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Japan’s current-account surplus narrowed in December on strength as result for the unceasing yen’s appreciation, which is weakening the global demand for the Japanese products and increasing …

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Japan’s current-account surplus narrows in December

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(MENAFN) Japanese TonenGeneral Sekiyu KK agreed to buy ExxonMobil’s local unit for USD3.9 billion, Bloomberg reported. TonenGeneral will buy 99 percent of ExxonMobil Yugen Kaisha, a Japanese …

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Japanese TonenGeneral buys ExxonMobil unit

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Luxury Rickshaw: World’s Tiniest Four Wheeler Car?

January 10, 2012

Over the years a slew of vehicles have fought for the title of “world’s smallest car.” The latest entrant on the scene is the Bajaj Auto’s RE60 , a new vehicle that fits four people and sports a 200cc, water-cooled, fuel-injected engine mounted in the rear. First unveiled at New Dehli’s Auto Expo 2012 , the company says the vehicle isn’t actually a car, but a four-wheeler designed to compete with three-wheel “autorickshaws,” the Economic Times notes. Logging an impressive 82 miles on each gallon of gas, the Indian-made compact urban passenger vehicle will save money on fuel and help eliminate eco-guilt thanks to its minimal carbon emissions of just 37.28 grams per mile , explains Zimbio. CNN takes a moment to compare what AutoDaily calls a “luxury rickshaw,” with America’s largest passenger vehicle, the decked out Cadillac Escalade. Weighing just 881 pounds, the RE60 is expected to cost 40 times less than the 7,100 lb Escalade . Depending on how you classify it, the RE60 now rivals the Nano, produced by India’s Tata Motors, for the title for world’s smallest production automobile.

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Toyota’s Sales Drop In 2011

January 4, 2012

TORRANCE, Calif. — Toyota says its U.S. sales dropped 7 percent in 2011, hurt by supply problems from Japan’s earthquake and tsunami. The Japanese automaker sold 1.6 million vehicles during the year, down from 1.8 million the year before. For December, sales edged up less than a percent to 178,131. The March earthquake and tsunami hampered Toyota’s supply of critical parts for several months, reducing the number of vehicles it could stock at dealers. In recent months, launches of models like the redesigned Camry and the Prius V have boosted sales. Camry sales rose 7 percent in December, while Prius sales climbed 9 percent.

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Alabama GOP Leaders Rethinking Strict New Law

December 8, 2011

By PHILLIP RAWLS, ASSOCIATED PRESS MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Alabama Republicans who pushed through the nation’s toughest law against undocumented immigrants are having second thoughts amid a backlash from big business, fueled by the embarrassing traffic stops of two foreign employees tied to the state’s prized Honda and Mercedes plants. The Republican attorney general is calling for some of the strictest parts of it to be repealed. Some Republican lawmakers say they now want to make changes in the law that was pushed quickly through the legislature. Gov. Robert Bentley, who signed the law, said he’s contacting foreign executives to tell them they and their companies are still welcome in Alabama. “We are not anti-foreign companies. We are very pro-foreign companies,” he said. Luther Strange, the attorney general who’s defending the law in court, this week recommended repealing sections that make it a crime for an undocumented immigrant to fail to carry registration documents and that require public schools to collect information on the immigration status of students. Both sections have been put on hold temporarily by a federal court. Two foreign workers for Honda and Mercedes were recently stopped by police for failing to carry proof of legal residency. The cases were quickly dropped, but not without lots of international attention that Alabama officials didn’t want. One of the groups challenging the law in court said the auto workers’ cases turned public opinion. “Suddenly the reality of what the state has done hit people in the face,” said Richard Cohen, president of the Southern Poverty Law Center. Before 2011, Republicans tried repeatedly to pass an immigration law but were always stopped by the dominant Democrats. That changed when Alabama voters elected a Republican legislative super majority – the first since Reconstruction. The result was a law described by critics and supporters as the toughest and most comprehensive in the nation. It requires a check of legal residency when conducting everyday transactions such as buying a car license, enrolling a child in school, getting a job or renewing a business license. After the U.S. Justice Department and other groups challenged the law, the federal courts put some portions on hold, but major provisions took effect in late September. Alabama suddenly found itself at the center of the nation’s immigration debate, ahead of other states with tough laws, including Arizona, Georgia and South Carolina. Within Alabama, much of the debate is within the business community that helped fund Republicans’ new strength. The Birmingham Business Alliance this week called for revisions in the law, expressing worry that it’s tainting Alabama’s image around the world. The group also said complying with the law is a burden for businesses and local governments, but did not offer specific changes. James T. McManus, chairman of the Alliance and CEO of one of the state’s largest businesses, the Energen Corp., said revisions “are needed to ensure that momentum remains strong in our competitive economic development efforts.” In Thomasville, a town of 4,700 about 80 miles southwest of Montgomery, Mayor Sheldon Day worries about recruiting industries. He said about 25 foreign companies have visited the town to consider possible plant sites since Thomasville recruited a Canadian steel company in July 2010. “Up until a few months ago, nobody raised the immigration issue,” he said. But in the last few months, it’s been brought up regularly. Day suspects competing states are portraying Alabama as hostile to foreigners even though he says that is not the truth. Based on the questions he gets from industrial prospects, he also believes competing states are recounting stories from Alabama’s civil rights past. “It’s bringing back old images from 40 or 50 year ago,” he said. The governor says he’s declined many national TV interviews about the law because he doesn’t want to fuel comparisons with what he sees as Alabama’s long gone past. “It’s going to take us a long time to outlive those stereotypes that are out there among people that Alabama is living in the `50s and `60s,” Bentley said. The Republican sponsors of the immigration legislation promoted it as a jobs bill that would run off undocumented immigrants and open up employment for legal residents. That was an easy political sale in a state suffering from nearly 10 percent unemployment. Even some Democrats voted for the law. Since the law took effect, Alabama’s unemployment rate has dropped a half percentage point. Economists and state officials who compile the statistics say it’s too early to say whether to credit the immigration law. But one of the sponsors, Republican Sen. Scott Beason of Gardendale, said neighboring states without a similar law haven’t seen the same drop. “There is nothing else to attribute it to,” he said. If there has been any damage, he said it’s the fault of inaccurate portrayals in the news media. He said the media ought to be reporting: “This law establishes a safer, more secure environment for people to come here and invest their money.” Republican House Speaker Mike Hubbard of Auburn said no industrial recruiters have complained to him about the law, and he will only support “tweaks” that make it more effective without weakening it. Some Democratic Party leaders have called for repeal, but the party is now so weak in Alabama that the real debate is among Republicans. The governor says the law is “very complicated” and needs to be simplified. He hasn’t recommended any specifics, but he says Alabama won’t abandon its goal of ensuring that only legal residents get jobs. Strange, the attorney general, says his recommended changes “don’t weaken the law, they just make it easier to defend.” Beason, however, said Strange’s proposals would weaken the law by repealing two sections that allow private citizens to sue state and local officials to enforce it. Beason said that’s needed because some officials are already saying they won’t follow the law. Other Republicans say the law is causing unnecessary problems for legal residents. Senate Republican Whip Gerald Dial of Lineville said legislators hear complaints from people about digging out documents to prove their legal residency when renewing professional licenses and buying car tags. “I made some mistakes in voting for this bill, and I want to step up and fix them,” he said.

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Scandal-Ridden Company Has Less Than Two Weeks To Correct Two Decades Of Accounting

December 3, 2011

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japanese regulators will not extend a deadline for Olympus to report its financial results, sources with knowledge of the matter said, leaving the scandal-hit company with less than two weeks to correct two decades of accounting and avoid delisting. Olympus and its auditors are scrambling to correct past earnings statements and submit its latest results after the company admitted to a cover-up of securities losses dating back to the 1990′s. If they cannot meet the December 14 deadline Olympus will automatically be delisted under stock exchange rules. As the deadline nears some stock market participants have speculated that Japan’s Financial Services Agency might extend the deadline, reflecting the view that regulators are keen to keep Olympus listed to limit the blow to small investors and the markets. The regulator has extended reporting deadlines in the past but only in cases where the company was hit by a natural disaster or some other factor seen to be out of its control. In principle, Olympus would have had to apply for an extension by November 14, which it did not, and the regulator is not eager to break with precedent and offer leniency to a firm that cooked its books, the sources said. “If Olympus had come clean earlier about the loss cover-up, it could have started investigating earlier and would have had enough time to meet its deadline,” said one of the sources, speaking on condition of anonymity. “A special exception will not be made for Olympus,” another source close to the regulator said. By law Olympus only has to restate earnings for the last five years. But to allow auditors to present an accurate account of present financial conditions about two decades of statements will have to be redone, auditing sources have told Reuters. That puts the bulk of the work on KMPG AZSA LLC, which audited Olympus until 2009 when the company switched to Ernst & Young ShinNihon LLC. Meeting the deadline will hinge in large part on how quickly a third-party panel charged with investigating Olympus’ past dealings can issue its findings. The panel is expected to submit its report next week. KMPG AZSA and Ernst & Young are working together and coordinating with the panel to ensure the process is as smooth as possible. But it remains unclear whether they will be able to finish in time, auditing sources said. Olympus has until 5:15 p.m. (0815 GMT) on December 14 to submit its results for the April-September first half. “There is no question this is going to come down to the wire,” one auditing source said. (Additional reporting by Nathan Layne; Editing by Yoko Nishikawa) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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TV Retailers Plan To Be ‘Aggressive’ With Promotions On Black Friday

November 6, 2011

NEW YORK (Reuters) – It may not be a blood bath, but it will definitely be a dogfight. The television aisles of top U.S. retailers are poised for a hard-fought contest this holiday season as chains take little chances with budget-conscious shoppers. Unlike last year when some such as Best Buy held the line on discounts and promoted only high-end TVs, many retailers told Reuters this past week that they plan to do whatever it takes to get the customer through the door. For the consumer, expect to see price cuts of up to 40 percent from a year ago on big-screen TVs, plus free shipping deals and even a 36-month financing option, in the run-up to ”Black Friday” on Nov. 25, the unofficial start of the holiday selling season. “As we look at the holiday season, we are going to play offense,” Hhgregg Inc Chief Executive Officer Dennis May told Reuters in an interview last week. “We are going to be very promotional. We are going to be aggressive.” U.S. shoppers have held off on buying televisions and other nonessential items in the anemic economy. But the TV market is also a victim of a lackluster product cycle. Early last week, Japanese manufacturer Sony Corp warned investors that its TV division is headed for its eighth consecutive annual loss, while rival Panasonic Corp forecast its biggest annual net loss in a decade. “My outlook is not any different from Panasonic and Sony,” Anthony Chukumba, an analyst with BB&T Capital Markets said. ”We have a lull right now in terms of TV demand; part of it is macro-driven, part of it is product cycle-driven. There is just not a lot of innovation out there. “And a couple of things that may in fact just have been counted on to drive incremental demand like 3-D and Internet-connected smart TVs are just not working.” Against this backdrop, global demand for televisions is expected to fall about 1 percent in the fourth quarter, according to Paul Gagnon, director of North American TV research for consulting firm Display Search. This will fuel the intense fight for shoppers as they look for the biggest bang for their buck during the holiday season. “It is starting even earlier than usual. You are seeing sharp promotions. You are seeing Wal-Mart out there with a TV this weekend and Amazon.com with special deals. It is upping the overall intensity,” Bernstein analyst Colin McGranahan said. “It is going to be a dogfight. Everyone’s going to be fighting because demand is not great,” McGranahan said. Best Buy has already said it would offer free shipping on online orders from Nov. 1 through Dec. 27. On TVs costing more than $899, the world’s largest consumer electronics chain is offering 36-month financing, a 60-day price guarantee and a promise to even pick up the TV from the customer’s house if the model was not what he or she really wanted. “Given economic realities, consumers are definitely more discerning this holiday season, definitely looking for the best value for their money,” Mike Mohan, senior vice president and general manager of Home Theater at Best Buy, said. FOCUS IS ON BIGGER SCREENS Industry watchers expect retailers to focus less on promoting special features like 3-D technology, which can be difficult for the average consumer to understand. “Today’s TVs have so many capabilities such as Smart TV, Internet and 3-D technology and there are also a lot of confusing terms such as screen refresh rate and HDMI Inputs. Consumers can become overwhelmed and have difficulty understanding what television will meet their needs,” Jim Hilson, BJ’s Wholesale vice president of merchandising said. Instead, they expect the focus to be on screen size, stressing the increased affordability of big screens. “In the U.S. which is one of the more mature markets around the world for TVs, one that has already largely gone through the flat-panel TV transition, mostly what people are out there doing right now is updating the size,” Gagnon said. Hhgregg said it is carrying more giant TVs with 60-inch and above screens, and reducing its inventory of 32- and 40-inch TVs this holiday season. “I can get a 60-inch TV for what I used to pay for a 40-inch TV,” Hhgregg CEO May said. “The screen size the consumer has always wanted has become affordable to them now.” Due to their focus on larger sizes, retailers including Best Buy, BJ’s, Sam’s Club and Hhgregg told Reuters that they will not be reducing their shelf space for televisions despite the uncertainty in demand. “To some degree, the 42 (inch) is the new 32. The 55 is the new 42,” said Jason Shaw, vice president of merchandising for electronics at Wal-Mart’s Sam’s Club warehouse store operation. ”They are getting more for their money than they have ever gotten before.” (Reporting by Dhanya Skariachan in New York, editing by Bernard Orr and Maureen Bavdek) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Japan stocks rise 1.2% in overseas gains

August 24, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) Japanese shares jumped 1.2 per cent Tuesday as overnight gains on Wall Street and European markets improved investor sentiment. The benchmark Nikkei 225 Stock …

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Harlan Green: Why Repeat 1938?

