No one knows a thing about social mobility; So will my children have a better or a worse life than me?

November 15, 2013 6:27 pm

No one knows a thing about social mobility

By John McDermott

So will my children have a better or a worse life than me? “Sir John Major, the former Conservative prime minister, said he found it ‘truly shocking’ that ‘in every single sphere of British influence, the upper echelons of power in 2013 are held overwhelmingly by the privately educated or the affluent middle class.’”

Financial Times , November 11

Hear, hear.

So you agree with the Senior Adviser to Credit Suisse, Chairman of the International Advisory Board of the National Bank of Kuwait, and former Carlyle Group executive about the role of the affluent middle class? Read more of this post

Call to reinstate Istanbul icon as mosque

November 15, 2013 5:55 pm

Call to reinstate Istanbul icon as mosque

By Daniel Dombey in Istanbul

One of Turkey’s most senior ministers has called for Istanbul’s ancient Ayasofya museum to be converted back to being a mosque, amid an intense debate about the social and religious agenda of the country’s Islamist-rooted government. Read more of this post

Lunch with the FT: Henry Blodget; A decade after being banned from Wall Street, the business website chief on redemption, regrets and market madness

November 15, 2013 12:42 pm

Lunch with the FT: Henry Blodget

By Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson

A decade after being banned from Wall Street, the business website chief on redemption, regrets and market madness

According to family legend, Henry Blodget’s great-grandfather was on the trans-Siberian railway when he lost his fortune in the Wall Street crash of 1929. He died not long after, during the Great Depression, his Fifth Avenue apartment valued at zero because the entire building had been declared bankrupt. Today, Blodget estimates, the prime Manhattan property would be worth $20m. Read more of this post

The evolving role of the Oxford English Dictionary

November 15, 2013 6:11 pm

The evolving role of the Oxford English Dictionary

By Lorien Kite

Look for a topical expression in the Oxford English Dictionary and you may find it is older than you think. “Phone-hacking”, for example, was first used in the early 1980s. Americans have been worrying about “fiscal cliffs” of one kind or another for more than 50 years. And the desire for an “Arab spring” goes back to at least 1975 – or longer in the case of cyclists, for whom the term was coined in the late 19th century to denote a component in the suspension of saddles. Read more of this post

Taking on middle class privilege poses tough choices for politicians; The social mobility issue has struck a nerve in Westminster

November 15, 2013 7:09 pm

Taking on middle class privilege poses tough choices for politicians

By Sarah Neville, Public Policy Editor

The social mobility issue has struck a nerve in Westminster

When Sir John Major this week railed against the domination of power by a privately educated elite, he was simultaneously delivering a political critique and articulating a deeply felt human desire for economic progress. From a “chicken in every pot” to “homes fit for heroes”, for decades politicians have found different ways of making the same promise to a hopeful electorate: vote for us and you will live a happier, richer life than your parents – and your children will do even better. Read more of this post

Class barriers keep poor out of professional careers

November 15, 2013 8:10 pm

Class barriers keep poor out of professional careers

By Elizabeth Rigby, Deputy Political Editor

The poorest Britons have no better chance of becoming a doctor, lawyer or accountant than they did almost 20 years ago, according to social mobility indicators seen by the Financial Times. The revelations, contained in a set of 17 trackers drawn up by Nick Clegg’s office to measure the coalition’s progress on improving life chances for disadvantaged people, also show that the most deprived children are still significantly behind their more privileged peers on the day they start school. The findings will add weight to growing public and political anxiety about the lack of social mobility in the UK. Read more of this post

Studies Reveal a Google-Like, Crowd-Sourcing Brain; the new combination of neuroscience and computer science tells us what programs the mind runs

The Brain’s Crowdsourcing Software

Nov. 15, 2013 7:51 p.m. ET

Over the past decade, popular science has been suffering from neuromania. The enthusiasm came from studies showing that particular areas of the brain “light up” when you have certain thoughts and experiences. It’s mystifying why so many people thought this explained the mind. What have you learned when you say that someone’s visual areas light up when they see things? Read more of this post

How Goldilocks Moved to Space and the World of Economists

How Goldilocks Moved to Space and the World of Economists

The story is ‘just right’ for astronomers judging the habitability of other planets.

BEN ZIMMER

Nov. 15, 2013 7:29 p.m. ET

When astronomers announced earlier this month that there could be billions of Earthlike planets in the Milky Way, a fairy-tale character made a familiar return to the headlines: Goldilocks. For planets to support life as Earth does, they must be not too big and not too small, not too hot and not too cold. In other words, they must be “just right,” like the porridge, chair and bed Goldilocks finds in the Three Bears’ house. Read more of this post

The Bad Idea of Daylight-Saving Time; The faceless system that determines our taxes also decides how much daylight we are allowed and when we may enjoy it

The Bad Idea of Daylight-Saving Time

The faceless system that determines our taxes also decides how much daylight we are allowed and when we may enjoy it.

