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Friday, July 31, 2020

Coronavirus vaccine: EU poised to secure Sanofi deal for coronavirus vaccine

French drugmaker Sanofi (SASY.PA) aimed at securing its COVID-19 vaccine for the 27 country EU bloc, the latest deal with vaccine producers.

Read more at: 
EU poised to secure Sanofi deal for coronavirus vaccine - Reuters

Thursday, July 30, 2020

USA: COVID-19 crushes U.S. economy in second quarter; rising virus cases loom over recovery

The U.S. economy suffered its biggest blow since the Great Depression in the second quarter as the COVID-19 pandemic shattered consumer and business spending, and a nascent recovery is under threat from a resurgence in new cases of coronavirus.

Read more at:
COVID-19 crushes U.S. economy in second quarter; rising virus cases loom over recovery

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Big Tech Under Scrutiny: Big Tech painted as the railroad barons of the digital age in antitrust hearing - by Therese Poletti

Jeff Bezos
For the most part — if you could tune out the political grandstanding that had nothing to do with antitrust — Wednesday’s congressional hearing on Big Tech gave many pointed examples of how four of the biggest tech companies in the U.S. abuse their dominant power and thwart competition.

What happens next will be in the hands of  US Goverment agencies. And while after Wednesday’s hearing it seems Alphabet may be most in jeopardy, the other companies should not relax. None of Big Tech made a very good showing Wednesday.

Read more at: 
Big Tech painted as the railroad barons of the digital age in antitrust hearing - MarketWatch

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

USA: Will Donald Trump′s visa restrictions slow down America′s economic revival?

Stefan Heffner's business plans for the United States have been turned upside down. The US representative of German medical equipment maker Richard Wolf moved to Chicago about a year-and-a-half ago with the ambitious goal of cracking the company's US sales record of $100 million (€85.3 million) by the end of this year.

Read more at:
Will Donald Trump′s visa restrictions slow down America′s economic revival? | Business| Economy and finance news from a German perspective | DW | 28.07.2020

Monday, July 27, 2020

EU-China: Council authorises signature of the agreement on geographical indications

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The Council today adopted decisions on the signature of the agreement between the European Union and the government of the People's Republic of China on geographical indications (GIs).

This is the first significant bilateral trade agreement signed between the EU and China.

It will ensure that 100 EU agri-food GIs ("Geographical Indications") such as Mozzarella di Bufala Campana, Languedoc wine, Polska Wódka or Elia Kalamatas get protection on the Chinese market. Likewise, 100 Chinese products will be protected in the EU, thereby ensuring mutual respect of the best of both agricultural traditions.

Read More at:
EU-China: Council authorises signature of the agreement on geographical indications - Consilium

Sunday, July 26, 2020

US Economy: The U.S. can 'change the world' by devaluing the dollar, analyst says

U.S. policymakers could “change the world” by devaluing the dollar, one analyst has claimed.

Speaking to CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Monday, independent macro advisor Hugh Hendry said quantitative easing programs — where central banks buy assets like government bonds to inject liquidity into the economy — were not working.

Instead of targeting bonds as a form of economic stimulus, policymakers should look to the value of the greenback, he suggested.

Quantitative easing — we’re being missold something,” Hendry argued. “Simply publishing or expanding these inert central bank reserves and trying to scare us all to death that they’re actually printing real money is a fraud.”

The underlying problem, he claimed, is that there is a shortage of dollars in the global market.

“America has decided over several decades to impose a global dollar standard, a monetary standard on the rest of the world,”

Hendry said. “It’s one thing to be the king, (but) you have to behave regally, you have to behave like the king. So if you’re going to impose a dollar standard on the world, you have to stand by and provide sufficient liquidity. And that’s actually where they’ve been failing.”

Hendry said the widespread sell-off in March, where global markets plummeted amid the height of fears around the coronavirus, was partially due to investors having to sell assets in order to create dollars and repay debt.

Read more: 
The U.S. can 'change the world' by devaluing the dollar, analyst says

Saturday, July 25, 2020

EU: An economic, as well as a monetary, union? – by John Palmer

There is not much of a market just now for optimism about our economic, social, political or environmental future. In the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, we face the worst economic crash in more than 100 years and potential climate-change disaster. But the outcome of the marathon Brussels summit heralds a strikingly encouraging new direction for the European Union.

The significance of the five-day European Council is not simply the sheer size of the €1.2 trillion stimulus to be given the EU economy but the unprecedented scale of the collective borrowing the union will undertake on world financial markets, to finance that recovery strategy. Of the €750 billion to be invested in post-pandemic economic recovery, an unprecedented €390 billion will be in grants, not repayable loans.

