manufacturing

Dean Baker: It’s Time for Representative Ryan to Man Up

April 4, 2011

Congressman Paul Ryan is the new darling of both the Republican Party and the major media outlets. He has put forward bold plans for dismantling Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. Congressman Ryan is prepared to tell tens of millions of workers that they can no longer count on a secure retirement and decent health care in their old age. In Washington policy circles, this passes for courage. Outside of Washington, people have a different conception of bravery. After all, over the last three decades the policies crafted in Washington have led to the most massive upward redistribution in the history of the world. The richest 1 percent of the population has seen is share of national income increase by close to 10 percentage points . This comes to $1.5 trillion a year, or as Representative Ryan might say, $90 trillion over the next 75 years. That’s almost $300,000 for every man, woman and child in the United States. This upward redistribution creates the real possibility that many of our children will be poorer than we are. If Representative Ryan and his followers really cared about future generations, then we might expect him to push for policies that reverse some of this upward redistribution. For example, we could break up the large banks (e.g. Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan) that operate with implicit government protection. This allows them to borrow money at below market interest rates and undercut their smaller competitors. By my calculations, the size of this subsidy to the largest banks is close to $35 billion a year , almost half the size of the long-term Social Security shortfall that concerns Mr. Ryan so much. If Mr. Ryan could man up a little, maybe he would have the courage to tell the big Wall Street banks that they will have to compete in a free market without this subsidy from the government. It’s not only the big banks that make Representative Ryan cower. He’s also scared of the pharmaceutical industry. As a result of government-enforced patent monopolies, we spend close to $300 billion a year on drugs that would cost us around $30 billion a year . The potential savings of $270 billion a year is about three times the size of the projected Social Security shortfall. Representative Ryan is a big fan of Medicare vouchers, however his voucher system does nothing to address our broken health care system while virtually guaranteeing that most seniors will not be able to afford decent health care. How about a voucher system that gives Medicare beneficiaries the option to buy into the more efficient health care systems in Europe and Canada, with the taxpayer and beneficiary splitting the savings ? Well, that one could hurt profits of the insurance industry and major health care providers, so Mr. Ryan is against it. We also could have freer trade in physicians’ services . If we paid the same wages to our doctors as countries in Europe and Canada, it would save us close to $90 billion a year. While our trade pacts ensure that our manufacturing workers have to compete with the lowest paid workers anywhere in the world, our doctors are still largely protected. If autoworkers enjoyed the same protection as doctors, they would all make $150,000 a year and we would still be buying all our cars from GM, Ford and Chrysler. But the doctors’ lobbies are powerful, so Mr. Ryan is not interested in this one. How about reining in the excess pay of top executives at U.S. corporations? Our top executives not only get paid far more than ordinary workers, they also get paid far more than top executives at large successful corporations in Europe and Japan. The government sets the rules for corporate governance just like it sets the rules for union governance. While Mr. Ryan’s friends have been anxious to use the heavy hand of government to weaken the power of unions to push on behalf of workers, they become timid when it comes to preventing corporate abuses. Suppose that the compensation of top executives had to be approved at regular intervals by shareholders, where only shares directly voted counted. (This means that mutual fund managers could not support big pay packages for their CEO friends in the name of the people for whom they are investing.) How about reducing military spending to the same share of GDP as it was in 2000? The savings of 1.6 percent of GDP (at $240 billion a year) is more than two and a half the size of the projected long-term Social Security shortfall. But this would hurt the defense industry, so again Mr. Ryan is not interested. The basic economic reality is very simple and everyone in Washington knows it. There is no way that future generations of workers will be poorer than the current one due to benefits like Social Security and Medicare. They could end up poorer if we continue to see the benefits of growth shifted to the top. The latter is the result of the corruption of politics in Washington. And at the moment, Mr. Ryan is the poster boy for that corruption. If he gets his way, your children and grandchildren can count on a very bleak future.

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Chinese stock markets grow to the highest level in four weeks, as the manufacturing growth expands

April 4, 2011

Chinese stock markets grow to the highest level in four weeks, as the manufacturing growth expands

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Jerry Jasinowski: Manufacturing Champions

March 29, 2011

Despite what you may have heard to the contrary, the U.S. is still the world’s largest and strongest manufacturing country. In every year since 2004, U.S. manufacturing output has exceeded $2 trillion in constant 2005 dollars, twice the output produced in America’s factories in the 1970s. We produce 21 percent of global manufactured products, well above Japan’s 13 percent and China’s 12 percent. Standing alone, U.S. manufacturing today would rank as the sixth largest economy in the world. We are so successful in large part because so many of our premiere manufacturing companies are true economic champions in every sense of the term — leadership, innovation, global presence, productivity, and profitability. Many of them are among the 30 Dow Jones companies whose performance is the main indicator of the overall market. More than half of the Dow Jones 30 companies are in manufacturing, which means that they make things. Based on historical and continuing performance, here are 10 manufacturing champions from the Dow Jones Industrial Average: Caterpillar – those big yellow machines are all over the world Cisco – the backbone of the global communications network Intel – the chips that power technology and communications Boeing – the world’s most competitive manufacturer of aircraft 3M – born to innovation and stays on the cutting edge Apple – leads the revolution in mobile communications DuPont – the greatest name in chemicals, one of our top export sectors IBM – Big Blue employs 400,000 people in more than 200 countries Alcoa – the world’s third largest producer of aluminum and aluminum products Pfizer – the maker of Viagra has more wonders in the pipeline They are all international companies with vast investments overseas, but that is the reality of world commerce today. We should not have it any other way. A full 95 percent of the world’s customers are not here, and neither is the most dynamic economic growth. To compete successfully in the competitive world marketplace of today, we need great manufacturing champions that can aggressively take advantage of opportunities all over the globe while still producing in the U.S. The good news is — we have such champions, many of them. It is high time we took note of the power of modern manufacturing to compete abroad and lead growth at home. Jerry Jasinowski, an economist and author, served as President of the National Association of Manufacturers for 14 years and later The Manufacturing Institute. Jerry is available for speaking engagements.

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Overland Storage Appoints Martin Lynch as Vice President of Operations

March 17, 2011

Industry Leader Tapped to Drive Worldwide Supply Chain, Manufacturing and Product Lifecycle

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Steve Blank: Inside Stanford’s Hottest Student Startups: Class 2

March 16, 2011

Our new Stanford Lean LaunchPad class was an experiment in a new model of teaching startup entrepreneurship. This post is part two. Part one is here . The class syllabus is here . We asked each of the student teams to: Write down their initial hypotheses for the 9 components of their company’s business model (Who are the customers? What’s the product? What’s the value proposition, distribution channel? etc.) Come up with ways to test each of the 9 business model hypotheses Decide what constitutes a pass/fail signal for the test. (At what point would you say that your hypothesis wasn’t even close to correct?) Consider if the business is worth pursuing? (Give us an estimate of market size) Start the team’s blog/wiki/journal to record their progress during for the class Autonomow Personal Libraries proposed to help researchers manage, share and reference the thousands of papers in their personal libraries. “We increase a researcher’s productivity with a personal reference management system that eliminates tedious tasks associated with discovering, organizing and citing their industry readings,” wrote the team. What was unique about this team was that Xu Cui , a Stanford postdoc in Neuroscience, had built the product to use for his own research. By the time he joined the class, the product was being used in over a hundred research organizations including Stanford, Harvard, Pfizer, the National Institute of Health and Peking University. The problem is that the product was free for end users and few Research institutions purchased site licenses. The goal was to figure out whether this product could become a company. The Personal Libraries initial hypotheses were: We solve enough pain for researchers to drive purchase Dollar size of deals is sufficient to be profitable with direct sales strategy The market is large enough for a scalable business Our feedback was that “free” and “researchers in universities” was often the null set for a profitable business. To see the slide, click here . Agora Cloud Services The D.C. Veritas team was going to build a new type of Wind Turbine – a Vertical Axis Wind Turbine that could fit in the backyard of houses across the U.S. They wanted to offer low cost, residential wind turbine which average Americans can afford. They wanted to provide a renewable source of energy at affordable price. The D.C. Veritas initial core hypotheses were: Not just a product, a complete service (installation, rebates, finance when necessary) Reduce the manufacturing cost. Cool and Sustainable symbol (“Prius” status) The Week 2 Lecture: Value Proposition
 Our working thesis was not one we shared with the class. We proposed to teach entrepreneurship the way you would teach artists: deep theory coupled with hands-on experience, guided by seasoned, accomplished artists. Our lecture this week covered Value Proposition — what problem will the customer pay you to solve? What is the product and service you were offering the customer to solve that problem? To see the slides, click here . Next week, each team tests their value proposition hypotheses (their product/service) and reports the results of face-to-face customer discovery. Stay tuned.

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Busy Week Ahead of U.S. Markets, as Investors Wait Data on Manufacturing, Housing, Inflation, and FOMC Meeting

March 13, 2011

Busy Week Ahead of U.S. Markets, as Investors Wait Data on Manufacturing, Housing, Inflation, and FOMC Meeting

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Mancession Over, Men Now Flourishing

March 5, 2011

Between December 2007 and June 2009 — the recession’s official timeframe, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research — the U.S. economy largely shed jobs from male-dominated industries: construction, manufacturing and production. Hence, the term ” mancession .” But in recent months, men are flourishing in the job market. In February, the unemployment rate for men was 7.8 percent while the overall unemployment rate is 8.9 percent. The unemployment rate for men 20 years and over has fallen to 8.7 percent from 10 percent in February of 2010. For women of the same age, the unemployment rate has hovered around 8 percent over the same period. “You have a situation now where the sectors that traditionally employ men have stopped losing jobs and are actually adding them,” said economist Dean Baker. “So there’s been a reversal. Men really took a very big hit in the first phase of the downturn. But for now it seems that the sectors that are gaining jobs most rapidly are the areas that are employing men.” In February, economic activity in the manufacturing sector expanded for the fifteenth consecutive month , according to the Institute for Supply Management’s monthly Report on Business, released this week. “Manufacturing appears to be red hot,” said Ryan Sweet, an economist at Moody’s Analytics. In February, the private sector added 222,000 jobs . Of these gains, 152,000 were in private service-providing industries and 70,000 were in goods-producing industries. Manufacturing gained 33,000 jobs, another month of positive news, but not as strong as the 53,000 positions added in January . Construction jobs grew by 33,000 in February, though improvement in this sector can, to some extent, be attributed to bad weather during January. Transportation and warehousing jobs were up 22,000, a rebound that can also be partly attributed to January’s inclement weather. Over the last three months, the sector has added 9,200 jobs per month on average. Temporary help services increased by 16,000 in February. Over the last two months, temporary help services added 5,300 jobs per month on average, lower than its average of 32,000 per month in the fourth quarter of last year. Leisure and hospitality saw increased employment in February (+21,000), and the industry has gained 9,000 jobs on average over the last two months. Retail trade positions decreased by 8,000 in February, a surprise since consumer spending has been on the mend. The retail sector has added 7,100 on average in the prior three months. Health care added 34,000 jobs, an increase over the prior three months’ average of 19,000.

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Ian Fletcher: U.S. Manufacturing ‘Red Hot’? Dream On

March 1, 2011

There is an article in the Huffington Post today which, before apparently being retitled, asserted in its headline that U.S. manufacturing is now “red hot,” and whose text quotes a financial analyst (apparently approvingly) who asserts that it is. This is based on a report from the respected Institute for Supply-Chain Management which reports that manufacturing output in the U.S. has expanded for 19 months straight. Sounds like things are looking up, no? Well, no. As I explained in detail in this article , upticks in American manufacturing output, or even the fact that manufacturing output is at record levels (as it is), do not prove we have a healthy manufacturing sector. The reason is that the appropriate standard for how much manufacturing output America should have is not “more than yesterday,” which is what all the joy over reported increases implies. Instead, the right standard is defined by the simple fact that Americans must either produce what they wish to consume, or produce something we can exchange with other nations that do produce it. If we don’t, we can only finance consumption by either a) selling of existing assets or b) going into debt. That’s what a trade deficit is. This implies that if America runs a trade deficit in manufactured goods (we do, and it’s huge) and our exports of raw materials and services aren’t big enough to cover the gap (they aren’t), then our manufacturing output isn’t large enough. Forget raw-materials exports saving us. That idea drowns in the ocean of foreign crude oil we suck in every year–which causes us to run a deficit, not a surplus, in this sector. Granted, we could hypothetically export more soybeans to pay for our imports without loitering around the global pawn shop. But our agricultural exports are a tiny fraction of the size of our deficit, so that’s unlikely. Our situation in services is a bit better, but our surplus in services is going down, not up, thanks to offshoring, which isn’t going away. Therefore, it’s pretty much up to manufacturing to balance our trade, which gives us two choices: either export more Boeings and Caterpillars in return for all those Hyundais and BMWs, or produce more Fords and Chryslers here so we don’t need to import so many Hyundais and BMWs. Either choice would requires more American manufacturing output, so no, our manufacturing output isn’t high enough. And it certainly isn’t “red hot.”

