Monday 22 December 2008

China to celebrate Matteo Ricci

Jesuit forged the first real ties between the two countries

(ANSA) - Rome, December 19 - Italy and China are joining forces to prepare a major show celebrating the man who forged the first real ties between their countries over four centuries ago. The exhibition will focus on Matteo Ricci (1552-1610), a Jesuit priest and academic who spent most of his adult life in China and eventually became a member of the court of Ming Emperor Wanli.


Officials from Italy's Marche region, where Ricci was born, and representatives from the Culture Ministry have travelled to China to meet with their local counterparts and Italian diplomatic staff.

The goal is to stage the exhibition in 2010, the 400th anniversary of Ricci's death, at several locations, starting with Beijing. It will then move onto Nanjing, followed by two stops in Shanghai: one in a former Jesuit orphanage that is being renovated and one in the Expo 2010.

Ricci studied mathematics and astronomy for several years in Rome, where he entered the Jesuit order, before setting out for the Far East in 1578 at the age of 26. He spent four years in Goa on the west coast of India before travelling to China where he settled in Zhao Qing in the southernmost Guangdong Province and began studying Chinese.

It was during this period that the Jesuit priest produced his first global Great Map of Ten Thousand Countries, which revolutionized Chinese understanding of the rest of the world.

In 1589 he moved to Zhao Zhou and began sharing European mathematical ideas with Chinese scholars, winning renown for his extraordinary memory and knowledge of astronomy.

The reputation of Li Madou - as he was known in China - spread, and in 1601 he was finally allowed into the Forbidden City of Beijing, where he worked until his death in 1610. During his life, the Jesuit sought to bridge the gap between Chinese and Italian cultures more by discussion of ethical and philosophical questions than by focusing on religion.

''Matteo Ricci and Marco Polo are now the two best-known Italian figures in China,'' said Italian Consul Massimo Roscigno at the meeting of officials. But while Ricci's work is today familiar to Chinese schoolchildren of all ages, only university-level students learn about Italian explorer Marco Polo, who also travelled to China.

In Italy, Ricci has only recently become a familiar name. Despite his reputation in China, the Catholic Church condemned him for heresy 100 years after his death and he was only rehabilitated by Pope Pius XII in 1939.

His memory has largely been neglected since then but a recent documentary and a successful exhibition in Rome have sparked a revival of popular interest in his extraordinary life. photo: portrait of Matteo Ricci painted in 1610 by Yu Wen-hui.

Wednesday 10 December 2008

FAO WARNS OF WORLD HUNGER INCREASE

Rome- based UN agency says 40 mln more hungry in 2008

(ANSA) - Rome, December 9 - The number of people suffering from hunger has increased by 40 million this year, the Rome-based United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said Tuesday.

Some 963 million people are now affected, taking the 1996 World Food Summit goal to reduce hunger by half by 2015 almost out of reach, according to FAO's latest report on the state of food insecurity in the world.

''It will require an enormous and resolute global effort and concrete actions to reduce the number of hungry by 500 million by 2015,'' said FAO Assistant Director-General Hafez Ghanem.

He added that reaching the target would need an investment of 30 billion dollars annually for agriculture and social protection in poor countries.

The FAO report said higher food prices were the primary cause of the increase in people suffering from hunger, despite the fact that these have now dropped since the beginning of the year.

While prices of major cereals fell by 50% from early 2008, they remained 20% higher than in October 2006, according to the report.

''Lower prices have not ended the food crisis in many poor countries,'' Ghanem said.

''The structural problems of hunger, like the lack of access to land, credit and employment, combined with high food prices remain a dire reality,'' he added.

Ghanem warned that lower prices and the credit crunch could meanwhile force farmers to plant fewer crops this year, ''unleashing another round of dramatic food prices next year''.

Nearly two thirds of the world's hungry live in Asia (583 million), although sub-Saharan Africa has the highest proportion of undernourished people in the total population (236 million, or one in three people), according to the report.

