united-states

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Albert Einstein once famously said, “We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.” It may very well have been the great thinker’s most prophetic warning ever. Here we are, faced with some of the gravest existential threats in the history of our species, and all we’ve been doing is throwing conventional thinking at the problems — and then we wonder why things keep getting worse. The most obvious of those problems? Climate change, of course. The conventional thinking? Incremental, uninspiring, regressive “sustainability” strategies. In blatant disregard for the great thinker’s teachings, we are continuing to stick our head deep in the sand and convincing ourselves that if we simply do a little less bad, the whole thing will go away like a bad dream. We have even packaged up our brilliant thinking into neat little sound-bites: recycle a few more paper cups, build a few more green office buildings, drive a few more hybrid cars, buy a few more carbon offsets, and it will all be fixed! Really? Has anyone ever done the real math? A long time ago, as our parents and grandparents began to worry about some of the side effects of uncontrolled capitalism, society’s response was to build up a system of important checks and balances: health and environmental NGOs, government regulations, media watchdogs, etc. The explosion of prosperity in the Western world through the second half of the last century naturally resulted in an equivalent increase in the strength and pervasiveness of the counter-balancing systems. NGOs became huge and global, governments grew massive regulatory teeth and the media became angrier and sharper. And we went on with our happy lives, believing that we live in a beautifully balanced world… Clearly, we had it wrong. We thought the model was balanced, but in reality it was just polarized — and the wealthier we got, the more polarized it became. By birthing “forces for good” and giving them the simplistic mission to mop up the mess that we created with our for-profit businesses, we actually made things worse! We fuelled a very well-entrenched belief among all participants in our capitalist society that you can’t make a profit without harming the world — and that the only people who can do good for our world are the ones who don’t make a profit. In our obese, lazy, polluted, climate-threatened 21st-century society, “giving back” has become one of the most fashionable lines — as if to imply that we really must have stolen something from the world as we were making a profit! It’s time to hit the reset button. Time to heed Einstein’s advice. We’re in trouble. Our “balanced” model isn’t working. Our planet is getting sicker by the day; our children are already assuming they will have a lower standard of living and that their lives will be shorter and less healthy than ours. Could it be that we actually allowed ourselves to become the “peak” generation in the history of our species? We need real solutions, not yesterday’s ineffective incremental stuff. We need to ignite the imagination of our 7 billion fellow passengers if we stand a chance to really turn this thing around. A few recycled cups and carbon offsets, when some estimate we’re making more than a billion new babies a decade, is not the solution — it was just a nice, cute start. It’s time to re-invent our path to profit and wealth, because that’s what it will take to excite and drive our fellow passengers. We are creatures of nature and that makes us greedy by design. Yesterday’s sustainability preachings were all about suppressing our instincts and our nature. Tomorrow’s solutions need to be about prosperity through innovation and about practical ideas about a new kind of capitalism, like Michael Porter’s shared value model . It’s time for new, big thinking. Time to kill our polarized old models. Time to intertwine profit and good in such a way that you can’t generate one without the other. Time to start creating real value and prosperity and time to ban that awful line about “giving back”…

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Andreas Souvaliotis: When Profit and Social Responsibility Collide

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Stephen Fitzpatrick: Smart Meters – Meters Without the Smart?

by Stephen Fitzpatrick on April 8, 2012

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Hard-pressed households may be facing yet another kind of energy bill because an upcoming launch of smart meters is going off the road. They are meant to save us money, help us control our energy use and help the country hit its environmental targets. It’s now three years since the previous government announced a national roll-out of smart meters to every UK home by 2020 but the creation and nature of the installation program has suffered repeated delays and changes in direction. The specification for smart meters, due last autumn, was finalised last month by the Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC) and they’ve sent it to the European Union to be approved. The delays mean that right now, any existing smart meters already installed and not to the anticipated sophisticated technical standard will need to be removed from homes by 2020. As a result the meters won’t last their certified life, which is just wasteful, the cost of buying them will be significantly higher for energy suppliers and some customers will have two meters installed within a short period. For households with pre-payment meters, the government has said it won’t decide how to manage this at the same time as normal payment meters meaning that their existing ‘non-smart’ meters will be in place for longer, leading to a two-tier system. It’s been reported that at least two of the ‘Big 6′ suppliers have halted their smart meter trials due to some of these uncertainties. There’s a suggestion that smart meters could be made optional (for suppliers who may not choose to offer them and for the public who may choose not to have one installed) but we think this makes little sense. How will the UK meet its 2020 commitments to reduce carbon emissions if smart meters are optional, when our homes contribute almost 30% of the UK’s emissions? Smart meters are likely to be more expensive for everyone, as new systems and meters will have to be paid for by a smaller number of customers – with the uncertainty leading to less investment by suppliers and less choice for you and me. We have to ask whether the government is wavering in its commitment to smart meters? Switching suppliers is often a good way to get a better deal, but if you have a smart meter from one of the existing trials and want to switch supplier before 2014, you’ll rely on the old supplier making information available to the new one – but there’s no incentive to do this quickly. We’re likely to lose access to our smart data for a while following a change of supplier – or be put off from switching which could cost us more in energy bills. We’ve suggested to DECC and Ofgem, the industry regulator, that smart meter installers should be made to provide smart data to new suppliers until a central communication body is set up to manage this. The complexity of the suggested process may lead to suppliers thinking it’s too complicated and administratively intensive so the customer’s new supplier may then only offer the ability to use the meter in a non-smart mode until at least 2014. The government is saying that energy suppliers will have to provide standardised IHDs (In-Home Displays) when installing approved smart meters. From the evidence we’ve seen, we don’t think most people will use these regularly to reduce or change their energy usage, meaning they could be a huge waste of time and money. We think it would be better to let households buy an IHD of their choice – or even receive the data on a smartphone or tablet app – creating competition and ensuring a greater chance of people using the piece of tech that’s right for them. The Energy Retail Association (ERA), the industry body for the ‘Big 6′ suppliers appears to have been tasked with creating the guidelines for installing smart meters. We think the independence of the code is compromised as the ‘Big 6′ energy companies are being allowed to heavily influence it – despite someone from the DECC chairing the steering board. The danger is that the process might be skewed in favour of salesman rather than what’s best for bill-payers. And the ability to educate the public about the rollout of smart meters could be irreparably damaged if everyone realises that the installation process is being controlled by companies that already suffer from tarnished reputations. In fact, negative press about smart meters already seems to far outweigh the positive, with bad experiences reported in the US. Until all of these factors are resolved, consumers will not have all of the information in order to decide, when the time comes, whether a smart meter is a smart idea for them.

Continued here:
Stephen Fitzpatrick: Smart Meters – Meters Without the Smart?

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Daniel Franklin: Why Now is a Good Time to Be Thinking About 2050

March 27, 2012

“Never prophesy, especially about the future.” That nicely captures the perils of predictions – so nicely, indeed, that the saying or a version of it has been credited to numerous people, from the movie mogul Sam Goldwyn to baseball’s Yogi Berra. But in practice, we do have to prophesy, however imperfectly. Take climate change, an issue that involves assessing what could happen decades ahead, and how to respond to it. Or take defence planning: despite the difficulty of forecasting the nature of future conflicts, decisions have to be taken today that will affect how wars are fought for years to come (the F-13 Joint Strike Fighter, for example, the most expensive defence-industrial project ever, is planned to be a mainstay of American and Western air forces until at least 2060). Similarly long horizons are involved in planning for our energy needs and our pensions. So we need to look at the long term. Where to begin? A good place to start is with population trends – which is why this is the subject of the first of the 20 essays brought together in Megachange: The World in 2050 , a book published by The Economist this month. The world’s population is changing very fast. It took 250,000 years for it to reach 1 billion, around 1800. The latest billion, taking the number of people on the planet to 7 billion, took just a dozen years (a landmark the United Nations said was reached last October). By 2050 the global population will have risen to a little over 9 billion, according to the UN’s central projections. And by then the global population will be older (the median age will rise from 29 to 38) and more urban, with nearly 70% living in cities and towns, compared with just over 50% today. It will also be more African: about half the extra 2.3 billion people on the planet by 2050 will be in Africa. In 1950 Europe accounted for over a fifth of the world’s population, and Africa for a tenth; those proportions are on their way to being reversed. By 2050, there will probably be nearly as many Nigerians (close to 400 million) as Americans. Very broadly, from the point of view of population patterns, the world will fall into three groups between now and 2050. The first consists of younger-than-average countries where the share of the economically active population relative to that of dependent children and elderly will be very favourable. These countries will potentially enjoy a ‘demographic dividend’, if there is enough productive work for their large numbers of working-age people (or they could face instability if jobs are scarce). In this group are India, the Middle East and Africa. In the second category of countries are those where the average age is rising, but not by much, and where the share of the working-age population relative to the young and old is deteriorating, but only modestly. The United States is in this group, as are Latin America and South-East Asia. The third group – and the big losers from the demographic changes in the next four years – includes Europe, Japan and China. Japan will be the oldest society ever known, with as many dependents as people of working age. And China, thanks not least to the legacy of its one-child population, will start to age rapidly. By 2050 its population will be older not only that America’s, but even than Europe’s. China really is in a race to grow rich before it grows old. All this has big consequences: for the economy, business, security, migration, health and the demands on resources, not to mention for culture and social change. It should inform many of the policy decisions taken today. The sooner we start preparing for the coming demographic changes and all that flows from them, the better our long-term prospects will be. Megachange: The World in 2050 is available now.

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James Dyson: The Award For Engineering Goes To…

February 25, 2012

It’s one of the year’s most hotly anticipated competitions. The contenders look nervously across the wings as the host steps up to the podium. The envelope is fumbled. The noise in the room drops in anticipation. Who will take away the coveted prize… the Mississippi regional middle school Science Bowl? You have to be realistic. Amid the hype and intrigue of ceremonies like the Oscars, a regional Science Bowl doesn’t grab headlines. I’d be a curmudgeon to deny talented artists recognition, or global audience shows like the Oscars or the Grammys. The problem is that by focusing so exclusively on celebrating the popular arts we deprive society, and more importantly children, of other people to look up to. No wonder many children’s role models are, well, models. The US now graduates more visual and performing arts majors than engineers. The same is true in the UK, where a recent survey found that while 4% of teenage girls want to become engineers and 14% scientists, 32% wanted to be models. But can we blame youngsters for wanting to be pro-athletes and actors when the media fixates on celebrity on a daily basis? Natalie Portman, who took home best actress Oscar last year, has more than acting prowess to distinguish herself: she was once a semifinalist in the Intel Science Talent Search competition for her research on an environmentally friendly method of converting waste into energy. Of course, the former achievement scored more highly in the publicity stakes. President Obama has spoken about treating science fair winners the like Super Bowl Champions. Unlikely, but what steps can be taken to at least partly fulfill the rhetoric? There’s a real opportunity here. Young people are clued up on contemporary issues that need to be fixed, from climate change to food shortages. But, despite the fact that toddlers can grasp the basics of a smartphone, not enough of them aspire to become the people that can solve them: scientists and engineers. In part, this is because of a lack of association between the technology we use – computers, cars and cell phones – and the people who develop and invent them. Because we just don’t celebrate them. This lack of cultural awareness is a problem. Fewer Americans and Brits choose to study science and engineering. Engineers and inventors are lionized in US. The problem is that the ones we celebrate are often a hundred years dead. There are television shows that are trying to change perceptions: PBS’s Everyday Edisons and the Science Channels How it’s Made on the Discovery Channel for example. But these are the exceptions. It’s not just down to the media. It’s up to politicians and companies to help change these perceptions and fly the flag for invention. China gets this one right. Science and engineering are increasingly ingrained in Chinese culture – so much so that most members of the Chinese Government have engineering degrees. The evidence of this mindset can be seen in thousands of high-profile Chinese infrastructure projects. We need to help educate people on engineering and manufacturing – shaking off the outdated dreary image of factory and monotonous lab work. Today’s factories aren’t Dickensian work houses. They’re high tech and exciting. I was warned that if I failed my exams that I’d end up in a factory. As it happens I did, and I enjoy it immensely. Our factory has a microbiology lab with a dust mite zoo, robotic testers, an electro-magnetic chamber and 3D printers, among other things. And I get to develop ideas with 600 like minded engineers and problem solvers every day. Engineers and scientists are not nerds but creative polymaths who think with their hands and their heads. Inspirational individuals to be respected, not mocked. Let’s give them a soap box for the 21st century. Talking up science and engineering won’t solve the manufacturing malaise. But it’s a good, and cheap, start. Many of the 14% of UK girls who wanted to be scientists were specifically interested in becoming forensic scientists. Why? Because of programs like CSI beamed to millions worldwide. Television can do a lot to help raise the profile of scientists and engineers. The media and politicians can too. Rather than dwelling on the delayed Dreamliner, let’s applaud the latest MIT breakthrough. Let’s celebrate our everyday Edisons and put them on the silver screen, during prime time. Jam es Dyson is the inventor of the Dyson vacuum cleaner. His Foundation runs the James Dyson Award – a global competition for student inventors and designers: http://www.jamesdysonaward.org/

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‘Unhealthy’ To Stare At Tweets All Day, Twitter Co-Founder Says

February 22, 2012

MONTREAL – Twitter co-founder Christopher Isaac “Biz” Stone has a message for those followers who stare at their tweet feed for hours on end. It’s not healthy. Stone says he’d prefer that people visit the popular social networking site frequently than sacrifice their life to it. He told a Montreal business audience even he is amazed by the influence of Twitter, which the founders initially thought would just be used for fun. Stone says it has instead ended up linking millions of people and been used to spur social change such as the so-called Arab spring, triggered by pro-democracy movements in the Middle East. The entrepreneur’s speech focused on tips for business people including that they should show empathy for their employees and shouldn’t be afraid to fail. He also says creativity is an unendingly renewable resource.

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The Real Reason For Nortel’s Collapse?

February 16, 2012

A former systems security adviser to Nortel Networks says he has no doubt that extensive cyber attacks on the technology company contributed to its downfall. In an interview with the CBC’s As It Happens, Brian Shields, the former senior systems security adviser at Nortel, said spying by hackers allegedly based in China “absolutely” was a “considerable factor.” “When they see what your business plans are, that’s a huge advantage. It’s unfair business practices that really bring down a company of this size,” Shields said. Nortel is currently selling off assets in the wake of a 2009 bankruptcy filing. Shields said both the Canadian and Chinese governments should investigate. “Your government needs to step in and provide direct assistance with an expert team …[that will] help with the forensics.” He insisted the hackers were based in China, something the Chinese government has rejected. Yesterday, its embassy in Canada said “cyber attacks are transnational and anonymous. It is irresponsible to prejudge the origin of attacks without thorough investigation and hard evidence.” The embassy added that China’s government “strictly prohibits” hacking and “stands ready to step up international co-operation in this field.” RIM a ‘huge target’ “The Chinese government ought to go to that location and get those computers and work with the Canadian government to help solve what happened here,” he said. Shields has alleged that Chinese hackers had unfettered access to the former telecommunications giant as far back as 2000, downloaded business plans, research and development reports, employee emails and other documents. He maintains that Canadian companies — including Waterloo, Ont.-based Research in Motion — continue to be targets. “Absolutely. Without a doubt. The questions you’ve got to ask is, is there something of value? Companies, for example, like RIM [are] a huge target. They ought to worry about this stuff. And anybody else that is in technology or oil exploration. This is economic espionage. It truly is.” Corporate espionage is a growing problem for North American companies, with the majority of attacks coming from China. Last November, a group of U.S. analysts said there were as many as 12 different Chinese groups participating in cyber attacks on U.S. companies and government agencies. During BHP Billiton’s hostile takeover bid for Saskatchewan’s PotashCorp, hackers traced to China targeted Bay Street law firms and other companies to get insider information on the $38-billion corporate takeover. Those same hackers also targeted Canadian government computers in fall 2010, targeting the Finance Department, the Treasury Board, and Defence Research and Development Canada, a civilian agency of the Department of National Defence. “It’s very personal to me because I’m very sad-hearted about what happened to so many of my friends, to this once great Canadian company,” Shields told As it Happens. “I was very proud to work there for so many years. I used to say it was the best job in the world.”

