industryterm:finance

  • Paying Professors: Inside Google’s Academic Influence Campaign - WSJ
    https://www.wsj.com/articles/paying-professors-inside-googles-academic-influence-campaign-1499785286

    #Google operates a little-known program to harness the brain power of university researchers to help sway opinion and public policy, cultivating financial relationships with professors at campuses from #Harvard University to the University of California, #Berkeley.

    Over the past decade, Google has helped finance hundreds of research papers to defend against regulatory challenges of its market dominance, paying stipends of $5,000 to $400,000, The Wall Street Journal found.

    Some researchers share their papers before publication and let Google give suggestions, according to thousands of pages of emails obtained by the Journal in public-records requests of more than a dozen university professors. The professors don’t always reveal Google’s backing in their research, and few disclosed the financial ties in subsequent articles on the same or similar topics, the Journal found.

    [...]

    In some years, Google officials in Washington compiled wish lists of academic papers that included working titles, abstracts and budgets for each proposed paper—then they searched for willing authors, according to a former employee and a former Google lobbyist.

    Google promotes the research papers to government officials, and sometimes pays travel expenses for professors to meet with congressional aides and administration officials, according to the former lobbyist. The research has been used, for instance, to deflect antitrust accusations against Google by the Federal Trade Commission in 2012, according to a letter Google attorneys sent to the FTC chairman and viewed by the Journal.

    #corruption #conflit_d'intérêt #dissimulation #lobbying

  • New York Under Water - Issue 49: The Absurd
    http://nautil.us/issue/49/the-absurd/new-york-under-water

    Science-fiction author Kim Stanley Robinson paints a vivid picture of life in New York City after the sea level rises more than 50 feet, drowning lower Manhattan and creating a forest of skyscrapers in his new book, New York 2140. 1 Numbers often fill my head. While waiting for my building’s morose super to free my Jesus bug from the boathouse rafters where it had spent the night, I was looking at the little waves lapping in the big doors and wondering if the Black-Scholes formula could frame their volatility. The canals were like a perpetual physics class’s wave-tank demonstration— backwash interference, the curve of a wave around a right angle, the spread of a wave through a gap, and so on—it was very suggestive as to how liquidity worked in finance as well. Too much time to give to this (...)

  • Life after Chernobyl: Who Still Lives in the Areas Contaminated after the Nuclear Accident - Bird In Flight

    https://birdinflight.com/inspiration/project/20170426-life-after-chernobyl-quintina-valero.html

    Spanish photographer Quintina Valero visited the exclusion zone and captured people who continue to live on the contaminated territory despite the danger.
    Quintina Valero

    Documentary photographer and photojournalist from Spain. After a career in finance she moved to London in 2001 where she studied Photojournalism at the London College of Communication. Published her work in The Guardian, Sunday Times, Thomson Reuter Foundation, El País, and The Internationale.

    #tchernobyl #nucléaire #ukraine #soviétisme

  • ‘To Schindler, the act of dwelling is one of the most basic and continuing human activities’ | Thinkpiece | Architectural Review
    https://www.architectural-review.com/rethink/to-schindler-the-act-of-dwelling-is-one-of-the-most-basic-and-continuing-human-activities/10008410.article

    Rudolph Schindler’s great lesson is the distinctive relationship between his conception of architectural activity and its realization in built form

    What is generally known about Schindler is not the buildings, but the writings of three very different personalities: Esther McCoy, who knew him well and worked in his office, tells us about him as a person and liberally sprinkles her account with anecdotes about his day-to-day life and personal struggles; Banham, as usual, attempts to bring to a relatively wide audience a new hero; Gebhard produces the most comprehensive account yet of Schindler’s work and attempts to set him in a niche in 20th century architectural development. All this is valuable information, but when writing from an architect’s point of view, the balance must be tipped from the academic and reminiscing to the actual; the study of architectural history is of the greatest value when we look at the buildings themselves -what sort of solution has been produced in a specific situation (client, finance, locality, site); what sort of quality has been achieved in the fulfilling of function; to what extent do they exemplify their designer’s philosophy?

    #Rudolph_Schindler #architecture

  • Allemagne : 12,5 millions de personnes sous le seuil de pauvreté, un record.

    Par Jean-michel Gradt – La pauvreté a progressé de 15 % en 2013 pour toucher 12,5 millions de personnes, un record, indique l’étude publiée par la fédération d’aide sociale Paritätischer Wohlfahrtsverband.


    http://www.anti-k.org/2017/04/14/allemagne-125-millions-de-personnes-seuil-de-pauvrete-record

    #Allemagne #pauvreté #inégalités

    Je ne vois pas la date de publication (dans l’URL on voit 14 avril 2017), mais je mets sur seenthis pour archivage

    • Allemagne : pauvres en pays riche

      L’Allemagne est présentée comme un modèle à suivre et la campagne électorale d’Angela Merkel s’appuie surtout sur une réussite chiffrée. Mais, pour beaucoup d’Allemands, la réalité est tout autre. Un Allemand sur cinq est en situation de précarité. à Berlin, un enfant sur trois est considéré comme « pauvre ». Et 20% des actifs sont condamnés à des emplois mal payés.

      https://www.arte.tv/fr/videos/077980-000-A/allemagne-pauvres-en-pays-riche
      #documentaire #film #working_poor #travailleur_pauvre #retraite #retraités #mère_célibataire #sous-traitance #travail #exclusion #mort_sociale (c’est le mot utilisé par une mère de 3 enfants qui se retrouve à l’aide sociale) #exclusion #aide_sociale #flexibilisation_du_marché_du_travail #précarisation #précarité #exclusion #fracture_sociale #survie

    • Welcome to Poor Germany

      How the Merkel government is risking Germany’s future by underinvestment and other ill-applied policy approaches.

