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		<title>Ikea  Attempts  To  Build  Public Case Against Russian  Corruption</title>
		<link>http://www.lanarkshirebusiness.com/ikea-attempts-to-build-public-case-against-russian-corruption.html </link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 02 Oct 2009 19:05:16 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[MOSCOW — Weeks before the  opening  of its flagship  store  outside Moscow in 2000, Ikea was approached by employees of a  urban  utility  firm . If the Swedish  retailer  wanted to have  power  for its grand opening, it had to pay a  bribe [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>MOSCOW — Weeks before the  opening  of its flagship  store  outside Moscow in 2000, Ikea was approached by employees of a  urban  utility  firm . If the Swedish  retailer  wanted to have  power  for its grand opening, it had to pay a  bribe .</p>
<p>Instead, Ikea rented diesel  generators  large enough to power a shopping  mall . The  engines  roared to life in a loud  rebuke  to the corrupt executives who thought they had the  retailer  cornered, and soon the utility turned on the  power . </p>
<p>As Ikea opened  markets  across Russia, and became one of the most  outspoken  Western corporate critics of Russian  corruption , renting  generators  to thwart  removing  from  power   companies  became standard practice. Ikea executives took great pride in their creative solution — renting  generators  “instead of putting ourselves into a squeeze,” as Christer Thordson, an Ikea board member and global  director  of legal affairs, put it in an interview. </p>
<p>But Russian  graft  may have proved more  stubborn  than Ikea. </p>
<p>The board of Ikea’s operating  firm , which is based in the Netherlands, has concluded that the Russian executive hired to  control  the generators was taking kickbacks from the rental  company  to substantially  inflate  the  price  of the service. Ikea said that such a  deception  could cost it about $196 million over two years. </p>
<p>Ikea canceled the contract and sought  redress  in Russian  local  court. But in rulings over the last two weeks, Ikea has lost another 5 million euros in damages that the judges awarded the  generator  rental  firm  for breach of  contract . </p>
<p>Ikea  disclosed  the  details  of its loss to The New York Times last month, saying that it hoped publicity might  compel  the Russian authorities to investigate. </p>
<p>“We have  encountered  something here that is outside the  scope  of what we normally encounter,” Mr. Thordson said, describing the  universal  retailer’s situation in Russia. “I have never experienced anything like this.” </p>
<p>The  leader  of the  engine  rental  company  and the former Ikea employee accused of accepting  bribes  denied any wrongdoing. </p>
<p>Russia is a maddeningly  opaque  but potentially  profitable   market  of 140 million people, whose incomes are  supported  by trickle-down oil  wealth . Many  global  businesses contend they must have a presence in Russia to  remain  competitive. On Thursday, Carrefour, the French hypermarket  chain , opened its second  store  in Russia. Wal-Mart, the world’s largest  retailer , has an advance  command  in Moscow but has yet to  sponsor .</p>
<p>Read other <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>current events news</a> and <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>business current event</a> on the <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>current events news</a>.</p>
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		<title>Medvedev  Laments  Russia&#8217;s Democracy,  Economy</title>
		<link>http://www.lanarkshirebusiness.com/medvedev-laments-russias-democracy-economy.html </link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Sep 2009 14:31:33 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[MOSCOW – Russia&#8217;s democracy is  unsteady , its economy is ailing and the country faces long-term  problems  with the health of its  citizens , President Dmitry Medvedev said in an article published Friday.
