2011年11月3日星期四
VIDEO: 'Be curious and ask questions'
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29 September 2011 Last updated at 14:13 GMT Help
2011年11月2日星期三
VIDEO: Will China help at-risk Italy?
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5 October 2011 Last updated at 00:32 GMT Help
Shares up on eurozone debt hopes
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6 October 2011 Last updated at 09:47 GMT
EC President Jose Manuel Barroso has fuelled expectations that Europe is preparing an action plan Stock markets have been boosted by expectations that European leaders are about to act to ease the debt crisis.The main markets in London, Frankfurt and Paris were about 2% up, after Hong Kong closed 5.6% higher.
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said in a television interview that there were plans for co-ordinated action to recapitalise banks.
More details of any action plan could come later at a European Central Bank press conference.
There have been a flurry of reports and comments in recent days that European authorities have negotiated plans to bolster banks and boost bailout funds.
On Thursday, Mr Barroso fuelled expectations further, telling Euronews TV that the EU executive was proposing "co-ordinated action" to the 27 European Union nations to bolster banks.
The intention was to "recapitalise banks and get rid of toxic assets they may have".
Continue reading the main storyYou can see this as creeping progress towards putting adequate shock absorbers into the eurozone's financial system.”End Quote
Robert Peston Business editor, BBC News On Thursday afternoon, European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet will lead a media briefing, which will come after the bank announces its decision on European interest rates.Then German Chancellor Angela Merkel is due to hold talks in Berlin with Mr Trichet as well as the heads of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the OECD and G20.
On Wednesday, Mr Merkel said she was in favour of a co-ordinated recapitalisation of European banks if that was deemed necessary.
Expectations that there will be action to bolster banks and boost European bailout funds began on Monday, when Olli Rehn, European commissioner for economic affairs, said there was "an increasingly shared view that we need a concerted, co-ordinated approach".
In an interview with the Financial Times, he said there was "a sense of urgency among ministers and we need to move on".
Arsenal financial future 'secure'
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Arsenal moved from Highbury to Emirates Stadium in 2006 Chief executive Ivan Gazidis has said Arsenal's financial future is bright despite a fall in turnover and profit.The Gunners reported group turnover for the year ending 31 May as £255.7m, down from £379.9m in 2010, while profit was also reduced from £56m to £14.8m.
Gazidis told the club website: "We are very secure - it's a good set of results again.
"This is a very solid, very healthy set of results and it gives us a good platform to move forward from."
Continue reading the main storyArsenal's accounts do not include the £30m gained from the sale of Cesc Fabregas, the £24m received for Samir Nasri or the £7m paid by Manchester City for Gael Clichy
A reduced income from property sales at the Highbury redevelopment and increase in player wages have played their part in the drops, but the figures do not include the sales of midfielders Cesc Fabregas and Samir Nasri to Barcelona and Manchester City respectively.
"We didn't have the same kind of profit from player sales that we had in the previous season and that explains the slight reduction in profit," added Gazidis.
"We haven't seen the same kind of profits from the property side that we have seen in the past but that was entirely to be expected. Our property business is debt-free so any new sales of property do accumulate cash, which is very positive for the future."
Debt-hit Spain fears youth brain-drain
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4 October 2011 Last updated at 20:21 GMT By Matthew Price BBC News, Madrid Matthew Price spoke to some Spanish students about their job optionsSpain's "Lost Generation" can be found studying literature in classroom 007 at Madrid's Complutense University.
Some 28 students sit alert, behind the rows of desks waiting for a series of questions.
How many of them are confident they'll get a job when they graduate next year? No-one raises a hand.
"What sort of job?" asks one young woman.
"Any," I venture. A few hands go up.
How many believe they will get a good job? No-one.
Who thinks they will have to leave the country to find the work they want? Almost everyone immediately raises a hand, and a glum look spreads across the faces.
A class with hands held aloft - a grim symbol of the mess Spain finds itself in.
The university dining hall - a concrete walled relic from the '80s - is a buzz of chatter. Students struggle through canteen meals.
Among them is Jesus Poveda. He is 20 years old, and without much hope of a future here.
"I think we will do well at work," he says, gesturing towards his fellow diners, "but not in Spain. We should leave the country."
Opposite him sits Guillermo Lerma, also 20 years old.
"Nowadays … [a] boss prefers someone who is studying because they don't have to pay too much." he says.
"You have temporary work here, but not a salary."
'Big advantage'Spanish unemployment is the highest in Europe - and it's still rising. The number of people looking for work in September rose by 100,000 - the largest increase in that month for 15 years.
Continue reading the main storyI don't see it as a negative... Youngsters see it as normal to move, to study, to work part of their lives in other countries”End Quote Valeriano Gomez Labour and immigration minister Overall some 21% of people are unemployed. Among the young it's far, far worse. Almost half of all 16 to 24 year olds are without jobs.
It's an astonishing and devastating statistic for a country that desperately needs a dynamic, thriving and young workforce to help it recover from the housing crisis that plunged this economy into recession.
"It's a problem not just for them, but for all of us," believes economics professor Gayle Allard from the Instituto de Empresa in Madrid. She is an American who has lived in Spain for 27 years.
"This is the generation that will be paying for the welfare state and pensions in the future. If they can't get started with relatively secure, well-paying jobs, start to put away some savings, start to accumulate assets, start paying into the welfare system, where does that leave the rest of us?" she asks.
"It's going to be backwards. We're going to be paying for these kids for years and years. It really puts at risk the whole [economic] model."
The latest recruit to the brain-drain of Spain is Irene Roibas - an economics graduate who's leaving for the Netherlands. It's partly for personal reasons, but also because she feels her future will be better secured outside her own country.
Budget cuts have brought many students out on to the streets to protest "I don't think that universities are preparing people [here]," she argues. Nor "that students are taking all the opportunities they have".
Does Spain need to change? "Yes, I think so, definitely."
Not everyone though is worried about people like Ms Roibas. In the offices of the labour and immigration department, the minister, Valeriano Gomez, believes that youth migration is not a problem.
"I don't see it as a negative. Spain has changed a lot. Youngsters see it as normal to move, to study, to work part of their lives in other countries.
"I don't see it as a problem. I see it as a big advantage."
Escape valveThe European Union of course makes it possible, indeed easy, for the unemployed to head elsewhere to work - although it's not the totally free labour market many champion, thanks to the language barriers that exist across the continent.
Continue reading the main storyFor the country to lose this group of people who could help raise the productivity of Spain, which is quite low, is a tragedy”End Quote Prof Gayle Allard Instituto de Empresa So Europe provides some sort of escape valve for unemployed Spanish youth. Many head for the UK, for France, but also to the US and Latin America.
Venezuela's need for engineers is said to be attractive to many Spanish.
In time the hope will be that they return to Spain, with the experience and desire to help rebuild the economy.
But much of Europe will not attract them. Youth unemployment across the EU is - on average - high at one in five.
Spain is caught up in the debt crisis that's hitting Europe. The government insists things will improve, but some fear that, without the young, it will take longer.
"For the country to lose this group of people who could help raise the productivity of Spain, which is quite low, is a tragedy," says Prof Allard.
In the university canteen many agree with that.
Across Europe, youth unemployment is rising. And just like the continent's economic crisis, there is no end in sight.
Southern Cross homes transferred
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30 September 2011 Last updated at 07:57 GMT
Southern Cross is to be wound up by the end of the year A third of Southern Cross care homes have been transferred to new operators, the company has announced.Southern Cross said the transfer of 250 homes would be followed by further transfers in October and November.
Southern Cross was the UK's biggest care home operator, with 752 homes, but ran into difficulties when it was unable to pay its rent to landlords.
In July, the firm said it was to cease trading after all of its landlords said they wanted to leave the group.
The first "wave" of homes have been transferred to about 18 different operators.
Its largest landlord, NHP, which owns 249 of the homes, will be included in the second wave.
NHP is forming a new company with turnaround specialists Court Cavendish to run the homes itself.
Winding upSouthern Cross said it had entered unconditional business purchase agreements covering 70% of its homes, with the remaining 30% still in progress.
It said all the homes would be transferred by the end of the year and the company would be wound up.
The company also announced the resignation of it chairman, Christopher Fisher, who stepped into the role in April to oversee the restructuring process.
"Now that the transfer of homes has commenced, I consider my role complete," Mr Fisher said.
VIDEO: Japan businesses more optimistic
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3 October 2011 Last updated at 01:21 GMT Help
2011年11月1日星期二
Firms fear energy price hikes
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4 October 2011 Last updated at 04:09 GMT By Gerry Northam Reporter, File on 4
Energy-intensive industries have seen gas and electricity bills soar Despite government hopes that manufacturing will lead the UK recovery, there are fears some energy-intensive industries may be forced to leave the UK as prices rocket.Davin Bates is standing at the cool end of a tunnel kiln watching racks of cups and sugar bowls trundle out ready for glazing.
As we peer fifty feet in to the bright orange centre, he tells me that the internal temperature is well over 1000 degrees centigrade.
Then he breaks the bad news about his gas bill.
Davin is a management accountant at one of Stoke-on-Trent's remaining successful potteries, Steelite. It is a sprawling village of redbrick buildings employing 650 people which produces half a million pieces of crockery a week.
There are seven kilns in all. Keeping them fired up was costly enough last year.
