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China’s premier unveils more measures to tackle corruption

By - Feb 24,2014 - Last updated at Feb 24,2014

BEIJING — The Chinese government will decentralise authority, be more transparent and adopt a “zero tolerance” attitude to corruption this year as it deepens its fight against graft, reported state media, citing Premier Li Keqiang.

President Xi Jinping has launched a sweeping crackdown on corruption since taking power, warning that the problem is a threat to the Communist Party’s very survival.

The latest measures were laid out in a speech by Li on February 11, in a meeting on tackling corruption, but only published by state news agency Xinhua late on Sunday.

Li criticised the over-concentration of power by the central government and urged the institution of an open government “as the most effective way to accept supervision”.

“When the government controls too much, directly intervenes in micro-economic activities, it not only influences the ability of the market to play a decisive role in the allocation of resources, it also increases transaction costs and makes it easy for corruption to breed,” Li said.    

In 2013, the government recouped 400 billion yuan ($65.67 billion) during its investigations into corruption, Li pointed out. More than 40,000 officials received disciplinary violations and 10,000 people have been fired, he indicated. 

According to Li, the government will have a “zero tolerance” approach to “corrupt elements” within the government.

“Regardless of who is involved, they must be investigated to the end, they must not be tolerated,” Li stressed.

Li’s speech comes as the investigation into China’s powerful ex-domestic security chief, Zhou Yongkang, has been gaining traction, with a number of close allies coming under scrutiny.  

Zhou was a member of the party’s Politburo Standing Committee — the apex of power — and held the immensely powerful post of security tsar until he retired in 2012. The government has yet to officially announce an investigation into him.    

Li said the government would open its budget and all its accounts further and urged top cadres to “strengthen constraints on their relatives and staff”.

Though the government has professed greater transparency in combating corruption, it has detained dozens of activists who have urged officials to disclose their assets, last month jailing one of those people, the prominent dissident Xu Zhiyong. 

The party has also shown no sign of wanting to set up an independent body to fight corruption, insisting that its internal mechanisms are sufficient. 

Separately, wealthy Chinese are likely to buy fewer luxury goods again this year after the steepest cut-back on spending in at least five years, changing the game for high-end retailers like Louis Vuitton which have staked their growth on China.

Overall spending by wealthy Chinese fell by 15 per cent in 2013, the third consecutive year of decline, according to a survey by the Hurun Report. Spending on gifts in particular also declined by a quarter.

The drop coincides with a government crackdown on corruption and gifting, as well as an a growing penchant for travelling and shopping overseas to circumvent Chinese consumption taxes on luxury goods as high as 40 per cent.

The shrinking ranks of wealthy residents in China has also reduced luxury spending. One in three so-called high net worth individuals have already left, or are planning to leave, the country, the report showed, mostly to seek better opportunities for their children’s education.

Chinese are the top consumers of luxury goods globally. A slowdown in their spending, or a change in shopping habits, would hurt high-end retailers already struggling with a weaker Chinese economy and a more sophisticated clientele that has moved away from logo-branded goods.

Luxury group Richemont, the maker of high-end IWC watches and Cartier jewellery, reported last month slower-than-expected sales growth in the third quarter, largely due to weaker Asian demand. 

LVMH, the world’s biggest luxury goods group, has also seen sales growth slow last year as Chinese demand cooled, prompting the company, and brands from rival Kering SA to offer goods with more discreet logos and in expensive materials.

“In terms of traditional luxury — leathers, accessories, watches — this year is going to be flat if not a little bit down,” Hurun Report founder and chief researcher Rupert Hoogewerf told Reuters.

“For luxuries like tea, healthcare, even education, we are still looking at a booming market,” he said.  

The crackdown on conspicuous spending, which began in 2012, is part of a vow made by Jinping to be tougher on graft. He has focused in particular on gifts made to government officials often in exchange for preferential treatment or contracts.

As a result, many wealthy Chinese now buy luxury goods for themselves, rather than as gifts, Hoogewerf indicated.

Products by Hermes, Chanel, LVMH’s Louis Vuitton brand, Apple Inc. and Gucci remained among the most sought-after brands for gifting, the survey showed.