Friday 14 November 2008

Italy 'to curb immigrant influx'

» 2008-11-13 17:25

Napolitano says foreigners make the nation stronger
(ANSA) - Rome, November 13 - The Italian government is ''determined'' to reduce the number of immigrants arriving in Italy, Welfare Minister Maurizio Sacconi said Thursday. Speaking a day after the Northern League reignited debate on the issue by proposing a two-year moratorium on immigrant entrants while Italy recovers from the economic crisis, Sacconi said the government was ''working together'' to come up with an acceptable plan. ''We must certainly take into account the fact that the economic crisis could result in unemployment for many immigrants already resident in our country, who could be required to leave if they don't find a new job within six months. For that reason we need to be cautious with new arrivals,'' he said. ''We are determined to contain new entrants, limiting them substantially to professionals, nurses and carers''. While the government planned to lower annual immigrant quotas, it would take ''a much more flexible line'' with highly trained professionals, he added.

But Italian President Giorgio Napolitano on Wednesday urged the country to ''continue decisively in the direction'' of opening its doors to immigrants, following the examples of the United Kingdom, France and Germany.

Praising the ''new energies from every part of the world'' that the influx of immigrants has brought, he said Italy should drop its ''old prejudices'' and create a ''climate of openness and appreciation towards foreigners who make themselves Italian,'' he said. Meeting representatives of 38,500 immigrants who were granted Italian citizenship in 2007, Napolitano said the number of foreigners living in Italy has tripled in the last decade and that this was ''a factor of freshness and strength for the Italian nation''. He added that while it was necessary to make the distinction between legal and illegal immigrants, there should ''be no barriers for basic human rights''. The issue of integration must meanwhile be dealt with ''seriously, avoiding hurried stopgaps that would show themselves to be artificial and fragile''. National statistics bureau Istat said Wednesday that there are now 3,433,000 foreigners living in Italy, around half a million of whom arrived in 2007.

MORE FOREIGNERS BECOMING ITALIAN CITIZENS.

More and more foreigners are meanwhile applying to become Italian citizens.

Interior Minister Roberto Maroni said Thursday that the number of successful citizenship applications doubled from 2005 to 2006, has risen slightly since, and is destined to rise at a faster rate. From 19,226 in 2005, they rose to 35,766 in 2006, 38,466 in 2007 and stood at 32,238 at the end of last month. ''These numbers, destined to progressively increase, require a commitment from institutions so that the integration of immigrants is effective - a goal that an indiscriminate opening of frontiers cannot ensure,'' the interior chief said. ''This is not exclusively a question of public order but of creating the greatest integration possible in conditions that are sustainable for the country''. Maroni stressed the need for aspiring citizens to have a working knowledge of the Italian language and share values with Italians in order to qualify for citizenship. But House Speaker Gianfranco Fini said ''the time was ripe'' to loosen citizenship requirements. Fini, who has campaigned in the past to give immigrants the vote, said ''Italian society has changed profoundly'' and it was time to ''discuss a new law''. Non-EU immigrants who have lived in Italy for ten years can apply for citizenship, while EU immigrants are eligible after four years and political refugees after five years.

There have been calls to halve the ten-year residence requirement for non-EU foreigners.

Children born in Italy automatically become citizens.

Wednesday 15 October 2008

The Nobel prize for economics is given to Paul Krugman

Nobel prize

The youngster gets it

Oct 14th 2008 From Economist.com

IT WAS widely expected that Paul Krugman, who won the the 2008 Nobel prize for economics on Monday October 13th, would claim the award one day. In 1991 he had received the John Bates Clark medal for the best young economist, which is widely seen as a stepping stone to a Nobel award. What is more of a surprise is that he was honoured rather sooner in his life than many other winners. Like most Nobel laureates in economics, Mr Krugman was recognised for research undertaken early in his career—in this case for his pioneering work on modelling trade between countries whose firms grow more profitable the bigger they become. At 55, he is only four years older than the youngest ever winner, Kenneth Arrow, who was 51 when he won in 1972. But he is a fresh-faced youngster in comparison with Leonid Hurwicz, one of last year’s winners, who was 90 when he shared the prize.









