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    IMF reaches staff agreement with Zambia for $185.5 million disbursement

    The agreement was announced after an IMF mission to Zambia from Oct. 2-15, followed by subsequent discussions at IMF and World Bank annual meetings in Washington, the Fund said in a statement.The IMF said Zambia’s economy has been hit hard by drought, with reduced agricultural output and electricity shortages impacting economic activity widely. It forecast Zambia’s 2024 real GDP growth at 1.2%, down from a 2.3% forecast in June. Inflation accelerated to 15.7% in October, driven by food prices and currency depreciation, well above a target band of 6-8%. More

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    DDHQ projects that Republicans will retain US House majority

    Edison Research has not yet projected House control. It has projected that Republicans will hold at least 214 seats, including two currently held by Democrats, with Democrats holding at least 205, with 16 uncalled. The smallest House majority is 218.Republicans had already secured a U.S. Senate majority of at least 52-46, Edison Research projected. During his first presidential term in 2017-2021, Trump’s biggest achievement was sweeping tax cuts that are due to expire next year. That legislation and Democratic President Joe Biden’s signature $1 trillion infrastructure law both came during periods when their parties controlled both chambers of Congress.By contrast, during the past two years of divided government, Biden has had little success in passing legislation and Congress has struggled to perform its most basic function of providing the money needed to keep the government open. More

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    Brazil’s finance chief says fiscal package issues solved, new area might be added

    The Brazilian real currency has weakened to multi-year lows against the U.S. dollar in recent weeks amid government hesitation to announce a fiscal package to stem a rapid rise in mandatory spending.Speaking to journalists in Brasilia, Finance Minister Fernando Haddad gave no time frame for when the package might be publicly announced. He added that outstanding issues that had held up discussions last week were resolved. Still, he said Lula has now asked to include a new ministry in the spending-cut package, adding that the talks with the unnamed ministry might be concluded by Wednesday.Lula and his chief of staff held meetings in the last few days with leaders of more than 10 ministries, including those from Health, Education and Pension, according to the government.The government has said it would present the fiscal package after municipal elections held in late October, but has offered no concrete timeline for the announcement since then.Asked if the package has stalled during the recent talks, Haddad said no, but that the government made adjustments to make the measures “more understandable and palatable.” Haddad said he would speak with Lula on Tuesday about presenting the package to the Lower House and Senate chiefs, adding he believed the measures could be approved by Congress this year. More

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    Australia Oct business sentiment highest in nearly two years, NAB survey shows

    The survey from National Australia Bank (OTC:NABZY) (NAB) showed its index of business conditions held at +7 in October. The more volatile confidence index climbed 7 points to +5, the highest reading since early 2023.Sales showed a 1 point rise to a strong +13 in the month, while profitability was steady at +5 and employment intentions dipped 2 points to +3.”Confidence spiked in the month after an extended period of below average reads,” said Gareth Spence, NAB’s head of Australian economics. “While it’s just one month this is an encouraging sign alongside a tentative improvement in forward orders.”The improvement came as a separate survey of consumer confidence from Westpac showed a second month of strong gains in November, partly on hopes for lower borrowing costs.The Reserve Bank of Australia has held interest rates steady at 4.35% for a full year and financial markets are confident the next move will be down, albeit not for a few months yet.Measures of cost pressures in the NAB survey suggested inflation was slowly easing with growth in input costs slowing to a quarterly pace of 0.9%, from 1.3% in September. Growth in labour costs eased to 1.4%, from 1.9%, and product prices to 0.5%, from 0.6%.”The survey, like other price indicators, continues to suggest an ongoing gradual easing in inflation pressure, but also that there is still some way to go in the moderation,” Spence said. The official measure of consumer price inflation slowed sharply to 2.8% in the September quarter, though much of that was due to temporary government rebates on electricity bills. More

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    Deutsche Telekom Joins Forces with Meta Pool to Pioneer Decentralized AI on NEAR Protocol