Less popular were Bulgari — another LVMH brand — Salvatore Ferragamo, Tiffany and Co. and the fiery baijiu liquor made by Chinese firm Kweichow Moutai Co. Ltd., once the top tipple of Communist Party officials.

Affluent Chinese often shop online for the best price globally. They have also become more confident about their fashion choices, mixing high-street clothing and accessories with branded goods.

“There is a much savvier consumer out there,” Hoogewerf said. “There will be more purchasing done overseas than in China. For a brand that’s global it’s fine.”

Over two-thirds of luxury spending by mainland Chinese was overseas in 2013, a factor that contributed to the United States overtaking China as the world’s fastest growing luxury market, according to a study by consultancy firm Bain & company released in December.

China’s superrich are also avid collectors — 70 per cent of wealthy Chinese rank collecting as a hobby — but what they are coveting is changing.

Ancient calligraphy last year surpassed luxury watches as the most-collected, knocking watches out of the No. 1 spot for the first time in five years, the Hurun report showed, which could mean revenue losses for top watch makers but a boon for auctioneers.

Patek Philippe remained the most popular watch brand for collectors for the seventh year running while Christie’s was the top ranked foreign auction house, the report showed.

Besides spending less at home, more rich Chinese are leaving the country. The number of wealthy Chinese who have emigrated or are planning to do so rose to 64 per cent from 60 per cent in the previous year, the survey pointed out.

Most of those leaving, or planning to, are looking for permanent residency overseas — the United States, Europe and Canada are top picks. Very few want to give up their nationality, perhaps because their outlook for China is improving.

The report showed millionaires’ confidence in China’s economy rose for the first time in five years but those who felt “extremely confident” still accounted for only 31 per cent of those surveyed.

The survey’s results are based on responses from 393 Chinese millionaires, or those with personal wealth of at least 10 million yuan ($1.65 million). The Hurun Research Institute has conducted the survey for the past 10 years.

Jordan’s oil bill drops considerably

By - Feb 23,2014 - Last updated at Feb 23,2014

AMMAN –– Jordan’s oil imports went down considerably in 2013 compared with the year before, official data showed Sunday. 

According to the Department of Statistics (DoS) report on the Kingdom’s foreign trade, Jordan imported oil worth JD3.91 billion last year, down by JD545 million or 12 per cent from the JD4.45 billion in 2012. 

The drop in the oil bill was reflected on Jordan’s imports from Saudi Arabia, the Kingdom’s major oil supplier, as the data showed that imports from the Gulf country went down by nearly JD616 million in 2013 to JD2.85 billion from JD3.46 billion in 2012. 

However, the DoS report indicated that Jordanian exports to Saudi Arabia in 2013 increased by around JD127 million to over JD651 million compared to JD523 million the year before. 

Iraq remained the biggest Arab market for national exports, which also went up to JD883 million last year from JD716 million in 2012. 

Imports from Iraq also increased reaching JD269 million last year compared to JD230 million in 2012. 

Exports to crisis-hit Syria dropped by nearly one third, according to the statistics, which showed that Jordanian products exported to Syrian market stood at around JD95 million last year, while in 2012 they reached over JD140 million. 

Imports from Syria increased to JD184 million from JD171 million. 

According to the DoS report, national exports rose to 4.8 billion in 2013, 1.2 per cent higher than the JD4.7 billion recorded the year before. 

Imports rose by 5.4 per cent to JD15.5 billion last year compared with JD14.7 billion in 2012.

Subsequently, the trade deficit widened by 8.5 per cent last year to JD9.9 billion at current prices compared with JD9.1 billion in deficit recorded in 2012.

The DoS noted that the coverage ratio of total exports to imports has declined by 1.8 percentage points to 36.2 per cent from 38.1 per cent.

Topping the list of imports were petroleum products, cars/bikes and their spare parts, steel, grains, equipment and tools, and electrical appliances. 

Major exports were garment, potash, vegetables and fruits, pharmaceuticals and fertilisers. 

