World business, finance, and political news from the Financial Times

https://www.ft.com

  • Musk orders Twitter staff to work day and night on ‘blue tick’ charge | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/ad4efd13-3e9e-4e76-968e-6d27b2c9346a?segmentId=2fbd1a9a-c8e3-7947-12ce-2a70795f5

    Elon Musk has ordered Twitter staff to work round the clock to implement a charge on users to keep their verified “blue tick”, as the new owner of the social media company seeks to stamp his mark on the business.

    The renewed push into subscription revenues comes as Twitter braces itself for a potential backlash from advertisers, as Musk considers loosening content moderation controls. On Monday, the Global Alliance for Responsible Media (GARM), a marketing industry group set up by the World Federation of Advertisers, warned Musk that keeping the platform free of inappropriate material was “non-negotiable”.

    Advertising made up more than 90 per cent of Twitter’s revenues in its last reported figures as a public company. Before Musk’s arrival, efforts were made to persuade users to pay $4.99 a month to subscribe to Twitter Blue, which enables them to access exclusive features including an edit button.

    Musk is said to want to increase the pricing of Twitter Blue and make it a condition of having a verified profile, signified by a blue tick next to a user’s name, on the social media platform. Hundreds of thousands of Twitter users have been verified, including big brands and corporate accounts, as well as celebrities and journalists. However, Twitter Blue is only available to users in the US, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand at the moment.

    Employees at Twitter have been working “24/7” to deliver Musk’s vision for verification, said two senior staff members. One person added that teams were told it was of the “utmost gravity”.

    Musk said in a tweet on Sunday that “the whole verification process is being revamped right now”.

    Twitter did not respond to a request for comment.

    One person familiar with Musk’s thinking ahead of completing the $44bn purchase of the social media site said several pricing options had been discussed, including $9.99 and $14.99 a month, adding that different groups of users could be asked to test pricing models.

    #Twitter #Elon_Musk #Blue_Tick

  • Prochain kink comploplo de gôche (qui aime se faire du mal) : la preuve que le covid long c’est rien que du mensonge pour vendre des trucs c’est qu’y a que la presse financière anglo-saxonne, les assurances et Décathlon qui en parlent.

    The growing evidence that Covid-19 is leaving people sicker
    (The potential impact on heart and brain disease poses challenges to healthcare systems globally)
    https://www.ft.com/content/26e0731f-15c4-4f5a-b2dc-fd8591a02aec

    Older Workers Are Struggling With A New Disability : Long Covid
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/nextavenue/2022/09/30/older-workers-are-struggling-with-a-new-disability-long-covid

    Covid long : reconnaître et soigner les symptômes persistants
    https://www.matmut.fr/mutuelle-sante-ociane/conseils/covid-long

    et

    Decathlon épaule ses salariés malades de Covid long
    https://www.info-socialrh.fr/bibliotheque-numerique/entreprise-et-carrieres/1559/sur-le-terrain/sante-decathlon-epaule-ses-salaries-malades-de-covid-long-687157.php

  • Russia’s melancholy oligarchs
    https://www.ft.com/content/daee2387-6d96-4f2e-9a80-5cc70cd8cc67

    Since Putin launched the invasion of #Ukraine, dozens of Russian tycoons have had their western bank accounts frozen and some have been forced to give up their stakes in western companies and lost their Mediterranean mansions.

    But six months later, there is little sign that the sanctions have pressured the oligarchs into starting a “palace coup” against Putin.

    Instead, they have had a very different impact. Increasingly angry at western governments, Russia’s oligarchs are scrambling for ways to cling on to what remains of their wealth — including through the sorts of buyout proposals that Fridman presented [donner une partie de sa fortune à l’Ukraine contre une levée des sanctions].

    Many of the oligarchs who once enjoyed spending time in the west are now resigned to returning to Russia. Those in Moscow have quietly accepted their diminished status in a country at war.