But this year Davin has faced a 55% rise in the cost of gas. The firm's electricity bill has also gone up by 17%.
Tough decisions"We find it difficult to pass on these costs to our customers," says Davin.
He says profits are therefore getting squeezed and the company's future plans are in jeopardy: "Investment will have to be looked at, because this is coming off the bottom line," he adds.
Across the whole sector, energy bills are driving managers to make tough decisions.At the British Ceramic Confederation, Dr Laura Cohen has watched factory after factory close - and she identifies high energy costs as a major problem.
She knows that other companies have moved production overseas.
"We heard only a few weeks ago that one firm has transferred all of their manufacturing to China," she says. "Energy costs are a significant part of that."
It is a trend which is not confined to the long-troubled Potteries. Other parts of the country are hit too.
The huge chemical industry, which contributes £30m a day to the British economy, is also suffering.
At the family firm of Thomas Swan in County Durham, enormous sealed vats of chemicals are heated and stirred to make specialist powders and liquids for niche hair dyes, printing and cleaning products.
Managing director Harry Swan, a great-grandson of the founder, has steered the company through the recession and now finds himself hit by electricity and gas bills of almost £1m.
His plant uses 28,000 megawatt hours of energy a year. Even before the latest round of price rises, his extra energy costs this year were equivalent to a month's profit. He is dreading the next bill.
For the Chemical Industries Association, chief executive Steve Elliott fears British job losses could be imminent: "There will come a moment when people say enough is enough," he says.
"There will only be one direction of travel - out of the UK."
There could be worse to come.
Industries have been totting up the cost of government and European initiatives to promote a low-carbon economy, the so-called "green taxes", and some say their additional bill will run into the millions.
'Tipping point'Cemex UK runs the biggest cement plant in the country, based on the outskirts of Rugby. It is not averse to the idea of a green economy. In recent years it has moved away from dependence on coal alone.
It now also burns chippings from old tyres and a fuel made from minced-up household waste. But the company is worried about the impact of coming green taxes.
Director Andy Spencer estimates that they will increase his annual energy costs by £12m.
What most concerns Cemex is that other countries will not impose similar new taxes on their cement producers. His prices would then struggle to compete on world markets.So Andy Spencer's thoughts are already turning to the possibility of switching production out of the UK to Cemex plants abroad, particularly in Egypt.
"I can foresee a time when economically it makes more sense to do that and I don't think that time is far away," he says.
"We are very committed to the UK, but there is a genuine concern that we could reach that tipping point where the economics don't stack up to produce domestically in the UK."
This seems at odds with the government's goal of rebalancing the economy in favour of manufacturing industries. The Chancellor George Osborne has called for "a march of the makers".
Andy Spencer sees that march hitting a roadblock. "We know we need to make the transition to a green economy," he says.
"But it must not come at the price of exporting our domestic energy intensive industries."
No blank chequesThe Energy Secretary Chris Huhne says there is little the government can do about some energy price rises.
"How much of this is due to the fact that these businesses are very reliant on world market factors? We've had a 27% increase in the gas price on world markets over the year to August," he says.
"Now with the best will in the world, I can't do anything about that."But he argues the government's reform of the electricity market will reduce prices for business and domestic consumers alike.
He is working on plans to announce special help for high-energy industries later this year, and says that in 2020 the net effect of the government's energy and climate change policies will be to reduce bills across the board.
But he is sceptical of some complaints on green taxes.
"I don't accept that some of the stories we are hearing about green taxes are correct. There are some ludicrously inflated and exaggerated claims," he says.
"I do not want to see even the most energy-intensive industries leave the UK, that would be madness.
"But am I writing blank cheques to anybody who says they've got a problem? No."
File on 4 is on BBC Radio 4 on Tuesday 4 October at 20:00 BST and Sunday 9 October at 17:00 BST. Listen again via the Radio 4 website or download the podcast.Dhallywood's fight for survival
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5 October 2011 Last updated at 17:37 GMT By Anbarasan Ethirajan BBC News, Dhaka
Sixty local films were made last year in Bangladesh The Bangladeshi film industry, known as Dhallywood, is about to face serious competition. Ever since its independence from Pakistan in 1971, local cinema halls have been banned from showing Indian films.
It was an attempt to protect the local film-making industry which is worth $20m (£12.9m).
But in the coming days, cinema halls here will show three Indian Bengali movies and nine more Hindi movies from Bollywood will be screened later.
Even though the move is not permanent, it has angered film-makers, producers and actors and has caused a fight between them and the theatre owners.
"Bollywood is a big institution. Their production cost is 100 times more than our production cost. How can we compete with them?" asks Masud Parvez Sohel Rana, a well-known Bangladeshi actor and director.
"It seems to me like you are asking a flyweight boxer to fight with a heavyweight boxer," he adds.
He says even the one-off screening of Indian movies will put more pressure on the government to lift the ban permanently, and if it happens, the home-grown movie industry will vanish in no time.
Film industry leaders also warn that more than 100,000 people are dependent on the industry and their jobs could be in danger.
Huge lossesHowever, cinema hall owners argue that they are losing revenue because of the ban.
Bangladeshi cinema owners are keen to show Bollywood movies It is also because of the falling number of films produced locally.
About a decade ago, Bangladesh produced about 100 movies a year.
But last year, the number dropped to about 60 and it is expected to go down further this year.
"We are not getting enough movies to screen in our cinema halls," says Iftekharuddin Naushad, who owns Madhumita cinema hall in the capital Dhaka.
"As a result, many halls have either been shut down or converted into malls."
In recent years, the number of cinema halls in Bangladesh has reduced from about 1,500 to just over 600.Many say the business is not sustainable under present circumstances and satellite television channels have been drawing away viewers.
"Our cinema halls are running with one fourth of their capacity and we are incurring huge losses," says Ahasanullah Moni, who owns Razmoni cinema hall.
The Bangladesh Motion Pictures Exhibitors Association has been urging the government to allow Bollywood movies to be screened in local cinemas to inject new life into the business.
"We are not asking to open the floodgate by importing hundreds of films. We want to screen a certain number of good Indian movies, Bollywood films, so that we can have some healthy competition," says Mr Naushad.
Joint productionSome film critics argue that importing Bollywood movies will also have benefits by forcing Dhallywood to improve its standards.
They say the poor scripting, production and technique of Bangladeshi films are driving away viewers from cinema halls.
Bollywood movies are already shown on satellite television channels in Bangladesh.
Pirated DVDs of these films are freely available across the country with Bollywood stars like Shahrukh Khan, Salman Khan and Aishwarya Rai are more popular than local actors.
Film Meherjaan include cast and crew from Bangladesh, India and Pakistan "Without bringing Indian films to the local market, there is no way to revitalise the industry. Actually there is no industry here," says young Bangladeshi director Rubaiyat Hossain.
To overcome the present crisis, Ms Hossain proposes more Indo-Bangla joint production.
Her critically acclaimed film Meherjaan, included cast and crew from Bangladesh, India and Pakistan.
"I don't think I could have brought my film to the present technical level, if I hadn't worked with Indian technicians," says Ms Hossain.
"I have learnt a lot by working with them and we do not have that kind of post-production facilities here in Bangladesh," she adds.
In an age of satellite channels, internet and cell phones, the demand for good and well-made movies is increasing.
So it seems Bangladeshi films cannot avoid competition for very much longer.
Soros' sympathy for bank protests
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3 October 2011 Last updated at 20:34 GMT
Other protests have been held in Boston, Los Angeles and Chicago Billionaire investor George Soros says he can sympathise with the ongoing protests on Wall Street, which have spread to other US cities.He said he understood the anger at the use of taxpayers' cash to prop up stricken banks, allowing them to earn huge profits.
A large rally is planned for Wednesday in New York City, with backing from union groups.
More than 700 protesters were arrested on Saturday on Brooklyn Bridge.
The demonstrations - based at Zuccotti Park, near Wall Street and the Federal Reserve - are now entering their third week.
Answering questions during a news conference at UN headquarters on Monday, Mr Soros said: "The decision not to inject capital into the banks, but to effectively relieve them of their bad assets and then allow them to earn their way out of a hole leaves the banks bumper profits and then allows them to pay bumper bonuses."
Mr Soros was announcing a gift of $40m (£26m) to a development project in Africa.
'Corporate zombies'Protests continued on Monday in New York, with many under the Occupy Wall Street banner wearing make-up to pose as "corporate zombies", eating fake money.
Protesters dressed as zombies took to the streets of Manhattan on Monday One of the protesters, John Hildebrand, 24, an unemployed teacher from the US state of Oklahoma, told the Associated Press news agency: "My issue is corporate influence in politics. I would like to eliminate corporate financing from politics."
Union members are expected to back a large rally planned for Wednesday.
Last Thursday, the United Federation of Teachers and the Transport Workers Union, which has 38,000 members, pledged support for the protests.
In Los Angeles on Monday, an anti-Wall Street demonstration was held outside the court where Michael Jackson's doctor is being tried for manslaughter.
Protests were held in recent days in Boston, Los Angeles and Chicago in front of their respective cities' Federal Reserve buildings. A march was also held in Columbus, Ohio.
A rally is planned, too, for later this month in the Canadian city of Toronto.
On Saturday, 700 protesters were arrested on the Brooklyn Bridge, where traffic was halted for several hours.