G-20 aspires to faster economic growth but roadmap sketchy

By - Feb 23,2014 - Last updated at Feb 23,2014

SYDNEY — The world’s top economies have embraced a goal of generating more than $2 trillion in additional output over five years while creating tens of million of new jobs, signalling optimism that the worst of crisis-era austerity was behind them.

The final communique from the two-day meeting of Group 20 (G-20) finance ministers and central bankers in Sydney said they would take concrete action to increase investment and employment, among other reforms. The group accounts for around 85 per cent of the global economy.

“We will develop ambitious but realistic policies with the aim to lift our collective gross domestic product by more than 2 per cent above the trajectory implied by current policies over the coming 5 years,” the G-20 statement said. 

Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey, who hosted the meeting, sold the plan as a new day for cooperation in the G-20.

“We are putting a number to it for the first time — putting a real number to what we are trying to achieve,” Hockey told a news conference. “We want to add over $2 trillion more in economic activity and tens of millions of new jobs.”

The targeted acceleration would boost global output by  more than the world’s eight largest economy Russia produces in a year.

The deal was also something of a feather in the cap of Hockey, who spearheaded the push for growth in the face of some scepticism, notably from Germany.

“What growth rates can be achieved is a result of a very complicated process,” Germany’s Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said after the meeting. “The results of this process cannot be guaranteed by politicians.”

Australia is acting as president of the G-20 this year, following Russia in 2013 and ahead of Turkey next year.

While shifting the focus to reforms that would lift and sustain global growth in years to come, the group acknowledged that monetary policy would need to “remain accommodative in many advanced economies and should normalise in due course”.

The growth plan borrows wholesale from an International Monetary Fund (IMF) paper prepared for the Sydney meeting, which estimated that structural reforms would raise world economic output by about 0.5 per cent per year over the next five years, boosting global output by $2.25 trillion.

The IMF has forecast global growth of 3.75 per cent for this year and 4 per cent in 2015.

As yet there was no roadmap on how nations intend to get there or repercussions if they never arrive. The aim was to come up with the goal now, then have each country develop an action plan and a growth strategy for delivery at a November summit of G-20 leaders in Brisbane.

“Each country will bring its own plan for economic growth,” said Hockey. “Each country has to do the heavy lifting.”

Agreeing on any goal is a step forward for the group that has failed in the past to agree on fiscal and current account targets. And it was a sea change from recent meetings where the debate was still on where their focus should lie: On growth or budget austerity. 

Financial markets had been wary of the possibility of friction between advanced and emerging economies, but nothing suggested the meeting would cause ripples on Monday.

“The text of the communique indicates that the standard US line that what is good for the core of the world economy is good for all seems to have won out,” said Huw McKay, a senior economist at Westpac, noting there was nothing that could be taken as “inflammatory” about recent volatility in markets.

There was a nod to concerns by emerging nations that the  Federal Reserve (Fed) consider the impact of its policy tapering, which has led to bouts of capital flight from some of the more vulnerable markets.

“All our central banks maintain their commitment that monetary policy settings will continue to be carefully calibrated and clearly communicated, in the context of ongoing exchange of information and being mindful of impacts on the global economy,” the communique read.

There was never much expectation the Fed would consider actually slowing the pace of tapering, but its emerging peers had at least hoped for more cooperation on policy.

Hockey said there had been honest discussions among members on the impact of tapering and that newly installed Fed Chair Janet Yellen was “hugely impressive” when dealing with them.

The G-20 also stated that it “deeply regrets” that progress on giving emerging nations more say in the IMF had stalled.

Major emerging powers including India, China, Brazil and Russia, have long lobbied for increased voting power in the IMF to reflect their growing share of the world economy, but the changes agreed in 2010 have been blocked by the US Congress.

The G-20 urged the United States to ratify the reforms before the next meeting of policy makers in April.   

 The group is also progressing with plans to “make sure multinational companies pay their fair share”, said US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew. 

Big budget deficits and revelations that companies such as Apple and Google use structures that lawmakers have labelled “contrived” to avoid billions of dollars in taxes, have led to growing calls to close corporate tax loopholes. The companies say they follow the existing tax rules.