AMANDA FOREMAN

Nov. 15, 2013 9:37 p.m. ET

Every November, a great theft is perpetrated against hundreds of millions of innocent people. They are robbed of an hour of afternoon sunlight by the government decree known as daylight-saving time. The misappropriation occurs precisely at the wrong moment, when the days are already growing shorter. Read more of this post

What Floats Your Boat Might Not Float Your Fund

Nov 15, 2013

What Floats Your Boat Might Not Float Your Fund

JASON ZWEIG

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The question isn’t whether interest rates will rise, but when. As Janet Yellen, the nominee to succeed Ben Bernanke as head of the Federal Reserve, made clear to lawmakers Thursday, the Fed won’t keep rates low forever. Some investors already are trying to protect themselves by pouring money into “bank loan” funds, or portfolios that hold short-term loans extended by banks to companies.

Read more of this post

Some statisticians are out to prove to nonmathematicians how useful—and ubiquitous—their field is

Odds Lot: Statisticians Party Like It’s 2.013 x 10 Cubed

About 88% Through Celebratory Year, 100% in Field Find It ‘Sexy’

DANIEL MICHAELS

Nov. 15, 2013 10:32 p.m. ET

LOUVAIN-LA-NEUVE, Belgium—When Ingrid van Keilegom tells people she is a statistician, they usually reply fearfully, ” ‘Oh, no,’ ” she says. “To them, it sounds like math.” Prof. van Keilegom and her colleagues at the Catholic University here, about 19 miles from Brussels, are out to change that impression. To demonstrate how useful—and ubiquitous—their field is, they recently held an all-day conference, “Statistics, your friend in daily life, whether you like it or not.” Read more of this post

Should you get in on the ground floor of IPOs?

November 15, 2013 6:49 pm

Should you get in on the ground floor of IPOs?

By Elaine Moore

Kicking yourself for missing out on Royal Mail’s blockbuster stock market debut? Don’t worry. There is plenty more where that came from. This year is shaping up to be a bumper year for companies choosing to make their debut on London’s stock markets as confidence in the UK’s recovery grows. So far this year 71 companies have debuted on UK exchanges, compared to 46 in the whole of 2012. After Foxtons, Merlin Entertainments, Esure and Royal Mail, there is now speculation that House of Fraser, Poundland or DFS might be the next household names to go public. Read more of this post

Young Aussie buyers find home-owning dream a nightmare to fund

Young buyers find home-owning dream a nightmare to fund

November 16, 2013

Simon Johanson

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First home borrowers are at record lows as they face skyrocketing property prices, the struggle to save a deposit and investor competition. A generation of young Australians is being squeezed out of the housing market. Skyrocketing house prices and the difficulty of saving a deposit are putting the great Australian home-owning dream out of the reach of many – despite the best buying conditions in years, with interest rates plummeting to historic lows and low unemployment. Sunaina Nundeekasen, a 28-year-old Sydney doctor, has worked for the past four years and still not managed to save a large enough deposit. Read more of this post

Bitcoin Scandal Reflects Popularity of Virtual Currency in China

NOVEMBER 17, 2013, 5:05 PM

Bitcoin Scandal Reflects Popularity of Virtual Currency in China

By ADAM CENTURY

On Oct. 26, the website of Global Bond Limited, a Chinese exchange platform for bitcoins, the booming digital currency, suddenly went dead. Then, without warning, GBL’s roughly 500 remaining investors were kicked out of the company’s official QQ group, a social media platform that the company was using for investor relations. By nightfall, the scale of the swindle was made public – 25 million renminbi, or $4.1 million – making it one of the largest bitcoin fraud cases since the currency’s inception four years ago. Read more of this post

Beijing’s parking woes: Is there any end in sight?

Beijing’s parking woes: Is there any end in sight?

By Lulu Xue    November 13, 2013    0 Comments

Beijing’s motor vehicle ownership has reached 5.4 million, ranking it first out of all Chinese cities in motorization. To combat parking shortages, the Beijing Municipal Commission of Transport recently announced the addition of over 13,000 parking spaces to the city’s center – but that might not be an optimal solution. Photo by Leo Fung.

