Tuesday, December 1, 2015

New dad Zuckerberg vows to give away Facebook fortune

New dad Zuckerberg vows to give away Facebook fortune

[SAN FRANCISCO] Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg on Tuesday announced he is a dad and pledged to give away his fortune to make the world a "better place" for baby daughter Max and others.
In a letter to Max posted on his Facebook page, Zuckerberg and wife Priscilla Chan said they were going to give away 99 per cent of their company shares - estimated value US$45 billion - during their lives in an effort to make a happy and healthy world.
"Max, we love you and feel a great responsibility to leave the world a better place for you and all children. We wish you a life filled with the same love, hope and joy you give us. We can't wait to see what you bring to this world," the letter said.
Mr Zuckerberg will "gift or otherwise direct" nearly all his shares of Facebook stock, or the after-tax proceeds of sales of shares, to further a mission of "advancing human potential and promoting equality" by means of activities for the public good, the California-based social network said in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
Mr Zuckerberg "intends to retain his majority voting position in our stock for the foreseeable future," Facebook said in the SEC filing.
"As you begin the next generation of the Chan Zuckerberg family, we also begin the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to join people across the world to advance human potential and promote equality for all children in the next generation," the Facebook chief and his wife said.
"Our initial areas of focus will be personalised learning, curing disease, connecting people and building strong communities."
AFP

Fed's Brainard calls for cautious, gradual approach to rate hikes

Fed's Brainard calls for cautious, gradual approach to rate hikes

[PALO ALTO] The Federal Reserve should go slow in raising rates, a top US central banker said on Tuesday, adding that there may be limits to the Fed's ability to tighten monetary policy while other central banks keep it loose.
With the so-called neutral interest rate in the United States now near zero and equilibrium rates in other countries around the world also lower than in the past, the Fed has less room to stimulate the economy when needed, Fed Governor Lael Brainard said in remarks prepared for delivery at Stanford University. "The new normal is likely to be characterised by a lower level of interest rates than in the decades preceding the crisis, which counsels a cautious and gradual approach to adjusting monetary policy," she said.
Indeed, weak growth abroad has pushed up the value of the US dollar, lowering the neutral rate in the United States and pushing down on domestic job creation, she said. One model in common use at the Fed suggests a 1-per centage-point cut in rates would be required over the medium term to offset the negative impact on employment of the stronger dollar, she said.
With short-term borrowing costs now near zero, "This shift down implies a delay in the date of liftoff and a shallower path for the federal funds rate over several years," Brainard said."In effect, this spillover from abroad implies some limitations on the extent to which US monetary conditions can diverge from global conditions." Slower expected US growth as the population ages and investor caution in the wake of the 2007-09 financial crisis are also pushing down on the long-term US neutral rate.
Brainard did not address her preferred timing for the Fed's first rate hike in Tuesday's speech; comments in prior speeches suggest she would prefer waiting until 2016.
The Fed will consider whether to raise rates at its last policy meeting of the year, in mid-December.
REUTERS