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Manufacturing Strongest Since 2004, But Challenges Remain

March 1, 2011

In a sign that the economy continues to recover, albeit unevenly, manufacturing just finished up another strong month. New orders and production rose at manufacturing companies in February, according to the Institute for Supply Management ‘s monthly Report on Business, released Tuesday. As demand for certain goods appeared to be strengthening, 61.4 percent of manufacturers reported that business in February was better than in the previous month. That figure, which handily beat economists’ expectations, is a high unseen since the heady days of May 2004. “Manufacturing appears to be red hot,” said Ryan Sweet, an economist at Moody’s Analytics. He added that growth in the sector is “supported by improvement in consumer spending in the U.S., but also by an improvement in global demand.” Indeed, economic activity in the manufacturing sector expanded for the 19th consecutive month, according to the ISM. As exports increased, the majority of survey respondents expressed confidence in the economy. The ISM report is considered an indicator of broader economic trends. But other forces may challenge this rosy picture. The unemployment rate remains high, at 9 percent, and the strong ISM report doesn’t necessarily mean the jobs situation will improve soon. Even as business booms, companies in recent months have shown reluctance to hire. In addition to the drags posed by falling home values and high unemployment, oil prices have been rising in recent weeks, as unrest in the Middle East has spurred fears of a global supply disruption. Rising oil prices sap dollars from consumers, and hit businesses’ bottom lines , as fuel becomes more expensive. The price of Brent crude , an industry benchmark, hovered just above $100 a barrel for the first few weeks of February. It broke $105 last week and has been climbing. Early this week, the price cleared $114, its highest value since the fall of 2008, after a summer of record-high prices helped drag the economy into recession. That increase is likely too recent to have been factored into the newest economic data. By the time March is over, consumer spending this quarter may turn out disappointing, Sweet said. Such spending, which makes up the majority of the country’s economic activity, is a key driver of growth.

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Data I/O Announces the Appointment of Douglas Brown to Board of Directors

February 28, 2011

REDMOND, WA–(Marketwire – February 28, 2011) – Data I/O Corporation ( NASDAQ : DAIO ), the leading global provider of advanced programming and IP management solutions used in the manufacturing of flash and flash-based intelligent devices, today announced the appointment of Douglas W. Brown to Data I/O’s Board of Directors effective April 1, 2011.

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Investors Prepare for Code Red as Income, Spending, Manufacturing, Services, Jobs, and Politics Dominate a Busy U.S. Week

February 27, 2011

Investors Prepare for Code Red as Income, Spending, Manufacturing, Services, Jobs, and Politics Dominate a Busy U.S. Week

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Nicholas Carroll: The Broken Covenant Between Rich and Middle Class

February 15, 2011

Henry Ford did not invent the middle class; it had been around a long time in the form of artisans and shop-keepers. Nor did Ford single-handedly drive the expansion of the American middle class; the Industrial Revolution was already doing that. What Ford did accomplish on January 5th, 1914 — when he unilaterally raised workers’ salaries from a minimum of $2.34 a day to $5 a day — was to hugely undermine the tradition of industrial worker exploitation embraced by the robber barons of the late 1800s. He had several reasons, reducing employee turnover being one of them, but the Earth-shaker was, “So they can afford to buy my cars.” Ford wanted more customers, and to get them he needed a bigger pool of Americans with discretionary income: that group called “the middle class.” To get that — in a leap of thought — he was willing to reduce worker exploitation to sell more cars. Coming from a noted union-hater, Ford’s action and reasoning crystallized a new concept in the distribution of wealth, a concept that would have lacked the same credibility coming from workers or unions. In fact it was so radical that one commentator observed even the Wobblies were momentarily stunned into silence. It wouldn’t last long. In 1929, the combination of financial fraud and folly knocked the workers back into the mud, putting a temporary end to the growth of the middle class. Whether Federal intervention or World War II (or neither) ended the Great Depression is a moot point; what WWII did do, we are assured by people who lived through it, was “pull the country together” in a way that had not been seen before or since. Out of that heady atmosphere of cooperation and technical advance came streamlined cars, air conditioning, television, a housing boom, and the GI Bill sending blue-collar workers off to college in unprecedented numbers. By the mid-1950s, Ford’s personal dream was realized, because there were a hell of a lot of Americans who could afford to buy a car. The radical idea Ford articulated had become a covenant — and there was so much new wealth that the rich hardly seemed to object that much of it was going to the growing middle class. Where the slide started is arguable. If it didn’t start with the war in Vietnam, it unquestionably did by the early 1980s, when big business received both tacit and blatant messages from Washington that they could flout Federal regulations with relative impunity. At the same time there were increases in manufacturing and wholesaling efficiency, more outsourcing of work offshore (now called “globalization”), and the probably-unexpected bonus that women entering the workforce would allow businesses to pay everyone less. The covenant was eroding, and by the mid-1980s the middle class was beginning to need two incomes per family to stay middle class. So one could point the finger at the manufacturing sector for beginning to chew away at the gains of the middle class. But it would be Big Finance that was destined to bring us to the Great Recession, leading off with the 1980s Wall Street “bonfire of the vanities,” hitting the news with the fall of Drexel Burnham , and creating the first widespread bank crisis since the Great Depression in the form of the late 1980s savings and loan crisis. With too few executives going to jail in the S&L crisis, the financial sector retained its chutzpah, and opened the road to ruin in 1999 by lobbying through the gutting of the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act — a law that among other things limited the relationship between Big Finance and local banking. It is worth a brief detour here to consider the fundamental difference between producers and financial people. Producers need customers who buy goods and services. Financial people don’t, exactly; they live on taking a slice of transactions between producers and customers. One might call a mortgage a real product, but it’s not — it’s an enabler to the real transaction, the real transaction being where the producer (home builder) sells a home to the customer. Psychologically this means there is a huge gulf between producer and financier. The first produces or delivers a more-or-less real thing for real people. The latter takes a slice of the financial pie as it flies by; the psychology is all “take” and no “make.” (And local banking stands somewhere in between — not exactly producing, but providing some services of actual value such as checking accounts.) This is not to suggest that producers are without sin. A day never passes without news of tainted food, poisoned water, phony shortages, exploding cars, or carcinogenic drugs. Likewise there is no hard-and-fast line between business models. Automakers have become hugely dependent on financing. Major telephone companies and cable networks seem to focus more on selling contracts than providing service. But at the end of the day, good or bad product, sterling or shoddy service, the producer has to sell their product or service, or they go bankrupt. Further, they have a limited market to sell it to. Shoe companies with $100 sports shoes cannot sell them in the Third World; they need customers with $100 in discretionary income. Producers are also more accountable. Ford Motor Co. is by most reckoning on track towards a level of reliability that rivals Honda — but they have to sell those cars to an audience where some are old enough to remember Ford Pintos exploding into flames when rear-ended. Telcos stand tall in their arrogance towards customers, yet AT&T has become known for inferior cellular connections, and they are paying the price as customers ranging from individual consumers to Apple Computer vote with their feet. Big Finance is more fluid than producers in its “product packaging,” as Wall Street demonstrated by selling the worthless dregs of subprime mortgages (ersatz goods) not only to Deutsche Bank, but to the investment funds of small Norwegian towns. Big Finance is also more nimble. While Wall Street financiers don’t have the physical mobility of boiler-room online fraud operations, they don’t have factories tying them down either. The executive who can no longer find buyers for CDOs can freely move into selling bison ranching shares or tulip bulb futures to buyers from Kansas to Kenya. The bottom line is that by any sane person’s reckoning, the question “Who caused the Great Recession?” leads to the financial sector — and the certainty that, left to themselves, the financial sector will “do it again” — and again and again, leaving nothing of the covenant that “the rich shall allow the middle class a passably decent lifestyle.” So regardless of their individual politics, middle class Americans who want to remain middle class should make note of the fundamental difference between producers and big finance, and accept — or insist — that Big Finance once again be closely regulated at the Federal level. Because no matter how it is packaged, the combination of deregulation and lax regulation means “no rules” for Big Finance — and that doesn’t bode well for the remnants of the middle class.

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Retail Sales Rise below Estimates, While Empire Manufacturing Continues to Expand

February 15, 2011

Retail Sales Rise below Estimates, While Empire Manufacturing Continues to Expand

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Ian Fletcher: Yes, American Manufacturing Really Is in Trouble

February 12, 2011

I’d like to respond to those commentators (Ron Boudreaux, Dan Griswold, and others) who deny that American manufacturing is in decline. These critics ask how American manufacturing can possibly be in decline when US manufacturing output is at an all-time high. This sounds like a reasonable objection to the claims of decline made by myself and others. But it’s not. Here’s the problem: decline is always a relative term, so the question, if one asserts that American manufacturing is in decline, is what is the appropriate level of American manufacturing output? Critics of the decline thesis tacitly assert that the appropriate level is “more than yesterday,” so if our manufacturing output is going up, all seems to be well. Nothing simpler! Unfortunately, the only rational standard for how much America should produce is how much Americans wish to consume . Because the only way to consume is either to produce what you wish to consume, or produce something else you can exchange for it. And this is where American manufacturing is clearly falling short, because America is running a huge trade deficit in manufactured goods, and we don’t produce enough of anything else (raw materials, services) to cover the gap. So instead we borrow and sell off existing assets. If Americans were willing to consume less, our manufacturing output would be just fine. But I don’t know a lot of people eagerly volunteering to accept a lower living standard. At some point, it all comes out in the wash. Either America must start producing more, or consuming less. And the longer we remain in denial about the fact that manufacturing is a sick sector in this country, the more likely it will be the latter. Another way to look at this problem is to observe that Don Boudreaux’s impressive figures about how “measured in inflation-adjusted dollars, U.S. manufacturing output in 2009 was about ten percent higher than it was in 2000″ come into proper focus when you remember that our overall economy was 32% bigger in 2009 than in 2000. So in fact, manufacturing isn’t booming, it’s standing pat. And while there’s no intrinsic reason manufacturing has to hold steady as a percentage of the economy, it sure as heck does have to stay big enough to match our consumption levels, which it isn’t doing.

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Dave Johnson: Jobs Crisis in Real World… Just Not in D.C.

February 3, 2011

Who is our economy for? Who is our government for? undergoing a transition from “We, the People” democratic government to a plutocracy run by and for the wealthy. One indicator of this transition is the way the D.C. Elite respond to unemployment. 9-10% unemployment used to be a national emergency. Now it’s a yawn. What The Washington Paper Says The Washington Post has a front-page story, ” Why does Fresno have thousands of job openings — and high unemployment? ” that says the problem is really “structural,” a skills gap, and there is little we can do. This is significant because so many people who make policy read the Washington Post while sitting in their nice, expensive restaurants. Stories like this risk that they will think that there really are plenty of jobs out there, but the serfs just aren’t up to taking them, or are too spoiled, but in any event there is no problem that needs solving, and call the lobbyist because this month’s check is late. Meanwhile, anyone in the real world outside of Washington or Wall Street reading about “thousands” of job openings going unfilled immediately knows something is fishy. In fact, if this story ran on the front page outside of DC or Wall Street we might even need to worry about Egypt-style riots. Anyone on the same side of the continent as Fresno knows that there are not “thousands’ of unfilled job openings. There might be thousands of foreclosures, or thousands of people in food lines, or thousands of people whose unemployment has run out but there are not thousands of unfilled job openings. What The Local Paper Says The Fresno Bee has a different story to tell, ” EDITORIAL: President should come see impact of joblessness in Valley “: The economy may be improving, but it would be difficult to persuade the thousands of out-of-work Valley residents that things are looking up. The six Valley communities cited in a U.S. Labor Department report have unemployment rates that run from 16.4% in Hanford-Corcoran to 18.6% in Merced. The other Valley cities on the list are Fresno (16.9%), Visalia-Porterville (16.8%), Modesto (17.2%) and Stockton (17.5%). . . . The nation’s economic recovery will not be complete until Americans go back to work. At every level of government, the goal should be to implement policies that improve consumer confidence and encourage businesses to hire workers. The Fresno Want Ads The Fresno Bee help-wanted ads tell the story. There are 963 “Sales” jobs listed, but the first 519 of those are at the same “company,” called “Work At Home Jobs, Inc.” and are mostly the same “job,” if you can call it that. The next 136 are a different “company” and the “jobs” are calling people from home to sell them wireless cell service — on commission. The next 52 are the same deal but a different “company,” selling internet from home, on commission. The next 46, same story. Etc. The next category after Sales is “Business development”, with 691 jobs, 466 are “work at home” and many of the rest are the same jobs at the same companies as the “sales” jobs. The next two categories are “General Business” and “Other” and, again, list the same “jobs” at the same “companies.” The next category is “Business Opportunity.” I challenge you to guess what “companies” and “jobs” are listed. (Hint: it’s the same ones again.) Supply And Demand Among the few specifics in the story is the example of “Jain Irrigation, which cannot find all the workers it wants for $15-an-hour jobs running expensive machinery that spins out precision irrigation tubing at 600 feet a minute, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.” $15-an-hour is just above the poverty level for a family of four, at about 130%. Dean Baker, writing in ” The Problem of Structrual Unemployment: Really Incompetent Managers ,” makes the point that a company complaining they can’t find skilled workers at $15 an hour needs to think about raising their offer. Baker writes, It presents comments from one employer who complains that he can’t find workers for jobs that pay $15 an hour. This is not a very good wage. It would be difficult for someone to support themselves and their children on a job paying $15 an hour ($30,000 a year). If the company president understand economics, then he would raise wages enough so that the jobs were attractive to workers who have the necessary skills. If they can’t get workers, they should know that they need to bump up the wage offered until they can. That is about as basic as it gets in the supply/demand equation. Can’t Sell The House And Move Part of this problem is the housing market. If Fresno really doesn’t have the skilled workers businesses need, Silicon Valley and Las Vegas certainly do, and have very high unemployment rates, but the people there can’t sell their houses and move! And even if they could sell they are “underwater,” will come out of the sale owing a ton of money that they can’t make up by taking a $15-per-hour job! Externalizing Training Costs Companies expect workers to already be trained, “externalizing” one more cost onto local communities, while shopping for the lowest tax areas to locate. California has a budget crisis and is cutting back on funding for the community colleges and other programs where people are trained for jobs. One reason for the budget crisis is businesses demanding ever-lower taxes, or playing communities and states against each other for tax incentives to relocate, using property tax avoidance schemes and so many other ways to get out of paying something back to the public for the public investment that enabled them to prosper . The Real Problem Out here in the real world the real problem is not “structural,” it is that there just are not enough jobs , they don’t pay enough, “free trade” deals have lowered wages and undermined our manufacturing base, there is not enough demand in the economy and the government is not doing its job of picking up the slack and after 30 years of tax-cutting the infrastructure is crumbling and not supporting competitiveness for our businesses. There are millions of unemployed and millions of infrastructure jobs that need doing. There is a new green energy and manufacturing revolution going on in the world and we do not have an economic/industrial policy to capture our share. There is problem after problem that is not being addressed by a government captured by interests. DC Avoids Dealing With The Problem It seems that the DC Elite will do anything to avoid just seeing what is in front of their faces. Clearly we have lost jobs from trade deals, Wall Street financialization and domination, lack of investment in infrastructure and education, etc. But the DC Elite come up with a thousand reasons not to fix these because the interests that benefit from those deals have influence over them. Our budget deficit is obviously from tax cuts and military spending — but you will never, ever, ever, ever hear that. Instead we hear job-killing “austerity” solutions that avoid asking the wealthy few to pitch in. On one issue after another, the DC Elite provide cover for the wealthy elite interests who now control DC. The transition from We, the People democracy to a plutocracy of, by and for the wealthy few is nearly complete. The real problem is not a breakdown of the structure of the job market and is not a mismatch between the jobs and the skills, it is a lack of jobs because of lack of demand, and a mismatch between who our government and economy are supposed to work for, and the interests that have brought this about. March 10 Summit on Jobs and America’s Future On March 10, 2011, the Summit on Jobs and America’s Future will bring together leaders and activists who understand that America faces a jobs crisis — and who are committed to building a political movement for sustainable economic growth, dynamic job creation, and a revival of the American economy. It’s free, $15 if you want lunch . Beat that. 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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Forex: Dollar Tumbles Across the Board as Risk Appetite Climbs on Strong Global Manufacturing

