IMF upwards
growth forecasts
The International Monetary Fund is revising upwards its growth
forecasts for the US and world economies this year while scaling
back its prediction for the 12 country Euro Zone, a German government
source said recently.
The source said that the IMF was
upgrading its forecast for US growth this year to 2.5-2.7 percent
from a previous projection of 2.3 percent. Similarly, it was
raising its 2003 forecast for the United States to 3.5 percent
from 3.4 percent previously.
The stronger than expected growth
in the US would give the world economy as a whole a boost, with
the IMF now forecasting a global expansion of 2.9 percent this
year and 4.1 percent next year.
Australia's
booming economy generates 75,000 new jobs
Australia's booming economy generated
more than 75,000 new full-time jobs in May, the biggest full-time
jobs in May, the biggest full-time employment boost in seven
years, according to official data released recently.
The extra 75,300 full-time jobs
in May was the highest rise since February 1995, but was partially
offset by the loss of 30,900 part time jobs, according to the
Australian Bureau of Statistics.
Foreign investment
in US drops by 60 %
Foreign investment in the United
States suffered a precipitous 60 percent drop in 2001, as the
US market lost some of its luster due to an economic recession
and terrorist attacks, according to the latest government figures.
Foreigners plunked down $ 132.9
billion last year to acquire or establish business in the United
States, down from a record $ 335.6 billion invested here in
2000, said the Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis.
"The decrease reflected weakness
in the US and world economies and a sharp drop in overall merger
and acquisition activity worldwide," the bureau said in a report
made public recently.
The figure marks the steepest drop
in foreign investment in a decade and according to some analysts,
could make financing the fledgling US economic recovery more
difficult because US domestic savings are traditionally low.
Foreign-owned assets in the United
States currently total $ 9.4 trillion while US claims on the
rest of the world amount to $ 7.2 trillion, according the White
House Council of economic Advisers.
US jobless rate
dips to 5.8%
The US economy added some 41,000
jobs in May as the unemployment rate decline two-tenths of a
point to 5.8 percent, the Labor Department said recently.
This is the largest increase in
noon-farm payrolls since February 2001, and marks the second
straight monthly increase after 12 consecutive monthly declines.
In April, payrolls rose by a revised
6,000, fewer than the initial estimate of a 43,000 increase.
British economy
shows some signs of slowing
The British economy demonstrated
signs of a possible slow down with the release of figures showing
that consumer spending and manufacturing production have faltered.
The Confederation of British Industry
said its survey for May found that sales volumes grew less than
the previous month, with footwear and home items among the hardest
hit.
Inflationary pressures were also
weaker as low demand and fierce competition meant prices rose
at their slowest rate for 15 months, the study said.
"All the evidence in survey points
to a gradual slowdown in consumer spending," said Alastair Eperon,
chairman of the CBI's survey panel.
Bankers go wild
as HSBC invests in nature
Over the next five years, 2000
HSBC workers will leave their desks and head into the field
to help scientists collect data for environmental projects ranging
from watching sea turtles in Costa Rica to tracking endangered
jaguars in Brazil.
http://www.iccwbo.org/home/news_archives/2002/wild.asp
End double taxation
of stock options says
Executives required to work abroad
may face double or even triple taxation on stock options that
are part of their remuneration package and business is pressing
governments to end these anomalies among tax regimes.
http://www.iccwbo.org/home/news_archives/menu2002.asp
Practical steps
proposed for responsible business conduct
International Chamber of Commerce
(ICC) has proposed practical steps for companies in making responsible
business conduct a management priority and said this could be
good for business.
http://www.iccwbo.org/home/news_archives/2002/business-in-society.asp
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