week

CoStar’s People of Note (April 17-23)

April 22, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Dallas/Fort Worth, Houston, Los Angeles, South Florida, New York City, and Washington, DC. WASHINGTON, DC Avison Young Taps Almquist as a Principal Twenty-four-year industry veteran Marty Almquist joined Avison Young in Tysons Corner, VA, as a principal. The broker will focus on agency leasing and tenant representation in Northern Virginia. She will collaborate with top leasing…

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Upsurge in Office Property Sales Spreads

April 21, 2011

Preliminary data for the first quarter of 2011 show office property sales have come in strong. However, not all markets and property classes are benefiting equally — top-quality assets in the top five markets continue to garner more investor interest and stronger rebounds in values. Statistics from CoStar’s State of the Office Market First Quarter 2011 webinar presented this week show that office transaction volume has already hit about $12 billion…

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Euro fell against major currencies with the beginning of the week

April 18, 2011

Euro fell against major currencies with the beginning of the week

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Geithner: Not Raising Debt Ceiling Would Be ‘Catastrophic’

April 17, 2011

WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Sunday he’s certain congressional lawmakers will come together to raise the nation’s debt limit and warned of dire consequences if they don’t. “I want to make it perfectly clear that Congress will raise the debt ceiling,” Geithner told ABC News “This Week” anchor Christiane Amanpour. According to Geithner, members of Congress conveyed this view to President Obama on Wednesday at the White House. “I sat there with them, and they said, we recognize we have to do this. And we’re not going to play around with it,” Geithner said. “We know that the risk would be catastrophic. It’s not something you can take too close to the edge.” This sentiment differs significantly from what some lawmakers say publicly. “I will oppose any attempt to vote to raise the limit on our $14 trillion debt until Congress passes the balanced-budget amendment,” declared Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.). Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has made similar statements . On NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Geithner said lawmakers who play politics with the debt ceiling will have to own the consequences. “I’ve spent a lot of time with Republicans and Democrats on this — I saw with the Senate Finance Committee last week — and they absolutely understand the stakes in this, and the leadership understand that you can’t play around with this,” he said. “You can’t take it too long. And those people up there who are telling people that you can take this to the brink because it gives them some leverage, they’re going to own the responsibility for the risk that creates for the American economy.” On CNN’s “State of the Union,” Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.) seemed willing to explore attaching provisions to a debt ceiling hike. When asked by host Candy Crowley whether he would consider some spending cuts, he replied, “Of course. I think that we need to have conversations about how we reduce spending. We also need to have a conversation about how we get some equality into our tax code again.” Federal law currently caps the federal debt at $14.3 trillion . But sometime in the next month, the United States will inevitably surpass that amount. Congress consistently votes to raise the nation’s debt ceiling, a decision it face again in the coming weeks. Geithner outlined myriad consequences should Congress decide, for some reason, not to raise the debt ceiling by June. “What will happen is that we’d have to stop making payments to our seniors — Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security. We’d have to stop paying veterans’ benefits,” he told Amanpour. “We’d have to stop paying all the other payments on all the other things the government does. And then we would risk default on our debt — and if we did that, we’d tip the U.S. economy and the world economy back into recession — depression.” Watch Geithner’s appearance on “This Week” below (via ABC News ):

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Steve Blank: Lessons in Learning Faster for Stanford’s Hottest Startups

April 15, 2011

The Stanford Lean LaunchPad class was an experiment in a new model of teaching startup entrepreneurship. This post is part five. Parts one through four are here , Syllabus is here . Week 5 of the class Last week the teams were testing their hypotheses about their customers (who are the users, payers, buyers, etc.) This week they were testing one of the most confusing sections of a company’s business model — customer relationships — the activities used to “Get, Keep and Grow” customers in a physical or virtual (web or mobile) channel. (Internet investor Dave McClure coined the acronym ” AARRR ,” to remember the parts of customer relationships on the web.) Many of the students had heard phrases that fall under customer relationships before; “customer acquisition, SEO/SEM, public relations, Social Network, Advertising, Loyalty programs, cross-sell and up-sell” etc., but now they were actually trying to implement it. (If their team was a web or mobile app they actually had to buy Google or Facebook ads and create demand.) For some of the teams their expectation was if they built the product customers will come. Filing into the classroom I could tell that for some reality had just come crashing down on them. Seeing the lack of customer interest for the first time is always depressing. (The goal of the class was to get them to understand that in a startup, that was the norm not the exception. And to teach them a methodology of what to do about it.) It was making some of the teams question other parts of their business model (did they have the right customer, did they have the right product features to meet customer needs, etc.) The Nine Teams Present The first team to present was D.C. Veritas, the team building a low cost, residential wind turbine. During the week they interviewed 7 more companies and consultants, developed case studies for 20 different cities in 5 states, and finalized the bill of materials for the wind turbine. But the big project for the week was testing and analyzing Customer Acquisition Costs. The team put together their sales funnel and started testing demand. The results were disappointing. The most optimistic estimates showed that the residential wind turbine market was less than $20 million in year 5 and the costs to acquire the customers made this a money-losing business. After regrouping the team decided that a major pivot was in order. Perhaps residential customers were the wrong target? Maybe the wind turbine they were building was better suited to a different customer segment? They had gotten feedback from consultants and industry experts that cities and utilities might be a more receptive audience. What if they redesigned the wind turbine to be embedded into street and highway light poles? Then they could serve cities, lighting companies and utilities. Using the business model canvas, the changes to their business were obvious. (BTW, our definition of a pivot: it’s when you significantly modify one or more of the business model building blocks.) Three more weeks to go. Can the D.C. Veritas team discover whether there’s a real opportunity for their wind turbine in cities? The teaching team observed that the next few weeks are going to be interesting. Time to dig in and find out. Our next team up was Autonomow , the robot lawn mower farm weeder. Last week they had pivoted from customers who needed large areas mowed, to organic farmers who needed lower costs for weeding. In this week’s foray into farm country they spoke to five farm implement dealers and interviewed yet another farmer. However, their primary focus was thinking through how they would “get” their initial customers. In talking to farmers and farm equipment dealers they learned the farm-specific places to create demand; trade shows like the World Ag Expo and magazines such as Vegetable Grower , Ag Source , Farm Equipment and Tractor House . The team then put together a specific budget for initial demand creation. The teaching team suggested that was the research to date was great, but until they built a robot that could actually tell the difference between a weed and a plant, this would just be a paper exercise. They were engineers, certainly they could do better than that? The Autonomow team started thinking how they could prove that their paper business model was real. To see the slides, click here . PersonalLibraries Last week we asked the PersonalLibraries team: are there enough customers to make this a business? So during the week they ran more hands-on user testing, A/B tests, landing page conversion tests, and bought Google Adwords. The results were not impressive. The feedback they were getting was that the product was a “nice to have” but not a “hair-on-fire” product. Our feedback was, that their data seemed to say that their current users don’t want to spend money and will incur infinite support and infinite cost. Our suggestion was, “run away from the academic researcher market as fast as possible.” We offered that the team might want to expand their user research to think about new features and verticals (document management, law firms, lab managers with discretionary budget, etc.) To see the slides, click here . Agora Cloud Services The Agora team ended last week wondering whether they were 1) a true marketplace for cloud computing, where they provide both matching and exchange capabilities for real-time trading. Or were they 2) an information exchange, providing matching services for cloud computing buyers and sellers, providing matching services. This week they answered the question by “punting.” They decided they were going to start as information services, move to brokering, then prediction and finally evolve into a true market. They interviewed another 8 buyers/sellers/industry experts. Their results on whether they could acquire with Google Adwords was a bit sobering. Their first effort didn’t get much traffic: 6 clicks out of ~2000 impressions. Worse yet, each of these clicks cost about a $1.00. Reason? They had been bidding on keywords that are too generic (e.g. cloud, ec2, Amazon Web Services, etc.) Their ads of “Cloud Demand Prediction” hadn’t been catching the eyes of people searching for these keywords. So they picked more specific keywords such as, (cloud comparison, best cloud providers, etc). And they created ads with specific headlines, such as “Too many cloud providers?”, “Reduce your cloud spend”, etc). They also increased their daily campaign budget to $20.00. What they found was that the keywords that did have traffic volume are extremely expensive. Depending on the keyword, the first page bids were between $5.00 to $25.00 per click! Ouch. The team concluded that AdWords may not be the best channel to create demand. To see the slides, click here . The Week 5 Lecture: Channel Channels are how a company delivers its value proposition (i.e. its product or service) to its customers. There are two major channels – virtual (web/mobile) and physical channels – and the difference is dramatic. In one, physical goods move from a loading dock to a customer or a retail outlet. In another the product is offered and sold online. (If the product is itself bits, it may not only be sold online but is often also delivered or used online.) Our lecture talked out how to choose the right sales channel, how the channel makes money, how they’re motivated, and the economics of a sales channel. To see the slides, click here . —— The lesson for the students this week was failure . What we wanted to teach them wasn’t how to fail fast – any idiot can do that. We wanted to teach them how to recognize failure, learn from it, and pivot. It’s not about failing fast – it’s about learning faster. That’s the lesson at the heart of the search for a repeatable and scalable business model. Now deep into the class most of the teams are starting to rethink their initial assumptions. Which teams will continue to Pivot? Will any completely abandon their current business and pick a new one? Stay tuned. Visit Steve Blank’s blog : www.steveblank.com .