August 4, 2011

Why does the final debt ceiling agreement look like 1938, when Republicans took over Congress after President Roosevelt ok’ed spending cuts while raising some taxes? Because Congress may have made the same mistake — a repeat of the Great Depression by cutting spending when the U.S. economy hasn’t recovered from the Great Recession. Democrats lost 71 House seats and 8 Senate seats in the 1938 election, after Roosevelt had been persuaded by his advisors cut back on New Deal programs, which precipitated the 1937-38 second depression and gave Republicans ammunition to say the New Deal hadn’t worked. Production and profits and wages had regained their 1929 levels by the spring of 1937. Unemployment remained high, but was considerably lower than the 25 percent rate seen in 1933. So in June 1937, some of Roosevelt’s advisors urged spending cuts to balance the budget. WPA rolls were drastically cut and PWA projects were slowed to a standstill, according to Wikipedia . The American economy took a sharp downturn in mid-1937, lasting for 13 months through most of 1938. Industrial production declined almost 30 per cent and production of durable goods fell even faster. Does this look terribly familiar? In other words, we might be doomed to repeat the historical mistake of listening to creditors to whom so much of the federal debt is owed by cutting spending without actually reducing debt, when we should be stimulating growth both to reduce the ratio of debt to GDP and help debtors repay their debts. The new agreement doesn’t allow any revenue increases in the first stage of some $2.1-2.4 trillion in mandated spending cuts over the next 10 years. This of course means the debt isn’t being paid down. All of the Bush tax cuts had added $3.7 billion to the $14 trillion in debt, with tax loopholes extended for energy and agribusiness, two wars and two recessions making up most of the rest. The spending cuts weren’t paid for then, and aren’t being paid for now, in other words. But, had we continued the stimulus spending of 2009-10 that included the $787 Billion in ARRA stimulus, spent more of the $11 billion set aside for the HAMP mortgage modification program, and extended the homebuyer tax credits that expired last June, we might have started both a real estate recovery and longer term economic growth. Instead, we are close to a ‘double-dip’ after just leaving the Great Recession. The first part of the Great Depression actually ended in 1934, which lulled everyone into believing that cutting spending in 1937 would do little harm. But it just made the Depression worse, until spending from government debt that topped 122 percent of GDP during World War II ended the Great Depression! So history is very clear on what it takes to stimulate jobs and economic growth — more spending on policies that produce growth. That is the only way to bring down the debt level. But one can’t borrow for the wrong things, such as tax cuts. As one pundit put it, business doesn’t care where the dollars come from — a public or private worker. Calculated Risk has kept tabs on the possibility of a double-dip recession and second quarter numbers show the economy has almost ground to a halt. GDP growth revisions show Q1 2011 rose just 0.4 percent and Q2 1.3 percent in the ‘advance estimate’. Personal Consumption Expenditures, which account for almost 70 percent of activity, have been falling for just the past 3 months for a number of reasons, including a spike in energy and food prices, and falling vehicle sales due to the Japanese Tsunami. It is why GDP growth has slowed so drastically. There are 4 indicators used by the National Bureau of Economic Research Business Dating Committee to determine a recession — employment, personal income less transfer payments, real GDP growth, and industrial production. Of the 4, industrial production and GDP growth have recovered the most. There is some hope with the July Institute of Supply Management non-manufacturing survey that showed overall service sector activity had risen 2.7 percent in 13 of its 18 industries, including transportation and Warehousing, Mining, and Real Estate (surprisingly), and which account for more than 70 percent of all economic activity. So we have not yet entered a double-dip. But without a viable job creation program, that may still happen. So history as well as basic economics tells us those who want to shrink government by slashing spending without programs that also grow the economy are wrong. What would it take to convince them otherwise? Another Great Depression, or a Great War?

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Clifford Winston: The U.S. May Need More Lawyers!

July 28, 2011

“The trouble with law is lawyers,” famous civil rights lawyer Clarence Darrow once said of his profession. Lawyers have been derided since the dawn of time, for many reasons. What most people don’t realize is that lawyers have cleverly created many restrictions on their industry’s size and services through their governing organization, the American Bar Association (ABA). Thus, the solution to the “trouble with lawyers” is counter-intuitive: we may need more of them — or, at least, we must spur more competition among them by busting the lawyer monopoly! ABA occupational licensing requirements have allowed lawyers to create a club with a limited membership that is able to raise prices to consumers, which is how top lawyers can get away with charging upwards of $1000 per hour for their time. In addition to licensing rules, the ABA accredits law schools, keeping the number of slots available artificially low. In turn, all but a few states today require would-be lawyers to graduate from those ABA-accredited law schools, and all but one state require would-be lawyers to pass the bar exam. In its natural lawyer-like way, the ABA also uses a very loose interpretation of terms to prevent non-lawyers from selling such services as simple, standard-form wills. It hasn’t always been this way. Abraham Lincoln, who neither attended college or law school, practiced law for nearly 25 years, and he turned out to be a good lawyer and a great president. Clarence Darrow also did not graduate from either college or law school, and he is regarded as one of the greatest criminal defense lawyers in American history. But neither Lincoln nor Darrow, nor countless other great legal minds of the past, would likely be allowed to practice today. While the supply of lawyers has been constrained, the demand for lawyers in the public and private sector has experienced continual growth, thanks in part to government policies that require private firms to retain legal counsel or encourage them to engage in litigation. Many of those policies are drafted and administered by lawyers themselves in Congress and the Executive Branch. For example, environmental standards governing pollution are determined by teams of lawyers in various administrative agencies and by additional private-sector lawyers. The demand for lawyers to write patent applications and to adjudicate the resulting patent conflicts increased dramatically following the establishment in 1982 of a new U.S. Court of Appeals for intellectual property disputes. State laws, such as consumer protection acts, which in practice have greatly expanded the scope of consumer litigation beyond well-established avenues of consumer protection, have also increased the demand for lawyers. And government policy has done little to stem the excessive growth in the past few decades of liability suits, particularly class-action suits that largely benefit lawyers. Clearly this supply and demand mismatch has caused wage distortions. With $200 billion spent on lawyers every year in America, the cost to consumers from those inflated prices is in the tens of billions of dollars. Regulations that impede competition and restrict operations have also curtailed potential innovations in legal products and services, such as publications of legal analyses, contracts, and software codes, which could assist middle-income consumers. One firm, LegalZoom.com, which sells simple legal documents like do-it-yourself wills, uncontested divorce documents, patent applications and the like — documents that should not require pricey lawyers to prepare — has just been accused of illegally practicing law in the state of Missouri in a class-action lawsuit . Do LegalZoom and firms like it represent more of a threat to consumers or lawyers? Let’s open up the legal field. Non-lawyers and LegalZoom-type companies should be allowed to provide simple services, just as physician’s assistants are capable of stitching up a wound so that doctors can focus on more complicated cases. And private corporations that have been prevented from competing with law firms should be allowed to establish their own legal services divisions to offer advice along with, for example, financial and accounting services. The price of a lawyer can indeed be reduced without sacrificing the quality of legal services. The argument that occupational licensing protects consumers from being harmed by unlicensed practitioners is weak during an era where information is so readily disseminated. A lawyer-specific Angie’s List or other places on the internet could easily give consumers information about a practitioner’s track record, level of experience, education, and certification, allowing potential customers to quickly and efficiently determine that individual’s competence. Instead, today’s licensure requirements may create only the perception of quality, thus increasing the demand for credentialed lawyers even in situations where the credential does not add value. The states could lead the way in a lawyer revolution. A few have already had the audacity to rebuff the ABA and have started to make it easier to enter into the legal services industry. If some states formally eliminate the licensure requirement, and if they express their support for all types of businesses to offer legal services, then the potential benefits to consumers of deregulating lawyers would become transparent and eventually spread nationally. Lawyers themselves, the subject of jabs over millennia — from the Bible to Shakespeare to Will Rogers — may even gain from an improved reputation with the public. ### Winston is a Senior Fellow and Crandall a Non-Resident Senior Fellow in the Economic Studies Program of the Brookings Institution. They are co-authors, along with Vikram Maheshri, of the new book First Thing We Do, Let’s Deregulate All the Lawyers (2011, Brookings Press).

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Men Account For Most Job Growth During Recovery, While Women Suffer

July 7, 2011

The recession, famously, hit men hard. It was dubbed the ” mancession ,” with male-dominated industries, like construction and manufacturing, among those shedding the most jobs. The gap in the unemployment rate between men and women grew to a 60-year high . Between December 2007 and June 2009, the official duration of the recession, 6.4 million jobs disappeared, and 74 percent of them were held by men. Now, though, it’s women who are losing out on the recovery. An extensive study from Pew Research, released Wednesday, shows that in the past two years, men have added 768,000 jobs, while women have lost 218,000. In 15 out of 16 economic sectors, men have done better than women in the recovery. Since June 2009, there have been five sectors — including finance, manufacturing, and the federal government — where men gained jobs and women lost them. In five others — among them education and health services, and leisure and hospitality — men gained jobs at a faster rate than women. And in another five sectors, including construction, information, and local government, women lost jobs at a faster rate than men. There was just one sector, state government, where women gained jobs while men lost them. The findings of the Pew report may not come as a complete surprise to some. In January of this year, the economist Heather Boushey noted at Slate that men had far outpaced women in terms of 2010 job growth. “In total throughout 2010,” Boushey wrote , “men gained slightly more than a million jobs, while women gained a paltry 149,000.” The Pew study observes that recoveries don’t usually happen like this. In five periods of recovery since 1970, women either gained jobs faster than men or incurred fewer job losses. The report adds that the current recovery “is the first since 1970 in which women have lost jobs even as men have gained them,” but that “it is not entirely clear why.” Since 2009, men have gained ground in a number of industries. For example, The Washington Post points out that men account for 39 percent of new jobs in health care and education since 2009, even though they’d only held about 23 percent of jobs in those sectors before the recovery. Overall, according the the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the unemployment rate is currently 9.5 percent for men and 8.5 percent for women, similar to pre-recession rates, according to the Post . The national unemployment rate is 9.1 percent .

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Jerry Jasinowski: U.S. Economy Stalls

June 13, 2011

In my last blog , I cited emerging signs of a U.S. and global economic slowdown. I noted weak 1.8% GDP growth in the first quarter, and the likelihood it would continue into the second. Since then, we have been hit by a storm of weak economic data that makes it clear the economy has stalled at about 2% growth. This is far different than the 3-4% growth that Wall Street analysts and economists were forecasting only a few months ago. The conventional wisdom, shared by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and most of Wall Street, is that this is just a temporary summer slowdown. The floods in the Midwest, the Japanese earthquake and nuclear meltdown, and other seasonal factors will simply pass. High demand in developing countries like China and Brazil, and manufacturing companies flush with cash, will provide the growth we need for a fall pick-up. But I am skeptical. This recovery is mired down by structural burdens of a housing depression, a damaged financial system, unusually high unemployment and extraordinarily high public debt. Heaven knows the ugliness of the May economic data suggested something much worse than a summer soft patch. Housing prices, as measured by the Case-Shiller index, have now declined by about a third, and the glut of foreclosures is threatening to drive housing prices lower. The sharp drop in the ISM Manufacturing Index from 60 to 53 raises questions about the strength of the manufacturing recovery. Finally, the measly addition of 54,000 jobs in May is about a third of what we need to reduce the unemployment rate. These weak numbers have increased uncertainty and further eroded business and consumer confidence. A Washington Post -ABC poll shows disapproval of Obama’s handling of the economy has risen, and 9 out of 10 respondents rate the economy in negative terms. Adding to this high uncertainty is the reality that the stimulative power of QE2 will decrease at the same time that Congress seeks a deficit reduction deal on the debt ceiling. Also, European debt problems continue to worsen. It is no surprise that the stock market has declined one percent a week for six weeks. Government policy makers have only a few options to improve the short term economic environment — such as extending the payroll tax cut, continuing the expensing of capital equipment, and repatriating foreign earnings back to the U.S. At the same time, we need a debt ceiling deal that includes a long term commitment to reducing entitlement spending. Business leaders must understand and accept the slow U.S. growth environment and make plans to deal with it. On the growth side, this means continuing to expand into growing emerging economies, developing new products and marketing, and looking for strategic acquisitions. But we also need to continue to focus on productivity improvements and cutting costs, putting even more emphasis on the application of lean manufacturing throughout the production process, and a full scale assault on reducing noncore spending, which frequently accounts for about a third of typical manufacturing expenditures.

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7marketSpot » Japan CMBS: How did the earthquake affect its recovery?

