(7) Dell buy-out | Hobson's Choice; Shareholders may not like Michael Dell's offer, but it's the best they'll get.
Note: Hobson's Choice
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobson%27s_choice
(8) The rising dollar | Green and Back. The dollar is enjoying a rare period of strength. How far can the rally go?
Note:
(a) The bar charts shows "Currencies against the $; % decrease May 1st-July 9th 2013": among others (renminbi or Taiwanese $ not one of them), Australian $ (~11%), Indian Rupee (slightly > 10%), Canadian $ (4%), British pound (a bit <#%), Japanese yen (a bit less than 3%), Euro (~2.5%).
(b) That means renminbi has in the same period appreciated against the above.
(9) Coffee prices | Brewed awakening; Plenty of coffee, to few drinkers.
(10) Boom and bust in Asia | Going for Growth; Explaining Asia’s economic success is as easy as one, two, three.
http://www.economist.com/news/bo ... -three-going-growth
(book review on Joe Studwell, How Asia Works: Success and Failure in the World’s Most Dynamic Region. Grove, 2013)
"Asia’s post-war miracle economies emerged, he [Studwell] argues, by following a recipe with just three ingredients: land reform; export-led, state-backed manufacturing; and financial repression. The process began with the ousting of the landlords. Feudal estates were broken up and divided among small farmers, who also received cheap credit and valuable advice. Smallholder farming requires 'grotesque' amounts of labour, Mr Studwell concedes. But that is a good thing, because countries as poor as Taiwan or South Korea were in the 1950s have labour—and only labour—in abundance. Tightly planted, closely tended farms coax the best yields out of each parcel of land. This rural bounty then creates room for the next step: export-led manufacturing.
"Mr Studwell’s recipe is not original: the formula dates back at least 140 years, he shows, to Japan under the Meiji emperor. Only the first step, smallholder farming, would be backed by this newspaper [which is how Economist identifies itself, as opposed to, say, a weekly or magazine].
Note:
(a) Washington Consensus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Consensus
(section 1.1 Original sense: Williamson's Ten Points)
(b) Of course, Taiwan and China have outgrown "smallholder farming" and regretted it, which is not suitable for automation.
(c) "Its heart is a historical account of how smallholder farming, export-led manufacturing and financial repression took root in Asia’s miracle economies, such as Japan and Taiwan, but failed to bed down in the Philippines and Indonesia."
bed (vi):
"1a : to find or make sleeping accommodations —usually used with down <a place to bed down>
b : to go to bed —usually used with down <bed down at midnight>"
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bed
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