Google Glass likely to be priced at US$299: researcher; The device’s display component supplied by Taiwan-based Himax Display will cost between US$30 and US$35 and will account for the biggest share of the total cost in the near term

Google Glass likely to be priced at US$299: researcher

CNA

2013-08-08

Google’s eyeglass-shaped mobile computing device will likely be priced at an affordable level when it officially goes on sale, a local researcher at the Taipei-based Topology Research Institute said on Wednesday. The Google Glass is expected to carry an initial price tag to consumers of US$299, Topology researcher Jason Tsai told reporters on the sidelines of a local seminar on wearable devices. The device’s display component, which will probably be supplied by Taiwan-based Himax Display, will cost between US$30 and US$35 and will account for the biggest share of the total cost in the near term, he said. Google announced on July 22 that it had agreed to buy a 6.3% stake in Himax Display, which produces liquid crystal on silicon chips and modules used in devices such as the Google Glass, head-up displays and handheld projectors. Read more of this post

Spotify: Eating Google’s Lunch and Loving It; CEO Daniel Ek says music recommendations and discovery are as important as a massive song vault

August 6, 2013, 8:14 p.m. ET

Spotify: Eating Google’s Lunch and Loving It

JOHANNES LEDEL and JOHN STOLL

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STOCKHOLM—As music lovers turn to cheap streaming services to access songs, some of the most prominent names in tech are crowding in for a piece of the pie. One of the biggest streaming-music sites, Spotify AB, now boasts 20 million songs and 24 million users, a quarter of whom pay about $10 a month for extra features, such as listening on mobile devices. The Swedish company’s revenue more than doubled to €434.7 million ($576.4 million) in 2012, but its loss widened to €58.7 million. A recent fundraising round valued Spotify at $3 billion, but Daniel Ek, the company’s 30-year-old chief executive and co-founder, doesn’t see bigger as better. He believes that music recommendations and discovery are as important as a massive song vault, and has enlisted 200 human curators to organize music for a new browsing feature. Read more of this post

Priceline Travels Road Back to High Hit in Dotcom Era

Updated August 8, 2013, 10:21 p.m. ET

Priceline Travels Road Back to High Hit in Dotcom Era

DREW FITZGERALD

It has taken more than 14 years, but Priceline.com PCLN +0.67% is about to complete a round trip. Fueled by a strong second-quarter earnings report, the company’s stock is closing in on its dotcom-era high after a wild ride that took it from nearly $1,000 a share down into the single digits—and back. The catalyst for the most recent leg was a jump in summer travel bookings, which helped the online airline and hotel reservation service post a 24% increase in profit to $437 million on Thursday. Revenue jumped 27% to $1.68 billion. Bookings surged 38% in the second quarter, driven by strong demand in Asia and resilient spending in Europe. The performance sent shares toward their all-time high. In after-hours trading, Priceline rose 5.4% to $984.04. The stock, which has climbed 50% since the start of the year, hit $990 in 1999, then fell below $10 after the Internet bubble burst. Read more of this post

Why Health Care for All is Still a Joke in India

Why Health Care for All is Still a Joke in India

by Seema Singh | Aug 9, 2013

IMS Health, which provides information and services for health care, unveiled India’s first physician-chemist census in order to fill gaps in the health care value chain. The census covered 120 cities, 3.73 lakh doctors and 99,000 chemists. We list some key findings that point towards the skewed reach of medical care and decode what the numbers mean.

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China’s crazy love affair with steel is a scary example of how its finances could implode

China’s crazy love affair with steel is a scary example of how its finances could implode

By Gwynn Guilford @sinoceros 10 hours ago

So maybe China’s not collapsing—in fact, it might be stabilizing. At least, that’s what China’s unexpectedly strong July trade data hints. Exports rose 5.1% year-on-year in July, more than analysts expected. Imports, though, were the real shocker, surging 10.9%, to hit $168 billion. But wait—what exactly was China importing so furiously in July? Heaps of iron ore, it seems. Imports of the metal leapt to a record 73.1 million tonnes (80.5 million tons), up 26.7% on the previous year. That’s more than it imported during the many months of the infrastructure bonanza between 2009 and 2012, when the government pumped $11.2 trillion into the economy: Some think this means the economy is stabilizing; “steel demand is quite strong” (paywall), Maquarie analyst Graeme Train said. But it’s weird, because China’s businesses really don’t need new steel. It’s so hard to find buyers that steel mills are now storing 225,000 tonnes of steel, up 1.8% from last year. By one estimate the industry has a fifth more production capacity than it needs. And of China’s major steel mills, 40 out of 86 operated at a loss in H1 2013. Read more of this post

IBM and others facing the cloudy business of accounting for the cloud

IBM and others facing the cloudy business of accounting for the cloud

By Michal Lev-Ram, writer August 8, 2013: 11:00 AM ET

More questions than answers have been raised about methods used to account for software-as-a-service products.