February 2, 2011

Forex: Dollar Tumbles Across the Board as Risk Appetite Climbs on Strong Global Manufacturing

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Ian Fletcher: Decline of U.S. Manufacturing: Factory Body Count and Epitaphs

February 2, 2011

The ongoing decline of American manufacturing is not an abstraction. But while most decent folk realize that real people are hurting, I’d like to focus today on a slightly different issue. I’ve found a fascinating database online at the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which enables one to get a blow-by-blow account of how American industry is falling apart. Go to their website here , then click on “QCEW Databases”, then “One Screen Data Search.” You can fiddle the various controls to get a picture of different states and different types of establishment. What does one discover? Over the past decade, the United States has lost 53,224 factories. From 2009 to 2010, we lost 8,000. To be fair, some were quite small, “mom-n-pop” machine shops and the like. But since 2001, we have lost 603 factories employing more than 1,000 workers. That’s a 41 percent drop. Some specific examples, just to give a concrete image to these statistics (source: Manufacturing & Technology News ): Cissell Manufacturing , the Ripon, Wisc.-based manufacturer of commercial laundry machines, closed its plant in Louisville, Ky., laying off 125 workers. Best Manufacturing Group , the country’s largest maker of table linens and nappery for the healthcare industry, company moved most of its production to Cambodia and closed its plants in King of Prussia, Penn., and Mahwah, N.J. Sparta Manufacturing , a foundry with 70 employees based in Sparta, Mich., closed — due to competition from China and India, the company said. Owens-Illinois , the manufacturer of packaging and containers used by hundreds of companies, closed its 300,000-square-foot machine parts plant in Godfrey, Ill. Belden CDT , a St. Louis-based manufacturer of cable, closed manufacturing plants in Tompkinsville, Ky., and Fort Mill, S.C. A majority of production was moved to a new manufacturing plant in Mexico. Davis Furniture shut down its production plant in Houlka, Miss., and moved manufacturing operations to China. 130 employees were laid off. Company owner Lynn Davis told the Associated Press that it was necessary to move production to China in order to stay competitive. Ethan Allen Interiors closed its 280,000-square-foot Spruce Pine, N.C., manufacturing plant and laid off 340 people. The company also closed its manufacturing facility in Oklahoma, with the loss of an additional 125 jobs. General Electric stopped manufacturing at one of its oldest plants. The company stopped making rotary appliance switches and fluorescent lamp holders at its Bridgeport, Conn., manufacturing facility, which had been in operation by GE for more than 80 years. Modine Manufacturing closed its Toledo, Ohio, manufacturing plant. The facility made heating and cooling systems for the automotive industry. M&S Manufacturing Co. , one of the world’s largest privately held makers of high-precision machined parts, closed up shop. The Hudson, Mich.-based company was founded in 1941. Sparton Corp. closed its cable wire harness manufacturing and assembly plant in Deming, N.M. Littelfuse Manufacturing transferred its semiconductor wafer manufacturing capacity from Irving, Texas, to Wuzi, China, and laid off 180 workers. Tecumseh Products Co. closed its engine component manufacturing plant in New Holstein, Wisc.

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Dollar Declines as ISM Manufacturing Expands above Expectations

February 1, 2011

Dollar Declines as ISM Manufacturing Expands above Expectations

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U.S. Markets Focus on Construction and Manufacturing

February 1, 2011

U.S. Markets Focus on Construction and Manufacturing

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U.S. Stocks Extend Gains after Upbeat ISM Manufacturing and Strong Earnings

February 1, 2011

U.S. Stocks Extend Gains after Upbeat ISM Manufacturing and Strong Earnings

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Mixed data from European Services and Manufacturing sectors

January 24, 2011

Mixed data from European Services and Manufacturing sectors

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Texas HVAC and Heater Manufacturer Custom Air Products & Services Introduces Ken Villarrubia as General Manager of Fabrication and Manufacturing

January 21, 2011

Ken Villarrubia Named General Manager of Fabrication and Manufacturing

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In The Nation’s Second-Largest Port, Hints Of An Export Boom

January 19, 2011

If the nation’s second-largest port is any indication, the American export economy may be on the mend — and new jobs may follow. After a year of steady improvement, California’s Port of Long Beach, a key barometer for the demand for American goods abroad, exported more goods than it imported in December. The larger rebound in exports helped the manufacturing industry add 136,000 new jobs last year, the first increase since 1997. Exports of 20-foot equivalent containers (TEUs) were up 15.8% last year in Long Beach, after 2009′s steep drop-off as global commerce plummeted a record 12 percent , the biggest decline since WWII. The port’s turnaround brought export levels to 1.56 million TEUs this year, just shy of its all-time export peak of 1.57 million TEUs in 2007. The rebound has been quick and palpable, said Nick Sramek, President of the Long Beach Board of Harbor Commissioners. “Scrap metal has been accumulating and accumulating on the docks, the piles growing taller because there just hasn’t been a market for it. Now it’s all been disappearing. Fast,” said Sramek. Long Beach isn’t the only American port that’s seeing a mini-boom. In November, exports surged to the highest level in two years, cutting the trade deficit to $38.3 billion from $38.4 billion. November’s jump follows export increases of 6.8 percent in the third quarter and 9.1 percent in the second quarter. In comments last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke pointed to exports as one reason for optimism about the economy in 2011. The steady climb also started President Obama’s 2009 promise to double American exports by 2015 off on a good note. The increase may be good news for people seeking manufacturing jobs, as well. Growth in the manufacturing industry has followed the climb in exports. According to the Institute for Supply Management, the manufacturing sector experienced a significant recovery in 2010 with manufacturers of electrical equipment, appliances and components reporting a strong demand for their products from Europe and Asia. But Gary Hufbauer , senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, was quick to put last year’s trade growth — including the increase in American exports — in perspective. “The only reason there was such a sharp bounce in 2010 is because there was a sharp drop in 2009. The bounce wasn’t a surprise to anyone who watches these things. The important question is, are we going to get really good export growth in the future?” he asked. Good growth in exports, Hufbauer said, amounts to about and 8 percent annual rate. “If we get a 10-12 percent export rate this year, I will say hallelujah!” he said. He projects export growth will only reach half that in 2011. A better indicator of economic recovery than increased exports is a reduction in the trade deficit, according to the Brooking’s Institute’s Barry Bosworth . “Ports don’t care if they’re loading or unloading the ships. It’s work for them. They’re not responsible for the trade deficit. But it’s a problem for the country,” Bosworth said. “If the U.S. is going to recover, we have to export more than we import.” Despite shipping out more goods in December than they shipped in, Long Beach imported 7.8 percent more goods than it exported during 2010. “It’s called shipping air,” said Dick Steinke, executive director for the Port of Long Beach, referring to the 50 percent of containers that leave the port empty. “They’re going back to Asia to get re-stuffed with goods to sell back here.” Many of the containers that are filled with American exports end up being imports later on. Three of the port’s biggest exports are scrap metal, scrap plastic and recycled paper, raw materials Asian countries use to make products they sell back to American consumers.

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Bryce Covert: Detroit: An American Ghetto Where a House Costs Less Than a Car

January 12, 2011

Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0 . Detroit’s history tells the story of the rise of manufacturing and economic prowess in the US. It is the story of the American middle class, built on the back of a booming industrial sector. But today it’s become an omen of the struggles for middle- and lower-class Americans and the manufacturing jobs they once relied on. And the city itself is turning into a ghetto. Convenient to transportation on rivers and rail, Detroit became a hub of industry as far back as the late 1800s, leading to a nouveau riche class of wealthy industrialists. But its real claim to fame would come when Henry Ford piggybacked on the city’s established carriage trade and built his first car manufacturing plant in 1899. Ford was the epitome of an American self-made man — the son of an immigrant farmer who left to apprentice with a machinist and go on to become an engineer and an industrialist. Soon after Ford’s plant opened up, GM, Chrysler and American Motors would follow suit, and the city quickly became the world’s car capital. The booming automobile industry sucked in labor, and the city’s ranks swelled from 265,000 in 1900 to over 1.5 million in 1930. With the workers — who came from the South as well as Europe — came labor disputes and the rise of union activism. It became the fourth largest city in the country. This period was the city’s gilded age, during which skyscrapers, mansions, and historic buildings all cropped up, as well as apartment buildings aimed at middle class workers from the factories. This was the American Dream. Now look at the city today: it is literally falling apart. It has shed roughly 1 million residents since the 1950s, and as the 2010 census showed Michigan was the only state to lose population, some analysts estimated that it would also show a drop to 150,000 people living in Detroit, down from 951,000 in 2000. The median price of a home sold in Detroit in 2008 was $7,500 — less than the price of a car — and the proportion of vacant homes to occupied ones almost tripled since 1999 to 28%. The city’s unemployment rate just fell , but from a dismal 13.3% to a still-pretty-dismal 12%. Median household income dropped nearly 25% to $28,730 between 1999-2008. The auto crisis allowed the big car companies to force two-tier payment systems in GM and Chrysler plants and labor’s influence is taking a huge blow in the recession. And those beautiful buildings built with booming auto profits lie in shambles, which look straight off the set of a post-apocalyptic movie. (I highly recommend clicking through and taking in these devastating, striking photos .) Sign up for weekly ND20 highlights, mind-blowing stats, event alerts, and reading/film/music recs. Living in this city is tantamount to living in a lawless state. Just ask Johnette Barham , who stuck it out through more than 10 burglaries and break-ins before her place and most of what she owned were torched. “I was constantly being targeted in a way I couldn’t predict, in a way that couldn’t be controlled by the police,” she told the WSJ . The empty houses that surround her can no longer act as a buffer against crime, and she and many other middle-class people are fleeing the city in droves. Wealthy neighborhoods have resorted to hiring private security firms to police their streets. Why? The Detroit Police Department is down about 700 officers, according to Warren Evans, who was appointed police chief in July 2009. There’s no one he can send to take care of crimes like petty theft when they’re working round the clock to bring down homicide rates. It’s not just the police force that’s feeling the pain from budget cuts. As fires raged through the city in September, which destroyed 85 homes and structures, the level of damage was directly connected to cutbacks. They’ve led to 8-12 fire company “brown outs” each day, meaning the companies are temporarily unavailable to fight fires, and one of the decommissioned stations was reported to be closest to a neighborhood that went up in flames. The city’s public school system is considering a GM-style restructuring to deal with its $327 million deficit and avoid bankruptcy. As Mayor Dave Bing grapples with the city’s $300 million budget gap, he’s looking to cut services in the emptier parts of town in an effort to shrink the city, which means many areas will be left without basic services such as water and sewage. On top of the cuts at the city and state level, cuts at the federal level also imperil Detroit’s economy — take Defense Secretary Robert Gates’ recent announcement to cut the defense budget, which will mean layoffs in Michigan defense companies. Not to mention that just Friday Ben Bernanke said the Federal Reserve won’t be helping out any state or local governments saddled with debt. All of these trends are likely to continue or worsen as the recession drags on and cutting budgets and services is in vogue. And while Detroit’s troubles are gruesome, it’s not the only city in America that’s falling to shambles. Take Baltimore. Roosevelt Institute Senior Fellow Tom Ferguson recently took to the city’s streets to explain how it’s caught in a housing Catch-22. When cheap loans pushed on the population went sour, they brought down many communities’ housing prices, and now without a steady tax base no one is interested in making loans to a city that is desperate for funds. It’s no wonder Ferguson tells this story outside boarded up houses. And it’s no wonder that images of Detroit ended up on a blog called Ghetto America . Once our pride and joy, Detroit now reminds us of how far off track our economy has gone and how downtrodden the middle class is. As Roosevelt Institute Senior Fellow Rob Johnson said to me: Detroit is the canary in the coalmine of America’s harsh, unbridled economic adjustment. It can happen anywhere with a violence and swiftness that is only tolerated by suppressing these horrid images and neglecting the human consequences. Such an unnecessary loss of grand creations.

