Up and Down Wall Street
The Job the Federal Reserve Can’t Get Done
The signal benefit of full employment for workers—significantly higher pay—remains elusive.
By Randall W. Forsyth
On this Labor Day weekend, it would seem that working women and men should be celebrating. Businesses have expanded monthly payrolls for nearly seven years, the longest streak on record. The jobless rate has fallen to levels that economists call full employment. You would think America in 2017 is a worker’s paradise, to use Marxist phraseology.
But how many more get financed when the Federal Reserve pegs the cost of overnight money at just over 1%?
THE JOB THE FEDERAL RESERVE CAN´T GET DONE/ BARRON´S MAGAZINE
USING BLOCKCHAIN TO CLEAN UP THE NIGER DELTA / KNOWLEDGE@WHARTON
Social Impact
Using the Blockchain to Clean Up the Niger Delta

The environmental devastation is widespread within the 1,000 square kilometers of Ogoniland — equivalent to roughly 390 square miles or about a third of the size of Rhode Island. It has destroyed the livelihoods of farmers and fishermen in surrounding villages, while jobless youth facing a bleak future are taking up arms, destroying pipelines and wreaking other havoc.
Damaged pipelines have led to more oil spills, while corruption and locals’ deep distrust of outsiders have further hampered assistance.
Cleaning up the Niger Delta and improving the economic plight of the area’s villagers have long been a passion of Chinyere Nnadi, founder and CEO of Sustainability International, a U.S. nonprofit whose goal is alleviating poverty in Africa. His family came from Nigeria and he remembers vacations back to their village where they had to deal with lack of electricity, unpaved roads, armed robbers and devastated agricultural crops. Since other groups have already tried to clean up the oil mess with mixed results, Nnadi realized that any solution must start with fighting corruption and building trust before any real progress is posible.
“I’m personally invested in it because it’s my family history,” Nnadi says in an interview with Knowledge@Wharton. “From the outside, it looks like it’s something as simple as solving an environmental problem. But then when you look into the society, you realize [the root of the problem is] systemic corruption and the lack of transparency within the actual community.…
Because that system is sick, and the actors don’t trust each other, no work is able to be done.”
To solve the problem, Nnadi said he realized that “we would have to introduce a new way of doing things.”
Fighting Corruption
Nnadi’s new way is the blockchain, a decentralized virtual ledger where records are verified, cannot be changed and are publicly accessible — if everyone’s eyes are on it, no one can get away with anything. To that end, his nonprofit is collaborating with the Blockchain for Social Impact Coalition, an initiative launched last month by ConsenSys, a blockchain technology software firm. “The reason that the blockchain is really important is because people don’t need to trust each other, they need to trust the tool,” says Ben Siegel, ConsenSys impact policy manager.
For Nnadi, however, the goal is to solve accountability and corruption issues in Nigeria. “Our thesis is that because the centralized institutional nodes of accountability have been compromised, distributed accountability could be the way to serve the interest of all of the community stakeholders: citizens, government and businesses. Through this mechanism, we hope to engineer economic inclusion and community engagement.”
Smart Contracts
Sustainability International and the blockchain coalition are looking to use “smart contracts” to bypass corruption and solve the problem of distrust in Ogoniland. These digital contracts automatically execute when all parties fulfill their responsibilities. For example, if Shell has set aside $10 million to clean up an oil spill, funds would be released to the contractor after the work has been verified as finished. “The total monies for the contract won’t be fulfilled until the community members have confirmed that this project has been completed,” Nnadi says. Ordinarily, he notes, the contractor helps himself to some of the money.
“You’re engineering accountability,” Nnadi continues. “Suddenly, you’re introducing new skillsets to the community where they’re able to monitor projects at international sustainability standards.” The community also benefits from all of the capital being put to use. Shell wins as well since it could monitor from afar and “know what’s happening deep in the jungle in the Delta.” His nonprofit is working on delivering access to the blockchain via mobile phones. (Eight in 10 Nigerians have them, according to BI Intelligence.)