      “Poor Germany?“ Really? Is that not a crass overstatement? Isn’t Germany the powerhouse of Europe, boosting a huge export surplus, historical low unemployment and shrinking government debt? Yes, it is.

      But this view is superficial and overlooks what is happening behind the shiny facade of a booming economy. The country is wasting its future by consuming too much and not investing in the future. To blame are the various governments led by Angela Merkel.

      In their sum total, the individual causes of this under- and malinvestment, as detailed below, explain much of the sense of profound frustration that voters feel with Germany’s major political parties. They explain a widening sense of national malaise that extends far beyond the oft-cited issue of migration.
      The fetish of the “black zero”

      It all starts with the politics of the so-called “black zero” in government finances, which is nothing else than the commitment to a permanent budget surplus for the government at the national level.

      Achieving this goal was quite easy over the last years. Thanks to ECB policy and the unresolved crisis of the Eurozone, interest rates on German government bonds fell below zero. Due to this effect alone, the German finance minister has saved 300 billion euros in interest expenses since 2009.

      In addition, the economic boom fueled by the low interest environment and the relatively weak euro reduced costs for unemployment support and led to record high tax revenues in Germany.

      Still, the “black zero” is an illusion created by politicians, notably former finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble, to boost their own image. A closer look reveals that the “black zero” comes at a high cost and, if one applies proper accounting, is even not true.
      Crumbling infrastructure

      Fixated on the goal of the budget surplus, the German government continued its practice of taking a very high share of the incomes of the average German citizen (Germany has the highest fiscal burden of all OECD countries behind Belgium). It also cut expenditures in certain areas, notably infrastructure spending.

      As a result, the public infrastructure of Germany is deteriorating. About 50% of Germany’s highway bridges were built between 1965 and 1975. They are in urgent need of replacement. In addition, 17.5% of all motorways need to be urgently reconstructed, as well as 34% of country roads.

      This casts a dark shadow over the long-held idea that Germany has world-class infrastructure. To be sure, the deteriorating quality of German infrastructure is hindering private investment and undermines the country’s future economic growth potential.

      To make up for the underinvestment of the past years, an immediate investment of more than 120 billion Euro is required. Long term, Germany would need to invest at least on the level of the OECD average of 3.2% of GDP, implying additional spending of 33 billion per year, or 1,000 billion over a period of 30 years.

      This one dimension of severe underinvestment alone demonstrates that the “black zero” is pure political fantasy. Instead of addressing these issues, the current government has announced it will reduce investments in the coming years even further.
      Lacking digitalization

      But it is not just country roads and highways that are falling apart. German schools suffer from chronic underinvestment in buildings, never mind the stunning lack of digitalization and tens of thousands of missing teachers. This is in spite of this shortfall having long been visible, given the impending retirement wave of public-school teachers.

      Only 2% of all German households have fast internet via fiber, compared to the 22.3% average in the OECD. In Spain, not as rich as Germany, more than 50% of households have access to fast internet. This not only hinders economic development, but gives German companies a clear-cut incentive for investing outside of Germany.

      The German military, the Bundeswehr, is suffering from outdated and non-functioning equipment. Many of its fighter jets, tanks and ships are not ready for combat. The soldiers do not even have adequate clothing for winter time.

      One would think that this would be a matter of embarrassment for the country’s politicians, but they remain rather nonchalant about it. Perhaps they see it as a politically convenient way to avoid being asked to support the West’s joint international missions.

      Fixing this shortfall will require another 130 billion euros just to get the German military working again. In the long run, the country will need to fulfil the NATO target of spending 2% of GDP on defence. This would imply a budget increase of roughly 26 billion euros per year, or 750 billion over a 30-year period.

      But despite paying lip service to these needs, the junior partner in the government, the SPD, remains opposed to making the required funds available.

      At the same time, the governments of Angela Merkel increased the spending on social welfare to a new record of nearly 1,000 billion euros per year. This is remarkable given that Germany currently experiences record low unemployment and a booming economy.
      Pushing savings abroad

      The obsession of German politicians with the “black zero” not only has significant negative implications for the economic outlook due to lacking investments, but also in light of global trade tensions. The export surplus notably is not only the result of a weak euro and hyper-competitive German industries, as is argued so often (falsely), but significantly also the result of insufficient spending and investment within Germany.

      The corporate sector, private households and the government itself are all net savers, pushing savings abroad and contributing to the significant trade surplus of more than 8% of GDP. A significant trade surplus and excess savings go hand in hand.

      Contrary to folklore, this surplus is not even in Germany’s own interest. For one, Germany’s track record of investing its savings abroad is downright bad. During the financial crisis, German banks, insurance companies and pension funds lost in the range of 400 to 600 billion euros. Today, a significant part of our savings ends up as non-interest bearing receivables of the Bundesbank as part of the ECB system (the so-called Target 2 balance).

      Overall, it is not a good idea, to be a creditor in a world awash with more and more debt. But Germany continues to disregard this fundamental insight, to its own detriment.

