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Trillions to AI shrink Infrastructure and Reindustrialization Articles

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

Articles are selected by experts and you can see the gist of the important articles.


BBC News Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The 1300 kilometre route through Nova Scotia to Quebec on VIA Rail Montreal to Halifax. The Ocean from Atlantic Canada to Quebec opened In 1903 and is running since that time seeing Canada through the 1918 influenza epidemic and through two world wars. Providing a link between Atlantic Canada and the other provinces and to further west in British Columbia.

BBC Sport Original article ›
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Ashwin takes 5 wickets for 37 runs with Australia getting their lowest total in India of 91 runs in the second innings. 

WSJ Original article ›
NYTimes.com Original article ›
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The NYT says many of India's largest and most profitable companies are "relative models of probity," and several ranking among the world's best governed companies including companies in the software and pharmaceutical sectors. Large parts of the Indian economy have little appetite for the risk taken on by the Adani Group and are run on a financially conservative basis. Infrastructure is unique for this kind of risk taking because of decades of neglect of Indian infrastructure during the 1995-2015 period, when China was rapidly building infrastructure with large investments and India fell behind. It is that catchup mode that induced Adani Group's aggressive efforts taking on debt for outsize goals that it was willing to adopt for coal, solar and port logistics. As a result the Indian economy with companies such as Infosys and Dr. Reddy's Labs says the NYT, is largely not affected by the problems of the Adani group's debt structure.    ...
The Guardian Original article ›
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The state's response in the Izmit earthquake of 1999 was weak and unprepared. This brought an outsider Recep Erdogan to power in the elections of 2003. 17,000 people died in that earthquake with damaged areas of Istanbul. 24 years later the situation is repeating itself as the state is seen as unprepared and uncoordinated in its response in the first 48 hours. This time there is a situation where the buildings that were built according to the code for earthquake prone areas are standing and next to them is the rubble from buildings that collapsed. After 2003 construction permits tripled and some construction failed to conform to the required building code, says this report in The Guardian. 

Amid the rubble of buildings and near open fires people gathered outside say no one is helping us in one earthquake hit area of Pazarcik, in this report of The Guardian.

 

NYTimes.com Original article ›
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2023 is the year when electric cars will finally be made competitive with gasoline cars with the help of government incentives, competition, and lower raw material prices. This trend will continue. Battery powered GM vehicles will cost $30,000 this fall. The Inflation Reduction Act provides government tax credits of $7500 for electric car buyers.

WSJ Original article ›
WSJ Original article ›
WSJ Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
About 14 million people or 16% of Turkey's population is in the earthquake zone. Much of the area is in rubble and people say there is not the equipment and support to find family members trapped in the damaged buildings. Millions are homeless, sleeping in tents, cars, and next to open fires in the wintry cold, says this report in WSJ. Criticism is mounting says this report that the response in the first 48 hours was slow and uncoordinated leading to loss of lives. Turkey which faces 200 earthquakes above magnitude 4 each year has faced earthquakes before, and knew that one like that in 1999 could happen again.

dw.com Original article ›
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The former commander of the NATO US forces in Europe 2014-2018, Gen. Ben Hodges, says the war could end in 2023 with air support to Ukraine. Hodges tells DW.com's Ines Pohl, that the only red line for Washington's support in Ukraine is "boots on the ground." Hodges says Ukraine must retake Crimea to maintain the international rules based order and the UN Charter.

About the Russian offensive in Feb 2023 Hodges says Russia was attempting to "surge" a new offensive but it does not have the capability to launch a "major' one. "They don't have the armored forces, the ability to break through," and that it will not change the "overall operational environment in Ukraine." This is the first serious assessment of the new phase in the war on an overall basis looking at the larger picture of Russian and Ukraine plus outside support capabilities. 

NYTimes.com Original article ›
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The efforts of president Biden with trillions of dollars of investment and the Fed's supporting measured fight against inflation, mean that the US economy is likely poised for growth in the year ahead.

