• Hong Kong 31.10.2009 1 Comment

    Macau at Night

    Macau at Night

    MACAU, Oct. 30 (Xinhua) — The government of the Macau Special Administrative Region (SAR) has provided allowances to local employers who hire young people aged below 26 and with no working experience, the Macau Daily Times reported on Friday, quoting the SAR’s labor chief as saying.

    The authorities attached importance to issues concerning young people employment and have used different channels to provide teenagers with up-to-date employment information, the daily quoted the SAR’s Labour Affairs Bureau Director Shuen Ka Hung as saying.

    According to Shuen, the bureau not only set up “recruitment and employment matching” on the Internet, but also held career talks so as to help improve local young people’s understanding of Macao’s employment market. read more at news.xinhuanet.com…

  • China 31.10.2009 4 Comments

    Chinese Defense Minister Cao Gangchuan (L, Front) holds a welcoming ceremony for visiting U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates (R, Front) in Beijing, capital of China, Nov. 5, 2007.  (Xinhua/Li Tao) (whj/wcy)

    Chinese Defense Minister Cao Gangchuan (L, Front) holds a welcoming ceremony for visiting U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates (R, Front) in Beijing, capital of China, Nov. 5, 2007. (Xinhua/Li Tao) (whj/wcy)

    Zachary Karabell (RiverTwice Research) – The economic relationship between China and the United States is the defining issue of our day. While debates over health care are vital to American society, and while challenges ranging from Iran to Afghanistan to North Korea are real, nothing will determine the arc of the coming decades – or will shape domestic life and prosperity in the United States – more than the emergence of China as a global economic superpower unrivaled except by America.

    The rise of China is hardly a secret, but because it is a complex economic that is constantly evolving, it gets less attention than hot-button issues. Absent a real crisis between the two, the relationship is more about the flow of capital and the nature of global business than it is about heated battles inside the Beltway or on Main Street. And while the rise of China and America’s increased dependency on Chinese loans to fund its deficits certainly generates anxiety, it’s mostly amorphous barring some specific issue to focus it.

    How that relationship came to be is the subject of my new book, Superfusion: How China and America Became One Economy and Why the World’s Prosperity Depends On It. While this economic fusion has taken more than two decades to evolve, with the crisis of the past year, it has become both a tighter embrace and one more fraught with tension. It’s to the credit of both governments – for now – that those tensions have not boiled over.

    For their part, the Chinese are concerned about the viability of the American economic system and about the long-term value of their more than $1 trillion of investments in American bonds. They are also dependent on the market even a recession-mired America offers, with exports to the United States still near $300 billion a year. Americans are worried about the effect of lower-cost Chinese labor on U.S. jobs, even though most of the lost jobs were lost long ago and have as much to do with the corrosive effects of technology on labor as they do with cheap production in China. Meanwhile, China offers turbo-charged growth for American companies, as the Chinese government turns to companies like Caterpillar and GE to help with the industrial build-out and as Chinese consumers buy more goods – even a bankrupt GM sold 1.6 million cars in China this year, more than in the United States.

    For now, the relationship between the two economies is symbiotic, and is providing a degree of stability to both societies. In the absence of Chinese money, the Obama administration could not be spending its way out of recession, and without American companies operating in China and without Americans purchasing Chinese goods, China wouldn’t have the money to lend and spend. But no country likes to see its sovereignty eroded and its ability to be master of its own fate undermined – and that is precisely what the economic relationship between the China and the United States does to their respective governments. National sentiment in both countries is also strongly suspicious, and that is likely to intensify. read more at RiverTwice Research…

  • Taiwan 30.10.2009 Comments Off

    Carrefour store in Taipei

    Carrefour store in Taipei

    (AFP) TAIPEI – A Taiwanese court has rejected an appeal by French retail giant Carrefour against a fine for misleading advertisements, an official said Friday.

    The Supreme Administrative Court upheld the decision against Carrefour for claiming it checked its price lists daily and immediately lowered the price of items found to be more expensive than competing stores, a court official said.

    Despite the claim, made on Carrefour’s website and in its catalogues, four of its outlets failed to charge the lowest prices, the Fair Trade Commission found earlier.