June 4, 2011

Japan CMBS : How did the earthquake affect its recovery? 3 JUNE 2011. » Japanese commercial real estate transactions have shown signs of a recovery though this recently took a pause with the March earthquake. …

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Toyota President Sees Full Production By November

June 4, 2011

(Reuters) – The president of Toyota Motors (7203.T) said on Saturday he expects the automaker to resume full production globally in November and its Japanese output is expected this month to recover to 90 percent of levels seen before a March earthquake. “We are restoring (production) at fast speeds despite ongoing aftershocks,” Akio Toyoda, the grandson of the company’s founder, told reporters during a visit to South Korea. “We expect our output to recover to normal from November … For Japan’s domestic production, we expect to resume 90 percent of our normal output this month,” he said. Toyota and its local rivals have been plagued by shortages of hundreds of components after a magnitude 9.0 earthquake and tsunami on March 11 damaged factories in Japan’s northeast. Production at Toyota is returning to pre-quake levels faster than the company anticipated, with output in June likely to reach90 percent of pre-quake levels, a company spokesman confirmed on Wednesday. That more optimistic outlook compares with a prediction last month for production to return to 70 percent of normal. The president said in April that a complete recovery was expected in November or December. Still, in 2011 overall production may be almost a million vehicles less than Toyota had planned to build at the beginning of the year. Lost output by the end of May was 900,000 cars. Because Toyota builds 38 percent of its cars in Japan compared with a smaller 25 percent at Nissan Motor Co Ltd (7201.T) and Honda Motor Co Ltd (7267.T) the impact at Japan’s biggest auto company has been greater. The president visited South Korea, a small market for the auto giant, to “encourage dealers,” a Toyota Korea representative said, at a time when the automaker is suffering from sales slump in the wake of the quake and a recall crisis. Toyota’s Lexus sales dived 51 percent in April in South Korea from a year ago, while other Toyota vehicle sales slid 41 percent, even as the imported vehicle market grew 14 percent led by vehicles from German carmakers, according to data by Korea Automobile Importers and Distributors Association. Last year, Toyota sold a combined 10,486 Lexus and other models in the South Korean market dominated by Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) and Kia Motors (000270.KS). A shortage of parts resulting from disrupted supply chains means it has lost ground in overseas markets. On June 2, Toyota said it sold only 38,500 cars in China during May, 35 percent less than a year ago. In the United States, its main foreign market, sales in May slumped 28 percent. In contrast, South Korean rivals Hyundai Motor and Kia Motors posted double-digit sales growth and a record-high combined market share last month in the key market, putting their combined U.S. sales almost on par with that of Toyota. (Additional reporting by Tim Kelly in TOKYO; Editing by Robert Birsel) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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U.S. Dollar Recoups Losses Ahead of Employment Report, Japanese Yen Cross To Face Range-Bound Price Action

June 2, 2011

U.S. Dollar Recoups Losses Ahead of Employment Report, Japanese Yen Cross To Face Range-Bound Price Action

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STELARA(R) Demonstrates Sustained High Level Efficacy in Japanese Psoriasis Patients Over 12 Months

May 30, 2011

STELARA(R) Demonstrates Sustained High Level Efficacy in Japanese Psoriasis Patients Over 12 Months

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Japan’s Prices Rise For First Time In Two Years

May 27, 2011

TOKYO — Japan’s consumer prices in April rose for the first time in more than two years on a spike in energy and tobacco prices, the government said Friday. Japan’s core consumer price index, which excludes fresh food, climbed 0.6 percent last month from a year earlier, marking the first year-on-year increase since December 2008, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications said. The rise in Japanese consumer prices was mainly due to a jump in gasoline and tobacco prices. The ministry said education costs were also higher in April. On a month-on-month basis, Japan’s core consumer price index was up 0.4 percent last month. But economist Hiroshi Watanabe at the Daiwa Institute of Research said the April increase in consumer prices does not mean Japan’s economy has emerged from deflation. “The April results were mainly lifted by temporary factors, such as a surge in tobacco prices. Overall, Japan’s economy still remains under deflationary pressure as the economy has yet to post a steady recovery,” he said. The world’s No. 3 economy has been battling periods of deflation – or a steady decline in prices – since the 1990s. Deflation is a burden as it can hamper economic growth by depressing company profits, sparking wage cuts and causing consumers to postpone purchases. It also can increase debt burdens. Faced with tumbling output and exports following the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, Japan’s economy recently slipped into a recession after contracting at an annualized rate of 3.7 percent in the January-March quarter.

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Demand Drops For Durable Goods

May 25, 2011

WASHINGTON — Businesses cut back on their orders for heavy machinery, computers, autos and airplanes in April, reducing demand for long-lasting manufactured goods by the largest amount in six months. Orders for durable goods fell 3.6 percent, and a key category that serves as a proxy for business investment was down 2.8 percent, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. The weakness was widespread across a number of industries as the impact of supply disruptions stemming from the Japanese earthquake in March rippled through U.S. manufacturing. Demand for autos, auto parts, steel, computers and electronic equipment all fell, and those declines were attributed in part to difficulty in getting critical component parts from Japan, where manufacturing has been disrupted by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami and nuclear plant disaster. Many analysts viewed the setbacks as temporary, but said they could dampen manufacturing for several months, until U.S. companies find alternative supply sources. “We think the disruptions from Japan will be temporary. Manufacturing will still be a bright spot for the economy this year,” said David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor’s in New York. Jennifer Lee, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, said that the April durable goods report was just another sign that “the U.S. economy is encountering its fair share of speed bumps” at the moment. Strong demand domestically and overseas has kept U.S. factories humming, making manufacturing one of the strongest sectors of the economy since the recession ended in June 2009. The overseas demand has been supported by a weaker dollar, which makes U.S. products cheaper in foreign markets. U.S. factories have added 167,000 jobs over the past six months, the best stretch of hiring gains in manufacturing since 1997. The April decline left orders at $189.9 billion, still 22.5 percent below where orders were in December 2007, the month the recession began. However, the April level is 27.7 percent above the recession low hit in April 2009. The big drop last month came following a 4.4 percent increase in March, a gain that was revised up from a previously reported 2.9 percent increase. In addition to the weakness in autos, demand for commercial aircraft fell 30 percent in April. Analysts had expected a big drop in this highly volatile category because new orders at Boeing slowed sharply in April. Orders for nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft, a category viewed as a good indication of business investment plans, fell 2.6 percent in April after a big 5.4 percent rise in March. Despite the April drop, economists are forecasting strong gains in business capital spending for the rest of this year as companies boost purchases of equipment to take advantage of a one-year tax break that Congress passed in December. Excluding all transportation categories, orders would have been down 1.5 percent in April after rising 2.5 percent in March. Other industries seeing a drop in demand in April included primary metals such as steel, down 1.5 percent, and computers, down 4.4 percent. Demand for machinery fell 3.4 percent in April.

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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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After Japan Disaster, Toyota Insists It’s ‘Open For Business’

May 22, 2011

DETROIT (Deepa Seetharaman and Bernie Woodall) – Toyota Motor Corp told its U.S. dealers this week that the company had 45 days of inventory and was working hard to get the word out that it was “open for business.” In a letter obtained by Reuters, U.S. Toyota brand sales chief Bob Carter told dealers the company was in a “healthy position” as it moved toward a full production schedule. The company recently announced that eight of its North American-built models, including the Camry and Corolla, would return to 100 percent production in June. “This is well ahead of our previously announced timeline of November/December,” Carter said in the letter. The earthquake that rocked northeastern Japan on March 11 forced Toyota and other Japanese automakers to cut output at home and abroad as they struggled to secure vital auto parts. The subsequent nuclear disaster and power shortages further complicated problems. But Toyota has moved to restore production more quickly than many analysts expected. In the letter, Carter reiterated that the automaker’s U.S. production would be 70 percent of normal volume in June, up from 30 percent in May. Toyota forecast a full return to production for all models and factory lines by November or December. At 45 days, Toyota’s current inventory levels is just five days less than its May 2010 inventory level of 50 days. But Toyota’s sales rate has dropped even more quickly than its inventory level, Edmunds.com Chief Executive Jeremy Anwyl said. He said data shows that Toyota’s supply of vehicles is outpacing current demand. Analysts said Toyota’s sales have been pinched because curbed auto production has pushed car prices higher at a time of rising fuel prices. The perception of low inventories has also dampened demand. “The thing that’s happened for Toyota is that all the media coverage of shortages and higher prices has pushed demand down faster than reduction in supply,” Anwyl said. Carter addressed this notion in his letter to dealers, “Our team has been working aggressively to spread the word that Toyota is ‘open for business.’” U.S. auto dealer groups as well as industry analysts have said June is expected to be the thinnest month for Toyota inventories, and that lack of inventory in May and June will reduce sales. On Thursday, J.D. Power and Associates said May sales will be “dismal,” down 10 percent from April, in part because of the lack of inventory due to the March 11 earthquake in Japan. On Thursday, Honda Motor Co’s U.S. sales chief, John Mendel, sent a letter to Honda dealers, also assuring them that while June will see short supply of vehicles made in Japan and for the popular compact sedan Civic, July allotments will rise 11 percent from June. “We have all the confidence in our ability to increase our production in late summer,” Mendel said in his letter to U.S. Honda dealers. (Reporting by Bernie Woodall and Deepa Seetharaman; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and Richard Chang) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Obama Heading To Europe

May 22, 2011

WASHINGTON — Weaving together strands of pomp, policy and summitry, President Barack Obama’s weeklong European tour is all about tending to old friends in the Western alliance and securing their help with daunting challenges, from the political upheaval in the Mideast and North Africa to the protracted war in Afghanistan. Obama’s eighth trip to Europe as president, with a quick-moving itinerary that dips into four countries in six days, unfolds against the backdrop of the NATO-led bombing campaign in Libya and stubborn economic weakness on both sides of the Atlantic. A priority for the president and his allies will be to more clearly define the West’s role in promoting stability and democracy in the Arab world without being overly meddlesome and within tight financial limitations. Obama, who departs late Sunday, will visit Ireland, England, France and Poland. Each is weathering an economic downturn that has forced European nations to adopt strict austerity measures. The U.S. has pushed its national debt to the limit, and Obama and congressional Republicans are in contentious talks about how steeply to cut spending. But never mind all that, at least for a moment. A highlight of Obama’s opening stop in Ireland will be a feel-good pilgrimage to the hamlet of Moneygall, where America’s first black president will explore his Irish – yes, Irish – roots, and most likely raise a pint. It turns out that Falmouth Kearney, who immigrated to the United States in 1850 at the age of 19, is the great great great grandfather of Obama on his white, Kansas-born mother’s side. Obama, whose father was born in Kenya, will connect in Moneygall with distant relatives from the Irish branch of his family tree. Michael Collins, the Irish ambassador to the United States, says the president’s visit will be “a golden moment” for a country that’s been on the economic ropes after its boom time. The visit is sure to play well at home for Obama – make that O’bama – as he heads into re-election season after being pushed to great lengths simply to prove he was born on U.S. soil. After his day in Ireland, Obama spends two in England, where he and first lady Michelle Obama will be treated to all the pomp and pageantry that the monarchy can muster for the president’s first European state visit. The Obamas even get a Buckingham Palace sleepover. Though the United States and Britain remain the closest of allies, the relationship has been strained by recent events, including last year’s oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico triggered by the explosion of an oil rig owned by British-based BP. Britain’s unilateral announcement of a timetable for withdrawal of its 10,000 troops from Afghanistan also rankled the United States. Heather Conley, director of the Europe program at the private Center for Strategic and International Studies, said Obama’s stop in Britain could help “put the `special’ back into the U.S.-U.K. special relationship.” Obama on Wednesday will become the first American president to speak to members of Parliament from the historic Palace of Westminster. European leaders are eager to see how president frames the U.S.-European partnership at a time when Obama has prodded Western allies to shoulder greater responsibility in areas such as Afghanistan and Libya. A NATO-led mission is working to protect civilians and assist the rebel fighters trying to oust Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi. Former Liberal Democrat leader Menzies Campbell, a member of the House of Commons foreign affairs committee, said British politicians would be listening keenly to what Obama had to say about Afghanistan when he addresses both houses of Parliament on Wednesday. “The death of Osama bin Laden can only encourage those with the ear of the president to proceed more quickly with the draw-down of American forces in Afghanistan,” Campbell said. “MPs and peers alike will be listening closely to what he says about America’s intentions for Afghanistan.” In private, Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron will plunge into the details of a host of international challenges on which the U.S. and Britain have worked together: Afghanistan, Libya, counterterrorism, the global economy and more. Both leaders then scoot to a French summit of the Group of Eight industrialized nations, where the president hopes to build on momentum from his speech days ago about how best to promote stability and democracy in the Middle East. Obama has called on the World Bank and International Monetary Fund to present the G-8 with an ambitious plan to help Egypt and Tunisia, in particular, recover from the disruptions caused by their democratic revolutions and prepare for elections later this year. The U.S. and its allies don’t want those elections to occur against a backdrop of economic chaos that could increase support for extremists. But there’s no expectation of a big aid measure emerging from the G-8. Rather, the countries in the region will present their plans for democratization and stabilizing their economies, and the G-8 will consider ways to help. Although not on the official agenda, the G-8 leaders are sure to be talking about future leadership of the IMF now that former chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn has resigned after being arrested on attempted rape charges in New York. European leaders are anxious to put another European in that position while emerging economies would like to see a process that is open to someone from the developing world. U.S. officials have said they favor an open process, without being more specific. Obama’s visit to Europe comes a little more than a month before the U.S. is scheduled to start its gradual troop withdrawal in Afghanistan. The president has said the initial drawdown will be significant, but it’s unclear how many specific answers he’ll have for European leaders. Britain and France, in particular, are looking for details on the U.S. withdrawal timetable for signs of how NATO will move from combat missions to a training role by the end of 2014. The Afghan mission is deeply unpopular in many European countries, and political pressure has led some leaders to set timetables for their withdrawal. The British are planning to draw down 400 of their nearly 10,000 troops this year, with all British troops out by the end of 2014. France, which has 4,000 troops in Afghanistan, has said it is considering speeding up its withdrawal now that al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden is dead. During his two-day stay in Deauville, France, Obama will take time for one-on-one meetings on the side of the G-8 with several world leaders, including Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan. The U.S.-Russia relationship, though much improved since the Bush administration, remains complex. Medvedev has spoken out strongly in recent weeks against U.S. plans to plant missile interceptors in Romania as part of a U.S. shield over Europe, saying that could threaten Russia. He’s warned that Washington’s failure to cooperate with Russia on the missile shield could lead to a new arms race, and also threatened to pull out of the New START nuclear treaty with the U.S. if Russia feels at risk. Obama’s meeting with Kan would be his first with the Japanese prime minister since the March tsunami and earthquake that triggered a nuclear crisis in Japan. The U.S. has sent military and humanitarian assistance to Japan, as well as nuclear experts, to help the country recover from the disaster. Obama’s visit to Poland is emblematic of a growing front in the administration’s engagement in Europe, as the U.S. expands its economic and security relationship with Central European nations. Robert Kupiecki, Poland’s ambassador to the United States, says Central Europe’s experiences in moving toward democracy offer many lessons that are “directly applicable” in the Middle East and North Africa, and that Poles and others in the region are anxious to help the democratic movement spread. Lech Walesa, the former Polish president who founded the Solidarity freedom movement, has visited Tunisia, and Walesa will meet with Obama in Poland to talk about the experience. Obama can point to Poland, with its stable government and growing economy, as a benefactor of democracy’s virtues.

