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    The cost of living time bomb no one can defuse

    Good evening,Oliver Dowden, the former co-chair of the Conservative party, has called for “intervention of a considerable scale” on soaring UK energy bills. By January, households could be burdened with annual costs of more than £4,200 — another £500 on top of the last estimate.The chorus of voices urging politicians to step up their efforts swelled this morning as former prime minister Gordon Brown told LBC that the two leadership candidates should agree a package for households with Boris Johnson this week. “It’s not good enough acting in September. These problems amount to a national emergency,” he said. The CBI, Britain’s biggest business lobby group, has also called on Johnson to act now. This piles significant pressure on Tory leadership frontrunner Liz Truss, who told the Financial Times last week that she would “look at what more can be done” but “in a Conservative way of lowering the tax burden, not giving out handouts”.The foreign secretary has promised to cut the rise in National Insurance, which her rival Rishi Sunak introduced when he was chancellor, if she becomes prime minister.Both leadership candidates will continue to be pressed on how they plan to tackle the cost of living crisis, as more signs emerge of the financial strain Britons are under.In times like these, people with poor credit often turn to community lenders, who can help them with small loans. But now these non-profits are struggling to meet demand and the owner of one provider has said he was forced to decline 90 per cent of applicants. Meanwhile, the number of households vulnerable to loan sharks or illegal lenders has increased from 310,000 in 2010 to 1.08mn in 2022, according to the government’s Illegal Money Lending Team.But the pawnbroking industry is enjoying a renaissance as cash-strapped households seek small loans secured on their jewellery and watches to help cover bills.The charitable and voluntary sector has become an integral part of the country’s social safety net, reports public policy editor Peter Foster, but its attempts to plug the gaps are being hampered by dwindling resources as donations slow.The single biggest cause of despair is soaring energy bills. Energy regulator Ofgem said last week it would now alter its price cap every three months, instead of twice a year, to allow consumers the chance to enjoy smaller bills when wholesale prices drop. In the current climate however, the only likely move is up. Support for a campaign of non-payment is growing.People with mortgages are facing a further squeeze after the Bank of England increased interest rates by the largest amount in 27 years. The BoE also lifted its forecast for inflation, which it now expects to hit 13 per cent by the end of the year.As economists debate what type of fiscal or monetary policy can best help against a looming recession, Duncan Weldon, the author of a new book on the British economy, says choosing the right mix is “very much akin to picking out the least crumpled shirt from the laundry basket: the best option is not necessarily a good one”. He concludes:The country is poorer than it thought it would be. In the short term that is unavoidable. The real policy debate is about how that pain is divided between households, firms and the government’s balance sheet — not how it is avoided.Latest newsBioNTech and Pfizer will begin clinical trials of vaccines adapted to new Covid variantsA number of multibillion-dollar buyouts that boosted US dealmaking were confirmed today: Pfizer agreed to buy drugmaker Global Blood Therapeutics for about $5bn; US appliance maker Whirlpool agreed to pay $3bn for Emerson Electric’s food waste disposal business Insinkerator; Avalara agreed to be acquired by private equity firm Vista Equity Partners in a deal that valued the cloud-based taxation specialist at $8.4bn, including debt; Digital media company Axios has agreed to sell to Cox Enterprises for $525mnGreater Manchester and West Midlands mayors seek powers over vocational skills in the regions to tackle widening inequality among adults in EnglandFor up-to-the-minute news updates, visit our live blogNeed to know: the economyThe US Senate passed Joe Biden’s flagship tax and spending bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act. It contains significant climate change legislation, as well as measures to cut prescription drug prices, and is seen as a major victory for the president ahead of the November midterm elections.Western capitals are increasingly worried that Turkey might help Russia avoid sanctions after the pledge made by the two countries leaders to expand co-operation on trade and energy.Latest for the UK and EuropeUK government plans to cut up to 91,000 civil servant jobs will mean public services being slashed and at least $1bn in redundancy payments, according to a review by Boris Johnson’s former chief of staff.Italians are speculating whether the hand of Moscow hangs over last month’s ousting of prime minister Mario Draghi. Some believe President Vladimir Putin exacted payback for Draghi’s tough stand over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.Ireland is benefiting from a €8bn corporate tax windfall after bumper pandemic-boosted revenues from tech and pharma companies. The country’s tax take has soared since 2015, with employment and foreign investment also at record highs.The European Central Bank is pumping billions of euros into weaker eurozone debt markets to protect them from the effects of its decision to unwind stimulus programmes as it battles to contain inflation.Global latestTensions are still high around Taiwan as China extended its “real war conditions” military exercise. Beijing has also stepped up its propaganda offensive against Taipei. Chief foreign affairs commentator Gideon Rachman warns that the idea of armed conflict over Taiwan is gaining ground in Beijing and Washington.US banks are busy repositioning themselves to stress their fossil fuel credentials to placate Republican politicians critical of their commitments to the environment and social justice.Big US oil and gas producers, meanwhile, remain unmoved by politicians’ calls to increase supply. Executives say they are under pressure from Wall Street to return windfalls from soaring prices to investors through dividends and share buybacks, rather than spending heavily to increase production.Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro is banking on recent improvements in the economy to boost his chance of re-election in October. A strong rebound in services and falls in unemployment mean the economy is now forecast to grow 1.7 per cent this year, a big improvement from as recently as January when banks predicted a recession.Need to know: businessChina’s Baidu is offering the world’s first commercial human-free robotaxi service in the cities of Chongqing and Wuhan. Baidu is best known as an internet search engine but robotaxis, along with cloud computing, are now said to be its long-term drivers of growth.