    Following its decision, made in 2006, the commission slapped a fine of 4.44 million Taiwan dollars (138,000 US dollars) on Carrefour for making untruthful and misleading statements on its pricing. read more at asiaone business…

  • China 30.10.2009 Comments Off

    iPhone buyers in Beijing. Photo: it.chinanews.com.cn

    iPhone buyers in Beijing. Photo: it.chinanews.com.cn

    By Sam Oliver – The iPhone saw its formal debut in China Friday on carrier China Unicom, with the Wi-Fi-less hardware sold via 2,000 stores at a starting price of 4,999 yuan, or $730.

    That high price was cited by The Wall Street Journal as the “buzz-killer” over the handset’s debut. The high-end iPhone 3GS sells for 6,999 yuan ($1,024) without a service contract, which is how most people in China purchase their phones. The same handset can be bought for about $800 in Hong Kong.

    “When wrapped together with a service plan, as is generally done in the U.S., the phone will cost Chinese subscribers at least $3,120 over two years, compared with the roughly $2,600 cost for the same period for customers in the U.S.,” the report said.

    The average cost of a smartphone in China is $350. And Apple must also compete with an estimated 2 million imported iPhones that were already in China as of the summer of 2009.

    The cheapest iPhone runs 4,999 yuan, or $630, according to The Associated Press. And all of the officially sanctioned models come without Wi-Fi. But an imported iPhone 3GS with Wi-Fi can be bought from Chinese street markets for 5,700 yuan, or $835. read more at AppleInsider.com…

  • South Korea 29.10.2009 Comments Off

    Samsung is the world's leading memory chip maker

    Samsung is the world's leading memory chip maker

    By Lee Youkyung – SEOUL, Oct. 30 (Yonhap) — Samsung Electronics Co., the world’s leading memory chipmaker, said Friday that its third-quarter earnings more than tripled from a year ago on a rise in prices of key products.

    Net profit stood at 3.72 trillion won (US$3.16 billion) in the July-September period, compared with 1.22 trillion won a year ago, the company said in a regulatory filing.

    Sales jumped 29.1 percent on-year to 24.86 trillion won, and operating profits doubled from a year ago to 2.77 trillion won, it said.

    Shares of Samsung Electronics traded at 728,000 won on the Seoul bourse as of 10:15 a.m., up 1.39 percent from Thursday’s close. read more at Yonhap News Agency…

  • Japan 29.10.2009 Comments Off

    Japan Airlines Boeing 777-300

    Japan Airlines Boeing 777-300

    By KAZUAKI NAGATA
    Staff writer, The Japan Times Online – After about a month of evaluating the assets of Japan Airlines Corp., the transport ministry and a reconstruction task force said Thursday that the struggling carrier needs to go through reconstruction under the Enterprise Turnaround Initiative Corp.

    JAL released a statement saying it has begun consulting with ETIC on seeking its help for reconstruction.

    ETIC is a Tokyo-based corporation jointly set up by the government and about 130 private-sector financial institutions to rehabilitate debt-ridden companies.

    ETIC, which began operating earlier this month, is able to buy debt and invest in and provide loans to companies saddled with liabilities deemed excessive, and can raise up to ¥1.6 trillion in government-guaranteed funds.

    “I expect that ETIC will accept the application and will start its own asset evaluation of the company,” transport minister Seiji Maehara told a news conference. read more at The Japan Times Online…

  • China 28.10.2009 Comments Off

    Audis Q7 on display at the Shanghai International Auto Show in April.

    Audi's Q7 on display at the Shanghai International Auto Show in April.

    By CHRISTOPH RAUWALD, WALL STREET JOURNAL ONLINE – FRANKFURT— Audi AG will significantly exceed its sales target in China this year and expects the country to outpace its German home turf as its largest single market in 2012 or 2013 at the latest.

    The projection underscores a broader geographic shift among auto makers toward Asian growth markets.

    “Today we’re at 118,000 car sales already. We’re on track to significantly surpass our initial target in China this year” of selling 130,000 cars, said Peter Schwarzenbauer, Audi’s executive board member responsible for sales and marketing, in an interview.

    He said the Ingolstadt-based company will launch its A3 hatchback in China next year as part of a wider move to attract a broader customer base there, in addition to the new Q5 small sport-utility vehicle, which is being rolled out globally.

