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LyrArc brings in selected articles from many of the world's top publications.

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Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Japan is playing an increasingly positive and significant role in stabilizing the international financial system, and in providing new ideas for solution and proactive measures, some of it based on its own experience with a long sustained economic downturn from which it only recently emerged. It has dedicated $100 billion to the IMF for loans to emerging economies, which will be a significant help in preventing a severe downturn in developing countries. Here Prime Minister Aso outlines ideas that Japan will bring to the global talks this weekend November 15-16, 2008. The significant immediate steps are early and thorough disclosure of nonperforming loans based on valuation and reliable standards, and the removal of these loans from their balance sheets as a top priority. Japan was slow to do this prolonging its downturn into a decade or more of no growth. Other two priorities are injecting capital into banks with government money, and supplying ample liquidity from central banks and US dollar liquidity. After the immediate challenge there lie 7 areas to be addressed in the medium term. Improving savings and reducing consumption in countries dependent on external debt and moving to domestic demand led growth in export dependent economies. Bolstering the resources of the International Monetary Fund and the Asian Development Bank. Changing the governance structures of the IMF and the World Bank and other bodies to give proper representation to emerging economies that play an important role in the world economy. Giving the Financial Stability Forum a status above standard setting institutions like the Basel Committee, the Forum reinforced and reorganized to give membership to emerging economies. International Accounting Standards Board, governments, companies and investors in ajoint effort work to come up with a set of standards that have global application. And tightening standards for credit rating agencies through the International Organization of Securities Commissions. Aso proposes giving various countries legal authority over these agencies and the nurturing of credit rating agencies in each region in addition to global agencies, for the development of regional bond markets. Aso is also pushing for regional cooperation like the initiatives in East Asia such as the foreign exchange swap mechanism. ...
BusinessWeek Original article ›
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The behaviour of the people at private equity in destroying jobs in the midst of the worst job market in decades. In this case the private equity names are Cerberus, Sun Capital, and Lubert-Adler and the jobs are the 30,000 jobs at Mervyns in 2004 when it was acquired by private equity firms for $1.2 billion from Target. All of these jobs are gone. Target bought Mervyns in 1978 for $300 million, but neglected Mervyns even as it focussed on the Target franchise using Mervyn's earnings to do that, it then sold Mervyn's in 2004 to private equity firms. The private equity firms took out $400 million in cash from the firm even as they burdened Mervyns with $800 million in debt. After the acquisition they formed two companies, one with the retail business and the other with the real estate assets of Mervyns, which they went out and sold to get cash out of the company. The real estate was then rented back to Mervyns by the new owners at twice the rent, as Mervyns had a lower rent negotiated many years ago. All that debt and the higher rent and the underinvestment in the brand put Mervyns into a death spiral, with the economic downturn killing the company and pushing it into liquidation, with workers losing even their vacation pay. What does this mean for the rest of the economy? According to Standard and Poors /LCD Group, from 2005 through the third quarter of 2008 private equity firms loaded a huge $741 billion of debt onto their companies'balance sheets. Its not that private equity firms operate without taking on debt, but in the low interest and high liquidity environment of recent years the debt levels soared. Now in the credit collapse lenders are pulling back and debt heavy companies cannot refinance, and fear has set in. According to Capital IQ, of 105 big USA companies that have filed for bankruptcy in 2008, 66 are owned by private equity buyout firms or spun off by them. Investors are nervous about these companies and loans made for these deals are trading at 33 cents on the dollar. ...
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Hiring talented managers in China is difficult because of the short supply and may become a constraint.Difficulties in finding, training and retaining managers was mentioned by 37% of 324 companies responding, more than issues such as regulation, bureaucracy or piracy.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Some political experts such as David Plouffe, campaign manager of Obama's 2008 campaign for president, do not take a Hillary win over Donald Trump as a given. They cite the average of negatives for Trump at 63%, but Clinton's are high too at 54%, and this campaign season has shown Clinton has vulnerabilities in the way she has lost in some of the primaries to Bernie Sanders. Sanders like Trump is leading a voter protest against establishment candidates.
