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Colin Powell said this weekend that he wasn’t all that sure about voting for President Obama this election, but Rush Limbaugh says that’s a load of hooey, reports ThinkProgress . When it comes down to it, the “titular head of the Republican party, the ideal model Republican” will vote for the…

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Japan parliament elects Yoshihiko Noda as prime minister

Former finance minister Yoshihiko Noda faces post-tsunami reconstruction and a sluggish economy as Japan’s new leader Japan’s parliament elected former finance minister Yoshihiko Noda as the country’s new prime minister on Tuesday, the sixth leader in five years. A fiscal conservative, Noda faces a host of daunting problems, including the post-tsunami recovery and nuclear crisis, and a sluggish economy and the yen’s surge, which hurts Japan’s exporters. Noda, who was elected on Monday to head the ruling Democratic Party of Japan, succeeds the unpopular Naoto Kan, who officially resigned on Tuesday with his cabinet after nearly 15 months in office. Noda, 54, must unify the fractious ruling party and restore public confidence in politics amid disgust over squabbling in parliament and perceived lack of leadership after the tsunami. He is a “moderate voice” in the ruling party, Sheila Smith, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington, wrote. “He has a steady temperament and a reputation for fairness in a party where loyalties have been severely tested of late.” A supporter of the US-Japan security alliance, Noda has angered China and South Korea for comments about convicted wartime leaders revered at the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo, where the souls of all Japan’s war dead are enshrined. Earlier this month, he reiterated his claim that the wartime leaders had paid their debts and should no longer be seen as war criminals. He made similar comments in 2005. Yasukuni visits by postwar politicians have often enraged Japan’s neighbours, who bore the brunt of Japan’s colonial aggression and are sensitive to any efforts by Japan to whitewash its past. As finance minister, Noda has been battling the yen’s recent rise to record highs against the dollar. Earlier this month, he authorised Japan’s intervention in global currency markets to try to weaken the yen. Noda has also said Japan must rein in its huge deficit twice the country’s gross domestic product and has voiced support in the past for raising the country’s 5% sales tax, but has toned that down lately. Japan Japan disaster guardian.co.uk

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Home ownership ‘to fall to mid-80s levels’

• National Housing Federation says home ownership falling • Group predicts house prices to rise 21% by 2016 • Rents forecast to rise almost 20% by 2016 • Call for more housebuilding to tackle crisis The housing market is in crisis as home ownership tumbles and house prices soar, a study warned on Tuesday. Home ownership in England will slump to just 63.8% over the next decade, the National Housing Federation’s forecast said, the lowest level since the mid-1980s. Huge deposits, combined with high house prices and strict lending criteria, have sent home ownership into decline, the Federation said. The Federation, which represents England’s housing associations, warned the housing market will be plunged into an unprecedented crisis as it also forecast steep rises in the private rental sector and a house price boom. The Federation blamed the bleak outlook on an under-supply of homes in the UK. Federation chief executive David Orr said: “With home ownership in decline, rents rising rapidly and social housing waiting lists at a record high, it’s time to face up to the fact that we have a totally dysfunctional housing market. “Home ownership is increasingly becoming the preserve of the wealthy and, in parts of the country like London, the very wealthy. “And for the millions locked out of the property market the options are becoming increasingly limited as demand sends rents rising sharply and social homes waiting lists remain at record levels.” In England, the proportion of people living in owner-occupied homes will fall from a peak of 72.5% in 2001 to 63.8% in 2021, the Federation forecast. In London, the majority of people living in the capital will rent by 2021 with the number of owner occupiers falling from 51.6% in 2010 to 44% by 2021, it added. The north-east will be the only English region to see any increase in owner occupier numbers over the next decade, rising marginally from 66.2% to 67.4%, the Federation predicted. The average house price in England will meanwhile rise by 21.3% over the next five years from £214,647 in 2011 to £260,304 in 2016, according to Oxford Economics, who were commissioned to produce the forecasts. Average rents in the private sector are forecast to increase sharply by 19.8% over the next five years fuelled by high demand and a shortage of properties. Oxford Economics predicted that rents would increase on average in England from £486 a month in 2011 to £582 a month in 2016, meaning tenants would be paying £1,152 more a year in total. Around 4.5 million people are currently stuck on social housing waiting lists – but only those in the most desperate of circumstances have a realistic chance of being allocated a home. The Federation said in 2010/11 105,000 homes were built in England – the lowest level since the 1920s. More government investment in affordable housing would stimulate a wider, faster economic recovery and help fix our broken housing markets, according to the Federation. Orr continued: “At the heart of this crisis is a chronic shortage of new homes. Despite the overwhelming need to increase supply, house building has slumped to a 90-year low, plunging the country even deeper into the mire. “Ministers need to make unused public land available to housing associations, local authorities must assess the level of housing need in their area, and housing has to be finally treated as a top political priority.” Housing minister Grant Shapps said: “The trebling of house prices in the 10 years from 1997 has locked too many out of owning their own home. “I want to see a period of house price stability so that more homes become affordable, but I am also determined that we pull out all the stops to give hard-working first-time buyers the help they need. “That’s why I’ve held summits with lenders to encourage them to do more to help people take their first step onto the housing ladder, and I’ve launched the FirstBuy scheme as a valuable alternative to the Bank of Mum and Dad for those struggling to get together that much-needed deposit. “But we also need to get Britain building again. That’s why I’ve announced plans to release thousands of acres of public land for housebuilding. “Despite the need to tackle the deficit we inherited, this government is putting £4.5bn towards an affordable homes programme which is set to exceed our original expectations and deliver up to 170,000 new homes over the next four years.” Housing market Real estate Construction industry Property First-time buyers House prices guardian.co.uk