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Forex: Euro, British Pound Rally As U.K. PMI Manufacturing and Euro-Zone CPI Estimate Tops Expectations

January 4, 2011

Forex: Euro, British Pound Rally As U.K. PMI Manufacturing and Euro-Zone CPI Estimate Tops Expectations

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ISM Manufacturing Shows Expansion, as Stock Markets Open the Year in Strong Fashion

January 3, 2011

ISM Manufacturing Shows Expansion, as Stock Markets Open the Year in Strong Fashion

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ISM: Manufacturing Sectors Expands for 17th Straight Month

January 3, 2011

ISM: Manufacturing Sectors Expands for 17th Straight Month

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iPhone Secrets Among Tips That Led To Arrests

December 16, 2010

NEW YORK — Federal prosecutors in Manhattan broadened their insider trading crackdown Thursday, arresting four people on charges alleging that so-called “expert consultants” revealed secrets about Apple Inc.’s iPhone and other technology products to hedge funds seeking a trading edge on quarterly earnings reports. The latest probe targeted Primary Global Research, a Mountain View, Calif.-based firm that offered consulting services to investors on industry trends, issues and regulations. Instead, prosecutors allege, firm executive James Fleishman used four consultants employed by publicly traded companies to create a corrupt clearinghouse for confidential information. Fleishman, 41, was charged with wire fraud and conspiracy. Three others, all outside “expert consultants” for Primary Global Research until earlier this year, were charged with wire fraud and conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud, according to papers filed in federal court in Manhattan. Fleishman helped arrange for Primary Global Research clients, including hedge funds, to speak with the consultants, the papers said. The clients were told about highly confidential Apple sales forecasts information, new product features for the iPhone and a top-secret project known internally at Apple as “K48,” which became the iPad, launched this year, the complaint said. The charges allege that a “corrupt network of insiders at some of the world’s leading technology companies served as so-called ‘consultants’ who sold out their employers by stealing and then peddling their valuable inside information,” U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said in a statement. He said the allegations describe criminal conduct that went “well beyond any legitimate information-sharing or good faith business practice.” Primary Global Research paid four consultants more than $400,000 merely to participate in phone calls with their clients, “an indication of the value placed on the information,” said FBI Assistant Director Janice K. Fedarcyk. “This wasn’t market research. What the defendants did was purchase and sell insider information,” Fedarcyk said, adding: “Our investigation is most assuredly continuing.” The three consultants charged were Mark Anthony Longoria, 44, of Round Rock, Texas; Walter Shimoon, 39, of San Diego; and Manosha Karunatilaka, 37, of Marlborough, Mass. The prosecution is an offshoot of a probe of Galleon Funds founder Raj Rajaratnam and 22 others in which prosecutors made extensive use of wiretaps, which are more common in drug and organized crime investigations. Rajaratnam has pleaded not guilty and said he only traded with information available to the public. On wiretaps used to build evidence against those arrested Thursday, Fleishman and Longoria could be heard speaking about the Galleon probe, with Fleishman assuring Longoria that Galleon was not a client, according to court papers. The complaint said Longoria responded: “OK. Good. I wasn’t sure. I was, like, really getting nervous.” Richard Choo-Beng Lee, a former hedge fund co-manager who has pleaded guilty and is cooperating with the government, made some of the recordings, the complaint said. Investigators have learned from Lee that his hedge fund’s “practice was to have its employees call a firm consultant before the consultant’s employer was expected to release its quarterly earnings, in part to obtain inside information,” the complaint said. Longoria worked at Advanced Micro Devices Inc. as a supply chain manager, Shimoon worked at Flextronics International Limited as senior director of business development and Karunatilaka worked as an account manager at Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. office in Burlington, Mass. The complaint said Shimoon illegally provided information about sales forecasts and new product features for Apple’s iPhone that had been given to employees of Flextronics, which worked with Apple on camera and charger components for the iPhone and iPod. It said he also spoke of the iPad project, saying on secretly recorded conversations with a government cooperating witness: “At Apple you can get fired for saying K48 … outside of a meeting that doesn’t have K48 people in it. That’s how crazy they are about it.” The complaint said Shimoon was also captured on wiretaps promising to get secrets about sales at Research In Motion Ltd., which makes Blackberrys. Shimoon has been terminated and Flextronics has clear policies prohibiting the release of confidential information about the company and its business partners, Flextronics said in a statement. It was not immediately clear who would represent Shimoon at an initial court appearance. For Karunatilaka, bail was set at $250,000 after an initial appearance in federal court in Boston. He was expected to be released Thursday. His lawyer, Brad Bailey, said he was reviewing the allegations against his client and would decide how to proceed. He said it was likely Karunatilaka would appear in Manhattan court sometime in January. Longoria appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Andrew W. Austin, Texas, who ordered him released on $50,000 unsecured bond and told him to surrender his expired passport. When asked if he was a flight risk, a tearful Longoria said no. “I’m not trying to fight this. I’m here to help. I’ve been cooperating on this from the beginning,” Longoria said. Longoria resigned Oct. 22 from AMD, where he had worked since 2007, said Mike Silverman, a company spokesman. “It appears that AMD is the victim of an insider trading scheme,” Silverman said. He added that AMD was cooperating with investigators. A lawyers for Fleishman did not return phone calls for comment. A fourth consultant for Primary Global Research, former Dell global supply manager Daniel Devore, pleaded guilty Dec. 10 to wire fraud and conspiracy charges in a cooperation deal that could win him leniency at sentencing, prosecutors also announced. His lawyer, John Sutton, declined to comment Thursday. In his plea, Devore told a judge that Primary Global Research paid him about $145,000 to share inside information with the firm’s clients and employees. “I knew that when I was misappropriating Dell’s confidential information and providing it to money managers, I was violating my duties of confidentiality and trust to Dell,” he said, according to a transcript. David Best, a Dell spokesman, said the company would cooperate with authorities. ___ Associated Press Writer Larry Neumeister in New York and AP Technology writers Jordan Robertson in San Francisco and Jessica Mintz in Seattle contributed to this report.

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European Market’s Tensions Ease Amid Concerns, UK Manufacturing Improves  

December 7, 2010

European Market’s Tensions Ease Amid Concerns, UK Manufacturing Improves

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How The Auto Industry Bailout Pulled One Indiana Town Back From Brink

November 23, 2010

KOKOMO, Ind. — Jerry Price remembers the eerie silence less than two years ago when he walked through one of the transmission plants that long provided the economic lifeblood of this town steeped in auto industry history. With the machines still and the workers gone, casualties of Chrysler’s bankruptcy declaration a few days earlier, the only signs of life were a few lights that had been left on. “None of us, including myself, ever thought that this place would be running again,” said Price, vice president of United Auto Workers Local 685. Not only has the plant reopened for business, but President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden are visiting Tuesday to herald Kokomo as one of the major success stories of the auto bailout. Residents of this city, where unemployment once soared above 20 percent after the shutdown, are doing their part to proclaim the virtues of legislation that generated plenty of controversy at the time. “If the bailout hadn’t come, then we’d be a ghost town,” said Jeff Newton, a pastor who runs Kokomo Urban Outreach, which runs a network of food pantries. Kokomo’s fortunes have been entwined with the auto industry since 1894, when Elwood Haynes invented one of the first automobiles in the United States there. Since the 1930s, when then-Delco (later Delphi) located there, followed by General Motors and Chrysler, the auto industry has been the city’s bread and butter. Today, Kokomo is likely more dependent on the industry than any other city in the country – including those in Michigan, said Indiana University-Kokomo Chancellor Michael Harris, an economist who has studied the auto industry for 20 years. Nearly 25 percent of the city’s work force is employed by the industry, he said. Most work at the four Chrysler plants that employ about 4,500 today, at GM, which employs about 1,000, or at Delphi, which has about 1,400 workers. “If the auto industry would have totally walked away from Kokomo, we would probably have unemployment that would have hit 35 percent,” said Harris. As it was, the city’s unemployment rate hit 20.4 percent in June 2009, the highest level in the past decade. “It’s been very scary at times,” said Dave White, 58, who has worked at Chrysler for 24 years. His wife also works for the automaker. Kokomo leaders and business owners say an infusion of cash pulled the city back from the brink. Besides benefitting from Chrysler’s $7.1 billion share of the auto industry bailout, the plant received nearly $4 million in federal stimulus money and an $89 million grant to help Delphi Automotive Systems develop electronic components for vehicles. In September, the jobless rate dropped to 12.7 percent – the lowest rate in nearly two years. Stimulus money paid for a new park pavilion and helped remodel a fire station. Democratic Mayor Greg Goodnight said the city used other money to remove 11 stoplights and convert several streets into one-way streets to help make downtown more friendly for pedestrians. Volunteers also planted flowers throughout downtown to spruce up the area. While those jobs were temporary, observers say the bigger – and longer lasting – boost has come from Chrysler and Delphi, which have invested heavily in Kokomo since receiving federal help. Delphi announced a $28 million investment and Chrysler has promised more than $300 million to retool one of its transmission plants. “There’s no doubt that Chrysler has decided to make Kokomo the center of their manufacturing for the future,” Harris said. Even so, Kokomo’s recovery is still in its infancy. Newton, the pastor whose Kokomo Urban Outreach runs six neighborhood food pantries and meal programs, said the food pantries still serve about 800 people each month – the same as they did during the height of the depths of the recession. “We had people crying in the hallways” when things were at their worst, Newton said. “They’d never had to go to a food pantry before, and they felt ashamed.” Now, instead of autoworkers scrimping on food to pay mortgages and car loans, they’re seeing more minimum-wage workers to whom the recovery hasn’t yet trickled down, he said. Penny Irwin, the broker-owner of Re/Max Realty One in Kokomo, said the average price of a home in Kokomo dropped about $30,000 over the last three years. But home prices are slowly improving. According to Indiana Association of Realtors statistics, the median cost of a home in Howard County is $75,250, up from $69,900 a year ago. Downtown has also seen a turnaround, with 13 new businesses starting up or moving in since January, said John Wiles, a former newspaper editor who now heads the Kokomo Downtown Association. The city used an economic development income tax for some projects, made matching loans to downtown businesses to improve building facades and set up a riverfront development district along Wildcat Creek to encourage new restaurants by making it easier to obtain liquor licenses. “We’ve done a lot of things for ourselves,” Goodnight said. The riverfront initiative – along with Small Business Administration financing – made it possible for father and son Steve and Blake Kinder to start Cook McDoogal’s Irish Pub, a new downtown bar with lavish woodwork rescued from old churches and remodeled homes that’s set to open Tuesday. A couple of years ago, Blake Kinder said, the only people downtown were coming for court appearances. Now, it’s common to see young mothers walking their babies in strollers. “The mood has definitely risen,” he said. “People are starting to feel more comfortable about Kokomo’s future, whether they like to admit it or not.” ___ Associated Press writer Tom Coyne in South Bend also contributed to this story.