    Audi ranks third in global luxury- car sales behind BMW AG and Daimler AG’s Mercedes-Benz. But it keeps a firm grip on the top position in China, which it gained thanks partly to the early market entry of its parent company, Volkswagen AG.

    Mr. Schwarzenbauer said annual sales in China might soar to 250,000 cars by 2012 or 2013 as Audi is preparing to launch several new or revamped models, ramping up local production and expanding its dealership network.

    He said Audi also plans to establish a broader leasing and financing business in China to tap rising customer demand. Most Chinese buyers tend to pay cash for their vehicles. read more at online.wsj.com…

  • Hong Kong 28.10.2009 Comments Off

    Hong Kongs developers want cheaper plots from the government

    Hong Kong's developers want cheaper plots from the government

    Alfred Liu , The Standard, Wednesday, October 28, 2009 – The Hong Kong administration “will step in decisively” to prevent unfairness and instability emerging in the real estate market, which has seen prices climbing to record highs amid land supply shortage, a government source told The Standard.

    After meeting Financial Secretary John Tsang Chun-wah yesterday, the city’s biggest property developers said they want cheaper plots from the government, which is set to fine-tune its land supply policy. Executives including Cheung Kong (Holdings) deputy chairman Victor Li Tzar-kuoi, Sun Hung Kai Properties vice chairman Thomas Kwok Ping-kwong, Sino Land chairman Robert Ng Chee-siong and Great Eagle chairman Lo Ka- shui met Tsang at government headquarters for about an hour.

    Tsang discussed issues concerning Hong Kong’s land supply system and property prices, telling the developers he is concerned soaring prices for luxury homes may lead to price surges in the mass market, according to the source.

    The government still hopes prices will adjust through market mechanism.

    “But if there is anything unfair or unhealthy happening in the property market that affects economic development or people’s livelihood, the government will step in decisively,” the source said.

    Given the difficulty of meeting the government’s land auction requirements, representatives from the Real Estate Developers Association stressed they support the government’s land sale application list system, while seeking changes.

    “The developers are asking the government to assess the value of land sites closer to prevailing market prices for developers, to trigger them easier from the application list,” said association vice chairman Stewart Leung Chi- kin, who is also an executive director at New World Development.

    The developers also hope the government will increase the opportunities for selling land via applications, Leung said. read more at TheStandard.com.hk…

  • China 28.10.2009 Comments Off

    Robin Yanhong Li, CEO of Baidu

    Robin Yanhong Li, CEO of Baidu

    (ChinaDaily.com) Baidu’s hasty move to a new Internet advertisement system marks a rare stumble for China’s dominant search engine, opening a window of opportunity for others salivating for a piece of the country’s fast-growing online market.

    Baidu, whose name is practically synonymous with Internet search in China, surprised investors when it revealed transition to its new Phoenix Nest system will lead to softer revenues into next year as customers adjust, sending its stock down sharply.

    The news was music to others, such as Sina Corp and global search leader Google, looking for a bigger piece of the pie in the world’s biggest Internet market with 235 million search users in June, up about a third from a year ago.

    “In the short term, Baidu could possibly lose market share to Google,” said JP Morgan analyst Dick Wei.

    “From the end user perspective, they aren’t going to see much of a difference, but from the advertisers perspective, if you look at monetization market share, it (Baidu’s market share) could be a bit lower in the next few months,” he said.

    Baidu expects to lose some customers and have lower revenue in the near term after the system is fully rolled out.

    Baidu shares, which shed 0.5 percent to close at $432.97 during regular trading hours in New York, fell over 13 percent in after-hours trade to $375.99 after the company gave its revenue forecast that was well below Wall Street estimates. read more at ChinaDaily.com…

  • Opinion 27.10.2009 3 Comments

    Hong Kong - a beacon of hope to the American worker? (photo: Randal Rayborn)

    Hong Kong - a beacon of hope to the American worker? (photo: Randal Rayborn)

    A Change of Age

    The pundits told us the great transition from the Industrial Age to Information Age would be easy. Nothing like the wrenching social dislocations of the 1800’s, when people left behind the grinding poverty of rural agrarian life to earn better wages laboring in urban factories. This time, the transition would require nothing more difficult than a bit of retraining. Add a few computer skills to your resume, those pundits assured us, and all the golden rewards of the new Age would rain down upon you.

