Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts

Hilco takes control of HMV chain







Restructuring specialist Hilco has taken effective control of music and DVD retailer HMV.






Hilco, which already owns HMV Canada, has bought the debt of HMV from the group’s lenders, Lloyds and Royal Bank of Scotland.


The debt deal paves the way for Hilco to gain full control of HMV. A further announcement is expected later.


HMV has been hit by competition from online rivals, supermarkets, and illegal music and film downloads.


HMV’s estimated debt was about £176m, but Hilco is believed to have paid much less than this to acquire it because the retail chain is in administration.


It is understood that the debt had to be purchased as a prerequisite to taking full control of HMV. A source told the BBC that an announcement about the completion of the purchase could come as early as Tuesday evening.


Hilco said in a statement: “Hilco UK confirms that it has acquired HMV’s debt from the group’s lenders. It has not bought the business itself.


“Hilco believes there to be a viable underlying HMV business and will now be working closely with Deloitte who, as administrators, are reviewing the business to determine future options.”


An industry group of music labels and film studios, including Universal Music and Sony, were reported on Monday to favour a buyout of HMV by Hilco.


Hilco bought out HMV Canada from parent HMV group in 2011 for £2m, and this history means suppliers are likely to give a Hilco-owned HMV in the UK more favourable credit terms.


In Canada, Hilco said the support of HMV’s key suppliers had been of “critical importance” to the business’s performance.


HMV has 223 UK stores in total, and a workforce of about 4,000.


On Monday, the administrators for HMV said that the retail chain would start accepting gift vouchers in stores from Tuesday.


Deloitte, which had previously said that gift cards could not be redeemed in stores, said it had made the change after assessing HMV’s financial position.


BBC News – Business





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Criminal crackdown on tax evasion







More cases of tax evasion will be taken to the criminal courts as the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) accelerates its crackdown in this area.






Keir Starmer, the director of public prosecutions (DPP), is expected to say on Tuesday that the need to “deter, detect and prosecute” tax evasion is greater given the economic climate.


Tax authority figures suggest evasion costs the UK economy £14bn a year.


The CPS wants a five-fold rise in prosecutions in as many years.


Civil or criminal


Tax evasion is illegal, whereas tax avoidance is legal but has been put under the microscope by politicians and campaigners in recent months.


HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) is the investigating authority in the UK. It has the power to levy financial penalties and order tax to be repaid.


However, in the most serious cases of evasion it now provides the evidence to the CPS to make a decision on criminal charges in England and Wales. It has similar agreement in Scotland and Northern Ireland via the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service and the Public Prosecution Service Northern Ireland.


Continue reading the main story

In a recession, when ordinary law abiding taxpayers are suffering real hardship, the need to deter, detect and prosecute those who evade tax is greater than ever”



End Quote Keir Starmer Director of public prosecutions


These criminal prosecutions come when there is evidence of forged documents, links to suspected wider criminality, when somebody in a position of trust or responsibility is allegedly involved, and where conspiracy is suspected.


The CPS secured 200 tax evasion convictions in 2010-11, but stepped up its crackdown with 550 convictions in 2011-12.


‘Real hardship’


In a speech on Tuesday, the DPP will say that the CPS is aiming for a five-fold increase in prosecutions in five years from 2010.


The target is for 1,500 prosecutions by 2014-15. Not all will result in conviction, although nearly nine in 10 tax evasion cases taken by the CPS do so at present.


Mr Starmer will say that a decision has been taken to “radically increase” the number of prosecutions. Senior judges have also made it clear that large scale tax evasion, even without previous convictions, will lead to “significant” prison sentences.


“Tax evasion has to be dealt with robustly all the time. But in a recession, when ordinary law abiding taxpayers are suffering real hardship, the need to deter, detect and prosecute those who evade tax is greater than ever,” Mr Starmer is expected to say in the speech.


“There is a longstanding myth that unlike many other offences that the CPS has to deal with, tax evasion is a victimless crime. But many would be outraged if money was stolen from their personal bank accounts.”


He will say that the amount of money lost to tax evasion is the equivalent of £530 for every household in the UK. This could have been spent on areas such as schools, hospitals, firefighters, police and public services.


Prosecutions will not only target individuals and organised criminals, he will say. The CPS and HMRC will also target those who set up dishonest tax avoidance schemes.


However, the CPS said it would need more resources to keep the conviction rate rising.


“The CPS is well placed to ramp up our response to tax evasion with a dedicated team of specialist fraud prosecutors who work closely with investigators from an early stage,” a CPS spokesman said.


“Future increases will be a challenge however, and we will be speaking to government about how best that is managed.”


The CPS took on tax evasion cases after it was merged with the Revenue and Customs Prosecution Office a few years ago.


HMRC has been targeting various professions, telling lawyers, doctors, dentists, tutors, coaches and others to come forward with unpaid tax or face fines, instead of receiving visits from inspectors.


“We are working closely with the CPS and other law enforcement agencies to end the kind of practices the DPP is talking about,” said a spokesman for HMRC.


“The vast majority of taxpayers are honest and pay what they have to under the law. They rightly expect us to tackle the small minority of cheats who deprive the country of vital revenues and we are using every penny of our additional resources tackle the cheats.”


Patricia Mock, of accountancy firm Deloitte, said that by securing some notable convictions, the CPS was finding “a sensible way of creating a deterrent against evasion”.


BBC News – Business





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What’s In An Inch? Subway Comes Up Short






Don’t be so literal; the “Subway Footlong” is a registered trademark, not an actual measurement. So wrote Subway Australia on its Facebook page on Jan. 16, after customer Matt Corby’s photo of an 11-inch sub sandwich, measured against a ruler, went viral.


According to ABC News, the Subway response, which is no longer posted on the page, read: “The length of the bread baked in the restaurant cannot be assured each and every time as the proofing process may vary slightly each time in the restaurant.” A representative told ABC News on Friday that while the bread is baked at each store, the company strives for each sub to be 12 inches long.






It might seem nitpicky to complain about getting cheated out of 1 inch, or possibly less than an inch, of Italian Herbs & Cheese bread. But an inch can mean everything. Take golf: In the 2004 HP Classic, Joe Ogilvie missed sinking his blast out of the sand trap by an inch, handing the victory and $ 918,000 of the $ 5.1 million purse to Vijay Singh. And to companies that deal in hundreds of thousands of transactions a day, that small measurement adds up fast:


• When Southwest Airlines (LUV) reduced passenger legroom by an inch (to 31 inches) to add six seats to each plane last year, it estimated the $ 60 million redesign would add $ 10 million per year in ticket sales.


Radio City Entertainment (CVC) raised the maximum height to be a Rockette in 2000 by 1 inch, to 5 feet 6 1/2 inches. That extra bit of leg might just help draw more viewers to the Radio City Christmas Spectacular, which brought in $ 72 million in ticket sales during nine weeks in 2004.


