fiscal

Indian economy to grow 7% this year

by on January 9, 2012

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(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) India’s economy will grow by 7 per cent this fiscal year, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said Sunday, and was geared to return to a higher growth rate of 9 to 10 per …

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Indian economy to grow 7% this year

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(MENAFN) Sony said it swung to a net loss in the fiscal first quarter on the impact of the March 11 earthquake, and cut its profit forecast by 25 percent on weak TV sales and a strong …

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Japan- Sony swings to quarterly loss

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Joplin Tornado Inflicts Economic Setback On Community Still Struggling With Recession’s Legacy

May 25, 2011

The tornado in Joplin, Mo., has dealt severe economic damage to a community still struggling to recover from the Great Recession. As local leaders respond to the devastation from the Sunday tornado that claimed at least 125 lives , efforts to care for the injured naturally take precedence over economic considerations. But in the coming weeks, as the community rebuilds the hospital that was damaged, the roads that were torn up and the homes and stores that were destroyed, the cost will weigh heavily on this city of 50,000, where the local economy already faced strains. As many as 2,000 buildings in the city were destroyed by the tornado, according to estimates from local emergency management officials. And as many as 10,000 buildings were damaged, according to a Tuesday report from the Oakland, Calif.-based catastrophe risk modeling firm EQECAT. The insured loss is estimated to be between $1 billion and $3 billion, EQECAT said. But the full economic consequences will likely be even greater, EQECAT senior vice president Tom Larsen said in an interview. With buildings destroyed, workers will go without jobs, and businesses will lose revenue. Even as insurers pay claims, residents will likely absorb personal financial losses of untold value. The cost to the region, Larsen said, will likely amount to at least an additional $1 billion, borne partially by the local government and individual residents. “This is a major hit upon that area,” Larsen said. “Some people may move out and never come back.” For a city whose general fund budget is just over $20 million , these figures seem enormous. President Barack Obama has declared a disaster in Joplin, making the city eligible for federal assistance . After the tornado struck, the House Appropriations Committee approved a $1 billion aid package , in an effort to keep federal disaster relief accounts funded through the end of September, the AP reported. The economic fallout could be long-lasting, however, as the city continues to grapple with the recession’s legacy. In 2006, before the economic crisis, the unemployment rate in Joplin was 3.8 percent, according to the city’s most recent financial report. By 2010, it had jumped to 8.2 percent. As of October, the city’s third-largest employer was St. John’s Hospital, with 2,480 employees, according to the financial report . Walmart was the sixth largest, with 920 employees, the report says. Both employers have been devastated by the storm. On Sunday, the tornado tore into St. John’s Regional Medical Center, leaving a path of destruction and killing five patients, according to a New York Times report. A local Walmart now lies in ruins . The local real estate market, too, could face a major setback. The pace of building in Joplin has slowed in the years since the economic crisis. Construction during the six months that ended April 30 amounted to $13.4 million, a 36 percent decline from the same period a year earlier, the Joplin Globe reported this month, citing building permits. For the fiscal year that ended last October 31, the value of residential and commercial construction reached $60.4 million, less than half of the construction during the fiscal year that ended in 2007, the Globe said . Reached by phone on Monday and Tuesday, the city’s accounting manager, Joel Gibson, said it was too early to estimate the financial damage from the tornado. “Right now we’re in the search and recovery phase,” he said Tuesday. “I’m trying to manage phones, take care of people here.”

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Sony Paid Big Money To Mitigate PlayStation Network Hack

May 23, 2011

TOKYO — Sony Corp. is expecting an annual loss of $3.2 billion, reversing its earlier projection of a return to profit, as the electronics giant struggles with production disruptions from Japan’s tsunami and a hacker attack on its online gaming service. The Japanese maker of PlayStation 3 video game machines and Bravia flat-panel TVs said Monday that the projection of a 260 billion yen ($3.2 billion) net loss for the fiscal year ended March 2011 was largely due to writing off 360 billion yen ($4.4 billion) related to a tax credit booked in a previous quarter. Sony announced the loss ahead of its official earnings announcement Thursday under Tokyo Stock Exchange guidelines. The company had earlier projected a 70 billion yen ($860 million) profit. Like many other Japanese manufacturers, Sony has been hampered by the production disruptions set off by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that killed more than 25,000 people, destroyed many factories and sent the nation’s economic recovery into reverse. The company kept its operating profit forecast unchanged at 200 billion yen ($2.46 billion). It expects to report sales of 7.18 trillion yen ($88.2 billion), slightly down from an earlier projection of 7.2 trillion yen ($88.5 billion). Masaru Kato, Sony’s chief financial officer, said parts shortages in the aftermath of the disaster have eased but a full recovery hasn’t yet been realized. “In the first quarter, we saw quite a major impact on our manufacturing activities,” he said. After the quake, “negative factors have grown bigger” and offset earlier improvement in the previously loss-making games division, dashing hopes for a profit. Tokyo-based Sony also faced a new challenge to its reputation following a massive security breach affecting more than 100 million online accounts. After temporarily closing down its online gaming services last month, Sony began restoring its PalyStation Network services in the U.S. and Europe on May 15 mainly for online gaming, chat and music streaming services. Sony spent 14 billion yen ($170 million) to cover costs that included identity theft insurance for customers, improvements to network security, free access to content, customer support and an investigation into the hacking. Sony has seen plunging sales of flat-panel TVs and other gadgets, and was likely to remain in the red in its TV business for the seventh year straight. Sony has also taken a beating in music players and other portable devices to Apple’s iPod, iPhone and iPad. The company booked a 40.8 billion yen ($439 million) loss for the fiscal year ended March 2010 after a 98.9 billion yen loss the year before_ Sony’s first annual red ink in 14 years. ___ Associated Press writer Tomoko A. Hosaka contributed to this report.

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Toyota’s Profit Plunges After Japan Disaster

May 11, 2011

TOKYO — Toyota’s quarterly profit crumpled more than 75 percent after the March earthquake and tsunami wiped out parts suppliers in northeastern Japan, severely disrupting car production. The maker of the popular Prius hybrid gave no forecast for the current fiscal year through March 2012, citing an uncertain outlook because production continues to be hampered by shortages of parts. Toyota is expected to lose its spot as the world’s top-selling automaker to General Motors Co. this year because of the disasters. The automaker’s president Akio Toyoda said he and others at Toyota are “gritting our teeth” to keep jobs in Japan. He promised to disclose earnings forecasts by mid-June. Toyota Motor Corp. reported Wednesday that January-March profit slid to 25.4 billion yen ($314 million) from 112.2 billion yen a year earlier. For the fiscal year ended March 2011, Toyota’s earnings doubled, showing that the Japanese automaker had been on the way to recovery from its recall crisis when the magnitude-9.0 earthquake struck on March 11. But Toyota also said efforts to fix production, including using other plants and finding replacement parts, were going better than initially expected, with car manufacturing expected to gradually pick up in Japan and abroad from next month to 70 percent of pre-disaster levels. Toyota earlier said such production improvements wouldn’t start in Japan until about July, and overseas in August, with a full recovery not expected until late this year. “Our priority is to get our production back to normal and recover from the disaster,” a somber Toyoda told reporters. When a full recovery would come was still unknown, he said. By the end of May, the crisis has cost the company production of 550,000 vehicles in Japan, and another 350,000 overseas. Production is now back at about 50 percent. “By reviving our company, we want to help bring Japan’s comeback,” said Toyoda. Analysts say the quake and tsunami have sorely hurt Toyota but a production recovery could come quickly. “I think chances may be good that getting production back would be speedy,” Shotaro Noguchi, analyst at SMBC Nikko Capital Markets in Tokyo, said in a recent report. Still, Toyota may face a different kind of challenge in the months ahead because the government has asked for a shutdown of the Hamaoka nuclear power plant, which is located on a fault-line and furnishes the power supply for the region where Toyota is headquartered and has many of its plants and suppliers. The request came because of growing fears about the safety of nuclear power after the tsunami damaged the cooling systems at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant on the northeastern coast, sending it to the brink of a meltdown. Toyoda did not say how much the Hamaoka shutdown would reduce production, but promised the company would do its utmost to secure a stable power supply. He said production at all lines for all models would be back at pre-disaster levels by November or December at the latest, but efforts are under way to do it faster. The hit Toyota has taken makes it likely a resurgent General Motors will regain the title of world’s No. 1 automaker by annual vehicle sales. Toyota overtook GM as the world’s biggest automaker in 2008, a distinction the American manufacturer had held since 1932. Toyota said it sold 7.31 million vehicles for the fiscal year through March 2011, up by 71,000 vehicles from the previous year. For the January-March period, Toyota sold 1.79 million vehicles worldwide. That is fewer than the 2.22 million vehicles GM sold and fewer than No. 3 automaker, Volkswagen AG of Germany, at 1.99 million. Toyoda said the automaker was still missing about 30 types of parts, although that was an improvement from the 150 it had lacked before. Toyota hopes to be producing at 70 percent of its pre-quake levels by June. The automaker’s full-year results highlight how, when the quake struck, Toyota had been on its way to a recovery from the recall fiasco, affecting 14 million vehicles worldwide, which had battered its reputation for quality. Sales for the January-March quarter dipped 12 percent year-on-year to 4.6 trillion yen ($57 billion), according to Toyota. For the fiscal year ended March 2011, profit doubled to 408.1 billion yen ($5 billion) from 209.4 billion yen the previous year. Annual sales edged up 0.2 percent to 18.99 trillion yen ($234 billion). Toyota said vehicle sales fell in North America, Japan and Europe, but it had robust sales in other regions, such as the rest of Asia, Africa and South America. Toyota is especially struggling in the U.S., where its April sales rose just 1 percent from the previous year, while GM’s car and truck sales surged 26 percent and South Korean rival Hyundai Motor Co. posted a 40 percent jump in sales. Like other Japanese exporters, Toyota has been hurt by the surging yen, which erodes overseas earnings. The dollar has now fallen to near 80 yen from about 90 yen a year earlier. “Despite negative factors such as a rapid rise in the yen and the earthquake, our profit sharply rose, thanks to massive cost-cutting and sales efforts,” said Toyoda, referring to the full-year result. Honda, which reported a quarterly profit drop of 38 percent last month, has said it doesn’t expect to return to full production in Japan until the end of the year. Toyota shares closed up 0.6 percent at 3,270 yen ($40) in Tokyo, shortly before earnings were announced. That is still down 9 percent from before the quake. ___ Associated Press writer Shino Yuasa contributed to this report.

