majority

Huffington Post…

NEW YORK – Sooner than expected, the International Monetary Fund will have a new managing director. For more than a decade, I have criticized the Fund’s governance, symbolized by the way its leader is chosen. By gentlemen’s agreement among the majority shareholders – the G-8 – the managing director is to be a European, with Americans in the number two post and at the head of the World Bank.

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Stiglitz: IMF Chief Must ‘Continue Along The Reform Path’

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Huffington Post…

This week Newt Gingrich, as is his way, is at the epi-center of the brouhaha over his comments about Paul Ryan’s (R-WI) plan to replace Medicare with a voucher system. Let me say right now, I like vouchers. I like the idea of allowing a broad array of solutions for a problem and letting the marketplace determine the best solution. I now have to caveat this statement: I only like vouchers if they are not designed at the outset to place the burden of Medicare on the elderly (i.e., a voucher needs to have a fair market value). The whole Newt-Voucher thing started me thinking about how confused I am about government and political identity. I don’t know about you, but I want to go back to those good old days when government expanded and the USA was King of the Mountain. Bill Clinton was Alan Greenspan’s favorite Republican when it came to fiscal conservancy. My favorite Democratic president is Richard Nixon. You know the Richard Nixon who created the Department of Education and the Environmental Protection Agency, as well as opening up China. Sure he had some frailties, but I don’t talk about Clinton’s foibles; why belabor Nixon’s? All this said, I know when Nixon was alive, I did not recognize his contributions. I particularly like the following June 4, 1971 special message to Congress from Nixon: We believe that part of the answer lies in pricing energy on the basis of its full costs to society. One reason we use energy so lavishly today is that the price of energy does not include all of the social costs of producing it. The costs incurred in protecting the environment and the health and safety of workers, for example, are part of the real costs of producing energy — but they are not now all included in the price of the product. Makes you want to cry when you think Nixon was really a closet liberal. Republicans (Newt aside, well, Newt prior to his numerous mea culpas) like vouchers but do not like insurance exchanges. They think insurance exchanges are socialism. A recent news item in The Denver Post noted: House Democrats on Wednesday had to rescue a Republican-backed bill to set up health insurance exchanges in Colorado, legislation blasted by Tea Party activists as furthering “Obamacare” and “socialism” but roundly supported by businesses. The Republican Party has not always been the Party of NO. Eisenhower’s party wasn’t no. Nixon was certainly not no. Reagan wasn’t no (he actually raised taxes). Bush 42 was noblesse oblige. But now the definitions of socialism and capitalism have been warped to such a degree that our vocabulary is unable to provide clarity for a politician’s opinions. Seems like today’s Glenn Beck Republican is about anti-socialism, pro-capitalism and an Ayn Rand philosophy of Me FIRST and You NEVER. Here’s the strange part about it, none of this has anything to do with what the majority of Americans believe — even the majority of voting Independents and Republicans. What would happen today if some ranchers or farmers joined together to form a coop to gain better market force? The nerve of those pinkos: Coops are definitely socialism. Yet, what is the difference between an insurance exchange and a coop? Nothing. Forty years ago, I worked on school vouchers for the Office Economic Opportunity (OEO), a predecessor to the Department of Education. School vouchers made strange bedfellows. The religious right banded together with disenfranchised minorities; both seeking a better choice, in their eyes, for their children’s education. Charter schools are now the result of people seeking empowerment and by all metrics a good solution. Vouchers for Medicare may have the same peculiar base of support. AARP, unions and employers may end up banding together to reap the same billions of dollar windfall that insurance companies see in vouchers. Yet, their motives may be very different. Those billions of funding dollars can be the basis for the creation of insurance exchanges, employer self-insurance and new insurance companies. More companies are self-insuring and using insurance management firms to provide accounting and claims administration. These firms provide claims management as a fee-for-service (i.e., a fixed cost per claim versus a percentage of the claims). Medicare vouchers offer the possibility of transforming the insurance landscape. So which is the Republican proposal and which the Democrats? Medicare vouchers can ignite market forces through insurance exchanges that Tea Party members label as socialism. Vouchers can also be priced so retirees face an increasing financial burden. It’s confusing. Newt was right; social engineering is hard to explain.

Read more here:
Gary Liberson, PhD: Social Engineering Medicare

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Penny Herscher: What Women Want: To Make Money!

