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Google eyes emerging markets networks: report

Google to Fund, Develop Wireless Networks in Emerging Markets

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Google has become deeply involved in a series of projects to build and operate wireless networks in emerging markets including sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, a report said on Friday.
The Wall Street Journal, citing unnamed sources, reported the effort is part of a plan that could connect a billion or more new people to the Internet.

Google did not immediately respond to an AFP request to comment on the report.

According to the report, Google is “deep in the throes” of the effort to build wireless networks for people outside major cities where wired Internet connections are scarce.

It said Google plans to team up with local companies in some of the countries to develop the networks, and formulate business models to support them.

In some cases, Google plans to provide its own recently developed wireless technologies to help such networks.

Google has launched an ultrafast fibre network in the Kansas City area and is working in other areas of the United States on creating powerful Wi-Fi networks.

The Journal said that in the emerging markets, Google is seeking to create an ecosystem using new microprocessors and low-cost smartphones powered by its Android mobile operating system.

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The system could also use balloons or blimps to transmit signals for the networks.

The daily said Google has begun discussions with regulators in countries including South Africa and Kenya on changing rules to allow the use of airwaves reserved for TV broadcasts.

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Posted by on May 25, 2013 in Articles, International News

 

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Gold outlook worst in commodity survey

Gold outlook worst in commodity survey

Source: Bloomberg.com

 

Gold has the worst 12-month outlook among commodities and will trade below $1,400 an ounce in a year, according to an investor poll by Credit Suisse Group AG.

Sixty percent of respondents named bullion as having the worst outlook, 18 percent picked copper and 16 percent selected corn, the bank said in an e-mailed report today. Fifty-one percent predicted gold will fall under $1,400 in 12 months, it said. The bank polled 185 investors including hedge funds, pension funds and family offices on May 15 in London.

 

Gold has the worst 12-month outlook among commodities and will trade below $1,400 an ounce in a year, according to an investor poll by Credit Suisse Group AG.

Sixty percent of respondents named bullion as having the worst outlook, 18 percent picked copper and 16 percent selected corn, the bank said in an e-mailed report today. Fifty-one percent predicted gold will fall under $1,400 in 12 months, it said. The bank polled 185 investors including hedge funds, pension funds and family offices on May 15 in London.

“Bearishness for gold was a very clear consensus,” said Kamal Naqvi, the head of commodities sales for Europe, Middle East and Africa at Credit Suisse. “It’s not about just not buying gold, it’s about shorting it,” or wagering on a drop.

Gold slumped into a bear market last month as investors lost faith in the metal as a store of value. Bullion is down 17 percent this year, compared with the 2.9 percent drop for the Standard & Poor’s GSCI gauge of raw materials.

Fifty-three percent of investors expect commodity prices to stay near current levels, Credit Suisse said. Most were underweight raw materials or had zero exposure, while they expected to be overweight or neutral in 12 months, the bank said. Investors named relative value trades, fundamentally based directional trades and volatility as the best ways to extract value from commodities.

 

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Press Release:Dun & Bradstreet Promises Most Comprehensive Credit Bureau in Tanzania


L-R Adrian Pillay (GM Business Development), Adebowale Atobatele (GM Tanzania Bureau) Miguel Llenas (C.E.O) at the Dun & Bradstreet Credit Bureau Workshop in Dar es Salaam recently.

Participants at the Dun & Bradstreet Credit Bureau (T) Limited Workshop

Press Release

Dun & Bradstreet Promises Most Comprehensive Credit Bureau in Tanzania

FINANCIAL institutions in Tanzania are set to enjoy better protection from loan defaulters following the announcement that Dun & Bradstreet Credit Bureau, a company licensed by the bank of Tanzania to provide credit reference services in Tanzania announced that it will commence operations in a few weeks.

The workshop which was attended by Senior Executives of Banks and Financial Institutions in Tanzania, also had in attendance representatives of the Bank of Tanzania, and the International Finance Corporation who graced the event as observers and promoters of the credit reference system in Tanzania.

Speaking at the workshop, General Manager, Dun & Bradstreet Credit Bureau Tanzania Limited Mr. Adebowale Atobatele, explained that with the use of a credit report in the assessment of loan applicants, banks and financial institutions can easily estimate the credit worthiness of loan applicants thereby ensuring that they approve the loans of only those who they (banks) consider to have the propensity to repay based on their credit history.

Speaking further on the benefit of credit reporting, Mr. Adebowale Atobatele said, “The benefits of credit reporting are multi-dimensional. For example, banks and financial institutions, they can expect to make accurate risk predictions, prevent loss, reduce their NPL ratio and increase their ability to lend to a broader risk segment, Also, with a good credit report, consumers can expect to have their loan applications objectively reviewed, they can expect to have easy access to credit and build a strong reputation collateral.”

Speaking during the opening of the workshop D&B Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Miguel Llenas said, “Our aim is to build the most comprehensive Credit Bureau in Tanzania thereby playing a significant role in boosting Tanzania’s economy and financial soundness. We are in Tanzania to help improve the lending culture. We want to see a situation where people develop a culture of repayment not only because it is morally right to repay loans but because it is in the best interest of the economy.”

Credit bureaus, established by Dun & Bradstreet, have reduced the information asymmetry between lenders and borrowers thereby creating transparent and efficient credit information system.

Dun and Bradstreet Credit Bureaus Tanzania Ltd. will work closely with Central Banks, commercial banks, financial institutions, insurance companies, economic development boards and various government entities and to build a robust credit information infrastructure for Tanzania.

Nevertheless Mr. Adrian Pillay General Manager Dun and Bradstreet Credit Limited named some D&B Credit Bureaus implementations as Credit bureau of Nepal, CRB that is in Sri Lanka, Emcredit that is in Dubai, Credit Reference Company that is in Nigeria and iScore in Egypt.

Participants at the workshop expressed hope, that with the presence of Dun & Bradstreet Credit Bureau in Tanzania, the country’s financial sector will be further protected from collapse.

 

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12 ways to eliminate stress at work

Source: , Forbes

The average business professional has 30 to 100 projects on their plate. Modern workers are interrupted seven times an hour and distracted up to 2.1 hours a day. And four out of 10 people working at large companies are experiencing a major corporate restructuring, and therefore facing uncertainty about their futures. This may be why more than 40 percent of adults say they lie awake at night plagued by the stressful events of the day.
“People are asking me for answers,” says Sharon Melnick, Ph.D, a business psychologist and author of just released Success Under Stress. “Everyone feels overwhelmed and overly.

Is there a way to maintain steady focus throughout the day? Is it possible to do everything that needs to get done and still have energy left over after work? How do you keep cool under so many demands? Informed by 10 years of Harvard research and field-tested by more than 6,000 clients and trainees, Melnick offers the following strategies to take your work stress down a peg, before it takes over your life.

Act rather than react

“We experience stress when we feel that situations are out of our control,” says Melnick. It activates the stress hormone and, if chronic, wears down confidence, concentration and well-being. She advises that you identify the aspects of the situation you can control and aspects you can’t. Typically, you’re in control of your actions and responses, but not in control of macro forces or someone else’s tone, for example. “Be impeccable for your 50 percent,” she advises. And try to let go of the rest.

Take a deep breath

If you’re feeling overwhelmed or are coming out of a tense meeting and need to clear your head, a few minutes of deep breathing will restore balance, says Melnick. Simply inhale for five seconds, hold and exhale in equal counts through the nose. “It’s like getting the calm and focus of a 90-minute yoga class in three minutes or less at your desk,” she says.

Eliminate interruptions

“Most of us are bombarded during the day,” says Melnick. Emails, phone calls, pop-ins, instant messages and sudden, urgent deadlines conspire to make today’s workers more distracted than ever. While you may not have control over the interrupters, you can control your response. Melnick advises responding in one of three ways: Accept the interruption, cut it off or diagnose its importance and make a plan. Many interruptions are recurring and can be anticipated.
“You want to have preset criteria for which response you want to make,” she says. You can also train those around you by answering email during certain windows, set up office hours to talk in person or close the door when you need to focus.
Schedule your day for energy and focus
Most of us go through the day using a “push, push, push” approach, thinking if we work the full eight to 10 hours, we’ll get more done. Instead, productivity goes down, stress levels go up and you have very little energy left over for your family, Melnick says. She advises scheduling breaks throughout the day to walk, stretch at your desk or do a breathing exercise. “Tony Schwartz of the Energy Project has shown that if we have intense concentration for about 90 minutes, followed by a brief period of recovery, we can clear the buildup of stress and rejuvenate ourselves,” she says.

Eat right and sleep well

“Eating badly will stress your system,” says Melnick, who advises eating a low-sugar, high-protein diet. “And when you’re not sleeping well, you’re not getting the rejuvenating effects.”

According to the CDC, an estimated 60 million Americans do not get sufficient sleep, which is a critical recovery period for the body. If racing thoughts keep you from falling asleep or you wake up in the night and can’t get back to sleep, Melnick suggests a simple breathing trick that will knock you out fast: Cover your right nostril and breathe through your left for three to five minutes.

Change your story

Your perspective of stressful office events is typically a subjective interpretation of the facts, often seen through the filter of your own self-doubt, says Melnick.
However, if you can step back and take a more objective view, you’ll be more effective and less likely to take things personally. She recalls one client who sent a request to human resources for more people on an important project. When she was denied, she immediately got angry and defensive, thinking they didn’t trust her to know what she needed. Yet she never stopped to even consider there might be budgetary issues on their end. Once she was able to remove herself from the situation, she called the HR director and said: Tell me where you’re coming from, I’ll tell you where I’m coming from and then let’s see if we can find a solution. Ultimately, it worked.

Cool down quickly

“When you feel frustrated or angry, it’s a heated feeling in your body that can cause you to react,” says Melnick. Instead of immediately reacting—and likely overreacting—she suggests trying a “cooling breath” technique: Breathe in through your mouth as if you are sipping through a straw, and then breathe out normally through your nose. Done right, you’ll feel a cooling, drying sensation over the top of your tongue. It’s like hitting the “pause” button, giving you time to think about your response. She says, “It’s so powerful it will even calm theotherperson down.”

Identify self-imposed stress

“Learn to stop self-imposing stress by building your own self-confidence rather than seeking other’s approval,” says Melnick. If you’re too caught up in others’ perceptions of you, which you can’t control, you become stressed out by the minutia or participate in avoidance behaviors like procrastination. Ironically, once you shift your focus from others’ perception of your work to the work itself, you’re more likely to impress them.

Prioritize your priorities

With competing deadlines and fast-changing priorities, it’s critical to define what’s truly important and why. That requires clarity, says Melnick. It’s important to understand your role in the organization, the company’s strategic priorities, and your personal goals and strengths. Cull your to-do list by focusing on those projects that will have the most impact and are best aligned with your goals.

Reset the panic button

For those who become panicked and short of breath before a presentation, Melnick says you can quickly reduce your anxiety with the right acupressure point. Positioning your thumb on the side of your middle finger and applying pressure instantly helps regulate your blood pressure.

Influence others

Even if you’re responsible for your behavior and outlook, you’re still left dealing with other people’s stressful behavior, Melnick notes. She advises confronting a problem coworker or employee by stating the bad behavior in a respectful tone, describing the impact on the team and the individual, and requesting a change. For example, constant negativity might be addressed in this way: “When you speak in a critical tone, it makes others uncomfortable and less likely to see you as a leader. I understand your frustration but request that you bring concerns directly to me, so we can talk them through.” By transferring the ownership of the problem, you’re more likely to resolve it.