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Israel-America-Iran – the dangers grow

January 29, 2012

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) The events and tensions that revolve around Iran and its multi-faceted relations with its immediate neighbours – and its antagonists farther afield in the United States, …

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Michael P. Owens: How Newt Gingrich Can Win the Nomination by Coming Clean About Climate Change

January 24, 2012

And just like that… Newt Gingrich is suddenly the front-runner for the Republican nomination. It is not surprising Gingrich’s win of Saturday’s primary in South Carolina was due to his strong backing by conservative voters in the state. While Gingrich is no pauper, voters already alienated by Romney’s wealth, appear to be balking at his reticence to produce his tax returns. Perhaps, the 99% movement is not just a liberal thing after all? Though I can’t say whether Gingrich will be able to maintain this momentum through the upcoming primary in Florida, I do have a suggestion that I believe would improve his chances significantly: Gingrich should come clean about his well Documented beliefs on climate change! Now, before you suggest that this would be political suicide for a “conservative” presidential candidate in 2012, I ask that you please hear me out. The United States is lagging behind China and Europe in the clean energy race! The U.S. is the only developed nation where believing in climate science is a political issue. Meanwhile, the rest of the world agrees that climate change is real; and has focused on finding innovative, profitable solutions to mitigate its effects. When it comes to global investment in clean energy, the U.S. now ranks third, behind China and Germany (respectively). But those numbers understate the issue. In fact, China has actually invested three times more than us. This statistic is even more alarming when combined with the Pew Center study that predicts that the global market for clean energy will reach $2.3 trillion by 2030. Since reviving the sluggish economy and restoring our nation’s competitive edge remain key election issues, why are none of the candidates talking about these alarming statistics? Gingrich’s View on the Environment In 2007, Mr. Gingrich authored a book titled, A Contract with Our Earth , which called for “bipartisan environmentalism” to save the planet. In 2008, he starred in a commercial alongside Nancy Pelosi, for Al Gore’s Alliance for Climate Protection, in which he acknowledged that despite obvious political differences, “we do agree our country must take action to address climate change.” For the past year, revelations like these about Gingrich have been used by his rivals to label him a moderate. Unfortunately, in an effort to appeal to conservative voters, Gingrich has pulled an about-face. According to a recent survey by The Pew Research Center, only 31 percent of Republicans believe in global warming (compared with 77 percent of Democrats). This capitulation was never more evident than when Gingrich cut the chapter on climate change from his soon to be released book. How the U.S. Can Grab a Slice of the Estimated $2.3 Trillion Global Market for Clean Energy Republicans have been led to believe that the only way to address climate change is through a combination of higher taxes and new regulations that would burden business owners. This is shallow thinking from the party that touts the merits of free markets and capitalism above all else. If there were a tax on carbon emissions, the market would step in to provide alternatives. In turn, the country would develop new industries and jobs — putting us on the fast track to grabbing a slice of the estimated $2.3 trillion global market. To quote the same Pew Center survey: “America’s entrepreneurial traditions and strengths in innovation — especially its leadership in venture capital investing — are considerable, giving it the potential to recoup leadership and market share in the future.” My suggestion to Mr. Gingrich is that he simply come out and declare that if we want to be serious about reviving our economy, we must have an honest conversation about climate change. After all, the rest of the world is. Gingrich can state honestly that he has reservations about a cap-and-trade system and a carbon tax, but that he believes capitalism and American ingenuity can find a solution. The words Conservative and Conservation come from the same root. If Gingrich properly demonstrates these connections to his base, and highlights the risk of losing more economic ground to China, Germany and others, I believe he would gain additional supporters. Honesty Trumps All Poll after poll illustrates Americans’ intense distrust of government. The people want honesty, not political pandering. If Gingrich were to come clean about his true beliefs on climate change, he may just win the nomination and more.

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Olivier Blanchard: Driving the Global Economy with the Brakes On

January 24, 2012

After the speech by the IMF’s Managing Director in Berlin yesterday , my main messages on the global outlook will not surprise you. Starting with the bad news — the world recovery, which was weak in the first place, is in danger of stalling. The epicenter of the danger is Europe, but the rest of the world is increasingly affected. There is an even greater danger, namely that the European crisis intensifies. In this case, the world could be plunged into another recession. Turning to the good news — with the right set of measures, the worst can definitely be avoided, and the recovery can be put back on track. These measures can be taken, need to be taken, and need to be taken urgently. And now the numbers, starting at the epicenter: The IMF’s forecast for growth in Euro Area for 2012 is ‑0.5 percent — this marks a decrease of 1.6 percentage points relative to our September 2011 projection. In particular, we predict negative growth in Italy (‑2.2 percent) and Spain (‑1.7 percent). We have also revised downwards our forecasts for other advanced countries, although by less. Only for the United States, is our forecast unchanged at 1.8 percent. The growth outlook in emerging and developing countries is also down, at 5.4 percent, a decrease of 0.7 percent relative to our September forecast. The revision is particularly sharp in Central and Eastern Europe, reflecting their links to the Euro area. But it is also substantial in China and India, where internal factors explain most of the decrease. What are the forces behind these numbers? Most advanced economies are operating with two major brakes on. The first is fiscal consolidation . Consolidation is necessary — debt levels are very high — but, in the short run, it is clearly a drag on demand, it is a drag on growth. The second is tight credit . In many countries, particularly in Europe, banks are still weak. They are deleveraging. And, in many cases, deleveraging means tighter credit to households or firms, another drag on growth. With those brakes on, the recovery cannot be very strong, and indeed this is something you see in past financial crises. What is happening in Europe, however, is making things worse. Doubts about fiscal sustainability are leading to high yields on sovereign bonds and, in turn, doubts about bank solvency. To reassure markets, governments have felt they had to consolidate further. To reassure investors, banks have deleveraged and tightened credit. Both actions have further decreased growth, leading to a dangerous downward spiral. This explains our forecasts of negative growth for some of the Euro periphery countries, and low growth in the rest of the Euro area. Looking beyond Europe, spillovers through trade are already visible among Euro trade partners. And bouts of risk aversion and uncertainty are leading to high volatility of capital flows to emerging markets. If not contained, this downward spiral can lead to even worse outcomes, be it disorderly default or Euro exit, with major spillovers, first to the rest of the Euro area, and then to the rest of the world. In this context, the required policies are clear. These are largely a repeat of the main messages from the Managing Director Christine Lagarde’s speech yesterday . First, fiscal consolidation must proceed, but at an appropriate pace. Decreasing debt is a marathon, not a sprint. Going too fast will kill growth, and further derail the recovery. It took more than two decades to successfully decrease debt from its World War II heights. We should expect that it may take as long or longer this time. Of the essence here is a credible medium term plan, something still missing in the United States and Japan. Once such a plan is in place, in most countries, automatic stabilizers should be left to play. In some countries, slower consolidation may even be appropriate. Second, a credit crunch must be avoided. Where banks need to increase their capital ratios, they should do it through an increase in capital, rather than a decrease in credit. Recapitalization through public funds will help credit, sustain activity, and may actually improve the fiscal outlook. Third, and to the extent that they are taking the tough measures they need to take, Euro periphery countries — such as Italy or Spain — must be able to borrow at low interest rates. As many investors have left the market and are unlikely to return soon, public liquidity provision may be needed. It can be provided in various ways, by the European Central Bank, by the European Union, and by the IMF. Whichever combination is used, the available funds must be large enough to maintain low interest rates and fiscal sustainability. Our forecasts are based on the assumption that these measures will be adopted, and the euro crisis will slowly decrease in intensity. If they are not, one can fear the worst. If they are adopted decisively, the world economy may perform better than our forecast. One should be under no illusion however. Even then, the brakes will still be on, and unemployment will decrease only slowly. We have a long way to go before the world economy has fully recovered. From iMFdirect blog

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Matt Browne: A Resurgent Middle Class Versus Government of the CEO

January 24, 2012

As the State of the Union approaches, Americans are being confronted by two competing visions of their economic future. A progressive vision, where a resurgent middle class will drive economic growth; and a conservative vision, in which greater corporate freedom will hopefully create wealth that might one day trickle down. In recent weeks, Mitt Romney’s record as a business leader has come under increased scrutiny. His opponents in the Republican primary have tended to focus their attacks on his dubious record as a job creator, characterizing him instead as a corporate raider . More troubling, however, is his vision of what is good for business and what that would mean for the American economy and society. Earlier this month, Romney gave a revealing interview to Fortune , during which he indicated that Sarbannes-Oxley is high on the list of meddlesome government intrusions he would like to repeal. While Sarbannes-Oxley is an imperfect piece of legislation — as George W. Bush stated post-Enron — it was designed to ensure, “No boardroom in America is above or beyond the law.” It needs reforming, or perfecting, not repealing. Romney also argued for slashing legislation, taxes, and social and environmental standards in order to attract new investment and avoid off-shoring of current jobs. Just as “water finds the lowest point,” he stated, so “businesses find the most attractive place.” In Romney’s eyes, then, the United States, American businesses, and the American worker are trapped in a global race to the bottom. Romney’s solution is informed by the story he tells himself — and Americans — about Bain Capital: namely that the firm invested in and turned around failing companies. His conclusion is that a CEO who knows what he is doing can make any business succeed, and as such, should be given greater freedom to act. What Romney is promising, then, is government of the CEO, by the CEO, for the CEO. Unfortunately, in the grand scheme of things, management is one, albeit potentially significant factor, in what determines business success and economic growth. After all, some of Bain’s investments failed. Presumably, Romney hired good people to run those companies too (unless of course he instructed them to simply strip assets). So what does drive investment, job creation, economic growth and business success? In 2011, Forbes ranked America a dismal 10th on its top 10 list of the best places in the world to invest and do business . Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Singapore, and South Korea all placed higher. Interestingly, all have tighter financial and corporate regulation, and each of these governments spends a much larger percentage of GDP on education, skills, research and development and infrastructure programs. According to Romney, these are policies that reduce competitiveness. So why is the United States lagging behind? What Forbes and the World Economic Forum understand, but Romney has failed to grasp, is that countries and regions with modern infrastructure, a well-educated and healthy workforce, tolerant, diverse and creative societies, and good public services, are both better places to live in and better places to invest in (the two are related, these countries attract more highly skilled labor, while their egalitarian approach also strengthens domestic demand for goods and services . America needs to be engaged in a race to the top, one in which the ambition is to be a world leader, not the “lowest point” of the global production chain. This is what President Obama referred to in last year’s State of the Union as winning the future. The challenge this week is to build on that vision, presenting a progressive pro-business agenda, one in which a resurgent middle class helps support the creation of high quality jobs , and where investment in people, technology and infrastructure supports today’s business as well as the industries of the future.

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Google To Collect Even More User Information

January 24, 2012

LOS ANGELES — Google is overhauling the way it treats user data, linking information across its array of email, video and social-networking services so that information gathered in one place can be used in another. For example, if you spent the last hour logged into Google to search the Web for skateboards, the next time you log into YouTube, there’s a good chance you’ll get recommendations for videos featuring Tony Hawk. The changes take effect March 1 and remove some of the legal hurdles that Google faced by having more than 70 different privacy policies across various services. But the changes could irk privacy critics for the sheer volume of information collected. Google Inc. hopes to improve the user experience across its different services and give advertisers a better way to find customers.

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Greg Voakes: From Googol to Glory: The Tale of Sergey and Larry

January 24, 2012

Larry Page and Sergey Brin met at Stanford in 1995, the same year Microsoft released its cleverly named Windows 95. Back then, the two were just computer science nerds trying to find their way in a world without Google — but they quickly got to work on what would later become the algorithm behind the world’s most heavily trafficked search engine. From the time they hired their first in-house chef to the disclosure of their monster IPO, this timeline attempts to chronicle the revolution of Google — one that has completely changed the Internet. Created By Online PhD

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Wendy Brandes: The Agony and Ecstasy of a Small Business

January 24, 2012

I have a small fine-jewelry business . I’ve also had a root canal. I think they’re very similar: Forewarned might be forearmed, but it doesn’t eliminate the need for painkillers. I knew — both from talking to people with experience and plain old common sense — that the business would be the most challenging thing I’d ever done, job-wise. I was also told that the root canal would hurt. I still needed Percocet for the tooth … and sometimes I wish I could have it for the business too. Of course, there are joys to having a jewelry business. I love it when customers tell me that the earrings they bought from me online are even better than they expected; that their new necklace is their favorite jewelry ever; or that they can’t take their eyes off their custom-made engagement ring. Redesigning old jewelry is especially rewarding. It’s fun to convert an unworn cocktail ring into three streamlined stacking rings or give a lone stud earring new life as a pendant . My job even helped me make the most of my root canal: I engraved my gold crown with my initials . The ache the business gives me — in a place where molars don’t grow — comes from a classic small-business conundrum: the high cost of producing low quantity. You might think that problem is unique to my luxury jewelry line, where a one-of-a-kind 18K gold and diamond design can go for upwards of $20,000 and raw-material prices of metals have tripled since I launched in 2005 . But every small, self-financed businessperson I speak to — whether butcher, baker, candlestick maker, computer programmer, hair stylist, photographer or fashion designer — tells me the same story. The problem is the cost of labor. Even when you’re making goods out of inexpensive materials, you need to pay for labor. U.S. labor is expensive because, despite the ongoing recession, the U.S. has a high standard of living and a minimum hourly wage of $7.25. In countries without such a high standard of living, people will work for a dollar a day or less. That’s why manufacturing and other jobs — including customer-service phone lines, as many of us know — have moved overseas. Using inexpensive labor enables companies to sell goods or provide services at prices U.S. consumers are willing to pay. So why don’t I move my production overseas, especially when a ring that cost $40 to produce in New York City cost $4 in Asia (before last year’s surge in the price of silver)? Forget for the moment about quality issues and the idealistic wish to keep jobs in the U.S. I simply can’t afford to produce cheaply. Factories require bulk orders because they would go out of business selling one $4 ring at a time. A minimum requirement for me is 100 units of each ring style. If I start ordering 100 rings at a time, I need to find a way to sell them or I’m going to drown in inexpensive rings. Quantity orders from retailers aren’t easy to come by when you’re a start-up. As Annie Lin, who, with her sister Karen, had a U.S.-made contemporary women’s clothing line called AIRA from 2008 to 2011, tells me, getting the brand in front of customers was “the hardest part” because both boutiques and department stores “heavily relied on the ‘usual’ brands they often order from and leave a small budget for new designers.” Limited distribution means limited profit, which scares off the kind of deep-pocketed investors who would be able to finance mass production. Another Catch-22. Because I’ll try anything once, I did the 100-unit order with a few styles, just to see if an inexpensive piece would fly off the proverbial shelf. I sold 30 of one style — a large quantity for me — all to individual customers. I made $20 on each sale and 30 trips to the post office. I’d rather hold out for one big engagement ring that nets $5,000 than do that again. At least I developed a better understanding of factories’ requirements for large orders. My factory was giving me a break, really. A hundred units barely qualifies as mass production. Walmart is the gold standard of huge orders: A 2005 Wall Street Journal series identified a small order of pens for Walmart as 48,000 units. Designers like me and the Lin sisters persist as long as we can, praying we’ll have that “lightning in a bottle” moment: the right celebrity, the right store, the right press. Sometimes the money runs out before the moment comes. The AIRA line, which retailed from $180 to $550, was in seven boutiques but just breaking even when the Lins pulled the plug. Annie says, “In retrospect, if we did not find a celebrity to wear our clothing or somehow lower our price point … we were looking at six or more years before seeing profit.” Maybe a design award will give me the push I need: I’m a finalist for Fashion Group International’s Rising Star Award for jewelry (the awards will be announced on Thursday, January 26). My friend, designer Stacy Lomman , is also in an optimistic state of mind because she is a finalist for the Rising Star Award in women’s wear after just 18 months in business. Financially, however, not much has changed for Stacy since 2010, when she was interviewed by the Huffington Post about her use of social media to finance her first runway show. Now preparing for her fourth show, she is conducting yet another campaign on the Kickstarter “crowdfunding” site to raise money to buy fabric for the 10 to 12 looks she’ll sew singlehandedly. Being a Rising Star finalist means “I’ve proven that I am someone to watch,” she says. A win could help her “secure some type of corporate sponsorship in order to take my business to the next level.” Here’s hoping that finding that financial backing isn’t like pulling teeth.

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Mitt Romney Releases Tax Returns

January 24, 2012

By Steve Holland and Kim Dixon TAMPA, Fla./WASHINGTON, Jan 24 (Reuters) – Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney released tax records on Tuesday indicating he will pay $6.2 million in taxes on a total of $42.5 million in income over the years 2010 and 2011. Bowing to increasing political pressure to provide more detail about his vast wealth, the former private equity executive released tax returns indicating he and his wife, Ann, paid an effective tax rate of 13.9 percent in 2010. They expect to pay a 15.4 percent rate when they file their returns for 2011. Romney’s tax rate is below that of most wage-earning Americans because most of his income, as outlined in more than 500 pages of tax documents, flows from capital gains on investments. Under the U.S. tax code, capital gains are taxed at 15 percent, compared with a top tax rate of 35 percent for wage earners. Romney released the tax returns after a week in which his chief rival for the Republican presidential nomination, former House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich, questioned whether Romney was hiding information about his finances and cast him as being out of touch with most Americans. Gingrich’s attacks on Romney helped him upset the former Massachusetts governor in the South Carolina primary on Saturday. Since then, Romney has vowed to be more aggressive in returning fire. He has launched a series of attacks questioning Gingrich’s character, judgment and lucrative work as a Washington consultant, and released his tax returns to try to nullify Gingrich’s criticisms on that front. The tax rates Romney reported paying could add fuel to a national debate over the fairness of the tax code, and coincides with broader concerns about income inequality symbolized by the Occupy Wall Street movement. Romney’s campaign officials stressed that his tax rate is based mostly on income from investments that are held in a blind trust. Romney’s holdings include an undisclosed amount in funds based in the Grand Cayman Islands and other overseas entities. Romney advisers stressed that the holdings in the Caymans – along with those in a Swiss bank account that was closed in 2010 after an investment adviser decided it could be politically embarrassing to Romney – were reported on tax returns and were not vehicles to avoid taxes. They also stressed that Romney, whose holdings are in three blind trusts, makes no decisions as to how his money is invested. Regardless, the emerging picture was of a man of great means who contributes mightily to charity. The documents showed he and his wife contributed $7 million in charity over the two years, much of it going to his Mormon church. That represents more than 15 percent of the Romneys’ income for those years. Romney, whose estimated net worth is $190 million to $250 million, is among the wealthiest Americans ever to seek the presidency. Top campaign officials and the director of Romney’s blind trust, Brad Malt, briefed Reuters on the details ahead of a more general release of the information Tuesday morning. Campaign counsel Ben Ginsberg, asked why Romney was not releasing tax records for the years in the 1980s and 1990s in which Romney made his fortune at private equity firm Bain Capital, said the two years covered by the tax returns should give a broad picture of Romney’s financial situation. “We’re not going to get into the game of once you give them something, they demand more,” Ginsberg said. “This is a fulsome release and we’re proud of it.” The tax issue may have been a factor in Romney’s loss to Gingrich in South Carolina. It became a distraction to Romney’s campaign, and Romney’s fuzzy answers on when and if he would release his records aggravated the problem. First he said he might release them, or might not. When the questions kept coming, he said he would put them out in April, after his 2011 forms were completed. Only after he was defeated in South Carolina did his aides say he would release them this week. Gingrich has released his returns for 2010, but has not released an estimate for last year, as Romney did. Long considered the front-runner for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, Romney was staggered by Gingrich’s lopsided win in South Carolina, and is looking to regain enough momentum to defeat Gingrich in Florida, which votes on Jan. 31. (Editing by David Lindsey and Paul Simao) Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Romney Says Only He Has Lived On The ‘Real Streets Of America’

January 20, 2012

After Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum dove into a bitter dispute over ancient history from the halls on Congress, Mitt Romney says the argument is a “perfect example of why we need to send to Washington someone who has not lived in Washington, but someone who’s lived in the real streets of America.” That’ll be easy for Romney: at last count, he currently lives on at least eight streets in America. You can see his summer house in New Hampshire here .

