American work life: Can’t we do better? The workers who have emerged from the rough economy are more weary and skeptical than before the financial crisis

American work life: Can’t we do better?

August 30, 2013: 5:00 AM ET

The workers who have emerged from the rough economy are more weary and skeptical than before the financial crisis.

By Katherine Reynolds Lewis

FORTUNE — When looking over the past year’s data points and news developments on American workers, the question comes to mind: “Can’t we do better than this?” Across the income spectrum, there’s a sense of an unmet promise in the current economic recovery. The situation has dramatically improved from the depths of the Great Recession, when unemployment peaked at 10% in October 2009. It was at 7.4% in July. Economic growth has picked up to an annual rate of 2.5%, and job openings are starting to materialize. Read more of this post

An episode of Germany’s top crime show recently highlighted a secretive business: helping clients create and maintain lies. Now one such agency is struggling to keep up with the demand

08/30/2013 04:52 PM

Selling Lies

Alibi Agencies Help Create Double Lives

By Barbara Hardinghaus

An episode of Germany’s top crime show recently highlighted a secretive business: helping clients create and maintain lies. Now one such agency is struggling to keep up with the demand.

For his best clients, Patrick Ulmer says he goes out and arranges the lie personally. In one instance, he got into his car and drove south to Cologne, where he rang the doorbell at an apartment. The door opened to reveal his client. The client’s clothing was scattered around the apartment. His cologne and even the cloths he used to clean his glasses were there. The refrigerator contained his favorite foods, from chocolate pudding to melons. All the signs suggested that this was where the client lived. Read more of this post

Twitter is wrecking Twitter to make Twitter more popular

Twitter is wrecking Twitter to make Twitter more popular

By Dan Mitchell, contributor August 29, 2013: 2:56 PM ET

By making conversations easier to follow, Twitter is encouraging people to use the service for something other than its essential function. It’s probably a good idea for the company, but not for people who use Twitter to follow the news.

FORTUNE — Twitter is working to attract many more new users and keep the ones it has. To that end, the site is risking doing all it can to wreck Twitter. Wreck it, that is, for those of us who appreciate Twitter’s unmatched utility as a constantly updated, crowdsourced flow of real-time news and information. The people who use it that way might be part of a shrinking minority, however, with more and more people using the service to yammer and argue. “Twitter fights” no doubt bring many more eyeballs to Twitter than do, say, links to stories about Syria or climate change. But for people who use Twitter as an information resource rather than as a platform for inherently inarticulate “conversation,” the cacophony wastes time and ruins the experience. Read more of this post

Skewering dictators: Laugh them out of power; Political cartoons in the Arab world are getting punchier

Skewering dictators: Laugh them out of power; Political cartoons in the Arab world are getting punchier

Aug 31st 2013 | BEIRUT |From the print edition

20130831_IRP003_0 pic1_doaa_eladl

This sketch by Doaa Eladl, a prominent female Egyptian, is relevant again today since it refers to the military’s strong influence over the country’s politics. The caption (top right) says “The next president”.

IN MANY Middle Eastern states, cartoons are powerful weapons of subversion. In the past the men who drew them were often coy in the face of censorship: a mocking depiction of a king on a jewelled throne holding his nose as he surveyed his citizens might be acceptable, but not more obviously humiliating depictions of the monarch. Better to focus on foreign themes like America’s support for Israel. Yet Arab cartoonists have been getting more daring. In Egypt they spent a year sending up their embattled president, Muhammad Morsi, before he was ousted. Syrian opposition newspapers show President Bashar Assad bathed in blood. Read more of this post

The mental cost of money worries; Thrift requires mental effort, itself a scarce resource, and resesarchers set out to investigate whether their preoccupation with money leaves the poor with less mental bandwidth for other tasks

August 28, 2013 5:15 pm

The mental cost of money worries

By Mark Vandevelde

Poor people are disproportionately likely to make bad decisions, such as taking out loans they cannot repay, eating unhealthily and dropping out of class. It is sometimes said that such people are authors of their own misfortune. Send­hil Mullainathan, a Harvard economist, and Eldar Shafir, a Princeton psychologist, have a different view. They argue that lousy decisions are an effect of poverty as well as a cause. The mindset that produces them, they say, is triggered by scarcity of all kinds – warping the decisions of busy professionals who are short of time, lonely hearts who want for social contact and dieters who must ration their calories, as well as the poor. Read more of this post

‘Creative destruction inevitable for Thai growth’

‘Creative destruction inevitable for Thai growth’