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Euro Falls After Moody’s Further Downgrades Ireland

April 15, 2011

DUBLIN (Padraic Halpin) – Moody’s cut Ireland’s sovereign rating by two notches to the verge of junk status on Friday and kept its outlook on negative, pushing the euro lower and adding to renewed pressure on the euro zone’s weaker countries. The move sent Ireland’s borrowing costs up and cut short a rare spell of good news after the government said on Thursday it had passed a review of its economic progress by creditors and ratings agency Fitch upgraded its outlook. A soaring of Greek borrowing costs to new highs has turned up the heat on fellow strugglers Ireland and Portugal this week after Germany said for the first time that Athens may have to restructure its huge public debt. Moody’s official Dietmar Hornung told Reuters, however, that the chances of Ireland having to restructure any of its debt were very remote and said he expected Dublin’s debt-to-GDP ratio to level off at a “sustainable” 120 percent. An advisor to Greece’s Prime Minister said last week that its debt-to-GDP will jump to over 150 percent by the end of the year, and higher still by the end of 2012. However Moody’s said Ireland’s growing debt would be high by EU standards and that weak economic growth prospects together with the expected decline of the government’s financial strength threatened its ability to manage the burden. “Should the intended fiscal consolidation goals not be met, a further rating downgrade would likely follow,” Moody’s said. “Moreover, a further deterioration in the country’s economic outlook would also exert downward pressure on the rating.” Moody’s said the downgrade to BAA3 from BAA1 — which puts its rating two notches below both Fitch and Standard and Poor’s — was also due to uncertainty around solvency tests required by the European Stabilization Mechanism (ESM) It said the country may need to take further austerity measures to meet its fiscal goals and that its financial position may suffer as a result of rises in European Central Bank interest rates. One in ten Irish mortgages were either in arrears or restructured at the end of 2010 and more customers are set to fall into difficulty after the ECB raised its base rate earlier this month. The ratings cut pushed the euro to a session low against the dollar, falling as low as $1.4451, down 0.2 percent on the day, and moving further away from its 15-month high around $1.4521 hit earlier this week. The Irish/German 5-year government bond yield spread was 20 basis points wider on the day at 724 bps. The equivalent 10-year spreads, which narrowed by around 100 basis points after an end-March fresh round of bank stress tests, were little changed on the day. ALL ABOUT GROWTH Ireland has been struggling to convince markets its spluttering economy can grow fast enough to sustain its debt burden since the International Monetary Fund and European Union arranged an 85 billion euros bailout last year. The IMF this week slashed its forecast for Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth to 0.5 percent from 0.9 percent previously and said it did not expect Ireland to meet the target of getting its budget deficit under an EU limit of three percent by 2015. The government, which will get a full update on its progress on the IMF/EU deal later on Friday, is updating its forecasts but currently predicts 1.7 percent growth this year to give it a budget deficit of 9.4 percent. Analysts said the Irish story would now be all about growth. “I still think we will maintain investment grade, but at the same time the risks around achieving debt sustainability are to the downside,” said Dermot O’Leary, chief economist at Goodbody Stockbrokers. “It’s absolutely all about growth now. I think we’ve parked the banking issue which is a positive and you can get that from the readings of the ratings agencies views.” On a positive note, Moody’s said that upward pressures could also develop on Ireland’s rating and that the country’s long-term potential growth prospects remain higher than those of many other advanced nations. (Editing by Patrick Graham) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Will We Have an Active Week to Follow this Week’s Consolidation?

April 15, 2011

Will We Have an Active Week to Follow this Week’s Consolidation?

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Jobless Claims Unexpectedly Rise After Weeks Of Dropping

April 14, 2011

New U.S. claims for unemployment benefits unexpectedly rose last week, bouncing back above the key 400,000 level, a government report showed on Thursday. Initial claims for state unemployment benefits rose 27,000 to a seasonally adjusted 412,000, the Labor Department said. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims slipping to 380,000. The prior week’s figure was revised up to 385,000 from the previously reported 382,000. The four-week moving average of unemployment claims — a better measure of underlying trends – climbed 5,500 to 395,750. The rise in claims interrupted a downward trend that had kept them below the 400,000 threshold for four weeks. That level is normally associated with steady job growth. Despite last week’s rise, the four-week average held below the 400,000 mark for a seventh straight week. A Labor Department official said claims tend to rise the first week of a new quarter. The number of people still receiving benefits under regular state programs after an initial week of aid fell 58,000 to 3.68 million in the week ended April 2, the lowest level since September 2008. Economists had expected so-called continuing claims to ease to 3.70 million from a previously reported 3.72 million. The number of people on emergency unemployment benefits fell 12,245 to 3.55 million in the week ended March 26, the latest week for which data is available. A total of 8.52 million people were claiming unemployment benefits during that period under all programs. Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Non-Traded REIT American Realty Capital Trust Seeking Liquidity Alternatives

April 13, 2011

Just months away from closing-out its ongoing public offering of stock, American Realty Capital Trust Inc., a non-traded REIT with $1.2 billion in net leased real estate investments, announced action this week intended to enhance shareholder value. The company’s advisor, American Realty Capital Advisors LLC, intends to begin interviewing investment banking firms and other advisory firms to provide its board with recommendations for exploring various…

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Euro falls against the dollar with the beginning of the week

April 11, 2011

Euro falls against the dollar with the beginning of the week

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FOREX: Dollar Ends the Week by Hitting a Fresh 17-Month Low as Rate Expectations Stall

April 9, 2011

FOREX: Dollar Ends the Week by Hitting a Fresh 17-Month Low as Rate Expectations Stall

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Another week to show that the superpower’s sectors continue on reviving gradually…  

April 9, 2011

Another week to show that the superpower’s sectors continue on reviving gradually…

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Gold Prices Hit Record High On U.S. Dollar’s Decline

April 8, 2011

NEW YORK (Frank Tang) – Gold rose to a record high for a fourth straight day and silver surged on Friday, as a weaker dollar, the prospect of a U.S. government shutdown and inflation worries lifted precious metals in a broad commodities rally. Gold was set for its biggest weekly gain in four months, drawing support from renewed euro zone sovereign debt fears amid Portugal’s financial crisis and inflation jitters as crude oil and corn hit new highs this week. Bullion broke above key resistance on technical charts and could target above $1,500 an ounce. The metal has risen more than 10 percent since late January when political unrest began to flare in the Middle East and North Africa. “With the expected future inflation being higher in this low interest rate environment, investors are more inclined to have some contributions to commodities as an inflation hedge,” said Hakan Kaya, commodities portfolio manager at Neuberger Berman, which manages about $190 billion client assets. Spot gold rose as high as $1,474.19 an ounce and was later up 1 percent at $1,472.20 an ounce by 12:36 a.m. EDT. Bullion was on track to rise 2.5 percent this week for a fourth straight weekly gain. U.S. gold futures for June delivery gained 1 percent to $1,473.60. Gold remained far below its all-time inflation-adjusted high, estimated at almost $2,500 an ounce set in 1980 as a result of heightened geopolitical pressure and hyperinflation. (Graphic: r.reuters.com/ren88r ) U.S. futures activity was sharply below average for a second consecutive day, but analysts said low volume is not detrimental to the bull run after a strong price rally. Silver rose 2.3 percent to $40.42 an ounce, just off the session high of $40.49. The gold-to-silver ratio — the number of silver ounces needed to buy an ounce of gold — fell to a 28-year low near 36 on Friday. “One would expect silver to outperform in this environment because it bears a higher risk than gold on a volatility basis,” Kaya said. DOLLAR WEAKNESS UNDERPINS The dollar slide against the euro, supported by widening interest rate differentials after ECB’s rate hike, and crude oil’s surge to 2-1/2 year high added fuel to a rally that has already taken gold to a series of record highs this year. Gold also benefits from dollar weakness as Democratic and Republican congressional leaders said on Friday there was no overall deal on government funding for the rest of the fiscal year that ends September 30, and could not even agree on what disagreements remain ahead of the midnight Friday deadline. The looming U.S. government shutdown was “simply a minor problem of far greater problems,” said Camilla Sutton, chief currency strategist at Scotia Capital. The issues with the U.S. dollar are not temporary and the dollar is expected to remain weak this year, she added. On charts, gold breached important technical resistance at $1,466 an ounce near Thursday’s high, said Rick Bensignor, chief market analyst at Dahlman Rose. If bullion could hold above $1,466 early next week, it should next target an area between $1,500 and $1,510 an ounce, Bensignor said. Among other precious metals, platinum gained 1.3 percent to $1,803.74 an ounce, while palladium jumped 2.2 percent to $791.97. Prices at 12:36 p.m. EDT (1636 GMT) (Additional reporting by Julie Haviv in New York, Jan Harvey in London; Editing by David Gregorio) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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William Lucy: Eerie Echoes of a Long-ago Battle

