Friday, September 4, 2015

PAP's getting its message across to voters: PM Lee

PAP's getting its message across to voters: PM Lee

By
[SINGAPORE] Things have "gone well" for the ruling People's Action Party at half-time in the general election campaign, according to its party boss Lee Hsien Loong.
Voters have been "receptive" during the campaign and Mr Lee, who is also the prime minister, said at a press conference on Saurday that the PAP has got its message across.
This election is about Singapore's future, choosing the government and leadership and setting the direction for the country, he said.
Noting that the hustings this time around have been less heated, the PAP's secretary-general called on voters to judge "fairly and dispassionately" the character and intentions of the candidates before voting on Polling Day on September 11.
"Compare the candidates on their quality of character, their integrity, their commitment to serve. Then cast your vote in good conscience on what you believe will secure a good future for your children," Mr Lee said.
On the controversial Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council issue, he said it is important to raise it.
"As the ferocity of the response shows, I think the facts have exposed a raw nerve," he said of the Workers' Party which is defending the Aljunied GRC and the Hougang and Punggol East single wards.
"As the dust settles, I think the record will show that there remains important questions to be answered. They know what the questions are, they know what voters need to know."
But Mr Lee indicated that the PAP would not harp on the issue any more in the remaining days of the campaign.
"We have made out points. Voters are clear-eyed and we will leave it to them."
On the opposition in general, Mr Lee said good policies are a result of the people working directly with the PAP - there's no need for intermediaries, or co-drivers.
Mr Lee was flanked at the press conference by PAP candidates Lim Swee Say, Ng Eng Hen, Halimah Yacob, S Iswaran and Desmond Lee.

Fed seen deferring rate hike despite unemployment fall

Fed seen deferring rate hike despite unemployment fall

[WASHINGTON] The Federal Reserve is expected to put off a long-planned interest rate increase this month despite another fall in the US jobless rate, placing concerns about China ahead of US data.
Analysts said on Friday that the mixed August jobs report - job creation slowed to 173,000 but unemployment fell to 5.1 per cent - backed the Fed launching on a long-awaited series of rate hikes to "normalize" monetary policy after years in crisis mode. But continued worries about Beijing's ability to counter the downturn in its huge economy, and the stress that has brought in global financial markets, will likely give Fed Chair Janet Yellen and her team pause before pushing ahead.
"Their main concern has not been the current state of the domestic economy, which we know has been strong, but fears about possible spill-overs from China and the stock market volatility on future activity," said Harm Bandholz of UniCredit.
The policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee has appeared anxious to get past an initial increase in the benchmark federal funds rate, which has sat at zero per cent since 2008 to reboot the economy after the Great Recession.
Critics say the ultra-low rate is no longer helping growth but is feeding excessive speculation and overly high prices in asset markets, and threatens to spark a burst of inflation.
But defenders say low rates remain justified by the slow levels of investment and consumer spending, and the lack of any real signs of inflation. Even so, analysts said those arguments have been pushed to the side by the economic turmoil especially since China's August 11 yuan devaluation.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned this week that the fallout from China's troubles on other economies could be larger than expected. Those considerations are likely to gain greater weight than domestic indicators when the FOMC meets next on monetary policy, on September 16-17.
On Friday, the worries continued: the leading markets in Japan and Europe fell more than 2.2 per cent, and on Wall Street the S&P 500 dropped 1.5 per cent.
"The question remains how much weight the Fed will place on positive labor market data and whether or not this will outweigh their more skeptical views on inflation and global market instability," said analyst Kim Chase of BBVA in a client note.
The case for a rate rise, to most analysts, increased with the August employment report. The 5.1 per cent jobless rate, the lowest level since April 2008, is well within the Fed's parameters for tightening policy.
But other barometers are not. The main one is inflation, which has held below the Fed's 2.0 per cent comfort zone, though mainly because of the plunge in prices of oil and other commodities.
Wage gains remain slow, at 2.2 per cent year-on-year. In addition, there is no sign that the jobs market is drawing back in dropouts or delivering more well-paid jobs to people. Yellen has made clear that those are crucial to her.
Dean Baker of the Center for Economic and Policy Research said the overall jobs report was "not especially positive."
"There is no evidence that wage growth is accelerating and there is a real risk that employment growth is slowing."
On the other hand, Fed Vice Chair Stanley Fischer, a Yellen policy ally, made clear last week that low inflation is not seen as a problem now.
"We should not wait until inflation is back to two per cent to begin tightening," he said last week.
Jeffrey Lacker, head of the Fed's Richmond branch and one of the minority "inflation hawks" on the FOMC, made a strong argument on Thursday for raising rates now. He said the jobless rate has long gone below FOMC targets and that inflation has already topped the target over the past six months.
"Recent financial market volatility is unlikely to affect economic fundamentals in the United States and thus has limited implications for monetary policy," he argued. "Waiting too long to begin raising rates could require a more dramatic increase in rates to restrain inflation pressures once they have become apparent in the data."
Technically, there is no reason why the Fed could hold to a wait-and-see stance. After the September meeting, it meets again in October and December, when the picture from China could become clearer. But as Yellen has stressed, the Fed wants to normalize rates only very slowly, and so the later they start, the steeper the increase could be if the US economy accelerates.
AFP