THE NATION September 2, 2013 1:00 am

THAILAND HAS to face another era of creative destruction if has to maintain its competitiveness, Bank of Thailand economists said last week. Creative destruction – the shift of labour to high-growth industries and the death of some non-competitive businesses – is going on, but not at the same level in each industry and not in all industries. Their paper entitled “Thailand’s Quest for Economic Growth: From Factor Accumulation to Creative Destruction”, aims to show the economic environments that are supportive of the change or hinder the process. Read more of this post

Why Internet Companies Don’t Buy From The Enterprise Kings

Why Internet Companies Don’t Buy From The Enterprise Kings

ALEX WILLIAMS

posted 3 hours ago

Internet companies represent the world’s fastest-growing markets and they cover the global economy. Every market imaginable is affected by Internet companies. They are cloud-centric by nature and come in various forms. They are SaaS companies but also have emerged as departments in big companies that derive their primary value as Internet providers. And these companies are not on the enterprise sales radar screen. Instead, enterprise companies are trying to soak every dollar possible out of IT. That’s their domain. But what the enterprise is selling is not the kind of technology an Internet company is likely to buy. Internet companies  are in the market to shave latency and deliver services faster. They are built to be as lean as possible. Capital spending makes little sense. And without capital spending, the enterprise vendors have nothing really to sell to a cloud-centric company. Read more of this post

Shoppers trust ‘brick and clicks’ retailers more than online only

Shoppers trust ‘brick and clicks’ retailers more than online only

September 2, 2013 – 1:13PM

Eli Greenblat

Traditional bricks and mortar retailers, which for a long time refused to believe the hype about online sales, have finally made an inroad into the crucial revenue channel by winning back customers from pure-play operators which have dominated the area. The latest National Australia Bank retail sales survey shows many bricks and mortar shops are successfully evolving into “bricks and clicks” operators, offering customers offline and online shopping. Read more of this post

Mercedes Stop-and-Go Autopilot Heralds Hands-Free Push

Mercedes Stop-and-Go Autopilot Heralds Hands-Free Push

Bumper-to-bumper traffic slowed to a crawl, finding a space in a crowded garage, or squeezing into a tight parking spot is no fun for any driver. To ease such tedious aspects of driving, companies from Mercedes-Benz to Continental AG (CON) are rolling out systems that take over the wheel. Daimler AG (DAI)’s Mercedes is leading the way with an add-on called “Stop&Go Pilot” available in its top-of-the-line S-Class sedan. Backed by an array of 12 ultrasonic detectors, five cameras and six radar sensors, the 79,800-euro ($105,800) S-Class can match the speed of the car in front of it, even coming to a complete stop and steering to stay in the lane. The feature costs 2,678 euros in Germany. Read more of this post

The next time you use your smartphone to inquire about migraine symptoms or to check out how many calories were in that cheeseburger, there is a chance that information could be passed on to insurance and pharmaceuticals companies

September 1, 2013 6:38 pm

Worried-well online have new symptom to fear

By Emily Steel in New York and April Dembosky in San Francisco

HealthApp

The next time you use your smartphone to inquire about migraine symptoms or to check out how many calories were in that cheeseburger, there is a chance that information could be passed on to insurance and pharmaceuticals companies. The top-20 health and wellness apps, including MapMyFitness, WebMD Health and iPeriod, are transmitting information to up to 70 third-party companies, according to Evidon, a web analytics and privacy firm. Read more of this post

Going Free Is Still Chinese Internet Companies’ Strategy for Land Grabbing

Going Free Is Still Chinese Internet Companies’ Strategy for Land Grabbing

By Tracey Xiang on August 30, 2013

Baidu announced they’d stop charging its navigation app. Later the same day AutoNavi, a veteran mapping data and service provider, held a press conference announcing the same thing. To fuel the hype, in the next day Baidu stated that they’d refund users who had paid for it. It’s unknown how many installs of Baidu Navigation, which costs 30 yuan, have been sold. AutoNavi cannot afford to do the same, for its premium navigation app, priced at 50 yuan ($8), had been downloaded and pre-installed in more than 70 million smartphones. Read more of this post

TV confessions in China an unsettling new trend for executives

TV confessions in China an unsettling new trend for executives

Megha Rajagopalan 5 hours ago

By Megha Rajagopalan

BEIJING (Reuters) – A series of confessions by foreign and local executives on China’s state-controlled television has spurred anxiety among the business community about a trend that some lawyers say makes a mockery of due process. Confessions have long been part of China’s legal landscape, with petty criminals routinely admitting their guilt on television. But rarely have senior business figures been put on television in orange prison jumpsuits to confess. Read more of this post

Silver Lining in China’s Smog as It Puts Focus on Emissions?

