Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Businesses Benefit with Mobile Coupons | MyDealCompass Blog ...

Mobile coupons have recently been providing consumers a convenient way to save from nearby businesses. The popularity of consumers being able to walk into a store or restaurant and save by scanning a coupon off their mobile device is truly innovative technology at its best. However, this trend to paperless savings is also benefiting business owners in several big ways.

First of all, when you advertise a mobile coupon on the myDealCompass platform, you are able to offer your savings to consumers who will actually redeem your coupon. Many times with traditional paper coupons, unaware consumers may immediately throw them out or accidentally hide them away where they become forgotten. This is wasted advertising dollars for you. With myDealCompass you have tools on the site that alert you to the interest in your deal, how many times it is redeemed and if your customers are sharing the savings with friends and family.

Even better is the fact that you can save hundreds of dollars on advertising costs by offering savings on myDealCompass. The cost of printing and distributing paper coupons and savings is high, but 80 percent of the time, potential customers do not redeem the paper savings you offer. This is a waste of time and money. myDealCompass allows you to advertise your mobile coupons for a flat, monthly rate. Additionally, you can change, alter or discontinue the deal at any time. This is not even a possibility with traditional paper savings. The way businesses benefit with mobile coupon technology is clear, and consumers are loving the easy access savings they receive from myDealCompass.

Source: http://mydealcompass.com/blog/index.php/businesses-benefit-mobile-coupons/

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Toyota's new robot is handy household helper

11 hrs.

An in-home robot for the masses that can fetch objects from the floor and high shelves and?connect you with family and friends via a tablet computer, is being shown off this week at a trade?show in Japan.

The lightweight, cylindrical Human Support Robot (HSR) responds to voice commands as well as a graphic interface on a tablet computer. Its key feature is a folding arm with a two-finger gripper that can pick up stuff from the ground, open curtains, reach high shelves, and other tasks, according to Toyota.?

The arm is about?2.5-feet long and can lift objects weighing up to 2.7 pounds and 5.1 inches wide, which is sufficient to pick up a dropped remote control or fetch an ice cold beer from the fridge.

The 70 pound machine was designed to assist independent home living for people with limited arm or leg mobility. Top speed is only 1.8 miles per hour and the arm moves with insufficient force to cause much trouble, making it safe for indoor, at home use, according to Toyota.?

The robot "can also wear a tablet computer atop its head, which would allow caregivers and family members to communicate with the robot's owner over Skype or other services,"?Gizmag noted?in a story about the robot.

While a price isn?t set for the HSR, it could sell well among Japan?s aging population where insurance will pick up 70 percent of associated costs thanks to a recently passed law to encourage robot technology for elder care.

HSR is just one of many robots?under development that are being designed to work with humans in all kinds of situations from the factory floor to the surface of?Mars.

? via?The?Verge, Gizmag

John Roach is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. To learn more about him, check out his website. For more of our Future of Technology series, watch the featured video below.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/toyotas-new-robot-handy-household-helper-1B6043717

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Sunday, September 23, 2012

Goodbye, Summer! Fall Starts Saturday

Get prepared: It's time to kiss long days and warm weather goodbye and welcome in crisp temperatures and crunchy leaves. The first day of fall, also known as the autumnal equinox, is Saturday, Sept. 22.

The equinox gets its name from an astronomical curiosity. During both the spring and fall equinoxes, the sun transits directly over the Earth's equator. Day and night are approximately equal length on equinoxes, which is how the days got their name ? it means "equal night" in Latin.

This year's equinox occurs at 6:49 a.m. EDT (14:49 UTC) on Saturday, the time when the sun makes its pass over the equator. The actual date of the fall equinox varies slightly each year, sometimes falling on the 23rd or 24th depending on the vagaries of our calendar and Earth's slightly irregular orbit.

While day and night both last about 12 hours around the equinox, the days will start to shorten in the Northern Hemisphere as winter approaches. That's because the Earth orbits at a slight tilt of 23.5 degrees. When the Northern Hemisphere tilts toward the sun, that half of the world experiences summer while southerners get winter. When the Northern Hemisphere tilts away, the seasons flip. [50 Amazing Earth Facts]

At the poles, the differences in the length of day and night are so extreme that one or the other completely disappears. At the North Pole, the sun rises during the vernal, or spring, equinox, climbs in the sky until the first day of summer (the summer solstice) and then gradually makes it way back down, setting on the day of the autumn equinox.

Living things respond to these light changes, of course, from trees shedding their leaves to animals preparing for hibernation. For the high-attitude-living male Siberian hamster, the changes must be especially noticeable: The rodent's testes swell up 17 times their size from short days to long, part of the changes that allow the animals to time reproduction properly.

Seasons matter for humans, too. People with seasonal affective disorder suffer depression in the winter months, likely a result of hormonal changes in response to alterations in sunlight.

More bizarrely, scientists have found a biannual trend in Google searches for naughty keywords related to pornography and prostitution. A study published in August in the journal Archives of Sexual Behavior revealed that such searches are more common around Christmas and early summer. Other studies have found that condom sales go up during these times and that young people report having more sex.

What's not clear is whether this seasonal sex cycle is biological or cultural ? perhaps caused by people having extra vacation time on their hands around the holidays and during the summer.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappasor LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook& Google+.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/goodbye-summer-fall-starts-saturday-134529238.html

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Coping with stress through exercise

Are you stressed out? Aren?t we all? With today?s fast paced lifestyles of trying to keep up with the rat race and balance work and family, stress is an unfortunately reality. However, it is still essential that we take time out for ourselves and one of the best known stress-relievers is exercise. Physical fitness not only improves your health and reduces stress; it also relaxes tense muscles and helps you to sleep.
Additional benefits to exercise include:

  • It improves blood flow to your brain, bringing additional sugars and oxygen that may be needed when you are frustrated or feeling overwhelmed. When you ?think hard?, the neurons of your brain function more intensely. While doing this, they can build up toxic waste products that can cause foggy thinking. Cardio and strength training helps speed the flow of blood through your brain, moving these waste products faster, to help you think clearer.? Exercise during your day will help you be more productive.
  • Exercise causes the release of chemicals called endorphins into your blood stream. These endorphins give you a feeling of happiness and positively affect your overall sense of well-being. ?Start your day off right with a motivating fitness class.
  • There is evidence that those who engage in a regular fitness routine have less extreme physiological responses when under pressure than those who don?t exercise often. This means that fit people are able to handle the long-term effects of stress, without suffering ill health or burnout. Consider ending your day with a yoga class that allows you to relax.

If you are feeling a tad overwhelmed by work, finances or balancing your life, it is time to take action and start up a regular fitness routine. Not only for the health of your body, but the health of your mind as well!