      The German government is also blind to the fact that the trade surplus leads to increasing frustration in other countries, not just in the case of U.S. President Donald Trump, but also in France and Italy. The risk of protectionist measures especially targeted against the automotive industry, which German government politicians are otherwise overly keen on protecting, is high.
      There is an alternative

      It would be much smarter if the German government would use the excess savings of the private sector to fund the urgently needed investments in the country. This would:

      • Offer the private sector a safe and attractive opportunity to save within Germany

      • Improve German infrastructure in all dimensions

      • Reduce the country’s trade surplus and therefore reduce the risk of protectionist measures

      • Reduce the exposure of German savers to doubtful creditors abroad.

      Obviously, it would be in everybody’s interest if Germany were to change its policies.

      https://www.theglobalist.com/germany-angela-merkel-government-spending

      via @wizo

  • Emmanuel Macron has taken French voters for granted. Now he risks defeat | Olivier Tonneau | Opinion | The Guardian

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/may/01/emmanuel-macron-french-voters-marine-le-pen

    Voilà l’ #arrogance incarnée. Ce mec est complètement à l’est.

    Monday 1 May 2017 17.47 BST

    I had lunch in a Parisian cafe recently with a journalist who had spent the whole French presidential campaign vilifying the leftwing candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon and trumpeting the merits of the centrist Emmanuel Macron in the columns of a respected (if declining) centre-left weekly.

    I asked him if had there been a deliberate effort among intellectuals and mainstream politicians to engineer a run-off between Macron and the far-right Marine Le Pen in the second round of the presidential election. “Why, of course,” he laughed. “We’ve been at it for a year.” Considering how obvious the strategy had been, I cannot claim to have revealed much of a secret. Still, it’s nice to know I was not being paranoid.

    • We finished our lunch, the journalist commenting on every passing woman with the old-fashioned sexism characteristic of the French ruling class, while I reflected on the astonishing irresponsibility of the strategy. It may have seemed like a good idea: pitting Macron against the Front National leader was the surest way to ensure the former’s victory. Yet the tactic could be about to backfire, with terrifying consequences.

      The rise of Macron is characteristic of the age of spin doctors: it illustrates both their power and their limits. It is truly astonishing that the man who inspired (as personal secretary) and implemented (as finance minister) the policies of President François Hollande could be branded as something radically new.

      To achieve this feat, spin doctors resorted to celebrity-building in ways previously unknown in French political life. Macron was new because he was young and handsome, and because he had never been elected before. He appeared repeatedly on the front pages of Paris Match with his wife , whose name is chanted by his supporters at his rallies. In the final weeks of the campaign Macron was so careful not to expose the true nature of his programme (which amounts to little more than the unpopular liberalism-cum-austerity implemented by Hollande) that his speeches degenerated into vacuous exercises in cliche and tautology.

    • how many would have voted for him, and how many against her? Because it is impossible to answer this question, it would be impossible for Macron to take a hard line against social protests on the grounds that the election validated his programme.

      mouais, ça n’a pas empêché Chirac

    • A few weeks before the election, something important happened that was largely unnoticed: an opinion poll showed that the main concern of the people was neither unemployment nor immigration, but the reform of state institutions and the implementation of a radical sixth republic. There is a deep resentment towards a state they perceive as oppressive, corrupt and violent.

      Mélenchon achieved his impressive first-round result because he campaigned on the promise of a radical reform of the state. He was thus able to bring back to politics people who had abstained for years, and also to claw back Le Pen voters. (He cut her lead over him from seven percentage points in 2012 to less than two this year). These voters are not interested in the comparative merits of a Le Pen or a Macron government; their anger is directed at the “deep state” (police, justice, administration). They are even less inclined to vote Macron, because they know – everyone knows – that the second round was deliberately staged. They feel they were set up, and abstention seems to them a dignified act.

      Macron has just days to take stock of their anger and adopt the only strategy that can secure his victory against Le Pen: showing humility, and reducing the severity of his programme. The only problem is that he might not be aware how serious the situation is. There is a certain Dangerous Liaisons charm about the microcosm of journalists, intellectuals and politicians who shape (or think they shape) the political destiny of France. According to my lunch companion, Macron has infinite confidence in his charisma and is blissfully unaware of the threat.

      Why, then, take the risk of allowing an individual such as Le Pen a path to power, I asked. I received no answer – another woman had caught his attention. France, no doubt, is in good hands.

    • @fil Exactement ! Ce dont je me souviens de l’entre deux tours de 2002, c’étaient des raisonnements du genre, il faut massivement voter pour Chirac comme cela ça va le contraindre à appliquer une politique de centre droit, et au contraire s’il passe avec de faibles pourcentages, il saura qu’il est élu par ses seules électeurs pour appliquer son seul programme. Et donc du coup il a plus ou moins appliqué le programme de Le Pen.

      Cette fois-ci faites bien ce que vous voulez.

    • @intempestive

      Si l’on pouvait s’en laver les mains, ce serait formidable. Mais c’est nous qui mesurons et qui vivons le vrai danger, c’est nous qui savons que ce n’est pas un jeu électoral, que c’est bien plus grave que ça.

      Je ne sais pas ce qu’est le nous que tu emploies car je me sens très seule sur tous les points.
      Il me semble que le vrai danger n’est pas pour « nous », les petits blancs ex-colonialistes assis devant leur télé qui croient former nation/république/pays/frontière/territoire dans cette tautologie serinée sans cesse du nous égoïste, ou le mot #politique ne veut plus rien dire. Non, il me semble que le danger est réel pour tous les invisibles, les #SANS, les migrants, tous les méprisés de ce système déjà fascisant … et tous ceux qui payeront ce blanc-seing déjà donné à une police avide de violence et fière d’un « nous » nauséabond.

