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November 11, 2005

North Korea wants “no pants” for women

Filed under: by leafworks at 4:38 pm

…North Korea’s communist government is urging women in the country to wear traditional Korean clothes instead of pants, according to a North Korean monthly magazine.

“Keeping alive our dress style is a very important political issue to adhere to specific national cultural traditions at a time when the U.S. imperialists are maneuvering to spread the rotten bourgeois lifestyle inside North Korea,” the Joson Yeosung (Woman) magazine said, according to South Korea’s Yonhap news agency…

Full story here: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051104/ap_on_re_as/nkorea_no_pants

April 13, 2005

US Balance of Trade Keeps Slipping

Filed under: by Preston Danforth at 12:14 pm

Another great piece from Capital Spectator:

The U.S. balance of trade slipped to another all-time deficit in February–$61 billion vs. $59 billion in January, reports the U.S. Census Bureau. If you thought the news would take a hefty bite out of the dollar, you were mistaken. By the close of Wall Street trading today, the dollar gained ground against the euro and yen.

If that counters forex logic, think again, say the buck’s bulls. The catalyst for that corner of optimism stems from trade between U.S. and China, goes one school of thought. Although America’s trade deficit with China remains firmly negative, February’s level of red ink with the Middle Kingdom actually slipped in February from January, reports CBC.

In another instance of China’s sway over the markets, the International Energy Agency advised that demand growth for oil recently took a breather in the world’s most-populous nation. “Chinese demand growth slowed to 5.4% in the first two months of 2005, well below the 20.8% growth seen a year ago,” IEA reports. The news helped slash the price of a barrel of crude in New York today by almost $2.

Read more here

Consumption Economics & the Energy Crisis

Filed under: by Preston Danforth at 12:12 pm

The Capital Spectator has a great piece on Consumption Economics & the Energy Crisis:

CONSUMPTION ECONOMICS
In the good old days of energy shocks, consumers cut back when prices jumped. But cutting back is no longer popular sport in the current bull market for oil.

Long gone are the days in the 1970s, when higher oil prices eventually convinced Joe Sixpack to drive less, buy cars with more fuel-efficient engines, turn down the heat, and otherwise curtail the more-egregious energy-sapping activities. A chart in the oil chapter in new World Economic Outlook from the IMF (Figure 4.2) shows the collective result of that mindset of yesteryear: global oil demand fell sharply in the wake of the rise in the real (inflation-adjusted) rise in oil prices in the era when incumbent presidents went by the name of Nixon, Ford and Carter.

In the Bush II era, the rising price of energy has yet to materially lower global demand. Or, as Rodrigo de Rato, managing director of IMF explained in speech earlier this month, “So far, the effects of higher oil prices on global growth and inflation have been manageable….”

Meanwhile, the demand train rolls on. World oil consumption was recently averaging 82.2 million barrels a day, the International Energy Agency says. That’s up from less than 80 million barrels a day in 2003. Overall, demand growth is advancing at the fastest pace in 24 years, IEA advises via BBC News. The cause? Bubbling economies in China, India along and the U.S. (the world’s largest oil consumer), to name the primary suspects.

Economic growth, to restate the obvious, is a beast that’s still largely fed by oil. Yet the global economy appears to be less sensitive to oil’s price. Indeed, crude oil has been in a bull market since the end of 1998, but the trend’s having little effect on the consumer mindset. Is this because of a cultural shift that minimizes, if not dismisses the notion of sacrifice and conservation in favor of consumption at all costs? Or perhaps the explanation is that oil prices are still well below their real (inflation-adjusted) peaks that harassed the decade of the seventies. Maybe it’s because real interest rates have been artificially low. Then there’s the point about how economies are much less energy intensive these days: raising gross domestic product takes fewer barrels of oil today compared with 30 years previous.

Whatever the answer, it seems clear that oil demand will only drop materially with the arrival of recession in the U.S. and/or other leading economies. Indeed, a world that’s inured to high prices is necessarily a world that can afford to pay up.

Even better is the prospect of slower demand growth without recession. If that’s a sweet spot, the markets got a taste of it with yesterday’s news from the IEA that China’s thirst for oil slowed in the first two months of this year. That’s helped take some of the froth out of crude oil’s price.

Adding to the selling momentum of late in the oil futures trading pits is news from the Energy Information Administration that U.S. inventories of crude are rising fast, having reached their highest in several years in recent weeks. America’s oil stocks totaled 317.1 million barrels as of April 1, up nearly 5% since early March and almost 9% higher relative to mid-January. More of the same was on view today when the EIA released its weekly storage numbers and reported that crude inventories rose again for the week through April 8. The news triggered a wave of selling in oil futures, bringing prices below $51 a barrel intraday for the first time since March 1.

Read more here

December 20, 2004

FDA Asks Pfizer to Pull Back Marketing of Celebrex

Filed under: by Shanti Braford at 3:36 am

It seems the FDA can’t quite make up it’s mind about Pfizer’s mega-drug, Celebrex. Is it harmful, or is it safe?

In an unusual move that reflects serious concerns about the new results, the agency asked the company to suspend its use of direct-to-consumer advertising and alter its marketing to doctors, as regulators and the company examine the data from the National Institutes of Health trial. The commitment was “open- ended,” said John Jenkins, director of the FDA’s office of new drugs.

More on CNN Money: FDA Asks Pfizer to Pull Back Marketing of Celebrex

November 3, 2004

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