Sunday, 31 December 2017

JAPAN TIMES Brexit Headlines: 1 Dec - 31 Dec 2017

The Japan Times
Brexit Headlines

The top overseas news stories of 2017

WORLDDEC 26, 2017

The Japan Times newsroom selected these international news stories as the most important of 2017. 1. Trump takes power: Donald Trump was inaugurated U.S. president on Jan. 20, ushering in a tumultuous period for the United States. Trump attempted to shake up much of what ...

BUSINESS   DEC 8, 2017

Big companies are stepping up their plans in case Britain crashes out of the European 
Union without a deal as Prime Minister Theresa May struggles to get talks back on 
track after a major setback. Britain is aiming to agree with the EU on Dec. ...




Friday, 29 December 2017

Must-Reads of 2017: Progressives vs. Populists

Three books explain why Trump and Brexit should have come as no surprise.
78

No respect.
 
Photographer: Leon Neal/Getty Images

The great political question of the moment is what to make of the rise of populism -- both in the U.S. and in Europe. Few things matter more than containing and turning back this surge's excesses, but doing so will be far more difficult if its causes go unexamined. Three books published this year made invaluable contributions to this essential endeavor.
The populist campaigns that elected Donald Trump, started the countdown to Brexit, and put far-right political parties in or close to power in much of Europe are essentially protest movements -- and in every case, the white working class has been the driving force.
These movements, preoccupied with immigration, scoop up every narrow-minded xenophobe and outright racist. But there are far too few of those to explain what has happened. If bigotry were the whole story, populism couldn't have scored so many victories. Why did millions of decent members of the white working class -- hard workers, good neighbors, proud citizens -- turn against centrist mainstream politics?
The answer suggested by all three books is that Trump supporters, Brexiteers and the rest didn't so much abandon centrist mainstream politics. Centrist mainstream politics abandoned them.
In "White Working Class: Overcoming Class Cluelessness in America," Joan C. Williams takes the country's professional-managerial elite to task for its moral complacency and failure to understand the values of the white working class. The book offers countless telling examples of this cultural blindness.
For instance, the PME, as she calls it, is either perplexed or just amused by the fact that many working-class voters support tax cuts for the rich while opposing more generous benefits for the poor. How dumb can those suckers be? Well, many of them take the view that lower taxes are good for the economy, and that what's good for the economy is good for jobs. They don't resent rich people if they think their wealth has been earned -- and they do resent paying benefits, financed out of their taxes, to people who won't work. None of that is dumb.
There's a widening empathy gap, no doubt, between the professional-managerial elite and the white working class in both the U.S. and Europe, but Williams is right that the telling deficit is not in empathy but in respect. The elite is capable of empathizing with the working class -- generously allowing that its pathologies are understandable under the circumstances -- but it rarely any longer grants respect. The best the mainstream center-left can do is swallow its disgust now and then, and offer condescension instead. To many working-class voters, that's worse. Hence Trump.
David Goodhart's "The Road to Somewhere: The New Tribes Shaping British Politics" is mainly concerned with Europe and especially Brexit. Instead of Williams's professional-managerial elite and white working class, he looks at what he calls Anywheres and Somewheres, but the categories are closely aligned. Anywheres are well educated and economically mobile, with "portable, achieved identities." Somewheres "are more rooted, and usually have 'ascribed' identities -- Scottish farmer, working-class Geordie, Cornish housewife -- based on group belonging and particular places."
Educated and affluent people, Goodhart observes, used to be more nationalistic than the rest, because they had a bigger stake in the country. Now it's the reverse. "The richer and better educated you are, the more global your attachments are likely to be." So Anywheres feel less solidarity with Somewheres, their fellow citizens. In general, the Anywhere worldview has little time for citizenship. It's universalist and post-nationalist -- not much interested in borders. Mass immigration is an unalloyed blessing: The more the better. And you think it's a problem that the European Court of Justice is the U.K.'s highest legal authority? I mean, did you go to university?
The hardening of class and cultural divisions between the professional-managerial Anywheres and the working-class Somewheres is stressing democratic politics in much of the West. What's the answer? Williams urges the elite to think harder and more open-mindedly about the values of decent working-class people. Goodhart calls for a new political settlement between Anywheres and Somewheres -- a liberal agenda, but one that's cautious on immigration and recognizes the centrality of citizenship.
Both prescriptions are consistent with the advice of the third book, Mark Lilla's "The Once and Future Liberal: After Identity Politics." Lilla -- like Williams and Goodhart, a progressive -- emphasizes the role that identity politics has played in undermining support for the liberal project. First, he says, the current preoccupation with race, gender and sexuality has encouraged a style of politics that is less concerned with seizing power than with protesting it. Second, he argues that identity politics, as practiced lately, is apt to divide rather than unite people.
This needn't be so. And historically, it hasn't been. The civil-rights movement was an identity-politics project -- but it couched its demand for justice in terms of rights the U.S. had promised to all its people. This approach presupposed the goal of a country united in justice, and that a demand expressed that way would have moral purchase. The current mode of identity politics often suggests that no such conversation is even possible. So what if we are fellow citizens? If I'm straight, I can have nothing useful to say about gay rights. If I'm white, I can have nothing useful to say about race. My role, it seems, is to shut up and feel ashamed.
The protest vote that elected Trump, ejected Britain from Europe and advanced far-right politics in Germany and elsewhere was reckless and unwise. But these studies show why it should have come as no surprise.
https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2017-12-28/must-reads-of-2017-progressives-vs-populists