  • Massive protest in Hungary against bill that could oust Soros university
    http://www.reuters.com/article/us-hungary-soros-protest-idUSKBN17B0RM

    Hungarians rose up in one of the largest protests against the seven-year rule of right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orban on Sunday, protesting against new legislation that could force out of the country one of its top international universities.

    The Central European University (CEU), a school founded by U.S. financier George Soros, could be forced to leave Hungary after a bill passed in Parliament this week by Orban’s Fidesz party set stringent, new conditions under which it must operate.

    The bill has led to criticism from hundreds of leading academics worldwide as well as from the U.S. government and the European Union.

    The protest drew some of the largest crowds against Orban’s seven-year rule, with organizers estimating attendance around 70,000. The crowd marched across a bridge over the river Danube and filled the square outside Parliament, which was defended by several lines of police, some in riot gear.

    Thousands of people, mostly students, stayed on after the main protest for an unannounced march on the building of the Education Secretariat, then on to the headquarters of Fidesz, where where they chanted anti-Fidesz slogans before, with numbers dwindling, they blocked Oktogon square, a busy intersection in central Budapest.

    Though passionate, the protest remained peaceful throughout.

    Hungarian President Janos Ader must now sign the bill by Monday to make it law. The protesters said they wanted to convince Ader to reject the bill and refer it to a constitutional review.

    “What do we want Ader to do? VETO,” the crowd chanted. “Free country, free university!”

    “The government wants to silence pretty much everyone who doesn’t think the same as them, who thinks freely, who can be liberal, can be leftist,” protest organizer Kornel Klopfstein, a PhD student at the University of Bielefeld in Germany, told Reuters.

    “According to the government one of the centers of these people is at CEU... We should stand up for academic freedom and for CEU.”

    The students sat down on the pavement and chanted slogans like “Here is the end, Viktor”, or “Fidesz is dirty”.

    The government has been tightening up on dissent in other ways as well, proposing tighter rules on non-governmental organizations (NGOs), which will have to register with authorities if they have a yearly foreign income of 7.2 million forints ($25,000).

    The rules are admittedly targeting organizations funded by Soros, a Hungarian-born American financier who for decades has given away billions of dollars of his fortune to support causes of a liberal “open society” worldwide.

    The Hungarian premier has often vilified Soros, whose ideals are squarely at odds with Orban’s view that European culture is under an existential threat from migration and multiculturalism.

    “The government is always looking for someone to fight with, and Soros seems like a perfect person for this because he funds NGOs in Hungary and he funds CEU as well,” Klopfstein said.

    CEU Rector Michael Ignatieff has said the school would continue operations as normal and demanded that the law be scrapped and additional international guarantees of academic freedoms be added to current legal safeguards.

    The U.S. State Department will send diplomats to Budapest next week to address the CEU crisis, said Ignatieff, who spent several days in Washington to lobby the U.S. government, lawmakers and the media.

    “They want to completely undermine and eradicate what remains of civil society,” Bara Bognar, a 40-year-old finance professional, told Reuters. “This is the first protest I have ever participated in. There is a level at which you must be present, so here I am.”

    “The method, the lack of dialogue, the efforts for years to annihilate all democratic institutions, this cannot be the future of us nor our children.”

  • G20 conflict over protectionism : From post-war to pre-war capitalism - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/03/24/trad-m24.html

    G20 conflict over protectionism: From post-war to pre-war capitalism
    By Nick Beams
    24 March 2017

    While the dispute was over the words to be included in a communiqué, the decision by the G20 finance ministers meeting last weekend, at the insistence of the United States, to drop a previous commitment to “resist all forms of protectionism” has more than symbolic significance.

    Following the meeting, the general consensus among the other powers was to downplay the significance of the split, at least publicly, in the hope that the situation could change by the time of the G20 leaders’ summit in July, by which time the Trump administration would have had sufficient time to “learn.” But given the US president’s strident assertions of “America First” and his denunciations of the present trading system as unfair to the US, that hope seems like whistling in the dark.

    #capitalisme #néolibéralisme #mondialisation #globalisation

  • We are all Helen Zille. Or, why the West thinks that #colonialism was not all bad.
    http://africasacountry.com/2017/03/we-are-all-helen-zille-or-why-the-west-thinks-that-colonialism-was-

    In a series of tweets circulated earlier today, Helen Zille, who is Premier of the #Western_Cape (one of #South_Africa’s nine provinces) and the former leader of the country’s second largest political party, the Democratic Alliance (DA), asserted there are many positive aspects to colonialism. Zille, who is white, governs the Western Cape, which…

    #POLITICS #Democratic_Allaince #Hellen_Zille #Hitler #Twitter

    • The end of colonialism, apartheid and Jim Crow have marked the global rise of liberal racism – what sociologist Eduardo Bonilla-Silva calls “racism without racists”. Even when we do not openly endorse colonialism like Zille does, our works are filled with strategic silences, omissions and erasures that continue to sustain ideas of Western superiority.

      Some scholars hint at the superiority of the political institutions of Western democracy. Others mention the “inevitable” rise of capitalism, seen always as a quintessentially Western achievement. Others still talk about the “advanced” cultural practices of “European modernity.” Even critical Western scholarship opposed to the neoliberal paradigm rarely acknowledges the persistence of whiteness and racial inequalities, often developing criticisms of the world of finance, the banks or the multinationals that underplay the role of race in these institutions. These coded forms of racism have contributed to consolidate white supremacy in the last few decades of neoliberal hegemony.