Read more at:
An economic, as well as a monetary, union? – John Palmer

Friday, July 24, 2020

USA: McDonald's to require face coverings in all its U.S. restaurants starting August 1

McDonald's Corp.MCD,  +0.59% said Friday that it will require customers to wear a face covering in all of its restaurants starting August 1. About 82% of McDonald'srestaurants are in places where face covering mandates are already inplace. The new company policy is part of what the company says is astepped up response to the surge in COVID-19 cases over the past two weeks. U.S. cases have reached more than 4 million, with 69,900 cases added on Thursday. McDonald's has also paused the reopening of itsdining rooms for an additional 30 days. McDonald's joins other companieslike Walmart Inc.WMT, -0.30% and Target Corp. TGT  +1.11%that have put face covering policies in place over recent weeks. McDonald's shares are nearly breakeven for the year to date while the Dow Jones Industrial AverageDJIA, -0.68%has fallen 7.3% for the period.

Read more at;
McDonald's to require face coverings in all its U.S. restaurants starting August 1 - MarketWatch

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

South Korea enters recession as exports plunge by most since 1963

South Korea plunged into recession in the second quarter in its worsteconomic decline in more than two decades as the coronavirus pandemicbattered exports and social distancing curbs paralysed factories.

Read more at:
South Korea enters recession as exports plunge by most since 1963 - Reuters

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

EU rescue deal: ‘The most important moment in the life of our Europe,’ says Macron

An historic rescue plan for economies left shattered by the coronavirusepidemic was hailed by French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday as “the most important moment in the life of our Europe since the creation of the euro”.

Read more:
EU rescue deal: ‘The most important moment in the life of our Europe,’ says Macron

Monday, July 20, 2020

USA - Global warming and the economy: Sink or swim: Miami’s perilous future facing climate change

With its white-sand beaches and glittery high-rises, Miami is still a vacation hotspot. But lapping at those shores is another reality.

The city is also a "possible future Atlantis, and a metonymic stand-in for how the rest of the developed world might fail — or succeed — in the climate-changed future," writes Miami journalist Mario Alejandro Ariza in his forthcoming book, "Disposable City: Miami's Future on the Shores of Climate Catastrophe."

This may not be news to some. The city's plight has been the subject of investigative reporting and even viral news stories after an octopus showed up in a parking garage following an especially high tide.

Read more at:
Sink or swim: Miami’s perilous future facing climate change | Salon.com

Sunday, July 19, 2020

Western Economies: Second stock market crash – 3 reasons why it could be coming, and what I’d do right now - by Royston Wild

The FTSE 100 has steadied again but investors remain extremely jumpy. Dip-buying activity remains thin on the ground as market makers consider the possibility of a second stock market crash.

It’s impossible to say with any degree of certainty whether another crash is around the corner. But there’s certainly plenty of potential problems that could cause a fresh financial market meltdown. Here are three reasons why a second share market collapse could happen sooner rather than later.

The easing of lockdown restrictions across the globe have allowed stock indexes to creep steadily higher from their March troughs, leading to hopes of swift economic improvement.

Have politicians been too quick in lifting restrictions, though? A subsequent secondary spike in coronavirus cases has led many to believe that the answer is ‘yes.’ Parts of China have had to be locked down again in recent days. Infections in some parts of the US continue to balloon. And today the World Health Organisation said that it has seen a resurgence of cases in more than 20 European countries.

News flow has led to speculation that efforts to steadily ease lockdown restrictions could be slowed. Some are suggesting that strict quarantine measures could be re-introduced in a move that would deal a bodyblow to the economic recovery and likely cause another market crash.

Read more: 
Second stock market crash – 3 reasons why it could be coming, and what I’d do right now

Saturday, July 18, 2020

Brazil's Bolsonaro says coronavirus restrictions kill economy - by Carolina Mandl, Leonardo Benassatto

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro said on Saturday that lockdown measures used to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus “kill” and have “suffocated” the country’s economy. 

Read more at: Brazil's Bolsonaro says coronavirus restrictions kill economy - Reuters

Friday, July 17, 2020

Germany: Retailers urge fresh stimulus to prevent US-style apocalypse

Germany's city centers may be bustling again, but not at the same level as before the coronavirus lockdown. Worse still, early indications suggest people aren't spending with the same enthusiasm.

The country's retail sector expects this year's loss innon-food trade to hit €40 billion ($45.6 billion). Sales will end 2020 udown 22% compared to last year, according to the Germantretail federation HDE.

