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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Announce Central Eyre Iron Project Prefeasibility Study Update And Mineral Resource Estimate

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Iron Road Limited (ASX:IRD) Announce Central Eyre Iron Project Prefeasibility Study Update And Mineral Resource Estimate

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Calling All Petroleum Engineers: Your College Major Is More Important Than Degree Itself

May 24, 2011

With student indebtedness rising and a dearth of decent-paying jobs for recent graduates, many are asking whether a college degree is still worth the sticker price. According to a new report , a college degree is well worth it in terms of lifetime earnings. But, the study’s authors noted, not all degrees are worth the same amount: A student’s chosen major has critical, far-reaching consequences. “The core finding here is that going to college and getting a degree is important, but what you major in can be three or four times more important.” said Anthony P. Carnevale, who co-authored the study and directs Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce. “The difference in earnings is more than 300 percent.” Utilizing previously unreported data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2009 American Community Survey, the study authors sampled 3 million college graduates between 25 and 64 who had reported their undergraduate major and subsequent salary to arrive at their findings. “There’s this tendency in this country to say, ‘I’m going to college. I made it,’” said Carnevale. “Well, yes, you’ve made it to a point. But the most important decision to come is what to major in.” Titled “ What’s It Worth? The Economic Value of College Majors ,” the study indicates that the earnings disparity between different college majors is substantial. In terms of yearly earnings, petroleum engineers reported making $120,000, while college counselors and psychologists earned an average of $29,000. Over the course of a lifetime, this translated into petroleum engineers making $5 million, while counselors and psychologists earned approximately $2 million. Of the 171 majors included in the report, engineering, computer science and business reported the highest salaries. Lower earnings were reported in fields such as education, social work and counseling — though they all made about 75 to 85 percent more than individuals with only a high school degree. The study also found a significant earnings gap by gender, race and ethnicity. “In the case of African Americans, in not one of the 171 majors were they making as much or more than white people,” said Carnevale. “For women, in only three of the included majors — physiology, computer science and pharmacology — did they out-earn their male counterparts.” While the ultimate value of college may well be worth it for degree-holders, the majority of Americans now bristle at the increasing cost . Last week, the Pew Research Center released a survey that asked whether or not college was worth it . Of the more than 2,000 people surveyed, 57 percent claim that higher education fails to provide adequate value in return for increasingly high costs. Further, 75 percent said that college is too costly for the average citizen to afford. Despite its high cost, Carnevale still believes a college degree is unequivocally worth it. “A college degree is still the threshold requirement for access to the middle and upper middle class,” said Carnevale. “But access to the upper class now depends on your major.” Both Carnevale and his colleague, Carl Van Horn, a professor of public policy at Rutgers University, caution current college students with giving the choice of major careful consideration. Specifically, he advises students to be better informed about the future weight of the decision they’re about to make. “Rather than following the whimsy of what their friends are doing or what their parents want them to do, they need to understand the choice they’re making,” said Van Horn, who also directs Rutgers’ John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development. “Pre-school teachers don’t make $150,000, investment bankers do. The choice of major is especially critical now when the labor market is so very competitive.”

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The Return Of ‘Made In The USA’

May 5, 2011

NEW YORK (Nick Zieminski) – The “Made in the USA” label may be poised for a comeback, a new study argues. The next few years will bring a wave of reinvestment by U.S. multinational manufacturers in their home base, as rising wages and a strong yuan currency make China a less attractive production center, the paper by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) predicts. The study, published on Thursday, says U.S. reinvestment will accelerate as the United States becomes one of the cheapest locations for manufacturing in the developed world. If it came to fruition, such reinvestment could speed up a delicate economic recovery that has yet to gain much traction. There is evidence the trend has already started: * Caterpillar Inc has repatriated manufacturing of construction excavators, boosting investment in facilities in Texas, Arkansas and Illinois. * NCR Corp brought back production of automatic teller machines to Georgia, creating 870 jobs. * Toymaker Wham-O moved production of Frisbees and Hula-Hoops from China and Mexico to the United States. More such announcements are likely over the next year or two, BCG says, citing conversations with clients. “If you work the math out using today’s numbers. you’d still say it’s a good idea to go to China,” said Hal Sirkin, a senior BCG partner and lead author of the study. “(But) around 2015, you get to a point of indifference between producing in the U.S. and producing in China.” Wages in China are still a fraction of what U.S. workers earn. Direct pay and benefits for production workers in the United States are about $22 per hour, versus only about $2 in China, roughly 9 percent of the U.S. cost. But that difference is expected to narrow, with the Chinese worker earning about 17 percent as much as his or her U.S. counterpart four years from now. Factoring in higher U.S. productivity rates, the weaker U.S. dollar and other factors, such as shipping costs, that difference could narrow further. “MADE IN THE USA” The study predicts China will remain a major global player — just less of an exporter to the United States. China will still export to Europe, whose workers are less able to move for jobs than U.S. workers are. U.S. wage advantages could eventually reach the point that European automakers will export U.S.-made cars to Europe, the study said. The appeal of a shorter supply chain and fewer headaches from issues like intellectual property will also help encourage jobs and production to come back to the United States, BCG said. Policy could also nudge manufacturers to make the move. High unemployment is driving state incentives to attract factories, while unions are becoming more flexible. Still, the study’s thesis is based on assumptions that may not play out. One is that supply and demand of labor in China are increasingly moving out of balance. Another is that demand from a growing Chinese middle class will raise costs, as factories shift to producing for domestic consumption and workers demand more pay to pay for goods that were out of reach before. Also, the yuan’s rally could reverse. Since China first loosened restrictions on trading the yuan, its value has steadily strengthened from more than 8 yuan to the U.S. dollar in 2005 to fewer than 6.5 per dollar now. The expected U.S. reinvestment, meanwhile, will affect some industries more than others. Shoes or clothing are work-intensive and do not require highly skilled labor. But higher-value goods made in lower volumes, such as home appliances and construction equipment, are more likely to bear the “Made in the USA” label in coming years — especially if they are large and expensive to ship. General Electric Co’s example supports the study’s contentions. GE’s appliance unit is in the middle of a four-year, $600 million plan to build up its manufacturing presence in Louisville, Kentucky, adding some 830 new jobs. “The default has been to say: ‘Let’s put the next plant in China,’” Sirkin said. “We’re saying: ‘Sit back and think through your options.’” BCG is a management consulting firm that advises large manufacturers on issues ranging from strategy to operations. (Additional reporting by Scott Malone in Boston, editing by Gerald E. McCormick) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Location, Size Make All the Difference in Big Box Vacancies

May 5, 2011

The national retail real estate market is recovering, with many retailers finding space at quality locations formerly occupied by big box tenants that have gone out of business, according to a recent study by Colliers International, authored principally by Jeff Simonson, senior research analyst. Using the recent bankruptcies of Circuit City, Linens ‘n Things, Mervyns and Gottschalks as a model, the study: Re-Tenanting Bankrupted Big Boxes: Paving…

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Bandanna Energy Limited (ASX:BND) Received South Galilee Prefeasibility Study

April 27, 2011

Bandanna Energy Limited (ASX:BND) Received South Galilee Prefeasibility Study

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IRS Funding Cut Days Before Report Shows $330 Billion In Uncollected Taxes

April 11, 2011

WASHINGTON — As part of the budget deal hashed out on Friday evening, lawmakers agreed that no additional federal funds would be used to hire new IRS agents. Then on Monday, the Government Accountability Office publicly released a study showing that, as of the end of fiscal year 2010, roughly $330 billion in federal taxes had never been paid — an amount that, if collected, would represent nearly nine times the amount of savings as the budget itself. The dual developments aren’t shocking. Despite evidence that a single dollar spent on enforcing the tax code could result in up to ten dollars in revenue, politicians, naturally, are reluctant to align themselves with tax collectors. And yet, the sacrificing of funds for IRS agents in the continuing resolution deal underscores a particular problem that seems bound to confront fiscally conscious lawmakers. “Cutting back on IRS enforcement could easily cost the treasury much more in revenue than it saves,” said Chuck Marr, Director of Federal Tax Policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The GAO report, which looks specifically at the issue of passport holders who have failed to pay their full share of taxes, underscores Marr’s point. Titled “Federal Tax Collection: Potential for Using Passport Issuance to Increase Collection of Unpaid Taxes,” the study labels poor enforcement of tax laws and the tax code as a “high-risk” hole in government policy. In fiscal year 2008, passports were issued to about 16 million individuals. Of those, more than 224,000 owed more than $5.8 billion in unpaid federal taxes. A good chunk of the evasion, the GAO concluded, was committed by individuals with “substantial personal assets” including multi-million-dollar homes and “luxury cars.” One passport recipient bought a house for $2 million and another property for $1.5 million despite owing $1 million in federal taxes. “If you look, you can find records of most capital gains income,” said Rob Shapiro, former U.S. Undersecretary of Commerce. “People deposit it in their bank accounts or the institutions may issue reports if it is capital gains on stock transactions. So it is not hard to pick it up if you have the manpower to look for it. And again, given that the salary of an IRS agent is at least as high as the average salary in America, the fact that there is a ten-to-one ratio for the returns on auditing tells you that [tax evasion] is coming from the high-income brackets.” Regardless of who the worst evaders are, the GAO concludes that “IRS enforcement of federal tax laws is vital,” not just to pinpoint the offenders but to promote “broader compliance.” And what do the study’s authors cite as a compelling reason to beef up IRS functions? A “federal deficit” that “continue[s] to mount.” Indeed, several close observers of the budget debate have wondered exactly how lawmakers can shudder at going after tax evasion while simultaneously preaching fiscal responsibility on the stump. Marr, for one, noted that Congress has already disbanded a tax reporting provision in the president’s health care reform law that would have resulted in stronger compliance. That was scuttled for politically obvious reasons: the paperwork it placed on small businesses was deemed well beyond burdensome. But the decision to deny funding for more IRS agents doesn’t have such an easy-to-distill an explanation. “Hiring more IRS agents would have allowed the Obama administration to enforce its agenda, insofar as its agenda is to make sure that people don’t cheat on their taxes,” wrote Jonathan Cohn in The New Republic . Obama has made buffing up the IRS a relative hush-hush plank of his tax reform agenda. Upon entering office he advocated for more funds for the agency, and as part of his 2012 budget, he proposed a 9.4 percent increase so that it could hire roughly 5100 new employees. The proposal, which pivoted off of previous studies that reached similar conclusions as the GAO’s, was met with somewhat frenzied pushback from conservative circles — the specter of black-suited tax collectors roaming the streets undoubtedly on the mind. And almost immediately, the suggested increase in IRS funds became a target of cut-happy legislators.

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What Happened To Entrepreneurship During The Recession?

April 5, 2011

They were among the recession’s most inspiring stories: laid-off workers who went on to start their own businesses rather than dropping out of the labor force or crawling back to corporate America. But a recent analysis of Census data calls into question the popular belief that the financial crisis spurred American entrepreneurship. Instead, entrepreneurial activity took a nosedive during the downturn, according to a new paper from the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. The new report challenges another study that used identical Census data. According to a widely-circulated study by the Kauffman Foundation, a Kansas City-based entrepreneurship advocacy group, new business creation spiked during the recession. Released last May, the study found the monthly rate of people transitioning into self-employment steadily rose from late 2007 to a 14-year high in 2009 . “Kauffman’s findings give only half the picture,” says Scott Shane, the new paper’s author and entrepreneurship professor at Case Western Reserve University. “Sure, the number of Americans who became self-employed grew. But that number was dwarfed by the amount of US entrepreneurs whose businesses failed during the recession, and who were forced to exit self-employment.” As a result, the total number of self-employed Americans shrank to 9.8 million in June 2009 from 10.2 million in November 2007, Census data show. All told, 68,490 more businesses closed in 2009 than in 2007, an 11.6 percent increase in the business closure rate. “If you have more people giving up than going in, I can’t see how entrepreneurship went up,” says Shane. The main point of contention between the two reports is which measure does a better job of capturing entrepreneurial activity: the net change in the total number of self-employed workers or the rate by which people become self-employed. One thing both studies can agree on is that the majority of the businesses formed during the recession are not hiring employees in the short term. But Dane Stangler, research manager at Kauffman, is bullish over the long term. Even though they have not yet hired an employee, “non-employer firms started during the most recent recession will become the employer firms of the next decade,” Stangler says. So will the hoards of new businesses created since the downturn began — many of which still don’t employ workers — boost the economy? Even though only three percent of new businesses created without employees eventually evolve into businesses with employees, a 2007 study by the National Bureau of Economic Research found that those three percent made up over a fourth of “young businesses,” or companies under three years old with employees. That three percent also accounted for 20 percent of the revenue generated by young businesses. And relatively young businesses — not small businesses — are the biggest engines of job growth, according to Census economists . ‪If these trends are still valid in the post-recession economy, then Kauffman may have been right to focus on the flow of entrepreneurs into the economy during the recession, rather than the total stock.‬

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Bill Cheney: Debit Interchange: Those Who Can Least Afford It Will Be Hurt Most

March 29, 2011

It’s easy and popular to demonize the big banks of Wall Street. In many cases, they deserve it. But the attempt by retailers, big and small, to cast the current political battle over debit card interchange as a fight between Wall Street and Main Street (with merchants, of course, claiming the Main Street mantle), is grossly inaccurate and misleading. When smaller card issuers — like the credit unions my association represents — express their deep concern about the impact of interchange, we are painted by proponents of the new law restricting interchange fees as fronting for the big Wall Street banks that they say are the true targets of the legislation and related rules proposed by the Federal Reserve Board. Credit unions are cooperatives, locally based and owned by their 93 million members — the people who do the saving and borrowing. Many are teachers, firefighters, police officers, members of the military. That’s as Main Street as you can get. Our industry has no allegiance to the banks, which have a history of opposing pretty much everything credit unions try to do. We are only aligned with the banks on interchange because in this case our members will be harmed by the effects of the legislation and pending Fed proposal. What’s the concern? Well, you’ve heard the old line about the businessman who is selling a product for less than it cost him to produce it, and when asked what he plans to do, responds: “Don’t worry, we’ll make it up on volume.” That encapsulates what’s going to happen if the Fed’s interchange proposal is allowed to take effect. Credit unions receive on average about 44 cents per debit card transaction as interchange revenue. The Fed proposal would chop that to 12 cents, a figure that doesn’t begin to account for the actual debit card service costs, such as those related to fraud and systems support. The 12-cent rate puts us in the same boat as that businessman trying to make up his losses on volume. We estimate that up to two out of every three credit unions would lose money on their debit card programs if the interchange regulations reduced interchange-related revenue by 40 percent. Remember, credit unions are member-owned cooperatives. Their business model is all about passing savings onto their consumer-members. Last year, for example, consumers saved $6.5 billion using credit unions rather than banks. In this case, however, credit unions will have absolutely no choice but to pass the higher interchange costs on to their members, most likely by adding fees to debit cards or other services. And the people who can afford it least are the ones likely to be hurt most. “No worries!” say the merchants and their supporter on Capitol Hill. “The interchange law exempts most community banks and credit unions” (those with assets under $10 billion). But the exemption is fatally flawed. Larger institutions account for the majority of debit transactions. Over time, smaller institutions will lose out, too. Market pressures will force the interchange price that smaller institutions receive toward the lower, 12-cent rate. Influential regulators like Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair have voiced doubts about the efficacy of the small institution exemption. The need to address the inherent flaws in the exemption is why Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) and Rep. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) have introduced legislation to delay and further study the Fed’s implementation of interchange. And the call for delay, further study or both is coming from other quarters, too: The National Community Reinvestment Coalition, the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, the NAACP, and most recently, the National Education Association. All share a concern that the ones who can least afford it — low- and moderate-income consumers — will be hurt the most by added fees. Those of us working to help Sen. Tester and Rep. Capito to delay and study this troubling issue are admittedly, as the Wall Street Journal terms us , a “collection of strange bedfellows.” But it is a grouping brought together by shared concern about the unintended yet potentially harmful consequences of the interchange restrictions. And this unlikely conglomeration demonstrates that attempting to narrowly cast interchange as some type of deserved comeuppance for Wall Street banks misses a much broader and consumer-oriented picture. Put another way: In the zeal to reform interchange, don’t hurt consumers and the financial institutions that they own in the process.