    In a big step for decentralized technology, Deutsche Telekom (OTC:DTEGY) MMS has partnered with Meta (NASDAQ:META) Pool (NASDAQ:POOL) as part of its Enterprise Node Operator (ENO) program, becoming the first telecommunications giant to operate a validator node on the NEAR blockchain. This collaboration not only enhances NEAR’s network security and decentralization but also signals a new era of enterprise-driven blockchain adoption, powered by Meta Pool.Meta Pool, a leader in liquid staking solutions on NEAR, developed the ENO program to connect established industry leaders with the decentralized ecosystem. By joining this initiative, Deutsche Telekom provides NEAR with enterprise-grade infrastructure that boosts both network reliability and performance. This partnership marks a milestone in Meta Pool’s mission to transform the decentralized ecosystem, elevating NEAR’s technology to new levels of scalability and security through trusted industry partnerships.About Meta PoolMeta Pool is a multi-chain liquid staking ecosystem and a DAO with multi-chain governance on NEAR and Ethereum. It offers Vote-to-Earn governance rewards, Liquid Staking Tokens on Ethereum, NEAR, Solana, Aurora, ICP, and Q, and Solana’s first restaking aggregator, supporting mpSOL, jitoSOL, bSOL, and SOL. Meta Pool makes liquid staking simple and accessible across multiple blockchains, with plans for further expansion. A Visionary Collaboration for Decentralized AI and Blockchain InnovationMeta Pool’s ENO program was designed to bridge traditional and decentralized worlds, creating a robust and resilient network on NEAR through partnerships with industry leaders. By joining this initiative, Deutsche Telekom empowers NEAR with the infrastructure to support decentralized applications at scale, opening doors for new advancements in AI, blockchain scalability, and multi-chain interoperability. With Meta Pool’s ENO program as the foundation, Deutsche Telekom is taking a leap toward reimagining the future of decentralized networks.In an era where data sovereignty and transparency are paramount, Meta Pool’s ENO program brings companies like Deutsche Telekom into the NEAR network, securing blockchain and AI solutions that empower users. This partnership sets the stage for a privacy-focused, decentralized future, championed by industry leaders committed to the transformative power of blockchain.NEAR is a high-performance, environmentally sustainable Layer 1 blockchain built to host decentralized applications for millions of users. Thanks to its unique sharding technology, NEAR enables fast, energy-efficient transactions, making it a “green” alternative within blockchain technology. NEAR aligns with Meta Pool’s mission to advance accessible, eco-friendly blockchain solutions that support a more inclusive digital future.Through Meta Pool’s ENO program, Deutsche Telekom gains access to cutting-edge blockchain insights, reinforcing its leadership in decentralized AI. This partnership reflects a shared commitment to exploring Web3 possibilities, setting the stage for a more transparent, secure, and innovative digital world.ContactPablo VazquezMeta [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    Vital signs improve for English healthcare productivity, think tank says

    The Institute for Fiscal Studies said growth in hospital activity had far outstripped increases in staffing over the last year, suggesting new workers were being put to good use – even if this had not yet made a big dent in treatment waiting lists.Restoring the National Health Service is one of the five missions of Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Labour government, elected in a landslide in July.Last month finance minister Rachel Reeves announced sharp increases in tax, spending and borrowing to repair public services, which a vast majority of Britons say are in a poor state.”While undoubtedly positive news, we should remember that NHS productivity is still below where it was pre-pandemic and will require a further period of improvement before the post-pandemic productivity hit is fully unwound,” Olly Harvey-Rich, research economist at the IFS.”Nonetheless, this is a welcome development, particularly as the NHS heads into winter.”The IFS said the number of consultants in NHS England had grown by 3.6% in January to July 2024 compared with a year previously, and there were 6.4% more nurses and health visitors too. But growth in services was much stronger, with elective admissions up by 10.3% and outpatient appointments rising 9.2%.Overall public sector productivity, dominated by healthcare and education, last year stood around 3% below its level of 1997, according to official data.Earlier this year, NHS England cited several factors for the drop in productivity, including: strikes, temporary staffing costs, changing needs of patients and past real-terms cuts to healthcare investment that had harmed the resilience of the NHS. More

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    Australian consumer sentiment jumps for second month in Nov

    The Westpac-Melbourne Institute index of consumer sentiment rose 5.3% in November from October, when it jumped 6.2%. The index reading of 94.6 showed pessimists still outnumbered optimists, but by a narrowing margin.Indeed, readings for future finances and the economic outlook broke above the 100 mark for the first time since the pandemic. “Consumers are seeing some further easing in the pressure on family finances, are no longer concerned about the risk of further interest rate rises and are becoming more confident about the economic outlook,” said Westpac Senior Economist Matthew Hassan.The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) again left its interest rates unchanged at 4.35% this month and financial markets are confident the next move will be down, albeit not until next year.Hassan did caution that survey responses took a turn for the worse after Republican Donald Trump’s won the U.S. presidential election. It was unclear whether this would last.Otherwise, the survey was broadly firmer as the share of consumers expecting mortgage rates to drop in the future climbed to the highest since 2016.That was reflected in the survey’s measure of family finances compared to a year ago which surged 6.8%, while finances for the next 12 months rose 4.4%.The index measuring the economic outlook for the next 12 months jumped 8.7%. The outlook for the next five years rose 6.5% as fears of rate hikes eased.The “time to buy a major household item” added 3.2% in November, boding well for retailers ahead of the Christmas shopping period.The time to buy a dwelling index jumped 11.3%, while respondents were also less worried about losing their jobs. More

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    Live Nation posts upbeat quarterly profit on lower costs, shares rise

    The Beverly Hills, California-based company is benefiting from high prices of concert tickets, even as some customers are spending cautiously amid high interest rates.”We wrapped up our most active summer concert season ever, our show pipeline has never been bigger, and brand sponsorships are accelerating,” CEO Michael Rapino said.The U.S. Department of Justice and more than two dozen states in May sued to break up Live Nation, arguing that the big concert promoter and its Ticketmaster unit illegally inflated concert ticket prices and hurt artists.Live Nation reported profit per share of $1.66, beating analysts’ average estimate of $1.59, according to data compiled by LSEG. Revenue declined about 6% to $7.65 billion for the quarter ended Sept. 30, missing estimates of $7.75 billion. The company reported its first decline in revenue since 2021.Operating expenses for the quarter fell to $5.78 billion from $6.30 billion a year earlier.The company’s concert business comprising merchandise sales and the production of live music events generated $6.58 billion, making up the bulk of its overall revenue, followed by $693.7 million from ticketing. More