What do the time-honored hutong – quintessential narrow alleys of Beijing that date back to the Qing dynasty – and danwei – organized work and housing complexes from the pre-1979 era –have in common? Apart from the fact that neither has been replaced by modern buildings, one of their major similarities is that they were designed to serve pedestrians, not cars. However, as Beijing’s rate of motor vehicle ownership escalates, even hutong and danwei residents are opting for cars. Because the densely-populated central city, an area with over 23,000 people per square kilometer, is inherently at odds with intensive car usage and massive parking lots, continued motorization is exacerbating the challenges to sustainable urban mobility in Beijing. Read more of this post

Alibaba’s CTO sees chance for non-American internet ecosystem

Alibaba’s CTO sees chance for non-American internet ecosystem

By Li Jizhi, Zhang Xuan

HELSINKI, Nov. 16 (Xinhua) — As the Slush conference, an annual startup event in Helsinki, attracted thousands more participants than last year, a top Chinese IT developer has seen the opportunity of emerging independent internet ecosystem rather than the current one dominated by Americans. Wang Jian, Chief Technology Officer (CTO) of Alibaba group, made the remarks in an interview with Xinhua, after he briefed the Slush audience about China’s e-commerce businesses. Read more of this post

Alibaba helps make China’s largest fund

Alibaba helps make China’s largest fund

BEIJING, Nov. 16 (Xinhua) — Currency fund Tianhong Zenglibao has become the first fund in China to hit 100 billion yuan (16.30 billion U.S. dollars) of sales thanks to its cooperation with Yu’ebao, Alibaba’s wealth management product. The fund, with more than 29 million buyers so far, saw its asset scale sales exceed 100 billion yuan on Thursday, the Shanghai Securities News reported on Friday, citing data from Tianhong Fund.

Read more of this post

China’s A shares poised to go global

November 15, 2013 6:26 pm

China’s A shares poised to go global

By Kylie Wong

China has made significant strides in opening up its capital markets to foreign investors, but several key challenges need to be addressed before the mainland equity market can feature in broader equity benchmark indices. Mainland-listed equities traded in the renminbi, also known as A shares, are currently excluded from global indices as they are not freely accessible by the global investing public. The existing China representation within those indices is largely via H shares, which are Chinese securities listed in Hong Kong. Read more of this post

Chinese Balk at Child-Rearing Costs

Nov 16, 2013

Chinese Balk at Child-Rearing Costs

An easing of the one-child policy might help China address a coming slump in its work force. But the country’s citizens are concerned with another reality: how expensive it has become to raise even one kid. In a country where the cost of living has soared alongside breakneck economic growth, some Chinese are saying that due to economic pressures, they don’t want a second child even if the government allows them to. Read more of this post

Future for Egg Derivatives Is Fragile in China

Nov 18, 2013

Future for Egg Derivatives Is Fragile in China

If we were to dream up the perfect commodity to trade as a futures contract, it would probably be durable, non-perishable and subject to regular swings in supply and demand. Being notoriously fragile and perishable, eggs clearly don’t fit the bill on the first two counts, and investors may need some convincing on the third. Eggs aren’t just for breakfast. The Dalian Commodity Exchange on Nov. 8 launched futures contracts, with each lot weighing in at 5,000 tons and each egg weighing 53-60 grams, deliverable to warehouses around China that are cooled to 5° Celsius. Read more of this post

Graduates from Yiwu’s “Taobao University” earn over 10,000 yuan a month

Graduates from Yiwu’s “Taobao University” earn over 10,000 yuan a month

Staff Reporter

2013-11-17

To enroll in the Entrepreneurship Academy — dubbed “Taobao University” — at Yiwu Industrial & Commercial College, students must first open Taobao shops and earn a monthly income of more than 8,000 yuan (US$1300) or a Taobao credit rating of four diamonds — credit rating on Taobao, China’s equivalent of eBay and Amazon, is divided into four grades, starting from hearts, then diamonds then blue crowns then yellow crowns, with each grade divided again into five — the Shanghai Evening Post reports. Read more of this post

Huawei’s enterprise business booms in Western Europe on innovation

Huawei’s enterprise business booms in Western Europe on innovation

BARCELONA, Spain, Nov. 16 (Xinhua) — Huawei, a leading global information and communications technology (ICT) solutions provider, is seeing its enterprise business booming in Western Europe, a senior Huawei manager said. “Our enterprise business has been growing very fast in Western Europe since we started such business here in the second half of 2012,” Leon He, president of Huawei’s Enterprise Business Group in Western Europe, told Xinhua. Read more of this post

Incredible bitcoin rally in China to meet ‘inevitable crash’: investor

Incredible bitcoin rally in China to meet ‘inevitable crash’: investor

Staff Reporter

2013-11-17

Bitcoin, a decentralized online currency, began the second round of revaluation this year in early July after its price has jumped to over US$460 from the original US$200 for every BTC. Exchange rates against the renminbi topped 2,700 yuan (US$443) at its peak, according to huobi.com, a site dedicated to bitcoin trading news. Chinese women have played a critical role in the rally, accounting for 40% of VIP customers. VIPs are defined as traders with over 10 million yuan (US$1.6 million) in total transaction volume using the online currency, according to the report. Read more of this post