FORTUNE — Last week’s disclosure that the Securities and Exchange Commission is conducting an investigation into how IBM reports its cloud computing revenue poses more questions than answers. The New York-based tech giant admitted it has been cooperating with the SEC since last May but said little else about the particulars of the case. One thing is clear: It’s likely this won’t be the last probe into the often inconsistent methods used to account for software-as-a-service products. Read more of this post

EBay’s John Donahoe on E-Commerce and Mobile Payments’ Future

EBay’s John Donahoe on E-Commerce and Mobile Payments’ Future

By Brad Stone on August 08, 2013

What’s the next set of goals, beyond returning to growth?
In the eyes of the consumer, e-commerce and retail are now one. It’s just shopping, right? And that’s why you see us taking steps to get more involved in the full commerce environment. An example would be EBay (EBAY) doing one-hour delivery. You buy online, but you get it delivered to you from an offline store. Another example would be PayPal being accepted by offline merchants. Read more of this post

In Export Boom, U.S. Cities Sell to the World

In Export Boom, U.S. Cities Sell to the World

By Dorothy Gambrell on August 08, 2013

U.S. exports in June increased to an all-time high. While most of the big coastal cities did well, metropolitan areas on the Gulf stand out for their thriving oil and gas business.

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Kiwi IT-millionaire Tim Williams was the first foreigner to list a company ValueCommerce on the Japanese stock exchange

Tim Williams: Japan’s Internet Pioneer

By Skye Wishart, July 22, 2013 @ 11 am

Kiwi IT-millionaire Tim Williams was the first foreigner to list a company on the Japanese stock exchange – a wild ride that taught him business and gave him a lifelong bent to jump into an unfamiliar industry. We interviewed him in the lead up to his role as a judge in the New Zealand International Business Awards 2013. Twenty-three-year old molecular geneticist Tim Williams’ plan was not to jump into IT, but to study Chinese medicine in Beijing – and strike it rich by engineering the raw components. But on the way over there, a stop-off in Japan foiled his plans – he loved the culture and stayed, teaching English for a couple of years. That is, until he met fellow Kiwi Jonathan Hendriksen, and together they decided to start a business in internet hosting. Back in 1996, the Internet was still quiet in Japan, and the boys set up the first domestic rental server company in the country. Read more of this post

Finalists of 2013 NZ International Business Awards

FINALISTS NAMED IN 2013 NEW ZEALAND INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS AWARDS

A revolutionary diabetes detection system and a digital DJ software platform are among the unique range of solutions produced by the 29 finalists in this year’s 2013 New Zealand International Business Awards. Celebrating the passion, vision and new approaches that New Zealand businesses are taking to achieve international success, the Awards are run by New Zealand Trade and Enterprise (NZTE) and strategic partner ANZ. Other finalists include a business offering 3D modelling technology for use in hydrogeological and geothermal exploration, a company whose handmade educational tools for children are sold in Harrods and MoMa, a burger venture taking on the Middle East, a business that manufactures precision electro magnets used in touchscreens, whiteware and medical systems, and a number of agricultural and ICT-focused companies. Also of note this year are the two winery finalists – the first time in four years a winery has made it to the finalist stage of the Awards. Read more of this post

China’s Worst Nightmare Is Turning Japanese

China’s Worst Nightmare Is Turning Japanese

Few words strike greater fear in the hearts of economists and politicians than “Japanization.” That specter of chronic malaise, deflation and bad debt has driven central bankers from Ben S. Bernanke in the U.S. to Mario Draghi in Europe to flood markets with liquidity in an effort to avert their own lost decades.