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Sarah O’Leary: Paula Deen’s Preventable Marketing Disease

January 19, 2012

Paula Deen announcing she has Type II Diabetes after endorsing a drug company’s diabetic treatment product is like a man admitting he’s a sex addict after inking a deal with Viagra. Sadly, she could have avoided selling her filleted soul to the devil, changed the lives of countless diabetics and made millions more from her brand. No matter how hard marketers try, it’s hard to imagine a larger misstep for Paula Deen’s brand, franchise and image. Known as the culinary queen of down home cooking, she relished her fat-laden, high-sugar feasts through cooking shows, books and licensed products. Downplaying the significant role that her lifestyle played in her Type II Diabetes diagnosis puts her brand legacy and future profits in jeopardy. Three years ago, Ms. Deen was diagnosed with Type II Diabetes. For the next three years, she continued on her delicious, wildly unhealthy course without missing a single marketing beat. She evangelized her fat, fried and sugared recipes with the enthusiasm of a drug pusher, only to become one for drug company Novo Nordisk when there was money to be made. As marketers, we look for spokespersons to represent our products so that we sell more of them. We are, after all, in the business of selling products and services. Hopefully, we do that with ethos. Unfortunately, there are marketers willing and able to sugar coat truths to increase sales. Arguably Novo Nordisk, the manufacturer of Type II Diabetes drug Victoza, is doing just that. And Paula, using her celebrity to make money off of her disease and at the potential expense of those consumers who trust her, seems more than happy to participate. Provided you have enough insulin on hand, visit the Paula Deen hosted, Victoza sponsored site, diabetesinanewlight.com. Deen explains that one needs make only simple changes — in her case, the big sacrifices were giving up sweet tea and walking more with her husband and tweaking recipes — to manage that little nuisance, Type II Diabetes. The sell that brings you closer to hell, as we marketers know, never works in the long term. Victoza will, most definitely, reap the rewards of increased awareness and sales now. However, it will fail in the long term if the product alone, without substantive live style changes, doesn’t change the lives of its consumers for the better. I’d hazard to guess how much money Ms. Deen received to sell her branded soul. The truly sad part, other than giving misguided hope to those who have the disease and listen to her, is that she could have made more money as a true role model. Had she announced her malady and dedicated herself to change, both prescriptive (possibly with Victoza) and lifestyle, her marketing opportunities would have been endless. Unfortunately, Deen and the makers of Victoza took the easy way out and, in doing so, missed a huge opportunity to be the anchor and champion of a new movement. If they had taken a page out of Special K cereal’s successful campaign, “The Special K Challenge,” Novo Nordisk could have made Victoza the “hero” element of a bigger solution. The Special K Challenge establishes Special K, along with diet and exercise, as part of a healthy lifestyle. The product doesn’t claim or infer that cereal alone will solve weight issues, nor would that be necessary or prudent. At the end of the day, if the program suggested by Special K works, it will move more boxes. Victoza, positioned as part of a dedicated lifestyle change rather than an almost magic syringe, would sell more with Deen as the spokesperson than it’s poised to do now. Much like sports teams that change logos to sell more licensed merchandise, Paula could have opened an entirely new wing of her empire by changing her offerings. Realizing that there will always be a market for the cooking style that made her famous and thus not in any real danger of waning, Paula could have kept her legacy intact and added to her offerings by reinventing herself as someone committed to wellness. With a healthy life, healthy living cooking genre, Paula could have used her celebrity for good (and for a great deal of profit). Americans love those who struggle through adversity, and she could have reaped millions from such a movement. Paula is now suffering from the popular perception that money bought her new-found honesty. If money was her motivator, sadly, she missed what would have been a whole grain-fed cash cow. Millions could have been made from exercise apparel and equipment endorsements, over the counter vitamin and drug deals, wellness cook books and a wealth of other opportunities. By playing the wrong hand, Paula left untold millions on the table. Marketing mixes and Type II Diabetes can’t be fixed, much to Ms. Deen’s chagrin, with a sweet smile and pound of butter.

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More IKEA Workers Vote To Unionize In U.S.

January 19, 2012

WASHINGTON — Officials with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) union announced Thursday that more than 350 workers at an IKEA distribution center in Maryland have voted to join the union. If the vote is certified by the federal labor board, the workers in Perryville, Md., will become the second American IKEA workforce to join the IAM’s ranks. The first group, which is employed by the IKEA-owned Swedwood Group at a furniture factory in Danville, Va., voted overwhelmingly over the summer to join the union, a move that American labor activists considered a high-profile victory. “I think they saw what happened in Danville and saw the deal we were able to negotiate there,” Rick Sloan, an IAM spokesman, said of the Maryland employees. “It certainly helped.” When the L.A. Times ran a story on the Virginia factory last April, the disgruntlement of some of the workers there shocked readers in the U.S. and abroad, given the furniture retailer’s cultish following among consumers and generally solid reputation among employees. The company was criticized for an apparent double standard: While it was progressive and union-friendly in Europe, it did not show American workers the same kind of respect, critics said. “IKEA is a very strong brand and they lean on some kind of good Swedishness in their business profile. That becomes a complication when they act like they do in the United States,” a Swedish union official told the paper . “For us, it’s a huge problem.” According to IAM official John Carr, who recently visited the Maryland site, the same workplace issues raised by employees in Virginia had cropped up in Maryland. In particular, workers wanted more of a hand in the scheduling, vacation and seniority systems. “These are things that are important in any place if you want to make a future and a career out of it,” Carr said. The National Labor Relations Board is expected to certify the vote within 10 days, Carr said. If it does, the union and the company will begin contract negotiations. IKEA could not immediately be reached for comment.

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Tay K. McNamara, PhD: No One Wants a Younger Boss… Or Do They?

January 19, 2012

In most workplaces, long-established norms hold that older workers manage younger workers. As the workforce becomes increasingly multigenerational, it’s important to ask if violating these norms is disruptive to morale and productivity. Older workers don’t like working for younger bosses. Right? The answer seems to be yes and no. Some previous studies — as described in an article by Mary Hair Collins, Joseph F. Hair, Jr., and Tonette S. Rocco that was published in Human Resource Development Quarterly in 2009 — have found tension in the attitudes of older workers towards younger supervisors. Other research, however, suggests that the relationships older workers have with their supervisors are not determined by whether the boss is younger or the same age. Moreover, data from a 2008 survey conducted by the Families and Work Institute — a nonprofit research organization based in New York City — found that employees of all ages who reported to younger supervisors generally viewed their supervisors as sources of support. Of those 50 and older, 90 percent said that their supervisors helped them solve problems at work. (The figure for employees younger than 50 was 86 percent.) Why do some studies show that younger supervisors are a workforce problem and other studies show they aren’t? A recent analysis of data collected in 2007 by Boston College’s Sloan Center on Aging & Work provides insight. The Center’s Age & Generations study asked more than 2000 employees a host of demographic questions, work-related questions, and questions about how supportive they considered their supervisors to be. These employees were also asked if they saw their supervisors as about the same age (49 percent), at least 10 years older (33 percent), or at least 10 years younger (12 percent). About 6 percent of the workers surveyed said they really had no idea. Generally, workers who described their supervisors as younger than them viewed their supervisors as less supportive as compared to workers who described their supervisors as older than them. However, workers whose responses suggested less positive assessments of their own competence, self-worth, and worthiness (very low “core self-evaluations,” as described in a 2006 article by Timothy A. Judge, Amir Erez, Joyce E. Bono, and Carl J. Thoresen) perceived older supervisors as more supportive than supervisors who were younger or even the same age. Younger supervisors really may be a problem for workers who are feeling insecure already, but these workers are usually a small minority. Core self-evaluations are a stable personality trait: It doesn’t change much over time. However, might other sources of insecurity — like downsizing — trigger a preference for an older supervisor that’s more widespread in a workforce than it would be otherwise? The atmosphere within a company and in the economy as a whole could have a lot to do with whether, at any moment in time, older workers view their younger supervisors as threatening, undeserving, and unsupportive. The inconsistency of research findings on the level of comfort older workers feel with younger supervisors may be due in part to today’s tenuous economic circumstances, when more people feel less secure.

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Mary Hall: Job Hunting Tips From Expert Christine Hassler, Including How to Use Social Media

January 19, 2012

Before Christmas, I   a wrote a post on my blog, The Recessionista, about tips for buying professional attire for job hunters. Within the text of that post on The Recessionista, we ran a contest offering winners the chance to get their job hunting questions answered by   Gen Y expert Christine Hassler . In today’s tough economy everyone can always use some tips about how to best position themselves for employment.  It’s not just new college graduates that need help and advice.  Seasoned professionals need help too, especially as the way we look for jobs has changed. In the era of social media, where there are weekly Tweet-ups like #Jobhunt chat , many job hunters are networking and job hunting in the new social world using Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn to assist them. Since social media is new to many people, it’s no surprise that our readers and thousands of job hunters are looking for answers. Hundreds of questions were submitted. I’ve selected two excellent questions submitted by readers of The Recessionista, one a traditional job hunter’s question, and one question about how to best use social media to job hunt and to publish, since social media and returning to work after an absence were questions asked by many readers. The answers by Christine Hassler offer some great tips. Question #1 from contest winner Ellen: “On the subject of returning to the job market after an absence — how best to describe what you were doing while gone ?” A. Christine Hassler: The truth! Most people have a great reason why they were out of the market. The most important thing is that you believe that it was a good thing and something that in someway enhanced your professional life or personal life (and when our personal life is better we naturally are better employees because we are happier and less distracted at work). The more concerned you are about it, the more others will be. So tell the truth, talk about what you learned and how excited you are to return to work. Keep directing the conversation in the interview forward rather than rehashing the past. Question #2 from from reader Amber: “How do you keep your social media profiles such as Facebook, Myspace, Twitter ideal for when employers search for your name online ?” A. Christine Hassler: I recommend having at least one social networking outlet that can be exclusively for your personal use that is not under the same name that is on your resume.  Use that as a place for pictures, updates about what you are doing in your personal life, and a way to connect with friends. Keep your searchable SM sites very professional. Check all your pictures, post quotes and links to articles that are relevant to your profession. Think of social media as another version of your resume. Thanks to Christine for so thoughtfully answering these questions. I have some extra pieces of advice for job hunters. First, join job hunting networks via Facebook, LinkedIn or Meet-up that may help you connect with employers. Second, if social networking is part of your job search or your life, don’t post anything publicly that you wouldn’t want your future employee to see. Remember the story of a young job hunter just offered a job by Cisco who tweeted that he wasn’t sure if he should take it ? Well, it wasn’t long before Cisco manager read that Tweet and responded. Here’s how that dialogue went: “Cisco just offered me a job! Now I have to weigh the utility of a fatty paycheck against the daily commute to San Jose and hating the work.” “Who is the hiring manager. I’m sure they would love to know that you will hate the work. We here at Cisco are versed in the web ,” tweeted back Tim Levad, a “channel partner advocate” for Cisco Alert. Ouch! I don’t know if the hapless Tweeter ever made it to Cisco, but he committed corporate suicide before ever starting the job. I’ll always remember what Elizabeth Taylor said about Twitter in Harper’s Bazaar last year, because I think she really understood how to use Twitter for networking in the public fishbowl of the Internet. After all, she had every extensive public relations training since she was a child star. It’s no surprise that she got social media. “I love the idea of real feedback and a two-way street, which is very, very modern. But sometimes I think we know too much… So, like all things, it is to be used with care!” said Dame Elizabeth . Do you use social media to connect with others or follow Twitter IDs, LinkedIn groups or Meet-up groups that share job information? Social media is another version of your resume, your brand and ultimately you. So remember, first impressions count :)

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Mary Eileen Williams: In 2012 Career Success Is Up to You!

January 19, 2012

Today’s constantly changing workplace challenges us to continually update our skills, keep abreast of trends on a global scale, and reinvent ourselves to remain successful. Like many other aspects of life, there is a good news/bad news scenario to this current state of affairs. The bad news is that the job security we knew in our youth is virtually nonexistent. Downsizings, layoffs and reorganizations are now daily occurrences. Moreover, this destabilization is taking place within industries (such as finance and banking) that we formerly viewed as being the most secure. The days of the corporation as family á la “Ma Bell” are gone. However, despite the ongoing assaults to our sense of equilibrium, there is plenty of resulting good news to be found in the modern workplace. No longer are we stuck in longstanding careers that hold little promise or professional reward. We are freed up to chart our own course. In fact, it’s best to consider ourselves as entrepreneurs and/or consultants whether we’re self-employed or getting a paycheck from someone else. Here are four career realities of 2012 you’ll want to bear in mind: The new job security — You’re considered only as valuable as the skills you offer, the problems you can solve, and the ideas you present. Job security is no longer met through external structures. Rather it is experienced by way of internal direction, innovation and preparation. Flexibility is key — The ladder of advancement is more likely to be horizontal rather than vertical (i.e., increased skills, experience and training rather than enhanced job titles). Recognize you are the master of your own destiny. Take a proactive approach to your career by keeping current with the demands of the times, identifying opportunities as they arise, and consistently reevaluating your direction. You have to market yourself — Whether you’re in a job search, vying for opportunities within an organization, or attracting clients or customers to your own business, you’ll need to market yourself as a valuable problem-solver. Although tooting one’s own horn is anathema to many, it’s a necessary skill. And you can learn it! It’s generally helpful to think of yourself as selling a product — and that product is you! You’ll need to define the product ( you ) with well-chosen descriptive words, differentiate it from other products, and identify its benefits (how employing you as a problem solver will bring value to the organization). To substantiate your claims, you’ll want to describe problems you have solved in the past, the skills you used, and the positive results you achieved. This way you’ll be providing a framework for demonstrating what you’re capable of accomplishing in the future. Managing your career in 2012 is a bit like piloting a boat. In order to avoid being blown adrift by the winds of change, you have to adjust your sails, keep your eyes on the horizon, and proceed on your chosen course. Focus, flexibility, preparation and planning are all essential components for successful sailing. These same qualities will keep you moving towards your goals… even in the choppy waters of today’s workplace. Mary Eileen Williams is a Nationally Board Certified Career Counselor with a Master’s Degree in Career Development and twenty years’ experience assisting midlife jobseekers to achieve satisfying careers. Her book, Land the Job You Love: 10 Surefire Strategies for Jobseekers Over 50 , is a step-by-step guide that helps you turn your age into an advantage. It’s packed with information providing mature applicants with the tools to successfully navigate the modern job market and gain the edge over the competition. Visit her website at Feisty Side of Fifty.com and celebrate your sassy side!

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FDA Won’t Approve New Diabetes Drug Yet

January 19, 2012

TRENTON, N.J. — In a setback that could spell trouble for several drugmakers developing a new type of diabetes pill, U.S. regulators have told partners Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. and AstraZeneca PLC they can’t approve its experimental drug without more data. Shares of both companies fell more than 2 percent. The Food and Drug Administration decision Thursday comes after expert FDA advisers in July recommended that dapagliflozin not be approved. They cited elevated rates of bladder and breast cancer seen in clinical studies, plus concerns about infections and possible liver damage. Bristol-Myers has been touting dapagliflozin as an important new drug. BernsteinResearch analyst Dr. Tim Anderson had forecast sales of about $1.2 billion a year by 2020, a modest blockbuster by today’s standards. Dapagliflozin is part of a new class of drugs for Type 2 diabetes called SGLT-2 inhibitors, which reduce blood sugar by increasing how much is excreted in the urine and also help patients lose weight. Type 2 diabetes, which is generally related to obesity and a sedentary lifestyle, accounts for at least 90 percent of diagnosed cases in adults. Bristol-Myers, based in New York, and London-based AstraZeneca said the FDA wants data from ongoing studies and may require new ones to better evaluate the drug’s benefits and risks. If that happens, it likely would delay a chance at approval by a couple of years. The companies said they’ll work with the FDA to determine their next steps and are committed to dapagliflozin, which has been tested in more than 5,000 patients in 19 clinical studies. The companies also are in “ongoing discussions with health authorities in Europe and other countries” where they are seeking approval for the once-a-day pill. The setback follows failures of other experimental drugs for each company recently and could indicate difficulties ahead for several other competitors developing compounds similar to dapagliflozin, according to Anderson. “Our best guess is that safety concerns linger over the small cancer signal that surfaced in prior studies,” Anderson wrote. Bristol and AstraZeneca both need some new big sellers soon because they have blockbusters facing generic competition this year and in future years. Blood thinner Plavix, which Bristol jointly markets with France’s Sanofi SA, is the world’s second-best-selling drug but loses U.S. patent protection this May. Bristol reported $5.42 billion in Plavix sales in the first nine months of 2011, part of which goes to Sanofi. AstraZeneca loses patent protection in March for its No. 3 drug, Seroquel for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. It brought the company $3.2 billion in the first three quarters of 2011. Anderson noted he expects Bristol-Myers to have flat revenue from 2012 onwards and that AstraZeneca seems “to have a never-ending decline.” If it’s approved eventually, dapagliflozin would have to fight for space in the increasingly crowded field of diabetes drugs, which now spans about a half-dozen classes of pills and injected drugs, plus multiple types of insulin. Numerous older pills are available as cheap generics, so newer ones must be significantly better and safer to win insurance coverage and market share. Bristol’s Onglyza, another type of drug for Type 2 diabetes launched 2 1/2 years ago, has been a disappointment, with sales of only $320 million in 2011′s first nine months. Bristol-Myers, which has one of the industry’s best portfolios of drugs in development, said last month that experimental liver cancer drug brivanib didn’t increase overall survival in a late-stage study. Three other late-stage studies of that drug are continuing. Late last year, AstraZeneca said it was abandoning plans to develop a new ovarian cancer drug called olaparib, and that a planned antidepressant known as TC-5214, being developing with U.S.-based Targacept Inc., did not perform well in the first of four late-stage studies. Further tests of TC-2514 were continuing, though. In early afternoon trading, AztraZeneca’s U.S.-listed shares were down 69 cents, or 1.4 percent, at $47.51 and Bristol-Myers shares declined $1.08, or 3.2 percent, to $32.65, while the broader markets were up less than 1 percent.