The protesters won support from actor Alec Baldwin, who posted videos on his Twitter page that had already been widely circulated.
One appeared to show police using pepper spray on a group of women, and another a young man being tackled to the ground by an officer.
"This is unsettling," Baldwin wrote. "I think the NYPD has a PR problem."
But the NYPD said the marchers had been warned many times not to stray on to the road, and released video footage on Sunday showing protesters chanting "take the bridge".
Ask the experts: Eurozone crisis
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27 September 2011 Last updated at 22:54 GMT By Laurence Knight & Ian Pollock Business reporters, BBC News
Our experts answer your eurozone crisis questions Last month, the BBC asked viewers what questions they had about their finances, particularly given fears about a renewed financial crisis and recession.Here, BBC journalists Laurence Knight and Ian Pollock answer your questions about how the eurozone debt crisis might affect you.
Why, with the eurozone in crisis, is the pound still so weak against the euro? - Roy Waite, Carentoir, FrancePut simply, the UK is in no better shape than the eurozone.
Both currency blocs (and the US for that matter) face the same economic malaise. Debts are too high, particularly household debts, so nobody wants to spend - not consumers, not businesses, not even governments.
That means interest rates in the UK and the eurozone are likely to remain very low for many years, making both currencies an unattractive place for investors to park their cash.
But thanks to the hawkish European Central Bank, eurozone interest rates have actually been somewhat higher than in the UK - and were even rising until recently - helping to push the euro's value up.
High interest rates and a strong euro have of course made things even harder for Greece and other heavily-indebted governments, and markets view their debts as very risky.
But the euro is also home to German government debt - considered an ultra-safe investment by markets.
Even if the more distressed eurozone governments defaulted on their debts, the consequences would be felt well beyond the eurozone's borders, much as the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008 was felt outside the US.
And if these countries left the euro, the value of the remaining, more German-dominated euro might actually go up.
How prepared are we, the Bank of England, etc, for a Greek default? - Robert W Warne, CardiffUse the dropdown for easy-to-understand explanations of key financial terms:AAA-rating GO The best credit rating that can be given to a borrower's debts, indicating that the risk of borrowing defaulting is miniscule.Bank of England governor Mervyn King revealed in response to MPs' questions in June that the Bank was working with the Treasury to draw up contingency plans for a Greek default.
He did not give any details of what those plans are, nor have any emerged since.
The direct exposure of UK banks to Greece is fairly limited, but - as with the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers - a Greek default could have a number of knock-on effects that affect the UK far more severely.
For example, it could lead to the failure of one or more European banks because of their exposure to Greece, or to a general loss of confidence in global banks, in the euro or in the debts of other over-stretched eurozone governments.
The plan may consider actions such as:
emergency cash loans from the Bank of England to the UK banks, if there is a collapse of market confidence in theminterventions to support other short-term cash markets, such as commercial paper markets, which are used by companies to fund themselvesthe government injecting new loss-absorbing capital into the banks, if they suffer heavy losses because of the failure of a European bank or losses on other eurozone government debtsthe Bank publishing details of an audit currently under way of the UK banks' exposures to the eurozone, in order to reduce uncertainty and restore confidencemonetary stimulus - such as cutting rates to zero and buying up more UK government debt - in order to head off a broader economic downturnemergency tax cuts and/or spending increases by the government for the same purpose, with some of the resulting borrowing to be funded by the Bank of England's debt purchasescurrency interventions if the euro were to drop significantly against the pound.What would happen to euros in bank accounts in non-eurozone countries when/if the eurozone breaks up and turns into two or more different currencies? - Robert, BathYou should check the terms of your bank account.
So long as the euro continues to exist - minus some members - your account should be unaffected.
If, for example, Greece left the euro, its government would probably pass a law overriding its existing euro contracts, as well as those of Greek banks, companies and individuals, redenominating them all into new drachmas.
Some legal experts have warned of a huge mess in these circumstances, with litigation brought by anyone who lost out on the conversion.
However, most financial contracts specify the law of a particular country as its "governing law". For a bank account in Athens or a Greek government bond, the governing law is Greece. So it would be hard for anyone to argue in court that these contracts should not be redenominated, if the Greek parliament says so.
But an account held in a non-eurozone country is likely to apply the law in that country, or the law of a popular jurisdiction such as England, New York or Germany. So it should be unaffected by a Greek redenomination law, unless your account is with a Greek bank.
If the euro ceased to exist altogether - with even Germany exiting - then what happens depends primarily on your account terms, assuming that they are not governed by the laws of one of the eurozone countries.
Your bank probably would have reserved the right to choose which national currency to use as a successor to the euro. Its choice would then be a commercial decision, based on how much it values its reputation and client relations over its own short-term financial gain.
Where does the European Central Bank get the money from to buy Spanish and Italian bonds? How much do they have available and what will they do if they use it all? - Peter Gray, Hitchin, HertsEssentially the ECB, together with the "eurosystem" of 17 national central banks, can itself create the money that it uses to buy government debts.
There is therefore no theoretical limit to how much it can buy up.
When the ECB buys an Italian bond, it can pay for it by providing to the bond seller with a newly-created euro deposit at the seller's national central bank.
The seller can then use this deposit as "money" to buy other financial instruments, or it can redeem the deposit for newly-printed euro cash.
Practically, however, there are three limits on how much the ECB can do this.
The central bank's first priority is price stability. Creating new money is typically viewed as inflationary.
The ECB may try to reduce the impact of this money creation by borrowing the newly-created money back from the market, or by selling other assets it owns - German government bonds perhaps.
However, in the current heavily-depressed economy, many economists argue that money creation is not inflationary at all, at least in the medium-term, as banks are simply hoarding the money.
Secondly, the ECB may make losses on the bonds if Italy defaulted on its debts, or if it sold them back to the market at a lower price than it bought them.
The eurosystem has "capital" - money given to it by the eurozone governments when it was set up, plus profits it has made on its operations - of about 80bn euros that can absorb these losses.
But if the losses are too big, the ECB would need to be given new capital by the eurozone governments - something they are not legally obliged to do.
So the ECB may be concerned that any such bail-out could damage its cherished political independence.
Thirdly, the ECB is concerned not to distort markets too much, and in particular, not to discourage fiscal discipline by the Italian or Spanish governments by making it too easy for them to borrow.
I have three Spanish buy-to-let mortgages. I am saving sterling in the hope that the euro will collapse in value, to help pay off one of the mortgages. If a euro member leaves, is this likely to happen? If I default on the other two mortgages, can the bank take the one that I have just paid off? - Michael Sands, Northern IrelandThere are too many missing pieces of information to give you a sensible answer. Are the three properties in Spain or the UK? Is your lender in the UK or Spain? Were the loans in pounds or euros?
Whatever the facts, you appear to be in a hole, and as the former Labour Chancellor Denis Healey once said, in that situation, you should stop digging.
Let's assume the properties are in Spain and you borrowed euros from a UK lender to buy them.
Your suggested strategy is complex and hinges on several different things going your way, which they may not.
Firstly, devaluation of the euro. That might happen if one or more countries left the euro, but equally the euro might in fact strengthen if just the weakest countries such as Greece and the Irish Republic leave.
If Spain left the euro and, presumably, readopted the peseta as the national currency, you might think you would benefit from a probable devaluation of the newly adopted peseta.
But you might still be legally obliged to repay your debts in euros, regardless of the new local currency in Spain. And again, the euro might not devalue but appreciate if Spain left.
So, your guess that economic upheaval will inevitably reduce the value of your euro-denominated debts may not be accurate.
Your ambition to default on two mortgages after paying off just the third is also off beam.
Firstly, it is arguably dishonest.
Secondly, if you borrowed from a UK lender, then unless they were asleep when they lent you the money, they will have a charge over all three properties.
They will be able to chase you for any outstanding debts, once they have seized the two defaulted properties and sold them.
The same applies if you borrowed from a lender in Spain. If you still owe them money after they have seized your two mortgaged homes and sold them, they can still pursue you for the debt, there and here.
If your finances are too distressed, default may be inevitable. But it will not be an easy escape route from the debts you took on.
Warning over mobility aid scams
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28 September 2011 Last updated at 23:02 GMT By Simon Gompertz Personal finance correspondent, BBC News
The elderly are vulnerable to high prices quoted on the doorstep Elderly and disabled people face risks from unscrupulous traders offering stairlifts and other mobility aids on the doorstep, a watchdog is warning.The Office of Fair Trading (OFT) is promising to try to stamp out unfair sales practices, by removing credit licences and encouraging trading standards officers to prosecute.
The watchdog said it had received thousands of complaints.
Buyers can pay 50% more than High Street prices on the doorstep.
Some have overpaid by hundreds or even thousands of pounds.
PromisesThe OFT has received thousands of complaints about sales of the equipment, which includes mobility scooters, special chairs and adjustable beds.
Some victims found the equipment they were promised failed to turn up.
May Bell, an 88-year-old from Sheffield, told BBC News how she was left £1,800 out of pocket and trapped on the ground floor of her house after a visit from a salesman.
"I thought I'd had it," she said. "I thought it was the end of my time."
May Bell said she was trapped on the ground floor of her homeShe had been promised a new stairlift. But after her old one was disconnected, the replacement did not arrive.
For five weeks, she was forced to sleep in a chair and use a commode instead of her toilet.