Be your own best critic

Some 60,000 thoughts stream through your mind each day, Melnick says, and internal negativity is just as likely to stress you out as an external event. The fix? Instead of being harsh and critical of yourself, try pumping yourself up. Encouraging thoughts will help motivate you to achieve and ultimately train you to inspire others.

 
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Posted by on April 3, 2013 in Articles

 

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How to turn guilt into productivity at work

By Martha C. White
NBCnews.com

We all have them: those work tasks hanging over our head that we keep putting off even though doing so makes us feel even worse.

Tap into that guilt over unaccomplished tasks and use it to make you a more productive worker, said Nick Jehlen, partner at design consulting firm Action Mill.

Jehlen started an experiment he dubbed “guilt hour.” At a weekly meeting, workers publicly identified the undone task they felt the most guilty about putting off. Everyone spent the rest of the hour tackling the task they named. “It was instantly helpful,” Jehlen said.

Jehlen said that the “social aspect,” in which co-workers will offer to help out or share a burden, is one benefit, since tasks can be transferred but a person’s sense of guilt hanging over it doesn’t go along with it. “People feel guilty about something they’re not doing … but somebody else can take it off their plate and not feel guilty about it,” he said.

It’s possible to use guilt in a positive way to complete tasks even without group feedback, though. There are a couple of principles that anyone can apply to their own backlog of dreaded duties, Jehlen said.

One reason “guilt hour” works is because people spend an entire hour working on just their individual single tasks. “It’s a huge, huge part of it,” Jehlen said.

“Attention has become the most critical barrier today to high performance and productivity,” Louis S. Csoka, president and founder of APEX Performance, said via email.

“Multi-tasking and other things can diminish our productivity,” said Taya R. Cohen, assistant professor of organizational behavior and theory at the Tepper School of Business, Carnegie Mellon University. “With procrastination, often it’s just starting or carving out that time.”

Making the time is one catalyst to getting the job done. Another is saying you’ll do the task you’re putting off in front of other people.

“Accountability can be a really powerful tool,” said Mark Ellwood, president of Pace Productivity. He created a website called BuddyHive.com to help workers stuck in a rut on a personal or professional project. They can use the site to find like-minded people who will check in with them, offer advice and hold them accountable.

It’s also worth taking a look at what kinds of tasks you tend to put off, and which ones you feel the worst about shirking. “Anytime you’re asking somebody for a favor or advice, that’s the kind of thing that often comes up” in guilt hour, Jehlen said.

Ellwood said administrative tasks are often blamed for sapping productivity. “The sorts of things people are procrastinating are the things they don’t see as adding value to their jobs,” he said. But although we might not see them as valuable, paperwork and the like can prompt stronger feelings of guilt because these tasks often hold up someone else’s workflow if they’re left undone.

Cohen added that it’s also important to keep the guilt focused on a specific task. “Guilt can be good if if’s focused on specific behaviors you can then do something about.” Feeling bad about yourself as a person and your work overall, though, can be detrimental.
If done wrong, tapping workplace guilt can be bad for morale. “This is a negative approach to something that should be looked at it in a more positive and encouraging mode,” Csoka said. People would be better off just developing and executing a clear goal plan, he said.

But if an unfinished task is really putting a drag on productivity, acknowledging the feelings you have about it might not hurt. “The longer you don’t do it, the more guilty you feel about it and the harder it is to get done,” Jehlen said. So, block out an hour on your calendar and alleviate your guilt.

Source: CNBC news

 
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Posted by on March 27, 2013 in Articles

 

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The Cyprus Crisis 101 : Story Behind the Bailout

Talk about blindsided. Friday was a normal day in the recent bull market; although the market sold off slightly, the fact that the Dow continues to print all-time highs is barely news anymore. Investors went into the weekend thinking all was well, but when news that Cyprus had entered into a bailout deal with the European Union emerged, investors were blindsided.

First, where is Cyprus?

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Cyprus is located in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea, east of Greece and South of Turkey. In 2011 i stopped by Cyprus for 6hours en route to Greece and fell in love with it. Very calm,wether-i hate cold!

It’s one of those sleepy countries that frankly isn’t large enough for most of the investing world to care about.

According to the CIA Factbook, the country has a population of 1.1 million – about as many people as the state of Rhode Island. The country is 77% Greek, 18% Turkish and 5% other ethnicities with a median age of 35.

Its land mass is about 7,800 square miles – roughly the size of New Jersey. This doesn’t sound like a country that would become the subject of international headlines, but there’s a lot more to the story.

It’s Greece All over Again

Economic history:
Until 2009, Cyprus had turned its economy around. After a deficit of 6.3% in 2003, it implemented a series of austerity measures that gave it a surplus of 1.2% in 2008. When the recession hit, Cyprus fell back on hard times because of its large exposure to Greek debt. In 2012, the country contracted by 2.3%.

The country was downgraded numerous times in 2012 with agencies like Fitch giving it a BB- rating and warning of further downgrades. This drove Cyprus’ borrowing costs higher.

A Closer Look at the Banks

According to CNBC, the Cypriot banking sector is about eight times the size of the economy with almost $19 billion, or one-third of all deposits, coming from Russian sources. Dmitry Rybolovlev, the largest Russian investor, has almost a 10% stake in the Bank of Cyprus equaling $8 billion to $10 billion.

The Canadian Press reports that the Russian elite use Cypriot banks to avoid political uncertainty and corruption in Russia. In addition, money earned through illegal means is often funneled to Cyprus because of its policy of turning a blind eye. Russia estimates that $49 billion was illegally wired to foreign accounts last year – 2.5% of Russia’s GDP.

There’s concern that if Cyprus imposes capital controls, Russian banks could face losses equal to 2% of the country’s GDP because Russian banks have loaned Cyprus-based companies of Russian origin $40 billion. Although Russian officials may show outward discontent for the practice, their actions prove that it’s as Russian as the cosmonaut.

What’s the Story on the Bailout?

Cyprus was systemically damaged due to its exposure to Greece. It, like Greece and so many other countries, was forced to ask the European Union for a bailout but this time the EU didn’t reluctantly say yes, as it repeatedly did with Greece.

Instead, the EU said, “If we’re going to help you, you can first help yourself.” That was the beginning of a controversial and unprecedented move to force everybody with money deposited in a Cypriot bank to pay for the bailout.

Who threw the biggest fit? Germany, and most would say rightfully so. They are tired of being the “go to” place for the EU when it needs money. Michael Fuchs, deputy parliamentary leader of Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union party said, “Why should Germans bail out these people and they are not willing to accept at least a minor bailing out by themselves?”

With Chancellor Angela Merkel facing election in September, she can no longer afford to hand out Germany’s money without much regard for public sentiment. This was clearly a public display for the sake of her country.

What resulted wasn’t a small tax; anybody with more than 100,000 euros in deposits could pay a 9.9% tax, and those with less than 100,000 euros, a 6.75 % tax. The idea was simple: Stick it to the Russians – let them pay for the bailout. But during what had to be a very late meeting with an empty coffee pot, somehow they forgot about Cypriot citizens who are also bank depositors and living in a country deep in recession. The plan is supposed to raise 5.8 billion euros, but there may be a new plan on the horizon.

Monday just so happened to be a bank holiday (hardly a coincidence) so there could be no run on the banks to get the money out before the tax was imposed. Once it became clear that parliament was not going to vote to adopt this plan, the state-run banking system said they were remaining closed until at least Thursday. (So politicians in favor of this plan could lobby for votes.)

What now seems clear is that Cyprus should brew some stronger coffee and come up with a better plan.

CNBC reports that the first 20,000 euros could be exempt or those with savings up to 100,000 euros might only pay a 3% tax.

What Does This Mean to the World?

First, it means that the way banks do business can no longer be completely trusted. Dennis Gartman, author of The Gartman Letter, said Monday, “The very nature of banking has been shaken to its roots.”

Imagine if you woke up Sunday morning to an email from your bank saying, “As a result of an agreement with government officials, 6.75% of your bank account will be withdrawn before the beginning of the business day.” You would reconsider keeping your money in any bank. That’s the fear going forward. How safe is a person’s money in any bank around the world if this precedent is set?

Second, the United States has been in a bull market not just because of the Fed injecting money into the economy but because the drama in Europe that made headlines over the past couple of years has been noticeably absent. Investors are worried that this story signals the return of eurozone troubles.

Talk about blindsided. Friday was a normal day in the recent bull market; although the market sold off slightly, the fact that the Dow continues to print all-time highs is barely news anymore. Investors went into the weekend thinking all was well, but when news that Cyprus had entered into a bailout deal with the European Union emerged, investors were blindsided.

First, where is Cyprus? Cyprus is located in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea, east of Greece and South of Turkey. It’s one of those sleepy countries that frankly isn’t large enough for most of the investing world to care about. According to the CIA Factbook, the country has a population of 1.1 million – about as many people as the state of Rhode Island. The country is 77% Greek, 18% Turkish and 5% other ethnicities with a median age of 35.

Its land mass is about 7,800 square miles – roughly the size of New Jersey. This doesn’t sound like a country that would become the subject of international headlines, but there’s a lot more to the story.

It’s Greece All over Again

Until 2009, Cyprus had turned its economy around. After a deficit of 6.3% in 2003, it implemented a series of austerity measures that gave it a surplus of 1.2% in 2008. When the recession hit, Cyprus fell back on hard times because of its large exposure to Greek debt. In 2012, the country contracted by 2.3%.

The country was downgraded numerous times in 2012 with agencies like Fitch giving it a BB- rating and warning of further downgrades. This drove Cyprus’ borrowing costs higher.

A Closer Look at the Banks

According to CNBC, the Cypriot banking sector is about eight times the size of the economy with almost $19 billion, or one-third of all deposits, coming from Russian sources. Dmitry Rybolovlev, the largest Russian investor, has almost a 10% stake in the Bank of Cyprus equaling $8 billion to $10 billion.

The Canadian Press reports that the Russian elite use Cypriot banks to avoid political uncertainty and corruption in Russia. In addition, money earned through illegal means is often funneled to Cyprus because of its policy of turning a blind eye. Russia estimates that $49 billion was illegally wired to foreign accounts last year – 2.5% of Russia’s GDP.

There’s concern that if Cyprus imposes capital controls, Russian banks could face losses equal to 2% of the country’s GDP because Russian banks have loaned Cyprus-based companies of Russian origin $40 billion. Although Russian officials may show outward discontent for the practice, their actions prove that it’s as Russian as the cosmonaut.

What’s the Story on the Bailout?

Cyprus was systemically damaged due to its exposure to Greece. It, like Greece and so many other countries, was forced to ask the European Union for a bailout but this time the EU didn’t reluctantly say yes, as it repeatedly did with Greece.

Instead, the EU said, “If we’re going to help you, you can first help yourself.” That was the beginning of a controversial and unprecedented move to force everybody with money deposited in a Cypriot bank to pay for the bailout.

Who threw the biggest fit? Germany, and most would say rightfully so. They are tired of being the “go to” place for the EU when it needs money. Michael Fuchs, deputy parliamentary leader of Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union party said, “Why should Germans bail out these people and they are not willing to accept at least a minor bailing out by themselves?”

