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    How the Metaverse could impact the lives of kids

    As with anything else, the Metaverse has its advantages and disadvantages. As a parent, being aware of these risks and taking measures to protect your children from them is paramount. To start with, closely monitor your child’s online activity. Restrict their access to potentially harmful content and keep a close watch on what they see and do in the Metaverse.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    A positive week beckons for western unity and democracy

    Hello and welcome to the working week.For the first time, in what feels like a long time, this could be a very positive week for western democracy.Firstly, Nato. One of the ironies of the Ukrainian conflict is that Russia’s invasion has not only failed to achieve the Kremlin goal of limiting Nato power, it has fuelled the expansion of the military alliance — much to the delight of small European states bordering Russia. Finland could apply for Nato membership in a matter of days, following a debate in the country’s parliament on Monday, and is likely to be followed by Sweden, which will host Finnish president Sauli Niinistö for talks on how to achieve this on Tuesday. The process of joining Nato will take longer, but the change will be significant, doubling Nato’s land border with Russia. The gathering of leaders of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organisation in the Kremlin tomorrow is no doubt an attempt to show that president Vladimir Putin can organise his own military alliances, although this may also serve to illustrate the differences in scale between it and the western grouping. As if to emphasise the point, Nato commanders will meet in Brussels on Thursday.The other cause for hope in western democracy is the year of elections. Voting in Australia’s federal elections closes on Saturday with opposition Labor leader Anthony Albanese maintaining a lead in the polls over the incumbent Scott Morrison — although these indications have been wrong in the past.Friday is the deadline for candidates in the French parliamentary vote to declare their candidacy. Meanwhile, in South Korea, newly elected president Yoon Seok-youl will host his US counterpart Joe Biden during his first few days in office.Boris Johnson will visit Northern Ireland on Monday after Sinn Féin won the largest number of seats in the Stormont power-sharing executive. The UK prime minister must address the impasse in which Democratic Unionist party politicians are refusing to join the assembly while the post-Brexit UK-EU trading protocol remains in place. Johnson’s solution is expected to be legislation to override parts of the protocol, which he agreed to in 2019. Do tell me what you think about the week ahead. What are you most interested in this week? Email me at [email protected] dataThe week will start with a flurry of data from the US and China — retail sales, industrial production and housing data. Other key moments will be the inflation updates from the UK, Canada, Japan and the EU. We will get an insight into the European Central Bank’s view on monetary policy with the publication of the minutes from its April meeting and South Africa’s central bankers meet to decide their next interest rate move — expected to be a rise of 50 basis points, the first time they have done such a thing since 2016.CompaniesThe cost of living is increasing at the same time that international travel is becoming a possibility again, so this must be a good time for budget airlines, right? EasyJet and Ryanair both have investor updates this week, which will give an insight into the strength of demand for flying going into the peak summer period. However, other factors are weighing on the companies. EasyJet in particular has struggled with Covid-related staffing shortages, and investors will be watching to see if this disrupts previously announced plans to fly 90 per cent of its 2019 flight schedules in this quarter.Is a flatlining productivity and the energy crisis sending the British back to the economy of the 1970s? If so, then UK consumer goods group Premier Foods — home of Mr Kipling cakes, Oxo stock cubes and Smash instant potato mix — has the brands to remind Brits of that age of beige and austerity. Whatever the reason, Premier Foods is riding a wave. Having already upgraded its full-year forecast, investors have high hopes of sales success when the company reports its results on Wednesday.Key economic and company reportsHere is a more complete list of what to expect in terms of company reports and economic data this week.MondayCanada, manufacturing and wholesale trade figuresChina, April retail sales and industrial production dataEU, March trade figuresGreggs Q1 trading updateJapan, April producer price index (PPI) dataUK, Rightmove monthly house price figuresResults: BuzzFeed Q1, Ryanair FY, Take-Two Interactive Software Q4, Tencent Music