their money and they get a lot of capital gains, so they are doing pretty well here.” Cain disputed the analysis Tuesday evening during GOP presidential debate in Las Vegas, where the other Republican candidates heaped on criticism. Cain has acknowledged that taxes would increase for some but says taxes would decrease for most. “It does not raise taxes on those that are making the least,” Cain said. “All of those are simply not true.” “The reason that our plan is being attacked so much is because lobbyists, accountants, politicians, they don’t want to throw out the current tax code and put in something that’s simple and fair,” Cain said. “They want to continue to be able to manipulate the American people with a 10 million-word mess.” Cain’s plan would scrap current taxes on income, payroll, capital gains and corporate profits. He would replace them with a 9 percent tax on income, a 9 percent business tax and a 9 percent national sales tax. Cain’s campaign has gained momentum largely in response to his tax plan, which is popular in part because of its simplicity. Several polls have the former CEO of Godfather’s Pizza at or near the top of the Republican field, vying with former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. President Barack Obama told ABC News that Cain’s tax plan would impose a “huge burden” on middle-class and working families. The president said Cain’s plan would make sure the wealthiest pay less – and replace the revenue with a sales tax hitting the less well-off. Romney criticized the plan in a conference call with reporters Tuesday. “I believe that you’re going to find with the 9-9-9 plan Herman Cain has put out that the burden shifts more to the middle class, and I think that’s the wrong direction to go,” Romney said. “A decision to completely jettison our current tax system for a new system always has some merit, but then you need to get into it, to figure out who’s this going to help and who’s this going to hurt.” Cain’s rise in the polls has brought increased scrutiny, and his tax plan has taken hits from across the political spectrum. Some don’t like shifting the tax burden from the wealthy to the poor and middle class; others don’t like the new national sales tax. “Anytime you give the Congress a brand-new tax, it doesn’t go away,” said Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn. “If we give Congress a 9 percent sales tax, how long will it take a liberal president and a liberal Congress to run that up to maybe 90 percent?” William McBride, an economist at the conservative Tax Foundation, said Cain’s plan to move away from taxing savings and investment “would be a very good thing for growth in the long run.” But, McBride said, the national sales tax would be a nightmare to administer because so many state and local governments already have sales taxes, and the bases are different. In most states, food and medicine are excluded from sales tax. Cain has said his sales tax would be applied to all new goods – only used goods would be exempt. “It’s not as simple as having all these jurisdictions simply tack on 9 percent and send it to the federal government,” McBride said in an interview. Cain has said his plan would initially raise as much money as the current tax system but do it more efficiently, leading to economic growth, which would produce higher tax revenues. The Tax Policy Center analysis agreed that the plan would initially raise about the same amount of money as current tax policy, about $2.55 trillion in 2013. The Tax Policy Center compared taxes on U.S. households under current tax policy, with those imposed under the Cain plan. In using current tax policy, the analysis assumes that tax cuts enacted under former President George W. Bush – and extended through 2012 by Obama – would be extended. The center did a separate analysis that assumed all the Bush-era tax cuts would expire at the end of 2012. Under that scenario, Cain’s plan would still impose higher taxes on 77 percent of U.S. households, the report said. The Tax Policy Center is a research group formed by two Washington think tanks: the Urban Institute and the Brookings Institution. Researchers at the center regularly testify before Congress on tax policy. The center’s analyses during the 2008 presidential campaign were widely circulated. The center said researchers tried to consult with Cain’s advisers to make sure they were interpreting the plan correctly, but they had not heard back. ___ Associated Press writer Steve Peoples contributed to this report.