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Venus Metals Corporation Limited (ASX:VMC) Yalgoo Iron Ore Project Pre-Feasibility Study Contract Awarded To Promet Engineers

March 8, 2011

Venus Metals Corporation Limited (ASX:VMC) Yalgoo Iron Ore Project Pre-Feasibility Study Contract Awarded To Promet Engineers

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Scott Gamm: Credit CARD Act One Year Later: Was it a Success?

February 21, 2011

One year ago on February 22, 2010, the epic Credit CARD Act took effect, which aimed to reform the entire credit card industry and help young people under age 21 steer clear of credit card dangers. Now one year later, was the CARD Act a success? The simple answer: yes and no. Studies published last week show how the CARD Act has benefited consumers, despite opponents who claimed the laws would only prompt banks to think of new ways to make money. Among the specifics of the CARD Act included clear and easy to understand disclosures on credit card statements. According to the Center for Responsible Lending, “an estimated $12.1 billion in previously obscure yearly charges are now stated more clearly in credit card offers.” Another component of the CARD Act dealt with minimum payments. Credit card companies must now disclose exactly how much money in interest it will cost and how long it will take consumers to get out of debt if they only pay the minimum payment. According to a survey conducted by Consumer Reports in July 2010, 23% of those of participated in the survey are now making payments greater than the minimum as a result of the warnings on the credit card bill. Interest rates on credit cards have increased. According to the Federal Reserve, interest rates on credit cards towards the end of 2010 on average were 13.44%, compared to about 12.08% in 2008. The credit card industry would argue that the increase in interest rates was due to the CARD Act and more rules and regulation. However, according to a study released last week from CardHub.com, the rise in interest rates was due to the unstable economy and not the CARD Act. CARD Act Fails to Help Students The CARD Act aimed to protect students from credit card dangers by requiring those under age 21 to have a cosigner on the account and prohibiting credit card companies from sending pre-approved credit card offers to those under age 21 via mail. According to a study released last month from the University of Houston, 76% of undergraduate students received credit card offers in the mail over the past year. While it’s still legal for companies to send credit card offers in the mail (pre-approved offers, however, are illegal and against the CARD Act), this study shows how willing credit card companies are to find any and all loopholes. Here’s a tip: if you’re a student and receive any type of credit card offer in the mail, rip it up and throw it away! Credit cards offers sent via mail are usually littered with high fees and high interest rates. Instead, apply for a secured credit card or visit CreditCardConnection.org to search for credit unions in your area. While the CARD Act was a win in terms of more transparency and disclosures, it’s up to the consumer to ensure that they are not getting ripped off by credit card companies. Best option: use cash – you won’t have to worry about what credit card companies do and you’ll never accrue credit card debt. Scott Gamm is the founder of the personal finance website HelpSaveMyDollars.com . He has appeared on NBC’s TODAY, MSNBC, Fox Business Network, Fox News, ABC News and CBS.

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Venus Metals Corporation Limited (ASX:VMC) Yalgoo Iron Ore Project Scoping Study Indicates Potential NPV Of A$1.14 Billion

February 16, 2011

Venus Metals Corporation Limited (ASX:VMC) Yalgoo Iron Ore Project Scoping Study Indicates Potential NPV Of A$1.14 Billion

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Video: Stanton Urges Caution in Shutting Down Fannie, Freddie

February 11, 2011

Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) — Thomas Stanton, a fellow at Johns Hopkins University’s Center for the Study of American Government, discusses the outlook for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Stanton speaks from Washington with Erik Schatzker and Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Tectonic Resources NL (ASX:TTR) Philips River Definitive Feasibility Study Indicates Long Life Operation

February 11, 2011

Tectonic Resources NL (ASX:TTR) Philips River Definitive Feasibility Study Indicates Long Life Operation

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Australian Market Report of February 10, 2011: Calzada (ASX:CZD) Announce Positive Results In Human Stem Cell Study For Bone Growth

February 10, 2011

Australian Market Report of February 10, 2011: Calzada (ASX:CZD) Announce Positive Results In Human Stem Cell Study For Bone Growth

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Sidney Shapiro: Do Regulations Cost $1.75 Trillion? Not Exactly

February 9, 2011

Having voted to repeal health care legislation, House Republicans have now taken aim at government regulations, describing efforts to protect people and the environment as “job-killing.”

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

February 5, 2011

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

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David Isenberg: PMSC Challenges in Kosovo

January 25, 2011

One of the tasks the U.S. government uses private military contractors for is overseas law enforcement. No, they are not walking a beat in another country. But they are used to demonstrate the U.S. Government’s (USG’s) commitment to international operations. Beyond the deployment of police personnel to interim policing missions, LE agencies may also be involved in international operations to enforce U.S. domestic law; for capacity building; and/or in support of U.S. military forces. This is a task that firms like DynCorp, to name one of the bigger PMCS, has long specialized in. It is, to be sure a necessary task; one can’t have stability in an area where there is or recently was conflict without effective and uncorrupted law enforcement agencies. While many PMC have performed this critical work capably it is not without costs. A recent study, Lessons Learned from U. S. Government Law Enforcement in International Operations , by the U.S. Army’s Peacekeeping and Stability Operations Institute examined lessons from three operations: Panama (1989-99), Colombia (1989-Present), and Kosovo (1998-Present). In regard to the last it looked at the UN Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) mission. Although the study does not name the contractor DynCorp has long had the civilian police (CIVPOL) contract, which supplies personnel for U.N. police missions. The United States was the largest contributor of police personnel to the UNMIK mission. At its peak, the United States had 605 officers (all as individually-deployed personnel; the United States did not provide an SPU) in Kosovo. All personnel were recruited (mostly from a variety of U.S. state and local agencies), trained and administered by a contracting company for 12-month deployments to the UNMIK. Using this means, the United States was able to provide a well-regarded, well-equipped contingent of police officers to the mission. However, recruitment of police professionals by contractors draws from a relatively small pool of qualified and available personnel, so there were a few cases of less than suitable personnel (unfit or inappropriately qualified) deployed with the contingents. Another recruitment problem was attracting the right range of law enforcement personnel; although salaries offered by the contractor were very competitive for generalist officers from smaller departments, they were less attractive to still-active personnel from big city departments or officers with management or specialist expertise. Use of a contracting company as an intermediary also created difficulties in dismissing and disciplining officers, and still required government involvement in, and close supervision of, the predeployment training provided in order to ensure the required standards were maintained. In addition, this did not provide a way to institutionalize knowledge and provide for long-term capacity … 3. Use of Contractors. The USG provided a sufficient number of qualified contracted law enforcement professionals to the mission. Overall they performed their tasks well, but there were challenges in recruiting, securing specific expertise, and management overhead. While using contracted LE professionals has had both benefits and challenges, currently a contractor-dependent system is the only means by which the USG deploys large numbers of police to international operations. Existing legislation (particularly under the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution) limits USG ability to deputize state or local employees to federal roles; so these individuals can only work as advisors, contractors, or be added to the permanent federal work force. In addition, while the DoS can develop relationships with local/state LE to recruit LE personnel for overseas deployment, often local/state police stations cannot easily release their personnel and will not agree to do so absent some form of legal mandate (e.g., for National Guard and Reserve military forces). Finally, some relevant skills required in overseas contingencies are not commonly available in state and local LE forces. For the DoS, one of the primary benefits of maintaining a contracting system means that it does not have to permanently employ more people. Contracting allows the DoS to avoid permanently hiring personnel who may only be required for a few years and also reduces the management overhead to vendors who oversee payroll, benefits, and other issues. The DoS is limited to ensuring the contracts are legal and current and to providing some oversight to the overall operation. While not a prevalent problem, one of the related challenges of using contractors includes discipline and accountability. In some cases, companies providing contractors are reluctant to take disciplinary action against their contractors even in the face of clear violations because they want to maintain the mandated number of personnel in country. Contracts often do not specify the steps to be taken in such cases, making it difficult to take adequate disciplinary measures against offenders. This can foster a dangerous kind of impunity under which no system exists to deal with actions that are illegal or are contrary to USG strategic priorities and guidelines.

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William K. Black: Obama Embraces the "Economic Philosophy That Has Completely Failed"