With Chancellor Angela Merkel facing election in September, she can no longer afford to hand out Germany’s money without much regard for public sentiment. This was clearly a public display for the sake of her country.

What resulted wasn’t a small tax; anybody with more than 100,000 euros in deposits could pay a 9.9% tax, and those with less than 100,000 euros, a 6.75 % tax. The idea was simple: Stick it to the Russians – let them pay for the bailout. But during what had to be a very late meeting with an empty coffee pot, somehow they forgot about Cypriot citizens who are also bank depositors and living in a country deep in recession. The plan is supposed to raise 5.8 billion euros, but there may be a new plan on the horizon.

Monday just so happened to be a bank holiday (hardly a coincidence) so there could be no run on the banks to get the money out before the tax was imposed. Once it became clear that parliament was not going to vote to adopt this plan, the state-run banking system said they were remaining closed until at least Thursday. (So politicians in favor of this plan could lobby for votes.)

What now seems clear is that Cyprus should brew some stronger coffee and come up with a better plan. CNBC reports that the first 20,000 euros could be exempt or those with savings up to 100,000 euros might only pay a 3% tax.

What Does This Mean to the World?

First, it means that the way banks do business can no longer be completely trusted. Dennis Gartman, author of The Gartman Letter, said Monday, “The very nature of banking has been shaken to its roots.”

Imagine if you woke up Sunday morning to an email from your bank saying, “As a result of an agreement with government officials, 6.75% of your bank account will be withdrawn before the beginning of the business day.” You would reconsider keeping your money in any bank. That’s the fear going forward. How safe is a person’s money in any bank around the world if this precedent is set?

Second, the United States has been in a bull market not just because of the Fed injecting money into the economy but because the drama in Europe that made headlines over the past couple of years has been noticeably absent. Investors are worried that this story signals the return of eurozone troubles.

20130320-221933.jpg

 
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Posted by on March 20, 2013 in General Knowledge, International News

 

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FINANCING ALTERNATIVES FOR BUSINESSES

 

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Term of the Day: CASH FLOW LOAN

 

Definition of ‘Cash Flow Loan’

Borrowing cash typically to meet day-to-day operations or acquisitions. It is a type of debt financing, in which a bank lends funds, generally for working capital, using the expected cash flows that a borrowing company generates as collateral for the loan.

Reasons for needing a cash flow loan could be seasonal-demand changes, business expansion or changes in the business cycle.

Cash-flow loans can help in temporary situations, but if cash flow problems persist then companies need to improve their cash conversion cycle and get customers to pay faster.

 

 

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Vc4Africa on HOW TO BUILD INNOVATIVE COMPANIES, IN AFRICA AND WORLD

 

“Almost all leaders agreed that they underutilized the creativity of their employees”

 

In this article Prof. dr. Jeff Gaspersz explores how to build innovative companies.

 

Jeff GasperszProf. dr. Jeff Gaspersz is Professor of Innovation at Nyenrode Business University, and a speaker and author in the field of innovation management and business creativity. See his website: http://www.jeffgaspersz.com

In all the years I have been discussing innovation and creativity with managers and entrepreneurs in master classes, seminars and roundtable sessions, one observation keeps returning: almost all leaders agreed that they underutilized the creativity of their employees.

They admitted that they could capture so many more fertile ideas in their company. The major reasons they gave for failing to do so were a lack of time and the absence of an effective process to manage all those ideas. Furthermore, they feared demotivating their employees when ideas were rejected and, in addition to that, a core question arose: Is encouraging ideas really a core management task? Current existing business challenges demand enough attention as it is. So there is creative gold in companies, but these leaders don’t dig enough for it, despite the often deeply-felt need to innovate or to find creative solutions for urgent problems.

Stimulating creativity as a core task in leadership

It is my contention that stimulating and nurturing organizational creativity will increasingly become a key task in leadership. With fast changing market challenges, demanding customers and smarter competitors, we need more than ever, all of our imagination to find new ways to innovate and rise to new challenges. Being more creative is our only way to become resilient in times of change and crisis and will secure our sustainable success, therefore stimulating and harvesting creativity will become a strategic priority.

This is confirmed by the IBM 2010 Global CEO Study among 1500 CEOs in 60 countries in which creativity was selected by the CEOs as the most crucial factor for the success of their companies. As a leadership quality, creativity scored even higher than integrity and global thinking. But not only the leaders had to be creative: the interviewed CEOs felt that they faced the challenge of spreading a creative spirit throughout their entire organizations.

Here, we are touching on the essence of leadership needed for building a creative organization. Its aim is to persuade each employee to engage in the quest for new solutions and improvements. It is about communicating in such a way that energizes people, giving them ownership over any given problem and inviting them to search for new ideas and bring them forward.

Employees as co-creators in innovation

The ultimate goal of innovation leadership is not to create followers waiting for instructions, but to awaken self-leadership in people and allow them freedom to work on their ideas, share their thoughts and take initiative to meet their targets; thus bringing improvement and innovation within the reach of each individual employee.

It is therefore especially important to avoid excluding a single employee from the process of creative thinking about solutions. Everyone should be invited to be a co-creator in innovating because one can never predict which employee will coin a brilliant idea. The more people we exclude from the search for new opportunities, the weaker our corporate innovative power will be. There is a growing awareness of this in leadership philosophy, now that innovation has become a necessity. In a survey among innovation leaders in 54 South-African companies it was found that one of the greatest enablers of innovation was considered to be the empowerment of staff to support innovation by recognizing opportunities.

For this purpose, small initiatives can have a positive knock-on effect in shaping the culture where new opportunities are discovered on a permanent basis. In a government organization I worked with, employees were very enthusiastic about a simple program for knowledge sharing, launched by top management: the week of the exchange. For one week in the year employees arrange an internship in the team of another department. The results were a better understanding of each other’s work, a cross-fertilization of insights and a stream of new ideas.

Another small initiative with a profound effect on the opportunity mindset is setting up a periodical in-company event where employees are invited to listen to a variety of speakers, such as innovators, entrepreneurs, authors and artists. In participating in such events, I have seen the same effect occur as when we watch the famous TED Talks where speakers, covering a wide range of topics, are given 18 minutes to present their ideas. When we listen to the diversity of their ideas, opinions and research findings our minds open up, we become inspired and we find connections between what is shared and our own challenges. More than 500 million people have already viewed the TED Talks, so it fulfills a deep need. How easy it is to organize TED-like events in your own company by inviting inspiring people from within your own network? It will not only bring new views, but will also show your employees, and invited customers, how important it is for your company to shape a culture of inspiration and innovation.

 

 

Source VC4AFRICA SITE

 
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Posted by on March 19, 2013 in Articles

 

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Statoil in fresh Tanzania gas find

Source: I2EastAfrica

Statoil and Britain’s BG Group plan to build a $10 billion East African liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal well placed for exports to Asia, after the Norwegian company made a new find off the coast of Tanzania.

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Statoil plans East Africa LNG plant after Tanzania gas find

“We have enough gas to move forward,” Statoil’s head of exploration, Tim Dodson, said on Monday after it announced the discovery of between 4 trillion and 6 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of gas in the Indian Ocean.

“We are working with BG to come up with a recommendation for a landing site. We should be making that recommendation to Tanzanian authorities fairly early in the second quarter,” Dodson told Reuters.

The latest find, Statoil’s third in the area within a year, brings its total recoverable resources there to 10-13 tcf.

BG has interests in three blocks off Tanzania together with Ophir Energy.

On Monday, BG announced that results from its Jodari well drilled off Tanzania, near Statoil’s own finds, were “excellent”.

The U.S. Geological Survey has estimated that more gas lies off the shores of Kenya, Tanzania and Mozambique than off Nigeria, Africa’s biggest energy producer.

East Africa is attractive to oil firms because of its relative proximity to Asia’s big LNG consumers.

To allow exports of the fuel to major markets, there will be a need for installations to turn gas into freezing liquid for transport by ship. Statoil and BG are on course to build one of the first.

Anadarko and Eni are planning to build an LNG export terminal in Mozambique.

The plant to be built by Statoil and BG would have at least two processing units, or trains, to process gas from Statoil’s Block 2 and BG’s Block 1.

“In addition to the 10-13 tcf that we have, they (BG) have a similar kind of number (in Block 1),” said Dodson.

“So if we have 20 tcf, there will be a discussion on whether you develop all of that straight away or whether you build two trains and then add a potential third train, or even a fourth.”

Statoil would extract the gas from the seabed via a big offshore development before piping it to the export terminal on land, Dodson said.

He said $10 billion was a fair ballpark estimate for the cost of developing the plant. An investment decision would be at least three years away, not before early 2016, he added.

Statoil operates the hydrocarbon licence for Block 2, with a 65 percent working interest, and ExxonMobil holds the remaining 35 percent.

DIVISIVE ISSUE

There is political risk to the project, with oil and gas becoming a divisive issue in Tanzania.

While oil and gas could be a much-needed source of revenue for the developing country, there are fears energy could prove to be a “resource curse”, bringing the kind of unrest experienced by Democratic Republic of Congo and Nigeria.

In the southern region of Mtwara, residents are threatening to block a gas pipeline project until they see more of the benefits.

The government has accused opposition leaders of inciting opposition to the pipeline, which it hopes will boost generation of cheap electricity and end chronic energy shortages.

Opposition politicians and activists have been calling for a halt to the issuance of oil and gas exploration licences until Tanzania revamps laws regulating its fast-growing energy sector.

The government has unveiled a draft national gas policy and plans to have new legislation in place this year.

Statoil has drilled five wells off Tanzania so far and expects further wells this year, most likely towards the end of the year after geologists analyse data provided from fresh three-dimensional seismic surveys this summer.

“We can expect more discoveries,” Dodson said.

Statoil will also drill two wells off Mozambique, primarily seeking oil, with drilling of the first well due to start in the first week of April. There, again, Dodson saw potential for significant finds.

In Angola, on Africa’s west coast, Statoil hopes to drill another well towards the end of the year. Dodson said he believed there could be very big finds as the geology is similar to the oil-rich pre-salt blocks off Brazil, across the Atlantic.

 
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Posted by on March 19, 2013 in Business News, Tanzania News

 

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BoT chief: Shilling remains relatively stable

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Prof Ndulu

The Tanzania shilling has been the most stable currency in the Eastern African region, but since the beginning of this year, it fails to hold against the US dollar and currencies of the country’s other major trading partners.

The shilling currently trades at 1,620/- for the greenback, up from last year’s average of 1,580/-. Staff Writer ABDUEL ELINAZA had an interview with the Central Bank Governor, BENNO NDULU, on the issue. Excerpts…

QUESTION: Why is the shilling sliding down against the US dollar to reach 1,620/- by mid-last month?

ANSWER: The movement of the shilling to the US dollar to exchange at 1,620/- is the outcome of normal market forces as opposed to failure of country’s monetary policy. For the past 14 months, since December 2011, the exchange rate of the shilling against the US dollar has remained stable in comparison to the depreciation for the previous year and in comparison with many currencies including those of our major trading partners.

The annual depreciation of the shilling against the US dollar at the end of January 2013, was only one per cent. In the 12 months to December 2011, the shilling had depreciated by nearly 15 per cent, but the measures we took have considerably slowed down the rate of depreciation.

Q: Has the tight monetary policies failed?