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Jobless Claims Down As Labor Market Could Be Picking Up

May 19, 2011

WASHINGTON – The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits fell more than expected last week, offering hope the labor market recovery remains on track. Initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell 29,000 to a seasonally adjusted 409,000, the Labor Department said on Thursday, continuing to unwind the prior weeks’ spike. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims dropping to 420,000. The prior week’s figure was revised up to 438,000 from the previously reported 434,000. “Clearly what it shows is an ongoing healing in the labor market. The recent data have been skewed by special factors like the Easter holiday and supply chain issues coming out of Japan,” said Neil Dutta, a U.S. economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in New York. “Some of the increase in jobless claims have been organic due to the slowing in the economy.” U.S. stock index futures extended gains on the report, while prices for government debt widened losses. The dollar rose against the yen. The four-week moving average of unemployment claims, a better measure of underlying trends, rose 1,250 to 439,000 – the highest level since mid-November. The data covers the survey period for the government’s closely watched employment report for May, which will be released early next month. The recent jump in claims, blamed on auto layoffs because of supply chain disruptions from March’s Japanese earthquake and problems with adjusting data for seasonal variations, had raised fears of a pull back in the pace of job creation. Employers added 244,000 jobs in April, the most in 11 months. However, the unemployment rate rose to 9 percent from 8.8 percent in March. Despite the fall, claims held above the 400,000 mark for a sixth straight week, indicating payroll growth will only be gradual. The four-week average has now been above that level, which is normally associated with stable job growth, for four weeks in a row. A Labor Department official said only one state or territory, the Virgin Islands, had been estimated, indicating the report was largely clear of distortions. The number of people still receiving benefits under regular state programs after an initial week of aid fell 81,000 to 3.71 million in the week ended May 7. Economists had expected so-called continuing claims to fall to 3.72 million from a previously reported 3.76 million. The number of people on emergency unemployment benefits increased 53,398 to 3.47 million in the week ended April 30, the latest week for which data is available. A total of 7.94 million people were claiming unemployment benefits during that period under all programs. (Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Neil Stempleman) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Peter Fox-Penner, PhD: Nuclear Trust

May 18, 2011

At the end of April, the New York Times reported that Toshiso Kosako, a senior adviser to the Japanese government, resigned in protest over the government’s handling of the Fukushima nuclear plant accident. This is the latest incident in an ongoing climate of accusations that Tokyo Electric Power has not been transparent about the condition of its damaged reactors or the dangers posed to citizens from radiation releases. This story is a reminder that nuclear energy is unique among energy technologies. No other energy source is capable of causing dangerous conditions over comparably large geographic areas. The Deepwater Horizon oil spill was an environmental calamity covering 2,900 square miles , but we did not have to evacuate every human from the oil spill area or limit their time within the area to a matter of a few hours. Relatedly, no other technology involves nuclear radiation — a danger whose psychological impacts are greatly amplified by the fact that it is both totally invisible to the senses and highly unfamiliar to nearly all ordinary citizens. When a nuclear incident occurs, the invisibility and unfamiliarity of radiation makes the general population extraordinarily reliant on the operators of nuclear facilities and their overseers for information critical to their very lives. Citizens’ willingness to live with the risks posed by nuclear power is understandably linked to their confidence that the nuclear industry and its government regulators will be honest about safety risks and take adequate steps to protect them. If they believe that plant operators or the government will act to protect itself by not protecting or informing them, citizens lose faith in both the nuclear industry and the government. Although there are some parallels to climate science, no other energy form is nearly so reliant on trust in a narrow cadre of engineers, scientists and regulators for its public acceptance. Had the Fukushima plants used any other prime mover (the technical term for energy forms used to generate power), there would have been no evacuation or ongoing safety fears, and the story would have faded from the world press in a day. Quite a lot has already been said about the impact of Fukushima on the hoped-for “nuclear renaissance.” Most of the commentary, including my own, has centered rather mechanically on how much more nuclear plants will now cost and which new reactor projects will continue to proceed. Yes, we will see a few projects on the drawing boards drop away. No, this will not change bipartisan congressional support for maintaining a commercial nuclear power industry. I now realize that this accident will have a deeper and more lasting impact. Sadly, we live in an era of deteriorating trust for most of the institutions of civil society, including representative government. The debate over climate science has politicized this venerated institution to a degree never before seen in modern times. These long-term developments, combined with the specific allegations leveled at Tepco and the government of Japan, suggest that nuclear power has a much bigger hurdle to surmount than its specific license approvals. More than any other energy form, its fate is tied to our very confidence in government’s ability to protect its citizens from harm, admit its own wrongdoing and criticize and control powerful corporate interests. This is a tall order, and it does not bode well for the hoped-for nuclear revival. It does, however, suggest a path forward for civilian nuclear power. Governments can gain the trust they need to revive this sector by demonstrating the ability to provide transparency and accountability in the regulation of nuclear plants and the handling of nuclear accidents. In and of itself, this is a goal that will advance all of civil society and repair the public’s trust in government. It could also be the key to preserving the future of this low-carbon resource. The views expressed in this article are strictly those of the author.

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Asia Ahead: The Japanese economy the center of attention in Asia this week

May 15, 2011

Asia Ahead: The Japanese economy the center of attention in Asia this week

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Marshall Auerback: The Myth That Banks Are Solvent

May 12, 2011

Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0 . Banks will likely have too much cash by 2019 as a result of the Basel III global banking rules, UBS AG Chief Executive Oswald Grübel said Thursday . “In the next 10 years, at the end of 2019, we will have overly liquid, overcapitalized banks,” he said, addressing a business audience at a conference. “However this also means we won’t have a lot of growth.” Mr. Grübel was discussing changes in the global balance of power and what the possible consequences would be. The CEO has said that investment banking could shift to the U.S. and Asia if stricter capital requirements are enforced in the U.K. and Switzerland. The basic economic tenet, however, remains that “power goes where the money is,” he said. This is consistent with the fallacy that the banks are basically solvent and able and ready to extend credit if only these darn regulators would get out of the way. As James Galbraith has argued , the problem is said to be no more serious than some clogged plumbing. A bit of Draino in the form of government handouts and guarantees should be sufficient to get credit flowing again. Most major banks are not insolvent, this story goes, but rather have a temporary liquidity problem induced by malfunctioning financial markets. Time will allow market mechanisms to restore the true, higher value of “legacy” assets. Once the banks are healthy, the economy will recover. Nonsense. Private debt loads remain too high, income and employment continue to fall, and delinquencies and foreclosures continue to rise. Assets are overvalued even at current depressed prices. Many financial institutions (probably including most of the big ones) are hopelessly insolvent, holding mountains of toxic waste that will never be worth anything. So why are we busy implementing policies that simply maintain a credit-based economy? All around the world, policymakers continue to foster the fiction that all we have a temporary illiquidity problem, not a problem of excessive leverage, excessive debt, and a legacy of assets that were vastly overvalued based on economic scenarios that had no chance of coming to fruition. Given the inappropriate premises under which policymakers in the U.S., the U.K., and the euro zone have dealt with the leverage of financial institutions, it’s obvious that problems will continue to languish if the administration does not change its course of action. This will heavily constrain the global economy’s capacity to recover and will lead to multiple Japanese style “lost decades” around the globe. The whole boom of the last 25 years was predicated on financial deregulation, massive fraud, and a huge build up of private debt as a consequence of inadequate fiscal policy to generate full employment and rising incomes. Growth was based on household borrowing and the continuation of negative saving trends (that is, household deficit spending). A good place to start recovery efforts, therefore, would be to change this method of economic growth by promoting employment, rather than capitulating to the siren songs of the bankers whose recklessness got us into this mess. In a much saner world, we would be in the midst of a government-led investment push, much like the Space Race or the Manhattan Project , to drive new energy technologies forward by scaling up production and innovation, both apt to lower unit cost points. There would also be a concerted effort to establish the new infrastructure required. (After all, highways were constructed in part for national defense purposes, and railroads and canals had their share of public subsidization.) But with the ease of capture so visible , no such effort led by the government could be trusted enough to be supported, especially by a citizenry that has become one of fragmented (and anxious) consumers. Deficit austerians in government fail to understand that a budget deficit is essential for stable economic growth if the contribution of net exports (the difference between exports and imports) is not strong enough to sustain domestic demand while the private domestic sector is trying to save. We need to put an end to these ridiculous policy responses. We not only require substantially increased supervision and regulation of the financial sector, but must also put a stop to the practices that brought on the crisis in the first place. If left alone to deal with the current problems, market mechanisms will push management and owners of insolvent institutions to ramp up losses and engage in yet more fraudulent accounting, leading to an even bigger crash down the road.

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US Dollar – Japanese Yen Technical and Fundamental Forex Forecast for May

May 12, 2011

US Dollar – Japanese Yen Technical and Fundamental Forex Forecast for May

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Dave Johnson: U.S.-China Summit: If Trade Were Trade…

May 9, 2011

Today the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue begins in Washington. This is the third such meeting, and it’s time for the Obama administration to get it right. China has not been engaging in “trade” with us, they have been engaging in something else entirely. The Washington Post sets the stage, with an editorial, The U.S. must push back against China’s investment controls : … It is still holding the renminbi at about 25 or 30 percent below its probable market value. … Beijing has increasingly used government procurement rules, technical standards and tax laws to force foreign companies to transfer their technology to state-owned Chinese firms in return for access to the Chinese market. … Beijing’s objective is the mercantilist one of building up state-owned “national champion” firms that can then capture global markets from Japanese, European and U.S. competitors. No matter that the state-owned sector already receives massive official support, direct and indirect — while more efficient private-sector job- creators must scramble for resources. Last week’s Let Trade Be Trade , explains: Since China’s admission into the World Trade Organization we have been packing up our factories and sending them over there. We have been buying so many things made in China, but they have not been buying very many things made here, and the resulting “trade deficit” has gotten worse year after year. Everyone is afraid of what China might do with all those trillion$ in U.S. Bonds they have accumulated. … There is a better way to solve the problem: let trade BE trade. Time To Buy From Us There is a simple solution: tell them to start actually trading with us, When the meeting begins Secretaries Clinton (State) and Geithner (Treasury) and Locke (Commerce) should slide a big stack of order forms across the table and say, “Your turn. Let us take your orders now, please.” China has been selling but not buying and it’s time for them to to start buying. That way we might be able use the word “trade” without wincing. It would also help fix our economy, our budget deficit, our unemployment rate and many other pressing problems. China Holds $1.5 Trillion Of Our Debt Trade by definition is a two-way street, buying from and selling to others. But China has accumulated $1.5 trillion by selling to us and not buying from us. This one-sided “trade” relationship has hurt or killed industries, companies, factories and jobs here in the United States, while forcing wages and living standards to drop. It has also placed China in an unhealthy position of power over us. It is understandable that some American interests have benefited from this arrangement, becoming fabulously wealthy while at the same time strengthening their whip-hand by pitting China’s low-wage rights-suppressed workers against American employees who have enjoyed all the protections and benefits of democracy. But it is not clear why our own government has gone along. It is obvious now to all that the one-way arrangement with China has hurt us, closed our factories, devastated our “rust-belt” communities, created vast income disparities and created terrible imbalances in the world’s economy. Placing Orders Here Fixes Both Economies If China were to place orders tomorrow for $1.5 trillion in American-made goods, the effect on our economy, unemployment level, manufacturing base, budget deficit, state budget shortfalls, public-employee pensions, and a host of other problems would be immediate and dramatic. And with our economy and wages restored, our own orders of goods from China would increase, boosting their economy, too. Their trade manipulations are costing them. Workers, facing labor-rights suppression and import restrictions from joining the world’s economy, are increasingly restless. They face inflation and a pending financial crisis. And that huge cash reserve is increasingly at risk from the worldwide imbalances it causes. If China repositioned its policies from mercantilism to trade it would fix so many problems. So why don’t they? If Not Trade, What? If China were using trade to build their economy they would use that $1.5 trillion dollar reserve to place orders here for American-made goods, boosting our economy, and boosting our ability to trade further with them. But they are not. They are sacrificing their own economic position to instead build their power position. China is cleverly using the greed and power of our Chamber of Commerce, huge multinationals, Wall Street, etc, to manipulate our government into letting them to sell China the rope to hang us with. The more China continues these manipulations even at its own expense, the more we should perhaps be understanding these imbalances as a national security problem instead of a trade problem. China isn’t trading , it is seizing the means of production. It is using manipulations of trade to gather wealth and power to itself at the expense of the rest of the world. It is vitally important for U.S. opinion leaders and policymakers to address this. We have been hypnotized by the word “trade” and the result is we are ignoring our national security. We are not minding our business. It is time to tell them to start trading fair or we’ll start minding our business with a big, fat tariff on imports so we can start paying down our deficits and rebuilding our manufacturing and jobs base. This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture . I am a Fellow with CAF. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary .

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World’s New Most Valuable Brand

May 9, 2011

Apple has overtaken Google as the world’s most valuable brand, ending a four-year reign by the Internet search leader, according to a new study by global brands agency Millward Brown. The iPhone and iPad maker’s brand is now worth $153 billion, almost half Apple’s market capitalization, says the annual BrandZ study of the world’s top 100 brands. Apple’s portfolio of coveted consumer goods propelled it past Microsoft to become the world’s most valuable technology company last year. Peter Walshe, global brands director of Millward Brown, says Apple’s meticulous attention to detail, along with an increasing presence of its gadgets in corporate environments, have allowed it to behave differently from other consumer-electronics makers. “Apple is breaking the rules in terms of its pricing model,” he told Reuters by telephone. “It’s doing what luxury brands do, where the higher price the brand is, the more it seems to underpin and reinforce the desire.” “Obviously, it has to be allied to great products and a great experience, and Apple has nurtured that.” Of the top 10 brands in Monday’s report, six were technology and telecoms companies: Google at number two, IBM at number three, Microsoft at number five, AT&T at number seven and China Mobile at number nine. McDonald’s rose two places to number four, as fast food became the fastest-growing category, Coca-Cola slipped one place to number six, Marlboro was also down one to number eight, and General Electric was number 10. Walshe said demand from China was a major factor in the rise of fast-food brands. “The Chinese have been discovering fast food and it’s such a vast market — Starbucks, McDonald’s… and pizza has hit China,” he said. “The way McDonald’s has reinvented itself, adapted its menus, added healthy options, expanding the times of day it can be visited, for example oatmeal for breakfast… that allied with growth in developing markets has really helped that brand.” Nineteen of the top 100 brands came from emerging markets, up from 13 last year. Facebook entered the top 100 at number 35 with a brand valued at $19.1 billion, while Chinese search engine Baidu rose to number 29 from 46. Toyota reclaimed its position as the world’s most valuable car brand, as it recovered from a bungled 2010 product recall. The survey was carried out before the March earthquake that caused massive disruption to Japanese supply chains. The total value of the top 100 brands rose by 17 percent to $2.4 trillion, as the global economy shifted to growth. Millward Brown takes as a starting point the value that companies put on their own main brands as intangibles in their earnings reports. It combines that with the perceptions of more than 2 million consumers in relevant markets around the world whom it surveys over the course of the year, and then applies a multiple derived from the company’s short-term future growth prospects. The full report is at www.millwardbrown.com/brandz. (Editing by David Cowell) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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‘Special Factors’ Blamed For Big Jump In Unemployment Claims

May 5, 2011

WASHINGTON — The number of people applying for unemployment benefits surged last week to the highest level in eight months, a troubling sign a day ahead of the government’s report on April employment. The Labor Department said Thursday that the 43,000 spike in applications to a seasonally adjusted 474,000 last week was largely the result of unusual factors, including a high number of school systems in New York that closed for spring break. Still, it marked the third increase in four weeks. The four-week average, a less volatile measure, rose for the fourth straight week to 431,250. Applications have jumped 89,000, or 23 percent, in the past four weeks. “The trend is clearly upward, so that’s disconcerting,” said Kurt Karl, chief U.S. economist for Swiss Re. “When you get three or four weeks in a row of special factors, they’re no longer so special.” Applications near 375,000 are typically consistent with sustainable job growth. Weekly applications peaked during the recession at 659,000. Rising unemployment applications and other weak economic data this week have prompted some analysts to worry that higher fuel prices may be causing employers to slow their pace of hiring. The government is scheduled to release its April jobs report on Friday. Economists are projecting that the economy likely added 185,000 jobs in April and the unemployment rate may remain 8.8 percent, but some are now saying the numbers could be lower. Thursday’s report also doesn’t bode well for hiring in May, economists said. A Labor Department spokesman blamed much of the latest increase on the unexpected spike caused by New York schools. That resulted in 25,000 layoffs. The department didn’t anticipate the closures when making seasonal adjustments, the spokesman said. The employees affected were bus drives and cafeteria workers, not teachers. One economists was skeptical that school recesses, presumably that have been on the calendar all year, would be difficult to account for. “Whatever school holidays may have occurred in New York were most likely associated with the Easter and Passover holidays, which should not have come as a surprise to those who calculated the seasonal adjustment factors for this year,” said Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at MFR Inc. Other factors also contributed to the increase, the Labor spokesman said. Oregon launched its own extended unemployment benefit program, which caused an increase in overall applications in the state for unemployment benefits. And auto-related layoffs rose, Some companies have shut down or slowed production because of parts shortages stemming from the earthquake in Japan. Those disruptions are mostly affecting Japanese automakers with plants in the North America. Honda Motor Corp. has slowed production at 10 of its U.S. and Canadian plants. Toyota has cut its U.S. production by two-thirds. Both have said they aren’t laying off workers. But the slowdowns also affect auto-supply companies. Still, applications have risen sharply in recent weeks, raising concerns that high gas and food prices are cutting into consumer spending and slowing the economy. Businesses are also facing higher costs for raw materials, which reduce profit margins. They may be cutting back on hiring as a cost-saving measure. The national average for gas was $3.99 a gallon on Thursday, according to the AAA Daily Fuel Gauge. That is 30 cents higher than a month earlier. Other recent data have also pointed to a weaker job market. A private trade group said Wednesday that a measure of employment growth in the service sector, which employs 90 percent of the work force, slowed for the second straight month. The report, by the Institute for Supply Management, still showed that employment rose, but at the slowest pace in 7 months. The number of people continuing to receive benefits rose 74,000 to 3.7 million. Millions more unemployed are receiving aid from extended benefit programs put in place during the recession. All told, more than 8 million people received unemployment benefits for the week ending April 16, the most recent data available. That was 170,000 fewer than the previous week.

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GM’s U.S. Sales Rise Despite Production Concerns

May 3, 2011

DETROIT (Bernie Woodall and Ben Klayman) – General Motors Co’s U.S. sales rose 26 percent in April, a sign that the automaker has not been greatly affected by supply disruptions from Japan after the March 11 earthquake. Auto sales are an early indicator each month of U.S. consumer demand, and GM, as the biggest U.S. seller of autos and the first to report April sales on Tuesday, indicated that industry sales will be strong. A Thomson Reuters poll of 40 economists and analysts had predicted a gain of 16 percent over last year. GM said that its retail sales were up 25 percent, driven by higher sales for its fuel-efficient Chevrolet compact cars and compact crossovers: the Cruze, Equinox and Terrain. The Cruze, the compact car that GM introduced last year, is now the second-biggest selling vehicle in the automaker’s lineup, behind only its Silverado pickup truck. Cruze sales so far this year are about triple the sales of the car it replaced, the compact Cobalt. “Consumers are continuing to rethink their vehicle choice,” said Don Johnson, GM vice president for U.S. sales. Ford Motor Co sales analyst George Pipas said this week that Ford is also showing a major shift in consumer taste toward smaller and more fuel-efficient cars as gasoline prices rise. U.S. retail gasoline prices rose 8 cents in the past week to $3.96 per gallon and are now $1.07 higher than a year ago, according to government figures released on Monday. Pipas said the he believes that high gasoline prices are convincing many consumers to “pull the trigger” on a new vehicle purchase. “I believe there is a call to action,” Pipas said of consumer purchases this spring. “Summer is the driving season, and I’m going to pull the trigger,” he said of consumers. Sales for the other automakers in the U.S. market will be issued later on Tuesday. On Monday in Japan, new-vehicle sales in April halved, sinking to the lowest monthly tally on record, as Japanese automakers felt the full brunt of the March earthquake. Also on Monday, French car sales fell 1.2 percent, reflecting the end of a scrappage scheme. In Italy, they fell to the lowest level in 15 years. Last month, Ford outsold GM for only the second time in 13 years. Ford and other automakers will report U.S. sales later on Tuesday. The world’s top automaker by sales, Toyota Motor Corp, is expected to show weaker sales than its U.S. counterparts, due to production and inventory problems, analysts said. GM shares were up 2.4 percent at $32.94 on the New York Stock Exchange on Tuesday morning. (Additional reporting by Deepa Seetharaman, editing by Matthew Lewis) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Manufacturing Is Growing, Even As The Economy Slows

May 2, 2011

NEW YORK (By Steven C. Johnson) – The pace of expansion in U.S. manufacturing slowed in April for a second straight month but was brisker than expected, data showed on Monday, a sign the sector was holding up despite slower national growth. A separate report showed private residential investment helped boost construction spending in March, and borrowing by small businesses rose, albeit more slowly than in February, which may signal more hiring down the road. Slower growth in the manufacturing sector, which has been at the forefront of the U.S. recovery, appeared to corroborate evidence the economy had lost some momentum in recent months. The Institute for Supply Management said its index of national factory activity fell to 60.4 in April from 61.2 the previous month, its second monthly slide. A reading above 50 indicates expansion. Previous regional reports had showed a slowdown in manufacturing last month. ISM’s broader national report has been expanding since August 2009 and hit a peak in February 2011. “A lot of the growth is being driven by exports and the weaker dollar,” said Norbert Ore, chairman of the ISM Manufacturing Survey Committee. The ISM reading beat the median estimate of 60 in a Reuters poll of 64 economists, suggesting the sector was still firmly in expansionary territory. “With what is happening in the world at this point, you would expect (manufacturing numbers) to be down,” said Kurt Karl, chief U.S. economist at Swiss Re. “We’ve had (higher) oil prices, we have had hits to Japan, we have had hits domestically from production and supply constraints from the Japanese disruptions and we are still over 60 on the manufacturing (index). So it is a very good report.” PRICES UP, CONSTRUCTION SPENDING ENCOURAGING Data last week showed overall U.S. growth slowed to a 1.8 percent annual rate in the first quarter, off its 3.1 percent pace over the final three months of 2010. Economists said consumers were spending less as higher food and gasoline prices dented their incomes. Input prices in manufacturing also neared a three-year high, the ISM report showed. Last week, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said the economy faces new headwinds from soaring oil prices, but said a forecast of 3 to 4 percent growth was reasonable. Another report released on Monday showed construction spending rose at its fastest pace in 11 months in March, though February’s data was revised to show a bigger decline than originally reported. Also on Monday, PayNet Inc reported that borrowing by small U.S. businesses rose in March, while loan defaults at such firms fell to the lowest level in more than four years. “Small business balance sheets are pristine right now,” said William Phelan, PayNet’s president and founder. “There’s a lot of potential there (for growth), but we need to see the demand come back to ignite it.” Borrowing by small businesses is considered a harbinger for the broader economy because they account for as much as 80 percent of new hiring. (Additional reporting by Lucia Mutikani in Washington, Ellen Freilich in New York and Ann Saphir in Chicago; Editing by Dan Grebler) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Bin Laden’s Death Gives Markets Boost Of Optimism, Eases Fear Of Recession

May 2, 2011

This post has been updated. Osama bin Laden’s death has decreased the risk of doing business around the globe and especially in the Middle East, providing a needed boost to the broader economic recovery, economists said Monday. The leader of the al Qaeda terrorist group is dead, President Barack Obama announced from Washington late Sunday. The news has been a tonic for financial markets: the price of a barrel of oil fell; Japanese stocks rose to a post-earthquake high and U.S. stock futures surged. We live in a new and potentially less dangerous world, headlines are declaring. It’s a change that promises more investment in Middle East countries, cheaper transportation costs and less risk the U.S. economy will tip back into recession. “There’s a lot of positives out of this,” John Silvia, chief economist of Wells Fargo, said in an interview Monday morning. “It lowers the risk premium of anything. It generally decreases what we would call event risk — in other words, a sudden outbreak of terrorism.” “It will last as long as it’s perceived there’s no bin Laden junior coming along,” he added. Stocks across the world rose on the news of the terrorist leader’s death. Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average gained 1.6 percent, reaching a high not seen since a devastating earthquake and tsunami struck the northeastern cost in March, Bloomberg News reported. The Stoxx Europe 600 index posted an eighth day of gains, and Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures rose in London. “The nation finally caught a break,” Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said in an email Monday morning. “At the very least, this will lift the collective psyche and rally financial markets for a bit, and confidence is vital to any recovery.” [ UPDATE: 9:40 a.m. -- Stocks had a strong opening in New York, with the S&P 500 up 0.29 percent, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 0.33 percent. Both indices pared immediate gains.] The good news comes during a period of economic strain. The price of oil has skyrocketed in recent months as protests across the Middle East turned violent, stoking investors’ fears that the supply from that crucial region would be compromised. Brent crude, a global benchmark, was up 50 percent compared to last year, as of Friday. As the price of oil rose, the price of gas followed, and a gallon of regular gas in the U.S. now costs an average of nearly $4, according to the American Automobile Association. High energy prices were leading economists to slash their forecasts for U.S. economic growth. Consumer confidence, an important economic indicator, plummeted in March. High gas prices were causing Americans to cut back on driving, and, as business contended with increased transportation costs, some were forced to scrap plans to hire new workers. Further, high gas prices take a profound psychological toll, making people feel poorer. Energy prices rose to highs not seen since 2008, when months of high oil prices helped drag the economy into recession. But, at least for now, that trend has reversed. In the U.S., a barrel of crude for June delivery fell from near $114 to just above $112 on Monday. The general feeling among investors seems to be that there’s now less risk of an oil supply disruption. Some tension that has accumulated over the last few months has apparently now eased, bringing the price of oil down. The dollar, which had reached a three-year low, began to climb. “One interpretation is that bin Laden’s death means that Al Qaeda will be in disarray for some time, leading to relative calm with respect to new terrorist threats, which in turn reduces the potential for disruption in oil supply,” Andrew Lo, a finance professor at MIT, said in an email early Monday. “Financial markets will likely react positively to this news in the short run, but the repercussions may be more complex over time as we learn how bin Laden’s death affects his organization and, consequently, the political economy of the Middle East.” It’s too soon to say what the long-term economic effects of bin Laden’s death will be, economists noted. Bin Laden himself did not much affect oil prices while he was alive, said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist of IHS Global Insight, in an email Monday morning. But for now, the terrorist’s death has apparently given investors a sense of optimism, which has propelled financial markets upward. Over the longer term, it could make secular Middle East countries like Turkey more attractive to investors, noted Silvia, the Wells Fargo chief economist. The so-called risk premium of doing business there could be lower, as a major terrorist attack now seems less likely. An influx of investor money could give the region an economic boost. But fundamental economic problems remain. Greece, which requested a bailout last year and has been crippled by debt, still struggles. Portugal, Ireland and Spain and the other relatively weak countries in the Euro zone still confront the prospect of painful and lengthy economic recoveries, as the high value of the Euro makes it difficult to undertake the monetary easing that a country with its own currency can implement. Bin Laden’s death is “not going to be the answer to what’s going on,” Silvia said. Further, the status of al Qaeda remains uncertain. The leader’s death could even spark a surge of terrorist attacks in the short run. The State Department issued a travel alert Monday morning, warning of the potential for anti-American violence. The alert lasts until August 1.