January 20, 2011

President Obama’s Executive Order on regulatory review was originally set in motion by his February 3, 2009 direction to OMB to create an improved regulatory review process. The fundamental principles and structures governing contemporary regulatory review were set out in Executive Order 12866 of September 30, 1993. A great deal has been learned since that time. Far more is now known about regulation — not only about when it is justified, but also about what works and what does not. Far more is also known about the uses of a variety of regulatory tools such as warnings, disclosure requirements, public education, and economic incentives. Years of experience have also provided lessons about how to improve the process of regulatory review. In this time of fundamental transformation, that process–and the principles governing regulation in general — should be revisited. September 30, 1993 is an interesting date. I was the deputy director of the National Commission on Financial Institution Reform, Recovery and Enforcement (NCFIRRE). We issued our report in July 1993 on the causes of the S&L debacle. Our report was based on an extensive investigation of what worked and what failed in regulation. In particular, we found that the deregulation and desupervision created an environment in which at “the typical large failure” “fraud” was “invariably present.” By fall 1993, the Office of Thrift Supervision had learned the lessons and developed extremely effective rules, supervision, enforcement, and support for the criminal justice system. Congress passed the Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) law in 1991. The regulators had removed the abusive regulatory accounting rules designed to cover up the scale of the debacle. Administration officials had falsely used this cover up of losses through accounting gimmickry to claim that the S&L crisis had been “resolved” at no cost to the taxpayers. The PCA was based on the finding that such accounting cover ups and “forbearance” greatly increased the eventual cost to the taxpayers. By fall 1993, a well-functioning partnership of the OTS and the Justice Department had produced over 1,000 felony convictions of “major” S&L frauds — it remains to this day the greatest success against elite criminals in history. The Justice Department and the OTS ensured that the prosecutions were prioritized properly by creating the “Top 100″ list. The OTS (which was created in 1989) had brought over 1,000 serious enforcement actions. The OTS secured over $1 billion in settlements from top tier auditors and brought hundreds of successful civil actions against the elite frauds. The reregulatory effort was so successful that for the next 15 years every U.S. Treasury Secretary flew to Tokyo and urged Japan’s leaders to stop relying on dishonest accounting to cover up their main banks’ losses and to instead adopt the regulatory policies that prevented the S&L debacle from becoming a catastrophe. By September 1993, the S&L regulators had written extensively of our research findings about the role of accounting control fraud in driving the crisis and the regulatory and accounting lessons we had learned. My papers, collectively roughly 500 pages, had been circulated among many finance economists. Our work explained why econometric studies produced exceptionally erroneous findings in the presence of accounting control fraud and financial bubbles. Three of the nation’s leading white-collar criminologists, Henry Pontell, Kitty Calavita, and Robert Tillman had published several journal articles on these same topics. George Akerlof and Paul Romer formally presented their paper on accounting control fraud — “Looting: the Economic Underworld of Bankruptcy for Profit” at the Brookings Conference on September 9, 1993 before many of the nation’s most prominent finance specialists. The NCFIRRE report notes that key elements of the Reagan administration — particularly Treasury and OMB, actively opposed our vital reregulation of the S&L industry. That reregulation was essential to containing a raging epidemic of accounting control fraud in the mid-1980s. Only the fact that the Federal Home Loan Bank Board was an independent regulatory agency prevented OMB from blocking S&L reregulation. President Obama is correct that white-collar criminologists and a few non-theoclassical economists have continued to add to the useful understanding of regulation since 1993. However, his 2009 direction to OMB is not candid. By September 1993, we not only knew how to regulate effectively — financial regulation was exceptionally effective — and employment and growth were surging. The perverse (Gresham’s) dynamics that the accounting control frauds had caused that destroyed wealth and jobs had been eliminated or minimized. Even the most elite frauds and their elite political allies were held accountable. Bank Board Chairman Gray led the successful reregulation in late 1983-mid-1987 over the intense opposition of the Reagan administration, a majority of the House of Representatives, Speaker Wright, and the five U.S. Senators that became known as the “Keating Five.” Paul Volcker was Gray’s sole powerful ally. Wright and the Keating Five intervened on behalf of the two worst control frauds in America. S&L regulators had their careers destroyed, but continued to buck the frauds and their political patrons and do their duty to the public. In 1991-1992, the OTS’ West Region used its supervisory powers to squash a fast-developing trend among a number of California S&Ls to make “liar’s” loans. We recognized that such loans were inherently unsafe and unsound and frequently fraudulent. Our efforts were so effective that Long Beach Savings gave up its federal charter to escape our regulatory authority. It became a mortgage banker and rebranded itself as Ameriquest — the most notorious of the early non-federally regulated lenders specializing fraudulent and predatory nonprime loans. What happened after September 1993 is that OMB and Treasury, in alliance with Fed Chairman Greenspan and Senator Gramm, lost the accurate understanding of why vigorous financial regulation is essential and how one makes regulation effective. OMB, Treasury, Greenspan, and Gramm adopted anti-regulatory policies that were intensely criminogenic. We had to reregulate without the benefits of the criminology studies by Pontell, Calavita and Tillman and Akerlof & Romer’s economic studies. The Clinton and Bush administrations had the advantage of all our research and our demonstration of which financial regulatory policies succeed and which fail. (They also had the benefit of the public administration scholars’ books and articles that studied used our reregulation and concluded that it was an exemplar of effective regulation.) Unfortunately, the “completely failed” economic dogma that the Clinton and Bush administrations, Greenspan and Bernanke, and Senator Gramm shared led them to ignore our successes and adopt anti-regulatory policies that were so perverse that they were intensely criminogenic. The recent epidemics of accounting control fraud, the creation of the largest bubble in history, and the Great Recession could not have occurred if the Clinton and Bush administrations had actually learned a great deal about what works and what fails in regulation. The Clinton and Bush anti-regulatory policies created the “three des” — deregulation, desupervision, and de facto decriminalization. In late 2008, however, then-Senator Obama proclaimed that he had learned the correct regulatory “lessons” from the resulting economic collapse. From the Washington Post : “John McCain has spent decades in Washington supporting financial institutions instead of their customers,” [Obama] told a crowd of about 2,100 at the Colorado School of Mines. “So let’s be clear: What we’ve seen the last few days is nothing less than the final verdict on an economic philosophy that has completely failed.” Senator Obama was correct — the Clinton and Bush anti-regulatory policies were a catastrophic failure that permitted the epidemics of fraud that drove the Great Recession and the loss of over 10 million jobs. OMB was among the most virulent opponents of vigorous financial regulation because it has long been dominated by anti-regulatory economists embracing the “economic philosophy that has completely failed.” Bush selected financial regulatory leaders on the basis of the strength of their anti-regulatory zeal. President Obama was incorrect, therefore, in his February 3, 2009 directive to the OMB about the improved understanding of regulation. “Years of experience” have not taught the theoclassical economists “far more” “about what works and what does not” in regulation. The theoclassical economists know vastly less about effective regulation now than did OTS in 1993. The University of Chicago economists that President Obama appointed to senior positions related to regulatory policy scorned financial regulation. Austan Goolsbee, now Chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors poured scorn on those who warned of the urgent need to regulate nonprime loans. In a March 29, 2007 op-ed in the New York Times , Goolsbee derided those warning that nonprime loans were a “time bomb.” This column shows why the reasoning and methodology that Goolsbee employed “completely failed” because it relied on anti-regulatory dogma rather than sound economics and white-collar criminology. The column also shows that Obama’s regulatory review policy embraces Goolsbee’s “completely failed” anti-regulatory dogma and methodology and ignores the sound findings and methodologies employed by successful regulators, economists, and white-collar criminologists. Obama is correct that white-collar criminologists and non-theoclassical economists have learned “far more” “about what works and what does not” in regulation. He is incorrect that his economic team has learned these “lessons.” Goolsbee loves financial innovation and “consumer choice.” He began his defense of nonprime loans by decrying the “very old vein of suspicion against innovations in the mortgage market.” Goolsbee premised his argument upon the findings of an econometric study of home lending innovations. He argued: These innovations mainly served to give people power to make their own decisions about housing, and they ended up being quite sensible with their newfound access to capital. [T]he mortgage market has become more perfect, not more irresponsible. People tend to make good decisions about their own economic prospects. Of course, basing loans on future earnings expectations is riskier than lending money to prime borrowers at 30-year fixed interest rates. That is why interest rates are higher for subprime borrowers and for big mortgages that require little money down. Sometimes the risks flop. Sometimes people even have to sell their properties because they cannot make the numbers work. And do not forget that the vast majority of even subprime borrowers have been making their payments. Indeed, fewer than 15 percent of borrowers in this most risky group have even been delinquent on a payment, much less defaulted. When contemplating ways to prevent excessive mortgages for the 13 percent of subprime borrowers whose loans go sour, regulators must be careful that they do not wreck the ability of the other 87 percent to obtain mortgages. For be it ever so humble, there really is no place like home, even if it does come with a balloon payment mortgage. It’s hard to get something more wrong than Goolsbee (and the economists that conducted the study he relied upon) got this wrong. Theoclassical economics assumes that market participants are rational, informed, and utility-maximizing. It follows that expanding choices is always the correct policy. Some individuals who find the new option desirable will take it and be better off. Individuals that can expect to be worse off if they select a new option will not select it. Anyone who criticizes relying on consumer choice is paternalistic and is demeaning less-affluent consumers’ decision-making skills. The econometric study he relies and topic he discusses are perfect foils to illustrate Goolsbee’s opposition to regulation. The problem is that the study Goolsbee relied upon illustrates why fraud makes econometric studies fail. I have explained (and these explanations can be found in my 1993 NCFIRRE papers and Akerlof & Romer’s 1993 article) why accounting control fraud epidemics can hyper-inflate financial bubbles. Bubbles allow accounting control frauds to refinance bad loans and delay delinquencies and defaults. The regional real estate bubbles had begun bursting before Goolsbee wrote his op-ed — the delinquencies, defaults, and foreclosures lag the collapse of the bubble. A 13% delinquency rate would kill most subprime lenders, but the eventual default rate was likely to be far higher. Goolsbee ignores the loss to the consumer of purchasing a home with substantial negative equity. Goolsbee stresses that many of the subprime borrowers are relatively poorer minorities. The predatory lenders that induced them to take out loans they could not repay created reverse Pareto optimality — both parties to the nonprime loans made in 2006 and 2007 typically suffered a serious financial loss. Nonprime loans in 2003-2007 hyper-inflated the bubble and the markets increasingly less efficient (not ever more “perfect”). When one considers the endemic mortgage fraud by lenders and their agents and resultant negative expected value of the transaction we see that the frauds also cause negative externalities to the public. The nonprime borrowers included some speculators, but the typical borrower was the prey and the typical nonprime borrower lost wealth. The three key elements that Goolsbee relied upon to give the worst possible policy advice on how regulators should respond to the nonprime loans (do nothing, all is well, the lenders are making the nonprime borrowers friends) are (1) a presumption that financial innovation is good and that financial regulation is bad if it reduces innovation, (2) greater consumer choice is good and financial regulation is bad if it reduces choice (note the innovation increases choice), and (3) the scientific means of choosing between alternative regulatory policies is to rely on econometric studies. Obama’s Executive Order revising regulatory review policy enshrines each of these three elements even though Goolsbee demonstrated that they lead to the most destructive regulatory policies if control fraud or bubbles are present. Obama’s Wall Street Journal letter adopted this Republican talking point about “innovation.” Sometimes, those rules have gotten out of balance, placing unreasonable burdens on business–burdens that have stifled innovation and have had a chilling effect on growth and jobs. There are doubtless some contexts where this unsupported assertion could be true, e.g., the various bans on stem cell research, but in the financial context “innovation” frequently poses systemic risks, is devoid of social utility, and has no demonstrated advantage to anyone but the seller. Paul Volcker has made this point forcefully : I hear about these wonderful innovations in the financial markets, and they sure as hell need a lot of innovation. I can tell you of two — credit-default swaps and collateralized debt obligations — which took us right to the brink of disaster. Were they wonderful innovations that we want to create more of? You want boards of directors to be informed about all of these innovative new products and to understand them, but I do not know what boards of directors you are talking about. I have been on boards of directors, and the chance that they are going to understand these products that you are dishing out, or that you are going to want to explain it to them, quite frankly, is nil. I mean: Wake up, gentlemen. I can only say that your response is inadequate. I wish that somebody would give me some shred of neutral evidence about the relationship between financial innovation recently and the growth of the economy, just one shred of information. President Obama’s Wall Street Journal letter directed regulators not to interfere with consumer choice. [C]reating a 21st-century regulatory system … means using disclosure as a tool to inform consumers of their choices, rather than restricting those choices. We tried this “economic philosophy” and it “completely failed.” Goolsbee’s op-ed was typical of theoclassical dogma: regulations that restrict consumer choice are inherent illegitimate. The predatory lender pushing the loan that the borrower cannot repay is the borrower’s true friend. The regulator is the paternalistic bureaucrat. The FDIC tried to use disclosure plus consumer education to make this anti-regulatory dogma sound more attractive — and disclosure and consumer education failed to protect the nonprime borrowers. Obama’s directive is a radical, dangerous assault on regulation and consumers. It would require us to get rid of “suitability” requirements — your 85 year old grandmother’s financial advisor could hand her a “disclosure” page explaining the risks investing in the mezzanine tranche of CDOs and proceed to advise her to put her entire savings in the CDOs. We could not ban “liar’s” loans. We would have to get rid of many of the food and drug safety laws. We cannot “restrict” the consumer’s “choices.” The drug companies can hand out a “disclosure” page about the risks of a drug that has not been FDA approved for safety and efficacy and it’s up to you to decide whether to buy it. We cannot restrict the consumer’s “choice” so there cannot be any limits on usury or default fees. Your friendly payday lender can hand you their disclosure sheet and then when you are delinquent on a $50 loan they can charge you a $500 fee. We cannot restrict choice, so everybody you contract with can take away your right to sue for torts they commit by disclosing that they have a mandatory arbitration clause and you agree that their maximum liability is $10. Under this logic we couldn’t make prostitution unlawful. The OMB Director (implicitly) explained the import of the new regulatory review standard for econometrics: “Regulations must be guided by objective scientific evidence.” OMB decides whether the rules are guided by “objective scientific evidence.” OMB is dominated by neoclassical economists who believe, in the economic context, that only econometric studies are “objective scientific evidence.” Econometric studies, however, will show that accounting control frauds are reporting record income in the short-term and that whatever asset is used in the frauds has a strong, positive relationship with income. The regulators could not provide the necessary econometric studies to, for example, stop liar’s loans until the true “sign” (negative) of the relationship between making liar’s loans and income emerged — after the fraud and the bubble collapse. Any proposed rule that would restrict the nonprime lenders’ use of liar’s loans would be contradicted by the “objective scientific evidence” (the econometric study). The administration is adopting the “completely failed” economic philosophies that rendered regulation ineffective and allowed the epidemics of accounting control fraud that caused the Great Recession. Senator Obama knew that it was imperative that we junk that failed philosophy. President Obama is adopting key aspects of the completely failed philosophy that he condemned. Bring back Senator Obama. Bill Black is an Associate Professor of Economics and Law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, a white-collar criminologist, and a former senior financial regulator. He is the author of The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One.

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Australian Market Report of January 19, 2011: Xanadu (ASX:XAM) Commenced Scoping Study For Galshar Coal Project in Mongolia

January 19, 2011

Australian Market Report of January 19, 2011: Xanadu (ASX:XAM) Commenced Scoping Study For Galshar Coal Project in Mongolia

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60% Of New Jobs Were In Low-Paying Areas

January 13, 2011

Following last week’s disappointing job report , investment research group TrimTabs brings us an even sharper picture of an economy not on the verge of an economic recovery. (Hat tip to Zero Hedge .) TrimTabs drills into the Labor Bureau’s data for new jobs added in last year, to reveal some unsetting details: “Of the 1.1 million private jobs gained in the last year, 650,000 or 60% are jobs that have absolutely no real wealth creation capacity, nor do they provide any real benefits.” 60% of new jobs went to Temporary Help, Leisure & Hospitality and Retail trade. Leisure and hospitality pays an average hourly wage of $13.14, while a retail salesperson brings in an average of $11.84 an hour, according to the BLS’ database. Temporary help services can be slightly more lucrative at the higher end (Registered Nurses earn $32.77 an hour), but packers and packagers only earn an average of $8.62 per hour. As TrimTabs puts it :

 These jobs are certainly better than no jobs. But for the economy to grow sustainably — without the crutches of $1+ trillion per year in federal deficit spending, zero percent dictated interest rates, and tens of billions per month in central bank debt monetization — American companies need to start generating more higher-paying jobs at home. Last December, the New York Times reviewed a grim reality for Americans returning to the workforce after a layoff. All too often, new job means a lower standard of living and less satisfying work. The effects are emotional as well as economic: “In many cases, these people are not very happy,” said Cliff Zukin, professor of public policy and political science at Rutgers University and one of the authors of the study. “They’re the winners who got new jobs, but they’re not really what they want, and not where they want to be.” Check out Zero Hedge for more information .

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Higher Pump Prices May Linger Into 2011

December 20, 2010

Those stubbornly high gas pump prices might seem like an unwelcome house guest who overstays his welcome, come January. Drivers in many states already pay at least $3 a gallon for regular and analysts don’t expect any relief soon. That’s because crude oil has hovered between $83 and $89 a barrel since Thanksgiving. The national average for regular gasoline was $2.981 a gallon Monday, according to a survey by AAA, Wright Express and the Oil Price Information Service. That’s about the same as a week ago and more than a dime higher than a month ago. A year ago the average was $2.59 a gallon. Motorists in Washington, California, Hawaii, Illinois and Maine are among those paying the highest prices – from $3.092 a gallon to $3.618 a gallon. The Rockies, Texas and parts of the Midwest have the cheapest gas, ranging from $2.738 a gallon to $2.827 a gallon. A new study from business management firm PortiaGroup with data supplied by OPIS finds the average U.S. household will spend about $305 on gasoline this December, up almost 14 percent from last December and 76 percent more than December 2008. Gasoline is taking a bigger bite of median household income this year: 7.4 percent, compared with 6.5 percent last year and 4.2 percent two years ago, the study says. Energy analyst Jim Ritterbusch believes the national average for a gallon of regular will range between $2.90 a gallon and $3.07 a gallon through February. “We’re going to see comparatively high prices here for a while,” he said. “We’ve seen a stronger-than-expected economy and that tends to augur toward stronger gasoline prices, unfortunately, despite the fact that unemployment is still high.” Tom Kloza, publisher and chief oil analyst at OPIS, expects prices to fall during the winter and then begin to climb again. He has forecast prices between $3.25 and $3.75 a gallon from March to May, barring an unforeseen global economic issue. Pump prices could rise above $4 a gallon again in some states for the peak driving season, if oil prices continue to climb. And oil prices climbed again on Monday, as China’s thirst for energy showed little sign of being quenched. Platts, the energy information arm of McGraw-Gill, said China’s oil demand in November hit an all-time high of 9.3 million barrels per day. Traders also are monitoring the stock markets for clues about where the global economy may be headed in the New Year. Stocks wavered between small gains and losses in afternoon trading Monday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost about 2 points. The NASDAQ and the S&P 500 were a little higher. Benchmark oil for January delivery rose 79 cents to settle at $88.81 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Since the contract expired Monday, many traders shifted their focus to the February contract, where the price rose 77 cents to settle at $89.37 a barrel. In other Nymex trading in January contracts, heating oil added 1.58 cents to settle at $2.4895 a gallon, gasoline futures gained 6 cents to settle at $2.3778 a gallon and natural gas gained 17.1 cents to settle at $4.129 per 1,000 cubic feet. In London, Brent crude rose $1.07 to settle at $92.74 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

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CHART: The Number Of Adults Living With Their Parents Has Skyrocketed

December 10, 2010

Empty nest parents, be warned: the number of adults aged 25 to 34 who are living with their parents has exploded, according to this rather shocking chart put together by economist Tom Lawler and posted on Calculated Risk . Earlier this year, a study published in the journal Transitions to Adulthood titled “What’s Going on with Young People Today? The Long and Twisting Path to Adulthood” concluded that the economic downturn has caused an entire generation to delay adulthood. As ScienceDaily summarized the study: “In 1969, only about 10 percent of men in their early thirties had wages that were below poverty level. By 2004, the share had more than doubled. Overall, the share of young adults in 2005 living in poverty was higher than the national average.” Calculated Risk i s slightly more sunny about the below chart: If the job market picks up, the adults living with their parents may transform into a new class of home buyers. Check out the chart below and visit Calculated Risk for more information.