Tuesday 30 September 2008

Italy can weather credit storm

Treasury constantly monitoring financial developments
(ANSA) - Rome, September 30 - Italian banks currently have enough cash on hand to allow the country to weather the international credit crisis, the Treasury said on Tuesday.
In a statement issued after a meeting of its special financial stability committee, the Treasury said ''the consequences (of the crisis) on Italy's banking system and insurance sector remain under control and the liquidity of Italian banks is adequate''.
The watchdog committee is chaired by Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti and includes Bank of Italy Governor Mario Draghi, Treasury Director Vittorio Grilli, the chairman of the insurance sector authority ISVAP, Giancarlo Giannini, and the head of the stock market authority Consob, Lamberto Cardia.
The committee, which has been meeting almost daily, said that while the repercussions of the crisis on Italy were contained, ''it is best to keep the situation under constant observation''.
Tremonti is set to report to the house on the credit crisis on Thursday morning. ITALIAN ECONOMY IS SOUND, FRATTINI SAYS.
Italy's condition to weather the financial crisis was also confirmed on Tuesday by Foreign Minister Franco Frattini. ''Fortunately, Italy has a sound financial setting. We do not have banks or insurance companies plagued by debt because we are a country which manufactures. Our industry protects us,'' Frattini said.
Some concern over the effects the US-based crisis will have on the Italian economy came from Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne who said on Tuesday that the group's stock value and sales would suffer.
''For sure it (the credit crisis) will have an effect on us and right now no evaluations or forecasts can be relied upon,'' Marchionne said.
Nevertheless, he added that Fiat ''has a solid financial position which will allow us to cover our needs''.

Wednesday 10 September 2008

ITALIAN ECONOMY STALLED

Revised Istat figures shows GDP down 0. 1% in 2nd qtr
(ANSA) - Rome, September 10 - The Italian economy is in worse shape than previously expected and could be headed for a recession if GDP does not pick up in the third quarter.

National statistics bureau Istat on Wednesday revised its figures for the second quarter of 2008 and said GDP fell by 0.1% over the same period the previous year, its worse year-on-year result since the third quarter of 2003, when GDP also fell by 0.1%.

Last month Istat had predicted zero growth for the second quarter.

Istat confirmed that GDP sank by 0.3% over the first quarter of the year, its poorest performance since the last quarter of 2007.

Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi downplayed the bad economic news and said ''I believe that I am the premier of a very solid nation with a high standard of living and of well-being''. The poor state of the Italian economy was confirmed by the European Commission which on Wednesday reduced its already modest forecast for GDP growth in 2008 to 0.1%, from 0.5% calculated last April.

The EC added that the reduction ''implies that there is no impetus for growth in 2009''.

According to the European Union executive, the Italian economy has been slowing down since the middle of last year ''and the outlook for the coming months is not encouraging due to a further decline in competitiveness and a drop in global demand''.

The EC said it expected Italy's GDP in the third quarter to be unchanged over the second quarter but that the economy should pick up slightly in the final quarter of 2008 with a predicted decline in inflation.

According to the EC, the stagnation of the Italian economy is primarily due to a decline in domestic demand brought on by a surge in consumer prices.

Should Italy's year-on-year GDP fall in the third quarter, this will mean that the economy is formally in a recession. The national retailers' association Confcommercio said that the revised Istat figures ''confirm the risk of a recession, something which is already a reality for consumers''.

''Consumer spending has been falling for the past three quarters and indications are that this will get even worse, also give the results of the past season for tourism.'' the group added.

''Unless measures are adopted to boost consumer spending by increasing available income for families, the current crisis will compromise the economic picture in 2009,'' Concommercio warned.

Concern over the state of the economy was echoed by leading consumer groups who said the situation was ''grave and worrisome''.

''The violent plunge ion consumer spending, caused by purchasing power at historic lows, has resulted in consequences which are clear to everyone,'' Federconsumatori and Adusbef said in a joint statement.

''On one thing I think we can all agree on to try and avoid recession and that is the need for the European Central Bank to cut interest rates by at least one percentage point,'' they added.

Wednesday 3 September 2008

The second browser war (From Economist.com)

Sep 3rd 2008 | SAN FRANCISCO

From Economist.com

Google’s new web browser is its most direct attack on Microsoft yet


SEVERAL years ago, Silicon Valley was rife with rumours that Google, then primarily a search engine, might be building a new web browser to rival that of Microsoft, called Internet Explorer (IE), or even an operating system to rival Microsoft’s Windows. Google mocked those rumours and they died down. But if Sergey Brin, Google’s co-founder, is to be believed, the speculation itself made him think that “maybe it’s not a bad idea”. And so this week Google did launch a new browser, called Chrome, that is also, in effect, a new operating system. The rumours, says Mr Brin cheekily, “just happened to migrate from being false to being true.”

Chrome amounts to a declaration of war—albeit a pre-emptive one, in Google’s mind—against Microsoft. So far, Google has been coy about admitting the rivalry (whereas Microsoft’s boss, Steve Ballmer, is obsessed with it). In web search and advertising, Google dominates roughly as Microsoft does in operating systems and office applications. To the extent that Google has challenged Microsoft’s core business at all, it is through its web-based word-processing, spreadsheet and presentation applications. But these, so far, have few users.