It should worry China, then, that experts on this dreaded scenario are turning their attention to Beijing. Take Brian Reading, whose quest to understand what the world can learn from Tokyo’s mess dates back to his prescient 1992 book “Japan: The Coming Collapse.” He recently wrote a 40-page report with Lombard Street Research Ltd. colleague Diana Choyleva titled “China’s Chance to Avoid Japan’s Mistakes.” Read more of this post

In wake of cash crunch, PBOC commits to transparency but quietly tightens grip to become more controlling and secretive

In wake of cash crunch, PBOC commits to transparency but quietly tightens grip

Wed, Aug 7 2013

By Lu Jianxin and Pete Sweeney

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – China’s central bank has publicly committed to becoming a better communicator after a cash crunch that it engineered spooked global financial markets in June, but traders say its behavior has become more controlling and secretive. “There is a vicious cycle in China’s reform process,” said a senior trader at a Chinese state-owned bank in Beijing. “A deregulation move often creates a mess in the newly liberalized market. Then the consequent re-tightening suppresses the market again.” Read more of this post

China’s ailing bad debt market cries for change

China’s ailing bad debt market cries for change

Thu, Apr 26 2012

By Koh Gui Qing

BEIJING (Reuters) – Veteran investor Jack Rodman has had enough. After waiting 11 years for China to sell its rising pile of bad bank loans, he is quitting and going to Spain instead. His pull-out exposes a pressing failing in China’s booming financial sector: it does not properly dispose of a growing store of bad loans from banks’ profligate lending, keeping risks pent up within the world’s second-biggest economy. And the problem only scratches the surface of deeper troubles plaguing China’s banking industry, where heavy government intervention has produced a dysfunctional system that is at times better at destroying capital than creating it. The frozen market for bad loans shows just that. Read more of this post

Nervous About Backlash, Facebook Moves Cautiously on Video Ads; CEO Zuckerberg Tries to Find Right Balance for Users and Advertisers

August 8, 2013, 4:41 p.m. ET

Nervous About Backlash, Facebook Moves Cautiously on Video Ads

CEO Zuckerberg Tries to Find Right Balance for Users and Advertisers

EVELYN M. RUSLI and SUZANNE VRANICA

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Facebook’s coming big play for video ads will unlock a new market for the social network’s booming ad business–but it will also present the greatest test of Facebook’s commitment to its user experience. Evelyn Rusli reports on The News Hub. Photo: Facebook.

Facebook Inc. FB -0.85% has been planning for months to dive into the lucrative market for online video ads. The holdup: CEO Mark Zuckerberg doesn’t want to annoy its 1.1 billion members. As soon as this fall, Facebook plans to launch a video-ad service that will show members 15-second-or-less clips on both smartphones and the Web, according to people with knowledge of the matter. Facebook needs the ads to be sufficiently splashy that they will convince brands to fork over roughly $2 million per day. Yet since earlier this year, Mr. Zuckerberg and his engineers have toiled over how to make the ads not so distracting and slow that they alienate users, according to current and former employees and advertisers. The videos will appear prominently on members’ homepage news feeds, the people familiar said. Read more of this post

Daniel Yergin: China’s Big Commodity Chill

August 8, 2013, 7:12 p.m. ET

Daniel Yergin: China’s Big Commodity Chill

With the end of the supercycle, copper prices have dropped 30% from their 2011 peak, and iron ore is down 32%.

DANIEL YERGIN

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Though it was summertime, a tinge of ice was in the June air at this year’s St. Petersburg International Economic Forum. “There is no magic wand we can wave,” said Russian President Vladimir Putin, acknowledging the abrupt drop in Russia’s growth rate. “Prices for our main exports rose fast” for many years, he told the forum, but now “the situation has changed. There are no magic solutions.” What is giving Russia and many other countries the shivers is the China Chill that is the result of the slowing Chinese economy. It means a recalibration for the world’s exporters, who have come to count on vigorous Chinese demand. It will be a particular challenge for commodity exporters. Over the past decade, they have been the great beneficiaries of the commodity “supercycle”—the combination of accelerating demand and rising commodity prices that have delivered GDP growth. With China’s slowing, the supercycle is over, meaning tough choices ahead. Read more of this post

Norway’s sovereign wealth fund expands its activist role; about 60 per cent invested in equities, the fund owns on average 1.25% of every listed company in the world. Its average stake in European companies is 2.5%