    A demonstration of Baidu’s Apollo Go autonomous taxi service in Beijing, China © Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

    Chinese investors are also piling into a more traditional asset: jade. The semi-precious stone has been in short supply for several reasons, including a coup in Myanmar, which produces 70-90 per cent of the world’s supply of jadeite, the rarer of two distinctive stones collectively known as jade.Something else in short supply is lithium, a key raw material for electric car batteries. Carmakers are rushing to invest in projects to secure new sources but a top producer says the market will stay tight until 2030.Big Tech, which is already suffering from a range of financial problems, now faces a triple whammy of changes that could affect their business models, writes columnist Rana Foroohar: new EU rules, US listing requirements and internet fragmentation.It’s plain sailing though for the offshore shipping industry, which has benefited from the steep rise in oil and gas prices. Clarksons, the world’s largest shipbroker, says its index tracking rates paid to lease rigs, subsea vessels and offshore supply vessels are at the highest level in seven years.Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway slowed new investment sharply in the second quarter, as the US stock market sell-off drove the conglomerate to a $43.8bn loss. Investors are selling stakes in buyout funds at a record pace.The pandemic turbocharged demand for industrial warehouse space but, as our Big Read details, this is now cooling rapidly as signs grow that the ecommerce boom is slowing, the global economy is faltering and locals push back against the erection of massive eyesores.Tensions are increasing between Royal Mail and its workers over plans for its lossmaking UK postal business.The World of WorkCity centres are experiencing a moment of radical change, as physical stores are displaced by online retail and offices remain half empty as employees work from home. FT architecture critic Edwin Heathcote says planners must grasp the opportunity to reimagine our urban areas for the new world of work.Do young workers have an image problem? As business returns to some sense of normality, columnist Pilita Clark says some managers are starting to tire of pandering to the whims of their younger staff who they see as disengaged, indifferent and even deluded. Get the latest worldwide picture with our vaccine trackerSome good news . . . Coral cover on the northern and central Great Barrier Reef is at its highest since monitoring began 36 years ago. Paul Hardisty, chief executive of the Australian Institute of Marine Science, said the results in the north and central regions were a sign the reef could still recover, although other areas showed it was still vulnerable to disturbances.A ranger inspects the state of the coral on the Great Barrier Reef © David Gray/ReutersHave you spotted some good news stories you’d like to share with FT readers? Please send them to us at [email protected]. More

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    Demography is not destiny