Jordanian business mission to head to Indonesia Monday

By - Feb 22,2014 - Last updated at Feb 22,2014

AMMAN –– A delegation of Jordanian businesspeople and representatives of different economic sectors will pay a visit to Indonesia on Monday in an attempt to raise commercial exchange between the two countries. Jordan Chamber of Commerce (JCC) President Nael Kabariti underlined the Kingdom’s commitment to boost economic cooperation with the Asian country. The business delegation will include representatives from the sectors of trade, tourism, transport, construction, automobile, renewable energy, food, olive oil, IT and healthcare among other fields, according to Kabariti. 

Murad discusses business ties with British, Hungarian envoys

By - Feb 22,2014 - Last updated at Feb 22,2014

AMMAN –– President of the Amman Chamber of Commerce (ACC) Issa Murad on Saturday met with British Ambassador in Amman Peter Millett and discussed bilateral cooperation and ways to boost commercial exchange between the two countries. Murad called on the UK embassy to arrange a business trip for Jordanian businesspeople as a means to  explore investment opportunities. He noted that the chamber has established a special unit for developing international business relations. On Friday, the ACC head met with Hungarian Ambassador to Jordan Bela Jungbert and discussed means to activate joint agreements and establish investment partnerships. Murad described trade volumes between the two countries as modest. 

Jordan, Iraq preparing to tender $18b oil pipeline

By - Feb 22,2014 - Last updated at Feb 22,2014

AMMAN — Work to construct a $18 billion oil pipeline from Iraq’s Basra to Jordan’s port city of Aqaba may start soon, as officials from both coutries are meeting with international firms interested in the mega-project, an official said Saturday. 

Jordan and Iraq are speeding up their measures and efforts to construct the pipeline, a senior official at the Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority (ASEZA) told The Jordan Times.

The official, who preferred to remain unnamed,  said that Jordanian and Iraqi officials held meetings last week in Aqaba with several international companies that showed interest in carrying out the scheme, adding that work on the project is set to begin soon. 

Once completed –– the pipeline is projected to export 2.25 million barrels of oil per day through the Kingdom. It would generate between $2 billion and $3 billion a year in revenues for the Kingdom, according to estimates of Iraqi and Jordanian officials.

The source said that Jordanian and Iraqi officials had agreed to prepare copies of the tenders from the Iraqi side.

ASEZA Chief Commissioner Kamel Mahadin, who attended the meeting, said it is one of the mega-projects that would further enhance economic ties between Jordan and Iraq. 

“Iraq will provide Jordan with oil at preferential prices,” Mahadin added.
In addition to securing the Kingdom’s oil needs, 120,000-150,000 barrels a day, the 1,700 kilometre-long pipeline is expected to create around 10,000 jobs in Iraq and over 3,000 opportunities for Jordanian engineers and workers. 

The double pipeline may also include extending a sub-pipeline to Jordan’s sole refinery in Zarqa.

Last week meetings came just days before the launching of the Basra investment forum that will take place in Amman between February 27 and 28, and will focus on the Basra-Aqaba oil pipeline project. 

G-20 host Australia urges central banks to avoid ‘surprises’

By - Feb 22,2014 - Last updated at Feb 22,2014

SYDNEY –– Australia on Saturday called for better advance notice of policy changes by central banks to avoid shockwaves for emerging economies, at a meeting of G-20 finance ministers where rifts over US monetary policy loomed large.

Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey said he wants the summit to stay focused on ways to stimulate growth and create jobs in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, adding he was confident of tangible results.

“I must say there is tremendous goodwill in all the meetings I have attended,” he told reporters just before Saturday’s meetings in Sydney.

But the fallout being felt by some emerging economies, which have suffered sharp capital outflows and losses to their currencies they blame on the Federal Reserve easing back its mammoth stimulus programme, remains a lightning rod issue.

Countries led by Indonesia and South Africa, which is not attending the Sydney meeting, along with Mexico and Brazil have called on the US to provide more clarity on its wind-back and better communication to subdue the impacts on emerging markets.

Speaking Friday, US Treasury chief Jacob Lew said he was monitoring global volatility and was encouraged that some economies had taken action to get their houses in order.