His  speech  were among the  bluntest   estimations  to date on national  flaws [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>MOSCOW – Russia&#8217;s democracy is  unsteady , its economy is ailing and the country faces long-term  problems  with the health of its  citizens , President Dmitry Medvedev said in an article published Friday.</p>
<p>His  speech  were among the  bluntest   estimations  to date on national  flaws  from the Kremlin, which is typically defensive about similar accusations.</p>
<p>Medvedev  carps  an economy that feeds  only  off Russia&#8217;s energy resources, a lack of  experienced  politics and  excessive  state  influence  in everyday life — all in an article that some  observers  said was an attempt to distance him from his mentor, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.</p>
<p>&#8220;An  incapable  economy, a semi-Soviet social  sphere , a weak democracy, negative demographic  vogues  and an unstable Caucasus. These are very big  troubles  even for a state like Russia,&#8221; Medvedev wrote in the piece, which ran in  several  leading newspapers and on the Kremlin Web site.</p>
<p>Analysts  admired  the article comes as Medvedev appears to be trying to map out new  strategies  independent of Putin, who is still viewed as Russia&#8217;s top  resolution  maker.</p>
<p>&#8220;This could be  interpreted  as a  sign  of difference in policy  plans  between Putin and Medvedev,&#8221; said Masha Lipman of the Moscow Carnegie Center.</p>
<p>Putin  issued  no comment on the  article  Friday.</p>
<p>Rumors of  divisions  between Putin and Medvedev — dubbed a &#8220;ruling tandem&#8221; — have  circulated  for months. They have appeared to take  various   accesses  to major  notes  such as policy toward Ukraine and  restructuring  the economy. Medvedev in the past has called for a more liberal  way  to politics in Russia and expressed  curiosity  in breaking up some of the large state-corporations consolidated during Putin&#8217;s tenure.</p>
<p>In the  article , Medvedev attacked Russia&#8217;s &#8220;humiliating  confidence  on raw materials&#8221; and called for more investment in high-tech industries and  enlarged   energy  efficiency.</p>
<p>Analysts also  said  the  article  exposed differences within ruling  blocs  on how to pull Russia out of the  current  economic crisis, which hit the country particularly hard, and on how to  improve  its crumbling infrastructure.</p>
<p>The Kremlin has  struggled  to deal with the  fallout  of the  turning point , which has sent unemployment  spiking , dried up  foreign  investment and battered Russian stock markets.</p>
<p> Backing  to politics, Russia must  struggle  for an &#8220;open,  pliant  and internally  total  &#8221; political system, Medvedev wrote.      </p>
<p>Rights activists say Putin as president led Russia down the  opposite   path by  destroying  the  election  of regional leaders, by squeezing smaller parties out of  existence  and allowing an air of impunity to gather over  charges  on Kremlin critics.</p>
<p>On Friday, Putin said at a  meeting  with Russian  experts  at his  residence  outside Moscow that he and Medvedev would not  compete  in the next  election  but would  discuss  what  way  to take. </p>
<p>In his  article , Medvedev condemned &#8220;centuries of  exhausting   corruption  &#8221; and widespread paternalistic  attitudes  in Russia that all  difficulties  should be the responsibility of the state. </p>
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		<title>Shipping  Industry  Fights  For  Survival</title>
		<link>http://www.lanarkshirebusiness.com/shipping-industry-fights-for-survival.html </link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Sep 2009 08:09:13 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A  brutal  downturn in  universal  trade has left  shippers  with idle capacity, billions in losses, and even facing  potential  bankruptcy
The Andromeda  towers  almost 40 meters (131 feet) above Hamburg&#8217;s Burchard  wharf , as countless feeder  boats  and container stacking  vehicles  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A  brutal  downturn in  universal  trade has left  shippers  with idle capacity, billions in losses, and even facing  potential  bankruptcy</p>
<p>The Andromeda  towers  almost 40 meters (131 feet) above Hamburg&#8217;s Burchard  wharf , as countless feeder  boats  and container stacking  vehicles   conflict  around it like  arthropods  around a bored elephant. Shipyard CMA CGN&#8217;s new flagship  vessel   ship , one of the world&#8217;s largest,  brags  a 100,000 horsepower engine, can carry 11,400  containers , is 363 meters long and was  came  from South Korea only a few months ago—at a  price  of $160 million (€111 million). </p>
<p>The Andromeda was built for an economic  hum  that never seemed to end, at a time when more and more  containers , bigger ships and ever-growing port  installations  were needed. </p>
<p>With each  passing  minute,  heave  bridges  hoist   holders  from the quay wall onto the deck of the 100,000-ton behemoth. When fully  burdened , the  craft  has  place  for  containers  arranged up to 18 wide, 86 long and 19 tall. In the end, the Andromeda is loaded to about two-thirds capacity. &#8220;That&#8217;s not bad,&#8221; says Captain Ivan Bozanic. &#8220;At least  nowadays .&#8221; </p>
<p>The  next  day, the CMA flagship  departures  Hamburg for China, the  point  of  basis  of its 68-day round-trip  voyage . The Andromeda  passes  exclusively between East Asia and northern Europe, a speedway of  global   trade . It  unchangeably  shuttles TV sets, mobile phones, T-shirts, and everything else China&#8217;s  factories  are churning out, toward the West, and returns to the East  loaded  with finished parts, machines and empty containers. </p>
