How depression hurts the heart

How depression hurts the heart

May 12, 2014 – 7:27AM

Paula Goodyer is a Walkley award winning health writer

Smoking, inactivity, being overweight, high blood pressure: you can probably name a few risk factors for heart disease but there’s a good chance that depression won’t be among them. Although depression has been on the Heart Foundation’s list of risk factors for heart disease for over a decade most of us don’t realise the impact it can have on the health of our arteries or that the more severe the depression is the higher the risk. Read more of this post

Australian businesses failing to explore bigger data; Big data used to be purely about volume, but it is now more around the complexity of the data, which brings in notions of variety, speed and accuracy

Australian businesses failing to explore bigger data

May 12, 2014 – 10:58AM

Cynthia Karena

Externally sourced data, such as traffic flow, should be used to help businesses, Dr Hodgkinson said. Photo: Joe Armao

Despite some big data vendors claiming Australia is leading the big data analytics trend, businesses here are well behind their US counterparts. Read more of this post

Tech giants pour resources into artificial intelligence

Tech giants pour resources into artificial intelligence

May 10, 2014

Brandon Bailey

The latest Silicon Valley arms race is a contest to build the best artificial brains. Facebook, Google and other leading tech companies are jockeying to hire top scientists in the field of artificial intelligence, while spending heavily on a quest to make computers think more like people. Read more of this post

Unemployment ‘tidal wave’ feared in next two years in Australia

Unemployment ‘tidal wave’ feared in next two years

May 9, 2014

Bianca Hartge-Hazelman

Some analysts say the better-than-expected jobs data does not paint an accurate picture of the labour market. Photo: Louise Kennerley Read more of this post

Cheap buses lure travelers from rails, sky with new frills

Cheap buses lure travelers from rails, sky with new frills

Sun, May 11 2014

By Ian Simpson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Forget the grimy terminals and uncomfortable buses of the past. Discount U.S. carriers are luring a new generation of riders from young tourists to business travelers with amenities such as free Internet and leather seats. Read more of this post

Xi Says China Must Adapt to ‘New Normal’ of Slower Growth

Xi Says China Must Adapt to ‘New Normal’ of Slower Growth

By Bloomberg News – May 11, 2014

Chinese President Xi Jinping said the nation needs to adapt to a “new normal” in the pace of economic growth and remain “cool-minded” amid a slowdown that analysts forecast will lead to the weakest expansion since 1990. Read more of this post

Maple, resting on laurels: Canada has not learned every crisis lesson

Maple, resting on laurels: Canada has not learned every crisis lesson

May 3rd 2014 | Ottawa | From the print edition

CANADA weathered the financial crisis well. No bank needed to be rescued: the World Economic Forum anointed Canada’s banking system the soundest in the world. Mark Carney was exported to the Bank of England in large part because of his work at the Bank of Canada. Stephen Harper, the prime minister, took to describing Jim Flaherty, who died on April 10th just weeks after leaving the cabinet, as “the best finance minister on the planet”.

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The Communist Party: The gatekeepers; A string of arrests sparks debate about the role of leaders’ all-powerful assistants

The Communist Party: The gatekeepers; A string of arrests sparks debate about the role of leaders’ all-powerful assistants

May 10th 2014 | BEIJING | From the print edition

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China’s provincial economies: Unhappy convergence; Poorer provinces are suffering most as the economy slows

Provincial economies: Unhappy convergence; Poorer provinces are suffering most as the economy slows

May 10th 2014 | HONG KONG | From the print edition

CHINA’S economy is slowing: GDP grew by 7.4% in the first three months of this year, compared with 7.7% in the final quarter of 2013. Just one of 31 provinces hit its growth target. The pain is being felt most keenly in the underdeveloped if resource-rich west and south-west of the country; Yunnan saw the biggest drop in growth of any province.