Entertainment Q1TuesdayEU, Q1 eurozone GDP figuresFrance, Q1 unemployment rateItaly, consumer price index (CPI) dataUK, unemployment figures, April insolvency statistics plus Q1 productivity flash estimateUS, April retail sales and industrial production figures plus May housing market index dataResults: Home Depot Q1, Imperial Brands H1, JD.com Q1, Land Securities FY, Vodafone FY, Walmart Q1WednesdayAviva Q1 trading updateCanada, April CPI dataEU, Q1 trade figures plus April harmonised index of consumer prices (HICP) dataGoverning council of the European Central Bank holds a non-monetary policy meeting in FrankfurtJapan, March industrial production data and Q1 preliminary GDP figuresRussia, Q1 flash GDP figuresUK, April CPI and retail price index (RPI) dataUS, April residential construction figuresResults: ABN Amro Q1, British Land FY, Burberry FY, Cisco Systems Q3, Experian FY, Marston’s H1, Mitchells & Butlers H1, Premier Foods FY, Singapore Airlines FY, TJX Companies Q1ThursdayEU, minutes of the last European Central Bank governing council meetingJapan, April CPI figuresPhilippines, monetary policy committee meetingSouth Africa, monetary policy committee meetingUK, trade figures plus CBI monthly industrial trends surveyResults: easyJet H1, Generali Q1, Investec FY, National Grid FY, Qinetiq FY, Royal Mail FYFridayChina, monetary policy rate decisionEU, flash consumer confidence dataJapan, April CPI figuresResults: Deere & Company Q2, Nationwide FY, Richemont FYWorld eventsFinally, here is a rundown of other events and milestones this week. MondayEU foreign affairs council meets in BrusselsFinland’s parliament to debate Nato membership after the country’s president Sauli Niinistö and prime minister Sanna Marin said Finland ‘must apply’ to join the Nato military alliance within daysRussia, leaders of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation, including president Vladimir Putin and Belarus’s Alexander Lukashenko, meet in the KremlinUK, prime minister Boris Johnson visits Northern Ireland to try to persuade Democratic Unionist politicians to rejoin the power-sharing executive in StormontBank of England governor Andrew Bailey answers questions at the Treasury committee hearing, including an explanation of how the central bank plans to get inflation back to its 2 per cent targetUS, president Joe Biden hosts Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis at the White HouseTuesdayEU, Andrea Enria, chair of the European Central Bank’s supervisory board, gives a keynote speech at the Institut Montaigne in ParisFrance, the 75th annual Cannes Film Festival beginsSweden, Finnish president Sauli Niinistö makes a state visit to Stockholm as the two countries prepare to join NatoUK, House of Commons Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee holds a session on propriety of governance in light of the Greensill Capital scandalWednesdayGermany, G7 development ministers meet in BerlinSpain, Uefa Europa League final will take place at Seville’s Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán StadiumUS, start of a trial of four men allegedly affiliated with the ‘Proud Boys’ movement on charges stemming from their participation in the January 2021 Capitol riotThursdayBelgium, Nato military commanders gather for a defence chiefs’ meeting in BrusselsUK, 67th Ivor Novello Awards takes place at the Grosvenor House in LondonECB vice-president Luis de Guindos speaks at the 20th annual symposium on ‘Building the Financial System of the 21st Century: An Agenda for Europe and the United States’FridayCambodia, Day of remembrance to commemorate the genocide of the Khmer Rouge regime that ruled the country from 1975 to 1979EU, Foreign ministers from the 46 Council of Europe member states meet in Turin to discuss their response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine plus EU foreign affairs council (development) meets in BrusselsFrance, deadline for candidates to declare they are running for the French parliamentary electionsUS president Joe Biden begins visit of South Korea, where he will meet the new South Korean president Yoon Seok-youlUK, the Bank of England’s chief economist Huw Pill speaks at an event hosted by ACCA Cymru Wales in Cardiff, plus it is National Work From Home DaySaturdayAustralia, polls close in federal electionsThailand, trade ministers from Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation nations meet in BangkokSundaySwitzerland, 2022 World Economic Forum event begins in Davos. Topics on the agenda will include the pandemic recovery, tackling climate change and building a better future for workFrance, the Roland Garros French Open tennis tournament begins in ParisUK, Neil Campbell aims to set a new speed world record on a bikeUS president Joe Biden begins visit of Japan, including a meeting with leaders of the other Quad grouping countries, Australia, India and Japan for discussions following spate of weapons tests by North Korea More

