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    State AGs demand TikTok comply with US consumer protection investigations

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A group of 45 state attorneys general in the United States on Monday demanded Chinese-owned social media app TikTok produce subpoenaed materials sought in an ongoing nationwide consumer protection investigation.The states are seeking to review internal TikTok communications to determine whether the company engaged in deceptive conduct that harmed mental health of TikTok users, particularly children and teens, Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody said. On Monday the states urged a Tennessee state court to compel TikTok answer requests for information.California Attorney General Rob Bonta said the petition alleges TikTok has failed to preserve some potentially relevant evidence, in the form of internal employee chat messages “and is hampering the investigation of Tennessee and other states across the country, including California.”TikTok did not immediately comment.In March 2022, eight states including California and Massachusetts, said they had launched a bipartisan, nationwide probe of TikTok, focusing on whether the popular video-sharing app causes physical or mental health harm to young people.Last week, TikTok said it was developing a tool that will allow parents to prevent their teens from viewing content containing certain words or hashtags on the short-form video app, as the embattled company looks to shore up its public image.TikTok, owned by Chinese tech company ByteDance, is facing renewed scrutiny worldwide over its proximity to the Chinese government and protection of user data.The app, wildly popular among younger users, has been banned from government-owned phones in the U.S., Canada and other countries due to security concerns. Last week, a U.S. House of Representatives committee voted to give President Joe Biden new powers to ban TikTok.Like other social media apps, TikTok has also faced criticism for not doing enough to shield teens from inappropriate content.Parents will now also be able to set custom time limits for their teens’ TikTok usage depending on the day of the week, the company said. More

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    White House says it will have something in near future on Fed vice chair nominee

    Biden is considering a number of candidates to replace Lael Brainard, who left her post as Fed vice chair last month to become Biden’s top economic adviser.White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters that the nomination was a priority for Biden. “We don’t have anything to preview with regard to the candidate or announcements, but clearly, we’ll have something in the near future,” she said.Brainard has been a Fed board member since 2014 and its vice chair since last May. She took up her duties at the White House late last month.The Fed vice chair plays a key role in forming U.S. monetary policy and is typically held by a PhD economist. More

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    Brazil announces pilot for digital currency seeking to leverage financial services

    According to Fabio Araujo, coordinator of the initiative at the bank, the public use of the digital currency should begin at the end of 2024, after the completion of the testing phase – which will include buying and selling of federal public bonds among individuals – and its subsequent evaluation.Araujo said the “digital real” will be built as a means of payment executed on distributed ledger technology (DLT), to support the provision of retail financial services settled through tokenized deposits in institutions of the financial and payment systems in Brazil.”This environment reduces costs and brings the possibility of financial inclusion for people. You have services that are very expensive to carry out, such as repo operations, which today are only for banks, but which could be performed by anyone with a technology based on digital currencies,” he said.”This could reduce the cost of credit, the cost of improving the return on investments. There is a great potential for new service providers, fintechs, democratizing access to the market and offering new services.”Araujo stressed that the concept of the Brazilian central bank digital currency (CBDC) was not intended to leverage digital payments, as this is already being done on a large scale with Pix, which was launched at the end of 2021 and has been widely adopted in Brazil.Bank deposits would continue to exist within the Brazilian CBDC, only being registered in a more modern environment, meaning that financial institutions would not lose this source of funds for credit generation.”Banks are very interested in this new tokenized world, in every conversation we have they have shown a lot of interest,” said Araujo. More

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    It is time for a UK-wide growth strategy