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FOMC To Maintain Neutral Tone, Japanese Yen Correction To Gather Pace

April 27, 2011

FOMC To Maintain Neutral Tone, Japanese Yen Correction To Gather Pace

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Georges Ugeux: Has Wall Street Lost It’s Way?

April 26, 2011

“Markets are always right.” This assertion loved by market analysts is increasingly losing its relevance. In recent years, we have seen that Wall Street was able to be heavily mistaken. The Dow Jones gained 30% since the lowest level of last year, July 6th. What concerns me most is the evolution since the beginning of this year. The Dow Jones has risen approximately 9%. On an annual basis, this would be somewhere above 30%. However, since the beginning of the year, we had a string of bad news. • Popular uprisings across the Middle East • A tsunami followed by a nuclear crisis that seriously weakens the Japanese economy • A rise of 40% of the yield 10-year US Treasury bonds, from 2.5% to 3.5%, over the last six months • A doubling of the yields of the obligations of countries in difficulty – with Greece’s 2-year bonds yielding almost 24% • A negative outlook on the United States AAA rating by Standard & Poor’s • Mediocre corporate results for the first quarter of 2011 in the USA • A 20% increase in food prices worldwide • A nearly 20% increase in the price of gasoline worldwide • A weakening US dollar against all key currencies Inflation is at our doors, we are going through democratic crises, Europe and the United States have become vulnerable, and interest rates are rising. Each of these factors alone would negatively influence the investment climate and lead Wall Street to decline. All of them combined have the potential to provoke a market collapse. This collective denial, which is reminiscent of 2007, gives the distinct impression that stock markets have lost all reason. Time has come to protect capital. We know what kind of crises Wall Street denials can provoke. Large financial institutions are now in a position to send a signal to sell shares, without being accused of lack of civic-mindedness, sense of responsibility, or both. This is the extent of the independence of financial advice that they publish. Today Equilar , a compensation analyst, reported that the S&P American CEO’s bonus increased 43% between 2009 and 2010, and that their average salary ($ 9 million) increased by 28%. The first press conference on Wednesday, of the President of the Federal Reserve, will most likely tell us nothing more than what we already know. It is good news for the “core inflation” level, namely the Consumer Price Index, without taking into account the price of energy or food ! This betrays the actual purchasing power of the consumers. Bernanke’s optimism will not reassure us: he has a track record for not seeing a crisis coming even if it’s the size of an iceberg. The current euphoria on Wall Street is definitely one of the most compelling signs of a selling opportunity in a long time.

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Ford Post Best First Quarter In 13 Years

April 26, 2011

DEARBORN, Mich. — An improving economy and new vehicles like the Ford Explorer propelled Ford Motor Co. to a $2.6 billion profit, its best first-quarter performance since 1998. The company earned 61 cents per share from January through March, compared with 50 cents per share in the same quarter a year earlier. The results beat Wall Street’s expectations. Analysts surveyed by FactSet were forecasting earnings of $2.1 billion, or 50 cents per share. Revenues rose 18 percent to $33.1 billion. The company was profitable in all regions, but saw strong growth in Asia, where sales rose 28 percent. Sales rose 12 percent in North America. “Our team delivered a great quarter, with solid growth and improvements in all regions,” Ford President and CEO Alan Mulally said. The March 11 earthquake in Japan, which has hurt Japanese automakers, has had little impact on Ford so far. Chief Financial Officer Lewis Booth said the company has lost production of 12,000 to 14,000 vehicles at its Asian operations, but doesn’t expect that to have a major effect on the bottom line. Three Asian assembly plants are closed this week because of parts shortages. Rising prices of commodities like steel cost the company $300 million in the first quarter, and are expected to increase costs by up to $2 billion by the end of this year. Ford offset some of those increases by raising prices by an average of $117 per vehicle at the end of the first quarter. Booth said Ford also continued to make progress paying off debt. The company, which took out a $23 billion loan in 2006 to revamp its operations, ended the quarter with $16.6 billion in debt, down $2.5 billion from the beginning of the year. Ford said it now has $4.7 billion more cash than debt, an improvement of $3.3 billion from the start of this year.

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Japan Central Bank: Economy To Shrink Through June

April 23, 2011

(Reuters) – Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said the country’s economy will likely shrink in the first half of 2011 due mainly to stalled output in the wake of Japan’s March 11 earthquake and tsunami, the Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday. “We are now expecting production and GDP will decline in the first quarter and the second quarter,” Shirakawa said in the interview conducted on Friday, echoing the views of most private-sector economists who also see a first half contraction. The focus is now on how quickly the Japanese economy will return to growth. This largely depends on when supply chain disruptions will ease and to what degree power shortages could affect factory output during the peak summer period. Shirakawa was quoted as saying supply constraints would likely continue at least until August before recovering. “Once supply capacity is recovered, then the Japanese economy is moving back to the original growth path,” Shirakawa said in the interview. The BOJ is expected to hold off on any further easing of monetary policy next week but will likely reiterate its readiness to act if the quake’s damage threatens Japan’s return to a moderate economic recovery. In a twice-yearly outlook report to be issued at next week’s rate review, the BOJ will cut its economic forecast for the current fiscal year, which began on April 1, from its January projection of 1.6 percent growth to reflect the impact of the quake, sources familiar with the BOJ’s thinking have told Reuters. But many in the bank agree with the dominant market view that Japan will avoid a contraction for the full fiscal year as growth is expected to pick up from around autumn. (Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Nathan Layne) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Toyota’s Production Won’t Return To Normal Until November Or Later

April 22, 2011

TOKYO — Toyota’s global car production, disrupted by parts shortages from Japan’s earthquake and tsunami, won’t return to normal until November or December – imperiling its spot as the world’s top-selling automaker. President Akio Toyoda apologized to customers for the delays due to the March 11 disasters that damaged suppliers in northeastern Japan, affecting automakers around the world. “To all the customers who made the decision to buy a vehicle made by us, I sincerely apologize for the enormous delay in delivery,” Toyoda said at a news conference in Tokyo. Toyota Motor Corp. earlier said it has suffered a production loss of 260,000 cars. Earlier this week, it resumed car production at all of its plants in Japan for the first time since the quake, but the factories are running at half capacity due to the parts shortages. Japanese manufacturers are also grappling with power shortages. Aftershocks from the magnitude 9.0 quake have slowed progress, Toyoda said. “We’ve seen some of the recovery work set back to square one many, many times,” he said. The setbacks could cost Toyota its top position in the global auto industry. Last year, Toyota sold 8.42 million vehicles, barely keeping its lead over a resurgent General Motors Co., which sold 8.39 million, thanks to booming sales in China. Given Toyota’s production woes, GM could reclaim the title of world’s largest automaker that it lost in 2008. Adding to those worries, customers in some overseas markets are raising questions over possible radiation contamination of exported vehicles due to radiation leaks at a tsunami-damaged nuclear plant in northern Japan’s Fukushima prefecture (state). In response to that concern, Japanese automakers have begun checking radiation levels on some cars and tires before shipment. “We want to erase their worries by taking this measure,” said Hirokazu Furukawa, a spokesman for the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association. He noted that no radiation has been detected on cars bound for overseas markets so far. Toyoda and other Toyota executives said normal production for some vehicles inside Japan could resume by July, with normal output beginning to be restored by August overseas. But it will take until late in the year for the company to bring its production lines back to full capacity for all models. “In November or December means that all lines and all models will go back to normal and we will be able to receive orders and make deliveries as usual,” Toyoda said. The company would not provide details on which vehicles might become fully available first. The announcement Friday was meant to facilitate dealers’ discussions with customers, Toyoda said. “Even if it is only the timing we can share with others … we may be able to deal better with people working on the front lines,” he said. “Dealers cannot discuss deliveries or any other specifics and they are having a hard time right now.” The parts crunch has been felt around the world, from Malaysia to Europe to the United States. Nissan Motor Co. and Ford Motor Co. have said several North American plants would be closed for some of April, and Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne has said his company will see disruptions. Toyota has extended production cuts at its North American factories into early June, a move that will likely result in widespread model shortages. Its factories in China are operating at 50 percent capacity, and production at three Thailand plants is being cut by 70 percent. The company has pledged not to lay off any of its 25,000 workers in North America and says it will use the extra time for training to make improvements at its 13 factories in the region. The disaster has left Toyota and other Japanese manufacturers who pride themselves on just-in-time efficiency in an awkward bind. Toyota executives say that while the industry’s supply chains were designed out of necessity to maximize competitiveness, the company might consider ensuring that its plants have alternative suppliers or that each region is relatively self-sufficient. “I don’t want to think about this, but we are in an earthquake-prone country, so we will have to give serious consideration to what we will do in the future,” said Shinichi Sasaki, an executive vice president. ___ Associated Press writers Shino Yuasa and Malcolm Foster in Tokyo and Grant Peck in Bangkok contributed to this report.

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PARTNERS: Nokia, Microsoft Ink Major Deal

April 21, 2011

By Tarmo Virki, European Technology Correspondent (HELSINKI) – Nokia Oyj’s earnings fell less than expected in the first quarter and the company signed a final agreement to start using Microsoft Corp software, sending its shares 3 percent higher. But gains were capped by the company’s forecast for profits to fall in coming quarters, due in part to Japan’s earthquake which hit component supplies across the technology sector. Underlying earnings per share fell to 0.13 euros in the three months through March from 0.14 a year earlier, beating analysts’ average forecast for 0.10. Nokia’s market share fell to 29 percent from 33 percent as nimbler Asian rivals ate into its dominant position in cheaper phones and it continued to lose out in more expensive smartphones to Apple Inc and others. To turn around its smartphone fortunes, Nokia’s new Chief Executive Stephen Elop in February unveiled a deal to start using Microsoft software instead of its own Symbian platform. Nokia said the deal enables it to cut annual costs by around 1 billion euros ($1.5 billion). Labour union officials said they expect Nokia to start lay-off talks next week. “Finalization of the agreement with Microsoft means Nokia can now focus on execution, but margin guidance underlines that difficult times lie ahead as it transitions the portfolio,” said analyst Geoff Blaber at CCS Insight. Nokia’s key phone unit reported an operating profit margin of 9.8 percent for January-March, well ahead of analysts forecast of 8.6 percent, but said for the full year the margin would fall to within a 6 to 9 percent range. Analysts on average expected the margin to drop to 8.5 percent. NIL-NIL Shares in Nokia were 3 percent higher at 6.11 euro by 6:57 a.m. EDT, outperforming 1.3 percent gain in the STOXX Europe 600 Technology Index. The stock remains well down on a record 65 euros seen in 2000. “It’s a bit of a no-score draw really. You’ve got a solid set of numbers but guidance is bad,” said Richard Windsor, global technology specialist at Nomura. “You’ve got a little bit of relief going on today but it probably doesn’t have legs in it.” Nokia forecast second-quarter sales at its phone unit would fall to between 6.1 and 6.6 billion euros, well below analysts’ average forecast of 6.9 billion, partly due to component shortages stemming from the March earthquake in Japan. “We expect these factors and their negative impact on our mobile devices volumes to continue not only during the second quarter 2011 but also through the third quarter 2011 at least,” Nokia said in a statement. Despite its bargaining power analysts say Nokia is likely to be among the phone makers worst hit by the disruption to supplies from last month’s devastating Japanese earthquake. It makes 450 million phones a year, which means quick and big changes in component supply are difficult. Nokia’s smaller rival Sony Ericsson said this week there were shortages of displays, batteries, camera modules and some printed circuit boards. Nokia’s telecom network gear arm Nokia Siemens Networks reported a surprise profit for the quarter and said Chinese regulators had approved its $975 million acquisition of Motorola Solutions’ gear business, clearing the last major hurdle for the deal to go through. The deal, which Nokia Siemens expects to close on April 29, will make the venture the second-largest globally and give it better access to the North American market. (Additional reporting by Terhi Kinnunen in Helsinki, with Georgina Prodhan in London and Mia Shanley and Simon Johnson in Stockholm; Editing by David Holmes) ($1=.6850 Euro) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions

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Japan Cabinet Ministers Express Confidence In U.S. Debt After S&P Lowers Outlook

April 19, 2011

April 19, 2011 1:27:39 AM By Kaori Kaneko and Tetsushi Kajimoto TOKYO (Reuters) – Japanese cabinet ministers on Tuesday moved to shore up confidence in U.S. debt after Standard & Poor’s threatened to lower its credit rating on the world’s largest economy due to a bulging budget deficit, touching a nerve with one of the largest holders of Treasuries. S&P, which assigns ratings to guide investors on the risks involved in buying debt instruments, slapped a negative outlook on the United States’ top-notch AAA credit rating on Monday and said there was at least a one-in-three chance that it could eventually cut it. Japan is the second-largest holder of Treasuries after China and its confidence in dollar-denominated assets has been steadfast until now, but the prospect of a ratings downgrade could test Japan’s faith in Treasuries. The increasing chance of a downgrade for the United States could also draw unwanted attention to Japan’s large debt burden, which is likely to grow larger as the government secures funding to rebuild after last month’s devastating earthquake and tsunami. “The United States is tackling fiscal issues in various ways, so I still think U.S. Treasuries are basically an attractive product for us,” Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda told reporters after a cabinet meeting. If investors start demanding higher returns for holding riskier U.S. debt, the rise in bond yields could erode the value of Treasuries held in currency reserves and push borrowing costs up in other countries. Japan’s reserves rose to $1.12 trillion at the end of March from $1.09 trillion at the end of February after Japan and other Group of Seven countries intervened to stem a rise in the yen. The bulk of Japan’s reserves are believed to be held in Treasuries. “Even if a private company downgraded, U.S. treasury bills are in demand from the world,” Economics Minister Kaoru Yosano said. Japan’s public finances are also in a dangerous state, and the timing of S&P’s warning could be a source of discomfort. Japan is set to compile an extra budget worth about 4 trillion yen ($48.4 billion) to start reconstruction after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, which also triggered the world’s worst nuclear crisis in a quarter century. This is likely to be the first of several spending packages. Japan’s public debt is already twice the size of its $5 trillion economy, and policymakers have said new bond issuance would be needed after the first extra budget to pay for reconstruction costs. S&P cut Japan’s sovereign rating to AA-minus in January, although it said shortly after the March disaster that it did not expect to change its ratings stance on Japan. ($1 = 82.675 Japanese Yen) (Editing by Edmund Klamann) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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IMF Scolds Developing Countries’ Economic Policies

April 18, 2011

WASHINGTON – The International Monetary Fund on Monday criticized developing countries for not responding strongly enough to the surge of hot money into their markets, saying the result could be a hard economic landing. After meeting in Washington D.C. on Friday, the IMF said in a note to G20 major economies that huge inflows of speculative capital had sped up economic growth in emerging markets, but also pushed up inflation and the response by developing country governments had “been insufficient to address these rising pressures, portending risks of a hard landing.” It said while capital flows to emerging markets have moderated, and in some cases been reversed, they remained high and volatile. The IMF said emerging market economies have tried to slow the flows through a combination of macroeconomic policies as well as capital control measures, but are delaying further macroeconomic responses such as raising interest rates. In Brazil, the IMF said there was scope to continue monetary policy tightening, while in China there should be less reliance on quantitative limits and reserve requirements and more focus on raising interest rates. The IMF warned last week that overheating pressures were growing in fast-growing emerging market economies that was leading to asset bubbles. Countries such as Brazil have pushed back, blaming near zero interest rates in the United States for sending investors elsewhere in search of returns, and telling the IMF to pay closer attention to the source of the flow. Brazil has resisted efforts to restrict the use of capital controls. Meanwhile, the IMF said the recovery in advanced economies were moving too slowly. In the United States, improvements in the housing and labor markets have been slow and without an increase in exports, growth will remain subdued. The Fund said the U.S. dollar was on the strong side of fundamentals, and a further depreciation of the U.S. unit against undervalued currencies would help to cut the U.S. current account gap. The IMF repeated that the Chinese yuan was “substantially undervalued,” while the values of the euro and Japanese yen are broadly in line with fundamentals. The IMF said the risk of a near-term spike in oil prices back to 2008 peaks, when prices went close to $150 a barrel, has “increased materially”. Global oil prices have risen to $127 highs this month on concerns that a prolonged conflict in Libya could affect supplies. The IMF said the Libyan supply setback was comparable to development around the time of the Iraq war in 2003. Libyan production declines equivalent to 1.5 percent of global supply have been broadly offset by higher production elsewhere. (Reporting by Lesley Wroughton; )

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Fed: Economy, Hiring Improving, Despite Energy Prices

April 13, 2011

WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy improved in every region of the country this spring, but higher oil prices remain a concern, according to a survey released Wednesday by the Federal Reserve. Factories were busier, consumers spent more and companies boosted hiring in all 12 of the regions surveyed by the Fed. But the report also found that high energy prices are putting pressure on businesses to raise their prices. And workers are seeing limited, if any, pay increases because they lack leverage in market where jobs are still hard to find. . Still, scant wage gains are a major reason Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke says inflation won’t spread through the economy this year. That’s limiting businesses ability to raise prices, even though many companies are facing higher costs for raw materials. The Fed’s report found that manufacturers are having an easier time increasing their prices to other businesses. But retailers have been more limited, fearing they might lose customers. Bernanke and a majority of Fed officials also predict that the surge in oil prices will lead only to a modest and short-lived increase in consumer prices. Consumer spending picked up modestly in most of the Fed’s 12 regions, despite the higher gasoline prices. Shoppers, however, focused on necessities and lower-priced goods. Auto sales rose and tourism also strengthened in most areas. Factories boosted production across most of the Fed’s regions, and many manufacturers increased hiring. Businesses remain mostly upbeat about future sales prospects, the Fed reported. Still, some said the earthquake in Japan could disrupt sales and production. Many U.S. businesses depend on Japanese companies for parts, particularly automakers and electronics manufacturers. The crisis could also temporarily limit Japanese imports of U.S. goods. The Fed’s report is based on information collected from its 12 regional banks before April 4. The information will be used when Bernanke and his colleagues discuss the economy at their next meeting on April 26-27.

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British Pound Rebound To Accelerate On Higher Inflation, Japanese Yen Reversal To Gather Pace

April 11, 2011

British Pound Rebound To Accelerate On Higher Inflation, Japanese Yen Reversal To Gather Pace

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Jitters mount spurring yen and dollar gains after the Japanese quake 

April 11, 2011

Jitters mount spurring yen and dollar gains after the Japanese quake

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Ian Fletcher: The Theory That’s Killing America’s Economy — and Why It’s Wrong

April 8, 2011

I wrote in a previous article how America’s disastrous embrace of free trade is ultimately based on a false theory of how the global economy works: the so-called Theory of Comparative Advantage. This is what economists, from the government on down, believe in. This matters. But I didn’t explain why the theory is wrong — which it is. Understanding its flaws is the price of admission to serious criticism of free trade, so it’s well worth getting a grasp on them. Economic theory can be a tough chew, but it’s worth the effort, if only to gain the intellectual confidence not to be intimidated by the so-called experts. So… let’s take a look at some of that machinery behind the wizard’s curtain, shall we? The theory’s flaws, which are fairly well known to economists but mostly ignored, consist of a number of dubious assumptions upon which the theory depends. To wit: Dubious Assumption #1: Trade is sustainable. The problem here is that the theory of comparative advantage pays no attention to the long term. So it can quite easily recommend a trade policy that gives us the highest possible living standard in the short run — but by way of selling off our country out from under us. This is what happens when a nation runs a trade deficit , which necessarily means that it’s either sinking into debt to foreigners or selling off its existing assets to them. The theory of comparative advantage is blind to this problem because it treats people’s time horizons as a given . So if a nation wants a short-term consumption binge followed by long-term decline, the theory says “OK, no problem. You wanted it, you got it, what’s not to like?” A saner theory of trade (and of economics generally) would advise people that it’s not a good idea to engage in decadent binges, regardless of how good it feels right now. It would recommend protectionist restraints on imports to force trade into balance, not free trade. Dubious Assumption #2: There are no externalities. An externality is a missing price tag. More precisely, it is the economists’ term for when the price of a product does not reflect its true economic cost or value. The classic negative externality is environmental damage, which reduces the value of natural resources without raising the price of the product that harmed them. The classic positive externality is technological spillover, where one company’s inventing a product enables others to copy or build upon it, generating wealth that the original company can’t capture. If prices are wrong due to positive or negative externalities, free trade will produce suboptimal results. For example, goods from a nation with lax pollution standards will be too cheap. So its trading partners will import too much of them. And the exporting nation will export too much of them, overconcentrating its economy in industries that are not really as profitable as they seem, due to ignoring pollution damage. Positive externalities are also a problem. If an industry generates technological spillovers for the rest of the economy, then free trade can let that industry be wiped out by foreign competition because the economy ignored its hidden value. Some industries spawn new technologies, fertilize improvements in other industries, and drive economy-wide technological advance; losing these industries means losing all the industries that would have flowed from them in the future. Dubious Assumption #3: Productive resources move easily between industries. As noted in my original article , the theory of comparative advantage is about switching productive resources from less-valuable to more-valuable uses. It’s about putting our economy to its own best use. But this assumes that the productive resources used to produce one product can switch to producing another. Because if they can’t, then imports won’t push our economy into industries better suited to its comparative advantage. Imports will just kill off our existing industries and leave nothing in their place. When workers, for example, can’t move between industries–usually because they don’t have the right skills or don’t live in the right place–shifts in an economy’s comparative advantage won’t move them into a more appropriate industry, but into unemployment. In the United States, because of our relatively low minimum wage and hire-and-fire labor laws, this problem tends to take the form of under employment, rather than unemployment per se. So $28 an hour ex-autoworkers go work at the video rental store for eight dollars an hour. The same goes for other inflexible factors of production, like real estate. That’s why the shuttered factory rivals the unemployment line as a visual image of trade problems. Dubious Assumption #4: Trade does not raise income inequality. Even if free trade expands the economy overall (dubious), it can tilt the distribution of income so much that ordinary people see little or none of the gains. For example, suppose that opening up a nation to freer trade means that it starts exporting more airplanes and importing more clothes than before. Because the nation gets to expand an industry better suited to its comparative advantage and contract one less suited, it becomes more productive and its GDP goes up. So far, so good. Here’s the rub: suppose that a million dollars’ worth of clothes production requires one white-collar worker and nine blue-collar workers, while a million dollars of airplane production requires three white-collar workers and seven blue-collar workers. So for every million dollars’ change in what gets produced, there is a demand for two more white-collar workers and two fewer blue-collar workers. Because demand for white-collar workers goes up and demand for blue-collar workers goes down, the wages of white-collar workers go up and those of blue-collar workers go down. But most workers are blue-collar workers — so free trade has lowered wages for most workers in the economy! This is not a trivial problem: Dani Rodrik of Harvard estimates that freeing up trade reshuffles five dollars of income between different groups of people domestically for every one dollar of net gain it brings to the economy as a whole. Dubious Assumption #5: Capital is not internationally mobile. The theory of comparative advantage is about the best uses to which America can put its productive resources, what economists call “factors of production.” We have certain cards in hand, so to speak, the other players have certain cards, and the theory tells us the best way to play the hand we’ve been dealt. Or more precisely, it tells us to let the free market play our hand for us , so market forces can drive all our factors to their best uses in our economy. Unfortunately, this relies upon the impossibility of these same market forces driving these factors right out of our economy. If that happens, all bets are off about driving these factors to their most productive use in our economy. Their most productive use may well be in another country, and if they are internationally mobile, then free trade will cause them to migrate there. This will benefit the world economy as a whole, and the nation they migrate to, but it will not necessarily benefit us. This problem applies to all factors of production, but the crux of the problem is capital. Capital mobility replaces comparative advantage, which applies when capital is forced to choose between alternative uses within a single national economy, with absolute advantage. And absolute advantage contains no guarantees whatsoever about the results being good for both trading partners. Capital immobility doesn’t have to be absolute, but it has to be significant and as it melts away, trade shifts from a guarantee of win-win relations to a possibility of win-lose relations. David Ricardo, the British economist who invented the theory of comparative advantage in 1817, actually knew about this problem perfectly well, and wrote about it in his book on the subject. So there’s no excuse for modern economists to ignore it. Dubious Assumption #6: Short-term efficiency causes long-term growth. The theory of comparative advantage is what economists call “static” analysis. That is, it looks at the facts of a single instant in time and determines the best response to those facts at that instant. But it says nothing about how today’s facts may change tomorrow. More importantly, it says nothing about how one might cause them to change in one’s favor. So even if the theory of comparative advantage tells us our best move today, given our productivities in various industries, it doesn’t tell us the best way to raise those productivities tomorrow. That, however, is the essence of economic growth, and in the long run much more important than squeezing every last drop of advantage from the productivities we have today. Economic growth is ultimately less about using one’s factors of production than about transforming them–into more productive factors tomorrow. The theory of comparative advantage is not so much wrong about long-term growth as simply silent. Analogously, it is a valid application of personal comparative advantage for someone with secretarial skills to work as a secretary and someone with banking skills to work as a banker. In the short run, it is efficient for them both, as it results in both being better paid than if they tried to swap roles. (They would both be fired for inability to do their jobs and earn zero.) But the path to personal success doesn’t consist in being the best possible secretary forever; it consists in upgrading one’s skills to better-paid occupations, like banker. And there is very little about being the best possible secretary that tells one how to do this. Dubious Assumption #7: Trade does not induce adverse productivity growth abroad. When we trade with a foreign nation, this will generally build up that nation’s industries, i.e. raise its productivity in them. Now it would be nice to assume that this productivity growth in our trading partners can only make them ever more efficient at supplying the things we want, and we will just get ever cheaper foreign goods in exchange for our own exports, right? Wrong. Consider our present trade with China. Despite all the problems this trade causes us, we do get compensation in the form of some very cheap goods, thanks mainly to China’s very cheap labor. The same goes for other poor countries we import from. But labor is cheap in poor countries because it has poor alternative employment opportunities. What if these opportunities improve? Then this labor may cease to be so cheap, and our supply of cheap goods may dry up. This is actually what happened in Japan from the 1960s to the 1980s, as Japan’s economy transitioned from primitive to sophisticated manufacturing and the cheap merchandise readers over 40 will remember (the same things stamped “Made in China” today) disappeared from America’s stores. Did this reduce the pressure of cheap Japanese labor on American workers? It did. But it also deprived us of some very cheap goods we used to get. And it’s not like Japan stopped pressing us, either, as it moved upmarket and started competing in more sophisticated industries. Oops! When Nobel laureate Paul Samuelson — author of the best-selling economics textbook in history — reminded economists of this problem in a (quite accessible) 2004 article , he drew scandalized gasps from one end of the discipline to the other. But nobody was able to explain why he was wrong. They still haven’t. I don’t expect most readers to get all the above analysis the first time through. But I do hope that everyone who’s read this far now understands that there is no good reason — regardless of what most economists say — to assume that free trade is necessarily best. The economic logic of those who say it is, is riddled with enough holes to sink a container ship.