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Galaxy Resources Limited (ASX:GXY) Signs Letter Of Intent For Potential Battery Manufacturing Site

November 23, 2010

Galaxy Resources Limited (ASX:GXY) Signs Letter Of Intent For Potential Battery Manufacturing Site

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PHOTOS: America’s Fastest-Growing States

November 20, 2010

For Americans forced to combat the lagging economy, it may be better to live in the Midwest and Southwest than on either of America’s coasts. The fastest-growing states in America last year, according to a new report from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, are concentrated in the Great Plains and in the Southwest, where natural resources have buoyed local growth. States like Oklahoma, which was particularly helped by growth in mining, Louisiana and South Dakota have seen growth rates that would put much of the rest of the nation to shame. Unfortunately, and perhaps not surprisingly, states that relied on the manufacturing of durable goods and construction saw some of the biggest drops in local GDP. The BEA notes that one of these two industries was the prime cause of declines in economic growth in 34 states in 2009. All told, 38 states saw declines in real GDP in 2009. Though GDP has been criticized for providing an incomplete picture of economic well-being — including by Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz — it’s still the most widely-used gauge of aggregate economic activity. Which states saw the biggest jumps in economic activity last year? Check out the fastest-growing states below:

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Gilbert B. Kaplan: Put on Your Workboots, America

November 12, 2010

Wouldn’t it be nice if someone would come forward with a real jobs program? Instead the debate in Washington is on things like tax cuts and what to do — next year — with health care and the budget deficit. These are important subjects, but none of them will have any near-term effect on the unemployment level (9.6 percent officially and probably 20 percent unofficially). It is no accident America largely turned one party out of office for another. A party in control of the White House and both houses of Congress that does not have a radical reemployment program at a time the sustained unemployment level is at a record high is not going to get a lot of sympathy. Yet there is something which can be done immediately, which will have an impact on U. S. jobs, particularly in the manufacturing sector. The Democratic party can do this now; they still have control of the Senate. If they want to send a message to America, there is a step they should take when they get back for the lame duck session starting Monday. The Senate should pass the China currency bill which already passed the House of Representatives in September, and which will make it much more likely the Department of Commerce will impose duties on imports of products from China to offset currency manipulation. The bill would remove an objection the Department of Commerce raised when it refused to investigate currency manipulation in two trade cases earlier this year, and clear the way for trade investigations of this pernicious, unfair practice. The next step is in the hands of the large Democratic majority in the Senate, which is not altered by the election in the upcoming lame duck session. And the action could have a dramatic effect on the job base of the United States on a fast-track basis. There is hardly a manufacturing company in the U.S. that is not being impacted by low cost Chinese imports. Yet there is very little that is being done about that. The Fed’s monetary moves will lower the value of the U. S. dollar, but not against the Chinese yuan, as long as the Chinese do not change their strategy of essentially pegging their currency against the dollar. There is not a commitment by the Democrats to take action on the currency bill. What are the implications of waiting until next year? In a word, disastrous for working Americans (and even worse for the millions of not-working Americans). Representative Kevin Brady (R- Texas), the likely next Chairman of the Ways and Means Trade Subcommittee, has already said he does not expect the House to act on currency legislation next year. So assuming the Republican House would ever act, which is doubtful, we are looking at well over a year before a bill would get back to the Senate. Meanwhile Americans watch their jobs move to China. That puts the issue starkly before the Senate Democrats. America has sent a strong message: we will not sit idly by while the folks in Washington ignore the jobs situation. And yet by not acting, that is exactly what the Senate will be doing. Once again, in the lame duck, our legislators will take up issues that most Americans don’t understand and don’t really care about, while a common sense pro-U. S. jobs bill is ignored. I would think this is a step the Senate should only take at its peril. So on second thought, America, leave your work boots on the shelf, gathering mold. At least until you see if the Senate has the guts to stand up for American jobs.

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Unemployment Rate Holds Steady In October — But Economy Adds 151,000 Jobs

November 5, 2010

WASHINGTON (AP) — The economy generated a net gain in jobs for the first time in five months in October, as businesses stepped up their painfully slow pace of hiring. But the unemployment rate, measured by a separate survey of households, remained stuck at 9.6 percent for the third straight month. The Labor Department said Friday its survey of employers showed a net gain of 151,000 jobs last month, the first increase since May. Private employers hired 159,000 workers, the best since April. Economists welcomed the report, which showed much stronger job gains than Wall Street analysts had expected. “This is not a gangbusters report but it is very important,” said Carl Riccadonna, an economist at Deutsche Bank. “It shows us that the momentum in employment is building.” Employers also extended the average work week to 34.3 hours, up by one-tenth. The additional jobs and longer work week should boost Americans’ incomes and provide fuel for more consumer spending, which drives about 70 percent of the economy. The additional income, combined with the Federal Reserve’s decision Wednesday to pump more cash into the economy and the potential extension of the Bush tax cuts, could “jump start a virtuous cycle,” Riccadonna said. More income may encourage more spending, leading to more hiring by healthier companies, he added. The department also revised August and September’s payroll figures higher. The private sector added 103,000 more jobs in those two months than previously estimated. So far this year, the economy has added 874,000 jobs and over a million in the private sector. But that comes after the nation lost more than 8 million jobs in 2008 and 2009. And about 14.8 million people say they were unemployed, a figure that hasn’t improved much since the beginning of the year. The job gains were concentrated in relatively few sectors: retailers added 27,900 positions, likely in preparation for the holiday season. Temporary agencies added 34,900. Restaurants and bars hired 24,400 people. Government at all levels shed only 8,000 jobs, a much better showing than September’s steep drop. The construction industry added a small number of jobs, while the manufacturing sector shed 7,000 positions. Factory employment has been roughly unchanged since May. The economy needs to add at least 100,000 net new jobs a month just to keep up with population growth. It will need to generate many more than that to cut into the unemployment rate, which has now topped 9.5 percent for 15 months. The economy is growing, but at a weak pace. The Commerce Department said last month that gross domestic product, the broadest measure of the nation’s output, increased by 2 percent in the July-September period. That isn’t fast enough to encourage much hiring. High unemployment helped stoke voter anger in congressional elections earlier this week. The Republican Party took control of the House and made significant gains in the Senate. On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve announced a plan to buy $600 billion in Treasury bonds in an effort to accelerate economic growth. Those purchases are intended to lower interest rates on mortgages and other loans and spur more borrowing and spending.

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Euro Area Manufacturing Expands, Driven By German Boost  

November 2, 2010

Euro Area Manufacturing Expands, Driven By German Boost

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U.S. ISM Manufacturing Tops Expectations in October, EURUSD Extends Intraday Decline

November 1, 2010

U.S. ISM Manufacturing Tops Expectations in October, EURUSD Extends Intraday Decline

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Jeffrey Rubin: Can the Canadian Economy Afford the Tar Sands?

October 19, 2010

America is banking on a lot more Canadian bitumen exports to supply it with oil in the future. Already the single largest source of the US’s imported oil, the Alberta tar sands’ supply could soon comprise as much as almost a third of America’s total oil imports–apart from the fact that it’s far from clear whether or not the rest of the Canadian economy could afford the consequences. Whether Canadians like it or not, their dollar has become a petro-currency. Currently trading near parity against the greenback, it wasn’t that long ago that the Canadian dollar was trading as low as 61 cents against its bigger cousin. But of course back then oil was trading at close to $20 per barrel, and at that price Alberta’s tar sands were a marginal energy resource. At $80 per barrel, the oil industry is pumping one and a half million barrels per day, and the once-marginal Canadian resource has suddenly become second only to Saudi Arabia in proven reserves. At triple-digit prices, the tar sands will produce three to four million barrels per day. In turn, the tandem of soaring oil prices and soaring oil production will propel the Canadian dollar to heights it’s never seen. A soaring currency may bring long-lost NHL franchises back to Winnipeg, Quebec City and maybe even Hamilton from Dixie and the desert, but that’s about all the Canadian economy can expect from its major trading partner. Other than Canadian bitumen exports, American consumers won’t be buying much from their northern neighbor. That won’t pose much of a problem for Alberta, whose exports are almost all energy-based. Unfortunately the same can’t be said for the rest of the Canadian economy: shipments to the US market account for three quarters of the country’s total exports. Or at least they do–for now. How long can Ontario remain the single largest producer of motor vehicles in North America if the Canadian dollar is trading at a double-digit premium to the greenback? For that matter, what segments of the Canadian manufacturing sector are likely to survive that exchange rate in the first place? Will the morphing of the Canadian dollar into a petro-currency be Alberta’s revenge for the still-loathed National Energy Program ? Back in the early 1980′s, Ottawa transferred billions of dollars of petro-wealth from Alberta to subsidize manufacturing in Ontario and Quebec by forcing domestic oil prices below world levels. Are the tables about to turn? Will the price for more mega-projects in the tar sands spell the end of the manufacturing sector in Ontario and Quebec? If so, what will the political feedback be from a region of the country that still controls the majority of seats in Canada’s Parliament? As more and more Canadian auto and steel plants are closed in the wake of a soaring currency, America may have to look elsewhere for its future oil supply.

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Martha A. Duggan: The Case for a Federal ‘Green Bank’

October 14, 2010

Conventional wisdom says that it will be exceedingly difficult for the United States Congress to pass energy legislation in its next session. For those who are waiting on signals that demonstrate our government’s willingness to incentivize investments in clean energy, this has been a depressing period. But while I understand the frustration expressed from nearly every faction of the energy sector, I am optimistic about the potential to capitalize on this seemingly-lost opportunity in the next Congress. In the past several weeks there has been a notable shift in media coverage of the politics of energy reform. What began as a message of shock and despair, has now turned to one of acceptance and genuine desire to start with a clean slate, and try once more for an improved, cleaner, and more efficient energy economy. The recent coverage of the Coalition for Green Capital (CGC), a non-profit organization based in Washington, DC, exemplifies this shift. As a member of its Board of Directors I appreciate the media coverage of the CGC’s positive efforts to produce a road map for the clean energy future of the United States. The New York Times article, ” A Climate Proposal Beyond Cap and Trade “, by David Leonhardt, describes the view of a prominent environmental economist who “should be despondent over Washington’s failure to pass a climate bill.” However, according to Leonhardt, MIT Professor Michael Greenstone, is not despondent. Rather, “he thinks the benefits of the bills that died in the Senate — which would have raised the cost of carbon emissions, through a system known as cap and trade — were sometimes exaggerated.” Leonhardt notes that after all the necessary compromises had been made the bills would not have raised the price of carbon enough to have any meaningful impact, and would also have done little to address the increasing emissions from the developing world. Leonhardt goes on to recognize Reed Hundt, CEO of the Coalition for Green Capital, and the Coalition’s efforts over the past two years to create a federal financing entity that would make clean energy cost competitive with carbon intensive energy. The New York Times is not alone in recognizing the value in creating such an entity. A recent article by HuffPost’s Dan Froomkin titled ” A Convenient Truth: Gearing up for Climate Change Could Supercharge the Job Market “, also focuses on a silver lining in the dark cloud over the clean energy sector and reinforces the need for a clean energy economy as envisioned by the Coalition for Green Capital. Froomkin writes: Could one major crisis be solved by solving another? If we’re talking about the nation’s desperately poor job market on the one hand, and the dire threat of climate change on the other, then the answer is: Quite possibly, yes. The solution to both would be an enormous investment in green technology and green jobs – creating a “clean energy economy” while reducing carbon emissions; putting millions of Americans back to work while increasing our energy independence; rebuilding our manufacturing base while saving consumers money on their energy bills; and saving the planet. It certainly sounds a heck of a lot cheerier than the alternative. These media outlets have called attention to the fact that reflecting the true cost of clean energy is, and will continue to be, unpopular — a completely logical fact given the current state of our economy. This means that the time is now for the creation of a federal clean energy financing institution (a “Green Bank”) which would lower the cost of clean energy. We do not need to take the unpopular route of making carbon-intensive energy more expensive. Instead we can make clean energy sources more affordable. The energy sector has huge potential for new investment and widespread expansion, and this potential can only be realized if this sector is provided with the proper incentives. On November 16th, the Coalition for Green Capital will be holding a public conference in Washington, DC entitled “The Future of Energy Reform.” We will lay out our Coalition’s road map for a clean energy future in the US. I encourage anyone interested to visit our website for further information: CoalitionForGreenCapital.com , or to reach out via email to sarahdavidson635@gmail.com

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Stephen Goldsmith: FDI with Chinese Characteristics