    The UK’s failure to tap the productive potential of its regions and nations goes a long way towards explaining its flagging international economic performance. Its economy is among the most geographically imbalanced in the rich world. The economic might of its second cities lags behind those in peer nations. Its leading light, London, has also slowed since the financial crisis. It is not for want of trying: successive governments have tried and failed to boost British towns and cities. But the longer the UK wavers without a strategy for national growth, the further it will fall in the global economic pecking order.Learning from prior efforts is vital. The UK’s regional development policy has long been plagued by inaction, inconsistency and a lack of focus. A 2017 industrial strategy, 2021 “plan for growth”, and 2022 “growth plan” have all come and gone. Boris Johnson’s “levelling-up” agenda has not taken off. The country now lacks a growth strategy that it desperately needs. To get it right Britain must focus on its existing specialisms, slash growth barriers — such as limited funding, regulation and poor connectivity — and develop institutions to execute and monitor long-run UK-wide development.Building on existing competitive strengths is crucial. Backing clusters which are emerging throughout the UK — particularly in growth sectors like clean tech, AI and life sciences — can bring global trade and investment to the regions and stimulate the development of towns and cities. The government must also better support the country’s world-class universities, which can act as hubs for regional growth by driving job creation and research and development activity.To support these strengths, Britain must lift barriers to growth. Funding is essential. Given the knock-on benefits of spending on R&D and infrastructure, the government must boost public investment, which has proportionally been among the lowest in the OECD over the past two decades. It should also evaluate the development of long-term economic investment funds, for example by consolidating existing pots or by drawing on public sector pension schemes and income from public assets. Raising private sector finance streams via initiatives to encourage pension and insurance funds to invest in long-term assets remains important.At the same time Britain must address its toxic inability to build. Its strained housing supply limits the movement of people across the country. Onerous planning regulations need to be reformed and local authorities need more incentives and responsibility to develop land. Tax reform could play a part. Stamp duty, a tax on property transactions, limits mobility. A tax based on property value makes more sense. Better yet, a land value tax would incentivise development. Improving infrastructure is a priority too. Road and rail links between northern cities are poor, as is urban transport: average commuting times are among Europe’s longest.The right institutional set-up is important. The UK is highly centralised, with Westminster driving policy and funding plans. Further devolution of decision-making to local authorities, alongside more tax retention and revenue-raising powers, would help to ensure policy is more responsive and accountable to local needs. An independent body to monitor and advise on regional and supply-side policies might be beneficial. It would help embed long-termism into the growth agenda beyond the electoral cycle.Next week’s Budget is an opportunity to begin addressing these issues. As this, and future, governments look to mend the UK’s growth woes, they must not overlook the vital importance of unlocking the latent talent, investment and innovation in all its regions and nations.This is the third in a series of editorials on boosting UK economic growth. Previous leaders examined skills and workers, and investment. More

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    BOJ to keep yield cap, ultra-low rates at Kuroda’s last policy meeting

    TOKYO (Reuters) – The Bank of Japan (BOJ) is set to maintain ultra-low interest rates, including a controversial bond yield cap, on Friday as it awaits a leadership transition that could eventually end outgoing chief Haruhiko Kuroda’s massive monetary stimulus.With rising inflation pushing up long-term interest rates, some investors bet the BOJ may tweak yield curve control (YCC), such as by raising the 10-year yield cap, as early as next week’s policy meeting – the final one to be chaired by Kuroda.But the BOJ is likely to hold off on making major changes to YCC given uncertainty over whether wages would rise enough to keep inflation sustainably around its 2% target, say four sources familiar with its thinking.While markets have renewed their attack on the BOJ’s yield cap, many central bank policymakers see no immediate need to take additional steps to iron out market distortions caused by its huge bond buying, they say.”The BOJ already has sufficient tools to mend market distortions, which will take some more time to fix,” one of the sources said, a view echoed by another source.At the two-day meeting ending on Friday, the BOJ is set to maintain its short-term rate target at -0.1% and that for the 10-year bond yield around 0%.Markets are rife with speculation the BOJ will phase out Kuroda’s controversial stimulus policies when academic Kazuo Ueda, the government’s nominee to become next governor, takes the helm in April.In December, the BOJ stunned markets by widening the band around the 10-year yield target in a move that allowed the yield to rise to 0.5% from the previous 0.25%.The bank’s quarterly survey showed last week an index measuring the degree of bond market functioning hit a record low in February, a sign the December decision has done little to ease market distortions.”It will take a certain amount of time to gauge the impact of the tweak we made to YCC on market function,” BOJ board member Hajime Takata said last week, stressing that he saw no imminent need to make further tweaks to the policy.Another board member, Junko Nakagawa, also said last week more time was needed to gauge whether the December widening of the band was enough to fix market distortions.Kuroda, whose second, five-year term ends on April 8, will leave behind a mixed legacy with his massive stimulus praised for pulling the economy out of deflation – but straining bank profits and distorting market function with prolonged low rates.While inflation has exceeded the BOJ’s 2% target mostly due to rising raw material costs, Kuroda has stressed the need to maintain ultra-low rates until inflation is driven by strong domestic demand and higher wages.In parliament confirmation hearings, Ueda stressed the need to support the economy with ultra-loose policy for now, saying a shift to tighter policy would only come when Japan’s inflation trend accelerates significantly. More

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    China cautious on outlook for growth