Kevin Werbach, a Wharton professor of legal studies and business ethics who has studied the blockchain, says there’s been an “explosion of blockchain-based applications and systems. It’s still very early. It’s still not as solid and reliable as where they need to be, but it is clearly where we’re going to see more activity.” He notes that the blockchain has been used in various social impact efforts. In May, the United Nation’s World Food Programme conducted a pilot that gave cryptocurrency vouchers to 10,000 Syrian refugees in Jordan that they redeemed at certain markets.
“It certainly has potential for social impact applications as well as commercial applications,” Werbach says. “The danger is people think it’s a magic bullet. If the problem is getting accurate information into the blockchain in the first place, the blockchain can’t solve that problem. If there’s a massive power imbalance, the blockchain can’t automatically solve that.
Certainly, it has a lot of potential in the social impact context. But we have to be careful about what the technology can and cannot do.”
Laying the Groundwork
Nnadi is aware of the inherent challenges of fighting deep-rooted dysfunction in Nigeria. His nonprofit has been working in the region for the last four years to identify people and groups they can trust, specifically community-based nonprofits. These organizations have become popular as a response to systemic corruption. “It’s [assisting] the community activists that already exist on the ground and have been fighting with no help,” he says. “What we’re looking to do is activate the local person, arm them with a new skill or a new tool to support their community.”
Nnadi aims to “open up a communication channel with the villager on their feature phone directly to Shell or to the government.” Currently, there is no direct, quick link, and so reporting and clean-up of spills are delayed. He is working with Media for Justice in Nigeria, for example, to station environmental monitors in every village in the Delta who use their smartphones to take photos of spills and share them with an instant messaging group. But the information is siloed within the group, and it could take months before reaching someone in government or at Shell.
“We’re looking to use feature phones and create a communication channel [between] the villager and our platform so that there’s an ability for the villager to be a 24/7 monitor” — not only for spills, but also for acts of terrorism such as bombing of pipelines and illegal refineries, Nnadi says. Such activities cost oil companies and the government a fortune and thus they could be motivated to help groups like community nonprofits. The basic thesis of the pilots is to “empower the 99 actors against the one bad actor.”
Sustainability International is planning to launch several pilots in the Niger Delta over the next year, starting with small, controlled tests. Its initial endeavor is actually to glean information about the clean-up process by doing the work manually at first and then adding layers of technology as appropriate. The nonprofit plans to work with people in the village instead of bringing in workers from outside the area; the blockchain will be piloted afterwards. “The core problems of our use case that we are looking to solve are provenance, payments, security and identity,” Nnadi says.
Siegel adds: “A platform like Sustainability International’s project has the potential to create a blockchain solution that can be used not only in Nigeria but … [also] anywhere we’re trying to fight corruption.” He says the blockchain coalition is creating a decentralized community of meetup groups worldwide interested in using the technology for social impact. It is holding a month-long hackathon starting on September 7 to aid that effort. “We’re on the cusp of proving that blockchain has the potential to really change the way we think about social impact,” Siegel says
NORTH KOREA CRISIS: TRUMP PLAYS WITH FIRE / DER SPIEGEL
North Korea Crisis
Trump Plays with Fire
A DER SPIEGEL Editorial by Mathieu von Rohr .
Images of Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un
The conflict with Kim Jong Un raises concern that Washington may be more unpredictable than North Korea.
Donald Trump recently posted a tweet that triggered consternation among his top military leaders. "After consultation with my generals and military experts," he wrote early one morning, "please be advised that the United States Government will not accept or allow ..."
Officials at the United States Defense Department suddenly became very nervous when they saw the tweet. Was the president announcing a military strike? Against North Korea? Nine minutes later, the next tweet provided the denouement: The president wanted to ban transsexuals from military service.
This anecdote says a lot about how little confidence even close associates have in the American president. He's an impulsive man without a shred of foreign policy experience. This is also evident in Trump's threats against North Korea, which raised fears of a war last week. Trump spoke in almost biblical terms when he threatened "fire and fury like the world has never seen." No other U.S. president has ever displayed such recklessness, and for good reason. If the United States descends to the same rhetorical level as North Korean dictator, it not only increases the risk of war, but also normalizes Kim Jong Un's own belligerence.