• In 1997, the Washington Post decided to shrink the width of the paper by an inch (to 12 1/2 inches) and the length by 1 9/16 inch (to 22 inches) to save “millions of dollars,” according to Michael Clurman, the Post‘s production vice president.


Subway customers, meanwhile, can take comfort that the “Five-Dollar” part of the slogan is holding firm.


Businessweek.com — Top News





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Blockbuster to close 129 stores







DVD rental firm Blockbuster is to close 129 more stores after it went into administration earlier this month.






It had already given 31 stores notice of closure. The chain has 528 stores and employs 4,190 staff.


Deloitte, the accountancy firm running Blockbusters, said 760 staff are now facing redundancy, but the closures are not taking place immediately.


The administrators have previously said Blockbuster UK would keep trading while it tries to find a buyer.


Joint administrator Lee Manning said: “Having reviewed the portfolio with management, the store closure plan is an inevitable consequence of having to restructure the company to a profitable core which is capable of being sold.


“We would like to thank the company’s employees for their support and professionalism during this difficult time. We are also grateful to the customers for their continued support.”


The administrators said that “a dedicated employee helpline” had been set up, as well as an “employee assistance programme to help those staff facing redundancy find other jobs”.


Expansion planned


The first Blockbuster store in the UK opened in south London in 1989, and the firm has sought to expand its services in recent years, including with a trade-in facility for pre-owned titles.


But the firm’s profits have been hit by the growth of online rental services an, recently, the popularity of streaming films over the internet.


More than 100 Blockbuster UK outlets have closed in the past few years.


Blockbuster in the US went bankrupt in 2011 but was rescued by US pay-TV provider Dish Network in a $ 320m (£200m) deal, which saved hundreds of US stores from closing. The UK arm is also owned by Dish Network and run separately.


Before Blockbuster was bought by Dish Network, there were media reports of ambitious expansion plans, including selling electrical goods such as televisions, mobile phones, and iPods.


But business experts said Blockbuster’s problems were all too similar to those hitting other retailers – a failure to adapt quickly enough to a changing business environment and consumer habits.


Blockbuster’s administration came after music chain HMV and camera-seller Jessops both went into administration earlier this month.


BBC News – Business





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UK retail sales fall in December







UK retail sales fell at a seasonally-adjusted 0.1% in December from the month before, official figures suggest.






Compared with a year earlier, the quantity of goods sold rose a worse-than-expected 0.3%, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).


This was the slowest annual growth rate for a December since 1998 – except for December 2010, when sales were hit by heavy snow, the ONS said.


Clothing and food sales did notably badly, but online retailers did well.


The ONS said that while sales continued to be higher than a year ago – a trend that began in August – this growth had lost its momentum.


In the bigger picture, sales have stagnated since mid-2007. The December 2012 figure was only 2.4% higher than the volume of sales recorded in December 2007.




Kate Davies, Office for National Statistics: “The year-on-year growth was the slowest since December 1998″



The value of goods sold in December was 0.1% lower than November, and 0.7% higher than a year ago, indicating that the price rises faced by shoppers came to a halt at the end of the year – although this could also reflect consumers trading down for cheaper versions of the goods they want.


Shopping from home


The figures came as a surprise to some analysts, who had been expecting stronger growth.


Many High Street retailers had reported a last-minute surge in shoppers the last weekend before Christmas, and bumper Boxing Day sales, following what had otherwise been a fairly quiet run-up to Christmas, not helped by the rain.


The ONS data confirmed that online retailers continued to increase their share of business. About 10.6% of sales were carried out online during the month, up from 9.4% a year earlier.


That share was down just 0.1 percentage points from November – a much smaller fall than usually occurs as this time of the year, when more shoppers typically head for the High Street for their Christmas purchases and for the Boxing Day sales.


The data tallies with figures from research firm Experian that suggested the number of visits to retail websites rose 86% on Christmas Eve, 71% on Christmas Day and 17% on Boxing Day compared with a year earlier, as many chains began their online sales before Christmas.


Total online sales were up 15.5% from a year earlier, led by a 36% increase by websites of department stores such as John Lewis.


“This was a very online Christmas,” Rahul Sharma, retail analyst at Neev Capital, told the BBC.




Economist Jeremy Cook: “Peoples’ pockets are still being pressured by price rises”



“People want to be able to compare prices online. They like the ability to shop online, maybe picking up in the store, and the retailers who can adapt to that the best are the ones who are really going to win.”


‘More to come’


Weak sales, and the migration of business to online competitors, have felled a number of big High Street names in recent weeks.


Electricals chain Comet and camera retailer Jessops have ceased trading, while music vendor HMV and video rentals firm Blockbuster face uncertain futures, having gone into administration.


“For all that we’ve had very strong trading statements from the likes of Dixons, Argos and John Lewis, there is a soft underbelly of the likes of HMV, Jessops, etc,” said Mr Sharma. “I suspect there’s more of those.”


With more people shopping online, it seems fewer felt the need to use their car. The volume of petrol and diesel sold in December fell 6.6% from a year ago, despite ticking up 1.8% compared with November.


Stripping out the effect of these lower car fuel sales from the data, total sales rose a more respectable 1.1% from a year ago.


Continue reading the main story


Other sectors to suffer included predominately food stores, where sales volumes fell 1% from the year before, and textiles, clothing and footwear stores, where sales were down 3.5%.


Weak pound


The weak sales data “will scotch any hopes of a consumer-led recovery, and are another strong hint that the economy is contracting again,” said currency trader Chris Redfern at Moneycorp.


He said it would add to fears that the UK may be on the verge a triple-dip recession, following a strong rebound in activity over the summer.


Next week, the ONS is widely expected to confirm that the UK economy shrank in the last three months of 2012.


If the economy also shrinks during the current quarter, it would mean the country had experienced its third recession in a row without recovering to its peak level of activity recorded in 2007.


The poor sales figures also strengthen the case for more money creation by the Bank of England, as well as a possible change in its inflation target to allow for higher price rises – changes that would likely weaken the pound further.


The pound has already been falling sharply in recent days, reaching a nine-month low against the euro, on fears over the state of the UK economy and a possible bust-up with the EU.


“The markets had been primed on Friday for a gutsy speech from the Prime Minister about Britain’s relationship with Europe,” said Mr Redfern. “Its cancellation has left them searching in vain for other good news.”


BBC News – Business





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Housing starts climb to highest rate since June 2008






WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Groundbreaking to build new homes accelerated in December to its fastest pace in over four years, supporting the view that housing is poised to provide a substantial boost to the U.S. economy.


The Commerce Department said on Thursday that starts at building sites for homes surged 12.1 percent last month to a 954,000-unit annual rate.






