this article explores how china's central bank pledged to push forward with market-driven reforms on interest rates and capital account opening in a pilot free-trade zone set up in Shanghai.
China's central bank has resolved to push market driven reforms on interest rates and capital accounts. Residents will be allowed to do cross-border investments.
The current account deficit in India has improve somewhat, to its lowest percentage of GDP in several years, due mostly to an increase in exports accompanied by a sharp decrease in the importing of gold. However, this improvement has been met by a similar change in the capital account, which has decreased and is expected to decrease further in the future due to a variety of factors involving foreign direct investment, commercial banking, and portfolio investment.
The article is talking about the national income rises according to the development and improvement of the country from back then until now. The boost of national income in India was 8.2 per cent GDP between 2003-2008. The prime minister of economic advisory council lowered the economic growth.However, the GDP per capita was higher than the national income in India which is better because it showed the amount of money that individuals have and how they improved.
This article is interesting because it is quite important in terms of the impact it could have on the U.S. India is one of very few countries near the Middle East that is "stable" at the moment, and the U.S. as a country imports quite a bit of its oil from the Middle East. This is very closely related to what we have been studying this week, in that when something is scarce, or demand is high, prices elevate. Not only is it a good decision on India's part to raise prices because it will help their own national fiscal rating, but it will also take advantage of the fact that many countries will begin turning to them as a primary source of oil / diesel until the situations in the arab spring are resolved. India is doing a smart thing fiscally, while capitalizing on unrest in the arab spring and maximizing their profit during this time of high interest in the good that they have to offer.
This article is very interesting in that it shows how a massive company like Air France is making decisions to cut spending drastically in order to reduce their production cost. On a side note, I found this article thanks to my french class, so if any of you are french / speak the language and would like a more interesting view on the topic, check out this link. http://www.france2.fr/jt/20h/
Nairobi, Kenya - A new partnership among Kenya Commercial Bank (KCB), the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and General Electric Company (GE) will make $10 million in local financing available to small and medium enterprises in Kenya to develop private health facilities such as small clinics, diagnostic centers and hospitals."This first-of-its-kind transaction was designed in response to the lack of local credit for health facilities in Kenya to purchase much-needed medical and diagnostic imaging equipment. The risk-sharing agreement with USAID will allow KCB to take additional lending risks for clients in the health sector seeking to purchase GE equipment," USAID said in a January 28 press release.
PGG is seeking approval from members to pursue an alliance with multinational corporation CHS Inc.Pendleton Grain Growers, a longtime local farmers' cooperative with roots back to the Great Depression, is looking to partner with a multinational agribusiness collective to spur new growth and investment.
The article is talking about the federal government which has shut down today because of an impasse over the budge and in two weeks, the nation is set to hit its borrowing limit.The major problem in the articles is that there is an oversupply of global labor, an oversupply of global productive capacity and an oversupply of global capital. The jobs created low wages and part time. Growth in domestic manufacturing is still slow which will prevent the development of a country in their own production and prevent the large amount of profit they will get as a result of the domestic production.Business spending has fallen, rents of the houses falling where home prices have increased. The reason why its hard to get out from the rut is because they are no longer faced with a world in which supply-side economic remedies, easy money, reduced taxation, fiscal belt-tightening and deregulation can spur new capacity and the creation of well-paying private sector jobs.Countries that were recently poor find themselves with huge surpluses and sovereign wealth funds. The rich countries of the world, while still rich, struggle with monumental levels of debt, both private and public, and unsettling questions about whether they can compete globally.Also to clear this mess,developed nations need to put the huge surplus of underemployed workers back to work by any means, including big public sector investments to improve infrastructure and competitiveness.Moreover, a new economic multilateral ism with the developing world, to encourage them to re balance their economics away from savings and toward consumption, while we in the West must curb our addiction to credit and consumption is necessary.