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Carlo Cottarelli: Tax Matters for Developing Countries

April 22, 2011

You hear a lot these days–not least from me–about the fiscal problems of advanced economies. But let’s not forget the fiscal problems that low-income countries face, though they are of a different kind. For all too many low-income countries, government tax revenues are far from enough to meet the needs of their people. Some have made good progress, and this helped them weather the crisis better than many advanced economies–but there is an underlying, quiet crisis of inadequately resourced governments. Nor is it just the level of revenue that matters; tax design and implementation are also critical to the efficiency of economic activity, to fairness, and to the legitimacy of the state. Sharing experiences Supporting low-income countries’ efforts to strengthen their ability to raise revenue is an important part of the IMF’s role in helping them maintain stable and growing economies. How best to do this was the topic of two recent IMF conferences: one, in Nairobi , focused on sub-Saharan Africa ; the other, with a global focus , in Washington, DC, earlier this week. In both cases, I was impressed by just how candid and frank participants–government officials as well as civil society, donors, business and academics–were about what has and hasn’t worked for them. At both events, participants made very clear their view that the IMF’s technical support has, and is, helping their countries become better governed states that are responsive to the needs of the people. But they also made very clear that ultimately the solutions to these problems must be home-grown. We want to hear your ideas too, on both our recent paper on this topic and the G-20′s request for major international and regional organizations (including the IMF) to advise them on what they could do to help. Please visit our comments page to weigh in. More than “show me the money” There was, of course, a lot of technical stuff at both events . I now know much more about the details on which revenue mobilization ultimately depends, such as taxpayer segmentation, compliance management, production sharing agreements, transfer pricing, and small business taxation, among other critical issues. But it is the broader issues that left the most powerful impressions. Four in particular stand out: (i) Strong Commitment Many low-income countries have shown strong commitment to strengthen their revenue systems, through both administrative reforms and improved tax policies. There is a lot still to do. In sheer revenue terms, an additional 4 percentage points of GDP or so was suggested needed in some low-income countries if they are meet the Millennium Development Goals . But there have also been notable successes: Tanzania, for instance, achieved a 5 percentage point increase in its revenue to GDP ratio in the decade after 2000. Such good results exemplify the need for a commitment to the reform process over the medium- to long-term; sustainable changes require continued effort, and, particularly, continued political support. (ii) Equity, fairness and good governance Strengthening revenue systems is about much more than increasing revenue. Effects on growth and efficiency clearly matter–the poor are not likely to be best served by tax systems that treat investment harshly, for instance. But equity and fairness matter a great deal too, maybe even more. They matter in themselves: after all, a main reason that low-income countries need more revenue is to finance poverty-reducing measures. And equity and fairness also matter for the legitimacy and effectiveness of the tax system: taxes that are seen as unfair will be poorly complied with. And poor compliance leads itself to actual and perceived unfairness, as only some pay their fair share. Then there are links between taxation and building modern, accountable and responsive governments overall. One reason we have long seen combating corruption in tax administrations as so critical, for instance, has been its potential value in spearheading wider improvements in public governance. Ensuring that elites are seen to pay a decent amount of tax is important in this context, too. (iii) Avoiding exemptions and preferences Exemptions and preferential treatments in tax systems are a pervasive source of revenue loss in many developing countries–as they are too, of course, in many advanced economies. Discussions at the two recent conferences made clear again that many low-income countries fully understand the misallocation of resources and inequities these create. They feel, though, largely powerless to do much about them because of both strong domestic interests and a perceived need to compete with neighboring countries for foreign investment. Increased transparency has an important role here, particularly in the form of analyzing the revenue losses associated with tax expenditures. So, perhaps, does stronger regional tax cooperation, so countries can avoid “beggar thy neighbor” tax policies. (iv) Political will But addressing inappropriate tax policies, and improving revenue administration and enforcement, is ultimately an act of political will. The trouble is–and this is my final impression–that we still know very little about this ‘political will.’ We know it is needed in order to drive through tough policy changes. And that it matters to build and support firm, even-handed enforcement. But there are many hard questions, to which we don’t yet have the answers, about where political will comes from and how to create it. Our best hope of finding the answers is by continuing the kind of dialogue we have had in Nairobi and Washington. From iMFdirect blog

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Video: Holtz-Eakin Says S&P View May Force U.S. to Make Changes

April 19, 2011

April 18 (Bloomberg) — Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the American Action Forum, Michael Woolfolk, managing director and senior currency strategy at the Bank of New York Mellon Corp., and Joseph Tanious, vice president of J.P. Morgan Funds, talk about Standard & Poor’s decision to cut its credit rating outlook on the U.S. to “negative” and the potential impact of the move on investors and the fiscal deficit. They talk with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Budget Deal Passes House Vote

April 14, 2011

WASHINGTON — A coalition of House Republicans and Democrats approved on Thursday legislation that would cut almost $40 billion from the budget for the rest of the fiscal year by a vote of 260 to 167. When the time for the vote expired, fewer than 150 members had voted yes, with scores waiting to see where their colleagues would fall before taking the plunge. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has vowed to quickly take up the House-passed legislation Thursday afternoon without further debate. ( SCROLL DOWN FOR LIVE UPDATES )

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PM: Indian economy to grow 8.5% this fiscal

January 9, 2011

PM: Indian economy to grow 8.5% this fiscal

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Swiss Franc to Strengthen on Euro Zone Fiscal Crisis in 2011

December 31, 2010

Swiss Franc to Strengthen on Euro Zone Fiscal Crisis in 2011

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Euro Prepares for an Eventful January as Fiscal Crises Unresolved

December 17, 2010

Euro Prepares for an Eventful January as Fiscal Crises Unresolved

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Millionaires To Obama: Tax Us

November 20, 2010

More than 40 of the nation’s millionaires have joined Patriotic Millionaires for Fiscal Strength to ask President Obama to discontinue the tax breaks established for them during the Bush administration, as Salon reports.

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Video: Loescher Expects Surge in Siemens Green Technology Sales

November 8, 2010

Nov. 8 (Bloomberg) — Siemens AG Chief Executive Officer Peter Loescher talks about the company’s prediction for green technology sales. Siemens aims to grow revenue from solar equipment, wind turbines and other energy saving products to 40 billion euros ($55 billion) by 2014 compared to 28 billion euros in the fiscal year through September. Loescher speaks from Munich with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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India expects 8.5% growth this fiscal year

October 27, 2010

India expects 8.5% growth this fiscal year

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Lease Down: Look for More City Layoffs and Project Cuts

October 14, 2010

City finances continue to weaken under the strain of the recession, resulting in cities being less able to meet their fiscal needs in 2011 and beyond. According to the National League of Cities’ annual report on cities’ fiscal conditions, financial officers…

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Video: Callow Says Ireland Needs `Enormous’ Fiscal Adjustment: Video

October 11, 2010

Oct. 11 (Bloomberg) — Julian Callow, chief European economist at Barclays Capital, talks about the European debt market and the fiscal situation in Ireland, Portugal and Greece. Callow speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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40 States Bank On Rising Tax Revenue In 2011

September 28, 2010

WASHINGTON — The vast majority of state governments are anticipating a rise in tax revenues this year after two years of sharp drops. Analysts caution that most states will face large budget gaps in the next few years. Forty states forecast having an increase in tax receipts in the current fiscal year, according to a forthcoming report by the National Conference of State Legislatures. Slow economic growth is boosting proceeds from income and sales taxes. That could reduce the impact of states’ budget struggles on the economy. State budget shortfalls have led to widespread layoffs, tax increases, spending cuts and other measures that have restrained economic growth. “We do think 2010 is the bottom and we are at a turning point,” said Corina L. Eckl, director of the fiscal affairs program at the NCSL and author of the report. Still, state officials aren’t without enormous challenges. States will lose federal stimulus money in coming years and will struggle to close large budget gaps. Tax revenues are well below pre-recession level. High unemployment puts heavy demand on state-run social service programs. “Stability and growth in tax collections is very good news,” the report said. “But in the near term it will not be enough to propel states out of their fiscal difficulties.” Overall, states raised taxes and cut spending to eliminate budget gaps that totaled $84 billion for fiscal year 2011, which in most states began July 1. The NCSL forecasts a total gap of $72 billion in fiscal year 2012 and $64 billion in 2013. That means more job cuts and tax increases could still be needed. Meanwhile, the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government said in a report last month that state tax collections rose in the April-June period. But they are still about 17 percent below the same period two years earlier. Many states project it will take years for tax revenue to return to where it was before the recession began. Sixteen states say it will take at least two more years – until fiscal year 2013 or 2014 – while four states don’t expect to return to pre-recession levels until fiscal 2015. California doesn’t expect revenues to return to their peak levels for five more years, or fiscal 2016. That’s the longest of any state. State budget struggles have held back the economy, even after the recession ended in June 2009. State governments have cut 43,000 jobs since August 2008. Cuts in services and funding for local education have led to thousands of additional cuts at local schools and among private contractors doing business with the states. In previous downturns, state government employment has been a relatively safe haven. States have also raised tax rates and cut spending to make up for lost revenue. Both moves can further slow economic activity. Half the states raised taxes in 2009 by a total of $28.6 billion, the NCSL report estimates. Cuts in state and local spending reduced economic activity for three straight quarters, from the middle of last year through the first quarter of 2010, the Commerce Department estimates.

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Video: Bloomberg’s Chu on Cisco, Microsoft Dividend Plans: Video

September 14, 2010

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Dominic Chu talks with Melissa Long about the importance of dividend-paying stocks to some investors and the outlook for dividends from Cisco Systems Inc. and Microsoft Corp. Cisco, the largest maker of networking equipment, plans to initiate the company’s first dividend this fiscal year. Microsoft is planning to sell debt this year to pay for dividends and share repurchases according to a person familiar with the matter. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Ghezzi Calls Fiscal Vulnerability Index `Early Warning’ Video

September 10, 2010

Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) — Piero Ghezzi, head of economics and emerging-markets research at Barclays Capital, talks about Barclays’s new Fiscal Vulnerability Index, which measures the sovereign debt risk of countries. Ghezzi speaks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Larry Beinhart: Recessions & Recoveries, The Real Story

September 2, 2010

There appear to be, roughly, three types of recessions. There are post-war recessions. These are easy to understand. There’s an abrupt decline in military spending, demobilization reintroduces a large number of people into the work force, and businesses supplying the war machine need time to switch to consumer products. We’ve had them after World War One, World War Two, Korea, and Vietnam. They tend to end more or less by themselves as society adjusts to a peacetime economy. There are recessions due to fiscal policy. Either cuts in government spending, as in 1937 and 1973, or a hike in interest rates to tighten the money supply, as was done in 1949, 1958, 1960, 1969, and 1980. Historically, these have been relatively brief and shallow. They end when the deliberate policies that brought them on are reversed. Finally, there is the sequence of boom and crash. The first of these was in 1929, and the collapse that followed was called the Great Depression. The others were 1990, 2000, and 2007, the one we’re in now, starting to be called the Great Recession. Except for 2,000, these also included massive bank failures. Economists, historians, and, as we move into the present, journalists and pundits, offer a mixed multitude of reasons for each of them. But now that we’ve had four of them (including the crash of 2,000), we can see a pattern emerging. Coming out of World War One we had a top marginal tax rate over 70%. From 1921-25 it was cut, in steps, down to 25%. There was a boom, particularly in the fiscal sector. The crash came in 1929. When Ronald Reagan came into office in 1981, the top marginal rate was, once again, 70%. Reagan started cutting in 1982, down to 50%, then to 38.5% in 1987, and 28% in 1988. There was a boom in the fiscal sector. In the mid-eighties the collapse began, and over 1,600 banks failed. There was a huge bailout. It was followed by the recession of 1990. George H.W. Bush raised the rate to 31%. It cost him re-election. Then, under Bill Clinton, the top rate went up to 39.6%. That was followed by the longest sustained period of economic growth in modern times. However, in 1997, the Republican congress pushed Clinton into cutting the capital gains tax from 28% down to 20%. It was called The Taxpayer’s Relief Act. It marks the moment when the dot.com boom turned into the dot.com bubble. It burst in 2,000, and, along with the 9/11 attacks, there was another recession. George W. Bush launched another round of tax cuts. The top rate went down to 35%. Capital gains rates were cut to 5%. This was followed by the Bush boom. There was huge growth in the fiscal sector, but “mysteriously,” it was a jobless recovery. The boom was hollow. It was a bubble. It led to the Crash of 2007, with massive bank failures, followed by our current recession. How does this type of recession end? In 1932, Herbert Hoover raised taxes. He did it to balance the budget. In 1933 the economy changed direction and began moving upward. In 1991, George H.W. Bush, disturbed by the huge deficits that followed Reagan’s cuts, raised taxes. The economy subsequently turned around. After the 2,000 recession there was no tax hike. There were tax cuts. Corporate profits rose, there was a boom in real estate and in the fiscal sector generally. But there was no recovery. The recession continued for normal people. There were no new private sector jobs. Median income went down. Manufacturing continued to decline. The historical record suggests that this recession won’t end until there is a tax increase. Economies are complex. There are always a multitude of factors that effect booms and busts, growth and recessions. It is also a commonplace that conjunction does not necessarily imply causality. Nonetheless, if the same sequence takes place a multitude of times in different circumstances and the sequence takes place four out of five times — tax cut, fiscal sector boom, bubble, crash, bank failures and recession or depression — it makes a very good case for causality. The one exception — the fifth significant tax cut — took place in 1964 and 1965. Tax cut enthusiasts always refer to them as the Kennedy tax cuts, but they took place under Lyndon Johnson. They also always cite them as a great stimulus to the economy. They certainly didn’t improve anything. The economy stayed flat . The Dow Jones stayed flat . It’s possible that the difference between 90% and 70% was not enough to unleash a search for short term profits over long term growth and an ensuing frenzy of speculation. Those cuts do mark the moment when economic improvements in the life of ordinary people began to slow down, then flatten out, and, in the very long term, begin to decline. Our public policy dialogue has little basis in fact or rationality. Much of it, even in universities, is bought and paid for. There is no interest group willing to pay foundations, endow universities, buy radio ads for commentators, who will advocate higher taxes. But there’s lots of money willing to invest in propaganda that calls for lower taxes and claim that they’re good for the economy. So you won’t hear calls for higher taxes. You won’t find politicians who dare to propose higher taxes. Hopefully the expiration of the Bush tax cuts will work as tax hikes. That will mark the beginning of a real recovery. My primary qualification to write about these things is that I am not an economist. Most economists, as Paul Krugman recently observed, are theologians. They put theory first and then look for, or imagine, facts that will fit them. There is a lot of debate at the moment about what will end the recession and what effect tax policy has. Untutored as I am, I was free to look up the history and put historical charts of recessions, GDP, the Dow Jones average, fiscal policy, and tax policy in parallel columns. The historical facts are that high top marginal tax rates correlate with a very healthy economy. That high tax rates on the rich don’t impede growth. For whatever reasons, they promote growth. Low taxes on the rich are unhealthy. Tax cuts for the rich are dangerous.