Friday, 15 December 2017

Jean-Claude Juncker: "I have extraordinary faith in Theresa May"

European President Jean-Claude Juncker has signalled an end to the fractious relationship between the EU and the UK demonstrated during the first stage of Brexit talks - by saying he has "extraordinary faith" in Theresa May.
Friday 15 December 2017 9:41am
EU Leaders Move to Next Stage of Brexit Discussions
Juncker: "The second phase of Brexit talks will be significantly harder than the first" (Source: Getty)

Juncker was speaking as the leaders of the EU's 27 remaining countries were expected to give the thumbs-up to EU chief negotiator progressing to the second stage of negotiations, which are expected to focus on trade and a transition period.
Reuters reported him saying:
I have extraordinary faith in the British Prime Minister. She has agreed with me and Mr Barnier that the withdrawal agreement will first be formalised and will be voted on and then we will see.
The second phase will be significantly harder than the first and the first was very difficult.
Juncker's vote of confidence came just over 24 hours after Tory rebels scuppered the government's EU Withdrawal Bill on the eve of May's trip to the European Council.
The rebels, including Stephen Hammond and Anna Soubry, were accused of "treachery" after they voted in favour of an amendment to the bill by Dominic Grieve which sought a "meaningful" vote on the final Brexit deal.
http://www.cityam.com/277597/jean-claude-juncker-have-extraordinary-faith-theresa-may

London Overground Night Tube service arrives today: Here's what you need to know about the new 24-hour service

You may have heard the Night Tube is expanding once more, and branching out to the London Overground this week.
From tonight, new 24 hour services will get underway each Friday and Saturday between Dalston Junction and New Cross Gate.
Friday 15 December 2017 8:41am


The Night Tube is getting bigger
The Night Tube is getting bigger (Source: TfL)

You may have heard the Night Tube is expanding once more, and branching out to the London Overground this week.
From tonight, new 24 hour services will get underway each Friday and Saturday between Dalston Junction and New Cross Gate.
Friday 15 December 2017 8:41am
Here's what you need to know about the rollout, including whether more Night Tube services are on the cards...

What is the new Night Tube extension?

East London Overground services will run all night on Fridays and Saturdays starting from Friday 15 December to help those working throughout the night, as well as those enjoying east London's nightlife.

Which bit of the Overground is getting the 24 hour service?

Services will run between New Cross Gate and Dalston Junction, but Whitechapel won't get the Night Overground service until Crossrail works are complete. That's expected to join in the fun from next summer.
Here's the route:

(Source: TfL)

Are there plans to expand the Night Overground service after that?

Yes, Transport for London (TfL) plans to extend it to Highbury & Islington next year.

So the new Night Overground service will connect up with some of the Night Tube spots?

That's correct. The Night Overground will link up with the Night Tube network at Canada Water on the Jubilee Line, and then with Highbury & Islington on the Victoria Line next year.

How many Night Tube services are there again?

Five at the moment. It began on the Central and Victoria Lines in August last year, before being rolled out onto the Jubilee Line in October, the Northern Line in November, and then the Piccadilly Line last December.
The Night Tube services:

  1. Central Line: trains run between Ealing Broadway and Loughton / Hainault
  2. Victoria Line: trains run on the entire line
  3. Jubilee Line: trains run on the entire line
  4. Northern Line: trains run from High Barnet and Edgware to Morden via the Charing Cross branch
  5. Piccadilly Line: trains run between Cockfosters and Heathrow Terminal five

How has the Night Tube been doing so far?