    During the dot-com era, that rosy forecast seemed to be coming true. Multi-millionaires were born every day in the Great Internet Land Rush, and for a time it seemed the Information Age had already arrived, after a quick and painless transition. Even the sudden collapse of the dot-com bubble didn’t dampen many spirits – yes, a few of the kids had gotten too eager, but the economic changes the boom had wrought were permanent – and the industrial economy the United States was rapidly losing to Asia and Latin America simply didn’t matter any more. The era of the service economy had dawned, and if Americans could no longer compete for industrial work against a global labor force…well, it just didn’t matter. Take a few computer classes, and Joe Steelworker could get right back into the game.

    But a new trend was taking hold, one that the American media and government to this day refuse to recognize, much less accommodate – the greatest casualty of the transition to the Information Age is the job.

    The death of the “job”

    Many people still hold jobs in the United States. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, almost eight million civilian jobs have been lost since peak employment of 146.6 million was reached in November of 2007. But in an era of excessive government regulation and mandatory health insurance coverage, creating a traditional job is no longer the most efficient way to buy talent. International labor arbitrage gets a lot of media blame, but it is not the real reason American jobs are disappearing.

    1980’s corporate America employed layer upon layer of “redundicrats” – middle managers and lower-level executives who contributed very little to corporate bottom lines, but did quite a lot to build up the egos of the more senior-level executives whose empires they made up. Companies began to recognize the excessive costs incurred by this redundancy toward the end of the decade, and many administrative employees and extra layers of management began to disappear, replaced by new technologies like word processing software. It was an era of morale-boosting fads like “team-building” and hanging inspirational posters on cafeteria walls, but the real theme was already clear – even in the midst of an unparalleled economic expansion, the goal was to do more with far fewer people. Employees were no longer seen as assets who could add value, but as costs to be controlled.

    American firms continued to invest heavily in automation throughout the 1990’s. Mass layoffs weren’t necessary (indeed, they posed serious publicity risks), but fewer and fewer replacements were brought in to address normal rates of attrition. A brief spike in hiring in advance of the Y2K crisis did not change the overall mission of HR departments, which was to minimize the growth of headcount. Business process automation often improved the quality of working life for those still employed, but left many older employees struggling to gain minimal competency in the new technologies.

    The dot-com boom starkly pointed out the real challenge of the Information Age – how to help older workers keep up with the tide of young brainpower that was remaking the workplace. The back-breaking farm work of the Agrarian Age transitioned to the somewhat easier drudgery of the Industrial Age – but the demands of the Information Age now presented a much steeper hill for the average worker to climb.

    Transition to a knowledge economy difficult for many

    Evidence suggests that at best 20% of US workers have the brainpower, education, and cultural fluency necessary to do meaningful work in a global information economy. That is a brutal and politically unacceptable statistic. All the weekend Microsoft Excel courses in the world can’t turn a laid-off bus driver into the Java/J2EE-fluent Enterprise Systems Architect US companies desperately want to find.

    Western companies have eagerly embraced foreign outsourcing in an attempt to both find the talent they need and to control the cost of retaining it. But outsourcing has proven to be a mixed blessing. Language barriers and reputation risk make the actual price of hiring H1B’s much higher than their enticingly low salary and benefit costs. And there are still very few H1B’s allowed by quota in the United States compared to the much larger number of brainpower-intensive positions that go unfilled. Unfilled for a simple reason – adding an unproven outsider to an overdue technology project invariably delays it further. If companies can find perfection on the open market, they’ll create a job for it – otherwise, hiring managers usually decide to just have Bob and Bill and Jo work some more overtime. There is not enough time built into extremely tight project schedules to train even a capable candidate in a given company’s way of doing business. Bob and Bill and Jo aren’t happy, either – the overtime demanded of them is invariably unpaid.