A: No. Not at all. Actually, the data shows that while Tanzania Shilling depreciated by 1 per cent in the 12 months ending January 2013, the Kenyan shilling depreciated by 4.6 per cent and the Ugandan shilling by 11.7 per cent. At the same time the exchange rate of the South African Rand against the US dollar depreciated by 11.8 per cent, while that of Indian Rupee depreciated by 6.8 per cent and that of Japanese yen by 18.6 per cent during the same period. There has been significant increase in the demand for the dollar among non-typical users.

Typically we pay for power generation in shillings. Currently the Independent Power Producers (IPPs) — other than TANESCO are mostly paid in foreign exchange — since they have to meet their obligations in foreign currency. The weekly demand for US dollars by TANESCO to purchase power from the IPPs and to pay for their fuel import bill is substantial and at present in excess of four million US dollars, putting additional pressure on the amount spent on importing expensive fuel for transportation and industrial use.

The annual bill for importing expensive oil still stands at more than 3,300 million US dollars a year. Furthermore, foreign contractors building roads and other infrastructure projects funded by domestic revenue have to be paid and they typically externalise their revenues adding to the demand pressure for foreign exchange.

Q: Tanzania is now taking the IMF Standby Credit Facility loan of about 117 million US dollars. Is this because we have failed to boost exports and thus the foreign exchange inflow?

A: The decision by Tanzania to take the IMF’s Standby Credit Facility of about 117 million US dollars is not unusual. This decision is based on our assessment of the balance of payment needs, external debt sustainability position and concessionality of the loan. Tanzania has been borrowing from external concessional sources such as the World Bank and the African Development Bank to finance various development projects and programmes in order to boost economic growth and expedite poverty reduction.

It has also borrowed from the IMF from time to time for balance of payments purposes. In its endeavour to expedite implementation of development projects, including transport infrastructure, power generation and the gas pipeline, the government has decided to borrow from nonconcessional sources.

This decision has been taken with careful consideration of the country’s debt sustainability status. In 2011, the government borrowed 221.8 million US dollars for power generation. In 2012, some 213.5 million US dollars was borrowed for construction of the gas pipeline.

Source: The Daily News, http://www.dailynews.co.tz

 

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Five Ways the Rich Stay Frugal

Source : Financial Post

A fat salary isn’t the only way someone can strike it rich. Regardless of one’s income level, people who live below their means, invest wisely, and live modestly are on the path to real wealth.

Here are five frugal habits that many of the upper class have adopted to build long-lasting wealth and financial independence:

Drive a modest car.

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Your car should only serve the purpose of getting you safely and comfortably from point A to point B — nothing more. When you pull up to a stoplight in an expensive car, you might impress a stranger. However, don’t let the price tag of your car define your character or image, because at the end of the day most people could care less what type of car you drive. Let Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who drives a modest $30,000 Acura TSX entry-level sedan, be your role model on this one.

Buy a modest house.

Warren Buffett famously still lives in the Omaha, Neb., home he bought back in 1958 for US$31,500. Take Buffett’s cue and don’t overwhelm yourself with a large monthly mortgage payment. Buy a modest and comfortable home and use the money you save to build your savings and retirement fund.

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Don’t carry wads if possible

Try to avoid traveling with a wallet packed with cash. According to Bankrate.com, 86% of people who spend cash on luxuries like expensive cars, jewelry, and electronics are non-millionaires trying to act the part by purchasing luxury brands. Instead, follow the example of oil mogul T. Boone Pickens, who famously shops with a grocery list and only carries the amount of cash he needs to make purchases.

Don’t pay full price.

A great way to keep more of your money is by not paying full price on anything. Hilary Swank, who has an estimated net worth of US$40-million, is commonly seen using coupons at the grocery store. Michelle Obama often opts to shop at Target or H&M rather than high-end department stores. A great way to build wealth is to have a frugal mindset and use the money you save on consumer goods to build your investments and savings accounts.

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Have an action mentality.

Almost all self-made millionaires have one thing in common: They are people of action. They don’t sit around feeling sorry for themselves waiting for something good to happen to them, as opposed to the people who I would say have the “lottery mentality.” People of action take appropriate risks, are constantly looking to improve themselves, and are addicted to knowledge, as it is the best way to gain a competitive advantage in life’s financial endeavors.

Truly rich people are those who take their income and turn it into wealth by investing wisely, saving, and living frugally. People who take their income and try to use it to support an unsustainable lifestyle are those who end up in debt and are unable to retire on their terms. When it comes to money and finances, it all boils down to choices and personal responsibility. Which road are you going to take?

 
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Posted by on March 17, 2013 in Articles

 

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AfDB says door open to private sector

The African Development Bank (AfDB) has challenged the local chief executive officers to utilise the borrowing opportunity availed by the regional bank through its private sector window.

AfDB offers non-sovereign guaranteed loans for both public and private sectors in the regional member countries to enterprises engaged in activities in any sector, including, but not limited to, manufacturing, infrastructure, extractive industries, energy, and other productive activities.

The AfDB resident representative in Tanzania, Dr Tonia Kandiero, challenged CEOs in the country whose companies deal with profitable investments to utilise the bank’s opportunities which also do equity investment.

“Tanzania has much potential in terms of profitable sectors and there are huge and endless opportunities for the bank investment,” said Ms Kandiero, during the CEO roundtable on Tuesday.

According to her, the new private sector operations reached $1.3 billion in 2012. The sponsorship is also available in local currencies.

She was invited by the CEO roundtable to give a presentation about the bank and the role it plays in financing development projects so that the private sector could determine how to chip in and explore the opportunities available.

“AfDB is a very big financier of infrastructure development and other profitable sectors but the business community is not very much aware of the opportunities the bank offers.

“We invited her since the private sector is looking for investment opportunities,” said the CEO roundtable chairman, Mr Ali Mufuruki.

The CEO Roundtable normally invites various people to talk about relevant issues which are relevant and important to the business community in order to give ideas that they can explore and invest in.

Source: The Citizen, http://www.thecitizen.co.tz

 
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Posted by on March 14, 2013 in Tanzania News

 

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Term of the Day: Trust

Legal entity created by a party (the trustor) through which a second party (the trustee) holds the right to manage the trustor’s assets or property for the benefit of a third party (the beneficiary).

The four main types of trusts are:

(1) Living: trust created by the trustor while he or she is alive.

(2) Testamentary: trust established through a will and which comes into effect (is created) when the trustor dies.

(3) Revocable: trust that can be modified or terminated by the trustor after its creation.

(4) Irrevocable: trust that cannot be modified or terminated by the trustor after its creation.

 
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Posted by on March 14, 2013 in Uncategorized

 

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Tanzania Money Market Updates

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The Tanzanian shilling was stable against the US Dollar on Wednesday as there were fewer inflows of US Dollar in the market.

Commercial banks quoted the local unit at 1621/1631 against the dollar, which was the same as Tuesday’s close of 1621/1631.

CAPITAL MARKET

Wednesday, Today, DSE recorded a total turnover of TZS 44.13 mln from 72,388 shares traded in 33 deals in comparison to the previous session which recorded a turnover of TZS 34.30 mln from 150,702 shares traded in 39 deals.

CRDB counter had 1,469 shares traded at weighted average price of TZS 160 per share in 18 deals.

SIMBA counter had 20 shares traded at weighted average price of TZS 2,400 per share in 1 deal. SWISSPORT counter had 5,100 shares traded at weighted average price of TZS 1,820 per share in 3 deals.

TBL counter had 3,199 shares traded at weighted average price of TZS 3,100 ex dividend per share in 7 deals.

Today foreign investors generated a total turnover of TZS 24.65 mln for the purchase of 49,300 CRDB shares and 13,300 NMB shares. Meanwhile on AON Board there were 810,100 TBL shares on offer at TZS 3,100 per share.

MONEY MARKET

On Wednesday, the interbank money market recorded a total volume of TZS 36.70 billion whereas the shilling was exchanged at the levels of between 7.00% and 3.00%.

Source: The CRDB BANK

INTERBANK FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKET (14th March 2013)

 

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African Cities Become Next Frontier For Business

African cities are the next big markets for investors thanks to the rising consumer spending and massive infrastructure investments.

According to a new report by the Economist Intelligence Unit, eight of the world’s 20 fastest growing economies will be African.
Tanzania not in the list.

“A recent survey conducted by The Economist Group of 217 global companies based in 45 countries revealed that expansion in Africa is a priority for two thirds of them within the next decade,” notes the report released last week.

The report notes that although Africa’s growth story has revolved around commodities, Africa’s growth is now becoming more diverse because of the “peace dividend” being realised after years of armed conflict and military rule that has given way to democracy.
rapid urbanisation

There is also rapid urbanisation as half of all Africans are under 20 and are rapidly moving to cities. According to the Habitat, more than 40 per cent of Africans now live in urban areas.

Other growth drivers include improved governance because of greater accountability that comes hand-in-hand with democracy, and the slow strengthening of institutions; growing trade that is replacing aid, thanks to the growing trade relations with China.They also include the rise of technology exemplified by the rise in the number of mobile subscribers in Africa that exceeded the 0.5 billion mark in 2010, allowing companies greater access to consumers.

The infrastructure investment largely by Chinese companies is improving the state of roads, airports, and railway lines, fixing critical infrastructure component that is attracting foreign investors and sparking more domestic investment.
highetst potential

MasterCard African Cities Growth Index 2013 indicates that Accra, Lusaka and Luanda, the capital cities of Ghana, Zambia and Angola respectively, as the Sub-Saharan African cities that have the highest potential for growth over the next five years.

The index was developed in the final quarter of last year and analysed 19 cities across Sub-Saharan Africa ranking them according to their growth potential between last year and 2017.

“Growing urbanisation, combined with the fact that the center of global economic gravity is shifting to dynamic emerging markets such as those found in Africa, means that the continent’s cities will play a much bigger role in driving the economic growth of their respective countries,” said Michael Miebach, president, MasterCard Middle East and Africa.

Among the 25 cities that the Economist Intelligence Unit’s report identifies as being the growth frontiers include Cape Town, Durban, Johannesburg, Nairobi, Tunis, Dakar, Cairo, Tripoli, Addis Ababa and Casablanca among others.

And as for Dar ES Salaam. Let us hope for the best. I would love to see it on the list.

 

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Women Leaders: Arianna Huffington on Sandberg’s Book: To Lean In; First Lean Back

Source:Huffington Posts

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Arianna Huffington

An enormous amount of ink and pixels have already been devoted to Sheryl Sandberg‘s important new book, “Lean In,” some of it claiming that Sandberg exhorts women to relentlessly drive themselves to the top.

But that’s not at all what Sandberg is saying. What she’s saying is that as well as institutional barriers to success, women face a lot of inner barriers—voices that, as she puts it, urge you to “leave before you leave.”

“Lean In” has unleashed multiple conversations. For me, the most interesting is the one about the nature of the world women are leaning into. This is a great moment for all of us—women and men—to acknowledge that the current male-dominated model of success isn’t working for women, and it’s not working for men, either.

For everybody, stress has gone up—in the last 30 years, self-reported stress has gone up 25% for men and 18% for women. And we’re surrounded by stressed-out leaders—in politics, in business, in media—making terrible decisions. What they lack is not smarts but wisdom. And it’s much harder to tap into your wisdom, recognizing the icebergs before they hit the Titanic—a big part of leadership—when you’re running on empty.