“We’re seeing a substantial differentiation in the marketplace in the economies that have made those decisions and in the economies that haven’t,” he said.

“Emerging markets need to take steps of their own to get their fiscal house in order and put structural reforms in place.” 

‘Reasonable warning’ 

Hockey agrees that countries must make their own reforms to bolster their economies, but said central banks in the world’s most advanced nations should give each other better notice of policy changes to avoid market turbulence. 

“I think if there is a policy of no surprises in relation to monetary policy activity and that central banks around the world have reasonable warning of what may be events that create market volatility, I think that’s not unreasonable,” he said.

“I think that’s what central bank governors are aiming for.”

Bilateral meetings were held Saturday morning ahead of a session on the global economy in which delegates discussed the latest reports from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank.

The OECD warned Friday that declining global productivity would usher in a new and extended era of low growth unless reforms are accelerated.

These include freeing up labour markets, encouraging infrastructure investment and undertaking the structural reforms needed to boost domestic demand.

Hockey has been pushing his fellow ministers to agree to faster global growth targets, and a draft of the communique due to be issued Sunday, cited by Bloomberg, said they would agree on “concrete measures” to achieve this.

It said collective gross domestic product could be raised by “at least 2 per cent” above current projections over the next five years.

This could not be confirmed, but a G-20 official said ministers were likely to adopt a global growth goal, although targets for individual countries are not expected.

OECD data released Thursday showed growth in advanced economies slowed down slightly in 2013 to 1.3 per cent from 1.5 per cent in 2012.

Hockey said he was confident the meeting would provide results.

“All the finance ministers and central bank governors I have spoken to understand that whilst the globe is facing some challenges, that there is some level of international market volatility,” he said.

“Through greater cooperation, realistic goals, and importantly a tangible process for achieving those goals, we can have very real outcomes this weekend.”

But he admitted that some of his counterparts –– notably Germany –– were reluctant to put their names to a global economic growth target.

“I understand that there is some reluctance from some to have a goal or a target or an ambition, but we need to reach high to deliver more,” he said.

“There needs to be a tangible plan presented by each jurisdiction that helps to achieve our collective goal. “

Honda, lagging rivals, considers opening board to foreigners

Feb 22,2014 - Last updated at Feb 22,2014

TOKYO –– Honda Motor Co. is considering diversifying its all-Japanese, all-male board by appointing a foreigner and could move as early as Monday, when it unveils its next slate of directors, sources close to the company said.

“I think we have to think quite seriously, and we are thinking very, very seriously,” Honda Executive Vice President Tetsuo Iwamura told Reuters when asked about naming a non-Japanese to the board. He was speaking on the sidelines of a plant opening in Celaya, Mexico, on Friday.

Japan’s third biggest carmaker, long considered a pioneer of Japanese globalisation with the likes of Sony Corp., now lags far behind Toyota Motor Corp. and Nissan Motor in building diversity in its executive ranks.

Japan’s big companies are under pressure to bring in outsiders to bolster governance, risk management and global perspective, having traditionally chosen board members from senior male managers who had spent their careers at the company.

Honda started assembling cars in the United States in 1982 — a Japanese first — and now makes and sells about 80 per cent of its vehicles overseas.

It has nevertheless resisted bringing foreigners into the upper echelons of its Tokyo headquarters, sources close to the company said, believing its largely autonomous regional operations, that include locally hired managers, have made it global enough.

That attitude now appears to be changing as it seeks faster growth and puts more emphasis on emerging markets.

The automaker recently consulted a major Japanese bank about diversifying its management board, an individual with knowledge of the matter said.

Sources close to Honda also said the company was considering appointing a foreigner to the board within the next several years and did not rule out that it could name one among board members and executives to be announced on Monday for the new financial year that starts in April. They added, however, that the company was in no hurry to diversify.

The company declined to comment on executive changes.

Lack of diversity 

Honda has already appointed non-Japanese to senior posts at regional subsidiaries. At American Honda Motor, John Mendel, formerly with Ford Motor Co. and Mazda Motor Corp., is executive vice president overseeing sales, and Mike Accavitti, previously with Chrysler, is senior vice president of auto operations.

