BRIC economies top agenda of corporate governance summit
Submitted by Hardeep Sidhu on Fri, 02/26/2010 - 13:08.Toronto, Feb 26 - The role of BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) economies in the new global order tops the agenda of this year's global summit on corporate governance being held here in June.
The three-day summit will be held from June 7, the organizer International Corporate Governance Network (ICGN) said here Thursday.
With over 450 leaders in corporate governance in 45 countries as its members, the ICGN aims to raise standards of corporate governance worldwide. Most of its members are institutional investors with management of funds to the tune of $9.5 trillion under them.
Under 'The Changing Global Balances,' the summit will debate the importance of good corporate governance after the global meltdown triggered by corporate greed.
Mining in Australia to boom in coming years
Submitted by Neha Malik on Tue, 02/23/2010 - 21:19.
The two major Asian countries, India and China have definitely helped the world a lot in coming out of the recessionary period, especially when the developed countries were down and were with lower consumption.
The demand for commodities in China and India is increasing and the increased demand has led to a surge in the mining activity of Australia, claimed the central bank of Australia. The Reserve Bank of Australia also stated that the surge could last for about 15 years or even more.
2009 drop severest in Dutch economy since 1931
Submitted by Sukant Sharma on Sat, 02/13/2010 - 16:19.
The Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) reported on Friday that the Dutch economy shrank 4 per cent in 2009. This is the highest drop ever measured by CBS and The Netherlands' worst since
1931. The 2009 downturn surpassed the previous record drop of 3.6 per cent in 1931 during the world depression. The worst economic drop in the post-World War II era was 1.2 per cent in
1982.
The economy dropped 2.2 percent in the last three months of 2009.
US can ignore the EU and still access SWIFT data, commission says
Submitted by Jimmy Peterson on Sat, 02/13/2010 - 16:06.
Due to the SWIFT agreement ,The United States could still access European Union citizens' bank transfer data by cutting deals with individual European governments, despite a European
Parliament rejection of this practice. SWIFT agreement allowed the United States to analyses EU citizens' bank transfers for anti-terrorism investigations, and then provide EU
governments with intelligence on suspicious transactions.
Germany falters in recovery
Submitted by Keshav Seth on Sat, 02/13/2010 - 12:57.
Germany reported flat GDP numbers in the fourth quarter. Europe’s largest economy stagnated amid declined consumption & investment.
Only the exports were seen in positive territory as per the data published by the Federal Statistical Office. The gross domestic product remained flat on a sequential basis in the fourth quarter, after a 0.7% rise in the previous three months. The main contributing factors were the negative numbers for final consumption expenditure and capital formation as they slowed down economic growth.
India's will grow in uneven manner, says US strategic think tank
Submitted by Hardeep Sidhu on Fri, 01/22/2010 - 12:51.Washington, Jan 22 - Calling India a "a country of endless unrealised potential," a strategic think tank has suggested that in the 2010s it "will grow, but in a wildly unpredictable and uneven manner" leaving "fantastic expectations" unrealised.
"India has always been a country of endless unrealised potential, and it will remain so in the 2010s," said Stratfor, which calls itself a global intelligence agency, suggesting the decade ahead would not be a period of decisive change for the world.
Brazil eyes 1.6 mn new jobs in 2010
Submitted by Dalbir Sahota on Fri, 01/22/2010 - 11:43.Brasilia, Jan 22 - The Brazilian economy will grow by 5.2 percent this year which would help create 1.6 million new jobs, an official said.
Brazil's Finance Minister Guido Mantega Thursday offered the latest forecast in a Cabinet meeting chaired by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.
Mantega raised the forecast for economic growth from five to 5.2 percent. He said 1.6 million new jobs will be created in 2010.
Brazil has already pulled out of the recession caused by global financial crisis and is likely to attract substantial foreign investment in 2010, despite it's being an election year, Mantega said.
Global economy to grow 2.7 percent in 2010: World Bank
Submitted by Dalbir Sahota on Thu, 01/21/2010 - 15:19.Washington, Jan 21 - The global economy is poised to grow 2.7 percent this year, but the recovery will be slow as the impact of fiscal stimulus wanes, the World Bank has said in a report.
The Global Economic Prospects 2010 report released Wednesday said the recovery "that is now underway will slow later this year as the impact of fiscal stimulus wanes."
It said the global economy shrunk 2.2 percent in 2009.
Financial markets remain troubled and private sector demand lags amid high unemployment. However, the economy is expected to grow 3.2 percent in 2011, Xinhua reported.
"Overall, these are challenging times," said Justin Lin, World Bank chief economist and senior vice president.
Canadian dollar hits a new high
Submitted by Hardeep Sidhu on Fri, 01/15/2010 - 13:12.Toronto, Jan 15 - The Canadian currency hit a new high Thursday, rising to a three-month high against the US dollar.
Supported by steady commodity prices, the loonie - as the Canadian dollar is called - rose as high as 97.61 cents US. The loonie, which is expected to reach parity with the US dollar any time this year, has gained as the greenback has slipped on poor US retail sales data.
Since sinking to 77 cents US in March 2009, the Canadian loonie has risen more than 20 percent agaisnt the US dollar. The loonie almost reached parity with the greenback in October last when it touched 98 cents US Oct 14.
But it retreated on fears of government intervention as the rising currency was - and is - harmful to the country's recession-hit manufacturing sector.
Singapore's economy shrinks in fourth quarter
Submitted by Dalbir Sahota on Mon, 01/04/2010 - 17:16.
Singapore, Jan 4 - Economic activity in Singapore slowed in the fourth quarter, with gross domestic product contracting by 6.8 percent, the government said Monday.