As women scale new heights in the workplace, they pay a heavy price: women in stressful jobs have a nearly 40% increased risk of heart disease and a 60% increased risk of diabetes than their less-stressed colleagues. According to the latest study from the American Psychological Association, women are more likely than their male colleagues to feel stressed during a typical workday, due to many factors, including feeling underappreciated in the workplace.

Associated Press
Sheryl Sandberg
There’s a French expression, “reculer pour mieux sauter,” which, loosely translated, means leaning back in order to jump higher. That’s what cats do. And by leaning back, we become much better at leaning in.

That means acknowledging the value of caring for our human capital — getting enough sleep and rejecting the culture of “time macho,” which Anne-Marie Slaughter describes as “a relentless competition to work harder, stay later, pull more all-nighters, travel around the world and bill the extra hours that the International Date Line affords you.” And it means acknowledging that family can actually be a great thing for our career, by putting everything at work in perspective.

The world needs women to redefine success beyond money and power. We need a third metric, based on our well-being, our health, our ability to unplug and recharge and renew ourselves, and to find joy in both our job and the rest of our life. Ultimately, success is not about money or position, but about living the life you want, not just the life you settle for.

Some companies get it. Already, twenty-five percent of large American corporations have some kind of stress reduction program — yoga, meditation, or some way for workers to lean back — during the workday. Not just Google and Silicon Valley startups, but General Mills , Target Aetna , etc. The realization is spreading that this is not just good for the employees’ health but for the company’s bottom line. Mounting evidence, both scientific and anecdotal, confirms that the practices that make us less stressed also make us more productive. (We at HuffPost launched a free app, GPS for the Soul, to track your stress level through your heart-rate variability; it also includes a personalized guide of pictures, music and poetry that helps you course-correct.)

For far too long, men have equated success with working around the clock, driving yourself into the ground, sleep deprivation and burnout. Women need to lead the way to change that — both for their sake and for the sake of successful men who desperately need to learn how to lean back.

I cant wait to get my own copy of “Lean In” on kindle.

By

Associated Press
Arianna Huffington
By Arianna Huffington

 
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Posted by on March 13, 2013 in Articles

 

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Commonwealth Bank app all ‘Facebanking’ on Facebook

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Picture: Anthony Reginato
ONE of Australia’s Big Four banks yesterday opened a branch in one of the last locations you’d expect: Facebook.

The new social banking app, developed by the Commonwealth Bank, will let users make payments to friends, fund events and handle everyday banking transactions without leaving Facebook’s website, but social media experts have warned that “Facebanking” may not be popular with all internet socialites.

CommBank online banking general manager Drew Unsworth said Kaching for Facebook was an extension of its smartphone apps, and was designed to let users pay back money owed or make cash gifts to friends for birthdays and weddings.

But Mr Unsworth admitted using a social network to balance the books might initially sound like a risky investment.

“When people first hear about it they think all their financial details will be on their (Facebook) wall, but that’s not right,” Mr Unsworth said.

“There’s probably a misconception about what’s on Facebook and what Facebook has access to. They won’t have access to financial information sitting on there.”

Commonwealth Bank customers must choose a four-digit PIN and register a mobile phone to use the service for security, to receive SMS confirmation codes, and Mr Unsworth said the bank offered a “100 per cent security guarantee” to cover losses from unauthorised transactions.

“We’ve got a lot of monitoring around this type of transaction,” he said. “To make it work really well there’s a lot of stuff that happens behind the scenes.”

Facebook is regularly a target for hacking attempts, with 206 phishing attempts verified by online security firm Phishtank in January, and “malicious content” hidden in some web links, according to Websense.

Deakin University social media lecturer Ross Monaghan said security concerns, although dismissed by the bank, could dissuade some users from banking on Facebook.

He said others would choose to avoid “Facebanking” simply to avoid mixing their personal life with their finances.

“People don’t go to Facebook for financial transactions, they go there to interact with family and friends, so it seems like an odd mix,” he said. “I’m not sure whether people would be comfortable making all their transactions through Facebook.”

Read more: http://www.news.com.au/technology/commonweatlh-bank-app-all-facebanking-on-facebook/story-

 
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Posted by on March 6, 2013 in International News, Uncategorized

 

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Barclays Chairman Marcus Agius Resigns

The interest rate rigging scandal has claimed its first scalp among the senior  management of Barclays with the bank’s Chairman set to announce his resignation today.

Marcus Agius at a Barclays branch

The scandal has claimed its first scalp among the senior management of Barclays, as the bank confirmed on Sunday that Marcus Agius, its chairman, was set to resign

 

Marcus Agius is expected to say he is “truly sorry” for the scandal, which has   dealt a “devastating blow” to the bank. Meanwhile, Lord Turner of   Ecchinswell, the head of the Financial Services Authority, said “more heads   will roll” at badly behaving banks.
Yesterday it emerged that Barclays stepped up its efforts to rig interest   rates after Bob Diamond, its chief executive, personally spoke to the deputy   governor of the Bank of England. Bob Diamond had a conversation with Paul   Tucker about how much Barclays was claiming it had to pay to borrow money   during the financial crisis in 2008.
After Mr Diamond spoke to Mr Tucker, Barclays staff came to believe the Bank   of England wanted them to falsify this data — which was used to calculate   Libor, the interest rate that banks pay to each other.
The bank’s traders then escalated their secret attempts to manipulate the   markets and make it appear that the bank was paying less to borrow money   than was actually the case, documents show. Sources at both banks said this   was the result of a “misunderstanding” and insisted that Mr Tucker had not   sanctioned Barclays’ actions.
At the time, the Bank of England was keen to see a lower Libor rate, as that   would have been a positive sign in the depths of the credit crunch.
The disclosure increases the pressure on Mr Diamond, who has now been put at   the heart of discussions about the fixing of Libor. When he gives evidence to MPs this week the bank chief will also have to   explain why his employees were left with the understanding they had the Bank   of England’s blessing.
As the board of Barclays called an emergency meeting last night, there were   calls for a criminal inquiry into the bank by Vince Cable, the Business   Secretary, and Lord Blair of Boughton, the former Metropolitan Police   commissioner.
Mr Diamond is also facing calls to step down over his failure to spot the   scandal, which may have caused banks to charge mortgage holders, credit card   users and businesses too much for billions of pounds in loans.
Barclays was last week fined £290 million for its role in the affair. Other   high street banks are expected to face heavy penalties for similar   wrongdoing
 
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Posted by on July 2, 2012 in International News

 

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Kutoka Bungeni: Misamaha ya Kodi Kupunguzwa

Dodoma, Tanzania

 

WIZARA ya Fedha imesema, Serikali ina lengo la kupunguza misamaha ya kodi ili isizidi asilimia moja ya pato la taifa.

Naibu wa Fedha Ms.Saada Mkuya,Mb.

Naibu wa Fedha Ms.Saada Mkuya,Mb.

 

Naibu Waziri wa Fedha, Saada Mkuya Salum ameliambia Bunge mjini Dodoma kuwa, Serikali inaendelea kupitia baadhi ya sheria za misamaha ya kodi ili kuangalia kama bado zina manufaa kwa umma.

 

Amesema, ili kutimiza azma hiyo, Mamlaka ya Mapato (TRA) kupitia mfuko wa dhamana wa ushauri wa sera na usimamizi wa kodi ulioanzishwa na Shirika la Fedha la Kimataifa (IMF) inafanya uchambuzi wa kina wa kuangalia sheria na kanuni za misamaha ya kodi.

 

Kwa mujibu wa kiongozi huyo wa Serikali, uchambuzi huo utaleta mapendekezo ya kuiondoa misamaha yote isiyo na maslahi na tija kwa taifa.

 

Salum amesema, mwaka ujao wa fedha, Serikali imechukua hatua za kurekebisha sheria mbalimbali za kodi kwa nia ya kupunguza misamaha na kuzuia mianya ya ukwepaji kodi.

 

Alikuwa akijibu swali la Mbunge wa Viti Maalumu Amina Abdulla Amour (CUF) aliyetaka kufahamu ni lini Serikali itapunguza misamaha yakodi hadi kufikia chini ya asilimia moja ya pato la taifa kutokana na kuwa kero kwa muda mrefu kwa taifa kukosa fedha na mapato kwa ajili ya maendeleo.

 

“Sisi pale wizarani tumeamua kulivalia njuga suala hili, tutaifanya kazi hiyo na tunaomba tupewe muda kwani jambo hili haliwezi kufanyika kwa mara moja,” alisema.

 

Wakati huo huo, Salum alisema Benki ya Wanawake inaweza kushiriki katika mpango wa kukopesha na kusimamia fedha za mabilioni ya Rais endapo inahitaji kufanya hivyo na taasisi zingine za fedha ambazo zimekidhi vigezo vilivyowekwa.

 

Alitaja vigezo hivyo kuwa ni pamoja na uwezo wa kuhudumia vijijini, kuwa na mizani nzuri za hesabu na uzoefu katika kuhudumia wajasiriamali wadogo.

 

Alisisitiza kuwa walengwa wa mfuko wa mabilioni ya Rais ni vijana, wazee, wanawake vijijini na mijini ambao wanafanya shughuli katika kuhudumia wajasiriamali wadogo.

 

Alikuwa akijibu swali la Mbunge wa Viti Maalumu Faida Mohamed Bakar (CUF) ambaye alihoji kama Serikali inakubaliana naye kwamba sasa ni wakati muafaka wa kuhamisha fedha za mkopo wa mabilioni ya Kikwete na kutumika katika Benki ya Wanawake ili wananchi wapate mikopo.

 

Wakati huohuo, Kamati ya Kudumu ya Bunge ya Fedha na Uchumi, imeafiki maeneo mengi ya kodi na tozo mbalimbali yaliyopendekezwa na Serikali kufanyiwa marekebisho, lakini ikasisitiza umuhimu wa nidhamu ya matumizi ya Serikali na uwezo wa kuongeza mapato.

 

Mbali na hayo, Kamati hiyo ilieleza kutoridhishwa na Serikali katika kasi ya kushughulikia misamaha ya kodi.

 

“Kamati inaishauri Serikali kuonesha dhamira ya kweli kufanikisha lengo hilo (la kuimarisha taratibu za kukusanya mapato pamoja na kupunguza misamaha ya kodi) na kutoa taarifa ya utekelezaji mbele ya Kamati Januari 2013,” amesema Mwenyekiti wa Kamati hiyo, Andrew Chenge.

 

Chenge alikuwa anawasilisha taarifa ya Kamati yake kuhusu hali ya uchumi wa Taifa kwa mwaka 2011 na Mpango wa Maendeleo wa Taifa kwa mwaka 2012/13 pamoja na tathimini ya utekelezaji wa Bajeti ya Serikali kwa mwaka 2011/12 na mapendekezo ya mapato na matumizi ya Serikali kwa 2012/13.

 

“Kamati inaendelea kushauri kwamba Serikali iachane na mtindo wa kuibua matumizi mapya yasiyo ya dharura ambayo hayakuidhinishwa na Bunge wakati wa utekelezaji wa bajeti”

 

“Mtindo huo unavuruga bajeti na kupunguza uwezo wa kutoa fedha za matumizi mengineyo (OC) na matumizi ya maendeleo kama ilivyokusudiwa. Kamati inasisitiza umuhimu wa Serikali kubana matumizi kwa kupunguza matumizi yasiyo ya lazima,” amesema Chenge.

