##
Global Ponzi meltdown/House of Cards ##
South
Korea’s household debt has more than doubled over the last
decade to almost $1 trillion. The
debt-to-disposable-income ratio in South Korea of over 160%
is much higher than that of the U.S., Germany, France and the
U.K.
More
than 2 million people, or 13 per cent of the estimated 16 million
Australians using credit, are at risk of credit default.
Mario
Draghi, the ECB’s president, seemed unable to secure backing for
his €1 trillion stimulus plan from Germany
##
Airline Death Spiral ##
A
sudden failure of all electronic systems at the international
terminal of the Chennai airport, paralysed operations during
peak hour. According to well-placed sources, Customs and Immigration
departments were the worst hit by the failure, as
individual airlines managed to get their back-up servers online
and continued functioning.
As
one British airport faces imminent closure, and another is set
to lose all scheduled flights this month, a senior
aviation figure has said departure tax should be applied
only at London airports.
Losing
altitude
Only
three out of 15 global airline stock listings since the start of 2010
are trading above their offer price as of October 3... Returns in the
industry worldwide remain 2.2 per cent below the cost of capital,
the International Air Transport Association reported in June.
##
Fault lines/flashpoints/powder kegs/military/war drums ##
Self-guided
unmanned patrol boats that can leave warships they're protecting
and swarm and attack potential threats on the water could
join the Navy's fleet within a year.
A recent
spate of dangerous midair encounters between American
military aircraft and Chinese and Russian planes in the Pacific
is the result of increasingly assertive strategies by both U.S.
adversaries to project power far beyond their borders, according
to the top U.S. Air Force commander in the region.
##
Global unrest/mob rule/angry people/torches and pitchforks ##
##
Energy/resources ##
DOE
eyes limiting aircon temp in malls to save energy (Philippines)
Norway’s state
oil company Statoil, faced with falling oil prices and rising costs,
reportedly plans to cut another 500 jobs on its
offshore platforms. More land-based employees may lose their
jobs as well, as the country’s oil and offshore industry
stops gushing.
##
Infrastructure scavenging ##
Gautrain
services resume after cable theft (South
Africa)
##
Got food? ##
##
Lifestyle Solutions ##
We've put
all our hopes, dreams and chips on Plan A, as if security flows from
institutional promises rather than from being adaptable,
resilient and able to create value in a variety of
circumstances.
##
Environment/health ##
The
projected sea-level rise of the next quarter-century or so because of
climate change will occur, albeit briefly, in Miami next
Thursday. On that day, the alignment of the sun, earth and moon
will produce a King Tide — the highest high tide of the year,
a full foot above normal, or about half the sea level rise Miami
is expected to experience by 2060.
##
Intelligence/propaganda/security/internet/cyberwar ##
The
NSA and Me (James
Bamford)
Since
the Contra-cocaine scandal surfaced in 1985, major U.S. news
outlets have disparaged it, most notably when the big
newspapers destroyed Gary Webb for reviving it in 1996. But a
New York Times review of a movie on Webb finally admits the
reality.
##
Systemic breakdown/collapse/unsustainability ##
Americans
lack confidence in the government's ability to protect their
personal safety and economic security, a sign that
their widespread unease about the state of the nation
extends far beyond politics, according to the latest
Associated Press-GfK poll.
Sand
is becoming so scarce that stealing it has become an attractive
business model. With residential towers rising ever higher
and development continuing apace in Asia and Africa, demand for
the finite resource is insatiable.
##
Japan ##
Sorry,
I can't agree with the IMF, whose officials should live here and
watch what's left of the countryside retreat under the relentless
onslaught of totally needless construction projects. -- RF
Japan's
government says it will help smaller businesses struggling
with higher costs for fuel and other imported materials amid
the yen's depreciation.
##
China ##
On
Thursday, the Chinese central government announced on its
website that the State Council, with the approval of the National
People’s Congress, will establish quotas for borrowings by local
governments. Moreover, Beijing said it was banning fund raisings
through special purpose vehicles and other “corporate
channels” and announced it will not fund bail outs.
##
UK ##
##
US ##
Were
it not for people dropping out of the labor force over the past
several years, the unemployment rate would be well over 9%.
That’s
right, the labor force grew by only 7% of the gain in
adult population. That explains, of course, why the labor
force participation rate of 66.0% back at the time of the
crisis has plunged to a 36-year low of 62.7% in September. Or
to put it another way, the employment-to-population ratio
of 59.0% last month compared to just under 62% six years ago
and 64.2% in the year 2000.
Sears
Holdings Corp.'s deepening financial troubles have forced
insurers and banks to raise the cost of guaranteeing payment
to vendors, rattling the retailer's supply chain as the company
heads into the key holiday season.
Chicago’s
unfunded pension obligations have ballooned to $37.3 billion —
a more than three-fold increase since 2003 — because
of inadequate employer contributions, declining investment
income and a shrinking base of active employees, a taxpayers’
watchdog group has concluded.
It
is hard to feel the tornado of price erosion when you are
standing in the eye of the financial storm.
The
ongoing U.S. energy boom may be driving gasoline prices lower,
but homeowners who heat with natural gas may be in for another
winter of sticker shock.
Prepare
to start paying for tap water (at
restaurants)
And
finally...
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