The drop in the fourth quarter resulted in a 2.1-percent contraction for the year. The negative economic growth for 2009 fell within the Trade and Industry Ministry's forecast of a of 2 percent and 2.5 percent drop for the year.
US Federal Reserve keeps interest rates at record low
Submitted by Sukhpreet Manchanda on Thu, 12/17/2009 - 10:55.
Washington, Dec 17 - The US Federal Reserve Wednesday kept interest rates at their historic low of near 0 percent and noted signs that the world's largest economy is recovering from recession.
The central bank's board said economic conditions "continued to pick up" since its last meeting in November but were likely to "remain weak for a time," indicating it would keep rates at their current low for some time.
Touted best among G8, Canadian economy on rebound
Submitted by Dalbir Sahota on Tue, 12/15/2009 - 12:25.
Toronto, Dec 15 - Touted as the best among all the G8 economies during the current global slowdown, the Canadian economy is set for a rebound, according to the country's top bank.
In a report Monday, the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) said the economy will return to positive growth in 2010 after contracting at an average of 2.5 per cent in 2009. According to the report, the economy is likely to grow by 2.6 per cent in 2010. It will pick up further in 2011 to grow by 3.9 per cent.
Abu Dhabi steps in with $10 bn to bail-out of Dubai World
Submitted by Dalbir Sahota on Mon, 12/14/2009 - 15:40.Dubai, Dec 14 - Peer emirate Abu Dhabi Monday had a a pleasant surprise for the financial world Monday, stepping in with a $10 billion bail-out offer for Dubai World that is caught in a multibillion dollar debt crisis.
"The Government of Abu Dhabi and the UAE Central Bank have agreed to provide important support," said Sheikh Ahmad Bin Saeed Al Maktoum, Chairman of the Dubai Supreme Fiscal Committee. He is also the uncle of Dubai's ruler Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum.
"Specifically, the Government of Abu Dhabi has agreed to fund $10 billion to the Dubai Financial Support Fund that will be used to satisfy a series of upcoming obligations on Dubai World," his statement said.
US Senate passes $1-trillion federal spending bill
Submitted by Mahavir Sharma on Mon, 12/14/2009 - 12:42.
Washington, Dec 14 - The US Senate Sunday passed a $1-trillion spending bill that will keep federal agencies and social programmes operational until the end of September 2010.
The measure, which already passed in the House of Representatives and combines six separate spending bills, was approved by a 57-35 vote largely along party lines with three Democrats voting against it and three Republicans supporting it. It has now to be signed by President Barack Obama.
World Bank provides $405 mn for Andhra Pradesh
Submitted by Dalbir Sahota on Fri, 12/11/2009 - 15:41.
Washington, Dec 11 - The World Bank has approved two projects worth $405 million designed to promote environment friendly modes of urban transport and to improve management and delivery of services in urban areas in Andhra Pradesh.
A $105 million loan for the Sustainable Urban Transport Project (SUTP) will finance capacity building and demonstration projects in select cities that will create models of sustainable transport solutions for Indian cities to replicate.
Nearly one in five Hong Kong firms to recruit as economy rallies
Submitted by Dalbir Sahota on Tue, 12/08/2009 - 16:41.
Hong Kong, Dec 8 - Nearly one in five Hong Kong companies plan to take on new staff as the city's economy recovers strongly from the downturn, a survey found Tuesday.
Seventeen percent of employers interviewed by recruitment company Manpower Professional said they planned new hirings in the first three months of 2010.
The response, from interviews with more than 800 employers, was a six percentage point increase on a similar survey conducted three months ago when Hong Kong emerged from a year-long recession.
Japan unveils fresh stimulus package
Submitted by Dalbir Sahota on Tue, 12/08/2009 - 15:20.
Tokyo, Dec 8 - Japan Tuesday unveiled a fresh stimulus package worth 7.2 trillion yen ($81 billion) Tuesday to spur the world's second-largest economy facing deflation and a rising yen.
The government proposed increasing the package from 7.1 trillion yen to 7.2 trillion yen following a call for more pump-priming measures from the People's New Party, one of the two junior coalition partners of the Democratic Party of Japan.
The government did not unveil its proposal as originally planned due to differences within the ruling coalition.
US economic rebound smaller than thought, but Fed optimistic
Submitted by Sukhpreet Manchanda on Wed, 11/25/2009 - 15:56.Washington, Nov 25 - The US economy's rebound from a deep recession was smaller than initially thought, according to new government figures, but the Federal Reserve said it expects the country's recovery to pick up the pace in the coming year.
The Commerce Department in an updated estimate Tuesday said the world's largest economy grew at an annual rate of 2.8 percent in the third quarter, the fastest rate in two years.
But while the figure confirmed that the US has likely emerged from its deepest recession in decades, it was lower than the department's first estimate of 3.5 percent.
India, US pledge to stimulate global economic revival
Submitted by Smita Prakash on Wed, 11/25/2009 - 13:41.
Washington, Nov. 25 : Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President Barack Obama on Tuesday took note of the new opportunities offered by their economies and their respective strengths, and their potential for future growth to catalyze global economic growth, and pledged to create conditions that would facilitate their continued expansion.
US central bank issues rosier outlook on economy
Submitted by Mahavir Sharma on Wed, 11/25/2009 - 11:31.
Washington, Nov 25 - The US Federal Reserve Tuesday raised its growth forecasts for the US economy, but warned that unemployment in the US will remain for some time at its highest levels in a generation.
The US central bank projected the world's largest economy will shrink 0.1-0.4 percent this year and grow by 2.5-3.3 percent in 2010. That compares to June's prediction of a contraction of 1-1.5 percent in 2009 and a gain of 2.1-3.3 percent next year.
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