      That edifice is now crumbling. The Zilles of the world are tired of beating around the bush. They want to speak openly about white superiority and do not want to feel uncomfortable for their views.

      They believe that postcolonial countries have been given a chance but failed to assert their worth, denying the fact that neocolonial structures are just as sturdy as colonial ones. They are tired of “diversity talk,” it is all a sham in their opinion. They see a return to the “good old days” of fascism, colonialism, Jim Crow and apartheid as the way forward.

  • The Hamilton Hustle | Matt Stoller
    https://thebaffler.com/salvos/hamilton-hustle-stoller

    most of Hamilton’s legacy is astonishingly counter-democratic. His central role in founding both the financial infrastructure of Wall Street and a nascent military establishment (which supplanted the colonial system of locally controlled democratic militias) was rooted in his self-appointed crusade to undermine the ability of ordinary Americans to govern themselves. We should be grateful not that Hamilton structured the essential institutions of America to fit his vision, but that he failed to do so. Had he succeeded, we would probably be living in a military dictatorship.

    (…) Within this context, it’s useful to recognize that Hamilton the play is not the real story of Alexander Hamilton; rather, as historian Nancy Isenberg has noted, it’s a revealing parable about the politics of the finance-friendly Obama era.

    #États-Unis #démocratie #histoire #comédie_musicale

  • A Computer Just Clobbered Four Pros At Poker | FiveThirtyEight
    https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/a-computer-just-clobbered-four-pros-at-poker
    https://espnfivethirtyeight.files.wordpress.com/2017/01/roeder-poker-update-1.png?quality=90&strip=all&

    About three weeks ago, I was in a Pittsburgh casino for the beginning of a 20-day man-versus-machine poker battle. Four top human pros were beginning to take on a state-of-the-art artificial intelligence program running on a brand new supercomputer in a game called heads-up no-limit Texas Hold ’em. The humans’ spirits were high as they played during the day and dissected the bot’s strategy over short ribs and glasses of wine late into the evening.

    On Monday evening, however, the match ended and the human pros were in the hole about $1.8 million. For some context, the players (four men and the machine, named Libratus) began each of the 120,000 hands with $20,000 in play money, and posted blinds of $50 and $100.

    ...

    Tuomas Sandholm, a Carnegie Mellon computer scientist who created the program with his Ph.D. student Noam Brown, was giddy last week on the match’s livestream, at one point cheering for his bot as it turned over a full house versus human pro Jason Les’s flush in a huge pot, and proudly comparing Libratus’s triumph to Deep Blue’s monumental win over Garry Kasparov in chess.

    And, indeed, some robot can now etch heads-up no-limit Texas Hold ‘em (2017) alongside checkers (1995), chess (1997), Othello (1997), Scrabble (c. 2006), limit Hold ‘em (2008), Jeopardy! (2011) and Go (2016) into the marble cenotaph of human-dominated intellectual pursuits.

    Brown told me that he was keen to tackle other versions of poker with his A.I. algorithms. What happens when a bot like this sits down at a table with many other players, rather than just a one-on-one foe, for example? Sandholm, on the other hand, is quick to say that this isn’t really about poker at all. “The AI’s algorithms are not for poker: they are game independent,” his daily email updates read. The other “games” the algorithms may be applied to in the future: “negotiation, cybersecurity, military setting, auctions, finance, strategic pricing, as well as steering evolution and biological adaptation.”

    #transhumanisme #singularité #jeux

  • Democrats can’t win until they recognize how bad Obama’s financial policies were - The Washington Post
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2017/01/12/democrats-cant-win-until-they-recognize-how-bad-obamas-financial-pol

    Two key elements characterized the kind of domestic political economy the administration pursued: The first was the foreclosure crisis and the subsequent bank bailouts. The resulting policy framework of Tim Geithner’s Treasury Department was, in effect, a wholesale attack on the American home (the main store of middle-class wealth) in favor of concentrated financial power. The second was the administration’s pro-monopoly policies, which crushed the rural areas that in 2016 lost voter turnout and swung to Donald Trump.

    #Obama didn’t cause the financial panic, and he is only partially responsible for the bailouts, as most of them were passed before he was elected. But financial collapses, while bad for the country, are opportunities for elected leaders to reorganize our culture. Franklin Roosevelt took a frozen banking system and created the New Deal. Ronald Reagan used the sharp recession of the early 1980s to seriously damage unions. In January 2009, Obama had overwhelming Democratic majorities in Congress, $350 billion of no-strings-attached bailout money and enormous legal latitude. What did he do to reshape a country on its back?

    #finance

  • Netanyahu caught on tape negotiating mutual benefits with businessman - Israel News - Haaretz.com
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.763607

    At the heart of Case 2000 is an attempt at an unambiguous deal between money and government. Sources who spoke with Netanyahu said he was surprised by evidence against him.

    Désolé, je n’ai trouvé un rapport en français que sur ce site d’extrême-droite :

    L’opposition veut faire tomber Netanyahou suite à un enregistrement entre le Premier ministre et un homme d’affaire
    http://alyaexpress-news.com/lopposition-veut-faire-tomber-netanyaou-suite-a-enregistrement-ent

    • Netanyahu caught on tape negotiating mutual benefits with businessman
      At the heart of Case 2000 is an attempt at an unambiguous deal between money and government. Sources who spoke with Netanyahu said he was surprised by evidence against him.
      By Gidi Weitz | Jan. 8, 2017 | 7:02 AM

      Suspicions in the main corruption affair involving Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are backed by a tape documenting alleged contacts between Netanyahu and a businessman over mutual benefits, Haaretz has learned.

