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    Draghi calls for joined-up thinking in Europe

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.This article is an on-site version of Martin Sandbu’s Free Lunch newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every Thursday. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newslettersFree Lunch readers will be well aware that the Draghi report has landed. In his long-awaited (and delayed) work, Mario Draghi, star-quality former Eurozone central bank chief and ex-prime minister of Italy, set out his analysis of Europe’s productivity challenges and how to address them.There is a short version (well, 69 pages) of the report that I recommend reading in full. For those who want more, there is a much longer in-depth version here. And for those who can’t be bothered to spend much time but want to be able to say they have read something, Draghi offers a readers’ digest version here.There are a lot of excellent ideas in the Draghi report. The analysis is clear-headed: while the task was to look into the EU’s “competitiveness”, Draghi wastes no time in stressing that this should be understood as how to improve productivity — and as a mercantilist zero-sum agenda where export surpluses are better the bigger they are, or “using wage repression to lower relative costs”. (It’s only a decade ago that Eurozone policymakers insisted on “competitiveness” when they meant lowering the labour share of income.) The many very good policy proposals include: more investment and more common funding for common goods; using better the EU’s size to improve terms by procuring raw materials and natural resources jointly; creating a truly single market for company financing (the capital markets union project) and removing barriers for companies to scale up to the level of the continent-sized market; and defining the desired trade-off between promoting domestic clean tech production and making use of Chinese capacity to meet European decarbonisation goals.You can read more about the details in my colleagues’ write-up and the FT’s largely positive editorial. But Brussels is the place good reports come to die. Only months ago, the Letta report on the single market also delivered plenty of good advice, as did many reports before it. So although Draghi’s answers to the question of “what” — what does the EU need to do — are excellent, the biggest question is the “how” — how to actually achieve all these things.That’s why I think the most original and consequential parts of his report, and so far those that have caught the least attention, are on how to change the way the EU makes policy. Draghi’s hundreds of pages of policy proposals amount to one big call for more joined-up decision-making. Here he is on how to make the decarbonisation agenda a success for productivity (my italics):Executing this strategy will require a joint decarbonisation and competitiveness plan where all policies are aligned behind the EU’s objectives.This includes not just domestic policy, but requires what Draghi calls a “foreign economic policy”. And here he is on a particular illustration of a failure to do so (my italics again):The automotive sector is a key example of lack of EU planning, applying a climate policy without an industrial policy . . . The EU has not followed up these ambitions [of phasing out internal combustion engines] with a synchronised push to convert the supply chain.(He says, for example, that the EU should consider extending carbon tariffs to the automotive sector.)This call for joined-up policymaking is more profound than it may seem at first glance. Obvious as it may sound, if it were actually achieved, it would be a game-changer for EU growth and the bloc’s influence on the world. That is because it would involve a greater degree of conscious planning for the EU economy as a whole, and that planning would require policymakers at all levels to take EU objectives more into account and not just narrow national interests. The promise is to make everyone better off on the whole by reducing anyone’s ability to prevent any particular cost to them. How does Draghi propose to do this? Here are the main ways:Common planning for productivityDraghi wants a “competitiveness co-ordination framework”, where all the existing policy co-ordination at present linked to fiscal planning (in the so-called European Semester) is gathered to formulate a common EU-wide productivity strategy and co-ordinate national policies with it. More common regulatory frameworks to escape rather than replace the patchwork of unharmonised national rulesDraghi endorses the idea of “28th regimes” — that is to say, a common regulatory framework in parallel with (not replacing) existing national ones. If a company or project chose to be governed by the 28th regime in question, this would be sufficient to allow it to operate anywhere in the EU. Draghi proposes 28th regimes for renewable energy projects, for interconnectors and for innovative small- and medium-sized enterprises to make it easy for them to scale up to the full EU market.More majority voting and less unanimityDraghi points out that the current treaties allow the EU to move more policy areas from unanimity to qualified majority decision-making, provided that is unanimously decided upfront (the so-called passerelle clauses). “All possibilities offered by the EU Treaties should . . . be exploited to extend QMV,” recommends Draghi.More ‘coalitions of the willing’Of course, many countries will not want to give up their veto rights in some sectors. Indeed, every sector may have some country determined to hold on to its veto. So, Draghi concludes, the EU must pursue the joined-up decision-making he calls for among the countries willing to do it without all 27 member states being on board. Preferably that would include the existing procedure for “enhanced co-operation” whereby nine or more member states can decide to use the EU institutions to do more together without forcing anything on the laggards.More centralised budget capacity for the strategically important sectorsDraghi could not be clearer: “Some joint funding of investment at the EU level is necessary to maximise productivity growth, as well as to finance other European public goods.” But it also works the other way round: “The more that governments implement the strategy laid out in this report, the greater the increase in productivity will be, and the easier it will be for governments to bear the fiscal costs of supporting private investment and of investing themselves.” The next budget, Draghi proposes, should have a dedicated “competitiveness pillar” to be managed under the framework mentioned above in point 1. This would have dedicated funding streams, such as “a centralised EU budgetary allocation dedicated to semiconductors supported by a new ‘fast-track’ IPCEI [Important Project of Common European Interest — the EU’s pre-identified projects with easier subsidy rules]”.These are, to be sure, bold proposals. But what is clear is that good policy proposals will not be realised without a decision-making reform along Draghi’s lines. Nor will the productivity growth acceleration everyone accepts is needed, and which Draghi convincingly argues is possible.What that also means are two things that should be of great interest to sceptical national leaders. One is that limited political time, energy and capital could now be most fruitfully devoted to Draghi’s procedural proposals — because they would greatly lower the cost of pursuing any of the substantive policy ideas by those who would like to. The second is that doing so may (whisper it) more than pay for itself — economically, of course, because of the prospect of faster growth, but therefore also politically, by getting Europe out of its economic funk. Fortune, in short, favours the bold. Other readablesRecommended newsletters for youChris Giles on Central Banks — Your essential guide to money, interest rates, inflation and what central banks are thinking. Sign up hereUnhedged — Robert Armstrong dissects the most important market trends and discusses how Wall Street’s best minds respond to them. Sign up here More