More than just a gym, Columbia Lake Health Club provides innovative fitness classes, personal training and sports conditioning. Their mission is to help clients develop, maintain and protect their healthy and active lifestyle through coaching, training, motivation and education. They can help you get on track and stay there. For more information, visit www.columbialakehealthclub.com.

Back to the Columbia Lake Health Club profile page.

Source: http://www.waterlooregionshoptalk.com/2012/featured/coping-with-stress-through-exercise/

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Thursday, September 20, 2012

RT on DVD & Blu-Ray: Katy Perry and The Cabin in the Woods ...

Plus, a wide variety of releases and an Indiana Jones collection.

This week on home video, we?ve got a lot of new releases to discuss, including some very well-received movies and a couple of outright flops, as well as a collection of movies some of us have been waiting quite a while to get on Blu-ray. See below for the full list!

Also available this week:

  • David Fincher?s paranoid thriller The Game arrives in a brand new Criterion Collection Edition.
  • Marcel Carn??s 1945 classic Children of Paradise, which was previously available in a Criterion Collection edition, also gets a shiny new update, including a Blu-ray release.
  • Japanese director Sion Sono?s (probably best known for 2002?s Suicide Club) campy, manic take on love and sexuality, Love Exposure, arrives this week.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1925915/news/1925915/

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Source: http://blackentertainmentsports.stoptbpartners.org/1322/rt-on-dvd-blu-ray-katy-perry-and-the-cabin-in-the-woods/

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Wednesday, September 19, 2012

China cleans up after angry anti-Japan protests

Chinese cleaners wash the barricade outside the entrance to the Japanese Embassy in Beijing, China, Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012. People across China have engaged in days of furious protests over some East China Sea islands, claimed by Beijing and Tokyo, that Japan purchased last week from a private owner. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

Chinese cleaners wash the barricade outside the entrance to the Japanese Embassy in Beijing, China, Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012. People across China have engaged in days of furious protests over some East China Sea islands, claimed by Beijing and Tokyo, that Japan purchased last week from a private owner. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

Security personnel with the Japanese embassy stand guard with helmet and shield as Chinese cleaners wash the entrance to the Japan embassy in Beijing, China, Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012. Mass protests outside the Japanese embassy over the disputed Diaoyu Islands subsided by more than a week. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

Security personnel with the Japanese embassy stand guard with helmet and shield as Chinese cleaners, unseen wash the entrance to the Japanese embassy in Beijing, China, Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012. Mass protests outside the Japanese embassy over the disputed Diaoyu Islands subsided by more than a week. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

BEIJING (AP) ? China was returning to normalcy Wednesday after angry protests over Japan's wartime occupation and Tokyo's recent purchase of islands also claimed by Beijing.

Beijing sanitation workers were using high-pressure hoses to erase the stains of paint bombs hurled at the Japanese Embassy the day before. Road blocks were removed, allowing for normal traffic around the embassy, and police shooed pedestrians away.

Japanese shops, restaurants and factories in China that closed to avoid being targeted by protesters were open again.

Large and sometimes violent anti-Japan protests roiled many Chinese cities over the weekend, triggered by the Japanese government's purchase last week of the disputed East China Sea islands. More demonstrations followed Tuesday on the 81st anniversary of Japan's invasion of China, an emotional remembrance that further stoked the outrage.

In Beijing, the bitterness spilled over to the nearby U.S. Embassy, with around 50 protestors surrounding the car of U.S. Ambassador Gary Locke and trying to block him from entering the compound.

The U.S., a close ally of Japan, has said it is staying out of the territorial dispute, but it also been the target of Chinese anger.

The State Department said in a statement that Locke was unhurt and that diplomats have expressed concerns to the Chinese Foreign Ministry.

The incident comes amid heightened vigilance for American diplomats following violent attacks on U.S. embassies in Libya, Yemen and Egypt. The statement said embassy officials have asked the Chinese government to do everything possible to protect American facilities and personnel.

Though the demonstrations have wound down, at least temporarily, there has been no progress in resolving the dispute bedeviling relations between the two Asian economic powerhouses.

The islands are tiny rock outcroppings that have been a sore point between China and Japan for decades. Japan has claimed the islands since 1895. The U.S. took jurisdiction after World War II and turned them over to Japan in 1972.

The disagreement escalated last week when the Japanese government said it was purchasing some of the islands from their private owner. Japan considers it an attempt to thwart a potentially more inflammatory move by the governor of Tokyo, who had wanted not only to buy the islands but develop them. But Beijing sees Japan's purchase as an affront to its claims and its past calls for negotiations.

Beijing has sent patrol ships inside Japanese-claimed waters around the islands, and some state media have urged Chinese to show their patriotism by boycotting Japanese goods and canceling travel to Japan

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-09-19-Asia-Disputed%20Islands/id-14b3cddc58994c79a5e378eae88ad9d5

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Status Update

An orientation class for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program

An orientation class for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program applicants in Los Angeles in August

Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images.

Given the images of people lining up in cities across the country to attend workshops on? the so-called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program for DREAM Act-eligible kids?which allows teenagers and young adults who were brought to the United States illegally as children to remain in the country without fear of deportation?you might think that spreading the word about this opportunity is akin to hawking tickets to a Justin Bieber concert. That is, even a rumor will make the masses come running.

But figures released by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services show that at this point, just 82,000 immigrants, a small fraction of the 1.2 million estimated to be currently eligible for the program, signed up. According to Luis Arbulu, a former Google executive who has served as an entrepreneur-in-residence for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration, the kids who queued on Aug. 15?as soon as government started accepting applications?are the super motivated. ?They are the ones,? he says, ?who get their college applications in on the first day.?

But what about the hundreds of thousands of other teenagers and young adults? For that, immigrant advocacy groups are gearing up for a mobile technology campaign that would impress the savviest of Madison Avenue?s social media mavens. Advocates will leverage texts, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, because the bulk of those eligible for Deferred Action are between the ages of 15 and 31, arrived before they turned 16, and have spent at least five years in the United States.

It doesn?t begin and end with the trendiest technology, though, because immigrant activists? target crowd goes beyond the young and Internet-savvy. The executive order is pretty expansive: While the DREAM Act legislation that Congress voted down several times would have required immigrants to have completed at least two years of college or enlisted in the military, the president?s initiative includes residents who have obtained a GED or are in some kind of vocational training. As a result, according to a National Agricultural Workers Survey, some 54,000 farm workers could qualify if they find a way to get into a classroom. This is a group that isn?t on Facebook, at least not every day, so activists will need to find other ways to reach them.

In addition, about one-quarter of the immigrants who could take advantage of the deferred action can't yet, because of the ?at least 15? mandate?some who might be eligible in the future are as young as 5. So getting it on the radar of their parents and other "influencers" in their lives is vital. This assumes, of course, that the Deferred Action program will continue in the years ahead, which isn?t a guarantee. It doesn?t provide lawful status but rather a two-year reprieve, and subsequent administrations could revoke it.