May 11, 2011

In a world where women still make less money than men for the same job, iVillage and Today.com have released a survey that shows — shock horror — that salary is the most important criteria for a woman choosing a job. “97% of working moms surveyed saying that salary is most important to them, followed by a family-friendly work environment (91%), job enjoyment (91%), flexible hours (86%), a short commute (83%) and health insurance for the family (81%)”. Why is this news? The report attributes this to “today’s fragile economy” and this is infuriating. Women are equal in the workplace and, like men, are ambitious, want to make money and want to grow their careers. The desire to make money has nothing to do with the “fragile economy” and everything to do with professional women finally coming of age. Why do women continue to perpetuate the worldview that women are not as mercenary and tough as men? Lisa Barone of Outspoken Media wrote a hilarious “Letter to Women in Tech, I Let You Down” where she writes that she never got the memo to be meek and weak. The perpetuation of the concept that we are in any way less able or less ambitious is women hurting women for no good reason at all. I certainly never thought for a moment that I would not succeed, make equal money, run the meeting, set the strategy, lead the company — why wouldn’t I? Because I don’t have a Y-chromosome? Seriously? It is true women have to work hard. In our society they still do the majority of the household chores. As the iVillage survey reports “All moms, whether they are working or not, continue to be responsible for the majority of the household chores. In two-thirds of dual working families, moms are responsible for 75% or more of all the household chores, with 97% of those surveyed responsible for half or more of the duties in the house.” Yes, a harsh side effect of the aforesaid missing Y-chromosome today but get over it ladies. Like breastfeeding in the middle of the night there are some things that are not going to change in our generation so the best strategy is deal with it, let the dust bunnies build up and, when you can, pay for extra help around the house. Yes I had moments of guilt building my career but I want to be a role model to my daughter and every other nerdy, techy young woman out there that they can be anything they want to be — and yes still be happy and have a family. Technology is a fantastic place to grow your career as a woman because, in the end, all that really matters is how smart you are when you are designing systems and writing code. We must help young women keep going and get all the way to the top. Women are still scarce as CEOs (especially in tech!) and in the board rooms which are still Male, Pale and Stale — as reported by BNET and Catalyst — and this is a direct result of the low numbers of women in the top jobs. There are enough women at the top now to show young women coming up that there Are No Limits. I refuse to apologize for being an equal member of society and for wanting the same opportunity as any man. I expect to compete — I’d want no less. I watch men compete hard and ferociously for advancement and so should we. And when we win it’s not news. It’s equality.

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Where It’s Better To Rent Than Buy

April 29, 2011

Of the 50 most populated cities in the United States, New York remains the city where it’s better to rent than buy. The Big Apple’s competition? Fort Worth, Texas. That’s according to the recently released Q2 2011 Rent vs. Buy Index by Trulia , an online real estate resource. The site compares rent of a two-bedroom apartment with median list price of a home to create price-to-rent ratio. Using that ratio, they divide cities into three groups: (1) cities where it is beneficial to buy a home; (2) cities where the choice should be made on a case-by-case basis; and (3) places where renting is much less expensive. According to Trulia’s release, buying a home has become more affordable than renting an apartment in 80 percent of major cities. Besides New York and Fort Worth, only in Kansas city is renting the preferable option. Right behind those cities are Memphis, Los Angeles and San Francisco,. On the other end of the spectrum, the majority of cities where buying makes sense are located in the Western United States. Las Vegas comes out atop the buy-here rankings, followed, in order, by Phoenix, Arlington, Miami and Mesa (Ariz). Taken by itself, the price-to-rent ration doesn’t completely explains why a high-rent, foreclosure-addled city like Miami lands in the buy-here sector, while a city with low rents like Fort Worth is the second most friendly rentable city. As always, caveat rentor. Below is the graphic visualizing the rent-to-buy ratios of fifty metropolitan cities:

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Skype To Start Showing Ads

March 7, 2011

Skype for Windows will begin offering advertisements this week to customers in the U.S., U.K. and Germany. According to an official company blog post this morning, the VoIP calling service will feature ads in the Home tab area of its Windows-based software. Customers can expect one ad per day (for now) from companies like Groupon, Universal Pictures, and Visa, writes Doug Bewsher, Skype’s chief marketing officer. The ads will be based on “non-personally identifiable demographic data (e.g. location, gender and age),” Bewsher writes, adding that customers can request that Skype withhold this information from advertisers. “The ads won’t interrupt your Skype experience,” says Bewsher. “You won’t suddenly see annoying pop-up ads or flashy banner ads in middle of conversations.” Since the majority of Skype’s users hold free accounts, it’s a logical move for the company to make ads a prominent part of the user interface. “We think this is an interesting opportunity for advertisers,” Bewsher told AdAge. “This is a premium placement to engage with our users.” “The company said paying users may also receive advertising, though that may change over time,” AdAge reports . The placement and frequency of these ads may change too, according to Skype . Below, you can see an example of Skype for Windows displaying an advertisement in the Home tab. LOOK: [hat tip Mashable ]