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Moody’s Downgrades Spain On Corporate, Bank Debt

October 18, 2011

NEW YORK – Moody’s Investors Service Tuesday cut Spain’s sovereign ratings by two notches, saying high levels of debt in the Spanish banking and corporate sectors leave the country vulnerable to funding stress. Further downgrades of Spain’s rating are possible if the euro zone debt crisis escalates, Moody’s warned. The agency cut Spain’s government bond ratings to A1 from Aa2, concluding the review for a possible downgrade it had initiated at the end of July. The new rating has a negative outlook. (Reporting by Walter Brandimarte; Editing by James Dalgleish) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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The Rev. Jacqueline J. Lewis, Ph.D.: God’s Economy

October 18, 2011

I grew up in the Black Church, where the milkman and the accountant sat together on Sunday. Singing spirituals and hearing scripture rooted us in God’s vision to end discrimination, share resources and promote peace. It was the vision that gave my parents and their parents hope; it inspired their struggle for civil rights. They taught their children how to be leaders on Wednesday, marched for racial justice on Saturday, and gave what they had of their time and their finances to make the church run. Once enslaved Africans were freed, there was always an economic gap. Some went to college, others took up the trades, and still others worked in menial but necessary jobs. As wealth increased, folk did not forget from whence they came; they reached back and pulled someone up and helped someone out. I have not forgotten those lessons of community and caretaking and pulling together as a village. The early church was like that as well, learning from its Jewish leaders -⎯ including Jesus himself -⎯ that in God’s Economy, the poor, the orphaned, the widowed, the sick and the lame were the responsibilities of the community. In our country, there are divisions and anger around class. I want to change the conversation from class warfare to class collaboration. A faithful coalition of people can have a greater impact toward a more just society when they pool resources, enact strategies, build bridges and challenge the status quo. In the early church conflicts arose about who should be first and who should go last, but they were resolved by evoking the teachings of Jesus: In God’s Reign there are new rules. Everyone is invited to God’s banquet, the first will be last and the last will be first. These radical teachings guided the first congregations; they shared what they had with one another and took care of the least among them. I think we need to resurrect these ideas and ideals and not waste time on us-vs.-them tactics. God’s Economy does not have to be a dream in our faith communities. This is, to my mind, what it means to be faithful. On several occasions, members of my congregation at Middle Collegiate Church have made donations directed to benefit someone else. “Give this to someone who really needs it,” they tell me as they quietly pass me a donation. All of us know someone out of work. Fifteen percent of Americans live below the poverty line. No one of us can do all of this, but churches and other faith communities, non-profits, private citizens and our government can partner to care for one another. We can adopt a family or a classroom. We can create jobs for teenagers and help them get ready for college. We can put people back to work as we build our infrastructure and create new technologies. We can restore the American Dream. But more importantly for me as a Christian pastor, we can live into God’s Vision, God’s Economy. The prophet Isaiah reminded the atoning faithful that the true fast that God desires is for us to share our bread with the hungry, to take the poor into our home, to clothe the naked and to not ignore our own families (Isaiah 58:7). When Jesus was teaching his disciples about the reign of God, he told a parable of an owner of a vineyard who hired laborers at various times during the day. At day’s end, he paid the ones hired early in the morning, the ones who were hired at noonday, and the ones hired at the end of the day the same wage (Matthew 20:1-16). The workers who came early were angry that those who came late to the vineyard received the same pay. How dare that landowner treat everyone the same! How outrageous is the kind of love in God’s Economy! I must admit the state of our present economy outrages me. And the Occupy Wall Street movement has our country talking about class and financial inequalities again. Many children eat only one meal a day through their school lunch program. It is not acceptable for a nation with this much wealth to threatened that program with tax cuts. Older people should not have to choose between medicine and food. I am less concerned about how we got here or whose fault it is. I am focused on what can we do now and how will we pull together to do it! The questions before us are not just economic, they are ethical and moral. Middle Collegiate Church is incredibly diverse around race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity and finances. Some of our members own several houses, some bring their belongings to church in a bag. Most of us are in the middle, struggling to make ends meet, or saving a little for our future and our children. No matter where we are on that continuum, we pool our resources to make sure we provide more than 1,500 meals every month to people who are hungry. We provide warm coats and back-to-work clothing for hundreds of people as well. We partner with programs that address homelessness in our city. But we want to do more. We want to change the systems and structures that make our programs necessary. In this rich nation, we have enough resources to care for all of us and then share with our global neighbors. We are calling for an interfaith coalition of caring people to join us. Students and senior citizens, homemakers and the homeless, brokers and bakers, clergy and computer software designers, teachers and technicians — if you are out of work but ready to work for systemic change, if you are tired of the bickering and ready to broker God’s Economy, we want you with us. Let’s put our minds and hearts together. Let’s talk and blog and ask the hard questions. Let’s recommend courses of action and then hold our leaders accountable. Let’s fuel our revolution with prayer and Spirit. It is too simplistic to demonize all of the people who make more money than we do. Good people with wealth share it every day. Wealthy people share my middle class critique of a system that allows lobbyists to protect corporations from the appropriate tax; a tax code with loopholes that poor people will never find or fit through; and a bailout that benefited banks while the poor are still poor. There has to be some accounting for that, some rectifying of this situation. Let’s turn our restlessness into revolution, our anger into action, our despair into demonstration. And let’s never forget the Power at work within us that is able to do more than we can ask or imagine. That Power is Love. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once said, “Cowardice asks the question — is it safe? Expediency asks the question — is it politic? Vanity asks the question — is it popular? But conscience asks the question — is it right? And there comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular; but one must take it because it is right.” On Sunday, Oct. 30, join us online as we stream worship at 11:15 a.m. (EST) at MiddleChurch.org and then stay as we stream a town-hall conversation about God’s Economy. You can add your questions and ideas to our Facebook page or tweet @middlechurch for a town-hall conversation about God’s Economy. Let’s change the conversation.