April 8, 2011

Forty-three years ago this week Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee where he’d gone to stand with a beleaguered band of city sanitation workers who had been out on strike for nearly two months. Those workers were part of my union, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). They were a small local, made up entirely of African-Americans, in a region of the country that had demonstrated scant good will toward labor unions and even less towards black men seeking to better their lives. I was with Dr. King during his time in Memphis. Today the struggle of union members in Wisconsin and elsewhere stirs my memories of that time. In 1968 I was on AFSCME’s national staff and had been sent to Memphis to aid the strikers. Decades have passed, yet that initial impression stays so fresh and strong in my mind. Men, weary and worn-down by back-breaking labor, looked down upon as “garbage men”, dark-skinned and old beyond their years. Yet there they were, day after day, walking the picket lines with their heads — and signs — held high. Their message still echoes down the years: “I am a man.” They were paid little more than the minimum wage, and not paid at all if it rained and garbage couldn’t be collected. Their work was often dangerous, lacking even minimal safety protections. In fact, it was the deaths of two workers chewed up in the trash machinery that helped to spark their walkout. They sought better pay and fairer treatment, but most fundamentally, they were striking for recognition of their right to have a union. The politicians attacked them relentlessly, claiming they just didn’t want to do their jobs. The mayor was willing to pay them a little more money, but flat-out refused to recognize their right to form a union that would allow them to bargain from a position of strength, not beg for crumbs from a position of weakness. I saw in these men something noble in their bearing — at once humble and dignified — and something ennobling in their steadfast insistence on being treated with respect. I believe Dr. King saw it as well. He came to Memphis without hesitation or question because he knew with utter clarity that the sanitation workers’ struggle for labor rights was an essential aspect of the struggle for human rights to which he had devoted his life. It was there, finally, that he gave his life to the struggle. After his death, the strike was soon settled and the sanitation workers won their right to have a union. In the ensuing years, that right brought them improved pay and working conditions, but more profoundly it brought them the dignity and respect that are at the core of our democracy. Dr. King is always in my thoughts on this sad anniversary, but never more so than this year, with its eerie echoes of that long-ago battle for fundamental collective bargaining rights on the streets of Memphis. Today we find ourselves once again facing politicians who are fiercely determined, no matter what the cost to the public good, to deny workers a voice on the job. In 2011, sanitation workers and nearly every other public employee in the states of Wisconsin and Ohio find themselves denied their right to collective bargaining just as their brethren in Tennessee were in 1968. Today it has once again become acceptable for politicians to belittle public employees and the important, often demanding, jobs they perform. We rely on these men and women when a fire breaks out, when the snow piles up, when disaster strikes. We entrust them with the care of our children, the health of our communities, and the safety of our streets. I believe they deserve our appreciation, not vilification. That’s why working people throughout the country are rallying this week, under the banner “We Are One,” at more than 1,000 events all across the nation. They are standing up to defend their rights and to defy the raw power grab by the corporate elite that is behind the assault on those rights. Like thousands of Illinoisans who have marked the anniversary in their own communities, I will be traveling to Chicago on Saturday for a culminating statewide rally. When I rise to speak to those assembled — those who work in the public or the private sector, union members and union supporters, all of them joined together by the conviction that animated Dr. King nearly half a century ago — I will recall those sanitation workers in Memphis. And I will know, deep in my heart, that once again we shall overcome.

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Talbots To Accelerate Store Closings

April 6, 2011

Talbots is looking to slim down. The leading specialty retailer and direct marketer of women’s classic clothing, shoes and accessories, plans to reduce its store count from the 587 locations it currently operates to around 400 — and do so relatively quickly. Last fall, Talbots outlined a plan to close 75 to 100 stores over the next three years. This week, the company said it was stepping up that plan. “We are now planning an accelerated store…

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Real Money: Shorenstein and Blackstone Each Raise Another Billion or So

April 6, 2011

Fund raising activity targeting real estate remains fast and furious with big hauls reported this week by both San Francisco-based Shorenstein Properties LLC and The Blackstone Group in New York. Shorenstein, a private real estate investment and management company with a nationwide portfolio of office properties, closed on Shorenstein Realty Investors Ten LP, an investment fund with $1.23 billion in committed equity. The firm intends to deploy…

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Mike Green: Uplifting Black America: Private Capital and a High-Growth Entrepreneurship Ecosystem

April 5, 2011

It’s a simple formula: Investing in high-growth companies creates jobs while generating more wealth for investors. The formula has worked for America’s private venture capital investment community for 65 years. Unfortunately, no such active community exists in Black America. This week, the National Venture Capital Association and the Angel Capital Association meets in Boston for the ACA Summit (April 4-6, 2011) and NVCA Annual Meeting (April 6-8). Together, these organizations are comprised of more than 500 groups of private equity investors who make up a large portion of the reason why the 21st century Innovation Economy races along at breakneck speed and offers solutions to the problems of high rates of unemployment and diminishing levels of wealth. There are no such comparable gatherings in Black America. Producing Jobs and Wealth Between 1980 and 2005, all net job growth in America was produced by companies less than five years old. That doesn’t happen without angel and venture capital investing in high-growth entrepreneurship. Source: Pricewaterhousecooper’s National Venture Capital Association 2010 MoneyTree Report: Data provided by Thompson Reuters During the same time period, venture capital experienced its largest boon since it was first introduced in the ’50s. In the ’50s and ’60s Blacks were legally and institutionally barred from many facets of the American Dream. In the 70s, Americans were still consumed by widespread, overt racial disparities, some of which seeped underground during the ’80s and ’90s, when private equity capital enjoyed its heyday and the establishment of a firm economic investment infrastructure and high-growth entrepreneurial culture None of that job- and wealth-creating infrastructure was built in Black America … or any broad regions comprised primarily of any racial minority demographic groups. Infrastructure: High-Growth Entrepreneurial Ecosystem The culture of high risk-high return capital investment had been established by the 80′s, which led to rapid growth in the technology sectors. This laid the foundation and established conditions in which high growth startups could emerge. These startups have gone on to revolutionize, if not create industries, including biotechnology (Genentech), personal computers (Microsoft, Apple) and eventually internet-based commerce including social networking sites like Google, Facebook, etc… This type of high risk and explosive entrepreneurial culture has yet to take root in Black America, but not due to lack of an entrepreneurial, innovative or creative spirit among Black Americans. Rather, it has been the lack of understanding of the relationship between (high) risk capital, explosive entrepreneurship and economic growth that has hampered Black America’s participation in the Innovation Economy. The private equity capital investment community laid the framework for the high-growth Innovation Economy today, which has replaced the former manufacturing economy, which replaced the agrarian economy. Power of Private Equity Capital Investment Click on image to access interactive data graphic at Kauffman.org Today, it is private equity capital investments from high net worth individuals and SEC-qualified investors (both known as angels), along with venture capital, that ignite the fire blazing into new technology frontiers. Fueling that fire is science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education and those pursuing professions in the various STEM fields. Since 1995 , more than 50,000 companies have received a total amount greater than $439 billion in venture capital equity investments. That’s not counting angel investments, which typically enter in the equation early and exit earlier than venture capital. Much of this activity has somehow escaped Black America. However, it is also clear that very few of those companies are led by Black entrepreneurs. In 2010, Black tech entrepreneurs received just 1% of technology based equity investments. America’s Job Creators Meet in Boston Likely few Blacks will find their way to the ACA and NVCA events in Boston this week, where many of the people responsible for the success of high-growth entrepreneurs (who have created jobs that reduced the unemployment rate and generated more wealth for investors) will come together to network, learn, share and improve their infrastructure. Indeed, the private equity investment infrastructure is expanding. And President Obama has recognized the private equity investment community as the leading opportunity for job creation and wealth generation in America, as well as the solution for the U.S. becoming more competitive in the global marketplace. So, where is Black America? Missing: Black Capital Investments While the recent unemployment numbers brought good news for the nation as a whole, with total unemployment dropping to a two-year low, it left a sour taste in the mouths of Black Americans, who must contend with the notion that the rate of unemployment today for Black Americans remains double the rate it is overall for the nation. That point hasn’t changed much since Dr. King bemoaned being left out of the American Dream when he articulated his famous “Dream” speech in August of 1963. Moreover, a May 2010 data report by the Institute on Assets and Social Policy reveals that wealth is being generated in America at an astounding rate, yet has managed to bypass Black America. This report shows a quadrupling of the wealth gap between Blacks and Whites over the 23 years the study was conducted (1984 – 2007). It’s not a secret how wealth is created in America on a mass scale. Other minority groups have managed to figure out the formula. Asian Americans Invest in STEM / High-Growth Entrepreneurs For example, Asian Americans, who own nearly one million fewer businesses than Black Americans, produced $2.5T in total gross receipts compared to $137 billion by 1.9 million Black-owned businesses. Asian Americans have an investment infrastructure. They own hundreds of companies in Silicon Valley. They also produce STEM-educated professionals and high-growth entrepreneurs at a significant rate. Black Americans are no strangers to entrepreneurship nor innovation. Our focus, however, has been on lifestyle entrepreneurship ventures primarily rather than high-growth equity backed enterprises that produce more fast-growing employer firms. Government Solutions? It is no secret the focus of economic activity in Black America has targeted conducting business with the government as a prime channel of activity. Thus, major investments of time, energy and money have been made in obtaining political cache in attempts to affect public policies that open doors of access and opportunities for a tiny percentage of Black-owned small businesses. This focus on government solutions, which proved prudent during the 20th century battles over constitutional citizenship, must be transformed to fully engage in the 21st century quest for economic equity citizenship. Today, Black America is missing out on a vital element required for job creation and wealth generation: an innovative infrastructure that focuses on high-growth entrepreneurship fueled by a pipeline of STEM ingenuity and risk capital. Such an infrastructure would be the foundation of capital investments necessary to fund an ecosystem of high-growth entrepreneurship. Real Economic Solutions If Black America is to change the current paradigm of a widening wealth gap compared to White America and a rate of unemployment consistently much higher than the national average, it must recognize an immediate need to establish its own private equity investment community and establish strong ties with the current infrastructure that has decades of experience. Perhaps a step in the right direction would be to show such a significant presence at the equity capital investor gatherings in Boston this week to a degree that simply the sheer attendance numbers alone would raise eyebrows and interest. Or perhaps there should be a convening of the minds within our community to address this important issue? What’s preventing us from establishing such a valuable infrastructure and ecosystem? The numbers speak for themselves. While the rest of America has figured out how to create both jobs and wealth, Blacks have consistently lagged behind in both. The missing element in Black America is a viable, growing equity capital investment community that can fuel high growth entrepreneurship and Black participation in the Innovation Economy.

