Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Japan's economy unexpectedly slips into recession

Japan’s economy unexpectedly slipped into recession in the third quarter, falling at an annualised 1.6 percent rate after plunging 7.3 percent in the second quarter following a rise in the national sales tax that undercut consumer spending.

The world’s third-largest economy, after the United States and China, had been forecast to rebound by 2.1 percent in the third quarter but consumption and exports remained weak, saddling companies with huge inventories.
The news sets the stage for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to delay another deeply unpopular sales tax hike and call a snap election halfway through his term.
Abe has said he would look at the data when deciding whether to press ahead with a second increase in the sales tax to 10 percent in October next year as part of a plan to curb Japan’s huge public debt, which is the worst among the industrialised nations.
Japanese media have said the prime minister, who returns from an Asia tour on Monday, could announce his decision to delay the hike as early as Tuesday and state his intention to call an election for parliament’s lower house, which ruling party lawmakers expect to be held on December14.
An economic adviser to Abe termed the economic slide “shocking” and urged the government to reconsider steps to support the economy.
“This is absolutely not a situation in which we should be debating an increase in the consumption tax,” Etsuro Honda, a University of Shizuoka professor and a prominent outside architect of Abe’s reflationary policies, told Reuters.
No election for parliament’s powerful lower house need be held until late 2016, but political insiders say Abe wants to lock in his mandate while his ratings are still relatively robust, helping him push ahead with economic and other policies such as a controversial shift away from Japan’s post-war pacifism.
Facing a divided and weak opposition, Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) is expected to keep its majority in the lower house, but it could well lose seats. As election talk heated up last week, a poll by NHK public TV found that Abe’s voter support had fallen 8 percentage points to 44 percent from a month earlier.
A senior LDP lawmaker said the data made Abe’s decision to postpone the tax hike certain and that he expected the premier to call a snap poll, arguing that his “Abenomics” strategy to re-energise the economy was working but needed more time.
“For sure, minus 1.6 percent is not good, but if you look at individual indicators, things are beginning to turn up,” the lawmaker told Reuters.
“The prime minister feels strongly that he wants to make certain of the economic trend so I think he will put off the sales tax rise from next October,” he said.
Even before the GDP announcement, Abe appeared to suggest he was leaning towards delaying the tax hike, telling reporters travelling with him in Australia that raising the tax rate would be meaningless if deflation returned.
Consumption stagnant
The yen slipped on the poor GDP reading, with the dollar briefly pushing to a seven-year high above 117 yen. The benchmark Nikkei stock average fell 2.6 percent.
Sluggish growth and downward pressure on inflation due to sliding global oil prices prompted the Bank of Japan to unexpectedly expand its massive monetary stimulus last month.
Abe inherited the sales tax plan when he took power in December 2012, pledging to revive the economy with his “Abenomics” mix of ultra-easy monetary policy, spending and reforms.
The LDP, its smaller ally and the then-ruling Democratic Party enacted the legislation requiring the tax to be raised unless economic conditions were judged too weak.
Economy Minister Akira Amari said the GDP data showed the April hike to 8 percent from 5 percent had made it harder than anticipated for the public to shake off their deflationary mindset.
Household spending is stagnating, with housing investment and corporate capital spending down, Amari said, while finding a bright spot in strong corporate profits.
On a quarter-on-quarter basis, the economy shrank 0.4 percent in the third quarter, following a contraction of 1.8 percent in the second quarter. Recessions are typically defined as two or more consecutive quarters of economic contraction.
Private consumption, accounting for about 60 percent of the economy, rose 0.4 percent from the previous quarter, half as much as expected.
Some economists, however, said growth could improve in the October-December quarter.
“If you look at other fundamental indicators, they’ve shifted over to an increasing trend, so if this continues ... the next quarter should be better,” said Junko Nishioka, chief economist at RBS Securities Japan.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Hong Kong activists mark one month of 'umbrella protests'

Hong Kong democracy activists on Tuesday marked one month of mass protests by unfurling a sea of umbrellas as student leaders called for direct talks with Beijing officials, the first time such a request has been made.