In July, the man who visited her, Shane Johnson of Nottingham Mobility, was convicted of breaching consumer protection regulations and sentenced to a year in prison.
Ann Pope, from the OFT, promised more enforcement activity to protect consumers.
"We are issuing a warning to the industry that we will take further action where necessary," she said.
RulesThere is nothing to prevent traders knocking on doors, although there are rules on what they can do once they gain entry to a potential customer's home.
They should show identification and be honest about who they are. They should make it clear that they are selling something and not put consumers under pressure.
Some doorstep sellers have pretended to be from social services to establish trust. Others stay for hours and refuse to leave.
In Sheffield, May Bell had a new stairlift installed for free after the manufacturer heard about her plight. But she remains frightened about answering the phone or dealing with a knock on the door.
Her granddaughter, Frances Bell, is still angry about what happened.
"They are scum to do that to old age pensioners, to vulnerable people, and leave them in the situation that they left my nan in," she said.
Yahoo! surges on takeover rumour
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5 October 2011 Last updated at 21:40 GMT
Yahoo is one of the internet's best-known brands Shares in the internet portal firm Yahoo have leapt 10% on rumours that Microsoft is considering a second attempt at a takeover.Microsoft, which last bid in 2008, joins a host of other companies which are considering buying Yahoo, one of the internet's best-known brands.
China's giant internet company Alibaba has already said it might buy Yahoo.
Rumours of a bid from Vodafone also pushed shares in BlackBerry maker, Research in Motion, 12% higher.
Yahoo shares jumped 10.1% to close at $15.92 and Microsoft shares ended 2.2% higher at $25.89.
Yahoo's current market value is $20bn (£13bn), compared with Microsoft's previous bid of around $45bn.
Neither party has made any official comment.
Microsoft is said to be divided as to whether it would make sense to mount such a bid.
Reasons in favour include the ability to beat AOL as a competitor by creating a stronger web portal.
Market shareMicrosoft already has an agreement with Yahoo involving its Bing internet search engine, which powers Yahoo's search but gives 88% of advertising revenue back to Yahoo.
Combing the two could give Yahoo 30% of the US search market, according to analysts.
According to the latest figures from research firm comScore, Google has 64.8% of the US search market, Yahoo has 16.3% and Microsoft 14.7%.
But Yahoo is seen as lacking in growth potential.
Early last month, Yahoo fired its chief executive in a row over the company's future direction.
It said last month that it had received "inbound interest" from a number of parties.
Sid Parakh, analyst at fund firm McAdams Wright Ragen, told the Reuters news agency: "There are many reasons why this thing probably makes sense.
"If you strip out the variety of assets Yahoo owns, you are pretty much paying nothing for the core business."
Crowds swell Wall Street protests
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1 October 2011 Last updated at 01:49 GMT
The crowds in Zuccotti Park are frustrated at a lack of employment and opportunity in the US An estimated 2,000 people have gathered in Lower Manhattan, New York, for the largest protest yet under the banner Occupy Wall Street.Demonstrators marched on New York's police headquarters to protest against arrests and police behaviour.
Several hundred people have camped out near Wall Street since 17 September as part of protests against corporate greed, politics, and inequality.
Earlier, UK band Radiohead were forced to deny rumours they would appear live.
A tweet sent out by a Twitter account linked to the protest movement set off a firestorm of online interest.
But a spokesman for the band later denied they were planning to appear, and the group themselves denied the rumour on Twitter.
"We wish the best of luck to the protesters there, but contrary to earlier rumours, we will not be appearing today at #occupywallstreet," @Radiohead tweeted.
Anger at policeThe Occupy Wall Street movement has set up its base camp in Zucotti Park, a privately owned patch of land not far from Wall Street.
Continue reading the main storyWe blame the banks. They were part of this, but so was Freddie Mac and Fanny Mae and Congress and you and me and everybody”End Quote Michael Bloomberg Mayor of New York City Hundreds of people have camped out in the park since 17 September.
The loosely organised group says it is defending 99% of the US population against the wealthiest 1%, and had called for 20,000 people to "flood into lower Manhattan" on 17 September and remain there for "a few months".
Some 80 people were arrested during a march on 25 September, mostly for disorderly conduct and blocking traffic, but one person was charged with assaulting a police officer.
Friday's protest numbers were swelled by local trade unions and by those attracted to the area by the rumour of Radiohead's attendance.
New York's police have come in for criticism by the movement since video emerged of pepper sprays being used against demonstrators last weekend.
"NYPD protects billionaires and Wall Street," read one placard carried aloft on Friday, the AFP news agency reported, as crowds marched towards the city's police headquarters, where they rallied peacefully before dispersing.
The stand-off at One Police Plaza passed off largely peacefully New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg used his weekly appearance on a radio show to criticise the protesters, saying they were targeting the wrong people.
"The protesters are protesting against people who make $40,000 or $50,000 a year and are struggling to make ends meet. That's the bottom line," he said.
"We always tend to blame the wrong people. We blame the banks. They were part of this, but so was Freddie Mac and Fanny Mae and Congress and you and me and everybody."
A series of other small-scale protests have also sprung up in other US cities in sympathy with the aims of Occupy Wall Street.
The movement's website on Friday said a Boston movement had begun, with other reports online suggesting a sit-in was due to begin on Saturday in downtown Washington DC.
2011年10月31日星期一
Climate 'could hit Canadian GDP'
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29 September 2011 Last updated at 23:19 GMT
Current federal estimates say climate change will cost Canada about $5bn a year by 2020 Negative effects of climate change could cost Canada the equivalent of 1% of its GDP by 2050 and 2.5% by 2075, a government-backed report has said.Damage could reach C$41bn ($20bn; £27bn), estimates say, depending on global emissions, the economy and population growth.
Higher temperatures could kill forests, flood low-lying coastal areas and spread disease, the report said.
The panel denied that Canada would gain from global warming.
"Climate change presents a growing, long-term economic burden for Canada," said Canada's National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy (NRTEE).
'Strong, stable, responsible'In a 162-page report, measures proposed included enhanced forest fire protection, pest control and an effort to foster the growth of climate-resilient trees.
The panel also recommended limiting construction in in low-lying coastal areas vulnerable to flooding, and developing technologies to limit pollution and slow ozone accumulation.
It said climate-related costs to Canada could increase from C$5bn in 2020 to between C$21bn and C$43bn by 2050.
These figures depended on co-ordinated global action to limit warming to 2C by 2050, the report said.
The findings of the panel were seized on by opposition politicians who believe the Conservative government should be doing more to confront the threat of global warming.
"Our coastal communities, our forestry industry, and the health of Canadians will all suffer unless we take action right now," said Laurin Liu, of the New Democrats, Canada's main opposition party.
"This out-of-touch government has produced no plan to deal with the impact of climate change," he added.
But Environment Minister Peter Kent said Canada needs "a strong, stable, environmentally responsible ... government to take care of the environment, and that is exactly what we are doing".
The report also said Canada had much to gain from an international, Kyoto-style treaty focussing on cutting carbon emissions beyond 2012.
Eurozone rates unchanged at 1.5%
: 52 BST resignation of President Jean-Claude Trichet as the Bank's Central Europe European Central Bank left interest rates unchanged amid the ongoing crisis in the eurozone debt.Benchmark rates were held at 1.5% in the third, after growing from 1.25% in July in an attempt to cool inflation.
Earlier, the Bank of England of British kept interest rates hold at 0.5%, but for quantitative re-started.
The decisions come from intensive European leaders beyond speculation does recapitalise banks.
Stiglitz: Austerity not the way
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3 October 2011 Last updated at 23:01 GMT Viewpoint by Joseph Stiglitz Professor at Columbia University
Joseph Stiglitz won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2001 and is a former World Bank chief economist Most economists thought that when the euro was put together, it was an incomplete task. They'd taken out too many adjustment mechanisms and had not put anything in its place. One of the things that makes the American common currency work across the country is we have a common fiscal authority and high migration - we're willing to allow North Dakota to become empty.
In Europe, there's no fiscal authority, migration is more difficult and most of the countries are not willing to let themselves become empty. So the framework for allowing for an effective common currency is not there.
Now you might be able to make up for the deficiencies in one part by strengthening another part, for instance by having a stronger fiscal authority. But they don't have that.
What they did fiscally was tie themselves to the stability and growth pact, which was a pact for recession rather than for growth because limiting deficits when you have a shock is a recipe for recession, which is what is happening in Greece.
So the question was always: when a crisis occurred would they be able to finish the task? And I think the jury is still out.
MisguidedThe agreement that they made in July was a reasonably good agreement. It recognised that Greece needed help to grow but they haven't put in any money and the process of ratification has been very slow.
So I think it's really a question that has not yet been resolved.
There are a number of institutional ways of going about helping to resolve it. The European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) needs to be larger or to have more ability to leverage itself. That's a minimum.Over the longer term they're going to need European bonds and a number of other actions, and they have to recognise the framework of austerity is not the way to go.
Issuing bonds should be one part of the fiscal framework.
The problem with the eurozone was the one part of the framework that they thought they needed was limiting fiscal deficits and that was just a misguided analysis.
Ireland and Spain had surpluses before the crisis. But they thought that having limited fiscal deficits was necessary and sufficient for protecting the economic framework and that was just wrong.
PoliticsThe July agreement was a good start if they implement it quickly. But that's not been happening.