The North Korean ruler, whose isolated realm has now become a global security risk, isn't crazy. His actions are calculated. His supreme objective is that of preserving his murderous regime and nuclear weapons are his life insurance policy, intended to provide him with international respect. North Korea could soon have the ability to reach Los Angeles or New York with nuclear-armed intercontinental ballistic missiles. As such, Washington's concern is understandable, but Trump's options are limited. There is no military solution.
Incalculable Consequences
The idea of a preemptive strike has repeatedly been raised, through which the United States could eliminate North Korea's nuclear weapons. But even if such an attack were unexpectedly able to neutralize the country's entire nuclear arsenal, retaliation would be an almost certainty.
Strategists fear that Pyongyang would react with an artillery strike against the South Korean capital Seoul. This could lead to the deaths of millions of people, China could be drawn into the war and the consequences would be incalculable. Trump's advisers know this.
For months, Trump has been using Twitter to call upon the Chinese leadership to resolve the conflict.
But that's wishful thinking. Although Beijing is displeased with Kim, China is even more worried that the North Korean regime will collapse, leading to the north's reunification with U.S. ally South Korea. The Chinese have recently increased pressure on Pyongyang, but they could certainly do more, including as an intermediary. But even if they wanted to, they could not take away Kim's nuclear weapons.
Pressure and Diplomacy
The only tool left for the United States is a holdover from the Cold War era: deterrence.
Washington must build a credible military threat, issue explicit security guarantees for South Korea and Japan and impose tougher economic sanctions against North Korea. At the same time, the United States and its allies could also offer a compromise to North Korea. They could hold out the prospect of diplomatic and economic relations in exchange for concessions from Pyongyang.
This blend of military and economic pressure could ultimately lead to regime's collapse, or increase its willingness to engage in real negotiations. But that requires patience, which is why the appropriate response to Kim Jong Un is not "fire and fury," but something much more complicated: pressure and diplomacy.
The good news is that no one is interested in a war, at least from a rational perspective. The bad news is that one cannot always rely on all parties behaving rationally. Escalation usually occurs when both sides make the wrong calculations. Nothing would be worse that sliding into a war by accident. That's what makes Trump's escalating words so dangerous. It is advisable, to be sure, to judge him by his actions more than by his words. He has often made drastic statements before only to listen to his advisers in the end.
Nevertheless, his rhetoric raises concern that the unpredictable player in this conflict is not the North Korean dictator but the American president.
Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan
CHINA AND INDIA GUARD AGAINST THE PREPOSTEROUS / GEOPOLITICAL FUTURES
China and India Guard Against the Preposterous
By George Friedman
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STATE SUPPORT HAS A DOWNSIDE FOR CHINA´S TECH TITANS / THE FINANCIAL TIMES COMMENT & ANALYSIS
State support has a downside for China’s tech titans
Some big companies have grown complacent under government protection
by: Jamil Anderlini
.
Are China’s internet titans about to conquer the world? Listen to the talk in Beijing and in some circles in the west and the triumph of Chinese tech is all but certain. At the very least it will compete on an equal footing with the world-beating incumbents headquartered in Silicon Valley.
Take Richard Liu. The founder and chief executive of JD.com, China’s second-largest e-commerce company and the world’s third-largest internet company by revenue, believes his business and competitors such as Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu will one day pose a serious challenge to the likes of Google, Facebook and Amazon — but not for at least another decade.
Instrumental in this is the support of the Chinese state. To a greater or lesser extent, all of China’s big and successful internet companies have benefited from the communist party’s efforts to exclude Silicon Valley’s finest. Facebook, Google, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube are all blocked in China.
On top of that, the government has announced plans to shut down all non-official virtual private network services that allow paying customers to circumvent the “great firewall” censorship system and access overseas websites.
Beijing claims foreign websites must be blocked under censorship and “national security” laws but the bans are effectively non-tariff trade barriers that potentially violate World Trade Organisation rules.
The results in commercial terms for the companies have been outstanding, as shown until recently by the performance of Baidu, China’s most protected internet champion. The company, often referred to as the “Google of China”, was the direct and immediate beneficiary of Beijing’s decision to block Google in 2010 after the US group refused to censor its search results.