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Tax evasion: The data revolution; It will soon be a lot harder to hide money overseas

Tax evasion: The data revolution; It will soon be a lot harder to hide money overseas

May 10th 2014 | NEW YORK | From the print edition

THE war on those stashing undisclosed money offshore intensified this week when 47 countries, including the Group of 20 and some prominent tax havens, sealed a pact that will shake up the sharing of tax information. Under the present system, countries have to file requests with each other for data on suspected cheats. Even reasonable enquiries are often rejected as “fishing expeditions”. In future the signatories—and dozens of others that will be pressed into joining later—will automatically exchange information once a year. This will include bank balances, interest income, dividends and the proceeds of sales, which can be used to assess capital-gains tax. Read more of this post

Italian banks: Neither borrowers nor lenders; Weak banks are squeezing the life out of the Italian economy

Italian banks: Neither borrowers nor lenders;  Weak banks are squeezing the life out of the Italian economy

May 10th 2014 | MILAN | From the print edition

“I’M SCARED to ask the banks for help,” says Alessandro Amati, the boss of Axel Elettronica, an Italian electronics firm. “It doesn’t seem they want to help concretely, just words.” The complaint is a common one among Italian businesses about a banking system that, on paper at least, ought to be one of Europe’s soundest. Total bank assets in Italy stand at a relatively modest 2.6 times GDP, compared with 3.2 times in the whole of the euro area. Italian banks generally shunned the sorts of toxic financial instruments that brought down banks in America and Germany. And the country has not experienced a housing bust on a par with that in Ireland or Spain.

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Apple’s Midlife Crisis

Apple’s Midlife Crisis

By PETER THAL LARSEN

MAY 9, 2014, 1:34 PM 5 Comments

Apple is showing another symptom of a midlife crisis.

It hasn’t got a tattoo or hooked up with a Pilates instructor. But Apple’s interest in headphone maker Beats Electronics suggests that it feels the need to open its wallet in order to keep up with the cool kids. Read more of this post

The great trailblazer: Economists everywhere should mourn the passing of Gary Becker

The great trailblazer: Economists everywhere should mourn the passing of Gary Becker

May 10th 2014 | From the print edition

IF THERE is one person to blame for economists’ habit of opining on everything, it is Gary Becker, who died on May 3rd. Not content with studying the world’s economies, he was the first prominent economist to apply economic tools to all aspects of life. His revelation was the sort that seems obvious only in hindsight: that people are often purposeful and rational in their decisions, whether they are changing jobs, taking drugs or divorcing their spouses. This insight, and the work that followed from it, earned him a Nobel prize in 1992. No less an eminence than Milton Friedman declared in 2001 that Mr Becker was “the greatest social scientist who has lived and worked in the last half-century”. Read more of this post

Shadow banking in China: Battling the darkness; Every time regulators curb one form of non-bank lending, another begins to grow

Shadow banking in China: Battling the darkness; Every time regulators curb one form of non-bank lending, another begins to grow

May 10th 2014 | JINGJIANG | From the print edition

IN THE town of Jingjiang, a few hours’ drive from Shanghai, Yangzijiang Shipbuilding is making 21 huge container ships for Seaspan, a Canadian shipping firm. An enormous sign declares, “We want to be the best shipyard in China.” It is certainly among the most profitable, earning 3 billion yuan ($481m) last year. But only two-thirds or so of that came from building ships. The rest came from lending money to other companies using a local financial instrument called an entrusted loan. This puts Yangzijiang at the forefront of another industry: shadow banking. Read more of this post

Daydream believers: Korean unification is less likely to be gradual and peaceful than nasty, brutish and quick

Daydream believers: Korean unification is less likely to be gradual and peaceful than nasty, brutish and quick

May 3rd 2014 | From the print edition

THIS seems an odd time for South Korea’s leaders to be talking up the prospects of reunification with their country’s evil twin. The economic gap between the rich south and dirt-poor north of the peninsula grows ever wider, implying mounting reabsorption costs for South Korea. And under its latest Kim-despot, the 30-ish, callow but ruthless Kim Jong Un, the North seems as hostile as ever, threatening new nuclear and missile tests and this week conducting live-fire exercises near the disputed maritime border. In response to Barack Obama’s visit to Seoul in late April an official “Peaceful Reunification” committee thundered that the North “must settle its final scores with the US through an all-out nuclear showdown”. And misogynistic bile was spat at the South’s president, Park Geun-hye: a “dirty comfort woman for the US and despicable prostitute selling off the nation”. Read more of this post

Tourists beware: A report from the seamy underworld of unlicensed tour guides

Tourists beware: A report from the seamy underworld of unlicensed tour guides

May 10th 2014 | WASHINGTON, DC | From the print edition

A TERRIBLE threat stalks the streets of Washington, DC: unlicensed tour guides. These brazen lawbreakers imperil the public by showing them around the nation’s capital without a permit. Your correspondent went undercover to observe at first hand the dangers tourists face in their clutches. It was harrowing. First, your correspondent had to balance on a Segway, a two-wheeled vehicle from which she could have fallen several inches to the cold, hard pavement. “Just try to relax,” purred Bill Main, the outlaw guide, “It’s easy.” With white knuckles and a pink helmet, the tour began. Read more of this post

