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India hunts hidden cash in corruption blitz

By - Mar 19,2017 - Last updated at Mar 19,2017

A man pedals his cycle rickshaw during rains in Agartala, India, on Saturday (Reuters photo)

NEW DELHI — Mansions owned by maids, gardeners and drivers until now have aroused little suspicion in India, where the wealthy have long hidden fortunes in the names of lowly-paid staff to avoid paying tax.

But as the government broadens its crackdown on corruption, a new law promises to end the widespread practise and hundreds of suspicious bank accounts are under investigation. 

“There’s been an overnight change in the system,” real estate lawyer Naresh Gupta told AFP, describing the new rules as “very draconian”.

“Investigators can question anyone and ask any government department for information about suspects.”

The law banning so-called “benami” transactions, making it illegal for assets to be hidden in another’s name, came into effect in November as part a twin strike by the government to flush out undeclared “black money” hoarded by tax evaders. 

It followed a shock decision by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to withdraw high-value bank notes from circulation, compelling millions to join the formal banking sector for the first time. Previously, around 90 per cent of everyday transactions in India were in cash.

Holding real estate in someone else’s name has been a particularly popular avenue for those seeking to legitimise black money and dodge their tax dues.

Those caught out could have their wealth seized, face a seven-year jail term and pay hefty fines equivalent to 25 per cent of the asset’s value.

Government officials say 235 suspicious accounts were under investigation for alleged benami activity in mid February, with more than half frozen and properties seized.

But Modi, who was elected in 2014 on a pledge to wipe out corruption and kickstart the economy, has promised more scalps as the dragnet widens.

“It has some very tough provisions. Those holding such property should start consulting their [accountants],” he said in a February speech.

 

‘They will go after everything’ 

 

The law was in step with November’s controversial “demonetisation”, which forced Indians to turn in their old, devalued banknotes in exchange for new ones.

Those declaring suspiciously-large sums were red flagged for audit by the tax department, which often uncovered complex and implausible webs of benami holdings.

In one case, the department said 33 million rupees ($500,000) were hidden in the name of a woman who wasn’t even aware the account existed.

In another instance, $9 million was spread across 20 fictitious accounts.

A network of jewellers, meanwhile, was busted spiriting black money into shell companies ostensibly owned by a day labourer, local media reported.

“Even within families, people want to hide their assets from others so will purchase it in someone else’s name,” said Abhishek Goenka from tax and audit firm PwC India.

One businessman bought a sprawling mansion in a swish Delhi postcode and registered the deed under a company whose CEO also happened to be his maid.

A young couple meanwhile purchased a $1.2 million house under someone else’s name to avoid explaining how two civil servants could afford such a place, a person close to the transactions told AFP.

“By registering the property in someone else’s name, unaccounted income gets accounted for,” said Goenka.

“If at a later date it’s then sold on to a benami buyer, the cycle perpetuates.”

There is no hard data on what percentage of transactions in India are benami and could fall foul of this law. But experts agree the practice is rife and long overdue for scrutiny.

“After the note ban, this was the natural next step,” said Uday Ved, a Mumbai-based tax adviser and former KMPG head of tax, in reference to the Modi government’s anti-benami blitz.

 

“Now the law is in effect they will go after cash, real estate, gold, everything.”

G-20 ministers fail to get US on board for trade, climate

By - Mar 18,2017 - Last updated at Mar 18,2017

German Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann and German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble (left) address a news conference at the G-20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting in Baden-Baden, Germany, on Saturday (Reuters photo)

BADEN-BADEN, Germany — Finance ministers from the world's biggest economies on Saturday failed to get the US to renew an anti-protectionist pledge and a vow to fight climate change, in the face of Donald Trump's "America First" push.

After a two-day meeting, ministers from G-20 developed and emerging nations said they were "working to strengthen the contribution of trade to our economies", but failed to spell out a pledge to reject protectionism in a closing statement.

An entire section on action against climate change was dropped from the final document, sparking dismay among America's partners as well as environmental activists.