Figures published this week showed clothes and shoe stores were the hardest hit during the stay-at-home orders introduced in March and April, with sales plummeting 65% and 61% respectively. German jewelers and toy stores, meanwhile, saw theirrevenues cut almost in half.

"Retailers in large city centers that draw a lot of tourists have been affected the most. Asia and Russia's wealthy are missing," Markus Wotruba, head of research at theetail analyst BBE, told DW. He added that Germans are, for the timebeing, more likely to shop in their immediate vicinity, which has shrunk the catchment area of many regional shopping malls.

Read more at:
Germany: Retailers urge fresh stimulus to prevent US-style apocalypse | Business| Economy and finance news from a German perspective | DW | 17.07.2020

Thursday, July 16, 2020

Coronavirus May Change Insurance Industry Forever

Insurance companies are creating products for a world where health emergencies could become the new normal after manybusinesses struggled during the COVID-19 crisis. 

New insurance policies designed to guard against events like thecoronavirus health crisis might cost a lot. But they offer businesses -- from restaurants to film production
companies -- ways of protecting against work stoppages and losses if another virus strikes.

Read more at: Coronavirus May Change Insurance Industry Forever

Monday, July 13, 2020

The Netherlands - a Royal pilot: See inside the 'Dutch Air Force One' Boeing 737 private jet

King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands is not your average royal.

While not performing royal duties, the Dutch monarch often takes the skies a a licensed pilot. Willem-Alexander joined the exclusive club of flying royals when he was a prince, joining his counterpart in the UK, Prince Philip, who frequently flew around his kingdom.

While typically flying aircraft in the Dutch government's fleet of VIP aircraft, it wasevealed in 2017 that Willem-Alexander flew as a co-pilot for KLM Royal Dutch Airlines for 21 years, according to CNN, flying regional aircraft around Europe around twice a month. The royal kept a low profile, never revealing his identity to passengers

Read more at: 
See inside the 'Dutch Air Force One' Boeing 737 private jet - Business Insider

Sunday, July 12, 2020

US Economy: Coronavirus’s Spread Broadens Across U.S.

New coronavirus infections topped 15,000 in Florida, the largest one-day increase in any state since the start of the pandemic, while more than half U.S. states—including some that avoided a significant surge in the spring—were reporting steady climbs in new cases.

The number of daily infections in the U.S. surpassed 60,000 for a third consecutive day on Saturday, after reaching a record of more than 66,000 ases the previous day, data compiled by Johns Hopkins University showed.

Read more: Coronavirus’s Spread Broadens Across U.S. - WSJ

Friday, July 10, 2020

China-US relations: What the world could use now: a reset between the U.S. and China

The U.S. has reached a critical inflection point in its relationship with China, made all the more urgent because of COVID-19.

The coronavirus disease and its resulting pandemic is an unfolding story, presenting new challenges each day, yet several lessons have emerged from it already.

Read  more at:
What the world could use now: a reset between the U.S. and China - MarketWatch

Thursday, July 9, 2020

Neoliberalism – the ideology at the root of all our problems - by George Monbiot

NEOLIBERALISM
Neoliberalism: do you know what it is?

If you do have the capability to distinguish between "Right and Wrong",  and  are not too preoccupied with other "things" to do, it might be worth your while to read this rather lengthy, but most informative article, to help you understand why the world is in the total mess it is.  Have fun, and don't get too depressed. Tomorrow might bring better tidings - R.M - EU-Digest

Its anonymity is both a symptom and cause of its power. It has played a major role in a remarkable variety of crises: the financial meltdown of 2007‑8, the offshoring of wealth and power, of which the Panama Papers offer us merely a glimpse, the slow collapse of public health and education, resurgent child poverty, the epidemic of loneliness, the collapse of ecosystems, the rise of Donald Trump. But we respond to these crises as if they emerge in isolation, apparently unaware that they have all been either catalysed or exacerbated by the same coherent philosophy; a philosophy that has – or had – a name. What greater power can there be than to operate namelessly?

So pervasive has neoliberalism become that we seldom even recognise it as an ideology. We appear to accept the proposition that this utopian, millenarian faith describes a neutral force; a kind of biological law, like Darwin’s theory of evolution. But the philosophy arose as a conscious attempt to reshape human life and shift the locus of power.

Neoliberalism sees competition as the defining characteristic of human relations. It redefines citizens as consumers, whose democratic choices are best exercised by buying and selling, a process that rewards merit and punishes inefficiency. It maintains that “the market” delivers benefits that could never be achieved by planning.