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Obama May Push To Overhaul Income-Tax Code Next Year

December 10, 2010

WASHINGTON — President Obama is considering whether to push early next year for an overhaul of the income tax code to lower rates and raise revenues in what would be his first major effort to begin addressing the long-term growth of the national debt. While administration officials cautioned on Thursday that no decisions have been made and that any debate in Congress could take years, Mr. Obama has directed his economic team and Treasury Department analysts to review options for closing loopholes and simplifying income taxes for corporations and individuals, though the study of the corporate tax system is farther along, officials said.

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Kevin Lawton: The Crowdfunding Revolution Will Democratize Venture Investing

December 8, 2010

It’s no secret that venture capital and angel investing is ‘clubby,’ dominated mostly by middle-aged men. According to a 2007 study of angel investors in North America, 86 percent were male with an average age of 57. Women didn’t fare any better in a similar UK study , where 93 percent of investors were male. A similar trend exists on the entrepreneur side: only eight percent of companies that receive venture capital funding are run by women. While the VC community seems stuck in an old boys network mentality, crowdfunding is radically re-shaping business investment and neutralizing gender bias, for both investors and entrepreneurs. According to Danae Ringelmann, co-founder of crowdfunding site IndieGoGo , 42 percent of successful funding campaigns are women-led. That’s nearly identical to the 41 percent of small businesses in the US which are run by women. Still, most of the current crowdfunding options are non-equity based due to SEC registration requirements, as mentioned in my previous post . Essentially, a U.S. entrepreneur who sells equity in their company online or offline must live under exemptions provided by Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933. These exemptions say that entrepreneurs can approach friends, family and accredited investors for funding, but not the general public . That’s quite unfortunate, as equity financing is well matched for the risk-vs-reward mechanics of seed stage investing. And seed represents a sizable financing hole between $25,000 and $2 million, which is the gap between self-funding and where venture capital takes an interest. According to this Dartmouth study , “only 1% to 2% of all business plans presented to either angels or VCs receive funding.” That’s why the system at large is trying so hard to bust out of the shackles of the old modes of financing. At the low end of the financing curve, crowdfunding is creating a vibrant way to launch small projects and businesses, especially those with smaller capital needs. But as one pushes further up in seed funding needs, equity financing becomes increasingly more important. Investors need more upside potential to balance out the higher risks of investing in pre-revenue ventures. So it’s great to see the newly launched Crowdcube (U.K. only), which will allow funders to purchase equity in startups, although they need to be friends and family. There are other upcoming efforts in Europe which also allow equity funding. Unfortunately, the U.S. is absent in equity crowdfunding, largely due to the SEC. SEC regulations that outlaw general solicitation are in place to protect unsophisticated investors from fraud. But it’s easy to see how banning general solicitation is the wrong approach and contradicts policies that permit other investment activities. Just look at “penny stocks,” which are publicly traded stocks with per-share prices below $5, often less than $1. In a portfolio of penny stocks, some will lose most or all of their value (roughly 10 to 20 percent on average), some will perform decently, and others will increase by 10 times or more. Despite the high risk, penny stocks have fewer reporting requirements than typical stocks, and are legally traded by the general public. To manage risk, investors hold a diversified portfolio. And, in the case of penny stocks, diversification is a best practice and an education thing, not a regulatory issue. Penny stocks have a risk profile that is very similar to investments in early startups: 40 percent, according to this study , lead to a zero return, some yield mediocre returns, and a very small percentage of VC investments in startups yield big returns. If you plotted returns of industry-wide seed stage investments and penny stocks, they’d look very similar. It makes sense, then, that the risks are managed in a similar fashion. Investors of early startups shouldn’t put all of their money in any one investment. Rather, they should hold a diversified basket of startup investments. If they do, a systemic level of 1 or 2 percent fraud is nearly irrelevant. This is why the argument for the ban on the general public investing in startups doesn’t hold up. And crowdfunding offers something further, with its strong elements of social networking. Opening the funding process to the general public adds transparency and trust signaling. It’s much harder for fraud to occur when the whole world is watching, especially with credibility and performance ratings. Raising money nearly always requires using a first-level network as a trust signal to drive the network effect. No trust circle equals no funding. As various countries adopt more powerful forms of crowdfunding, they will reap the economic benefits. But beyond this new funding model is a revolution in gender equality for entrepreneurs and investors. I discuss a much deeper and broader look at the crowdfunding phenomenon in my book, The Crowdfunding Revolution .

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Carbon Energy Limited (ASX:CNX) Completed Concept Study For The Production Of Ammonia and Synthetic Natural Gas

December 8, 2010

Carbon Energy Limited (ASX:CNX) Completed Concept Study For The Production Of Ammonia and Synthetic Natural Gas

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Ron Ashkenas: How Companies Can Give More Than Just Thanks

November 24, 2010

Many cultures around the world celebrate a yearly thanksgiving festival, a time when we express our gratitude for a successful harvest. While observances and timing vary considerably based on different crops, climates, religions, and histories, the common thread is that we should set aside time to thank a higher power — or nature — for providing us with another year of sustenance. Although it’s common knowledge that effective food production is critical to our survival and worthy of a yearly ” thank you ” (especially in light of recent food recalls ), most of us in the modern, developed world take the annual harvest for granted. Although we are aware of droughts, floods, and fires that may affect food production in various parts of the globe, producing food for most of us is no longer a miracle — it’s an established industry . As a result, the Thanksgiving holiday, particularly in the United States , has become more about football and parade floats than the availability of food. The reality is that malnutrition and starvation have not been eradicated , even in the developed world, and may only worsen as the population expands. The food agency of the United Nations, the FAO, estimates that there are 925 million undernourished people in the world , largely because the calories produced worldwide (which should be sufficient) are not effectively utilized and distributed. So while there is abundance in some places, there are shortages in others. The FAO also reports that food production needs to rise by 70% in the next 40 years to meet population growth, while there will be less available land due to urbanization and climate change. According to their study, hitting this target will require a 50% annual increase in agricultural investment starting now. Clearly these macro-economic and developmental problems cannot be solved by any one person or organization alone. However, the Thanksgiving holiday (which comes this week in the United States) is a good time to think about what each one of us can do, both as individuals and as members of organizations . Here are a few ways to promote giving throughout the year: 1. Make giving easy. Talk to your leadership team about making it convenient for you and your colleagues to make charitable contributions beyond just the yearly United Way campaign. Due to the recession, donations to the 400 largest charities in the U.S. (including the United Way) dropped by 11% in 2009 . At the same time, contributions by people making over $200,000 per year fell by 35% . So, in these tough times when many aid organizations have fewer resources, it is all the more important to mobilize larger numbers of people to contribute. Obviously organizations cannot (and should not) force employees to give — but they can make giving easy by setting up payroll reduction plans, putting links to vetted charities on company websites, and providing forums for educating employees about social and community issues. 2. Cut back to give back. Consider ways of redirecting some of the lower-value items in your budget to community or social activities. For example, one company realized that it was supplying three biscuits (as well as coffee, tea, and soft drinks) for every person attending meetings in the headquarters building. By reducing the biscuit allocation it was able to save hundreds of thousands of dollars per year, some of which could be shifted to corporate giving. Another opportunity is to either reduce the luxury level of corporate offsites, and/or spend a portion of each offsite with your team doing community service. This not only benefits the community, but also develops the team . 3. Work together to give your time. Use the Thanksgiving holiday to talk with your team about doing or sponsoring a social service project together (again on an optional basis). Find out what kind of project they would feel good about, and tap into their interests and passions. Set a goal for what you want to accomplish, and then keep it going throughout the year. Although it may not be apparent, individuals and organizations can make a difference — especially if we all increase the giving that goes along with our thanks. How can your company give more? Cross-posted from Harvard Business Online .

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Raymond Baker: The Rut in India’s Economic Highway

November 18, 2010

Writing about India’s booming economic performance and growth potential has become its own cottage industry over the last several years. Indeed, a report out this week predicts that India will become the world’s fastest growing economy by 2012 and, by 2030, will likely be the globe’s third largest economy behind China and the United States. From its educated work force to its embrace of technology and the likelihood it will be among the leaders in developing “green” businesses, it appears that India – other than the Commonwealth Games – can do no wrong. But the rosy picture has a dark underside that must be addressed if India’s stagnant income inequality levels are to be overcome. A new study of the magnitude of illicit capital outflows shows that close to one half trillion dollars have been siphoned out of the Indian economy since independence in 1948. This shocking figure is coupled with an equally alarming estimated annual growth rate of 16.4 percent. In the most recent years examined, India lost an average of $16 billion per year (2002 – 2006). The report, “The Drivers and Dynamics of Illicit Financial Flows from India: 1948-2008,” by Global Financial Integrity a Washington, DC-based research and advocacy group, also notes that as the economy has improved, the amount of illicit money shifted to offshore financial centers has increased as well. Wealthy individuals and private companies “were the primary drivers” of illicit capital flight, the study finds. Moreover, those private companies, and no doubt some publicly-held firms too, mispriced goods in order to funnel money out of the country. In the last five years for which data are available (2004 – 2008) approximately US $89 billion in trade was mispriced. A key driver of these illicit flows was that government oversight did not keep pace with deregulation of the market. “Trade liberalization,” the report notes “merely provided more opportunities [for] companies to misinvoice trade, lending support to the contention that economic reform and liberalization need to be dovetailed with strengthened institutions and governance if governments are to curtail capital flight.” The simple truth is that a rising tide does not lift all boats. Despite India’s tremendous economic growth, this has not translated into an equal amount of poverty alleviation. While there has been progress in its Human Development Index score – which is an examination of health, education, and income levels conducted annually by the UN Development Program – over the last 30 years, the country still ranks 119 out of 169 nations. The rich in India, as the saying goes, get richer and many of the rest just muddle along. This is a pity given the country’s vast potential to help more people out of poverty. The remedy is not technically difficult, but it requires political will which, sometimes, is a difficult commodity to find. A closer examination of trade pricing by the government would curtail a tremendous amount of money from leaving the country, but there is little indication the authorities acknowledge the problem. India has signed the UN Convention Against Corruption but has not ratified it, nor, as the most recent G20 communiqué urges of its members, “effectively implemented” its provisions. There is a global component to the solution as well. The G20 must push for tax evasion to be just cause for charging someone with money laundering , which would cause many individuals and companies to think twice about avoiding the tax. Further, an international standard requiring that beneficial ownership of companies, charities and trusts be known by government authorities would create another hurdle for those wishing to hide money in shady places behind a veil of secrecy. What must not happen is for the Indian government to rest on the notion of asset recovery as its first line of defense. This is a noble effort but, as history has shown, one which is has not been met with a great amount of success. Once money leaves an economy, it rarely returns. The poor deserve a better answer to the question “when will our turn come?” than the current government response of, “we’ll catch up to your money after it’s gone.”

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Dan Dorfman: Santa Special: A Fatter Net Worth

November 12, 2010

Here’s a novel idea. Why limit those holiday stocking stuffers to friends and relatives? Why not get a gift for yourself, as well? What should you buy? In this case, how about a Christmas stuffer that could wind up stuffing your bank account with more cash? That’s essentially the thinking of a trio of investment pros, who recommend putting some bucks to work in the revitalized, roller-coaster stock market Hey, wait a minute. After this past week’s mediocre market showing — which saw the Dow tumble 251.50 points — such an idea hardly seems very appealing, if not downright scary. Moreover, such a suggestion would have drawn a thunderous chorus of boos earlier this year when fear gripped Wall Street. It’s no wonder. Following last May’s “flash crash,” a sudden and frightening drop in the Dow of about 600 points in a matter of minutes, coupled later on with spiraling fears of a double-dip recession and mounting worries of spreading European debt crises, many Wall Streeters understandably ran for cover, convinced that Santa would likely be a no-show this Christmas. That view, though, now may well be off base as a growing number of market watchers have shifted gears, believing St. Nick is on the way with a bag of goodies that contains another one of those traditional year-end spirited Santa Claus rallies. Granted, there’s still a lot out there to spook investors, such as a resumption of European debt woes, a housing market that looks like it’s rolling over again, the near certainty of a painfully slow jobs recovery, a recent spurt of disappointing reports from such names as Disney and Cisco Systems, and a gridlocked Congress that figures to continue to provide little or no meaningful legislation over the next couple of years. Still, some market watchers, fired up by improving economic fundamentals — which have driven up the Dow from 10,000 in late August to around 11,400 (now 11,192) — are looking for say another 5 percent to 7 percent gain in stock prices over the next few months. San Francisco money manager Gary Wollin sums it up: “Santa Claus is coming to town. Or more aptly put, he’s coming to Wall Street.” While some pros argue that the market is overbought, rising too far too soon, and vulnerable to a sell-off, Wollin, who manages a tad above $100 million of assets under the banner Gary Wollin & Co., disagrees. He thinks there’s more upside over the near term, namely a further rise in the Dow to 12,000 by year end. Wollin, who has deftly caught a number of up and down market moves in recent years and astutely turned bullish in March of 2009 with the Dow at around 6,500, points to a somewhat perkier economy and huge liquidity on the sidelines, especially in low-yielding fixed-income investments, as the major spark plugs for his 12,000 projection. Another, he says, will be the likely re-entry into the market of the individual investor, who, he notes, is feeling a lot wealthier now than at the end of 2008, a year in which the Dow fell about 34 percent and closed at 8,776. Indicative of this re-entry is the fact that individual investors have plowed money into stock mutual funds in three of the past four weeks. Retail sales gains in both August and September, it’s pointed out, also reflect this wealthier view. Though a bull, Wollin worries that inflation could take hold sooner than expected because of excessive money printing. Likewise, he thinks retail sales could turn sluggish after Christmas because of continuing high unemployment. A blue chip stock player, he rates a winning equities portfolio over the next 12 months as one that contains such names as AT&T, Exxon Mobil, Microsoft, UPS and Federal Express. Bob Doll, the chief investment strategist at BlackRock, a global investment manager with more than $1 trillion of assets, echoes Wollin’s market exuberance. Pointing to improving economic signs, the $600 billion economic-boosting QE2 (quantitative easing) package, the GOP’s conquest of the House, strong earnings growth and attractive stock valuations, Doll says it all adds up to higher stock prices. Chuck Carlson, an editor of the Dow Theory Forecasts, one of the nation’s leading investment newsletters. takes note of another bullish signal — a rise in two Dow averages (the Dow Transports and the Dow Industrials) to two-year highs, which means, he says, the primary market trend should be regarded as bullish under the Dow Theory. Taking note, too, of the tremendous cash on the sidelines, a gradually, but slowly growing economy and stepped-up corporate stock buybacks, Carlson says he’s reasonably optimistic that the trend is up for the balance of the year. Like Wollin, he also thinks a 12,000 Dow before Jan. 1, 2011, is a reasonable expectation. His top stock picks for the next 12 months, all rated as market outperformers, are Aflac, Newmont Mining, Apple, IBM recommend and CSX. Whether our three bulls are on target or full of bull remains to be seen. But a couple of studies, based on historic patterns, strongly support the advent of another Santa Claus rally. One study shows that since 1986, December is an outperforming month for the market, having averaged a 1.4 percent gain, versus an average 0.5 percent rise for all non-December months. The other study shows that since the end of World War 11 through 2001, the Dow averaged a 9.1 percent gain from its low in November or December to its high in December or January. In some cases, these gains were double-digit, ranging from 10.7 percent to 22.2 percent. What do I think? Put me in the skeptical camp. When a dry cleaning store out of the blue feels compelled to call up my wife, Harriet, and tell her “we could use your business,” that’s something to worry about. Likewise, when I see a growing number of reasonably well dressed people panhandling at restaurants, hotels and places of worship, and hear of more and more people griping that they can no longer afford the maintenance charges on their apartments, it tells me the economy is still struggling pretty badly, more so than many of us think. On top of this, 43 million Americans are now on food stamps, there’s an inventory of 4.2 million empty homes looking for buyers and 14.8 million unemployed looking for work. Actually, it’s 25 million if you factor in the underemployed — people who have left the labor force and part-timers who can’t get full-time jobs. Any way you look at it, such shortfalls are hardly the stuff of what economic recoveries and bull markets are all about. But just maybe I’m too much of a worry-wart. Perhaps, judging from the way our trio of pros see it, John Wayne had the right idea when he said “courage is being scared to death…and saddling up anyway.” What do you gthink? E-mail me at Dandordan@aol.com