Google’s fear has been that Microsoft might use its grip on people’s computers and browsers to tweak the default settings so that Google’s search engine and other services might be disadvantaged. This, after all, is how Microsoft behaved in the 1990s, when it crushed Netscape, an early browser.

Microsoft’s fear, by contrast, has been that computing as a whole might move from the operating system as a platform for applications to the web (or “cloud”). This is why it attacked—also pre-emptively, in its mind—Netscape and landed in antitrust court.

As Google rose to dominate the web during this decade, it therefore invested a lot of energy into a rival web browser to IE, called Firefox. An open-source project (whose code can be altered by anybody), Firefox comes from a foundation, across the street from Google’s offices, that happens to be based on the remnants of the old Netscape. Google’s engineers contribute code to Firefox and pay the foundation a share of advertising when people search Google in the browser’s toolbar. Thus Firefox rose to become the largest browser after IE, with almost 20% of the market.

But Google concluded that even Firefox could not protect it against Microsoft. It began to define its business as “search, ads and apps”, where the apps (applications), with a few exceptions, run on the web and are accessed through a browser. So Google decided to build a browser from scratch, explicitly for those fledgling services, from word processing to snazzy virtual worlds.

Chrome, which it launched with a cheeky comic book instead of a press release, is the result. It is based on tabs, each of which runs independently of the others for security, speed and stability. It even works offline. It is, in short, the scenario that Microsoft has dreaded ever since Netscape. As Arnaud Weber, a Google engineer and one of the characters in the comic book, says in a speech bubble: “We’re applying the same kind of process isolation you find in modern operating systems.” It is a geek’s way of saying that developers and consumers may soon stop caring about the operating system on their own hard drive altogether.

Ingeniously, Chrome itself need not take a lot of market share to fulfil Google’s objectives. Google does not expect to sell or otherwise “monetise” Chrome directly. Like Firefox’s, Chrome’s source code is free for anybody to change and improve, and even for rival browser-makers to incorporate. That could even include Microsoft. As Mr Brin says, “we would consider it a success” if the next version of IE were “built on Chrome, or even if it were just a lot better as a result of Chrome.” Google wants ever more people doing ever more things on the web, and peace of mind that nobody, not even Microsoft, can interrupt that.

Monday 7 July 2008

Consumer spending falls 2. 7% in May

No trend reversal in sight for 'dramatic' situation'
(ANSA) - Rome, July 4 - Consumer spending fell for the seventh month in a row in May, down 2.7% in volume compared to the same month last year, and there are no indications of a reversal in trend in the near future, the Confcommercio retailers' association reported on Friday.

The drop in May brought the average decline in consumer spending since the start of the year to 1.9%, compared to a rise of 1.1% in volume in the first five months of 2007.

According to Confcommercio, the May decline ''definitively erases any possibility of a trend reversal in the short term. The crisis is structural and profound and reinforces the forecast that economic growth this year will be next to zero''.

Because of their reduced purchasing power, Confcommercio observed, Italians are spending less on automobiles and on food, as well as on entertainment.

Due to a 5% hike in food prices, Confcommercio calculated that Italians Italians bought 3.3% less food, creating a situation which the Adusbef consumer group defined as ''truly dramatic''.

Confcommercio said Italians in May spent 13.5% less, compared to May 2007, on buying cars, motorbikes, fuel and plane tickets, while for the first five months of the year the reduction was 8.1%.

The decline in May for car sales was put at over 20% and 13% for motorbikes, while fuel sales were down 1%, indicating that Italians were increasingly leaving their cars in their garages.

For nonessential goods and services - which include entertainment and recreation - Italians cut spending by 4.9% in May and 5.1% for the first five months of the year.

The only area where Italians were still spending was for communications, which is also the only sector where prices continue to fall, but even here ''there are signs of a slowdown,'' Confcommercio said.

In a related development, the Coldiretti farmers' union reported on Friday that 44% of Italians last month never ate out at a pizzeria or restaurant and among those who did, 71% said they may not do so as frequently this month because of the need to tighten their belts.

Tuesday 1 July 2008

ITALY: inflation hit 12- year high

Consumers and retailers concerned over soaring prices

(ANSA) - Rome, June 30 - Italy's year-on-year inflation hit a 12-year high in June sparking major concern among both consumers and retailers.