Attempts to limit competition are treated as inimical to liberty. Tax and regulation should be minimised, public services should be privatised. The organisation of labour and collective bargaining by trade unions are portrayed as market distortions that impede the formation of a natural hierarchy of winners and losers. Inequality is recast as virtuous: a reward for utility and a generator of wealth, which trickles down to enrich everyone. Efforts to create a more equal society are both counterproductive and morally corrosive. The market ensures that everyone gets what they deserve.

We internalise and reproduce its creeds. The rich persuade themselves that they acquired their wealth through merit, ignoring the advantages – such as education, inheritance and class – that may have helped to secure it. The poor begin to blame themselves for their failures, even when they can do little to change their circumstances.

Never mind structural unemployment: if you don’t have a job it’s because you are unenterprising. Never mind the impossible costs of housing: if your credit card is maxed out, you’re feckless and improvident. Never mind that your children no longer have a school playing field: if they get fat, it’s your fault. In a world governed by competition, those who fall behind become defined and self-defined as losers.

Among the results, as Paul Verhaeghe documents in his book What About Me?  in which he describes his main concern how social change has led to this psychic crisis and altered the way we think about ourselves.re :epidemics of self-harm, eating disorders, depression, loneliness, performance anxiety and social phobia. Perhaps it’s unsurprising that Britain, in which neoliberal ideology has been most rigorously applied, is the loneliness capital of Europe. Unfortunately we are all neoliberals now.

The term neoliberalism was coined at a meeting in Paris in 1938. Among the delegates were two men who came to define the ideology, Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek. Both exiles from Austria, they saw social democracy, exemplified by Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal and the gradual development of Britain’s welfare state, as manifestations of a collectivism that occupied the same spectrum as nazism and communism.

In The Road to Serfdom, published in 1944, Hayek argued that government planning, by crushing individualism, would lead inexorably to totalitarian control. Like Mises’s book Bureaucracy, The Road to Serfdom was widely read. It came to the attention of some very wealthy people, who saw in the philosophy an opportunity to free themselves from regulation and tax. When, in 1947, Hayek founded the first organisation that would spread the doctrine of neoliberalism – the Mont Pelerin Society – it was supported financially by millionaires and their foundations.

With their help, he began to create what Daniel Stedman Jones describes in Masters of the Universe as “a kind of neoliberal international”: a transatlantic network of academics, businessmen, journalists and activists. The movement’s rich backers funded a series of thinktanks which would refine and promote the ideology. Among them were the American Enterprise Institute, the Heritage Foundation, the Cato Institute, the Institute of Economic Affairs, the Centre for Policy Studies and the Adam Smith Institute. They also financed academic positions and departments, particularly at the universities of Chicago and Virginia.

s it evolved, neoliberalism became more strident. Hayek’s view that governments should regulate competition to prevent monopolies from forming gave way – among American apostles such as Milton Friedman – to the belief that monopoly power could be seen as a reward for efficiency.
Something else happened during this transition: the movement lost its name. In 1951, Friedman was happy to describe himself as a neoliberal. But soon after that, the term began to disappear. Stranger still, even as the ideology became crisper and the movement more coherent, the lost name was not replaced by any common alternative.

At first, despite its lavish funding, neoliberalism remained at the margins. The postwar consensus was almost universal: John Maynard Keynes’s economic prescriptions were widely applied, full employment and the relief of poverty were common goals in the US and much of western Europe, top rates of tax were high and governments sought social outcomes without embarrassment, developing new public services and safety nets.

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

EU Economy: Re-starting the EU economy – How can industry contribute to a resilient and sustainable recovery?

The outbreak of the corona pandemic has posed a serious threat to European industry in both the short and long term, from disruption of supply chains due to transport and travel restrictions, to the loss of suppliers. Most industrial companies report substantial falls in numbers of orders placed or order cancellations. Due to a mix of a weak global economy and uncertainty in business, society and politics, many companies are lacking not only liquidity but also the necessary planning security for future innovations and investments.

Businesses are now facing three transition processes: the digital transformation, the move to a sustainable economic system, and surviving the corona crisis. For a successful recovery, a stable and predictable environment for long-term sustainable growth must be re-established as quickly as possible. Individual nations going it alone, border closures and protectionist measures undertaken by EU Member States at the beginning of the pandemic questioned Europe’s ability to find a common response to the crisis. But the Commission’s EUR 750 billion Recovery Fund announced in May was a strong statement which now must be converted into sustainable success.