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Youth Radio — Youth Media International: Future of Business, Millennial-Style

November 11, 2010

Originally published on Youthradio.org , the premier source for youth generated news throughout the globe. By Robyn Gee Youth Radio recently profiled a company called Mr. Youth , a marketing agency targeting youth consumers. They claim to be experts in engaging young people, which includes enticing young people to remain on their own payroll for long periods of time. They were recently voted one of the best places to work in New York City by Crain’s magazine. Mr. Youth recently collaborated with Intrepid , to conduct a study with the goal of finding out how Millennials, or people born in the 1980s, would design and manage a company. The results of the study provide insight into the minds of young people today, and how our companies will be run in the near future.

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Daniel T. Walsh: Harness the Profit Motive to Deliver Environmental Sustainability

November 5, 2010

Showing businesses how to profitably achieve environmental sustainability goals just might be the motivational carrot we need to begin reducing energy consumption today and jumpstart significant progress in reducing greenhouse gas emissions. While it appears increasingly unlikely that Congress will take up energy or climate legislation during the current session, there is a growing consensus among business leaders that meaningful progress can be made in mitigating emissions and energy use by embracing new tools and approaches into their business models. Debunking the notion that sustainability and profitability are mutually exclusive corporate goals, a recent CEO survey on sustainability released by Accenture, found that sustainability is being recognized as a source of cost efficiencies and revenue growth. In fact, 80 percent of the more than 760 CEOs surveyed indicated that the downturn has only served to raise the importance of sustainability for their businesses. What’s driving this dramatic shift in behavior is the growing realization that achieving energy efficiency is not only good for the environment and reducing U.S. dependence on foreign oil, but can deliver financial returns that can far outweigh the initial investment and can readily be turned into an opportunity for savings that can boost bottom lines. To realize a more sustainable energy future, it is necessary to change how we produce and consume fossil fuels. Changing production is a slow route that is principally limited to progress in the energy sector. Reducing consumption, however, can happen faster and have a far greater impact across the entire economy. And that’s particularly true if it’s based on simple, traditional economic theory that dictates that the best way to encourage consumer behavior is to change the equation — by removing the effort, or cost of taking positive action and delivering immediate gratification or savings. For example, the overwhelming response to some of the government’s recent tax rebate programs showed just how powerful immediate cost savings can be as a motivator in achieving positive environmental outcomes. For example consumer response to instant vehicle rebates overwhelmed original projections, with 677,000 older vehicles being swapped for more efficient models in a matter of weeks, resulting in an impressive annual reduction of 1.5 million metric tons of CO2. For U.S. businesses, one of the fastest routes to emissions reduction and energy savings is being achieved through the deployment and use of “smart networks.” Smart networks leverage a powerful “network offset effect” that occurs when replacing carbon-intensive activities – such as travel – with less carbon intensive technologies. The simple fact is that the energy required to communicate is much less than the energy required to physically move people and things around. By using technology to leapfrog the old, physical infrastructure we can move work to people rather than people to work; connect rather than travel; manage business remotely and in real-time; and improve transportation and distribution system efficiencies Demonstrating how travel replacement can reduce costs targets some of the lowest hanging fruit for reducing energy consumption in the U.S. Telepresence and other forms of virtual collaboration that can replace some business travel represent perhaps the most promising opportunity for businesses to start capturing significant emissions reduction benefits in the near-term, with relatively minor changes to existing business processes – i.e., removing the “effort” in the cost equation. Telepresesence, a high-definition videoconferencing technology which enables groups of people to meet “in person” in multiple locations worldwide – holds even greater promise for unlocking the sustainability benefits of travel replacement. A recently released study commissioned by the Carbon Disclosure Project and produced by independent analyst firm, Verdantix, found that if the largest US and UK businesses (> $1 billion revenues) were to substitute telepresence for some business travel, they could cut CO2 emissions by nearly 5.5 million metric tons by 2020- equivalent to removing more than one million passenger vehicles from the road for one year. And with the systems achieving payback in only 15 months, the study found that total economy-wide financial benefits of almost $19 billion could be achieved in the same timeframe. The study also revealed that telepresence technology can help speed decision-making, improve employee productivity, and provide workers with a better work-life balance – delivering a host of immediate benefits above and beyond cost savings to motivate positive behavior in reducing emissions. Harnessing smart networks that leverage the network offset effect to deliver immediate energy efficiencies and cost savings to businesses just might be the right economic equation to motivate the positive behaviors and actions required to deliver significant progress in addressing energy efficiency and emissions reduction. And it’s an approach that can help businesses make smarter sustainability choices and investments today that better prepare them for whatever challenges may lie ahead. Daniel T. Walsh is a Senior Vice President in Marketing Services for AT&T Business Solutions.

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Doug Kendall: The Chamber, Citizens United, and the Campaign for the Third Branch

October 26, 2010

Last week, investigators at the Center for American Progress released a bombshell , making public confidential materials penned by energy tycoon Charles Koch for a conference of well-heeled conservative activists this past June. These materials also included an invitation to far-right money men and women to another gathering scheduled for next January, to plan the takeover of the White House in 2012. While helping reveal the right’s political agenda, these materials also show just how central the courts are to their plans. For one surprising example, two names topped the list of luminaries who had previously attended Koch’s gatherings: Supreme Court Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas. Furthermore, consider the Chamber of Commerce, and the topic for discussion they chose for Koch’s gathering this past June. In the middle of a heated battle over the control of Congress — a fight that has crystallized the Chamber’s status as a leading financier of conservative causes — the Chamber chose to speak about the opportunity to win judicial elections and capture the state courts. This laser-like focus on the courts is missing on the left, which is far more focused on winning elections and legislative battles. But what if those legislative victories are overturned by the activist rulings of conservative judges? That is already happening in cases such as Citizens United v. FEC , where last January the Supreme Court gutted by a 5-4 vote the McCain-Feingold Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act — a law that progressive funders and activists had spent more than a decade mobilizing to produce. Citizens United is hardly an isolated example. In June, in the wake of Citizens United , the organization I head, Constitutional Accountability Center, comprehensively examined cases decided by the Supreme Court in which the Chamber of Commerce filed briefs since Justice Samuel Alito began participating in decisions in early 2006. Over this nearly five-year period (through the end of June 2010), the Chamber prevailed in 68 percent of its cases. The Chamber was even more successful in the October 2009 Term, winning over 80 percent of its cases (13 victories in 16 cases). Our study also demonstrated a pronounced ideological divide on the Court on Chamber positions: the Court’s conservative majority (Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Alito, Kennedy, Scalia, and Thomas) collectively voted for the Chamber 74 percent of the time while the Court’s moderate/liberal bloc (including former Justice David Souter, who was on the Court for most of these rulings) was more centrist, collectively casting 43% of its votes in favor of the Chamber. The response to our June study, even among many liberals in the Washington legal community, was muted. Indeed, Justice Breyer — who voted for the Chamber less than half the time in our June study — came to the Chamber’s defense, telling Bloomberg News that the Chamber’s recent success before the Court was nothing new because the Chamber has always done well before the Court. A follow-up study released today by Constitutional Accountability Center demonstrates that to be flat wrong. CAC studied the 5-year period immediately before any of the members of the Court’s current conservative majority took the bench. During the five Supreme Court Terms from October 1981 to June 1986, the Court ruled in the Chamber’s favor just 43% of the time. Even more striking was the lack of any comparable ideological divide on the Court during this earlier era. For example, the voting records of then-Justice William Rehnquist, widely viewed as the most conservative member of the Court of that era, and Justice William Brennan, its most liberal member, differed by only three points in support for the Chamber — 47% compared to 44%, respectively. Rehnquist and Brennan waged heated battles over hot-button social issues such as reproductive choice and affirmative action, but they did not battle often over the law’s impact on corporations. Not surprisingly, the Justice voting most often in favor of the Chamber in our earlier study was Lewis Powell. Justice Powell was a moderate on social issues and the Burger Court’s swing Justice on those topics. But he had also represented the Chamber of Commerce in private practice and penned a now famous 1971 memorandum instructing the Chamber to take advantage of a “neglected opportunity in the courts.” For the past 40 years, the Chamber of Commerce and its allies have taken to heart Justice Powell’s advice and worked tirelessly and step-by-step to push for a judiciary that is sympathetic to its legal arguments. How sympathetic? Consider that during the period of our 1981-1986 study, Justice Powell — the most pro-Chamber judge of his era — voted with the Chamber 59 percent of the time. His replacement, Justice Anthony Kennedy — the most moderate member of the Roberts Court’s conservative wing — voted with the Chamber 69 percent of the time during the period of our study of the Roberts Court. There has been a ton of coverage this election season of the Chamber of Commerce’s undisclosed donors and multi-million dollar expenditures on Congressional races across the country. But the Chamber’s efforts in the judicial arena have remained largely underneath the radar. This imbalance of attention is unfortunate, because while the success of the Chamber’s attempt to influence the mid-term election remains to be seen, we already know that the Chamber’s decades-long effort to influence the judiciary has been a resounding success.

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Dan Solin: Jim Cramer’s Shame Meter Is Broken

October 13, 2010

I don’t watch Jim Cramer’s aptly titled Mad Money . A reader sent me CNBC’s summary of his October 6, 2010, show, which he thought would be of interest. He was right! Cramer outlined a recommended trading strategy. It was quite simple. You should sell stocks that had “flown too high,” “let them cool off” and then buy them back at lower prices. According to Cramer, this is a “tested strategy” that had served him well for 30 years. Here’s the part that really got my attention: “And if there were proof that buy-and-hold — or simply buying an index fund, for that matter — generated the kinds of returns earned from actively managing your money,” Cramer would “offer a mea culpa immediately.” Hold on to your hats. Cramer offers no data indicating his trading strategy is “tested.” All of the available data indicates it is nonsense. Cramer doesn’t tell investors how to implement this strategy. How is an investor to know when a stock is “too high” or when to buy back in? The movement of stock prices is random, often driven by tomorrow’s news, which no one knows. Cramer’s dismal stock-picking record illustrates this problem. An article in Barron’s found that Cramer’s stock picks underperformed the DJIA, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq over the two year period studied. A website that tracks the performance of investment gurus found that Cramer’s stock picks were right 47% of the time, which is slightly less than you would expect from the toss of a coin. Cramer conveniently ignores this data, and offers “proof that he is correct.” He brags that he called the market lows, when the Dow was “flirting with 6,000,” and advised his viewers to buy stocks. Cramer fails to note that, on March 21, 2008, he wrote an article for New York Magazine stating that the market had reached a bottom: “[N]ot just for the stock itself, which happens to the venerable Bear Stearns, but for the whole stock market, and for the long-suffering housing market too.” Viewers who followed this advice, saw their portfolios plunge by 39.7% over the ensuing 254 days. His observation about the “long-suffering housing market” hitting bottom was simply dead wrong. Sometimes stock pickers are right and sometimes they are wrong. When they are right, it is due to luck and not skill. This was precisely the finding of an independent study , which concluded that 99.4% of the 2,076 active fund managers studied over a 32-year period demonstrated no genuine stock picking ability. Another study , published in the prestigious Journal of Finance , looked at the performance of 819 actively managed funds over a 45-year period. The study found that actively managed funds underperformed their passive benchmarks by approximately 1% a year, due to their trading costs and high management fees. The import of this study is stark. Investors pay more than $10 billion in fees to actively managed funds. Yet the fund managers do not have the skill to equal their benchmarks. Investors would be better off buying funds that simply tracked the index. Still not convinced? Another study discussed here looked at hiring and firing decisions of active managers made by more than 3,700 retirement plan sponsors over a nine-year period. These managers were responsible for managing $737 billion of assets. Generally, the managers were hired based on their past performance, much the way investors are told to pick mutual funds. So how was the performance of these “skilled” active managers after they were hired? On average they were close to or below their benchmarks. “Hot hands” are a function of luck. Luck does not persist. There is a wealth of additional data indicating that index-based investing consistently beats active management over the long term. It is summarized here. There is a method to Cramer’s “madness.” He wants you to trade. Trading increases the revenues of his corporate sponsors. It also decreases your returns. Here’s my challenge to Cramer: Show me any peer review study demonstrating your trading strategy has merit. Since you represented your strategy has “served you well for 30 years,” provide me with a list of your trades over that time period. I will crunch the numbers and publish the results. Otherwise, I look forward to your promised mea culpa. It’s not spelled “boo-ya.” The views set forth in this blog are the opinions of the author alone and may not represent the views of any firm or entity with whom he is affiliated. The data, information, and content on this blog are for information, education, and non-commercial purposes only. Returns from index funds do not represent the performance of any investment advisory firm. The information on this blog does not involve the rendering of personalized investment advice and is limited to the dissemination of opinions on investing. No reader should construe these opinions as an offer of advisory services. Readers who require investment advice should retain the services of a competent investment professional. The information on this blog is not an offer to buy or sell, or a solicitation of any offer to buy or sell any securities or class of securities mentioned herein. Furthermore, the information on this blog should not be construed as an offer of advisory services. Please note that the author does not recommend specific securities nor is he responsible for comments made by persons posting on this blog. Here is the trailer for my new book, Timeless Investment Advice .