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US Dollar Index Offers Proxy to Dow Jones, Aussie to Copper Prices

October 18, 2011

US Dollar Index Offers Proxy to Dow Jones, Aussie to Copper Prices

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ZEW survey: German economy worse than believed

October 18, 2011

ZEW survey: German economy worse than believed

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EUR/USD Classical Technical Report 10.18

October 18, 2011

EUR/USD Classical Technical Report 10.18

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USD/JPY Classical Technical Report 10.18

October 18, 2011

USD/JPY Classical Technical Report 10.18

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U.K. Whitbread profits rises by 38.0% in the third quarter

October 18, 2011

U.K. Whitbread profits rises by 38.0% in the third quarter

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Danone revenues climb to $6.62 billion in the third quarter

October 18, 2011

Danone revenues climb to $6.62 billion in the third quarter

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U.K. Inflation Accelerates to 5.2% in September  

October 18, 2011

U.K. Inflation Accelerates to 5.2% in September  

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US Hasbro Q3 net income up to USD171m

October 18, 2011

US Hasbro Q3 net income up to USD171m

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Totally blind’ hairdresser caught in benefit scam

October 18, 2011

Totally blind’ hairdresser caught in benefit scam

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British minister dumps official letters in London park

October 18, 2011

British minister dumps official letters in London park

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Buffalo rampages after Vietnam restaurant escape

October 18, 2011

Buffalo rampages after Vietnam restaurant escape

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Cats alert sleeping Austrian owner of fire

October 18, 2011

Cats alert sleeping Austrian owner of fire

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Pastor accused of cashing dead teacher’s pension cheques

October 18, 2011

Pastor accused of cashing dead teacher’s pension cheques

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US Schwab Q3 net income surges 77% to USD220m

October 18, 2011

US Schwab Q3 net income surges 77% to USD220m

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World’s 7 billionth person to be born Oct. 31

October 18, 2011

World’s 7 billionth person to be born Oct. 31

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US Lincare Holdings Q3 net income down 4% to USD43.6m

October 18, 2011

US Lincare Holdings Q3 net income down 4% to USD43.6m

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China’s Jan-Sep fixed asset investment hikes 24.9%

October 18, 2011

China’s Jan-Sep fixed asset investment hikes 24.9%

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H3C Technologies selects Entropic Communications c.LINK Broadband

October 18, 2011

H3C Technologies selects Entropic Communications c.LINK Broadband

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