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    Global jobs market shaken by green transition

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    FirstFT: Trump camp reels after debate

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    CARV Unveils CARV Labs, a $50M Accelerator to Fund Decentralized Data Ecosystem

    CARV is launching a $50 million accelerator to incubate projects capable of driving the mass adoption of its eponymous data protocol.With backing from top blockchain VC funds, including HashKey Capital and Consensys, the modular data layer for gaming and AI has pledged to support innovators, particularly those actively building the future of decentralized data.Backed by CARV Protocol, the accelerator’s mission is to enable a dynamic, decentralized data infrastructure that empowers users to control and monetize their data. It will provide comprehensive support to startups, including funding and investment backed by leading industry funds, go-to-market and growth support, expert tokenomics advisory, infrastructure and tooling tech advice, and access to the company’s industry network and community.Current industry investors set to play a role in the accelerator’s vertical-specific programs include MARBLEX, the web3 arm of South Korean mobile game developer Netmarble; Intella X, the Web3 Publishing arm of South Korea’s Global Game Developer and Publisher NEOWIZ, the crowdfunding platform Alphastarter; Doublejump.tokyo, the developer behind the Oasys blockchain; various business angels; game publisher Xterio; Solana, NEAR and Ronin networks. Additional partners such as Arweave, Litentry, the Linea Ecosystem Investment Alliance (LEIA), and Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) Cloud will also promote the accelerator. Linea, the secure zkEVM L2 that empowers dapps to thrive, will further market a web3 gaming offer later this year that will connect to the accelerator. The first project incubated under CARV Labs, BANANA, an idle game built on the TON ecosystem, attracted over 8M users within just 4 weeks with more than 1M daily active users, 1.8M social accounts connected, and 73M social tasks completed. The rapid success of BANANA underscores CARV Labs’ effectiveness in fostering innovation and driving user engagement in decentralized applications. This milestone showcases the potential for future projects and positions CARV Labs as a leader in the space.The groundswell of applications building on the protocol has enabled CARV to generate over $5 million in revenue YTD, with more games and projects in the pipeline. Last month, it announced the launch of its Alphanet, run by the 40K verifier nodes distributed to its community worth $35M. The milestone was considered an important one as CARV evolves into a truly decentralized and scalable protocol layer. Alphanet’s arrival followed April’s Series A funding round, led by Tribe Capital and IOSG Ventures, which attracted $10 million. Gaming, AI, and data infrastructure projects interested in finding out more about the new accelerator are advised to reach out via CARV’s official Discord channel.About CARVCARV is building the largest modular Identity and Data Layer (IDL) for gaming, AI, and beyond, integrating over 900 games and AI companies, representing more than 30% of all Web3 games, and serving 9.5M+ registered players with 1.3M+ daily active users and 2.8M unique on-chain CARV ID holders. Ranking among the top three globally with 2.1M+ average daily unique active wallets across 40+ chains, CARV has raised $50M in total funding from top-tier investors like Tribe Capital, Temasek Vertex (NASDAQ:VRTX), HashKey Capital, Animoca Brands, and ConsenSys, along with major gaming studios and ecosystems such as MARBLEX (Netmarble) and the Sandbox. The team comprises industry veterans from Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN), Binance, Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL), and Electronic Arts (NASDAQ:EA), all dedicated to revolutionizing data usage in gaming, AI, and beyond.About HashKey CapitalHashKey Capital is a global digital asset and blockchain leader helping institutions, founders and talents advance the blockchain industry. As one of the largest crypto fund managers and being the earliest corporate investor in Ethereum, HashKey Capital has managed over US$1 billion in client assets since its inception. Leveraging its unparalleled expertise, HashKey Capital’s venture investments team oversees a diversified portfolio of over 600 pioneering projects across institutional services, infrastructure, data, AI, consumer services/ technology and more.About ConsensysConsensys is the leading blockchain and web3 software company. Since 2014, Consensys has been at the forefront of innovation, pioneering technological developments within the web3 ecosystem. Through our product suite, including the MetaMask platform, Infura, Linea, Diligence, and our NFT toolkit Phosphor, we have become the trusted collaborator for users, creators, and developers on their path to build and belong in the world they want to see. Whether building a dapp, an NFT collection, a portfolio, or a better future, the instinct to build is universal. Consensys inspires and champions the builder instinct in everyone by making web3 universally easy to use and develop on. To explore our products and solutions, visit https://consensys.io/.Website | Discord | X | Telegram | MediumContactCOOVictor [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    Oil prices to keep falling as demand weakens, says IEA head