<p>Until  not too long ago ,  navigation  was both the greatest beneficiary and  hammering  pulse of globalization, moving  property  around the world at an ever- increasing  pace. The industry has been  growing   rapidly  from year to year, ever since China became the world&#8217;s  plant . In 2008, roughly 500 million standard  holders  (TEU) were  transported  on the world&#8217;s oceans—twice as many as at the turn of the millennium. </p>
<p>Year after year, new and ever more  large   ships  were built, ports were  enlarged  and new scheduled service introduced. The  load  capacity of the world&#8217;s combined  container  fleet  increased  from 4 million TEUs in 2000 to 12.5 million today. </p>
<p>Many became  rich  in the years of the  hum ,  comprising  ship  owners , bankers and investors,  especially  in Hamburg. In the last  term , the northern German port city became the world&#8217;s  leading   center  for the financing and operation of new  ships . Germans own 35 percent of the  holder  ships in operation worldwide, and close to 60 shipping banks and financiers are headquartered in Hamburg. Hamburg-based Hapag-Lloyd became one of the world&#8217;s  chief  shipping line  operators . </p>
<p>Read about <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>current events news</a> and <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>business current event</a> on the <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>current events news</a>.</p>
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		<title>Why China&#8217;s  Chip  Industry Won&#8217;t  Seize  America&#8217;s</title>
		<link>http://www.lanarkshirebusiness.com/why-chinas-chip-industry-wont-seize-americas.html </link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Sep 2009 01:01:10 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Chinese  semiconductor   companies  have  produced  some design wins, but they are still  struggling  when it comes to any  real  silicon breakthroughs
In the 1980s, the U.S. was  wasted  with  scare  that Japan would become the  prominent  power in manufacturing and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Chinese  semiconductor   companies  have  produced  some design wins, but they are still  struggling  when it comes to any  real  silicon breakthroughs</p>
<p>In the 1980s, the U.S. was  wasted  with  scare  that Japan would become the  prominent  power in manufacturing and technology. Those  fears  never came to pass. Today the same  scares  are  pointed  China. The Middle Kingdom  begins  to be an even more daunting foe, with its  enormous  foreign reserves, fast-growing economy, oceans of scientists and engineers, and enormous subsidies to high-tech  companies . How real is the China threat? </p>
<p>There is no doubt that China is making  fast  strides in both infrastructure and technology, but U.S.  worry  of being overtaken by China appears to be  replaced . It takes more than money and might to  reach  innovation. This is what I learned when researching the  inflated   values  of engineering graduation rates in China and by analyzing its pharmaceutical industry. And this is one of the key findings in a new book titled  Chips  and Change: How Crisis Reshapes the Semiconductor Industry (MIT Press). Written by Professors Clair Brown and Greg Linden of the University of California at Berkeley, the book  proposes  a  wealth  of information about  semiconductor  development cycles as well as a fresh and informed look at some of China&#8217;s key technological  variants  in those realms. </p>
<p>A few years ago, China seemed to be on track to  rule  the global  semiconductor  industry in the same  method  it currently dominates the electronics manufacturing sector. In 2004, China&#8217;s most advanced  wafer  manufacturer, SMIC (SMI), went public on the Hong Kong and New York  market  exchanges. The next year, two Chinese  chip  design  companies , Actions (ACTS) and Vimicro (VIMC), had successful Nasdaq IPOs. Boosters of China&#8217;s chip industry said there were hundreds more  transistor  design  firms  waiting in the wings and many new Chinese chip manufacturers were also starting up. </p>
<p>Obstacle  to  Advance </p>
<p>Five years later, most Chinese  chip   firms  remain unprofitable. Why?  A number  of interlocking reasons that  propose   spins  as to why training lots of engineers and spending money to subsidize  firms  and build  conveniences  is not enough to  create  a successful industry. </p>
<p>Because of China&#8217;s poor  good name  for  defending  intellectual  property , multinationals have limited technology  remove  to China. For  instance ,  chip  giant Intel (INTC) is now building a  factory  in northeastern China but has long delayed locating its most cutting-edge fabrication facilities in China, even though this  increases  the  cost  of logistics to supply China-based electronics  plants , which are among the biggest  consumers  of Intel processors.</p>
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		<title>The  Card   Game</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Sep 2009 20:21:55 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Overspending on  Debit  Cards Is a  Benefit  for Banks
When Peter Means returned to  graduate  school after a career as a  civic  servant, he turned to a  charged  card to help him spend his money more  carefully . 