 
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Posted by on June 19, 2012 in Tanzania News

 

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Serikali ya Tanzania Yatangaza Bajeti ya mwaka 2012/2013

Dr. Mgimwa - Waziri Wa Fedha Tanzania akionyesha mkoba wa bajeti ya serikali kwa mwaka 2012/13

Dr. Mgimwa – Waziri Wa Fedha Tanzania akionyesha mkoba wa bajeti ya serikali kwa mwaka 2012/13

Dodoma, Tanzania:  SERIKALI imetangaza bajeti ya shilingi trilioni 15 kwa mwaka wa fedha 2012/2013.

Kwa mujibu wa Waziri wa Fedha, Dk William Mgimwa, pamoja na mambo mengine, bajeti hiyo imelenga kudhibiti mfumuko wa bei kwa kutangaza kutoa vibali vya kuingiza chakula kutoka nje, na kuwabana matajiri kwa kuongeza kodi ya bidhaa zisizokuwa za lazima.

Akisoma bajeti hiyo bungeni mjini Dodoma jana, Dk Mgimwa pia alitangaza kwamba Serikali imepanua wigo wa Kodi ya Mishahara (Paye) na sasa itawagusa wafanyakazi wenye kipato cha kuanzia Sh170,000 badala ya Sh135,000 ya awali.

Amesema, Serikali pia imerejesha mafunzo ya Jeshi la Kujenga Taifa (JKT) kwa kutenga Sh7 bilioni kwa ajili ya kuchukua vijana 5,000.

Dk Mgimwa amelieleza Bunge kuwa, Serikali imeongeza kodi za bidhaa mbalimbali, zikiwemo, bia, soda, sigara, juisi zinazoingizwa kutoka nje na kufuta msamaha wa ushuru wa bidhaa kwa magari kwa wote waliokuwa wananufaika na msamaha huo.

Alifafanua kwamba kodi ya vinywaji baridi imepanda kutoka Sh69 kwa lita hadi Sh83 na mvinyo unaotengenezwa kwa zabibu inayozalishwa nchini kwa kiwango kinachozidi asilimia 75, imeshuka kutoka Sh425 kwa lita hadi 145 kwa lita.

Wabunge wameelezwa kuwa, kodi ya mvinyo unaotengenezwa kwa zabibu inayozalishwa nje ya nchi kwa kiwango kinachozidi asilimia 25, imepanda kutoka Sh1,345 kwa lita hadi 1,614 kwa lita.

Dk Mgimwa amesema, kodi ya vinywaji vikali imepanda kutoka Sh1,993 kwa lita hadi Sh2,392 kwa lita, bia inayotengenezwa nchini kwa nafaka na ambayo haijaoteshwa, kodi yake imepanda kutoka Sh248 kwa lita hadi Sh310 kwa lita. Bia nyingine zote kodi imepanda kutoka Sh420 hadi Sh525 kwa lita.

Kuhusu ushuru wa bidhaa za sigara, Dk Mgimwa alisema, sigara zote zisizo na kichungi na zinazotengenezwa kwa tumbaku inayozalishwa nchini, kiwango cha angalau asilimia 75, kodi imepanda kutoka Sh6,820 hadi Sh 8,210 kwa sigara 1,000.

Alisema Sigara zenye kichungi na zinazotengenezwa kwa tumbaku inayopatikana nchini kwa kiwango cha angalau asilimia 75, kodi imepanda kutoka Sh16,114 hadi Sh19,410 na sigara nyingine zenye sifa tofauti na makundi hayo, kodi imepanda kutoka Sh29,264 hadi Sh35,117 kwa sigara 1,000.

Alisema tumbaku ambayo ipo tayari kutengenezwa sigara (cut filler) kodi yake imepanda kutoka Sh14,780 hadi Sh17,736 kwa bunda la sigara 1,000 wakati ushuru wa cigars unabaki kuwa asilimia 30.

Katika bajeti hiyo, Waziri Dk Mgimwa alisema muda wa maongezi (airtime) kwenye simu za mkononi umeongezeka kutoka asilimia 10 hadi 12.

Alisema lengo la hatua hiyo ni kuoanisha ushuru wa bidhaa unaotozwa na huduma hiyo katika nchi za Jumuiya ya Afrika ya Mashariki (EAC), kwa kipindi hiki ambacho nchi zipo katika Soko la Pamoja.

Alisema hatua hizo za ongezeko la ushuru wa bidhaa kwa pamoja, zinatarajiwa kuongeza mapato ya Serikali kwa kiasi cha Sh144,054.9 milioni.

Waziri huyo alipendekeza kufanyika marekebisho kwenye sheria husika za kodi ya matangazo ya Serikali yanayotoa msamaha wa kodi kwenye magari kwa walengwa mbalimbali ili kuweka ukomo wa umri wa miaka minane kwa magari hayo badala ya miaka 10.

Alisema magari yenye umri wa zaidi ya miaka minane yatatozwa ushuru wa bidhaa wa asilimia 20. Lengo la hatua hiyo ni kupunguza wimbi la uingizaji magari chakavu na kulinda mazingira.

Alitangaza pia marekebisho katika ushuru wa forodha, ikiwemo kufuta msamaha wa ushuru wa forodha katika vitu mbalimbali vikiwemo magari yenye ujazo wa CC 3000 huku pia ushuru wa forodha ukifutwa katika bidhaa nyingine nyingi muhimu.

Alisema katika kuhamasisha na kuchochea ukuaji wa sekta ya ufugaji wa nyuki, vifaa vinavyotumika katika ufugaji na kurina asali vimepewa msamaha wa ushuru wa forodha vinavyoingizwa kutoka nje ya nchi na wafugaji wa nyuki.

Alisema msamaha wa ushuru wa forodha kwenye migahawa ya majeshi ya ulinzi utaendelea kutolewa kwa kipindi cha mwaka mmoja.

Alisema kumefanyika marekebisho katika Sheria ya Forodha ya Jumuiya ya Afrika ya Mashariki ya mwaka 2004 ili kutoa msamaha wa ushuru wa forodha kwa wazalishaji wa vyakula vinavyotengenezwa mahsusi kwa lishe ya watoto wenye utapiamlo na watu wanaoishi na Virusi Vya Ukimwi.

Alisema kuwa katika Bajeti hiyo, pia wametoa msamaha wa ushuru wa forodha kwenye malighafi zinazotumika katika kutengeneza vifaa vya kufanyia uchunguzi wa magonjwa (medical diognastic kits) kwa kuwa vifaa hivyo hutozwa asilimia sifuri vinapoagizwa kutoka nje ya nchi.

Katika marekebisho hayo, utatolewa msamaha kwenye mitambo (machinery) na vipuri vyake vinavyotumika kwenye uchimbaji wa madini lakini hautahusisha vipuri vya magari vitakavyoagizwa na makampuni yanayojihusisha na uchimbaji wa madini.

Katika bajeti hiyo, pia umetolewa msamaha wa ushuru wa forodha kwenye vyuma vinavyowekwa kwenye kingo za barabara na lengo lake ni kutoa unafuu katika ujenzi wa miundombinu ya barabara.

Alisema ushuru wa forodha umepunguzwa kwa ving’amuzi kutoka asilimia 25 hadi asilimia sifuri ili kuwezesha mabadiliko katika teknolojia ya analogia na kwenda katika teknologia ya digitali.

Alisema katika Bajeti hiyo, pia ushuru wa ngano umeondolewa kuwa asilimia 0 badala ya asilimia 35.

Alisema Serikali pia imesamehe VAT katika mashine za kutolea stakabadhi (electronic fiscal devices), ili kupunguza bei yake na kuwezesha wafanyabiashara wengi kuwa nazo, kuhamasisha matumizi yake na hivyo, kuongeza mapato ya Serikali.

Katika eneo hilo, Serikali imeondoa VAT kwa vifaa mbalimbali vya kuhifadhia, kusafirisha na kusambaza gesi asilia ili kuongeza matumizi ya nishati hiyo katika sekta mbalimbali za kiuchumi, kwenye magari, majumbani na viwandani.

Wafanyabiashara ambao mapato yao hayazidi Sh3,000,000 hawatalipa kodi kuanzia Julai Mosi, mwaka huu. Dk Mgimwa alisema mpango huo umefanywa kulinda mapato ya Serikali.

Kabla ya msamaha huo, wafanyabiashara hao ambao mapato yao hayazidi Sh3,000,000 walikuwa wanalipa Sh35,000.

Marekebisho mengine ya kodi ya mapato ni kuwa wenye mapato kati ya Sh3 milioni –Sh7.5 milioni watalipa Sh100,000 badala ya Sh95,000.

Waziri Mgimwa alisema Bajeti hiyo imejielekeza katika Kukuza Pato la Taifa kwa asilimia 6.8 mwaka 2012 ikilinganishwa na ukuaji wa asilimia 6.4 mwaka 2011.

Malengo mengine ni kuimarisha miundombinu ya uchumi, ikijumuisha umeme, barabara, reli na bandari, kuongeza upatikanaji wa huduma za kifedha na kuongezeka kwa mapato ya ndani yatakayofikia uwiano na Pato la Taifa wa asilimia 18 kwa mwaka 2012/13 kulinganisha na mwelekeo wa asilimia 16.9 mwaka 2011/12.

Dk Mgimwa alitaja malengo mengine kuwa ni pamoja na kuendelea kudhibiti mfumuko wa bei ili urudi kwenye viwango vya tarakimu moja na kuwa na kiwango tengemavu cha ubadilishaji wa fedha kitakachotokana na mwenendo wa soko la fedha.

Malengo mengine ni kukuza mikopo kwa sekta binafsi kwa kiwango cha asilimia 20 ya Pato la Taifa ifikapo mwishoni mwa Juni 2013, sambamba na jitihada za kudhibiti mfumuko wa bei, kuboresha mazingira ya wafanyabiashara wadogo na wa kati, kulinda na kuendeleza mafanikio yaliyopatikana katika sekta za huduma za jamii, kuimarisha utawala bora na uwajibikaji na kujenga uwezo wa nchi kukabiliana na misukosuko ya kiuchumi na kifedha pamoja na kushiriki kwa ufanisi katika ushirikiano kikanda na kimataifa.

Kuhusu matumizi ya maendeleo, Waziri Mgimwa alisema itazingatia vipaumbele vya miundombinu ya umeme – mkazo ukiwa upatikanaji wake kwa kuongeza uzalishaji, usafirishaji na usambazaji na jumla Sh498.9 bilioni zimetengwa.

 

 
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Posted by on June 15, 2012 in Business News, Tanzania News

 

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Tanzania Opposition Budget Demands

The opposition has unveiled a list of demands it wants the government to fulfil in the coming budget. They want to see more concetration on raising domestic revenue in the next budget, taming the inflation rate and spearheading national economic growth. The analysis was presented by Mr. Zito Kabwe, MP, who is the shadow minister for finance at Dar es Salaam news conference on Tuesday 05th June,2012.

