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(MENAFN) The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in Germany said that Porsche will recall around 1200 911 Carrera S sports cars due to potential fuel leaks, reported AP. The …

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Porsche to recall 1,200 911 Carrera S cars for fuel leaks

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(MENAFN) Iran’s National Carpet Center said that during the first 10 months of the current Iranian calendar year, the country’s exports of handmade carpets reached USD439 million, reported Tehran …

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Iran’s exports of handmade carpets reach USD439m in 10 months

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Iran’s exports of handmade carpets reach USD380m in 9 months

January 17, 2012

(MENAFN) Iran’s National Carpet Center said that in the first 9 months of the current calendar year, the country exported USD380 million worth of handmade carpets, reported Tehran Times. The …

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‘Jobs For Justice’ Rally Brings Thousands To National Mall

October 15, 2011

WASHINGTON — Thousands of Americans led by the Rev. Al Sharpton rallied Saturday against the backdrop of the Washington Monument, calling for easier job access and decrying the gulf between rich and poor before marching to the new Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial. The rally was intended to drum up support for President Barack Obama’s jobs plan, which died Tuesday in the U.S. Senate. But speakers used the platform for varied causes, including condemning state laws requiring voter identification at the polls and protesting the recent execution of Troy Davis, a Georgia man convicted of killing an off-duty police officer. Davis maintained his innocence until his death and attracted thousands of supporters worldwide even though courts repeatedly ruled there wasn’t enough evidence to exonerate him. Chanting for jobs and justice, many demonstrators carried banners for their labor unions and wore pins or T-shirts bearing King’s likeness. Obama is scheduled to speak Sunday at the dedication ceremony for the memorial, the first monument dedicated to a black leader on the National Mall. Sharpton, the featured speaker at the March on Washington for Jobs and Justice, blasted the Senate for its failure to pass Obama’s $450 billion jobs bill. The measure includes an extension of a payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits, as well as money to help local governments keep teachers and other workers on the job. Obama and Senate Democratic leaders plan to try to pass elements of the measure by breaking it into pieces. “If you can’t get the jobs bill done in the suites, then we will get the jobs bill done in the streets,” Sharpton said to cheers and applause. He told the crowd that King would have supported their cause “because he stood for those who were cast down and cast back.” King’s eldest son, Martin Luther King III, was also among the speakers. “Over 45 years ago, my father talked about a redistribution of wealth. In fact, that is probably why he was killed,” King said. “Because he said if America is going to survive responsibly, then it must have a redistribution of wealth.” Kathie Williams, a part-time administrator for the Howard County, Md., parks and recreation department. She’d like to find full-time work but has struggled to do so despite an active search. “No one has responded to me,” Williams said. Belinda Shade, 56, of Waldorf, Md., works as a special education school administrator but said the economy still makes her insecure. “Right now I have a job, but I don’t know what might happen tomorrow,” Shade said, later adding, “There are no jobs. People are really hurting. Everything is coming apart as a result.” District of Columbia Mayor Vincent Gray held a separate protest supporting greater autonomy for the district government – Congress must approve the local government’s budget – and joined in the larger gathering. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis and Randi Weingarten of the American Federation of Teachers were among the other speakers. Nonetheless, Sharpton said the rally was not intended as an overtly political statement or as part of the president’s re-election bid. “This is not about Obama,” he said. “This is about my mama.”

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Chinese industrial profit up 28.3% to USD438b

August 28, 2011

(MENAFN) China’s National Bureau of Statistics said that in 2011′s first seven months, the country’s industrial profit surged 28.3 percent to USD438 billion, reported Bloomberg. The agency added …

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Prtrofac eyes expansions worth USD4b to fund projects

August 24, 2011

(MENAFN) Petrofac’s chief executive, Ayman Asfari, stated that the company is planning to fund expansions in South East Asia and Africa worth USD4 billion, reported the National. The chief …

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Economists Prefer Cuts Over Taxes, Survey Finds

August 22, 2011

NEW YORK — The majority of economists surveyed by the National Association for Business Economics believe that the federal deficit should be reduced only or primarily through spending cuts. The survey out Monday found that 56 percent of the NABE members surveyed felt that way, while 37 percent said they favor equal parts spending cuts and tax increases. The remaining 7 percent believe it should be done only or mostly through tax increases. As for how to reduce the deficit, nearly 40 percent said the best way would be to contain Medicare and Medicaid costs. Nearly a quarter recommended overhauling the tax system and simplifying tax rates and exemptions. About 15 percent said the government should enact tough spending caps and cut discretionary spending. The latest survey by the NABE was conducted in the two weeks ending Aug. 2, the day that the Senate passed and President Obama signed legislation to cut spending by more than $2 trillion and raise the nation’s debt ceiling. The agreement managed to avert a potential default, but Standard & Poor’s downgraded U.S. credit from AAA to AA+, citing the political wrangling over the deal as a reason. According to the survey of 250 economists who are members of NABE, nearly 49 percent of those responding said the country’s fiscal policy should be more restrictive, while nearly 37 percent said they believe the government should do more to stimulate the economy. The remainder said fiscal policy should remain the same. At the same time, more than 70 percent of the people that responded said they expect U.S. fiscal policy to be more restrictive over the next two years. In the area of U.S. monetary policy, more than half of the economists surveyed said they thought it was “about right,” while over a third said it was “too stimulative.” Less than 6 percent said it was “too restrictive.” The rest did not know or didn’t give an opinion. The survey was taken before the Federal Reserve announcement that it expects to keep short-term interest rates at their current low levels into 2013. At the same time, the respondents were nearly evenly split on whether U.S. monetary policy will stay the same or be more restrictive in the future, with those options getting about 42 percent of responses each. Nearly 15 percent of those surveyed say they believe monetary policy will be more stimulative down the road.

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Oversight Committee Overlooking Ethics Rules?

June 17, 2011

WASHINGTON — Rep. Darrell Issa’s Oversight Committee may have violated House ethics rules by streaming a hearing Friday that included commercial advertising. The committee, holding a field hearing in North Charleston, S.C., on the National Labor Relations Board, apparently did not transport the gear it needed to stream the hearing with government resources. So it resorted to the commercial UStream site to feed the hearing, and hosted the feed on the official Oversight Committee homepage. But that comes with ads, which government watchdogs say is prohibited. And Chairman Issa (R-Calif.) knows it. “Members are prohibited from doing anything that has an implied commercial endorsement,” said Melanie Sloan, the head of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. When the Huffington Post clicked to watch the hearing, an ad for Verizon popped before the stream of the official proceedings would begin. As the hearing went on, ads served by Google for various services popped up, including one offering help with government bids and another aid getting Pell grants. Refreshing the page after a brief recess brought up an ad for United Healthcare. Also, the logo for UStream was carried across the top of the page for the entire hearing. See the Verizon ad below: “It’s an implied endorsement,” Sloan said. And she added that Issa should know better because she once pointed out to him that it was an issue when a web designer touted work done on Issa’s website. “He took care of it,” Sloan said. The committee did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but apparently decided to make use of the streaming service used by the local county government, perhaps saving money and effort on the part of the federal government. Sloan said expediency was not an adequate defense. “Maybe they just didn’t want to deal with the rules, but that’s not an excuse,” she said. Perhaps complicating the issue, at least one of the ads featured a company — Verizon — that has a history with the National Labor Relations Board, which ruled against the phone service provider in a noted 2007 case. Verizon’s president at the time, Denny Strigl, has since retired and recently become a vocal critic of the NLRB and the very topic that Issa was addressing, a recent ruling against Boeing. In that case, the NLRB alleges that Boeing started a production line in South Carolina as retaliation against unionized workers in Washington State who have gone on strike in the past.

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Commercial Real Estate Slowly Turning Around « Washington Bank …

June 4, 2011

Sales and leasing volumes in commercial real estate have turned a corner and are heading up, but because the past few years have been so difficult, the upturn barely feels like one. … That's a bit surprising, because the big-four national banks — Wells Fargo, Citibank, Chase, and Bank of America — are in a far better position to make loans. Not only are they sitting on piles of money, but because they've grown to the point where they're too big to fail, …

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N.C. Gov Issues Executive Order To Restore Unemployment Benefits

June 3, 2011

North Carolina Gov. Bev Perdue (D) issued an executive order Friday unilaterally reinstating unemployment insurance for 47,000 laid off North Carolinians. The benefits had stopped because of an impasse between Perdue and Republicans in the state legislature that has dragged on since April. “For weeks, I have been trying to work with the Republican legislative leaders to get them to do the right thing: send me a clean bill to extend the unemployment benefits for 47,000 North Carolinians who have lost their jobs,” Perdue said in a statement . “Instead, they have persistently attempted to use our unemployed workers as hostages by tying the extension of their benefits to my acceptance of budget bills that would inflict severe and unnecessary cuts to our schools and other essential programs.” Perdue continued: “Today, I am issuing an executive order extending federal unemployment benefits to these 47,000 North Carolinians. Republican leaders in the General Assembly have been unwilling to take the necessary steps to extend these benefits, and no doubt they will attempt to interfere with this action.” Indeed, Republicans suggested they might interfere. “If the Governor does, in fact, have the authority to do this, I’m shocked that it took seven weeks for her to figure it out,” State House Speaker Thom Tillis (R) said in a statement. “It’s probably more than a coincidence that she chose this action on the same day that we are approving a budget to fix this problem. We must hold the Constitution sacred –- we cannot allow a Governor to rule the state by decree.” A Perdue spokeswoman said the U.S. Department of Labor told the News & Record that the federal government had reviewed the order and agreed to release the money. The benefits lapsed because the state lost eligibility for the federal Extended Benefits program, which gives 20 weeks of benefits for long-term jobless who exhaust 79 weeks of combined state and federal benefits. The state lost its eligibility because its political leaders couldn’t agree on a bill to realign its eligibility “trigger” with a new federal standard, implemented to allow states to keep the Extended Benefits program, that took effect in December. It’s not unheard of for governors to modify their states’ Extended Benefits triggers by executive order, according to the National Employment Law Project, which specifically cited a 2009 order from Kentucky Gov. Steve Brashear (D) and a 2010 order by former Florida Gov. Charlie Crist (R). In April, Perdue vetoed a bill that would have preserved the benefits because statehouse Republicans attached conditions that the governor said would have resulted in massive state layoffs. Perdue strongly suggested she’d veto subsequent attempts. John Allison of Charlotte, N.C., who had followed the political process closely, had been disappointed by the lack of compromise. He didn’t know Perdue could reinstate the benefits herself. “Why didn’t she do this weeks ago?” he asked. Allison, an unemployed landscaping consultant whose predicament HuffPost previously covered , has been worried about making his rent since his benefits stopped in April. On Friday, he said he had $3 left.

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Restaurant Industry Outlook Remains Positive

June 2, 2011

Buoyed by positive same-store sales and solid optimism among restaurant operators for continued growth, the outlook for the restaurant industry remained positive in April. The National Restaurant Association’s Restaurant Performance Index (RPI) – a monthly composite index that tracks the health of and outlook for the U.S. restaurant industry – stood at 100.9 in April, essentially unchanged from a level of 101.0 in March. In addition, April represented…

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Dorie Clark: Five Ways to Make Your Team More Productive

June 1, 2011

You know the saying: If you want to get something done, ask a busy person. That applies — and then some — to Eric Schadt, an innovative scientist recently hailed by Esquire as “the biggest thinker in biology,” and who gained international fame for his work last fall in rapidly sequencing the cholera strain ravaging Haiti (he moved so fast, a mere four weeks after he received the sample, the New England Journal of Medicine published his results). And that’s not the only productivity feat for Schadt (whom I came to know because he’s related to my girlfriend). Last year alone, Schadt published 35 peer-reviewed scientific papers; he gives at least 40 speeches per year and is invited to present at hundreds more. So how does he do it? Here are Schadt’s five leadership and productivity tips. 1. Delegate relentlessly . There’s simply no way for one human being to devise, conduct and write up 35 simultaneous research projects. To maintain his output, Schadt relies on a talented team of scientists with whom he collaborates. His mantra? If someone else can do it, and he trusts them — delegate. 2. Be willing to place your bets . There are no guarantees in science. You could spend months on an experiment, only to see it fail. But you can’t choose your projects — or your hypotheses — timidly. Be a bold thinker, place your bets and be willing to change your mind if they don’t pan out. 3. Build a team of team players . Just like in basketball, a team of scientists doesn’t get very far if there are prima donnas hogging the spotlight. During the hiring process and when checking references, work hard to ensure you’re tapping people who believe in advancing the mission, not just their own careers. 4. Help your team advance . This is the counterpoint to #3 — you’ll never be able to retain even the most altruistic types if they don’t believe their career is moving forward. Look out for your best staffers and reward them with opportunities to publish, speak and grow their visibility and professional profile. 5. Sell the vision . Says Schadt, “Never tell someone to do something until you explain why it matters.” It’s easy to sell staffers on the value of eradicating disease and improving human health, of course, but it also applies to any business. Providing context ensures everyone feels like part of the team and understands that even unpleasant tasks advance the mission — whether it’s interns making photocopies (so journalists can have the press kits they need to write about the company’s new breakthrough) or frontline staff handling customer complaints (because solving a problem early could mean turning a loud adversary into a dedicated fan). What are your secrets for cultivating and leading a productive team? Dorie Clark is a strategy consultant who has worked with clients including Google, Yale University, and the National Park Service. Listen to her podcasts or follow her on Twitter .