National statistics bureau Istat reported on Monday that inflation in June hit 3.8%, its highest since July 1996, with a 0.4% monthly increase in its consumer price.

Aggravating inflation again this month were the soaring costs of pasta and other wheat products along with runaway prices for fuels.

Compared to June 2007, pasta prices were up 22.4%, after climbing 20.7% the previous month, while bread cost 13% more, following a 13.3% hike in May.

Overall food and non-alcoholic beverage prices rose above average, jumping 6.1% in one year.

According to the consumer group Codacons, ''the record increases for food will have a very strong repercussion on consumer spending, which this year could fall by as much as 5%''.

The price increases over the past six months, observed Codacons chairman Carlo Rienzi, ''will cost each family a whopping 1,500 euros more''.

In order to combat inflation, Codacons called on the government to ''introduce triple-pricing by decree to show the consumer the cost of a product at its source and then at the wholesale and retail levels''.

The Coldiretti farmers' union reported that in the first three months of the year rising food prices had resulted in a 5.5% drop in the amount of bread Italians buy and a 2.5% reduction in the amount of pasta they eat.

Overall family spending on food, Coldiretti observed, is down 0.4% Energy prices in general rose 14.8% over June of last year, compared to a 13.1% hike in May, and were 2.8% higher than the previous month.

Diesel prices in one month jumped 5.5% and were 31.5% higher than June 2007, while gasoline prices rose 4.7% for the month and 12.6% for the year.

The general decline of consumer spending and the surge in inflation now also has retailers alarmed, with the national retailers association Confcommercio warning that ''if oil prices do not come down we can expect inflation to average out at 4% in 2008, instead of the 3% rate previously expected''.

''At this point it is no longer a question of inflation in one sector as opposed to another but involves the stability of the Italian economy as a whole,'' Coldiretti added.

The national association of retail services operators Confesercenti is also worried over the possibility of interest rates going up to combat inflation, a move they feel would dash all hopes of an economic recovery.

''If oil hits $200 in 2008 and interest rates rise to 4%, Italy will see zero GDP growth and this will lead to further repercussions in consumer spending even in healthy areas like tourism,'' Confesercenti warned.

Istat on Monday also reported that producer prices in May leapt by 7.5%, the biggest year-on-year jump since January 2003.

Despite hitting a 12-year high, inflation in Italy was below that of the 15-nation euro zone, where it rose this month to 4%, from 3.7% in May.

Thursday 29 May 2008

Italian anxiety over crime rises

(ANSA) - Rome, May 28 - The number of Italians who feel at risk of being robbed or attacked rose by 7% between 2003 and 2006, a new report by national statistics bureau Istat revealed on Wednesday.

Around 35% of Italians thought they lived in an area that is at high or medium risk of crime.

But although bag snatching and robbery are at the highest rate in 50 years, the report noted that the number of other offences have decreased.

''In reality, since the beginning of the '90s many types of crime such as car theft have registered a decrease. Murders have also dropped,'' Istat said.

''The perception of crime rates relies more on the widespread nature and visibility of crimes than on their seriousness''.

The report pointed out that there was a strong link between Italians' growing sense of insecurity and the increase in the number of immigrants living in Italy - a phenomenon highlighted in a government survey in April that revealed some 49% of Italians believe that immigrants are ''dishonest''.

Recent polls have also shown that the majority of Italians support a government crackdown on crimes committed by foreigners announced by Interior Minister Roberto Maroni earlier this month.

The Istat report confirmed a growing trend in immigrant crime, with some 100,000 immigrants booked in 2007.

While bag snatching was the most popular immigrant crime with 70% of offences committed by foreigners, immigrants were also responsible for around 33% of violent crimes committed in 2007, the report said.

Italy's foreign population was behind 39% of sexual offences, 27% of bodily harm crimes and 36% of murders in 2007.

But while the number of murders committed by immigrants rose by 26% between 1992 and 2006, the report showed that in many cases the victim of the crime was also an immigrant.

''Often the victim and the murderer are of the same nationality: it seems that the growth of homicides that involve foreigners is connected more to issues within the group rather than Italian society as a whole,'' Istat said.

The report also stressed that almost all immigrant crime in the country is committed by foreigners who do not have a residence permit.

Of regular immigrants who have the necessary paperwork, only 6% were responsible for crimes in 2007 - around the same percentage as the Italian population.