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Japanese yen declines with the start of the week

April 4, 2011

Japanese yen declines with the start of the week

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Another week to confirm that the U.S economy is on a firmer footing while facing lasting challenges…

April 2, 2011

Another week to confirm that the U.S economy is on a firmer footing while facing lasting challenges…

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Vishakha N. Desai: Asia Needs More Women Leaders

April 1, 2011

As the center of gravity of the global economy moves east, Asia needs to recruit more women for leadership positions across the public and private sectors. But how can they break through more glass ceilings and climb corporate ladders? And, once there, what will they bring to the table? Some of the region’s most influential women are confronting these challenges as they share their experiences and wisdom at Asia Society’s “Women Leaders of New Asia” summit in Singapore this week. There are real moral imperatives for making sure more women reach the very top. But there is also a bottom line: It’s simply makes good business sense. Women often make the majority of financial and consumer decisions in Asian families. They work out what to buy for the home, what school to send their children to, where to go for vacation and so on. This alone behooves companies to have women in senior positions to understand better the purchasing habits and financial power of women. But there are deeper reasons for women to assume more leadership responsibilities. And, much of it comes from unexpected quarters, namely culture and tradition. The Western concept that reason should operate above all else dates back to the Age of the Enlightenment. Now some modern research suggests that this runs counter to how our brains actually function. For instance, in his new book, the New York Times ‘ David Brooks points to the importance of emotions, intuitions, perceptions, genetic dispositions and unconscious longings in all sorts of decision-making — momentous, inconsequential and in between. I contend that the holistic traditions of Asia — from India to Indonesia and China to Korea — are based on strong mind/body and reason/intuition relationships. We can thank those deep cultural values for much of the success Asian societies have had building their economies and chasing the materialistic dream of wealth and better lifestyles. This is where Asian women can do more. They are, more often than not, the keepers of age-old traditions in families and communities. So, now is the time for more women to take on the mantle of leadership and infuse these cultural nuances into the broader narrative of the geo-economic power shift to Asia. To do so would build a valuable legacy for future generations. It must be said that there has been much progress in the advancement of women. The female talent pool is growing fast as women graduate from universities in large numbers in many Asian countries. Singapore has an impressive record. Elsewhere, around 47% of graduates in China are women and the figure is 50% in India. Of those female graduates in China, 65% say they have high ambitions and expect to follow professional careers. In India the figure is 85%. It would be an enormous waste of human talent if one-half of the population was under-utilized, particularly as governments and businesses try to modernize and boost their competitiveness. But, alas, women are still a rarity on corporate boards, in senior management teams and top government positions in Asia. While more well-educated women are entering the workforce than ever before, social taboos and family pressures mean many are leaving in droves after reaching mid-level management positions. There are many other hurdles to female advancement. Younger women have few opportunities to be mentored by senior women in a strategic way. And, it’s also hard for some to get back into the workforce after a hiatus during their childbearing years. It’s no surprise, for instance, that some women in Singapore and elsewhere are delaying marriage and even opting not to have children. We hope to bridge some of these gaps at this week’s summit. We are building a strong network of women leaders and learning about best practices in the public and private sectors. This is not simply a nice idea whose time has come. This is something we can ill-afford to ignore.

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Libyan Opposition Strikes Oil Deal

April 1, 2011

BENGHAZI, Libya — A plan to sell rebel-held oil to buy weapons and other supplies has been reached with Qatar, a rebel official said Friday, in another sign of deepening aid for Libya’s opposition by the wealthy Gulf state after sending warplanes to help confront Moammar Gadhafi’s forces. It was not immediately clear when the possible oil sales could begin or how the arms would reach the rebel factions, but any potential revenue stream would be a significant lifeline for the militias and military defectors battling Gadhafi’s superior forces. Rebel units were pushed back about 100 miles (160 kilometers) this week along the Mediterranean coast, but still held parts of oil-rich eastern Libya and the key city of Benghazi. In recent clashes, rebels displayed more firepower including mortars and rockets, but remain significantly outgunned. Ali Tarhouni, who handles finances for the opposition’s National Transitional Council, said that Qatar has agreed to market oil currently in storage in parts of southeastern Libya. He said one sticking point is how to truck the oil out of the country. Tarhouni said money from oil sales will be put into an escrow account the opposition will use to pay for weapons, food, medicine, fuel and other needs. He said the rebels had asked visiting U.N. and French envoys to have sanctions lifted on the parts of Libya controlled by the rebels. He said that if transport issues are solved, the rebels could immediately start exporting 1 million barrels per week. When asked, he said the rebels would certainly use oil revenues to buy arms. “People are dying,” he said. He said the council was exploring “buying arms, any kind of arms that we can get to. We have a list of the arms we need and we’re trying some different fronts to buy them. There was no immediate comment from officials in Qatar, one of the few Arab states taking part in the international military contingent enforcing a no-fly zone in Libya. Qatar is also assisting a rebel satellite TV operation that began broadcasts this week from Qatar’s capital Doha and has agreed to host a meeting of Libyan opposition groups. A spokesman for Qatar Petroleum, the state company responsible for selling the Gulf nation’s oil, declined to comment. In London earlier this week, Britain’s foreign secretary, William Hague, said Qatar had offered to “facilitate” oil sales that are consistent with international law. Hague did not provide details about who would be supported, how the facilitation process would work, or how Qatar’s offer has been received by diplomats. It has been unclear how exactly such an arrangement would work. The effort to get oil out is hampered by several factors, including the rebels’ ability to hold eastern oil production and export facilities, the departure of skilled foreign oil-field workers and international sanctions that technically apply to the country as a whole. OPEC member Libya produced about output of 1.6 million barrels per day of oil before the conflict, just under 2 percent of world production. Qatar – host of the U.S. Army’s Middle East command hub – has significantly boosted its international profile in recent years with diplomatic initiatives and top-level sporting events, including being picked to host the 2022 World Cup. The 22-member Arab League was critical in winning U.N. Security Council support for the no-fly zone. But only Arab League members Qatar and the United Arab Emirates have contributed aircraft to the mission. Qatar also has agreed to host the first meeting of an international contact group aimed at coordinating political action and opening channels with Libya’s opposition. No date for the meeting has been set. A Qatari aid plane carrying 30 tons of relief supplies including medicine, medical equipment and blankets landed in the Libyan city of Tobruk on Wednesday, according to the official Qatar News Agency. Last month, Qatar sent ground troops to join a Saudi-led force aiding the rulers in Bahrain, which has been wracked by anti-government protests and violence for more than six weeks. In the Arab world, however, Qatar may be best known as the headquarters for the powerful Al-Jazeera broadcasting network, which was founded by the country’s rulers in 1996. A Libyan rebel spokesman, Mahmoud Shamam, said a satellite channel, Libya TV, began broadcasts from Doha earlier this week with financial and logistical support from Qatar. A top rebel official, Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, offered a cease-fire Friday if Gadhafi pulls his military forces out of cities and allows peaceful protests against his regime. ___ Associated Press writers Adam Schreck and Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, contributed to this report.