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Alex Nowrasteh: Immigrants Help Fuel Tech Growth

January 19, 2012

People are the most valuable resource. We see this most clearly among entrepreneurs, scientists, engineers, and innovators. Creating wealth and new ways of doing things drive economic growth. This is especially true in the technology sector. Encouraged by free markets, individual liberty, and the right incentives, innovators can achieve technological wonders. But unfortunately, our immigration system limits their number. Nowhere is the positive impact of immigrants more noticeable than in high tech startups. According to a survey by the National Foundation for American Policy, immigrants have started nearly half of the top 50 venture-funded companies . Software, semiconductors, and biotechnology are the most common venture-backed startup firms started by immigrants. According to another report by Vivek Wadhwa, roughly 25 percent of all engineering firms founded between 1995 and 2005 were founded by immigrants. A report from the Kauffman Foundation shows that immigrants are more than twice as likely as native-born Americans to start firms. Thanks to America’s entrepreneurial culture, stories like those of the Hungarian-born Andy Grove , who founded Intel, and the Soviet-born Sergey Brin , who founded Google, are common. There are many thousands more who create successful but smaller companies. Entrepreneur Andres Ruzo , who describes himself as “Peruvian by birth, Texan by choice,” started the telecommunications firm Link America in 1994. He is also working on ITS Infocom, which manages communication networks for large companies. His firms also expanded into Latin America by trying to, in Ruzo’s own words, “Americanize South and Central America: to bring the culture of performance and results and speed and punctuality and quality and reliability to Latin America.” With rare exceptions, immigrant entrepreneurs face immigration problems. Employment-based green cards , capped at 140,000 a year, are issued to some kinds of skilled workers and investors, under strict country of origin quotas and burdensome requirements. The H-1B visa is capped at 85,000 per year for temporary workers employed by American firms. Many times H-1B workers are issued a green card after several years. All the while, the worker has to be an employee, not an entrepreneur. Roughly a quarter of master’s students and a third of Ph.D. students in science and engineering at U.S. universities are foreign-born. Yet the amount of paperwork, bureaucracy, and requirements they face to stay in the U.S. after graduation throw up serious roadblocks to innovation and entrepreneurship. Innovators and entrepreneurs should spend their time starting new businesses, not navigating a byzantine and outdated immigration system. America is uniquely meritocratic. We attract the best and the brightest from around the world, but our immigration system gets in the way. The government expects a potential entrepreneur to prove that he or she is an entrepreneur before he or she can start a business. There is no stamp or marking that shows who will be a successful entrepreneur ex ante. Only experience, not government fiat, can determine that. Our immigration rules need to allow for those experiences. Many immigrant workers innovate within American firms, filling niche specialty roles. Many are graduates of the best universities and technical schools in the world. Jim Clark , the American founder of Healtheon (now WebMD ), Netscape (now part of AOL), and Silicon Graphic affectionately calls his Indian engineers “the most talented engineers in the Valley… and they work their butts off.” American-educated Indian engineer Srikanth Nadhamuni and others produced some of the most innovative websites and medical cost saving tools yet developed. His story is multiplied thousands of times over, but for every success that is realized, our immigration laws impede another through arduous bureaucratic barriers. Chia-Pin Chang , a Taiwanese native and Ph.D. in computer engineering from George Washington University, co-founded the medical device firm OptoBioSense. In addition to the burdensome government regulations on medical devices, Chang faces yet another obstacle: He has to close his business in February and move back to Taiwan if he cannot secure an employer-sponsored green card. Iranian-born Esmaeil-Hooman Banaei created an electricity generating fabric while getting his Ph.D. from the University of Central Florida. Now he is waiting for a green card and a legal chance to pursue the American dream while developing new technology. His invention may flop or it may produce benefits, profits, revenues, and opportunities for Americans. But we’ll never know if he doesn’t get a green card. Immigration links together the world’s most valuable resources, allowing immigrant and Americans to work together. The immigrants then become Americans and the process continues, replenishing America’s talent pool. The government cannot choose who will become an innovator or entrepreneur before they get an opportunity to do so. Immigration regulatory limbo ties the hands of hundreds of thousands of potential entrepreneurs and innovators. Those knots should be undone. Immigrants and Americans working together have produced enormous wealth and opportunities for everybody in the United States. Governments just needs to let them.

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John R. Talbott: The End of Romney

January 19, 2012

The Wall Street Journal reports today in its story entitled ‘Romney’s Unorthodox IRA’ that Mitt Romney has between $20.7 million and $101.6 million parked in his IRA. IRA’s were created by Congress as a means of encouraging Americans to save for their retirement. It appears given the magnitude of the amounts involved that Mitt Romney is using his IRA in a complex tax avoidance scheme. As the WSJ reports; Under federal law, Mr. Romney isn’t required to pay annual taxes on the account’s investment gains, and the bulk of his contributions to the fund are likely to have been pretax dollars, IRA experts say. As such, the Romney IRA has enabled the current Republican front-runner to defer paying taxes on a sizable portion of his wealth — although he could face high tax bills when he eventually withdraws the money. IRAs do allow individuals to avoid paying taxes on their current income and deferring all additional taxes until the funds are withdrawn from the IRA in retirement. For this reason, Congress saw fit to put a maximum contribution limit on the IRAs of $2,000 a year. Any amounts contributed to an IRA beyond this maximum must be contributed after the paying of all required taxes. For Mitt Romney to have accumulated $20 to $100 million in his IRA suggests that somehow he had found a way around this $2,000 a year limit to contributions as there is no way contributing $2,000 a year could ever grow to $20 million in one’s lifetime, much less $100 million, regardless of how good an investor one is. One method Mitt Romney may have employed is to have made his initial investments in a 401(k) plan on a pre-tax basis because 401(k) plans allowed up to $30,000 a year in annual contributions back in the 1980′s without the payment of ordinary income taxes. But even with making $30,000 contributions each year, it is hard to see how a $20 to $100 million fortune could be amassed in such a short time. This suggests, and the Wall Street Journal article hints at this, that Romney was not making cash contributions to his IRA but rather parking equity shares of his companies’ investment funds there, or quite possibly putting shares of private companies that his firm bought into his 401(k). If this happened, we need to know at what valuation Romney made these contributions as it is very easy to claim a low stated value for shares of private companies or investment funds that have no publicly available market price. If Romney purposely understated the true value of the shares he contributed to his retirement plan he could be held criminally liable. But Romney did not stop there with his tax avoidance scheme. It appears (and appearances are all we have at this point since Romney refuses to release his tax returns until the Republican nominating process is effectively over in mid-April) that Romney then at some time, possibly at his retirement, converted his 401(k) plan into an IRA and thus permanently avoided the contribution limits on IRAs. But, as the WSJ reports, “Under current tax law, anybody investing an IRA in a private-equity fund, as Mr. Romney did, would likely incur a hefty special tax on ‘unrelated business income,’ also known as UBIT. This tax, (is) assessed at a maximum 35% rate…” There is no indication that Romney paid this tax. And, according to the WSJ , Romney also may have made use of offshore tax havens like the Cayman Islands to further avoid paying his taxes. Romney’s company, Bain Capital, made liberal use of offshore vehicles and one way to avoid paying the UBIT tax referenced above is to claim that Romney was not investing in a private equity fund, but rather in an off-shore corporation that itself invested in the private equity fund. ABC News reports that Bain Capital has set up over 138 secretive offshore funds in the Cayman Islands. Romney has reported recently that his actual effective tax rate is around 15% per year. Robert Reich, as reported in the Huffington Post, suggests that Romney and his private equity funds most likely made ample use of the carried interest rule that allows hedge funds, LBO funds and private equity funds to compensate their managers at capital gains rates rather than ordinary income rates, an advantage only available to wealthy Wall Street insiders. But Romney was not happy paying 15% per year. By bastardizing the intent of IRA legislation meant to help working Americans save for retirement, Romney has succeeded in shielding $20 million to $100 million of his staggering personal wealth from all taxes to date, an effective tax rate of 0%. Mitt Romney with all his tax dodging schemes has as much chance of being elected president in this tough economic climate as a draft dodger would have had during the Vietnam War. John R. Talbott, previously a Goldman Sachs investment banker, is a best selling author and economic consultant to families whose books predicted the economic crisis. You can read more about his books, the accuracy of his predictions and his financial consulting activities at www.stopthelying.com

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Cities Getting Hit Hardest Since The Recession: Report

January 19, 2012

Official recovery or not, it turns out that cities around the world still have a long way to go to get back to where they were before the downturn. More than half of the world’s 200 largest cities have yet to return to their pre-recession levels in either income or employment, according to a new report from the Brookings Institute . Compared to the pre-recession years of 1993 to 2007, cities all around the world are struggling, especially in North America and Western Europe. In cities like Dublin and New Orleans, income growth rates decline last year. Chinese cities, which have generally fared much better through the recession, are also seeing a drop off. Industry hubs like Beijing and Guangzhou have seen growth rates drop by over half compared to pre-recession levels. “China took proactive steps last year to cool off its real estate market, which people were concerned was facing the same kind of bubble condition as in the U.S. and Europe prior to the recession,” Alan Berube, an author of the report told The Huffington Post. “In the process of doing that it managed to cool off the economy altogether.” The Brookings findings for U.S. cities mirror other reports. Brookings, which looked only at the 57 largest cities in the U.S., found that none “had fully recovered its recession induced losses by 2011,” while and IHS Global Insight report found that only 26 of the nation’s 363 cities had returned to pre-recession levels of employment. While the Brookings report notes significant employment growth declines in cities like Las Vegas, Berube said some cities have faired better than others, a pattern that will likely continue going forward. “In the United States it will be a mixed bag,” he said. “Some places will be back to where they were prior to the recession, growing their income and employment levels — not at a rapid rate — but one that should bring unemployment down. Others are still trying to escape the vortex leftover from the recession.” Here are the ten cities whose income growth has dropped most significantly since before the recession, according to the Brookings Institute :

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Anna Cuevas: HAMP’s Second Lien Modification Saves Fewer Than 50% of Second Mortgages

January 18, 2012

In January 2011, one of the government’s largest mortgage lenders, Fannie Mae, implemented the U.S. Treasury’s Second Lien Modification Program. Also referred to as 2MP, slightly less than 50 percent of eligible Housing Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) second liens have been modified to date. Through the 2MP initiative, services of second mortgages have the option to modify the lien or to extinguish it — which is an admission that the mortgagor is not likely to be repaid for the second mortgage, and as a result, they clear their interest in the property by filing a lien waiver. To qualify for this HAMP modification directive, the borrower’s first lien must be in modification. In addition, the remaining balance of the principal of the second mortgage must be a minimum of $5,000 with an existing monthly payment of $100 or more. It should be noted that Second Lien Modification Program is voluntary, and not all banks have opted to participate. Of the major HAMP servicers, only six have chosen to do so. These services for these lenders are notified by the U.S. Treasury Department if a second lien is eligible for modification under the program. To date, over 115,000 second liens have been identified as eligible. Yet, less than half had begun the modification process. Almost 10,000 of those were extinguished. The HAMP loan modification program continues through 2012. Initial projections estimated that 3 to 4 million mortgages would benefit from the program; however, at its current rate of 25,000 to 30,000 a month, fewer than 1 million mortgages have been modified. If you are the holder of a second mortgage that meets the guidelines stated above, you should contact your lender to determine if they participate in HAMP’s 2MP program. Some of the voluntary participants as of this writing are Citigroup, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan Chase, and Ally Financial. Anna Cuevas, known as “America’s Loan Modification Guru,” has guided thousands of Americans in keeping their homes from foreclosure. A popular blogger (askaloanmodguru.com), Cuevas has been called a “superhero of the loan modification industry” and has been nominated for CNN’s Heroes. She is the #1 bestselling author of SAVE YOUR HOME Without Losing Your Mind or Money.

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Jacquelyn Ottman: The Rise of the Biobased Economy… And Why Brand Owners Need to Develop a Strategy in 2012

January 18, 2012

Our economy is slowly but surely heeding the signal that carbon is the new watchword. During the past few years, a steady stream of so-called “biobased” products have been making their way to retail shelves — compostable dinnerware made from corn, plant-based laundry detergents, and bamboo flooring among them. Coke and Pepsi are now competing to be first to market with a soft drink bottle derived entirely from sugarcane or other plant materials. The emerging biobased economy even has its own label: USDA Certified Biobased, pictured at right. It’s part of a federal BioPreferred program designed to help grow “green” jobs, stimulate the rural economy, promote energy independence, and prompt a shift to renewable resources from petroleum, helping to manage the carbon cycle. Launched in February 2011, the label needs a little introduction, given that the term “biobased,” although familiar-sounding, represents more than meets the eye. We advised the USDA on strategic marketing considerations related to the launch of the USDA Certified Biobased label. Here’s a primer — and why you need to be thinking about forming your own biobased strategy during 2012. 
What Is “Biobased”? Ask a consumer what “biobased” means and they might respond with somewhat erroneous definitions such as “natural,” “biodegradable,” or “renewable.” Consult Webster and you’ll come up short. But the USDA (and federal law) defines it quite specifically as “commercial or industrial products, other than food or feed, that are composed in whole, or in significant part, of biological products or renewable agricultural materials (including plant, animal, and aquatic materials), or forestry materials” — hence the label depicting the soil, sea, and the sun. More important than this definition are the program’s intention: to expand the market for alternatives to petroleum-based products by promoting new uses for agricultural commodities such as bioplastics, biofibers, and biobased chemicals. It thus excludes products such as office paper, cotton t-shirts, and wooden furniture introduced before 1972. (See BioPreferred.gov for more details.) Both finished consumer and commercial products as well as intermediate products ( e.g. , platform chemicals, fibers, etc.) are currently eligible to earn the USDA Certified Biobased label. Standards for “complex” products (consisting of many components, such as automobiles) are being developed. Among the many products that have already earned the label are Procter & Gamble’s Gillette ProGuide Fusion razor package; Papermate mechanical pencils, made from Mirel biodegradable plastic; the Greenware line of cold cups, made from NatureWorks’ plant-based Ingeo polymer; and intermediates such as Lenzing’s TENCEL lyocell fiber, made from eucalyptus, and DuPont’s Sorona polymer. Seventh Generation is so bullish about the label that they have certified over 60 of their household cleaning and personal care products — virtually their entire product lineup. Why Pursue a Biobased Strategy? The credibility and broadscale awareness of the brand USDA positions labeled products to stand out to consumers. In an age when consumers actively seek environmentally preferable biobased products with comparable price and performance, having the USDA Certified Biobased label increases shelf appeal. And marketing benefits don’t stop there. The federal government, by law and executive order, now gives purchasing preference to over 60 categories of biobased products. Biobased alternatives can also help businesses to manage volatile petroleum-driven costs and ensure sustainable supplies. Measurement, Transparency, and Product Performance Not every product made with plants or other renewable resources can qualify for the USDA Certified Biobased label. That’s because the USDA has set strict minimums for biobased content in a wide range of “designated” products. For instance, a lip balm may only need 11-percent biobased content to qualify, while a disposable food container needs 72 percent. Any product category for which a target has not yet been established must achieve minimum biobased content levels of 25 percent. Although this 25-percent bar may at first glance seem low, keep in mind that minimums are based upon the highest levels of biobased content possible without compromising performance, and to encourage participation in a market now ramping up. Biobased content is measured using a radiocarbon dating test standard, ASTM D6866. This test measures total carbon content and distinguishes the amount of “new” organic from fossil or petroleum-based carbon. This enables the “new” organic (biobased) carbon to be expressed as a percent of the total carbon. To foster transparency, encourage a level playing field, and promote continuous improvement, the USDA Certified Biobased label requires disclosure of the percentage of biobased content for the product and/or package. Caution Advised When Making Environmental Claims Marketers may realize advantages if they can substantiate a product’s biobased content in support of environmental marketing claims such as “natural,” “biodegradable,” “renewable,” or even “non-toxic.” However, none of these environmental attributes are automatic because of a product’s certified biobased content. Whether a claimed environmental attribute can be supported depends upon the amount of biobased content, as well as how the product was processed and transported, and other life-cycle considerations. Keep in mind, too, that much consumer confusion surrounds the biodegradability and recyclability of bioplastics. For instance, some resins may not be biodegradable but can be recycled (like Coke’s bioplastic PET PlantBottle, recyclable with petroleum-based PET). In addition, some traditional petroleum-based plastics are compostable in industrial (municipal) facilities, but not in backyard composters. And no plastic, biobased or otherwise, is designed to readily biodegrade in landfills. The revised proposed FTC Green Guides, anticipated in 2012, will likely include specific guidance for biobased marketing and related claims. (We’ll discuss this in more depth in future posts.) What’s Your Biobased Strategy? According to Kate Lewis, Deputy Manager of the USDA BioPreferred program, since its introduction in February 2011, over 500 products have been certified to use the USDA Certified Biobased label, and over 400 applications are in the pipeline. She reports that her group is “looking forward to working with proactive brand owners to capitalize upon their certification and really drive this new bio-industrial revolution forward.” Now entering the market, these labelers will enjoy first-mover advantage as well as the opportunity to educate their consumers and other stakeholders about the benefit biobased content brings to their products. Whether one leads or follows, it’s clear that biobased products figure prominently in our future. We predict that all products will ultimately be judged by their carbon content and their potential to effect global climate change. So, credible biobased products are and will continue to be a critical component of a long-range strategy. Short-term motivations for developing a biobased strategy, while company- and brand-specific, can include minimizing cost; enhancing image, reputation, and consumer perception; and avoiding potential regulatory risks. So key questions for every brand owner, product manager and CEO in 2012 are: What’s your biobased strategy? Do you have a team in place to bring biobased innovation into your brand and product portfolio?