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Mohamed El-Erian: Why Another Stimulus WON’T Be Enough

August 27, 2010

In sum, the current policy approaches here and abroad are unlikely to deliver a durable and robust U.S. recovery and, critically, create sufficient growth in jobs. Yet the main debate in Washington is whether to do more of the same — namely, another fiscal stimulus and another round of quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve. This clearly conflicts with evidence that a broader and more holistic response is needed.

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Laurence J. Kotlikoff: What Should the Fed Do to Move the Economy Ahead?

August 25, 2010

First, some background. The U.S. is bankrupt. Don’t take my work for it. Take the IMF’s. In its recent review of the U.S. economy, the IMF said “The U.S. fiscal gap is huge for plausible discount rates.” And “… closing the fiscal gap requires a permanent annual fiscal adjustment equal to about 14 percent of U.S. GDP.” (See section 6 of http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2010/cr10248.pdf) The fiscal gap is the value today (the present value) of the different between projected spending (including serving official debt) and projected revenue in all future years. To put 14 percent of U.S. GDP in perspective, total revenues currently constitute only 14.9 percent of GDP. The Congressional Budget Office’s Long-Term Alternative (i.e., honest) Fiscal Scenario projection shows, if anything, an even greater degree of insolvency. Using the CBO’s spreadsheet, I measure the fiscal gap at $202 trillion. Congress may cut some spending and raise some taxes, but it’s not going to come up with anything close to 14 percent of GDP on an annual basis without radically reforming and simplifying our tax, retirement, healthcare, and financial systems, each of which is an incredibly complex and hugely inefficient mess. Congressman Paul Ryan’s Roadmap offers such radical, simplifying, growth-promoting, and physiologically-inspiring reforms. If Uncle Sam doesn’t come up with a KISS (keep it simple, stupid) like Ryan’s or mine (see my recent book, Jimmy Stewart Is Dead, including the Afterword), which entails ironclad control on growth in federal spending, Uncle Sam will be forced to make money the third-world way — by printing it. Let’s consider this most likely scenario. I.e., let’s consider the fact that Uncle Sam has a time-path of expenditures net of taxes, which he can only “finance” by printing money. I put the word finance in quotes because printing money is simply a way of imposing a hidden and subtle tax, which economists call seignorage. In printing money and spending it, the government meets its obligations. But the extra money leads prices to rise by more than would otherwise occur. This reduces the purchasing power of the money and of the government bonds people already hold. And this loss of purchasing power of existing money balances and the decline in the real value of government debt represents the seignorage tax. So monetary policy is a form of fiscal policy, and we have to think about the Fed’s actions from the perspective of fiscal policy. If we take it as given that Uncle Sam will print money to “cover” his bills, the only question is when. He can print money today to pay off future bills or he can wait until the future to do so. Printing money today to buy long-term Treasury bonds is an example of the former. Sam can also print money today to buy assets that will generate income over time. The return on those assets can then be used to pay future bills. For example, the Fed could print $9 trillion this morning and buy back all outstanding Treasury bills and bonds. (Note, the Fed would need to print more money if the price of these securities rose as it was buying them up). This afternoon, it could print, say, $25 trillion and buy up half the world’s stocks. These two acts would make a big improvement in Uncle Sam’s finances. But the prices of goods and services would skyrocket and the dollar would lose all of its value. Worse, everyone would see they’d been taken and that they should never have held dollars or anything denominated in dollars. Overnight people would make the yuan, the Canadian dollar, or some other more trustworthy money the reserve currency. So as much as Uncle Sam would like to print $9 trillion this morning and $25 trillion this afternoon and shave $34 trillion off his $202 trillion fiscal gap, he’s not likely to do so for fear of exposing his racket. Instead, Uncle Sam, actually, Uncle Ben (as in Ben Bernanke), has decided to print money to buy back U.S. bonds and to buy private assets, but on a smaller scale. We heard this week of the Fed’s plans to further expand its “balance” sheet and purchase longer term U.S. Treasury bonds. The Fed also will, it appears, continue to indirectly purchase private assets, primarily in the form of mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. This makes sense. When prices are stable or falling, the ability of the public to see through to what’s really going on is that much less. Indeed, exacting the seniorage tax is easiest when prices are falling because the public doesn’t realize that had the central bank not printed so much money, prices would have fallen even further and they would have enjoyed a bigger increase in the purchasing power of their money and government bonds. I.e., when prices are falling and the government prints money, it effectively taxes holders of money and government bonds by limiting their real capital gains on these holdings. Yes, this is very subtle, but that’s what’s going on. So, to get back to the question of what monetary policy the Fed should be running right now, my answer is that if the Fed is ultimately going to need to print money to pay the government’s bills, this is the time to do it or, at least,more of it. The danger, though, is that when the economy returns to normal, there will be so much money sloshing around that prices will rise dramatically. The Fed is very worried about this outcome having printed $1,152 trillion since August 2007 and jacked up the monetary base by a factor of 2.4. Indeed, the Fed is so worried about this extra money getting into the economy’s blood stream that it’s been bribing banks to horde this money as excess reserves. The bribe is coming in the form of paying interest on the excess reserves. This bribe has also been used to pass money under the table to the banks so they could “earn” money in a completely safe manner and, thereby, remain solvent. In worrying about inflation and in keeping the banks afloat via payment of interest on excess reserves, the Fed has undermined it’s other objective, namely getting the banks to make more loans to the private sector. I think it’s time to focus on that objective. Hence, I’d also recommend that the Fed stop paying interest on deposits and take the risk on inflation. Jobs, at this point, are more important than prices.

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Laurence J. Kotlikoff: Is There A Government Bond Bubble?

August 25, 2010

YES, there is a government bond bubble. And it’s huge. Uncle Sam and his counterparts in the EU and Japan are broke and are, almost surely, going to print vast quantities of money to cover their enormous spending obligations. The printing presses are already working full time. The Fed, for example, has increased the monetary base by 140% in the last three years. If and when this money gets lent out by the banks (they are now holding much of it in excess reserves) prices of goods and services (the price level) should rise by 140%! A one-time jump in prices of this magnitude would leave the nominal price of outstanding nominal bonds unchanged, but reduce the real price (the purchasing power of nominal bonds) by 58%. But what we’ve seen is the beginning, not the end, of the money creation process, and any increases in the current price level will give rise to expectations of future increases in prices. This will raise long-term interest rates and lower nominal bond prices. And it doesn’t take much of an increase in expected future inflation to do a very big number on the prices of long-term bonds. So current bondholders will get hurt in two ways. The prices of their bonds will fall due to concern about future money creation and the current price level will jump due to past money creation. Is this for sure? Nothing’s for sure in a very uncertain world in which bond traders and the public are focused on countries’ official debts, rather than their fiscal gaps, to gauge the need to print money. The labeling problem in economics (discussed, informally, in prior blogs and, formally, here and here) renders official debt figures utterly meaningless. But this emperor’s new clothes continue to draw lots of attention. Although I wouldn’t touch long-term, US nominal bonds with a 1,000-foot pole, the Fed would scoff at my concerns about inflation. The Fed says it’s ready, at the first sign of inflation, to sell huge quantities of bonds into the market to suck out all the money it injected in the last three years. The Fed thinks it can do so without depressing bond prices and raising interest rates. Maybe it can, maybe it can’t. But as of last week, the Fed was concerned enough about raising rates to announce it would continue to actively buy bonds (i.e., print even more money). What the Fed can’t avoid, short of Congress’ adopting radical structural reforms, is the fiscal train wreak that’s coming. Congress cannot forever continue to borrow from Peter to pay Paul, whether explicitly, through the formal sale of bonds, or implicitly, through the expansion of pay-as-you-go transfer programs. At some point foreigners will stop enabling our Ponzi scheme and Uncle Sam will find that he can’t “borrow” or “tax” additional resources from younger generations to hand over to older ones because the younger generations will have already handed over everything or almost everything they earn. Well before this happens, the Fed will come under enormous pressure to lower interest rates, the need for which is the standard handy excuse for making money by making money. As this occurs and inflation takes off, we’ll likely see a switch from the dollar to the yuan or to a basket of foreign currencies as the world’s reserve currency. All it will take is a couple of big players to signal they’ve lost faith in the dollar and Uncle Sam’s gig will be up and its bonds will be down–way down.

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Megola Inc. Announces Management Team Changes

August 23, 2010

POINT EDWARD, ON–(Marketwire – August 23, 2010) –  Megola Inc. ( OTCBB : MGON ) announces that Mr. Sufan Siauw has joined the Board of Directors effective for the company’s 2011 Fiscal Year. Mr. Siauw, previously a member of Megola’s Advisory Board, replaces Mr. Willard (Buzz) Brown on the Board of Directors. Mr. Brown continues his relationship with Megola as President and CEO of New Fire Solutions, LLC.