That said, there is a real payoff from registering: Successful applicants won?t just be free (for now) from perpetual threat of getting kicked out of the country, but they will also receive permits to work in the United States. In some states, too, those who register will be eligible for in-state tuition and drivers? licenses.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=5cc8ad56e6b2872db4391df1cb4e057c

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Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Unconventional Love

Unconventional Love

Love should be love. But as these 5 couples find, it isn't as easy as it looks

Owner:

Game Masters:

This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?Unconventional Love?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

Topic Tags:

Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.


Ooh, this is interesting. Boy 1 is a transguy, right? As in, physically female, mentally male? If so, may I reserve him? Thanks ^^

User avatar
Leon21
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Ay I pleeeeaaassseee have boy 2 couple 2! :)

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Little Troll
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Girl 2 in the yuri couple please :D

Luck is a lot like Fairies
~*~If you believe in it, then it's more likely to be real ~*~

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The*Lucky*Teacup
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Yup Leon, he is ^_^

Reserved for all three of you! =D

Ah... The*Lucky*Teacup... I feel very poorly for abandoning your Roleplay. I don't know why, I just lost my enthusiasm for my character :/

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TheBouquineuse
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Tis fine. I think everyone kinda ditched it, and I'm a part of so many roleplays now, I was just kinda like 'whatever'...
Boy I suck at running roleplays xD
And yay I get to play a pregnant girl :DDDDD

EDIT: curious, what's a hex code?

User avatar
The*Lucky*Teacup
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Another quick question: Is the Wakefield Reorientation Center a place for LGBTQ teens to seek refuge from un-accepting parents, or is it a center where they try to force LGBTQ teens into 'becoming' straight?
Oh, also, should I use a picture of a very feminine male for my character, or a very masculine female?

User avatar
Leon21
Member for 0 years


Lucky: Nah, you were pretty good at it actually. I just spend a few days away from my computer and my enthusiasm for my creations goes poof. Luckly I have no life now! :D

Leon: Reorientation center is fancy-talk for a "pray-the-gay-away" center in this RP. Also, either is fine. This is your character after all ^_^

User avatar
TheBouquineuse
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Ahh, okay. My best friend's mother tried that approach with me once. It didn't work very well XD Well, I'll look around a bit, and see if I can find any decent pictures.

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Leon21
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I would like to reserve Girl 5 please!!

Lovely day we're having isn't it?

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Miss_Dreamer
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XD, I wouldn't expect so. Also, if you have any problems finding a picture, "Genderqueer" works better then "Transgender" in Google search

And she's reserved foryou Dreamer ^_^

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TheBouquineuse
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Yay for the peoples with no life :D

Curious, what's a hex code?

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The*Lucky*Teacup
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It's pretty much a color code, I'm not quite sure how to describe it though...
Light green would be [color= # 80FF00][ / color ] without the spaces

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TheBouquineuse
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Uh huh... :3

Bouqui... would you by any chance be able to tell me what purple is? Pretty please? ^,^

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The*Lucky*Teacup
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This is purple: BF40FF
As is this: BF00FF

You're very welcome :P

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TheBouquineuse
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=D Well yay! XD Also, you can come up with herboyfriend's name. It seems only fair

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TheBouquineuse
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...I wanna think of something really strange xD
What's his last name gonna be though?

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The*Lucky*Teacup
Member for 0 years


Smith... 'cause I have 0 creativity. Also, he has to be 18 due to the fact that I have now decided twinship between my character and him.

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TheBouquineuse
Member for 0 years


Smith. :D Okey doke. And that's fine, I don't think the brother won't appear all that much anyways... will he?

Last edited by The*Lucky*Teacup on Mon Sep 17, 2012 5:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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The*Lucky*Teacup
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Monday, September 17, 2012

The Bubble Economy and Debt Deflation | Global Research

Now that the Bubble Economy has given way to debt deflation, the world is discovering the shortcoming of models that fail to explain how most credit creation today (1) inflates asset prices without raising commodity prices or wage levels, and (2) creates a reciprocal flow of debt service.

*??????? *?????? *

As published in the World Economic Association?s World Economic Review Vol #1.

ABSTRACT

Current macroeconomics ignores the roles that rent, debt and the financial sector play in shaping our economy. We discuss the Classical view on rents and policy responses to the rentier sector in the 19th century. The finance, insurance & real estate sector is today?s incarnation of the rentier sector. This paper shows how financial flows can be conceptually and statistically studied separately from (but interacting with) the real sector. We discuss finance?s interaction with government and with the international economy.

1. Introduction

Now that the Bubble Economy has given way to debt deflation, the world is discovering the shortcoming of models that fail to explain how most credit creation today (1) inflates asset prices without raising commodity prices or wage levels, and (2) creates a reciprocal flow of debt service. This debt service tends to rise as a proportion of personal and business income, outgrowing the ability of debtors to pay ? leading to (3) debt deflation. The only way to prevent this phenomenon from plunging economies into depression and keeping them there is (4) to write down the debts so as to free revenue for spending once again on goods and services.

By promoting a misleading view of how the economy works, the above omissions lead to a policy that fails to prevent debt bubbles or deal effectively with the ensuing depression. To avoid a replay of the recent financial crisis ? and indeed, to extricate economies from their present debt strait-jacket that subordinates recovery to the overhang of creditor claims (that is, saving the banks from taking a loss on their bad loans and gambles) ? it is necessary to explain how credit creation inflates housing and other asset prices, while interest and other financial charges deflate the ?real? economy, holding down commodity prices, shrinking markets and employment, and holding down wages in a downward economic spiral. We are dealing with two price trends that go in opposite directions: asset prices and commodity prices. It therefore is necessary to explain how credit expansion pushes asset prices up while simultaneously causing debt deflation.

Yet the typical MV=PT monetary and price model focused on commodity prices and wages, not on the asset prices inflated by debt leveraging. Similarly, today?s ?Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium? (or DSGE) models are characterized by the ?absence of an appropriate way of modeling financial markets? (Tovar 2008:p.29). While Schumpeter (1934:95) already noted that ?processes in terms of means of payment are not merely reflexes of processes in terms of goods. In every possible strain, with rare unanimity, even with impatience and moral and intellectual indignation, a very long line of theorists have assured us of the opposite?, this finds no place in DSGE models or, for that matter macroeconomics in the last decades. Cecchetti et al (2011:p.2) describe current practice in writing that ?for a macroeconomist working to construct a theoretical structure for understanding the economy as a whole, debt is ? trivial ? because (in a closed economy) it is net zero ? the liabilities of all borrowers always exactly match the assets of all lenders. ? With no active role for money, integrating credit in the mainstream framework has proven to be difficult.? And yet credit and its counterpart, debt, have shaped our economic systems since prehistory (Hudson 2004). Understanding how credit is used is therefore a sine qua non for understanding our economy. That requires, in turn, to think about a fundamentally different model which can replace DGSE type models as the standard for analysis. Only then can the ?naked emperor be dethroned? (Keen 2011).