Data for U.S. housing starts can be volatile and is sometimes subject to large revisions. The government revised downward its estimate for November housing starts to a 851,000-unit rate from the originally reported 861,000.


Some of the strength in December’s reading for starts came from a 20.3 percent surge in multi-family unit construction. That component is especially volatile.


Wednesday’s report nonetheless builds on a trend in growth that has led many analysts to expect residential construction boosted the economy last year for the first time since 2005.


December’s pace of groundbreaking was the fastest since June 2008.


This year, home building is expected to provide stronger support to economic growth, which would partially counter the drag expected from tighter fiscal policy as Washington works to shrink the federal budget deficit.


Permits for future home construction edged higher to a 903,000-unit rate, the quickest since July 2008.


The housing market has regained some footing after a historic collapse that helped push the economy into its worst recession since the Great Depression.


Last month, groundbreaking for single-family homes, the largest segment of the market, climbed 8.1 percent last month to a 616,000-unit pace.


(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Neil Stempleman)


Business News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Blockbuster enters administration







DVD rental firm Blockbuster has become the latest UK High Street firm to go into administration after struggling against internet competitors.






The chain has 528 stores and employs 4,190 staff.


Deloitte, the accountancy firm which will now take over running the firm, said Blockbuster UK would keep trading while it tries to find a buyer.


Music chain HMV and camera-seller Jessops both went into administration earlier this month.


It is not yet known what will happen to HMV’s branches and 4,350 staff. Unusually, all of Jessops’ 187 branches closed within days of administrators being appointed.

















January retail administrations


BranchesStaff
850ba   65331348 clcn0lsr Blockbuster enters administration

HMV



239



4,350


850ba   65331522 ebxnwsc7 Blockbuster enters administration

Jessops



187



1,500


850ba   65327387 7on50lne Blockbuster enters administration

Blockbuster UK



528



4,190



Electricals chain Comet collapsed before Christmas.


Continue reading the main story

Start Quote



It is shocking that the [Blockbuster] board and executive management failed to make bold choices”



End Quote Prof Ajay Bhalla Cass Business School


“We are working closely with suppliers and employees to ensure the business has the best possible platform to secure a sale, preserve jobs and generate as much value as possible for all creditors,” said Lee Manning, from Deloitte’s Restructuring Services practice.


“The core of the business is still profitable and we will continue to trade as normal in both retail and rental whilst we seek a buyer for all or parts of the business as a going concern.


“During this time gift cards and credit acquired through Blockbuster’s trade-in scheme will be honoured towards the purchase of goods.”


Store closures


The first Blockbuster store in the UK opened in south London in 1989, and the firm has sought to expand its services in recent years, including with a trade-in facility for pre-owned titles.


The firm launched an online DVD rental operation in 2002, and the company’s website, blockbuster.co.uk, claims to send out more discs per customer than other online DVD rental services in the UK.


However, this online rental market became increasingly crowded with rival services, and now the popularity of streaming films over the internet is growing fast.


Blockbuster UK has closed more than 100 outlets in the past few years.


Blockbuster went bankrupt in the US in 2011, but was rescued by US pay-TV provider Dish Network in a $ 320m (£200m) deal, which saved hundreds of stores from closing. The UK arm is also owned by Dish Network but run separately.


Before Blockbuster was bought by Dish Network, there were media reports of ambitious expansion plans, including selling electrical goods such as televisions, mobile phones, and iPods.


But business experts said Blockbuster’s problems were all too similar to those hitting other retailers – failure to adapt quickly enough to a changing business environment and consumer habits.


‘Altered landscape’


Professor Ajay Bhalla, of Cass Business School, said: “The company, like HMV, failed to transform its business model early enough. When it did, it found a fundamentally altered competitive landscape where the platform model had destroyed the traditional retail one.


“Firms like Blockbuster failed to face up to the enormity of the change and altered their business model on the fringes (eg selling second-hand products), rather than coming up with an innovative offering. It is shocking that the board and executive management failed to make bold choices.”


Dr Steve Musson, a lecturer at the University of Reading and an expert in the economics of UK cities, added: “The retail businesses that we have seen going into administration since Christmas have a lot in common – they have large numbers of stores and have struggled to adapt to changing retail habits.


“Rents for retail businesses are usually payable quarterly, with many landlords most recently asking for payment at the end of December, which is why we often see retail failures coming in clusters.”


BBC News – Business





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HMV boss ‘confident of solution’









Chief executive Trevor Moore: “We will be working tirelessly to take this business forward.”



The boss of HMV has said he is confident of finding a solution to the embattled retailer’s troubles.


Trevor Moore said management had begun working with administrators Deloitte.


“We remain convinced we can find a successful business outcome,” he told journalists. “The intention is to continue to trade the stores.”


HMV revealed late on Monday that it intended to appoint an administrator. The firm has struggled against online competition.


Mr Moore said the board would do whatever they could to support staff, while Deloitte assesses the prospects for the business and seeks potential buyers.


“I would like to personally pay tribute to the 4,500 people who work for HMV. Clearly this is a very worrying time for them and their families.”


‘Disappointing’ Christmas


The company has said that it is not accepting gift vouchers or issuing any more.


Mr Moore did not reveal how many customers held the vouchers but said: “We’re working to reconcile that number.”


Continue reading the main story

Start Quote


2edcf   65289622 vincechalmers HMV boss confident of solution


I’m surprised, it seemed to be busy at Christmas. I’ve got a gift card and I can’t use it now”



End Quote Vince Chalmers


Over the past week, the company had redeemed a significant amount of vouchers – more than they sold – he said, but admitted they had still been selling them up until Monday.


But Allianz Insurance, which underwrites HMV’s extended warranties, said it would continue to honour insurance claims made under extended warranty policies taken out by HMV customers.


Mr Moore said that trading over Christmas had been disappointing, particularly so in technology products.


“We had a very limited supply of two key brands of tablets,” he said, without specifying the brands.


He said that while HMV’s problems had been well documented, “the events of last night will have come as a shock to many of you”.


Chief financial officer Ian Kenyon added that the company had received “amazing support” from its suppliers.


Brand in decline


HMV is the last remaining national music retailer. It has 230 stores in the UK and Ireland, as well as nine shops under the Fopp brand.


News of its imminent administration has been greeted with sadness by customers and those in the music industry.


Since its first store opened in 1921, it has been one of the most recognisable brands on the High Street, with its iconic dog and gramophone trademark.


But many analysts say its demise has been inevitable over the past 20 years as it failed to embrace the shift towards online sales and digital downloads.


The expense of having so many stores, and therefore a large rent bill, is likely to have contributed to its decline, they say.