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Katherine Warman Kern: Do Read The Art of Choice

October 12, 2010

In The Art of Choosing , Dr. Sheena Iyengar, business professor at Columbia University, writes about her work in the area of understanding culture, how we make choices, and how those choices impact our lives. I learned, that, if you trust me, you will probably accept my recommendation to read it and be happy about it! Dr. Iyengar is a pioneer. There probably aren’t many blind researchers. Certainly not many who are tenured professors at a school the caliber of Columbia Business School. And the study of culture in the context of business is a relatively new specialty and very relevant to growing businesses in the post-Mass marketing era. From the now famous “Jam” study, which identified that fewer choices featured at retail could increase sales by double-digits, to the study of medical choice which affirms the value of informed consent with a doctor’s recommendation, the book is rich with research. I didn’t always agree with Dr. Iynengar’s conclusions, but every question she pursues and the facts she shares are valuable with insights into future opportunity For example, when studying the differences between Anglo-American and Asian-American kids, she reveals an insight which is key. Both the Anglo-American and Asian-American kids were least motivated when their options were limited by the teacher, Anglo-American kids were most motivated and worked longer when exercising personal choice, and the Asian-American kids, who believed their mothers made the choice for them, were the most productive. This could mean that Anglo-American kids are more motivated by personal choice and Asian American kids are more motivated by pleasing their mothers. But the fact that neither performed well when the teacher made the choice for them suggests that neither is motivated when they think someone who doesn’t care about them personally makes the choice. In other words, when someone else you trust makes the choice for you, you are not haunted with self-doubt about the choice you made or questioning the intent of the untrustworthy authority figure who made the choice for you. You happily plug away productively, believing that someone who knows and cares about you chose the right option for you to pursue. Understanding how we make choices could be a dangerous thing in the hands of people we do not trust. But Dr. Iyengar reveals just how ineffective it can be to try to manipulate choice. The “love on a suspension bridge” study reveals that triggering a negative emotion — fear — could be confused with positive emotions — like love. But when a student of Dr. Iyengar attempts to try it out on a love interest, the result backfires! In today’s marketplace of abundant choices, this is a must read to understand the factors effecting choice.

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Donald Trump Says He’s Seriously Considering Running For President

October 5, 2010

Real estate mogul Donald Trump said on Tuesday’s edition of “Morning Joe” on MSNBC that he’s “absolutely thinking about” making a bid for the White House in 2012. The same day, Trump told Fox News that if he were to mount a presidential campaign he’d run as a Republican. “I’m totally being serious because I can’t stand what’s happening to the country,” said the New York-based businessman to the network. “I am being serious about it. I’ve been asked for years to do it. And I had no interest. This is the first time I am — at least I’m considering it.” Trump stressed that while he’s thinking about running for president, it’s premature to say whether or not he’ll bite the bullet in the end. CNN reported earlier this week: Trump is making clear he had nothing to do with a mysterious poll in New Hampshire that, accordant to TIME Magazine, asked Granite State voters about a potential Trump presidential bid. “I never heard of this poll but I’m anxious to find out what it says. I do not know about a poll taken in New Hampshire,” Trump said Monday on CNN’s “American Morning.” Trump reiterated to Fox News that he played no role in generating the study; however, he did call the results it produced “amazing.” He signaled he thinks he may just be the right person to takeover the White House, saying, “I think my whole life has sort of been about finesse when you get right down to it.” WATCH: Donald Trumps Talks 2012 On MSNBC’s ‘Morning Joe’

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Jeffrey Rubin: Depletion Is Economic, Not Just Geological, Concept

October 5, 2010

As I head down to Washington to speak at the ASPO-USA (Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas) 2010 World Oil Conference this week, I can’t help but reflect on how far the peak oil movement has come over the last decade. It’s not too hard to figure out why. There is a very simple litmus test for the credibility of the movement’s central theory of depletion–the price of oil. With oil already trading at over $80 per barrel in the shadow of the world’s deepest-ever postwar recession, I guess there’s not much of a debate anymore. Of course the world will never run out of oil in the literal sense. There are some 170 billion barrels of the stuff trapped in the Alberta tar sands , and over 500 billion barrels more in the Orinoco tar sands in Venezuela. And if we suck them dry, there are billions more barrels of oil in shale, just as there is natural gas. But what the global economy has already run out of is the oil it can afford to burn. Depletion isn’t just a geological concept; it’s also an economic one. From a purely geological standpoint, you can always boost production–or at least offset depletion–by accessing increasingly costly and environmentally problematic sources of new supply (such as the tar sands). But as we saw from the recent recession, the global economy can’t afford to run on the prices needed to pull that oil out. For some people, the fact that oil prices fell to around $40 per barrel during the depths of the recession was proof enough that it had no business being in triple-digit range in the first place. But what those folks forget is that world oil demand fell during the recession for the first time since 1983. Peak oil is not a problem if the economy it’s supposed to power is shrinking–it’s only a problem if we actually want our economies to grow. The first thing you notice about an economic recovery, even an anemic one, is that the world economy starts consuming more oil. The next thing you notice is that the price of oil starts heading up. We all might have liked the pump prices that came with $40-per-barrel oil during the recession, but we shouldn’t expect much to be flowing out of the gas pumps at that price. Even deep-water oil, like at BP’s ruptured Macondo well in the Gulf of Mexico, doesn’t work at that price, to say nothing of mining bitumen in Alberta and processing it into synthetic crude. If you doubt that, just look at what happened in the Alberta tar patch when world oil prices plunged during the recession. Some $50 billion of planned investment was cancelled literally overnight. No, the world’s not running out of oil. It’s just running out of the oil we can afford to burn.

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Foreclosure Crisis Intensified Among Blacks: Study

October 4, 2010

African Americans have suffered disproportionately from foreclosures due to racially discriminatory lending practices, a new study shows (h/t to Felix Salmon ). The study (pdf) , authored by Douglas Massey and Jacob Rugh of Princeton, looks at racially segregated neighborhoods, where the percentage of minorities (particularly blacks, Hispanics and Asians) is higher than in the country as a whole. Using a black “dissimilarity index” to measure how a region’s African-American makeup differs from the national percentage, the authors found that one standard deviation increase in this index — when a community is slightly blacker than the nation as a whole — increases the number of foreclosures by 15,028 and the foreclosure rate by 1.68 percentage points. As Salmon points out, that’s quite high, given that the nation’s foreclosure rate is 4.14 percent. Before the housing bubble burst, blacks were more likely than their white counterparts to be given “subprime” loans, with high (or increasing) interest rates and hidden fees. It’s a practice often referred to as “predatory lending.” As Reuters notes, blacks with similar credit scores to whites were given worse deals on their loans, suggesting that race played a role in the way some lenders structured these deals. Among lenders that went bankrupt in 2007, blacks were three times more likely than whites to receive subprime loans, according to a previous study that the authors cite in their report. Among lenders that did not go bankrupt, blacks were equally as likely as whites to receive “predatory” treatment. The structures of these subprime mortgages made default especially likely, contributing in large part to the housing market meltdown that led to the financial crisis. But lenders didn’t have to worry about the risk of default: With the rise of mortgage securitization in the 1980s, lenders could originate loans and sell them off to banks, which repackaged them and sold them to investors. The popularity of mortgage-backed derivatives, especially collateralized debt obligations, in the years leading up to the crisis created a huge demand for subprime, high-yield bonds — which in turn encouraged some lenders to engage in ever riskier practices. Racial segregation concentrated and intensified the fallout from racially motivated lending practices, the study says. It also facilitated the lending in the first place, since lenders could target communities that they knew to be disproportionately black or Hispanic. “Hispanic and black home owners, not to mention entire Hispanic and black neighborhoods, bore the brunt of the foreclosure crisis,” the study says. The authors say the nation’s civil rights legislation must be amended to include more effective mechanisms for enforcement. Bank of America last week halted foreclosure proceedings in 23 states, as it joined a growing list of banks who have said they didn’t properly review all foreclosure documents. READ the study below: 10ASR10_629-651_massey-2

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Corporate Slogans Cause Students To Rebel: Study

September 22, 2010

From the Associated Press: Corporate slogans can make shoppers rebel, according to a recent study. In an article for the April issue of the Journal of Consumer Research, researchers said corporate slogans exhorting consumers to save money could lead shoppers to want to spend more, while tagwords associated with luxury could inhibit spending. In one exercise, 435 college students were shown brands associated with value, including Walmart and Kmart. After being flashed the brands, they students said they were less inclined to spend. But after students read slogans that promoted savings and deals, such as “Focus on value, think us,” students tended to want to spend more money. When students were shown brands deemed “luxury” such as Tiffany and Neiman Marcus, they tended to be willing to spend more money. However, exposure to catchphrases that promoted spending, such as “Luxury, you deserve it,” often resulted in students saying they would spend less money. The researchers, marketing professors from three universities, said their study suggested that consumers often want to do the opposite of what corporate slogans tell them to do. The study said that shoppers often understand and resist – perhaps unconsciously – retailers’ attempts to persuade them to act in a certain way.

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Money Can Buy Happiness, Study Finds — But Only Up To $75,000

September 6, 2010

WASHINGTON — They say money can’t buy happiness. They’re wrong. At least up to a point. People’s emotional well-being – happiness – increases along with their income up to about $75,000, researchers report in Tuesday’s edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. For folks making less than that, said Angus Deaton, an economist at the Center for Health and Wellbeing at Princeton University, “Stuff is so in your face it’s hard to be happy. It interferes with your enjoyment.” Deaton and Daniel Kahneman reviewed surveys of 450,000 Americans conducted in 2008 and 2009 for the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index that included questions on people’s day-to-day happiness and their overall life satisfaction. Happiness got better as income rose but the effect leveled out at $75,000, Deaton said. On the other hand, their overall sense of success or well-being continued to rise as their earnings grew beyond that point. “Giving people more income beyond 75K is not going to do much for their daily mood … but it is going to make them feel they have a better life,” Deaton said in an interview. Not surprisingly, someone who moves from a $100,000-a-year job to one paying $200,000 realizes an improved sense of success. That doesn’t necessarily mean they are happier day to day, Deaton said. The results were similar for other measures, Deaton said. For example, people were really happier on weekends, but their deeper sense of well-being didn’t change. Kahneman, a Nobel Prize winning psychologist, and Deaton undertook the study to learn more about economic growth and policy. Some have questioned the value of growth to individuals, and Deaton said they were far from definitively resolving that question. But he added, “Working on this paper has brought me a lot of emotional well-being. As an economist I tend to think money is good for you, and am pleased to find some evidence for that.” Overall, the researchers said, “as in other studies of well-being, we found that most people were quite happy and satisfied with their lives.” Comparing their life-satisfaction results with those of other countries, the researchers said the United States ranked ninth after the Scandinavian countries, Canada, the Netherlands, Switzerland and New Zealand. The research was supported by the Gallup Organization and the National Institute on Aging. ___ Online: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: http://www.pnas.org Princeton Center for Health and Wellbeing: http://www.princeton.edu/chw/ Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index: http://www.well-beingindex.com/

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Immigration Boosts Wages, Employment And Productivity, Fed Study Finds

August 31, 2010

Champions of strict immigration reform, be warned: there may be an economic consequence to tightening America’s borders. Immigration is actually good for employment, wages and productivity , according to a new study from the San Francisco Fed. States that have had a large influx of immigrants tended to produce more, hire more and pay workers more than states that have few new foreign-born workers, argues a study released today by a visiting scholar at the San Francisco Fed. For every one percent increase in employment from immigration, the study finds, a state will see a .4 to .5 percent increase in income per worker. In conducting the study, Giovanni Peri, an associate professor at University of California, Davis, compared output per worker and employment in states that have had large immigrant inflows with data from states that have few immigrant inflows. Peri found no evidence that immigrants “crowd-out” employment for American citizens. Peri concludes that immigration boosted states’ output, income and employment because the economies “[absorbed] immigrants by expanding job opportunities rather than by displacing workers born in the United States.” Further, the results of the study support the theory that U.S.-born workers and immigrants tend to take different occupations, says Peri. The study uses a hypothetical illustration to explain: “As young immigrants with low schooling levels take manually intensive construction jobs, the construction companies that employ them have opportunities to expand. This increases the demand for construction supervisors, coordinators, designers, and so on. Those are occupations with greater communication intensity and are typically staffed by U.S.-born workers who have moved away from manual construction jobs. This complementary task specialization typically pushes U.S.-born workers toward better-paying jobs, enhances the efficiency of production, and creates jobs.” Check out a brief of the study at the NBER’s website . (The full study is available for purchase.)

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Immigration Boosts Wages, Employment And Productivity, Fed Study Finds

August 31, 2010

Champions of strict immigration reform, be warned: there may be an economic consequence to tightening America’s borders. Immigration is actually good for employment, wages and productivity , according to a new study from the San Francisco Fed. States that have had a large influx of immigrants tended to produce more, hire more and pay workers more than states that have few new foreign-born workers, argues a study released today by a visiting scholar at the San Francisco Fed. For every one percent increase in employment from immigration, the study finds, a state will see a .4 to .5 percent increase in income per worker. In conducting the study, Giovanni Peri, an associate professor at University of California, Davis, compared output per worker and employment in states that have had large immigrant inflows with data from states that have few immigrant inflows. Peri found no evidence that immigrants “crowd-out” employment for American citizens. Peri concludes that immigration boosted states’ output, income and employment because the economies “[absorbed] immigrants by expanding job opportunities rather than by displacing workers born in the United States.” Further, the results of the study support the theory that U.S.-born workers and immigrants tend to take different occupations, says Peri. The study uses a hypothetical illustration to explain: “As young immigrants with low schooling levels take manually intensive construction jobs, the construction companies that employ them have opportunities to expand. This increases the demand for construction supervisors, coordinators, designers, and so on. Those are occupations with greater communication intensity and are typically staffed by U.S.-born workers who have moved away from manual construction jobs. This complementary task specialization typically pushes U.S.-born workers toward better-paying jobs, enhances the efficiency of production, and creates jobs.” Check out a brief of the study at the NBER’s website . (The full study is available for purchase.)