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    Bitcoin price today: rises to $58k, but sentiment remains fragile

    Strength in the dollar, following a stronger consumer price index inflation reading- also limited overall gains in cryptocurrencies, as did the prospect of a smaller interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve next week.Sentiment towards crypto was also dented by a heated presidential debate on late-Tuesday, where Vice President Kamala Harris was seen gaining an edge over former President and pro-crypto candidate Donald Trump.Bitcoin rose 2.8% to $58,115.9 by 01:16 ET (05:16 GMT). Gains in Bitcoin came tracking an overnight surge in technology stocks, as NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang offered some positive comments on artificial intelligence demand.But the world’s biggest cryptocurrency still remained entrenched in a $50,000 to $60,000 trading range seen through most of the year. Bitcoin has also struggled to break substantially above $60,000, amid a dearth of positive cues for crypto. The token was nursing steep losses from the prior week, amid a broader rout in risk-driven markets. Bets on a Kamala Harris presidency rose after Tuesday’s debate, where she was seen consistently putting Trump on the defensive over several key issues, ranging from abortion rights to international relations. Online prediction market PredictIt showed odds for a Harris victory rising to 57 cents from 53 cents on a payout of $1, while Trump’s odds sank to 47 cents from 52 cents. Of the two candidates, only Trump has openly declared support for the crypto industry, although he has shied away from mentioning the industry in more mainstream events, such as the Republican national convention, or even the presidential debate. Harris, on the other hand, is expected to continue the Biden administration’s scrutiny of the sector over its alleged tenacity for fraud. This stance saw the Securities and Exchange Commission enact a series of high-profile crackdowns against crypto over the past two years.Broader cryptocurrency prices tracked gains in Bitcoin, with world no.2 crypto Ether up 1.8% at $2,368.10.SOL, XRP, ADA and MATIC drifted higher, with ADA leading gains in the pack with a 5.1% increase. Among meme tokens, DOGE rose 2.9%. A stronger-than-expected reading on core CPI saw traders pricing in a greater possibility the Fed will cut interest rates by 25 basis points next week, instead of a bigger 50 bps cut.But before that, producer price index data due later on Thursday is set to offer more cues on U.S. inflation. More

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    Inflation is still dead

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    Dollar firm as inflation data douse bets for big Fed rate cut

    TOKYO (Reuters) – The dollar traded near a four-week high versus the euro on Thursday after signs of some stickiness in U.S. inflation reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve would avoid a super-sized interest rate cut next week.Meanwhile, a quarter-point rate reduction from the European Central Bank (ECB) is widely expected later on Thursday, with investors anxious for hints on how soon the monetary authority will cut again.The dollar gained against the yen, following a turbulent session on Wednesday that saw the U.S. currency plunge as much as 1.24% to the lowest this year before recovering all its losses after the consumer price data.Early on Wednesday, Bank of Japan board member Junko Nakagawa reinforced the central bank’s tightening bias by saying low real rates leave room for further rate hikes. Another BOJ board member, Naoki Tamura, takes to the podium on Thursday.The U.S. consumer price index (CPI) rose 0.2% last month, matching the advance in July. But excluding the volatile food and energy components, the gauge climbed 0.3%, accelerating from the previous month’s 0.2% increase.As a result, traders essentially priced out the chances of a 50-basis point (bp) rate cut on Sept. 18, paring the odds to 15% versus 85% probability for a 25-bp reduction. However, there are still 104 bps of cuts priced by year-end, meaning markets still expect a 50-bp cut at either the November or December meeting.The dollar rose 0.38% to 142.905 yen as of 0031 GMT, after dipping as low as 140.71 on Wednesday for the first time since Dec. 28 following Nakagawa’s comments. However, the failure of the yen to sustain its gains “has left signs of downside capitulation at the 140.71 low, … opening the way for a recovery back towards 145.50,” said Tony Sycamore, an analyst at IG.The dollar-yen pair tends to track U.S. long-term Treasury yields, which bounced back forcefully after dipping to a 15-month low of 3.605% on Wednesday, and were ticking up in Asian time on Thursday to last stand at 3.6609%.The euro eased to $1.1007, sticking close to Wednesday’s low of $1.1002, the weakest since Aug. 16.The ECB lowered its deposit rate to 3.75% in June and an array of policymakers have already backed another cut, suggesting their debate is likely to focus on how quickly borrowing costs need to fall in subsequent meetings.Sterling edged lower to $1.30360, after dipping as far as $1.30025 in the previous session for the first time since Aug. 20.The Swiss franc was also on the back foot, with the dollar gaining 0.08% to 0.8529 franc, after touching the highest since Aug. 21 at 0.8544 franc on Wednesday. More