    Today’s top storiesUS defence secretary Lloyd Austin played down the significance of a potential Ukrainian retreat from the eastern city of Bakhmut, as Russia’s months-long offensive came closer to encircling the city.US private equity group Silver Lake and one of Canada’s largest pension funds have offered $12.4bn to buy experience management software company Qualtrics, in what could be one of the largest buyouts of the year.Boeing is joining forces with rival Airbus in the £1bn contest to replace Britain’s battlefield helicopter as concerns rise that the original in-service date of 2025 can no longer be met.For up-to-the-minute news updates, visit our live blogGood evening.China is aiming for growth of just 5 per cent this year, its lowest target in more than three decades, as the world’s second-largest economy tries to bounce back from pandemic disruption.The conservative figure, announced by outgoing premier Li Keqiang at the National People’s Congress, the annual rubber-stamp parliament which began yesterday, should be easy to hit as household consumption rebounds. But it is also further confirmation that the era of double-digit increases has come to an end. Investors were clearly disappointed, with copper, oil and iron ore leading global commodity markets lower on the news. It also took the gloss off last week’s data which showed manufacturing activity expanding at the fastest rate in a decade, with the country’s exporters on a major charm offensive at world trade fairs.Chinese defence companies at least will be happy with the promise of military spending increasing by more than 7 per cent. Taiwan not so much.Li also set a budget deficit target of 3 per cent of GDP, and pledged to create 12mn urban jobs and keep the unemployment rate at about 5.5 per cent. He also promised to expand market access for foreign investors and address ongoing problems in the country’s property sector.Li’s boss, President Xi Jinping, China’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong, is expected to use the Congress to announce sweeping, centralising changes to his administration, with loyalists taking charge of key portfolios such as finance and tech.There was also acknowledgment from the platform that “many difficulties and challenges still confront us”. These include slowdowns in the rest of the world weakening demand for Chinese goods, alongside “escalating” attempts “to suppress and contain China’s development”, a reference to US controls on semiconductor technology. US chipmakers must now agree not to expand capacity in China for a decade to become eligible for new federal subsidies, while a new Congressional committee has been formed to investigate the “ideological, technological and military threat” of the Chinese Communist party. Just last week Washington added another two dozen Chinese groups to its trade blacklist, accusing them of assisting China’s military and surveillance tech exporters.Hong Kong, meanwhile, is coming up against stiff competition from Singapore in the battle to remain Asia’s leading financial hub.A lacklustre economic performance could also act as a brake on wider global recovery: the IMF is counting on China and India to account for half of global growth this year — with the US and euro area at just 10 per cent. Need to know: UK and Europe economyUK construction activity was better than expected in February, according to new PMI survey data that showed the highest growth rate in nine months as the outlook for commercial projects improved. On a more downbeat note, the government’s pledge to build 40 hospitals is looking ever more hollow as inflation eats in to the budget. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt is set to use his March 15 Budget to give households more help with energy bills but economic forecasts suggest he will have little room for big giveaways. Chief economics commentator Martin Wolf says the challenge of “levelling up” of regional inequalities is even more difficult than widely thought.

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    European Central Bank chief Christine Lagarde warned that underlying price pressures would remain “sticky in the short term” and signalled that further interest rate rises were very likely as “inflation is a monster that we need to knock on the head”.Estonia’s prime minister Kaja Kallas won a resounding victory in parliamentary elections, with her liberal Reform party taking 37 of 101 seats. The country of 1.3mn million people, which borders Russia, has been one of the EU’s most vocal supporters of Ukraine.Need to know: Global economyColumnist Rana Foroohar says the conventional wisdom that America leads on innovation and Europe on regulation has been reversed as the US tightens control over sectors such as tech, pharma and finance.As Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro approaches his tenth anniversary as president, our Big Read explains how he remains very much in control, using both old-fashioned repression and more modern techniques such as AI-generated media content.

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    Need to know: businessThe boss of BP’s US business insisted that the company was not cashing in on high oil prices and was sticking with its promised transition away from fossil fuels.US-listed tech groups face a cash crunch after burning through billions from IPOs. As the proceeds from a period of frenzied dealmaking start to run low, many face a choice between expensive capital raises, cost cutting, or takeovers.Business in Northern Ireland hailed last week’s Brexit trade deal with the EU, but for farmers in England, hope is fading fast for any kind of Brexit dividend.The boss of Harrods said he was confident that the luxury department store would prosper in a downturn because “the rich get richer in a recession”. The remarks follow bullish reports from luxury companies such as Hermès and LVMH.A new FT film documents the rise and fall of Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX cryptocurrency exchange. “Regulators fell for it, venture capitalists fell for it, celebrities fell for it — everyone fell for the legend of Sam.”