    #oligarques #kremlin #sanctions

  • China throws Europe an energy lifeline with LNG resales | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/1e20467a-5b53-42b7-ad89-49808f7e1780

    (...)

    The more desperate Europe becomes about its energy supplies, the more China’s policy decisions will have the power to affect the bloc. As Europe attempts to wrestle out of its dependence on Russia for energy, the irony is that it is becoming more dependent on China.

    Maintenant que la Chine peut importer plein de gaz russe, la Chine peut en exporter à l’Europe sous forme de gaz liquéfié, plus cher que le gaz transmis par pipeline.

  • John Burn-Murdoch sur Twitter
    https://twitter.com/jburnmurdoch/status/1562004612172873728

    NEW: the collapse of emergency healthcare in England may be costing 500 lives every week, a close match for non-Covid excess deaths

    Let’s look at how we reach that conclusion, by taking a deep-dive into non-Covid excess mortality and its possible causes

    The NHS is being squeezed in a vice | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/f36c5daa-9c14-4a92-9136-19b26508b9d2

    Since Covid-19 took its first English life in March 2020, the country has recorded around 120,000 more deaths than would have been expected over the same months of three typical, non-pandemic years.

  • ExxonMobil and Chevron shatter profit records after global oil price surge
    https://www.ft.com/content/13f82093-1110-4c92-9fea-936067a5f29e

    The five western oil supermajors — Exxon, Chevron, Shell, BP and TotalEnergies — are together on track to generate well over $50bn in profits in the three months to the end of June.

    [...] Exxon and Chevron have responded [to attacks from politicians] by arguing that they are increasing spending on new supply to help meet surging demand. However, their capital spending remains far lower than prior to the coronavirus pandemic and they have prioritised increasing dividends and stock repurchases.

    #énergie #pétrole

    • Glencore posts record $18.9bn profit as coal enjoys a renaissance
      https://www.ft.com/content/5ce49d4e-be60-4675-ae7e-8fe70b9b1bac

      Unlike many of its rivals, which have cut their coal-mining activities amid criticism of the carbon emissions generated by the fuel, Glencore remains one of the biggest producers.

      The Swiss-headquartered group argues coal will be needed during the energy transition in many parts of the world and that it is better for the company to run down production over the next 30 years than to divest.

      #charbon

  • We’re not all Ukrainians now
    https://www.politico.eu/article/ukraine-russia-war-nato-eu-us-alliance-solidarity
    L’article pointe l’écart entre la retenue relative des dirigeants occidentaux, qui ne donnent pas tout ce qu’elle veut à l’#Ukraine, et leurs discours, dans lesquels ils prétendent s’aligner sans réserve sur les objectifs ukrainiens et présentent la situation comme une guerre entre monde libre et autocratie. Cet écart est dangereux, selon les auteurs, pour plusieurs raisons.

    For one, it attracts domestic calls for escalation, including demands for maximal war aims, from the restoration of Crimea to direct military intervention.

    Secondly, the White House’s rhetoric also undermines its own refusal to comply with Ukraine’s demands for high-risk assistance in the form of no-fly zones, the complete economic shutdown of Russia or actual troop deployments, undercutting its own restraint.

    [...] Crucially, this rhetoric-policy gap could also raise excessive Ukrainian expectations of support. But those insisting the West should give Ukraine whatever it wants ignore that what Ukraine wants partly depends on what the West will give them — or at least what it says it will. And claims of fully aligned interests may fuel Ukrainian dreams of total victory that are probably untenable and only conducive to prolonging war.

    [...] The problem here isn’t helping Ukraine, it’s pretending the help is unconditional.

    [...] The idea that nations can heavily contribute to a war effort without any say in its execution is offensive. Those arming Ukraine may not be risking enough to suit Ukraine, but they aren’t risking nothing — the danger of Russian retaliation remains. And sanctions entail economic pain for those sanctioning as well as the sanctioned.

