Not even death can come between a man and his Doritos. Arch West, the Frito-Lay marketing exec credited with inventing the chip brand, died last week at age 97, reports the AP , and his Oct. 1 graveside service will feature the chips he dreamed up after stumbling upon a San…
Continue reading …The Boeing 787 Dreamliner is finally taking off—just three years behind schedule. Yesterday, the much-anticipated jet was officially delivered to its first customer, Japan’s All Nippon Airways. With a ceremony planned for today in Everett, Wash., reporters are getting a look at the nifty features that set the jetliner…
Continue reading …• Germany divided over bolstering bailout fund • Analysts expect US-style Tarp €150bn relief scheme Stock markets endured a day of sharp volatility amid uncertainty about how eurozone leaders intend to solve the ongoing – and increasingly pressing – crisis that is gripping the single currency and threatening global growth. While the US and UK hope that eurozone leaders will come up with a scheme strong enough to build a firewall around the most indebted countries in the eurozone, Germany has emerged as a stumbling block to any plan that might be drawn up to increase the bailout funds for the eurozone to €2tn (£1.7tn) or more. German politicians told the Guardian of their dismay at reports following the last weekend’s meeting of the International Monetary Fund about beefing up the existing bailout fund – known as the European Financial Stability Facility. Frank Schäffler, a politician from North Rhein-Westphalia, said any scheme to bolster the fund from its existing €440m capacity would be a “catastrophic development” that he feared would lead to inflation. “It must be stopped,” he said in a phone interview. Schäffler is from the pro-business Free Democratic Party (FDP), which rules in coalition with the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) of the chancellor, Angela Merkel. Germany’s finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, appeared to downplay any attempt to bolster the EFSF. “We do not intend to increase it,” he said in a television interview. His remarks came after European markets closed and after France’s CAC40 closed 1.8% higher and the Dax in Germany rose 2.9% – but not after moving 6% from peak to trough. Gains in London were more muted with the FTSE index ending 0.4% higher at 5,089.37, while Wall Street was gyrating. President Barack Obama called on European leaders to move more quickly to address the crisis. He said in a town hall meeting that Europe’s financial crisis “is scaring the world” and that the actions the region’s leaders have taken so far “haven’t been as quick as they need to be”. Louise Cooper, of BGC Partners, said: “These massive moves tell us how deeply uncertain is the future. Trying to trade or invest in such markets is more than difficult, I would suggest it is almost impossible.” Gold prices are falling – down by $40 and off $300 from its $1,920 an ounce high on 6 September – as traders liquidate positions to release cash to cover losses elsewhere. But earlier, Lorenzo Bini Smaghi, an executive board member of the ECB, had insisted that discussions were under way about how to bolster the EFSF. “I know that people are thinking about these things. They may not be willing to admit it in the public, but they are thinking about these things,” he said, referring to the Troubled Asset Relief Programme (Tarp) used in the US after the 2008 banking crisis. Analysts at JP Morgan expect European banks to get a capital injection of up to €150bn through a Tarp-like deal. “Euro-Tarp is, in our view, the best risk-reward medicine for opening the Eurobank funding market,” JP Morgan analyst Kian Abouhossein said. There is also speculation about recapitalisation of eurozone banks, particularly because the losses, or “haircut”, on Greek bonds are expected to rise to 50%. The second bailout for Greece in July put the loss at 21% and fears of large writedowns drove shares in Greek banks – big holders of their country’s debt – to a 19-year low. French banks are also of concern to the market and remarks by the Banque de France’s Christian Noyer at the weekend were seen as suggesting the central bank was ready to step in if necessary. While a wide-ranging solution is needed, the focus is still on Greece. It needs the sixth tranche of payouts – €8bn – from its original bailout to be released next month or it will run out cash, potentially defaulting on its debt and being unable to pay its public-sector workers. The EFSF must also be endorsed across the eurozone, even before any plans can be adopted to bolster its firepower. A key vote in Germany is due on Thursday and Schäffler suggested Merkel and Schäuble were not being honest with parliament about what lay ahead. “The ink has not dried on this second bailout and already there is talk about more money,” he said. On Tuesday afternoon the FDP will hold a meeting to decide whether the party should support Merkel but Schäffler says he will vote “no” regardless. Doubts remain about whether enough will be done. Philip Booth, from Cass Business School, said: “The IMF and the EU still has not woken up to the realities of the sovereign debt situation.” Haircuts, blackmail and how to turn one euro into five What is the new rescue plan? There isn’t one. This is a wish list dreamt up by Tim Geithner, US Treasury secretary, along with possibly the UK and more than likely some emerging nations. In Brussels they say it’s “wildly premature” to talk of a multitrillion-euro bailout fund and an “orderly” halving of Greece’s €315bn debt within the six-week deadline set by Geithner and George Osborne. OK, but what’s all this about €2tn? EU officials know the current