October 12, 2010

Consistent with so much about China’s thrust on to the global stage over the past decade, its outward foreign direct investment (OFDI) has grown far faster than OFDI from other transitional economies. Chinese OFDI is largely politically driven, aimed at achieving specific nationalistic objectives, such as securing natural resources, acquiring strategic assets in key technologies and service industries, and creating national champion companies. China’s approach to OFDI — which is often aggressive and brusque in nature — is increasingly coloring its relationship with recipient nations at all levels of development and income. China has tailored its approach to OFDI based on the relative economic and political strength of the recipient country in exchange for specific benefits. For example, in highly indebted poor countries (HIPCs), China tends to offer to build infrastructure in exchange for the right to access to raw materials. In developing countries, China may offer to help develop an indigenous industry; in emerging markets, grant greater access to the Chinese market; and in developed countries, expand reciprocal agreements related to cross-border investment. In each case, China weighs the relative costs and benefits associated with expanding its relationship with a given county vis-à-vis what it will receive in return. Developed countries have cried foul over the perceived anti-competitive financial support granted by the Chinese government to Chinese multinational enterprises (MNEs) — most of which are state-owned — operating in developing countries. Suspicions persist that much Chinese OFDI is driven by political considerations, since state-owned-enterprises (SOEs) are under the direct control of the state. Aggressive merger and acquisition (M&A) activity by Chinese MNEs in high technology and strategic natural resources has further heightened tensions. At the same time, many developing countries welcome aid with no-strings-attached, which often accompanies Chinese OFDI, particularly in the natural resources sector. Yet some governments remain wary that such investment will lead to the ‘development trap’: a flood of cash that results in heightened corruption and largesse without building indigenous capacity, knowledge, management skills, or that allows movement up the global economic value chain. This is increasingly becoming an issue as China ramps up its investment presence in the world’s poorest countries. A Government-Led Strategy China’s stock OFDI is still small compared with that of developed countries, and was approximately equal to that of Austria in 2008. That same year Chinese OFDI stock was only 3.4% of GDP compared to 20.3% for East Asia as a whole and a world average of 27.3%. Yet until 2000, OFDI from China was negligible. That year, Premier Zhu Rongji officially announced that overseas investment would be one of the main objectives of the government’s Tenth Five Year Plan (2001-05), giving birth to a “go global” strategy. Premier Wen Jiabao reinforced the importance of overseas investment in the Eleventh Five Year Plan (2006-10). The government-led strategy has proven to be effective. In 2006, yearly OFDI flow was 19 times that of 2000, growing at an average rate of 116% per year, far greater than average world OFDI growth of 6% over the same period. Other emerging economies recorded growth of just 31%. According the latest United Nations Conference on Trade and Development figures, OFDI flows more than doubled from 2006 to 2008.12 Until the late 1990s, the Chinese government discouraged OFDI by the private sector. Apart from a few projects run by SOEs, OFDI remained less than a sideshow to China’s export led growth. The “go global” strategy radically shifted the government’s policy toward the private sector to one of overseas investment promotion, in addition to aggressively pushing strategic investment by SOEs. In other words, the “go global” strategy is essentially two-pronged: in part a strategic decision to maximize China’s political and economic power and at the same time a response to macroeconomic and domestic market factors. The acquisition of strategic natural resources through investment in the primary sector abroad is at the top of the government’s agenda. Such investment is designed to provide supply and price security for China’s manufacturing-based economy, whose ravenous appetite for oil, metals, construction materials, and other key commodities makes their supply a national security imperative for the government. Not surprisingly, SOEs conduct OFDI in the primary sector, where investments are dominated by a few giant firms such as Baosteel, the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC), the China National Petroleum Corporation, Sinochem, and Sinopec. A second strategic objective is to spur investment that acquires sophisticated, proprietary technology, technical skills, industry best practices, and established brand names and distribution networks. The government hopes strategic asset acquisition can propel its chosen SOEs into industries at the top of the global value added chain, while obtaining the latest technology potentially for government use. Such investment often takes the form of M&A activity. Lenovo’s purchase of IBM’s computer unit and Huaneng Group’s acquisition of InterGen are representative examples. China’s overall strategy for SOEs is to “grasp the large and let go of the small”, aiming to create national champions from large SOEs through extensive government support while giving small and medium-sized SOEs greater exposure to the market. The government hopes to establish global, vertically and horizontally diversified MNEs operating with the most advanced technology and business practices as tools to advance its political and economic objectives. In addition to the primary sector, the government seeks to create and support national champions among some manufacturing, shipping, telecommunications, and financial services companies. Finally, OFDI serves as a strategic objective at the macroeconomic level, relieving some of the imbalances that have been built up by economic policy that distorts the marketplace. Upward pressure on the Yuan can be somewhat mitigated by encouraging greater capital outflows, and OFDI reduces the massive capital stock the government has accumulated. Furthermore, promoting OFDI allows for investment diversification, particularly away from U.S. and other government bonds. The Private Sector vs. Government Control Domestic market dynamics have increasingly factored into OFDI growth and would have fueled its growth even without government promotion, given China’s low OFDI relative to GDP. The increasing maturity and sophistication of some Chinese industries has oriented them to naturally expand profitably overseas. Fierce domestic competition has also propelled Chinese business in that direction, through organic business development and survival strategies. Establishing overseas production facilities and sales and distribution networks cuts operating costs, permits access to new markets, and provides the ability to avoid tariff barriers. As China’s economic growth continues, labor costs, which are already held artificially low, will become more expensive. As domestic investment continues, capital will become cheaper, so firms from low-skilled, labor-intensive industries will increasingly use their domestic knowledge to seek more efficient production markets. While private sector enterprises exposed to market forces are clearly playing a greater role, SOE’s have continued to dominate OFDI, with SOEs holding approximately 84% of OFDI stock, and accounting for approximately the same percentage of OFDI flows from 2004-2006. Nearly all of the 30 largest Chinese MNEs are SOEs, and all large SOEs are under the direct control of the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Council (SASAC), which has authority over human resources, budgets, and investment decisions and strategy. Therefore, much of the OFDI can be viewed as an extension of government economic policy. SOE’s receive direct financial support from the government in the form of below market rate loans, direct payments, and other subsidies associated with official aid programs. The China Development Bank (CDB) and China Export and Import Bank (EXIM Bank) are the two primary government organs that provide support, although other state-owned banks and specially created funds also provide backing. Strategic OFDI receives significant political backing (see below), so while private sector enterprises will gradually expand their share of OFDI, the government will maintain strict control of what it views as strategic industries. Sweeteners in Developing Countries An increased share of global investment is one consequence of China’s economic and political rise. Chinese OFDI has the potential to become a large portion of global cross-border investment, but China’s obstreperous use of bargaining power creates political obstacles which may inhibit that growth. The blowback China has recently received from some African countries objecting to its one-size-fits-all approach to OFDI (leaving them with a nice football stadium but no knowledge that will help them grow in the long-term)– has prompted China to reconsider its approach. Some African countries are no longer simply rolling out the red carpet. In an increasing number of cases, natural resource export earnings must now be deposited into off-shore escrow accounts, with the value of the exports determined at the time of export, rather than in advance. Angola has required some Chinese companies to subcontract up to 30 percent of the work generated by OFDI to local companies and workers. Angola also began to require that Chinese companies obtain a minimum of three locally-sourced bids for every project. The government of Congo is now requiring that up to 12 percent of any infrastructure project pursued by Chinese companies involve local firms, with no more than 20 percent of workers being Chinese, up to one percent of the costs of each project devoted to worker training programs.3 This is a far cry from how Chinese OFDI started in these countries, when the Chinese simply dictated the terms of engagement. Developing countries accounted for 95% of Chinese OFDI stock by the end of 2006, with a significant percentage in countries with weak governance and rule of law. Many of these countries have experienced the classic “resource curse” in which valuable reserves of minerals or fossil fuels enhanced corruption and conflict rather than promoting economic development. Chinese SOEs typically step into this environment with the advantages of political backing and government subsidized and insured investment, and China has often used significant sweeteners to win contracts. As part and parcel of negotiating OFDI deals in resource rich poor countries, China usually sends high-ranking officials to negotiate deals alongside official development aid (ODA) programs. In order to secure investment deals, the government offers infrastructure projects, politically important landmarks, soft loans, and grant programs as a package deal with a proposed natural resource investment. With government financing and political support, Chinese SOEs avoid a plethora of risks that often plague investments in resource-rich poor countries. Political and reputational risks are usually mitigated, and financing uncertainty is eliminated. For several years, the World Bank has ranked Congo last on its list of ease of doing business measurement. Congo has a failed legal system, a kleptocratic bureaucracy, nearly non-existent infrastructure, and is consistently rated as one of the most corrupt countries in the world by Transparency International. Yet in 2008, EXIM Bank and CDB signed investment deals estimated to be worth up to $14 billion with the Congolese government. The banks agreed to build infrastructure and refurbish mines in exchange for 3.5m tons of copper reserves.4 While Freeport McMoRan, a U.S. firm, controls three times as much copper at its Tenke Fungurume mine in Congo, it took years to arrange the investment. Furthermore, the speed with which the Chinese SOEs reached a deal is striking by comparison to a mine in Katanga Province that Freeport recently opened — Tenke Fungurume Mining Sarl — which took more than a decade to finance and get off the ground. It has already faced significant obstacles, including unforeseen and possibly illegal taxes, jailed employees, and fines running in the millions of dollars.5 Such risks hinder western MNEs, which must respect the bottom line, but are of little concern to Chinese SOEs. A Soft Touch in Emerging Markets China’s relationship with other emerging markets is complex. Subsidized Chinese OFDI may crowd out less or un-subsidized OFDI or internal investment from other emerging market countries. At the same time, emerging markets view Chinese investment into their countries, particularly in infrastructure and industrial projects, as a valuable resource for economic development, as it comes with few strings attached at a time when FDI in general is stunted. China’s strategy has been to negotiate such investment through diplomatic channels, with investments taking the form of partnerships and quid pro quo loans as opposed to being exclusively under Chinese control; emerging markets have more negotiating power than HIPCs, and Chinese negotiators know it. A series of business partnerships have emerged from President Hu’s bilateral diplomacy with Brazil’s President Lula da Silva. For example, Brazil’s state oil giant Petrobras recently completed a 900 mile natural gas pipeline as part of a joint venture with Sinopec. Last year, the CDB loaned Petrobras $10 billion to develop offshore reserves in exchange for future oil supply contracts.6 Yet while Brazil welcomes such investment and negotiates with confidence, it also fears being limited to exporting commodities to China. Brazil imports a wide variety of manufactured products from China, but sends mostly oil, minerals, and agricultural products in the other direction. At some point, Brazil and other emerging markets may take a harder line as their manufacturing firms face subsidized competition from China. China has not hesitated to use socialist ideology as a comparative advantage to press ahead with investment in the natural resource sector in other strategically important oil producing countries. In Venezuela, President Hu signed an accord with Hugo Chavez earlier this year to provide $20 billion of financing to support joint investment in the country’s oil, electricity, construction and agricultural sectors. When combined with an existing investment fund created by the Chinese in Venezuela for $12 billion in return for forward sales of oil, the Chinese have committed more than $30 billion in recent years to support the development of Venezuela’s petroleum reserves.7 A Sledge Hammer Won’t Work in Developed Markets In neither Brazil’s nor Venezuela’s case did China use extra sweeteners to obtain strategic investments; rather, it used diplomacy, ideology, and camaraderie. That tends not to be the case in developed countries, where China finds it is playing on a more even field. When placed in a competitive environment with a formidable opposite number, China tends to use a sledge hammer to get what it wants. For example, in July of 2009, Chinese police arrested four employees of the world’s third-largest mining firm, Rio Tinto, on charges of bribery and industrial espionage. One of those arrested, Stern Hu, an Australian citizen, was Rio Tinto’s lead iron ore negotiator in China. The arrests were believed to be payback for Rio Tinto’s tough negotiating stance on the price of iron ore, and for a failed $19.5 billion bid by Chinalco (an SOE) to increase its stake in the company. Since Rio Tinto derives approximately 19 percent of its total sales from China, which is its largest market, the company has since tried to smooth relations, even though Hu was sentenced to 10 years in prison.8 In 2005, CNOOC failed in its bid for Unocal in the United States because it did not anticipate that U.S. lawmakers would not approve of such a strategic acquisition by a Chinese SOE. The objection to the acquisition was made on national security grounds, but also because SOE involvement implied unfair financing resources and hence, not a fair, competitive landscape. A HIPC or developing country probably would not have opposed such an overture, either because their government officials could be bribed to accept the deal or the Chinese could find some other way to bulldoze the deal through. Such an approach will not work in a developed country because of the of the legal and regulatory safeguards in place. Points of conflict with developed countries occur primarily in three areas. First, OFDI by Chinese SOEs is increasingly seen as unfairly competitive with private sector companies. China’s support for strategic investments through direct subsidies and official development aid to win contracts allows for project bids which might not otherwise be viable in a free market context. Government ownership allows for a high tolerance of reputational and operational risk. By virtue of government ownership and backing, Chinese SOEs often operate investments in risky environments where western multinational prefer not to operate, and at reduced cost, thereby outmaneuvering western firms. As western multinationals generally operate based on market conditions, albeit with advantages from established reputations, technology, and industry best practices, they and their home countries believe the playing field is no longer level. Indeed, China’s growing non-commercially motivated OFDI has the potential to distort global markets, leading to long-term loss of productivity and efficiency. Second, Chinese official aid to unsavory governments in order to lubricate OFDI contracts raises governance and humanitarian concerns and, therefore, hackles among developed country governments. China’s general willingness to befriend rogue or distasteful governments, — funding projects in countries such as Sudan, Iran, Venezuela, and Niger — creates tension with the developed world. Some of this tension may actually stem from the fact that the exercise of realpolitik by China puts it on top, and outmaneuvers western firms that have had their activities circumscribed in such countries due to sanctions, reputational or political risk. Finally, Chinese SOEs’ attempt to acquire ownership or assets of large developed country MNEs operating under market conditions has unnerved some developed country governments that fear losing market access to strategic resources, as well as their technological and advanced practices edge. Better Capitalists Than We’ll Ever Be If it weren’t for the West’s preoccupation with achieving a higher moral standard and adherence to international standards of acceptable behavior, China would not have been as successful as it has been in securing OFDI in the developing and emerging world to the degree that it has. China is in the process of beating the West at its own game – identifying what is sees as the West’s ‘weakness’ on the grand chess board and filling in the gaps left behind. If the West played the game the same way, China’s investment ambitions would be restricted or at least more expensive. But the West is not going to change its stripes any more than China will be changing its own. In some respects, China is outmaneuvering the west in the “great game” that the west invented. China is quickly learning the benefits of establishing more equitable and genuinely mutually beneficial bilateral economic relationships. Soon enough it will master that game, too. Once that occurs, China will truly be able to demonstrate why this is the Chinese century. Until then, the developing world will have to figure out a way to encourage China to leave something other than a football stadium behind.

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Dave Johnson: It’s The Lack Of Demand, Stupid!