Under the government's new security package, convicted foreigners who receive a jail term of two years or more will automatically be expelled and irregular migrants who commit an offence will see their sentence increased by a third.

Illegal immigration will also be considered a crime, and landlords who rent to illegal aliens will receive sentences of up to three years.

According to the Istat report, there are around 3.5 million foreigners living in Italy, around half of whom are from Eastern Europe.

Albanians, Moroccans and Romanians form the largest foreign communities in the country, while Lombardy, Veneto, Emilia Romagna and Lazio are the regions where most immigrants choose to settle.


Friday 16 May 2008

The rapid growth in developing countries prompts a rethink by drugs companies

(from ECONOMIST.com on line edition) BRAZIL has long been a thorn in the side of the global drugs companies. The country's vibrant generics industry has often trampled over their patents. As recently as last year, its government threatened to invoke compulsory licensing (a legal mechanism that, in effect, legitimises such trampling) to browbeat a foreign drugs firm into offering huge discounts. And Brazil's state-funded researchers have devised some impressive drugs, including a new therapy for malaria (see article). Small wonder, then, that big drugs firms have remained leery of this market.

Indeed, they have been cautious about developing countries in general, which they have regarded as the source of many headaches and few profits. A decade ago Britain's GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) got a bloody nose in South Africa when it tried too vigorously to defend patents on an HIV drug. More recently Novartis, a Swiss firm, lost a bitter battle in India over patent protection for Gleevec, a profitable cancer drug. In Thailand the government has invoked compulsory licensing for some drugs. And next week the industry can expect another drubbing over patents harming “innovation for the poor” at the World Health Organisation's annual assembly.

But consider the story of Moksha8, a new drugs firm launched last month with money from Texas Pacific Group, a private-equity outfit. It aims to capitalise on Big Pharma's neglect of many emerging economies by striking licensing deals for branded drugs which it, in turn, intends to market to affluent customers in those countries. It already has some two dozen drugs under licence for Brazil from Roche and Pfizer. Fernando Reinach of Votorantim, a Brazilian firm that also invested in Moksha8, expects its annual sales to top $1 billion within a year or two.

All of which suggests that the situation is ripe for change. For much of its history, the industry has focused chiefly on the diseases that afflict people in rich countries, while largely neglecting research into diseases of the poor. But as growth slows in developed markets, and the twin threats of generic drugs and price controls advance even in pharma-friendly America, drugs companies are thinking again.

That is not simply because governments in developing countries are wielding the big stick of busting patents: their expanding middle classes also provide a tantalising carrot. McKinsey, a consultancy, estimates that the value of the Indian drugs market will grow from $6.3 billion in 2005 to $20 billion in 2015. China's market is expected to soar even more spectacularly. Given such prospects for growth, says Mark Feinburg of Merck, an American drugs giant, “you've got to be in these markets—it's a great opportunity.”

G.V. Prasad, vice-chairman of Dr Reddy's, a successful Indian drugs firm that is evolving from copycat to innovator, is convinced that the thinking at Western firms is changing, and cites a recent reorganisation at GSK as evidence. Andrew Witty, who takes over as the firm's chief executive on May 22nd, wants to combine all its little divisions that deal with developing countries into one emerging-markets group, to be run by Abbas Hussain, whom he has just poached from Eli Lilly, a rival American firm.

Serving these markets will mean building up local expertise and research efforts. Where drugs firms have set up shop in developing markets, it has generally been to cut costs, rather than to cater to the needs of locals. But that is changing. Novartis has opened a research centre in Shanghai and has another outpost in Singapore focused on tropical diseases. Merck has struck several deals with firms in emerging markets to do early-stage research. The drugs giants argue that this new approach allows them to tap a global network of innovation, and also provides insights into local markets.

Paul Herrling of Novartis points out that virally induced cancers are rare in Europe but common in China. Terry Hisey of Deloitte, a consultancy, notes that Asians and Europeans can respond differently to anaesthesia. “We see China and India as research-and-development partners, and partnerships can help us learn how to do business there,” says Robert Court of GSK.

New thinking is also needed when deciding how to sell drugs in developing countries. In the past Western firms either ignored such countries or saw them as charity cases. But now, says Tachi Yamada of the Gates Foundation, who was at GSK when the firm faced the South African backlash over HIV drugs, “pharma companies can't possibly survive without recognising their responsibilities to the poor.”