    • The War in Ukraine Is Getting Complicated, and America Isn’t Ready | THE EDITORIAL BOARD
      https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/19/opinion/america-ukraine-war-support.html

      But as the war continues, Mr. Biden should also make clear to President Volodymyr Zelensky and his people that there is a limit to how far the United States and NATO will go to confront Russia, and limits to the arms, money and political support they can muster. It is imperative that the Ukrainian government’s decisions be based on a realistic assessment of its means and how much more destruction Ukraine can sustain.

      Confronting this reality may be painful, but it is not appeasement. This is what governments are duty bound to do, not chase after an illusory “win.” Russia will be feeling the pain of isolation and debilitating economic sanctions for years to come, and Mr. Putin will go down in history as a butcher. The challenge now is to shake off the euphoria, stop the taunting and focus on defining and completing the mission.

    • Ukraine’s Way Out
      https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/05/ukraine-war-russia-putin-end/629890

      But Kyiv’s right to fight for complete territorial sovereignty does not make doing so strategically wise. Nor should Ukraine’s remarkable success in repelling Russia’s initial advance be cause for overconfidence about the next phases of the conflict. Indeed, strategic pragmatism warrants a frank conversation between NATO and Ukraine about curbing Kyiv’s ambitions and settling for an outcome that falls short of “victory.”

    • What is America’s end-game for the war in Ukraine?
      https://www.ft.com/content/315346dc-e1bd-485c-865b-979297f3fcf5

      Increasingly diplomats and analysts are debating how far Ukraine will go as the war drags on. America’s promises to leave the final borders up to Ukraine have left some allies uneasy, analysts said.

      Stefanini, Italy’s former ambassador to Nato, expresses concern at the lack of clarity over the eventual objectives. “Does it mean getting back to the pre-February 24 situation? Does it mean rolling back the territorial gains that Russia made in 2014? Does it mean regime change in Moscow?” he asks. “Nothing of that is clear.”

      Charap, of the Rand Institute, said the US and Ukraine’s interests are aligned on the war’s outcome, but that could change in the months ahead.

      “If they decide victory looks like something the US finds to be hugely escalatory, our interests may diverge. But we’re not there yet,” he said.

  • Food crisis looms as Ukrainian wheat shipments grind to halt
    Prices soar as Black Sea ports at virtual standstill amid Russian assault.

    At this time of year, Kees Huizinga is normally busy planting wheat, barley and corn on his farm in central Ukraine. But, having lost workers to the frontline, the Dutch national left his grain silos to sound the alarm about the impact of the Russian invasion on global wheat supply.

    Russia and Ukraine supply almost a third of the world’s wheat exports and since the Russian assault on its neighbour, ports on the Black Sea have come to a virtual standstill. As a result, wheat prices have soared to record highs, overtaking levels seen during the food crisis of 2007-08.

    “If farmers in Ukraine don’t start planting any time soon there will be huge crisis to food security. If Ukraine’s food production falls in the coming season the wheat price could double or triple,” said the Dutch national, who has been farming for two decades in Cherkasy, 200km south of Kyiv. He is part of a farming union, whose 1,100 members cover just under 10 per cent of the country’s farmland.

    While well stored wheat, such as that on Huizinga’s farm, can last several months, agricultural experts and policymakers have warned of the impact of delayed shipments on countries reliant on the region for wheat, grain, sunflower oil and barley.

    “They’re going to have to find different suppliers and all that means higher prices,” said Joseph Glauber, the former chief economist at the US Department of Agriculture and a senior fellow at agricultural policy think-tank IFPRI.

    The surge in prices will fuel soaring food inflation — already at a seven-year high of 7.8 per cent in January — and the biggest impact will be on the food security of poorer grain importers, warned analysts and food aid organisations.

    Ukraine accounts for 90 per cent of Lebanon’s wheat imports and is a leading supplier for countries including Somalia, Syria and Libya. Lebanon is “really struggling with an already high import bill and this is only going to make things worse,” said James Swanston, emerging market economist at Capital Economics.