At an evening rally at the main protest camp, thousands raised umbrellas to mark the moment a month ago when police fired tear gas at largely peaceful crowds -- kickstarting the most concerted challenge to Beijing since the bloody 1989 Tiananmen protests.
As protesters streamed into the site Alex Chow -- president of leading protest group the Hong Kong Federation of Students -- said he would seek a meeting with China's Prime Minister Li Keqiang if the Hong Kong government failed to relay protesters' demands to mainland authorities.
Parts of the semi-autonomous Chinese city, an Asian financial hub, have been paralysed by a month of mass rallies and roadblocks.
Protesters want China to rescind its decision in August that all candidates in elections for the city's leader in 2017 must be vetted by a loyalist committee -- an arrangement demonstrators deride as "fake democracy".
Talks between the government and student leaders last week made little headway. The government offered to write a report to Beijing on events since protests began and to set up a committee with demonstrators to discuss further constitutional reform.
But Chow Tuesday said any report must include a direct request from the city authorities calling on mainland authorities to withdraw their August decision.
"If the Hong Kong government has difficulty meeting our demands, we sincerely hope that arrangements could be made for us to directly meet with premier Li Keqiang as soon as possible," Chow said.
It is the first time students have broadcast the idea of going straight to Beijing to negotiate.
Their request echoes the Tiananmen protests when student leaders eventually met then-premier Li Peng for what turned out to be fruitless talks.
On June 3/4 the movement was brutally crushed by the military, with hundreds -- and by some estimates thousands -- killed.
Movement at an impasse

Organisers of the demonstrations have been hoping to inject new momentum into the movement after reaching an impasse with the government and seemingly struggling to decide how to proceed.
The protests have been dubbed the "Umbrella Movement" following the creative ways demonstrators used them to shelter from the heat, torrential rain, pepper spray and police batons.
Tuesday's rally opposite the city's government headquarters in Admiralty district started with an 87-second silence at 5:57 pm (0957 GMT).
At that time on September 28, riot police shot the first of 87 canisters of tear gas at crowds who had taken over a highway near the city parliament.
That decision backfired, drawing tens of thousands of sympathisers onto the streets and fuelling a movement that has defied many expectations both for its size and longevity.
But the Chinese government has shown no sign of backing down. Protest leaders are also aware that the disruption caused by their roadblocks has sparked mounting public frustration.
Occupy's co-founder and university professor Benny Tai said Tuesday he planned to spend more time away from protest sites and return to teaching, but insisted it was not a retreat.
But many of those at the rally said they could not leave the streets until genuine democratic progress was made.
"We can't retreat because we haven't got anything yet," 52-year-old computer programmer Any Ho told AFP. "Democracy cannot be taken for granted. We have to be persistent for it to come."
In surprisingly frank comments from a mainland Chinese businessman, billionaire Alibaba founder Jack Ma said the protests were the result of "young people who don't have hope".
"All the big guys take... the good things and the young people feel hopeless. I understand that but they should not push too much. Both sides should listen," he was quoted by the Wall Street Journal's website as saying during a conference run by the media group in California.


Stung by sanctions scandal, Cuba defends North Korea at U.N.

Wed, Nov 12 2014
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Cuba, which was involved in a violation of U.N. sanctions against North Korea last year, has come to the aid of Pyongyang to defend it against a Western-led push to bring its alleged human rights abuses to The Hague, envoys said on Wednesday.

S. Korea prosecutors seek death for captain of doomed ferry

South Korean prosecutors on Monday sought the death penalty for the captain of a ferry that capsized in April, leaving 304 people, most of them school children, dead or missing, in a trial of 15 crew who abandoned ship before it sank.