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Barbara Roper: Fiduciary Duty: What Investors Need to Know

August 30, 2010

At the end of the day Monday, the comment period officially closes on the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) study of the standard that should apply to brokers when they give investment advice and recommend securities. Yet as of last Monday, with only one week remaining on the comment period, only 32 individual investors had submitted comments out of 1535 filed. This is arguably the single most important investor protection issue for retail investors, but unless they make their voices heard, this issue is likely to be decided without their input. Most investors choose to rely on a professional – a broker, a financial planner, or an investment adviser – to help them make investment decisions. These investors rely heavily, if not exclusively, on the recommendations they receive from these professionals. Surveys show, for example, that the typical mutual fund investor does little if any additional research on the funds that are recommended; instead, they do exactly what their broker or financial planner or investment adviser suggests, without second-guessing that recommendation. This makes investors extremely vulnerable, particularly given the conflicts of interest that pervade the securities industry and investors’ difficulty in distinguishing between sales- and advice-based services. What many investors don’t realize is that even though the services investment advisers and broker-dealers provide are often virtually indistinguishable, they are regulated under different statutory and regulatory frameworks. Investment advisers are subject to a fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of their clients and to provide disclosures to clients regarding conflicts of interest. Brokers do not have this fiduciary duty. Instead, they are required to make recommendations that are generally “suitable” for the investor. Under this lower standard, brokers are free to recommend a particular product that provides the broker with higher compensation, even if a different product would be better for the customer. And they don’t even have to disclose this conflict of interest to the customer. To add to the confusion, brokers have encouraged investors to rely on them as advisers, by giving their salespeople titles like “financial advisers,” offering extensive advisory services, such as investment planning, and marketing their services based on the advice offered. The recently passed financial reform bill allows the SEC to end this confusion and require all professionals who provide investment advice, whether they are brokers, financial advisers, or investment advisers, to meet the same standard of investor protection. But before the SEC can adopt these new rules, the law requires the agency to conduct this study. Those not currently subject to a fiduciary duty have made a concerted effort to submit their comments. Unfortunately, most investors appear to know nothing about this proposed change. On several of the issues addressed by the study investors should be able to add valuable insights. They can explain how confusing they find the different titles used by brokers and investment advisers, such as financial advisor, financial planner, and investment adviser. They can offer their views on whether services that sound similar, if not identical, to the average investor – services like investment planning, retirement planning, financial planning, and advice about investments – should be subject to the same standards. They can tell the Commission what they believe the appropriate standard for such advice should be. In short, do they want all those who provide investment advice to have to act in the best interests of their customers? We believe the answer is obvious. The dramatic changes that brokers have made in their business model have rendered the old regulatory distinctions obsolete. Brokers have worked hard to convince investors to rely on them as trusted advisers. It is high time they were regulated accordingly. The SEC has a golden opportunity to end investor confusion by requiring that all who offer investment advice to act solely in the best interests of their clients, without regard to their own interests, to take steps to avoid and minimize potential conflicts, and to disclose any conflicts of interest. It can’t happen soon enough.

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David Isenberg: The Chimerical Cost Savings of Outsourcing

August 22, 2010

This year has seen increased rhetoric, if not a lot of action, about the idea that the Obama Administration is suddenly putting back into government all sorts of jobs that previously had been outsourced or privatized. The August 9 announcement by Defense Secretary Robert Gates about the Pentagon relying less on contractors is supposedly a sign that the pendulum is suddenly swing back towards insourcing. This is a laughable contention, if for no other reason, that the Pentagon doesn’t even know how many contractors it has working for it. As Winslow Wheeler of the Center for Defense Information pointed out , in regard to Gate’s call for a 10 percent reduction per year for three years in “support contractors”: The total number of these contractors appears to be unknown. One estimate is that the DOD contractors number 790,000; other numbers in are higher. In any case, the denominator for this 10 percent reduction appears to be unknown. Also, it is unclear if this 10 percent reduction pertains to all contractors or a subset. If the correct number is 790,000, will there actually be three years of reductions of 790,000 of these people?) More to the point private military contractor advocates have been beating their rhetorical drums for many years that the private sector is usually better than the public sector in achieving results. Sometimes; maybe even many times, it is true but hardly always. Most people have forgotten the background to this. That is why an article published earlier this year in the Air Force Law Review merits our attention The article, ” Uncontracting: The Move Back to performing In-House ” by Major Kevin P. Stiens and Lt. Col. (Ret.) Susan l. Turley recalls that Section 832 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 required the Comptroller General to convene a panel to study transferring commercial activities from performance by federal employees to performance by contractors. “The Panel was to consider procedures for determining whether functions should continue to be performed by government personnel, and for comparing the cost of performance of functions by government personnel with the cost of the functions by contractors.” … The section did not mandate insourcing but did require DOD to consider returning to performance by government employees when a contract has been “poorly performed due to excessive costs or inferior quality.” … The GAO also agreed that outsourcing could achieve substantial savings, concluding that “outsourcing is cost-effective because the competitions generate savings–usually through a reduction in personnel–whether the competition is won by the government or the private sector.” … But, and here is the part that private military advocates rarely mention: the short-term savings that outsourcing promises evaporate quickly once competitors drop out; contractors who underbid to win a contract are free to raise rates later or in follow on contracts, often leaving government representatives with little choice but to accept.” … But ” while some exalt the benefits of the blended workforce, others are concerned about the loss of in-house expertise, lack of ethical standards for contractors, and the ‘pirating’ of government employees by contractors. The article argues that “overestimated cost savings and global changes negatively impacted the outsourcing process. Not only did the cost savings fail to materialize, outsourcing caused other tangible losses. The government lost personnel experience and continuity, along with operational control, by moving to contractors.” The authors also write, “Although insourcing will not be a miracle cost-saving tool, performing more functions with federal employees instead of contractors will better equip the government to operate in current global conditions.” Ignore that background noise; it’s just the sound of various trade associations gnashing their teeth and sputtering indignantly. Considering how often advocates claim that PMC are just doing their part to help make the country safer, paragraph is worth considering: Initially, outsourcing aimed to cut government spending while also decreasing the size of the government, especially the military. Eisenhower worried that big government “would make decisions that suited them best, undermining democracy. In short, they might use the pursuit of making Americans safer as cover for all kinds of ills. I do not have space here to do justice to the article’s detailing of the history of governmental outsourcing so let’s just say that in the author’s view it is a nice idea, which does not live up to reality. They note: Despite increased effectiveness, improved capabilities and taxpayer savings, competitive sourcing ultimately fails for a number of reasons. The biggest drawbacks roughly correspond to benefits offered by insourcing. The anticipated cost savings turned out to be inflated at best and non-existent at worst. In some cases, outsourcing has actually cost the government more, in part because of an inability to properly manage the contracts and contractor personnel, and the recurring recompetition requirement. Insourcing, on the other hand, would not only reverse the financial roller-coaster but would allow the government to better control personnel while retaining in-house expertise. They also note that many of the purported savings claimed by PMC advocates are not backed by evidence; a point I have been making for years. Additionally, the fact that the government uses a detailed process to determine costs does not guarantee that the private competitor will conduct such an exacting pricing valuation. Contractors’ bids should reflect their overhead costs, such as training personnel and providing medical and retirement benefits; their more direct costs, such as wages; and what they plan to charge the government to achieve a reasonable profit. However, contractors have an economic incentive to overestimate their savings and efficiencies: award of the contract. In a fixed-price contract, the contractor bears the risk of underbidding, but if the government commits to reimbursing the contractor’s costs, the government may realize no savings. No matter how the results are calculated, they are simply estimates, which may or may not play out as expected. Most outsourcing savings estimates failed to account for typical growth in contract costs. Admittedly, the government can obtain some simple goods and services more cheaply through contracting out. However, frequently “the short-term savings that [outsourcing] promises evaporate quickly once competitors drop out; contractors who underbid to win a contract are free to raise rates later or in follow on contracts, often leaving government representatives with little choice but to accept.” While the GAO recognized that outsourcing can be cost-effective, in a report to Congress it questioned some of the savings projections. The GAO reported doubts that the services would ever achieve the projected 20 to 30 percent savings. In fact, the “GAO found that contracting outside of A-76 can actually cost the government more than doing the work in-house.” According to GAO, both DOD and OMB lacked “reliable data” at every stage of the outsourcing effort. Neither agency had the right information at the start “to assess the soundness of savings estimates,” and DOD then failed to consistently track and analyze cost data to determine whether the contract achieved the savings. The process takes into account anticipated costs; it does not look at what a contract costs the government in the end. The authors also note that this is not exactly what you would call breaking news. As early as 1991, various studies showed that contracts are more expensive than government employees. For example, the GAO concluded that 11 out of 12 contractors in their study were about 25 percent more costly. Studies after years of outsourcing confirmed this early data. In 2007, a Congressional study found that contracts for intelligence support cost, on average, almost twice as much as in-house performance. In 2008, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence reported that the cost of a federal employee–including not just salary but all benefits such as retirement and healthcare–was $125,000, while the direct cost (excluding overhead) for each contractor employee was $207,000.

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Danny Wong: The Long Tail of Retail

August 20, 2010

There is no doubt that while brick and mortar businesses feel outdated, brick and mortar sales continue to massively trump online sales. But e-commerce sales are growing at a very strong rate. In 2009, U.S. online sales amounted to $155.2 billion, only 6% of total retail sales (via Forrester Research ). A new report from comScore released “its Q2 2010 U.S. retail e-commerce sales estimates, which showed that online retail spending reached $32.9 billion for the quarter, up 9 percent versus year ago.” According to the numbers in the study, U.S. e-commerce sales have a 7% Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) since 2007. E-commerce, without a doubt, is booming ! Photo via TechCrunch and Forrester Forrester predicts that online sales will reach $250 billion in 2014, capturing 8% of the total U.S. retail sales. But what sectors of online retail will explode? Which ones will become irrelevant? Here’s some speculation: E-commerce superstores like Amazon and Zappos will continue to expand by providing a wider product selection to suit everyone’s needs so they become a hub for everything and anything, sort of like WalMart. Their impressive growth rates which quickly made them billion dollar companies aren’t likely to come to a halt any time soon. E-stores like Amazon and Zappos are certainly hitting the long tail of retail, and are successful in doing so because consumers are having trouble finding miscellaneous products they want in their local retail stores. Amazon and Zappos make it easy to find and purchase the things you really want. Where else can I find organic soy milk in portable single-serve sizes? Perhaps Whole Foods, but I really hate waiting in those long lines, and it would be a disappointing and wasted trip if they didn’t carry what I was looking for or was out of stock. Flash sale sites like Gilt, HauteLook and RueLaLa will reach more consumers who are looking for the latest and greatest deals on designer brands. Gilt Groupe even expanded to create Gilt City for flash deals in your local city. With consumers looking to minimize costs but maximize value, flash sale businesses came at the right time. Right now, there are scores of web-savvy consumers who would die for 70% off a pair of Nudie jeans, and would check in online several times a day to catch the most recent and available deals, which can disappear in minutes. These businesses win because they capitalized on maximized value to customers at minimized costs, at a time when consumer behaviors and technology enabled these businesses to boom. The growth of group buying sites seems to show that the group buying industry will be a multi-billion dollar industry in no time. GroupOn was valuated at $1.35 billion earlier this year in it’s latest round of funding, but competitor sites like Tippr are coming around with far more competitive advantages (due to some really great IP) which will help in the group buying industry’s expansion. One huge and interesting differentiation point is Tippr’s white-labeling of it’s group buying software and group buying tactics, which it will license out (to big publishers most likely) to minimize merchant acquisition and consumer acquisition costs because of the leverage of publishers. I think it’s just genius that instead of building a business as massive in manpower as GroupOn is, with it’s several hundred person sales team, Tippr is building a software-as-a-service business and will white-label their group buying systems so that publishers can offer more value to their readers and because publishers already have strong, loyal readerships, consumer acquisition costs are low, and merchant signups are easy when the publishers already have connections to scores of advertisers that might be willing to try something different for their marketing efforts. Co-creation is a booming sub-industry within e-commerce where consumers are collaborating with retailers to create product that they want. The power of design is put into the hands of consumers where consumers are no longer subject to what retailers want to provide. Instead, consumers have active input into what retailers are creating so consumers get a product completely tailored to them to fit their individual needs. The co-creation trend has been featured on NYT , HuffPo , Entrepreneur , Mashable , MSNBC and many other big media outlets. Many co-creation companies are building some serious traction. Chocri , for example is only a few years old but is already a multi-million dollar company specializing on co-created chocolate bars . Millions have been invested into co-creation companies like Gemvara ($11 million), FashionPlaytes ($1.7 million), and LaudiVidni (a few hundred thousand). Of course, there are also neat startups that have made a big splash in the co-creation space and media including GemKitty , Shoes of Prey , and GelaSkins . While e-commerce seems to be the long-tail of retail, co-creation has become the long-tail of e-commerce, and as e-commerce booms, so will co-creation in the coming years. Danny Wong is the co-founder of co-created men’s dress shirts startup, Blank Label . Blank Label is hitting the long-tail of the dress shirts market, providing DIY shirts, slim fit dress shirts , bespoke dress shirts and fitted dress shirts .