Airport shopping: The sixth continent; The battle to catch people in “the golden hour” before they board is getting ever more sophisticated

Airport shopping: The sixth continent; The battle to catch people in “the golden hour” before they board is getting ever more sophisticated

May 10th 2014 | From the print edition

QATAR’S new airport, which opened on April 30th, offers travellers a “stunning” terminal with 25,000 square metres for shops and restaurants (plus a “uniquely shaped” mosque). Shops in Abu Dhabi’s Midfield terminal, planned for 2017, will be arrayed around an indoor park, with “Mediterranean plants and features at its centre, and desert landscapes at its edge.” Passengers travelling through Heathrow’s Terminal 2, which opens in June, will munch on wood-fired pizza and consult concierges to help them shop. Read more of this post

Eurotunnel: The next 20 years; A bad project comes good—with better yet in store

Eurotunnel: The next 20 years; A bad project comes good—with better yet in store

May 10th 2014 | PARIS | From the print edition

QUEEN ELIZABETH gamely saluted “la combinaison de l’élan français et du pragmatisme britannique”. President François Mitterand countered with a courteous nod to Britain’s help in two world wars. A centuries-old dream of connecting Britain to France was formally realised on May 6th 1994 with the opening of Eurotunnel under the English Channel, la Manche. Read more of this post

Corporate whistleblowers: Lawyer’s poker; In-house counsels’ lips might no longer be sealed

Corporate whistleblowers: Lawyer’s poker; In-house counsels’ lips might no longer be sealed

May 10th 2014 | NEW YORK | From the print edition

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THE potential rewards of exposing corporate wrongdoing have ballooned in America, where whistleblowers can now claim up to 30% of fines imposed. Bent executives can be forgiven for feeling that the only insider they can trust not to spill the beans is the company lawyer, bound as he is by strict ethics rules and the principle of “attorney-client privilege”. Read more of this post

Electricity supply: Profitable interruptions; Collecting and trading spare electricity is a thriving industry

Electricity supply: Profitable interruptions; Collecting and trading spare electricity is a thriving industry

May 10th 2014 | From the print edition

SPIKES in demand for power and unexpected dips in supply have plagued electricity generators and their customers for decades. The solutions have been crude. More than a decade ago North American power companies started paying big consumers to switch off machines and devices to ease the load on creaking grids. In 2003 French producers did the same to cope with a heatwave. Read more of this post

Huawei: Seeking its own path; A Chinese technology company that is steering clear of the stockmarket

Huawei: Seeking its own path; A Chinese technology company that is steering clear of the stockmarket

May 10th 2014 | From the print edition

ONE thing about Huawei is easy to understand: its ambition. In Paris on May 7th the Chinese telecoms company showed off the Ascend P7, a sleek smartphone compatible with the speedy fourth-generation mobile-phone networks being built in many countries. Huawei started pushing its own brand of smartphones only in 2011, but by last year it was the world’s third-biggest vendor. Though it is still far behind the leaders, Apple and Samsung, it hopes that phones like the P7 will help it close the gap. In its main business, supplying network equipment and services to telecoms operators, it is already a close rival of Ericsson of Sweden. Last year this part of its operations brought in about 70% of its revenue of 239 billion yuan ($39 billion). Read more of this post

Alibaba: From bazaar to bonanza

From bazaar to bonanza: China’s e-commerce giant has just revealed details of its long-awaited flotation in America. It will be a blockbuster

May 10th 2014 | SHANGHAI | From the print edition

“TEN to 15 years from now, I think China can be eBay’s largest market on a global basis.” So declared Meg Whitman grandly back in 2004. At the time, she was the chief executive of eBay, an American e-commerce pioneer. Things did not work out as planned. Local competition proved so fierce and nimble, in contrast to eBay’s managers, that the company was forced to beat a humiliating retreat. Read more of this post

How better rice could save lives: A second green revolution; Technological breakthroughs in rice will boost harvests and cut poverty. They deserve support

How better rice could save lives: A second green revolution; Technological breakthroughs in rice will boost harvests and cut poverty. They deserve support