Mr. Zito Kabwe MP: Kigoma North MP,Shadow Finance Minister

1. Tax Exemptions
The Budget presented by the Shadow finance minister Zitto Kabwe; also asked the government to reduce tax exemptions, widen the tax base on the Skills Development Levy (SDL) and increase revenue collection from mining, oil exploration and mobile phone operators. Mr Kabwe said  the government failed to deliver on an earlier promise to reduce tax exemptions from three per cent to one per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
“We want explanations from the government and will continue demanding an increase in revenue collection. We also want all tax exemptions to be approved by the finance committee.” said Mr. kabwe in a press conference.
The value of tax exemptions now stands at Sh1.03 trillion, equivalent to three per cent of the GDP—and also the same amount offered by donors in general budget support.Mr Kabwe also wants the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) to collect tax effectively from oil exploration, mining and mobile phone firms, which he accuses of evading taxes.

2. Skills and Development levy (SDL)
On SDL, Mr Kabwe proposes that all employers, including public organisations, pay up at four per cent. Only private organisations pay SDL currently, and at six per cent of salaries.

3. Infrastucture
Hon.Kabwe also identified infrastructure—power and roads, especially in rural areas—as a priority in improving food production and transportation, which will help tame the fluctuation of inflation.There have been concerns that there are plenty of food grains, especially maize, in some parts of the country but they cannot be delivered to other areas due to poor roads.

4. National debt

Mr Kabwe called for a special audit in the national debt account following its rapid increase, reaching Sh22 trillion in April this year. He said: “This is a serious issue that the opposition camp will follow very closely. We will seek clarification and audit the national debt account. We want to know why the government continued to borrow and see if the money goes to targeted expenditures.”

4. Reduction of Import taxes on Food
The opposition budget proposes that the government reduce or remove import tax on food, especially rice, for a specific period in order to tame inflation. Food and non-alcoholic beverages account for 47.8 per cent in the national consumer price index.

On Inflation and Other Issues:
The inflation rate now stands at 18.7 per cent, down from 19.8 per cent last December. “If we improve infrastructure in rural areas, they will attract big economic projects which will employ more youth in the rural areas and push the country’s economy,” added Mr Kabwe.
Other priority areas include rehabilitation of the railway, including the central line, Tanga, Moshi and Arusha railways. The MP also spoke of raising domestic revenue to 20 per cent of the GDP, preparing the nation for the gas economy, reducing pay as you earn for minimum salary from 14 per cent to nine per cent, regulating education and reducing taxes for local industries which use domestic raw materials like cashew nuts, cotton and sisal.
The opposition camp will press for the removal of sitting allowances as it did last year, although the government did not accept the proposal.Mr Kabwe, who is also the chairman of the Parliamentary Committee for Public Organisations Accounts (Poac), said the country may have lost huge sums of money in the transformation of the Presidential Parastatal Sector Reform Commission (PSRC) to Consolidated Holding Corporation (CHC), given the lack of records on the assets of public companies.
The CHC has been asked to compile a list of all assets of public organisations before and after transformation of the PSRC.The Poac has already formed a task force to probe the number of assets that the National Milling Corporation (NMC) had before and after the transformation.

What do you think about the Opposition’s Budget ideas/analysis ; Comments ?

Visit Hon.Zito Kabwe Blog for more Budget analysis: https://zittokabwe.wordpress.com/

 

 
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Posted by on June 8, 2012 in Tanzania News

 

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Industries Negatively Affected by an Economic Recovery

What is an economic recovery?

An economic recovery is a period of increasing business activity signaling the end of a recession. Much  like a recession, an economic recovery is not always easy to recognize until at  least several months after it has begun. Economists use a variety of indicators,  including GDP, inflation, financial markets and unemployment to analyze the  state of the economy and determine whether a recovery is in progress.

The general thinking is that recessions are bad for business. However, some  of businessess do quite well during downturns and would actually prefer that  the economy struggle a bit. On the flip side, they tend to be negatively  affected when the economy starts to recover. The following 5 industries fall into this category.

1. Discount Stores:

These are department stores which offers its items at a lower price than many other retail stores. Economic downturns necessitate  belt-tightening on the part of consumers. In a falling economy, high-end  fashion, automobiles, and homes see a plummet in demand as individuals  focus on all but the most core necessities. Discount stores, like Mr.Price, tend to see a corresponding boost in  demand during these downturns and do well in difficult economic climates. On the flip side, these  businesses see their popularity wane when the business cycle improves and  consumers become less concerned about losing their jobs. When the economy recover consumers will go to high-end stores and most expensive cars etc.

2. Education

Job losses during recessions leave those  unfortunate enough to be handed a job termination lettesr with free time. Many use their time  constructively and return to school to either learn a new job skill or add a  degree that will make them more desirable to current employers, or in  preparation for when the employment market picks up. One study by the Pew  Research Center detailed that community colleges experienced record enrollment  trends during the credit crisis. It specifically cited individuals in the auto  industry returning to school. The center even mentioned a drop in high school  dropouts, which makes sense as there is less opportunity to find a job instead  of going to class. In an upturn, these trends reverse as earning a paycheck  becomes more possible and makes  education look less appealing in comparison. In Tanzania this could apply more to colleges that offers cheap short courses; for high fee institutions ca not be affordable for a person that looses a job.

3. Grocery Stores

In similar fashion to the alcohol-related  firms, consumers tend to eat at home more often in a down economy. The recession crisis saw the restaurant industry suffer mightily as a result of this  phenomenon.  This trend  favored food retailers. In an economic recovery, their growth tends to  slow because of less traffic in the grocery aisles.

4.Spirits

The spirits and alcohol space is unique in that it  can benefit in both good and bad times. As with retail, the higher end of the  market does well in an upswing as consumers have more discretionary money to throw around and try a more expensive bottle of wine or whiskey. A  shift also occurs as people dine out less, meaning they buy more alcohol for  drinking at home, as opposed to at a restaurant.  But overall, people are just as likely to drink  and drown their sorrows in an economic downturn. As you might expect, people  trade down to cheaper brands during a recession.

5. Pawn Shops

Pawn shops euphemistically refer to themselves as  “specialty consumer financial services” firms and tend to do well when  people need money. Labor-intensive jobs, such as those in the manufacturing  and homebuilding industries, are very economically sensitive and lay off workers  in downturns. Part of this work demographic doesn’t qualify for traditional  credit offered by banks and credit card companies and means they sometimes have  to rely on pawn shops, which offer high-interest loans and take personal  property as collateral.

The  Bottom Line For the most part, the above industries do less well  during economic recoveries. Overall, these spaces would prefer a downturn and  the chance to profit from a gloomier business climate.

 
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Posted by on June 6, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

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Should you Pay in Cash instead of credit Card?

Should you Pay in Cash instead of credit Card?

In this article i will focus on just one technique to improve your finances by  taking a close look at how making purchases with cash can contribute to your ability to budget, save and invest.

A Plastic Affair

 With the proliferation of plastic  alternatives to hard currency, some people consider carrying cash a  throwback.
To be fair, plastic is much sexier than a piece of colored  paper with a dead president staring vaguely into the distance. Some banks even  allow you to customize the graphics that appear on the credit  card/debit card or choose from a range  of designs and colors the company is marketing.
There  is also the security advantage with debit and credit cards. Debit cards are  protected by your personal identification number (PIN) and credit cards by your  signature (and for some cards, a PIN number too). Cash is only protected by your  ability to defend it should someone else want to take it from you.
Moreover, nowadays cards are as widely accepted as cash shops. And yet, from a personal  finance view, cash is almost always the better choice for making a purchase.  Here’s why:
1. Overpaying

One of the drawbacks of credit and debit cards  is that they encourage you to spend more than you intend to by giving you easy  access to more capital. With cash, spending more than you intended requires  going to a bank or ATM to get more and then going back to the store to complete  the purchase. For most people, this provides time to reconsider whether their  budgets can handle any extra strain.
Generally speaking, only carrying  the cash you are prepared to pay for a given product will prevent you from  buying the next level up and paying for features you don’t need. This works for  small-scale purchases, but buying a computer or a car can involve large amounts  of cash that probably shouldn’t be carried around. If a check  can’t be used, a debit card is better  than a credit card because you are spending money you have rather than money you  don’t.

2. Over-Shopping
Just as  cards encourage overpaying for one item, they also allow you to buy more items  than you mean to. Stores are set up to make products appealing in order to  persuade shoppers to buy more. Sometimes a shopping list isn’t enough to protect  you from impulse buys.

According to the  Dunn & Bradstreet study found that people spend 12-18% more when using credit  cards than when using cash. And McDonald’s found that the average transaction  rose from $4.50 to $7 when customers used plastic instead of cash.
So  what can you do to avoid this? Only carrying enough cash to buy the things on  your list can limit the damage. This is  the best way to keep shopping within your budget. If you are motivated, you  will find discounts or cheaper alternatives to your regular brands to make that  cash go further and maybe earn yourself a luxury item.
3. Cash Vs. Credit Cards
 Cash in this article, is strictly limited to money you have already earned and is sitting  there for you to use. Using your Visa to take a cash  advance and then carrying the cash with you will not solve the essential  problem of using high-interest debt to cover your expenses.
Cash has one  very clear advantage over using a credit card: If you buy something on your  credit card and end up carrying a balance, or only make the minimum payment each  month, you will incur interest at a rate of 20% or more of your purchase (which  can have you paying Tsh.20,000/- or more for every Tshs.100,000/-  you spend). If you save up enough  cash for the same purchase, you are giving yourself the equivalent of a 20%  discount by not using your card. Before  you even sign up for a card, make sure you know what you’re getting into.
4. Cash Vs. Debit Cards
If this article were only  dealing with cash as a better alternative to credit cards, no one would dispute  it. In contrast, debit cards seem to enjoy a protected status despite the  overkill on ATM fees and foreign ATM fees. Forgetting the fees, a debit card’s  main failure is that is trivializes purchases. Being a square of plastic, it is  hard to tell how much of your money is flowing through your debit card.
For most people it becomes a matter of 10,000 shillings here, 100,000 Shillings there, another 40,000  over here and so on until  they give up keeping track of how much has been spent in a day – let alone a  month. Then it’s a shock to their systems when the monthly statement comes  and it’s far too late to do any good. With cash, you can see the damage as it is  done and hopefully curtail your spending before it gets out of  control.
The Bottom Line Using a credit or debit card  offers more security than cash in most cases. For large purchases, carrying cash  is often not an option and writing a check or getting a bank  draft  may be more trouble than it is worth for some. Furthermore, if a debit  card is used responsibly, it is an ideal replacement for cash. A credit card can  also be a convenient tool, but it’s only a fair substitute for cash when the  balance is paid in full at the end of each month. Otherwise, your ultimate  reward for paying with your credit card will be paying off an even bigger  debt.
If you struggle to avoid overspending, shopping with cash is one  way to stick to your budget and limit impulsive spending.
For more Saving and Budgeting Tips check Out My article here: http://monfinance.com/2012/03/23/finance-tip-budget/

 

 

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Finance Tip before You Walk Down the Aisle

Finance Tip before You Walk Down the Aisle
Though it  might be an exciting time when you’re considering taking the plunge and getting  married, don’t  forget that you really need to have a serious talk with your new partner about  money before you get married. Though this may be an awkward discussion to  have, especially in our African Culture, this may sound really bad,especially for men.  What kind of man who cannot provide for his Woman!

” Mwanamke Matunzo”

before you commit yourself into “Till death do us part” contract you need to know what that person earns, what debts they owe and what  their financial plans are for the future. When  you make those vows, you’re also agreeing to a financial partnership with your  beloved. You will need to know that their goals and spending habits are  compatible with yours and that you’re not marrying someone who will drain you  financially, destroying all the hard work you’ve done to create a financially  secure life for yourself.