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CoStar’s People of Note (March 27-April 1)

April 1, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, National, New York City, Northern New Jersey, Orange County, Orlando, Sacramento and Washington, DC. LOS ANGELES NKF Taps Rothstein as Managing Director Investment sales veteran Barry Rothstein joined Newmark Knight Frank’s Capital Group in Los Angeles as a managing director. Rothstein’s specialty is brokering complex commercial real estate…

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Number Of People Seeking Jobless Aid Drops

March 31, 2011

WASHINGTON — Fewer people applied for unemployment benefits last week, a sign that layoffs are dropping and companies may be stepping up hiring. The Labor Department said Thursday that the number of people seeking benefits dipped by 6,000 to a seasonally adjusted 388,000 for the week that ended March 26. That’s the second decline in three weeks. Applications near 375,000 or below are consistent with a sustained increase in hiring. Applications peaked during the recession at 659,000. The four-week average of applications, a less volatile measure, rose to 394,250. Still, that figure has dropped by 35,500, or 8 percent, in the past eight weeks. “The downtrend … is undeniable,” Joshua Shapiro, chief economist at MFR Financial Inc., said. “We believe that this improvement will continue in the weeks and months ahead.” The department also revised the previous five years of data. The changes showed that applications in recent weeks were moderately higher than previously reported. As applications have fallen, hiring has started to pick up. Economists forecast that employers added a net total of 185,000 jobs in March. That would be just below February’s gain of 192,000 – the most jobs added in nearly a year. The unemployment rate is expected to remain unchanged at 8.9 percent. The March data will be released Friday. Still, hiring must rise by about 300,000 per month to rapidly bring down the unemployment rate, economists say. The economy has gained more than a million jobs in the past year but still has 7.5 million fewer jobs than before the recession. The number of people collecting benefits also dropped. It fell by 51,000 to 3.7 million in the week ending March 19, the latest data available. That’s the lowest figure since October 2008. But that doesn’t include millions of people receiving aid under the emergency unemployment benefit programs put in place during the recession. All told, 8.8 million people received unemployment benefits in the week ending March 12, the latest data available. That’s slightly higher than the previous week. There have been other positive reports about jobs and hiring this week. More than half of the largest U.S. companies plan to step up hiring in the next six months, according to a survey by the Business Roundtable, released Wednesday. That’s the highest proportion of the group’s members that plan to add workers since the quarterly survey began in 2002. The Roundtable represents the CEOs of roughly 200 of the largest U.S. companies. And the Conference Board said more job openings were posted online in March. The number of postings rose by 208,800, or nearly 5 percent, to 4.45 million. Job openings have increased by 600,000 in the first three months of this year. The Conference Board is a nonprofit business research group.

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Budget Impasse Increasing Risk Of Government Shutdown

March 26, 2011

With time running short and budget negotiations this week having reached an angry impasse, Congressional leaders are growing increasingly pessimistic about reaching a bipartisan deal that would avert a government shutdown in early April.

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CoStar’s People of Note (March 20-26)

March 25, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, East Bay, Long Island, Los Angeles, New York City, Philadelphia, San Francisco and South Bay. LOS ANGELES Lee & Associates Taps Toumazos as Principal Commercial real estate veteran Paulette Toumazos joined Lee & Associates-LA North/Ventura Inc. in Sherman Oaks, CA, as a principal. The 25-year industry professional focuses on the sale and leasing of office…

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CoStar’s People of Note (March 20-26)

March 25, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, East Bay, Long Island, Los Angeles, New York City, Philadelphia, San Francisco and South Bay. LOS ANGELES Lee & Associates Taps Toumazos as Principal Commercial real estate veteran Paulette Toumazos joined Lee & Associates-LA North/Ventura Inc. in Sherman Oaks, CA, as a principal. The 25-year industry professional focuses on the sale and leasing of office…

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Ed Mierzwinski: In The Public Interest: Checking the "Fact Check" From CFPB Opponents

March 24, 2011

Professor Elizabeth Warren, the architect of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) , was in the press often this week letting the public know about the progress of “standing up” the new consumer protection agency. Her opponents took notice, and posted a “Fact Check” purporting to find errors in one of her interviews from earlier in the week. But their “Fact Check” needs a fact check. It’s a political spin job, not a policy paper. In its short length, it manages to make several factual mistakes while also completely missing the point. The “Fact Check” incorrectly claims that only the CFPB’s director can set the budget. In fact, the Bureau’s power and authority are similar to that of other bank regulators, except that in two respects it is more, rather than less, limited. Like them, it is subject to Congressional oversight. In addition, unlike any other bank regulator, it can have its decisions overruled by a committee of the other banking regulators under some circumstances, and its budget is capped, while other bank regulators’ budgets are not. More importantly, the “Fact Check” fails to check history. It fails to go back to the Great Crash of 2008 and recall that our economy failed because the system before – with no dedicated agency looking out for consumers – failed to protect us. The real difference between the CFPB and the other regulators is not that it will have too much power. The real difference is that the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will be the first banking regulator with one job- protecting and standing up for consumers in the financial marketplace. For too long, enforcement of consumer protection laws in the financial market was left to regulators whose main mission was ensuring the financial stability of banks. It didn’t work. The real outrage is the fact that existing regulators, like the Federal Reserve – (a much less accountable agency, by the way) – had the responsibility to protect the market from products like abusive subprime mortgages, but financial industry special interests objected, and they failed to do so, with disastrous consequences. What opponents of the CFPB really fear is that we now have a regulator that will put consumer interests first and hold Wall Street accountable. Wall Street plain and simple doesn’t want a consumer cop on the beat . But consumers do.

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Goldman Sachs Buys Out Warren Buffett

March 18, 2011

OMAHA, Neb. — The Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said Friday it has received regulators’ permission to spend $5.65 billion to repurchase Berkshire Hathaway’s preferred shares in the banking giant. Goldman said the Federal Reserve has approved its plan to repay Warren Buffett’s company for the $5 billion investment it made at the height of the financial crisis in the fall of 2008. Goldman was eager to repay Berkshire because it had been paying 10 percent interest on the preferred shares, which translated into an annual expense of $500 million. “Berkshire Hathaway’s 2008 investment in Goldman Sachs was a major vote of confidence in our firm and we are very appreciative of it,” Goldman spokesman Stephen Cohen said. The repurchase will weigh down Goldman’s first-quarter earnings by $2.80 per share because it includes a one-time preferred dividend of about $1.65 billion. The Federal Reserve also approved Goldman’s overall capital spending plan for 2011, including the repurchase of common stock and a possible increase in the bank’s quarterly dividend. But Goldman did not announce any stock purchase or dividend plans on Friday. Goldman was one of a number of banks subjected to “stress tests” conducted by the Federal Reserve to see if their balance sheets were strong enough to weather another recession. On Friday, the Fed said it had completed those tests and expects that “some” banks will increase or resume dividend payments and buy back shares. The Fed did not reveal the names or number of banks that are expected to do so. Berkshire’s Goldman investment figures in a high profile insider trading trial because prosecutors say a former Goldman board member tipped off Galleon hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam about Berkshire’s investment before it was announced. The SEC said Rajaratnam directed his hedge fund, the Galleon Group, to buy 175,000 shares of Goldman stock within a minute of receiving the tip about Berkshire’s investment, enabling him to earn nearly $1 million in profit. Rajaratnam’s trial began earlier this week. He has denied wrongdoing. The former Goldman board member has also denied wrongdoing. Buffett did not immediately respond to a message Friday seeking comment, but he predicted in his annual letter to shareholders last month that Goldman would soon redeem the shares. Buffett has said that the $500 million dividend Goldman had been paying Berkshire broke down to nearly $16 a second, making every tick of the clock sound like music to his ears. But he said Goldman didn’t seem to like hearing its money tick away. Buffett told shareholders that Goldman’s decision to redeem shares – along with similar moves by Swiss Re and General Electric – will diminish Berkshire’s earning power because it will no long receive the special high dividends. Berkshire’s 50,000 preferred shares of common stock will be repurchased for $110,000 apiece on April 18 because Goldman was required to give 30 days notice. But Berkshire will continue to hold warrants to buy 43.5 million common Goldman shares at a price of $115 per share anytime before the fall of 2013. Earlier this week, Berkshire found a use for some of its cash when it announced a deal to pay $9 billion for specialty chemical company Lubrizol Corp. That deal, which includes $700 million in debt, is expected to close in the third quarter, if shareholders and regulators approve. Berkshire owns roughly 80 subsidiaries, including clothing, furniture, jewelry and corporate jet firms, but its insurance and utility businesses typically account for more than half of the company’s net income. It also has major investments in such companies as Coca-Cola Co. and Wells Fargo & Co. Berkshire has more than 260,000 employees worldwide but only 21 at its headquarters in Omaha.