August 31, 2013

Silver Lining in China’s Smog as It Puts Focus on Emissions

By CHRIS BUCKLEY

HONG KONG — Jiang Kejun may be one of the few Beijing residents who see a ray of hope in the smog engulfing the city. A researcher in a state energy institute, he is an outspoken advocate of swiftly cutting China’s greenhouse gas output, and he sayspublic anger about noxious air has jolted the government, which long dismissed pollution as the necessary price of prosperity. Read more of this post

Shark Fin Decline Linked to China Corruption Crackdown

Shark Fin Decline Linked to China Corruption Crackdown

By Agence France-Presse on 3:25 pm September 1, 2013.
Conservationists have attributed a dwindling demand for shark fins to China’s crackdown on corruption which has forced a decline in lavish banquets. “We are seeing a reduction in demand from China. Hong Kong is also showing a significant decline in consumption,” Angelo Villagomez, a shark specialist with US-based conservation group the Pew Charitable Trusts, said Sunday. Villagomez was in the Marshall Islands to discuss shark sanctuaries with leaders at the Pacific Islands Forum, the annual summit of Pacific heads of state. However, he said the decline in shark fin demand over the past year was not directly linked to increasing shark protection by Pacific island governments. Instead, it was related to the Chinese leadership’s crackdown on graft and opposition to extravagance. Read more of this post

China’s mooncake sales fall over 20% due to anti-corruption policy

China’s mooncake sales fall over 20% due to anti-corruption policy

Staff Reporter

2013-09-02

China’s mooncake sales this year are expected to fall at least 20% in the wake of the government’s anti-corruption policies, with some producers shutting down while others have switching to targeting foreign companies or individuals, the Shanghai-based First Financial Daily reports. “I have worked for a supermarket for more than 10 years, and every year around this period, promotions for mooncakes have been seen everywhere, but in recent days, in my supermarket there is not any such promotion at all,” said Mr. Yin, a marketing executive of an unidentified large-sized supermarket. Read more of this post

China’s Bright Food in talks to buy control Israel’s biggest food maker Tnuva for $1.7B

Chinese company in talks to buy control of Tnuva

Tnuva is Israel’s biggest food maker, and deal could exceed NIS 6 billion.

By Yoram Gabison | Sep. 2, 2013 | 4:11 AM

China-based Bright Food Group, which has been a global acquisition binge over the past three years, is putting out feelers to buy Tnuva, Israel’s biggest food maker, in a deal that could exceed NIS 6 billion. The Chinese company is in talks with Apax Partners, the British private equity fund that owns a 56% stake in Tnuva, the maker of such iconic products as Israel’s best-selling cottage cheese, through foreign investment banks, TheMarker has learned. Read more of this post

China moves to chill interest in independent films; “They don’t like people with interesting ideas gathering together”; “They don’t want people to think, they don’t want people to have independent and free ideas”

China moves to chill interest in independent films

By AP News Aug 30, 2013 4:53PM UTC

BEIJING (AP) — Chinese authorities have disrupted an independent film school, shut down two film festivals and harassed organizers of a third in recent months, say independent filmmakers, who see the actions as part of a general clampdown on freedom of expression. Filmmakers whose edgy themes contrast with the rosier images of the country’s mainstream industry are accustomed to censorship of content deemed to show China in a negative light. But independent filmmakers say authorities now appear to be trying to chill the sharing and discussion of their films, amid a broader clampdown under Chinese leader Xi Jinping on public discourse that could potentially undermine the country’s one-party rule, including the arrests of bloggers who post sensitive material and activists who have accused officials of corruption. Read more of this post

Asia turns bullish on convertible bonds

September 1, 2013 1:23 pm

Asia turns bullish on convertible bonds

By Paul J Davies in Hong Kong

Stock market jitters and rising costs of credit do not sound like good news for companies’ funding needs. But convertible bonds are an exception that prosper in such volatile times – and Asian groups are rushing to take advantage. Qihoo 360 Technology, a US-listed Chinese security software firm, saw very strong demand for one of the year’s biggest issues last week. That $600m deal took total issuance for the year so far in Asia excluding Japan above $10bn, according to Dealogic. Read more of this post

Philippines’ Jollibee aims to become Asia’s largest homegrown chain

Jollibee aims to become Asia’s largest homegrown chain

By Neil Jerome C. Morales (The Philippine Star) | Updated September 2, 2013 – 12:00am