NYTimes.com Original article ›
NYTimes.com Original article ›
NYTimes.com Original article ›
WSJ Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
India's challenges in securing $1.3 trillion in capital over 5 years for infrastructure spending. This is needed including capital from the private sector to support government funding, so that India can build the infrastructure to create new manufacturing hubs that compete with China as the world's manufacturing workplace. The Biden administration's determination to compete effectively with China using is own supply chain in Asia, and the EU's plan to follow what the Biden administration does, is likely to create a new kind of environment by 2024-2025 that will create a steady flow of capital to India and other parts of Asia to finance this effort for rebuilding its supply chain. The Biden administration is seeking to build a culture change from the old culture pushed by Reagan type free marketers that delivered lost decades in manufacturing and jobs in manufacturing for the US. Biden's State of the Union message was clear- "Folks we're just getting started. We're just getting started." By 2024-2025 the Adani story may just be a footnote to this story as other manufacturers and investors pick up the infrastructure challenges facing the US, EU and India for a new supply chain for the Free World built around self-reliance. The Ukraine war and China incidents such as one that happened recently, will accelerate the rebuilding of the new supply chain on the part of the US and the EU with partners in Asia. And change decades old assumptions and trade relationships over months, not years. ...
WSJ Original article ›
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The European Union plans to rebuild its solar panel industry by manufacturing in the home country. This means shifting away from supply channels where China controls 80% of production. Chancellor Merkel failed to see the risks of letting German companies be decimated by China's subsidy program supporting solar panel makers in China. A system of customs duties failed when China threatened to retaliate with duties on German car exports. In the end Germany like the US under president Obama and Trump after 2010 failed to support domestic solar panel makers.  Now subsidies are accepted way of competing with China for both the US and the EU. The US under the Biden administration is fully committed to compete with China by developing its own solar panel manufacturing industry with the kind of help China is giving to its own solar panel makers. The EU is following the same path. From 200 gigawatts in 2023 the EU's target is 600 gigawatts from solar by 2030. The 400 gigawatts will come from through a policy of make at home in the EU, including raw materials, polysilicon, wafers, and assembly. Subsidies are now the way the US and the EU plan to get back what they lost to China, their critical manufacturing advantage through errors in policy. The European Commission is also changing the rules to accomodate the move. A story of one more critical advantage surrendered through the orthodoxy of free markets without policymakers understanding what they were doing. ...
WSJ Original article ›
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Russia plans to cut oil production by 500,000 barrels a day in a rare move outside of the alliance with OPEC. The move will push oil prices higher.

mint Original article ›
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The vehicle scrapping policy gets more financing in the 2023 Indian budget. This will have the effect of increasing car sales and jobs as newer cars, buses and other vehicles are put on the road. By increasing electric vehicles it is a fight for climate change prevention. The simple act of removing fossil fuel guzzling older vehicles with newer fuel efficient vehicles cuts oil use and cuts oil import costs. Doing this on scale is what will help in the fight for climate change. In just one move India will remove about 1 million buses, trucks and transport vehicles used by federal and state governments by April 1, 2023.

The Guardian Original article ›
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Cacti in Alpine mountain regions, in the Swiss canton of Valais. Another sign of how the changes in climate are affecting vegetation, as shown in this report in The Guardian.

NYTimes.com Original article ›
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Kamala Harris finds herself in a conundrum with the spirited address given by president Biden in the State of the Union and her cautious approach to not do anything to overshadow the president or disappoint the president, says this report in the NYT. Her analytical approach as a prosecutor in California also comes in the way of talking in plain terms to the people. Advisers suggest she talk in an informal colloquial tone to connect with younger people. 

NYTimes.com Original article ›
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Gallup found last summer that only 16% of Americans polled had "quite a lot" of confidence in newspapers, in its decades long polling of "Confidence in Institutions." For TV news only 11% trust it. Bret Stephens of NYT says the right approach to give marginalized communities a voice is to create more diverse newsrooms not let objectivity be eroded. He reminds people that in a democracy its not just about reporting, it's also about listening, listening to all the people. He quotes Arthur Miller- "A good newspaper, I suppose, is a nation talking to itself." President Biden showed this in his State of the Union address, by working hard to listen to what the nation is saying about itself, about communities all across America that were for too long being ignored while jobs were sent overseas and communities suffered. For far too long, a period that stretched into four decades, turning them into the "invisible" people. Ninety years after Carl Sandburg's "The People, Yes" the task is one of restoring that voice of the people of America. About Lincoln, Sandburg wrote that he said Yes to the paradoxes of democracy, Yes to the hopes of government, No to debauchery of the public mind, Yes to people struggling in the middle of illusions, which of the faiths and illusions would he or she choose for his portion of the light, to take one out of the wilderness. If death was in the air, so was birth.   ...
The Guardian Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Ravindra Jadeja and Axar Patel put an eight wicket partnership that gets India to 321 for 7 with Axar taking shots all around the wicket. Both players in this partnership are from Gujarat, and exchanged words on strategy in Gujarati. Axar from Anand, and Jadeja from Jamnagar.

The Guardian Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The $2.3 billion pounds (2.6 billion euros) the UK paid to the EU for not collecting legitimate customs duties for imports from China, could finance a UK travel pass like the popular 9 euro travel pass in Germany. That 9 euro pass was a sixth of the cost to travel in Berlin, one way the German government helped people face the cost of living crisis. It cost the German government 2.5 billion euros. One more missed opportunity in Britain by the Tory government to help people with the cost of living crisis. The UK gets hit first with a loss of the customs duties revenue that would have been collected as well as any penalties for fraud from importers. Add to this the $2.3 billion pounds in settlement with the European Union for not collecting legitimate customs duties from imported textiles and shoes into Britain from China. Blunders and missed opportunities to help people  with cost of living crisis is a mark of the Conservative government in Britain. The Guardian reports that the case goes back to 2017 when the EU anti-fraud office said British authorites had allowed criminals to evade customs duties by making false claims about imports of clothes and shoes from China. It says that the EU found over half of all textiles and footwear imported from China were below the lowest acceptable prices.  ...
The Guardian Original article ›
NYTimes.com Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Pictures of the earthquake in Turkey in the NYT.


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