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Maine Teen Labor Law A Boon To Businesses

June 1, 2011

WASHINGTON — Paul LePage, Maine’s Republican governor, signed into law Tuesday a watered-down version of a controversial bill that would have rolled back the state’s child labor standards. Although the most contentious elements had been struck by the time of its signing, the new law marks a small victory for two groups: Children who want to work more hours on school nights, and business owners who want more cheap labor. The law boosts the maximum amount of hours a 16- or 17-year-old can work during the school year from 20 to 24 hours per week. It also raises the per-day limit from four hours to six, and allows children to work until 10:15 p.m. on school nights. Although the law doesn’t affect wages, teen workers tend to earn significantly less than older workers. According to the most recent statistics from the Department of Labor , about 25 percent of teen workers made the minimum wage or less in 2010, compared with just 4 percent of workers age 25 and older. The much stronger original bill, sponsored by Sen. Debra Plowman (R-Hampden), would have removed all the hour restrictions on 17-year-old workers, as well as the summer work restrictions on 16-year-old workers. Plowman could not be reached for comment. According to her biography on the state legislature page, the state senator is a member of the National Association of Women Business Owners, and her family runs a garage-door installation business. Rep. Timothy Driscoll (D-Westbrook), a strong opponent of the bill, told The Huffington Post that the final law “did get softened up a bit, but it still wasn’t to my liking.” Driscoll said the focus for teens should be school, not work, and that the new law “exploits children.” Driscoll also said he never really believed the Republican line that the bill was aimed at giving youngsters more work experience, noting that his suspicions grew during a state labor committee hearing on the proposed bill back in March. “The only folks there supporting it were the folks in high-priced suits and shiny shoes,” Driscoll said. “There weren’t any children or parents there testifying in favor of it.” (The Maine legislature’s website does not feature video from past hearings.) Instead, as Driscoll recalls, there were a representative from the Maine Restaurant Association, a representative from the Maine Innkeepers Association and a stakeholder from a Maine amusement park called Funtown Splashtown USA. Driscoll pointed out that restaurants, inns and amusement parks tend to rely on low-priced teen labor and would have an interest in seeing children allowed to work more hours. Earlier this year, a bill was proposed in Maine that would have pushed the teen pay floor beneath the state minimum wage of $7.50 per hour, to a so-called training wage of $5.25 for the first 6 months of employment. That bill, titled ” An Act To Enhance Access to the Workplace for Minors ,” was voted down in committee. Similar proposals have been popping up in the last four years, according to Driscoll who’s been in the legislature since 2004. The lawmaker said he usually hears the same argument for relaxing teen labor regulations: Some kids are cut out for school, and some kids aren’t, so best to get the latter to work as soon as possible. “I’ve always pushed back on that,” said Driscoll. “What we should be doing is giving every kid a fair opportunity to get ahead and make sure they’re afforded an education.” “They’ll have the rest of their lives to work,” he added.

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Construction Writers Association Announces 2011-12 Board of Directors

June 1, 2011

CHICAGO, IL–(Marketwire – May 31, 2011) – The Construction Writers Association (CWA) announced its leadership team for 2011-12: Bill Wilson, president, editorial director of Roads & Bridges magazine, Arlington Heights, IL; Marc Ramsey, first vice president, communications manager for the American Subcontractors Association, Alexandria, VA; and Tina Grady Barbaccia, second vice president, executive editor of Better Roads magazine, Des Plaines, IL. Tracie Christie became immediate past president, associate director of awards and marketing for the National Asphalt Pavement Association, Lanham, MD.

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China Hikes Power Prices In Attempt To Counter Threatening Shortage

May 30, 2011

BEIJING (Jim Bai and Tom Miles) – China has raised power prices for industrial, commercial and agricultural users in some regions by about 3 percent in an attempt to ease what threatens to be the worse power shortage in seven years in the world’s second-largest economy. The power price rise, which excludes residential users, will add to inflationary pressures but revive profit margins at power producers. That should prompt an increase in electricity supplies from loss-making power plants that had failed to keep up with rising demand. Higher prices should also discourage excess power consumption. “This is obviously good for the power shortages and it was very much expected – the only way the problems can be solved is by adjusting prices,” said Lin Boqiang, director of the Center for Chinese Energy Economics Research. “The other problems – like the power grid or the transportation of coal – are long-term and can only be solved after several years. There was just no other way. This is clearly going to have some sort of impact on industry but the impact of actually having no power is much bigger. Most businesses will be more willing to accept higher prices than power cuts.” China looks set for the worst summer power shortages since at least 2004 as demand growth remains strong while coal-fired power plants, which generate 80 percent of national electricity output, have restricted production due to operating losses resulting from high coal costs. At the same time, hydropower has been hit by a drought in central China, including Hubei province, home of the Three Gorges Dam, the world’s biggest hydropower project. The government raised the prices that grid firms charge industrial consumers by 0.0167 yuan per kilowatt hour , Chinese state media said after a briefing by the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s top economic planning body. Lin said the price rises would add about 0.5 percentage points to inflation, but the impact would be much more if the shortages were allowed to continue unchecked. The increase, ranging from 0.004 yuan/kWh to 0.024 yuan/kwh in 15 Chinese provinces including Shanxi, Qinghai, Gansu, Jiangxi, Hainan, Shaanxi, Shandong, Hunan, Chongqing, Anhui, Hubei, Sichuan, Hebei and Guizhou. The price rise came earlier than some analysts had expected. Several had said China would first raise on-grid power tariffs, the prices at which power generating firms sell to grid operators, and then hike prices for end-users once inflationary pressure had subsided. “The move aims to ease power shortages, this will add to inflationary pressures but the impact will be limited and it will take some time for upstream price rises to trickle down to downstream,” said Wang Jun, an economist at CCIEE, a government think-tank. The increase was the first since November 2009 and follows on-grid tariff hikes in 12 provinces on April 10, with three more provinces following suit on June 1, the NDRC was quoted as saying. The average price rise offered to power producers was 0.02 yuan per kWh, slightly more than the hike for end-users. Jianguang Shen, chief economist at Mizuho in Hong Kong, said he expected the price of coal would jump in response to the price hike, wiping out the margin gain for power producers and adding to Chinese coal imports. To prevent that, the government would order state-owned coal producers to hold down their own prices, he said. The previous on-grid price hike had no significant impact on the power shortages because of a concomitant coal prices rise, said Want Wei, a senior analyst Guotai Junan Securities. “Coal imports could rise after the power rise hike as coal producers and trading companies are likely to raise coal prices, triggering more coal imports,” he said. “Every 0.01 yuan rise in power price could offset an increase of 50 yuan in coal prices.” China has already cut power supplies to some industrial users in eastern, southern and central regions as pent-up demand rebounded after local governments ordered power cuts in late 2010 for the purpose of achieving energy saving goals. In addition, power generating firms curbed their output levels because rising coal prices undermined their operating margin. The National Development and Reform Commission, China Electricity Council and some industry analysts have all warned of the possibility of worse shortfalls in summer when demand peaks. The State Grid of China, the country’s dominant power distributor, said it would cut supplies to more industrial users in summer to shortfalls expand. China’s five state-owned power generating groups lost more than 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) on their thermal power operations in the first four months of the year, an official with the council said on Tuesday. The five groups, parents of China Power International Development Ltd (2380.HK), Datang International Power Generation Co Ltd (0991.HK) (601991.SS), Huadian Power International Corp Ltd (1071.HK) (600027.SS) and Huaneng Power International Inc (0902.HK) (600011.SS), had racked up more than 60 billion yuan in losses in past three years, according to the State Electricity Regulatory Commission. (Additional reporting by Judy Hua, Kevin Yao and David Stanway; Editing by Ken Wills and Simon Webb) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Ian Fletcher: Why Johnny Can’t Innovate: The American Economy’s Most Surprising Deficit

May 28, 2011

I argued in a previous article why, despite America’s current obsession with government budget issues, the real key to bringing back our economy lies in a) fixing our trade deficit and b) restoring our capacity for innovation. Although the former problem has now grabbed significant public attention, most Americans seem to think that our national capacity for innovation is healthy and without problems. After all, we’re the home of Silicon Valley. So things must be going great, right? Unfortunately, no, and for the same reason that, as I explained elsewhere, our manufacturing sector isn’t healthy. While it’s true that there’s an enormous amount of innovation (and manufacturing) going on in this country, “enormous” is not, in and of itself, an adequate quantity. To figure out how much innovation (or manufacturing) is enough for America, the quantity must be measured against how much we need to maintain our living standard . And we are, in reality, falling short in both areas. As long as our manufacturing output is so small that we must run a trade deficit with foreign nations in order to satisfy our consumption desires, we aren’t manufacturing enough . As long as our innovation output is so small that American industry can’t keep pace with its foreign rivals and continues to inexorably surrender market share and technological superiority to them, we aren’t innovating enough. Yes, it’s nice that we have iPhones and other innovative American products. But for our economy to be truly healthy, we would have to be exhibiting that level of innovation in products across the board . Our cars would have to be as innovative as our iPhones. And our consumer electronics. And all the other by-no-means-low-tech products that increasingly aren’t even made in this country. Having a few superstar sectors in our economy simply isn’t enough to deliver the living standard that Americans want. To deliver this, we need an economy in which dozens of major metropolitan areas have the same sheen of prosperity, productivity, innovation and all-round economic sophistication that the San Francisco Bay Area has. That’s the vision to keep in your mind. Detroit as San Francisco. People forget how small Silicon Valley really is. According to the Labor Department, it only employs 225,000 people — in a U.S. economy with a labor force of 238 million . Unfortunately, the media in this country give so much excess attention to it — and the other fancy sectors of our economy, like Hollywood and Wall Street — that people mistakenly think it, and industries like it dominate the U.S. economy. Nice work if you can get it, but they don’t. What would it take to restore innovation to those sectors of the American economy that are deficient in it? The best analysis of this problem I know is by Gregory Tassey, the chief economist of the National Institute of Standards and Technologies, America’s only serious civilian industrial policy agency. In his book The Technology Imperative , and also in his essay , “Rationales and Mechanisms For Revitalizing U.S. Manufacturing R&D Strategies,” he argues that the key problem for U.S. innovation is what he calls the “valley of death” between pure science and commercialization. America remains strong (though in relative decline, compared to other nations) in pure science. We remain good at commercializing discoveries and inventions that can be sold for a profit. But we are weak at the vast area of research that falls between these two extremes. Before a new scientific discovery can reach fruition in actual products sold to customers, it must pass through many stages of research. And, crucially, much of this research cannot itself be turned to profit. But profiting from new discoveries is impossible unless this research is done. Because it is unprofitable, companies won’t, as a rule, engage in enough of this intermediate research. Therefore an economy that relies wholly upon private profit to finance innovation will fall short. This research isn’t academic science either, so don’t expect the professors to fill in. One way to look at this research is to call it useful but unpatentable ideas. Anybody who has ever talked to creative engineers, or patent lawyers, knows that a great many important ideas cannot be patented. Some are more discoveries than inventions. Others are too generic, or too easy to copy. Others consist simply in the painful process of trying and ruling out a hundred ways to implement some new fundamental principle in order to find the one or two ways that have a future. Other ideas are not the sort of things for which patents would be even relevant. In their case, one would ideally capture their value by means of proprietary technologies, first-mover advantage, or other commercial methods. But, for any of a dozen different reasons, one cannot. So if you do this research, somebody else can harvest the profits as easily as you can. The problem is a kind of “tragedy of the commons” applied to ideas. Historically, the only companies that engaged in this sort of research were very large companies with monopoly or quasi-monopoly power over their ultimate product markets: companies like the old AT&T with its Bell Labs, the old IBM with its Watson Laboratory, the old RCA with its Sarnoff Research Center, or the old Xerox with its Palo Alto Research Center. Because of their oligopolistic power, they were assured of a) capturing the value of whatever they discover, rather than having it swiped by a competitor, and b) bringing in enough money, over a long-enough time frame, to pay for expensive laboratories that may take years to produce results. There are still a few companies like this around, but not nearly enough to bridge the valley of death to the extent we need. So government has a legitimate role. This fact, of course, drives laissez-faire ideologues crazy. But it was recognized as far back as founding father Alexander Hamilton, whose Report on Manufactures , submitted to Congress in 1791, was partly about this very topic. (What constitutes high technology changes over time, but technological innovation has been the key to economic growth since the dawn of the industrial revolution.) During the Cold War, hundreds of billions of dollars, from the jet plane to the Internet, went into this sort of research. But because it was justified in terms of national security, not industrial innovation per se , we never really reached a solid understanding of what we was doing. So we never properly institutionalized it as a policy with an economic purpose. As a result, our efforts today in this area are pathetically small. For example, the Federal government’s Manufacturing Extension Partnership maintains a network of centers in every state designed to help American manufacturers adopt innovative technologies. One evaluation found that it generated $1.3 billion a year in cost savings for manufacturers and $6.25 billion in increased or retained sales — all for an annual federal outlay of only $89 million. A single Boeing 747 costs four times that. Another good but underfunded program is the Technology Innovation Program . An audit by the respected National Academy of Sciences vindicated its claim to generate economic benefits far exceeding its cost. One single $5.5 million grant, for example, seeded development of the small disk drive industry, which enabled creation of the iPod, the iPhone, TiVo and the Xbox. TIP’s 2012 projected budget? $75 million. Our rivals are far ahead of us in this game. Germany, where factory wages are now higher, and unemployment lower, than here, spends roughly two billion dollars a year on its Fraunhofer Gesellschaft . They even have a substantial presence in this country, to harvest useful American ideas for commercialization in Germany! To get our economy back on track, we need to stop dreaming that innovation is purely a self-financing private-sector game and start paying for the innovation we need. Either that, or we’re not going to get the economy we want.