2. Finance is not The economy

In the real world most credit today is spent to buy assets already in place, not to create new productive capacity. Some 80 percent of bank loans in the English-speaking world are real estate mortgages, and much of the balance is lent against stocks and bonds already issued. Banks lend to buyers of real estate, corporate raiders, ambitious financial empire-builders, and to management for debt-leveraged buyouts. A first approximation of this trend is to chart the share of bank lending that goes to the ?Fire, Insurance and Real Estate? sector, aka the nonbank financial sector. Graph 1 shows that its ratio to GDP has quadrupled since the 1950s. The contrast is with lending to the real sector, which has remained about constant relative to GDP. This is how our debt burden has grown.

Graph 1: Private debt growth is due to lending to the FIRE sector: the US, 1952-2007

Source: Bezemer (2012) based on US flow of fund data, BEA ?Z? tables.

What is true for America is true for many other countries: mortgage lending and other household debt have been ?the final stage in an artificially extended Ponzi Bubble? as Keen (2009) shows for Australia. Extending credit to purchase assets already in place bids up their price. Prospective homebuyers need to take on larger mortgages to obtain a home. The effect is to turn property rents into a flow of mortgage interest. These payments divert the revenue of consumers and businesses from being spent on consumption or new capital investment. The effect is deflationary for the economy?s product markets, and hence consumer prices and employment, and therefore wages. This is why we had a long period of low cpi inflation but skyrocketing asset price inflation. The two trends are linked.

Debt-leveraged buyouts and commercial real estate purchases turn business cash flow (ebitda: earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) into interest payments. Likewise, bank or bondholder financing of public debt (especially in the Eurozone, which lacks a central bank to monetize such debt) has turned a rising share of tax revenue into interest payments. As creditors recycle their receipts of interest and amortization (and capital gains) into new lending to buyers of real estate, stocks and bonds, a rising share of employee income, real estate rent, business revenue and even government tax revenue is diverted to pay debt service. By leaving less to spend on goods and services, the effect is to reduce new investment and employment. Contemporary evidence for major OECD economies since the 1980s shows that rising capital gains may indeed divert finance away from the real sector?s productivity growth (Stockhammer 2004) and more generally that ?financialization? (Epstein 2005) has hurt growth and incomes. Money created for capital gains has a small propensity to be spent by their rentier owners on goods and services, so that an increasing proportion of the economy?s money flows are diverted to circulation in the financial sector. Wages do not increase, even as prices for property and financial securities rise ? just the well-known trend that we have seen in the Western world since the 1970s, and which persists into the post-2001 Bubble Economy.

It is especially the case since 1991 in the post-Soviet economies, where neoliberal (that is, pro-financial) policy makers have had a free hand to shape tax and financial policy in favor of banks (mainly foreign bank branches). Latvia is cited as a neoliberal success story, but it would be hard to find an example where rentier income and prices have diverged more sharply from wages and the ?real? production economy.

The more credit creation takes the form of inflating asset prices ? rather than financing purchases of goods and services or direct investment employing labor ? the more deflationary its effects are on the ?real? economy of production and consumption. Housing and other asset prices crash, causing negative equity. Yet homeowners and businesses still have to pay off their debts. The national income accounts classify this pay-down as ?saving,? although the revenue is not available to the debtors doing the ?saving? by ?deleveraging.?

The moral is that using homes as what Alan Greenspan referred to as ?piggy banks?, to take out home-equity loans, was not really like drawing down a bank account at all. When a bank account is drawn down there is less money available, but no residual obligation to pay. New income can be spent at the discretion of its recipient. But borrowing against a home implies an obligation to set aside future income to pay the banker ? and hence a loss of future discretionary spending.

3. Towards a model of financialized economies

Creating a more realistic model of today?s financialized economies to trace this phenomenon requires a breakdown of the national income and product accounts (NIPA) to see the economy as a set of distinct sectors interacting with each other. These accounts juxtapose the private and public sectors as far as current spending, saving and taxation is concerned. But the implication is that government budget deficits inflate the private-sector economy as a whole.

However, a budget deficit that takes the form of transfer payments to banks, as in the case of the post-September 2008 bank bailout, the Federal Reserve?s $2 trillion in cash-for-trash financial swaps and the $700 billion QE2 credit creation by the Federal Reserve to lend to banks at 0.25% interest in 2011, has a different effect from deficits that reflect social spending programs, Social Security and Medicare, public infrastructure investment or the purchase of other goods and services.

The effect of transfer payments to the financial sector ? as well as the $5.3 trillion increase in U.S. Treasury debt from taking Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac onto the public balance sheet ? is to support asset prices (above all those of the banking system), not inflate commodity prices and wages. Similarly, the 2009 ?quantitative easing? policy in Britain confused loans used in the real economy (which were stagnating or falling throughout the experiment) with boosting bank balances with the Bank of England which quadrupled over 2009 (Graph 3). Bezemer and Gardiner (2010) show that neither bank loans nor spending nor GDP increased noticeably during or after the exercise, but there was a curious stock market rally during 2009.

A London Stock Exchange press release on 29 December 2009 reported that ?a record ?82.5 billion was raised through new and further issues of equity on the London Stock Exchange during the course of 2009? despite difficult market conditions?. Finance is not the economy.

Graph 2: ?Quantitative Easing? in Britain increased bank reserves (right hand axis), but not lending to the real sector(left-hand axis) (bln Pound Sterling)

Source: Bezemer (2012) based on Bank of England data and author?s calculations

Most models treat the international sector either as a ?leakage? (as Keynes termed foreign trade and capital flows) or as a balancing item in the private/public sector surplus or shortfall (as in the Levy Institute model ? see Zezza 2009 for an analytical description). But the international sector involves not only export and import trade and other current account items (emigrants? remittances, and above all, military spending) but also foreign investment and income ? and foreign central bank reserves held in U.S. Treasury and other securities, that is, loans to the U.S. Government.