MANILA, Philippines – Fastfood giant Jollibee Foods Corp. (JFC) aims to be the largest homegrown quick service restaurant chain in Asia by 2020. The long-term goal will be supported by continuous store expansions and acquisitions of several more brands abroad, an executive said. “We hope in the next seven years to achieve being the largest,” JFC chief financial officer Ysmael V. Baysa said in an interview. So far, JFC is the largest homegrown fastfood chain in Southeast Asia and the second biggest in the entire Asian continent in terms of sales, Baysa said. “For Asian companies, excluding US (fastfood) franchises, I think we’re second next only to Japan’s Yoshinoya,” Baysa said, adding that the long-term plan was crafted in 2004 when JFC was the top four in Asia. Read more of this post

More than one in eight UK high street shops could go out of business in the next three years; many of these “zombie” companies are only able to stay trading due to very low interest rates, and are not paying down the capital on loans

September 1, 2013 11:55 am

More than 1 in 8 UK shops face closure, says study

By Duncan Robinson

More than one in eight shops could go out of business in the next three years, according to an in-depth review of the UK’s struggling high street by former Iceland and Wickes chief executive Bill Grimsey. The retail veteran has claimed that nearly half of the UK’s retailers are under extreme financial pressure, as the high street struggles to deal with a slump in consumer spending. This figure rises to two-thirds among small retailers, according to an analysis by Company Watch, a financial risk management group which Mr Grimsey commissioned to carry out research. Read more of this post

Tea prices have plunged more than a third over the past year as the crisis in Egypt, the world’s fifth largest importer, has cut demand

September 1, 2013 9:29 pm

Trouble brews for tea growers in wake of Egypt crisis

By Javier Blas in Nairobi

BlackTea

Tea prices have plunged more than a third over the past year as the crisis in Egypt, the world’s fifth largest importer, has cut demand just as global production has rebounded after several years of bad crops. The commodity, which is critical to several east African economies, is now selling at its lowest price in more than three years. Kenya is the world’s largest exporter of black tea, followed by Sri Lanka and India. The wholesale cost of Kenyan medium-quality tea, known as best Pekoe Fanning 1, last week fell to $2.64 a kilogramme, down roughly 34 per cent from a year ago and the lowest since mid-2010. Traders said prices could fall further if the crisis in the north African nation of tea drinkers results in lower sales. “We see absolutely no reason to be bullish,” Van Rees, the Netherland-based tea traders, said in a report. Read more of this post

Tyrant or Hero? Plan to Name Jakarta Road After Suharto Stirs Controversy

Tyrant or Hero? Plan to Name Jakarta Road After Suharto Stirs Controversy

By Markus Junianto Sihaloho on 9:31 am August 31, 2013.
A plan to name a main thoroughfare in the heart of Jakarta after former President Suharto has drawn both support and muted criticism, with Jakarta Governor Joko Widodo conceding it could be a hard sell. The plan, conceived by a group calling itself the Council of 17 and led by Jimly Asshidiqie, a former chief justice of the Constitutional Court, would see the four roads encircling the National Monument (Monas) park renamed in honor of former leaders, as part of what Jimly called a push to boost the public’s sense of nationalism. Joko, who met with the Council of 17 on Friday, said he foresaw no problems in renaming Jalan Medan Merdeka Selatan, on the southern edge of the Monas square, to Jalan Sukarno, in honor of Indonesia’s founding president. Read more of this post

Lack of reform-oriented leaders may hurt business environment in Indonesia

Lack of reform-oriented leaders may hurt business environment

Published: 2013/09/02

JAKARTA: Indonesia’s rapidly growing economy offers opportunities for entrepreneurs, but the lack of a strong reformist candidate for the upcoming presidential elections may hurt the business environment, according to a report by Ernst & Young. The global company, whose services include financial and tax auditing as well as various advisory services, recently released the outcome of its study on entrepreneurship in each of the world’s top 20 economies. Indonesia, the world’s 16th largest economy, was part of the “EY G-20 Entrepreneurship Barometer 2013.” Analysing Indonesia’s strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats, the study said: “A strong reformist candidate has yet to emer-ge for elections in 2014, raising the possibility of backsliding on earlier improvements to the business environment thereafter.” Read more of this post

India’s Holy Mary: Converting Sacred Temple Gold Into Dollars; RBI plans to request Tirupati, Shirdi shrines to sell their gold pile to rescue Rupee fall