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Japanese Automakers Search For Alternative Suppliers Post-Quake

March 18, 2011

TOKYO — Japan’s major automakers are trying to find alternative parts suppliers to replace those knocked out of action by the colossal earthquake last week that has forced most of the country’s car production to a halt. Analysts say production is likely to resume within the next few weeks, bouncing back from the Mar. 11 quake and tsunami which killed more than 6,000 people. Once parts are coming, automakers will be able to make up for much of the lost production in coming months, they say. What’s likely to hurt in the longer run are logistical difficulties caused by destroyed roads, and limits on electricity use. Power stations have suffered damage including several nuclear power reactors that are beyond recovery – and leaking radiation in a still unfolding crisis. The yen’s recent surge to record highs could also hamper automakers. Toyota Motor Corp., maker of the Prius hybrid and Lexus luxury models, has stopped production at auto assembly plants throughout Japan through next Tuesday. Among Japan’s automakers, it will likely be least affected because most of its suppliers are located near the company’s Nagoya headquarters, southwest of Tokyo, which is far from the disaster’s epicenter in the northeast. Honda Motor Co. said its production halt at auto assembly plants in Japan will be extended by three days until March 23. Earlier this week, Nissan Motor Co. and Mitsubishi Motors Corp. restarted some plants using their stocks of parts, which will continue only as long as inventory lasts. “It’s all guesswork,” Koji Endo, analyst with Advanced Research Japan, said of the potential damage. Automakers are scrambling to find other suppliers, including overseas ones, to replace those disabled by the 9.0-magnitude quake, he said. Northeastern Japan is home mostly to tertiary parts-makers – the tiny machine shops that make parts for secondary and other suppliers. Parts-makers higher up in the supply chain will be able to make those parts instead, Endo said. He estimates the loss for Toyota at about 6.5 billion yen ($81 million) or 13,000 vehicles at day, but Toyota can make up for that by boosting production later on. Goldman Sachs said in a report this week that the damage to automakers will be short term, and parts-makers have recovered quickly from previous earthquakes. Nissan’s engine plant in northeastern Japan suffered damage, and a transmission plant was damaged from another quake Tuesday in Shizuoka, southwest of Tokyo. That could prove more serious as suppliers for engines and transmissions are harder to replace. Spokesman Mitsuru Yonekawa said damage was being assessed and it was unclear when production will resume. Nissan said Friday that checks began this week for traces of radioactive material in vehicles to avoid spreading contamination. Fears about radiation leaks have been growing because of the crisis at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant, which is spreading low levels of radiation in northeastern Japan, forcing nearby areas to be evacuated amid efforts to cool overheating nuclear reactors. Toyota said it may decide next week’s plans by later Friday. It began production for repair and replacement parts Thursday, and plans to start production of parts for overseas production, including knockdown car assembly, Monday.

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CoStar’s People of Note (March 13-19)

March 18, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Chicago, Denver, Kansas City, Los Angeles, New York City, Portland and Washington, DC. DENVER Sullivan Joins Jones Lang LaSalle By Nina Thilert Mary Sullivan joined Jones Lang LaSalle as a senior managing director. Sullivan will work with Senior Managing Director John Jugl Jr. to expand the company’s capital markets platform, including investment sales, real estate investment…

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How will Rising Price Pressures and FX Interventions Affect the Dollar in the Week Ahead?

March 18, 2011

How will Rising Price Pressures and FX Interventions Affect the Dollar in the Week Ahead?

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Jobless Claims Fall To Lowest Level Since July 2008

March 17, 2011

(Reuters) – New U.S. claims for unemployment benefits fell as expected last week, with the four-week moving average dropping to its lowest level in more than 2-1/2 years, pointing to a strengthening labor market. Initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell 16,000 to a seasonally adjusted 385,000, the Labor Department said. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims falling to 387,000. The prior week’s figure was revised up to 401,000 from the previously reported 397,000. The four-week moving average of unemployment claims — a better measure of underlying trends – dropped 7,000 to 386,250, the lowest since mid-July 2008 and staying below the 400,000 level for a third straight week. The claims data covered the survey period for the government’s closely watched employment report for March and offered more signs the labor market recovery was gaining traction. Employers added 192,000 jobs in February, the most in nine months. The Federal Reserve on Tuesday said the economy was on “firmer footing” with the labor market improving gradually. It also dropped a reference it had used in a statement in January to employers remaining reluctant to add to payrolls. A Labor Department official said there were no unusual factors affecting the report. The number of people still receiving benefits under regular state programs after an initial week of aid dropped 80,000 to 3.71 million in the week ended March 5, the lowest level since September 2008. Economists had expected so-called continuing claims to fall to 3.75 million from a previously reported 3.77 million. The number of people on emergency unemployment benefits declined 58,580 to 3.54 million in the week ended February 26, the latest week for which data is available. A total of 8.95 million people were claiming unemployment benefits during that period under all programs. Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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U.S stocks open the week in red

March 14, 2011

U.S stocks open the week in red

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Penny Hoff: Broke Is the New Rich

March 13, 2011

This week I was the recipient of a Barn Raising, but instead of a barn it was my house and instead of a raising it was more of a razing and instead of building a place in which to put my cows, it was more along the lines of preparing the place to try and sell it to avoid The New F Word — foreclosure. Until you’ve had a chance to see friends in action the way I have this week, you cannot fully appreciate the definition of the word friendship. It is true; when crisis strikes, we find out who our true friends are. Often if a crisis is bad enough, like when there’s a terrible illness or injury or even worse, when a loved one dies, our friends want to rally around — they are wringing their hands, wanting to do something, anything. The truth is that most times, when an accident or injury or illness or death happens, there’s so little for the people who love us, to do . But in our house-crisis situation, there was not just one thing to do, but about 987 things that my friends not only could do, but they really wanted to do. They fixed those hundreds of wrong things with my house in a record breaking week of dumping, scrubbing, scraping, dumping, moving, pruning, dumping, rearranging, painting and did I mention dumping? After eight days of overtime back-breaking work, the end result was that my house was a House Makeover; so Extreme it could be a hit reality show. But not Extreme only in the result but also Extreme in that my friends, who’s health and fitness has always been my business, now were making my house their business. Author Deborah Underwood said, there are many kinds of Quiet: first awake Quiet, jelly-side down Quiet, don’t scare the baby robins Quiet, car ride at night Quiet. In that same line of thinking, there are many kinds of Broke: the I forgot my wallet and can’t stop at Starbucks Broke, the I’m in college and temporarily Broke, the Homeless Shelter Broke and now, there’s a new kind of Broke — the I thought we were rich but now there’s no job and should we send our kids to college or pay the mortgage Broke. So, it was time to sell our heart, I mean, our home, even though none of us were ready — not our 18-year-old son, who will leave our nest next September, and certainly not our 16-year-old twins who only have one year left at the high school in this school district where they’ve attended since kindergarten. And certainly not me. Beyond not wanting to clean out eighteen years of clutter and cluttered memories from the basement to the attic — an idea both overwhelming and paralyzing — I felt the heartbreak of leaving every time a neighbor walked or drove by our house. Ask anyone on my street, I am the mayor. I also used to be the Bike Whisperer, having taught every child on our avenue to ride a bike. I’m the Grand Poo-Bah of Halloween parades, the Pet Pastor of dog funerals, and the Maestro of Talent Shows. I soothe myself by reading the paper and reminding myself that this predicament is not the humiliating event that it would’ve been ten years ago. Today, we are a statistic; we are one in every six families in the country. We are no longer the upper middle class. As a matter of fact I saw a frightening chart the other day that put our family of five under the poverty line. We are poor . Shocking to me, but nothing new in 2011. But something unprecedented happened since last Wednesday. In the words of author Gene O’Kelly, not only have I let go of something precious but I’ve also gained something precious, and that is the palpable sense of being carried by my community when I couldn’t walk through this letting go process by myself. How precious the feeling of neighbors reaching out and helping in ways that used to be acceptable (when was the last time you asked your neighbor for even a cup of sugar?). This week, no one rang the doorbell. They just marched in and got down on their knees and started scrubbing. It took me a week to find out who painted the corner of the bathroom where my two teenage boys had missed the target for the past six years. It turned out to be my neighbors who went in there and anonymously redid that bathroom. They get the MVP (Most Vile Painting) award. Longtime friends built shelves, threw out my too-big-for-my-kitchen fridge and loaned me couches, a dining room set, patio furniture and plants to freshen up the place. Other neighbors arrived with lottery tickets in the hopes that I’d win and get to stay! Such an amazing gift, my friends have given me. In the weirdest way, my house is now the most livable it has ever been, only because my friends have helped me, in the most radical way, to make it the most sell-able. I normally blog about fitness and I’ve always said that fitness can be a metaphor for life and what applies to life also applies to fitness — when we least feel like walking the walk is when it most matters. And from the dirt can arise the most beautiful of flowers. This week, I have been given the gift of community and friendship that almost (almost) eclipses the loss that I will feel leaving this street and this house. I should also mention that releasing the bondage of all my “stuff’ is very similar to the experience of shedding unwanted pounds. We start to feel what it feels like to be free of unnecessary weight that we didn’t know was weighing us down until it was gone. Finally, we can breathe. So if this is the way it feels to be Broke, then I am the Richest Broke Girl in all of history. Bring it on.

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The central bank of Japan and Australia takes the first place this week

March 13, 2011

The central bank of Japan and Australia takes the first place this week

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Ending the Week with a Cliffhanger for the Markets

March 12, 2011

Ending the Week with a Cliffhanger for the Markets

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Behind The Republican Ambush On The EPA

March 11, 2011

Can the 112th Congress officially claim the mantle of “most anti-science” ever? So says Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), a 36-year veteran of congressional wrangling over environmental matters. Even the contentious fights over issues like the 1990 Clean Air Act amendments pale in comparison to the environmental battles of the current Congress, the 71-year-old lawmaker noted earlier this week: “I’ve never been in a Congress where there was such an overwhelming disconnect between science and public policy.”