    Russia also provides its Black Sea neighbour Turkey with more than 70 per cent of its wheat imports, according to the International Trade Centre. Even before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, inflation in Turkey had had hit a 20-year high of 54.4 per cent in February. “The war is only going to exacerbate the cost of food,” said Ismail Kemaloglu, the former head of the state Turkish Grain Board and now the director of the consultancy IK Tarimussu.

    “What’s critical here is that the Black Sea offers a logistical and price advantage . . . Costs will rise significantly when [Turkey] buys from the US or Australia,” he said. “Even if the war ends tomorrow, Ukraine’s planting season has already been disrupted and it will impact the 2022 harvest regardless.”

    The UN World Food Programme, which procures grains and food to distribute to poorer countries, bought just under 1.4m tonnes of wheat last year of which 70 per cent came from Ukraine and Russia.

    Prior to the invasion it was already facing a 30 per cent increase in the cost of wheat, because of poor harvests in Canada, the US and Argentina. The latest surge in grain prices would further curtail its ability to provide aid, it said.
    “This is an unnecessary shock of mega proportions,” said Arif Husain, chief economist at the WFP.

    High prices could trigger unrest, analysts said.

    The last time wheat prices spiked to these levels in 2007 and 2008 because of severe production declines in leading producing countries such as Australia and Russia, protests spread through nearly 40 countries from Haiti to the Ivory Coast, while a jump in grain prices in 2009-10 is regarded as one of the triggers of the Arab Spring uprisings in the Middle East.

    Russia accounts for two-thirds of Egypt’s wheat imports. Egyptian authorities say their wheat inventories will last until mid June and the Egyptian local harvest should start coming in by mid April. Any rise in subsidised bread prices and further increase in food inflation in Egypt “increases the threat of social unrest,” said Swanston.

    It is also unclear how long the crisis will last, said analysts, a fact that is boosting prices. “The market is worried that this is not a problem that’s going to be solved any time soon,” said Tim Worledge at Agricensus, the agricultural data and pricing agency.

    Wheat inventories are tight everywhere and as Chinese and South Korean buyers of Ukrainian corn, used to feed livestock, sought sellers elsewhere, EU agricultural ministers on Wednesday discussed allowing farmers to boost production using the 10 per cent of land they usually leave fallow in response to the war in Ukraine.

    In the short term, Ukrainian farmers contending with a war may struggle to spread fertilisers and pesticides and plant seeds for the spring crop. The next crop is due in the European summer. That harvest will depend on how long the Russian invasion lasts and for how long exports via the ports will be blocked.

    Sitting in his friend’s house in Siret close to the Romania-Ukraine border, Huizinga said the main question raised during a call with 75 fellow Ukrainian farmers was whether to plant or not to plant. They may struggle to get fertiliser and crop protection and it is unclear whether they could actually harvest and ship the crop. “The supply chain is broken,” he said.

    Some of the 400 staff on his 15,000 hectare farm have gone to fight and Huizinga has posted videos on social media of fellow farmers in the bomb shelters and villagers slaughtering pigs to deliver food to those in Kyiv and in the army. The difficulty, he said, could soon extend way beyond Ukraine. “We can face a huge problem, especially the poor people, who will have difficulty getting bread.”

    https://www.ft.com/content/457ba29e-f29b-4677-b69e-a6e5b973cad6

    #crise_alimentaire #blé #Ukraine #guerre #prix #Russie #Liban #Somalie #Syrie #Libye #Turquie #impact #Mer_Noire #mondialisation #globalisation #Egypte #inflation #pain

  • BioNTech and AI start-up develop tool to predict high-risk coronavirus #variants | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/dc8f8040-c9ce-43be-9b6c-c276930064d4

    Thread by FLAHAULT on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App
    https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1481379139391217679.html

    1/10 - “A new early warning system can predict the highest-risk coronavirus variants simply from their genetic code, alerting health authorities and vaccine developers to the potential risks months before they spread, according to a study.”
    ft.com/content/dc8f80…

    2/10 - “The AI-based program, developed by BioNTech and north African AI start-up InstaDeep, identified more than 90% of VOCs, including the highly transmissible #Omicron strain, on average two months before their designation by the WHO.”