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Video: Christine Owens Says U.S. Jobs Market Is in `Deep Hole’

May 27, 2011

May 27 (Bloomberg) — Christine Owens, executive director of the National Employment Law Project, talks about the state of the U.S. jobs market and demographic hit hardest by tighter labor environment. Owens speaks with Mark Crumpton on Bloomberg Television’s “Bottom Line.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Nuke Plant In ‘Tornado Alley’ Not Fully Twister-Proof

May 27, 2011

WASHINGTON — The closest nuclear power plant to tornado-ravaged Joplin, Mo., was singled out weeks before the storm for being vulnerable to twisters. Inspections triggered by Japan’s nuclear crisis found that some emergency equipment and storage sites at the Wolf Creek nuclear plant in southeastern Kansas might not survive a tornado. Specifically, plant operators and federal inspectors said Wolf Creek did not secure equipment and vehicles needed to fight fires, retrieve fuel for emergency generators and resupply water to keep nuclear fuel cool as it’s being moved. Despite these findings, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission concluded that the plant met requirements put in place after the Sept. 11 attacks that are designed to keep the nuclear fuel cool and containment structures intact during an emergency. Wolf Creek Nuclear Operating Corp., which runs the facility about 150 miles northwest of Joplin, said it would take action to correct the problems. “The issues affected only one of several (emergency) procedures, so we continue to conclude Wolf Creek meets requirements, the same conclusion we’ve reached for every U.S. plant,” said Scott Burnell, a NRC spokesman. Wolf Creek, until recently, was one of three nuclear plants placed on a federal watch list in March for safety-related issues. David Lochbaum, a former nuclear plant engineer who now works on nuclear safety for the advocacy group Union of Concerned Scientists, said the equipment that a tornado could disable is the “backup of backups,” but that potential should raise concern nonetheless. “It’s kind of nuclear safety 101,” Lochbaum said. “It’s kind of stupid for it to be there, where it could help with a tornado, and a tornado takes it out.” Already this year, tornadoes have knocked out power to nuclear power plants in Alabama and Virginia, exposing vulnerabilities. At Browns Ferry in Alabama, storms disabled sirens, meaning that police and emergency personnel would have had to use telephones and loudspeakers in a crisis. At the Surry Power Station in Virginia, documents obtained by The Associated Press show that a tornado badly damaged a fuel tanker used to refuel a backup generator. Those instances, along with the situation at Wolf Creek, highlight a larger problem at the nation’s 104 nuclear reactors: While reactors and safety systems are designed to withstand a worst-case earthquake, flood, or tornado, that doesn’t necessarily mean all emergency equipment or the buildings that house such equipment are disaster proof. Wolf Creek’s location in Tornado Alley means that it was designed to handle the maximum tornadoes possible for the United States, with wind speeds up to 360 miles per hour and a maximum rotational speed of 290 miles per hour. But its fire truck is parked in a sheet-metal building “not protected from seismic or severe weather events,” according to the NRC inspection conducted after the Japanese disaster. Jenny Hageman, a spokeswoman for the plant, said there are other options besides on-site equipment for dealing with fires. “We are absolutely protected from a tornado,” Hageman said. “Is everything protected from a tornado on this job site? No. But we protect the critical elements.” The NRC’s post-Japan inspections found numerous other instances where U.S. nuclear plants kept equipment needed to fight fires or to cope with a loss of electrical power in places that a flood could overwhelm or an earthquake could damage. What sets Wolf Creek apart is that it is at much greater risk of being struck by a tornado than other plants are from natural disasters. Since 1985, when the Wolf Creek plant came on line, six tornadoes have touched down in Coffey County, where the plane is located, according to the National Climatic Data Center. All of those twisters were minor, and caused no injuries or deaths. Over that same time period, the National Weather Service issued 23 tornado warnings in the county. “Before Joplin, we had a tornado in the county next to us that ripped up the city of Redding,” said Coffey County emergency management coordinator Russel Stukey. Stukey expressed skepticism about the NRC’s findings, but acknowledged that “a nuclear plant in Kansas should be prepared for a tornado. I wouldn’t go as far to say Wolf Creek is not.” Despite the close calls, including the recent series of deadly tornadoes in the South and Midwest, a twister never has struck Wolf Creek, Stukey said. NRC records show that those nuclear plants hit by a tornado have emerged largely unscathed: _In June 2010, a tornado ripped off siding off a building housing emergency equipment and knocked out one of two power sources at the Fermi nuclear plant in Michigan. An alert was declared, and the plant was stabilized. _Tornadoes struck the Quad Cities nuclear power plant in northwestern Illinois in 1990 and 1996. In 1990, the plant’s security fence was damaged and the roof of one building blew onto a duct that connects the radioactive waste processing area to a venting stack. No radioactive gas was released. Six years later, a tornado damaged one of the unit’s secondary containment structures, leading to an alert and shutdown. _In 1998, a tornado hit the Davis-Besse plant in Ohio, causing significant damage to electrical distribution systems, sirens and other “unfortified” structures, according to the NRC. There were no adverse effects to public health and safety. Similar problems occurred more recently at nuclear power plants in Virginia and Alabama in the path of tornadoes. After the twister at the Surry plant damaged a tanker truck used to fuel a backup generator, state officials were unsure whether the generator it supplied was needed to run emergency systems. The utility called state officials seeking help, and a contractor supplied the plant with a fuel tanker. “I personally do not want to be that close to disaster again,” said Harry Colestock, the director of operations for the Virginia Department of Emergency Management, in an email directing his staff to hold a follow-up meeting with the company, Dominion. Dominon spokesman Jim Norvelle said an older fuel tanker was at the plant, but utility workers did not believe it could navigate the debris left by the tornado. The company is evaluating how it stores equipment and has agreed to supply a liaison to the state’s emergency operations center upon request. Just over a week later, tornadoes forced the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant near Athens, Ala., to shut down after severe weather wrecked transmission lines and created problems for a plant in Tennessee. The storms also disrupted siren systems that alert residents living near nuclear power plants to trouble. The sirens, which are connected to the electrical grid, failed during a blackout. Tennessee Valley Authority officials said they are in the process of adding sirens that have battery backups, meaning they would work even during a power outage. At one point, only 12 of 100 sirens in the communities surrounding Browns Ferry worked. A similar problem occurred in the region surrounding the Sequoyah Nuclear Plant in Soddy-Daisy, Tenn., which lost 36 of its 108 sirens. If there had been a crisis at either nuclear plant, emergency officials would have driven vehicles with loudspeakers through affected areas to alert residents. ___ Associated Press writer Ray Henry in Atlanta contributed to this report. ___ Online: Array Array Array

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Larry Womack: Sorry, Creditors: I’ve Already Reached My Debt Ceiling

May 26, 2011

The federal government could eliminate around seventy percent of its debt by ending two costly wars, restoring tax rates for the wealthy to their already historically low pre-Bush levels and taking more serious measures to get the economy back on track. But who wants to do all that! Certainly not the House Republicans who control the nation’s purse. Instead, the new Republican majority came into Congress insisting that the bulk of the debt remain untouched, arguing instead that it was time to “get serious about the national debt” by whittling away at the remaining sliver that funds infrastructure, essential services and the social safety net. Sure, their math may stink, but the approach was certainly novel. (So novel, in fact, that Republicans panicked when they realized they might be tricked into accidentally actually passing their own proposals.) If you’re anything like me, you could probably eliminate your personal debt by selling your house and living out of a tent, firing any employees you might have, running or biking to work, never purchasing or doing anything you didn’t absolutely need to survive, canceling your cable and Internet accounts and selling your children to some clean-looking strangers. Given the available options, I would say Congress has it easier. But, if you really are anything at all like me, you’re about as interested in living in a tent as Republicans are in making the insanely wealthy pay real tax rates as high as their maids. (Though for the record, I will cancel my cable the moment networks realize they could be selling their “live” content through TV, IOS and Blu Ray apps like Netflix, Hulu or DivxTV.) So, sucker that you are, you probably intend to take the more conventional approach of generating revenue through work and then trying to live within those means. Rather than adopt an ideology so embarrassingly consistent with simple math, the Republican-run House of Representatives is choosing a third option, even more novel than the last: the get-out-of-debt-free card. With Democrats unwilling to fork over the magic wand that turns 30% into 100% while simultaneously engaging in a good deal of what Newt Gingrich called “radical right wing social engineering,” Republicans are threatening to simply not raise the federal debt ceiling… thereby making payments on the national debt unnecessary until they do! Did you know that we could do this? If this strategy plays half as well with creditors as it does with a deeply, distressingly uninformed public that seems to think that about 90% of the national debt is sitting in the liquor cabinet on Nancy Pelosi’s invisible jet, you and I have just hit the jackpot. I think I’m going to start by calling my bank and telling them that I will no longer be making mortgage payments. Many people are already doing this , of course, but they’re losing their homes and hurting their credit ratings. They must not have explained to the bank that they had reached their personal debt ceilings. I, on the other hand, will inform the bank that there will be no use in foreclosing or doing any sort of violence to my credit rating, since financial penalties actually mean higher real debt, and that doesn’t happen when one has reached his personal debt ceiling. Then I’ll call my credit card companies and tell them not to expect a payment this month. But of course, don’t bother charging me late fees, raising my interest rates or reporting me to the otherwise-appropriate agencies. I’ve reached my personal debt ceiling, after all, and that would all mean much more debt! I’ll probably soon after call the various contractors I am working with and tell them not to expect payment for their work, but please do still deliver the products they are working on. Of course, there will be no sense in filing suit, as I have already reached my personal debt ceiling. And don’t worry about the secondary, tertiary and ongoing repercussions of my failure to pay. Why, if their creditors don’t like it, they can tell them that they’ve reached their debt ceilings, too! Next, I think I’ll call the cable company and tell them to no longer bother sending me a bill. But, of course, don’t even think about shutting off my service; I’ve reached my personal debt ceiling and I’m pretty into Game of Thrones . I should probably call my phone provider to inform them next. They won’t be getting any payments from me in the near future and I can’t have them discontinuing my service with still so many more creditors to call. I especially plan to savor the one to the IRS…. Now that there are no consequences to not paying your bills, there has never been a better time to be a deadbeat in America. Of course, if that doesn’t work out, you can always go into the business of capitalizing on ignorance. That seems to be working out well for some.

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ATI Allied Health/NHA Names Derek Reid Director of Employer Relations

May 25, 2011

STILWELL, KS–(Marketwire – May 25, 2011) – ATI Allied Health and National Healthcareer Association (NHA), the allied health training and certification arms of Ascend Learning, today named industry veteran Derek Reid as director of Employer Relations. This appointment reinforces the companies’ commitment to building and maintaining strong partnerships with their allied health clients.

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Report Warns Against Slashing Intelligence Budget

May 24, 2011

WASHINGTON — With America’s top terror target eliminated, the nation’s intelligence agencies fear they will look like a fat target for budget cuts. Their chief argument: Gutting intelligence budgets led to the shortfalls that allowed Osama bin Laden to carry out attacks in the first place. Lawmakers say they are well aware that the terror war is not over but warn that cuts are coming. Congress approved an intelligence budget of $80.1 billion in 2010, but lawmakers are keeping that roughly the same, slightly north of $80 billion for the next two years – and south of the White House’s request, according to two U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss classified budget figures. Those who lived through the purge of what is known as human intelligence – on-the-ground spies, informants and go-betweens – after the fall of the Soviet Union fear a rerun of the 1990s. Then, the spy world saw across-the-board cuts, agency by agency, on the theory that their main reason for being had ceased to be. “There was very little effort to look across the community and say if one organization is cutting analysts deeply in one area, let’s make sure another organization isn’t doing the same,” said former Pentagon intelligence official Joan Dempsey. The last time the budget masters took a buzz saw through the intelligence agencies, the White House was blindsided by al-Qaida’s strike on U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998, Dempsey said. She’s among a wide spectrum of intelligence professionals warning against a repeat of such cuts, in a report released Tuesday by the Intelligence and National Security Alliance. “After the victory against the Soviet Union, we cut deeply across our capabilities in Africa, because people said we were in Africa because of the Soviet Union,” Dempsey said. That left the intelligence community practically blind during “an entire decade of unrest, and turmoil, in which U.S. troops had to intervene” in fragile states like Somalia, and al-Qaida built in strength, she said. The former chairman of the House intelligence committee, Rep. Peter Hoekstra, R-Mich., agrees. He remembers meeting resource-starved CIA officers in his first trips in 2001. “They told me they had no capability,” Hoekstra said, in a continent where the human intelligence needed to penetrate tribal and gang-supported unrest far outweighed the usefulness of the satellite and signals intelligence that was so popular at the time. “We let human intelligence die on the vine.” After al-Qaida attacked the U.S. on Sept. 11, 2001, “we tried to hire quickly to make up for the damage,” he said, “and sent a lot of people on dangerous assignments with not enough mentoring.” But Hoekstra also warned against cuts to satellite and signals intelligence investment, citing the lead time needed to develop and launch satellites to replace an aging fleet. New satellite systems are attractive to cut in the short term, because a single system often runs into the billions. But when the older satellites start failing, leaving gaps, the rush to replace them quickly can cost even more, he said. “I had about $2 for every dollar (former CIA Director George) Tenet had when al-Qaida struck on Sept. 11,” said retired Gen. Michael Hayden, who led the CIA from 2006 to 2009. Hayden oversaw one of the largest periods of expansion the intelligence agencies have ever seen. “So the record shows it paid off, but everyone recognizes it would be hard to sustain,” Hayden said. James Clapper, director of national intelligence, told Congress in February that he’d be making cuts across the community, signaling that the post-Sept. 11 rate of growth had come to an end. Several DNI officials were part of a task force that helped write the industry report released Tuesday. Clapper was careful not to identify what areas he has been thinking of cutting, Dempsey said, for fear the power of his suggestion might drive congressional committees to beat him to it. The intelligence budget has risen steadily since the Sept. 11 attacks, according to two U.S. officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the precise figures are classified. Clapper published the 2010 figure, at $80.1 billion, up from $75 billion the year before. The current version of the 2011 intelligence authorization act does cut some of the personnel requests made by the CIA, but adds millions of dollars and thousands of civilian positions, including “critical counter-terrorism positions at the CIA and a significant increase to the National Counterterrorism Center,” said a House intelligence committee member, Rep. Jim Langevin, D-R.I. Key programs like the CIA unit that hunted down bin Laden have been funded, but the lawmakers have started weeding out what they’ve decided are unnecessary duplications, said Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Md., the intelligence committee’s minority chairman: “There is duplication of programs. There are some programs we can’t afford, or that might have to be delayed for a few years.” Hayden said the cuts to the military make it all the more important to guard against cuts to intelligence, after Defense Secretary Robert Gates warned that a budget-reduced U.S. military may no longer be able to fight a two-front war. “If forces are going to be drawn down, then how you use those forces will be much more limited,” Hayden said. “So strategic intelligence is all the more important.”