Capital flows have swollen enormously since the turn of the millennium, and they have increasingly been matched by outflows of investments into dollar-denominated assets held both by private citizens and their governments. This was facilitated by new investment vehicles such as Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWFs). UNCTAD (2011: p. 119) reports 25 newly established SWFs since 2000 only. Thanks to capital inflows, the capital account is now moving independently from the current account. It is not as if the buildup of international savings requires current account surpluses. Even developing countries with current account deficits had accumulated foreign reserves as well as private investments in enormous quantities at the eve of the crisis, as Obstfeld (2008) reports. At the heart of this is the U.S. economy and its financial markets. For instance, U.S. consumers and businesses ran a trade deficit, and banks used the entire $700 billion QE2 supply of Fed credit for foreign currency arbitrage and other international speculation, not for lending to the domestic U.S. economy. But the U.S. Treasury received an inflow from foreign central banks building up their dollar reserves by buying Treasury securities and other U.S. financial securities.

Fig. 1: Private sector, government sector, international sector

This model can be used to trace U.S. transactions with China. The economy runs a trade deficit with China, and also a private-sector investment outflow to China. There is some return of earnings from these investments to U.S. companies. But on balance, there is a dollar outflow to China ? which also receives dollars from its exports to third countries. China?s central bank has recycled most of these dollar receipts to the U.S. Treasury (and earlier, into Fannie Mae bonds and kindred investments), but was not permitted to buy U.S. companies such as Unocal?s refinery operations.

Fig. 1A: U.S. transactions with China, private and government sectors

This public/private/international model may be made more realistic by treating the financial, insurance and real estate (FIRE) sector as distinct from the underlying production and consumption economy, as motivated in Graph 1.

4. The FIRE sector, rents, and the Progressive response

The FIRE sector deals with the economy?s balance sheet of assets and debts, real estate, stocks and bonds, mortgages and other bank loans ? and the payment of interest, money management commissions and other fees to the financial sector, as well as insurance payments and also rental payments for housing. The FIRE sector is today?s form that the rentier class takes. Rentiers are those who benefit from control over assets that the economy needs to function, and who, therefore, grow disproportionately rich as the economy develops. These proceeds are rents ? revenues from ownership ?without working, risking, or economizing?, as John Stuart Mill (1848) wrote of the landlords of his day, explaining that ?they grow richer, as it were in their sleep?. Classical economics from Adam Smith onwards analysed rents, its effects, and policies towards rents, but the very concept is lost in today?s economics.

Just as landlords were the archetypal rentiers of their agricultural societies, so investors, financiers and bankers are in the largest rentier sector of today?s financialized economies: finance controls the economy?s engine of growth, which is credit in all its forms. Economies obviously need banking services, insurance services, and real estate development and so, of course, not all of finance is ?without working, risking, or economizing?. The problem today remains what it was in the 13th century: how to isolate what is socially necessary for ?retail? banking ? processing payments by checks and credit cards, deciding how to re-lend savings and new credit under normal (non-speculative) conditions ? from extortionate charges such as 29% interest on credit cards, penalty fees and other charges in excess of what is socially necessary cost-value.

In principle, all monopolies should be included in this rentier sector, as they represent a special privilege (control over markets, especially for necessities) whose return in the form of prices and income in excess of necessary costs of production is a form of economic rent, that is, a transfer payment rather than ?earned? income. But statistically there is no practical way to isolate monopoly rent in the NIPA, as this would include a large part of the information technology sector, pharmaceuticals, and much ?industry.? The ideal conceptual framework for statistics would be to separate economic rent from underlying cost value.

Classical political economists from the Physiocrats through Adam Smith, John Stuart Mill and their Progressive Era followers were reformers in the sense that they treated the rentier sectors as extracting transfer payments rather than earning a return for producing actual output (?services?). Their labor theory of value found its counterpart in the ?economic rent theory of prices? to distinguish the necessary costs of production and doing business (reduced ultimately to the value of labor) from ?unearned income? consisting mainly of land rent, monopoly rent, and financial interest and fees. The various categories of rentier income were depicted as the ?hollow? element of prices.

Land rent, natural resource rent, monopoly rent and returns to privilege (including financial interest and fees) had no counterpart in necessary costs of production. They were historical and institutional products of privileges handed down largely from the medieval conquests that created Europe?s landed aristocracy and banking practice that developed largely by insider dealing, legitimized by lending to kings to finance war debts in an epoch when money and credit were the sinews of war. So banking as well as military rivalries for land essentially involved the foreign sector. Mill (1848) asked ?What claim have they, on the general principle of social justice, to this accession of riches? In what would they have been wronged if society had, from the beginning, reserved the right of taxing the spontaneous increase of rent, to the highest amount required by financial exigencies??

The political aim of classical analysis, then, was to minimize the economy?s cost structure by freeing industrial capitalism from these carry-overs from feudalism. The reformers? guiding idea was to minimize the role of rentier income (economic rent) by public investment, tax policy and regulation. We consider these in turn:

(1) direct public investment in basic infrastructure, including education, transportation systems, communication systems and other enterprises that were long kept in the public domain or publicly regulated from the late 19th century onward. The premier example of this is the French Cr?dit Mobilier bank founded by followers of the Count de Saint-Simon (1760?1825), who inspired key Classical economists including Karl Marx and John Stuart Mill.

The Cr?dit Mobilier bank, founded in 1852, was named in contrast to the common mortgage bank (Soci?t?s du Cr?dit Foncier) or land banks, which lent money on the security of immovable property. The Cr?dit Mobilier aimed to loan to the owners of movable property and so to promote industrial enterprise, mining and the construction of railways and other infrastructure. Today, the bulk of bank lending is again to real estate and other property already in existence, not for the creation of new productive capacity and innovation of production processes. We need Cr?dit Mobilier ? type financial institutions.

(2) tax policy (taxing land and natural resources). Here the foremost Classical-era name is Henry George (1839-1897). In his Progress and Poverty (1879) he observed that much of the wealth created by social and technological advances is captured by landowners and other monopolists via economic rents. This concentration of ?unearned? income ? which strictly speaking is not income, though it is a revenue stream ? in the hands of the few is, according to George, the cause of increasing poverty precisely in those areas which are more developed. The plight of the poor in the mature economy of New York struck him as much worse than the living standards of the poor in his native (then underdeveloped) California.

Today, the impoverishing rent flows are (a) in payment for inflated assets prices and (b) in servicing loans against those assets. A large part of the economy?s surplus flows to the property and finance sectors in payment of loans, interest and fees for the use of land and housing. And today just as in George?s days, inequality has increased strongly as bank loans have been reoriented away from supporting the real sector and towards FIRE sector loans. This drives up asset prices and thus mortgages, increasing the drain from the real economy while enriching assets owners.

(3) regulatory policy to keep the prices charged by natural monopolies such a railroads, power and gas companies in line with actual production costs plus normal profit. The classical example of this is the US Sherman Antitrust Act (1890), enacted in response to the development of business conglomerates or ?trusts? in the last third of the 19th century, which often stifled competition and manipulated prices. Today again the global financial market place is dominated by a few giants; and in most economies three of four banks control 80% or more of domestic markets.

