Tag: Economy

  • Goldman Sachs-this is where the dole out goes.Goldman CEO ‘settles’ for a $9 million bonus .


    To say the least ,this is obscene.
    Story:
    The price tag for Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein getting some peace of mind: nearly $60 million — and the distinction of being paid less than JPMorgan Chase’s Jamie Dimon.

    Despite guiding Goldman Sachs through its most profitable year ever, Blankfein will get a bonus of just $9 million, all of it in stock and a far cry from the $68 million he bagged in 2007, which at the time was Goldman’s best year ever.

    http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/pauper_payout_C0dESz1keGxvzbq3sgRMSI#ixzz0emX5rqW2

  • Bigotry In The Indian Premier League And The Bigger Picture

    The writer very cleverly abuses India in the guise of trying to bemoan Pakistan’s current status.Yes, IPL incident is a deliberate snub
    The reason has been obliquely hinted, that nobody wants to have a Pakistani in the team , taking into consideration the situation prevailing over there.No cricketing reason whatsoever.
    No doubt Pakistani players are exciting to watch.Then you can nor be sure whether they will take part in the competition as and when demanded by the franchisees for their country is in such a shape that their President does not know who is running the country or what will happen to Pakistan or himself.Under the circumstances, it is prudent on the part of the franchisees not to have bought any of them, for we are talking of investments and returns , not charity.
    Added to this is the PCB’s propensity of recalling players, players in match fixing scandals, dope scandal.
    Even if it were to be because of souring relations between the two countries,what is wrong in India treating these players as persona non grata?Let Pakistan understand their chaotic , region and world destroying policies have a price.
    many over there will no doubt feign ignorance over Pakistan’s malicious acts against India.
    If you close your eyes, world shall not cease to exist.
    You do so, as has been proved, at your own peril.
    Further, Pakistan declares that Pakistan parliamentary panel will not be coming to India as a retort.
    You are Welcome to take such an action.
    Keep on doing things like this with all countries,say for example with Sri Lanka whose cricketers were attacked in Pakistan;US, because it is ‘Satan’;Bangladesh ,for it seceded from you;UK,EU and Japan for they are cordial with India.
    Please be content with China and North Korea: from the former you can get Nuclear Technology and later give Pakistan away in a platter;with North Korea to whom you can sell nuclear secrets.
    Remember, sins of rulers visit their subjects.

    Story:
    What I am about to write may hurt my Indian friends and I am sorry. There are crooks, cranks and madmen in every country including India and there is no exaggeration in what I write. I am merely writing from the heart as I always do.

    Much has been said about the Indian Premier League’s decision to leave out Pakistani cricketers in the year that Pakistan is the defending World Twenty20 Cricket Champion. Indians have come up with the stupidest excuses – excuses that cannot and should not make sense to any reasonable person. But then we are not dealing with reasonable people.

    Forgive me for being harsh, but the truth is that Indians today are drunk with power and acting like the world’s newly rich. All of a sudden a hitherto mal-nourished and largely backward people through no fault of their own, mired in religious superstition and other such meandering parochialisms, find themselves sitting on a lot of wealth (or so they think) primarily – though not completely- because they have perfected the fine art and exact science of geometric population multiplication. In the process they have learnt to use terms that they have not arrived at organically – secularism, democracy, economy- etc but as events repeatedly show are clever ploys to claim a stake in the world. A few hours after the world trade center bombing, I ran into a few Indians in New Jersey and shared my feelings of profound sorrow with them. They responded with one line “America is finished now- India is the next world super power”- Again and Again I ran into Indians who repeated the same line to me . To me this response sums up the Indian uber-nationalist psyche for better or for worse. Ofcourse this is not to suggest that there aren’t any fine Indians- many manyIndians are genuine humanists and liberal secularists. They are not driving Indian policy however.