Continue reading the main story

HMV


  • Founded in 1921 with its first store on London’s Oxford Street

  • Its trademark dog and gramophone image is taken from the 1898 oil painting, His Master’s Voice, which features Nipper the dog listening to an early gramophone recording

  • Moved into live entertainment but started selling off its live venues last year, including the flagship Hammersmith Apollo in west London

  • Bought the Waterstones book chain in 1998 but sold it last year as its debts mounted


As its debts mounted, HMV sold off parts of the business, notably its live entertainment arm and the Waterstones book chain.


Last week, the group announced a month-long sale with 25% off prices, sparking worries that it needed to shift stock after poor Christmas trading.


HMV follows electrical goods firm Comet and camera chain Jessops into administration, but while those two companies have ceased trading, HMV hopes that a buyer can be found and the business will be able to continue on the High Street.


“There are likely to be very many options for this business in the coming days,” Mr Moore said.


BBC News – Business





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Flat-rate pension plan hits many









Pensions Minister Steve Webb: “People will retire with a single, simple, decent state pension”



Plans for a “simple” flat-rate state pension have been unveiled, but many of those entering the workforce now will be worse off than under current rules.


The government’s White Paper shows that there are short-term gainers but longer-term losers from the policy.


Instead of a basic pension of £107 a week plus various mean-tested top-ups, recipients will get £144 in today’s money from 2017 at the earliest.


The government said this was fairer for the self-employed and many mothers.


Figures in the White Paper, published on Monday afternoon, suggested that at least half of all people reaching state pension age before 2050 were likely to have a better outcome under the new system than they would if the current system were to continue. Of these, the majority would be better off by at least £2 per week.


However, by 2060, more than half would be worse off than if the current system continued, because they could not build up a state second pension.


After April 2017, people will also have to work longer, making 35 years’ worth of National Insurance (NI) contributions, rather than the current 30, to qualify for the full pension.


Continue reading the main story

Pension facts


  • Currently 11.5 million people claim the state pension

  • 2.8 million women receive a state pension of less than £80 a week. Only 474,000 men do so

  • 3.2 million individuals receive pension credit to supplement their retirement income

Source: DWP



Anyone who has not paid NI for at least 10 years will not qualify for the new state pension at all.


‘Complicated’


The current full state pension is £107.45 a week, but can be topped up to £142.70 with the means-tested pension credit, and a state second pension which is based on National Insurance contributions.


Anyone who qualifies for the state pension before April 2017 will continue to receive their entitlement under the current system.


For new pensioners from April 2017, the second state pension and pension credit will be abolished. The replacement – the universal flat-rate payment in England, Wales and Scotland – will be the biggest overhaul of the pension system for decades.


Pensions Minister Steve Webb said that the single payment would make it clearer for people to see how much extra they needed to save, in private or workplace pension schemes, for a comfortable retirement.


He told MPs that 10 million people were not saving enough for their pension.


Continue reading the main story

Winners and losers


Winners include:


The self-employed, who currently do not build up a state second pension


Those who have spent time out of the workforce, such as mothers and carers of those with disabilities, will benefit in the short-term


Losers include:


Those entering the workforce now are likely to receive less than they would have done had the current system remained in place


Those who have fewer than 10 years of National Insurance contributions, who will get no state pension under the new rules



“The current state pension system is too complicated and leaves millions of people needing means-tested top-ups,” he said.


“Our simple, single-tier pension will provide a decent, solid foundation for new pensioners in an otherwise less certain world, ensuring it pays to save.”


But Labour said that the government had “dithered and delayed” over proposing reforms.


“We support sensible pensions reform but this government has consistently acted with secrecy and incompetence and we will study these plans very closely to ensure ministers are completely straight with the millions of hardworking people who will lose out under these plans,” said Gregg McClymont, the shadow pensions minister.


Overhaul


The change involves merging the state second pension with the basic state pension, to create one flat-rate payment.


The self-employed will benefit, as they tend to get a lower state pension. Women who have taken time out of the workplace to bring up children are also set to benefit.


“[These are] people who don’t make enough contributions throughout their working life to, in particular, the state second pension, which includes people with intermittent work patterns, periods of low earnings and the self-employed,” said Chris Curry, from the charity the Pensions Policy Institute.



Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith said: “This reform is good news for women who for too long have been effectively punished by the current system.


“The single tier will mean that more women can get a full state pension in their own right, and stop this shameful situation where they are let down by the system when it comes to retirement because they have taken time out to care for their family.”


Under the new system, anyone who works, has been claiming benefits for being unemployed, has been looking after children aged 12 or under, or caring for sick or disabled adults for 35 years will receive a fixed pension of £144 a week when they reach state pension age.


The amount will be lower if their if they have fewer “qualifying years” of this kind.


However, it will be updated each year – as the state pension is now – in line with earnings, prices, or 2.5%, whichever is higher.


Under established plans, the state pension age is rising to 66 for both men and women by 2020, with further plans for this to increase to 67 between 2026 and 2028.


Mr Webb told MPs that he wanted to see a review of the state pension age every five years, starting in the next Parliament.


He also said that all current workers’ accrued pension rights will be recognised, so the new system will have to involve some future pensioners being paid a top-up to the new, merged, flat-rate payment.


BBC News – Business





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Is WTO about to abandon dream of global free trade?






GENEVA (Reuters) – As it seeks a new chief to lead it out of a negotiating death-spiral, the World Trade Organization looks doomed to be fatally undermined by new global carve-ups that will leave many of the world’s poorest sidelined.


At its creation 18 years ago, as the “third pillar” of the post-World War Two economic system alongside the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, tariffs fell by a third and world markets, from farm produce to finance, were opened up.






A boom in commerce ensued, gathering pace when China became a member in 2001. But then, at a meeting in Doha that year, the WTO launched an ambitious attempt to push for further liberalization that would help developing countries most of all.


The talks dragged on for 10 years, failing to resolve a split between the developed and developing worlds, mostly over agriculture. WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy, who vowed in 2005 to make them his “first, second and third priority”, finally declared an “impasse” in 2011.


The WTO’s first head, Peter Sutherland, wrote in an op-ed published on December 31 that it was “a unique failure in the history of multilateral trade negotiations“.


The stalemate triggered a scramble to arrange preferential trade terms outside the WTO – regional deals such as the U.S.-led Trans-Pacific Partnership and bilateral agreements such as the one the European Union is pursuing with the United States.


“If either ever comes to pass, which I doubt, a huge share of world trade would be conducted within a discriminatory framework,” wrote Sutherland.


Such deals were already common before the “impasse”, but afterwards they became the main focus for many countries seeking a route back to economic growth. British Prime Minister David Cameron has made an EU-U.S. deal one of three priorities for the UK’s presidency of the G8 group of nations, which began this month.


“The big question is this: does the WTO retain its centrality in the trading system? It’s down to the next WTO head,” said Simon Evenett, professor of international trade at St Gallen University in Switzerland.