The result is just the behavior that progressive Americans deplored in 19th century business, now played out in finance: artificial price increases for bank services and banker?s remuneration, far above the level necessary to cover costs with a reasonable profit left; block buying and price fixing in the trading of financial products; and even fraud and intimidation of competitors. And after the crisis, small banks have been bankrupted in their hundreds while the large banks have been bailed out. Re-introduction of financial anti-trust policies will not be the end (in the first 10 years of existence of the Sherman Antitrust Act, many more actions were brought against unions than against big business). But it will be a start.

5. How the FIRE sector operates

The financial sector has become the leading rentier sector. Its ?product? is debt claims on the ?real? economy, underwriting, and money management on a fee basis. For this it receives interest and dividends from real estate and business borrowers, and from consumers. Over time, a real estate buyer typically pays more in interest to their mortgage lenders than the original purchase price paid to the property seller.

Fig. 3: Interaction between the FIRE and government sectors

In its interactions with the government, the financial sector buys bonds (and also makes campaign contributions). The Federal Reserve pumps money into the banking system by purchasing bonds and, when the system breaks down, makes enormous bailout payments to cover the bad debts run up by banks and other institutions to mortgage borrowers, businesses and consumers. The government also enhances the real estate sector by providing transportation and other basic infrastructure that enhances the site value of property along the routes. Finally, the government acts as direct purchaser of monopoly services from health insurance providers, pharmaceutical companies and other monopolies. In the other direction, the U.S. Government receives a modicum of taxes from real estate (mainly at the local level for property taxes), not much income tax but some capital gains tax in good years.

Hardly by surprise, the financial sector prefers to make itself invisible ? not only to the tax collector and government regulators, but to voters. In fact, tax polices favor unearned income. The ordinary income tax rate in the US is twice the level of taxes on capital gains: for the 15 % income tax rate brackets, 5-year capital gains taxes are 8%; and for the 39.6% bracket, they are 18% (Kiplinger 2009). And yet, since capital gains are not income, higher capital gains tax is opposed on the grounds that this tax falls on (non-capital gains) incomes, which would therefore be unfairly taxed. Minarik (1992:16) writes against capital gains taxation asserting that ?the burden of proof should rest on those who would violate the basic principle of equal tax rates on incomes from whatever source.? This conflates revenue streams with income.

Successful attempts to break out the rentier sector from the rest of the economy?and hence, balance sheet and debt transactions from the purchase of goods and services?have helped soften criticism of shifting the tax burden off land and monopoly rent, and off finance. Yet Epstein and Crotty report that ?financial sector total financial assets grew from about a third of total US economy financial assets in the post-World War II decades to 45 percent of total financial assets. Their value was approximately equal to the US GDP in the early 1950s, whereas now it amounts to 4.5 times of the US GDP. Financial sector profit has grown from about 10 percent in the 1950-60s to 40 percent of total domestic profits in the early 2000s.?

Fig. 4: Overall model of the FIRE sector: producers, consumers, government, world

The distinction between rentier and ?earned? income was not incorporated into the NIPA. It is as if all income was earned by playing a productive role, and in which money (and hence, credit and debt) were ?neutral,? only a ?veil,? not as affecting the distribution of income and wealth. Credit was spent only on goods and services, not on assets. And the financial sector?s loans always took the form of productive credit, enabling businesses to pay back the loans out of future earnings while consumers paid out of rising future incomes. This is still the representation found in most textbooks today. For instance, Mishkin (2012:1 and 24) explains that ?in our economy, nonbank finance also plays an important role in channeling funds from lender-savers to borrower-spenders? Finance companies raise funds by issuing commercial paper and stocks and bonds and use the proceeds to make loans that are particularly suited to consumer and business needs.?

There thus was no explanation of how a credit bubble could inflate real estate prices and then collapse into a negative equity disaster. Finance seemed only to create wealth, not impoverish the underlying economy. Amazingly, this was claimed even for the exotic products whose proliferation preceded the 2008 crash. As late as 2006 academics asserted that ?[f]inancial risks, particularly credit risks, are no longer borne by banks. They are increasingly moved off balance sheets. Assets are converted into tradable securities, which in turn eliminates credit risks. Derivative transactions like interest rate swaps also serve the same purpose [of eliminating credit risks, MH & DB]? (Das 2006).

Nor was there any way for mainstream models to distinguish government transfer payments to the financial sector (e.g., the $13 trillion in post-2008 financial bailouts in the United States) from Keynesian-style deficit spending. Such transfer payments did not ?jumpstart? the economy. They turned a politically well-connected financial elite into new vested interests. All this is completely missed in conventional macroeconomics, which cannot come to grips with the role of the financial sector in the economy. Eminent economists have described training in today?s macro models as a useless, even socially wasteful activity (Buiter 2009; also Krugman 2009; Solow 2010).

One can understand why the financial sector has had so little interest in tracing the effect of rising money and credit on diverting income from the circular flow between producers and consumers, diverting business revenue from new capital formation, and stripping industrial assets and natural resources. Most model builders isolate these long-term structural, environmental and demographic feedbacks as ?externalities.? But they are part and parcel of reality. So one is tempted to say that the financial element of economic models is too important to be left to bankers and the think tanks they sponsor.

6. Effects on the environment, demography and the economy

Just as debt deflation diverts income to pay interest and other financial charges ? often at the cost of paying so much corporate cash flow that assets must be sold off to pay creditors ? so the phenomenon leads to stripping the natural environment. The so-called ?debt-resource-hypothesis? suggests that high indebtedness leads to increased natural resource exploitation as well as more unsustainable patterns of resource use (Neumayer 2012). This is what occurs, for instance, when the IMF and World Bank act on behalf of global banks to demand that Brazil pay its foreign debt by privatizing its Amazon forest so that loggers can earn enough foreign exchange to pay foreign bankers on the nation?s foreign-currency debt. The analogy is for absentee landlords who pay their mortgages by not repairing their property but letting it deteriorate. In all these cases the effect of debt deflation extracting interest is not only on spending ? and hence on current prices ? but on the economy?s long-term ability to produce, by eating into natural resources and the environment as well as society?s manmade capital stock.

Demographically, the effect of debt deflation is emigration and other negative effects. For example, after Latvian property prices soared as Swedish bank branches fueled the real estate bubble, living standards plunged. Families had to take on a lifetime of debt in order to gain the housing that was bequeathed to the country debt-free when the Soviet Union broke up in 1991. When Latvia?s government imposed neoliberal austerity policies in 2009-10, wage levels plunged by 30 percent in the public sector, and private-sector wages followed the decline (Sommers et al 2010). Emigration and capital flight accelerated: the Economist (2010) reported that an estimated 30,000 Latvians were leaving every year, on a 2.2 mln population. In debt-strapped Iceland, the census reported in 2011 that 8% of the population had emigrated (mainly to Norway).