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Andrew Reinbach: Health Care Could Kill Us: We Don’t Have to Let It

May 23, 2011

News that Vermont’s Senate recently passed a single-payer health care system must have gladdened many progressive hearts, but truth be told, future health care costs would bankrupt America even if single-payer systems spread nationwide. That’s because the problem’s not in the accounts receivable department; it’s the actual cost of health care, now growing at roughly seven percent a year. That’s about twice as fast as the economy grows in an average year. And since the future of Medicare is one of the things forced onto the table by Republicans as part of a deal to raise the debt ceiling, minimizing that rate of growth could mean the difference for many aging Americans between some health care, and, under the Ryan Plan, de facto health care rationing according to the ability to pay. Meanwhile, saying you’ve solved America’s health care crisis by changing how you pay for it is like saying you’ve stopped the spread of nuclear weapons by outlawing the nicknames of certain missiles. And because the country is getting older and sicker, focusing on how to pay, instead of what you pay, does almost nothing to bend the cost curve. The Alzheimer’s Association, for instance, says the cost of treating that disease will grow from $189 billion in 2015, to over $1 trillion in 2050 . That’s twice what we spend for Medicare today. And the National Cancer Institute expects annual cancer treatment costs will grow 27 percent by 2020, to $158 billion . Can we do anything about this? Maybe, if we come to grips with the fact that there are worse things in life than death, that modern medicine offers many of them, and that with today’s medical technology, a worst-case scenario isn’t dying — it’s years of falling apart, slowly, ending with a few years of progressively aggressive treatment that basically keeps you, well, not dead. This nightmare has been given to us by what Daniel Callahan and Sherwin B. Nuland, in a May 9th article in The New Republic titled “The Quagmire”, call The War on Death. The article isn’t available free online. What we’ve bought into, say the authors, is the idea that we’re all somehow going to live a long and healthy life, followed by a brief decline and a quick, easy death — hopefully, while we’re sleeping. A pretty picture; and pretty unrealistic. “What we need is a different philosophy about death and dying,” says Callahan, who’s president emeritus of The Hastings Center. The good news in that grim analysis is that it finesses the toughest political problem about medical care in America — the screaming on the Right about so-called socialized medicine and death panels. This is because what we’re talking about here is mostly a matter of personal choice, and professional guidelines, not government programs. No faceless government bureaucrats play any part in this — although personally, I’ve never seen any difference between faceless government bureaucrats making health care decisions, and faceless private health insurance bureaucrats making the same decisions. This doesn’t mean making choices like that is easy. It’s not, not by a long chalk. Most people don’t want to talk about dying. And that goes double for families with elderly parents, who will otherwise wind up managing their parent’s care in those last, machine-filled days in the ICU. But if we can bring ourselves, as individuals, to move past the fantasy of a good, long life and a good, short death as some sort of real probability; come to grips with the fact that, as medicine is practiced now, it’s likely to put us on a road to the reverse; and organize our personal health care around avoiding that worst-case scenario; we can not only avoid that horror in the ICU — we can maximize the likelihood that we, as a people, can enjoy decent healthcare for all, however we pay for it. There are some other things we can do as well. For one, as Callahan and Nuland say, we can do something about the very high costs of medical school. As they point out, those costs force young doctors into the big-money medical specialties that let them repay their debts, but starve America for the primary care physicians we need to manage our health. Another: we can stop buying the latest drug as if it was a flashy new toy, and rely on tried and true medicines that do pretty much the same job for fractions of what the new drugs cost. This is a different version of what Callahan means when he talks about needing a different philosophy about death and dying; these new drugs are inevitably sold as great advances in medicine, offering almost unlimited health, while never mentioning the cost. A senior FDA scientist, speaking on condition of anonymity because he isn’t authorized to speak to the press, told me that not only are the potential side-effects of most new drugs often poorly understood; but that they produce only very marginal improvements in results in return for vastly higher costs. Securities research for pharmaceutical companies, for instance, routinely touts the financial value of such drugs not only because they produce higher profits today, but — because they often have to be taken more or less permanently — produce reliable, long-term revenue streams. This is great for pharmaceutical companies; but for Americans paying taxes and insurance premiums, not so much. A third thing we can do: think about what we’re giving our elderly relatives when we start fighting to keep them alive — an all-too-common scenario– and show some courage and compassion. Let me tell you a little story. My best and oldest friend — we were like brothers for 50 years — died about three years ago from cancer-related complications. His wife was his health care proxy, and I was his back-up proxy. He had no hope of any recovery, his condition wasn’t reversible, and he made us promise that whatever happened, he wouldn’t end up on a respirator. He did though, for reasons that don’t matter now. It’s enough to say he still didn’t want to be on it, knew he was dying that day, and wanted to go. All his wife had to do was give the order to disconnect him; the medical staff was standing by. But she couldn’t pull the trigger. She’s in no way a bad person; it just wasn’t in her. I had to do it, and was proud to give my friend what he wanted. After all, he would have done it for me. Of course, if I hadn’t been there, the hospital would have had to do everything in their power to keep him from dying as long as possible, running up millions of dollars in bills that, one way or another, would have paid for by you and me. For no result. I’m sure there are other things we can do to control costs instead of just deal with the payments piece. These are just three of them. But it seems to me that if we can screw up our courage, face the facts and choose wisely, we can have a batter life and a better death, and the American people can have better health care in the bargain. That seems to me to be a goal worth pursuing. Visit me at www.Reinbachsobserver.com

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Ian Fletcher: How China Stiffs Its Own Creditors

May 23, 2011

I examined in a previous article the ethical case for America repudiating its financial obligations to China. While considering this tempting possibility–which makes for a better bargaining position if nothing else–we should recall the fact that China has, in fact, repudiated its own financial obligations to other nations. The key here is that the formerly (and still nominally) communist government in Beijing refused, upon taking control of the country in 1949, to honor the debts incurred by the previous government, the Nationalists of Chiang Kai-shek. That previous government, like all governments, had a substantial public debt, and just like the U.S. today, much of it was owed to foreigners. The amount at stake? As these unpaid obligations have been accumulating for over sixty years now, it is now estimated to come to about $260 billion, mostly bonds. ( Source ) This repudiation didn’t exactly come as a surprise. At the time, the new government was sincerely communist, and these debts were regarded as the debts of an evil capitalist regime. Furthermore, they were owed to evil capitalists abroad, and if refusing to pay them caused financial hardship or chaos overseas, so much the better. Unfortunately, international law doesn’t work that way. If nations were permitted to repudiate their debts due to ideological differences with the previous government, we could wipe out our national debt every time Republicans replaced Democrats in Washington, or vice versa. Indeed, this is why debts are considered “national” debts in the first place: they are obligations of the nation itself, not of any particular group of politicians who happen to be ruling it at a given moment. The flip side of this principle is, of course, that not only liabilities but also assets carry over from one regime to the next. This includes everything from the typewriters in the nation’s embassy in Ruritania to the national territory itself. (And, of course, it includes the money owed to the nation by foreigners.) Beijing should remember that its claim to the territories of Tibet and Taiwan are based (however dubiously in Tibet’s case) upon historical claims predating the Communists’ seizure of power. But are those who repudiate history entitled to base claims upon it? Hmm… No nation is entitled to have things both ways. Either the People’s Republic of China is the successor state to Nationalist China, in which case it must honor the latter’s debts, or it isn’t, in which case it is not the legitimate government of the country, and we might as well go back to the curious era (1949-71) in which we regarded Taipei as the legitimate government of all China. China is not, of course, the only nation to have welched on its international debts. Russia did it in 1917, Cuba in 1961, and North Korea in 1964. Conversely, any number of nations have gone through wrenching ideological transitions without repudiating their debts. For example, South Africa’s government continues to honor the debts incurred by the apartheid state that preceded it. When the communist government of Russia fell in 1991, there followed a flurry of claims on its successor, which were worked out in various (not entirely satisfactory) ways. There were partial settlements of some of China’s foreign debts in 1979, but this did not include the aforementioned $260 in bonds. In 1987, the British did a deal with China concerning their share of the outstanding obligations, but this deal did not cover non-UK citizens. But in 2006, the Chinese Ministry of Finance formally informed the U.S. government that it was not willing to repay the rest of China’s outstanding obligations. China’s debt repudiation has not, as one might imagine, receded into ancient history. On July 17, 2008, the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation and Trade of the House Committee on Foreign Relations held hearings on the matter. So it remains a quiet but live issue. Bondholders seem to have long memories. Distressingly, there is also another very contemporary angle to this issue. The very same credit ratings agencies that approved billions of bad mortgage securities stand accused of complicity in China’s attempt to run from its financial past. There is a formal legal complaint outstanding with the U.S. Department of Justice antitrust division (viewable here ) accusing these agencies of colluding with each other and Beijing to do this. The significance for the present day is that they stand accused of overstating the reliability of contemporary Chinese debt by, among other things, ignoring the government’s past unreliability. (As we saw in the Asian Crisis of 1998, these agencies are quite capable of mis-rating governments.) Given the scale of sovereign borrowing by the world’s second-largest economy, this may not remain an abstract problem forever.

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AFL-CIO Threatens To Break From Democrats

May 21, 2011

WASHINGTON — Prominent labor leaders, frustrated that Democrats in Washington aren’t aggressively pursuing the union agenda, are threatening to limit their campaign support for Democrats, an act that would hamper the party’s bid to regain control of the House next year and keep a majority in the Senate. AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka’s threat of a pullback Friday was the latest warning to a party that has long relied on labor’s cash and grass-roots support. If it makes good on its threat, labor probably would spend more time and money combating union-busting efforts by state officials. “We will change the way we spend, the way we do things and the way we function that creates power for workers,” Trumka said. In a speech at the National Press Club, Trumka called for “an independent labor movement” and said unions were not responsible for building the power of any political party, but for improving the lives of working families. He promised that unions would spend the summer holding leaders in Congress and the states accountable. If labor makes itself truly independent of the Democratic Party, it would mark a major shift in a long-standing political relationship. “It doesn’t matter if candidates and parties are controlling the wrecking ball or simply standing aside to let it happen,” Trumka said. “The outcome is the same either way. If leaders aren’t blocking the wrecking ball and advancing working families’ interests, then working people will not support them.” The AFL-CIO’s executive council is considering a plan that could spend less on congressional races and more on fighting state battles like those in Wisconsin and Ohio, where lawmakers want to weaken collective bargaining rights and reduce union clout. But Trumka made clear the federation had no plan to follow the lead of the nation’s largest firefighters union, which announced last month that it would halt all political donations to members of Congress because they are not fighting hard enough for union rights. The move has won praise in many corners of the labor movement, where union activists have openly grumbled about House and Senate Democrats being too quiet while unions are getting pummeled in dozens of states. “We’ve spent money where we have friends and we will continue to do that,” he said. Leon Fink, a labor historian at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said unions are tired of being taken for granted and discouraged that their influence with moderate and conservative Democrats has been limited. “Spending a lot of money electing conservative Democrats in marginal districts had no legislative payoff for unions,” Fink said. “They don’t seem to have the capacity to impose their will on the party.” Unions have been disappointed that Congress has not passed a more ambitious stimulus plan to create jobs, that health care reform didn’t go far enough and that Democrats – when they held a majority in Congress – couldn’t muster enough votes to pass a bill that would make it easier to organize unions. The AFL-CIO spent more than $50 million to support Democrats in last year’s midterm elections, much of it in critical get-out-the vote efforts in dozens of key races. But a growing number of union leaders remain frustrated at what their money has bought. Some activists want to reallocate resources permanently so that more is spent bolstering grass roots support in the states. Unions have threatened to pull support from Democrats before, only to come back as election time draws closer when they realize there are few political alternatives. Asked how seriously Democrats should take the threat, Trumka pointed to former Arkansas Sen. Blanche Lincoln. Unions spent about $10 million last year trying to unseat Lincoln in the Democratic primary because she refused to support a broader health reform package and a bill that would make it easier for workers to form unions. Lincoln beat back the challenge, but lost in the general election. Yet unions continued to offer support to other Democrats in the 2010 election who also wavered on the health overhaul, as some leaders feared the consequences of a GOP majority would be even worse. It remains unclear how far the trend on unions trimming back political donations might spread. The politically powerful Service Employees International Union does not intend to reduce its role in federal races, SEIU political director Brandon Davis said. Guy Cecil, executive director of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, said organized labor is not just an important part of the Democratic Party, but is “critical to rebuilding our entire economy.” “We are working closely with labor at every level to build strong campaigns and deliver results for working families,” Cecil said. Jennifer Crider, spokeswoman for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said “labor’s fight is our fight and we’re proud to partner with them.” Trumka saved his harshest criticisms for Republicans in Congress and dozens of state legislatures for passing budgets that slash pensions and curb bargaining rights of union members while giving tax cuts to “the powerful and well-connected.” “The final outrage of these budgets is hidden in the fine print,” Trumka said. “In state after state, and here in Washington, these so-called fiscal hawks are actually doing almost nothing to cut the deficit.” He said these budget deals are sending a message that “sacrifice is for the weak.” “Powerful political forces are seeking to silence working people – to drive us out of the national conversation,” Trumka said. Trumka and other union leaders have said they expect the moves in some states to curb union rights will create a backlash that will help organized labor grow stronger. Unions are already spending millions to help recall campaigns in Wisconsin and Ohio. They are hoping the momentum of those recalls can be sustained through the 2012 elections.