"I regret that our discussions today were unable to reach a satisfying conclusion on two absolutely essential priorities, and which France would have liked to see the G-20 continue to take firm and concerted action on," said French Finance Minister Michel Sapin.

Host German Finance Minister Wolfgang 

Schaeuble, however, struck a conciliatory tone, noting that in the US the matters of finance and trade were divided in two portfolios.

"Trade questions are not the responsibility of the finance minister... that's why it was a bit complicated, that's true," he said, as the American delegation was led by US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

The conspicuous omissions come as Trump champions a "Buy American" strategy that includes threats to penalise companies that manufacture abroad by heavily taxing their products.

Carried to power on the back of a political storm over de-industrialisation in vast areas of the US, Trump vowed in his inauguration speech to "follow two simple rules: buy American and hire American".

Since taking office, he has withdrawn the US from a trans-Pacific free trade pact and attacked export giants China and Germany over their massive trade surplus.

His stance has been condemned by Washington's trading partners, and led Beijing to issue a stern warning against sparking a trade war.

Trump himself insisted at a tense Washington press conference Friday, following his first meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, that "I'm a free trader but also a fair trader".

He also rejected a description of his policies as "isolationist".

 'Can't happen again'

References to action against climate change under the Paris Accord were absent from the G-20 statement, unlike at a China-led summit last year. 

Delegates said the US team was unable to commit as they had not been given instructions from Washington to do so at the meeting in the western German spa town of Baden-Baden.

The exclusion of climate marked a new setback for environmental action, activists say, after Trump proposed to take the axe to environmental financing.

Under his first national budget proposal, he suggested cutting financial resources for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by a third, as well as eliminating contributions linked to UN climate change programmes.

On the campaign trail, Trump had threatened to pull the US out of the Paris Accord on combating climate change.

"The lack of attention to climate in the G-20 finance statement is no doubt due to the Trump administration's irresponsible and isolated approach to climate change," said Li Shuo, senior climate policy adviser at Greenpeace East Asia.

"Other countries should not allow this to happen again," added Li.

But Schaeuble sounded a more optimistic tone, saying that "I'm not pessimistic, but rather I think the process works and we have made progress on a series of important questions."

Jordan, Saudi Arabia to inaugurate business coordination council

By - Mar 18,2017 - Last updated at Mar 18,2017

AMMAN — In coincidence with the upcoming visit of Saudi King Salman Bin Abdulaziz to the country, Jordan Chamber of Commerce will inaugurate a permanent office of the Saudi-Jordanian business coordination council at the chamber’s headquarters to further strengthen business relations between the two countries. 

In April 2016, in the Saudi capital city of Riyadh, His Majesty King Abdullah and the King of Saudi Arabia witnessed the signing of the minutes, stipulating the establishment of the council; a step deemed necessary to pave the way for further business cooperation.  

The council to be set up, in cooperation with the Saudi chambers of commerce, will work to increase commercial exchange, facilitate the flow of goods and the movement of people between both countries, the chamber’s President Nael Kabariti said on Saturday.

The office will extend services and information to Jordanian and Saudi businesspeople and offer recommendations on the best ways to deal with any obstacles that may hinder the joint flow of trade, according to the Jordan News agency, Petra.  

It will also facilitate procedures for Jordanian exporters and truck drivers, the chamber’s president indicated.

Kabariti expressed hope that the upcoming visit will lead to the signing of several fruitful agreements and partnerships between the private sectors of the two countries. 

The opening of the council’s office is one of several economic activities that the chamber will hold on March 27, during the visit of the Saudi Monarch to the Kingdom.  

 

Saudi investments in the Kingdom exceed $10 billion, and Saudi Arabia is one of the country’s most important commercial partners.

British unemployment hits 41-year low

By - Mar 15,2017 - Last updated at Mar 15,2017

Morning commuters walk across London Bridge with Tower Bridge in the background into the city of London on March 2 (AFP photo)

LONDON — Britain's unemployment rate has struck the lowest level for more than 41 years, official data showed on Wednesday as the country prepares to trigger its exit from the EU.