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Obama Picks Sides In SOPA Fight Between Campaign Donors

January 18, 2012

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama entered the fray over two controversial anti-piracy bills with a Jan. 14 statement aligning the White House with technology and Internet community critics of the legislation. The statement put the president on one side of a major debate between two of the biggest donor communities in the Democratic Party — the technology and Internet industry vs. movie and recording companies — in the middle of his reelection campaign. Obama’s position on the anti-piracy legislation — the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) in the House and the Protect IP Act (PIPA) in the Senate — hints at the increasing role played by computer and Internet companies, their executives, and their employees in the Democratic Party coalition. Since 2007, executives and employees of such companies have given $52 million to Democratic Party efforts, up $12 million from the period 2001 to 2006, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Hollywood and the entertainment industry, long counted as stalwarts of the Democratic money machine, continue to give more than the party’s new tech friends. The Democratic National Committee received $1 million more from the entertainment sector than from the tech sector through Sept. 30, 2011. The biggest supporter of the president’s reelection was DreamWorks CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg, who has raised at least $500,000 for the reelection and contributed $2 million to a super PAC supporting the president. Obama has also appeared at a New York fundraiser hosted by Miramax co-founder Harvey Weinstein and, in one visit to Los Angeles, held three separate fundraisers at the Sony Pictures movie studio. Donors include big-shot Hollywood executives and producers such as Steven Spielberg, Brian Grazer, John Pepper and Katzenberg and actors like Tom Hanks, Jamie Foxx, Jennifer Garner, Eddie Murphy and Alec Baldwin. Perhaps it is the entertainment industry’s heavy tilt leftward, rarely giving fewer than 70 percent of all its contributions to Democrats, that makes the industry’s support look like a given. And that may have freed the White House to issue the Jan. 14 statement — written by Victoria Espinal of the Office of Management and Budget, Aneesh Chopra, U.S. chief technology officer, and Howard Schmidt, White House cybersecurity coordinator — on the side of tech community. A more recent convert to the Democratic coalition, the tech community has a strong relationship with the Obama White House. With its less glamorous, more cerebral stars, it seems like more of a natural fit for Obama than Hollywood. And that fit shows in campaign contributions. The $9.2 million that Obama raised from the computer and Internet industry in his 2008 campaign is three times more than any other politician had raised from the industry over an entire career. It also marked the first time that computer and Internet interests beat the entertainment industry in donating money to a Democratic presidential candidate. Although the DNC has received significantly more from entertainment companies, the tech and entertainment sectors through Sept. 30, 2011, are nearly evenly matched in giving to President Obama’s reelection campaign: The tech sector gave $1.3 million; the entertainment industry, $1 million. Silicon Valley and the tech sector overall grew from a small player in politics in 1999 to a major Democratic donor community by 2006, according to a 2008 Atlantic article by Joshua Green — and then further accelerated its involvement with Obama’s 2008 campaign. As Green describes, the increase in contributions from the tech sector were helped along by a shift in fundraising tactics away from the smaller living room events that favor the rich — such as Hollywood elites — and toward a subscription model based on Silicon Valley software sales. This was largely the model that Obama adopted by establishing online fundraising platforms and by connecting rally attendees to those platforms through mobile devices. The relationship between Obama and tech companies has involved more than money. Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes left his Silicon Valley job to help the Obama team run its social networking and online fundraising platforms. Google’s Eric Schmidt served as an informal adviser to the campaign and later went to Washington to serve on the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology. In the White House, the president appointed the nation’s first chief technology officer and first chief information officer and reached out to the tech community in both Silicon Valley and Washington. “People in the tech industry appreciate the competence of his tech work and the stand in favor of Internet freedom,” Craig Newmark, who founded the popular site Craigslist.org, told The Huffington Post. Newmark, who calls himself a “libertarian moderate,” added, “His stand regarding SOPA reflects the understanding that it won’t really help stop piracy, but it would do a lot of damage to the U.S. and could shut down much of the tech industry, destroying jobs.” The Obama administration’s statement on the anti-piracy bills was specifically elicited by an online program, called We The People, that allows citizens to submit petitions asking for a White House statement of policy. An official White House statement is delivered if the petitioners can round up enough people to co-sign their request. The Jan. 14 statement says that the president “will not support legislation that reduces freedom of expression, increases cybersecurity risk, or undermines the dynamic, innovative global Internet.” The White House statement provides a broad critique that largely embraces the arguments of critics of the legislation, such as Google, Facebook and Yahoo. The administration also stated its opposition to specific elements of the two bills. The statement singled out as a threat to cybersecurity a much-noted provision related to Domain Name System rerouting, recently removed by the bills’ sponsors in Congress. Despite the president’s seeming abandonment of the entertainment industry on this subject, the industry does not appear ready to quit the president just yet. The Motion Picture Association of America, a major supporter of the anti-piracy bills, decided to interpret the White House statement as a sign of support for its side. (AOL Inc., HuffPost’s parent company, is lobbying against the Stop Online Piracy Act and the Protect IP Act. AOL CEO Tim Armstrong has met with President Obama.) Make your voice heard on SOPA and PIPA:

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Fuel Transfer Runs Smoothly For Iced-In Alaska City

January 18, 2012

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A Russian tanker that went on an ocean odyssey of 5,000 miles to deliver fuel to the iced-in city of Nome was offloading the gasoline and diesel in what officials say is smooth sailing so far, with one possible problem avoided. Two parallel hoses, 700 yards long each, are stretched between the tanker Renda and a pipeline that will deliver 1.3 million gallons of fuel to storage tanks near the harbor of the iced-in city. The offloading began with gasoline, and then both gasoline and diesel were being transferred separately. Jason Evans, board chairman of Sitnasuak Native Corp., the company that arranged for the fuel delivery, said Tuesday the tanker’s two hoses are pumping between 30,000 and 40,000 gallons of gasoline and diesel an hour. One section of hose had to be switched out early Tuesday morning when a suspected bubble occurred in the line, Evans said. The change-out went smoothly and there have been no spills since the pumping operation began Monday evening. This is the first time petroleum products have been delivered to a western Alaska community by sea in winter. The mayor said festivities were planned, including a Coast Guard helicopter landing on the beach so children can look inside. They also set a basketball game between residents and Coast Guard crew members, and the city invited the crew to a pizza dinner. “It is our way to show our appreciation and how grateful we are and what they did for us,” said Mayor Denise Michels. The transfer could take from 36 hours to five days. It started near sundown Monday, after crews laid the hoses along a stretch of Bering Sea ice to the pipeline that begins on a rock causeway 550 yards from the tanker, Evans said. Sitnasuak owns the local fuel company, Bonanza Fuel, and has been working closely with Vitus Marine, the supplier that arranged for the delivery of the 1.3 million gallons of fuel. State officials said the transfer had to start during daylight, but can continue in darkness. Nome has just five hours of daylight this time of year. The city of 3,500 didn’t get its last pre-winter barge fuel delivery because of a massive November storm. Without the Renda’s delivery, Nome would run out of fuel by March or April, long before the next barge delivery is possible. Alaska has had one of the most severe winters in decades. Snow has piled up 10 feet or higher against the wood-sided buildings in Nome, a former gold rush town that is the final stop on the 1,150-mile Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. The Renda began its journey from Russia in mid-December, picking up diesel fuel in South Korea before heading to Dutch Harbor, Alaska, where it took on unleaded gasoline. It arrived last week off Nome on Alaska’s west coast, more than 500 miles from Anchorage. A Coast Guard icebreaker cleared a path for the 370-foot tanker through hundreds of miles of a slow journey stalled by thick ice and strong ocean currents. In total, the tanker traveled an estimated 5,000 miles, said Rear Adm. Thomas Ostebo, commander of District Seventeen with the Coast Guard. “It’s just been an absolutely grand collaboration by all parties involved,” said Stacey Smith of Vitus Marine, the fuel supplier. Smith said the effort is a third of the way over with the arrival of the Renda near Nome. Pumping the fuel from the tanker will be the second part. The third part will be the exiting through ice by the two ships. Personnel will walk the entire length of hosing every 30 minutes to check for leaks, Evans said. Each segment has its own containment area, and extra absorbent boom will be on hand. The Coast Guard is monitoring the effort, working with state, federal, local and tribal representatives, Chief Petty Officer Kip Wadlow said. The fuel participants had to submit a plan to state environmental regulators on how they intended to get the fuel off the Renda, he said. “We want to make sure the fuel transfer from the Renda to the onshore storage facility is conducted in as safe a manner as possible,” he said.

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Christopher Sands: Did U.S. Partisan Warfare Kill Keystone?

January 18, 2012

Open partisan warfare between Democrats and Republicans, between the Obama administration and Congress, is underway and the latest clash is the battle of Keystone, the fight over the Keystone XL pipeline. By attaching a deadline for a decision to legislation extending the payroll tax holiday by two months, Congress tried to force President Obama to issue a presidential permit that would allow for the expansion of the pipeline where it crosses the U.S.-Canadian border. The president had previously announced that he would delay his decision until 2013. President Obama today called Congress’ bluff: he decided and rejected the permit on the grounds that he did not have adequate information in hand to approve the pipeline at present. This is consistent with his explanation for delaying his decision to 2013, despite the lengthy review and hearings process that has already taken place. Congress forced him to make a decision, but did not override his freedom to make that decision as he saw fit, and so he chose — as his aides had hinted he would — to say no. Environmental groups will cheer the decision, and contribute heartily to re-elect the president. Republicans, though, will cheer as well: they have forced President Obama to reject a project that would create American jobs immediately and lower U.S. oil and gasoline prices over time. In elections this year, Republican candidates will cite this decision as proof that President Obama put special interests ahead of jobs and economic growth. The importance of the battle of Keystone will be measured by its significance in the larger partisan war that has raged in the United States for a decade or more. It has been a war from the Gingrich revolution to the battle to Impeach President Bill Clinton, from the appalling invective against President George W. Bush to the defection of Senator Jim Jeffords of Vermont to put the Senate in Democratic hands, to the election of President Obama who promised to change the tone of Washington through to the partisan passage of health care legislation and the 2010 election that signaled a Republican takeover of the House of Representatives. Frustrated by his inability to pass climate legislation, President Obama turned a routine presidential permit decision into a political weapon. By delaying his decision, he allowed his allies in the environmental movement to raise funds and protest the pipeline in Nebraska and nationwide. The issue rallied a diverse coalition of local and national environmental activists and boosted their fundraising in a bleak, recessionary economy. The president first delayed his decision on Keystone to the end of 2011, allowing additional time for hearings and study. Then, under pressure from his allies, he decided to add a delay until after the U.S. election, pledging to decide in 2013. Republicans smelled weakness. Texas Governor and Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry came out with a strong endorsement of the Keystone pipeline, criticizing Obama for the delayed decision. Shortly thereafter, the entire field of GOP presidential candidates endorsed the Keystone pipeline and pledged to approve the permit if elected. The partisan battle lines were drawn. House Republicans tried to attach language forcing the president to make a decision on the Keystone pipeline and ultimately succeeded in adding to the temporary payroll tax cut extension. The White House initially insisted it would veto any bill that included language forcing the President’s hand on Keystone, but when the bill came to his desk President Obama signed it anyway. The payroll tax cut extension is only good until the end of February, and as Congress returns this week following a recess for Martin Luther King Day, negotiations are about to begin on another payroll tax cut extension as well as another increase in the U.S. debt ceiling by more than $1 trillion. Obama’s Keystone decision is a warning shot to Congressional Republicans intended to make the president look stronger for the battles to come. Like picnickers at the Battle of Gettysburg, Canadians have a great view of the fighting and are not indifferent about the outcome — but for those doing the fighting, they are irrelevant. It is always hard and sad to repeat this, but this is all about us in the United States, and not about you in Canada. And whatever Prime Minister Harper, Premier Redford or Ambassador Doer thinks or says about the president’s decision, it won’t stop the war. Only the 2012 election can do that now. President Obama’s rejection of the Keystone permit can be reconsidered at any time by this president. Or by his successor.

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Zondra Hughes: Free at Last! Leaving a Bad Job to Launch a New Business

January 18, 2012

Life is a dream when you love your job and it’s a nightmare when you hate it. So what can you do if you are living a nightmare? Leave that job behind, according to two young entrepreneurs who found their passions in their second careers. Shatoia Starks left her job as a pharmaceutical sales exec to operate a food truck, Mama Green’s Gourmet Goodies. Shatoia’s cookies are sold in Whole Foods and she now plans to open a bakery. Jeremiah Bishop was the general manager at a bill collection agency in his former life. However, “When the economy crashed and tanked, nobody was paying bills, so I had to find something else to do.” Five years later, Bishop is an in-demand fashion photographer and owner of Phinally Phocused Photography. Here Shatoia and Jeremiah discuss three ways they’ve mentally prepared to leave bad job situations and launch profitable new businesses. 1. Be open to explore new possibilities — or old passions. “Inspiration can come at any time; you must be open to receive it,” says Shatoia. “I was in pharmaceutical sales for about 10 years, and I really started to dislike it a lot.” While visiting her mother for the holidays, “I started organizing my great — grandmother’s recipes, and as I sat there, a lot of memories were coming back. And I always loved food a lot and I enjoyed serving food. I always loved sales, so I combined those two and started a food truck. I am 100 percent happier now than ever before.” 2. Find a mentor and educate yourself. “My friend, Charan Ingram, is a great Web designer, and he had gotten into photography, and Adobe Photoshop,” says Jeremiah Bishop. “Charan took me under his wing, and… I studied lighting techniques, makeup techniques, the kind of photography that I wanted to do, which is mostly high fashion.” You must also do the research to find needed resources. “Try to use as much of the free help that’s out there as possible,” Shatoia states. “SCORE, the Small Business Association, here in Chicago, the Women’s Business Development Center; try to use as much free info as the city offers, because these people are former executives and they’ve done this before.” 3. Get a solid support system. Having a solid support system will also help you to keep the faith when launching your business, advises Shatoia. “The challenging part has been just taking the leap,” Shatoia says. “Believing in myself and saying, OK, I’m going to do this, and the support that I got from my husband and my mom really encouraged me to believe that I can do it and not turn back.” Last, but not least, you should never give up, adds Jeremiah. “You only can be knocked down for so long; nobody gives up permanently,” Jeremiah states. “As long as you have a great work ethic and you’re willing to work hard at it, I believe anybody can be successful in this country.” Your turn, if you’ve left a bad job situation to launch a business, how did you mentally prepare to strike out on your own?

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Police Target Journalists In Romania

January 18, 2012

BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) — Demonstrations against Romania’s harsh austerity measures took place across the country again on Wednesday, with protesters demanding the government’s resignation. In Strasbourg, France, Martin Schulz, the newly elected chief of the European Parliament, said Romanian officials should take urgent economic action to improve the public’s living standards. He said governments in all countries, but especially hard-hit Romania, should listen to protesters and their grievances. A total of about 2,000 people, including 300 in Bucharest, were taking part Wednesday’s peaceful demonstrations in cities across Romania — as they now have for seven days in a row. Opposition leaders urged Prime Minister Emil Boc to fire his interior minister and begin talks on early elections to replace his government. Boc rejected both demands, saying early elections are not justified because Romania has a ballot scheduled next fall. In 2009, Romania took a two-year euro20 billion ($27.5 billion) loan from the International Monetary Fund, the European Union and the World Bank as its economy shrank by 7.1 percent. It imposed harsh austerity measures under the agreement, reducing public wages by 25 percent and increasing taxes. Anger has mounted over the wage cuts, slashed benefits, higher taxes and widespread corruption. In another development Wednesday, a media organization urged Romanian authorities to identify and prosecute protesters and policemen who reportedly attacked nine journalists during previous violent anti-government demonstrations. The Vienna-based South East Europe Media Organization said that reporters were assaulted while covering protests against the austerity measures that degenerated into violence in Bucharest on Sunday and Monday. At least 59 people were injured during the disturbances. The media organization said the exact number of attacked journalists is not known. However, it mentioned nine cases of journalists and other media employees who were either hit by stones and Molotov cocktails hurled by protesters or allegedly detained or beaten by riot police. The Romanian Press Club, which represents journalists in Romania, expressed concern over “some excessive actions” by police who allegedly targeted journalists. Chairwoman Indira Crasnea said Wednesday the club is aware of up to five cases of journalists who were attacked in the first days of the protest when the police were “tougher” in their handling of violent demonstrators. The opposition said it will organize another protest march on Thursday. ___ AP writer Alison Mutler contributed from Bucharest.

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No Williams-Sonoma In Sonoma?