World's richest 10 per cent produce 50 per cent of CO2: report

World's richest 10 per cent produce 50 per cent of CO2: report

[LE BOURGET] The richest 10 per cent of people produce half of Earth's climate-harming fossil-fuel emissions, while the poorest half contribute a mere 10 per cent, British charity Oxfam said in a study released Wednesday.
Oxfam published the numbers as negotiators from 195 countries met in Paris to wrangle over a climate rescue pact.
Disputes over how to share responsibility for curbing greenhouse-gas emissions and aiding climate-vulnerable countries are among the thorniest and longest-running issues in the 25-year-old UN climate process.
"Rich, high emitters should be held accountable for their emissions, no matter where they live," Oxfam climate policy head Tim Gore said in a statement.
"But it's easy to forget that rapidly developing economies are also home to the majority of the world's very poorest people and while they have to do their fair share, it is rich countries that should still lead the way." The report said that an average person among the richest one per cent emits 175 times more carbon than his or her counterpart among the bottom 10 per cent.
Rich and developing nations remain deeply divided on the issue of "differentiation" - how to share out responsibility for curbing greenhouse gas emissions, which derive mainly from burning coal, oil and gas.
Developing countries say the West has polluted for much longer and should shoulder a bigger obligation for cutting back.
They also demand assurances of finance to help them shift to less-polluting renewable energy, shore up defences against climate impacts such as sea level rise, droughts and superstorms, and to cover damage that cannot be avoided.
"We hope advanced nations will assume ambitious targets and pursue them sincerely. It's not just a question of historical responsibility - they also have the most room to make the cuts and make the strongest impact," Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi told Monday's opening of the summit by world leaders.
Yet many rich nations, led by the United States, reject the idea of a "bifurcated" approach with obligations placed on one group of countries, and not the other.
They point to the risk of carbon emissions - as measured by volume, rather than per capita - from emernging giants such as China and India.
Oxfam said its analysis "helps dispel the myth that citizens in rapidly developing countries are somehow most to blame for climate change."
AFP

Southeast Asia needs to do more to open markets: study

Southeast Asia needs to do more to open markets: study

[BEIJING] Despite numerous pledges and years of effort to transform Southeast Asia into a single market, the 10-nation region remains resistant to free-flowing trade and fortified against imports, to the cost of some global companies, according to a study for one of the region's biggest investors.
The study, commissioned and paid for by US automaker General Motors, highlights a lack of progress by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to harmonise trade and investment rules, leaving the autos industry with little to show for a decade of trade liberalisation.
In the study, consultancy Oxford Economics found that tariffs in ASEAN on imported goods such as cars generally have fallen "dramatically", but this is undermined by industrial policies that promote some products, through tax and other incentives, but require them to have high levels of locally made components that put imported goods at a competitive disadvantage.
Policies like Indonesia's "low-cost green cars" (LCGC) and one in Thailand dubbed Eco2 neutralise the positive impact of lower tariffs, says GM.
"South Korea is GM's major manufacturing hub. There is a free trade agreement between Korea and ASEAN and we would like this to operate as a free trade agreement and as effectively as possible," Matt Hobbs, vice president in charge of government relations and public policy for GM International, told Reuters.
Under current conditions, GM cannot deploy vehicles made in Korea to be sold competitively in ASEAN countries, he said.
SINGLE MARKET
ASEAN formally established an ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) at its annual summit last month, aiming to create a single market with few barriers to the flow of trade, capital and professional labour in an area of 625 million people.
"In practice, we have virtually eliminated tariff barriers between us," said Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, the summit host. "Now we have to assure freer movements and removal of barriers that hinder growth and investment." Twelve years in the making, Mr Najib said it will take another 10 years to put into effect all the measures of the AEC, which comes into being on Dec 31. Politically sensitive sectors such as agriculture, auto production and steel will remain protected during that period.
An integrated ASEAN economy is meant to compete with China, India and Japan - ASEAN's combined GDP of US$2.6 trillion would make it the world's seventh largest economy - but endemic corruption, poor governance and a lack of transparency in some members pose formidable obstacles to full integration.
DRAG ON GROWTH
For GM, being able to use existing capacity in South Korea, a major export hub for the company, is critical to its bottom line, especially as it restructures its business in southeast Asia. As part of that process, GM has stopped producing GM-branded cars in Indonesia and is scaling down its Thai plant.
Without significant export markets, like southeast Asia, GM Korea will find it tougher to be profitable and may need to make permanent capacity cuts, analysts say. Not so long ago, Korea was producing close to a fifth of GM's global output, but labour costs have risen by nearly half in five years, pushing it into a high-cost bracket along with Japan.
According to the GM-commissioned study, non-tariff measures have gained momentum in ASEAN since the global financial crisis. The study counted 190 additional non-tariff measures implemented in 2009-13, with 75 such measures in Indonesia, 39 in Vietnam, 27 in Thailand, and 16 in Malaysia.
These are a drag on the region's economic growth, and cost jobs, the study said, adding that if all these measures were removed, GDP in the bloc's five biggest economies would grow by an extra 0.5 percentage point in 2025, resulting in more than half a million new jobs.
For GM, policies such as LCGC and Eco2 make a car like the Chevrolet Spark less competitive. The specifications for the Korean-built subcompact model are similar to those required to qualify for the Indonesian and Thai programs.
But in Thailand, the Spark carries an 80 per cent duty as there is no coverage under the 2007 ASEAN-South Korea free trade agreement.
Also, the Spark would not qualify for the lower tax and other Eco2 benefits because it doesn't meet local content requirements. The cost of manufacturing an imported Spark would be "thousands of dollars" more than an average Eco2-qualified car made in Thailand, a GM spokesman said.
GM's Hobbs reckons ASEAN could be the world's sixth-largest car market by volume by 2018 - if it operates as a true single market. "If you add all the (ASEAN) countries together and they could function as a single, unified region, then that would make (ASEAN) even more competitive as a production base for the rest of the world," he added.
REUTERS