Austerity measures in Greece have brought widespread protests Let me say, for democracy it's not been that slow. Two months to get landmark legislation through is not a long time. But markets move quickly. So I don't criticise the fact that there's been a deliberate pace - that's the nature of democracy.
My criticism is they didn't do anything in the 10 years before there was a crisis.
I suspect that we're going to see a lot of volatility. Whether at the end the eurozone will emerge intact or not, it's hard at this point to say.
It all depends on the politics. Even though I think the commitment of the leaders to do something is there, the political process in some ways is not in tune with the economics. The problems are deep.
I think there is a reasonably good chance that a year from now you would find the eurozone smaller than what it is today.There's a broad consensus among economists that the best way of doing it would be for the northern European countries to leave. That would be the easiest adjustment.
But the general view is that is not what's going to happen. The view is that some of the weaker countries will leave and that will lead to very large trauma in the global financial markets such as freezing the credit markets, a repeat of 15 September 2008 (when Lehman Brothers collapsed).
Growth potentialIf Europe insists on going forward with the kind of austerity packages in Germany and without the kind of assistance they need to help those countries with severe economic problems, such as Greece, then almost surely the eurozone will break up.
But if they come forward with that money, then it can survive, at least for a while.
Continue reading the main story Use the dropdown for easy-to-understand explanations of key financial terms:AAA-rating GO The best credit rating that can be given to a borrower's debts, indicating that the risk of borrowing defaulting is miniscule.The European Central Bank (ECB) is the one institution that has the kind of flexibility that is necessary to deal with the crisis. It will be absolutely essential, because they will be able to step into the breach and be willing to do that.Now the problem is that some people in Germany and elsewhere have said the ECB should not be buying Italian and Spanish bonds and that it should not be stepping into the breach. But if the ECB doesn't do that, then the eurozone's prospects are very, very bleak.
It's not inevitable that Greece will default if they come forward with enough assistance for it to grow. It has enormous growth potential, so if Europe comes up with enough money, it will grow and that will enable it to manage its debts.
But so far I've seen nothing in the form of growth assistance as opposed to austerity assistance just to meet its budget shortfall, and I'm not very optimistic that it will avoid a default.
Joseph Stiglitz is a recipient of a Nobel Prize in Economics and a former chief economist at the World Bank.
The opinions expressed are those of the author and are not held by the BBC unless specifically stated. The material is for general information only and does not constitute investment, tax, legal or other form of advice. You should not rely on this information to make (or refrain from making) any decisions. Links to external sites are for information only and do not constitute endorsement. Always obtain independent, professional advice for your own particular situation.
Dexia shares in new Greece slump
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4 October 2011 Last updated at 09:16 GMT Continue reading the main story Shares in the Franco-Belgian bank Dexia have fallen for the second day running as fears over its exposure to Greece debt continue.
They fell 37% at the open of Tuesday trading after losing 10% on Monday following an alert from the Moody's ratings agency.
Dexia is holding an emergency board meeting amid serious concerns.
The governments of France and Belgium, which are joint shareholders in Dexia, moved to guarantee its debts.
A joint statement from the countries' finance ministers said: "In the framework of Dexia's restructuring, the governments of France and Belgium, in coordination with our central banks, will take all necessary steps to ensure the protection of depositors and creditors."
The two ministers, who are at the wider European finance ministers' meeting in Luxembourg, have been discussing ways to support the bank.
Dexia's shares are worth only just over one euro, so almost any movement will result in a large percentage change.
Market concernsGreece-linked concerns are also hitting financial markets again after eurozone finance ministers delayed a decision on giving Greece its next instalment of bailout cash.
It came after Greece said it would not meet this year's deficit cutting target.
A meeting set for 13 October, when finance ministers had been expected to sign off the next Greek loan, has now been cancelled, says BBC Europe correspondent Chris Morris.
The UK's FTSE 100 index was down 1.5% at the start of trading. France's Cac was 3.3% lower, while Germany's Dax had lost 3.2%.
Greece announced on Sunday that its 2011 deficit was projected to be 8.5% of gross domestic product, down from 10.5% in 2010, but short of the 7.6% target set by the EU and IMF.
Eurozone banks have been hit by cash outflows since the summer amid fears that Greece, and possibly other governments, may ultimately default on their debts, and even leave the eurozone, leaving their lenders sitting on big losses.
Dexia's exposure to Greek government debt totals 3.4bn euros ($4.5bn; £2.9bn). Its total exposure to Greece - including to private-sector Greek borrowers - is 4.8bn euros.
It has already written off 21% of its Greek debts, but market prices now suggest the eventually loss to lenders could be in excess of 50% of the amount owed by Greece.
The bank is already partly-owned by the two governments, after it received a 6bn euros joint bailout at the height of the financial crisis in 2008.
There were reports last week that the bank could be split up, and speculation of a possible nationalisation of the bank.
Another option under consideration is the sale of Credit Local, a unit of the bank responsible for lending to French local governments.
UK construction activity 'stalls'
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4 October 2011 Last updated at 10:11 GMT
Markit said uncertainty over future economic conditions dampened confidence in the sector Activity in the UK construction sector slowed to "near stagnation" in September, a closely-watched survey has suggested.The Markit/Cips construction purchasing managers' index (PMI) fell to 50.1, just fractionally above the 50 "no-change" threshold that separates expansion from contraction.
In August, the index had read 52.6.
Markit said fewer new orders was the reason behind the slowdown, but added that staffing levels rose slightly.
Confidence in the sector remained relatively subdued, the research group said.
Also on Tuesday, builders' merchant Wolseley announced a return to full-year profit but said recent weaker economic forecasts were likely to have an impact on its markets.
On Monday, Markit/Cips data showed surprise growth in the manufacturing sector.
VIDEO: iPhone 5 'critical' for Apple
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4 October 2011 Last updated at 02:20 GMT Help
2011年10月30日星期日
IBM's bet on data-centric computing
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3 October 2011 Last updated at 23:01 GMT
IBM's Watson computer was a proof of concept, says Dr Menon Each week we ask high-profile technology decision-makers three questions.This week it is Dr Jai Menon, the chief technology officer and vice-president for technical strategy for IBM's Systems and Technology Group.
He holds 52 patents and is arguably most famous for his contribution to the Raid storage technology. Computing giant IBM has more than 426,000 employees, generating an annual turnover of just under $100bn (£64.6bn) and profits of $14.8bn.
What's your biggest technology problem right now?
There are always multiple problems, but one problem that we are focused on is providing our customers with IT solutions that are flexible to their needs, but easily consumable.
Our customers have many different kinds of workloads they have to run, for example transaction-based systems that have to serve thousands or millions of users at the same time, 24/7.
Or analytics systems with fewer users that require deep complex computation. The challenge is how do you satisfy all these different kinds of tasks?
The are two different approaches: You can standardise it all on one kind of computer, and use that for all their business tasks. But that doesn't really work: it's like saying 'buy just one type of car', and hope it meets the needs of a small family, and doubles up as a pick-up truck, a big van or an MPV [people carrier].
So the other approach is to realise that you have lots of different types of workload, and you buy systems that are optimised for these tasks. That's clearly preferred to the first approach. The challenge over time is that with lots of different workloads, you end up with many kinds of computers, and then there's the challenge to make that consumable.
We are working on a technical approach that will create a system that has all the pieces that make up a computer system. You build this system with different kinds of processors, and there are memory and storage and networking elements, and then you have very sophisticated software that comes with the system. And the software is able to construct the kind of computer you need.
So if you need a lot of computing power, medium-sized storage and not a lot of memory, that's what the system provides. And once the task is running, and you need more memory or computing power, then the system will make that choice for you.
And when your workload goes away, you simply deconstruct the system.
This is not just virtualisation, where you have one kind of standardised computer, with a standardised processor and a certain amount of storage and memory.
You need to be able to assign more than what a single computer can do.
This is very much customer driven. What our customers are telling us is: 'Come up with newer better computers, that take up less floorspace and are faster.'
People have amazing amount of workload, and require lots of different virtualisation environments, but they also have too many different systems.
So I've got to let customers reuse their existing assets, skills and software.
The software is key - it's a universal resource manager.
What's the next big tech thing in your industry?The next big thing in our industry are new kinds of computers. I call them data-centric computers, because right now our computers are very processing-centric computers.
These new computers can extract and find information in data that can aid human cognition. When we created [supercomputer] Watson, it combined hardware and deep analysis software that we designed to work together.
We are moving away from computers that compute, to computers that can extract information from the huge amounts of unstructured data - because every two days we generate more data than all data from the dawn of civilisation until 2003.
Watson was just an example to prove the point. There are very interesting business problems out there, and rather than having to be programmed these computers learn as they go along.
They are data-centric rather than compute-centric.
For example, they could work as a physician's assistant, providing all the knowledge, the data about the patient itself, manage the doctor's notes.
Right now, all we do is Google a medical problem, and we get back 20 documents, and we have to go through them and rate them and find the answer.
In the future, the computer will give you an answer with a probability to go with that, and that's so much better than what we do today.
That to me is the next big technology thing. And it also applies to government. Computers could help governments find answers to tax issues, zoning laws, financial issues.
From a technology point of view, we still need a few things that to support this - more memory in the system, and solid state memory and storage, and obviously the deep software.