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Edward D. Kleinbard: Sacred Tax Cows: It’s Them or Us

August 10, 2010

The National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform is in a pickle. We can expect Republican members of the Commission to push for cuts in government spending but no new taxes, and Democratic members to argue that tax increases are necessary. With a supermajority required to approve any recommendation, what hope is there of success? The best hope for bipartisan consensus lies in targeting the $1.2 trillion a year in hidden government spending embedded in the Tax Code in the form of “tax expenditures.” These programs are styled as tax savings, but really function as replacements for explicit government spending. Some make sense, but a great many are poorly targeted and would never pass Congress if presented as an outright spending proposal. Unfortunately, some of the most popular of these tax breaks – in particular, political “sacred cows” like the home mortgage interest deduction, the charitable contribution deduction and the deduction for state and local taxes – are incredibly expensive and give the country very poor returns relative to their cost. Everyone likes these tax breaks, but in light of the long-term fiscal crisis facing the country, we must choose: we can maintain our herd of hideously expensive tax sacred cows, or we can sacrifice them and set the country on the path to fiscal health. Today the government spends more through tax expenditures than it collects from the personal income tax, and spends twice as much through the Tax Code as it does through explicit discretionary spending programs. Unlike explicit spending, tax expenditures show up in the budget process simply as reduced tax revenues. In reality the tax revenues are there, borne by taxpayers not eligible for the subsidy, and spent on those who do qualify. It’s as if the government actually collected roughly twice as much in personal income taxes as it actually does, but then spent all those extra revenues on programs that today are invisible as a matter of budget presentation or debate. The reason to focus on tax expenditures is that we have little choice. Cutting traditional spending programs cannot by itself address the fiscal gap in the second half of this decade. For 2007, total non-defense discretionary spending (for example, spending on highways, housing, education and national parks) amounted to only 18 percent of federal government outlays. Cutting Social Security benefits or government spending on healthcare could make a much larger impact, especially the further out you take the projections. But in light of citizens’ reliance on existing programs in planning their futures, the aging of America’s population (and with it the increase in demands for these programs), and the long time lag before incremental changes materially affect budget numbers, it is improbable that even remotely feasible changes in Social Security or healthcare policies could by themselves address our deficit problem over the next decade. From the other direction, the fiscal gap also cannot be addressed solely by taxing the rich. To do so would require that the top income tax rate jump from 35 percent to 75 percent or more – levels that haven’t been seen in over 40 years. In light of the increasing income inequality in the United States, there’s a good case to be made for somewhat higher marginal rates on high-income Americans, but there just aren’t enough rich individuals to fill the fiscal gap by themselves. By necessity, then, any plausible plan to set this country on a sustainable budget path will require higher tax revenues, borne by the majority of Americans. This need not be dismissed as irresponsible. The United States currently is a low-tax country. The OECD calculates that the aggregate tax burden in the United States (federal, state and local) in 2007 was the fourth-lowest as a share of gross domestic product among the organization’s 33 members, comprising most of the world’s large economies. By making some judicious adjustments to tax rates and targeting tax expenditures, we can meet President Obama’s goal of reducing budget deficits to 3 percent or less of GDP in the second half of this decade, and we can shrink the overall handprint of government on the economy. (Longer-term balance requires revisiting the major entitlements programs.) Moreover, we can do so without recourse to new taxes, like a Value Added Tax. The process would include two elements: first, revert to the tax rate schedule in effect during the Clinton Administration. That will raise the tax rates imposed on affluent Americans in particular, but only to levels that we know from past experience are consistent with a robust economy. Second, eliminate itemized deductions, except possibly those for extraordinary medical expenses (because they do relate to an individual’s ability to pay tax). The largest itemized deductions, those for home mortgage interest, charitable contributions and state and local taxes, are among the most expensive tax subsidies. These three sacred cows alone are projected to cost at least $240 billion for just the coming fiscal year, and that cost will climb as the economy recovers. Only about one-third of tax filers are eligible to claim itemized deductions. And most economists agree that itemized deductions are poorly designed as incentives, for two reasons. One, the subsidies go up as an individual’s income increases (because tax deductions are more valuable the higher your maximum tax bracket), and two, they frequently reward acts – much charitable giving, for example – that would have occurred even without the subsidy. Economists Rosanne Altshuler and colleagues at the Tax Policy Center recently calculated that the changes proposed here would raise more than enough revenue to address the fiscal gap in the second half of this decade. The proposal also would add to the progressivity of the tax system, because itemizers in most cases are higher-income taxpayers. Moreover, the changes would also cause fewer tax-related adverse effects on the economy than would other income tax revenue-raisers of comparable magnitude, such as significant hikes in marginal tax rates at every level. Of course, it would be inadvisable to go cold turkey on a change as dramatic as the one I propose, because current housing prices and household budgets incorporate the existence of these subsidies. Instead, their elimination should be implemented over a period of several years. That delays the full benefit, but the sooner we begin phasing out much of the synthetic government spending that permeates the Tax Code, the sooner we will reach the goal of sound fiscal policy. Itemized tax deductions and other tax expenditures routinely are labeled “sacred cows,” made politically untouchable by virtue of their great popularity and entrenched political constituencies. But the reality is that, in light of our current unsustainable long-term fiscal path, we really have no choice: it’s them or us. Tax expenditures are a $1.2 trillion per year herd of sacred cows that we can no longer afford to keep. Their culling must begin. Professor of Law, University of Southern California Gould School of Law, and former Chief of Staff of the U.S. Congress’s Joint Committee on Taxation. ekleinbard@law.usc.edu

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Bank of Baroda sees 50% growth this fiscal

July 27, 2010

Bank of Baroda sees 50% growth this fiscal

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State Budget Crisis: 46 States Facing ‘Greek-Style Deficits’

June 25, 2010

Even as the U.S. appears to be on the mend — gross domestic product has climbed three straight quarters — finances in Arizona, Illinois, New Jersey, New York and other states show few signs of improvement. Forty-six states face budget shortfalls that add up to $112 billion for the fiscal year ending next June, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington research institution. State spending is 12 percent of U.S. GDP. “States are going to have to cut back spending and raise taxes the same way Greece and Spain are,” says Dean Baker, co- director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington. “That runs counter to stimulating the economy and will put a big damper on the recovery in the latter half of this year.”

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Olivier Blanchard: Ten Commandments for Fiscal Adjustment in Advanced Economies

June 24, 2010

Olivier Blanchard and Carlo Cottarelli are economists at the International Monetary Fund Advanced economies are facing the difficult challenge of implementing fiscal adjustment strategies without undermining a still fragile economic recovery. Fiscal adjustment is key to high private investment and long-term growth. It may also be key, at least in some countries, to avoiding disorderly financial market conditions, which would have a more immediate impact on growth, through effects on confidence and lending. But too much adjustment could also hamper growth, and this is not a trivial risk. How should fiscal strategies be designed to make them consistent with both short-term and long-term growth requirements? We offer ten commandments to make this possible. Put simply, what advanced countries need is clarity of intent, an appropriate calibration of fiscal targets, and adequate structural reforms. With a little help from monetary policy, and from their (emerging market) friends. Commandment I: You shall have a credible medium-term fiscal plan with a visible anchor (in terms of either an average pace of adjustment, or of a fiscal target to be achieved within four-five years). There is no simple one-size-fits-all rule. Our current macroeconomic projections imply that an average improvement in the cyclically-adjusted primary balance of some 1 percentage point per year during the next four-five years would be consistent with gradually closing the output gap, given current expectations on private sector demand, and would stabilize the average debt ratio by the middle of this decade. Countries with higher deficits/debt should do more, others should do less. Such a pace of adjustment must be backed-up by fairly specific spending and revenue projections, and supported by structural reforms (see below). Commandment II: You shall not front-load your fiscal adjustment, unless financing needs require it. For a few countries, frontloading may be needed to maintain access to markets and finance the deficit at reasonable rates–but, in general, a steady pace of adjustment is more important than front-loading, which could undermine the recovery and be reversed. Nonetheless, a non-trivial first installment is needed: promises of future action will not be enough. Current fiscal consolidation plans in advanced G-20 countries imply on average a reduction in the cyclically adjusted deficit of some 1¼ percentage point of GDP in 2011, with significant dispersion around this according to country circumstances. This seems broadly adequate, and consistent with commandment I, at least based on current projections on the recovery of aggregate demand. This said, while front-loading fiscal tightening is, in general, inappropriate, front-loading the approval of policy measures (which would become effective at a later date) will enhance the credibility of the adjustment. Commandment III: You shall target a long-term decline in the public debt-to-GDP ratio, not just its stabilization at post-crisis levels. High public debt tends to raise interest rates, lower potential growth, and impede fiscal flexibility. Since the early 1970s, public debt in most advanced countries has been the ultimate absorber of negative shocks, going up in bad times, not coming down in good times. In the G-7 average, gross debt was 82 percent of GDP in 2007, a level never reached before without a major war. The current fiscal doldrums are due not only to the crisis, but also to how fiscal policy was mismanaged during the good times. This time, it must be different: the final goal must be to lower public debt ratios, gradually but steadily. Commandment IV: You shall focus on fiscal consolidation tools that are conducive to strong potential growth. This will require a bias towards (current) spending cuts, as spending ratios are high in advanced countries and require highly distortionary tax levels. Some cuts should be no brainers: for example, shifting from universal to targeted social transfers would involve significant savings, while protecting the poor. Containing public sector wages–which have risen faster than GDP in several advanced countries in the last decade–will be necessary. This said, nothing should be ruled out. Countries with low revenue ratios and large adjustment needs–like the United States and Japan–will also have to act on the revenue side. Promising “no new taxes,” in all countries and circumstances, is unrealistic. Commandment V: You shall pass early pension and health care reforms as current trends are unsustainable. Increases in pension and health care spending represented over 80 percent of the increase in primary public spending to GDP ratio observed in the G-7 countries in the last decades. The net present value of future increases in health care and pension spending is more than ten times larger than the increase in public debt due to the crisis. Any fiscal consolidation strategy must involve reforms in both these areas. This includes Europe, where official projections largely underestimate health care spending trends. Given the magnitude of the spending increases involved, early action in these areas will be much more conducive to increased credibility than fiscal front-loading. And will not risk undermining the recovery. Indeed, some measures in this area–while politically difficult–could have positive effects on both demand and supply (for example, committing to an increase in the retirement age over time). Commandment VI: You shall be fair. To be sustainable over time, the fiscal adjustment should be equitable. Equity has various dimensions, including maintaining an adequate social safety net and the provision of public services that allow a level playing field, regardless of conditions at birth. Fighting tax evasion is also a critical component to equity. For VAT, a tax that is relatively resilient to fraud, tax evasion averages about 15 percent of revenues in G-20 advanced countries. Evasion for other taxes is likely to be higher. Commandment VII: You shall implement wide reforms to boost potential growth. Strong growth has a staggering effect on public debt: a one percentage point increase in potential growth–assuming a tax ratio of 40 percent–lowers the debt ratio by 10 percentage points within 5 years and by 30 percentage points within 10 years, if the resulting higher revenues are saved. An acceleration of labor, product and financial market reforms will thus be critical. In the current context of weak aggregate demand, reforms that increase investment are more desirable than reforms that increase saving. While both have positive long-run effects, investment friendly reforms increase demand and output in the short run, while saving friendly reforms do the opposite. A word of caution, though: the timing and magnitude of the effects of structural reforms on growth are uncertain: fiscal adjustment plans relying on faster growth would not be credible. Commandment VIII: You shall strengthen your fiscal institutions. Sustaining fiscal adjustment over time requires appropriate fiscal institutions. The current ones allowed a record public debt accumulation before the crisis. They are insufficient. This requires better fiscal rules, including in Europe; better budgetary processes, including in the United States, where, at least for Congress, the budget is essentially a one-year-at-a-time exercise; and better fiscal monitoring, including through independent fiscal agencies of the type recently created in the United Kingdom. Commandment IX: You shall properly coordinate monetary and fiscal policy. If fiscal policy is tightened, interest rates should not be raised as rapidly as in other phases of economic recovery. Calls for an early monetary policy tightening in advanced economies are misplaced. Commandment X: You shall coordinate your policies with other countries. In a number of advanced countries, the reduction in budget deficits must come with a reduction in current account deficits. Put another way, if the recovery is to be maintained, the initial adverse effects of fiscal consolidation on internal demand have to be offset by stronger external demand. But this implies that the opposite happens in the rest of the world. In a number of emerging market economies, current account surpluses must be reduced, and these countries must shift from external to internal demand. The recent decisions taken by China are, in this respect, an important and welcome step. Policy coordination will also be important in some structural areas: for example, over the medium term, it will be critical to protect fiscal revenues from rising tax competition. Obey these commandments, and chances are high that you will achieve fiscal consolidation and sustained growth. This post originally appeared at iMFDirect