However a drop in the jobless rate comes alongside news of slowing wages growth.

Unemployment for the quarter ending January 31 fell to 4.7 per cent from a rate of 4.8 per cent in the final three months of 2016, the Office for National Statistics said in a statement.

"The unemployment rate dropped to 4.7 per cent in the three months to January 2017... It has not been lower since June to August 1975," the ONS said.

Analysts' consensus forecast had been for an unchanged rate of 4.8 per cent, which would have kept unemployment at an 11-year low point.

"The labour market is currently seeing decent improvement, reflecting the economy's resilience through the second half of 2016," Howard Archer, chief UK economist at IHS Markit, said in reaction to Wednesday's data.

"However, markedly slowing earnings growth reinforces the squeeze on consumers coming from rising inflation — and this is likely to increasingly weigh down increasingly on economic activity."

It comes as British Prime Minister Theresa May intends on starting the EU withdrawal process by the end of March.

Parliament this week approved a bill empowering the government to trigger Article 50 of the EU's Lisbon Treaty, starting a two-year countdown to Brexit.

"The labour market has been helped by the economy's extended resilience since June's Brexit vote, but mounting signs that consumers are starting to limit their spending fuels belief that 2017 will become increasingly difficult for the economy and for the jobs market," said Archer. 

"The imminent triggering of Article 50 will bring likely difficult negotiations with the EU... Consequently, we see unemployment starting to edge up before too long and we suspect that the unemployment could reach 5.1 per cent by the end of 2017," he added.

The Bank of England (BoE) will be mindful of the mixed unemployment data ahead of its latest monetary policy announcements due Thursday.

Analysts widely expect the BoE to keep its main interest rate at a record-low 0.25 per cent and make no changes to its cash-stimulus programme aimed at supporting the UK economy during the Brexit process.

"The wage growth element is key for the Bank of England as weaker wage growth, which increased by only 2.2 per cent year-on-year in January, could reduce pressures on the BoE to raise interest rates," said Kathleen Brooks, research director at City Index.

 

Across the Atlantic, the Federal Reserve is all but certain to announce a US interest rate hike Wednesday.

IMF’s Lagarde warns G-20 to avoid ‘self-inflicted’ wounds

By - Mar 14,2017 - Last updated at Mar 14,2017

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde gestures during an interview with Reuters in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on February 13 (Reuters photo)

WASHINGTON — IMF chief Christine Lagarde on Tuesday warned the world’s largest economies to avoid damaging the incipient global recovery with policies that would derail trade and immigration.

In a message to the Group of 20 finance ministers ahead of their meeting this week, Lagarde said the world economy is on the road to recovery, “But it would be a mistake to assume that it will automatically return” to good health.

“Above all, we should collectively avoid self-inflicted injuries,” Lagarde said in a blog post. “This requires steering clear of policies that would seriously undermine trade, migration, capital flows, and the sharing of technologies across borders.”

The message seemed targeted primarily at US President Donald Trump, who in his first days in office has imposed controversial immigration restrictions, and threatened unilateral trade sanctions against the closest US trading partners, as well as slamming multilateral trade deals and organisations.

“Such measures would hurt the productivity, incomes, and living standards of all citizens,” Lagarde said.

The IMF in January forecast a pickup in global growth to 3.4 per cent this year and 3.6 per cent in 2018, compared to 3.1 per cent last year. This is partly due to expectations of more growth-friendly policies in the United States, as well as better outlook for the euro area, the United Kingdom and Japan.

Lagarde said “the recent strengthening of activity suggests that the world economy may finally snap out of its multi-year convalescence”.

However, she cautioned, “maintaining the positive growth momentum continues to require supportive macroeconomic policies”, since demand is still weak and inflation not reliably back to the desired target in many advanced economies.

The United States has fewer problems with demand, and Lagarde repeated that plans for increased infrastructure investment could help boost US growth, along with “efficiency-enhancing corporate tax reform, and improvements in education”, and that in turn would be good for the global economy.