New York Times Original article ›
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Madeleine Brennan is the principal of a junior high school in Brooklyn Heights, New York. She is the oldest principal in the U.S., and has been a teacher since 1946. Her philosophy on education: have consistent rules and consequences, a full school calendar, and having to love the children you teach to really be able to work with them. Her thoughts on retiring and working age- its all about loving what you do and doing it for a lifetime.
New York Times Original article ›
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John Donovan, chief technology officer at AT&T, says he has an aversion to seeing people shower credit on leaders. He is focussed on the team and on the result. Growing up in a family of 11 kids taught him not to look for compliments. He likes to see one of his team do a job better than he could. He likes to deflect praise and concentrate on the result which is what excites his imagination.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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The employment-to-population ratio for people aged 20-24 fell to 60.1% from 67.1% in the last 3 years. Prof. Katz says young people who have not entered the labor force and a large number of people who have applied for disability benefits are problem areas. The unemployment rate of 9.4% does not reflect the people who have given up looking for a job, or those who retired, and those who applied for long-term disability benefits.
Economist Original article ›
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How savings habits changed from the last generation to this one. By age 45 savings rate rose sharply to about 30% of disposable income for our parent's generation. For the generation born 1955-64 savings rate remained unchanged at 10%, according to the McKinsey Global Institute. The result of the financial crisis is that credit cards are declining and savings are up. Credit cards shrank by 11% or 32 millon in 2009 according to Nilson Report.
New York Times Original article ›
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Japan's Premier Hatoyama admitted that he failed to win popular support for moving the American base off Okinawa. He said that it was hard to do it during my time, as the presence of China and N. Korea has made public opinion leery of making changes to the alliance with the U.S. However there remain questions about Obama's treatment of Hatoyama during the negotiations, by keeping Hatoyama at arms-length and refusing to compromise on the Okinawa issue.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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France has some obvious strengths in nuclear energy with 58 nuclear plants generating 80% of France's electricity. And Electricite de France is owned 85% by the French government. The French government is working to setup a partnership between EDF and the other nuclear energy generator manufacturer Areva. Problems include the larger reactors that Areva makes and the company falling behind in the schedule to set up reactors in Finland. Abu Dhabi recently opted for South Korean reactors.
BusinessWeek Original article ›
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David Stockman, director of the Office of Management and Budget under Reagan, is interviewed by Tom Keene. Stockman says the US has $52 trillion of debt on a $14.5 trillion economy, a ratio of 3.6 times GDP. Historically, before 1980, it has been around 1.6. This debtification of the US, he says, is the major problem facing the US today. Stockman sees little or no economic growth in the next 5 to 10 years, as debt reduction progresses.
New York Times Original article ›
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A 2011 survey by Universum shows technology firms such as Google, Apple and Facebook as the most preferred choice of university graduates during campus recruiting. Financial firms lag far behind, with J.P. Morgan Chase ranking 41st in that list. At Harvard Business School only 17% of the class went into investment banking and finance. Students from the University of Texas at Austin to Yale, say they want to build something tangible or follow their dream project.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Chrysler's effort to improve quality under a former Toyota executive, Mr. Betts. Fiat-Chrysler CEO, Marchionne, has given wide ranging authority to Betts to stop everything if needed to make changes and improve quality. Chrysler quality has lagged behind competitors GM, Ford, Toyota, Honda and Nissan, and is only now beginning to catch up. The new Jeep was given particular focus. And the product launch of the new Dart is getting a similiar focus on quality.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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World Bank estimates are for the damage from Japan's earthquake and tsunami to cost $122 billion to $235 billion, or between 2.5% and 4% of Japan's GDP. By comparison the Kobe earthquake in 1995 cost $100 billion in damages. Growth will slow in the first half of 2011 by 0.5 percentage points, but it will accelerate in the second half of 2011. Growth will also slow in countries such as Thailand, Indonesia and Philippines which export to Japan.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Factors that point to deceleration, stabilization followed by reacceleration in the U.S. stock market include growth in hiring, moderate P/E ratios, a recovery in Japan after the earthquake, and stronger corporate balance sheets. Uncertainty comes in three areas, a crisis in Greece or Portugal, slowing growth in China with rising inflation, and a sharp slowdown in U.S. growth after the end of the Fed's monetary easing. Current estimates are for 2.9% growth in the U.S. economy for 2011.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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This editorial in the WSJ says Turkey under Erdogan is moving towards one man rule which threatens Turkey's democracy. It points to the CHP Republican People's Party, the main opposition party, as reflecting the views of the secular elite but failing to attract widespread national support. That this party or other parties have failed to build strong support to act as an effective opposition, and offer voters an alternative, is a loss for Turkey and democracy.