plans to stabilise the eurozone and resolve the sovereign debt crisis don’t cut the mustard with the markets. So there’s feverish talk of raising the bailout facility’s financial firepower to €1tn, €2tn – or even €4.5tn (roughly ten times what’s now available). One idea is to leverage this firepower by effectively turning it into a bank, which, armed with a triple-A rating and access to virtually unlimited European Central Bank capital, could lend money to countries in trouble. By distancing the ECB from these loans this would overcome political hurdles – notably in Germany. Another idea mooted is to bring forward by a year – to July 2012 – the date for turning the EFSF into a permanent European Stabilisation Mechanism and, ultimately, European Monetary Fund. French president Nicolas Sarkozy and several thinktanks like the EMF idea. Another idea is for an orderly default on Greek debt of 50%. But that will be resisted by bondholders (largely banks) who in July agreed a 21% “haircut”. Aren’t they still trying to sort out the old rescue plan though? Yes. The first Greek debt crisis forced EU leaders to adopt a rescue plan in May 2010 and its failure prompted a bigger one in July. The core element is a bailout mechanism known as the European Financial Stability Facility, which provides “temporary” financial assistance to eurozone members in difficulties. It has €440bn (£380bn) available and has used about €142bn of this to prop up Greece, Ireland and Portugal. There are fears that unstoppable crises in Spain and/or Italy would swiftly exhaust this firepower. So, what’s the (relatively paltry) €8bn they’re arguing about in Greece then? This is the sixth payment from the first €110bn emergency package agreed in May 2010. It must be signed off by the EU, ECB and IMF but the price is further spending cuts, tax rises, privatizations, wage-cuts etc. The economic and social cost is now said to be too high. So, what’s happening with that plan – and why is there a big vote in Germany this week? Leaders agreed in July to modify the EFSF as part of a second bailout of Greece and those reforms have to be ratified by every government in the eurozone. The German parliament (Bundestag) votes on Thursday on increasing the EFSF’s funds – and raising Germany’s contribution from €123bn to €211bn or almost half the total. A positive vote is likely but MPs are talking of being “blackmailed” into approving even bigger contributions in future; they vote early next month on the second Greek rescue package as a whole. Austria, Cyprus, Estonia, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Slovakia are yet to approve the July package. What if one country doesn’t ratify? Market chaos – and back to the drawing board. “The way things are going the Bundestag will be asked to vote every second week on a different, new rescue package,” one insider said. So, if it’s Germany, the whole euro project will be doomed.Simply developing new means for pan-European institutions to borrow more money or parcelling up the debts into packages that are ultimately passed round to other countries or to the ECB is not a solution.” European debt crisis European banks Greece Europe IMF Economics Global economy European Central Bank Europe Helen Pidd Jill Treanor David Gow guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Former IMF chief claims diplomatic immunity from lawsuit brought by hotel maid over sexual assault allegation Dominique Strauss-Kahn has asked a New York judge to dismiss a civil suit filed by the hotel maid who accused him of sexual assault. The high-profile criminal case against Strauss-Kahn collapsed last month after prosecutors told the court they could not trust hotel worker Nafissatou Diallo’s testimony beyond reasonable doubt. Strauss-Kahn was forced to resign as managing director of the IMF after he was arrested in May while trying to board a plane to Europe and charged with the sexual assault and attempted rape of Diallo in his suite at the Sofitel hotel in Manhattan. Diallo had filed a civil law suit against the ex-IMF boss before the criminal case collapsed. While the criminal case continued, judge Douglas McKeon gave the one-time French presidential candidate until 26 September to respond. Strauss-Kahn’s lawyers are arguing that their client was immune to such suits under international law. McKeon will now now consider the application. Diallo, a 32-year-old Guinean immigrant, maintains in her civil suit against Strauss-Kahn that she was subjected to a “sadistic” attack. She is seeking unspecified damages from the millionaire economist. DNA evidence of a sexual encounter was recovered by the police, and Strauss-Kahn has argued that he had consensual sex with Diallo. Earlier this month, in his first interview since the trial collapsed, Strauss-Kahn said there was no “aggression or constraint” involved, but admitted he was guilty of a “moral fault” . Strauss-Kahn faces legal woes on both sides of the Atlantic, despite the collapse of the criminal case. This week he is expected to meet Tristane Banon , a French writer who has accused him of attacking her during an interview him in 2003, when he was a senior figure in the opposition Socialist party. He has strenuously denied the accusations. French prosecutors are deciding whether to bring charges against Strauss-Kahn and the meeting is set to take place before a judge. Dominique Strauss-Kahn New York United States France IMF Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Arnold Schwarzenegger’s biggest fan may just be … Arnold Schwarzenegger. The action hero and former Governator of California has commissioned at least three larger-than-life bronze statues of himself when he was at his most buff, and he’ll be keeping at least one for himself. The owner of the bronze business…