    Video: FTX: the legend of Sam Bankman-Fried | FT Film

    The World of WorkHow should companies carry out mass lay-offs without inflicting lasting damage on morale and future growth? US financial editor Brooke Masters says few companies appear to be trying to find creative ways to cut labour costs.News that women now hold many more board seats in UK listed companies is welcome, but this means it will be become harder than ever to argue there are not enough with experience to be a chief executive or chair, says columnist Pilita Clarke. Dilbert, the cartoon character who has chronicled cubicle culture since the 1990s, has been handed his pink slip. The strip has been dropped by US newspapers after its creator waded into a race controversy.Scott Adams and his comic creation Dilbert © APSome good newsA deal to protect the nearly 60 per cent of the world’s oceans that lie outside national boundaries has been agreed after nearly two decades of on-off negotiations. The High Seas Treaty was described by the UN as a “massive success for multilateralism and “an example of the transformation our world needs and the people we serve demand”.The UN High Seas Treaty will be central to enforcing pledges made at the UN COP15 biodiversity conference to preserve a third of the sea and land by 2030, known as the 30 by 30 pledge © Brian Inganga/AP More

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    How to think about Biden’s first two years

    Last week, Ed teed up an important question about whether Biden is chasing too many complicated economic policies at the moment. My quick response was no — there is real synergy to what he’s doing — and I’d like to expand on that topic here.Let me start by setting the context for what he’s doing. I think about markets, economies, and capitalism in general not as being handed down on stone tablets, but as systems that evolve and change to fit the needs of the time. 18th century mercantilism gave way to 19th century laissez faire philosophy, as nation building moved into a wave of globalisation. Keynesianism gave way to the Chicago school when we needed a bit less government and more animal spirits. Systems reach critical mass because they are purpose-built for the challenges of the day. Then, eventually, the pendulum swings too far in one direction, and we need a new set of policies, which eventually become its own system.We are now at such a turning point. I’ve written many times about how the last half century was predicated on the idea that capital, goods and people would cross borders in search of the most profitable returns, and — crucially — end up where it was most productive for our economy and society as a whole. That philosophy, neoliberalism, gave us more growth at a global level than ever before. But the system created substantial amounts of inequality within nations.It also created global imbalances between capital and labour, which gave us everything from the financial crisis (imbalances create speculation) to a cost of living crisis (imbalances create asset inflation that wage inflation can’t match) to a geopolitical crisis (production/consumption imbalances between the US and Asia are at the heart of this).That reality frames everything Biden must do. You can’t look at his chessboard in incremental terms. This isn’t politics as usual when you might think about taking on, say, healthcare or real financial reform, as was the Obama paradigm. (Obama should have done the latter rather than the former at the time, in my opinion; because he failed on finance, he lost the trust of a lot of the party and the people, and the rest of his agenda was doomed — but that’s another Note!).Rather, Biden has to start pulling lots of levers at all once to have a hope of moving the dial enough to get the US to a fundamentally different place in the next decade. America has to shift its mix of production and consumption in order to change its fiscal picture and raise wages (see my column here about why that must involve manufacturing subsidies). It needs to innovate by iterating, which means making things again in order to grow. It needs to make sure that the fastest growing industries, in the care sector, create good jobs.Gina Raimondo’s plan to link the two by pushing business to provide on-site childcare is actually genius, because many businesses I speak with already want to do just that (how else will they get more female labour into the workplace, which is crucial to improving GDP growth and plugging the labour gap). They just want some incentives to do so, and using the CHIPs money to give them that is low-hanging fruit.I could keep going with all the reasons why the White House’s multipronged policies make sense. All the things that made the old world possible — cheap labour, cheap capital and cheap energy — are going away, and fast. We must understand and map a new and more regional world, with multiple political economies. We must restructure supply chains, increase resiliency, and even prepare for a post-dollar world. We must move from financialised growth to the real thing. None of this is incremental. Biden is right to throw everything, including the kitchen sink, at the problem.Ed, I was struck by your column on Jimmy Carter the other week, and all the ways in which we misunderstand that president. One that I might have added is the way in which Carter’s administration actually began some of the financial deregulation (of interest rates, for example, and the overturning of Regulation Q which started the process of financialisation) that Reagan gets credit for. What struck me was that