Legs fall off China’s hairy crab industry

November 17, 2013 4:18 pm

Legs fall off China’s hairy crab industry

By Patti Waldmeir at Yangcheng lake

Free “hairy crabs” used to be one of the perks of government service in eastern China at this time of year – peak season for these hairy-limbed delicacies, one of China’s many currencies of corruption. But, according to crab sellers around Yangcheng lake near Shanghai, home to some of China’s most famous crustacean restaurants, no government departments are staging hairy crab banquets this year. Big companies are struggling to get government officials even to accept crab gift packs, a common way of greasing the wheels of commerce in this crab-hungry part of the country. Read more of this post

New Era of Higher Costs Spurs Record 50-Year Yield: China Credit

New Era of Higher Costs Spurs Record 50-Year Yield: China Credit

China sold 50-year bonds at a record high yield as banks prepare for what they describe as a new era of higher borrowing costs after a government policy overhaul. The finance ministry auctioned 20 billion yuan ($3.3 billion) of debt due November 2063 on Nov. 15 at a yield of 5.31 percent, the highest since sales of the tenor began in 2009. That compares with a 4.24 percent rate offered in the previous sale and the 5.05 percent median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. The sale drew bids for 1.51 times the amount offered, less than the 2.13 times in May. Read more of this post

Reality Check: Chinese Developers Unconvinced By Housing Curbs

Reality Check: Chinese Developers Unconvinced By Housing Curbs

Created on Thursday, November 14, 2013 – 19:35 EST

BEIJING (MNI) – Signs that big city governments are finally ready to act to cool demand for housing in China haven’t fazed real estate developers, who still don’t believe the government has what it takes to bring order to the runaway property market. Some hope lies in signs the new Chinese leadership may be willing to institute fundamental reform of the country’s land use system to put the housing market on a more solid, sustainable footing. But the statement released following a key Communist Party meeting here shed little light on how much reform the government is willing or able to implement. Read more of this post

Success of Chinese Leader’s Ambitious Economic Plan May Rest on Rural Regions

November 16, 2013

Success of Chinese Leader’s Ambitious Economic Plan May Rest on Rural Regions

By CHRIS BUCKLEY

HONG KONG — China’s Communist Party has burnished President Xi Jinping’s plans for an economic overhaul with exultant propaganda about a historic turning point. But the success of his proposals, and the long-term health of the Chinese economy, could rest on policy battles reaching down into thousands of towns and villages over land, money and a misshapen fiscal system that has bred public discontent and financial hazards. Read more of this post

Xi, in ‘Godfather’ Mold, Looks Assertive and Even Imperial; “Xi Jinping personally has a sense of crisis. He doesn’t want to become like the last emperor of the Qing Dynasty, Puyi.”

NOVEMBER 15, 2013, 12:40 AM

Xi, in ‘Godfather’ Mold, Looks Assertive and Even Imperial

By CHRIS BUCKLEY

The president of China, Xi Jinping, has admitted to watching “The Godfather,” and this week he proved he could be a shrewd student of one of that film’s themes: the art of amassing and applying power in a small, secretive circle of men. Mr. Xi emerged from a four-day meeting of the Communist Party Central Committee stronger. He won endorsement for a new national security commission that is likely to enhance his influence, as well as for a leadership group on reform that could give him a more direct say in economic policy, which has tended to be the prime minister’s domain. Read more of this post

Xi’s China Reform Plan Sets Scene for Local Clampdown

Xi’s China Reform Plan Sets Scene for Local Clampdown

China’s Communist Party signaled a bigger focus on fiscal concerns during President Xi Jinping’s tenure, setting the scene for a clampdown to control the finances of indebted regional authorities. Local governments will be able to sell bonds to fund construction and officials will be rated on measures including borrowing levels, the party said Nov. 15. An easing of the one-child policy and extra land rights for farmers also featured in the biggest package of reforms since at least the 1990s. Read more of this post

You Think There’s Bubble in Chinese Real Estate Market? Nothing Compared With Animation Industry in China

BEIJING – NOV 17TH, 1:50 | TAGS: ANIMATION CHINA

You Think There’s Bubble in Chinese Real Estate Market? Nothing Compared With Animation Industry in China

In 2005, the State Administration of Radio Film and Television required that no less than 60% of Chinese animation be screened on TV channels during the prime time. Then more policies that favors the Chinese-made animations are introduced, including subsidies… In terms of the output, China had became the top animation provider in the world. In 2011, China produced more than 260,000-minutes-long tv episodes of animation, which is 180,000 minutes more than Japan, the second biggest animation-output country of the world. In 2012, a total of 117-thousand-hours-long animation was aired in China. According to the State Administration of Radio Film and Television (SARFT, 国家广电总局), approximately 60% of the Chinese animation companys’ revenue came from TV stations. Yet the TV stations’ total budget for procurement transactions was not more than 50 million yuan. The average cost of the purchases for TV stations was less than 10 yuan per minute. Read more of this post