    So where does this general aversion to traditional hiring and training practices leave the remaining 80% of workers, many of whom are intelligent and experienced in roles that no longer exist, but struggle to perform relatively simple Information Age tasks like logging into a corporate network and reading their e-mail? There simply aren’t many jobs left where their talents – developed for an era that has passed – can be used to advantage. Or, more precisely, their core competencies have been permanently taken off the job market and replaced with automated processes, outsourced tasks, or temporary positions. And government regulation has created an age bias – mandatory offering of health insurance means the cost of employing these workers trumps the value their experience offers. If they possess a particular skill that is still in demand, they can try their hand as independent contractors or start their own businesses – many have done so out of necessity. But other workers have started to slide back out of the middle class lifestyles they once considered an entitlement. They may well never again find the kind of “permanent” employment they once enjoyed. For it is likely America will never again reach that November, 2007 peak job level. The Information Age offers entrepreneurship, temporary projects, and odd jobs – more freedom, but far less old-fashioned job security.

    The middle class lifestyle – expectations and reality

    Television has delivered a very clear vision of American upper middle class life,both internally and to the entire world. Television thus sets an expectation – Americans watch Hollywood shows and commercial advertising and believe they should be able to achieve the lifestyle depicted therein. For nearly three decades after WWII, this was not an unreasonable expectation. The United States emerged from the war in an economic position unparalleled in history. The manufacturing economy was so strong that assembly line workers in Detroit were able to buy three-bedroom suburban homes and drive new cars. Americans quickly assumed this was the “new normal”.

    By the 1960’s the middle class lifestyle had become America’s birthright, a reward, many thought, for its steadfast defense of freedom during the war. But the real reason for US ascendancy was that its industry had survived the war intact. Wartime necessity taught Americans to make things, and they set to converting those defense production lines to peaceful purposes with a vengeance. Americans built things and sold things to a world desperate to rebuild and modernize, and became the richest nation on Earth while doing so.

    The suburban lifestyle popularized in the post-war years was a direct side effect of that period of economic ascendancy.

    But the manufacturing boom eventually ran out of steam, and by the late 1990’s, the era of financial engineering was underway. A different dynamic had taken hold – if Americans could no longer afford the lifestyle they saw on TV by creating and selling superior products, they could just borrow the lifestyle they wanted from the bank. Why work hard and wait many years for your experience to be rewarded when you could have the bigger house and nicer car right now…just like those people on TV? This belief and Alan Greenspan’s interest rate manipulations created a giant real-estate bubble which has yet to fully collapse. Foreclosures are driving hundreds of thousands of Americans away from the “American Dream” of home ownership and back into rented apartments. The even larger commercial real estate bubble has not yet begun to deflate.

    One thing is clear – the American middle class will not return to poverty quietly. Their sense of entitlement is too great, and vast subsidies will be demanded at the ballot box, adding trillions more to a debt load already beyond any in human experience.

    An exodus?

    Young, bright workers have an option. It has been said that a smart young person in 1807 went to London, a smart young person in 1907 went to New York, and a smart young person in 2007 went to Shanghai. The economic “Wild West” of Asia bears a resemblance to America in the early part of the last century, offering the young and bright endless opportunities to build empires of their own. Opportunities they will struggle to find in the mature economies of the United States and Europe, which drown the small business owner in red tape for the benefit of rent-seekers in government.

    America’s President Obama has made no secret of his hostility toward small business – he views business owners with the jaundiced eye of a fraud victim and finds virtue only in public service and community activism. But he seems to have little problem accommodating the wishes of the large multi-nationals whose campaign contributions have bought considerable control over his Administration and the US Government as a whole, so perhaps he does not consider those entities to be businesses at all. It is unlikely any real economic recovery can occur in the United State as long as government treats small business as its enemy.

    Faced with such a hostile environment, why wouldn’t America’s best and brightest start to look for opportunities in places like Shanghai, Hong Kong or Singapore? While none of these cities is noted for encouraging free political speech, they certainly understand the critical importance of enabling the freest economies possible, and they welcome brainpower from foreign lands. Most Asian nations now demonstrate a keen understanding of the new rules of the Information Age, while the governments of the United States and Europe seem determined to try to fight off the future. A reverse of the “brain drain” America exploited so skillfully over the last century may be about to begin, as Asia’s young talent returns home from university education in the US and their American classmates start to follow them. It seems likely that the next Microsoft or Hewlett-Packard is even now being created in a garage…in Shenzhen.

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