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Home Sales Drop In April, Foreclosures Declined

May 19, 2011

WASHINGTON — Fewer people purchased previously occupied homes in April. Activity among first-time homebuyers increased and foreclosure sales declined, but those factors weren’t enough to signal a recovery in the weak housing market. Sales of previously occupied homes fell 0.8 percent in April to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.05 million units, the National Association of Realtors said Thursday. That’s far below the 6 million homes a year that economists say represents a healthy market. Purchases made by first-time homebuyers increased to make up 36 percent of sales. That’s still below the 40 percent that the trade group says is consistent with better markets. Sales to investors dropped slightly to account for about 20 percent of the market. Since the housing boom went bust, sales have fallen in four of the past five years and hit a 13-year low last year. Sharp price declines and low mortgage rates haven’t been enough to boost home sales this year. Some people who want to buy can’t, mostly because banks have tightened lending requirements and are insisting on larger down payments. Many buyers who are able to qualify for loans are holding off, worried that home prices won’t hit bottom for some time. Economists say it could be years before the housing market fully recovers. And more homes under contract for sale are being delayed, re-negotiated or canceled, mostly because of the tighter lending requirements. A separate survey from the trade group found 11 percent of Realtors said a contract was canceled because an appraisal came in below the negotiated price. And 14 percent said a contract was renegotiated to a lower price because of a low appraisal. The median sales price in April rose 2.4 percent from March, to $163,700. It’s still down 5 percent from the same month one year ago. The median price of a new home is now nearly 31 percent higher than the median price for a previously occupied home. That’s twice the normal markup. The gap is largely because of the flood of foreclosures or short sales – when the lender accepts less than what is owed on the mortgage – which are forcing down prices. Sales of homes at risk of foreclosure fell in April and made up 37 percent of all purchases. Foreclosure sales declined only because a large number of those homes are backlogged in the courts. They have been held up by a state and federal probe into troubled foreclosure practices by lenders. A record 1 million homes were lost to foreclosures last year and foreclosure tracker RealtyTrac Inc. expects 1.2 million more will be lost this year. There’s a glut of unsold homes on the market but few buyers are biting. In April, the supply of homes rose to nearly 3.9 million. At last month’s sales pace, it would take more than 9 months to clear those homes. Analysts say a healthy supply can be cleared in six months. The increase in unsold inventory “should continue to weigh on prices,” said Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak + Co. The situation is much worse when taking into account the “shadow inventory” of homes, economists say. These are homes that are in the early stages of the foreclosure process but, because of backlogged courts or the government probes, have not hit the market for re-sale. The Mortgage Bankers Association said Monday that about 8.3 percent of homeowners missed at least one mortgage payment in the January-March quarter when adjusted for seasonal factors. That’s up 0.7 percent from the previous quarter. Sales fell across most regions of the country. In April, sales declined 7.5 percent in the Northeast, 1.6 percent in the West and 1 percent in the South. But they rose 5.7 percent in the Midwest.

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Elizabeth Warren Simplifies Mortgage Forms

May 18, 2011

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau advanced its overhaul of annoying, incomprehensible mortgage forms on Wednesday in its first regulatory maneuver since the agency was created by last year’s financial reform bill. The CFPB rolled out two prototypes for a single, streamlined form to replace two complex and overlapping forms used by consumers to help gauge the real costs of their mortgage. The new regulator, which hopes to have a final form ready by September, is asking consumers to provide feedback on the forms online and is conducting in-person tests and interviews about the forms in six cities. Consumer advocates and both community and Wall Street banks have lobbied for the change for years. Banks complain that it makes no sense for them to have to deal with two forms that carry the same basic information, while consumer advocates bemoan the fact that the forms aren’t actually very helpful to consumers. “The new forms — they look good,” said Ron Haynie, President and CEO of the Independent Community Bankers Association’s mortgage group, which lobbies on behalf of small, community banks. “This moves in a direction that makes sense,” said Bob Davis, Executive Vice President of Mortgage Finance for the American Bankers Association, which represents banks of all sizes but traditionally places a heavy emphasis on the interests of big banks. “Our bankers thought this was a positive step.” Ira Rheingold, Executive Director of the National Association of Consumer Advocates also praised the new forms. “They’ve really got the right idea.” “You want consumers to actually be able to shop around for a mortgage,” Rheingold said. “This information has to give consumers a legitimate view of the costs of the mortgage — and that doesn’t really exist today. The [current] forms are fairly incomprehensible, there’s all sorts of numbers in there, and you can’t tell what’s important and what’s not.” Once the new form is finalized, bankers may eventually begin butting heads with borrowers over its legal status. Currently the disclosure forms are not legally binding documents and banks could present the borrower with different final terms than the one outlined in the documents. But consumer advocates want the new forms to be a legally binding offer. But for now, at least, both consumer advocates see this as a good sign of things to come. Ed Mierzwinski, Director of the U.S. Public Interest Research Group’s Consumer Program said CFPB’s early testing process suggested the agency “has new ideas, not only about making disclosures better, but about making the regulatory process better for both buyers and sellers.” Elizabeth Eurgubian, Vice President and Regualtory Counsel for the ICBA added, “This process thus far has been a lot better for banks and for lenders than the previous processes have been, and the banks appreciate being brought in.” Take a look at the new prototypes here and here . And compare them to the old forms here and here .

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Michael A. Siegel: A Decade Later "New Markets" Continues to Build Opportunity in an America Left Behind

May 18, 2011

The idea, in it’s purest form, was called “community capitalism” as think tanks along with many of the nation’s top economists began pushing a revolutionary idea that began to take hold in late 1990s — the solution for economic revival in impoverished America stretched beyond traditional anti-poverty programs. The answer, they maintained, to creating sustainable and measurable economic opportunity throughout these regions “left behind” rested in private investment. With national unemployment at 4% and the federal surplus continuing record gains, as America had all but erased it’s national debt, President Clinton signed the Community Renewal Tax Relief Act into law in December 2000 including a critical provision to help bring opportunity to severely distressed low-income urban, older suburban and rural communities which had failed to enjoy in the prosperity boom of the 1990s: The New Markets Tax Credit . Working closely with then-Speaker Dennis Hastert and GOP Senate leadership, the Clinton administration crafted this business-based solution designed to stimulate private economic growth in neglected regions throughout the nation. At the time of its introduction, the program marked a decidedly different and bold approach to helping “America’s forgotten neighborhoods” replacing models of the past that relied exclusively on federal grants with a commercially oriented plan to direct private dollars into areas where employment was scarce; investment non-existent. A decade later the innovation behind the “New Markets” public system/private sector approach has become a policy standard and continues to enjoy Republican and Democrat support based on its record of success as recently evidenced by the latest joint effort of Senators Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME) who urged Congress to renew the program last week introducing S996: a five year extension of the program. How it Works At its core, “New Markets” is designed to encourage private investments from corporations and individuals who might never consider buying into so-called “high-risk areas” of America where unemployment and poverty rates can soar by as much as twice the national average. As both Senators Rockefeller and Snowe have attested, the program is geared to provide much needed capital so that all qualifying locals — from urban to rural — can benefit, consequently improving the quality of life and building employment opportunities for people in these areas through lasting investments in local businesses. Administered by the Department of Treasury, investors receive a seven‐year, 39 percent federal tax credit for New Markets investments: a five percent credit in each of the first three years, six percent annually in the last four years. These investments are made to spur community and economic revitalization. The statute requires that investments be located in census tracts where the individual poverty rate is at least 20% or median income does not exceed 80%. Today, $50 billion of capital is flowing in under-served communities in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. Yet unlike many other tax credit programs the “New Markets” program has required renewal during each session of Congress since its introduction. New Markets Success There are and will always remain those who will attempt to discredit the “New Markets” program by delving into what some call “the less than 2%” arena — pointing to a handful of projects out of some 3,000 which, while approved and in qualified areas, may not seem worthy of recognition. But taken on the whole, the “New Markets” program has made significant improvements in distressed communities throughout the country, creating opportunity and jobs while defraying costs to the taxpayer and federal government. In fact, The New Markets Tax Credit Coalition conducted an independent audit of the program as it reached its 10th Anniversary. Some of the key findings include: Between 2003 and 2009 the New Markets Tax Credit leveraged $8.00 in private investment for every $1.00 of cost to the government. Demand for funds far exceeds availability. To date, community enterprises have requested a total of202 billion in allocation authority since 2003, a demand of more than seven times the credit available. The vast majority of “New Markets” investments (89.5%, of the dollars invested) have been made in communities with at least one factor of higher economic distress than required by law (unemployment rates at least 1.5 times the national average, poverty rates greater than 30%, median income less than 60% of area median). And then there is this: According to the website for the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act , the cost to taxpayers to create one job requires approximately $90,000 in federal dollars. In contrast, “New Markets” programs — fusing public incentives with private funds — have created nearly 500,000 jobs at a cost to the federal government of less than $12,000 per job. By any definition the New Markets program has exceeded expectations. Not only has it created a successful model of for-profit, business-driven expansion of investment, job creation and economic opportunities in distressed communities with government and the community partnerships playing key supportive roles — it has done so in tough times when private capital has been hard to find due to the credit crunch and slowing economy. Continuing this program is in the best interest of businesses, taxpayers and communities hit hard by recent economic conditions. Let’s hope Congress agrees.

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VHA Inc. Announces New Board Chair and Two New Board Members

May 17, 2011

IRVING, TX–(Marketwire – May 17, 2011) – VHA Inc., the national health care network, has announced a new Board chair and has elected two new members to its board of directors.

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Lowe’s Profit Falls On Cold Rain, Chilly Weather

May 16, 2011

NEW YORK — Lowe’s Cos. profit fell 6 percent in the first quarter, as the bad weather that plagued much of the country kept customers away from their gardens and other outdoor projects. The Mooresville, N.C., chain’s quarterly performance missed Wall Street expectations and the nation’s No. 2 home improvement retailer lowered its full-year outlook. Lowe’s results come a day before the country’s biggest home improvement retailer, Home Depot Inc., reports its quarterly figures. Both companies depend on the spring selling season to give them a boost, as shoppers typically head out in droves to buy seasonal items such as flowers, patio furniture and barbecue grills. But cold and rainy weather across the northern half of the country and tornadoes in the Southeast have been a drag on the season so far, Lowe’s said Monday. “It’s difficult to overcome Mother Nature when it comes to weather-related conditions,” Chairman and CEO Robert Niblock said during an interview with the Associated Press. While home owners dealing with flooding and tornado damage will be looking to make repairs, Niblock said any business related to that will be spread out over the long term. Weather is not the only concern. Lowe’s said customers remain wary about spending due to ongoing worries about the housing market and rising gas prices. On Monday, the National Association of Home Builders reported that U.S. homebuilders are concerned the housing market won’t recover this year, with some feeling it may be getting worse. Economists expect home prices will continue to struggle this year before a modest recovery begins. Lowe’s reported a 3.4 percent decline in traffic during the quarter, with average receipt nearly flat. For the three months ended April 29, Lowe’s net income dropped to $461 million, or 34 cents per share. A year earlier it earned $489 million, or 34 cents per share, a year earlier. Revenue dipped 2 percent to $12.19 billion, as sales of outdoor items fell. Revenue at stores open at least a year slipped 3.3 percent. The latter metric is a key indicator of a retailer’s health because it excludes results from stores opened or closed during the year. Analysts polled by FactSet expected higher earnings of 36 cents per share on revenue of $12.54 billion. Lowe’s first-quarter earnings came in at the low end of its projected guidance of 34 cents to 38 cents per share. Its stock declined 92 cents, or 3.6 percent, to $24.84. Lowe’s cautioned in February that consumers were still holding back on big projects. The chain was also up against a difficult comparison with last year, when shoppers took advantage of federal cash-for-appliances rebates, Niblock said. For the full year, Lowe’s now expects earnings of $1.56 to $1.64 per share and a revenue increase of about 4 percent, implying revenue of about $50.79 billion. The retailer previously forecast earnings of $1.60 to $1.72 per share on a 5 percent revenue increase. Analysts predict full-year earnings of $1.70 per share on revenue of $50.9 billion. Lowe’s anticipates second-quarter earnings of 65 cents to 69 cents per share, with revenue up about 4 percent, implying revenue of about $14.93 billion. Wall Street expects earnings of 68 cents per share on revenue of $14.82 billion. The retailer anticipates the second half of the year being stronger than the first, as it will no longer face comparisons that include government stimulus programs. Lowe’s ran 1,751 stores in the U.S., Canada and Mexico as of April 29.