Banks and credit  unions  have [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Overspending on  Debit  Cards Is a  Benefit  for Banks</p>
<p>When Peter Means returned to  graduate  school after a career as a  civic  servant, he turned to a  charged  card to help him spend his money more  carefully . </p>
<p>Banks and credit  unions  have long pitched  charge  cards as a convenient and  prudent   way  to  buy . But a  increasing   amount  are now allowing consumers to exceed their balances — for a  price .</p>
<p>Banks market it as overdraft  protection , and the fees it  evolves  have become an important  source  of income for the banking industry at a time of big losses in other  actions . This year alone, banks are expected to bring in $27 billion by covering overdrafts on checking  reports , typically on  debit  card  buys  or checks that exceed a customer’s balance. </p>
<p>In fact, banks now make more covering overdrafts than they do on  penalty  fees from  credit  cards. </p>
<p>But because  consumers  use  debit  cards far more often than credit cards, a  waterfall  of fees can be set off quickly, often for people who are least able to  supply  it. Some banks further  increase  their revenue by manipulating the order of a  customer’s  transactions in a way that causes more of them to incur overdraft fees. </p>
<p>“Banks will let you overspend on your  charge  card in a  method  that is much, much more expensive than almost any  credit  card,” said Eric Halperin,  director  of the Washington office of the Center for Responsible Lending.</p>
<p>Debit has essentially changed into a stealth  form  of credit, according to critics like him, and three quarters of the nation’s largest banks, except for a few like Citigroup and INGDirect, automatically cover  charge  and A.T.M. overdrafts. </p>
<p>Although  regulators  have warned of  insults  since at least 2001, they have done little to  check  the explosive  increase  of overdraft fees. But as a  consumer  outcry grows, the  performance  is under attack, and regulators plan to introduce new protections before year’s end. The proposals do not seek to ban overdraft fees altogether. Rather, regulators and lawmakers say they hope to curb abuses and make the fees more fair.</p>
<p>The Federal Reserve is considering requiring banks to get  leave  from  users  before enrolling them in overdraft programs, so that  users  like Mr. Means are not caught unaware at the cash  list . </p>
<p>Representative Carolyn Maloney, Democrat of New York, would go even further by requiring warnings when a  charge  card  buying  will overdraw an account and by barring banks from  working  the most expensive purchases through accounts first. </p>
<p>Bankers say they are merely  charging  a fee for a convenience that  protects   users  from embarrassment, like having a  load  card rejected on a dinner date.</p>
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		<title>Coming Back, China Eases  Suggestion  To Ban  Removes  Of Some  Vital  Minerals</title>
		<link>http://www.lanarkshirebusiness.com/coming-back-china-eases-suggestion-to-ban-removes-of-some-vital-minerals.html </link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 20 Sep 2009 19:30:43 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[BEIJING — Chinese  authority  said on Thursday that they would not entirely  prohibit   removes  of two minerals  urgent  to manufacturing  crossbreed   automobiles , cell phones, large wind turbines, missiles and computer monitors, although they would tightly regulate production.
China  makes  more than 99 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BEIJING — Chinese  authority  said on Thursday that they would not entirely  prohibit   removes  of two minerals  urgent  to manufacturing  crossbreed   automobiles , cell phones, large wind turbines, missiles and computer monitors, although they would tightly regulate production.</p>
<p>China  makes  more than 99 percent of the world’s  supply  of terbium, above, and dysprosium, used in  manufacturing . </p>
<p>China  produces  more than 99 percent of the world’s  supply  of dysprosium and terbium, two  unusual  minerals  essential  to recent breakthroughs in high-technology industries.</p>
<p>A bureaucratic  reshuffling  in Beijing this year prompted a review of Chinese policy, and  rules  were drafted that would ban the export of these minerals. That incited  anger  and  perturbation  from Western governments and multinational  firms  that depend on Chinese supplies.</p>
<p>Wang Caifang,  representative  director general of China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, tried on Thursday to calm   concerns  that the draft rules would become the final policy, saying the regulatory review was still under way.</p>
<p>“China is very  answerable . We will not take  casual  decisions. All our  decisions  will be consistent with scientific  development ,” she said in a speech at the Minor Metals and Rare Earths 2009  conference  in Beijing. “China will not close its doors.”</p>
<p>During an interview after her  conversation , Ms. Wang said that China would continue to set an  annual  quota for the export of each mineral, adding, “I don’t think it will be zero.”</p>
