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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: THE ANT who wrote (109553)1/7/2015 5:46:27 PM
From: dvdw©  Respond to of 218621
 
was digging your input until the last part of this post….

this is a community of folks who make a wide range of contributions.

love all good minds. every good mind is a teacher, when you decide that is true.

good with MW because he's a teacher, often an opposing view, cannot grow if your sensory organs are unidirectional.

RO/RS=CF covers it.



To: THE ANT who wrote (109553)1/8/2015 5:14:26 AM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218621
 
But what if I take them out? <How many of the gods at the hundred percentile of leftist righteousness on this board wouldn't take him out if they could?> Fortunately, they remove themselves, thereby saving me the trouble and ethical dilemma. In case they don't volunteer for a Darwin Award, they are selected by intelligent women for elimination through their eugenics programmes.

Nature will not be denied. We didn't get to walk on our hind legs and learn how to count, read and think by staying entirely like monkeys. It's a gradual process taking decades, centuries, and millennia but that's pretty quick in geological time, though slow by biological time, so the process seems more benign than it really is. It's actually viciously merciless, relentless and inevitable and fairly fast.

In fact, the process is now going an order of magnitude faster than ever before with 7 billion people now in the process of being winnowed compared with only a billion at the end of the Little Ice Age and only 100 million when the Roman Empire was a big deal.



People mistakenly think human evolution is slow, but it isn't. People are very different from 10,000 years ago and even 2000 years ago. Even 1000 years ago they were quite different. In just 100 years the Flynn Effect has shown major intelligence improvement around the world. Stupidity is not selected. Intelligence is. None of us want less intelligence, though you might not think that from attendances at the local boozer. Women are noted for wanting intelligent men and wives are frequently less than obsequiously admiring of the intelligence of their husband, even if he's sober, as many husbands can attest.

In fact evolution is so rapid that it's only 30,000 years ago that an African bloke left Africa to father all non-Africans. It was only 90,000 years ago that an African woman left Africa and mothered all non-Africans. Blue eyes were invented in Iran only 8,000 years ago: <According to a team of researchers from Copenhagen University, a single mutation which arose as recently as 6-10,000 years ago was responsible for all the blue-eyed people alive on Earth today.The team, whose research is published in the journal Human Genetics, identified a single mutation in a gene called OCA2, which arose by chance somewhere around the northwest coasts of the Black Sea in one single individual, about 8,000 years ago.

Read more: dailymail.co.uk
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>

We are getting about equal to all non-African evolution, being 30,000 years worth, in about a single century because it's a numbers game and the number of people is now huge compared with historical numbers.

Mqurice



To: THE ANT who wrote (109553)1/8/2015 7:55:51 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 218621
 
In December, IATA said falling fuel prices and stronger economic growth means global airlines will report their strongest profit margin in more than five years in 2015.

Qatar Airways to cut surcharge following oil price drop
zawya.com



To: THE ANT who wrote (109553)1/13/2015 5:18:08 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 218621
 
Why Brazil Is A Surprisingly Closed Economy

Otaviano Canuto, World Economic Forum
    Jan. 12, 2015, 1:35 PM
According to traditional macro-level measures of trade penetration (share of exports and imports in GDP), Brazil is an unusually closed economy. For Brazil this measure was only 27.6% in 2013 – a figure among the lowest in the world. Notably, Brazil’s trade openness lags far behind its peers among the BRICS countries, all of which reached trade-to-GDP ratios of at least 50% in recent years.Figure 1. Brazil’s relative closed-ness to tradeWDL

Brazil’s size is often used to explain the country’s relative closedness. As the comparison with other large economies already indicates, this argument does not hold up to close scrutiny. While it is true that large economies tend to exhibit lower percentages of exports and imports to GDP, this feature fails to explain the exceptionally low levels of trade penetration observed in Brazil.

Looking at 2013 data from 176 countries available through the World Bank’s World Development Indicators (WDI) database, the average trade-to-GDP ratio is 96%. Even among the six countries with a larger economy than Brazil, the average is 55%.

Using the same WDI data and running a simple, univariate OLS regression of trade penetration and GDP on all available countries, we can show that less than one-sixth (15%) of Brazil’s deviation from the mean can be explained by the size of its economy alone. In other words, just looking at size of GDP we would expect Brazil to have a trade-to-GDP ratio of 85% – three times the observed 28%.

Conducting a multivariate OLS regression controlling for GDP as well as other dimensions of country size (surface area and population), Brazil’s lack of openness still cannot be adequately explained – Brazil’s expected trade-to-GDP ratio in this model is still about twice the actual value (62%). Controlling for other structural features often associated with trade openness – such as the urbanization rate and the share of GDP produced in the manufacturing sector – even increases the expected openness slightly to 64%.

The only approach we discovered to fairly accurately predict Brazil’s low level of openness is by also controlling for whether or not a country is located in Latin America and the Caribbean (using an LAC dummy variable in the regression). This comes in as a significant negative factor, reducing Brazil’s predicted openness to 31%. However, all this tells us is that Brazil is not alone – other Latin American countries also have a low trade penetration relative to the rest of the world (controlling for size and other characteristics).

Micro-level indicatorsA more interesting perspective on Brazil’s lack of trade openness can be obtained by looking at the number and characteristics of exporting firms.