January 17, 2012

SONOMA, Calif. — Cookware giant Williams-Sonoma wants to go home. But the $3 billion chain is facing opposition over a new store at the original downtown Sonoma site. Ninety-seven-year-old Chuck Williams opened his first store on Broadway in 1956. He introduced a European aesthetic that revolutionized the way Americans cook and helped brand the city as a place to enjoy the good life. It will decide Wednesday whether to enact a moratorium on such businesses until a proposed ordinance is drafted. Sonoma Mayor Joanne Sanders is opposed to chain-store regulations and thinks it would be a loss to bar one of the most successful businesses in the United States from returning home. ___

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Stinson Carter: Cruises Offer Relaxation, Anarchy

January 17, 2012

Cruise ships are little countries unto themselves. They have their own socioeconomic pecking order and they abide by their own tax code and their own laws (or lack thereof in most cases). If Americans suffer some grievance aboard, there are three bodies they can solicit for help: the FBI, the country whose territorial waters they were in at the time of the event and the vessel’s flag state. That being said, no one generally wants to deal with the issues that arise, not the F.B.I., not the Italians or Greeks and certainly not Panama, Liberia or the Bahamas, countries whose governments rely on cruise ship flag fees to function. All too often, the process of determining responsibility for cruise passengers becomes an inter-governmental game of hot potato. In 2008, I went undercover on a major cruise liner and lived among the crew for a week to write a story for Maxim magazine. Though the story was more humorous than investigative, what I learned in the process was alarming. Upon my return, interviews with cruise industry consumer advocacy groups and attorneys who handle cases from on board cruise ships showed me the side of the pleasure cruise that leaves it vulnerable to the type of confusion that followed the sinking of the Costa Concordia. On my cruise ship, I met a 90-pound dancer from England who was technically in charge of a lifeboat in case of emergency. It was a running joke among her friends because an “emergency” was as unthinkable as her potential ability to man that lifeboat. This petite young woman could dance amazingly well, perch high on the arm of a male dancer, flip in the air. She was a very confident dancer, but a confident lifeboat operator she was not. Human beings in a corporate climate don’t police themselves very well. Bad P.R. and profit loss are the most significant safeguards you have as a cruiser. Sure, keeping you alive is good business, but if something goes wrong — unlike in your home country where there’s a legal system in place to assist you — cruise lines’ handling of the crisis will be based, essentially, on an honor system that can seem more like a sweep-it-under-the-rug system. When you’re on a cruise ship, you are visiting a foreign country with no embassy, no consumer watchdog agency and no real accountability of any kind other than their desire to protect you as a potential future revenue source. Which is generally fine because keeping you alive, preventing sexual assault, avoiding food poisoning and not sinking are all good business. Capitalism is working for you until something goes wrong, at which point you become a problem; damage that must be controlled. Next time you’re taking an after dinner stroll on a cruise ship, you might find yourself standing against the railing and looking out over the endless black emptiness of ocean. In that moment, ponder the fact that if you suddenly heard a loud crunch and the ship began to tilt, the captain of your lifeboat might be the captain of the dance troupe. And if you want to be well taken care of by whatever local authorities pluck you out of that lifeboat, your best bet is probably to sink off the coast of Scandinavia. Something tells me they’d at least give you a warm bed and some free medical care, maybe even a shot of Aquavit. Bon Voyage.

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Startup Evisors Bets On E-Advice

January 17, 2012

By Deborah L. Cohen CHICAGO (Reuters) – As a student at top U.S. universities, Norwegian entrepreneur Fredrik Maro quickly learned it’s not always what you know but who you know that can advance your career. So he and three fellow Harvard business school alumni set out to build a company based on the premise that everyone should have a shot at reaching advisors with direct knowledge in their field at an affordable price. Their online startup, Evisors , provides a range of consulting expertise for aspiring students, entrepreneurs and others. “I realized there could be a business model here built around democratizing the access to all these great people with all this great know-how, making the people you need to know available to everybody, not just a select group,” said Maro, who was introduced to costly and exclusive consulting networks in niche areas such as hedge funds during his own stint at the global management consulting firm McKinsey & Co. Maro and his cofounders began developing Evisors as MBA students, eventually bootstrapping the venture with less than $25,000 of their own money. To keep costs down, they outsourced site development to engineers in India. “We were very focused on a lean startup model,” said Maro, noting that much of the online platform had to be rebuilt once the venture began scaling up. Realizing they couldn’t start off being all things to all people, the cofounders focused first on what they knew best: helping aspiring students with admissions strategies for elite schools and career moves. The topic had particular resonance for Maro, who spent countless hours studying for the SATs during mandatory army service in Norway. “I got into Penn (University of Pennsylvania) despite what must have been a terrible, terrible application,” he recalled, adding that Evisors consultants are enlisted to help with everything from mock admissions interviews to resume reviews. Expert advice, bargain price New York-based Evisors, which launched in beta in September of 2010 and went live about a year later, has amassed about 1,200 experts who charge anywhere from $30 to $700 an hour for advice in the form of a phone consultation or email. The average rate is about $100, far below elite consulting networks, Maro said. The venture has to date sold more than 1,000 sessions. Evisors takes a cut of the proceeds, typically 30 percent for first-time users, in exchange for facilitating the match and handling details such as toll-free phone calls, file sharing and billing. Michael Mayhew, chairman of Integrity Research, a research advisory firm to institutional investors, said Evisors has tapped an un-served market. Other online consulting networks such as Zintro are focused squarely on financial services, he said. “I do think there is a going to be first mover, branding type advantage,” Mayhew said. Surprisingly, the site hasn’t had to work too hard to recruit advisors, relying instead on its founders’ network and word-of-mouth referrals. Consultants set their own rates and are later evaluated, with their scorecard made public to potential customers. Ben Schumacher, a Harvard business school alumnus and director of strategy for the teachers’ network Teach for America, is among the site’s highest-volume consultants, offering career advice to recent graduates and mid-career executives alike. “When I see clients succeed, I get addicted to their success,” said Schumacher, who recently finished his 90th consultation and typically charges $195 per hour. Access to seasoned alumni from top schools has been appealing to a variety of universities, which have contracted Evisors to develop proprietary consulting networks for their students. The University of Cambridge was the first of some 20 schools, said Maro, whose company gives the universities a break on rates due to volume. Business connections Beyond career advice, Evisors has progressively honed other sweet spots, with entrepreneurial consulting emerging as its second-biggest area. A quick glance at experts in this area revealed a host of startup founders as well as a project director at a large museum. “A conversation or two with the right individual is very valuable,” said Alan Mark, a member of the New York Angels, among the investors that have provided nearly $700,000 in startup capital to Evisors. “This can be really helpful for small business and individuals who otherwise wouldn’t have access to these experts.” Dr. James Maisel, a retina surgeon and serial entrepreneur, found an advisor with specialized venture capital expertise in medical technology to help with a pitch to potential VC investors. The total cost: less than $500. “We got the IT advisor from a New York venture capital firm that has been in the business for a number of years and was familiar with our space,” said Maisel, whose venture, ZyDoc, uses speech recognition to aid in medical transcription. “He could not have been more well-suited to help us.” Those are the types of success stories Evisors is betting on for growth. “We’re getting these people into schools,” Maro said. “We’re getting startup funding. We’re getting people into their jobs.” Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Jennifer Openshaw: Janitorial Jobs & the Presidential Candidates

January 17, 2012

A lot of parents are scratching their heads: Should my kid really take a job as a janitor? How much lower can you go? Last night on Fox, I watched the South Carolina debates and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich respond to criticism he had received suggesting poor kids work as janitors — “kiddie janitors” — in their schools. The story unfolds in a New York Magazine article by Joel Klein here . We’re not here to debate the candidates, but the topic is a valid one. Many affluent parents have shared with me the debate they’ve had with their private school headmasters over “menial” jobs. The headmaster believes there’s nothing wrong while some parents and students believe it’s beneath them. But it’s all really a matter of perspective — and what you do with what you’re given. For instance, I worked at the age of 14 as a maid in a motel, making the $2.65 per hour minimum wage. I did it to earn extra money and start saving for college since the tuition would fall primarily on me. And, yes, I can still make beds the Holiday Inn way! Go Where the Flocks Don’t But seriously, this is a tough economy, and if a student needs money and there’s an opportunity, why not consider it? Oddly, some of the best paying jobs are those we wouldn’t ever consider — many of them union jobs. Did it ever occur to you, whether it’s you or your kids, that you might go where the flocks don’t? If money is so important, or even a certain type of experience, why not pursue those avenues that few do? Your chances of success will be much higher — and the pay might, too. We don’t believe in just taking a job just for the paycheck, but rather, make an experience of it. Whether a student is working at McDonald’s or as a school janitor, there are lessons to be learned — like how to run a business. Even one of my business school colleagues from UCLA now runs an actual janitorial business, cleaning the floors for colleges and office buildings. They are creating their own destiny. A Self-Enterprising School This isn’t about race. Some schools are operating programs on campus — whether it’s the cafeteria or a bank — that directly provides students skills. And schools are considering entirely new models — why not one that makes the employees — or at least some of them — the students? Why not teach them how an enterprise is run, customer service, accounting and the like? Wouldn’t they be ahead of other students once they hit college or the working world? Sure, you could argue that child labor laws and other rules we need to change — that it’s a cobweb of issues — but it’s an interesting idea. As parents and as Americans, we need to instill the values of hard work, commitment, and follow-through. Now more than ever, though, we need to also teach valuable, real-world business skills. The role of janitor may not be such a bad place to start both to serve in a job and to ultimately create jobs.

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Noelle Bell: Getting Fan Scaling Right for Your Business

January 17, 2012

What is fan scaling? It’s the process of building up the number of your fans for your fan page. Can it get too big? Can it get too small? Yes, it can, and what ultimately matters is the comfort level you have with the number of fans you have for your fan page. Take a look at your business and your fan page. Is your business local? Is it a national business with thousands of employees, or just a small amount of employees? Do you sell products? Do you market services locally? The number of fans you have depends on what kind of a fan page you have. If you’re just strictly a local business such as a restaurant, professional services, or a food truck, then there’s no need to spend thousands of dollars of advertising in Facebook to get thousands of fans all over the country. That would be wasted money with a ROI that really doesn’t reflect the local goals of your business. What you should be aiming for are at least a thousand fans or more if your business is located in a mid-sized city with a population of at least half a million people. You can do that for simply just a few hundred bucks in advertising on Facebook. However, if you’re a business with the goals of selling lots of products to a wider customer base, then it makes sense to invest in large-scale online marketing to get a wider number of fans for your fan page. So that way your brand gets a competitive advantage over other business brands with similar lines of products. The number of fans you have on your fan page also forces you to think in creative ways about your brand, and how you can best interact with your fans to get them talking about your business. Also, you can’t simply be content with just posting occasionally to market your products and your business. Think outside the box. What will engage your fans the best? A boring wall post with a simple status update about an event, or a wall post that links to a news article or your blog with a photo about the event? Your own Facebook Insights will likely have shown that rich media such as photos, rich content (i.e. link to relevant news articles, blog posts, or video), get a higher fan engagement than just simple wall posts. It’s because Facebook’s EdgeRanker algorithm tool tends to rank wall posts that contain rich media as having a higher engagement rate than simple wall posts. If you have under a thousand fans and you’re in a small city, creative content on your Facebook fan page will keep your fans engaged. Fan engagement is important, not just for keeping your fan numbers the way they are, but for the organic nature of what they do with your fan page. Your fans will share your wall posts, “like” your links, rich media posts, and custom tabs on their News Feeds. It means their friends, who aren’t fans of your page, will get to see the content from your page on that News Feed. It’s organic growth, and it’s the best one because it’s all based on word-of-mouth about your fan page. You don’t have to pay anything for that. It helps keep your fan base easily manageable because you’re not advertising nationally, but locally, and your fans are from your city, so there’s a natural ceiling for them to reach. On the other hand, if you’re a business looking to do national outreach about your brand because you want to get as many clients as you can for your products, you will need help to accomplish the number of fans you want for that goal. Large-scale online advertising is recommended in this scenario. One great way to keep your advertising content interesting is to simply advertise your wall posts as “sponsored story” ads so they appear as an unique way for people to interact with your fan page. Don’t post boring ads, just as you wouldn’t post boring content on your wall. Make them stand out. And once you start your ad run, and you’ve optimized for the best ad content, you’ll see your fans grow for your fan page. When the ad run ends, the fans still grow largely by word-of-mouth at this point. But there’s the usual drop-off in the gains of fans for your page, and that’s fine. What it just means is that you’ve reached a normal plateau in your fans for your page. Now is the time to engage with your fans, and continue that organic growth through creative content such as custom tabs, rich media, and links to relevant news articles mentioning a product of yours or your business or what’s happening in your industry. Don’t also be afraid to reply back to your fans. They love that! There’s nothing worse than a hit-and-run wall post where the fans respond, but no one responds back to them. Why should they put the time on your fan page when you’re not putting your time in replying back to them? It all comes back to customer service, and that’s what fan scaling the right way is about. Serve your customers (fans) well through creative content, smart advertising, and you will see the benefit of that investment back.

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A Look At New HDTV Products And Connected Devices From CES 2012

January 17, 2012

The Consumer Electronics Show is always a big deal for HDTVs and the devices that plug into them, and the 2012 edition was no different. With the majority of households already owning an HDTV, manufacturers are pressed to convince you to upgrade, and are pulling out all the stops. We’ve got new display technologies like OLED, 4K and Super Hi-Vision, plus more 3D and internet connected features than ever. DVRs and media streamers haven’t slowed down either, so while some services focused on eliminating the set-top box, those that remained either shrunk (Roku) or added features (Boxee, TiVo, Ceton — pictured above). The pace of the announcements made it nearly impossible to keep up with everything going on last week, so we’ve wrapped everything up in one neat summary available after the break.

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Anne Day: A Family Affair

January 16, 2012

How well do you get on with members of your family? That good, eh? Can you imagine working together, day in, day out? These days, running a business is not for the faint of heart, but operating a family-owned business takes even more courage, tenacity and diplomacy. Lately I have had the opportunity to chat to a couple of family business owners and they are the first to admit that it isn’t easy, especially if as a family, you tend to spend time together outside of the office. The gals at Mabel’s Labels are role models for us all. Not only are the four women business partners, but they are related too. Each woman brings a different skills set to the business and even when they have feisty business conversations, they don’t let it trickle into their personal lives. “We share a family cottage and our kids are all friends, so it would be very awkward if we took things too personally.” shares Julie Cole, one of the partners. Because they are such a talented group, one of the challenges has been to know when to get involved and when to step away and let your business partner run with it, something Julie admits “is always a tricky balance.” “Our partnership is always a work in progress.” she adds. Mutual respect is also crucial. You have to value and respect your partners’ contribution to the whole, because without it, it’s not going to work. Letting go of the reins as the parent hands over the business to the adult son or daughter can be daunting too. In the case of Geoff Stephens at Capital Paving, his father had been grooming him for that role since he was 16. Not that he forced him to join the company — he didn’t — but he didn’t want his son to be viewed as just the boss’s son and insisted that he work his way through the ranks and learn every aspect of the business. And he let him make mistakes. “I grazed my knees several times, but it was all part of the learning experience,” admits Geoff Stephens. He also went off to school to study business administration, so when he came back to the company, he had additional expertise to bring to the leadership role. In 1999 at the age of 36, Geoff took over the company and by that time his two brother-in-laws were also partners in the business. Having worked for seven years with my daughter, I know first-hand that the working relationship can be fraught with difficulties. It is all too easy to slip into the usual pecking order, with mother, of course, always knowing best. But I have discovered that isn’t always the case and sometimes having a young, fresh pair of eyes look at a situation can bring you a different perspective. When you do disagree, it can be all too easy to assume familiar roles and forego the courtesy you would normally extend to others, which, if other staff are witnessing the scene, is not a good thing. So as the others said, having mutual respect for what each player brings to the business is key. In fact, that rings true for any working relationship. We had to set boundaries so that in our free time or at family gatherings we didn’t talk shop. We also found that when people found out who my daughter was, often they treated her differently. Some were patronizing, almost giving her a pat on the head for helping her mother out, while others were syrupy sweet hoping to get to me through her. Both responses were not appreciated, especially given she played a vital role in the business. When she got married, she couldn’t wait to take on her husband’s name, sharing mine led to complications. A talented, young entrepreneur in her own right, she has recently moved on to spend more time in her own blossoming business. It’s the sort of success that every mother dreams for her child, but as her “employer” I sure miss her. But then for Christmas she proudly gave me a box of business cards — she’s made me VP of Sales — so I guess we’re still in business together, only this time she’s the boss!

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Google Calls Murdoch’s Allegations ‘Nonsense’

January 16, 2012

“This is just nonsense,” wrote a Google spokeswoman. “Last year we took down 5 million infringing Web pages from our search results and invested more than $60 million in the fight against bad ads…We fight pirates and counterfeiters every day.”

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The 10 Most Hated Companies In America

January 15, 2012

Customers, employees, shareholders and taxpayers hate large corporations for many reasons. 24/7 Wall St. reviewed a lengthy list of corporations for which there is substantial research data to choose the 10 most hated in America.