    3/10 - “The results from the study show that the program can evaluate the risks of new variants from their spike proteins within minutes, and monitor them as they evolve nearly in real time.”

    […]

    #IA

  • Homegrown app helping Kabul residents steer clear of danger

    #Ehtesab tracks turbulence on the ground and sends users alerts on which areas to avoid.

    As Kabul fell on Sunday, 20 young Afghan tech workers tracked the Taliban’s advance, broadcasting real-time reports of gunfire, explosions and traffic jams across the city through a new app.

    Called Ehtesab, the app relies on ground-level reports from a vetted team of users to a private WhatsApp group.

    The reports, which are then verified by the app’s fact checkers, range from security incidents, such as fires, gunshots and bombings, to road closures and traffic problems to electricity cuts. Sara Wahedi, the 26-year-old founder of the app, said the team tried to confirm the reports with the interior ministry, “when it used to exist”.

    On Sunday morning, Wahedi and her team were supposed to be uploading the new version of their iOS app but instead found themselves dealing with an ever more frantic stream of reports.

    “Breaking on the @ehtesabaf App: Taliban have entered Arghandi, Paghman District. South Gate of Kabul. ANDSF [Afghan National Defence and Security Forces] under attack,” Wahedi wrote on Twitter at the time.

    She said that as the Taliban advanced across Afghanistan, Ehtesab had built a reliable way of “getting reports from a lot of different security structures”, including police, the government and international organisations.

    Soon the team started receiving reports that the Taliban had captured Bagram prison, in the former US military base just north of Kabul.

    “At that point our reporting mechanisms were still in place, so it was easy to converse with our security team and all our reporters. We were monitoring minute by minute, talking to different police districts, tracking the Taliban kilometre by kilometre by that point,” she said.

    “But by the time they reached the city centre, everything shut down, nothing was online, there was no way of speaking to each other. People deleted their messages or turned off their phones. When the Taliban reached the president’s office, it was like, ‘OK, now we have to work alone’.”

    Ehtesab, which means “accountability” in Pashto and Dari, is co-owned by Afghan company #Netlinks, which invested $40,000, and #Wahedi, who said she has put in $2,500 of her own money.

    “I didn’t want to register as an NGO, to be benchmarked or limited by the United Nations or the United States. This is an Afghan-led and funded, fully 100 per cent Afghan team working on this,” she said.

    Users of the app can opt to receive phone alerts based on their location, warning them to avoid certain areas, buildings or businesses. They can also report incidents themselves via the app, which turns on your camera and microphone so you can send video footage to Wahedi’s team. The goal, she said, is to empower local communities with live information on which to act.

    Ehtesab is still running, and Wahedi said she want to keep operating it as long as possible, although she is currently outside Afghanistan. She has managed to raise nearly $15,000 through a GoFundMe campaign, part of which she will send to her team in Kabul as emergency funds.

    Her plan is to build a nationwide alert system, not just through the apps but through SMS warnings as well. Their office in central Kabul remains closed, with employees working from home, but they plan to upload a new iOS version as soon as they can get back to their desks.

    “We just want to alleviate some of the anxieties that Afghans have in these uncertain and volatile times,” she said. “We will find different ways of garnering data about the city and security . . . That’s the beauty of tech, it knows no borders,” she said.

    Wahedi founded the company in 2018, after spending two years working for President Ashraf Ghani’s office on Afghanistan’s social development policy, but insists she is not affiliated to any political group.