August 8, 2013 11:00 pm

Investor muscle

Norway’s sovereign wealth fund expands its activist role

For most savers, passive investing makes better sense than trying to beat the markets. For the world’s biggest sovereign wealth fund with $760bn or so of assets, passive is hardly an option. Norway’s steps to becoming a more active shareholder are logical – and may benefit other investors as well. When Norway’s SWF received its first injection of North Sea oil revenue in 1996, it was a largely passive, index-tracking investor, which outsourced precise portfolio decisions to external investment managers. This made sense at the time. The amounts invested were relatively small. Investment expertise was still thin at the central bank – the fund’s institutional home. Read more of this post

Chi-X Global and SBI Japannext set sights on South Korea; South Korea is the third-largest equities market in the region after China and Japan by volume

August 8, 2013 12:33 pm

Chi-X Global and SBI Japannext set sights on South Korea

By Jeremy Grant in Singapore and Simon Mundy in Hong Kong

South Korea is set to become the third Asian equities market to open to competition between exchanges and upstart trading venues after Chi-X Global and SBI Japannext, both backed by large banks, said they were exploring entering the country. The moves are a sign that the breaking of longstanding national exchange monopolies and equity market fragmentation – a trend that has swept Europe in the past six years – is gathering pace in Asia. Japan Exchange, formed from the recent merger of the country’s two largest bourses in Tokyo and Osaka, already competes with Chi-X and SBI Japannext in share trading. Australia’s ASX faces off against Chi-X Australia. South Korea is the third-largest equities market in the region after China and Japan by volume, and it offers trading in some of the most liquid stocks such as electronics maker Samsung. Read more of this post

Cash lure to stop firms deserting ETFs in times of stress

August 8, 2013 2:39 pm

Cash lure to stop firms deserting ETFs in times of stress

By Arash Massoudi and Tracy Alloway in New York

On Wall Street, it seems money talks. Three years after the “flash crash” that sent prices of exchange traded funds reeling, US stock exchanges say they have worked out a way to motivate the financial firms that are supposed to ensure smooth trading in ETFs: pay them more.

Two of the biggest venues for trading US ETFs are readying pilot programmes that they hope will encourage better behaviour from the top “market-makers” of the funds – financial firms such as Goldman Sachs and KCG. Read more of this post

After Going All In During Mining Boom, BHP Cuts Its Ambitions

AUGUST 8, 2013, 2:38 PM

After Going All In During Mining Boom, BHP Cuts Its Ambitions

By WILLIAM MACNAMARA

BHP Billiton, the world’s largest mining company, was willing to spend big in early 2012. It was building new mines and upgrading old ones, at a cost of $18 billion. It considered a potential expansion of its copper and uranium mine, Olympic Dam, which could have cost as much as $20 billion. It proposed a deepwater extension of Port Hedland, its iron ore port, an estimated $10 billion or more. But BHP has significantly scaled back its ambitions in the last year, replacing its multibillion-dollar spending spree with an austere program of cost cuts and efficiency drives. It shelved the plans for Port Hedland and Olympic Dam, both in Australia, noting the need to find “a less capital-intensive design.” The mergers and acquisitions department is now referred to as the “D department” internally, to signify its focus on disposals, according to a person close to BHP who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Read more of this post

Russia’s Stimulus Plan: Open the Gulag Gates to unlock the tens of thousands of business owners

August 8, 2013

Russia’s Stimulus Plan: Open the Gulag Gates

By ANDREW E. KRAMER

MOSCOW — A business owner in Russia has a better chance of ending up in the penal colony system once known as the gulag than a common burglar does. More than 110,000 people are serving time for what Russia calls “economic crimes,” out of a population of about three million self-employed people and owners of small and medium-size businesses. An additional 2,500 are in jails awaiting trial for this class of crimes that includes fraud, but can also include embezzlement, counterfeiting and tax evasion. But with the Russian economy languishing, President Vladimir V. Putin has devised a plan for turning things around: offer amnesty to some of the imprisoned business people. Read more of this post

Korea Pension Scraps Minimum Broker Fee to Reduce Trading Costs; The fund holds about 6% of publicly traded shares in the $1.1 trillion equity market

Korea Pension Scraps Minimum Broker Fee to Reduce Trading Costs

South Korea’s National Pension Service, the biggest investor in the country’s equity market, scrapped the minimum fees it pays brokers to execute stock trades as the fund seeks to reduce transaction costs.