Iwamura, their boss, serves as president and chief executive of American Honda.

It was unclear whether Honda was looking at potential foreign board candidates from inside or outside the company.

Honda’s relative lack of diversity at the top contrasts with Japan’s other big automakers.

Nissan, along with French partner Renault SA, is run by French-Lebanese Carlos Ghosn, while 15 of its 58 directors and auditors are non-Japanese and one is a woman.

Toyota, seen as a stalwart of traditional Japanese management, last year appointed American Mark Hogan, a former General Motors Co. executive, to its board. Of its 68 directors and auditors, seven are foreign and one is a woman.

Honda last year adopted an ambitious goal to expand global sales to six million cars annually by the year to March 2017, a 50 per cent jump from last year’s total.

Some executives see a need to work more closely across regions — including joint procurement of parts and materials — to boost efficiency, the sources said.

Honda is also aiming to raise the share of emerging markets in total sales and to revamp its vehicle development process, involving engineers across regions from the earliest stages.

IMF urges stronger growth efforts from G-20 economies

By - Feb 20,2014 - Last updated at Feb 20,2014

WASHINGTON — The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Wednesday called for the Group of 20 (G-20) to boost growth, warning of risks to the global economy, from deflation in Europe to high volatility in emerging economies.

According to the IMF,  advanced economies, which include most of the G-20, are still leading a pickup in economic growth overall around the world.

But it said more coordinated work is needed to keep output expanding and boost demand, as the world economy still struggles to leave behind the financial crisis that began in 2008.

“The recovery has been disappointing, with G-20 output still below longer-term trend,” the IMF added in a report ahead of a meeting of G-20 finance ministers and central bankers in Sydney beginning Saturday.

“Joint action is needed to boost output and to lower global risks substantially through more balanced growth,” the report stressed.

Despite the eruption of more financial turmoil in emerging-market economies last month, the IMF stuck to its forecast of the world’s economy expanding 3.7 per cent this year, after a 3 per cent pace in 2013.

It said it was assuming that the volatility that has unnerved emerging economic powers like Indonesia, Brazil and South Africa would be short-lived.

But it suggested that also depended upon further reforms in those economies as well as more work to boost demand in advanced countries.

“The recovery is still weak and significant downside risks remain,” the fund said, citing capital outflows, higher interest rates, and sharp currency depreciation in emerging economies as a “key concern”.

It added that tighter financial conditions globally, led by the US Federal Reserve’s (Fed) “tapering” of its stimulus, could further undercut growth in a number of countries.

In addition, extremely low inflation in Europe has the IMF worried about how an unanticipated shock to the economy could push the region into deflation, reversing many of the gains of the past year.

“The euro area is turning the corner from recession to a weak recovery that remains uneven and fragile,” it said.

It added that advanced economies need to maintain easy-money policies to keep boosting demand and enable government to improve their fiscal balances.

Facing tighter monetary conditions, emerging economies meanwhile need to do more work on their own economic policies and management to build their credibility with markets.

The IMF added, too, that advanced economy central banks in the process of pulling back from crisis-era monetary polices, like the Fed with its huge stimulus programme, could do well to better coordinate and communicate their actions to reduce the shock effect on the rest of the world.

“There is scope for better cooperation” between central banks on reeling back stimulus programmes and tightening ultra-low interest rates, so-called unconventional monetary policies, the IMF concluded.

42 Jordanian companies to take part in Dubai’s 19th International Food Fair

By - Feb 20,2014 - Last updated at Feb 20,2014

AMMAN — Forty-two Jordanian companies will take part in the 19th International Food Fair, slated to be held in Dubai next week. The companies’ participation is organised by the Jordan Enterprise Development Corporation (JEDCO), according to a statement received by The Jordan Times. JEDCO Chief Executive Officer Yarub Qudah said the companies operate in the food sector, including meat, chocolate and yoghurt production, noting that more than 4,500 Arab and foreign countries will take part in the fair, which is considered one of the most important food exhibitions in the world. The trade volume between Jordan and the United Arab Emirates stood at JD697 million in the first eleven months of last year, of which  imports accounted for JD491 million. 

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