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U.K. Budget Deficit Narrower Than Forecast as Growth Improves Tax Revenue

June 18, 2010

By Gonzalo Vina June 18 (Bloomberg) — Britain posted a smaller fiscal deficit in May than economists forecast as growth lifted tax receipts, providing a boost for finance minister George Osborne before his June 22 budget. The 16 billion-pound ($23.8 billion) shortfall compared with 17.4 billion pounds a year earlier, the Office for National Statistics said in London today. The result was below the 18 billion-pound median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey . Osborne is set to outline the deepest spending cuts since at least the 1970s to tame a budget deficit of 11 percent of gross domestic product last fiscal year. U.K. government bond yields have fallen since Prime Minister David Cameron took office six weeks ago on expectations his coalition government will step up the pace of deficit reduction. “The figures are a bit better than expected,” said Philip Shaw, chief European economist at Investec Securities in London. “There are signs that the figures have turned but that doesn’t detract from the need for the big squeeze I am sure we are going to get next week.” The 10-year gilt yield has fallen 37 basis points since May 11 and was trading at 3.512 percent as of 9:37 a.m. in London, up 3 basis points from yesterday. The pound, which has lost 8 percent against the dollar this year, was 0.3 percent higher on the day at $1.4865. Osborne is under pressure from investors and ratings companies to deliver on his pledge to slash the deficit as the sovereign-debt crisis in the euro region escalates. Pressure for Cuts “I think the risk that this economy and the U.S. faces is that unless we get control of our debt burden we could be in line at some point as well,” former Bank of England policy maker DeAnne Julius said in a Bloomberg Television interview June 16. Current receipts rose 7.6 percent in May from a year earlier, boosted by a 19 percent increase in receipts of value- added tax, a 17.5 percent levy on sales of goods and services. Government spending climbed 7.3. percent, with spending on social benefits gaining 3.7 percent. In April, the deficit was 8.3 billion pounds rather than the 10 billion pounds initially reported. The revision was partly due to higher-than-expected receipts from a tax on banker bonuses. The levy, expected to raise 2 billion pounds, generated 2.5 billion pounds, the statistics office said. Revisions The deficit excluding financial-sector interventions in the fiscal year through April was 154.7 billion pounds, revised from 156.1 billion pounds. As a share of GDP, the shortfall was revised to 10.99 percent 11.1 percent. The looming deficit-cutting drive has cast a shadow over prospects for consumer spending as the economy emerges from its worst recession since World War II. Osborne has refused to rule out raising the VAT rate. A measure of cash entering and leaving the public sector showed an 12 billion-pound deficit in May compared with 19.1 billion pounds a year earlier. Economists predicted a 20.5 billion-pound shortfall, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey. Net debt climbed to 903 billion pounds, or 62.2 percent of GDP. Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander yesterday pledged to cut the deficit at a faster pace than the previous Labour government planned as he froze or axed projects worth more than 10 billion pounds. While the independent fiscal watchdog set up by Osborne predicts the overall deficit will be 4 percent lower over the next five years than the Treasury forecast in March, it says the structural hole has increased, meaning the new government has more to fill through spending cuts and tax rises. The deficit will be little changed at 155 billion pounds in the fiscal year that began in April, or 10.5 percent of GDP, the Office for Budget Responsibility said earlier this week. In the first two months of the fiscal year, the deficit was 24.3 billion pounds, down from 26.2 billion pounds a year earlier. To contact the reporter on this story: Gonzalo Vina in London at gvina@bloomberg.net .

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Aiful, Japanese Consumer Lenders Face Industry Shakeout as Law Caps Rates

June 17, 2010

By Finbarr Flynn and Takako Taniguchi June 18 (Bloomberg) — Japan’s consumer finance companies face multibillion-dollar losses and an industry shakeout as stricter loan rules that take effect today force them to slow lending, analysts said. Aiful Corp. , Promise Co., Takefuji Corp. and Acom Co., the country’s top four consumer lenders, face losses of 503 billion yen ($5.5 billion) over the next two years, according to estimates from Nomura Holdings Inc. The law caps interest rates at 20 percent and prohibits lending to borrowers with consumer debt equal to a third or more of their annual income. More than 60 percent of Japan’s 3,900 registered lenders are yet to comply with a rule requiring them to sign up with credit information firms , meaning they can’t make new loans. The caps, meant to protect borrowers, mark the final phase of a four-year crackdown on the industry that’s contributed to the closure of thousands of consumer lenders, choking off credit in Asia’s largest economy. “The number of consumer lenders could easily halve,” said Shiro Yoshioka , a Tokyo-based analyst at Japaninvest KK, an independent research firm. “Borrowers with nowhere else to go will end up filing for bankruptcy.” About 1,530 lenders had registered with credit data collectors Japan Credit Information Reference Center Corp. and Credit Information Center Corp. as of June 1, according to the two companies. Ratings Cuts Japan’s parliament passed the consumer credit law in December 2006 following a Supreme Court ruling that lenders had charged excessive interest rates, and gave the companies until today to adapt to the stricter rules. Almost three-quarters of consumer loans carried interest of more than 20 percent in the year ended March 2006, according to Japan’s Financial Services Agency. The crackdown led to a surge in customer claims for interest refunds, triggering billions of dollars in industry losses and a slump in consumer lenders’ shares. Moody’s Investors Service and Standard & Poor’s have cut credit ratings of Takefuji and Aiful to below investment grade, or junk. Aiful , Japan’s fourth-biggest consumer lender by market capitalization, has tumbled 96 percent in Tokyo trading since Dec. 31, 2006, and the company reported 675 billion yen of losses over the past four fiscal years. The Kyoto-based company skirted bankruptcy in December after 65 creditors agreed to delay repayments on 279.1 billion yen in debt. Model Not ‘Viable’ Shares in Tokyo-based Takefuji lost 94 percent during the period. Takefuji, which has the lowest credit rating from Moody’s among the four biggest consumer lenders, has approved less than 10 percent of loan applications since November and is selling assets to repay debt, according to the company. “Things will only continue to get worse because of the new regulations,” according to Ehsan Syed , a Tokyo-based analyst with Fitch Ratings Ltd. “The business model isn’t viable anymore.” Takefuji is taking “all possible measures to survive,” President Akira Kiyokawa said at a press conference in May. Promise President Ken Kubo last month said this fiscal year will be the company’s “severest,” adding a loss of “several tens of billions of yen” is likely unavoidable. Acom President Shigeyoshi Kinoshita , while forecasting a 26.2 billion yen profit this fiscal year, said May 13, “It’s difficult to predict what effect the loan cap will have on borrowers’ behavior.” Loan Declines The companies’ customers typically take out loans to cover living expenses, with refinancing existing debt cited as the second-most common reason, according to a survey conducted by the Japan Financial Services Association in December. Fifty-three percent of individuals who borrow from the lenders have annual incomes of 3 million yen or less, the survey showed. Half of those borrowers may be unable to get additional loans from consumer finance companies because of the cap that limits debt to a third of annual income, the lobbying group said. Aiful president Yoshitaka Fukuda said May 12 he expects demand for funding from individuals and business operators to continue, though the company may be unable to lend to about half of its existing borrowers. Lawsuits claiming overcharged interest have saddled the industry with more than 4.4 trillion yen in refund charges, according to the association, forcing lenders to close branches and eliminate workers to survive. Costs related to interest refunds will likely total 1.6 trillion yen for Aiful, Takefuji, Acom and Promise over the next five years, Nomura analyst Wataru Ohtsuka said in a May 19 report. Lenders backed by large banking groups such as Promise — 21 percent owned by Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc. — and Acom, a unit of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. , have better prospects of weathering new regulations as they benefit from funding and loan guarantees, said Syed. “Without the backing of a large bank, it’s going to be difficult to stay competitive and profitable,” he said. To contact the reporters on this story: Finbarr Flynn in Tokyo at fflynn3@bloomberg.net ; Takako Taniguchi in Tokyo at ttaniguchi4@bloomberg.net

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States Face $127 BILLION Budget Shortfall As Stimulus Dries Up

June 15, 2010

Spending cuts by state and local governments from New York to California may act as a drag on the economy into 2011, only the second time in more than a half century that such reductions have restricted growth for three consecutive years. States face a cumulative budget gap of $127.4 billion as 46 prepare for the start of their fiscal year on July 1, according to a report this month by the National Governors Association and the National Association of State Budget Officers.

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Greek Economic Plan Is Sufficient to Avoid Debt Restructuring, OECD Says

June 15, 2010

By James G. Neuger June 15 (Bloomberg) — Greece’s “powerful” steps to overhaul the economy should enable it to escape the fiscal crisis without having to restructure its debt, said Pier Carlo Padoan , chief economist of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Speaking a day after Moody’s Investors Service downgraded Greece’s debt to junk status, Padoan lauded Prime Minister George Papandreou’s efforts to cut the deficit and make the economy more competitive. “I am convinced that Greece can make it without restructuring because they are doing all the painful things — both in the fiscal and in the structural domain — which need to be done,” Padoan said at the Lisbon Council in Brussels. Greek bonds fell today, pushing the 10-year yield to 9.28 percent, the highest since European leaders on May 10 followed up a 110 billion-euro ($135 billion) aid package for Greece by offering another 750 billion euros to other fiscally distressed governments. Buyers of credit-default swaps put the probability of a Greek default at 48 percent within five years, according to CMA DataVision. Papandreou delivered a “very, very powerful speech” about Greece’s economic revamp at a June 11 forum in Vienna, Padoan said. “Why should I not believe the prime minister?” Padoan said the euro’s decline from an all-time high of $1.60 in July 2008 is helping prop up the European economy, cushioning the impact of the debt crisis as it spreads from Greece to countries such as Spain and Portugal. “The euro has depreciated significantly,” he said. “Frankly, I don’t complain. It’s better to have a euro at $1.20 than $1.50. It adds a little bit of growth.” The euro rose for a second day against the dollar, trading at $1.2257 at 11:45 a.m. in London. To contact the reporter on this story: James G. Neuger in Brussels at jneuger@bloomberg.net

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Europe Ahead: ECB Monthly Report and UK May’s Fiscal Position in Details

June 13, 2010

Europe Ahead: ECB Monthly Report and UK May’s Fiscal Position in Details

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Pakistan Sets `Tough’ Deficit Target to Curb 13% Inflation, Get IMF Loan