      At the heart of the affair, dubbed Case 2000, lies an attempt to make an unambiguous deal between money and government – not suitcases brimming with cash in return for a gas monopoly, or bank transfers to a secret account in return for franchises in natural resources or infrastructure, but the businessman’s support that would help Netanyahu remain in office in exchange for huge financial benefits.

      Even if this pact was only partly realized or was still in its infancy, the mere existence – and documentation – of such incredible negotiations demands an immediate criminal investigation. When the affair is fully revealed, the details will shed light on how decisions are made at the top.

      It may be said that the affair is based on solid evidence that will be difficult to dispute, like that provided by former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s bureau chief Shula Zaken about Olmert: a series of tapes in which the prime minister’s own voice is heard. People who spoke with Netanyahu over the weekend after his second police interrogation over corruption allegations said he was surprised by the evidence against him. “He didn’t expect it,” said a person who knows Netanyahu well.

      The details of the affair are sensational also because for many years Netanyahu has been perceived, and rightly so, as a stranger to the local swamp of crony capitalism, adeptly navigated by his two predecessors, Ehud Olmert and Ariel Sharon. A few years back, the man who admired the American trust-breaking president, Theodor Roosevelt, was not the cup of tea of the major players in Israel’s economy. Netanyahu has been described in the past as a cautious man whose sins, while they might infuriate the public, were minor. When the details of the “Case 2000” affair are revealed, these perceptions could crack.

      This explosive material landed on the desk of Attorney General Avichai Mendelblit back in the spring. After sitting on it for long months and withholding the information from the public with no justification, the attorney general hastened to plug the narrative beneficial to Netanyahu: The affair is serious from a public perspective and is borderline in criminal terms.

      It’s time to put an end to this spin and to two others making headlines these last few days: That Netanyahu is calm and certain that it’ll all end in hot air; and that Mendelblit is a steadfast attorney general, who conducted a comprehensive, thorough and quick investigation. These two descriptions, aggressively peddled to the public by lackeys of these two intelligent individuals, are trickery and deception.

      It appears that the minor of the two affairs involving Netanyahu, the gifts case, is being received by the public with a shrug. The explanation may be the high threshold set over the last decade, when Israel watched in wonder as a president accused of rape barricaded himself in his residence, tycoons funneled millions into the prime minister’s son’s bank account, envelopes bursting with dollars finding their way into another prime minister’s hands, a finance minister who topped off his bank account with labor unions’ funds and a defense minister who stashed away hundreds of thousands of dollars and bought himself a luxury pad with money from tycoons.

      Today, it appears that only a gas monopoly in return for suitcases of cash, or a TV franchise for a bloated bank account in the Virgin Islands under a straw man’s name will wake the public out of its stupor. This is what Israeli society has come to.

      Suspicions in the gifts affair come as no surprise. For years stories abounded of Netanyahu’s tendency to abuse his status to receive funding from wealthy individuals in Israel and abroad for his luxurious lifestyle. This included first-class flights, hotel suites, expensive Cuban cigars, champagne and suits. Despite many reports since the early 1990s, about his parsimoniousness, his bizarre funding of personal expenses from the public purse, his fondness for enjoying the good life but not paying for it, Netanyahu continued in a behavior, which mainly showed dubious judgement.

      In this affair, wealthy businessmen, above all movie producer Arnon Milchan, were allegedly asked to buy hundreds of thousands of shekels worth of luxury items for Netanyahu and his wife Sara. A report by Channel 10’s Raviv Drucker that Netanyahu had asked U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry to assist Milchan with his visa problems, proves once more that there ain’t no such thing as a free lunch, and that the friendship between Netanyahu and Milchen was not just a warm, authentic relationship that happened to develop between the huge money and a top politician.

    • Israël : la police examine un enregistrement impliquant Netanyahu
      AFP | 08/01/2017
      http://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1028010/israel-la-police-examine-un-enregistrement-impliquant-netanyahu.html

      La police israélienne, qui enquête sur une éventuelle implication de Benjamin Netanyahu dans des affaires de corruption, examine un enregistrement d’une conversation avec un patron de presse sur l’éventualité d’apporter une couverture plus favorable au Premier ministre, selon des informations diffusées dimanche.

      Selon la chaîne privée Channel 2, la police est en possession d’un enregistrement d’une conversation entre M. Netanyahu et Arnon Moses, propriétaire du quotidien Yediot Aharonot et de son site d’information Ynet.
      Ce journal fournit une couverture traditionnellement hostile à M. Netanyahu. Cette même chaîne de télévision israélienne affirme que les deux hommes discutaient d’"un accord qui aiderait le Yedioth en échange d’une couverture favorable" au Premier ministre.

      Selon Channel 2, les discussions entre M. Netanyahu et l’éditeur portaient sur la possibilité de réduire ou fermer le supplément hebdomadaire du Israel HaYom, pour donner un coup de pouce aux ventes de son rival et à la fortune de la famille Moses.
      En échange, ajoute la même source, le Yedioth baisserait le ton de sa couverture traditionnellement hostile à M. Netanyahu. La chaîne ne précise pas quand cette conversation avait eu lieu ou si un accord avait été conclu.

      Depuis son lancement en 2007, le tirage du quotidien gratuit pro-Netanyahu Israel HaYom dépasse celui de Yedioth. Le journal appartient au milliardaire américain juif Sheldon Adelson, soutien de longue date de M. Netanyahu.