 

G-20 finance ministers and central bankers meet in Baden-Baden, Germany on Friday and Saturday. It will be the first time US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin participates in the gathering.

Intel to buy Israeli driverless car-tech firm Mobileye for $15b

By - Mar 13,2017 - Last updated at Mar 13,2017

The logo of Intel, the world's largest chipmaker, is seen at their offices in occupied Jerusalem, April 20, 2016 (Reuters file photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — US chipmaker Intel agreed to buy Israeli driverless car-technology firm Mobileye for $15.3 billion on Monday, positioning itself for a dominant role in the fast-moving autonomous-driving sector.

The $63.54-per-share cash deal marks the largest purchase of a company solely focused on the self-driving sector and could significantly alter the competitive landscape among key technology and systems suppliers, including chipmakers Nvidia Corp and Qualcomm Inc. and systems integrator Delphi Automotive Plc.

Mobileye's shares jumped 30 per cent to $61.3 in late morning US trading, while Intel's shares were down 2 per cent. Shares of Delphi, which has partnerships with both companies, were up 3 per cent.

The deal underscores the expanding alliances between automakers and their suppliers as they race to develop self-driving cars, a concept that once seemed a science-fiction dream but is drawing closer to reality.

While Intel is known for hardware chips and Mobileye for collision detection and mapping software, the merger promises to create an expanded portfolio of technologies needed for driverless vehicles. It also strengthens Intel's position in the sector against rival chipmakers Nvidia and Qualcomm.

The Intel-Mobileye portfolio includes cameras, sensor chips, in-car networking, roadway mapping, machine learning, cloud software and data fusion and management.

"It's an area where [Intel] has had very little presence — the automotive market, and so this is a tremendous opportunity for them to get into a market that has significant growth opportunities," said Betsy Van Hees, an analyst at Loop Capital Markets.

"Mobileye's technology is very critical... The price seems fair," she added.

 

The offer represents a premium of about 33 per cent to Mobileye's closing price of $47 on Friday.

RGH, Yasu Project venture into digital animation cooperation

By - Mar 13,2017 - Last updated at Mar 13,2017

Amman — Rubicon Group Holding (RGH), represented by its CEO Randa S. Ayoubi and Yasu-Project, a Japanese company,  represented by its chairman Inoue Yasuharu, signed a cooperation agreement on Monday, paving the way for the two business entities to work together on several projects.

The two companies will start their cooperation with the production of a full feature animation movie, celebrating the legacy of the football game, to be produced and developed by RGH. “We are very excited to see this collaboration between RGH and Yasu-Project to bring about Japan’s beauty in art and culture through RGH’s production dynamics,” Yasuharu said in remarks following the signing of the agreement.

The signing of a final agreement, including all details, is slated for April, according to a statement of RGH, global entertainment company headquartered in Amman. 

Egypt’s capital set to grow by half a million in 2017

By - Mar 12,2017 - Last updated at Mar 12,2017

A general view of a street in downtown Cairo, Egypt, on Thursday (Reuters photo)

CAIRO — Cairo’s population is set to grow by 500,000 this year, more than any other city in the world, adding to the pressure on an Egyptian economy struggling to recover from six years of political turmoil. 

Greater Cairo, a metropolitan area including Cairo and parts of the Giza and Qalyubia provinces, is home to some 22.8 million people and will gain another half a million in 2017, a Euromonitor International report released last week shows.

That represents a quarter of Egypt’s 92 million. The national natural population growth of 2.4 per cent per year is double the average of other developing countries, said Mohamed Abdelgalil, adviser to official statistics agency CAPMAS.

Stinging poverty in southern Egypt leads many families to have several children in the hope they can become sources of income. Those children eventually migrate to larger cities for job opportunities scarce in their hometowns. 

“In rural areas, and in the south in particular, poor families have many children because they see these children as a safety net,” Maysa Shawky, the head of the National Population Council, told Reuters in an interview.