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The Psychology Of Lotteries: Feeling Poor Makes People Want To Play, Study Shows

February 5, 2011

What makes people — particularly poor people — play the a lottery when the odds of winning are so low? Jonah Lehrer has an interesting post delving into the psychology of lottery-players. Lehrer notes that lottery has become a deeply regressive tax because the majority of lottery players are poor, and the majority of the money spent on lottery tickets goes to the state. Alicia Hansen, at the Institute for Public Accuracy explains : If a person who makes $15,000 a year purchases $3,000 worth of lottery tickets, she will spend 20 percent of her income on the lottery–quite a large portion (about one-third of that amount will be in the form of implicit lottery taxes). However, if an individual who earns $1,500,000 a year spends the same amount, it will be a drop in the bucket–a mere .2 percent of her income. Taking into account only the dollar amount spent misses the point. Our current federal income tax is progressive, meaning rates rise as income rises–the opposite of regressive. Many experts have argued for a flat tax, with one rate for all, but virtually no one would argue for a regressive income tax, where rates rise as income falls; such a tax would be seen as unfair and unduly burdensome to the poor. Lehrer highlights a paper from 2008 which seeks to explain why the poor buy lottery tickets, even though it’s against their financial interests. “The problem, it turns out, is feeling poor.” Lehrer points to a particularly poignant bit from the study: In two experiments conducted with low-income participants, we examine how implicit comparisons with other income classes increase low-income individuals’ desire to play the lottery. In Experiment 1, participants were more likely to purchase lottery tickets when they were primed to perceive that their own income was low relative to an implicit standard. In Experiment 2, participants purchased more tickets when they considered situations in which rich people or poor people receive advantages, implicitly highlighting the fact that everyone has an equal chance of winning the lottery. Last year, the North American lottery system generated more than $70 billion — more than Americans spent on music and movie tickets combined.

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Republicans Block Bill Preventing Wage Discrimination In The Workplace

November 17, 2010

WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats were unable to overcome a Republican filibuster of the Paycheck Fairness Act on Tuesday, with the chamber falling two votes short of the 60 needed to end debate and proceed to a vote on the measure that would help combat wage discrimination on the basis of gender. The vote broke down along party lines with the exception of sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.), who sided with Republicans and voted against cloture. Not a single member of the GOP broke rank. Observers closely watched the votes of Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine), Kay Bailey Hutchinson (R-Tex.) and Olympia Snowe (R-Maine), all women senators who voted for the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act , which provides basic protections against wage discrimination. “Senate Republicans had their latest opportunity to do the right thing , work with Democrats to reduce wage inequality for women, and help the American families they support,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) in a statement after the vote. “This was a prime opportunity to enact the kind of common-sense, bipartisan solutions to our economic problems that the American people are demanding, but Republicans spurned it.” “Democrats are eager to work with Republicans to address our shared challenges, but compromise is a two-way street,” he added. “I am hopeful that moving forward, Republicans put partisanship aside and focus on doing what’s right and fair for the American people.” “Forty-five years after passage of the Equal Pay Act, it is unacceptable that women still earn, on average, 77 cents to the dollar earned by men ,” said National Women’s Law Center Co-President Marcia Greenberger. “The law needs to be stronger. This persistent pay gap translates to more than $10,000 in lost wages per year for the average female worker. In this difficult economy, in which nearly 40 percent of mothers are primary breadwinners, women shoulder increased responsibility for supporting their families and cannot afford to have employers discounting their salaries.” Among other provisions, the Paycheck Fairness Act, which has already passed the House, would ensure that a law already on the books — the Equal Pay Act of 1963 — is properly enforced. It would also make sure that women aren’t punished for seeking out information about what their male colleagues are earning in order to ensure they are being paid properly. Opponents of the legislation, including Collins, have voiced concern that it would lead to ” excessive litigation on to the small-business community .” “This bill appears to go way beyond the Lilly Ledbetter Act and I am concerned what the impact would be,” she said in September. But in a Slate article, Center for American Progress senior economist Heather Boushey argued, “[I]t strains credulity to imagine that the law would have this attenuated effect. If businesses are worried about more litigation, maybe that’s because women armed with knowledge about pay gaps would be more likely to bring suits that have merit to enforce the laws that already exist .” Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) also voted for the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, but she was not present in Washington for the vote, instead in Alaska for the wrap-up of the ballot-counting process in her re-election fight against Republican Joe Miller. UPDATE, 2:14 p.m.: Statement from the President on the vote: I am deeply disappointed that a minority of Senators have prevented the Paycheck Fairness Act from finally being brought up for a debate and receiving a vote. This bill passed in the House almost two years ago; today, it had 58 votes to move forward, the support of the majority of Senate, and the support of the majority of Americans. As we emerge from one of the worst recessions in history, this bill would ensure that American women and their families aren’t bringing home smaller paychecks because of discrimination. It also helps businesses that pay equal wages as they struggle to compete against discriminatory competition. But a partisan minority of Senators blocked this commonsense law. Despite today’s vote, my Administration will continue to fight for a woman’s right to equal pay for equal work.