      Le Premier ministre a été interrogé jeudi par les enquêteurs pendant cinq heures, pour la deuxième fois en une semaine, dans le cadre d’une enquête sur des cadeaux qu’il est soupçonné d’avoir reçus illégalement d’hommes d’affaires.

      Channel 2 avait auparavant indiqué que M. Netanyahu avait reçu pendant sept ou huit ans des boîtes de cigares de choix de la part d’Arnon Milchan, homme d’affaires israélien, producteur hollywoodien et ami du Premier ministre. La valeur totale de ces cigares s’élèverait à des dizaines de milliers de dollars, selon Channel 2.

      La chaîne affirme également que la police soupçonnait M. Milchan d’avoir offert à l’épouse du Premier ministre, Sara, du champagne rose d’une valeur d’une centaine de dollars la bouteille.
      Un avocat de Benjamin Netanyahu avait affirmé vendredi que ces soupçons étaient « dénués de toute substance ».

  • Oligarchs making gains: the costly nationalisation of Ukraine’s PrivatBank

    On 18 December, the government in Ukraine decided to nationalise the country’s largest bank, PrivatBank. It has been owned by the oligarchs Ihor Kolomoyskyi and Henadiy Boholyubov (over 90% of the shares). Formally, the decision was taken following a motion from the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) and the Financial Stability Council after the major shareholders put forward a proposal to the government to take over the bank for the benefit of its clients. On 19 December, in an attempt to calm the situation on the market, Ukraine’s most senior officials, including the president, the prime minister and the head of the NBU, guaranteed the safety of deposits to clients of PrivatBank. In the pessimistic scenario, the state will have to pay 148 billion hryvnias (around US$5.5 billion) for the nationalisation of this bank.

    https://www.osw.waw.pl/en/publikacje/analyses/2016-12-21/oligarchs-making-gains-costly-nationalisation-ukraines-privatbank
    #Ukraine #banque #finance #nationalisation #private_banking

  • Proposed New Capital Rules Threaten Struggling Shipping Sector – gCaptain
    https://gcaptain.com/proposed-new-capital-rules-threaten-struggling-shipping-sector

    The global shipping industry will hit a credit crunch if proposed new bank capital rules are implemented in a sector already weighed down by toxic debt, bankers involved say.

    The Basel Committee of banking supervisors from nearly 30 countries met in Chile last month in an effort to complete the new rules for lenders in the world’s major financial centres. It is now trying to pin down the details.

    While the rules do not target shipping specifically, some of the biggest rises in requirements under the proposed regulation are likely to be in the models banks use to decide how much capital to set aside when they lend to shippers.
    […]
    German banks – which provide a quarter of the world’s $400 billion of outstanding shipping debt – are struggling to recoup their loans. Other European lenders with stable shipping portfolios fear the proposals will squeeze them too.
    […]
    Deutsche Bank, state owned rivals HSH Nordbank and NordLB are among the German banks with some of the biggest portfolios of troubled shipping loans.

    Chief executive of NordLB Gunter Dunkel said the Basel proposals would “affect us, but not as much as other German banks”.

    Deutsche Bank said in their quarterly results in late October they were still positive that any new rules would not send their capital requirements spiking.

    HSH is currently trying to sell parts of its portfolio including 500 million euros of shipping loans. A source familiar with the HSH transaction was still confident and said the bank was committed to selling shipping loans.

    Finance sources said offers received so far came were at 25 to 35 percent of the value of the loans.

    If that’s the value of such debt and you add potential Basel regulations, they are looking at a big hit somewhere,” the shipping finance source said.

    Petit rappel de la taille de la menace que fait peser la crise du transport maritime sur la finance mondiale et, en particulier, allemande.

  • How a Genius Is Different from a Really Smart Person - Facts So Romantic
    http://nautil.us/blog/how-a-genius-is-different-from-a-really-smart-person

    The most intelligent two percent of people in the world. These are the people who qualify for membership in Mensa, an exclusive international society open only to people who score at or above the 98th percentile on an IQ or other standardized intelligence test. Mensa’s mission remains the same as when it was founded in Oxford, England, in 1946: To identify and nurture human intelligence for humanity’s benefit, to foster research in the nature of intelligence, and to provide social and other opportunities for its members. Nautilus spoke with five present and former members of the society: Richard Hunter, a retired finance director at a drinks distributor; journalist Jack Williams; Bikram Rana, a director at a business consulting firm; LaRae Bakerink, a business consultant; and clinical (...)

  • Largest Bank in Norway Sells Its Assets in Dakota Access Pipeline
    http://www.ecowatch.com/norway-dnb-dakota-access-pipeline-2098464180.html

    Earlier this month, Reuters reported that DNB was “reconsidering its participation” in the financing of the pipeline if “concerns raised by Native American tribes against its construction are not addressed.”

    “We have initiated an independent review of how indigenous rights are safeguarded in this process,” Even Westerveld of DNB said. “In addition, we have intensified the dialogue with our customers to use our position as a bank to influence a solution to the conflict.”

    “It is great that DNB has sold its assets in the disputed pipeline, and it is a clear signal that it is important that people speak out when injustice is committed,” Martin Norman, Greenpeace Norway sustainable finance campaigner, said. “We now expect DNB to also terminate its loans for the project immediately.”