“Also, many of them have daughters until they have sons,” she added. “They want to produce breadwinners — instead of hiring a worker, they could have their children help them.”

Shawky said awareness campaigns at universities and schools have begun as part of a national population strategy. 

 

New capital 

 

Internal migration is one of the main causes of overpopulation in Cairo. Egypt lists 351 slums as “unsafe”, most of them in the sprawling capital where the poorest have built ramshackle homes that lack basic amenities such as mains sewage and water. Some 850,000 people are believed to live in such dangerous slums. 

“For the average citizen to not be affected by hikes in the prices of goods and services, the economic growth rate must be double the natural population increase rate,” Abdelgalil said. 

Egypt’s economic growth was 4.3 per cent in 2015-2016 — not enough to achieve that. The IMF expects it to be about 4 per cent this year. 

A new administrative capital, announced in March 2015, is intended partly to reduce the crowding in Cairo. Some 45km to the east, it will be home to government ministries, housing and an airport. 

People will start moving to the as yet-unnamed new city in 2018, said Khaled Abbas, assistant to the housing minister for technical affairs. Work on 17,000-18,000 residential units is nearing completion and they will be put up for sale in April.

 

“Egypt’s population is expected to reach 160-180 million in 40 years. Where will all these people go?” said Abbas. “We’re also working on developing areas in northern and southern Egypt.”

CPI rises by 4.6% in February

By - Mar 12,2017 - Last updated at Mar 12,2017

AMMAN — The consumer price index (CPI) rose by 4.6 per cent in February 2017 compared to the same month last year, according to the Department of Statistics (DoS).

The figure was the outcome of an increase in the prices of some commodity groups coupled with a drop in the prices of others. Among the groups which contributed to the increase were transport, vegetables, as well as dry and canned legumes.

These rose by 18 per cent and 27 per cent, respectively. Also, tobacco and cigarettes and health care contributed to the increase as their prices went up by 11 per cent, each. Moreover, rentals went up by 2 per cent.

The groups whose prices dropped were meat and poultry by 5 per cent, fruits and nuts by 10 per cent, garments by 4 per cent and dairy products and table eggs by 2 per cent, according to the DoS.

The CPI is a measure of the average change over time in the prices paid by urban consumers for a market basket of consumer goods and services.

Trade war will only bring ‘pain’ — China

By - Mar 11,2017 - Last updated at Mar 11,2017

Chinese Minister of Commerce Zhong Shan speaks during a National People's Congress press conference in Beijing on Saturday (AFP photo)

BEIJING — China on Saturday warned the US against launching a trade war, saying that both countries would suffer if US President Donald Trump follows through on his threats.

The billionaire politician has repeatedly accused China of using unfair trade policies to steal jobs from the US, threatening to retaliate with massive tariffs unless Beijing changes tack.

"A trade war is not in the interest of the two countries and the two peoples," China's Minister of Commerce Zhong Shan told reporters on the sidelines of the country's annual political gathering in Beijing.

"It's fair to say trade war will only cause pain without gains."

He said that US exports to China have increased by an average of about 11 per cent per year over the last decade, while Chinese exports have only increased by 6.6 per cent over the same period, noting that the Asian giant is also a major importer of American goods like soybeans, cars and Boeing airplanes.

"This clearly shows that China and America are very important to each other," he added.

On Thursday, Zhong's American counterpart Wilbur Ross said that the trade conflict with China and other countries has already been on for decades, but the US is just now beginning to fight back.

China is the world's biggest trader in goods. It accounts for about $350 billion of the US trade deficit, about half the total.

The warning was the second time this week that China has railed against a possible trade war, amid growing indications that the Trump administration is serious about pursuing a protectionist agenda.

Last week the United States Trade Representative sent a letter to Congress saying that Americans are not directly subject to rulings by the World Trade Organisation, which Washington joined when it was founded in 1995.

 

The assertion provoked a warning from China's commerce ministry that attempts to ignore the organisation's rules could lead to "a repetition of the trade war of the 1930s".

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