In the absence of serious international competition, China’s internet companies have been left to capitalise on the emergence of the world’s largest online market. The number of internet users in China has doubled since 2010 to reach 750m today, according to official government figures. The growth of e-commerce has been especially impressive — China is by far the largest online retail market in the world, accounting for nearly 40 per cent of all online sales globally.
Transactions through Alibaba’s online platforms alone totalled $500bn last year, equal to the gross domestic product of Argentina and more than the combined transactions of Amazon and eBay.
Yet state protection brings downsides that may end up harming the companies it seeks to help.
In a recent interview Mr Liu said the fact that the Beijing government blocks most major US internet companies from its enormous market stops Chinese enterprises from being truly competitive. “It’s like people — if you are put into a big sterile box on the day you are born and not exposed to any microbes or diseases and only given purified air and water then when you come out you will get sick very soon,” he noted morbidly. “You will die very soon out in nature.”Success within the state-censored ‘intranet’ of China has made some of the sector’s champions arrogant, complacent and liable to spend on acquisitions abroad
Baidu is a case in point. Despite, or perhaps because of, its privileged position as the dominant search engine in China since the decision to block Google, it is flailing. Its market capitalisation is just one-fifth that of Alibaba and Tencent and its growth has been subdued. It appears to be ailing even before it is let out of the sterile box.
Success within the state-censored “intranet” of China has also made some of the sector’s champions arrogant, complacent and liable to hugely overspend on acquisitions abroad.
Yes, some of the services they provide within China are impressive. Tencent’s WeChat messenger app is better than most similar services, widespread adoption of online payment systems are moving China towards a cashless society and e-commerce delivery services are exceptionally reliable and fast. But none of these services are unique or “game-changers” and there is no way the Chinese companies can replicate their domestic prowess or scale outside the walled garden of China’s internet.
At home their services are grafted on to the state-owned banking and logistics industries. They also receive preferential regulatory treatment in the form of cheap loans and land from a party-state that relies heavily on them for tax revenues, employment growth and online surveillance of citizens.
Even in Hong Kong, which maintains a largely separate political and legal system from the rest of China, these companies have failed to make real inroads even though several of their founders and top executives live in the city most of the time.
Residents overwhelmingly prefer WhatsApp to WeChat and almost nobody does their shopping through Alibaba or JD.com. An international advertising campaign for WeChat featuring star footballer Lionel Messi a few years ago turned out to be an expensive flop. Today, Tencent and its competitors are expanding into markets in Southeast Asia and eastern Europe that they think will be easier to crack.
There are sure to be many more embarrassing failures as the Chinese internet titans attempt to emerge from their sterile, state-protected box.
Bienvenida
Les doy cordialmente la bienvenida a este Blog informativo con artículos, análisis y comentarios de publicaciones especializadas y especialmente seleccionadas, principalmente sobre temas económicos, financieros y políticos de actualidad, que esperamos y deseamos, sean de su máximo interés, utilidad y conveniencia.
Pensamos que solo comprendiendo cabalmente el presente, es que podemos proyectarnos acertadamente hacia el futuro.
Gonzalo Raffo de Lavalle
Las convicciones son mas peligrosos enemigos de la verdad que las mentiras.
Friedrich Nietzsche
Quien conoce su ignorancia revela la mas profunda sabiduría. Quien ignora su ignorancia vive en la mas profunda ilusión.
Lao Tse
“There are decades when nothing happens and there are weeks when decades happen.”
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin
You only find out who is swimming naked when the tide goes out.
Warren Buffett
No soy alguien que sabe, sino alguien que busca.
FOZ
Only Gold is money. Everything else is debt.
J.P. Morgan
Las grandes almas tienen voluntades; las débiles tan solo deseos.
Proverbio Chino
Quien no lo ha dado todo no ha dado nada.
Helenio Herrera
History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as farce.
Karl Marx
If you know the other and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles.
Sun Tzu
We are travelers on a cosmic journey, stardust, swirling and dancing in the eddies and whirlpools of infinity. Life is eternal. We have stopped for a moment to encounter each other, to meet, to love, to share.This is a precious moment. It is a little parenthesis in eternity.
Paulo Coelho

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