    She had moved back to her hometown as a 21-year-old, after having escaped Taliban rule in her native Kabul to go to Canada as a refugee at the age of six. Two decades later, the Afghan entrepreneur found herself fleeing from the Taliban again. This time she does not know if she will ever be able to return. “It’s like Groundhog Day,” she said.

    Today, she is using what she calls the “privilege” of having escaped Kabul to try to put her friends and family on charter flights out of Afghanistan.

    “I’m grateful to be with my mom but the guilt is crippling when I think about my home, when I think about the fact I’ll never be able to go back to the Kabul I’ve known for so long,” she said. “I don’t think any of us will ever be the same again.”

    https://www.ft.com/content/972ad8e2-54a5-4300-a317-56cc2612bfef

    #Kaboul #cartographie #sécurité #cartographie #alertes #app #cartographie_participative #smartphone

  • En Bolivie, des zones protégées partent en fumée
    https://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2021/08/24/en-bolivie-des-zones-protegees-parties-en-fumee_6092180_3244.html


    Vue aérienne de la réserve naturelle de San Matias, en Bolivie, le 20 août 2021.
    WILLIAM WROBLEWSKI / AFP

    Six cent mille hectares ont déjà brûlé. Les forêts de la Chiquitania, dans le département de Santa Cruz, abritant des réserves écologiques, sont les plus touchées.

    Près de 600 000 hectares (ha), soit 6 000 kilomètres carrés, de terres ont brûlé dans le département de Santa Cruz, dans l’est de la Bolivie. Soixante-quatre pour cent de ses aires protégées ont été rasées par des incendies, pour la plupart d’origine criminelle, ont fait savoir les autorités.

    Lundi 23 août au soir, 20 incendies restaient actifs et sept zones protégées étaient touchées. En seulement deux jours, 200 000 ha ont brûlé, a rapporté le gouvernement. La plupart des incendies sont concentrés dans les forêts de la Chiquitania, une région située entre l’Amazonie au nord, les plaines du Chaco au sud et le Pantanal – la plus grande zone humide du monde – au sud-est. D’une superficie similaire à celle de la Belgique, la réserve naturelle de San Matias est l’une des plus endommagées. Cette partie du pays avait déjà connu de graves incendies en 2019.

  • La Suisse affûte ses nouvelles armes fiscales Ram Etwareea

    Le Conseil fédéral se préoccupe déjà de la proposition du G7 d’une fiscalité des entreprises mondialement harmonisée à 15%. Faute de pouvoir s’y opposer, il prévoit des mesures compensatoires. Les cantons se préparent eux aussi.
    La Suisse ne restera pas les bras croisés si les grands pays du G7 et du G20 imposent un taux d’imposition minimal global de 15% sur les bénéfices des entreprises. Un tel nouveau standard ne sera pas sans conséquence pour le pays où 18 des 26 cantons pratiquent un taux d’imposition au-dessous de ce seuil.
    . . . . . . .
    Il s’agira en effet de prendre des mesures compensatoires en faveur des entreprises au cas où elles doivent s’acquitter de plus d’impôts. Celles-ci pourraient prendre des formes diverses : subventions à la recherche, participation aux cotisations sociales, crédits d’impôt.
    . . . . .
    Nous serons aussi au front au cas où le G7 et le G20 nous imposent une nouvelle norme. » Et d’ajouter : « Après tout, le principe d’un taux d’imposition minimum global ne tombe pas du ciel. Dès lors, nous sommes prêts, si besoin, à prendre des mesures pour maintenir l’attractivité de nos cantons. »
    . . . . .
    La question des compensations, au cas où les entreprises devraient payer plus d’impôts n’est, de la même façon, pas à l’ordre du jour. « Elle sera abordée avec la Confédération en temps voulu selon l’avancement des discussions au sein de l’OCDE, poursuit Nathalie Fontanet. Toutefois et sauf avis contraire de la Confédération, les mesures de compensation me paraissent être un outil nécessaire, au vu de notre tissu économique. »
    . . . . . .
    Le week-end dernier dans la presse alémanique, et de nouveau dans le Financial Times (FT) de ce jeudi, c’est le chef des Finances du canton de Zoug, Heinz Tännler, qui monte aux barricades. Il a de quoi. Des dizaines de multinationales sont installées dans ce canton où le taux d’imposition est de 12%. « Il est évident que notre objectif est de nous maintenir comme un site parmi les plus avantageux en dépit de l’éventuel taux d’imposition minimal, dit-il. Notre population est consciente des besoins des entreprises internationales en matière de conditions favorables. »
    . . . . . . .
    « Les réformes s’imposent, mais le Conseil fédéral devra être assez intelligent pour aider à atténuer l’impact des changements. »