<p>Dysprosium and terbium are two of the most  useful , scarcest and most sought-after minerals among the 17 rare-earth  constituents . China mines 93 percent of the world’s rare-earth minerals, which have a wide range of  obscure  but crucial industrial applications, like the manufacturing of ceramics and stainless steel.</p>
<p>A  copy  of the draft  rules , viewed Thursday, said China would  additional  reduce its combined  annual  export quotas for all rare-earth  constituents  to 35,000 tons a year, from 53,000 tons last year and almost 66,000 tons as recently as 2005.</p>
<p>The  sketch  policy also clearly stated that  removes  of dysprosium and terbium were to be  banned  along with exports of three other rare-earth  constituents : thulium, lutetium and yttrium. But Ms. Wang seemed to back away from that.</p>
<p>By cutting  exports , as well as putting a  general  tax of 42 percent on  exports  of dysprosium, terbium and some of the other rare-earth  constituents , Beijing officials have successfully required  manufacturers  industries  of advanced magnets, motors and other technologies to move their  plants  to China, where the minerals are readily  accessible . </p>
<p>Read more about <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>current events news</a> and <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>business current event</a> on the <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>current events news</a>.</p>
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		<title>Five  Worldwide   Business  Danger Zones</title>
		<link>http://www.lanarkshirebusiness.com/five-worldwide-business-danger-zones.html </link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Sep 2009 13:10:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Business Tips and Articles</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[The five high-potential markets below may be  matured  for Western investment, but they also present potentially  perilous  working environments.  With the help of   AKE Group’s global risk monitoring service, UK Trade &#38; Investment, and the Overseas Security Advisory Council, BNET  held  the  particular   [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The five high-potential markets below may be  matured  for Western investment, but they also present potentially  perilous  working environments.  With the help of   AKE Group’s global risk monitoring service, UK Trade &amp; Investment, and the Overseas Security Advisory Council, BNET  held  the  particular   risks foreign travelers may encounter in these global hot  fault . Be sure to stay abreast of any new developments in these countries by checking the OSAC’s crime and safety reports. Oh, and  don’t forget  to take with you some  common  sense and these tips to maintain a low profile.</p>
<p>Russia</p>
<p>Due to  needy  law enforcement and the proliferation of weapons, Russia suffers from a wide  range  of crime. On the more extreme end, ongoing political  disputes  in the North Caucasus region (which includes parts of Azerbaijan and Georgia)  sometimes  erupt into large-scale attacks on public places, such as metro stations. In Moscow ultra-right-wing factions target foreign ethnic minorities in racially motivated attacks.</p>
<p>The most  often  risks are robberies, assaults, and “express kidnappings,” in which  attackers  force a victim to withdraw money from multiple ATMs. Watch your drink in bars and nightclubs, where criminals often attempt to drug unsuspecting individuals. </p>
<p>Common Scams</p>
<p>The “turkey  drop ”: A scammer pretends not to  pay any attention  as he drops a roll of money in front of a pedestrian. Then one or more accomplices (sometimes dressed as police officers) approach, accusing the victim of trying to steal the money. They try to check the victim’s passport and then demand a fine.</p>
<p>Staged vehicle accidents: Criminals pass  foreign  drivers on the Moscow Automobile Ring Road (MKAD) or larger city roads and  gesture  to get them to stop. A number of  persons  get out and  indict  the victim of hitting their car. To make the situation more believable, the suspects will brush some steel wool along the side of the car. They then demand an exorbitant amount as compensation.</p>
<p>India</p>
<p> A year after  the Mumbai  attacks , the terrorism threat remains high, especially in public places in  large  cities. In November 2008, senior executives from the Tata group, Ispat Industries, and Anglo-Dutch giant Unilever were among those caught up in the  assault   on the Taj Mahal hotel in Mumbai.</p>
<p>Brazil</p>
<p>Many areas,  mainly  the tri-border  region  with Argentina and Paraguay, remain centres of  arranged  crime and smuggling. In cities such as São Paulo, the main  point  is mobile street gangs. Attackers often use weapons and a disproportionate amount of violence to accomplish petty crime. </p>
<p>Mexico</p>
<p>The most immediate security  issue  in Mexico stems from the country’s role as a major  corridor  for drugs. As a result,  ordered  crime and smuggling gangs act with virtual impunity in many regions.</p>
<p>In Mexico City, the most common crimes  include  armed robberies, express kidnappings, car thefts, carjacking, and credit card fraud. Criminals select victims based on an appearance of vulnerability, prosperity, or inattentiveness, so dress plainly and don’t flash your cash. Use ATMs inside banks or in other businesses, and withdraw money during daylight hours.</p>