Emerging equity markets in crisis, little relief in sight: IIF

Emerging equity markets in crisis, little relief in sight: IIF

It could be a long downturn, it says, as it also flags a spike in mature markets' volatility

By
btworld@sph.com.sg
Tokyo
EMERGING equity and currency markets are in crisis, and bond markets in emerging economies appear poised for a fall, the Institute of International Finance (IIF) warned in a report on Friday.
In a highly bearish assessment of prospects, it suggested that emerging equity markets in general could be headed for a long-term downturn. The IIF added that while mature equity markets have fallen less dramatically in the recent China-led rout, their volatility has spiked worryingly upward, especially in the US.
The Washington-based IIF, which speaks for some of the world's leading banks and other financial institutions, had warned several weeks ago that emerging markets appeared headed for a perfect storm; its latest report confirms that this storm has now broken.
Emerging-market equities in general have crashed by 40 per cent since their most recent peak in April, the report noted. The declines far exceed those in mature markets over the period.
"Seven years after the Great Financial Crisis, the world's equity markets have experienced another bout of sharp sell-offs, accompanied by a spike in volatility," the report said.
"While prices have fallen across the board, the decline in equity and currency values across a range of emerging markets has reached crisis proportions."
The selloff in emerging market equities and currencies reflects the economic slowdown during the transition from the old commodity- and export-driven growth model to one that is more balanced and sustainable, it added.
"Until that transition is complete - and different emerging market countries will progress at different speeds - emerging market financial assets are likely to remain under pressure."
The IIF suggested that even if the US Federal Reserves were to postpone raising interest rates beyond September - an eventuality which market participants increasingly seem to expect - it would provide only short-term relief.
Emerging equity markets have been on a decline since 2011, when the super-cycle in commodities turned into a down phase, it said.
"If experience is any guide, such downturn phases of a commodity super could last 15 to 25 years," it said.
The second leg of the deceleration of emerging-market growth occurred when world trade, which used to grow twice a fast as global gross domestic product, slowed markedly, and then has now gone into modest decline.
World trade growth has been closely correlated with economic growth and corporate earnings in emerging markets, so the recent slowdown does not augur well for these markets.
Meanwhile, signals from the US Fed suggesting that it is ready to begin raising policy interest rates has sparked net outflows of around US$300 million from many emerging markets over the past year, said the IIF, which monitors such flows.
"The scale of these outflows (has been) similar to that last seen during the 2008 global financial crisis," the report noted, adding that the intense market pressure has driven a a sharp decline in emerging market currencies.
"On top of everything else, most emerging market countries have also had to deal with downward pressure on long-term potential growth, driven by slowing productivity and labour-force growth."
Chinese equity market gyrations have been the chief catalyst behind the emerging-markets slump, the IIF said.
"The key to stabilising this negative interaction between Chinese and (other) emerging-market growth prospects will be whether China can implement measures to support growth while not detracting too much from economic reform and rebalancing."
The IIF suggested that although emerging-market corporate bonds have been "relatively resilient" during the equity market slump, they could be "the next shoe to drop".
Weaker economic growth in emerging markets, allied with sharp declines in equity values, has increased the probability of default among many corporate borrowers, the report said. It added that many of these corporates have incurred "very high levels of debt"
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Blood and Oil (Video)


Blood and Oil

 , History


Blood and Oil
How did the Western world become so engaged in the Middle East? Why did the Ottoman Empire - now known as the Middle East become involved with World War I which was a European affair?
Anyone interested in learning and understanding the timeline of events that has lead us to the modern day conflict in the Middle East, should watch this film created by Marty Callaghan. 'Blood and Oil' is a detailed account about the motivation behind the birth of the Middle Eastern nations and the insatiable greed for oil.
The invasion by the British during WWI with the intent to quickly secure the city of Istanbul, ended up being an eight month-long series of battles, heavy with loss of life. Landing on the shores of the Gallipoli Peninsula at Anzac Cove 1915, the British forces were held back from taking the high ground by the defending Turkish troops, and therefore leaving their forces exposed and trapped on the beaches. During the initial landing, the British ship SS River Clyde became beached and under heavy Turkish fire from the shore. Many soldiers who emerged from the ship are shot and killed instantly, without ever making it to the beach. The sea was red with the blood of the slain, fifty yards deep from the shore.
Thus begins the entangled destinies of the Middle East and the Western world that will span decades. The tale of foreign occupation and misery with grisly chapters still being added - to this very day. Watch this film to learn the controversial truth behind the Middle Eastern occupation by U.S forces. 'Peacekeeping operations' and the 'War on Terror' are perhaps thinly veiled cover-ups for the Western fear with having oil supplies cut off. The Western economy would suffer greatly without such a steady oil supply, resulting in gas and fuel rationing.
The defeat of the Ottoman Empire in 1918 and events at the end of World War I, has led the Middle East into a dangerously discontent and torn land. As the author David Fromkin argues; the treaty forced upon the Muslim world was indeed -"The peace to end all peace".