October 7, 2010

In the 1992 campaign the Clinton War Room had a famous sign that read, “It’s the economy, stupid!” This meant that the central theme of the campaign was the economy. President Obama’s downturn-fighting war room needs a sign, too. The sign should read, “It’s the demand, stupid.” And what that means is: businesses want customers, not tax cuts. The stimulus was supposed to help make up for the lack of demand in the economy caused by Bush’s financial crisis. The stimulus worked, but was not enough. And tomorrow’s job numbers are likely to reflect that. Here are some (slightly out of date, new numbers come out tomorrow) job charts that show the effect of the stimulus as it kicked in, and now as it fades. First, the overall jobs picture: The manufacturing jobs picture: The lesson from these charts is obvious, and right in front of your face : The stimulus worked, but was not enough. People need jobs, not tax cuts. Jobs create demand and demand creates jobs. Tax cuts just create the massive deficits and concentration of wealth at the top that kills demand and jobs as we are seeing now. When neither jobs nor demand is happening the government needs to step in and create jobs to get things moving, as well as just to keep people employed so they can get by. At a time when our economic competitiveness is hampered by an aging infrastructure that has to be fixed up sooner or later anyway, combined with the ability of the government to borrow money at record-low interests rates, it seems obvious that government should be directly employing people to modernize our infrastructure. Here is a chart of the “output gap.” That big dipper at the top right is the current Bush-caused gap. Government needs to step in and fill that gap by creating demand. We need fiscal stimulus. The stimulus worked, but was not enough. Businesses Want Customers Not Tax Cuts Businesses want customers. Hand a businessperson a check and that businessperson will smile and say, “Thank you!” But the businessperson will not hire a single person more than is needed to meet demand. That check is going in the bank. If it is a tax cut, it is going in the bank. If it is a direct payment it is going in the bank. “Thank you,” bank. There is no other path that money will take except, “Thank you,” bank . But a businessperson with customers coming through the door will do whatever it takes to make sure there are enough employees to serve those customers . Businesspeople understand opportunity. A businessperson with an overdrawn bank account will hire employees to meet demand, and will find a way to get the money to pay for it . He or she might sell a car, run up the credit cards or even pawn jewelry or sell the first-born, but the employee will be hired because customers are coming in the door. (I know this, I’ve been there.) Economist Joseph Stiglitz spoke up on Tuesday about the Federal Reserve’s loose monetary policies, which are intended to help banks, and get businesses to borrow and expand, “The irony is that the Fed is creating all this liquidity with the hope that it will revive the American economy,” Stiglitz said. “It’s doing nothing for the American economy, but it’s causing chaos over the rest of the world. It’s a very strange policy that they are pursuing.” [. . .] But additional monetary stimulus will “clearly” not solve the problems caused by lack of global aggregate demand, Stiglitz said. “Lowering the interest rates may help a little bit, but that’s much too weak to address the problems facing the United States and Europe,” Stiglitz said. “We need fiscal stimulus.” What he is saying there is that making it easy to borrow is not creating jobs or demand. We need “fiscal stimulus” which is government directly stimulating demand, which is what makes businesses hire. So, once again, the answer is so clear and obvious that it is exactly the kind of thing that the elites in DC will miss: The stimulus worked, but was not enough. This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture as part of the Making It In America project. I am a Fellow with CAF. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary .

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Europe Ahead: Manufacturing sector conditions unchanged during September

October 1, 2010

Europe Ahead: Manufacturing sector conditions unchanged during September

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European Manufacturing Slows Down, Citing Cool Global Demand

October 1, 2010

European Manufacturing Slows Down, Citing Cool Global Demand

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Steve Chalgren Joins Arena Solutions as Vice President of Product Management and Strategy

September 30, 2010

Chalgren Brings More Than 20 Years in Strategy, Leadership and Operational Roles for Product Lifecycle Management (PLM), Software and Manufacturing Companies

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A CONVENIENT TRUTH: Gearing Up For Climate Change Could Supercharge The Job Market

September 28, 2010

(This is Idea No. 5 in Huffington Post’s ongoing America Needs Jobs series; see the introduction .) Could one major crisis be solved…. by solving another? If we’re talking about the nation’s desperately poor job market on the one hand, and the dire threat of climate change on the other, then the answer is: Quite possibly, yes. The solution to both would be an enormous investment in green technology and green jobs — creating a robust “clean energy economy” while reducing carbon emissions; putting millions of Americans back to work while increasing our energy independence; rebuilding our manufacturing base while saving consumers money on their energy bills; and saving the planet. It certainly sounds a heck of a lot cheerier than the alternative. And it makes sense that to genuinely restart the American jobs engine, you’re going to need something really big. Here’s University of Texas economist James Galbraith putting today’s need in historical perspective: The illusion of stimulus was that the economy would “return to normal” with a little “fiscal boost.” The reality is that having exhausted (however imperfectly) the 1940s agenda of middle-class housing, the 1950s highways agenda, the 1960s health-care agenda and the 1990s information-technology bubble, the economy needs a new strategic direction. The clear and pressing priorities are energy and climate change. To address these challenges is a grand task, requiring decades of research, careful planning and many investments, if we are to pass on a livable planet and a decent living standard. Institutionally it will require new lending agencies to assure that the funds needed are available over the long term. And the work can provide jobs for millions, for many years. In a major report issued last year, John Podesta and colleagues at the Center for American Progress described the characteristics of a clean energy economy . Among its attractive qualities, it promises to revive the American middle class: Solving global warming means investment. Retooling the energy systems that fuel our economy will involve rebuilding our nation’s infrastructure. We will create millions of middle-class jobs along the way, revitalize our manufacturing sector, increase American competitiveness, reduce our dependence on oil, and boost technological innovation. These investments in the foundation of our economy can also provide an opportunity for more broadly shared prosperity through better training, stronger local economies, and new career ladders into the middle class. Reducing greenhouse gas pollution is critical to solving global warming, but it is only one part of the work ahead. Building a robust economy that grows more vibrant as we move beyond the Carbon Age is the greater and more inspiring challenge. Famed venture capitalist John Doerr is an evangelist for clean energy and one of seven business leaders (also including Bill Gates and Jeff Immelt) who make up the American Energy Innovation Council (AEIC). That group is calling for “both robust, public investments in innovative energy technologies as well as policy reforms to deploy these technologies on a large scale.” Here’s how Doerr explains the group’s thinking : Well, today, we are in a worldwide race for the next great global industry. And I believe, and my partners believe, the president and members of Congress believe that is the new clean-energy technologies…. [I]f you look at the top 30 companies around the world in new clean energy — that’s the top 10 in wind, the top 10 in solar, and the top 10 in advanced batteries, the sort that would power our electric vehicles — only four of those 30 are American companies. If I compare that to the Internet, it’s — it’s as if, gosh, Microsoft and Apple and Google and Intel and Yahoo! were all companies headquartered in Europe or Asia, and only Amazon was a company here in the United States. So, we have got to make choices, make decisions now about whether we want to be making our own energy future with American jobs, or if we want to be buying that future from China and other countries around the world. There are many different paths to a green jobs future. The AEIC’s plan, for instance, calls for $16 billion in annual federal government investment in clean energy innovation. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Chairman Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) is still pushing for a “Green Bank,” at a cost of $10 billion a year, that would facilitate “significant and sustained investment” in new clean-energy technologies. (Bingaman, however, will be lucky if he can win passage of his bipartisan Renewable Energy Standard bill , written with Republican Senator Sam Brownback of Kansas, which would require utilities to get 15 percent of their power from renewable energy sources like wind and solar by 2021.) So what may be the last, best hope for major federal clean-energy investment is a retooled green bank proposal that former FCC chairman Reed Hundt is pushing . Bowing to the political realities — that, as he puts it, “Congress won’t appropriate any money now for any cause, no matter how worthy” and that unemployment is a more urgent priority than clean energy — Hundt is advocating a nonprofit Energy Independence Trust (EIT) that he bills as a massive jobs generator, and that he says would not require appropriations because it would just be borrowing money from the Treasury. At the core of the proposal is Hundt’s embrace of one of the many facts that deficit hawks try to ignore: that despite concerns that high deficits will force the U.S. to increase interest rates, the Treasury is currently able to borrow money — i.e. sell Treasury bills — at stunningly low rates . “You want to take the astoundingly low interest rates that the government has to pay to borrow money, and you want to transfer that to the degree possible to productive, revenue-producing businesses,” Hundt told HuffPost. “There’s a huge unmet need for productive new investment, but the only way to really prime the pump is to put in really cheap capital.” The investments Hundt is talking about, however, need to generate returns. “You want to build toll roads, not roads; dams that produce electricity, where you get paid back after a long period of time; electric transmission lines, where the revenue comes in from carrying the electricity; wind farms, where the revenue comes in from selling the electricity.” The Treasury would sell securities at very low interest, lend the money at cost to the EIT, and the EIT would then turn around and lend it to private investors. Hundt calls this “really, really, low, wonderfully low, cheap capital for investors who will build these clean energy systems.” And everyone would eventually get paid back. “It’s really pretty simple. In fact, it’s what China does,” Hundt said. “And in fact China has used low-cost lending to stimulate about twice as much clean energy investing as we have in the United States.” But how many jobs would this create? “Roughly speaking, $1 billion in capital is 10,000 direct jobs and about 50,000 indirect jobs,” Hundt said. “So one way to do it is say: How many jobs to you want? “So if you tell me you want a million jobs, then I need $100 billion of investment, which means that I need probably about $30 billion of cheap capital, because the rest would come from other forms of capital.” Meanwhile, that $100 billlion would buy an awful lot of clean power. “Everyone knows that we need to build a clean energy system to replace a dirty energy system,” Hundt said. The plan also allows for private industry and the states to be the decisionmakers. “I don’t believe that we need some kind of federal, national comprehensive, Washington-dictated solution. Electricity is a very local business,” Hundt said. “But I do believe if we said to all the states and all the businesses: Here’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for very cheap capital… then we would be opening the door to a variety of technological solutions that would be selected on the local level…. “If you want to rebuild the country, this is a golden opportunity.” ************************* NEXT IN THE AMERICA NEEDS JOBS SERIES: A Shorter Work Week (Want to learn more about the series? Read the overview . Got an idea you think we may have overlooked? Email froomkin@huffingtonpost.com . ) ************************* Dan Froomkin is senior Washington correspondent for the Huffington Post. You can send him an e-mail , bookmark his page ; subscribe to RSS feed , follow him on Twitter , friend him on Facebook , and/or become a fan and get e-mail alerts when he writes.

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Dave Johnson: Consensus Grows: Confront China On Trade

September 27, 2010

In the day-to-day news about trade problems with China the bigger picture can get lost. America is giving up its competitive position in industries of the present and future and it is costing us. Even the people you would think would defend “free trade” are coming to understand that America is losing its vital ability to invent, keep and create industries and jobs and to keep a modern economy humming. Robert J Samuelson has a significant op-ed today in the Washington Post, The makings of a trade war with China in which he says we need to confront China’s illegal trade manipulations. You should read the whole thing but here are excerpts, … Confronting China’s export subsidies risks a similar tit-for-tat cycle at a time when the global economic recovery is weak. This is a risk, unfortunately, we need to take. … The trouble is that China has never genuinely accepted the basic rules governing the world economy. China follows those rules when they suit its interests and rejects, modifies or ignores them when they don’t. … China’s worst abuse involves its undervalued currency and its promotion of export-led economic growth. Samuelson concludes, The collision is between two concepts of the world order. As the old order’s main architect and guardian, the United States faces a dreadful choice: resist Chinese ambitions and risk a trade war in which everyone loses; or do nothing and let China remake the trading system. The first would be dangerous; the second, potentially disastrous. It’s not just Samuelson concluding that we need to confront China’s cheating on trade. Many others have been weighing in that we are losing too much and have to take steps. For example, in July Andy Grove, Intel’s influential former CEO published a very important opinion piece on a similar topic, How to Make an American Job Before It’s Too Late . Grove wrote that we are not just losing jobs to China, we are losing the “chain of experience” that enables new companies and industries to form and to create new jobs and argues for a national economic strategy to preserve our manufacturing and technology base. (These are excerpts but Grove’s entire piece is an absolute must-read.) You could say, as many do, that shipping jobs overseas is no big deal because the high-value work — and much of the profits — remain in the U.S. That may well be so. But what kind of a society are we going to have if it consists of highly paid people doing high-value-added work — and masses of unemployed? …evidence stares at us from the performance of several Asian countries in the past few decades. These countries seem to understand that job creation must be the No. 1 objective of state economic policy. The government plays a strategic role in setting the priorities and arraying the forces and organization necessary to achieve this goal. Grove also says that we need to fix this and fix the unemployment problem for other reasons as well, Unemployment is corrosive. If what I’m suggesting sounds protectionist, so be it. One after another our business leaders and economists are realizing that the “free trade” ideology has not worked out very well for us. We were told by the “experts” that moving our factories out of the country was a good idea, that new jobs would replace those lost. They didn’t. We were told that we don’t need or want a national strategy to be competitive in the world because an invisible hand would guide us. It didn’t. We were told that trade “partners” would reciprocate by buying from us equally. They didn’t. We were told that we would invent new industries to replace ones we lost. We did, but the new industries moved or are moving out of the country, too. Now that we are in the midst of the resulting crisis even the “experts” are realizing that trade needs to be a two-way street for it to work, and it hasn’t been. “Free trade” was supposed to be a panacea, bringing us a prosperous future. The reality was different. A few corporate leaders (the ones who promoted these ideas) have gotten really, really rich at the expense of the rest of us (and that includes other corporations and corporate leaders). Now that the beneficiaries of the “free trade’ bamboozlement are off to their private islands in their private jets or private yachts the rest of us are looking around at the devastation of our economy and standard of living, wondering what to do and finally becoming aware that rigid ideologies and their enforcers have kept us from looking for practical solutions that actually work for all of us as a country and community. So finally from the depth of the resulting crisis a rational national discussion may be beginning , one in which people on the “free trade’ side are not able to just shut down different opinions by shouting “protectionist” or other slogans . As this discussion gets underway here are three principles to help guide us: 1) Let’s drop ideological preconceptions and look at what has worked in history and what is working for other countries today. Science is supposed to DEscribe, but economics has too often been about “if only people would do such-and-such, so-and-so would result.” That is PREscribing and is not science. 2) We have to talk about how we handle mercantilist nations like China who are not playing by the trade rules and what we, together as a nation, can do about it. Let’s also talk about and multinational reactions to the mercantilists. We can join with countries interested in lifting each other with fair trade, interested in trade models that help us mutually lift each other, and together take on those who want it all for themselves. 3) Ultimately we can’t all export our way out of this mess. And ultimately we can’t return to unsustainable old economic models that have failed us over and over. We can’t continue with a few taking as much as they can get at the expense of the rest of us. As machines and technology solve more of our problems and do more of our work our overpopulated, undereducated world has to come to grips with equitable models for who gets what for what and how to take care of our planet and each other. That is the only thing that will work in the long run. This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture as part of the Making It In America project. I am a Fellow with CAF. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary .

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400 Richest Americans Got Richer This Year, As Most Americans’ Net Worth Tanked: Forbes

September 23, 2010

The richest Americans got even richer this year, according to the new Forbes 400 list, even as the country’s total net worth tanked during the second quarter. The top 400, all of whom are worth at least $1 billion, saw their combined wealth increase 8 percent this year, to the dizzying total of $1.37 trillion, according to analysis from CNN . Meanwhile, according to data released last week by the Federal Reserve, the net worth of American households and non-profits in the second quarter of this year plunged 2.8 percent, or $1.52 trillion, from the previous quarter, to settle at $53.5 trillion. This means the 400 richest people in America account for about 2.6 percent of the nation’s private wealth. Topping the list — again — is Bill Gates , at $54 billion, up from $50 billion last year. In second is Warren Buffett, the so-called Oracle of Omaha who Thursday said it’s “common sense” that “we’re still in a recession,” with $45 billion. Members of the Walton family (of Walmart fame) snagged spots four, seven, eight and nine. New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, with $18 billion, came in 10th. Investor George Soros, who last week called the nation’s economy “blah,” came in 14th with $14.2 billion. Charles and David Koch, the manufacturing and energy titans and Tea Party movement bankrollers, profiled by Jane Mayer in The New Yorker last month, tied for fifth place with $21.5 billion apiece. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, in 35th place with $6.9 billion, is no longer the youngest billionaire on the list — his colleagues at Facebook, Dustin Moskovitz (in 290th with $1.4 billion) and Eduardo Saverin (in 356th with $1.15 billion) have joined him. Moskovitz is eight days younger than Zuckerberg. Both are 26. In a video interview with Forbes , Buffett said he is “sort of wired for capital allocation” and that he loves his profession so much that “I would be doing what I do now, and I would have done it in the past, if the payoff had been in seashells or shark’s teeth or anything else.” Buffett was having a conversation with rapper Jay-Z, who didn’t make the billionaires list, and who offered insights into his own rise to glory: “We were into a lot of street things,” he said. “It just so happened I had a talent to make music.”

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  Europe Ahead: PMI Manufacturing and Services Day in Euro Zone 

September 23, 2010
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Brandon Edwards: It’s Time to Make R&D Tax Credit Permanent, Assure U.S. Remains World’s Top Innovator

September 8, 2010

This year China became the world’s second-largest economy. Experts are currently arguing over when China will overtake the United States as the world’s largest. Most predictions place that event between 2020 and 2027. The good news has been that the manufacturing juggernaut our own consumer markets largely created still depends on us for the development of new products, processes and technology. According to recent studies, however, this should not be taken for granted. We now live in a truly global economy where it is not unusual to work alongside people in other countries. Labor off-shoring has moved beyond manufacturing and customer service support, extending to value-added research and development activities. This means we are not losing jobs just for our unskilled labor force, but for our higher-paid, more-educated workforce as well. The R&D tax credit is a highly effective targeted tax incentive that helps drive the global competitive edge that we need. President Obama is set today in Cleveland to again propose making the research credit permanent along with increasing its value, costing approximately $100 billion over the next 10 years (see fact sheet provided on the White House Web site). Although the program has been around for 30 years and enjoys bi-partisan legislative support, it has yet to be made permanent. The R&D credit has expired numerous times before being retroactively renewed. It has even lapsed for one year. The 2010 tax credit, widely expected to be renewed, has yet to be passed by Congress. The uncertainty of the credit restricts new projects, limits opportunities and curtails high-value job growth. The other problem is that our R&D tax incentive lags behind other countries. According to a report by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, a non-partisan think tank, we are now ranked number 17 out of the top 30 OECD countries. That’s right. You will find us below China, India, Canada, Mexico, Japan, Korea, Spain, France and others. (We were No. 1 as recently as the 1990s.) Besides contributing to global competitiveness, the return on investment is substantial. The R&D credit currently costs an estimated $7 billion a year, which is very little given its impact on the economy. A permanent credit coupled with just a 25 percent increase could boost real GDP by $206.3 billion, generate 270,000 manufacturing jobs and raise total employment by 510,000 within a decade, according to a 2010 report by the Milken Institute. One of the great things about the R&D credit is that it does not discriminate. Companies of all sizes, from small businesses to Fortune 500, qualify. A research study performed by The Tax Credit Company of IRS data shows that although large corporations claim the majority of credits, the relative impact on small to mid-size businesses as a share of their total assets is significantly greater. Bottom line: Strengthening the R&D credit is something all sides agree on. It is a priority for our economic future at one of the most uncertain times in our history. It’s time to put questions about the future availability of the credit to rest so that companies will stop discounting its value, take full advantage of it as a key driver of innovation and assure that the U.S. remains the world’s leader in research and development. Brandon Edwards is president of The Tax Credit Company, which represents Fortune 500 companies, and small and midsize companies in maximizing the value of tax incentive programs. More about the R&D Credit: R&D Tax Credit Update: http://www.researchcreditupdate.com R&D Credit Coalition: http://www.investinamericasfuture.org/ IRS: http://www.irs.gov/businesses/article/0,,id=101382,00.html

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Angela Haines: Commutes, Cats and Cakes: Enterprising Ideas!

September 3, 2010

After a couple of decades as a computer programmer who commuted every morning an hour across the Potomac to work in Maryland, Carol Covin began to notice as she stalled in traffic that there were as many cars driving in the opposite direction each morning towards Virginia. Why commute, she wondered? If there were good jobs closer to home, she wanted to find them. Her search led her to a publishing career. Her first edition of The Computer Professional’s Job Guide for the Washington, DC Area sold out its 5000 copy print run in four months. Her next step was to learn the publishing business so she could expand her guide geographically. Over the next few years Carol wrote computer jobs guides for New England, the Midwest, the Southeast and eventually a second updated edition for the Washington area. Then she published a national edition, 20 Minutes from Home: The Best Computer Jobs in America , under her own imprint, Twenty Minutes Press. Her next foray followed her 50th birthday. “I decided to create a 50-year plan with a task for each decade. I needed to think about other things I could do with my life outside of computers.” At the top of her list was to help find a cure for cancer. But that motivation was not as grandiose as it sounds. One of her friends with inoperable stomach cancer had stumbled upon an alternative therapy developed by a scientist in the late 1970s that he claimed had shrunk his tumor. Wondering if that protocol — a mineral salt currently sold over the counter — had legs, Carol spent a couple of years learning everything she could on the therapy, including experiences of other patients. By 2008, she felt confident enough to create Sky Blue Pharmaceuticals, LLC with the participation of a pediatric oncologist with FDA experience to advise her on regulatory matters. Currently, Sky Blue is seeking funds and approval necessary to proceed with clinical trials. And Carol still has a couple of years left to reach this decade’s goal — before going on to planting forests in desert countries! Dr. Phyllis Scalletar also wanted a new focus. After a couple of decades as a manager in several government agencies, including a stint as chief operating officer for the U.S. Chemical Safety Board, she turned to her cat for a business idea. “As you know, cats are picky eaters and it killed me to serve my cat those awful dried pellets they call cat food. So I decided to try developing cat sauces.” Through the Department of Food Sciences at a local university, she isolated a byproduct from the extraction of oil from algae, in the former of essential biomeal for her sauces, to jazz up the dried pellets. “I know a lot of people want to solve the world’s problems, but I just wanted to create more palatable cat food.” But her Waterloo arose in the manufacturing process: every time she received a shipment of the biomeal, it varied in color, consistency and composition. Eventually she pulled the plug on that business, but not before learning “never to rely on another party for your product’s key components; you can outsource a lot, but you have to keep control of your key ingredient.” Now what she plans to do is to return to her roots in chemical safety and hazardous materials. With increasing public interest in workplace safety and environmental hazards, she sees new opportunities arising out of her former experience. For Jennifer Whitlock, the leap was, well, sky high! With advanced degrees in aeronautical and astronautical engineering from Stanford, Jen signed on as a senior engineer scientist with Boeing to design jet aircrafts. For her work as the chief designer of the Blended Wing-Body (BWB) project, a passenger aircraft with 100 -800 seats with a military capacity to be a tanker, freighter, bomber, and combat support vehicle, she was awarded two patents. Then her personal life dictated a move. Her husband, a rocket scientist, lost his job and moved back home to the Midwest to work for Rolls Royce in Indiana, close to their families in Illinois. By then Jennifer had two children and wanted a more flexible schedule. So to satisfy “a creative artistic instinct” she moved from designing jets to designing cakes and cookies, starting a business called Posh-Pastries in 2009. Her most recent accolade: first place and grand sweepstakes prize for cakes and cookies at the 2010 Indiana State Fair. Any crossover benefits from her engineering days? “Sure,” Jen says, “at Boeing I had to learn all about business, the importance of branding and selling your designs to top management, how to manage expenses. All that helps because I realize that baking a pretty cake doesn’t mean you can run a business.” Next step: well no plans for a moonshot this time, but maybe moon cakes, for which, Jen admits, she might use her aircraft drafting tools to decorate. What these entrepreneurs have in common are a couple of traits: flexibility and creativity. And business ideas often start very close to home. Please share where your ideas come from. Seems like they can crop up anywhere, even when you’re stuck in traffic!

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Olin Urged To Keep Jobs In Illinois

August 25, 2010

EAST ALTON, Ill. — Two federal lawmakers urged Olin Corp. on Wednesday to reconsider its possible plans to move 1,000 jobs from its ammunition-making operation in Illinois to Mississippi, cautioning the company to be mindful of their efforts in Washington to steer business in its direction. Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin and Rep. Jerry Costello, in a letter to Olin President and CEO Joseph Rupp, pressed for a meeting to discuss the company’s plans to shift its Winchester ammunition division’s Centerfire production from East Alton, a village 20 miles northeast of St. Louis, to Oxford, Miss. The legislators suggested they deserved the courtesy, saying they worked hard on Capitol Hill to help Olin get sizable government contracts. Those deals included supplying Winchester munitions to the Army and a $54 million deal the lawmakers called “the largest ammunition contract in the history of federal law enforcement,” the letter said. “Whenever Winchester needed help in Washington, we were quick to respond with good results,” Durbin and Costello wrote. “That is why the preliminary decision to close the facilities came as a surprise to us and local stakeholders, many of whom have been working with or for the company for decades.” The lawmakers questioned the need to relocate, insisting “the Winchester division appears to be far from struggling” in light of Olin’s recent announcement that the unit recently posted its second-best quarterly earnings in its history. During the latest April-through-June period, the company reported Winchester sales of $147.7 million, up $7 million over the same span last year. Clayton, Mo.-based Olin, which also makes specialty chemicals, announced the possible move earlier this month with little public elaboration, stunning Illinois lawmakers and the operation’s union-represented workers. Valerie Peters, a spokeswoman for Olin’s Winchester division, said Wednesday that no decision has been made as to when or if the division would move. She said talks were continuing between the company and “key stakeholders,” including union workers. She added that Olin would be willing to discuss the matter with Durbin and Costello. Durbin and Costello warned that moving the Centerfire line and the jobs could further erode the job scene in East Alton, home to about 7,000 residents, and the rest of Madison County, where unemployment already surpasses 10 percent. Word that the Centerfire jobs may be heading south prompted East Alton’s mayor, along with other elected and business leaders, to scramble to meet with state officials to pinpoint any assistance for Olin that would encourage the Winchester operation to stay put. It wouldn’t be the first time Olin moved jobs out of Illinois. Several years ago, the company shifted the manufacturing of its Rimfire line – the .22-caliber devices that propel power tools such as nail guns – to Mississippi, along with 150 jobs. The company claimed it was a cost-saving measure.

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