Jagdish Bhagwati, professor of economics at Columbia University in New York, compared the WTO system to a three-legged stool, resting on negotiations, rule-making and dispute settlement. With one leg broken, the others start to wobble.


“You can’t do away with bilaterals and regionals, but as long as the first leg is not broken, the second and third won’t be,” he said. “The director-general has to come in and say that these things are here to stay, but how do I reconcile all this with the purposes of the WTO system which I am guardian of?”


NOT OUR FINEST HOUR


Nine candidates vying to succeed Lamy will make their pitch to the WTO’s membership at the end of this month. Many in the audience have spent a decade toiling over Doha, so none of the hopefuls is likely to trash it or claim to have an easy fix.


Instead, Evenett said, they will distance themselves obliquely, with lines like: “It was not our finest hour” or “There’s still some way to go”, while suggesting they could be part of a creative process to try and figure out how to move on.


“This is not business as usual,” said Richard Baldwin, professor of international economics at the Graduate Institute of Geneva.


“By analogy, the WTO needs a Bernanke or Draghi – a policy leader who can think out of the box and understand how the world has changed and how the policy must change with it – not a Greenspan or Trichet, who were simply implementing the old rules in a faithful, dogmatic style,” he added.


But the chances of a revolution are slim.


“The way I see it now,” said Baldwin, “the U.S. and China are happy to let the WTO languish – China has nothing to complain about that could be fixed by any conceivable version of Doha, and the U.S. sees no substantial gains from finishing Doha on the current terms.”


Both he and Evenett said there was a chance that the WTO would pick a “placeholder” director-general.


“If they want a quiet time, you might not want a particularly ambitious WTO head. Someone who just treads water might be acceptable,” said Evenett.


That would allow the surge of regional deals to continue unchecked. They would entrench and lubricate corporate supply chains, a bonus to big business, but would do nothing to assuage developing countries wanting a fairer deal on agriculture or better access to rich markets for their exports and services.


Bhagwati said the TPP was untransparent and influenced by lobbyists, ensuring that it was full of side conditions, such as stipulations on labor and intellectual property, which made it impossible for developing countries to sign up to.


“The lobbyists have to be sidelined,” he said.


If the TPP and the “mega-bilaterals” succeed, Baldwin said, global trade will be back to the pre-WTO days, dominated by the “Quad” – the United States, EU, Canada and Japan, with negotiations run by and mostly for the Quad members.


“This will threaten China, India and Brazil (and others) with exclusion, and at that point, we’ll see the current stalemate destroyed. There will be room for discussions to bring the TPP-like disciplines to the multilateral level.”


But the WTO cannot wait for the regional deals to develop to the point they can be harmonized into one whole. Even if that eventually happened – and Baldwin thinks it will require a new body, a WTO 2.0 – Sutherland believes that regional deals are already doing lasting damage to the credibility of the WTO.


“Now we are really in danger,” said Bhagwati. “Let’s hope it works out because this is our last chance to save the WTO.”


(Reporting by Tom Miles; Editing by Will Waterman)


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Americans feel austerity’s bite as payroll taxes rise






WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Americans are beginning to feel the pinch from Washington‘s decision to embrace austerity measures aimed at bringing down the nation’s budget deficit.


Paychecks across the country have shrunk over the last week due to higher federal tax rates, and workers are already cutting back on spending, which will drag on the economy this year.






In Warren, Rhode Island, Ben DeCastro got his first paycheck on Friday in which taxes on his wages rose by 2 percentage points. That works out to about $ 30 a week.


“You sit back and do the calculation, and that’s $ 30 I’m not going to spend at a restaurant,” said DeCastro.


He said he worries that people hit by higher taxes will spend less at the chain of furniture stores where he works as a marketing manager.


Politicians in Washington made much hubbub last week about a bipartisan deal to soften or postpone some $ 600 billion in scheduled tax hikes and government spending cuts. President Barack Obama said the deal would shield 98 percent of Americans from a middle-class tax hike.


Nevertheless, for most workers, rich and poor alike, taxes went up on December 31 as a temporary payroll tax cut expired. That cut – a 2 percentage point reduction in a levy that funds Social Security – was put in place two years ago to help the economy, which was still smarting from the 2007-09 recession.


About 160 million workers pay this tax, and the increase will cost the average worker about $ 700 a year, according to the Tax Policy Center, a Washington think tank.


“It stinks,” said Beverly Renfroe, an accountant for a realty firm in Jackson, Mississippi. “I definitely noticed a decrease.”


The pain will trickle through the economy over the next few weeks. Already, the new rate of 6.2 percent has trimmed paychecks for about half of the 200,000 employees whose paychecks are processed by Advantage Payroll Services, a payroll firm based in Auburn, Maine.


“HEADWIND TO GROWTH”


Economists estimate the payroll tax hike will reduce household incomes by a collective $ 125 billion this year. Some households could reduce contributions to retirement accounts or other savings, but most are also expected to cut back on spending.


That alone could reduce economic growth this year by about 0.6 percentage point, said Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan in New York City.


“The headwind to growth should be noticeable,” he said.


Most mainstream economists say the government should still be trying to stimulate the economy by lowering taxes or raising spending to help bring down the 7.8 percent jobless rate.


Even Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has said Congress could consider short-term stimulus measures if they can be coupled with a plan to tame the deficit over the long run.


But a consensus has emerged between Congress and the White House that the federal government should step up the pace at which it cuts the deficit, which ballooned during the recession.


That decision is having repercussions across the country.


In Bergenfield, New Jersey, Evelyn Weiss Francisco has put off plans to upgrade her cell phone and thinks she might go to fewer music concerts. A director at a public relations firm, she thinks the higher payroll taxes will cost her about $ 1,000 this year.


Some Americans will also pay higher income taxes this year. Congress and Obama let income tax rates rise for households making more than $ 450,000 a year, a partial repeal of tax cuts put in place under President George W. Bush. The wealthy will also pay a new tax to help fund a health insurance reform passed in 2010.


These will have a smaller impact on the wider economy because they affect fewer people. But taken together, this year’s tax hikes could subtract a full percentage point from growth, Feroli said.


Most economists see economic growth of roughly 2 percent this year, a lackluster pace held back by the government’s austerity measures that is likely to do little to reduce unemployment.


Failure to postpone government spending cuts due to begin around March would slow growth more, further frustrating the economic recovery.


DROP THAT BAGEL


The blow to the economy from the tax hikes will hurt the most during the first half of the year as people adapt to their smaller paychecks.


Consumer spending, which drives more than two thirds of the economy, will likely grow at a mere 1 percent annual rate in the first quarter, and 1.5 percent in the second, said Sven Jari Stehn, an economist at Goldman Sachs in New York.


Nicki Hagen, who received her first reduced paycheck on January 4 and then another on Friday, estimates the higher taxes will shrink her paychecks by about $ 10 a week.