<p>South Africa</p>
<p>South Africa’s  rates  of murder, rape, and car theft rank among the highest in the world. Be  cautious  after dark, because  there is no much light on the streets . Park in well-lit areas, and don’t stop to assist apparently distressed motorists.</p>
<p>If you’re visiting Johannesburg, be particularly careful in and around the airport and while driving away. There have been a number of incidents involving foreigners followed from O.R. Tambo International Airport to their destinations by car and then robbed at gunpoint. </p>
<p>For <a href='http://www.yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>current events news</a> and <a href='http://www.yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>business current event</a> &#8211; visit this <a href='http://www.yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>current events news</a>.</p>
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		<title>Recent Informational Update About Car Industry Business Giant</title>
		<link>http://www.lanarkshirebusiness.com/recent-informational-update-about-car-industry-business-giant.html </link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Sep 2009 19:50:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Business Tips and Articles</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[These look like  successful period    for carmakers in  the Motherland of Chinese . Since January, when Beijing introduced measures to shore up the auto industry, sales in the mainland have jumped 23%, and for the year the increase could hit 26%, Hong Kong-based brokerage CLSA reckons. That would mean 2009 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>These look like  successful period    for carmakers in  the Motherland of Chinese . Since January, when Beijing introduced measures to shore up the auto industry, sales in the mainland have jumped 23%, and for the year the increase could hit 26%, Hong Kong-based brokerage CLSA reckons. That would mean 2009 sales of 11.8 million  vehicles , making China  the world&#8217;s top  auto market. &#8220;I think China has  adopted  for good,&#8221; says CLSA analyst Scott Laprise.</p>
<p> The problem , at least for  car producers , is that those surging sales don&#8217;t produce the kind of  uses  most companies  wish to have . China&#8217;s stimulus package  contained  tax breaks on cars with small engines and subsidies for mini-trucks.  Through  July, sales of vehicles eligible for state support soared 49%, but many of these cars earn manufacturers as little as $100 each, according to researcher J.D. Power &amp; Associates (MHP). Sales of bigger, more profitable vehicles were unchanged, so earnings for automakers are up less than 5%, J.D. Power says. &#8220;The tax cuts absolutely affected my choice,&#8221; says Cui Tao, a 25-year-old resident of Tianjin who just bought a Geely Vision sedan for his fiancée. &#8220;I would have had to pay thousands more for a bigger car,&#8221; he says. </p>
<p>TOYOTA&#8217;S  DECREASE </p>
<p>The change has been hardest on the  partnership  of global  automakers . They tend to  focus  on larger, more expensive cars, while Chinese manufacturers  focus  on smaller, cheaper models, putting them in a better position to gain from Beijing&#8217;s stimulus measures. Shenzhen-based BYD Auto, for instance, has seen its sales soar 183%, to 208,000, in large part thanks to a hot-selling hatchback. </p>
<p> Collate  BYD to Toyota Motor (TM). The Japanese giant&#8217;s China sales are rised just 5% this year,  in spite of  the introduction of two new SUVs. That&#8217;s a big change from last year, when Toyota&#8217;s mainland sales  jumped by 18.5%, to 570,000 vehicles. While the company doesn&#8217;t disclose its China  profits , Yuzo Ushiyama, who  left  in June as Toyota&#8217;s China chief, hints that the preference for smaller vehicles has hurt. &#8220;Relatively inexpensive cars are selling quite well, but in China that segment is not [where Toyota competes],&#8221; he said in a May interview. &#8220;We have to address the short-term decline in profitability.&#8221; </p>
<p>Even  worldwide   carmakers  with surging sales are having trouble getting any  substantial   profits . General Motors has sold 43% more cars in China this year than in 2008. But three-fifths of its mainland sales come from its Wuling unit, which mostly makes tiny commercial vans that cost as little as $4,300. GM doesn&#8217;t reveal its China profits, but in the first quarter its Asian operation, of which China is by far the largest part, was in the red. </p>
<p> Sure , growing sales help offset shrinking margins. But the potential  reaching  from the world&#8217;s new No. 1 market are far smaller than those in the pre-crisis U.S., where Toyota  made  about half its global  uses  before the slump. Says Ashvin Chotai, managing director of consultant Intelligence Automotive Asia: &#8220;It will be very  hard  for  automakers  to turn China into a cash cow like the Japanese did with North America.&#8221;</p>
<p>More <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>current events news</a>. Read other <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>business current event</a> on the <a href='http://yourvideoforum.com' target='_blank'>current events news</a> site.</p>
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