New York Times Original article ›
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The peso declined to 7.75 to the dollar on Jan 23, 2013. After foreign exchange controls Argentines have turned to the black market for dollars. The black market or blue dollar rate was reported to be 13 pesos to the dollar. Argentina's currency declined by 18% from Jan 1- Jan 24, 2013. With declining reserves the policy of depreciating in stages is becoming untenable. Argentina's international reserves declined to $29.5 billion by the third week of Jan 2013.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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U.S. budget deficit reached 10% of GDP with the 2008-2009 recession and the need for federal spending when tax revenues dropped. Partisan budget fights took place in Congress in 2010 and 2011, with a downgrade of the U.S. credit rating in 2011. By December 2014 the budget deficit declined to $488 billion for calendar year 2014, or $483 billion for fiscal year, as the unemployment situation improved. The deficit in 2014 was a liitle below 3% of GDP.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Richard Haas and Michael Levi of the Council on Foreign Relations suggest a path of negotiations for a peaceful settlement of the Iran crisis. Haas points to the difficulties in solving the impasse in the crisis through solutions based entirely either on military options or on expanded sanctions. The merit of this approach, says Haas, would also be to demonstrate that the U.S. and the E.U nations have done their best to come up with a negotiated outcome.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Russia's GDP growth declined to 3.4% in 2012 from 4.3% in 2011. Exporters and Russian business are critical of the strict monetary policy followed by the central bank, the Bank of Russia. Inflation was at 6.7% in 2012 coming down from double digits in the prior decade. Central bank chief, Sergei Ignatyev, sees inflation coming down to 5% or even 4%, and says borrowing rates will come down as inflation declines, "maybe not immediately, but they will."
New York Times Original article ›
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Sabrina Tavernise of NYT meets people of the intellectual class in Pakistan's city of Lahore. There is no clear consensus of what Pakistan is or should be. At the same time there is a feeling that a more tolerant Islam, confined to religious practice and not a state ideology, has strong historical basis and is the way out of this mess. A mess that resulted from turning Pakistan into an Islamic state in a modern world.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Singapore's state owned investment company Temasek Holdings lost $39.9 billion dollars in the 8 months from March 2008 to November 2008, or half its portfolio gains of the previous 5 years 2003-2008, according to Singapore's finance minister. Temasek lost $4.6 billion in its investment in Merrill Lynch alone. This may be understated as equities have recovered some of the losses between November 2008 and March 2009, a deterioration in the market could mean higher losses for Temasek.
New York Times Original article ›
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Considering that weak consumer protection laws exacerbated the economic crisis by worsening the subprime crisis and weakening asset prices on the books of the banks, banks do not appear to have an understanding of where there deeper interests lie. Banking makes its best profits when it engages in prmoting the industrial activity, investment and growth of a country, and worst when it engages in the kind of mortgage activites that were common during the bubble in real estate.
Washington Post Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
prepaid credit cards are taking off. From $4 billion in 2007 to $8.7 billion in 2008. Especially with the young and college students, this is becoming increasingly popular way as an introduction to plastic. With the new credit card law making it difficult for anyone under 21 to get acredit card without an adult to cosign for him or her, this will become even more of the norm among college students and the young facing debts to be repaid.
New York Times Original article ›
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The collapse of the Irish economy as house prices drop 50%, bank stocks drop 90% and unemployment rearches 10% in 2008. In Limerick unemployment is 14% and higher in some areas of the city. Mr Dunne, Ireland's best known developer, once paid in July 2005 the amount of 379 million euros for a 7 acre plot in the exclusive Ballsbridge neighborhood of Dublin. He planned a one billion euro development on that site. He is now insolvent.

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