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    Ex-Goldman CEO Blankfein says recession possibility is 'very high risk factor'

    Speaking on “Face the Nation” on CBS, Blankfein said a recession is “a very, very high risk factor.””There’s a path. It’s a narrow path,” said Blankfein, who retired from Goldman Sachs several years ago and now holds the title of senior chairman. “But I think the Fed has very powerful tools. It’s hard to finely tune them, and it’s hard to see the effects of them quickly enough to alter it, but I think they’re responding well. It’s definitely a risk.”Last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell acknowledged that increasing interest rates will “include some pain,” but added that a far worse outcome would be for prices to continue spiking.In March, the Fed approved a quarter-percentage-point rate increase. But some analysts say they fear policymakers have fallen too far behind to curb price increases without the sort of sharp rate hikes that might cause a recession.Blankfein told CBS he agrees with Powell’s assessment, and said some of the inflationary effects the economy is enduring now will be “sticky.””Overall for individuals, and certainly for individuals at the bottom quartile of the … pie sharing, it’s going to be quite difficult and oppressive,” he said.Blankfein served as CEO at Goldman Sachs from 2006 through 2018, a tenure that included the tumultuous financial crisis that led the U.S. government to implement a bank bailout program. More

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    BoE’s Bailey set for tough grilling over inflation record

    Andrew Bailey will on Monday face the toughest parliamentary grilling of a Bank of England governor since the global financial crisis, as MPs challenge him on whether the bank has lost control of inflation.Senior Conservatives have accused the BoE of acting too slowly in raising interest rates to contain inflation, which the bank believes could exceed 10 per cent later this year.Bailey will appear before MPs on the Commons treasury committee, the forum which held former governor Lord Mervyn King to account during the financial crisis of 2008-9, ahead of the publication on Wednesday of inflation data for April, which is expected to show another sharp increase in prices.Last week, the FT reported growing criticism among senior Tories of the BoE’s handling of the inflation crisis, while cabinet ministers have also voiced their concern.The Sunday Telegraph quoted one cabinet minister as saying of the BoE: “It has one job to do — to keep inflation at around 2 per cent — and it’s hard to remember the last time it achieved that target.”In fact the BoE last hit its inflation target as recently as July 2021, but Bailey’s insistence that big price rises would be “temporary” has left him open to criticism.“The BoE persisted beyond any rational interpretation of the data to tell us that inflation was transient, then that it would peak at 5 per cent,” Liam Fox, former cabinet minister, told MPs last week.With the Conservative government coming under increasing pressure to help ease the cost of living crisis, the central bank — operationally independent since 1997 — is braced for a wave of political criticism over its recent record on inflation.But Boris Johnson’s allies said the prime minister has not been critical of the BoE and there was no discussion among senior ministers over ending its independence. “That’s sacrosanct,” said one senior government figure. “Do you really think we’d want to take back responsibility for putting up interest rates?”Kwasi Kwarteng, business secretary, told the BBC that the BoE was “a great institution” and that it had done “a good job”, arguing it was easy to criticise decisions by the monetary policy committee in hindsight. He added that Bailey was “a very capable central bank governor and he’s doing all he can on this issue.”April’s inflation figures are set to show prices rising at their fastest pace for over 40 years. With growth grinding to a halt, the UK economy has not suffered a period of stagflation like this since the late 1970s, a period the Conservatives have long used to highlight the dangers of letting Labour run the economy. In the April figures, the first to include the 54 per cent jump in the price cap on household energy bills, economists expect UK consumer price inflation to rise to 9.1 per cent, the highest level in the G7. The last time CPI inflation was 9 per cent or higher was in early 1982 at a time Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government was deeply unpopular. When Bailey gives evidence to MPs, he will appear with deputy governor Sir Dave Ramsden and two of the external monetary policy committee members who voted for a larger half a percentage point interest rate increase earlier this month: Jonathan Haskel and Michael Saunders. Bailey has declined to comment since the MPC meeting at the start of the month, but the BoE feels that the underlying inflationary problem in the UK is less acute than in the US and price rises will slow as the economy contracts later this year.Meanwhile, Labour will force a vote on putting a windfall tax on North Sea oil and gas companies on Tuesday. Rishi Sunak, chancellor, has left the door open for a windfall tax if oil and gas companies do not urgently announce new investments. But Kwarteng said on Sunday such a levy was “a bad idea” and that it would deter investment in new energy schemes. More

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    Welcome to Mars: I own everything, have total privacy and life has never been better

    Welcome to Mars. Welcome to my city, or should I say “our city” because I, like every other inhabitant, is a stakeholder in it. No, I don’t mean “shareholder,” as this isn’t a dystopian future run by private companies. My city on Mars has a decentralized governance structure just like the greater Mars. It is not a corporation nor is it a militarized state. It is a set of institutions governed directly by The People. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More