    #Dakota_access_pipeline #peuples_autochtones

  • The Lancet Countdown: tracking progress on health and climate change
    http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(16)32124-9/fulltext

    Proposed #indicators and indicator domains for the Lancet Countdown on #health and #climate_change

    The proposed indicator domains are heterogeneous: some reflect outcomes (greenhouse gas emissions or health), whereas others reflect process indicators with both direct and indirect links to climate change. Additionally, some can be modelled at a global or national level, whereas others reflect location-specific issues and would depend on data collection at sentinel sites.

    1: Health impacts of climate hazards
    1.1 Exposure to temperature change
    1.2 Exposure to heatwaves
    1.3 Changes in labour productivity
    1.4 Exposure to flood
    1.5 Exposure to drought
    1.6 Changes in the incidence and geographical range of climate-sensitive infectious diseases across sentinel sites
    1.7 Food security and undernutrition

    2: Health resilience and adaptation
    2.1 Integration of health into national adaptation plans
    2.2 Climate services for health
    2.3 Adaptation of finance for health

    3: Health co-benefits of climate change mitigation
    3.1 Coal phase-out
    3.2 Growth in renewable energy
    3.3 Access to clean energy
    3.4 Energy access for health facilities
    3.5 Exposure to ambient air pollution
    3.6 Deployment of low-emission vehicles and access to public transport
    3.7 Active travel infrastructure and uptake
    3.8 Greenhouse gas emissions from the food system and healthy diets
    3.9 Greenhouse gas emissions of health-care systems

    4: Economics and finance
    4.1 Change in annual investment in renewable energy
    4.2 Change in annual investment in energy efficiency
    4.3 Low-carbon technology patent generation and innovation
    4.4 Valuing the health co-benefits of climate change mitigation
    4.5 Direct and indirect fossil fuel subsidies
    4.6 Coverage and strength of carbon pricing
    4.7 Equity of the low-carbon transition

    5: Political and broader engagement
    5.1 Public engagement with health and climate change
    5.2 Academic publications on health and climate change
    5.3 Inclusion of health and climate change within medical and public health curricula
    5.4 Health and climate change in high-level statements of the UNFCCC and UNGA
    5.5 Implementation and estimated health benefits of the nationally determined contributions (NDCs)

    #climat #santé_publique

  • Wall Street’s Next Frontier Is Hacking Into Emotions of Traders
    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-09-01/wall-street-s-next-frontier-is-hacking-into-emotions-of-traders

    Startups wielding sensors and algorithms promise a new era of surveillance. The trader was in deep trouble. A millennial who had only recently been allowed to set foot on a Wall Street floor, he made bad bets, and in a panic to recoup his losses, he’d blown through risk limits, losing $4.9 million in a single afternoon. It wasn’t a career-ending day. The trader was taking part in a simulation run by Andrew Lo, an MIT finance professor. The goal : find out if top performers can be identified (...)

    #algorithme #biométrie #surveillance #surveillance #Bank_of_America #JPMorgan_Chase

  • Measuring #financial_toxicity as a clinically relevant patient-reported outcome: The validation of the COmprehensive Score for financial Toxicity (COST) - Souza - 2016 - Cancer
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cncr.30369/full

    #Cancer and its treatment lead to increased financial distress for patients. To the authors’ knowledge, to date, no standardized patient-reported outcome measure has been validated to assess this distress.

    METHODS

    Patients with AJCC Stage IV solid tumors receiving chemotherapy for at least 2 months were recruited. Financial toxicity was measured by the COmprehensive Score for financial Toxicity (COST) measure.

    (...)

    CONCLUSIONS

    The COST measure demonstrated reliability and validity in measuring financial toxicity. Its correlation with HRQOL indicates that financial toxicity is a clinically relevant patient-centered outcome.

    #santé #finance #sécurité_sociale #États-Unis

  • Big Data Exposes How Politically Connected Traders Cashed In During the Financial Crisis
    http://www.ibtimes.com/political-capital/big-data-exposes-how-politically-connected-traders-cashed-during-financial-

    “Many defenders of finance in the recent crisis suggest that the giant institutions were really taken by surprise when the bubble popped,” said the researchers. “Our results suggest that insiders understood the heavy risk-taking in their banks; They were not simply over-optimistic, and hence they sold more of their own shares before the crisis.”

    #criminels #banksters

    • “Nobody was prepared for this,” said Citigroup executive Robert Rubin, in an emblematic comment. (…) There was virtually nobody who saw that low-probability event as a possibility."

      Researchers tested that storyline against the SEC disclosures of top executives’ stock trades at 170 companies. That survey found a connection between bank executives selling their own personal company holdings and the performance of their firms in the crisis. The connection was particularly intense at firms with high exposure to the housing investments that fueled the crisis, said researchers at Ozyegin University, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid and Universitat Pompeu Fabra-ICREA.

      #merci #banques #profiteurs (perso je n’aime pas le tag banksters)

  • Economic Diary of Latvia. | Baltic News Network - News from Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia
    http://bnn-news.com/economic-diary-of-latvia-about-strong-women-in-power-151658

    This week, members of the Saeima unexpectedly declined amendments that provided for the merging of finance and customs police of the State Revenue Service. After hearing out deputies, Finance Minister Dana Reizniece-Ozola decided not to give up.
    This week was rich with all kinds of paradoxes and surprises. For example, it became known that investments of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development in Latvia have reached approximately EUR 600 million.
    Opposite to claims that Latvia is irrationally using its forests, it turns out that the total forested area in Latvia has doubled since the pre-war period. It continues to increase year after year, according to information from Green House association.

    #Economics #Latvia #Ministry_of_finances #Forests #Nature #Investments