Inasmuch as investors today have come to aim more at ?total returns? (net income + capital gains) rather than simply income by itself, a realistic model should integrate capital gains and investment into the current production-consumption model. Producers not only pay wages and buy capital goods as in ?current economy? models; they also use their cash flow (and even borrow) to buy other companies, as well as their own stock. When they make acquisitions on credit, the resulting debt leveraging finds its counterpart in interest payments that absorb a rising share of corporate cash flow.

This has an effect on the government?s fiscal position, because interest is a tax-deductible expense. By displacing taxable profits, the business revenue that hitherto was paid out as income taxes is now used to pay interest to creditors. The result in the early 1980s when debt-leveraged buyouts really gained momentum was that financial investors were able to obtain twice as high a return (at a 50% corporate income tax rate) by debt financing as they could get by equity financing. This tax incentive for debt leveraging rather than equity investment is the reverse of what Saint-Simon and his followers urged in the 19th century to become the wave of the future.

7. In conclusion

Only a portion of FIRE sector cash flow is spent on goods and services. The great bulk is recycled into the purchase of financial securities and other assets, or lent out as yet more interest-bearing debt ? on easier and easier credit terms as the repertory of bankable direct investments is exhausted. So the pressing task today is to trace how directing most credit into the asset markets affects asset prices much more than commodity prices. Loan standards deteriorate as debt/equity ratios increase and creditors ?race to the bottom? to find borrowers in markets further distanced from the ?real? economy. This increasingly unproductive character of credit explains why wealth is being concentrated in the hands of the population?s wealthiest 10 percent. It is the dysfunctional result of economic parasitism.

Keynes recognized a ?leakage? in the form of saving (specifically, hoarding). But at the time he wrote in the midst of the Great Depression there was little motivation to focus on debt service, or on the distinction between direct capital investment (tangible capital formation) and financial securities speculation or real estate speculation (which had all but dried up as asset markets were shrinking to reflect the economy?s shrinking). Saving took the form of non-spending, not of paying down debt. There was little lending under depression conditions.

Today?s post-bubble attempts to incorporate balance-sheet analysis into NIPA statistics on current activity are too crude. Stock averages do not give an adequate quantitative measure distinguishing the flow of funds into land and capital improvements or industrial capital formation in contrast to speculation in financial securities. So monetary analysis needs to be reformulated along with a better structural breakdown of NIPA to distinguish between money and credit spent on goods and services from that spent on financial assets and debt service.

References

Buiter, W (2009) The unfortunate uselessness of most ?state of the art? academic monetary economics. Financial Times, 3 March 2009.
Cecchetti, S Mohanty and F Zampolli (2011) The real effects of debt. BIS Working Papers 52, Basel: Bank for International Settlements.
Das, D. (2006) Globalization in the World of Finance: An Analytical History. Global Economy Journal 6 (1), article 2.
Economist (2010) Far from home: Migration and Latvia. The Economist, 1st Oct.
Epstein G. and Crotty J. (2012) How big is too big? On the social efficiency of the financial sector in the United States. Paper presented at the INET conference, Berlin. Available at www.ineteconomics.org/
Epstein, G. (ed.) (2005) Financialization and the world economy. Aldershot: Edward Elgar.
Hudson, M (2004) The archeology of money: debt versus barter theories of money?s origin. In: Wray, R. (2004) (ed.) Credit and state theories of money: the contributions of Michael Innes. Cheltenham UK: Edward Elgar.
Keen, S. (2009) Household debt:-the final stage in an artificially extended Ponzi bubble. Australian Economic Review 42, pp. 347?357.
Keen, S. (2011) Debunking economics: The naked emperor dethroned? London: Zed Books.
Kiplinger (2009) Tax law changes for 2008 ? 2017. Kiplinger?s.
Krugman, P (2009) How did economists get it so wrong? New York Times, 6 Sep.
Mill, JS (1848) Principles of political economy with some of their applications to social philosophy. Available here
Minarik , J (2007) Capital Gains Taxation, Growth, And Fairness. Contemporary Economic Policy, Volume 10, Issue 3, pages 16?25, July 1992.
Mishkin (2012) The economics of money, banking, and financial markets. New York: Pearson.
Neumayer, E (2012) Does high indebtedness increase natural resource exploitation? Environment and Development Economics, 10, pp. 127?141.
Obstfeld, M (2009) International finance and growth in developing countries: What have we learned? IMF Staff Papers Volume 56, Number 1.
Schumpeter, J (1934) The Theory of Economic Development. New York: Harvard University Press.
Solow, R (2010) Building a science of economics for the real world. Prepared Statement of Robert Solow, Professor Emeritus, MIT, to the House Committee on Science and Technology, Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight: 20 July.
Sommers, J.D., Bezemer, D. and Hudson M. (2010) The Human Costs of Financial Instability. in Latvia. In: Tavasci, D and Toporowski J. (eds.) Minsky, Financial Development and Crisis. Basingstoke, Hampshire UK: Palgrave MacMillan.
Stockhammer E (2004) Financialization and the slowdown of accumulation. Cambridge Journal of Economics, 28 (5), pp. 719-41.
Tovar, C (2008) DSGE models and central banks. BIS Monetary and Economic Department Working Paper no 258. Basel: Bank for International Settlements.
UNCTAD (2011) Trade and development report 2012. Geneva: United Nations Conference on Trade and Development.
Zezza, G. (2009) ?Fiscal policy and the economics of financial balances?, European Journal of Economics and Economic Policies, 6 (2), pp. 289-310.

Source: http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-bubble-economy-and-debt-deflation/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-bubble-economy-and-debt-deflation

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Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Girls showcase 'Game' at Food & Wine brunch ? Honolulu, Hawaii ...

<em>Joanne Chang, right, of Boston's Flour Bakery+Cafe, holds her macadamia nut version of the sticky bun, which was a hit at the "Girls Got Game!" Brunch on Sunday as part of the 2012 Hawaii Food & Wine Festival. (Star-Advertiser photo by Nina Wu)</em>

Joanne Chang, right, of Boston's Flour Bakery+Cafe, holds her macadamia nut version of the sticky bun, which was a hit at the "Girls Got Game!" Brunch on Sunday as part of the 2012 Hawaii Food & Wine Festival. (Star-Advertiser photo by Nina Wu)

BY NINA WU / nwu@staradvertiser.com

It was game on for a quartet of female chefs who brought their A-game to Sunday brunch on the final day of the 2012?Hawaii Food & Wine Festival.