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Foreclosures Hit Record High in August

September 16, 2010

August saw more Americans lose their homes to foreclosure than any other month on record, RealtyTrac reported today. Banks repossessed a total of 95,364 properties in August, a 25 percent increase from the same period in 2009 and a 2 percent increase over this May’s previous record. Foreclosure filings of all types, including default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions (the three major stages of the foreclosure process), increased to 338,836 in the month, a 4 percent jump from July. At the same time, though, the number of default notices that lenders issued to homeowners to initiate the foreclosure process actually went down. The August total of 96,469 was a 1 percent decline from July and a 30 percent drop from August of last year. It’s significantly lower than the April 2009 peak of 142,064 default notices issued. That the numbers of repossessed homes and default notices (respectively the last and first stages of the process) are converging demonstrates that banks are trying to mitigate the flow of new homes to the market. As Bloomberg reported Wednesday, the glut of housing inventory means home prices could decline for at least three years. Indeed, the number of properties with delinquent loans (30 or more days past due) that aren’t yet in foreclosure is currently 4,947,000, or 9.22 percent of all mortgage-financed homes, according to data from Lender Processing Services . The total number of foreclosed properties on the market, LPS says, is 2,038,000. It’s a bleak picture, but glimmers of hope emerge. The majority of Americans (at least, the majority of a 3,399-person sample) think the market has bottomed out, according to a survey released today by Fannie Mae . 47 percent of those surveyed said prices will remain flat for the next year and 31 percent predicted prices will rise. Even in such trying times, the majority of a 2,967-person sample of Americans say it’s “unacceptable” for homeowners to willingly walk away from a mortgage, according to a new survey from Pew Research Center . A whopping 59 percent of respondents condemn homeowners who choose to stop payments on “underwater” mortgages. According to the RealtyTrac data, Nevada and Florida led the nation in rates of foreclosure filings (including default notices, scheduled auctions, and repossessions) in August, despite year-over-year decreases in activity in both those states. One in every 84 Nevada homes received some form of foreclosure filing, compared to one in every 155 homes in Florida. Arizona, California and Idaho were right behind Nevada and Florida in the foreclosure rankings.

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Confident investors remain the majority in U.S markets

September 10, 2010

Confident investors remain the majority in U.S markets

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12 U.S. Cities Where Incomes Plummeted Last Year (PHOTOS)

August 10, 2010

Personal incomes declined last year throughout most of the nation, with the exception of a few regions propped up by federal funding, according to a report released by the Commerce Department on Monday. Of the 52 largest metropolitan areas in the U.S., personal incomes rose in only three — Washington, D.C., San Antonio and Virginia Beach, Va — where the biggest gains were among federal government and military workers. Areas with a high number of housing and finance jobs, including Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco, experienced some of the most drastic declines. And areas with plummeting housing prices and high unemployment like Nevada and Florida experienced some of the biggest year-over-year personal income drops, the WSJ noted . Overall, personal income fell in 223 metropolitan areas, increased in 134, and remained unchanged in nine. In the majority of areas where personal income increased, the Commerce Department attributes a major portion of the rise to a jump in transfer receipts like unemployment benefits. The following 12 metropolitan areas endured some of the nation’s steepest personal income declines in 2009:

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How To Find A Job: Career Expert’s Tips For The Unemployed (SLIDESHOW)