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Tax us more, say wealthy Europeans

German group latest to volunteer for higher contributions, saying country could raise €100bn in two years with a 5% wealth tax First it was Warren Buffett announcing that he and his chums had been “coddled long enough by a billionaire-friendly Congress”. Then Liliane Bettencourt, France’s richest woman, who was at the centre of a tax scandal last year, signed a letter along with 15 other billionaires begging to make a special contribution to the treasury to help drag France out of the financial crisis. Even an Italian got in the action , with the boss of Ferrari saying that as he was rich, it was only “right” that he stump up more cash. Now, as both France and Spain consider introducing a wealth tax, a group of 50 rich Germans have joined the “tax me harder” movement by renewing their open call to Angela Merkel to “stop the gap between rich and poor getting even bigger”. The German group, Vermögende für eine Vermögensabgabe (The Wealthy for a Capital Levy) is the latest manifestation of a feeling among some well-off individuals that the spare cash in their bank accounts might be able to ease, if not solve, the financial crises threatening to cripple their countries. “None of us are in Buffett’s or Bettencourt’s league,” said the founder, Dieter Lehmkuhl, a retired doctor with assets of €1.5m (£1.3m). “We’re a broad church – teachers, doctors, entrepreneurs. Most of our wealth is inherited. But we have more money than we need.” The group’s manifesto claims Germany could raise €100bn (£88.5bn) if the richest paid a 5% wealth tax for two years. On Monday, Lehmkuhl said he was renewing his call, first issued two years ago, to Merkel’s government to rethink its taxation policies. Currently the richest Germans are taxed a maximum of 42%. The previous chancellor, Gerhard Schröder, lowered the top tax rate from the 53% ceiling set by his predecessor, Helmut Kohl. “I would say to Merkel that the answer to sorting out Germany’s financial problems, our public debt, is not to bring in cuts, which will disproportionately hit poorer people, but to tax the wealthy more,” said Lehmkuhl. “We are always hearing about savings packages, but never tax rises. Yet tax increases are a way out of this mess. That’s where the money is: rich people. “Something needs to be done to stop the gap between rich and poor getting even bigger.” Under his group’s plans, the new tax would only affect individuals with more than €500,000 in capital wealth. All money over that ceiling would initially be taxed at 5% for the first two years and thereafter at 1% or more. Last week in France Nicolas Sarkozy proposed a similar idea: a temporary tax on the very rich. This would arrive in the form of an “exceptional contribution” of 3% on taxable earnings for those earning above €500,000. It will probably only last until 2013. The initiative has been attacked as an empty stunt before it has even kicked in – even by some in his own party. The left deemed it a smokescreen to hide the fact that Sarkozy has given away billions of euros in tax breaks to the rich while this new measure will yield only €200m. Chantal Brunel, an MP for Sarkozy’s own ruling rightwing UMP party, said that there must be higher permanent tax levels for “big fortunes” because “the rich must participate more”. In Italy too, one of the country’s richest citizens has come forward to offer to pay more tax – but only if Silvio Berlusconi’s government embarks on a wide-ranging programme of neo-liberal reform. Luca di Montezemolo, the multimillionaire Ferrari chairman, made his offer in an interview with the centre-left daily La Repubblica earlier this month. Montezemolo, 63, who has long been suspected of harbouring political ambitions, said he wanted to see the government raise cash by means of property sales and reductions in the perks of Italy’s pampered politicians. “Then, but only then, a contribution on the part of members of the public is needed,” he said. “You have to begin by asking it of those who have most, because it is scandalous that it should be asked of the middle class.” He said that even before the markets were swept this month by concern over Italy’s giant public debt, he had proposed a surtax on annual incomes of between €5m and €10m. But it had met with a “deafening silence”. In Spain, the Socialist government is reported to be considering the reintroduction of a wealth tax scrapped just three years ago. Experts say the tax on assets, not including a first residence, would produce upwards of €1bn of revenue from just 50,000 rich individuals. Finance minister Elena Salgado is on record as saying she regrets the demise of the tax. Alfredo Pérez Rublacaba, the new Socialist candidate for prime minister at the 20 November general election in Spain, has already pledged to hike taxes on the rich if elected. In the US, Buffett has been mocked for his admission in the New York Timesthis month that he felt bad about only paying $6.9m in tax last year, 17.4% of his taxable income, while his staff paid an average of 36%. He suggested income and investment tax rates should be raised on those making more than $1m in taxable income– 0.2% of people who filed tax returns in 2009. The article attracted fierce criticism. “Warren Buffett, hypocrite,” was the headline in the New York Post. “He cares more about shilling for President Obama – who’s practically made socking ‘millionaires and billionaires’ his re-election theme song – than about kicking in more himself,” the paper said. Harvey Golub, former chief executive of American Express, told the Wall Street Journal: “Before you ‘ask’ for more tax money from me and others, raise the $2.2tn you already collect each year more fairly and spend it more wisely.” Additional reporting by Angelique Chrisafis, John Hooper, Giles Tremlett and Dominic Rushe Squeeze the rich A “squeeze the rich” tax increase in the UK is unlikely despite the fiscal sacrifices offered by moneyed citizens in the US, France and Germany. The 50p rate introduced by the Labour government is more likely to be scrapped in a few years’ time rather than be raised. George Osborne said in his March budget that the 50p rate on taxable income greater than £150,000 per year would inflict “lasting damage” on the economy if it became permanent, laying the ground for its withdrawal in the medium term. The Centre for Policy Studies, a centre-right thinktank, said there was a huge difference between generosity, as practised by Warren Buffett, and compulsory taxation. Tim Knox, director of the CPS, said: “In the UK there is little evidence that the 50p tax rate is bringing in extra revenues for the Treasury, while it arguably reduces growth by cutting incentives to one of the most entrepreneurial sectors of the economy. Thus, in the long term, higher taxes on the rich can hit the less well-off most because less wealth is being generated and put into the economy. So while the generosity and philanthropy of the super-rich should not be questioned, whether their good intentions will produce the desired effect is a completely different matter.” Len McCluskey, general secretary of the Unite union, said the public is being “softened up” for the abandonment of the 50p rate. “This government is impatient to ditch it because it believes wealth can be clasped by the few,” he said. Dan Milmo Germany Global economy Helen Pidd guardian.co.uk