Southeast Asia needs to do more to open markets: study

Southeast Asia needs to do more to open markets: study

[BEIJING] Despite numerous pledges and years of effort to transform Southeast Asia into a single market, the 10-nation region remains resistant to free-flowing trade and fortified against imports, to the cost of some global companies, according to a study for one of the region's biggest investors.
The study, commissioned and paid for by US automaker General Motors, highlights a lack of progress by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to harmonise trade and investment rules, leaving the autos industry with little to show for a decade of trade liberalisation.
In the study, consultancy Oxford Economics found that tariffs in ASEAN on imported goods such as cars generally have fallen "dramatically", but this is undermined by industrial policies that promote some products, through tax and other incentives, but require them to have high levels of locally made components that put imported goods at a competitive disadvantage.
Policies like Indonesia's "low-cost green cars" (LCGC) and one in Thailand dubbed Eco2 neutralise the positive impact of lower tariffs, says GM.
"South Korea is GM's major manufacturing hub. There is a free trade agreement between Korea and ASEAN and we would like this to operate as a free trade agreement and as effectively as possible," Matt Hobbs, vice president in charge of government relations and public policy for GM International, told Reuters.
Under current conditions, GM cannot deploy vehicles made in Korea to be sold competitively in ASEAN countries, he said.
SINGLE MARKET
ASEAN formally established an ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) at its annual summit last month, aiming to create a single market with few barriers to the flow of trade, capital and professional labour in an area of 625 million people.
"In practice, we have virtually eliminated tariff barriers between us," said Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, the summit host. "Now we have to assure freer movements and removal of barriers that hinder growth and investment." Twelve years in the making, Mr Najib said it will take another 10 years to put into effect all the measures of the AEC, which comes into being on Dec 31. Politically sensitive sectors such as agriculture, auto production and steel will remain protected during that period.
An integrated ASEAN economy is meant to compete with China, India and Japan - ASEAN's combined GDP of US$2.6 trillion would make it the world's seventh largest economy - but endemic corruption, poor governance and a lack of transparency in some members pose formidable obstacles to full integration.
DRAG ON GROWTH
For GM, being able to use existing capacity in South Korea, a major export hub for the company, is critical to its bottom line, especially as it restructures its business in southeast Asia. As part of that process, GM has stopped producing GM-branded cars in Indonesia and is scaling down its Thai plant.
Without significant export markets, like southeast Asia, GM Korea will find it tougher to be profitable and may need to make permanent capacity cuts, analysts say. Not so long ago, Korea was producing close to a fifth of GM's global output, but labour costs have risen by nearly half in five years, pushing it into a high-cost bracket along with Japan.
According to the GM-commissioned study, non-tariff measures have gained momentum in ASEAN since the global financial crisis. The study counted 190 additional non-tariff measures implemented in 2009-13, with 75 such measures in Indonesia, 39 in Vietnam, 27 in Thailand, and 16 in Malaysia.
These are a drag on the region's economic growth, and cost jobs, the study said, adding that if all these measures were removed, GDP in the bloc's five biggest economies would grow by an extra 0.5 percentage point in 2025, resulting in more than half a million new jobs.
For GM, policies such as LCGC and Eco2 make a car like the Chevrolet Spark less competitive. The specifications for the Korean-built subcompact model are similar to those required to qualify for the Indonesian and Thai programs.
But in Thailand, the Spark carries an 80 per cent duty as there is no coverage under the 2007 ASEAN-South Korea free trade agreement.
Also, the Spark would not qualify for the lower tax and other Eco2 benefits because it doesn't meet local content requirements. The cost of manufacturing an imported Spark would be "thousands of dollars" more than an average Eco2-qualified car made in Thailand, a GM spokesman said.
GM's Hobbs reckons ASEAN could be the world's sixth-largest car market by volume by 2018 - if it operates as a true single market. "If you add all the (ASEAN) countries together and they could function as a single, unified region, then that would make (ASEAN) even more competitive as a production base for the rest of the world," he added.
REUTERS