July 21, 2010

As long-term unemployment takes its toll on the psyches of millions of laid-off American workers, career consultants like Bill Jeffries of Tucson, Arizona, are being inundated with clients who are desperate for any tips that might help them find a job in this economy. Jeffries, a senior career consultant and former broadcast executive, has been successfully helping people land jobs and reengineer their careers for ten years but he says his job has significantly changed since the recession. “We used to see almost all people who wanted to upgrade their careers,” Jeffries said. “Now, we see about 30 percent those people and 70 percent people who are unemployed, usually for an average of about 7 months. They come in exhausted, in tears… it’s heartbreaking.” Jeffries said his success rate has dipped from 80 to about 65 percent since the recession, but he still manages to put the majority of his clients in satisfying, full-time jobs with a little coaching and grooming. The difference between finding jobs for currently employed people versus unemployed people boils almost completely down to confidence, he says. “Anyone that comes in here wanting to upgrade their career, we’re with them less than 3 months, because they’re much more secure, confident, and their self-esteem hasn’t been shattered, and employers know that,” he said. “Out of work, people lose their skill sets and they begin to undervalue themselves. It’s tragic.” Jeffries says he is confident that anyone can get a job with the right amount of effort and coaching, and he has offered HuffPost a list of his most important and useful jobseeking tips.

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Buffett, Gates Press Billionaires to Give Half Their Wealth to Charities

June 16, 2010

By Andrew Frye and Katya Kazakina June 16 (Bloomberg) — Warren Buffett and Bill Gates are pressing fellow billionaires to commit at least half their wealth to charity in an effort to draw attention on the responsibilities the wealthiest have for aiding the needy. Buffett and Gates started a drive called “ The Giving Pledge ” to encourage high-profile philanthropic promises, according to the initiative’s website. A pledge of the majority of an individual’s fortune is “an understandable and quite reachable bar for the wealthiest — many will exceed it,” according to a document posted on the website. Buffett, the world’s third-richest person and chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. , has pledged more than 99 percent of his wealth to philanthropy. The greatest part of his fortune, estimated in March at $47 billion by Forbes magazine, is being given in annual installments to the foundation established by Microsoft Corp. co-founder Gates and his wife Melinda Gates . “Bill and Melinda Gates and I are asking hundreds of rich Americans to pledge at least 50 percent of their wealth to charity,” Buffett wrote today in a pledge on Fortune’s website. Buffett said 1 percent of his wealth is enough for him and his family, and “neither our happiness nor our well-being would be enhanced” by keeping more. The initiative kicked off with a meeting in New York on May 5, 2009, that was organized by the Gateses, Fortune magazine reported, citing interviews with the couple and Buffett. The leaders of the effort may have a minimum goal of about $600 billion in commitments, Fortune said, based on the calculation of half of the $1.2 trillion in net worth of the 400 richest individuals compiled by Forbes magazine. ‘The Giving Pledge’ “It would easily double or triple the amount of philanthropy in America,” said Melissa Berman , president of Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, a non-profit organization that has advised the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation on “The Giving Pledge” initiative. “If we would be able to get this influx for philanthropy from billionaires, it would inspire other Americans,” she said in an interview today. “And then we could really change what the world is like.” The idea to assemble a group of billionaire philanthropists to discuss strategies and encourage giving was Buffett’s, Fortune said. The meeting was hosted by David Rockefeller and included George Soros , Oprah Winfrey and Michael Bloomberg . Bill Gates ranks second on the Forbes list of billionaires. Bloomberg, the mayor of New York, is the majority owner of Bloomberg LP, the parent of Bloomberg News. The Gates Foundation, with an endowment of about $35 billion, combats disease and global poverty, and funds U.S. education initiatives. Those who take the pledge are invited to pick the causes that they fund. The effort will initially focus on U.S. billionaires and may expand to other countries. To contact the reporters on this story: Andrew Frye in New York at afrye@bloomberg.net ; Katya Kazakina in New York at kkazakina@bloomberg.net .