<em>Mac nut sticky bun. (Star-Advertiser photo by Nina Wu)</em>

Mac nut sticky bun. (Star-Advertiser photo by Nina Wu)

The event, called ?Girls Got Game!?, featured Jacqueline Lau of Roy?s Restaurants Hawaii, Christina Tosi of Momofuku Milk Bar in New York, Susan Feniger of STREET and Border Grill in Los Angeles and Joanne Chang of Flour Bakery+Cafe and Myers+Chang in Boston.?Female farmers from the isles ? from Naked Cow Dairy on Oahu to Kuahiwi Ranch on Hawaii island ? were also at the brunch to present their products.

There was a line to get in to the sold-out event, which offered a bounty of food and drinks at various stations on the pool deck of the Hyatt Regency Waikiki.

You could choose from local chocolate-covered croissants, mini pancakes, a display of tropical fruits intermingled with chocolate croissants (made from local chocolate), tropical jams and fresh-torched hamachi.

First stop: Joanne Chang?s station, where she offered her famous sticky buns topped with macadamia nuts. They were rich, nutty and sweet and a memorably good way to start the brunch.

Christina Tosi of Momofuku Milk Bar, adds the final touch of pepper to her breakfast dish.

Christina Tosi of Momofuku Milk Bar, adds the final touch of pepper to her breakfast dish. (Star-Advertiser photo by Nina Wu)

Tosi of Momofuku was all smiles as she dished out soft poached eggs on an English muffin with a pineapple onion marmalade, sprinkled with pepper. The eggs were poached to perfection, with just the right softness, while remaining a little runny inside. They were offered, along with glasses of her popular milk coffee.

Bedecked with several layers of lei and a pair of sunglasses, Susan Feniger of STREET greeted fans, autographed copies of her cookbook??Street Food? while doling out plates of sesame-coated local apple banana fritters with coconut Kaya jam and pandan leaves (topped with a sweet soy glaze).

The fritters, a comforting combo of fried sweetness and saltiness, were accompanied by a refreshing Burmese melon salad with coconut lime chutney and soy lime vinaigrette.

Feniger offered a very similar Southeast-Asian-inspired dish as a contestant on the second season of Bravo?s ?Top Chef Masters? in 2010. She got a helping hand from?Camille Komine of Camille?s On Wheels. Komine worked for Feniger in L.A. 30 years ago.

On this trip to Hawaii, Feniger says she discovered taro leaves and loves them so much she?s putting them on the menu at STREET.

Susan Feniger was having a blast, autographing books while greeting fans and dishing up her sesame-coated apple banana fritters and Burmese melon salad.

Susan Feniger was having a blast, autographing books while dishing up her sesame-coated apple banana fritters and Burmese melon salad with coconut chutney and soy-lime vinaigrette. (Star-Advertiser photo by Nina Wu)

Jacqueline Lau of Roy?s Restaurants offered two local-inspired plates ? a medley of moi sashimi with sea asparagus and limu salad with watermelon radish and pepeaiao (fungus) as well as Kuahiwi beef on a bed of Nalo greens.

The first was inspired by the sea, featuring all-local ingredients (and ?looked like jewels on a plate).

Bottles of prosecco were flowing, but the Bloody Marys were definitely the star beverage of the morning.

First, you got to choose the flavor of sea salt to rim the glass with, then the vodka, add your own touch of hot sauce and choice of accompaniments (fresh lemon wedges, basil, olives, carrots, celery, cluster tomatoes, shrimp).

Chandra Lucariello of Southern Wine & Spirits of Hawaii poured a little extra olive oil on top, which she says adds richness to the drink.

To finish it all off ? a scoop of salted caramel gelato from Il Gelato Hawaii.

It was a fabulous brunch presented by a star team of all-female chefs and farmers, and will hopefully happen again next year.

Source: http://www.honolulupulse.com/sa/girls-showcase-game-at-food-wine-brunch

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Saturday, September 8, 2012

Follow This Relationship Advice To Find Happiness Together | Get ...

Follow This Relationship Advice To Find Happiness Together

Article by Michelle Bery

Follow This Relationship Advice To Find Happiness Together ? Other

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Love is in the air when it comes to programming on television, articles in the magazines that we read, and the radio shows that we listen to; it seems that everywhere we turn talk is focused on ill-fated couples and the secrets to make a relationship last. But when it comes to the true ideals on which happy unions are based, there is some relationship advice that bears following.

First and foremost, as any happy couple will tell you, communication is the key to success in a relationship. That is why ? as is so often the case ? relationship advice will focus on the best ways to communicate with each other. So many times, couples come into a relationship with a whole set of baggage brought from their upbringing as children or from previous relationships. What defines communication for one partner may not even scratch the surface for another. Many couples will often turn to professional counseling in order to follow this relationship advice; learning how to redefine communication and meet each other?s needs so that each person feels respected and heard.

As trust is also such an essential ingredient in happy partnerships, you will often hear relationship advice focused on blazing new trails of trust in your relationship. Even if there has been no infidelity in your own relationship, some partners will bring past betrayals with them into this new environment. Or perhaps, a lack of trust has more to do with a partner?s own insecurity than the trustworthiness of their partner. In any case, a lack of trust almost always spells disaster to a relationship. It is essential, therefore, to follow this relationship advice to find mutual trust and respect in your partnership ? such respect and trust will invariably pay off in security and happiness.

In terms of relationship advice, experts also agree that time spent with each other equates to unbreakable bonds of friendship. And therein lays the secret to a great relationship ? friendship. Physical intimacy is great and an important component in any relationship but without friendship ? deep and abiding friendship ? the relationship will most likely not survive. Spend time together ? plenty of quality alone time ? and get to know each other over and over again; that is the greatest relationship advice that you will ever receive.

Relationship advice can be found on practically every corner. But what truly matters ? and what will translate to success and happiness in your own relationship ? are the things that are important to you as individuals and as a couple.

About the Author

For easy to understand, in depth information about relationship advice visit our ezGuide 2 Relationships.

Use and distribution of this article is subject to our Publisher Guidelines
whereby the original author?s information and copyright must be included.

Michelle Bery


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For easy to understand, in depth information about relationship advice visit our ezGuide 2 Relationships.












Use and distribution of this article is subject to our Publisher Guidelines
whereby the original author?s information and copyright must be included.

A man that cares about you will be genuinely interested, he will show in interest in your well-being, and he will be interested in meeting your friends and family. Keep a man interested without introducing too much drama with help from a certified life and dating coach in this free video on dating. Expert: Donna Barnes Contact: www.donnabarnes.com Bio: Donna Barnes is a professional life coach, relationship expert, television host, author, columnist and producer, based in New York City. Filmmaker: Paul Muller

Tags: Advice, Find, Follow, Happiness, Relationship, This, Together

Source: http://getmygirlfriendbackquickly.com/ethical-ways-to-get-your-girlfriend-back/follow-this-relationship-advice-to-find-happiness-together/

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