She has already started holding back from coffee-and-bagel runs made by coworkers at the home improvement company where she works as an office administrator in New York City.


She expects a much bigger hit to her family’s income when her husband gets his first paycheck for 2013 on Tuesday.


The two will then sit down and figure out how to budget their money. They might cut cable channels, or take vacation days when their daughter is out of school to save on babysitter expenses.


“This is going to affect our lives,” she said.


(Additional reporting by Emily Le Coz in Jackson, Mississippi, and Jessica Toonkel in New York; Editing by Xavier Briand)


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Global car industry sharpens U.S. focus for 2013






PARIS/DETROIT (Reuters) – The U.S. car market’s rebound may be slowing – but it still looks like the best bet to many of the global industry’s top brass as they converge on Detroit for the 2013 auto show.


With Europe in a protracted meltdown and some emerging markets flagging, the United States will increase its share of world auto sales this year even as its economy cools, analysts and executives predicted ahead of Monday’s media opening.






American light vehicle sales are expected to rise 4 to 7 percent with prices remaining strong, according to most estimates. That would outpace the 2.6 percent global expansion forecast by consulting firm LMC Automotive.


That is an alluring prospect for European brands fleeing the carnage at home and Japanese automakers hurt by a politically driven consumer backlash in China – where growth and pricing are less predictable for everyone.


“Even if China overtook the U.S. as our biggest-volume market, the U.S. is and will remain our second-most important market after Germany,” Porsche CEO Matthias Mueller said.


The Volkswagen-owned sports car maker thinks Europe would be “lucky” to see a recovery before 2015, Mueller said in an interview. “The situation is as critical as ever.”


U.S. OUTPERFORMS


The North American International Auto Show, better known as the Detroit auto show, opens to the public on January 19.


Among new vehicles to be unveiled by European carmakers at this year’s event are the SQ5 high-performance crossover from VW’s Audi brand, BMW’s M6 Gran Coupe and the redesigned Maserati Quattroporte.


The European market, already near a 20-year low, will shrink another 1.7 percent this year to 17.8 million light vehicles, LMC predicts, while the United States grows 4.2 percent to 15.1 million.


By comparison, U.S. auto sales averaged nearly 17 million vehicles a year in the decade prior to 2008 when the recession cast a pall.


Although rising more sedately than last year’s 13.4 percent surge, projected U.S. deliveries will account for 18.2 percent of the 82.7 million global total, compared with 17.9 percent in 2012.


“Right now, the U.S. is the healthiest auto market in the world,” said John Casesa, senior managing director with Guggenheim Securities.


Sales growth will be close to zero in Brazil and will slow to 3.4 percent in Russia, according to the same forecasts, while China’s expansion accelerates to 10.2 percent from 5.9 percent.


But with Chinese manufacturing capacity for 1.5 million additional vehicles coming on stream, some analysts warn that pricing and profitability could suffer this year.


Balancing China’s enormous growth potential, “a certain amount of unsteadiness is a factor,” Porsche’s Mueller said.


Japanese automakers are still smarting in China, where public outrage over a territorial dispute has translated into more than 100,000 lost sales for Toyota Motor Corp and Nissan Motor Co Ltd since September.


That can only increase their appetite in the United States – where car sales by Asian and European brands both averaged 22 percent growth, compared with a 12 percent gain for domestic nameplates.


The yen’s recent decline against the dollar will also give Japanese imports more edge, General Motors Co Chief Executive Dan Akerson acknowledged.


“People are going to be very competitive in this market,” Akerson told reporters on Wednesday. “This is the market with the best margins.”


While GM lost ground last year, it has broadly “held the line” since emerging from bankruptcy in 2009 and will soon benefit from the renewal of its aging lineup, Akerson said.


ENCOURAGING SIGNS


New pickup trucks being shown next week by Ford and GM’s Chevrolet and GMC may help the incumbents fight back.


Ford is also cautiously optimistic about 2013, the company’s chief economist said this week.


A coming payroll tax hike may weigh on sentiment, Ellen Hughes-Cromwick said, but signs of a housing market rebound and progress in President Barack Obama’s fiscal policy standoff with Congress are “favorable developments.”


While economic growth will likely slow to 1.6 percent from last year’s 2.2 percent, Citi analyst Itay Michaeli said, a glut of aging vehicles on U.S. roads promises to unlock “pent-up demand” for replacements in years to come.


“We may have only begun to see the U.S. sales recovery,” Michaeli said.


The bullish outlook shows that American carmakers’ drastic job and factory cuts of 2009 are still paying off, said Michael Tyndall of Barclays Capital.


“The U.S. took its medicine in the last crisis and capacity has remained relatively tight, so pricing remains disciplined,” the London-based analyst said.


“The operative word is growth – whereas Europe is going backwards again.”


(Additional reporting by Andreas Cremer in Berlin, and Bernie Woodall and Deepa Seetharaman in Detroit; editing by Matthew Lewis)


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Jobless claims rise, but jobs market recovery intact






WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits rose last week, the Labor Department said on Thursday, but details of the report suggested the jobs market continued to grow at a moderate pace.


Other data suggested the economy remained on a steady growth path, with sales at wholesalers rising by the most in more than 1-1/2 years in November, keeping inventories balanced.






Initial claims for state jobless aid increased 4,000 to a seasonally adjusted 371,000. The prior week’s figure was revised to show 5,000 fewer applications than previously reported.


Claims tend to be very volatile around this time of the year because of the holidays and seasonal layoffs, making it difficult to get a clear picture of the labor market’s health.


While claims increased last week, there was nothing in the data to suggest a deterioration in labor market conditions.


“Jobless claims data continue to suggest steady but modest U.S. employment gains,” said Robert Kavcic, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto.


The four-week moving average for new claims, a better measure of labor market trends, increased 6,750 to 365,750, still at a level consistent with steady job gains.


U.S. financial markets were little moved by the data.


GRADUALLY IMPROVING LABOR MARKET


A Labor Department analyst said there was nothing unusual in state level claims data and that no states had been estimated. He noted, however, that jobless claims on an unadjusted basis tend to peak in the second week of January and the rise in the week ended January 5 was a build-up to that.


Economists said it would take several more weeks before the data are free of seasonal distortions.


The labor market has been gradually improving, with job gains last year averaging 153,000 per month, little changed from 2011. That has not been enough to significantly cut the unemployment rate which ended the year at 7.8 percent.


A second report from the Labor Department showed job openings were unchanged at 3.7 million in November. Layoffs, however, declined and there was an increase in the number of people voluntarily leaving their jobs — both signs of improving labor market conditions.


Job growth has been hobbled by uncertainty over fiscal policy. Economists said a last-minute deal by the U.S. Congress to avoid some of the $ 600 billion in deep government spending cuts and higher taxes, or the fiscal cliff, only eliminated part of the uncertainty.