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Ethics Concerns At SEC May Undermine Funding Bid

March 11, 2011

As the SEC publicly campaigns for increased funding, chairwoman Mary Schapiro is facing new criticism over the appointment of a key agency official whose family has ties to Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme. Earlier this week, the New York Times reported that attention has turned to the appointment of David M. Becker, who was the SEC’s general council from February 2009 until last month. Becker was appointed to the position even though Schapiro and the agency knew that Becker’s mother had invested with Bernie Madoff. Veterans of the SEC, however, are divided on whether or not Schapiro or the agency did anything wrong. For her part, in a Congressional hearing Thursday, Schapiro admitted that the agency mishandled Becker’s latest SEC tenure. (Becker previously served as SEC General Counsel from January 2000 to May 2002.) “While Mr. Becker did solicit and follow advice from the ethics counsel, I realize in light of this incident that as chairman I have to ensure that we go beyond what may be required in any particular situation,” Ms. Schapiro said . At the SEC, Becker’s work involved helping to decide how Madoff’s victims would be compensated, according to the New York Times . Becker’s late mother invested money with Madoff, and Becker and two of his brothers inherited the investment and its earnings. The money was withdrawn well before the Ponzi scheme was discovered. “How could anyone have missed this?” said Steve Thel, professor of securities regulation at Fordham University, who previously worked as a lawyer in the General Council’s office at the SEC. “It almost has to have been that they did this by mistake. Because it’s so clear that this would create problems if anyone knew about it. I don’t think anything we know about Becker indicates he did this to protect his own pocket. I think that people didn’t think enough about ethics violations.” But in former SEC chairman Harvey Pitt’s view the matter is, in a sense, “much ado about nothing.” “Before Becker was hired he disclosed this issue,” Pitt said. “When issues relating to Madoff arose both he and the chairman did what they should, they went to the ethics councilor to find out what they thought.” “I think that ethical issues are very, very important but this is pretty much a tempest in a teapot if you will,” Pitt continued. “And what I’m worried about is that there are those whose agendas involve basically criticizing the SEC and whatever it does or doesn’t do. And my fear is that whatever anybody’s view on the merits of this [appointment] was, there are real and important issues the SEC is grappling with, and I don’t think this deserves to be at the center of another storm.” Schapiro testified before two congressional hearings on Thursday — one focussed on Becker and the other on the SEC’s bid for a large funding increase to meet the new financial regulations set by the Dodd-Frank Act. Critics, pointing to the failure of the agency to detect the Madoff fraud, are saying Becker’s work at the SEC is further proof of the agency’s incompetence. Becker’s financial ties were not publicly disclosed until Irving Picard, the court-appointed trustee charged with recovering assets for Madoff’s victims, sued the three Becker brothers to recover $1.5 million of the $2 million they had inherited in 2004. Becker and Schapiro both say that Becker’s work at the SEC only went forward on advice from the SEC’s ethics counsel. “Even if they did go through the ethics processes, the ethics processes are then problematic,” said Thel. “If someone could come to the conclusion that this is not problematic — that is problematic.” Bloomberg reports that Becker has said he consulted with the ethics counsel at least twice about work related to Madoff. One specific matter — and the biggest apparent conflict of interest — concerns the amount of money Madoff victims would be compensated. The NYT reports that while the agency had agreed to a deal that would return to investors only the money they had originally put into their accounts with Madoff, Becker said the commission should allow victims to keep some of the gains their investment had generated as well. That change would benefit Becker’s family. In May 2009, Becker went to the ethics counsel again to ensure proper conduct over the Madoff fallout. Bloomberg reports that Becker wrote in a letter to U.S. House Republicans that the counsel “concluded that a reasonable person with knowledge of all of these facts would not question my impartiality.” “That’s a strained conclusion,” said Steve Thel. “To say that Becker’s participation in the decision in the clawback would not have a direct and predictable effect is very problematic.” Furthermore, Thel pointed out, it is not merely a matter of hindsight. Everything that is troubling about Becker’s appointment was known at the time he was hired. Becker has said that his departure from the agency last month is not connected with Picard’s lawsuit. “The problem, the horrible black eye,” Thel said, “is that now the SEC has given people who are simply critics of regulation and the [Obama] administration a way to criticize the SEC and bring up again the Madoff failings which largely all predate the Schapiro administration.” Rep. Randy Neugebauer (R – Texas) said earlier this week that people from both parties agree there was at least an appearance of a conflict of interest, according to Reuters . House and Senate Republicans, along with the SEC’s top watchdog, are investigating Becker’s role at the SEC.

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Euro rises against the dollar at the end of the week

March 11, 2011

Euro rises against the dollar at the end of the week

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European stock close the week in red

March 11, 2011

European stock close the week in red

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Paul Blumenthal: Regulations Lead to Lobbying Surge by the For-Profit College Industry

March 10, 2011

This week the for-profit college industry hosts its annual Hill Day , where students and industry representatives come to Washington to talk to their representatives and lobby for industry priorities. The lobbying conference comes as the industry finds itself fighting on all fronts to block a proposed rule meant to rein in what many are calling bad practices by the industry. This fight has spurred the highest lobbying spending by the industry in its nascent history. In 2010 the for-profit college industry spent $7.57 million on lobbying, almost three times as much as it spent in 2009. The industry also doled out over $1.3 million in campaign contributions over the 2010 election cycle. The subject of the lobbying fight is a proposed rule by the Department of Education aimed at stemming a growing student debt and default problem in the industry. The new rules aim to mitigate a growing default and debt problem among for-profit college students. For-profit schools account for approximately 12 percent of all higher education students and they receive 25 percent of all Federal Pell Grants, while accounting for 44 percent of all student loan defaults. Investigations by the GAO , the Los Angeles Times , and the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, & Pensions (HELP) uncovered practices in the industry that indicated an emphasis on acquiring new students while ignoring the progress of those who have already been accepted to the schools. (These practices were uncovered in a 60 Minutes investigation in 2005 .) This policy led to huge rates student dropouts and loan defaults. Meanwhile, the schools reaped profits from the government loans each new student received. The rules , as proposed so far, label an institution eligible for federal funding as having “at least 45% of their former students paying down the principal on their federal loans; or their graduates will have a debt-to-earnings ratio of less than 20% of discretionary income or 8% of total income.” Programs that would lose funding “will have less than 35% of their former students paying down the principal on their federal loans; and their graduates will have a debt-to-earnings ratio above 30% of discretionary income and 12% of total income.” The Department of Education is set to release the final rules soon. The Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities (APSCU), the industry’s advocacy and lobbying arm, officially states , “The Department’s proposal will deny access by shuttering programs and putting millions of students out of higher education. That’s a bad deal for all concerned.” Two weeks ago the fight came to a vote in Congress when, in an amendment to the Continuing Resolution to fund the government, the House of Representatives voted to deny funds for the enforcement of the Department of Education’s rules on for-profit colleges on gainful employment. The vote was 289-136. Ninety-two of those voting received contributions from the industry. The sixty-one lawmakers who received contributions and voted yes received more than twice as much ($8,263), on average, as the forty who received contributions and voted no ($4,035). Letters of Opposition Before the House even brought this issue to a vote, a smaller group of congressmen protested the proposed rules by sending letters to the Department of Education to state their objections. Twenty-three of the thirty-five lawmakers signing these letters received contributions from the industry, which accounted for over a quarter of all contributions made by the industry in the 2010 cycle. On average these twenty-three lawmakers received $16,756 from the industry. Last year ProPublica examined the contributions to members signing protest letters over the education rules. This report looked only at contributions made in 2010 (not the cycle) and found that contributions from the industry skyrocketed to these members after the first letter was sent on March 22, 2010 and were often clustered around dates when the letters were sent. More than ninety percent of industry contributions to letter signatories in 2010 came on or after the date, March 22 , that the first letter was sent. A further examination shows executives and employees of for-profits clustering their contributions along with industry political action committees (PAC). Campaign finance records show thirty-five contributions totaling $40,500 to Reps. Buck McKeon and John Kline from executives, employees, and political action committees of Corinthian Colleges, Education Management Corp., and the Keiser University system reported on May 28, 2010. The two Republican congressmen each held the position of ranking member of the Education & Labor Committee in 2010; Kline is currently the chairman of the committee. McKeon and Kline had already signed a letter in opposition to the rule on March 22 . Kline had also signed another letter on April 30 . The congressmen are the top two recipients of for-profit college money among those who signed letters oppose the new rules receiving $99,750 and $71,500 respectively. Another letter signatory who received clustered contributions is Rep. Donald Payne. On July 19 Payne cosigned a letter to the Department of Education opposing the rules. This came after having signed onto two other letters on March 22 and April 30 . From the month preceding the July 19 letter , Payne received sixteen contributions totaling $18,500 from ten different for-profit college organizations. This spurt of contributions accounted for all but $3,000 of Payne’s haul from the for-profit industry. Payne would sign a fourth letter on September 8, a date on which he also reports receiving a $1,000 contribution from Bridgepoint Education. Rep. Alcee Hastings signed his name to more letters than any other congressman. Hastings received seven contributions totaling $7,400 over the course of one week in April. This occurred in between Hastings signing a letter on March 22 and a second letter on April 30 . According to Hastings’ publicly available schedule the congressman met with representatives from Education Management Corporation the week after receiving these contributions. (None of the contributions to Hastings came from Education Management.) These letters were part of a larger grassroots lobbying campaign by the for-profit college industry that included swamping the Department of Education with comments opposing the proposed rules. The rules ultimately received over 90,000 comments, many of them coming in bulk submissions from both opponents and supporters of the rules. Grassroots Lobbying Every time that Congress revisits the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 the topic of grassroots lobbying disclosure emerges and is soundly defeated. In 1995 Sen. Carl Levin, leading the lobbying disclosure push, called for disclosure of efforts to stimulate the public to lobby the government and in 2007 Sens. Russ Feingold and Barack Obama did the same. The reason for these efforts to enhance disclosure around these activities relate not just to their effectiveness, but to the potential for fraudulent or deceptive practices. Much of the for-profit college industry’s grassroots efforts have revolved around a letter writing campaign by students and faculty to demand that the comment period for the rules remain open beyond the proposed closing date and that the proposal be rescinded. A massive deluge of letters succeeded in getting the Department of Education to extend the comment period. A ThinkProgress * investigation revealed that some of the letters sent in opposition to the rules appeared to repeat numerous times, “[A]n Art Institute student “Alicia Laury” signed over 74 identical letters about her opposition to regulations on the for-profit college industry. Other names, with the same copy and paste letter opposing reform, appear dozens of times.” The industry also created a student organization , which is helping to organize this week’s lobbying blitz, known as Students for Academic Choice, hired lobbyist Lanny Davis to create the lobbying and advocacy organization Coalition for Educational Success, and is now using a fish mascot to make their message go viral on the Internet. The viral Internet marketing campaign proposes a mascot, the Fighting Salmon , for the for-profit industry. The Facebook fan page for this part of the campaign already has over 42,000 fans. While the grassroots lobbying effort is in full force during this week’s lobbying day, the inside Washington lobbying team assembled by the industry has been on the ground in increasing numbers over the past year. Lobbying Team The for-profit industry put together a large lobbying force over the year. Lobbying expenses ballooned from $1 million in the first quarter of 2010 to $3.25 million in the fourth quarter. Over the course of the year, the industry employed 158 lobbyists from thirty-seven firms and in-house operations. Seventy-one percent of these lobbyists had previous government experience and twelve were former members of Congress. The former lawmakers included former congressmen Dick Gephardt, Bud Cramer, Al Wynn, Vic Fazio, Toby Moffett, Henry Bonilla, and former Sen. Tim Hutchison. The lobbying firms include some of the most prestigious and well-connected in Washington including The Podesta Group, Akin Gump et al, Heather Podesta & Associates, Brownstein Hyatt et al, and Ogilvy Government Relations. A number of these lobbyists were scheduled to speak at the Hill Day events this week including Moffett, Fazio, Hutchison, and Bonilla. *ThinkProgress is a part of the Center for American Progress, which has run a campaign in support of the “gainful employment” rules.