    When Mumbai happened (and Pakistan mind you has had its fairshare of Mumbais too- many of which can be traced to India as well according to Pakistan’s government), India’s intelligentsia on a power-trip began to strategise how to hurt Pakistan and destroy it. These are not random Zaid Hamid like offbase characters or Kashifiat type Jamaat-e-Islami crazies who are laughable at best. Take a look at this brilliant professor at the IIM who wrote this ridiculous piece . India’s crook, cranks and madmen are ordinary respectable members of society. It is this thinking that is behind IPL franchises opting out of choosing Pakistani players. (One must take heart from the fact that Indian captain said in 2009 WT20 that India would win the tournament because all its cricketers play in the IPL. Pakistan ended up winning the tournament without even a single player playing in the IPL that year).

    The irony is that many Pakistanis don’t understand just how far we have squandered our natural advantage over India. If there was ever a country in the subcontinent that had the potential of being a first world country, it was Pakistan. Pakistan is a naturally resource-rich country which is also at the crossroads of world’s energy and commercial transport hubs. Despite our many failures, we have a growing middle class, a free media and a growing consciousness which will transform Pakistan into a modern democracy. We do however need to throw out this unnatural obsession with religion. We should also sue for peace with India but as the IPL has proved abundantly, we need to look in all directions.

    If we can put our house in order , Pakistan has the potential and ability to outdo India in every field and stand. Everyone other than Pakistanis themselves knows it. Indians know it and this is why you find so many Indian trolls baiting and abusing Pakistanis on Pakistani websites. In the information age – catching up will never be the problem but first we have to make up our minds. Do we want to live respectably with our heads held high? That would mean hard choices – one of which is to do away with our own crooks, cranks and madmen who have kept us mired in pipedreams and shadows.

    The question is who is going to bell the cat? No instead we shall continue to persecute our minorities, let the mullahs lead us astray and watch ridiculous Indian fillums like 3 Idiots as a national past-time.
    http://pakteahouse.wordpress.com/2010/01/22/bigotry-in-the-indian-premier-league-and-the-bigger-picture/#comment-25549

  • After Dubai

    It is not a question of rich nations going to the aid of troubled nations.It may be their turn tomorrow unless they cut down deficit financing, free sops,conspicuous consumption, encourage savings and make people live within their means.All other steps are temporary.
    When it looked as if Dubai would go bust last month, making global financial markets swoon, its wealthy neighboring emirate stepped in and bailed it out with a $10 billion loan. Unfortunately Dubai isn’t the only one teetering on the brink. Greece is also in trouble; so is Ireland. Others could follow. Unless the world’s richest nations come to the rescue of weakened states, the global financial crisis might sprout another leg and stop the nascent recovery in its tracks.

    Dubai created its problems. The oil-poor emirate borrowed lavishly to pay for a construction binge, and went bust when its housing bubble imploded. Other countries, like Greece and Ireland, are also suffering a hard landing from a decade of debt-fueled profligacy. But there are also innocent bystanders who could be swept away by the financial tide. Government budgets have been battered across the board by the global recession — reducing tax revenues as unemployment insurance and fiscal stimulus measures have increased expenditures. This has reduced governments’ options to fight the continued economic weakness.

    The most immediately vulnerable countries are in the European Union. Greece’s budget deficit exploded as recession took its toll, leading to a downgrade of its credit rating and a collapse in the price of its bonds. Ireland’s economy is expected to contract 7.5 percent in 2009, Italy’s 5.1 percent and Spain’s 3.8 percent.

    This is a compelling case for the sounder European economies to come to the rescue of their poor neighbors. Statements like the German finance minister’s suggestion that Greece sink or swim alone amount to a shot in the European foot. If Greece were to default on its debts, investors would run from other European countries with low growth and big debts — pushing some of the weaker ones into a crisis of their own.

    Growth in these countries is hindered severely by the remarkably strong euro, which has sapped their international competitiveness. With overstretched budgets taking further fiscal stimulus off the table, financial analysts have suggested that nations may be tempted to abandon the euro to achieve growth. Pain is also spreading outside Europe. Rating agencies have downgraded the credit of Mexico, whose budget deficit opened sharply as the economy contracted 7.3 percent last year.

    These strains could have deep and lasting repercussions. A breakdown of the euro would be disastrous — sending a potent shock through already jittery financial markets — deepening and extending this worldwide recession. Some observers worry about the secularly tolerant Dubai being driven into the arms of the much more conservative Abu Dhabi. And the world economy is too fragile to withstand another round of careening markets.