Read more:
Re-starting the EU economy – How can industry contribute to a resilient and sustainable recovery? – EURACTIV.com

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

USA:Trump administration says pandemic aid saved 51 million jobs. Did it?

There were red flags throughout the colossal data set that suggestedsome borrowers  overstated how many jobs their loan salvaged. That,combined with several of the named companies disputing that they took aloan after the government showed otherwise, cast doubt on the accuracyof the 51 million figure.

Read more at:
Trump administration says pandemic aid saved 51 million jobs. Did it? - Reuters

Monday, July 6, 2020

Trudeau won't travel to Washington to mark start of renegotiated NAFTA deal

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will not join his North American counterparts in Washington, D.C., this week to celebrate the coming into force of the three countries' renegotiated trade pact.

"While there were recent discussions about the possible participation of Canada, the prime minister will be in Ottawa this week for scheduled cabinet meetings and the long-planned sitting of Parliament," Chantal Gagnon, a spokesperson for the Prime Minister's Office, said in a statement.

 Read more at:
Trudeau won't travel to Washington to mark start of renegotiated NAFTA deal | CBC News

Sunday, July 5, 2020

US Tech Giants: EU has U.S. tech giants in its legal crosshairs - by Valentina Pop

Big tech companies including Google parent Alphabet Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and Facebook Inc. face a swath of proposed European regulations aimed at curbing their alleged anticompetitive behavior, making them pay more taxes and compelling them to shoulder more responsibility for illegal content on their platforms, said a top European Union official.

Margrethe Vestager, the EU's digital-policy and antitrust czar, detailed for the first time a comprehensive plan of how she aims to rein in U.S. tech giants, using a package of initiatives that the EU has begun to outline individually in recent weeks. The aim is to clearly delineate new legal boundaries for tech companies, rather than just apply existing laws covering fields such as antitrust regulation.

"It's a full complex of things. It's not done with just one piece of legislation," Ms. Vestager said in an interview with a small group of reporters. Ms. Vestager -- who in her prior term as European competition commissioner levied record fines on Google and ordered Apple Inc. to pay Ireland $14.5 billion in allegedly unpaid taxes -- last year was promoted to vice president of the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, in charge of competition and new legislation for the digital sector.

"After the first mandate and the first specific competition cases, what I have seen very clearly is that we need rigorous competition-law enforcement, but we also need regulation," she said.

Tech companies have said that they want to work with the commission to craft the new laws, but several have raised concerns about elements of the proposals. Representatives for Google, Facebook, Apple and Amazon, asked about the commission's new approach, either didn't respond, declined to comment or referred to earlier replies on the individual EU proposals.

Read more at: 
EU has U.S. tech giants in its legal crosshairs - MarketWatch

Saturday, July 4, 2020

Facebook boycott: Canada's biggest banks join boycott of Facebook platforms

Canada’s biggest lenders confirmed on Friday they had joined a
widespread boycott of Facebook Inc begun by U.S. civil rights groups
seeking to pressure the world’s largest social media platform to take
concrete steps to block hate speech.

Read more at:
Canada's biggest banks join boycott of Facebook platforms - Reuters

Friday, July 3, 2020

EU STOCKMARKETS: Here’s why U.S. struggles with the coronavirus could lead to Europe’s stock market taking the lead

A growing number of prominent Wall Street institutions are making theprediction that 2020 will be the year for Europe’s stock market tooutshine its U.S. counterpart as the coronavirus takes diverging tracksin the two economic powerhouses.

Read more at:
Here’s why U.S. struggles with the coronavirus could lead to Europe’s stock market taking the lead - MarketWatch

Thursday, July 2, 2020

USA Presidential Elections - Fundraising: Biden and Allies Collect More Cash Than Trump for Second Straight Month

Democrat Joe Biden edged out Republican Donald Trump in fundraising for a second straight month in June, data from the rival US presidential campaigns showed on Wednesday.

Biden and allied Democratic groups raked in over $141 million during the month, while President Trump and closely tied groups hauled $131 million.

Biden and Allies Collect More Cash Than Trump for Second Straight Month | Jewish & Israel News Algemeiner.com

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Social Media Advertising : Zuckerberg said to say of Facebook ad boycott: ‘All these advertisers will be back’ soon enough Murphy

Hundreds of companies around the world have joined a temporary ad
boycott against Fcebook Inc., but Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg says
he’s not worried and has no intention of

changing its policies,
according to a new report.



Read more at:

Zuckerberg said to say of Facebook ad boycott: ‘All these advertisers will be back’ soon enough - MarketWatch