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Dick’s Wings and Grill Hires Its First CEO

March 9, 2011

JACKSONVILLE, FL–(Marketwire – March 9, 2011) – Dick’s Wings and Grill, the award winning casual dining restaurant chain located in Jacksonville, FL, announced this week that Dave Eberle has been hired as its first CEO. In his role, Dave will be responsible for the day-to-day operations and support as well as growing the current franchise system, revenue and profitability.

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The bullishness starts the week with a roar!

March 7, 2011

The bullishness starts the week with a roar!

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John McCain Flunks Made In America 101

March 6, 2011

GOP Sen. John McCain is in need of a tech lesson. In an appearance on ABC’s “This Week,” the senator from Arizona said that iPads and iPhones are “built in the United States of America.” But every techie knows that they are, in fact, built in China.

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Another week confirming that the superpower’s recovery is strengthening…

March 5, 2011

Another week confirming that the superpower’s recovery is strengthening…

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The Dollar rises for the first time this week against the Yen during Asian session 

March 4, 2011

The Dollar rises for the first time this week against the Yen during Asian session

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U.S stocks close the week in the red 

March 4, 2011

U.S stocks close the week in the red

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Forex: Dollar Drops to start the Week as Spending Data, Fed Commentary Disappoint

March 1, 2011

Forex: Dollar Drops to start the Week as Spending Data, Fed Commentary Disappoint

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Forex: Dollar Drops to start the Week as Spending Data, Fed Commentary Disappoint

March 1, 2011

Forex: Dollar Drops to start the Week as Spending Data, Fed Commentary Disappoint

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Dave Johnson: Crappy Jobs Caused by Plutocracy and Austerity

February 28, 2011

There are good jobs and there are crappy jobs. There are burger-flipping jobs and there are skilled trades and professions. There are jobs that pay well and have benefits and jobs that don’t. There is even the job you had, now paying less, with no benefits. Much of the post-recession job growth is at low end. Many “better” jobs not at the low end pay less and offer fewer benefits than they used to. So the middle class continues to fall. The “economic divide” — the gap between the top few percent and the rest of us — continues to accelerate, pushed by the recent continuation of tax cuts for the wealthy, stock bubble-pumping from the Fed, and ongoing attacks on labor. And now, in particular by “austerity” budgets in the states and the pullback of stimulus and other programs from the federal government. If you are desperate you’ll take any job, and the “austerity” idea — cutting taxes for the rich and using the resulting deficits to force cuts in unemployment, services, things government does for We, the People — forces people to be desperate enough to do just that. At the same time, it is cutting the number of jobs and the possibility that the economy will ever create more. Why Crappy Jobs? Plutocracy and Austerity Why isn’t the economy rebounding and producing lots of good jobs? The answer has two parts: plutocracy and austerity. Plutocracy forces the money and power to the top, and that power forces austerity measures on us to remove even more money and power from the rest. Plutocracy : Fundamental changes brought in by the Reagan Revolution have come home to roost , shifting almost all of our economy’s income growth to a few at the top, while pitting working people around the world against each other. The forced decline of labor unions has left people on their own against giant corporations. This video shows what it is like to negotiate on your own, up against companies with billions in resources: Austerity : The second part of the crappy-jobs, slow-growth equation is austerity. Tax cuts for the wealthy have resulted in huge budget deficits, defunding government’s power to protect regular people. The plutocracy uses these deficits as an excuse to force budget cuts, “spending down” our infrastructure by deferring maintenance and modernization, cutting back on education, cutting back on basic scientific research and cutting back in many other areas thereby reducing our economic competitiveness. But they’re doing fine today, so they don’t care about how this hurts the rest of us tomorrow. Austerity cuts back economic growth. This week a Goldman Sachs report says that the proposed budget cuts passed by the House shave a couple percent off of economic growth. A Goldman Sachs economist has warned that the $60 billion package of spending cuts proposed by the Republicans to counter President Obama’s proposal could slow economic growth. The cutbacks will also hurt employment. Center for American Progress this week, in Cuts In House GOP’s Continuing Resolution Could Drive The Unemployment Rate Up One Full Point , Earlier this month, the Economic Policy Institute released a report finding that the $100 billion in discretionary spending cuts that the House GOP passed last weekend would result in the loss of nearly one million jobs. “Cuts of this magnitude will undermine gross domestic product performance at a time when the economy is seeing anemic post-recession growth,” wrote EPI’s Rebecca Theiss. Another report this week shows how state and local cuts are also shaving growth. And who can be surprised by that? When you lay off thousands of teachers and other government workers, this causes a ripple effect to grocery, clothing and other stores. It causes even more foreclosures. AP: State spending cuts slow US economic growth in Q4 , The government’s new estimate for the October-December quarter illustrates how growing state budget crises could hold back the economic recovery. The Commerce Department reported Friday that economic growth increased at an annual rate of 2.8 percent in the final quarter of last year. That was down from the initial estimate of 3.2 percent. . . . State and local governments, wrestling with budget shortfalls, cut spending at a 2.4 percent pace. That was much deeper than the 0.9 percent annualized cut first estimated and was the most since the start of 2010. The Effect On People This “austerity” craze — cutting taxes for the rich to force cuts in the things government does for We, the People — is threatening to destroy even the small amount of job creation we are getting. And what is the human effect? A report from the Coalition on Human Needs titled A Better Budget for All: Saving Our Economy and Helping Those in Need shows that millions of Americans would suffer from the proposed budget cuts: At a time when 14 million people are out of work, the House approach to the federal budget fails those who are struggling most, according to a new report by the Coalition on Human Needs for the SAVE for All campaign. The report draws a sharp contrast between the president’s budget for next fiscal year and the House plan for the remainder of this year, although it also notes serious concerns with elements of the president’s budget. It shows how the proposed budget cuts would both harm individuals and damage the country’s fragile economic recovery. The House plan includes the largest cuts, on an annualized basis, in domestic appropriations funding in history. An Expanding Economy Fixes This Cutbacks shrink the economy. And expanding economy provides good jobs with good pay and benefits and fixes budget deficits. We want an expanding economy for We, the People, not tax cuts for the rich and cutbacks on the things government does for We, the People. Tax cuts and austerity provide an opportunity for a few to cash out and take off, but does not provide for the rest of us . March 10 Summit on Jobs and America’s Future On March 10, 2011, the Summit on Jobs and America’s Future will bring together leaders and activists who understand that America faces a jobs crisis — and who are committed to building a political movement for sustainable economic growth, dynamic job creation, and a revival of the American economy. Free. $15 with lunch. Register here. This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture . I am a Fellow with CAF. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary .

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