    Source : https://www.letemps.ch/economie/suisse-affute-nouvelles-armes-fiscales

    #impôts #économie #fiscalité #inégalités #impôt #paradis_fiscaux #economie #capitalisme #évasion_fiscale #finance #multinationales #domination_finaciére #gafam #bénéfices #paradis_fiscal

    • Et si la Suisse faisait dans la subvention fiscale ?

      Selon le « Financial Times », la Confédération et les cantons réfléchissent activement à des moyens de compensation pour les entreprises qui seraient appelées à payer 15% d’impôt sur leurs bénéfices, comme le souhaite le G7.
      Un article publié jeudi https://www.ft.com/content/8b57bead-4e52-4f07-a2eb-ea46443abfe2 par le quotidien britannique affirme que les autorités suisses étudient déjà les possibilités de contourner l’éventuel standard fiscal mondial. Le pays, rappelle-t-on, accueille des dizaines de multinationales indigènes (Novartis, Roche, Nestlé, Glencore, Holcim) et étrangères (Philip Morris, Johnson & Johnson, Gunvor, Trafigura, Vale). Le taux d’imposition, qui n’est que l’un des facteurs qui comptent pour qu’une entreprise s’installe en Suisse, varie de canton en canton. Et 18 des 26 cantons ont un taux au-dessous de 15%.
      . . . . . .
      Taux d’imposition de 12% à Zoug
      Selon le journal, Berne a déjà lancé des consultations auprès des cantons pour définir une stratégie commune afin que le pays reste attractif. Ces mesures pourraient inclure des subventions pour la recherche et le développement, des déductions sociales ou encore des crédits d’impôts. « La démarche suisse met en lumière la difficulté de mettre en place un taux d’imposition global minimal de 15% pour les entreprises, souligne le FT. Les multinationales basées dans le canton de Zoug sont imposées à moins de 12%. »
      « Il est évident que notre objectif est de nous maintenir comme un site parmi les plus avantageux en dépit de l’éventuel taux d’imposition minimal, confirme Heinz Tännler, le chef des Finances du canton de Zoug.
      . . . . .
      Bref, l’exercice du journal économique et financier met en exergue le fait que les autorités suisses sont prêtes à trouver des astuces pour maintenir l’attractivité du pays. Son article a attiré beaucoup de commentaires. Les avis sont partagés. Pour les uns, la Suisse ne doit pas se plier aux exigences du G7 ou de l’OCDE mais se battre pour sa souveraineté fiscale. Pour les autres, elle est fidèle à sa réputation, celle d’un « paradis fiscal ».
      . . . .
      Source : https://www.letemps.ch/economie/suisse-faisait-subvention-fiscale

  • The unmaking of India | Free to read | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/80c18d5b-443e-48e4-9f28-3cc491df4260

    Despite his failures on the economic front, despite his mishandling of the pandemic, #Modi remains enormously popular among voters. An opinion poll conducted in late January showed “NaMo” as having approval ratings of above 70 per cent. Events of recent weeks may have caused a slide, but this is likely to be modest, rather than precipitous.

