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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumar89 who wrote (697779)2/8/2013 10:46:25 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation  Respond to of 1573482
 
PHILADELPHIA (CBS) – A new survey released Thursday says young adults, between 18 and 33-years-old, are more stressed than any other generation.

USA Today says the online survey was conducted in August 2012 by Harris Interactive for the American Psychological Association and was taken by 2,020 U.S. adults (18 and older).

Results of the survey say the average stress level of adults in 2012 was 4.9 on a 10-point scale, where one means “little or no stress” and 10 means “a great deal of stress.”

The survey found that the stress level for Millennials, adults aged 18-33, was 5.4 with 39 percent saying their stress increased during the past year and 52 percent saying that it has kept them up at night. The top two causes of their stress are work and money.

Millennial survey participants also reported, more than any other group, that a health care provider told them they have depression or an anxiety disorder.


For more information on the survey and results visit: www.usatoday.com.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (697779)2/10/2013 8:30:41 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573482
 
After ignoring unemployment, Obama seeks to convince Americans it’s his top priority



February 10, 2013 | 7:43 am



White House spinners are working furiously in the final 72 hours before President Obama’s State of the Union speech. Their job: convince the recession-scarred American public that economic recovery is Obama’s top priority — after everything he has said and done to suggest otherwise.

The unemployment rate is 7.9 percent — one tenth of a point higher than it was when Obama took office in January 2009. But the true toll of joblessness is far higher. The Labor Department’s so-called U-6 rate, which includes people who want a job but have become so discouraged they have quit looking, is 14.4 percent. And a new study, by Rutgers University scholars, shows that 23 percent of those surveyed have lost a job sometime in the last four years, while another 11 percent have seen someone in their household lose a job. That is one-third of the American people who have experienced unemployment during Obama’s time in office, along with many more who have experienced other hardships of the economic downturn.

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“Unemployment and what happened in the recession are society-wide experiences,” Rutgers professor Carl Van Horn, a co-author of the report, told me recently. And indeed, thousands of polls in the last four years have shown that jobs and the economy are the public’s top concern, ranking far above any other issue or set of issues.

Yet in what was likely to be the most-watched speech of his second term, his January 21 inaugural address, Obama ignored the issue of unemployment. Simply ignored it. The closest he came to even acknowledging a problem with the economy is when he said, “An economic recovery has begun” — five words out of a 2,100-word speech. Instead, Obama devoted significant portions of the address to gay marriage, global warming, immigration, and other priorities.

At other times since his re-election last November, Obama has made clear that other issues top his second-term agenda. In a New Year’s interview with NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Obama was asked to name his top priority for the next few years. He put immigration reform at the top of the list. “That’s something we should get done,” Obama said. Economic recovery, Obama added, is “the second thing that we’ve got to do.”

Since his inauguration, Obama has traveled outside Washington to make high-profile speeches, with an address on immigration reform in Las Vegas and on gun control in Minneapolis. That big speech on the economy, by far the public’s number one concern? It hasn’t happened.

So now, the White House is telling everyone that Obama will “return” to the issue of jobs and the economy in his State of the Union address. In articles in the Washington Post, the New York Times, Associated Press and elsewhere, White House aides are claiming Obama realizes that the economy is still the public’s number one issue.

“President Obama will concentrate his State of the Union speech on the economy, shifting the emphasis away from the broad social agenda of his second inaugural address to refocus attention on a set of problems that vexed his first term,” r eports the Washington Post.

“Mr. Obama will vow to use the power of his office to recapture robust job growth and economic expansion, according to White House officials who have seen the speech,” reports the Times. “Both eluded him during his first term.”

The president “will focus his State of the Union address on boosting job creation and economic growth at a time of high unemployment, underscoring the degree to which the economy could threaten his ability to pursue second-term priorities such as gun control, immigration policy and climate change,” reports the Associated Press.