Some firms have adopted “differential pricing” schemes that use formulas, based on average income per head, to set lower prices in poor countries. Merck, for example, recently launched Januvia, a blockbuster diabetes drug, in India for a fraction of the price it charges in America. But in future, says Prashant Yadav of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, firms must “price differentially not between OECD and developing-country markets, but within each developing-country market.” In other words, middle-class Indian patients will pay more than the rural poor.

Both Novartis and GSK say they are thinking along these lines. But is there not a danger that cheap drugs intended for the poorest will be pilfered and sold at a profit to the urban middle classes, or shipped overseas to rich countries? This has been the standard argument against differential pricing from the drugs companies.

Once again attitudes are shifting. Some diversion will happen, but firms that have tried tiered pricing have found ways to reduce it. Just changing the colour of a pill can help. So too can after-market checks on distributors and pharmacists by drugs companies: those selling looted products may be cut off from future distribution. Nan Wang of Sinovac Biotech, a Chinese vaccine firm, says her company has long sold the same vaccine at lower prices in poor parts of China than in rich cities; the two versions have different packaging.

But not everyone is convinced. “In the absence of competition, differential pricing is a hoax,” scoffs Yusuf Hamied, chairman of Cipla, an Indian generics firm. In his view, only generics-makers like his firm provide genuine competition to Big Pharma, which he insists should have no patent rights in poor countries. Even if the drugs giants really have changed their approach to the developing world, the arguments over their rights and responsibilities will continue to rage.

Monday 21 April 2008

Italian wedding costs soar

Couples may be in for 'nasty surprises', consumer group says
(ANSA) - Rome, April 18 - Happy couples in Italy are forking out the equivalent of two years' salary to pay for their wedding day, a report by consumers' association Federconsumatori revealed on Friday. As this year's wedding seasons kicks off, the price of tying the knot in Italy has increased by 40% in the last seven years to an average of 27,000 euros.

Federconsumatori said it based its calculations on around 100 guests attending ''a normal, tasteful ceremony without any extravagances, including an excellent meal and a beautiful dress''.

But couples opting for a full Hollywood-style bash were stumping up around 47,900 euros, the association added.

''Despite profound social changes, marriage still retains its fascination,'' the association said. ''But to avoid nasty surprises, its important for the couple to work out if they have sufficient funds''.

The biggest outlay remains the wedding meal, which in Italy tends to be a massive, multi-course marathon that can keep guests at the table for up to eight hours.

While the number of diners and the type of restaurant can temper costs, the average sit-down dinner with friends, relatives and acquaintances leaves the bride and groom out of pocket to the tune of 10,000 euros, according to Federconsumatori.

The traditional tiered cake topped with plastic figurines will set the happy couple back an additional 300-600 euros, while spending on bags of sugared almonds given to each guest as a memento adds up to around 1,200 and 2,500 euros.

The report showed that while brides are spending between 2,500 and 5,000 euros on a wedding dress and veil, the cost of dressing the groom is no longer far behind.

Men eager to look their best are stumping up around 2,000 euros on a suit, plus another 250 euros on shoes, the association said.

Couples are also investing in fancy underwear for the occasion - the bride spends between 200 and 500 euros, while men cough up between 80 and 120 euros for wedding-night briefs.

Also adding up are the rings (400-1,000 euros), musical entertainment (1,000-1,800 euros), videos and photos (3,500-5,000 euros), car hire (700-1,200 euros), floral decorations (400-1,000 euros) and the wedding bouquet (150-500 euros), the association said.

The spending is not over once vows have been pledged and the meal is over and done with, however: newlyweds are now paying out an average of 3,000-5,000 euros for a honeymoon - up from 2,000 euros in 2001.

The report may go some way to explaining why marriages are on the decline in Italy - according to national statistics bureau Istat there were 250,000 weddings in 2005 compared to 419,000 in 1972.

Wednesday 9 April 2008

Pleasure seekers

Leisure

Apr 9th 2008From Economist.com
ICELAND spends proportionately more on culture and recreation than other rich countries, with private and public spending together touching 10% of GDP. Its government lavishes over twice as much as others on providing sports, arts and recreational facilities for its citizens. Britons splashed out most on household items such as tickets to sports and arts events, CDs and DVDs, gardening and pets. Generally, wealthier countries devote more disposable income to leisure pursuits; Ireland is an exception.
AFP

Wednesday 30 January 2008

Italy: Economy unaffected by govt crisis - IMF sees progress in state finances continuing

(ANSA) - Washington, January 29 - The International Monetary Fund said on Tuesday that the government crisis in Italy was unlikely to affect the ''positive'' direction that its economy has taken recently.