June 6, 2010

By Farhan Sharif and Khurrum Anis June 7 (Bloomberg) — Pakistan imposed taxes on shares and electronic appliances and reduced ministers’ salaries to help cut the budget deficit to a six-year low and slow inflation. “The fiscal deficit target is very conservative, disciplined and tough,” Finance Minister Abdul Hafeez Shaikh said at a news conference in Islamabad yesterday after unveiling plans on June 5 to narrow the fiscal gap to 4 percent of gross domestic product in the year starting July 1. “We have to do this because government borrowings fuel inflation.” Consumer prices are running at over 13 percent in South Asia’s biggest economy after India, hurting livelihoods in a nation where the World Bank says a quarter of the people live on less than $1 a day. A lower budget shortfall may also enable Pakistan seek more funds from the International Monetary Fund as donor countries delay aid, Shaikh said May 12. The nation got $11.3 billion from the IMF since 2008 as war costs rose. Pakistan says it spent $43 billion since 2001 in the fight against Taliban militants. The government is narrowing its budget deficit from as much as 5.6 percent of GDP this year even as it needs cash to build power plants, dams and schools. Its deficit target for next year is the lowest since June 2005, according to government data. “The target for the fiscal deficit is ambitious,” said Sayem Ali, an economist at Standard Chartered Pakistan Ltd. in Karachi. “There are not enough avenues in the budget for revenue generation. The government is likely to enter into another IMF program.” Aid Delay Delays in aid worth $5.3 billion, pledged in April 2009 by the so-called Friends of Democratic Pakistan including the U.S., forced the government to boost borrowings by 14.5 percent to 365.9 billion rupees ($4.3 billion) in the 10 months to April from a year earlier, the central bank says, stoking inflation. As demand for overseas grants rose, Pakistan’s rupee lost 1.4 percent against the U.S. dollar this year and closed at 85.42 rupees in Karachi on June 4, according to Bloomberg data. The benchmark Karachi Stock Exchange 100 index advanced 2.7 percent this year. Shaikh said the total budget outlay for the new fiscal year is 3.26 trillion rupees, about 11 percent higher than the previous year. “The focus of this budget is on austerity because the global situation is still volatile and the security situation is still not controlled,” Shaikh said. “We must protect the economic recovery of the last two years.” Lower Deficit Pakistan is aiming to trim its budget deficit as Europe’s sovereign debt crisis, which led to a 750 billion-euro ($913 billion) rescue fund for the region’s weakest members including Greece, threatens global recovery. The nation’s $168 billion economy may expand 4.5 percent in the next financial year, the fastest pace since 2008, after growing 4.1 percent this year, according to the Planning Commission. Sales at Pakistan’s biggest cement makers including Lucky Cement Ltd. and D.G. Khan Cement Ltd. may get a fillip as Shaikh unveiled plans to accelerate growth by stepping up spending on roads and dams by 38 percent next fiscal, Karachi-based KASB Securities Ltd. said in a report yesterday. To increase revenue, Shaikh imposed a 10 percent capital gains tax on shares held for less than six months, and 7.5 percent for between 6 months and one year. There will be no tax for stocks sold after a year, he said. Excise Duty Shaikh also announced a 10 percent federal excise duty on appliances including air conditioners and deep freezers and raised levies on natural gas and cigarettes. A proposal to introduce a new value-added tax has been delayed until Oct. 1 because the finance ministry is still working on the modalities of its implementation, Shaikh said. As a result, the general sales tax will be 17 percent for the first three months of the new financial year, instead of levies varying from 16 to 25 percent, that offer scope for corruption and tax evasion, he said. On Oct. 1, the value-added tax will be imposed at a flat rate of 15 percent, replacing the general sales tax. Pakistan Telecommunications Co. , the nation’s biggest fixed-line provider, may gain because of the changes in the value-added tax rate, according to a June 6 report by Al-Falah Securities Ltd. in Karachi. Shaikh, who took an oath as finance minister on June 5 after being appointed to head the ministry in March, also said cabinet ministers will take a 10 percent pay cut. He pledged to reduce subsidies on state-owned enterprises including Pakistan International Airlines Corp. and Pakistan Steels Mills Corp. To contact the reporters on this story: Farhan Sharif in Karachi at fsharif2@bloomberg.net ; Khurrum Anis in Karachi at Kkhan14@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Isn’t Ready for Credit Rating Upgrade This Year, Moody’s Usui Says

May 24, 2010

By Yuki Hagiwara and Takako Iwatani May 25 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. , the world’s largest carmaker, will have insufficient profit to warrant an upgrade of its credit rating this fiscal year, Moody’s Investors Service said. Toyota, which Moody’s rates the highest among global carmakers at Aa2, needs an annual operating profit of 1 trillion yen ($11 billion), more than triple its outlook for this year, before it can be considered for a higher rating, Tadashi Usui , senior analyst at the credit rating company , said in an interview in Tokyo. It also needs an operating margin of 5 percent, he said. Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s began cutting Toyota’s rating last year after the carmaker posted the first of three straight quarterly losses. Usui said recalls of more than 8 million Toyota vehicles worldwide in the past year have damaged the company’s reputation, threatening to slow an earnings rebound. “I cannot say confidently that Toyota’s operating profit will recover smoothly,” Usui said. Toyota fell 1.9 percent to 3,300 yen as of the 12:50 p.m. trading break in Tokyo, while the benchmark Nikkei 225 index fell 3.1 percent. The automaker has declined 15 percent so far this year. Profit Outlook Operating profit may increase 90 percent this fiscal year to 280 billion yen, from 147.5 billion yen in the 12 months ended March 31, the carmaker said May 11. The forecast is almost 90 percent smaller than the record 2.27 trillion yen Toyota posted in the year that ended in March 2008. Moody’s downgraded Toyota’s credit rating last month to Aa2, its third highest level, with a negative outlook, from Aa1. The automaker lost its top Aaa rating in February 2009. Toyota has about 5 trillion yen of debt maturing by the end of 2012, with 1.09 trillion yen due in 2010, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Standard & Poor’s, which also rates Toyota’s debt at its third-highest grade, AA, removed the company from its “Credit Watch” list on May 14. The outlook may be raised to “stable ” from “negative” in the next one or two years, should Toyota’s recovery in profitability become clearer, Chizuko Satsukawa , a Tokyo-based analyst at S&P said today. ‘Gradual Recovery’ Fitch Ratings has Toyota on “rating watch negative,” according to Senior Director Jeong Min Pak . “We believe the company will still show gradual recovery, especially with our expectation of modest recovery in U.S. auto demand this year,” Pak said. “However, the scope of the recovery and profitability is expected to lag behind other Japanese makers.” Toyota’s earnings recovery may also be slowed by the introduction of better cars by rivals Hyundai Motor Co. and Ford Motor Co. in the U.S., traditionally the most profitable market for Japanese automakers, Usui said. Toyota also has excess capacity in the U.S., he said. Moody’s raised Ford’s credit rating to B1 from B2 on May 18. Toyota also faces at least 180 consumer and shareholder lawsuits in the U.S. stemming from vehicle recalls for defects linked to unintended acceleration. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration fined Toyota a record $16.4 million last month for not promptly notifying it of the pedal defect. ‘Good Lesson’ Toyota President Akio Toyoda said May 22 that scrutiny from inside and outside the company has been a “good lesson” for Toyota, and he expects the carmaker to emerge stronger after the recalls. The difference in yield on Toyota’s 1.772 percent notes due June 2019 and government bonds of similar maturity narrowed to 20 basis points yesterday, matching the lowest since the automaker issued the debt, according to Japan Securities Dealers Association prices on Bloomberg. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. Credit-default swaps tied to Toyota debt due in 5 years declined 3 basis points to 87 basis points yesterday, according to CMA DataVision prices in New York. The contracts, which reflect market perceptions of creditworthiness, traded at 50.5 basis points on April 16, this year’s lowest. Credit default swaps pay the buyer face value if a borrower fails to meet its obligations, less the value of the defaulted debt. Competitors Honda Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Co., Toyota’s largest Japanese competitors, must also increase profitability before Moody’s will consider raising their credit ratings, Usui said. For Honda, Japan’s second-largest automaker, an operating margin of 7 percent is necessary before Moody’s will consider raising its A1 rating, while a margin of less than 5 percent may trigger a downgrade. At Nissan, the nation’s third-biggest carmaker, an operating margin higher than 5 percent is the minimum necessary for Moody’s to consider raising the current Baa2 rating, Usui said. Rising raw-material prices and a strengthening yen also pose risks for Japanese carmaker earnings, he said. To contact the reporter on this story: Yukiko Hagiwara in Tokyo at Yhagiwara1@bloomberg.net

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British Airways Cabin Crew Cleared to Strike as Appeals Court Rejects Ban

May 20, 2010

By Steven Rothwell and James Lumley May 20 (Bloomberg) — British Airways Plc ’s 12,000 cabin crew are free to resume strike action over pay and staffing levels after a court overturned a ruling blocking the walkout. Flight attendants could start a five-day strike as early as next week after the Court of Appeals in London said the Unite union’s failure to provide members with a breakdown of ballot results didn’t render the vote on stoppages invalid. British Airways says a walkout would ground 30 percent of flights slated to carry 25,000 people a day, including 40 percent of long-haul services from London Heathrow. Europe’s third-biggest carrier had already reverted to a reduced schedule today in preparation for the appeals court decision. “We will talk to BA at every opportunity including now and over the weekend,” Unite General Secretary Derek Simpson said after the ruling. He said there’ll be no strike before May 24, when the union had been due to stage the second of four five-day walkouts it had originally planned. Unite lawyer John Hendy said at the start of the appeal that the strikes would be revived if the claim was upheld. British Airways was trading down 0.4 percent at 192 pence as of 11:36 a.m. in London after initially falling 1.4 percent following the ruling. Shares of the company, which says it will log a record pretax loss of 600 million pounds for the fiscal year to March 31 when it reports results tomorrow, have gained 2.6 percent this year, the fourth-best performance on the eight- member Bloomberg EMEA Airlines Index, which is down 16 percent. Strike Costs The union had originally called the first of four stoppages for May 18, having already held two walkouts over seven days in March that cost London-based British Airways about 45 million pounds ($65 million). The strike was blocked on May 17 when High Court Judge Richard McCombe ruled that Unite’s reliance on e-mails, the Internet and notices in airport crew rooms meant it hadn’t adequately told members about the result of a month-long ballot. The union argued that workers were perfectly aware of the results and that nobody had complained about being ill-informed. “BA cabin members are highly computer literate,” Lord Chief Justice Igor Judge said in today’s ruling. “They use the Internet on a daily basis. The website is indeed the most effective way of communicating.” The walkouts planned by Unite, part of the first sequence of strikes at British Airways since 1997, could cost the company more than 100 million pounds, based on its losses during the March stoppages. That would be equivalent to half the 205 million-pound operating profit that analysts predict the carrier will earn in the fiscal year that began on April 1. Negotiations over new terms for flight attendants began 15 months ago. Relations with Unite worsened in November, when Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh used voluntary departures to cut crew levels without consulting the union after the global recession led to a collapse in demand for air travel. Perks, Suspensions Unite has said the latest contract offer is an improvement on previous proposals and might be acceptable to its members should British Airways agree to reinstate travel privileges for cabin crew who went on strike in March and also take back workers who were suspended or fired during the dispute. The latest talks between the sides at the state-funded Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service came to a “premature end” this week after the High Court decision, Tony Woodley , Unite’s joint general secretary, said on May 18. The two parties have said they’re open to negotiations and U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron ’s new government also intervened this week, with Transport Secretary Philip Hammond urging the sides to “keep on talking for as long as it takes.” CEO Walsh says his plan is “very fair” and that he won’t budge on decisions taken regarding striking employees. ‘Dim View’ “The City will take a dim view if Walsh gives any ground,” Howard Wheeldon , senior strategist at BGC Partners LP in London, said this week, referring to London’s financial district. “The cupboard is bare.” Under the strike timetable in place today, British Airways will seek to fly about 70 percent of customers who have bought tickets with the help of crews who turn up for work. It has rented eight planes from other airlines and charter companies, together with pilots and flight attendants, in an effort to operate 50 percent of short-haul Heathrow services. Routes from London’s Gatwick and City airports aren’t be affected. The U.K. airline will seek to rebook some passengers whose flights have been canceled with 53 other carriers including alliance partners American Airlines, Iberia Lineas Aereas de Espana SA and Qantas Airways Ltd. To contact the reporters on this story: Steven Rothwell in London at srothwell@bloomberg.net ; James Lumley in London at jlumley1@bloomberg.net