The Money Fix - A Documentary for Monetary Reform (Video)




The Money Fix



The Money FixMoney is just information, a way we measure what we trade, nothing of value in itself. And we can make it ourselves, to work as a complement to conventional money. It's just a matter of design.
Money is at the intersection of nearly every aspect of modern life. Most of us take the monetary system for granted, but it has a profound and largely misunderstood influence on our lives. The Money Fix is a feature-length documentary exploring our society's relationship with the almighty dollar.
The film documents three types of alternative money systems, all of which help solve economic problems for the communities in which they operate.
The Money Fix examines economic patterning in both the human and the natural worlds, and through this lens we learn how we can empower ourselves by redesigning the lifeblood of the economy at the community level.

G20 to focus on global instability, slow growth: Joe Oliver

G20 to focus on global instability, slow growth: Joe Oliver

Joe-Oliver-commons
Tags: Economy
Structural reforms being planned by the world’s major economies have taken on increased importance because global growth has fallen behind forecasts, Canadian Finance Minister Joe Oliver told Reuters on Friday.
Oliver was speaking ahead of a meeting of finance ministers and central bank governors of the Group of 20 (G20) leading economies, which he said would focus on “how to deal with the instability and how to get growth growing again.”
Canada co-chairs with India a G20 committee on growth strategies, which were meant to add 2 per cent to the world’s economic activity over five years and which he said would achieve their purpose if carried out.
“Implementation is key,” Oliver said.
“But in the mean time, events keep intervening, and there are serial disappointments, and what International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde has called ‘the new mediocre’ is something that we seem to be confronting.”
All this makes it more important than ever for G20 countries to deliver on promised plans, he said.
The Conservative minister rejected the call by the opposition Liberal Party, made last week as part of the Canadian election campaign, to run deficits of up to $10-billion a year for the next two fiscal years to help boost infrastructure spending.
“We believe strongly that in spite of the international challenges which we and other countries have to confront, we’re on the right path, and it’s really important to stay the course of a low-tax plan for jobs and growth,” he said.
“We think getting into long-term structural deficits are precisely the wrong thing to do.”
Oliver said that the government’s plans for family benefits and infrastructure spending was already putting $10-billion into the economy without resorting to a new deficit.
The minister highlighted that Canada’s economy grew strongly in June after several months of shrinking, the budget was on track for balance, exports have resumed their growth, consumer confidence was still there and what has become a robust U.S. recovery was now helping Canadian manufacturing.
“So there is clearly positive news after a period of five months of contraction,” he said.

Microsoft said to weigh multibillion-dollar headquarters revamp

Microsoft said to weigh multibillion-dollar headquarters revamp

[SEATTLE] Microsoft Corp is considering a multibillion-dollar revamp of its headquarters campus in suburban Seattle, seeking to foster more collaboration among employees and attract young engineers, according to people with knowledge of the plans.
The software giant has hired architecture firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP as part of the effort at its Redmond, Washington, offices, said the people, who asked not to be named because the plans aren't public. Skidmore Owings designed Dubai's Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest building, and is helping Microsoft with a makeover of its much smaller campus in Mountain View, California.
Microsoft hasn't yet decided whether to move forward with the Redmond overhaul, said one of the people familiar with the matter.
"We continually work on Microsoft campus plans to anticipate future needs," the company said in a statement. A representative at Skidmore Owings's San Francisco office didn't return calls and e-mails for comment.
The potential updates would be aimed at shifting away from private offices toward the more open-plan work spaces that are favored by today's technology companies, said the people. Microsoft has been in Redmond since shortly before going public in 1986, a time when suburban campuses were in vogue. It now occupies about 80 buildings on roughly 500 acres (202 hectares).
The company owns the majority of the campus, which is about 13 miles (21 kilometers) east of downtown Seattle. It has already renovated some of the buildings to add open work space in place of private offices.
A broader makeover would include new construction and redevelopment of existing buildings, according to the people with knowledge of the matter. It could add amenities such as restaurants, retail spaces and public artwork, in addition to apartments to house visiting employees and interns, they said.
Many technology companies have chosen to buy, develop or lease office space in or near city centers to attract millennial workers who favor a more urban lifestyle. Microsoft wants to make the most of its suburban setting, by leveraging more of its outdoor areas, said the people with knowledge of the matter.
"Employees' tastes have changed," said Matt Griffin, managing partner of Seattle-based commercial developer Pine Street Group LLC. "Thirty years ago, they wanted to be on a college campus. If Microsoft thinks they're losing employees, they might try to make it more of an urban campus."
The Redmond campus is split into west and east sides by the State Route 520 freeway. Microsoft has agreed to help pay for a new pedestrian and bicycle path over the freeway. The plans now under consideration could entail a larger lid in the form of a park or buildings, said the people.
There also is a new light-rail station under development at a transit center on campus, in the Overlake neighborhood of Redmond. Construction is scheduled to begin next year, with an opening scheduled for 2023. The new station would be known as the Redmond Technology Center Station and include more parking spaces and covered facilities for bikes.
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