This is not Skynet [as described in the Terminator movies]. People always worry about new technology. When pocket calculators were introduced, people said we would forget to multiply; when computers came they said we would forget how to spell.
In reality all these computers are assistants, and they save us time so that we can focus on doing the things that only humans can do.
Pilots, for example, have always had things to helped them fly a plane. But at the end of the day I would not fly without a real human on-board.
What's the biggest technology mistake you've ever made - either at work or in your own life?This is probably an unusual kind of answer, but the timing of innovation is really important. My experience is, as innovators, we are always frustrated if we are too late.
We say: "I had the idea first, why did product development not move fast enough?" But my biggest mistake was in pushing an innovation too early to market, and I've learned from that.
What I've learned is that you really have to prepare the market. You have to shape the market, prepare your customers, create a standard, get enough people to buy into the standard.
And if you introduce your product too early and you haven't done that, then your product doesn't do very well. You just create a vicious circle, because you don't have the profits from the product to recycle and improve and innovate the product.
And then, once the market is ready and prepared, then you will be hesitant because you tried this once before and it didn't work. Then it gets very difficult to reenter the market.
For example in the storage space, we developed this IP [internet protocol] driven storage attached to the network. We shipped it in 2001, and it didn't do so well in the market.
This is now a $3bn market - 10 years later it's a great story, but by pushing it too soon, maybe five years too soon, it soured our executives as to whether this really was a good idea.
And then it is hard to catch up later.
Timing is everything. You can be wrong on both sides, too early and too late, and both are bad.
Greeks worry about ambitious privatisation plans
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4 October 2011 Last updated at 23:30 GMT
By Nigel Cassidy Business correspondent, BBC News, Athens
The Greek lottery OPAP will be sold as part of an ambitious privatisation programme Go into any of Greece's 5,000 OPAP lottery shops and there is one thing you definitely cannot bet on. It is that the array of Greek state assets lined up for sale will fail to raise an agreed 50bn euros by 2015 to lighten the country's crushing international debts.
OPAP is on a long list of nearly 20 entities earmarked for full or partial sale, by order of the European Union (EU) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
They are the sell-offs Greece's European partners are now demanding should be stepped up, not least because efforts to raise revenue through tax receipts are still defeating the country.
But in spite of Greece's lofty plans, the BBC has found that only one solitary stake has actually been sold in recent months: a 10% stake in the mobile phone group OTE has been bought by Deutsche Telecom for 400m euros.
Consequently, the chances of Greece reaching its target of raising 5bn euros by the end of the year from asset sales look slim.
Fear and frustrationIt is easy to see why the programme is being opposed every step of the way by most of the state's employees.
As protesters unfurl their banners in Syntagma Square, it is clear that they bracket all the mooted sell-offs with other unpalatable measures, such as austerity tax rises and job cuts.
Greek utility workers are wary about plans to sell off the companies they work for Staff fear that as public services - from power and water supply to transport and defence industries - are sold, it is inevitable that their pay and pensions will be drastically cut.
For their part, Greece's European partners are infuriated at the painfully slow progress in freeing up all these utilities.
Critics frequently suggest Greek privatisation is mired because the Pasok party in power has traditionally protected state workers, and is not pushing the measures through with enough vigour or conviction.
Much resistanceWhether or not this is true, there are several other reasons for the delays.
Some of these are apparent if you take a ride to the Athens suburb of Zografou.
(Bids for 49% of the railway OSE are welcome, by the way, but offers may not be forthcoming until losses of a billion euros a year have been stemmed.)
Greece remains "the last Soviet bastion in Europe", says Eydap's chief executive Nikolaos Bardis This is where you find the headquarters of Eydap, the well-respected water and sewage utility serving Athens, which employs 2,800 workers and has a good reputation for maintaining supplies of high-quality drinking water.
Eydap is supposed to be privatised next year, but the company says little has happened since it was put on the list.
Few workers are expected to lose their jobs after any sell-off, but bosses admit that pay, conditions and pensions may not be maintained at current levels.
Yet a huge union poster outside the front door shows a wad of euro notes, with a running tap emerging from them.
The message: Do not try to profit from our essential services.
'Soviet bastion'There are two reasons why the sell-off process has been slow, according to Eydap's chief executive Nikolaos Bardis.
Bureaucratic delays have contributed, as have investors' concerns that the potential value of the company might fall, given the current financial climate.
"We can say that Greece remains the last Soviet bastion in Europe," Mr Bardis says.
"There is a lot of opposition to the process. Socially this is a completely new idea. People here are just not used to private investors controlling state-owned companies.
"It is also true that the (Eydap) capitalisation is low because the market is extremely distressed and [the sell-off] didn't happen much earlier when the capitalisation was larger."
Investors' concernsMr Bardis has recently returned from a visit to the City of London to drum up investor interest in his company.
MP Elena Panaritis says privatisation is slow because democracy in Greece is weak One concern expressed there was that the Greek government was retaining the right to set water charges, a job that might be expected to fall to an independent regulator.
Potential buyers do not like the idea of political interference in consumer charges, which could easily have the effect of wiping out profits or investment spending plans, Mr Bardis observes.
"They are also concerned about the country's solvency and whether it will stay in the eurozone or be forced to re-adopt the drachma," he says.
"And they are making the assumption that the country will ask its lenders to take a 50% haircut on its loans," he adds, which means the lenders should expect only half their money to be repaid.
While investors are getting used to the idea, the same seems to be the case with the Greek people, who are gradually coming to realise that their country is broke.
"I do believe there is now a a silent majority in the society which is in favour of reform," says Nikos Koritasis, a principal at the Koultadis law firm that is deeply involved in the country's gas privatisation.
The company is working for a new Greek agency that has been set up expressly to run the sale of the country's assets, and Mr Koritasis insists people understand Greece has to try something new.
"There have been long delays, but there is now a new will to speed up the whole process," he says.
Speedy privatisationOne member of the Greek parliament who has a clearer perspective than most is Elena Panaritis.
She is a former World Bank executive, brought into the ruling Pasok party by Prime Minister George Papandreou to help oversee decisions and educate other politicians about the ways of the markets.
Following another long night of parliamentary debate, the country is making "superhuman" efforts to clear the way for the privatisations, yet it is taking time, she laments.
"We haven't been able to be as effective precisely because our bureaucracy is so bad," she reasons.
"Getting anything done is so complicated, with conflicting regulations and far too many people involved in taking decisions on each single asset.
"All this is taking longer than the 16 months we have to get it resolved. There really is the appetite to get the job done, but there are layers of steps and we get bogged down with the actual details."
It took the privatisation pioneer Britain well over a decade to free up and sell off its essential industries. Greece is expected to do much the same in a few months.
So it is no wonder that privatisation is a hard sell. It is another leap for this state-dominated island nation into what are seen as shark-infested commercial waters.
IMF warns on drastic budget cuts
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5 October 2011 Last updated at 14:41 GMT
Changing economic times will mean a change in economic policy, the IMF said Europe's stronger economies should avoid imposing drastic budget cuts at the expense of growth, a report by the International Monetary Fund has said.If things worsen in the UK, Germany or France, they should "consider delaying" cuts, because they can borrow "at historically low" interest rates.
The IMF also warned that a recession in Europe in 2012 could not be ruled out.
Separately, a Markit PMI study said the eurozone's service sector shrank for the first time in two years last month.
The IMF's warning came in its latest 100-page report on the economic outlook for Europe.
"Finding a durable solution to the euro area sovereign crisis has become more than overdue," the IMF said in its report.
"(This) will require some difficult decisions to improve crisis management and a demonstration of unity behind the project of economic and monetary union that will convince markets.
"The pursuit of nominal deficit targets should not come at the expense of risking a widespread contraction in economic activity," the IMF said.
"If (economic) activity were to undershoot current expectations and risk a period of stagnation or contraction, countries that face historically low yields (for example, Germany and the UK) should also consider delaying some of their planned consolidation."
The IMF's Europe director, Antonio Borges, said that Europe had edged closer to recession. "We still predict growth in 2012, but very modest," he said.
But if economies go into reverse "all those countries with fiscal leeway might want to consider" changes in fiscal policy, he said.
'Spreading malaise'The weakness of the eurozone's economic recovery was underlined in data from the latest Markit/CIPS Services Purchasing Managers' Index.
For September, the index fell to 48.8, from 51.5 in August, its lowest reading since July 2009. A reading below 50 indicates contraction.
Markit said that a service sector downturn that began in smaller members of the 17-nation eurozone had spread throughout the bloc.
"The malaise is spreading to the core, where surging rates of expansion earlier in the year have turned rapidly into contraction in Germany and only very modest growth in France," said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit.
Bernanke: US economy 'faltering'
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4 October 2011 Last updated at 20:35 GMT
The Fed chairman also lent support to critics of China's exchange rate policies US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has told Congress that the US economy is "close to faltering" and more action may be needed.Giving testimony to the US legislature, he said the Fed was "prepared to take further action as appropriate" to bolster the recovery.
His comments come after the Fed already decided to shift $400bn of investments into longer-term government debt.
Stock markets responded positively, with the Dow Jones rallying over 1%.
But US markets fell back again somewhat in afternoon trading, until a strong late rally just before the close, which left the Dow Jones Industrial Average uip 1.4% for the day.