China will press ahead with reform despite yuan blessing

China will press ahead with reform despite yuan blessing

[WASHINGTON] China will not stop financial sector reforms after an International Monetary Fund decision to add the yuan currency to the fund's benchmark currency basket, a senior Chinese policymaker said on Tuesday.
The IMF's executive board on Monday admitted the yuan, also known as the renminbi, to the Special Drawing Rights (SDR) basket alongside the dollar, euro, pound sterling and yen, a symbolic win for Beijing's campaign for recognition as a global economic power.
"The yuan joining SDR does not mean (the) end of reform of the financial sector in China," China's Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao said at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
But he made it clear Beijing was in no rush to allow the yuan to float freely, as China tried to change from an investment-driven model of economic growth to one linked more closely to innovation. "Now we are continuing with a managed floating system and we hope this system can help us to successfully complete the transition," he said.
Mr Zhu also said that he hoped the currency would one day fully reflect market values.
IMF policymakers stressed at Monday's SDR discussion the need for China to continue and deepen reforms, and to tackle any operational issues which might inhibit IMF members from exchanging renminbi for other currencies, the IMF said.
IMF staff pointed to gaps between onshore and offshore exchange rates and warned future deviations could pose challenges for IMF members, who may receive some disbursements in RMB once the decision takes effect.
The staff outlined increasing use of the yuan, which had to meet the test of being widely used to make international payments and traded broadly in foreign exchange markets.
A survey showed members of the IMF reported holding US$70 billion in renminbi-denominated assets in 2014, or 1.1 per cent of official foreign asset holdings.
Data suggested that daily average RMB turnover was roughly US$250 billion in six regional trading centers, behind the four other SDR currencies as well as the Australian dollar, Canadian dollar and Swiss franc, the report said.
Data through April showed turnover in London rose 80 per cent over two years, while turnover in Canada - home to one of only two RMB clearing and settlement centres in the Americas - was up more than 400 per cent at 0.2 billion.
Trading in New York was too thin to warrant a separate mention. Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is leading a push to establish a US renminbi hub.
REUTERS

The New American Century (Video)



The New American Century

 

The New American CenturyThis documentary film goes in detail through the untold history of The Project for the New American Century with tons of archival footage and connects it right into the present.
It exposes how every major war in US history was based on a complete fraud with video of insiders themselves admitting it. This film shows how the first film theaters in the US were used over a hundred years ago to broadcast propaganda to rile the American people into the Spanish-American War.
It film shows the white papers of the oil company Unocal which called for the creation of a pipeline through Afghanistan and how their exact needs were fulfilled through the US invasion of Afghanistan.
This documentary shows how Halliburton under their "cost plus" exclusive contract with the US Government went on a mad dash spending spree akin to something out of the movie Brewster's Millions, yet instead of blowing $30 million they blew through BILLIONS by literally burning millions of dollars worth of hundred thousand dollar cars and trucks if they had so much as a flat tire.

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