 I say Long gone are the days of considering  single women to be spinsters. Women  are becoming more and more comfortable in taking control of their own  finances, shaping their financial futures and turning their goals into  realities.
        Monica.
 

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Michuzi Blog Yatambulisha Huduma ya bure ya WIFI kuvinjari blog yake bure

Hongera sana Issa michuzi!

Pata Taarifa kamili Hapa:

Tovuti yako uipendayo inakupa huduma ya kujivinjari bure kutoka Uhuruone

Muhidini Issa Michuzi akishikiriana na Uhuruone wanawapatia wakazi wote wa Dar es Salaam huduma ya “Wifi hotspots” ambayo itawapa wakazi wote wa Dar es Salaam huduma ya bure ya kutembelea tovuti ya Michuzi. Kwa kupitia mitambo yao ya “Wifi Mesh” iliyopo Dar es Salaam ambayo imeunganishwa na tovuti ya Michuzi,wakazi wa Dar es Salaam wanatangaziwa kwamba wawashe kompyuta zao na kuunganishwa na taarifa za punde bila gharama yoyote.

Akikaririwa katika mahojiano ndugu Issa Michuzi alisema hivi, “Ni mapinduzi ya kweli ambapo Watanzania wanachukua hatua katika kuleta taarifa mbalimbali kwa wananchi katika viwango nafuu. Ninaamini hii itaongeza mawasiliano kwa watu wetu na ni ndoto yangu kwamba tovuti ya Michuzi itakua huru kufika kwa Watanzania wote hivi karibuni”.

Akiwa ofisini Bwana Rajabu Katunda alisema, “Uhuruone imejikita katika kutoa huduma kwa jamii na tumegundua kwamba taarifa za kijamii zinatakiwa kuwafikia wanajamii kwa urahisi. Tovuti nyingi zinatembelewa na Watanzania waliopo nchi za nje kuliko wananchi waliopo nchini na hii siyo haki. Kama nina uwezo kupata taarifa kwenye tovuti ya Michuzi ni jukumu letu kama kampuni kuwawezesha watanzania waliopo nchini pia kupata huduma. Watanzania tunatakiwa kuwa na utamaduni wa kusaidiana na kupeana moyo na hii itasaidia kukuza uchumi wetu sio tu kununua na kuuza bidhaa kutoka nje.

Kwa pamoja Bwana Michuzi na Katunda wamesema huu ni mwanzo tu na wanaamini kwamba hili wazo litafuatwa na wengine. Kwa msisitizo Bwana Michuzi aliongea “Lazima tuonyeshe mfano kwa vitendo sio maneno tu. Tumechukua hatua ya kwanza katika kufanikisha ndoto, wengine wanatakiwa kujiunga kwenye mapinduzi haya na kufanikisha”

Kutembelea tovuti ya Michuzi bila gharama washa Wifi kwenye Ipad, Tablet, Simu au Laptop. Tafuta Michuzi blog Wifi, Unganisha ,fungua browser yako uipendayo mfano Chrome, Internet Explorer, Safari au Firefox na nenda kwa Issa Michuzi.blogspot.com.

Kama hautaona tovuti ya Michuzi Wifi, tafadhali wasiliana na Uhuruone kwa email ifuatayo, issa.michuzi@uhuruone.com au piga simu namba 255779477477 ili uweze kuunganishwa.

 
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Posted by on March 28, 2012 in General Knowledge, Tanzania News

 

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Finance Tip: Know Your Market Value

Finance Tip: Know Your Market Value

Hello MonFinance readers, i hope you had a wonderful weekend. Today i am going to give you a tip on getting paid what your job  worth; and how to ask for a raise if you feel underpaid .

It sounds simple, but many people struggle with this  basic rule; getting paid what you’re worth and of course spend less than you earn .

Whether you are employed or self-employed,  Make sure you know what your job is worth in the marketplace, by conducting an evaluation of your skills, productivity, job tasks, contribution to the company, and the going rate, both inside and outside the company, for what you do. Being underpaid even one hundred thousand shillings a month can have a significant cumulative effect over the course of your working life.

After reading this and you feel underpaid; then you have to ask for a raise in a professional way.

How do you ask for a Raise?

Many employees make the mistake of asking for a raise because they need more money, can’t pay their bills, etc.  Your personal budgeting and financial problems are not your company’s problem.  Need has nothing to do with it, so it’s best not to talk about need when asking for a raise.

Base your request on your evaluation of your skills, productivity, job tasks, your contribution to the company, and the going rate, both inside and outside the company, for what you do.  Look at the entire situation from your company’s perspective, and base your approach on THEIR needs, and on what YOU can do for THEM.

However, no matter how much or how little you’re paid, you’ll never get ahead if you spend more than you earn. this is when the Budget Tip apply.  Often it’s easier to spend less than it is to earn more, and a little cost-cutting effort in a number of areas can result in big savings. It doesn’t always have to involve making big sacrifices.

Happy reading.

Monica.

 

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Finance Tip: Budget

For you to  be financially health, build yourself a solid budget  and stick to it.

This is just good sense for absolutely everyone – Men,Women, single,  married or divorced..Employed or student, Everyone.

Examine your monthly expenses, remembering to include  everything from housing costs, utilities, groceries, car payments, gasoline,  insurance and esthetics. Do the same for your income. Subtract your expenses  from your income, and see what you’ve got leftover. You can divide the remainder  up based on what you’d like to save and what you’d like to budget toward discretionary spending. Don’t  forget to factor in money towards repayment of credit card debt, student loans  or any other debts you may have. You’ll want to get debts  paid off as quickly as you can in order to save yourself those pesky  interest costs. You should also examine methods for reducing costs, like eating  meals at home or reducing the amount you spend on entertainment  expenses.

MJ.

 

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Tips for Investing in Initial Public Offering (IPOs)

Most people think Stocks investments is just eating a piece of cake. You do not have to be there physically to control your investments, you just browse daily or weekly on Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange site and manage your portfolio and your money multiplies.

Sounds so much Easier. In the days of dotcom mania, investors could throw money into an IPO and be almost guaranteed killer returns. Numerous companies, experienced huge first-day gains, but ended up  disappointing investors in the long-term. People who had the foresight to get  in, and out, on some of these companies, made investing look way too easy.

However, no investment is a sure thing. Investors could no  longer expect the double and triple-digit gains they got in the early tech IPO  days simply by flipping stocks. There is  still money to be made in IPOs, but the focus has shifted from the quick buck to  the long-term outlook. Rather than trying to capitalize on a stock’s initial  bounce, investors are more inclined to carefully scrutinize long-term prospects.
IPOs can be a risky investment. For the individual investor, it is tough to  predict what the stock will do on its initial day of trading and in the near  future because there is often little historical data with which to  analyze the company. Also, most IPOs are of companies going through a  transitory growth period, which are subject to additional uncertainty regarding  their future values.

WHAT IS AN IPO?

  ‘An IPO is The first sale of stock by a private company to the public. IPOs are  often issued by smaller, younger companies seeking the capital to  expand, but can also be done by large privately owned companies looking to  become publicly traded.’

 Even if you have a longer-term focus, finding a good IPO is difficult. IPOs have  many unique risks that make them different from the average stock which has been  trading for a while. If you do decide to take a chance on an IPO, here are five  points to keep in mind: 

1. Objective research is a scarce commodity 

Getting  information on companies set to go public is tough. Unlike most publicly traded  companies, private companies do not have swarms of  analysts covering them, attempting to uncover possible cracks in their corporate armor.  Remember that although most companies try to fully disclose all information in  their prospectus it is still written by  them and not by an unbiased third-party.

Search the Internet for  information on the company and its competitors, financing, past press releases,  as well as overall industry health. Even though info may be scarce, learning as  much as you can about the company is a crucial step in making a wise investment.  On the other hand, your research may lead to the discovery that a company’s  prospects are being overblown and that not acting on the investment opportunity  is the best idea.

2. Pick a company with strong brokers

Try to select a  company that has a strong underwriter.  I am not saying that the big investment banks never bring duds public, but in  general, quality brokerages bring quality companies public. Exercise more  caution when selecting smaller brokerages, because they may be willing to  underwrite any company.  However, one positive of smaller brokers is that, because of their smaller  client base, they make it easier for the individual investor to purchase pre-IPO  shares. Be aware  that most large brokerage firms will not allow your first investment to be an  IPO. The only individual investors who get in on IPOs are long-standing,  established (and often high-net-worth) customers. Of course in our country most of the brokerage firms aims at SELLING instead of ADVISING an investor.

3. Always read the prospectus

I have told you not to put all  your faith in it, but you should never skip reading the prospectus. It may be a  dry read, but the prospectus lays out the company’s risks and opportunities,  along with the proposed uses for the money raised by the IPO.

For example, if  the money is going to repay loans, or buy the equity from founders or private  investors, then look out! It is a bad sign if the company cannot afford to repay  its loans without issuing stock. Money that is going towards research, marketing  or expanding into new markets paints a better picture. Most companies have  learned that over-promising and under-delivering are mistakes often made by  those vying for marketplace success. Therefore, one of the biggest things to be  on the lookout for while reading a prospectus is an overly optimistic future  earnings outlook; this means reading the projected accounting figures carefully.
You can always request the prospectus from the broker bringing the  company public.  Get a professional to help you understand the prospectus because not anyone can read and understand the accounting information and statements disclosed in a prospectus.

4. Be cautious

Skepticism is a positive attribute to  cultivate in the IPO market. As i mentioned earlier, there is always a lot of  uncertainty surrounding IPOs, mainly because of the lack of available  information. Therefore, you should always approach an IPO with caution.
If your broker recommends an IPO, you should exercise increased caution.  This is a clear indication that most institutions and money managers have  graciously passed on the underwriter’s attempts to sell them stock. In this  situation, individual investors are likely getting the bottom feed, the  leftovers that the “big money” didn’t want. If your broker is strongly pitching  shares, there is probably a reason behind the high number of these available  stocks. This brings up an important point: even if you find a company going  public that you deem to be a worthwhile investment, it’s possible you won’t be  able to get shares. Brokers have a habit of saving their IPO allocations for  favored clients, so unless you are a high roller, chances are good that you  won’t be able to get in.

5. Consider waiting for the lock-up period to end

The lock-up period is a legally binding contract (Mostly 3 to 24 months)  between the underwriters and insiders of the company prohibiting them from  selling any shares of stock for a specified period.
The point here is that waiting until insiders are free to sell their shares is  not a bad strategy, because if they continue to hold stock once the lock-up  period has expired, it may be an indication that the company has a bright and  sustainable future. During the lock-up period, there is no way to tell whether  insiders would in fact be happy to take the spot price of the stock or not.

Let the market take its course before you take the plunge. A good company is  still going to be a good company, and a worthy investment, even after the  lock-up period expires.

The Bottom Line

By no means  I am suggesting that all IPOs should be avoided: some investors who have  bought stock at the IPO price have been rewarded handsomely by the companies in  question. Every month successful companies go public, but it is difficult to  sift through the riffraff and find the investments with the most potential. Just  keep in mind that when it comes to dealing with the IPO market, a skeptical and  informed investor is likely to perform much better than one who is not.

Happy reading and Go beat the Market!

Monica.

 

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