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Brett King: BANK 2.0: Branch is "Alternative", Internet and Mobile Mainstream

May 15, 2010

Since the introduction of internet banking, customer behavior as respects day-to-day banking has been rapidly changing. Whereas in the mid-80s you might have done 70% of your banking through the branch, cash and cheque, today most of our retail banking interactions occur through electronic channels. For some segments, like seniors passbook holders in Hong Kong, pensioners in the US, and SMEs in Indonesia and India. But increasingly, while branch is still being used, it is not being used as the preferred method of banking by the majority of customers today. The American Banker’s Association have been tracking this shift for some time. While 21% of customers in 2009 still cited the Branch as their preferred method, 25% chose the internet. The more telling statistic is that the branch as the preferred method has gone from 36% to 21% in just 3 years – that is a decline of 41% in 3 years for the branch as the ‘preferred’ method of banking. With mobile internet banking adoption skyrocketing, cheque usage in question, we can expect this rapid decline to continue over the next 3-5 years. The fact that in some markets branch visits have increased, is not a significant statistic considering the rate at which they have increased in comparison to utilization of direct channels. source: ABA – Preferred Banking Method 2007-2009 HSBC has found that 45% of their Premier customer base (their high-value, preferred-banking retail segment) in Hong Kong were online and using Internet banking on average 10 times per month. Between 2002 and 2007 Internet Banking grew 174% in the UK . In Japan over 2/3rds of consumers use Internet Banking regularly according to a survey by gooResearch in February of this year (some of the data is translated here ). 38% of the survey group reported using Internet banking more than 3-5 times per month (about 6% said more than 10 visits per month), and and about 22% of the sample size reported using mobile phone based banking more than 3-5 times per month. Research suggests the #1 driving force behind this increasing adoption of internet and mobile, regardless of geography, segment or market, is the convenience factor . It’s just too easy to log on to your bank as compared with driving down, finding a parking spot and standing in line at the branch. Thus far, however, revenue is trailing adoption rates significantly. How could it be that more than 40% of customers for most banks in developed economies cite Internet Banking (and other direct channels) as their preferred method of banking, transaction volume through Internet outpaces branch by a ratio of more than 4-to-1, and yet 80% of revenue still comes through the branch? How can it be that these same customers visit their “Internet” bank 5-10 times per month, and the branch only 3 times a year and yet 4 out of 5 products they apply for through the bank are sold through a branch? The revenue factor is constantly cited by traditional bankers in support of the branch, but there are three reasons for this trailing revenue versus adoption rate data: 1. Your “home” branch gets allocated the revenue by the system For most banks their IT systems still record the customer as being ‘allocated’ or ‘attached’ to a branch. This is most likely the branch you first visited to sign up for your account. If you’ve moved City or location and you visited a new branch and asked for you account to be moved over to that branch, it has changed. But for most banks you are ‘owned’ by a single branch as a business unit. Thus when a personal loan is applied for online, or you deposit money in a fixed income account, many banks record this as a ‘sale’ for the branch you are attached to regardless of which channel it came through. 2. The final compliance step is in-branch On many occasions you can’t actually complete the application for certain products online. There are various reasons for this. For a mortgage product, for example, a bank might want to cite documents associated with the land purchase. For investment products ‘that carry risk’ you need to sign a document to show the regulator that you weren’t coerced into making an investment and that you understand the risk. So while 90% of the leads today for new mortgage product might come through the internet or call centre, the final sale is still recorded against a ‘branch’ because that is where you did the last piece of the compliance process. 3. Most banks are awful at selling online Despite the increasing adoption rates, the increased usage of the internet channel by customers, the flagging branch usage, and the increasing revenue through online channels, most banks still consider the internet as an alternative to the branch or as a cost-reduction strategy for transactional banking. The branch is seen as the premier sales channel for customers – and it is. But it just isn’t the only channel for sales. Conclusions If banks honestly supported the internet as a sales channel, measured existing sales with better granularity as to where the revenue actual came from and used customer behavior as a leading indicator of where the money should be spent – our online and mobile banking experience would be far better than it is. For now, most bankers are still perpetuating a system that rewards physical distribution networks over direct channels because they are out of step with customers. With social media continuing to exert pressure, very soon branch will play a minor role in the actual sale. Today the branch is an alternative choice for the majority of customers. The branch, while retaining a role as a premier sales engagement channel, is still day-to-day a secondary choice. With the rapid rate of mobile banking adoption we can expect the role of the branch to be further diminished as part of customers day-to-day banking needs. So, what happens next? When we get an accurate picture of sources of revenue, many branches will no longer be viable from a business case perspective – at the very least they will have to change form and function. As banks realize that behavioral shift can not be arrested and real revenue is suffering due to lack of support, we will start to see a land grab for better positioning of product online, through mobile, through other direct channels, utilizing social media, third-parties and partners. This means straight-thru-processing, automated credit risk assessment and better offer management through electronic channels becomes absolutely critical. The organization structure needs to change too; Branch can’t dominate strategy, products must be manufactured for all channels, and compliance needs to find better ways of enabling digital engagement.