“A sharp increase in hiring seems unlikely as the spending side of the debate remains unresolved and higher taxes on most households are likely to weigh modestly on consumer spending in the near term,” said Jim Baird, chief investment strategist at Plante Moran Financial Advisors in Kalamazoo, Michigan.


A second report from the Commerce Department showed sales at wholesalers rebounded 2.3 percent in November, the largest gain since March 2011, after falling 0.9 percent in October.


Wholesale inventories rose 0.6 percent after advancing 0.3 percent in October.


Inventories are a key component of gross domestic product changes and accounted for almost a quarter of the economy’s annual 3.1 percent growth pace in the third quarter.


Economists expect a drawdown on inventories in the fourth quarter, which would be a drag on growth. They largely left their GDP forecasts, ranging from 0.5 percent to 2.9 percent, unchanged after the wholesale inventory data.


The claims report showed the number of people still receiving benefits under regular state programs after an initial week of aid tumbled 127,000 to 3.11 million in the week ended December 29, the lowest level since July 2008.


Highlighting the typical volatility at the start of the year, the last time the so-called continuing claims fell so much was in January 2011 and economists expect some correction in coming weeks.


The insured unemployment rate fell to 2.4 percent, its lowest since July 2008.


“The good news is the underlying jobs market is improving,” said David Berson, chief economist at Nationwide Insurance in Columbus, Ohio. “The bad news is we have a large number of people who are unemployed for a long time and unemployment insurance does not go on forever. So, some people might be falling off the rolls.”


(Editing by Andrea Ricci)


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Business leaders warn UK PM against leaving EU






LONDON (AP) — Top executives have warned U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron that he could damage Britain‘s economy if he seeks to renegotiate the terms of its membership of the 27-country European Union.


In a letter published in the Financial Times Wednesday, Virgin Group’s Richard Branson, London Stock Exchange head Chris Gibson-Smith, WPP chief executive Martin Sorrell and seven other business leaders challenged Cameron’s plan to renegotiate the U.K.’s membership terms of the 27-country EU and put the matter to a referendum.






The executives warn that such a plan could fail, pushing the U.K. out of the EU and hurting business in the process.


Membership of the EU has given the U.K. access to the massive European market as well as a say in how the region should govern itself and run its financial markets. The country has also benefited from EU funds to build infrastructure such as broadband networks.


However, popular distrust of the EU has grown in Britain — one of the 10 countries in the region that doesn’t use the euro. The British public shows no interest in moving closer to the rest of Europe, and most can’t even seem to stomach the current control the EU, which many Britons see as meddlesome and inefficient.


Though the business leaders urged EU reform in their letter, they argued “we must be very careful not to call for a wholesale renegotiation of our EU membership, which would almost certainly be rejected.”


“To call for such a move in these circumstances would be to put our membership of the EU at risk and create damaging uncertainty for British business, which are the last things the prime minister would want to do,” they said.


Tough economic times are forcing the 17 EU countries that use the euro to move ever closer, creating a more powerful union that could leave non-euro members like Britain with less negotiating power.


But while Cameron wants Britain to remain in the EU and to retain influence in the body, he is also resisting a push by many member states, like France and Germany, to grant central authorities in Brussels greater powers over financial and legal affairs for the whole of the EU. In the long run, many EU countries want to turn the bloc into a United States of Europe, an idea British politicians, particularly among Cameron’s Conservatives, abhor.


Cameron is due to make a speech in mid-January to outline his position and the requests he will make. On Wednesday, he told lawmakers that Britain could get the changes it wanted.


“We’re active players in the European Union but there are changes we would like in our relationship that would be good for Britain and good for Europe and I think, because of the changes in eurozone which is driving a lot of change in the European Union, there’s every opportunity to achieve that settlement and seek consent for it,” he said.


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Will the White House Kill ‘Trillion-Dollar Coin’ Talk?






The White House has remained silent so far on the miraculous debt-ceiling-evading trillion-dollar platinum commemorative coin. But that’s because no one has asked. But that could change today if someone in the White House press pool finally pops the question.


The best bet is that the White House will spoil the blogosphere’s fun by saying it has no intention of having Treasury issue a coin and “selling” it to the Federal Reserve as a way to raise money and avoid hitting the debt ceiling. That would track what happened in 2011, when Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner denied any intention of using the Fourteenth Amendment to avoid the debt ceiling.






In a way, an official denial from the West Wing would be a shame, because the online frothing and fuming over the trillion-dollar platinum coin has been great fun. Washington will be drearier if the pundits and bloggers are forced to go back to arguing over more prosaic matters like the long-term entitlements crisis.


What has juiced the debate is that there really does seem to be a loophole in the law that might theoretically allow Treasury to fund itself in a way that would not count against the debt ceiling. The loophole is large enough that Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., has vowed to plug it with legislation banning such a move. The coin gambit wouldn’t necessarily cause short-term economic damage, either, since it wouldn’t inflate the money supply if it didn’t result in more lending and spending in the economy. The downside? Most likely a constitutional crisis.


Josh Barro, the lead writer for Bloomberg’s Ticker blog, insists that Geithner should be prepared to mint the coin and call the Republicans’ bluff on the debt ceiling. New York Times columnist Paul Krugman even suggested putting the face of House Speaker John Boehner on the coin, “Because without him and his colleagues, this wouldn’t be necessary.” But over at Reuters, blogger Felix Salmon says, “As any poker player knows, when you’re up against a very stupid opponent, you should never try to bluff.”


Pure comic relief.


Businessweek.com — Top News





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Canada’s Ivey PMI beats expectations with December rise









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Cheap borrowing key, says Cameron







Prime Minister David Cameron has said reducing the UK’s debt burden to ensure it can borrow money cheaply from international investors remains the government’s top priority.






For this reason, he told BBC One’s Andrew Marr Show, the UK’s triple-A rating was “hugely important”.


Mr Cameron said the coalition also needed to address youth unemployment, which was “much too high”.


The economy needed rebalancing, with a larger private sector, he added.


The prime minister said it was vitally important the government maintained its “credibility for deficit reduction” so it could continue to borrow money at low rates of interest.


“Britain needs low interest rates, and we can only keep interest rates low if we have a credible policy on debt,” Mr Cameron said.


‘Negative outlook’


The coalition has introduced a series of austerity measures designed specifically to reduce the country’s debt levels.


Despite these efforts, last month Standard & Poor’s became the last of the three main international credit rating agencies – the other’s being Moody’s and Fitch – to put the UK on a “negative outlook”. It raised concerns about levels of government borrowing and weak growth in the UK economy.


Critics argue that the government’s spending cuts have undermined growth in the economy, which has been anaemic in recent years.