Lee Joon-seok, 68, charged with homicide, should be sentenced to death for failing to carry out his duty, which in effect amounted to homicide, the prosecution told the court before resting its case in a trial that has taken place amid intense public anger.
Sentiment turned sharply hostile after evidence surfaced that the mostly teenage passengers waited in their cabins, obediently following orders, as the crew escaped.
Lee was among 15 accused of abandoning the sharply listing ferr

China and Japan in landmark talks to ease tensions

© Kim Kyung-Hoon, AFP | China's Xi Jinping (right) shakes hands with Japan's PM Shinzo Abe on the sidelines of the APEC summit in Beijing on November 10, 2014

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (left) and Chinese President Xi Jinping held formal talks on Monday in what many hailed as a breakthrough in efforts to improve the strained relations between the two economic powerhouses.

The brief summit, held on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meeting, is the first meeting between the two leaders since they took office.
The détente started with an awkward handshake in front of the flashing cameras of the world’s press, with a unsmiling Xi greeting a stiff Abe in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People.
China and Japan

China, U.S. agree limits on emissions, but experts see little new

Wed, Nov 12 2014
By David Stanway
BEIJING (Reuters) - China and the United States agreed on Wednesday to new limits on carbon emissions starting in 2025, but the pledge by the world's two biggest polluters appears to be more politically significant than substantive.
As China's President Xi Jinping agreed to a date for peak CO2 emissions for the first time and also promised to raise the share of zero-carbon energy to 20 percent of the country's total, President Barack Obama said the United States would cut its own emissions by more than a quarter by 2025.
At its best, the announcement threw the political weight of the world's two biggest economies behind a new global climate pact to be negotiated in Paris next year.
But the United States has already pledged to cut its carbon emissions by 17 percent by 2020 and it's not clear if the new proposals will pass a Republican-dominated Congress.
In a statement, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell branded the new U.S. emission cuts as part of Obama's "ideological war on coal", and said his priority in the new Congress was "easing the burden" of environmental regulations.

Obama optimistic on change in Myanmar, more work to be done

Photo
12:39pm EST
NAYPYITAW Myanmar (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama said on Thursday he was optimistic about political change in Myanmar and called on the country's top politicians to push on with reform toward a free, inclusive and transparent election in 2015.
Myanmar began its emergence from international pariah status in 2011 when military leaders launched reforms after nearly half a century in power.
"The democratization process in Myanmar is real," Obama said at a joint press conference with the Southeast Asian nation's President Thein Sein at the presidential palace in the capital Naypyitaw.
"But in our discussions we recognized that this process is still incomplete."

TITLE: Laos rail development on fast track with Thailand, China line

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An agreement between Thailand and China on the construction of a new rail line linking the two countries has put the spotlight on Laos, the country this proposed railway would pass through.

China jails 'wild imams' in mass crackdown


China has imprisoned almost two dozen people - mostly Muslim religious leaders - in the western region of Xinjiang, in a stepped up crackdown on "illegal religious activities", Chinese media reported.
The 22 suspects, including so-called "wild imams", were given prison terms ranging from five to 16 years at a mass public sentencing in Xinjiang on Monday, the state-run China News Service reported.


Report accuses Myanmar generals of war crimes


Military activities carried out by Myanmar's powerful minister of home affairs when the country was under army dictatorship could constitute war crimes, a new study has said.
Human rights researchers at Harvard Law School said in the report released on Friday that there was evidence that Home Affairs Minister Ko Ko and two other generals were responsible for the executions, torture and enslavement of civilians by troops during a large-scale offensive against ethnic rebels of the Karen state between 2005 and 2008.

Japan to restart nuclear energy production

Local officials have approved to restart a nuclear power plant in Japan's south, ushering the country's return to nuclear power generation more than three years after the Fukushima disaster.
Kagoshima Governor Yuichiro Ito said two reactors at the Sendai Nuclear Power Station would be restarted despite concerns among some local residents.