China 'blocking'He said the switch into longer-term government debt announced last month - dubbed Operation Twist - was the equivalent of a half-percentage-point cut in interest rates, and gave a "meaningful, but not an enormous support to the economy".
But he warned that the eurozone debt crisis, as well as overly hasty spending cuts by the federal government, risked undermining the US recovery.
When asked what additional action the Fed might take if the economy continued to weaken, he reiterated policy options he has laid out in past speeches:
giving clearer guidance as to how long interest rates will be held close to zero, and in what circumstances they would rise;increasing "quantitative easing" - the Fed's purchase of US government bonds and other debts;cutting the interest rate paid on excess cash that the banks hold at the Fed.But he added that the US central bank's monetary policies were "no panacea".
Continue reading the main story The Fed chairman also appeared to lend support to those seeking to take action against China's policy of buying up US debts - which has the effect of holding down the value of the yuan at a more competitive exchange rate."Chinese policy is blocking what might be a more normal recovery process in the global economy," said Mr Bernanke, who said China was shifting demand away from the struggling US and European economies.
The US Senate has just begun a week-long debate on a bill that would threaten China, and other countries accused of keeping their currencies unfairly cheap, with trade sanctions.
On the subject of the eurozone debt crisis, Mr Bernanke said there was little help the US could offer.
"The problems are not really economic, they're political," he said. "Because what they are trying to do is find solutions that are acceptable to 17 different countries, which you can imagine is very difficult."
He said that the US was an "innocent bystander" to the crisis, and while the country's direct exposure to any debt default by Greece was limited, the real risk was that a disorderly default could trigger a run on other eurozone governments and a banking crisis, which would hit the US badly.
Felixstowe opens new port berths
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28 September 2011 Last updated at 13:18 GMT
By Richard Scott Transport correspondent, BBC News A look at the new mega-berthsThe Port of Felixstowe has formally opened the UK's first shipping berths capable of taking the next generation of giant container ships.The ships, which are due to arrive in 2013, can carry 18,000 containers.
But they need deeper water to dock, and bigger cranes to be unloaded than are needed for the current biggest ships.
Felixstowe, in Suffolk, says 1,500 new jobs will be created by its expansion plans - 680 directly employed by the port, with another 820 at suppliers.
Import issuesSome 90% of the UK's trade passes through ports. Almost everything we buy that isn't perishable of small and high value comes in on ships.
Felixstowe is the UK's largest container port and deals with more than 40% of our container cargo.
But container ships are getting bigger, and that gives ports a problem.
So Felixstowe has built the only berths in the UK capable of taking the next generation of cargo ships.
The biggest ships in use at the moment can carry around 15,000 containers (TEUs or twenty foot equivalent units) but in 2013 ships capable of carrying 18,000 containers are due to arrive.
The port has dug two deep water berths - numbers 8 and 9 - to accommodate them, as well as bought seven of the world's largest container cranes. These cost £6m each.
"Failure to provide facilities for the new container ships would mean the world's most efficient ships could not dock in the UK, driving up the cost of imports and making UK exports less competitive," said David Gledhill, chief executive of Hutchison Ports UK, which owns the port.
'Essential'The opening of the two new berths is the first stage of a £1bn investment programme.
The next generation container ships coming from Asia will only make three or four stops across Northern Europe - and Felixstowe is expecting to be on their calling cards.
"During the last decade many exporters concentrated on the European market, however, economic growth in Europe has slowed considerably, whilst growth in East Asia has accelerated," said John Cridland, director general of the CBI.
"It is therefore essential that the UK is able to export and import goods on a global basis and the expansion at Felixstowe will be a key asset in achieving this."
Barclays heads UK complaints list
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28 September 2011 Last updated at 14:35 GMT
There were more than 250,000 complaints to Barclays in the first six month of the year More complaints were made about Barclays than any other banking brand by UK customers in the first half of the year, figures have shown.The bank received 251,563 complaints, with 53% of closed cases upheld in customers' favour, the Financial Services Authority (FSA) figures show.
Barclays said it had cut complaints by 14% compared with a year earlier.
Other brands high on the list included Lloyds TSB (181,907), Santander (168,888) and NatWest (147,109).
The data pulls together figures released in recent weeks by banks.
Insurance complaintsNearly 10,000 complaints were filed every day to financial institutions, with a total of 1.85 million made in the first six months of the year.
The FSA figures showed that, among the most complained-about banking brands, Santander was the most likely of the major brands to deal with cases within eight weeks.
It closed 98% of cases within that timeframe. This compared with 74% at Royal Bank of Scotland, 77% at Lloyds TSB, 86% at NatWest, 89% at Barclays and 90% at HSBC.
Complaints were dominated by those about payment protection insurance (PPI), especially after banks lost their legal challenge on PPI rules in April.
PPI is supposed to cover borrowers' loan repayments if they fall ill, die, or lose their jobs.
But mis-selling cases led to new rules on how cases should be dealt with, and also created an extra compensation bill running into billions of pounds for the banks.
Adam Scorer, of watchdog Consumer Focus, said: "This issue continues to dog the financial sector and is a big test of its commitment to treating consumers fairly.
"All firms need to deal with outstanding cases and make sure everyone affected is treated efficiently and fairly."
Complaints about banking, rather than insurance and some other categories, fell by 22% compared with the same period a year earlier.
'Good progress'The FSA's complaints figures are published relating to banking brands.
Barclays headed the list but said the number of complaints had fallen by 14% compared with the same period a year earlier.
"We want to get it right every time. When we do get it wrong, we apologise, try to correct it quickly and identify how to prevent it from reoccurring," said Antony Jenkins, chief executive of Barclays Retail and Business Banking.
"We have made good progress in reducing complaints with a substantial and sustainable reduction in banking complaints by nearly a third.
"However, there is much more to be done and we are working hard to further improve our service to our customers, putting them at the heart of our business and getting it right first time, every time."
The largest group - Lloyds Banking Group - had most complaints when all its brands were added together.
Some complaints that are unresolved by the banks themselves end up with the independent Financial Ombudsman Service. It recently said that the largest number of these complaints, in the first half of the year, also related to Lloyds Banking Group.
It also said that nearly two-thirds of the new complaints made in the six months to the end of June were about PPI.
2011年10月29日星期六
London 2012 athletics track ready
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World Championship 1,500m silver medallist Hannah England tries out the new track at the Olympic StadiumThe athletics track at the London 2012 Olympic stadium has been completed.
The track is made of synthetic rubber and has been designed to help athletes run fast times. Five world records were set on a similar surface in Beijing.
London 2012 chairman Lord Coe said: "Today marks a huge milestone for the project as the stadium comes to life."
Long jumper Chris Tomlinson, 1,500m runner Hannah England and Paralympic discus thrower Dan Greaves were the first athletes to test out the track.
They were joined on the new surface by local schoolchildren, who will benefit from the Stadium's legacy plan to be a venue for sport, athletics, community and cultural events.
The 80,000-capacity stadium is nearing completion with the latest anticipated final cost of the work being £486m.
Lord Coe and Hannah England take a run on the new track The stadium will host the opening and closing ceremonies of both the Olympic and Paralympic Games, as well as all the track and field events.
An 80m sprint straight made of the same material as the main track has been laid under one of the main stands and a 400m training track will be laid shortly.
The track will be covered to protect it from the elements while other work continues at the Stadium.
"People can get a glimpse of how it will look in less than 10 months' time when we welcome the world's athletes to London," Coe added.
"There is still a lot of work to do on the stadium but seeing some of our top British athletes on the track with local schoolchildren really underlines the stadium's potential for 2012 and beyond."
Hugh Robertson, Minister for Sport and the Olympics, said: "This is another piece in the jigsaw for our Olympic Stadium."
Olympic Delivery Authority chairman John Armitt added: "Watching athletes and children run around the Olympic Stadium's track 10 months before the London 2012 Games highlights just how much has been achieved over the last four years."
High Street bookshops in decline
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4 October 2011 Last updated at 01:42 GMT
The Book Warehouse saved Notting Hill's Travel Bookshop earlier this month The number of bookshops on UK High Streets is in steady decline, according to The Booksellers Association.Membership of the body, which represents 95% of booksellers in the UK and Ireland, has continued to fall over the last six years.
Since 2006, the total number of members, not including supermarket outlets, has fallen by 20%.
Independent bookshop membership has fallen by over a quarter during the same period.
Chief executive officer Tim Godfray has called for the government and publishers to step in to stop the decline.
"At a time when literacy is an issue and libraries are under threat from government cuts, we need to build a coalition of publishers, government and consumers to provide opportunities for the passionate and creative entrepreneurs who run bookshops on our High Streets to thrive," he said.
In 2006, there were 4495 outlets who held memberships with the Booksellers Association, including 1483 independents.
By June this year, the total number had fallen to 3683, while independents dropped to 1099.
Last year, 50 new independent bookshops opened across the UK but 72 closed, confirming an overall decline for the third year running.
One of the most high profile shops to close this year was The Harbour Bookshop in Dartmouth, founded by the son of Winnie the Pooh author AA Milne in 1951.
In a recent Booksellers Association survey, the top three issues concerning shop owners that the government could address were the cost of rates, parking and planning.
"This is not just an issue for our members; it's also about preserving the retail diversity of our town centres," said Mr Godfray.
The rise of the e-book has also been blamed, an issue which the government can do little about.