May 10th 2014 | From the print edition

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WHEN, in 1961, the government of India asked a celebrated wheat breeder, Norman Borlaug, for advice about new seeds, the subcontinent was thought to be on the verge of starvation. China actually was suffering from famine. Borlaug persuaded India to plant a new semi-dwarf variety of wheat in Punjab. The next year, the country also tried out a dwarf variety of rice called IR8. These short-stemmed crops solved a basic problem: old-fashioned crops were long and leggy, so when fed with fertiliser they grew too tall and fell over. Borlaug’s varieties put out more, heavier seeds instead. They caught on like smartphones. Over the next 40 years the green revolution spread round the world, helping ensure that, where its seeds were planted, famines became things of the past. Read more of this post

Academic prestige: Why climb the greasy pole? Getting a job at a top university will not make you a better researcher

Academic prestige: Why climb the greasy pole? Getting a job at a top university will not make you a better researcher

May 10th 2014 | From the print edition

MOST academics would view a post at an elite university like Oxford or Harvard as the crowning achievement of a career—bringing both accolades and access to better wine cellars. But scholars covet such places for reasons beyond glory and gastronomy. They believe perching on one of the topmost branches of the academic tree will also improve the quality of their work, by bringing them together with other geniuses with whom they can collaborate and who may help spark new ideas. This sounds plausible. Unfortunately, as Albert-Laszlo Barabasi of Northeastern University, in Boston (and also, it must be said, of Harvard), shows in a study published in Scientific Reports, it is not true. Read more of this post

Genes and intelligence: The 3% solution; A potent source of genetic variation in cognitive ability has just been discovered

Genes and intelligence: The 3% solution; A potent source of genetic variation in cognitive ability has just been discovered

May 10th 2014 | From the print edition

PEOPLE are living longer, which is good. But old age often brings a decline in mental faculties and many researchers are looking for ways to slow or halt such decline. One group doing so is led by Dena Dubal of the University of California, San Francisco, and Lennart Mucke of the Gladstone Institutes, also in San Francisco. Dr Dubal and Dr Mucke have been studying the role in ageing of klotho, a protein encoded by a gene called KL. A particular version of this gene, KL-VS, promotes longevity. One way it does so is by reducing age-related heart disease. Dr Dubal and Dr Mucke wondered if it might have similar powers over age-related cognitive decline. Read more of this post

Culture and psychology: You are what you eat; Or, rather, what you grow to eat

Culture and psychology: You are what you eat; Or, rather, what you grow to eat

May 10th 2014 | From the print edition

THAT orientals and occidentals think in different ways is not mere prejudice. Many psychological studies conducted over the past two decades suggest Westerners have a more individualistic, analytic and abstract mental life than do East Asians. Several hypotheses have been put forward to explain this. Read more of this post

Exorbitant privilege: American and English law and lawyers have a stranglehold on cross-border business. That may not last

Exorbitant privilege: American and English law and lawyers have a stranglehold on cross-border business. That may not last

May 10th 2014 | From the print edition

IN 2012 ICBC, a state-controlled Chinese company that is the world’s most valuable bank, bought four-fifths of the Argentine subsidiary of Standard Bank, a South African firm. The deal was hailed as a leap forward for “South-South” co-operation—direct economic ties between emerging markets. But one group of rich-world middlemen got a slice of the action: lawyers. ICBC was represented by Linklaters, an English firm, and Standard Bank by Jones Day, an American one. The deal was made under English law, with any differences to be settled in an English arbitration centre.

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Hotel tycoon says Taiwan needs more ‘doers’

Hotel tycoon says Taiwan needs more ‘doers’
Saturday, May 10, 2014
By John Liu ,The China Post

TAIPEI, Taiwan — In a speech given at Academia Sinica yesterday, five-star hotel president Stanley Yen (嚴長壽) pointed out that Taiwan needs more “doers” and has a great need for public servants with international perspectives. Read more of this post

Acer spokesman faces insider trading charges

Acer spokesman faces insider trading charges

CNA
May 10, 2014, 12:00 am TWN

XA

TAIPEI — Two employees of Taiwan’s Acer Inc. (宏碁) and three other people were charged Friday by the New Taipei District Prosecutors Office as part of a probe into insider trading of the PC manufacturer’s shares. Read more of this post

Sun sets on Spaniards’ foiled solar power dreams

Sun sets on Spaniards’ foiled solar power dreams
Monday, May 12, 2014
By Katell Abiven, AFP

ALBACETE, Spain–“The sun could be yours,” the Spanish government promised in 2007, encouraging citizens to invest in solar power. Many who did now wish they could give it back. Read more of this post