India’s Holy Mary: Converting Sacred Temple Gold Into Dollars

Tyler Durden on 09/01/2013 17:39 -0400

Ten days ago, it was a tongue in cheek suggestion that the Royal Bank of India should lease their gold in a last ditch effort to procure much needed USD and keep the economic engine going. Then it was an offer so good, the citizens could simply refuse (or maybe not if it was enforced) that the millions of ounces of local wealth preserving gold be converted into Rupees in a wholesale gold purchasing campaign by the domestic banks. Now, the India Times, reports that as the dollar-starved desperation deepens, the local central bank is “discussing with banks on how to convince temple trusts to deposit their hoard of idle jewellery that could be converted into bullion.” In other words, the government is going for the sacred gold which will be sold to keep the petrodollar economy functioning for another several months. Surely, yet another “transitory” measure. Read more of this post

India’s crisis within a crisis; finance minister fights on two fronts

India’s crisis within a crisis; finance minister fights on two fronts

5:21pm EDT

By Sanjeev Miglani

NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Late last month, with their doors shut to the mounting market panic outside as investors fled the country, India’s cabinet ministers gathered to give final approval to a cheap food scheme for the poor. It was hardly a difficult decision for a government that needs to shore up its sagging popularity before elections due by next May. But officials familiar with the discussion say there was one dissenting voice over what is now destined to become one of the world’s largest welfare programs. Read more of this post

Indian channel, melding traditionalism and reality TV, seeks viewers with nonstop wedding news

Indian channel, melding traditionalism and reality TV, seeks viewers with nonstop wedding news

By Shivan Sarna, The Associated Press September 1, 2013 1:25 am

NOIDA, India – Indians are obsessed with weddings and obsessed with reality television. Now Shagun TV, a new television channel headquartered in a sprawling suburb of India’s capital, is hoping it has found a can’t-miss idea — merging the two into a 24-hour matrimonial TV station. Shagun TV can itself seem obsessed. Artwork on the windows of its lobby depict an Indian wedding procession, with turbaned men beating drums and an elephant-drawn carriage carrying the groom. In the main TV studio, a large cardboard astrology chart lies against a wall, used by one host to answer wedding and relationship questions. And a plasma television loops video of a bridal ceremony. Read more of this post

Japan’s Rakuten Acquires Singapore-Based Viki Video Site for $200 Million

Kara Swisher

Exclusive: Japan’s Rakuten Acquires Viki Video Site for $200 Million

SEPTEMBER 1, 2013 AT 6:44 PM PT

The deal was set to be announced next week, but after I queried the company about it, its CEO, Hiroshi Mikitani (whose nickname is Mickey), confirmed the transaction, although he declined to give the price. That would be $200 million, according to sources with knowledge of the situation. “Our foundation is not only limited to e-commerce, but an intention to strengthen our ecosystem in Japan and worldwide,” he said in an interview. “We have been looking into finding a global solution for video.” Read more of this post

Panasonic churns out 100 millionth washing machine

Panasonic churns out 100 millionth washing machine

KYODO

AUG 30, 2013

OSAKA – Panasonic Corp. has built its 100 millionth washing machine since starting production in 1951 under the leadership of founder Konosuke Matsushita. Its output of washing machines has accelerated since Panasonic started production in China in 1992, with the last 50 million being manufactured since 1998. Panasonic said Thursday that its washing machines are popular in numerous areas because they are designed specifically for each region, taking into consideration size and washing method. Read more of this post

Japan government abandons hands-off approach to Fukushima clean-up

Japan government abandons hands-off approach to Fukushima clean-up

5:12pm EDT

By Linda Sieg and Mari Saito

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s government is moving to take a more direct role in the clean-up of the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant, as concerns grow over the ability of embattled operator Tokyo Electric to handle the legacy of the worst atomic disaster in a quarter century. The concerns have also revived debate about the future of Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco) itself, including early-stage proposals to put its toxic nuclear assets under government control and leave the rest of the company as a provider of power to the nation’s biggest economic region. Read more of this post

Korea’s Tongyang Group’s financial woes to deepen from Oct

Tongyang Group’s financial woes to deepen from Oct

2013.09.02

Concerns are mounting in the corporate bond market over Tongyang Group’s fundraising capacity. This is because the Group is expected to face setbacks in financing as Tongyang Group’s major affiliated companies have suffered from a series of credit rating downgrades ahead of the implementation of financial investment regulation amendments in October. The issuance of debt securities by Tongyang-affiliated companies has totaled 576 billion won ($520 million) this year, according to financial investment sources Monday.  Read more of this post