Sales of e-books increased by 318% in 2010 and many predict that at least 50% of all books sold within 10 years will be digital downloads.
Book retailers have also faced increasing competition from online retailers.
Spending on printed books fell by 4% in August this year, with sales dropping to a seven-year low for the month, according to sales analysts Neilsen BookScan.
Yet physical non-fiction book sales were up 3% on this time last year, with significant gains for some genres such as cookery and fitness.
Oil firm resumes Libya operations
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26 September 2011 Last updated at 13:50 GMT
Libya's refineries were mostly closed in March, when fighting intensified Italian oil firm Eni has restarted production at an oil field in Libya, as opponents of Col Muammar Gaddafi tighten their control on the economy.Eni, which was the biggest foreign oil producer in Libya before Col Gaddafi was overthrown, said it planned to reopen other fields in the coming days.
Other firms, including French company Total, have also restarted operations.
Meanwhile, anti-Gaddafi forces are closing in on his hometown of Sirte, one of his few remaining strongholds.
The soldiers, loyal to the National Transitional Council (NTC), launched a surprise attack on the city on the weekend.
The BBC's Alastair Leithead, near Sirte, says the troops have the city surrounded and are preparing to enter it with significant force.
Gaddafi loyalists have been fiercely protecting the city from NTC advances in recent weeks.
Eni said in a statement it has restarted production at 15 wells in the Abu Attifel oil field, about 300km (190 miles) south of Benghazi.
Slow recoveryThe company said it was pumping 31,900 barrels of oil a day, compared with a rate of 70,000 barrels a day before the unrest broke out.
The wells were closed in March amid increasing violence between Gaddafi loyalists and rebels, who later formed the NTC.
France's Total announced last week that it had resumed production at its al-Jurf offshore facility, which is capable of producing 40,000 barrels a day.
And Libya's state controlled Arabian Gulf Oil (Agoco) announced earlier this month that it had started pumping 160,000 barrels of oil from fields in the east.
The country was producing 1.6 million barrels a day before the unrest began, making up the bulk of its wealth.
Experts say it is likely to take at least a year before anything close to those levels are reached again.
The NTC still has not found Col Gaddafi, who ruled the country for more than 40 years.
But several of his children and members of his inner circle have fled abroad.
His daughter Aisha fled to Algeria, and told journalists last week that her father was in good spirits and fighting alongside his supporters.
The Algerian newspaper El-Khabar reported on Monday that a group of Gaddafi supporters, possibly including Aisha, had now left the country for Egypt.
The report has not yet been confirmed.
Battle of the knowledge superpowers
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28 September 2011 Last updated at 11:04 GMT By Sean Coughlan BBC News education correspondent
"Knowledge clusters" are being built in France to kick start hi-tech industries Knowledge is power - economic power - and there's a scramble for that power taking place around the globe.In the United States, Europe and in rising powers such as China, there is a growth-hungry drive to invest in hi-tech research and innovation.
They are looking for the ingredients that, like Google, will turn a university project into a corporation. They are looking for the jobs that will replace those lost in the financial crash.
Not to invest would now be "unthinkable", says Maire Geoghegan-Quinn, the European Commissioner responsible for research, innovation and science, who is trying to spur the European Union to keep pace in turning ideas into industries.
She has announced £6bn funding to kick-start projects next year - with the aim of supporting 16,000 universities, research teams and businesses. A million new research jobs will be needed to match global rivals in areas such as health, energy and the digital economy.
'Innovation emergency'Emphasising that this is about keeping up, rather than grandstanding, she talks about Europe facing an "innovation emergency".
"In China, you see children going into school at 6.30am and being there until 8 or 9pm, concentrating on science, technology and maths. And you have to ask yourself, would European children do that?
Maire Geoghegan-Quinn: "The knowledge economy is the economy that is going to create the jobs" "That's the competition that's out there. We have to rise to that - and member states have to realise that the knowledge economy is the economy that is going to create the jobs in the future, it's the area they have to invest in."
But the challenge for Europe, she says, is to be able to commercialise ideas as successfully as the United States, in the manner of the iPhone or Facebook.
The commissioner says that she was made abruptly aware of the barriers facing would-be innovators at the Nobel Prize awards ceremony dinner.
Instead of basking in the reflected glory of a prize winner funded by European grants, she said she had to listen to a speech attacking the red-tape and bureaucracy - and "generally embarrassing the hell out of me".
Determined that this would never happen again, she is driving ahead with a plan to simplify access to research funding and to turn the idea of a single European research area into a reality by 2014.
With storm clouds dominating the economic outlook, she sees investing in research and hi-tech industries - under the banner of the "Innovation Union" - as of vital practical importance in the push towards creating jobs and growth.
"We have to be able to say to the man and woman in the street, suffering intensely because of the economic crisis: this is a dark tunnel, but there is light at the end and we're showing you where it is."
Global forumThere has been sharpening interest in this borderland between education and the economy.
This month the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) staged its inaugural Global Forum on the Knowledge Economy.
Continue reading the main story
GIANT - the Grenoble Innovation for Advanced New Technologies - is an ambitious French example of a knowledge cluster, combining academic research and commercial expertise.
The classic examples have been in California and Boston in the US, and around Cambridge in the UK. Purpose-built centres include Education City in Qatar, Science City in Zurich and Digital Media City in Seoul.
There will be 40,000 people living, studying and working on the GIANT campus. Centres of research excellence will be side-by-side with major companies who will develop the commercial applications. This includes nanotechnology, green energy and the European Synchotron Radiation Facility (pictured above). A business school, the Grenoble Ecole de Management, is also part on site.
This hi-tech version of a factory town will have its own transport links and a green environment designed to attract people to live and stay here.
This was a kind of brainstorming for governments living on a shoestring.The UK's Universities Minister, David Willetts, called for a reduction in unnecessary regulation, which slowed down areas such as space research.
The French response has been to increase spending, launching a £30bn grand project to set up a series of "innovation clusters" - in which universities, major companies and research institutions are harnessed together to create new knowledge-based industries.
It's an attempt to replicate the digital launchpad of Silicon Valley in California. And in some ways these are the like mill towns of the digital age, clustered around science campuses and hi-tech employers.
But the knowledge economy does not always scatter its seed widely. When the US is talked about as an innovation powerhouse, much of this activity is based in narrow strips on the east and west coasts.
A map of Europe measuring the number of patent applications shows a similar pattern - with high concentrations in pockets of England, France, Germany and Finland.
There are also empty patches - innovation dust bowls - which will raise tough political questions if good jobs are increasingly concentrated around these hi-tech centres. The International Monetary Fund warned last week that governments must invest more in education to escape a "hollowing out" of jobs.
Speed of changeJan Muehlfeit, chairman of Microsoft Europe, explained what was profoundly different about these new digital industries - that they expand at a speed and scale that would have been impossible in the traditional manufacturing industries.
Governments trying to respond to such quicksilver businesses needed to ensure that young people were well-educated, creative and adaptable, he said.
As an example of a success story, Mr Muehlfeit highlighted South Korea. A generation ago they deliberately invested heavily in raising education standards. Now, as a direct result of this upskilling, the West is importing South Korean cars and televisions, he said.
Continue reading the main storyThe triangle of innovation, education and skills is of extreme importance, defining both the problem and the solution”End Quote Jose Angel Gurria OECD secretary general Perhaps it is not a coincidence that South Korea's government has its own dedicated knowledge economy minister.
Robert Aumann, a Nobel Prize winner in economics, attending the OECD event, also emphasised this link between the classroom and the showroom. "How do you bring about innovation? Education, education, education," he said.
But this is far from a case of replacing jobs in old rusty industries with new hi-tech versions.
Gordon Day, president of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the US-based professional association for technology, made the point that digital businesses might generate huge incomes but they might not employ many people. In some cases they might only have a payroll one tenth of a traditional company of a similar size.
It's an uncomfortable truth for governments looking for a recovery in the jobs market.
Degrees of employmentBut standing still isn't an option.
Figures released from the OECD have shown how much the financial crisis has changed the jobs market.
Class of 2011 in Shanghai: China now has the second biggest share of the world's graduates There were 11 million jobs lost, half of them in the United States, and with low-skilled workers and manufacturing the hardest hit. If those losses are to be recovered, it is going to be with higher-skilled jobs, many of them requiring degrees.
But graduate numbers show the shifting balance of power.
From a standing start, China now has 12% of graduates in the world's big economies - approaching the share of the UK, Germany and France put together. The incumbent superpower, the United States, still towers above with 26% of the graduates.
South Korea now has the sixth biggest share of the world's graduates, ahead of countries such as France and Italy.
It means that the US and European countries have to compete on skills with these rising Asian powers.
But the US university system remains a formidably well-funded generator of research. A league table, generated for the first time this month, looked at the global universities with research making the greatest impact - with US universities taking 40 out of the top 50 places.
Their wealth was emphasised this week with the announcement of financial figures from the two Boston university powerhouses, Harvard and MIT, which had a combined endowment of £27bn.
"The triangle of innovation, education and skills is of extreme importance, defining both the problem and the solution," said the OECD's secretary general, Jose Angel Gurria.
"It's a world of cut-throat competition. We lost so much wealth, we lost so many exports, we lost so much well-being, we lost jobs, job, jobs," he told delegates in Paris.
"We must re-boot our economies with a more intelligent type of growth."