The first result is that very few Brazilian firms export (see World Bank 2014). The share of exporters among all formal-sector firms is less than 0.5%. Indeed, the absolute number of exporters in Brazil – less than 20,000 – is roughly the same as that of Norway, a country of just over five million people compared to Brazil’s 200 million. This means that, while in Norway there is one exporting firm for about every 250 Norwegians, the ratio in Brazil is one for every 10,000 Brazilians.

Of course, Norway and Brazil are vastly different countries. Norway is one of the richest countries in the world; its GDP per capita is almost ten times that of Brazil. Norway’s total GDP is about a quarter of Brazil’s, indicating that Norway can be more aptly described as a small open economy. Norway is also a small country close to and well connected with many more countries in its region compared to Brazil. On the other hand, Norway is also a commodity exporter, with the petroleum sector accounting for more than half of total exports. In the case of Norway, a strong natural resource sector appears to coexist with value chain integration and dynamic exporters in other sectors.

Looking at a larger set of countries, we observe that Brazil is indeed an outlier. Brazil’s number of exporters relative to the population is low even when controlling for GDP per capita.

Figure 2. Brazil’s relative lack of exporting firms

WDL

Out of all Brazilian exporters, a much smaller number of firms make up the overwhelming share of exports – the top 1% of exporting firms generates 59% of total exports, while the top 25% of firms account for 98% of exports (Exporter dynamics database).

We also observe little dynamism among Brazilian exporters. Even given the small number of exporters, Brazil has a very low entry rate – very few firms become new exporters. On the flipside, Brazilian exporters have a very high survival rate, meaning that the few firms that export are likely to continue doing so.

Why do so few firms export?To understand why Brazil is so closed to trade and has such a small number of exporters, we will need to take a closer look at how Brazilian firms engage with the outside world (see World Bank 2014). One interesting indicator is the ratio of domestic value added in exports (or its inverse, the imported content in exports).

This measure serves as an indicator of integration into transnational value chains. Countries that are integrated in those chains will show a lower share of domestic value added in exports as their exports include components and intermediate goods previously imported from other countries.

In Brazil we observe a very high share of domestic value added in total exports. Now this could be in part due to the fact that Brazil exports a lot of raw materials which typically have a very high degree of domestic value added as they constitute the origin of a value chain. However, even when only looking at Brazil’s manufacturing exports (about a quarter of total exports) Brazil’s domestic value added is still extremely high (93%); indeed, it is the highest among the economies covered by the OECD-WTO Trade in Value Added database.

Brazil’s absence from global production networks and resulting density of domestic value can only in part be explained by the relative distance (geographical as well as institutional) from major economic centres – like other LAC countries. However it is also in large part a result of policy decisions past and present on trade and local content (World Bank 2014, Canuto 2014).

Figure 3. Brazil’s lack of integration into global production networks

WDL

The high level of domestic value added in exports shows that the fragmentation of the production process along cross-border value chains, a very important part of the second wave of globalization (Baldwin 2011), has largely bypassed Brazil.

In part this can be explained by the difficulty encountered by firms attempting to trade across Brazil’s borders. Brazil’s precarious logistics and high transaction costs related to international trade are incompatible with the logic of cross-border value chains.

Over the past decade Brazilian firms have also faced serious competitiveness challenges such as real appreciation and defensive trade policy reactions (Canuto et al. 2013a, 2013b). This means that only the most efficient firms or larger firms benefiting from significant economies of scale are able to overcome barriers to export. This should explain some of the concentration of exports among a small number of large firms.

How could opening up support Brazil’s growth agenda?Opening up and integrating more deeply in global value chains would result in the closure of less competitive production chain segments and their substitution with imports, eliminating the deadweight loss associated with inefficient domestic production. On the other hand, the businesses left standing would be more competitive, while final products available to the domestic market as well as for exports would be of lower cost and higher quality (Fleischhaker and George 2014). Furthermore, in dynamic terms, integration in global value chains would allow scarce domestic resources such as skilled labour to be reallocated to the most productive firms and activities, increasing overall productivity.

The productivity gains and cost reductions in the global economy due to participation in global production networking have been significant, increasing the opportunity cost associated with the ongoing closedness of the Brazilian economy. The alternative approach, which would be to support vertically integrated supply chains through protectionist measures, are likely to be futile in the longer term. For example, despite rising trade barriers, Mercosur’s coefficient of imports from China has continued to increase in recent years. Furthermore, private investors seem to understand this, as they shy away from activities that are viable only under permanent protection.

In Brazil, given its labour shortages and aspirations of rising purchasing power, productive activities would be strengthened by the availability of cheaper local consumer, intermediate, and capital goods. Brazil’s immersion in global value chains would allow the country to leverage its comparative advantages which clearly exist in natural resource-associated industries but which could also emerge in specific activities in manufacturing or services once industries have access to cheaper inputs. Of course, public policy support remains essential. However, this support should be more horizontal in nature, rather than further encouraging the ongoing high density of production chains and perpetuating the extraordinary closedness of the Brazilian economy.

Authors’ note: Cornelius Fleischhaker is a Junior Professional Associate with the Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice of the World Bank, specializing in Brazil and other Latin American countries. The opinions expressed here are his own and do not reflect those of the World Bank.

Read more: https://agenda.weforum.org/2015/01/why-is-brazils-economy-closed-to-trade/#ixzz3OhASJAC0