Archive for October, 2007

31 Oct

Vodafone could face $2bn tax bill

By Joe Leahy in Mumbai and Amy Yee in New Delhi

The Indian government on Wednesday scored an early win in its efforts to force Vodafone to pay what lawyers estimate could be $2bn in capital gains tax on its acquisition of domestic mobile phone operator Hutchison Essar this year.
In a case closely watched by foreign […]

30 Oct

Is U.S. Stuck in Internet’s Slow Lane?

NEW YORK (AP) - The United States is starting to look like a slowpoke on the Internet. Examples abound of countries that have
faster and cheaper broadband connections, and more of their population connected to them.
What’s less clear is how badly the country that gave birth to the Internet is doing, and whether the […]

29 Oct

Safety Chief Is Opposing More Money

By STEPHEN LABATON
Published: October 30, 2007

WASHINGTON, Oct. 29 — The nation’s top official for consumer product safety has asked Congress in recent days to reject legislation intended to strengthen the agency, which polices thousands of consumer goods, from toys to tools.

Nancy Nord of the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
On the eve of an important Senate committee […]

28 Oct

Top bosses are paid 100 times more than the average worker

By NAOMI ROVNICK and SAM GREENHILL
The bosses of Britain’s largest companies are being paid more than 100 times as much as the average worker, it was revealed yesterday.
While ordinary wage-earners typically earned £30,000 last year, chief executives’ pay has doubled over the past five years to a staggering £3.2million.
It means top executives now […]

25 Oct

Slowing Marginally, China’s Economy Sets 11.5% Growth Pace

The Pudong Financial District in Shanghai as seen from the top of the Shanghai World Financial Center.
By KEITH BRADSHER
HONG KONG, Oct. 25 — China said Thursday that its economy expanded at a powerful 11.5 percent annual pace in the third quarter, a slight slowing from the second quarter that might help Beijing officials control inflation.
But […]

25 Oct

Asia Keeps Pressuring Oil Prices

Economic Growth Offsets
Efforts to Curb Demand;
Ambivalence on Ethanol
By PATRICK BARTA
October 23, 2007

Asia’s fast-growing economies have made some progress in addressing their seemingly insatiable demand for oil, but they continue to fall far short of the cuts needed to significantly reduce pressure on global supplies.
Galloping growth in Asia, led by China, was one of the key […]

24 Oct

The history of cash part final

Currency affairs: the history of cash
Sterling

The first mention of sterling is in 1078 as “sterilensis”, and by the 13th century the term was in common usage. England had a uniform national currency 600 years before France, and 900 years before either Germany or Italy.
The pound was established in 1560 by Elizabeth I and its […]

22 Oct

The history of cash part 5

E-money: the future of cash
We may not be that far away from a world where cash follows the chequebook into oblivion and few transactions are conducted face to face. There are in excess of 20 billion payments of less than £10 made every year; they could all go cashless.
E-money comes in three forms, two […]

21 Oct

The history of cash part 4

Credit cards, debit cards and cheques
Not so long ago, it was relatively difficult to open an account with one of the clearing banks, and the Mainwarings and Wilsons who ran the institutions long catered principally to the professional classes, discussing their affairs over a glass of Amontillado in the manager’s office.
Though bounders could […]

18 Oct

The history of cash part 3

The Gold Standard
Entrusting the issue of banknotes to one central authority effectively removed the danger of bankruptcy, but it did raise the spectre of inflation. This would happen if a central bank printed too much money. (To understand this, imagine you were an egg seller and everyone suddenly had twice as much cash; you […]