Continue reading …Peyton Manning may recover from surgery quickly enough to practice with the Colts by December, but the team doesn’t expect him to actually take the field until next season, owner Jim Irsay told the Indy Star this morning. But he seemingly backtracked moments later, tweeting: “I didn’t say Peyton out…
Continue reading …Lady Gaga getting diamond tooth implants? It might be hard to believe—if the singer wasn’t already known for her avant-garde fashion decisions. “She’s still deciding how many to get done. Her dental bill will be as expensive as her jewelry bill,” a source tells the Sun ; her designer confirms…
Continue reading …NHS Confederation boss Mike Farrar warns of hits to jobs, A&E and maternity wards to stave off going bust The NHS’s cash crisis is so great that it will have to either cut services to patients or close accident and emergency and maternity units if it is to avoid going bust, ministers have been warned. Resolving the service’s deepening financial worries will involve decisions that will be politically unpalatable as any efforts to save money will arouse controversy, according to a senior NHS leader. Mike Farrar, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, writes in the Guardian that longer waiting times and worsening balance sheets at foundation trust hospitals show that the NHS is facing an “unprecedented financial challenge” that has not yet been widely recognised. The need to make £20bn of efficiency savings by 2015 “means our finances are under more strain than ever”, he says. “I am deeply concerned that the gravity of this problem for the NHS is not widely understood by patients and the public. There is a real risk we will sleepwalk into a financial crisis that patients will feel the full force of. “This could see the NHS forced to salami-slice its way out of financial trouble, cutting services and use of less effective treatments,” adds Farrar, whose organisation represents most NHS hospitals, primary care trusts, ambulance services and mental health trusts in England. “There are three scenarios,” he adds. “The NHS maintains service standards but goes bust while doing so; it sees standards slip but maintains financial balance; or it keeps improving and stays in the black. Clearly, we all want the third option.” His intervention comes days after the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, warned that 22 trusts, which between them run 60 hospitals, were on “the brink of financial collapse” because of punishing repayments under private finance initiative deals struck while Labour was in power. Farrar says remaining solvent while preserving quality of patient care “means radically re-orienting services to reduce hospital stays and offering new forms of care. Put bluntly, this means fewer beds and fewerhospital-based jobs.” Closing some hospital units as part of a drive to centralise key medical services will both drive up standards and save money, he argues. The health minister, Paul Burstow, last week admitted that a “wave” of decisions involving reconfiguring hospital services across England was imminent. Some will be agreed by local NHS bodies, though others may go to the Independent Reconfiguration Panel of advisers, with Lansley having the final say. A source close to Lansley said he would not shy away from hard decisions, including on reconfigurations. “Mike Farrar is right to highlight the challenges the NHS faces, after a decade of declining productivity and many years of Labour turning a blind eye to the problems some parts of the NHS have been facing,” the source said. “Tough solutions may be needed, but through our modernisation plans we will help the NHS overcome these challenges so that every part of the NHS delivers the best possible care to patients.” Dr Mark Porter, chairman of the British Medical Association’s consultants committee, said the NHS’s cash problems had been forced on it by ministers despite its best-ever performance. “The NHS is working better than ever: more and better treatments, highly regarded by most patients,” he said. “The financial crisis has been imposed by governments with the continual claim that money needs to be removed to be spent on different treatments. Porter said: “It’s time that the people started asking where this pile of money is and what it is being spent on. “Right now, the government appears to want both a financial crisis and also to spend billions of pounds on completely unnecessary structural reorganisations.” Dr Clare Gerada, chair of the Royal College of GPs, said the NHS was facing “the chaos of change associated with an unprecedented need to make cuts. “What is actually happening is that the public are being told that everything is OK, and that they can have choice and that we can have lovely new hospitals and it will be business as usual. This needs to stop.” Hospitals cannot be shut safely without causing harm to patients, she added. “Many hospitals have told me that they don’t have enough beds, and this is especially apparent during the winter months. “Hospitals run at very high bed occupancy already and shutting them piecemeal does not appear to make much sense, except as cost reduction,” said Gerada. NHS Health Health policy Liberal-Conservative coalition Denis Campbell guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …We are not a very content bunch. Majorities of Democrats and Republicans alike are unhappy with the US government, leading to a record high of 81% who are dissatisfied with the way America is bring governed, the latest Gallup poll shows. A whopping 92% of Republicans are dissatisfied, as are…
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