NPS, the nation’s largest pension fund, ended its policy of paying a minimum 0.15 percent fee as of last month, Lee Yun Ji, a spokeswoman for the fund in Seoul, said in a phone interview today. Brokers will need to “write down” their fees and the new policy will spur competition for commissions, Lee said. Samsung Securities Co. (016360) and Mirae Asset Securities Co. (037620) retreated in Seoul trading today, while the Kospi Index rose 0.3 percent. Read more of this post

Public Pension Shortfalls Are Everyone’s Problem

Public Pension Shortfalls Are Everyone’s Problem

The pension liabilities that helped bankrupt Detroit have cast a harsh light on similar problems in Chicago and other large American cities, adding urgency to the question of who should close the shortfall. This is a challenge that public-sector workers and retirees shouldn’t bear on their own.

The public pension problem is by now well known. Detroit’s emergency manager estimates its unfunded liabilities at $3.5 billion, about a fifth of the city’s debt. As of last year, Chicago had funded just 36 percent of its pension obligations, while, as of 2011, Philadelphia had put aside just 50 percent of its promised benefits. Read more of this post

Elon Musk’s Fortune Soars $570 Million as Tesla Beats Estimates

Elon Musk’s Fortune Soars $570 Million as Tesla Beats Estimates

Elon Musk’s fortune soared $570 million yesterday as shares of Tesla Motor Inc. (TSLA), the electric-car company he co-founded in 2003, rallied 14 percent after posting second-quarter results that surpassed analysts’ estimates on a surge in Model S sedan deliveries. Musk has a net worth of $7.7 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, up more than 220 percent year-to-date. He’s the world’s 162nd richest person. The company on Wednesday reported an operating profit of 20 cents a share, including 15 cents related to a leasing program. Even without that provision, results exceeded the average of 10 analysts’ estimates for a 20-cent loss, according data compiled by Bloomberg. On its operating basis, Tesla said it will make money all year, even as it expands to Europe and Asia.

Read more of this post

Subaru’s 412% Surge Leads Carmaker to Debate Niche Status

Subaru’s 412% Surge Leads Carmaker to Debate Niche Status: Cars

What car company’s stock has risen the most — fivefold — since the beginning of 2012? Besides Tesla Motors Inc. (TSLA)

It’s Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd., maker of Subaru.

Profits and sales are heading toward records after the company benefited more than most Japanese carmakers from the weakening of the yen and as new models such as the BRZ sports car have become so popular that U.S. consumers need to wait months to get one. The success is leading President Yasuyuki Yoshinaga to worry whether the niche maker of all-wheel-drive vehicles is getting too big. Read more of this post

Assessing the scale of metal warehouse trades

Assessing the scale of metal warehouse trades

Izabella Kaminska | Aug 08 08:59 | 1 comment | Share

Earlier this week Morgan Stanley published an in depth look into the financing warehouse trades in metals — the ones most analysts have been in denial about (at least publicly) for at least five years — and why they are now, thanks to new LME proposals, finally easing. The note is titled: “Beginning of the end in warehouse trades: A game changer for base metals”. There were three notable observations.

First, it’s not just banks that should be blamed for fuelling the queue and inventory over-financing problems. Part of the problem is related to the general demise of independent warehouse operators in the metals industry. That is to say, there aren’t enough warehouse owners who do not have conflicting interests as traders or bankers on top of their warehousing businesses: As has subsequently become clear, domination of a good delivery point through the ownership of the majority of multiple warehouse units licensed to receive a particular metal in a given location is a necessary condition for controlling metal inflow, outflow and associated rental cash flow that is the foundation of warehouse rental and financing deals. In addition, a sizeable balance sheet and an active involvement in physical trading as a means of engaging in inventory finance or warehouse incentive deals became a sufficient condition of this domination. Not surprisingly, the lessons and opportunities provided by the Metro acquisition were not lost on the big physical commodity trading houses, which, in a short space of time from March 2010 onwards, bought the majority of the remaining independent LME warehousing businesses. Read more of this post

To Move Ahead You Have to Know What to Leave Behind

To Move Ahead You Have to Know What to Leave Behind

by Nick Tasler  |  12:00 PM August 7, 2013

Decisions are the most fundamental building blocks of successful change in our organizations, our teams, and our careers. The faster and more strategically we stack those blocks, the faster and more successfully we achieve change. Yet, change efforts often stall precisely because those decisions don’t happen. The question is why?