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House Dems: Coal Industry Rep Gave ‘Questionable’ Testimony On Whistleblower Retaliation

May 16, 2011

WASHINGTON — House Democrats have accused a coal industry representative of giving “questionable” testimony during a hearing on mine safety reform earlier this month. In a letter to Tim Walberg (R-Mich.), the chairman of the House Subcommittee on Workforce Protections, George Miller (D-Calif.) and Lynn Woolsey (D-Calif.) said that Anthony Bumbico needs to clarify the “contradictory testimony” he gave regarding alleged whistleblower retaliation at his company, Arch Coal. The mining company executive was testifying before the legislators on behalf of the National Mining Association. During the May 4 hearing, Bumbico was asked about the case of Charles Scott Howard. An employee at an Arch Coal subsidiary, Howard was disciplined and then laid off after publicly showing a video that revealed potentially dangerous conditions at the Kentucky mine where he worked. Bumbico testified that Howard had chosen to go public rather than bring the problems to the attention of mine management and the Mine Safety and Health Administration. But as recently detailed in the trade publication Mine Safety and Health News , Howard had repeatedly noted the problems in company log books and brought the video to an MSHA hearing only after the company took no action, according to Howard’s lawyer. Asked if Bumbico stands by his testimony, Arch Coal spokeswoman Kim Link said, “[s]hould we receive a letter seeking clarification [from Congress], we will respond accordingly.” Although Howard’s case may seem like a small matter, Bumbico’s testomy — and Democrats’ fiery response to it — says a lot about the struggle to reform MSHA and change mine safety oversight laws. Even though more than a year has passed since the tragedy at Upper Big Branch Mine, in which 29 West Virginia miners perished, Congress has not managed to pass a major safety reform bill. In the years leading up to the disaster, Upper Big Branch owner Massey Energy had repeatedly been cited for safety violations. The Robert C. Byrd Mine Safety Protection Act failed in the House last year under Republican opposition but has since been reintroduced. Among other changes, the law would bring more scrutiny to mines with “patterns of violations,” increase the criminal penalties against unsafe mines and enhance protections for mine whistleblowers like Howard. Fearing the costs of more oversight, mining interests have argued that MSHA already has the regulatory tools it needs to ensure safe workplaces. Testifying as an invitee of Republicans, Bumbico even said that — rather than taking on more oversight — MSHA should adopt a “voluntary” safety compliance program for mining companies. Mine safety advocates and many Democrats believe that such a self-policing program would be a joke, essentially taking funding away from MSHA and allowing mines to forgo quarterly inspections by the agency. Speaking about the prospect of real reform, a pessimistic Miller recently told the L.A. Times that ” nothing will happen until the next major disaster .”

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Erich Origen: Good Idea: Reward Losers That Produce Winners, Like in College Sports

May 14, 2011

In college sports the winner takes the trophy, the glory, and the inherent rewards of being the best. Financially, though, it’s a different ballgame. When any college team wins the national championship, a large portion of the winnings are distributed among all league members. The winner gets a good chunk, but doesn’t take all. This financial setup acknowledges that every team in the league that lost to the champions made them that much better. It also achieves the real end game: a strong and fair league in which great individual achievements are possible within a financially sustainable meritocracy. Imagine applying these principles to our larger economy. How many times have we seen this story: Company X lays off 5,000 people. Company X stock goes way up. None of the 5,000 people whose losses made that gain possible are rewarded in any way. In sports, we’re outraged at the slightest hint of unfairness. We remember bad calls for generations. Meanwhile, we tolerate all manner of unfairness in our economy, allow the Aristocrats to win every game, and look the other way at bad calls that devastate the lives of millions. As we take another devastating loss and walk away with nothing, unable to pay for our injuries, our officials deny the unfairness of the league. They tell us “Don’t worry, once you’re on the Aristocrats, you’ll be a winner, too. Keep working!” If only our society were as fair to its necessary winners and losers as any Rose Bowl. If people have to lose their jobs to make our economy more efficient, and that creates billions in new value, they should be rewarded for taking one for the team. But how can we reward both the winners and losers for our collective success? Some have advocated for a dividend for all citizens based on America’s GDP (similar to how every Alaskan resident gets a dividend based on oil production). In a sense, this would give every citizen some skin in the national economic game. Rather than divest the vast majority of Americans from our collective success, such a policy would instantly invest all of us in a collective enterprise. Our aim should be a society that is fair to both our economy’s winners and its necessary losers. To reach that goal, we must change the rules of our economy, and how it’s officiated, in order to create the fair, financially sustainable meritocracy we all deserve. Do you have ideas for creating a stronger, fairer, financially sustainable economic system? Post your ideas in the comments below.

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2011 College Grads Moving Home In Record Numbers, Saddled With Historic Levels Of Student Loan Debt

May 13, 2011

NEW YORK — While one’s college graduation is normally a time of jubilation, Megan Muller can more than relate to the sense of defeat that now hangs over the class of 2011. Muller, 26, graduated from Kean University in Union, N.J., yesterday with a bachelor’s degree in communication. She is the first person in her family to graduate from college. Like many graduates, she’s now faced with the larger worry of living back at home while also paying down vast amounts of debt. All along, money’s been a chronic source of anxiety. In order to finish, Muller took out more than $70,000 in student loans and has another $10,000 in credit card debt. Midway through college, after transferring and taking a few semesters off, Muller moved back in with her parents in order to save money. And until she can move out and find her own place, it’s the credit cards she must first pay down — in addition to beginning repayments on her student loans. “Trust me, you don’t want to be 26 and still living at home with your parents,” explains Muller, who, daunted by the expense of college, struggled with whether to finish at all. She currently makes about $25,000 as an assistant editor at Federal Practitioner , a peer-reviewed medical journal. Muller is hardly alone in her ongoing quest to establish an independent life. In addition to the normal job worries, the class of 2011 is saddled with a dual set of other obligations: moving home and paying back debt . A study conducted by Twentysomething Inc., a consultant firm specializing in young adults, reports that 85 percent of this year’s graduating class will be forced to move back home . Meanwhile, 2011 graduates also face historic amounts of student loan debt — or an average of $27,200 for graduates that borrowed money in order to finish school. “We tell people they need to get a college education in order to succeed, but then we put all of these roadblocks in their way by then making it practically impossible to repay what you owe,” says Michael D. Hais, who, along with Morley Winograd, coauthored the forthcoming book “Millennial Momentum: How a New Generation Is Remaking America.” The two men describe the number of 20-somethings moving home as “historically unprecedented.” Andrew Sum, a professor of economics at Northeastern University, couldn’t agree more. “This is our country and this is our future and we’re failing them,” says Sum, who reports a record number of 2011 graduates returning home to their parents’ nest. As a consequence, Sum sees young graduates not only delaying the formation of their own households, but consequently unable to achieve a desirable standard of living. Apart from the longer-term consequences associated with moving home, Sum’s data reveals another concern altogether. Namely, that young people face high amounts of debt and a lack of decent jobs. Using data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Sum reports that as many as 50 percent of college graduates under the age of 25 are underutilized, meaning they’re either working no job at all, working a part-time job or working a job outside of the college labor market — say, as a barista or a bartender. Mark Kantrowitz, who came up with the $27,200 figure based on the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study and publishes the financial aid sites Fastweb.com and FinAid.org , is concerned that debt at graduation is outpacing starting salaries. It’s a worry that Muller and many of her classmates also share. Going to school while working full-time required that Muller learn to survive on fewer and fewer hours of sleep. Coffee became her fuel. Name the job — whether working as a nanny, as a waitress, behind the counter at a beauty supply store or at the front desk of her local gym — and she’s done it. And while Muller realizes she’s fortunate to have a job, her paycheck is hardly enough to repay her existing debt while she saves to get her own place. Meanwhile, Muller is toying with whether to go into more debt in order to finance a graduate degree, hoping that more qualifications might lead to a bigger paycheck. “But so what if I’m $100,000 in debt and living in a smaller house and not able to afford the nicest clothes?” asks Muller, whose to-do list remains longer than her shopping list, despite yesterday’s high of finally receiving her diploma. “One day, it’s all going to pay off.”

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CHART: Where Is The Center Of America’s Population?

May 13, 2011

Once a decade the United States Census Bureau marks a point on the nation’s map that it calls the “National Mean Center of Population.” The Census Bureau describes it as “the place where an imaginary, flat, weightless and rigid map of the United States would balance perfectly if all 308,745,538 residents counted in the 2010 Census were of identical weight.” (Hat tip to NYT’s Economix) This decade’s National Mean Center of Population in Plato, Missouri maintains the steady westward movement that the point has made since it first started in 1790 in Kent County, Maryland. As people travelled westward, the national mean center crawled after them. This decade’s step of 23.4 miles West and slightly South marks the shortest distance the point has travelled since 1970. To see the National Mean Center’s gradual move westward see the chart below provided by the U.S. Census Bureau . You can also learn the mean center of population by state here . IFRAMES not supported

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States Shortchange The Unemployed With Junk Debit Card Fees

May 11, 2011

WASHINGTON — Many states shortchange the jobless by distributing unemployment benefits on debit cards loaded with obnoxious fees, according to a new study by the National Consumer Law Center . Of the 40 states that have switched from paper checks to prepaid debit cards, 22 states’ cards charge ATM fees, 24 charge balance inquiry fees, and 28 charge inactivity fees. The cards in Arkansas, Idaho, Nebraska, Ohio, and Oregon come with overdraft fees ranging from $10 to $20. And in Connecticut, Iowa, Rhode Island, and Tennessee, cardholders “must pay for every ATM inquiry or pay a denied transaction fee if they request cash when their balance is insufficient,” the study says. Tennessee stands out for having the card with the most “junk fees,” the study says. Tennessee’s card, provided by JPMorgan Chase, charges $1 for initial ATM withdrawals, 40 cents for balance inquiries, and 25 cents whenever someone swipes the card at checkout. It’s one of just four states that doesn’t provide even one free ATM withdrawal per deposit. Tennessee doesn’t think its card’s fees are junk. “I’m not sure calling them ‘junk fees’ is a fair statement,” said Jeff Hentschell, a spokesman for the Tennessee Department of Workforce Development, which distributes Tennessee Automated Payment cards for jobless benefits. “When you look at the context of where we were and where we are today, the fees are actually minimal compared to where people were going to cash paper checks before.” Indeed: The NCLC study itself points out that for people without bank accounts, “getting cash from a UC prepaid card will usually be cheaper than paying a check casher to cash a paper check.” Hentschell added his department has a handy website that lays out the fees. As for Chase, the bank says it’s giving states a good deal on a valuable service. “Each state negotiates its own contract and fee structure from numerous bidders,” a Chase spokeswoman said in an email. “To date, states have chosen card solutions that cost government nothing and save taxpayer dollars, selecting their card provider based on the best mix of fees and services to the consumer.” The NCLC study says the Bank of America-issued cards in California and New Jersey are the best, since they offer “free and ample access to cash and transactions with no penalty fees.” The study says close runners-up are Chase’s card in Arizona and Citibank’s in Maryland.

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Stephen Herrington: Retiring the National Debt by Not Destroying the Economy