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India, Hindustan Copper May Raise $1.1 Billion in Stock Sale, Ahmed Says

May 18, 2010

By Abhishek Shanker May 18 (Bloomberg) — Hindustan Copper Ltd. , India’s largest copper miner, said a planned share sale may fetch as much as 50 billion rupees ($1.1 billion), 25 percent more than estimated, following a surge in the stock price this year. The government will sell a 10 percent stake and the company a further 10 percent and the sale should be completed in September, three months ahead of schedule, Chairman and Managing Director Shakeel Ahmed said. The cabinet approval is expected this month, he said. Ahmed, who took over in October, is revising the fundraising estimate after Hindustan Copper shares rose 70 percent this year. The average copper price on the London Metal Exchange since January this year almost doubled to $7,337 a metric ton from the same period a year earlier. The funds will help “meet our immediate expansion needs, including an acquisition if we are able to identify an appropriate asset anywhere in the country or the world,” Ahmed said in an interview today. The share sale would raise as much as 40 billion rupees, he had predicted on Jan. 7. The shares rose as much as 1.5 percent to 476.90 rupees and traded at 472.05 rupees as of 11:14 a.m. in Mumbai. The Bombay Stock Exchange’s key Sensitive Index fell 0.2 percent. Asset Selloff Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee aims to raise 400 billion rupees this fiscal year selling shares in state-run companies including Coal India Ltd. and Steel Authority Of India Ltd. as part of a record asset selloff. The Sensex has fallen 6.5 percent since April 7, when the gauge was at its highest in more than two years. Still, it is more than double its March 2009 low and is valued at about 16 times current-year estimated profit, compared with a four-year average of 17.3 times. India is still the most expensive stock market in Asia outside of Japan, according to data tracked by Bloomberg. Hindustan Copper, which returned to profit in the last fiscal year, aims to increase output by more than six times in five years to tap rising metals demand in India, Ahmed said. The company plans to increase ore output by six times in five years by improving production in its mines, securing the rights to new mines in India and by acquiring assets overseas through joint ventures, he said. Hindustan Copper is seeking a venture with state-owned National Aluminium Co. to acquire assets abroad, he said. Hindustan Copper, which mines 3.2 million tons of ore, aims to increase production to over 20 million tons by 2015, Ahmed said. Of the total output, about 11 million tons will be mined locally. The company expects to win a license to prospect for reserves over an area of 36 square kilometers in the northwestern state of Rajasthan, Ahmed said, without giving more details. The company turned to a 1.55 billion rupee profit in the fiscal year ended March 31 from a loss of 103.1 million rupees a year earlier. Fourth-quarter net income rose to 917.4 million rupees from 37.8 million rupees, while sales rose to 19 percent to 4.1 billion rupees, the company said on May 14. To contact the reporter on this story: Abhishek Shanker in Mumbai at ashanker1@bloomberg.net

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Siemens Raises Full-Year Profit Forecast on Demand for Factory Equipment

April 29, 2010

By Richard Weiss April 29 (Bloomberg) — Siemens AG , Europe’s largest engineering company, said full-year earnings will be higher than previously forecast after it cut jobs and demand for light bulbs and factory automation equipment rebounded. Operating profit at the main industrial, energy, and health-care units will exceed the 7.5 billion euros ($9.9 billion) posted in fiscal 2009, Munich-based Siemens said in a statement today. That compares with a previous target of 6 billion euros to 6.5 billion euros. “We are profiting from measures we initiated early on to strengthen our competitiveness,” Chief Executive Peter Loescher said in the release. Europe’s manufacturers are emerging from the deepest contraction in decades as clients resume orders for products ranging from power cables to factory drives and medical gear. Siemens said today its three main divisions are on target to achieving their profitability goals and that demand in shorter- cycle businesses has picked up. Siemens rose as much as 1.8 percent to 73.26 euros and was trading at 72.62 euros as of 10.39 a.m. in Frankfurt, valuing the company at 66.3 billion euros. The stock has gained 13 percent this year, beating the 8 percent advance in the 84- member Bloomberg European Industrials Index. Profit Boost Operating profit from the three sectors rose 16 percent to 2.14 billion euros in the fiscal second quarter ended March 31, beating the 1.96 billion-euro mean estimate of nine analysts in a Bloomberg survey. Sales fell 3.9 percent to 18.23 billion euros, while net income rose 54 percent to 1.48 billion euros, Siemens said. Eleven of 14 divisions that report profitability figures reached their margin targets, while 3 fell short. “I was amazed by the quarterly profit,” said Jochen Klusmann , an analyst at BHF-BANK in Frankfurt who has a reduce ratings on Siemens shares and expects them to fall to 62 euros within 6 months. “The question, however, is what the underlying profit is, all charges and one-time effects aside, also when looking into 2011.” Siemens reported one-time gains of 180 million euros from U.S. pensions in the quarter ended March 31 and 110 million euros from currency and commodity hedging in the previous quarter. The company has said it expects further charges from its Nokia Siemens Network joint venture, and for workforce cuts in its industrial and information-technology divisions. Job Cuts Siemens cut 12,600 mainly administrative jobs in the fiscal year, reducing costs by 2 billion euros. About 5,000 posts were lost at the Osram lighting unit, where the quarterly operating margin jumped to 13.4 percent from 0.8 percent a year earlier. The company, whose products include high-speed trains and hospital scanners, has continued to cut jobs this year as demand dropped for some industrial products and its computer-services division, where 4,200 jobs will go, failed to improve its performance. Siemens employs 402,000 people worldwide. The fresh round of job cuts as Siemens targets a record sector profit — a measure introduced in 2008 — drew protests in Munich yesterday, with demonstrations outside the company’s headquarters. The improved figures at Siemens contrast with those of General Electric Co. , which on April 16 posted first-quarter revenue that trailed analyst estimates as sales of large equipment in the energy, aviation and rail industries declined. ABB Ltd., which competes with Siemens in power distribution and automation, on April 22 reported a lower-than-expected profit for the first quarter as clients in Asia and the Middle East delayed large power projects and prices fell. To contact the reporter on this story: Richard Weiss in Frankfurt at rweiss5@bloomberg.net .

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Ascendant Solutions, Inc. Reports 2009 Earnings, Earnings per Share and EBITDA

March 31, 2010

of $1,232,000 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009, compared to $956,000 in 2008. Real Estate Advisory Services EBITDA for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009 from the Company’s real estate advisory services segment was $1,184,000 compared

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Japanese Business Sentiment Approaches Pre-Crisis Levels, Tankan May Show

March 30, 2010

By Keiko Ujikane and Minh Bui March 31 (Bloomberg) — The Bank of Japan’s Tankan survey will probably show that business sentiment improved for a fourth straight quarter, approaching levels before the global financial crisis intensified 18 months ago. The Tankan index of sentiment among large manufacturers will climb 11 points to minus 14 in March, according to the median forecast of 23 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. A negative number means pessimists outnumber optimists. Companies including Toshiba Corp. are investing again, a sign that companies have recovered from global fallout spurred by Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. ’s collapse in September 2008. Signs of improvement may persuade central bank Governor Masaaki Shirakawa and his policy board to hold off on easing policy next week after already doubling a credit program to banks in March. “Concerns over a double-dip recession have receded considerably and corporate profits have turned up on export growth, which has improved business confidence,” said Hideo Kumano , chief economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo and a former Bank of Japan official. “The Tankan could be used by the BOJ as evidence that the real economy is solid, if it’s asked to undertake more monetary easing.” Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama’s government has repeatedly called on the central bank to help stem deflation that threatens to stunt the nation’s recovery from its worst postwar recession. The survey may show a weaker yen and a rebound in the stock market also bolstered sentiment, according to Masahiko Hashimoto, an economist at Daiwa Institute of Research in Tokyo. Japan’s currency has fallen about 8 percent since surging to a 14-year high of 84.83 per dollar on Nov. 27. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average has gained more than 9 percent this month. Investing Again The report is due at 8:50 a.m. in Tokyo on April 1. Higher confidence is encouraging some companies to invest or pare back cutbacks in spending plans . Large enterprises plan to cut capital spending by 0.4 percent in the fiscal year starting April 1, according to the survey of economists. Toshiba, Japan’s biggest memory-chip maker, will start construction of a flash-memory plant in July, reviving a plan to expand production capacity that was shelved during the recession. The facility, a fifth production line at Toshiba’s manufacturing site in Yokkaichi, central Japan, will be completed by 2011, the Tokyo-based company said this month. “There’s no doubt that companies will increase spending little by little as demand in Asia is robust,” said Soichi Okuda , chief economist at Sumitomo Research Institute in Tokyo. “Yet, companies are more keen on investing in plant and equipment overseas, so a recovery in domestic investment should be gradual.” Uneven Recovery Improvements aren’t assured after reports this week indicated that the recovery is uneven. Industrial production fell in February and payroll cuts kept the unemployment rate unchanged at 4.9 percent, contrasting with data released earlier showing retail sales surged at the fastest pace since 1997 and exports advanced the most in 30 years. “The worst is over for Japan’s economy, but that just means the recovery’s bud is starting to bloom,” Okuda said. “It will be difficult to see a sustainable recovery in domestic demand anytime soon.” Twelve consecutive months of consumer-price declines also show that Japan has yet to overcome deflation, which may prompt the central bank to ease policy further even as sentiment recovers. The bank doubled a lending program for commercial banks to 20 trillion yen ($217 billion) following government calls for it to do more. Shirakawa and his policy board will meet on April 6-7. Government Pressure While the Tankan won’t suggest a need for more action “the BOJ may keep its commitment to an extremely accommodative monetary stance because the government will keep pressuring them as long as prices are falling,” said Daiwa’s Hashimoto. The central bank increased the number of companies it surveys in the report, which is regarded as Japan’s mostly closely watched gauge of business confidence. Under the new sample, confidence among large manufacturers was minus 25 in December, compared with the minus 24 initially reported, and companies projected they would cut spending 12.8 percent this fiscal year. The sentiment index has been improving since hitting a record low of minus 58 in March last year. The Tankan confidence index among large service companies will improve 3 points to minus 18 in March, according to the median estimate of economists, an indication that the “worst is over” for non-manufacturers, Okuda from Sumitomo Research said. To contact the reporter on this story: Keiko Ujikane in Tokyo at kujikane@bloomberg.net

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Ontario Plans 195B Foreign Debt Sale

March 27, 2010

Ontario is planning to sell nearly 195 billion of debt denominated in foreign currencies in the fiscal year starting April 2010

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Greenspan Says Treasury Yields `Canary in the Mine’