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Obama’s Jobs Agenda Stalled In Congress

April 11, 2010

WASHINGTON — The election-year jobs agenda promised by President Barack Obama and Democrats has stalled seven months before voters determine control of Congress. Democrats have no money to pay for the program. That’s because both Republicans and the Democratic chairman of the Senate Budget Committee objected to taking money left over from the fund that bailed out banks, automakers and insurers and using it for the jobs bill. Such a move, they insisted, would add tens of billions of dollars to the $12.8 trillion national debt. An $80 billion-plus Senate plan promised an infusion of cash to build roads and schools, help local governments keep teachers on the payroll, and provide rebates for homeowners who make energy-saving investments. Two months after the plan was introduced, most of those main elements remain on the Senate’s shelf. Obama’s proposed $250 bonus payment to Social Security recipients is dead for the year, having lost a Senate vote last month. What’s going ahead instead are more modest initiatives. That includes some help for small business or simple extensions of parts from last year’s economic stimulus measure. None is expected to make an appreciable dent in an unemployment rate, stuck at 9.7 percent. Even legislation to help the jobless has run into trouble. The idea of a jobs agenda arose late last year when the unemployment rate hit 10 percent and Democrats voiced concern that the majority party wasn’t doing enough to spur job creation.

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CRE Firms Lay Out Modes for Operating in a Post-Recessionary Environment

March 31, 2010

It’s the annual report season for the majority of public companies and those from REITs and real estate operating companies not only lay bare the damage from the economic declines of the last year, but also the strategies they intend to adopt this year…

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Dennis Whittle: Entrepreneurs are made, not born

February 28, 2010

Here is a nice piece by Vivek Wadhwa in TechCrunch.

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Mike A. Hall: Solar Made in China — Opportunity (Not Crisis) for American Solar Industry

December 28, 2009

When I started working in the photovoltaic (PV) industry in late 2002, the Chinese were nowhere to be seen. On a recent trip to China, my executive team and I were blown away by the number of billboards for solar cells and modules while traveling between Shanghai and Wuxi. I’m going to go out on a limb and say there are more billboards for solar cells and modules between Shanghai and Wuxi then there are in all of North America. We thought the U.S. was the new hub of solar innovation today, but we couldn’t recall ever seeing this many billboards advertising solar in the U.S. As one of the larger developers of solar PV projects in the U.S., we felt like we knew all of the players. It is rare that we encounter a module manufacturer that is not already on our radar. What was amazing about the drive outside of Shanghai is that we came across so many advertisements for solar companies that we had never heard of. Although we already believed this to be true, this trip proved to us that China has taken the lead in solar cell manufacturing.a position the country will NOT be giving up any time soon. As I mentioned, less than a decade ago, China was not a player in the global solar industry. Although companies like Suntech and Yingli did exist, we never saw any of their products in the marketplace. In the early days, the Japanese providers dominated the market, and a few years later the German manufacturers — supported by tremendous government incentives for both system installation and manufacturing — were able to move to the top of the heap. Even as late as 2007 the Chinese were not considered major suppliers in the U.S. Now, two years later, the Chinese boast the largest manufacturer by capacity as well as at least four other companies that are generally considered to be top-tier global suppliers of PV modules. Behind them, there are reportedly hundreds of second-tier solar cell and module manufacturers trying to export their products to Europe and North America. The solar center of gravity has shifted from Europe to China. There are a number of causes for China’s rapid ascension. First is the simple manufacturing cost advantage that the Chinese have over Europe and the U.S. Chinese companies have an extremely low cost for both skilled and unskilled labor. Conversations I had in China revealed that the salary of a Chinese engineer is about one-tenth of that of an equivalent employee in the U.S., and factory workers in China earn salaries that are an even smaller percentage than that of their U.S. counterparts. Second, the Chinese government appears to have committed 100 percent financially to becoming the world leader in solar manufacturing. Chinese banks have been aggressive about lending to companies up and down the solar supply chain. For example, there have been a large number of investments in very expensive polysilicon manufacturing plants, which is the basis for most solar cell technologies. These would not have been possible without major backing from Chinese government-controlled banks. More recently, when the global demand for solar modules took a big dip in late 2008, the Chinese government stepped in and quickly created an incentive program in order to drive domestic demand. Over the last five quarters, this support has allowed these companies to continue to focus on growth while many other companies across the globe were focused on survival. Ultimately, I believe it is important that the U.S. accepts that China is going to manufacture the majority of the world’s solar cells and modules. That said, the U.S. is still well-positioned to benefit from the growing demand for solar energy. For example, two of the most innovative and successful solar companies in the world are still based in the U.S. First Solar (headquarters in Arizona) is the largest (by market cap) pure-play solar company in the world and has developed a thin-film technology that has a cost advantage over all of its competitors. Sunpower (headquarters in California) has developed the highest efficiency cell on the market. Although neither of these companies do the majority of their manufacturing in the U.S., they are going to be among the greatest beneficiaries of the growth in global solar demand. There is also an incredible opportunity to create domestic jobs, lower carbon emissions and lessen our nation’s dependence on foreign energy by stimulating the construction of solar PV systems in the U.S. The model of creating domestic demand and then creating service companies that become exporters of solar services has been a tremendous success in Germany, which is home to the largest solar service providers in the world. Overall, the U.S. is well-positioned to be a world leader in the rapidly growing PV industry. We have the innovation machine, financial community and domestic solar resources to make it happen. We just need to choose our battles, and devise a strategy that plays to our strengths.