The economy emerged from a double-dip recession between August and October last year with strong growth of 0.9%, but a number of economists fear it could have contracted again in the final quarter.


The UK currently holds a AAA rating from all three agencies – the only country apart from Germany and Canada to do so.


There are concerns that if the UK loses its top rating, international lenders would view the country’s economy as more risky and charge the government more to borrow money.


‘Good signs’


Mr Cameron also said that although there were more people in work now than when the coalition came to power, youth unemployment in particular needed to fall.


He said cuts in the public sector were unavoidable given the need to reduce government debt, and argued the private sector needed to grow to compensate.


He said there were “good signs [that this rebalancing] was taking place”, adding that it was important the economy became less reliant on the financial sector.


The unemployment rate in the UK currently stands at 7.8%, after August to September saw the biggest quarterly fall in the number of people out of work since 2001.


As the government approaches its mid-term review, director general of the business group CBI scored the coalition eight out of 10 for its plan for the economy, but just five out of 10 for delivery of the plan.


“Frankly, the government’s delivery has been disappointing, if not sluggish,” John Cridland told BBC Radio 4′s World this Weekend programme.


“They are not getting on with house building, road building, rail building at the pace we would like.”


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Egypt to replace finance and interior ministers: agency






CAIRO (Reuters) – Egypt’s finance and interior ministers are to be replaced in a partial cabinet reshuffle that was promised by President Mohamed Mursi last month in an attempt to assuage public anger at an economic crisis, the state news agency MENA reported on Saturday.


Middle East News Agency has learned that the new ministers will include General Mohamed Ibrahim for the Interior Ministry and … Al-Mursi Al-Sayed Hegazy for the Finance Ministry,” MENA said.






It said a total of 10 new ministers would take the oath of office on Sunday.


(Reporting by Yasmine Saleh; Editing by Kevin Liffey)


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UK service sector activity falls







Activity in the UK’s services sector fell for the first time in two years in December, a survey has suggested, raising fears of yet another recession.






The PMI services index from Markit/CIPS fell to 48.9 in December, down from 50.2 in November. Any score below 50 indicates the sector is shrinking.


Markit blamed the surprise contraction on a fall in new business.


It said the numbers suggested the UK economy shrank by 0.2% in the final three months of 2012.


The UK emerged from a double dip recession last summer with growth of 1% in the three months to September.


“The first fall in service sector activity for two years raises the likelihood that the UK economy is sliding back into recession,” said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit.


The last time the index was below 50 was in December 2010, when it stood at 49.7.


A slight reduction in incoming new business was cited as the main factor behind the fall, with a reluctance among business to commit to new spending, and budgets reportedly being tightened.


Confidence among purchasing managers remained at an 11-month low.


Mr Williamson said the data suggested that “underlying demand remains very weak and that activity may continue to fall in the new year”.


‘Continuing uncertainty’


The services sector is seen as a good indicator of the health of the wider economy as it accounts for about three-quarters of the UK’s GDP.




Chief strategist at Mint Partners, Bill Blain, says the decline was a surprise to economists



The estimate of a 0.2% fall in GDP for the final quarter is worse than predicted by other forecasters.


Separate purchasing managers’ indexes (PMIs) released earlier in the week indicated that the manufacturing sector had expanded last month, but that the construction sector had continued to contract.


“The underlying trend is one of continuing uncertainty,” said David Noble, chief executive at the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply.


“Businesses are holding back on investment, leading to falls in employment and increased levels of spare capacity. At the same time, costs are increasing and businesses are unable to pass these on because of competitive pressures.”


In December, the government’s Office for Budget Responsibility said it expected the economy to have shrunk by 0.1% in 2012 as a whole.


Bill Blain, chief strategist at brokerage firm Mint Partners, told the BBC the services sector data had come as a surprise, but warned against being too pessimistic.


“It has caught people out,” he told the BBC. ” [But] it’s just as likely that we will see [the sector] recover quite quickly… especially in areas like financial services.”


BBC News – Business





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The Millionaire Tax Is Becoming a Headache for France






François Hollande’s promise of a 75 percent income tax rate on millionaires was a winner on the campaign trail, with polls showing that six in ten voters supported it. But now that Hollande is President of France, the plan has caused so many headaches that even some leftists are saying it should be scrapped.
At a Jan. 3 press briefing, Hollande’s spokeswoman said the government would modify and reintroduce the levy, which was struck down by France’s constitutional court on Dec. 29. “The tax remains a part of the government’s aim of reviving France with justice,” spokeswoman Najat Vallaud-Belkacem said. A revised tax would take effect in 2014, a year later than the original plan, she said.


Addressing the court’s objections would be relatively easy. The judges said the levy was inequitable because it applied to individual rather than household incomes — so that, say, a couple with a combined income over 1 million euros ($ 1.32 million) could escape the tax, while a single-breadwinner household earning the same amount would have to pay it. Budget Minister Jérôme Cahuzac has said the government could apply it to all households, raising the threshold to 2 million euros for those with more than one income.






Politically, though, resuscitating the tax may be more trouble than it’s worth. It has already sparked an outcry among entrepreneurs and other wealthy French, including the actor Gérard Depardieu who said last month he was giving up his French citizenship and moving to Belgium. President Vladimir Putin fanned the flames on Jan. 3 by saying he would grant Russian citizenship to Depardieu; a spokesman for the actor declined to comment. “The psychological impact on the attractiveness of the French economy has been quite negative,” Philippe Gudin, a Paris-based analyst at Barclays Capital, said in a research note.


And while the tax is forecast to raise 210 million euros in revenues, it could lead to revenue losses if highly-compensated jobs disappear from France. Eric Chaney, the Paris-based chief economist at insurance group Axa, says major French companies and private-equity firms are increasingly shifting their recruitment to London and elsewhere. “We can’t bring high-level managers to France,” he told Bloomberg News. “They work in an international market.”


Hollande, speaking in Paris on Jan. 2, said he had instructed the government to “re-work” the millionaire tax, “without changing its objective.” The revised measure would be presented as part of the 2014 budget law voted on next fall, government officials have said.


But the prospect of a debate dragging on for months — giving affluent French more time to ponder leaving the country — could create still more problems. There’s a precedent for this situation: Hollande’s conservative predecessor, Nicolas Sarkozy, quietly shelved a carbon tax on automotive and household fuel, after French courts ruled it was unfair to apply the tax to individuals but not to companies.


Even some on Hollande’s left are saying the millionaire tax should be left to die.  “There’s not much use sticking with it,” Roger-Gérard Schwartzenberg, head of the Radical Left party, said in a statement after the court ruling. The tax “has been wrongly perceived as a sanction against professional success,” although the original measure would have applied to only 1,500 individual taxpayers, he said. “We should cut short this controversy.”


With reporting by Alan Katz and Greg Viscusi of Bloomberg News


Businessweek.com — Top News





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