Well, it's recorded over 9m journeys during its first year of operation. And research by London First and EY has predicted that the Night Tube will now be more beneficial to the economy than had been previously forecast. Estimates predict that over the next 30 years it will add £138m of value to the capital's economy each year - 79 per cent higher than the previous forecast of £77m.

Will Night services be expanded to other Tube lines though?

TfL is eyeing a wider rollout on its sub-surface Tube lines, but has to tie up an upgrade on them first including the introduction of a new signalling system, with work underway to improve the Circle, District, Hammersmith & City and Metropolitan Lines.
The modernisation of the lines, due to be completed in 2023, should mean Night Tube services can be introduced on them in the future.

A financial crisis in 2018? The danger signs are starting to emerge

It is 10 years since the last financial crisis, and it has taken that long for normality to return.
Friday 15 December 2017 4:09am
New York And New Jersey Continue To Recover From Superstorm Sandy
Debt levels in the major economies are now higher than pre-crisis levels (Source: Getty)

For the first time since the crisis, major economies are expanding together. Unemployment rates in the US and UK economies have halved.
However, productivity and investment growth has been on a declining trend in major economies.
This productivity puzzle may simply reflect the fact that, in a digital age, we’re mis-measuring actual, real productivity, but it is disturbing that debt levels in the major economies are now higher than pre-crisis levels. The debt overhang may itself weigh on longer-term potential growth, and could also be problematic should interest rate rises continue.
A potentially bigger problem is financial market bubbles, alongside what some commentators have called “irrational complacency”.
Major central banks never take responsibility for creating asset price bubbles, but it is often cheap money that is to blame. A decade of unconventional monetary policy has amounted to a $20 trillion monetary stimulus, which now threatens the return of financial instability.
There is a risk of market crashes in equities, bonds, and credit markets. Wage inflation might have been absent, but financial asset price inflation most certainly has not been.
In the process, this has created substantial income and wealth inequalities.
Central bankers are realising that their policies might backfire, creating financial instability, though they are publicly careful to play down the risk of market crashes and systemic financial failure.
The Fed has just implemented a third rate hike for this year at the December meeting. However, given the stimulus implied by record highs in US equities and dollar decline, US financial conditions are looser than last year.
There is little ammunition to combat either another recession, or another financial crisis – unless you think ever-lasting quantitative easing or helicopter money is the way to go.
There are more danger signs.
US equity markets are at record highs and the S&P 500 is up around 20 per cent this year. The tech-heavy Nasdaq is up over 25 per cent – reminiscent of the 2000 dot-com crash. Government bond yields are near rock-bottom. The Bank of England has found that the global risk-free rate has touched a low not seen since the 1300s.
At the same time, the ECB has created a credit bubble, with European junk bond yields actually below US Treasuries. It is unsurprising that the ECB is reluctant to withdraw monetary stimulus due to concerns it may trigger another Eurozone banking crisis.
Strategists suggest we are nearing the longest bull market in equities and bonds for 100 years. Risk-adjusted returns have been the strongest on record since the 1980s. Equities, bonds and credit are not usually simultaneously strong, apart from during the Roaring Twenties. It’s no secret what happened then.
And it’s not just traditional markets that have stretched valuations. Other asset classes and instruments are in a bubble.
Bitcoin and fine art are displaying “Eiffel Tower” chart formations, where the fall is just as steep as the rise once you crest the top.
Sotheby’s share price has been a historic indicator of financial crises on the way. A peak in the share price coincides with speculation and record art prices. Guess what it’s pointing at now.
We’re also seeing a return of so-called toxic debt instruments.
Pay-in-kind toggle notes, which allow companies to make interest payments with either cash or more debt, are coming back. When companies have a cash-flow problem, these instruments allow them to “toggle” interest payments. This can catch investors and companies in a deadly embrace when a default wipes them both out.
Ultra-easy central bank policies have created ultra-low volatility. Equity market corrections are now rarely more than five per cent. Investors trust central banks to back the markets so look to buy the dip and not go short. This explains why equity markets seem impervious to geopolitical risk.
These same policies can contribute to herd behaviour, sadly with the result that everyone goes over the cliff in the event of a crash. A big trade at the moment would be to short the CBOE VIX volatility index, based on a belief that low volatility is here to stay.
These conditions have encouraged passive investing, algorithmic trading and growth in ETFs. Passive investment has been described as “equity market quantitative easing”, as money goes in but never comes out.
These signs seem to point to a crash, but it’s worth remembering that, historically, crashes are often caused by innocuous events – ones that fly below the radar. It’s not always immediately obvious what the real culprit is.
http://www.cityam.com/277580/financial-crisis-2018-danger-signs-starting-emerge