May 9, 2011

The GOP proposes social spending cuts in order to fund tax cuts as a solution for our national debt. They, and the Beltway press, are undeterred by the OMB finding that their Paul Ryan-authored plan will do nothing of the sort. They are also undeterred by economists’ warnings that social spending cuts are the worst possible cuts in terms of economic impact, that they will shrink the economy and thus actually shrink revenues and make the deficit worse rather than better. Retiring the national debt shouldn’t even be an issue. The national debt as a percent of GDP has been higher in the the past and we survived. The key to that survival was to grow the economy. What we should be talking about instead of debt is how to grow the economy and create jobs. In a growing economy, the extraordinary debt of two wars and corporate banking disasters will essentially take care of itself over time. As Simon Johnson ably points out in his recent New York Times article , the U.S. has always been in debt and the only real issue, now or ever, is which political perspective on debt works, conservative or progressive. For the last thirty years, U.S. levels of spending, taxation and borrowing have been unusual, but a consistent theme has emerged. The Republicans run up the debt while they are in charge and blame the Democrats for it when the Democrats are in charge. Reagan exploded the debt with tax cuts and doubling of defense spending. Then, when Clinton took office, the GOP howled about the debt being too high. Bush took the Clinton surplus and blew it on more tax cuts and another doubling of defense spending. Now Obama is getting the same treatment that Clinton got from the GOP, being blamed for GOP’s own fiscal and regulatory irresponsibility. The pattern is obvious and obviously political. There is no analytical basis for the debt hysteria that has infected both Capitol Hill and the press reporting on it. We have had huge amounts of debt before. By the end of WWII the national debt was 120% of GDP compared to an estimated 90% now, and if intergovernmental debt, the money owed to the Social Security Trust fund, is discounted, the current debt to GDP ratio is about 60%. In the fifteen years following WWII, the debt was reduced back to 40% of GDP, where it had been before the war. Some of the debt was paid down, but mostly the ratio of debt to GDP was reduced by economic growth. GDP grew so the debt became smaller as a percent of GDP. While the dollar amount of it didn’t change a great deal, the scariness of it was reduced dramatically. This may seem like accounting gimmickry, but in practical terms it’s equivalent to going from owing more than you make to owing less than half of what you make. You are much more comfortable with carrying the debt. WWII was, by anyone’s criterion, a national emergency. Few argued that indebtedness should not be undertaken to win the war. So, too, an emergency is the Great Recession. In recession, the enemy is economic stagnation and unemployment. If government spending is effective to improve economic conditions, then spend we should. We put an additional $750 billion on the credit card and pulled out of the economic crash landing. We spent, but the spending we did was not enough to grow the economy, just to stop the tailspin. Achieving real economic growth will change the ratio of debt to GDP and effectively retire the debt both in perception and in dollars as economy sourced tax revenues grow. Now it’s possible that we need not borrow and spend more in order to grow the economy and retire the debt. We just need to be smarter about eliminating some of the things that are dragging the economy down and spending that is not doing the economy any good. The Wealth Gap is an issue of more than just seeming fairness. The richest 5% of Americans hold 65% of the nation’s wealth. In old school economic theory, that just means that there is more capital available to invest than ever before. In practical terms though, it’s not being invested. Bureau of Economic Analysis data shows that Gross Private Domestic Investment, money that is actually invested in the real economy, dropped 32% between 2006-09. With a significant reversal in 2010, it is still down 22% from 2006 while the amount of capital available for investment is up 30%. We do not need tax cuts to build more capital. We need taxes to force that accumulated capital back into the economy through either tax collections or direct business investments structured to defer taxes. Inducing just the historic level of real Gross Private Domestic Investment ratio to GDP into the real economy will grow the economy by 15%. Trade imbalance is wiping out American jobs and lowering the wages paid for jobs that we still have. With a huge consumer product trade imbalance, stimulus money finds its way into offshore profits and not our own economy. These factors make the economy smaller and so tax revenues smaller. Wage differentials are the driver of our trade imbalance. When we don’t protect American-based industry, we lose American jobs and tax revenue. Education and training are only a temporary answer. What ever an American can be trained or become educated enough to do, so can a foreign worker who will work for less. Cutting business incentives to outsource through taxation and tariffs could grow the economy by 5%. Health care cost increases are distorting the economy. 17% of GDP is now dedicated to health care whereas the amount could reasonably be 9%, more comparable to every other industrialized nation. Showing where that extra 8% of GDP we spend on health care ends up in the economy is an enormously complex undertaking. Profits after taxes and expenses of for-profit insurers and hospitals, and even non-profits, are meaningless statistics. Excessive margins, markup for health care services and equipment, outright fraud, monopolistic practices and profiteering business models likely account for the 8% of GDP seemingly wasted on health care. Those excess costs are single-handedly driving the argument that government spending is out of control, when it’s actually health care product profit margins that are out of control. Diverting the excess profit of the health care industry into lower profit margin industries could boost the economy by as much as 5% given distributed income multipliers of lower margin industries. Defense industry profit margins, like those of health care, are largely undocumented. The Middle East wars, excessive margins, fraud, unnecessary procurements and duplicate programs could account for half of the $685 billion defense budget. Defense is 5% of GDP. Cutting it to 2.5% of GDP and diverting those funds to lower margin industries could boost the economy by 1.5%, again considering economic multipliers. Taken together, correcting these fiscal and economic ills could put the debt on a path to resolution by boosting the economy as much as 26%. We would have an $18 trillion economy instead of $14 trillion economy. That would make the debt-to-GDP ratio 70% instead of 90% and grow tax revenues to $2.5 trillion (with repeal of Bush tax cuts) instead $1.4 trillion (without repeal of tax cuts). The budget would be balanced. These are, admittedly, highly rose-colored numbers for a short term solution. Growth compounds though, and in the longer term it could do to our current debt what growth did for the WWII war debt: make it go away. A solid economic shot in the arm would speed up the process. Speeding up real economic growth would create jobs. The business community, the “job creators,” are uncertain. They are not hiring. They are not hiring because taxes are too low and profits can be taken with historically low tax rates, the lowest rates on the highest incomes since the Gilded Age. Removing that uncertainty is important, but in the opposite sense of what Republicans imply. Business is not hiring because they think taxes will remain the same, rather than going up. Raise taxes and business will hire in order to defer realized profits. The political will to clean the fiscal house with anything like stringency doesn’t exist on Capitol Hill, even though all the measures mentioned above get resounding support in public polling. This while the Republican austerity proposals go down in public opinion flames. Seems like the public intuitively knows what needs doing and the GOP and Blue Dogs are just hell bent to ignore them. It also seems that the administration and Democrats are just going along playing at compromise, but why compromise with the GOP when it accomplishes less than nothing?

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State Lawmakers Revisit Expired Unemployment Benefits

May 9, 2011

State lawmakers in Tennessee and North Carolina want a legislative do-over after their states became ineligible for 20 weeks of federally-funded unemployment insurance last month. Democrats in the Tennessee, where the unemployment rate is 9.5 percent, are trying to revive the Extended Benefits program. They didn’t learn of the program’s untimely death until constituents reported that their checks had stopped after April 16. The U.S. Congress had previously reauthorized the EB program through the end of the year for states with persistent high unemployment. “We were pretty surprised to learn it had happened and there weren’t other efforts to get it remedied,” said Sen. Lowe Finney (D), who introduced legislation last Thursday to restore the federal EB program. “I’ve been hearing from constituents for a few weeks.” Rep. Craig Fitzhugh (D), who introduced the same bill in the state House of Representatives, also said constituents brought the lapsed benefits to his attention. “It’s certainly something, in my opinion, we should move forward on,” Fitzhugh said. In North Carolina, Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue vetoed a bill saving the benefits because Republican lawmakers attached big budget cuts to the legislation. But now Democrats and Republicans in the North Carolina General Assembly have said they want to cut a new deal to reinstate the benefits, according to the Charlotte Observer . The federal Extended Benefits program provides the final 20 weeks of checks for the long-term jobless who have exhausted up to 73 weeks of state and federal benefits without finding work. (That full complement of 99 weeks of benefits is available in only 25 states .) States are eligible for the EB program if they’ve got unemployment above 8 percent and if the rate is 110 percent of what it was two years ago. Since unemployment rates have been flat since then, Congress told states in December that they could amend their EB laws to look back three years instead of two. But several states haven’t bothered , and others have done so only after coupling the benefits with cuts . Some 28,000 Tennesseans missed out on checks last month as EB expired with little or no public debate , even though the federal government put states on notice about how the program might lapse and what lawmakers could do about it. Sen. Finney said that the bill, if passed, would pay benefits retroactively for anyone who has missed checks since April. Republican leaders in the Tennessee General Assembly did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A potential obstacle to the bill’s passage is its cost: While the federal government would pay $57.7 million, the state would be on the hook for $396,000, according to the legislature’s fiscal review committee. That’s because states cover the cost of layoff claims from state, local and tribal governments, which the National Employment Law Project estimates amount to 2 percent of all claims. Finney said he didn’t know if the legislation will be taken up by the assembly before it adjourns for the year this month. “When we’re this late in the legislative session it’s difficult to get bills heard, and some committees have already shut down for the year,” Finney said.

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Christopher Corson: Less Rhetoric and More of the Law in the NLRB’s Boeing Action

May 9, 2011

The complaint that the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) issued against the Boeing Company on April 20th has touched off a storm of comment and controversy, much of it wrong. We need to get past rhetoric and look at what the case is really about. In every state in our nation, the law provides important protections for individual workers when they act together to improve their work lives for themselves and their families. The law also says that employers cannot retaliate against workers who engage in protected activities. If retaliation were permitted, there would be no protection. For many years, Boeing employees in the State of Washington have worked through their union, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, to improve their work lives at the company — all while helping Boeing prosper by building the best commercial airliners in the world. Equally undisputed is that such activity was protected by law. So when Boeing itself announced that legally protected activities of its workers were the principal reason for moving a substantial portion of the company’s 787 Dreamliner assembly to South Carolina, the company committed unlawful retaliation. The case is that simple. Some commentators cry that the government is trying to tell a company where to put work. Boeing did not violate the law simply by moving 787 assembly. The violation was doing so in response to actions by its employees that the law protects. As the NLRB complaint states , “the relief requested by the Acting General Counsel does not seek to prohibit Respondent from making non-discriminatory decisions with respect to where work will be performed…” Commentators also cry that this case is just a Democratic administration favoring labor. But the rights at stake in this case belong to workers in every state, regardless of their politics and even regardless of whether they are unionized. The NLRB is the law enforcement agency that is supposed to enforce the laws that Boeing broke. Do big companies not have to follow the rule of law? Sadly, there are also commentators who are trying to recast the NLRB’s complaint as pitting northern states against southern ones. Retaliation against workers for exercising protected rights is as unlawful in South Carolina as it is in Washington. The NLRB should enforce the law whenever and wherever retaliation against workers takes place. We in the Machinists are proud to fight for our members at Boeing. We are just as proud to fight every day for our members who work in South Carolina and all across the South. We want Boeing and every other company that employs our members to prosper in the global economy, because that means jobs for our members and economic strength for America. But when any company violates legal protections for workers, the rule of law says there should be consequences. Boeing’s actions are properly before the NLRB, which should decide the case according to the law. The rhetoric should quiet down.

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Hallan Named Vice-Chair of National Retail Group

May 9, 2011

LANSING, MI–(Marketwire – May 9, 2011) – James P. Hallan, president and CEO of the Michigan Retailers Association, has been elected to a two-year term as vice-chair of the national Council of State Retail Associations (CSRA).

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Provista Hires Former Healthcare Executive Dan Thomas as New President

May 6, 2011

IRVING, TX–(Marketwire – May 6, 2011) – Provista, one of the country’s leading supply chain improvement companies and a wholly owned subsidiary of VHA Inc., the national health care network, announced today that it has hired Dan Thomas as its new president.

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Jerry Jasinowski: The Next Generation of Cost Savings

May 6, 2011

In these times of anemic economic growth, businesses must continue to increase profits by reducing costs. Procurement officers have become experts at extracting savings and innovations from suppliers, negotiating raw-materials contracts and managing complex global supply chains. But large amounts of goods and services are purchased too casually. Market researcher Gartner Inc., estimates that a typical company spends 30 to 60 percent of revenue on indirect goods and services. That’s not surprising in enterprises like law firms and ad-agencies where, except for salaries, almost all spending is “indirect.” But even manufacturers spend a lot of money on purchases related to sales and administration, rather than the production of goods. At packaged good companies, about 20 percent of non-core spending is logistics, encompassing everything from ocean-freight to short-haul trucking. Another 17 percent is in marketing services. About 9 percent is information technology and telecom. Corporate CFO’s are aware that indirect spending is significant, but do not appreciate the aggregate size, and find it difficult to control. Internal procurement managers are often stretched thin and focused on ensuring supply and optimizing pricing for core commodities. Even companies that have addressed indirect spending may still be leaving a considerable amount of money on the table. Although they have dedicated people and tools to improve the purchasing process, they do not have the full infrastructure to effectively managed indirect spending. With hundreds of supply markets to address and thousands of purchases to control, companies lack the market intelligence, specialized category expertise, structured processes and technology to maximize cost savings. Knowledge of the market, commodity experts and better buying processes can cut total indirect costs by 15 percent or more. One company I know had just negotiated 6 percent savings on linerboard, a dramatically fluctuating commodity. What they didn’t know was that the market had deflated further while they were negotiating. Using this outside intelligence they secured a total of 13.5 percent savings. Savings like this require a whole different level of discipline and resources. Some manufacturers such as Whirlpool, Kimberly Clark and Goodyear are using outside providers, leveraging the provider’s investments in dedicated category teams, market intelligence, and technologies to manage buying and enforce purchasing policies. But many are not. In one study by ICG Commerce, average companies were able to affect about half of indirect spending, while world-class companies were able to affect 93 percent. World-class companies have established business processes to make certain that everyone who buys anything used preferred suppliers to maximize savings. With $2 billion in indirect spending, an average company received a bottom line benefit of $54 million. A world-class company would save $272 million over the same time, and could increase that by 3 percent a year through continuous improvement. In today’s competitive environment, few companies can afford to overlook the opportunity to achieve this next generation of cost savings, which could amount to as much at 1 percent or more of a firm’s profit margin. 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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Video: Sharma Says S&P Cut U.S. Outlook to Serve Investors

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — Deven Sharma, president at Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC, talks about the lowering of its U.S. debt outlook rating to “negative” last month. S&P’s put the U.S. government on notice that it risks losing its AAA credit rating unless policy makers agree on a plan by 2013 to reduce budget deficits and the national debt. Sharma spoke with Phillip Yin at the Asian Development Bank meeting in Hanoi. Bloomberg’s John Dawson also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Global Warming Causing Food Prices To Rise

May 5, 2011

Over the last few decades, global warming has hindered the world’s food production causing prices to rise, new research reveals. The study, which NewScientist says is the first “to demonstrate a link between global crop yields and climate change,” not only tracks the link between rising temperatures and its effect on food production, but highlights the importance of finding new ways to adapt farming methods to the changing climate. From The Guardian : The drop in the productivity of crop plants around the world was not caused by changes in rainfall but was because higher temperatures can cause dehydration, prevent pollination and lead to slowed photosynthesis. According to David Lobell, a Stanford University scientist and an author of the report, “This is tens of billions of dollars a year in lost productivity because of warming,” The Washington Post reports. To conduct the study, Lobell and his colleagues gathered data dating from 1980 to 2008 for growing regions around the world, including their temperature, rain fall, and crop production. Then, they compared annual yields of four staple crops — corn, wheat, rice and soy beans — from every country in the world to what production would have been given precipitation and temperature remained the same since 1980, calculating the predictions with statistical models. Corn yields were 5.5 percent lower than the predictions showed they would have been if the environmental factors remained constant, and wheat yields were 3.8 percent lower. Wheat production in Russia showed the biggest drop, with yields 15 percent lower than what they could’ve been. Soy beans and rice were relatively unaffected due to being grown in areas not experiencing as much warming and thriving in higher temperatures, respectively. “Agriculture as it exists today evolved over 11,000 years of reasonably stable climate, but that climate system is no more,” Lester Brown, president of the Earth Policy Institute, told The Guardian . Not everyone agrees with the findings. Ken Cassman, a professor of systems agronomy at the University of Nebraska, told The Washington Post , “It’s not clear how well these analyses are capturing how well farmers can respond, and have been responding, to changing temperatures.” Kevin Trenberth of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado told NewScientist that the results were undermined by using a purely statistical model. Food prices have reached a record high this year , fueling unrest in regions like North Africa and the Middle East. A recent study presented at 2010′s UN climate summit in Cancun predicted that global warming could double grain prices by 2050 and leave millions more malnourished. This latest research, “Climate Trends and Global Crop Production Since 1980,” was published in Thursday’s issue of the journal Science .