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Danny Wong: The Long Tail of Retail

August 20, 2010

There is no doubt that while brick and mortar businesses feel outdated, brick and mortar sales continue to massively trump online sales. But e-commerce sales are growing at a very strong rate. In 2009, U.S. online sales amounted to $155.2 billion, only 6% of total retail sales (via Forrester Research ). A new report from comScore released “its Q2 2010 U.S. retail e-commerce sales estimates, which showed that online retail spending reached $32.9 billion for the quarter, up 9 percent versus year ago.” According to the numbers in the study, U.S. e-commerce sales have a 7% Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) since 2007. E-commerce, without a doubt, is booming ! Photo via TechCrunch and Forrester Forrester predicts that online sales will reach $250 billion in 2014, capturing 8% of the total U.S. retail sales. But what sectors of online retail will explode? Which ones will become irrelevant? Here’s some speculation: E-commerce superstores like Amazon and Zappos will continue to expand by providing a wider product selection to suit everyone’s needs so they become a hub for everything and anything, sort of like WalMart. Their impressive growth rates which quickly made them billion dollar companies aren’t likely to come to a halt any time soon. E-stores like Amazon and Zappos are certainly hitting the long tail of retail, and are successful in doing so because consumers are having trouble finding miscellaneous products they want in their local retail stores. Amazon and Zappos make it easy to find and purchase the things you really want. Where else can I find organic soy milk in portable single-serve sizes? Perhaps Whole Foods, but I really hate waiting in those long lines, and it would be a disappointing and wasted trip if they didn’t carry what I was looking for or was out of stock. Flash sale sites like Gilt, HauteLook and RueLaLa will reach more consumers who are looking for the latest and greatest deals on designer brands. Gilt Groupe even expanded to create Gilt City for flash deals in your local city. With consumers looking to minimize costs but maximize value, flash sale businesses came at the right time. Right now, there are scores of web-savvy consumers who would die for 70% off a pair of Nudie jeans, and would check in online several times a day to catch the most recent and available deals, which can disappear in minutes. These businesses win because they capitalized on maximized value to customers at minimized costs, at a time when consumer behaviors and technology enabled these businesses to boom. The growth of group buying sites seems to show that the group buying industry will be a multi-billion dollar industry in no time. GroupOn was valuated at $1.35 billion earlier this year in it’s latest round of funding, but competitor sites like Tippr are coming around with far more competitive advantages (due to some really great IP) which will help in the group buying industry’s expansion. One huge and interesting differentiation point is Tippr’s white-labeling of it’s group buying software and group buying tactics, which it will license out (to big publishers most likely) to minimize merchant acquisition and consumer acquisition costs because of the leverage of publishers. I think it’s just genius that instead of building a business as massive in manpower as GroupOn is, with it’s several hundred person sales team, Tippr is building a software-as-a-service business and will white-label their group buying systems so that publishers can offer more value to their readers and because publishers already have strong, loyal readerships, consumer acquisition costs are low, and merchant signups are easy when the publishers already have connections to scores of advertisers that might be willing to try something different for their marketing efforts. Co-creation is a booming sub-industry within e-commerce where consumers are collaborating with retailers to create product that they want. The power of design is put into the hands of consumers where consumers are no longer subject to what retailers want to provide. Instead, consumers have active input into what retailers are creating so consumers get a product completely tailored to them to fit their individual needs. The co-creation trend has been featured on NYT , HuffPo , Entrepreneur , Mashable , MSNBC and many other big media outlets. Many co-creation companies are building some serious traction. Chocri , for example is only a few years old but is already a multi-million dollar company specializing on co-created chocolate bars . Millions have been invested into co-creation companies like Gemvara ($11 million), FashionPlaytes ($1.7 million), and LaudiVidni (a few hundred thousand). Of course, there are also neat startups that have made a big splash in the co-creation space and media including GemKitty , Shoes of Prey , and GelaSkins . While e-commerce seems to be the long-tail of retail, co-creation has become the long-tail of e-commerce, and as e-commerce booms, so will co-creation in the coming years. Danny Wong is the co-founder of co-created men’s dress shirts startup, Blank Label . Blank Label is hitting the long-tail of the dress shirts market, providing DIY shirts, slim fit dress shirts , bespoke dress shirts and fitted dress shirts .

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Is Your CEO Lying? Watch Out For Use Of The Third Person

August 13, 2010

The next time you hear a CEO refer to him or herself in the third person, you may want to make sure you don’t own any of their company’s stock. Using phrases like “the team” and “the company” over “I” and “we” is one of a number of linguistic cues that an executive could be lying, according to a new study by David F. Larcher, professor of accounting at Stanford University, and his team at the university’s Rock Center for Corporate Governance . ( hat tip Wall Street Journal ) The study, titled ” Detecting Deceptive Discussions in Conference Calls ,” found that executives who later revised their firm’s financial statements displayed distinct styles of speech in analyst calls, including language that “disassociates themselves from their subject matter.” Less than truthful execs also tended to speak in generalities rather than specifics, and replaced common adjectives like “good” and “respectable” with effusive adjectives like “incredible.” Larcher told the HuffPost that he hadn’t yet investigated which companies were found to display the most frequent signs of deceitful language — though he added that deceit tended to occur most often in “high-litigation industries like tobacco and oil.” As a part of the study, Larcher’s team loaded 30,000 transcripts of public conference calls from 2003 to 2007 onto an electronic document, which they then culled for verbal patterns psychologists and linguists usually associate with deception. Fourteen percent of executives, they found, said something that raised a red flag. One such transcript Larcher’s team looked at was a conference call with Erin Callan, the former Lehman Brothers CFO, just months before the firm’s collapse. In it, she used the word “great” 14 times, “strong” 24 times and “incredibly” eight times to describe the bank’s recent performance. She used the word “challenging” six times and “tough” only once. To most linguists and psychologists, such an overtly positive tone as Callan’s is a dead giveaway that a person is being less than candid. “These ideas have been around for a long time,” says Larcher. “What we’re trying to do is put the linguistic model and the accounting model together.” READ the study, “Detecting Deceptive Discussions in Conference Calls,” below: Deceit

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China’s Rich Hiding $1.4 Trillion In Wealth, Study Says

August 13, 2010

BEIJING — China’s households hide as much as 9.3 trillion renminbi of income that is not reported in official figures, with 80 percent accrued by the wealthiest people, a study showed. The money — the equivalent of $1.4 trillion, much of it most likely “illegal or quasi-illegal” — is the equivalent of about 30 percent of China’s gross domestic product, according to the study, which was conducted for Credit Suisse and published last week by the China Reform Foundation

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Peter Bosshard: China’s Biggest Bank "Not a Mercenary" in Africa

August 10, 2010

The Gibe 3 Dam in Ethiopia is Africa’s most destructive dam project. So far, the Ethiopian government has not managed to attract any international finance for it. After several other funders pulled out, China’s biggest bank is expected to decide about a loan for Gibe 3 soon. The decision is an important test case for the environmental responsibility of China’s overseas lenders. The Gibe 3 Dam is currently under construction on Ethiopia’s Omo River. Environmental organizations have documented in eyewitness reports, articles and commentaries, the dam could lead to the collapse of the fragile ecosystems of the Lower Omo Valley and Lake Turkana. No less than 500,000 poor indigenous people depend on these ecosystems for their survival. The dam endangers two World Heritage Sites . The concerns of affected people and NGOs have meanwhile been confirmed by official studies. A review of the project’s impacts on Lake Turkana commissioned by the African Development Bank states: “Lake Turkana is dependant on the Omo River for almost 90% of its inflow. The river is the lake’s umbilical cord. If the Omo River inflow is cut, the lake level will fall. (…) The filling of the dam has the potential to dry up Ferguson’s Gulf, the most productive fishing area of the lake.” The Ethiopian government has expressed an interest in using the Gibe 3 Project for irrigation. If this happens, the study finds, the world’s largest desert lake “could drop 40 metres, and could ultimately be reduced to two small puddles.” Ethiopia will not be able to build the $1.7 billion dam project without international support. Yet in spite of strenuous efforts over the last four years, the government has not managed to secure any foreign funding. The institutions which have evaluated Gibe 3 include the World Bank, the African Development Bank, the European Investment Bank, Italy’s export credit agency SACE, and US bank JP Morgan Chase. For one reason or the other, none of them have become involved. Funders don’t usually inform the public if they decide not to finance a project, but it is clear that the Gibe 3 Dam would violate environmental standards which many of them have endorsed. In May, Ethiopia’s government announced that the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) would fund a Chinese equipment contract for Gibe 3 with a loan of approximately $450 million. ICBC is China’s and the world’s biggest commercial bank. Kenya’s Friends of Lake Turkana, BankTrack and International Rivers immediately called on ICBC to stay out of the project. “Funding the Gibe 3 Project would seriously damage ICBC’s reputation as a diligent, environmentally responsible bank,” the three organizations warned in a letter to the bank’s CEO . ICBC has meanwhile clarified that it has not yet taken a decision on the Gibe 3 loan. Wei Guoxiong, the bank’s Chief Risk Officer, assured a Chinese business newspaper that ICBC was evaluating the project “very carefully, very carefully”. “Although ICBC is a commercial bank, we are not a mercenary,” Wei Guoxiong said. “We will not support [projects with serious environmental impacts], whether domestically or abroad.” ICBC has expressed a strong commitment to China’s Green Credit Policy and has won numerous banking awards , including a prize for the country’s Best Corporate Citizen. Gibe 3 will put those commitments to the test. ICBC has a 20 percent stake in South Africa’s Standard Bank . Standard Bank is advising ICBC on African projects such as Gibe 3. The South African bank has signed the Equator Principles , an environmental standard for the international banking sector. The Gibe 3 Dam would violate the banking standards on social and environmental assessment, indigenous peoples, and biodiversity conservation. While ICBC has not signed the Equator Principles, its Chief Risk Officer argues that its policies are “in some cases more stringent” than these standards. Chinese investment in African infrastructure is much needed. We have often pointed out problems with specific projects and the environmental standards of Chinese funders. We have also acknowledged the environmental progress that has happened in recent years. With this background, the Gibe 3 Dam is a test case for China’s future role in Africa. Hardly any other project has been so extensively documented, discussed by international financiers and civil society, and covered in the media. If ICBC declines to fund Gibe 3, China’s biggest bank will demonstrate that it respects international environmental standards in its funding decisions, and that it can become a leading actor in the global banking sector. If ICBC does provide funding for the project, it will put hundreds of thousands of poor people at risk, undermine international environmental standards, and taint its own reputation.

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Muslims See A Ramadan Rally For Stocks, Investments

August 3, 2010

By Omar Sacirbey Religion News Service (RNS) The Islamic month of Ramadan, which begins on or around Aug. 10 this year, requires Muslims to fast and abstain from sex and other earthly pleasures from dawn to sunset. It is considered a good time to connect to God, purify oneself of sin, do good deeds, and spend time with family. A team of business professors thinks it might also be a good time to make money. Ahmad Etebari of the University of New Hampshire, Jedrzej Bialkowski of New Zealand’s University of Canterbury and Tomasz Piotr Wisniewski of England’s University of Leicester examined stock returns between 1989 and 2007 from 14 Muslim-majority countries and found that monthly stock returns during Ramadan averaged 38 percent, compared to a monthly average of 4.28 percent during the other 11 months of the Islamic calendar. The implications, the study concluded, were obvious. “Investors seeking fast profits in the Muslim world should try to profit from the (Ramadan) fast, buying shares prior to the start of Ramadan and selling them at the end of the holy month or preferably after Eid al-Fitr” (the celebration that follows Ramadan). The researchers attributed the stock spike not to divine intervention, but a collective optimism and euphoria that grips Muslim-majority societies during the monthlong fast. The 14 surveyed countries represent nearly half of the world’s 1.5 billion Muslims. “Ramadan positively affects investor psychology, as it promotes feelings of solidarity and social identity among Muslims worldwide, leading to optimistic beliefs that extend to investment returns,” the report authors said. “We hypothesize that the upbeat mood during Ramadan leads to positive investor sentiment and has a positive valuation effect on equity markets in Islamic countries.” While investors in Muslim-majority countries might expect a Ramadan stock bump, investors in non-Muslim countries like the United States should be more cautious since Ramadan does not induce the kind of national euphoria in non-Muslim societies, the report said. “The effects of Ramadan materialize only when the society chooses to participate in this religious experience collectively,” the report said. Rafi-uddin Shikoh, managing partner at New Jersey-based DinarStandard, which covers markets in both the Islamic world and the West, said he was surprised by the findings because working hours in Muslim countries tend to be reduced during Ramadan. “I find it a bit counterintuitive,” Shikoh said. “Ramadan tends to be a very slow month.” Other studies have found that religious holidays and other factors–World Cup soccer matches and even sunshine levels–can alter national moods and influence stock market performance. Several studies have documented stock spikes before Christmas and Good Friday. Writing in the Financial Analysts Journal in 2004, researchers Laura Frieder and Avanidhar Subrahmanyam found that stock returns are significantly up on Rosh Hashanah (the Jewish New Year) and the prior two days, but significantly down on Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement). Religion has been used to explain other economic phenomena as well. In 2003, Rene Stulz of Ohio State University and Rohan Williamson of Georgetown University found that religion can explain the differences in creditors’ rights in different countries. The researchers found that a country’s legal system is “more important” than its dominant religion in explaining shareholder rights, but religion often has more influence than “a country’s openness to international trade, its language, its income per capita, or the origin of its legal system” in determining creditors’ rights. While its unclear whether they’re aware of religion’s effects on finance or not, some Islamic financial institutions have promoted new financial products during Ramadan. Last year, the National Bank of Kuwait rolled out special Ramadan offers that included zero-percent interest credit cards and retail loans. In 2008, the Emirates Islamic Bank introduced a car loan “in commemoration of Ramadan” that it touted as “giving its customers an easier way to gift themselves a car during this auspicious time of the year.” For Monem Salam, director of Islamic investing at Saturna Capital in Bellingham, Wash., which manages Amana Mutual Funds that comply with Islamic law, such garish exploitation of Ramadan seems inconsistent with the spirit of the month and its emphasis on charity to the poor. Nevertheless, Saturna’s Islamic finance representatives try to take advantage of greater mosque attendance during Ramadan by arranging more mosque presentations during the month. “There’s nothing wrong with growing your wealth in Islam,” Salam said, “but there is an obligation to handle your money according to Islamic laws.” Although Etebari concludes in his report that Muslims can profit by buying stocks before Ramadan and selling them afterwards, he stepped back from that assertion in a recent telephone interview. “We cannot say year after year it’s going to hold up down the road. Just like everything else in finance, once something is discovered, any benefits, profits, are going to be arbitraged out,” Etebari said. “From that point on, there will be no more fast profits.”

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Nanette Fondas: Even in a Recession, Flex Makes (Dollars and) Sense

August 3, 2010

Flex time, job-sharing, compressed schedules, and telecommuting: these workplace practices are needed now more than ever as we juggle the demands of work and other life commitments in a global, 24/7 economy. Women sometimes need flexible work options particularly to make the pieces of their work-life puzzle fit together — today women make up half the paid labor force and 80 percent of them will become mothers by the time they reach age 44. But workplace flexibility is a salient issue for all people — not just women and not just mothers. In a 2008 Study of the Changing Workforce , fathers reported more work-life conflict than ever before. A whopping 59 percent said they experienced some or a lot of conflict; in 1977, only 35 percent did. Young people, older employees, parents and non-parents all need some flexibility in when, where, and how they work. So it was especially disturbing to learn from a new study by the Society for Human Resource Management that the number of employers offering flextime declined in 2010 to 49 percent (from 57 percent in 2006), most likely as a result of the recession. In my new book, The Custom-Fit Workplace: Choose When, Where, and How to Work and Boost Your Bottom Line , my co-author Joan Blades and I ask whether the benefits of offering workplace flexibility outweigh the costs. We learned that businesses that eliminate flexible work options for employees (or fail to offer them), would be wise to first stop and consider that: One of every three workers say being able to flexibly balance work and life is the most important factor in choosing a job. Workers of all ages and ranks — even executives in Fortune 500 Companies — say they want more flexibility and will forgo pay for it. Low wage workers are 30% less likely to quit their jobs within two years if they have some flexibility. Hundreds of psychologists and social psychologists have extensively documented the payoffs of employee-friendly benefits and policies. What they’ve seen is that when employers help employees balance their life and work commitments, when people are trusted and empowered to do their jobs, they are more satisfied, engaged, motivated, and loyal. These human feelings lead people to work harder and exceed expectations. This lowers turnover, absenteeism, recruiting, and training costs. Costs down, productivity up. The net effect? A boost to the bottom line. The key is to recognize that all employees are an asset, not a liability, and that the net effect of flex increases the return on that asset. Even in a recession.

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