    The writer is professor of globalisation and development at Oxford university and the author of ‘Rescue: From Global Crisis to a Better World’. He tweets @ian_goldinFor the first time in history there are more people over 65 than under 5. Pensioners outnumber children in a growing number of countries, including the UK, much of Europe and Japan. By 2030 there will be over 1bn people over 65 and more than 200mn over 80, with the number of elderly doubling over 20 years.Improvements in public health and medicine account for increased longevity, a long-term trend of about two years per postwar decade (notwithstanding the recent reversals which are primarily due to the pandemic and inequalities in healthcare). More surprising is how quickly fertility is falling. More than half the countries in the world are now below the level of fertility required to keep the population the same from generation to generation. In a single generation, societies as different as Iran and Ireland have seen their birth rates plummet in a way that cannot be explained by cultural and religious beliefs. Nor do income levels explain the difference. The United States and countries as diverse as Italy, South Korea, Japan, Hungary, Poland, Russia, China and Brazil are all recording record lows in fertility, and even India is now below replacement level. In fact, over half of projected population growth in the coming 30 years will be in just eight countries. The collapse in fertility coupled with increased longevity leads to a rapid ageing of societies. The working age population of the 38 member countries of the OECD is projected to decline by around a quarter over the coming 30 years without higher levels of migration. As a rapidly growing elderly population rely on the taxes, pension contributions and services provided by fewer and fewer workers, economies will come under increasing strain. With average life expectancy after retirement approaching 20 years in the developed world and real adjusted returns barely positive, much higher levels of savings are required to fund pensions. More saving means less consumption, dampening demand for everything other than services for the elderly.A key challenge is to direct a growing share of the savings into long-term investment, as the collapse in corporate and public investment means that as societies have aged, so too have their stock of infrastructure, health, education and other systems, with this contributing to the slowdown in productivity.The declining size of the workforce will mean that the revenue of governments through payroll taxes will shrink. The growing share of a declining workforce that need to be devoted to elderly care acts as a further drag on productivity and growth, since care work is necessarily not open to many gains in efficiency.The widening gap between the improvements in life expectancy and the much slower progress in addressing dementia and other degenerative brain diseases is compounding the pressures on families, care systems and private and public finances. Ageing also exacerbates income and wealth inequalities. With these disparities being widened by the pandemic, the gap in life expectancy exceeds 10 years between the poorest and richest communities in the US and UK. And there is a staggering 32-year gap in average life expectancy between rich countries like Japan and some of the poorest countries, such as Sierra Leone. Across Africa, the median age is below 20, half that of Europe and much of East Asia. Asia’s growth benefited from labour-intensive manufacturing, back-office processing and call centres. The automation of these processes is removing the middle rungs of the development ladder, with potentially dire consequences for the 100mn young Africans who will be entering the labour market over the next 10 years.Demography is not destiny, but it does need to inform public policy and individual decisions. It means greater attention must be paid to improving health, extending working lives, accepting more migrants, increasing productivity and growing savings. The shift from consumption to savings can increase the potential for a circular economy and reducing carbon emissions. It also reduces interest rates and inflation, allowing for higher levels of investment in clean infrastructure, health, housing and education, which are the bedrock of sustained growth.If we stop kicking the demographic time bomb down the road, it will be possible to achieve stable and sustainable societies that provide a better life for future generations as well as our own. More

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    Waiting for Pivot

    Ajay Rajadhyaksha is global chair of research at Barclays.Financial markets trade on narratives. And for the past several weeks, the dominant story in both bond and equity markets has been that the Fed will pivot, and soon. Investors expect a rapidly weakening economy to force the US central bank to do an about-turn, and cut rates barely months after hikes finish.This belief built up a head of steam across July, with many investors suggesting that the Fed could signal a shift at its Jackson Hole retreat in late August. Every weak housing data point fed into this narrative; every contraction in PMI was grist for this mill. A sharp pullback in commodities prices, a collapse in business and consumer confidence, a decline in market expectations for inflation over the next decade – all these pointed in that same direction. And then there was history: the Fed did a volte-face in both of the last two hiking cycles. Hikes in the summer of 2007 gave way to cuts in 2008. And memorably, the Fed hiked in December 2018 only to change course by January 2019. Small wonder that markets have been waiting for the US central bank to signal a shift again.Easier said than done.The data that matter most – inflation and wages – are still too strong for the US central bank to breathe easy. Way too strong. And the numbers are accelerating, even before July’s strong jobs report. Consider the last inflation print. Core CPI (which excludes food and energy prices) over 6 months is running at an annualised pace of almost 7 per cent. But the 3-month rate is almost 8 per cent. And the 1-month number annualised is nearly 9 per cent. That means core CPI is speeding up, not slowing down, and is in a very different zip code than the Fed’s 2-per-cent target.Even more important is the move in wages. For the past few months, it looked like wage growth was slowing down. Average hourly earnings, reported in the monthly jobs report, seemed to have settled into a 3.5- to 4-per-cent annual rate. Then three things happened all at once. First, the Atlanta Fed wage growth tracker showed that wages accelerated strongly in June (6.7 per cent annually):