Italy's economy will grow less than expected in 2008, in line with the rest of the euro zone, but not because of political uncertainty, economists at the Washington-based institution said. The IMF's new World Economic Outlook report cut its previous forecast for global growth in 2008 by 0.3% to 4.1%, against the 4.9% posted in 2007. The forecast for euro zone countries was cut from 2.1% to 1.6%.

''We don't expect Italy to be particularly hit within the euro zone. The impact of the economic slowdown will be fairly uniform in Euroland,'' Charles Collyns, deputy head of the IMF's research department, told ANSA.

Referring to the drastic reduction in Italy's budget deficit last year and the downward trend in national debt, he added that Italy had made notable ''progress towards consolidating its fiscal policy''.

''I don't think that what's happened in the last few weeks will damage the positive direction that Italy has taken,'' Collyns continued. IMF chief economist Simon Johnson observed that ''all uncertain political situations are a cause for concern but for us the key factors on which we base our growth forecasts are purely economic''.

International credit rating agencies recently made similar statements, saying they had no intention of changing ratings on Italian debt in the light of the resignation of Premier Romano Prodi.

He said the main factor cutting growth in Italy and Europe this year would be the falling US real estate market and the knock-on effects of the subprime mortgage crisis in European financial markets.

Economy Minister Tommaso Padoa Schioppa said last week that Italy and Europe were well placed to deal with the current turbulence on world financial markets.

But he warned that Europe was not entirely immune and acknowledged that the Italian government's growth forecast of 1.5% for 2008 would have to be scaled back.

The Bank of Italy recently predicted 1% GDP growth for this year and the Confindustria association of industrial employers has put the figure at 1.3%

Friday 25 January 2008

Italy has second - lowest murder rate in Europe

(ANSA) - Rome, January 24 - The number of women murdered in Italy surged last year to a 20-year-high of 181, according to a survey by the Eures think tank and the ANSA news agency.

Two thirds of the 181 women slain in Italy in 2006 had close ties to their killers - fathers, husbands, partners, boyfriends - or had recently broken up with them.

In homicides of both sexes, more people were killed by their loved ones than by the mafia - 32% of the 516 murders in 2006 were committed by relatives or significant others, and 23% by the Mob.

The number of foreign victims rose by 20% while the number of foreign-born murderers rose by 31%.

Three out of four murders of foreigners were by illegal immigrants: 30% by Romanians, 23% by people from Africa and 16% by Albanians.

In six cases out of ten, foreigners killed other foreigners.

Italy is among four countries with the second-lowest murder rate in Europe, 1.0 per 100,000 inhabitants, behind Norway with 0.7.

After Denmark, Germany and Spain, which have the same rate as Italy, come Britain with 1.3, France with 1.6 and Sweden with 2.6.

The United States's rate is 5.6.

Monday 14 January 2008

MOZAMBIQUE: Preliminary results of the Population Census 2007

The present population compared to 1997 increased of about 28%. In absolute value increased of 4,454,000 persons (about the population of Nampula province).

At provincial level, the increasing was not homogeneous. The population of the provinces of Niassa, Tete and Maputo increased between 46 and 51%. While a minor vatiation was found in Gaza (9%) and Inhambane (10%), as well as in the city of Maputo (11%).

In the case of the City of Maputo, we can see that in the last years it lost population in favor of the Province of Maputo, mainly because of the new residential areas expansion of the city of Matola and of the Districts of Boane and Marracuene.

Total population evolution, by province 1997 and 2007


Province
Populationvariation
1997
2007
1997-2007
Total
16,075,708
20,530,714
27.7
Niassa
808,572
1,178,117
45.7
Cabo Delgado
1,380,202
1,632,809
18.3
Nampula
3,063,456
4,076,642
33.1
Zambézia
3,096,400
3,892,854
25.7
Tete
1,226,008
1,832,339
49.5
Manica
1,039,463
1,418,927
36.5
Sofala
1,368,671
1,654,163
20.9
Inhambane
1,157,182
1,267,035
9.5
Gaza
1,116,903
1,219,013
9.1
Maputo Província
830,908
1,259,713
51.6
Maputo Cidade
987,943
1,099,102
11.3

source: INE Mozambique 2008