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Some Renewable Energy Advocates Place High Hopes On A Volcano

January 15, 2012

— Geothermal energy developers plan to pump 24 million gallons of water into the side of a dormant volcano in Central Oregon this summer to demonstrate new technology they hope will give a boost to a green energy sector that has yet to live up to its promise. They hope the water comes back to the surface fast enough and hot enough to create cheap, clean electricity that isn’t dependent on sunny skies or stiff breezes – without shaking the earth and rattling the nerves of nearby residents. Renewable energy has been held back by cheap natural gas, weak demand for power and waning political concern over global warming. Efforts to use the earth’s heat to generate power, known as geothermal energy, have been further hampered by technical problems and worries that tapping it can cause earthquakes. Even so, the federal government, Google and other investors are interested enough to bet $43 million on the Oregon project. They are helping AltaRock Energy, Inc. of Seattle and Davenport Newberry Holdings LLC of Stamford, Conn., demonstrate whether the next level in geothermal power development can work on the flanks of Newberrry Volcano, located about 20 miles south of Bend, Ore. “We know the heat is there,” said Susan Petty, president of AltaRock. “The big issue is can we circulate enough water through the system to make it economic.” The heat in the earth’s crust has been used to generate power for more than a century. Engineers gather hot water or steam that bubbles near the surface and use it to spin a turbine that creates electricity. Most of those areas have been exploited. The new frontier is places with hot rocks, but no cracks in the rocks or water to deliver the steam. To tap that heat – and grow geothermal energy from a tiny niche into an important source of green energy – engineers are working on a new technology called Enhanced Geothermal Systems. “To build geothermal in a big way beyond where it is now requires new technology, and that is where EGS comes in,” said Steve Hickman, a research geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif. Wells are drilled deep into the rock and water is pumped in, creating tiny fractures in the rock, a process known as hydroshearing. Cold water is pumped down production wells into the reservoir, and the steam is drawn out. Hydroshearing is similar to the process known as hydraulic fracturing, used to free natural gas from shale formations. But fracking uses chemical-laden fluids, and creates huge fractures. Pumping fracking wastewater deep underground for disposal likely led to recent earthquakes in Arkansas and Ohio. Fears persist that cracking rock deep underground through hydroshearing can also lead to damaging quakes. EGS has other problems. It is hard to create a reservoir big enough to run a commercial power plant. Progress has been slow. Two small plants are online in France and Germany. A third in downtown Basel, Switzerland, was shut down over earthquake complaints. A project in Australia has had drilling problems. A new international protocol is coming out at the end of this month that urges EGS developers to keep projects out of urban areas, the so-called “sanity test,” said Ernie Majer, a seismologist with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. It also urges developers to be upfront with local residents so they know exactly what is going on. AltaRock hopes to demonstrate a new technology for creating bigger reservoirs that is based on the plastic polymers used to make biodegradable cups. It worked in existing geothermal fields. Newberry will show if it works in a brand new EGS field, and in a different kind of geology, volcanic rock, said Colin Williams, a USGS geophysicist also in Menlo Park. The U.S. Department of Energy has given the project $21.5 million in stimulus funds. That has been matched by private investors, among them Google with $6.3 million. Majer said the danger of a major quake at Newbery is very low. The area is a kind of seismic dead zone, with no significant faults. It is far enough from population centers to make property damage unlikely. And the layers of volcanic ash built up over millennia dampen any shaking. But the Department of Energy will be keeping a close eye on the project, and any significant quakes would shut it down at least temporarily, he said. The agency is also monitoring EGS projects at existing geothermal fields in California, Nevada and Idaho. “That’s the $64,000 question,” Majer said. “What’s the biggest earthquake we can have from induced seismicity that the public can worry about.” Geologists believe Newberry Volcano was once one of the tallest peaks in the Cascades, reaching an elevation of 10,000 feet and a diameter of 20 miles. It blew its top before the last Ice Age, leaving a caldera studded with towering lava flows, two lakes, and 400 cinder cones, some 400 feet tall. Although the volcano has not erupted in 1,300 years, hot rocks close to the surface drew exploratory wells in the 1980s. Over 21 days, AltaRock will pour 800 gallons of water per minute into the 10,600-foot test well, already drilled, for a total of 24 million gallons. According to plan, the cold water cracks the rock. The tiny plastic particles pumped down the well seal off the cracks. Then more cold water goes in, bypassing the first tier, and cracking the rock deeper in the well. That tier is sealed off, and cold water cracks a third section. Later, the plastic melts away. Seismic sensors produce detailed maps of the fracturing, expected to produce a reservoir of cracks starting about 6,000 feet below the surface, and extending to 11,000 feet. It would be about 3,300 feet in diameter. The U.S. Bureau of Land Management released an environmental assessment of the Newberry project last month that does not foresee any problems that would stop it. The agency is taking public comments before making a final decision in coming months. No power plant is proposed, but one could be operating in about 10 years, said Doug Perry, president and CEO of Davenport Newberry. EGS is attractive because it vastly expands the potential for geothermal power, which, unlike wind and solar, produces power around the clock in any weather. Natural geothermal resources account for about 0.3 percent of U.S. electricity production, but a 2007 Massachusetts Institute of Technology report projected EGS could bump that to 10 percent within 50 years, at prices competitive with fossil-fuels. Few people expect that kind of timetable now. Electricity prices have fallen sharply because of low natural gas prices and weak demand brought about by the Great Recession and state efficiency programs. But the resource is vast. A 2008 USGS assessment found EGS throughout the West, where hot rocks are closer to the surface than in the East, has the potential to produce half the country’s electricity. “The important question we need to answer now,” said Williams, the USGS geophysicist who compiled the assessment, “is how geothermal fits into the renewable energy picture, and how EGS fits. How much it is going to cost, and how much is available.”

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Who Are The 1 Percent?

January 15, 2012

KINGS POINT, N.Y. — Adam Katz is happy to talk to reporters when he is promoting his business, a charter flight company based on Long Island called Talon Air. But when the subject was his position as one of America’s top earners, he balked. Seated at a desk fashioned from a jet fuel cell, wearing a button-down shirt with the company logo, he considered the public relations benefits and found them lacking: “It’s not very popular to be in the 1 percent these days, is it?”

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Jeffrey Sachs: How the Wall Street Journal Misleads About Federal Jobs

January 14, 2012

The editorial board of Rupert Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal has a simple game. They want to cut taxes for the rich and government services for the rest, and end regulations of banks and the environment. They support taxpayer-financed bailouts of Wall Street when needed. They will twist any facts in the service of these goals. Today’s lead editorial, with its graph of “Obama’s Growing Payroll,” is a perfect example of how the WSJ misleads rather than informs. The gist of the editorial is that Obama is presiding over a massive increase of government, exemplified by the surge of civilian employees. The graph shows a striking rise of federal employment from around 1.875 million in 2008 to 2.1 million in 2011. (I reproduce this as Figure 1 below). The Journal neglects the fact that today’s 2.1 million workers is actually identical to the number of Federal employees in 1981 at the start of the Reagan Administration, 1989 at the end of the Reagan Administration, and 1993 at the end of the Bush Sr. Administration. The numbers went down slightly after that (by around 200,000-300,000 workers as of the late 1990s) with a decline in Defense Department civilian employees, a decline that was probably offset by the rise of private defense contractors (not included in the OMB tables). There is no long-term trend at all. (I show this as Figure 2 below). The Journal endlessly tries to portray the “growth of government” as a social welfare system run amok. The editorial implies that President Obama is repeating LBJ’s Great Society by building up giant welfare and regulatory programs reflected in the “boom” of federal employment. But where did this so-called “boom” (actually a tiny boomlet) actually appear? In Great Society programs? In entitlements? No, the increase in employment is mainly in national-security-related employment : the military, homeland security, and justice (including prisons, FBI, drug enforcement, and the like). Welfare and entitlements programs little to do with. If we parse the increase of 225,000 federal jobs between 2008 and 2011, three-fourths came in the Defense Department (+84,000), Homeland Security (+28,000), Justice (+13,000), and Veteran’s Affairs (+45,000). Of course the Journal’s entire argument is absurd, a red herring, since the increase of 225,000 jobs represents all of 0.0017 of U.S. non-farm employment of 131 million workers. The entire federal civilian workforce is a mere 1.6 percent of the total non-farm employment. The Journal is taking tiny fluctuations and making them into a federal case, so to speak, for its propagandistic purposes. The actual fact of relevance is that the federal government has been declining as a share of national non-farm employment, from 2.3 percent in 1981 to 1.6 percent in 2011. (I show this in Figure 3 below). Partly this is because services that government should be providing have instead been outsourced to political cronies (especially among defense and security contractors). Partly its because of the true shrinkage, not expansion, of the federal government’s programs relative to GDP in non-security activities such as the environment, job training, community development — the matters that benefit poor and working class households, who don’t, incidentally, read the Wall Street Journal . The big lie of our time is that the federal government is expanding out of control. Yes, there is undoubted waste, especially in military outlays and in outlays for over-priced private health services. The Journal is a promoter of that variety of waste, the kind that benefits the 1 percent represented by powerful lobbyists, and that hurts the rest of society. For government services that count for the 99 percent, the federal government is shrinking, alas, no matter which phony figures the Wall Street Journal throws our way. Figure 1. Federal Employment 2001-2012, Source: OMB Figure 2. Federal Employment, 1981 to 2011, Source: OMB Figure 3. Federal Employment as a Percent of Non-Farm Employment, Source: OMB and Bureau of Labor Statistics

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Tebowmania: An Answer To Small Businesses’ Prayers

January 14, 2012

With their hometown Broncos missing the playoffs for the past several years, cutting into their bottom line, sports-related businesses in Denver are mounting a fourth-quarter comeback — thanks to Tim Tebow. The Denver Broncos quarterback has owners of sports bars, restaurants and merchandise stores Tebowing for another miraculous win against the New England Patriots on Saturday. Whether or not the Broncos can pull that off, Tebowmania has already been a huge win for small businesses, which are still bouncing back from the recession and the recent NBA lockout. Ron Vaughn, co-owner of Denver-based Argonaut Wine & Liquor, has seen a significant increase in business this season, particularly last Sunday before the wildcard playoff game against Pittsburgh, when business increased by about 1,000 customers. “It’s been sort of a mass euphoria here in Denver,” Vaughn said. “Tebow is the biggest topic of conversation. That’s what people are talking about while they’re shopping in the store — how unbelievable it is that they won six games in a row.” Vaughn is attracting customers throwing football parties by running ads and sales, like his “Beat New England” beer specials. Tebow “has been great for business, great for the city,” Vaughn said. “There was debate over whether Tebow was the right or wrong guy, but you can’t argue with success. And as far as the debate over whether he should keep his [Christian] beliefs private or talk about it as much as he does, as long as he wins, I think he can talk about whatever he wants.” While Jackson’s, a popular Denver sports bar, has valiantly fought the recession for three years by getting aggressive with specials, general manager Scot Minshall said the business started noticing a true turnaround as soon as Tebow came to town. “We saw an immediate impact on sales, which have gone nothing but up over the course of the season,” Minshall said. According to Minshall, sales during games this season were up 100 percent over last season, and in the wildcard playoff game, sales were up 150 percent. Jackson’s had to open two additional rooms last Sunday and is preparing for another big night on Saturday. “We have an all hands on deck mentality,” Minshall said. “We’re ready.” Minshall also traces the business boom to Tebow. “I’m for the guy. I think the country needs more guys like him who are purely good people,” he said. “It’s a change of pace, and I think that’s the attraction. Instead of cheering for the guy who killed dogs or the guy who’s been accused of domestic violence, you’re cheering for an all-American, just a great guy, and that’s refreshing.” “The Broncos have been awful for going on seven years,” Minshall added. “Can you call him the savior of the football team? To some degree, yeah. Is he saving our business? No, but he’s making it a lot better, and a lot more fun.”

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Mohamed A. El-Erian: Do Friday’s European Downgrades Matter?

January 14, 2012

The chatter on Friday’s downgrades of European sovereign ratings debt is all over the place — from those dismissing it as old news (especially given that S&P warned back on December 5th) to those viewing it as part of a larger and consequential transformation of the international monetary system. What follows is an attempt to provide a guide to the multifaceted implications. It focuses on three types of consequences: (i) those that are unambiguous and already reflected, albeit not fully, in market valuations; (ii) those that are less well understood but will become clearer in the next few weeks; and (iii) those that are consequential but where the analytics are still largely unknown at present. The sovereign debt of European sovereigns was already trading at yields consistent not only with what S&P announced today, but also with more draconian downgrades — thus the view that the impact on overall yields and spreads would be contained. Yet there are some differences between signaling an action and actually taking it. First you remove residual uncertainty about the action, including timing and scale. Second, you encourage others to follow. Third, you impact the pattern of investment flows, especially those subject to guidelines and restrictions defined in terms of ratings. All three are relevant for Europe. The net result has both a quantity and price angle: a decline in future investment flows into the Eurozone, and incremental market pressure that, other things being equal, would be more persistent than would have otherwise been the case. This speaks to a weaker Euro and recurrent volatility in sovereign spreads. In introducing a rating wedge at the very inner core of the Eurozone, the downgrade of France in particular impacts Pan-European vehicles. This includes the ESFS which the European Union uses to bailout countries and, in future, banks. While there is some short-term uncertainty, the scope of these vehicles — and, therefore, their effectiveness in countering the region’s debt crisis — will be undermined. It also has implications for the ECBs continued willingness to contaminate its own balance sheet. That takes us to known unknowns, and they are consequential. It is unclear the extent to which the downgrades will alter the function of the international monetary system over time. It is also unclear how material the incremental headwinds blowing out of Europe will be for countries already facing internal fragilities. It is unclear the extent to which the downgrades will materially impact the asset quality and capital adequacy of banks and other financial institutions. And there is little clarity on the range of reactions on the part of companies, depositors and households. Over the next weeks, months and years, we will learn a lot more about the consequences of today’s historical downgrades in Europe. What is clear at this stage is that the balance of risks is to the downside, for Europe and for the global economy. This post originally appeared on CNBC.com .

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Robert Teitelman: Starkman on the Decline of Business Journalism