in many periods of seismic change, the administration that ultimately gets credit for something is often not the one that began the changes.So, my question to you is both futuristic and historic. Calling on the several decades of history that you’ve been looking at for your upcoming book, and looking into the crystal ball of the future, do you think the Biden era will be remembered as the beginning of a post-neoliberal era, à la the Reagan-Thatcher shift? Or will that title go to some younger, different president in the future?Recommended readingI was struck by Chris Giles’ recent column on why Britain’s London problem isn’t about how much economic and political air is sucked up by the capital, and what local cities can do to get a slice of the pie, but rather how the UK can help London get more business from international competitor cities. I recently watched the David Bowie documentary Moonage Dream, which is one of the best depictions of the artistic spirit that I’ve ever seen (I’m a huge Bowie fan, though, so I am certainly biased).I’m enjoying Mariana Mazzucato’s latest book, The Big Con, written with Rosie Collington, which looks at how the consulting industry has taken governments to the cleaners. It’s amazing to me that companies and public sector officials alike are so worried about making the wrong decision that they are willing to pay tons of money to people who know less to make it for them. Edward Luce responds Rana, just to clarify, I was not criticising Biden for “chasing too many complicated economic policies”: it was a specific critique of his over-burdening industrial policy with too many conditions. I continue to think that will subtract from his efforts. I don’t dispute Biden’s chief goals — to reduce US inequality, improve employee rights (mandatory parental leave etc) and kick-start the shift to a greener economy. Nor do I think these are complicated. But governance is about execution particularly when it involves detailed state intervention. The media needs to pay more attention to that. Will history recall the Biden era as the end of neoliberalism? As you know I prefer the more precise term of anti-globalisation, which is happening in the US. But the backlash against free trade began under Trump, not Biden. Biden’s approach to globalisation is Trumpism with a human face. You quite rightly point out that a lot of the deregulation that we associate with Ronald Reagan actually began under Carter. His economic policy was, and remains, hard to classify. Unlike say Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society, FDR’s New Deal, or even Bill Clinton’s Third Way, we have no name for Carter’s economic approach. That is because it was confusing. He vetoed spending bills, deregulated large sectors of the economy, made heavy, and game-changing, investments in the new energy technology, and tried to drive special interests out of Washington. His legacy was mixed and hard to summarise. Reagan’s was simple by comparison. I would give Biden relatively high marks for his performance so far. Since the midterms, we have moved past the time of legislating and into the phase of implementing. That’s the harder part and he has to be single-minded in his execution. The tensions between Washington’s talk of “friend-shoring” and the protectionism of its Inflation Reduction Act and the Buy American drive are making that goal far more difficult. We are also fast approaching the point where the US cannot talk with a straight face of upholding the “rules-based international order” when it keeps trashing those rules and disabling the World Trade Organization. As I say, this began under Trump. The biggest strike against Biden is that he is continuing what Trump started. Your feedback And now a word from our Swampians . . . In response to “America — this is no way to run an industrial policy”:“Biden is chasing hares, they are elusive and can outrun him.” — Reader shetland37 More

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    NFTs Play a Vibrant Role in Cardano’s Progression; Says Founder

    Charles Hoskinson, the founder of the leading public blockchain platform Cardano, commented on the “vibrant” influence of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) on the progress of Cardano. During a podcast “Chaz and Gingersnaps Episode 1: Tragically Hip” with Tamara Haasen, the President of the technology company Input Output Global (IOG), Hoskinson asserted that NFTs were “the most vibrant part of Cardano at the moment”.Notably, on March 6, Hoskinson talked about the progress of the ecosystem in which NFTs have played a major role, adding that most of Cardano’s projects are NFT-related.He stated:In January 2023, Hoskinson updated his profile picture on his official Twitter account with a screenshot of a Cardano NFT featuring a drawing of himself, which seems to be evidence to prove his preference for NFTs.Additionally, in the podcast, Hoskinson pictured the blockchain’s interest in reaching the domain-specific language (DSL), Marlowe for NFTs. The effort is an initiative to “make it a turnkey low-code, no-code solution to issue NFTs or at least program out the logic of how NFTs work”.Further, the Cardano founder affirmed that the team behind the identity and credential solution built on the blockchain, the Atala PRISM, has been assisting the company in its endeavor to progress with NFTs. He added that their efforts have already been started and was trying to put identity with NFTs.The post NFTs Play a Vibrant Role in Cardano’s Progression; Says Founder appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More