    Three-month moving average of median wage growth, hourly data © Atlanta Fed’s calculations, Current Population Survey and US Bureau of Labour Statistics

    Second, the average hourly earnings data were revised upwards. Lo and behold, wages are no longer slowing in that series.But most significant was the latest release of the Employment Cost Index (ECI), the Fed’s preferred indicator. Private sector wages accelerated sharply to a 6.5-per-cent annualised pace in June. The cherry on the cake, of course, was the unemployment rate reaching a post-Covid low last week. The US labour market is not just not slowing down. It is speeding up.It is true that labour markets are famously backward looking. In September 2008, around the financial crisis, the jobless rate was still 6.1 per cent. When it peaked at 9.9 per cent a year and a half later, the US was well on its way to recovery. Even so, Fed officials care deeply about wages. If high wage expectations get embedded in an economy, high inflation can remain ‘sticky’ for far longer. A 2-per-cent inflation target is hard to achieve if per-capita wages rise 6 per cent in 2023. Central bankers don’t like admitting it, but a primary goal of rate hikes is to cause enough job losses to ensure that wage growth slows down. And if that isn’t happening despite several rate increases, it adds pressure on the central bank to raise rates further, and keep them high for longer.Admittedly, monetary policy does work with a long and variable lag. That is why central bank decisions are usually based on forecasts; today’s data is not supposed to be the dominant driver of today’s policy. But these are not normal times. The inflation spike of the last 12-15 months has been massive, persistent, and made a mockery of forecasts. And one by one, central banks have had to adjust policy to incoming inflation data. The Fed broke its own forward guidance and hiked 75bp in June because of a strong May CPI report. And the ECB followed in July, hiking 50bp despite promising 25bp.Strong jobs reports are usually greeted with enthusiasm in the Marriner S Eccles building. But the starting point on inflation, including core inflation, is simply too high. Markets have gotten ahead of themselves in expecting the Fed to start taking a more dovish approach. As things currently stand, any Fed surprises over the next few months are more likely to be hawkish. Investors waiting for an imminent pivot will have to keep waiting. More

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    Craig Wright Claims People Can Prove His Identity As Bitcoin’s Creator–Satoshi Nakamoto

    “Proof Is Always the People”In a recent interview, controversial Australian computer scientist Craig Wright strengthened his assertions that it is in fact him behind the invention of the world’s biggest cryptocurrency, Bitcoin.When asked if he was indeed the figure behind the alias “Satoshi Nakamoto”, Wright responded: “proof is always people.” Wright seemed to claim that there are those who know him to be the founder of the world’s largest cryptocurrency, saying: “I had family, I had friends,” but emphasized that being the founder of Bitcoin “actually makes life harder.”Wright Claims Keys Don’t Prove AnythingWright’s inability to send a message from the private key that matches the public key of Bitcoin’s ‘Genesis Block’, the name given to the first block ever mined, is a major reason for why his claims thus far have gone largely ignored. However, in defending his inability to send a message using those keys, Wright argues “you can’t prove with keys. If I own your car keys, that doesn’t mean I own your car. Honestly, that is the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard.”Things went awry when Wright’s interviewer, Hamish Macdonald, requested further proof of his claim. After swearing, Wright advised Macdonald to “pick up a law book, look what proof is.”On the FlipsideWhy You Should CareWright’s inability to send a message from the private key that matches the public key from Bitcoin’s Genesis Block is the reason why his claims have not been accepted.Get the full details of Wright’s lawsuit against Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) in:Dr. Craig Wright Sues Coinbase and Kraken for Misrepresenting BitcoinRead more on Wright’s claims to being Bitcoin’s Founder:Craig Wright Wins Whitepaper Lawsuit Over Bitcoin.orgContinue reading on DailyCoin More