January 13, 2012

The Audit’s Dean Starkman, writing the cover story in the most recent Columbia Journalism Review , has produced a longish essay that attempts to advance a critique he’s been making for awhile now. Starkman several years ago argued that business journalism, in its failure to predict the real estate bubble, demonstrated the same sort of insider corruption and myopia of, say, Wall Street and the regulators. Business and financial journalism, in short, has been captured by malign forces mostly on Wall Street and, like those dastardly political reporters, seduced by the siren song of insider access, free food and PR careers. In this new essay, Starkman takes that thesis as gospel — and in certain circles it undoubtedly is quite popular — while dismissing arguments against it as the bleating of “insiders,” who, he implies, have no interest in the public welfare. Starkman wields broad strokes like a house painter and sums it all up with sweeping certainty in the cover line of the piece: “How the business press forgot the rest of us.” Let’s come clean before we start. First, by Starkman’s definition, I am technically an “insider.” So be forewarned: Don’t believe a word I say. The Deal is a “trade” (and Starkman cannot help but use that word as if it were a disease) that reports on wholesale finance, meaning, in part, Wall Street. I worked nearly a decade at another “trade,” Institutional Investor, and learned the business at Forbes and Financial World. (I also spent some years working on two books, a long way from the calls of commerce I promise you.) Nonetheless, I will forge on. In this essay, Starkman lays out an historical schema, which suggests that business journalism struggled up a long ascent from parochial, insider concerns to the high plain of public service, only to descend again to a ditch full of grasping investors. Starkman’s evidence for all this is scanty to arguable to nonexistent; most of this historical ascent involves only The Wall Street Journal, where Starkman once worked, and which comes across as the only journalistic organ that matters — at least until things go to hell and he can blame it all on television and, bizarrely, M&A reporting. Second, a confession. I’m not absolutely sure what Starkman is getting at here. Or rather, I understand that cover line, but how all the pieces of this wandering argument, with its qualifications and asides, fit together is baffling. Starkman’s argument does mirror many of the single-cause critiques of the financial crisis: It harkens back to a purer, better time, when the public was better served, the middle class was large, factories hummed, and investigative journalism thrived. The resulting nostalgia is shin high, if unsurprising: For most of my career, journalism has been said to be in decline from vaguely better days, with the temporary exception of Watergate. In his view, this Eden appears to be the ’50s and is embodied in a single man: WSJ editor Barney Kilgore, who effectively reinvented the paper. What is remarkable here is how little Starkman has to say about this era where he believes business journalism reached out to serve the public, as opposed to insiders and investors. “Much of the business-press history since Kilgore has been one long struggle — sometimes successful — to transcend its roots as a servant to markets, and to become, in addition, a watchdog over them. The list of misbehaving industries exposed in investigations and analysis over the years by the business press — tobacco; auto; liquor; chicken plants; medical devices; even, once in a while, sort of, Wall Street — is long and impressive. Nonbusiness institutions, too, like government and unions, have come under business-press scrutiny.” What’s remarkable about this recitation is that nearly every one of these exposés could well be written for both investors and the public. Indeed, the WSJ as much as any press vehicle convinced readers that investors were the public. Eden, of course, implies the Fall. The Fall, in an historical scheme like this, suggests a conspiracy: snake, apple, woman, man — and soon you’re sweating behind a plow. (Starkman at one point cites the late Columbia University historian Richard Hofstadter on the notion of a “literate” public. Hofstadter, of course, is best known for his studies of paranoia in American political and intellectual life; he would recognize the roots of Starkman’s populist historical morality play.) What’s strangest about Starkman’s argument is his depiction of this fall, which seems to occur in the late ’90s (Kilgore died in 1967). He begins with Steve Lipin, the fine Wall Street Journal M&A reporter who established the paper as the go-to vehicle for M&A announcements in the late ’90s (“established,” because the WSJ had long had a powerful franchise in that area). Under Lipin, who, Starkman sniffs, toiled in the “trades” before somehow arriving at the WSJ, the paper dominated in deal scoops, particularly on Mondays. Lipin did excellent reporting, and the beat was a pressure cooker. But a number of these scoops were, as our own Yvette Kantrow reported over a decade ago, pretty clearly “placements,” leaked by the merging parties to get their case before an investing public. Starkman characterizes the rise of Lipin as a “divide,” as a “watershed moment” when the WSJ abandoned its interest in reporting for the public to reporting for “insiders” — who he later inflates into “investors.” Others, he adds, traveled the same path: Will Lewis, who broke some deals for the Financial Times around that time in New York (but whose real contribution was to use the Web to publish scoops in real time, thus undercutting the WSJ, which chose to wait for the paper), and The New York Times’ Andrew Ross Sorkin, who built his career on M&A. What he doesn’t mention is that as important as M&A scoops were to the WSJ, they were just one part of an increasingly complex and varied paper — and one reaching out with some desperation to a more diverse readership. What he also doesn’t say is that era of frenzied competition for deal scoops ended somewhere in the early-2000s, when the market no longer reflexively rewarded M&A deals. It hasn’t returned. Lipin left the WSJ for deal PR at Brunswick before then. M&A plays a relatively minor role at the Murdoch-era WSJ, which in Starkman’s logic of descent, would represent a new low. Starkman leaves out much of the context around that late ’90s period. Lipin seems to come from nowhere. In fact, Lipin was riding a powerful bull market, driven in part by expanding M&A activity that had been growing since the late ’60s, most spectacularly in the ’80s. By the late ’90s, M&A was a big business — big enough for our founder, Bruce Wasserstein, to start a paper, The Daily Deal, dedicated to it in 1998. (Starkman believes all M&A is bad, but that’s another matter.) But it wasn’t just the growth of the business. It was the fact that equity markets were exploding, in large measure not because of M&A, but because of the high-tech and Internet boom. Starkman makes a lot of the “insider” (meaning Wall Street) connotations of new-media vehicles like Jim Cramer’s “The Street,” “Fast Company” and “MarketWatch.” But he ignores the larger trend: They were all tossed up not by Wall Street but by tech mania, joining the big three business magazines and an entire business magazine segment in California (“Upside,” “Red Herring,” “Business 2.0″ and “Industry Standard”) in the unseemly, and ultimately destructive, stampede to embrace tech. These magazines were stuffed with tech advertising and catered to a huge readership enamored of dot-coms, IPOs and the Internet. They could care less about M&A scoops. This brings us to Starkman’s second snake in the grass. If Lipin was a sign of decline, CNBC comes off as the veritable Great Satan. Starkman takes the fact that CNBC used the daily drama of the stock market and turned it into a sporting event (creating “stars” like Maria Bartiromo who in Starkman’s scheme is analogous to Lipin and represents “something changing in the culture”) and decides it poisoned — corrupted — business journalism. It was all CNBCs fault! CNBC is responsible for the short, fragmentary, “granular” dispatches shorn of context that Starkman now sees taking over the business and driving out what little reporting and explanatory journalism for the “public” that existed. CNBC was the death knell of long-form feature writing and investigative reporting. By extension, CNBCification was responsible for missing everything from the dot-com bubble to subprime. CNBC was the thread to an even later villain, Cramer, and to the famous Jon Stewart evisceration, which Starkman interprets as fingering “the fundamental tension of the age” between investors and the public. Did I miss something in the famous episode of “The Daily Show”? All this is remarkably simplistic and wrong. True, CNBC was built (by evil Republican Roger Ailes, now a Murdochian) for an investing audience — and its 200,000 or so daily viewership is decent for cable, though hardly mass. It wasn’t the first market show on cable or the first show for investors; hello Lou Rukeyser on, of all places, PBS. Yes, it tends to be discursive, fragmentary and episodic, occasionally shallow or myopic (after all, it’s just stocks). It’s television! Besides, business and financial journalism has been shaped by investors, as even Starkman admits, not just for decades but for centuries. Starkman’s potted history of relations between the early press and business and finance may be generally true, but he makes the 17th century resemble today as he searches for the original sin. Most early papers (they were really newsletters, he says: trade again) were designed not to inform markets but to report on maritime matters. This makes sense, since most of their readers lived in ports. Publications, which are commercial vehicles after all, usually have a defined audience in mind, though they vary. Henry Luce aimed Fortune at senior corporate executives; BusinessWeek traditionally targeted managers; Forbes and Barron’s sought investors. Before, during and after Kilgore, the WSJ had a strong investor tilt. Kilgore’s leaders might have been longer, more sophisticated and better, but its readers remained mostly investors, not some broad “literate” public. Local newspapers had little business coverage that mattered, and increasingly embraced personal finance. And The New York Times and Washington Post business sections shared the investor tilt, as did, before that, the old Herald Tribune. And why not? Sports stories are not written for foodies. The largest population of people interested in business and finance tend to be investors. Local business pages don’t focus on personal investors because Bartiromo is sexy but because that’s what they think folks want. This is surprising or a sin? Moreover, Starkman blithely skips across what’s by far the most powerfully destructive (and yes: creative as well) trend to traditional narrative journalism: the Internet. Business and finance journalists don’t sit around and say: I must be fragmentary and fast to compete with David Faber on CNBC. No, the advent of the Internet, with its explosion of choices and its tyranny of real time, has eroded long-form and rewarded the quick hit, the 24-hour news cycle, the fact or factoid over the considered analysis. It has hollowed out mainstream publications, including the WSJ. It has disrupted everything. This is reality. Television, with its own narrow-casting pressures, sits over there, another world. Right in front of most of us, every single moment, is the pressure of competing in a digital world where information is a commodity and you’re only as good as your last scoop or last insight. That’s not all that’s out there, but it’s a predominant theme. (So is opinion, fast and loose, not unlike The Audit or this blog.) This, not CNBC, has destroyed vast swaths of traditional business coverage, particularly in those general-interest vehicles that once spoke, for good or ill, to a general public. This is like paying attention to a case of the sniffles when the bubonic plague is racing through town. But even that metaphor mischaracterizes — demonizes — what’s going on. It’s different. But it’s way too soon to tell if it’s a disaster. Starkman is right about one thing: “Investors” are not the same as the “public” (just as, by the way, Wall Street is not the same as money management or private equity or commercial banking), although as Kilgore recognized — and it has since greatly increased — there’s a sizable overlap. The notion that investors are a proxy for the public stems from two great periods of financial reform: the New Deal in the ’30s, when the Securities and Exchange Commission was set up expressly to make markets safe for investors, and the mid-’70s deregulation of Wall Street, which liberated brokerage commissions and saw the passage of Erisa. Starkman manages to write this entire essay, citing Joe Nocera’s book on the rise of personal finance, without mentioning the shift from defined benefit to defined contribution retirement plans, which drove millions of Americans into equity markets in the ’80s and ’90s. This is like missing the Internet. Given that tidal shift, he never bothers to examine exactly how much “investors” have come to make up of the “public.” He is quite right that there are stories that can be investigated about issues of import to the broader public and not investors. But that gap has shrunk. Who exactly is the rest of us? Do they consume journalism at all? How can they be reached? And, as the business and financial world has grown more complex and global, can we effectively bridge that chasm between the complex realities at play and potential readers who know little, have lost the habit of consuming “serious” journalism and have a million other distractions as near as their cellphones. We can all agree that business journalism can be improved. I have my own kit bag of concerns and fears. But Starkman seems to suggest that reforming journalism shouldn’t be all that hard — that it’s really a matter of realizing what’s gone awry and doing good, of reviving an imagined past. It’s infinitely more difficult than that — and it always has been. The notion of a “public good” is hazy and subjective and the province of demagogues and ideologues. Journalism is inevitably a commercial product and must be sold to an audience to survive — never more than today. You cannot force people to read or to understand. These subjects are complex and dynamic. It is exactly like not only recognizing a bubble (no trivial task) but also then managing to convince the world of it: easy in hindsight, fiendishly difficult in real time. But perhaps that’s just the insider in me talking. Cleanse the soul and Eden beckons again. Robert Teitelman is editor in chief of The Deal magazine.

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Goldman Makes Federal Reserve An Offer It Can Refuse

January 13, 2012

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. recently approached the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and offered to buy a multibillion-dollar bundle of risky mortgage bonds that the Fed acquired in the 2008 bailout of American International Group Inc., according to people familiar with the matter.

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Harlan Green: Who Else But the Fed Will Rescue Real Estate?

January 13, 2012

How can we thank Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke for keeping our economy afloat with gridlocked Congress and a timid White House? Not only has the Fed kept interest rates low enough to prevent actual deflation, as happened to Japan over the past 20 years that shrunk their economy. But the Fed is now proposing commercial banks under its purview take a more proactive position; not only by modifying more ‘underwater’ loans on their books, but actually renting out those it has taken back in foreclosure to tenants; including their former owners. This is while President Obama and Congress keep picking fights with each other over recess appointments, or the budget deficit, when job creation is what 80 percent of Americans give as the highest priority, according to a recent Rasmussen poll. The Fed is currently circulating a White Paper entitled ” The U.S. Housing Market Current Conditions and Policy Considerations ” that asks both government supervisors — specifically those of GSEs like Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHA and VA — and private mortgage holders to both loosen their overly restrictive underwriting standards, allow more loan modifications, as well rent out the REO properties they hold, until they are able to be sold! This is medicine that was applied once before — during the Great Depression — by the Roosevelt Administration, under the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation . It sold bonds to bring down interest rates for something like one million homeowners, or rented them back to those who had lost their homes, until they could again be sold. The data currently show that less than half of all lenders are currently offering mortgages to borrowers with FICO scores of 620 with a 10 percent down payment. Yet these loans are within the GSEs purchase parameters, according to the White Paper, which means little risk to the loan originators. Particularly first-time homebuyers aged 29 to 34 years old are affected, with only 9 percent taking out a mortgage from 2009 to 2011, while 17 percent took out mortgages from mid-1999 to mid-2001. Why the urgency now? “Perhaps one-fourth of the 2 million vacant homes for sale in the second of 2011 were REO properties… and the continued flow of new REO properties — perhaps as high as 1 million properties per year in 2012 and 2013 — will continue to weigh on house prices for some time,” said the Fed. And we know housing prices continue their decline in most areas, according to the S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Index and other indicators. The Case-Shiller 20-city composite is down a seasonally adjusted 0.6 percent in October following a revised 0.7 percent decline in September and a 0.4 percent decline in August. Graph: Econoday Individual cities show a decline in Atlanta where monthly rates of adjusted decline have been 4.1 percent, 4.8 percent and 2.9 percent the last three reports. Other weak spots include Minneapolis, Los Angeles, and Chicago as well as Las Vegas and Miami. So this is a good time for lenders to rent their REO properties, as rents have been rising while national multifamily vacancy rates have plunged. Depending on whether you use U.S. Census Bureau or REIS, Inc. data, the vacancy rate is hovering around 9.8 percent or 5.2 percent, when rates were as high as 11.8 percent during the recession. Graph: Calculated Risk “…the challenge for policymakers is to find ways to help reconcile the existing size and mix of the housing stock and the current environment for housing finance,” said the White Paper. “Fundamentally, such measures involve adapting the existing housing stock to the prevailing tight mortgage lending conditions–for example, devising policies that could help facilitate the conversion of foreclosed properties to rental properties — or supporting a housing finance regime that is less restrictive than today’s, while steering clear of the lax standards that emerged during the last decade.” So there is hope for real estate when the Fed decides it is time to assist housing, after Chairman Bernanke and others in various speeches have highlighted the drag that a devastated real estate market has on overall economic growth. That is to say, it is time for the banks holding all those vacant homes to get them off their books and back into the real economy. And who else can put their feet to the fire? Harlan Green © 2012

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Bed, Bath & Radioactive Tissue Holders?

January 13, 2012

NEW YORK — Metal tissue holders contaminated with low levels of radioactive material may have been distributed to Bed, Bath & Beyond stores in more than 20 states including New York, federal regulators said Thursday. Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokesman David McIntyre said the home products company had pulled the tissue holder from its stores. He said there is little to no risk to human health – but it’s better to avoid unnecessary exposure to radiation. “If someone has one of these, they could receive a small radiation dose from it,” he said. For example, he said someone keeping one of the boxes on a vanity in the bathroom and spending about 30 minutes a day near it for a year would receive the equivalent of a couple of chest x-rays. “There’s no real health threat from these, but we advise people to return them,” he said. Bed, Bath & Beyond Inc. said in a statement Thursday that its Dual Ridge Metal boutique tissue holder has been carried in about 200 of its stores since July. It said it was recalling all of the tissue holders and asking any customers who bought them to return them for a full refund. McIntyre said the company had received shipments of the tissue holders in July, August and December, but that only the December one – which contained 220 of the boxes – was determined to have contaminated products. He said the company is still trying to determine whether the other shipments had contaminated products. Nevertheless, the company said it was asking for customers to return any purchased tissue holders out of an abundance of caution. The contamination was first discovered in California when two packages bound for Bed, Bath & Beyond stores in Santa Clara and San Jose containing four tissue holders triggered radiation alarms at truck scales, according to a Jan. 6 report posted on the NRC website. The products were shipped from India through the port of Newark, N.J., the report said. The tissue holders are distributed by Tatara Group of Piscataway, N.J. The Dual Ridge line of products is described on the company’s website as having a “brushed finish.” A woman who answered a phone listed for the company declined to comment. New York health officials said they pulled 12 of the silver boxes from stores in Westbury, Port Chester, Elmsford and Huntington Station. They were tested and found to have low-level radioactivity, said state Health Department spokesman Mike Moran. The Nassau County Department of Health, where two of the boxes were shipped to the retailer’s stores, said the items were removed and taken to a “safe location.” The county Health Commissioner reiterated that the boxes posed “no imminent public threat.” State Health Commissioner Nirav Shah said in a statement Thursday that none of the products had been sold at the New York stores. Authorities said the tissue holders contain manmade cobalt-60, which is used in medical devices and for other industrial applications. Customers can call Bed, Bath & Beyond at 1-800-462-3966.

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Nigerian Muslims And Christians Unite In Frustration

January 13, 2012

LAGOS, Nigeria — A human wave of more than 20,000 surrounded the Muslim faithful as they prayed toward Mecca Friday, as anti-government demonstrations over spiraling fuel prices and corruption showed unity among protesters despite growing sectarian tensions in Africa’s most populous nation. While violence sparked by religious and ethnic divisions left about 1,500 people dead last year alone in Nigeria, some hope the ongoing protests gripping the oil-rich nation will bring together a country that already suffered through a bloody civil war. “It shows that Nigeria is now coming together as one family,” said Abdullahi Idowu, 27, as he prepared to wash himself before Friday prayers. Labor unions, meanwhile, announced Friday they would halt their five-day strike for the weekend, allowing families stuck largely inside their homes to go to markets and rest. Union leaders also plan to meet President Goodluck Jonathan and government officials on Saturday for new negotiations, just ahead of a promised labor shutdown of Nigeria’s oil industry. Nigeria, which produces about 2.4 million barrels of crude a day, is the fifth-largest oil exporter to the U.S. While the country has a several-week stock of oil ready for export, the threatened shutdown Sunday could shake oil futures as traders remained concerns about worldwide supply. The strike began Monday, paralyzing the nation of more than 160 million people. The root cause remains gasoline prices: President Goodluck Jonathan’s government abandoned subsidies that kept gasoline prices low Jan. 1, causing prices to spike from $1.70 per gallon (45 cents per liter) to at least $3.50 per gallon (94 cents per liter). The costs of food and transportation also largely doubled in a nation where most people live on less than $2 a day. Anger over losing one of the few benefits average Nigerians see from being an oil-rich country, as well as disgust over government corruption, have led to demonstrations across this nation and violence that has killed at least 10 people. Red Cross volunteers have treated more than 600 people injured in protests since the strike began, the International Committee of the Red Cross said Friday. “Over 4,000 persons have also been temporarily displaced there as a result of the strike and communal tensions,” said Mamadou Sow, the deputy head of the committee’s delegation in Nigeria. “Most of them have now started to return to their homes.” Protesters say they will not accept anything other than a full restoration of the estimated $8 billion in subsidies the government spends to keep gas prices low. On Friday, the president of the Nigeria Labor Congress said the government offered a slight subsidy to lower prices during negotiations on Thursday night. However, Abdulwaheed Omar said labor organizers rejected it, saying they wanted a full return of the subsidy. At the mass demonstration in Lagos, Pastor Tunde Bakare called in Nigeria to reject a government that “is working hard to remove the crumbs the poor people survive on,” while not providing adequate clean drinking water and electricity. “We have become a generator republic,” said Bakare, a one-time vice presidential candidate for the opposition party Congress for Progressive Change. Bakare also urged those gathered in Nigeria’s predominantly Christian south not to retaliate against Muslims living in their neighborhoods over recent attacks by a radical Islamist group known as Boko Haram. The group, which wants to implement strict Shariah law across Nigeria, is blamed for killing at least 67 people so far this year alone, according to an Associated Press count. Boko Haram also has begun specifically targeting Christians in Nigeria’s Muslim north in their attacks, causing some to flee while exploiting deep-seated ethnic suspicions in the country. Jonathan himself described the situation as worse than the nation’s 1960s civil war, which saw 1 million people killed after Nigeria’s southeast declared itself the Republic of Biafra. “In every family in the south, there are Muslims and Christians. They are not violent people. The sect can be identified and dealt with,” Bakare told the AP. In a show of solidarity, the protests Friday included prayers for Muslims. Several thousand gathered in the grass near an expressway off-ramp. Sheik Abdulrahman Ahmad preached to the crowd about the evils of terrorism, calling on them to shun possible reprisal attacks over the ongoing unrest. “Because we forget ourselves, oil has become our curse,” Ahmad told the crowd. He later added: “Our problem is oppression; our problem is bad governance.” Though Christians gathered around praying Muslims to protect them during their prayers, violence still lurks around the edges of the protest in a country where people are beginning to become hungry. A crowd suddenly ran after a suspected thief at one point, stoning him and beating him with sticks until he fell into a trash and feces-filled ditch. The crowd continued to throw things at him, cursing. “This is the life of a Nigerian,” a man in the crowd called out. “This is how we live.” ___ Associated Press writer Bashir Adigun in Abuja, Nigeria contributed to this report. ___

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