March 26, 2010

By Joshua Zumbrun and Craig Torres March 26 (Bloomberg) — Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the recent rise in Treasury yields represents a “canary in the mine” that may signal further gains in interest rates. Higher yields reflect investor concerns over “this huge overhang of federal debt which we have never seen before,” Greenspan said in an interview today on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital With Al Hunt.” “I’m very much concerned about the fiscal situation,” said Greenspan, 84, who headed the central bank from 1987 to 2006. An increase in long-term interest rates “will make the housing recovery very difficult to implement and put a dampening on capital investment as well.” The yield on 10-year Treasury notes was 3.86 percent at 12:19 p.m. in New York, little changed from late yesterday and up from 3.69 percent at the end of last week. U.S. interest-rate swap spreads declined to the lowest levels on record this week, reflecting investor concerns about the ability of nations to finance rising fiscal deficits. The rate to exchange floating- for fixed-interest payments for 10 years fell below the comparable-maturity Treasury yield for the first time on March 23. The swap spread reached as low as negative 10.19 basis points yesterday before reaching negative 7.63 basis points. Record Deficit The U.S. budget deficit reached a record $1.4 trillion for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30 amid falling tax revenue from the recession, a bailout of the banking and auto industries, and the $787 billion economic stimulus package. “I don’t like American politics and what’s happening,” Greenspan said. Historically, there has been “a large buffer between the level of our federal debt and our capacity to borrow,” he said. “That’s narrowing. And I’m finding it very difficult to look into the future and not worry about that.” Greenspan said in an interview last year that a consumption tax was a likely response to a widening budget deficit. That may not be sufficient when the gap is caused by a failure to cut spending, he said today. “I’m not convinced by any means that we can succeed in stabilizing this long-term outlook strictly from a value-added tax,” Greenspan said. Stock Rally The former Fed chairman said the U.S. economic recovery has been driven “to a very large extent” by a resurgence of stock prices. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index has jumped 73 percent since its low on March 9, 2009. The index rose 0.5 percent to 1,171.24 at 12:19 p.m. in New York. “You can see the whole blossoming of finance,” Greenspan said. “As these stock prices have gone up, debt became far more valuable, and you can see this huge issuance, especially of junk bonds.” A continued rally in share prices could help sustain the expansion, Greenspan said. Still, the unemployment rate could remain “not terribly far from where it is” at 9.7 percent as people re-enter the labor force to take advantage of job openings in a growing economy. The U.S. economy expanded at a 5.6 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter of 2009, and corporate profits climbed, figures from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington. Company earnings increased 8 percent, capping the biggest year- over-year gain in a quarter century. To contact the reporter on this story: Joshua Zumbrun in Washington at jzumbrun@bloomberg.net

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Pimco Bets on Asia-Pacific Bonds as U.S., Europe Risk a `Policy Mistake’

March 23, 2010

By Shelley Smith March 23 (Bloomberg) — Investors should buy Asia-Pacific bonds rather than European and U.S. debt on the region’s faster economic growth and lower risk of policy changes that would damp the recovery, according to Pacific Investment Management Co. “Politics are going to play a very important role in how an investor looks at asset classes over at least the next 12 months,” Brian Baker , Pimco Asia Ltd.’s chief executive officer, said in an interview in Hong Kong. “As policy makers withdraw from their fiscal stimulus, and as regulations are put in place in the financial system in the developed world, we run the risk of a policy mistake” that may weigh on markets, he said. Withdrawing measures designed to stimulate the economy or raising interest rates too quickly, burdensome regulation and protectionism all threaten to choke off growth in developed markets, Baker said. The economic recovery in Asia, on the other hand, will be “sustainable” and investors should seek to benefit from the development of the region’s financial markets, he said yesterday. The Asian unit of Pimco, manager of the world’s biggest bond fund, is focusing on Australian, Indonesian, Philippines and South Korean debt, Baker said. The Newport Beach, California-based firm recommends bonds of Asian companies with stable cash flows and of governments in the region that have adopted “prudent” fiscal and monetary policies to spur growth. Under Pressure Baker made his comments at a time when many governments of developed economies are under pressure to reduce budget deficits while increasing regulation of a banking sector widely blamed for worsening the deepest financial crisis in 70 years. All the Group of Seven developed countries, except Canada and Germany, will have debt-to-gross domestic product ratios close to or exceeding 100 percent by 2014, John Lipsky , first deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said in a speech in Beijing on March 21 . “In many cases an emerging market sovereign has a better balance sheet than a developed market sovereign that has a higher credit rating, given the fiscal spending that’s gone on in the developed markets,” Baker said. This shift “will continue over the next several years and is one that we think investors need to be aware of.” Ratings Risk The U.S. and U.K. have moved “substantially” closer to losing their top AAA credit ratings as the cost of servicing their debt rises, Moody’s Investors Service said this month. Standard & Poor’s boosted Indonesia’s rating to the highest level in 12 years and the Philippines will meet with S&P and Fitch Ratings next month to seek an upgrade reflecting its economic stability, record foreign reserves and accelerating growth, central bank Governor Amando Tetangco said today. Emerging economies will expand between 11 percent and 13 percent within the next year while the U.S. economy will grow by no more than 3 percent, according to Pimco estimates. U.S. dollar-denominated bonds in developing Asian countries returned an average 36 percent in the last 12 months compared with an average 8 percent for U.S. government and company notes, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show. To contact the reporter on this story: Shelley Smith in Hong Kong at ssmith118@bloomberg.net

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Gilt Sales May Fall 16% as Economic Recovery Lifts Finances, Survey Shows

March 22, 2010

By Anchalee Worrachate and Keith Jenkins March 23 (Bloomberg) — U.K. gilt sales may fall for the first time in three years as signs of an economic rebound reduce the government’s need to fund stimulus measures with debt, a survey of bond dealers showed. The government will issue 190 billion pounds ($285 billion) of bonds in the fiscal year starting April 1, according to the median forecast of 14 financial institutions that deal directly with the U.K. Debt Management Office. That’s a 16 percent drop from the record 225.1 billion pounds projected this fiscal year. Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling sets out the government’s spending plans in his budget report tomorrow, ahead of an election that must be held by June. Fewer sales may boost Prime Minister Gordon Brown , who is seeking to persuade voters that his Labour Party’s economic stimulus program is the best strategy for cementing the recovery. The opposition Conservatives have criticized his handling of public finances and Moody’s Investors Service says the risk of a U.K. downgrade has risen. “Concern over the budget deficit was overplayed, and gilt issuance will start to be less than we had feared,” said Steven Major , head of fixed-income research at HSBC Holdings Plc in London. “When the Chancellor speaks this week, the budget is in a much stronger position. Politically, it’s not bad to be able to say the government has ended the recession and is already getting on with the job of restoring the public finances.” Gilts Underperform Gilts have underperformed this year amid the widening budget shortfall and record supply. U.K. bonds returned 0.96 percent, compared with 2.66 percent for German debt and 1.7 percent for U.S. Treasuries, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes. Issuance will remain above historical standards over the next few years, said Simon Hayes , the chief U.K. economist at Barclays Capital in London. Sales averaged 48 billion pounds in the five years through March 2007, according to Debt Management Office data. “Such a revision would not change the overall picture,” Hayes said. “The elephant has not left the room. The U.K. would still be facing record levels of borrowing, and the public debt ratio will still be on a rising trend for the whole of the forecast period.” Rising Yields Yields on 10-year gilts will increase to 4.50 percent by year-end, according to a median estimate of 13 analyst forecasts compiled by Bloomberg. The yield was 3.92 percent yesterday, up from last year’s low of 2.93 percent in March. U.K. service industries, which account for three quarters of the economy, expanded in February at the fastest pace in three years, the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply and Markit Economics said March 3, adding to signs that interest rate cuts and stimulus measures are reviving growth. Gross domestic product may expand 1.2 percent this year, according to the median estimate of 15 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The Bank of England cut its key rate to a record low 0.5 percent last year and embarked on a 200-billion pound bond- buying program to aid the recovery. The rate will rise to 1 percent by year-end, a separate forecast showed. The U.K. Treasury predicted the budget deficit will swell to 12.6 percent of GDP this year, the largest in British postwar history, as tax receipts decline. The country has moved “substantially” closer to losing its AAA rating as the cost of servicing debt rose, Moody’s said March 15. Fitch Ratings said this month the U.K.’s credit profile has deteriorated “pretty sharply.” ‘Unsustainable’ Deficits The budget gap was 131.9 billion pounds in the fiscal year through February, up from 66.5 billion pounds a year earlier, the Office for National Statistics said March 18. The Treasury predicts a deficit of 170 billion pounds for the full fiscal year. Bank of England Deputy Governor Charles Bean said March 16 that the deficit is “unsustainable” in the medium term. Bank of England policy maker Andrew Sentance said March 19 there’s a chance Britain may return to recession should there be new shocks from the world economy. The recovery will be “slow and sluggish” this year, the Confederation of British Industry said yesterday. A drop in gilt sales next year may not translate into lower yields because longer-term supply will remain relatively high, rates will rise and policy makers will stop buying gilts under their quantitative-easing program, according to Jamie Searle , a fixed-income strategist at Citigroup Inc. in London. “Supply next year might be falling, but it’s still at a very high level” when viewed over time, said Searle. “High levels of borrowing will continue for a while. Add to that the fact that the Bank of England is no longer buying gilts and interest rates may rise. It’s hard to envisage lower bond yields in this environment.” To contact the reporters on this story: Anchalee Worrachate in London at aworrachate@bloomberg.net ; Keith Jenkins in London at Kjenkins3@bloomberg.net

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U.S. Budget Gap Rises to Record $221 Billion on Spending to Revive Economy

March 10, 2010

By Vincent Del Giudice March 10 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. posted its largest budget deficit on record in February as the government boosted spending to help revive the economy. The excess of spending over revenue increased to $221 billion last month, compared with a deficit of $194 billion in February 2009, according to Treasury Department figures released today in Washington. In fiscal 2009 that ended in September, the shortfall reached a record $1.4 trillion . A deficit that will probably exceed $1 trillion for a second year underscores the challenges facing the Obama administration and Congress as they seek to preserve the recovery, spur job growth and pass health care reform. The loss of 8.4 million jobs the last two years has been limiting tax revenue, while stimulus efforts such as the first-time homebuyers credit have added to expenses. “It’s mostly the recession if you look at the deficit numbers,” said David Wyss , chief economist at Standard & Poor’s in New York. To finance the shortfalls, “we’re borrowing a lot of money from abroad. At some point, foreign investors are going to be unwilling to fund it,” he said. The February deficit was in line with the $222 billion economists anticipated, based on the median of 31 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Projections ranged from shortfalls of $180 billion to $225 billion. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, in a report issued March 5, projected a deficit of $223 billion for February. Spending for February increased 17 percent from the same month a year ago, to $328.4 billion. Revenue and other income rose 23 percent to $107.5 billion, according to the Treasury. First Five Months The deficit five months into the 2010 fiscal year was $651.6 billion compared with $589.8 billion during the same period in the previous fiscal year. Corporate tax receipts totaled $45.4 billion for the year to date versus $52.8 billion in the same five months in fiscal 2009. Individual income tax collections were down 14 percent so far this fiscal year to $334 billion. In other categories, spending by the Social Security Administration rose to $308.6 billion from $290.1 billion for the fiscal year to date. Spending by the Department of Health and Human Services, which administers the Medicare and Medicaid health programs, rose to $342 billion from $319.6 billion. Defense Department spending rose to $273.9 billion from $267.4 billion, while spending on the Troubled Asset Relief Program fell to $8.7 billion from $113.3 billion. The government’s $787 billion economic rescue plan contributed to the record deficit in fiscal year 2009. The shortfall will probably exceed $1 trillion this year, according to the White House and congressional budget officials. Debt Limit Mounting monthly deficits prompted President Barack Obama to sign a bill on Feb. 12 that raised the federal debt limit by $1.9 trillion to $14.3 trillion. The increase was required to keep the U.S. from defaulting on its bills. It is more than twice the size of any of the four previous debt increases lawmakers approved in the past two years. The CBO said March 5 that the Obama’s 2011 budget proposal would create bigger annual deficits than projected. The CBO said the budget shortfall will remain above 4 percent of gross domestic product for the foreseeable future while the publicly held debt will reach $20.3 trillion, or 90 percent of GDP, by 2020. Economists generally consider deficits exceeding 3 percent of GDP to be unsustainable because that means government debt is growing faster than the ability to pay back the money. Obama’s budget request projected the government would run $8.5 trillion in deficits over the next 10 years. To contact the reporter on this story: Vincent Del Giudice in Washington at vdelgiudicebloomberg.net

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