    How does one explain this disjunction between performance and popularity? One reason for Modi’s appeal is that his ideology of Hindu majoritarianism is widely shared by voters, particularly in the populous states of northern India. The BJP has been especially successful in getting lower-caste Hindus into their fold, by offering them cultural superiority over Muslims.

    #Inde #identité #idéologie #popularité #populisme

  • Opinion | The World Needs Many More Coronavirus Vaccines - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/24/opinion/covid-vaccines-poor-countries.html

    Companies and countries are hoarding both raw materials and technical expertise, and have prevented poorer nations from suspending patents despite international treaties that allow for such measures in emergencies.

    En dehors de la suspension des #brevets les auteurs recommandent :

    Share technology and resources

    Ce à quoi les détenteurs de la #propriété_intellectuelle répondent que leurs réticences sont d’ordre purement patriotiques,

    Vaccine makers say IP waiver could hand technology to China and Russia | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/fa1e0d22-71f2-401f-9971-fa27313570ab

    #covid-19 #vaccins #vaccination

  • ‘It is much worse this time’: India’s devastating second wave | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/683914a3-134f-40b6-989b-21e0ba1dc403?desktop=true&segmentId=d8d3e364-5197-20eb-1

    Every night funeral pyres blaze on the banks of the Ganges, a grim symbol of the ferocious Covid-19 wave sparking a health crisis and human tragedy in India that is far surpassing anything seen last year.

    Patients are dying while their families search in vain for hospital beds. Supplies of oxygen and medicines are running low, leading to robberies of drugs from hospitals. Crematoriums and burial grounds cannot cope with the sheer number of corpses.

    The devastation has sparked outrage at the lack of preparation among officials who believed that the worst of the pandemic was over. Only two months ago, India was revelling in its success of reining in the spread of the virus. Now it is reporting about 294,000 infections and 2,000 deaths a day.

  • Health worker disillusionment threatens to hinder Covid recovery | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/dc7a9684-71e4-4ca9-b50f-415da5b4dad5

    ... the attempt to address under-investment in the French health system has not proved a panacea. “I’d say dissatisfaction at hospitals remains very strong,” Malâtre-Lansac said. “The impression many have is that #France doesn’t value hospitals enough and is always trying to reduce resources.”

    #choix #politique #budget #santé #hôpitaux #hôpital

  • Race and America: why data matters | Financial Times

    https://www.ft.com/content/156f770a-1d77-4f6b-8616-192fb58e3735

    When Yeshimabeit Milner was in sixth grade in Miami, Florida she was suspended for three days after talking back to the teacher in a technology class. Milner was devastated — but the episode also led to an epiphany. A few years later, she began to collect data on suspensions in a neighbouring school and found that black children like her were four times more likely to be suspended than white children. This was the beginning of her life as a data activist.

    –—

    Black students in US nearly four times as likely to be suspended as white students | US education | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/education/2016/jun/08/us-education-survey-race-student-suspensions-absenteeism

    lack students are nearly four times as likely to be suspended as white students, according to new federal data.The sweeping bi-annual survey of more than 50 million students by the US Department of Education found that suspensions overall have dramatically decreased by nearly 20% between the 2011-12 and 2013-14 school years.

    –---

    W.E.B. Du Bois’ Visionary Infographics Come Together for the First Time in Full Color | History | Smithsonian Magazine
    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/first-time-together-and-color-book-displays-web-du-bois-visionary-in

    fter three decades of emancipation, the gains made by African-Americans, those that existed at all, presented a decidedly mixed picture about the state of racial progress in the country. The political obstacles were voluminous, with the failure of Reconstruction still lingering, and Jim Crow institutional racism ascendant. In 1897, the United States Supreme Court would rule in Plessy v. Ferguson that separate was indeed equal. All the while, new generations of African-Americans found ways to uplift themselves, despite discrimination, through grassroots efforts in education, work and community building.

    #WEB_du_Bois #cartoexperiment #précurseurs