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Vietnam booms on FDI, looks to tap investment from India

NEW DELHI: While Vietnam has been cynosure of all eyes following its dispute with China
over the latter's claim in the South China Sea region, few would have noticed its recent
economic growth and market opportunities that it present. This growth has been based on
foreign direct investment (FDI) and Hanoi is keen to invite Indian investors in large as
enunciated by its prime minister during his trip to Delhi last month.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Australia’s Abbott vows to confront Putin over Flight MH17

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said Thursday he was determined to secure a one-on-one meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin to demand full cooperation in the investigation into the crash of a Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17 in Ukraine.

Abbott said he would hold a bilateral meeting with Putin as soon as possible either at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation leaders’ summit in Beijing on Nov. 9-10 or a week later in the Australian city of Brisbane, where Australia will chair a G20 meeting.
“One way or another, I will take the chance to speak to the Russian president sometime over the next week or so,” Abbott told reporters.
Russian officials ridiculed Abbott’s threat last month to “shirtfront” Putin – using an Australian football term for a head-on shoulder-charge to an opponent’s chest – and insisted that Abbot would have no opportunity since no bilateral meeting had been scheduled.
In a joint news conference on Thursday with Abbott, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte also revealed that investigators had retrieved more human remains this week from the rebel-held site in eastern Ukraine where the plane was shot down on July 17, killing all 298 on board, including Australians and many Dutch citizens.
Australians and Dutch united
Abbott said Thursday that he and Rutte were united in expecting full Russian cooperation with the Dutch-led investigation.
“We don’t want the investigation ridiculed; we don’t want the investigation compromised or sabotaged,” Abbott said.
Rutte said he gave Putin a similar message as Abbot’s on the sidelines of an Asia-Europe Meeting summit last month in Milan, Italy.
“I used the opportunity again to tell him that I expect him to do everything he can to put pressure on the separatists to allow unhindered access to the crash site,” Rutte underscored.
During the meeting with Putin, Rutte said he compared the disaster to the Russian nuclear submarine K-141 Kursk which sank with the loss of all 118 lives aboard in the Barents Sea in 2000 and was salvaged by a Dutch consortium.
Rutte said Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak would also try to meet Putin during the APEC summit.

North Korea releases two detained US citizens

The North Korean government has released two US nationals, Kenneth Bae (right) and Matthew Todd Miller, who are en route to the United States escorted by Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, his office said on Saturday.

US President Barack Obama said he was "grateful" for the release of the two Americans.
"I think it is a wonderful day for them and their families, and obviously we are very grateful for their safe return," he said, speaking on the sidelines of a White House ceremony.
The US State Department also hailed the release in a statement on Saturday.
"The Department of State welcomes the release of US citizens Kenneth Bae and Matthew Todd Miller from the DPRK (Democratic People's Republic of Korea), where they have been held for two years and seven months, respectively," it said.
The State Department also thanked Clapper for his active involvement in securing their release. “We are grateful to Director of National Intelligence Clapper, who engaged on behalf of the United States in discussions with DPRK authorities about the release of two citizens,” it said.
Bae, a missionary, was arrested in North Korea in November 2012 and was sentenced to 15 years of hard labour for crimes against the state. Miller, who reportedly was tried on an espionage charge, had been in custody since April this year and was sentenced to six years of hard labour.
Detained American tourist Jeffrey Fowle was released by North Korea last month.
The State Department went on to thank Sweden and other international entities for their help in the matter.
“We also want to thank our international partners, especially our Protecting Power, the government of Sweden, for their tireless efforts to help secure the freedom of Mr. Bae and Mr. Miller.”
Sweden functions as a so-called protecting power for the United States, Australia and Canada – including performing consular responsibilities for their citizens – in North Korea in the absence of formal diplomatic relations with Pyongyang.
"The Department of State reiterates our strong recommendation against all travel by US citizens to the DPRK," the statement added.