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Scott Bittle and Jean Johnson: Fiscal Follies: Facing the Budget Auto-Destruct Countdown, Without an Escape Pod

April 7, 2011

For the last couple of weeks, Washington has been living in one of those Star Trek episodes where the computer is counting down to an explosion. Within days, the U.S. government either will or won’t shut down because Congress either will or won’t agree on a budget to cover us until September, the end of the fiscal year. There’s always a certain drama to a countdown. Star Trek may have skimped on special effects, but they knew how to use countdowns to keep viewers hooked. It seems like the computer was always announcing how much time was left until the Starship Enterprise would go into “autodestruct.” To avoid having the spaceship blow up, both the captain and the first officer had to officially agree to turn the auto-destruct system off. In fiction, it provides a satisfyingly tense moment . You could say the federal government is in an auto-destruct sequence now too, and that unfortunately, our leaders can’t agree to turn it off. Even if we get through this current countdown without major damage to the economy or the country’s standing in the world, the truth is that we have more countdowns ahead of us. The countdown to the debt ceiling. For most of us, April 15 is usually tax day, but it’s also the day that U.S. debt could hit $14.294 trillion. According to the Treasury Department’s most recent estimates, we could reach the magic number anytime between April 15 and May 31 . When we do, Treasury needs permission from Congress to issue any more Treasury bonds, which is how we borrow money. And the U.S. government can’t function without borrowing money. There is an unnerving lack of clarity about exactly what would happen if Congress doesn’t go along. The Treasury does have a few maneuvers it can pull to delay hitting the ceiling, at least by a few weeks or months. Congressman Ron Paul believes that the government could just pay its bills as it goes along: ” You could have priorities . You can pay the interest on the Treasury bills, so the foreign holders of the debt don’t panic.” But Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, and a slew of other experts think the reaction could be far less benign. In a worst case scenario, not raising the ceiling might undercut confidence in U.S. Treasury bonds, triggering the kind of debt crisis that upended the economies of Ireland, Greece, and Argentina. Essentially, we’d be telling the world that we don’t know how to manage our money, which is unnerving to any lender. Geithner has warned that it could cause ” catastrophic damage to the economy, potentially much more harmful than the effects of the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009.” For Bernanke, not raising the debt ceiling ” would be extremely dangerous and very likely a recovery-ending event .” And given how long it’s going to take us to sop up the red ink, Congress will be facing “debt ceiling” decisions every couple of years for a very long time. It’s not over until it’s over, as Yogi Berra warned us. The countdown to 2019. If nothing changes, according to the General Accountability Office, this is the date when nearly every penny the government collects in taxes will be needed to cover spending on Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, and interest on the debt — around 90 cents out of every dollar is the attention-getting GAO factoid . With an aging population, rising health care costs, and gargantuan budget deficits driving up interest costs, spending in these categories could crowd out spending for just about everything else we expect government to do. We have about eight years to head this one off at the pass, but neither Congress nor the Administration has offered much of plan as of yet. The countdown to 2021. This is when the GAO estimates the debt held by the public will break its previous record of 109 percent of gross domestic product, set right after World War II. Essentially, the nation’s debts will be bigger than the entire economy. When a country’s debts get that big, it could start dragging down the overall economy, or even lead to a European-style debt crisis . Nobody really knows when the U.S. national debt would become “too big.” Greece imploded when its debt was about 115 percent of GDP, but Japan’s is already past 200 percent. Even in the aftermath of the tsunami, it hasn’t caused a debt crisis yet because Japan’s economy is bigger and healthier than those of Greece or Ireland. Plus, about 95 percent of Japan’s debt is held by Japanese investors . Only about half of U.S. debt is held in the United States . If present projections hold, the U.S. debt would hit 200 percent around 2033, and when you’re that far in the red, you’re always walking around with the auto-destruct switch armed. That’s why the world financial markets held their breath after the Japanese tsunami — at that level of debt, anything might set off a financial crisis. Despite the inside-the-Beltway drama, most Americans haven’t been focusing that much on the debate over this year’s budget. Surveys routinely show that much of the public is poorly informed about basics such as where the money in budget actually goes and how much can be saved by cutting funding for foreign aid and the space program (not much, just to be clear about it). So the clock is running. Either we make some meaningful decisions on the budget, or we stand by while the auto-destruct sequence starts. And unlike the crew on Star Trek, we can’t count on Captain Picard and Gene Roddenberry to rescue us just before the two-minute warning runs out.

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British Pound To Face Range-Bound Price Action, Japanese Yen Correction On Tap

April 7, 2011

British Pound To Face Range-Bound Price Action, Japanese Yen Correction On Tap

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Totoya To Shutdown North American Factories Due To Parts Shortage

April 4, 2011

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A Toyota Motor Corp. spokesman says it’s inevitable that the company will have to shut down its North American factories due to shortages of parts from Japan. Spokesman Mike Goss says the shutdowns are likely to take place later this month, affecting about 25,000 workers. But he says no layoffs are expected. He says the length of the shutdowns is unknown and depends on how fast earthquake-damaged Japanese parts factories get back in operation. Toyota gets about 15 percent of its parts from Japan for cars and trucks built in North America. The company has more than a dozen North American factories. Goss made the comments Monday before an appearance in Louisville by Toyota’s head of North American operations.

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Japan Nuclear Plant Crisis Could Last Months

April 3, 2011

TOKYO — Engineers pinned their hopes on chemicals, sawdust and shredded newspaper to stop highly radioactive water pouring into the ocean from Japan’s tsunami-ravaged nuclear plant Sunday as officials said it will take several months to bring the crisis under control, the first time they have provided a timetable. Concrete already failed to stop the tainted water spewing from a crack in a maintenance pit, and the new mixture did not appear to be working either, but engineers said they were not abandoning it. The Fukushima Da-ichi plant has been leaking radioactivity since the March 11 tsunami carved a path of destruction along Japan’s northeastern coast, killing as many as 25,000 people and knocking out key cooling systems that kept it from overheating. People living within 12 miles (20 kilometers) of the plant have been forced to abandon their homes. The government said Sunday it will be several months before the radiation stops and permanent cooling systems are restored. Even after that happens, there will be years of work ahead to clean up the area around the complex and figure out what to do with it. “It would take a few months until we finally get things under control and have a better idea about the future,” said Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency spokesman Hidehiko Nishiyama. “We’ll face a crucial turning point within the next few months, but that is not the end.” His agency said the timetable is based on the first step, pumping radioactive water into tanks, being completed quickly and the second, restoring cooling systems, being done within a matter of weeks or months. Every day brings some new problem at the plant, where workers have often been forced to retreat from repair efforts because of high radiation levels. On Sunday, plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. announced it had found the bodies of two workers missing since the tsunami. Radiation, debris and explosions kept workers from finding them until Wednesday, and then the announcement was delayed several days out of respect for their families. TEPCO officials said they believed the workers ran down to a basement to check equipment after the magnitude-9.0 earthquake that preceded the tsunami. They were there when the massive wave swept over the plant. “It pains us to have lost these two young workers who were trying to protect the power plant amid the earthquake and tsunami,” TEPCO Chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata said in a statement. On Saturday, workers discovered an 8-inch (20-centimeter) crack in a maintenance pit at the plant and said they believe water from it may be the source of some of the high levels of radioactive iodine that have been found in the ocean for more than a week. This is the first time they have found radioactive water leaking directly into the sea. A picture released by TEPCO shows water shooting some distance away from a wall and splashing into the ocean, though the amount is not clear. No other cracks have been found. The radioactive water dissipates quickly in the ocean but could be dangerous to workers at the plant. Engineers tried to seal the crack with concrete Saturday, but that effort failed. So on Sunday they went farther up the system and injected sawdust, three garbage bags of shredded newspaper and a polymer – similar to one used to absorb liquid in diapers – that can expand to 50 times its normal size when combined with water. The polymer mix in the passageway leading to the pit had not stopped the leak by Sunday night, but it also had not leaked out of the crack along with the water, so engineers were stirring it in an attempt to get it to expand. They expected to know by Monday morning if it would work. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of people are still living in shelters, 200,000 households do not have water, and 170,000 do not have electricity. Running water was just restored in the port city of Kesennuma on Saturday, and residents lined up Sunday to see a dentist who had flown in from the country’s far north to offer his services. Many were elderly and complaining of problems with their dentures. Overhead and throughout the coastal region, helicopters and planes roared by as U.S. and Japanese forces finished their all-out search for bodies. The effort, which ended Sunday, is probably the final hope for retrieving the dead, though limited operations may continue. It has turned up nearly 50 bodies in the past two days. In all, more than 12,000 deaths have been confirmed, and another 15,500 people are missing. ___ Associated Press writers Mayumi Saito, Noriko Kitano and Shino Yuasa in Tokyo and Jay Alabaster in Kesennuma contributed to this report.

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GM Sales Soar 11.4 Percent In March On Market ‘Shift’

April 1, 2011

DETROIT (By Deepa Seetharaman and Ben Klayman) – General Motors Co. said on Friday that its U.S. sales rose 11.4 percent in March as higher gasoline prices drove demand for smaller, more fuel-efficient vehicles such as the Chevrolet Cruze. The U.S. automaker said total U.S. sales in March for its four brands rose to 206,621 vehicles from 185,406 last year. Including its four former brands — Hummer, Pontiac, Saab and Saturn — GM sales rose 9.6 percent. Auto sales represent one of the first snapshots every month of U.S. consumer demand, and 34 economists surveyed by Reuters estimated March sales would rise 12 percent on average. Other automakers are scheduled to report March U.S. sales later on Friday. March is traditionally a stronger sales month than February, but lower incentive spending by GM, Toyota Motor Corp and others likely resulted in a lower growth rate than February’s stronger-than-expected 27 percent gain. GM sales chief Don Johnson said incentives per vehicle on average were $600 to $800 lower last month and the automaker would be prudent and disciplined with its deals going forward. The expected slower industry growth has raised concerns about the recovery in the U.S. auto market, although U.S. employment on Friday recorded a second straight month of solid gains in March and the jobless rate fell to a two-year low of 8.8 percent, marking a decisive shift in the labor market that should help underpin the economic recovery. Despite the sales increase, rising oil prices and the resulting pain at the pump could push consumers away from more lucrative light trucks. Light truck sales, which include pickup trucks and sport utility vehicles, make up a little more than half of U.S. auto sales and account for a disproportionate share of profits at the U.S. automakers because of their higher prices. Gasoline prices rose more than 3 cents to $3.60 a gallon over the last week, the Energy Department said. The average price of regular gas is 80 cents higher than a year ago as conflict in Libya and rising tensions in the Middle East have sent the cost of crude oil to above $100 a barrel. Another focus is the aftermath of the Japanese earthquake and subsequent tsunami last month which caused many supplier plants there to close or cope with power outages. GM said total U.S. sales for passenger cars rose 15 percent in March, while crossover and pickup truck sales rose 20 percent and 11 percent, respectively. “Clearly, as the market has shifted, we’re much better positioned from a product portfolio to take advantage of it,” Johnson said. GM shares were up 0.2 percent at $31.09 on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday morning. (Reporting by Ben Klayman and Deepa Seetharaman in Detroit, editing by Matthew Lewis) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Video: Ito Says Japan Has 80% Recession Chance on Power Outages

April 1, 2011

April 1 (Bloomberg) — Takatoshi Ito, a University of Tokyo professor and former adviser to the Japanese government, talks about the outlook for the economy amid reconstruction following last month’s earthquake and power outages.¶ He speaks with Bloomberg’s Ryan Chilcote in Cernobbio, Italy.

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