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Ryder Appoints John Gleason to Lead Sales and Marketing of Fleet Management Solutions

November 9, 2009

MIAMI, FL–(Marketwire – November 9, 2009) – Ryder System, Inc. ( NYSE : R ), a leader in transportation and supply chain management solutions, today announced that John Gleason has joined Ryder as Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing, North America, of its Fleet Management Solutions business segment. He reports directly to Tony Tegnelia, Ryder’s President of Global Fleet Management Solutions. “John has spent the majority of his career leading sales and marketing in business outsourcing solutions for global companies,” said Mr. Tegnelia. “We look forward to his leadership, customer relationship skills, and record of strategic and tactical sales results as we work to drive Ryder’s Fleet Management Solutions’ future growth. We are pleased to welcome John to Ryder and know he will be a strong addition to the current outstanding leadership, expertise, capabilities, and customer relationships that exist with

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Borders Closing 200 Waldenbooks Stores in January

November 6, 2009

The country’s second-largest brick and mortar book retailer, Borders Group, is closing 200 of its mall-based Waldenbooks stores in January. As a result, approximately 1,500 positions–the majority of which are part-time jobs–will be eliminated. Borders…

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Video: Today in Washington – Focus on Healthcare

October 26, 2009

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid Backs Public Option (Bloomberg News)

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Experienced HCIT Sales and Marketing Leader, Olivier Zmirou, Joins Capsule Tech, Inc. as EMEA Vice President of Sales and Marketing

October 23, 2009

PARIS–(Marketwire – October 23, 2009) – Capsule Technologie (Capsule Tech, Inc.), ( www.capsuletech.com ), the leading provider of medical device connectivity, today announced that Olivier Zmirou has joined as the EMEA Vice President of Sales and Marketing. Mr. Zmirou brings over 14 years of sales management, business development, and marketing experience in healthcare information technology to Capsule. Mr. Zmirou has spent the majority of his career with McKesson France in a variety of positions including Sales and Marketing Director, Director of European Marketing Development, and most recently as Sales and Business Development Director. “Coming from an EMR company it’s my priority to secure long term partnerships with EMR and CIS vendors in order for hospitals to benefit most from the value of connectivity. European hospitals have made tremendous progress in their IT implementations in the recent years. As they now struggle to stream

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DTCC Moving 1,600 Employees from Manhattan to Jersey City

October 14, 2009

The Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. (DTCC) is moving the majority of its Manhattan staff to Jersey City. The financial services firm is relocating about 1,600 employees to a 415,000-square-foot space at 570 Washington Blvd. in the Lefrak Organization…

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George Gordon Acquires Software Services Company Enporion

October 12, 2009

CEO Gordon Becomes Majority Shareholder; All Current Employees to Be Equity Owners

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All signs point to a strong July with convertible arbitrage and emerging markets logging the best performance gains

August 6, 2009

gains. ‘Given the market rally in July, our findings project another solid month for the majority of hedge fund strategies,’ said the firm’s online projections posting. Across the industry average gains are likely to be around 2.5%. Equity market neutral

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Fund spawned to buy distressed commercial properties

July 26, 2009

put together a $100 million fund to take advantage of what is expected to be a glut of distressed commercial real estate across the region. I was pooled by real estate veteran Tony Hayden. High-net-worth individuals make up the majority of investors and

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