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Chinese miners rescued after seven days trapped

Twenty-two coal miners trapped underground for a week in a flooded pit in north-eastern China have been rescued Twenty-two coal miners were rescued on Tuesday from their flooded pit in north-eastern China after being trapped underground for a week. State broadcaster CCTV showed the men being brought slowly to the surface, with all apparently in good condition. Hopes for the miners were revived on Sunday after noises were detected through a 920ft (280m) pipe that was drilled to allow fresh air into the illegal mine near the city of Qitaihe. Twenty-six miners were trapped on 23 August when workers broke through into an adjacent flooded pit. The official Xinhua News Agency said three miners were rescued on Saturday and that one body has been recovered. The mine had been ordered to shut down in 2007 but was reopened without permission on 16 August, Xinhua said, citing the provincial bureau of occupational safety. China’s mines are notoriously deadly, although safety improvements have cut annual fatalities by about a third from a high of 6,995 in 2002. That improvement has come despite a tripling in the output of coal used to generate most of China’s electrical power. Technological advances, better training and the closing of the most dangerous, small-scale mining operations have upped the success rate of rescue operations, even after several days. In April 2010, 115 miners were pulled from a flooded mine in the northern province of Shanxi after more than a week underground. China guardian.co.uk

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The full measure of Hurricane Irene’s fury came into focus today as the death toll passed 44, while Vermont contended with what its governor called the worst flooding in a century, and streams also raged out of control in rural, upstate New York. At the same time, nearly 5 million…

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To give your heart a boost, turn on The Hangover —but make sure you avoid Halloween. Movies that make you chuckle are good for your vascular function, while stressful war and horror movies hurt your system, a study finds. Researchers showed bits of funny movies one day and the opening…

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A 4-year-old racist photo on Facebook, ostensibly of a white hunter standing over a dead 3-year-old black boy, has ignited a media frenzy following a report by South Africa’s Sunday Times . Although the pic was quickly found to be an fake—the “hunter” paid the boy to pose with him—…

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Watched any Mexican TV lately? You may have seen the common ritual of law enforcement officers parading a “perp” before the news media—but now you can also watch his full videotaped confession. Or what authorities claim is his confession. “This is for the authorities, who want to show they…

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Turns out Facebook and Twitter might actually be hurting revolutions. A political science grad student at Yale argues in a new essay that Egypt’s former government quickened its downfall by cutting Internet and cell phone service in January. Instead of scrolling through messages and tweets about Lady Gaga, Egyptians met…

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