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Wendell Potter: Are Insurers Writing the Health Reform Regulations?

May 5, 2011

One of the reasons I wanted to return to journalism after a long career as an insurance company PR man was to keep an eye on the implementation of the new health reform law. Many journalists who covered the reform debate have moved on, and some consider the writing of regulations to implement the legislation boring and of little interest to the public. But insurance company lobbyists know the media are not paying much attention. And so they are able to influence what the regulations actually look like–and how the law will be enforced–with little awareness, much less scrutiny. At a January meeting of several hundred patient and consumer advocates in Washington, a top aide to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius all but pleaded with those in the audience to bombard the Obama Administration with messages insisting that the law be implemented as Congress intended. Rest assured, he told them, that the insurance industry’s lobbyists were relentless in their demands that the regulations be written to give them the maximum slack. One example: a section of the law expanding the rights of consumers to appeal adverse decisions made by their health plans. “The Affordable Care Act will help support and protect consumers and end some of the worst insurance company abuses,” read an Obama administration fact sheet from last summer. The fact sheet went on to assure us that the new rules would guarantee consumer access to both internal and external appeals processes “that are clearly defined, impartial, and designed to ensure that, when health care is needed and covered, consumers get it.” “In implementing this law, we have worked to end the worst insurance company abuses, preserve existing options and slow premium increases,” an administration official said. “Through it all, protecting consumers has been — and remains — our top priority.” The rules, originally scheduled to go into effect July 1, 2011, were actually written by the National Association of [State] Insurance Commissioners (NAIC), which was tasked by Congress to develop several important regulations required by the law. If the law is implemented as the NAIC recommends, patients will be able to get an external appeal of a broad range of coverage denials, including denials that result from an insurer’s decision to rescind, or cancel, a patient’s policy–not just denials made on the basis of “medical necessity” as determined by the insurer. The NAIC’s standards also say that insurers must provide consumers with clear information about their rights to both internal and external appeals and that the companies must expedite the appeals process in urgent or emergency situations. Well, surprise, insurers don’t like being told what to do by regulators. So they’re pushing back hard. Consumer advocates who have been in meetings at the White House in recent weeks say they believe the administration is bending over backward to accommodate the insurers. “We have reason to fear that the external appeal regs won’t be very consumer friendly,” said Stephen Finan, senior director of policy for the American Cancer Society Action Network. Finan and representatives of several other consumer and patient rights organizations, including Consumers Union, the National Partnership for Women and Families and the American Diabetes Association, wrote officials in the Departments of Labor and Health and Human Services in late January pleading with them to “stand firm for consumers” in rejecting several of the insurance industry’s demands. They expressed concern that the final regulations would allow insurers to stack the decks against patients by allowing health plans to deem a second-level internal appeal of a denial as meeting the requirement for an independent external appeal. They’re also worried that health plans will not be required to provide clear and understandable information to policyholders about their denial decisions, that the plans will not provide adequate translation of written communications into other languages (insurers are claiming this would be too burdensome), and that they will be able to take as long as 72 hours (instead of the recommended 24) to decide an urgent appeal. Equally as frustrating for the consumer advocates is the administration’s indication that they will give the insurers until January 1, 2012, rather than July 1, 2011, to comply with the regulations. Consumer advocates say the administration has told them that the reason it is proposing to delay the effective date of the new rules for half a year is to accommodate the health plans’ enrollment cycles and marketing needs. Health plans do need adequate lead time to make changes to their systems and to prepare materials to inform their customers of new procedures, especially in multiple languages, so some of their push back is understandable. The new regulations will also add to the insurers’ administrative costs, and the new law limits how much they can spend on overhead. But the consumer groups believe the administration itself has caused some of the problems by taking so long to finalize the regulations. The NAIC got its work done comparatively swiftly. “There is a clear pattern of leaning toward the insurance industry more than consumers,” one of the patient advocates told me. The consumer advocates, most of whom not so long ago were applauding the Democrats for getting reform enacted, even if it fell short of their original goals, are becoming increasingly discouraged, partly because there are so many more lobbyists for the insurers than for consumers. It’s hard to compete with them. “We’re outnumbered 100 to 1,” said one of the consumer advocates. It’s clear,” he added, “that the insurers are willing to make life more difficult for patients” by trying to weaken and delay the consumer protections. It’s also clear that, at least for now, the insurers seem to have the upper hand in dealing with the White House.

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Dorie Clark: How to Change Anything

May 4, 2011

I ran across VitalSmarts — a corporate training and research behemoth — when I was teaching a course on social marketing at Tufts University. Their book Influencer: The Power to Change Anything quickly made it onto my syllabus, as they detailed innovative strategies from across the globe that had successfully reduced HIV transmission in Thailand and reformed gang members in San Francisco. Now they’ve turned their sights inward — after all, if we can reform society, shouldn’t we be able to change ourselves? In the recently-released Change Anything: The New Science of Personal Success , Kerry Patterson and his compatriots have created a roadmap for individuals to gain mastery over their weight, their careers, their exercise habits, their interpersonal relationships, and more. This is a book you can put to immediate use at work. My top five takeaways: 1. Identify Crucial Moments Sometimes you’ll finish a day and feel completely unproductive. You know you worked 8 or 9 or 10 hours — but what did you actually accomplish? Patterson and company encourage us to identify specific “crucial moments” where we may have gotten derailed. Perhaps it’s our obsessive e-mail checking (which can quickly lead to putting out random fires) or getting too caught up chasing an article citation online (when we could have simply asked a colleague). Noticing these moments is key to controlling them in the future. 2. Find the Right Team . Some people truly want you to succeed, giving you sage advice and encouraging your efforts. And others may be dragging you down the path of extended coffeebreaks and carping about the boss (see my recent BNET article Are Your Friends at Work Holding You Back? ). It can be a challenge, but you’ve got to cut the naysayers out of your life. We respond to our environment, and you don’t want them polluting yours. 3. Structure Your Life to Succeed . We like to think success is a matter of willpower — but more often than not, it’s actually a matter of structure. I always thought it was a good idea to bike more, but I’d usually be in a rush … and I wasn’t sure if my tires were pumped … and I wasn’t sure where I’d put my helmet … so I’d invariably take my car, instead. All that changed when I moved to Boston years ago for graduate school, and parking rates close to school hovered between $20-$30. Thanks to the structural incentive, I quickly became a bicycling convert. 4. Proximity is Your Friend . Studies have shown that — despite the much-vaunted interconnectedness of the Internet — distance and proximity matter to us greatly. Scientists are more likely to collaborate with peers who work on the same floor; you’re more likely to work out if your exercise equipment is in your bedroom (as compared to the basement); and you’ll eat more Tootsie rolls if they’re on your desk instead of in the break room. So think carefully about the workplace behaviors you want to encourage, make them proximate, and watch yourself succeed. Having a professional journal on your nightstand instead of Sports Illustrated could make all the difference. 5. Don’t Accept Lame Feedback . I wish I’d had Change Anything a decade ago, when I worked as a reporter. It seemed like my editor disliked me more and more each week, because I clearly wasn’t writing articles the way she liked them. Her profound advice to me? “Make it different!” Sadly, my mind-reading skills were lacking, so she continued to harrumph and redline every piece. Patterson and friends urge us to insist on specifics, because that’s the only way we’ll get better. We should ask for particular, recent examples until we identify the “vital behaviors” that are sought. What are your top workplace success strategies? Dorie Clark is a strategy consultant who has worked with clients including Google, Yale University, and the National Park Service. Listen to her podcasts or follow her on Twitter.

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Little To Celebrate: Osama’s Legacy Is American Drift

May 2, 2011

NEW YORK — It takes no degree in psychology to understand why Americans flocked to the obvious gathering places — Ground Zero, the White House — celebrating news of Osama’s demise. A decade ago we watched people we knew or might have known hurtle to their deaths from a landmark building. Someone had to pay. The trouble is that we ourselves paid as a nation. And we have kept paying even as the price has climbed to impossible heights, via disastrous choices made in anger and vengeance more than reason and enlightened self-interest. We rushed into Afghanistan without the will to remake it. We embarked on an unnecessary war in Iraq, chasing the phantom of our national fears. We squandered our treasure on ill-conceived military misadventures just as we needed it most here at home, to rebuild our schools and invest in productive industries that might put people back to work. Last night, on city streets in New York and in Washington, the jubilant crowds chanted and sang as if we had won some sort of sporting event, the championship banner hung in a final statement of achievement. A chorus spoke of closure and justice and healing. But we have won nothing — even as one rightly hopes that Osama’s death will weaken al Qaeda’s capacity to sow terror. We completed no mission of decisive national import. Real victory will continue to elude us until we focus on rebuilding our own country, recovering from the self-inflicted wounds that have resulted from taking Osama’s bait. The attack inflicted by bin Laden’s terrorist organization on September 11, 2001 came with its own unique opportunity. Here was an invitation to reckon with the limits of military strength as a vessel of foreign policy. Here was a moment that suddenly made the world sympathetic to the American situation. But the tactical brilliance of the al Qaeda strike went beyond the terrifying images that filled our television screens, provoking that sickening feeling of vulnerability combined with rage over murder: It was as if Osama and his minions placed a bet on our national character, reckoning that such an attack would tap into the hot center of the American mindset, prompting a response that would be damaging to our long-term interests. We would react in anger and fear, and hurt ourselves in the process. Survey the last decade and it is hard to escape the conclusion that this is precisely what unfolded. Inside the prisons at Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib, we wasted international support and made ourselves something close to a pariah. When a hurricane wrecked New Orleans, we seemed to lack the resources to provide relief. As another American metropolis, Detroit, slipped inexorably toward the status of a failed city, we did little to arrest the decline. From California to New Jersey, we have accepted dilapidated classrooms, crumbling roads and elevated rates of unemployment as unalterable facts of contemporary life, as if we are powerless to invest in something better. In the middle of every policy debate lies the sentiment that the country is broke and has no other option but diminished expectations. We did not fall into debt because of Osama bin Laden. A terrible recession layered atop tax cuts for wealthy Americans mostly brought us here. But the trillions we have spent in Iraq and Afghanistan exacerbated our debt troubles, and these campaigns have concentrated our focus on military entanglements, leaving little attention for the crisis at home. And now, just as we should be having a sustained discussion about how to invest in a more bountiful future and repair the communities we have neglected, we are instead engaged in a festival of political pandering ostensibly about cutting the deficit. Cities are slashing support for public transportation. The federal government is trimming an inadequate social safety net. Congressional Republicans are threatening to vote against lifting the debt ceiling — a step that courts panic in global financial markets — unless they gain a blessing for another round of budget cuts that will intensify harm for the most vulnerable people. We never did find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, but we have one right here in our midst, loaded and set to detonate inside the Congress through this mindless debate. Osama bin Laden is gone, and that is better than the alternative. But the celebration over his death feels misplaced. The remnants of his most successful strike on American soil remain intact through the collective sense of powerlessness that frames the conversation. He has proven to our adversaries that, when we are frightened, we lose our way. Until we find our way back, standing in the street, high-fiving his death may feel good, but our circumstances are little changed.

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Donald Trump’s Vietnam Draft Claim Called Into Question

April 29, 2011

Earlier this week, Donald Trump said during an interview that he avoided being called to serve in the Vietnam War because he “got lucky” and “had a very high draft number.” The Smoking Gun reports , however, that appears not to have been the case. According to the website , Selective Service records tell a different story: By the time his number (356) was drawn during the December 1, 1969 draft lottery, Trump had already received four student deferments and a medical deferment, according to military records on file with the National Archives and Records Administration. An extract of Trump’s Selective Classification record, seen here, was provided in response to a TSG records request. ( Click here to view the records obtained by The Smoking Gun.) National Review Online relays what Trump initially told New York-based station WNYW about the matter earlier this week. “I was sitting at college, watching,” he said to the local outlet, “I was going to the Wharton School of Finance. And I was watching as they did the draft numbers and I got a very, very high number and those numbers [they] never got up to.” The Smoking Gun reports , however, that the draft lottery that took place in December of 1969 came eighteen months after Trump graduated from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. National Review Online questioned the claims made by Trump to WNYW on Thursday. Brian Bolduc wrote : But in her biography of Trump, Donald Trump: Master Apprentice , journalist Gwenda Blair attributes the Donald’s escape of the draft to another factor: “Donald’s military career ended with NYMA graduation; despite his athletic prowess, in 1968 he received a medical deferment from the military draft.” Trump has yet to announce whether he plans to run for president in the next election cycle. During a stop in Las Vegas on Thursday night he said he could be expected to make his plans known by June 1. When one woman at the event shouted “run for president,” the billionaire reportedly responded, “I think I am going to make you very happy on that.”

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Video: Diaz-Gimenez Says Spain’s Jobs Market Is `Dysfunctional’

April 29, 2011

April 29 (Bloomberg) — Javier Diaz-Gimenez, a professor at IESE business school in Madrid, discusses today’s Spanish jobs report. Unemployment rose to 21.3 percent in the first quarter, the National Statistics Institute said. Diaz-Gimenez, speaking from Madrid with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse,” also talks about the outlook for the economy. (Source: Bloomberg)

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