National Journal’s Ron Fournier writes that “White House officials tell me they feel stung by coverage of the inaugural address,” when the press “highlighted the president’s left-leaning stances on immigration, gun control, climate change, and gay and women’s rights.” Those White House officials claimed to Fournier that Obama in fact devoted much of his inaugural address to the economy — a claim that is on its face not true.

Obama’s slighting of the economy is nothing new. Critics charged throughout his first term that at a time when economic conditions bordered on the desperate, the president devoted more than a year of his energies to passing a national health care scheme. At the time, the White House promised it would “pivot” to the issue of jobs and the economy at some future time. That time never came. Meanwhile, all the polls showed deep public concern over the economy.

Now, apparently, Obama has noticed public opinion. “Obama’s return to an overtly economic message is supported in part by polls,” reports the Post, which notices “a gulf between what Obama has been talking most about publicly since his reelection and what most concerns the American electorate.”

Anyone could have seen that at any time in the last few months, or years. See here, and here, and here. Despite the nation’s deep and prolonged suffering, the president has simply never put the economy at the top of his agenda. After all he has said and done, will a single speech convince the public the he does now?

washingtonexaminer.com



To: Brumar89 who wrote (697779)2/13/2013 9:20:26 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation  Respond to of 1573482
 
Spain Loses 5% of Mobile Subscriber Base in 2012: Warning for Europe

2/12/2013 @ 1:55PM |2,020 views

forbes.com

It’s safe to say nobody expected Spain to lose 2.7 Million mobile lines in 2012. It’s a cataclysmic change that means that more than one out of twenty Spanish mobile subscribers went up in air in just 12 months. There are many reasons for the Spanish mobile crisis, including operator moves to purge inactive accounts and the move towards smaller handset subsidies. But the fact that steep decline of mobile lines persisted at the end of the calendar year 2012 indicates that this phenomenon is not mainly about account purging. Spanish consumers really have been dropping mobile lines for a year – and the trend shows no sign of abating.

Things might actually get worse in 2013. Spain recently announced a terrible, -10.7% decline in retail sales in December 2012. This was far worse than the average 2012 decline of -6.8%. The unemployment is now topping 26%. Youth unemployment has hit 55%. This is particularly important for the mobile telecom industry, since consumers under 30 years old are the key target of smartphone vendors and operators trying to persuade people to spend more on mobile data services. Investors know that telecom spending is one of the last things consumers touch when things get tough. This created misleading confidence prior to previous telecom slumps of 2001 and 2009 – both of which were lead by suddenly cratering European demand.

Carra: Knights of the Apocalypse

It now seems conceivable that Spain is drifting towards a two year contraction of 7-10% of its mobile subscriber base. Operators may have overestimated their subscriber bases before the current crunch began, but that is true for many other markets as well. We now have a scary precedent of just how bad things can go in a major European market when a nasty consumer recession and an unemployment surge coincide. Needless to say, none of the telecom industry projections incorporate the Spanish disease into the rosy future hockey sticks. Italy and France are obvious examples of European markets where mobile growth numbers may disappoint sharply in 2013 if the ongoing consumer malaise persists. Spain’s 2012 retail figures showed how a country can go from a long period of slow consumption slide into a sharp contraction as the population panics. This is not a linear process.

It may not be a coincidence that Cisco recently revised its global mobile data growth assumptions sharply downwards. One specific problem was the creeping rot in Europe – mobile data growth rate in Italy has plunged to a shockingly tepid 32%, for example. Apple‘s revenue growth in Europe slowed down dramatically over the course of 2012 – one reason why the iPhone global volume just missed the consensus by several million units.

The stock market is now mesmerized by the surprising health of the US recovery, from car sales to house market. Ericsson recently cheered investors by upbeat comments largely based on American revenue growth. But Europe has started popping up as a theme from Apple to Coca-Cola, which just delivered a dismal -6% European revenue decline. For the telecom industry, the dominant theme of 2013 may well be just how deep the European consumer angst will bite. Interestingly, Qualcomm has not downgraded European 3G/4G device sales estimates recently – it has lowered its North American device estimates instead. The industry benchmark projections for Europe remain high.