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    Artistokens is Positioning Itself as a Decentralized Alternative to Traditional Streaming Services

    Over the years, creators have had to exhibit their creativity by leveraging third-party applications such as streaming services and social networks. Sadly, these third-party applications are largely centralized and, as such, control revenue generation and end up determining the sharing ratio, which often favors the platform more than the creators.To end this decentralized art exchange protocol, Artistokens is on the mission to give everyone (i.e., users) the freedom to share, stream, and ultimately monetize different art shows or exhibitions of their choice. The decentralized protocol is community-led and is largely controlled by a network of users who are collectively addressed as artists. These artists leverage a blockchain-based alternative to existing streaming platforms, publish content, monetize, and distribute them directly to fans. With Artistokens in the picture, artists are not only able to bypass the existing centralized system but also maximize their earning potential while building a more intimate creator-fan relationship across the board. However, that’s not to insinuate that content creators alone are the only ones that can benefit from signing up on the platform.Artistokens artists generally comprise three main categories of users: ‘ performers (content creators),’ ‘Fans (content consumers),’ and ‘service providers.’ While some users fall in just one of these three demographics, others may fall into all three. Regardless, the role played by users of each demographic is distinctive and attracts varying rewards. For instance, performers or content creators are tasked with creating and uploading digital art content such as music, movie, artworks, or any other form of creativity they are willing to showcase with their fans. Fans of content consumers are on the platform to support their favorite by streaming whatever there is to stream.On the other hand, the third category of artist networks – Service providers – are tasked with the immediate responsibility of handling application traffic and securing the network. They can equally participate in streaming songs, art, and shows exhibited by performers.In terms of reward, the Artistokens network has its own native asset, $ART, which provides network security, as well as exclusive access to unique features, and community governance. Based on the Binance Smart Chain, the $ART token particularly aids all kinds of transactions executed within the platform, allowing holders to consume, share and monetize any art content of their choice.Speaking on why they want to revolutionalize the creative industry, Artistokens CEO claimed that the project is geared towards helping young people showcase their talents while supporting them achieve their goal. Artistoken will Eventually Build its own MetaverseBeyond creating an alternative to traditional streaming services, Artistokens ultimate goal according to the CEO is to create a “world of art game.” This also implies that a metaverse project is in the work, one that will accommodate artists of all genres alongside their fanbase. However, unlike the main platform’s structure, the metaverse treats everyone as players who go about collecting rare NFTs, enhancing their attributes and commercializing them via a dedicated marketplace within the artistokens network.Speaking of NFTs, Artistokens CEO revealed that there will be 3 collections of NFT – ‘Art Bulls,’ ‘Art Panda,’ and ‘Art Lions’ – distributed before the start of sale, during pre-sale, and after presale. Specifically, the CEO claims there are a total of 1111 NFT up for distribution, however, the largest portion of this, ‘Art Lions,’ will be distributed during the initial DEX offering (IDO).Also, there is another educational feature in the works which will enable keepers of Artistokens NFT to receive non – patent discounts across Art education or sports classes organized within the network’s virtual schools or that of a partner’s schools . So far, Artistokens have successfully partnered with 75 different Art and sports schools with more to be added before the project officially launches.In the end, Artistokens aims to motivate underprivileged creators and support them in pursuing meaningful lives through gaming and education. To learn more about Artistokens please visit the official website, Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) or contact the team via Telegram or Discord. Continue reading on DailyCoin More

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    Ukraine seeks new IMF programme, hopes aid arrives in Nov-Dec – PM

    KYIV (Reuters) – Ukraine has formally requested a new programme from the International Monetary Fund and hopes to receive aid under the programme from November to December, Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmygal said on Monday.”We expect to receive the corresponding assistance from the IMF already in November-December of this year,” he said in a statement on the government website. More