    We understand that voters in the rich, industrial world might be feeling deep bailout fatigue. Still, bailouts will be necessary. To begin with, the more powerful countries of the European Union — like Germany — must come to the rescue of their weaker neighbors. But other countries, including the United States and China, must stand ready to provide help. It might be expensive. But it would be cheaper than another round of crisis.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/18/opinion/18mon1.html

  • Avoiding a Japanese Decade-New York Times Edit.

    Many points have been left out.
    Risk is taken by Banks for large corporations , not for small/individual borrower.If you analyse bad debts , you will find maximum percentage shall be from large/corporate borrowers.Most of the time large corporations are financed based on non economic or financial considerations.
    Banks must take reasonable risk in lending to small companies and individuals for it shall generate demand and propel economy.
    Cap on income or tax on income beyond a certain ceiling shall prevent social unrest and morally being paid enormous sums as in Banks/corporations is obscene
    While lending care also should be taken, whether it be for small or big corporations, in determinig the repayment capacity..
    Non Performing Assets should be disposed after 5 years.

    Story:
    Thankfully, 2009 ended better than it began. Economists talk about green shoots of recovery taking hold. Consumer confidence has improved. Equity markets have soared. But for all the progress, the American economy remains extremely vulnerable.

    To understand those economic risks, it is worth considering Japan’s experience in the 1990s. A bursting housing bubble there sparked a banking crisis that was followed by a decade of economic stagnation.

    The Japanese government lacked the resolve to do what was necessary. It failed to fix its banks and stopped its early fiscal stimulus before recovery had taken hold, leaving the economy all too vulnerable to outside shocks, including the Asian currency crisis and the dot-com collapse in 2001. Japan’s annual growth rate — which had averaged 4 percent since 1973 — slowed to less than 1 percent, on average, from 1992 to 2003.

    President Obama’s economic advisers have learned from Japan’s experience. But they may not have learned enough. (Certainly Congress has not been paying attention.) If they are not careful, they could end up repeating some of the big mistakes that condemned Japan’s economy to a lost decade.

    The green shoots are barely out of the ground and Republicans and conservative Democrats in Congress are already demanding that the administration “do something” to cut the budget gap. We worry that the political drumbeat may be too hard to resist. In 1997, after three years of tepid growth, the Japanese government stopped its stimulus: it raised a consumption tax, ended a temporary income tax cut, increased social security premiums and nipped recovery in the bud.

    Japan’s other blunder was its unwillingness to fix its banks. Regulators did not force banks and indebted firms to recognize trillions of yen worth of bad loans. Banks trundled along like zombies, squandering credit to keep insolvent firms on their feet. When the Asian currency crisis hit, many undercapitalized banks toppled over.

    The Obama administration has not been quite as forgiving with the banks, but it still has been nowhere near aggressive enough. The regulatory reform meant to curb bankers’ destructive risk-taking is moving at a snail’s pace through Congress. While the Treasury has forced banks to raise capital, many — including some of the largest — remain thinly capitalized and weak.

    Banks have been unwilling to sell bad assets and take a loss. They remain stuffed with risky commercial and residential mortgages and consumer debt. Bankers, meanwhile, have made things worse by insisting on paying themselves huge bonuses after profiting so handsomely from the taxpayers’ tolerance and largess.

    There are two big problems with that. The bankers’ taste for risk has not been in any way quenched. And the American public is, justifiably, fed up. That means if there is another bank crisis — say when the Federal Reserve takes away the punch bowl of low interest rates — it will be a lot harder to get Congress to approve another bailout, no matter how necessary.

    The Obama administration has still done a far better job — up to now — in addressing the crisis than Japan’s governments did. As dismal as 2009 was, it pales when compared with what would have happened without the fiscal stimulus and the Fed’s enormous monetary boost.

    The White House is now pushing another mini-stimulus plan for next year. Chances are it will need to do a lot more to push reform and boost the economy. If there is an overarching lesson from Japan’s lost decade, it is that half measures don’t pay.