Avoid Changing By Addition. The Latin root of the word “decide” is caidere which means “to kill or to cut.” (Think homicidesuicidegenocide.) Technically, deciding to do something new without killing something old is not a decision at all. It is merely an addition. When an executive announces that her business will change to become a luxury service provider, technically it is not a decision until she also states that they will not provide low cost services to price-sensitive customers anymore. When a sales manager declares that his strategy this quarter will require his salespeople to spend more time strengthening existing customer relationships, he has only made an addition until he also declares that they should spend less time on something else like hunting for new prospects. Your palms might be sweating at the mere thought of telling your team to ignore some group of paying customers or to not spend time hunting for new business, even if you really want to see the change happen. Research has shown that making tradeoffs is so mentally exhausting that most people try to avoid them whenever possible. That’s why a manager who is no stranger to long hours and hard work will escape the discomfort simply by piling on new change objectives without killing any of the current priorities. But this change-by-addition approach can be a death blow. Read more of this post

Why Quitters Win: Decide to be Excellent

Why Quitters Win: Decide to be Excellent [Paperback]

Nick Tasler (Author)

Why Quitters Win

Publication Date: September 10, 2013

What is your strategic direction?

Why are some necessary changes so hard to make?

Are you pursuing too many top priorities?

How do you avoid irrational traps without getting bogged down by over-analysis?

Why Quitters Win reveals why Nick Tasler s elegantly simple 3-part Strategic Behavior framework is already driving excellence for everyone from Fortune 500 executives and middle managers to busy moms, small business owners and church leaders.
Decades of research in social science and business strategy, as well as Tasler s own findings from surveying the decisions of hundreds of thousands of working adults reveal that the most successful people, teams, and companies are not those with access to the widest variety of opportunities or the steadiest supply of creative ideas. Surprisingly, the opposite is true. Too many exciting opportunities, good ideas, and top priorities erode our focus, confuse our teams, and keep us swirling around on a plateau of mediocrity.
Why Quitters Win addresses these critical topics with a brilliantly simple approach that has the power to profoundly change your life one decision at a time. Read more of this post

Monasteries decline as TV and smartphones grip Bhutan; monastic materialism also to blame for a decline

Monasteries decline as TV and smartphones grip Bhutan

Thursday, August 8, 2013 – 12:57

AFP

THIMPHU, Bhutan – Kencho Tshering, a red-robed Buddhist monk, takes a call from the King of Bhutan’s office, then duly dashes off to start a ceremony praying for a break in the monsoon rains. But while he may be on speed dial for royal requests, the clout of his fellow monks is on the wane in the remote kingdom as it absorbs the impact of technology and democracy as well as an abuse scandal. “Bhutan is changing. The monastic body is going down and down,” Tshering told AFP at Dechen Phodrang, the monks’ school where he is principal, which is perched with majestic views over the capital Thimphu. “Even for senior monks, there’s no respect in the city,” he sighed. Read more of this post

Hong Kong Ex-Minister Gets Suspended Sentence for Fraud

Hong Kong Ex-Minister Gets Suspended Sentence for Fraud

Hong Kong’s former development secretary Mak Chai-kwong received a suspended sentence for his role in defrauding the government of more than HK$700,000 ($90,249) of housing allowances during the 1980s. District Court Judge Johnny Chan gave Mak and former assistant director of the highway department Tsang King-man sentences of eight months each, suspended for two years. Mak and Tsang were convicted in June of concealing that they had an interest in apartments that they leased from each other’s wives in order to claim the allowances. Read more of this post

South Korea Sees Creativity as Key to Growth

August 8, 2013, 4:41 PM

South Korea Sees Creativity as Key to Growth

By Jaeyeon Woo

The South Korean government unveiled this week a set of long-term plans to foster creative talent, which the government considers one of the most important factors for the country’s future growth. The decision came amid the acknowledgement that the current education system is not conductive to producing out-of-box thinkers. “The government realized the education and hiring environment of today has its limitation in encouraging creative talents,” read a statement released by the Ministry of Science, ICT & Future Planning, Ministry of Education and Ministry of Employment and Labor on Wednesday. Read more of this post