Bankruptcy blog

August 25, 2008

Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane

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The Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane is an ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Roman Catholic Church in the state of Washington in the United States. It is led by a prelate bishop which serves as pastor to the motherchurch in the Spokane Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes.

Canonically erected on December 17, 1913, the territories of the diocese were taken from the former Diocese of Seattle.

Approximately 90,000 Catholics in Washington state are served by the Diocese.US Church offers abuse settlement, 2007-1-5, BBC News, Retrieved 2007-6-30 There are 82 parishes in the diocese. http://www.deseretnews.com/article/1,5143,695216117,00.html

The current bishop of the Diocese of Spokane is William S. Skylstad. Bishop Skylstad was elected to a three-year term as president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops on 15 November 2004.

Contents


Sex abuse settlement and bankruptcy

Under Bishop Skylstad the diocese declared bankruptcy to protect it from claims of people molested by priests.

The Diocese of Spokane as part of its bankruptcy has agreed to pay at least US$48 million as compensation to people abused by priests. This payout has to be agreed with by the victims and a Judge before it will be made.

According to Federal Bankruptcy Judge Gregg W. Zive, money for the settlement would come from insurance companies, the sale of church property, contributions from Catholic groups and from the diocese’s parishes.


High schools

  • Desales Catholic High School, Walla Walla
  • Gonzaga Preparatory School, Spokane
  • Tri-Cities Prep, Pasco


Colleges

  • Gonzaga University, Spokane
  • Bishop White Semminary, Spokane


See also

  • Roman Catholic sex abuse cases
  • Cases of child sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church


External links

  • Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane
  • Catholic Hierarchy Profile of the Diocese of Spokane


References

August 10, 2008

Jens of Sweden

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Jens of Sweden was a Swedish company founded by Jens Nylander.
They mostly made portable media players.
Nylander declared the company bankrupt on 20 September 2005. According to Nylander, the company’s financial problems were mostly due to the bankruptcy of the American reseller Outwardsound, which left Jens of Sweden with claims of 700 000 Swedish kronor, and the Korean manufacturer Iops. Iops made the MP-130, but technical problems with the player forced Jens of Sweden to repair the players at a cost of approximately 3-4 million kronor. After this, the company canceled their payments to Iops.


Products

  • MP-450
  • MP-400
  • MP-120
  • SoundBridge (Rebranded from Roku[1])


Discontinued

  • MP-100
  • MP-110
  • MP-130
  • MP-300


External links

  • Official Website
  • source for information about bankruptcy (in Swedish)

July 21, 2008

Superintendent of Bankruptcy

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Superintendent of Bankruptcy (Canada)

The role of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy is to ensure that bankruptcies and insolvencies in Canada are conducted in a fair and orderly manner.

As stated on the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy Website:

“Whether you are a debtor (you owe money), a creditor (you are owed money) or a trustee (someone who administers bankruptcies and insolvencies), our goals are equally simple: to make the bankruptcy and insolvency process easier for you to understand and provide you with the information you need to best manage your situation.”

CO - Commerce Officers work here as Assistant Superintendents, Senior Bankruptcy Analysts and Bankruptcy Analysts.
PM - Program Managers work here as Assistant Bankruptcy Analysts.

July 8, 2008

Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 8:10 pm

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane is an ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Roman Catholic Church in the state of Washington in the United States. It is led by a prelate bishop which serves as pastor to the motherchurch in the Spokane Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes.

Canonically erected on December 17, 1913, the territories of the diocese were taken from the former Diocese of Seattle.

Approximately 90,000 Catholics in Washington state are served by the Diocese.US Church offers abuse settlement, 2007-1-5, BBC News, Retrieved 2007-6-30 There are 82 parishes in the diocese. http://www.deseretnews.com/article/1,5143,695216117,00.html

The current bishop of the Diocese of Spokane is William S. Skylstad. Bishop Skylstad was elected to a three-year term as president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops on 15 November 2004.

Contents


Sex abuse settlement and bankruptcy

Under Bishop Skylstad the diocese declared bankruptcy to protect it from claims of people molested by priests.

The Diocese of Spokane as part of its bankruptcy has agreed to pay at least US$48 million as compensation to people abused by priests. This payout has to be agreed with by the victims and a Judge before it will be made.

According to Federal Bankruptcy Judge Gregg W. Zive, money for the settlement would come from insurance companies, the sale of church property, contributions from Catholic groups and from the diocese’s parishes.


High schools

  • Desales Catholic High School, Walla Walla
  • Gonzaga Preparatory School, Spokane
  • Tri-Cities Prep, Pasco


Colleges

  • Gonzaga University, Spokane
  • Bishop White Semminary, Spokane


See also

  • Roman Catholic sex abuse cases
  • Cases of child sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church


External links

  • Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane
  • Catholic Hierarchy Profile of the Diocese of Spokane


References

June 29, 2008

Psychology of learning

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The psychology of learning is a theoretical science which seeks understanding of learning.

Learning is a process that depends on experience and leads to longterm changes in behavior potential. Behavior potential designates the possible behavior of an individual, not actual behavior. The main assumption behind all learning psychology is that the effects of the environment, conditioning, reinforcement, etc. provide psychologists with the best information from which to understand human behavior.

As opposed to short term changes in behavior potential (caused e.g. by fatigue) learning implies long term changes. As opposed to long term changes caused by aging and development, learning implies changes related directly to experience.

Learning theories try to better understand how the learning process works. Major research traditions are behaviorism, Cognitivism (psychology) and self-regulated learning. Neurosciences have provided important insights into learning, too, even when using much simpler organisms than humans (aplysia).


See also

  • Learning
  • Latent learning
  • Learning theory (education)


Readings

  • Zentall, T.R. (2006). Imitation: Definitions, evidence, and mechanisms. Animal Cognition, 9, 335-353. (A thorough review of different types of social learning) Full text

June 22, 2008

Law of effect

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The law of effect is a principle of psychology described by Edward Thorndike in 1898Thorndike, E. L. (1898). Animal intelligence: An experimental study of the associative processes in animals. Psychological Review Monograph Supplement, 2 (no. 4), 1-109.. It holds that responses to stimuli that produce a satisfying or pleasant state of affairs in a particular situation are more likely to occur again in the situation. Conversely, responses that produce a discomforting, annoying or unpleasant effect are less likely to occur again in the situation.

The law is important in understanding learning, especially as it relates to operant conditioning. However its status is controversial. Particularly in relation to animal learning, it is not obvious how to define a “satisfying state of affairs” or an “annoying state of affairs” independent of their ability to induce instrumental learning, and the law of effect has therefore been widely criticised as logically circular. In the study of operant conditioning, most psychologists have therefore adopted B. F. Skinner’s proposal to define a reinforcer as any stimulus which, when presented after a response, leads to an increase in the future rate of that response. On that basis, the law of effect follows tautologically from the definition of a reinforcer.

In an influential paper of 1970Herrnstein, R. J. (1970). On the law of effect. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 13, 243-266., R. J. Herrnstein proposed a quantitative relationship between response rate (B) and reinforcement rate (Rf):

B = k Rf / (Rf0 + Rf)

where k and Rf0 are constants. Herrnstein proposed that this formula, which he derived from the matching law he had observed in studies of concurrent schedules of reinforcement, should be regarded as a quantification of the law of effect. While the qualitative law of effect may be a tautology, this quantitative version is not.


References

June 20, 2008

Parable of the Growing Seed

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The Parable of the Growing Seed is a parable found in the Gospel of Mark () and partly in that of Thomas (Thomas 21d). Its fragmentary presence in Thomas makes it plausible for it to have ultimately derived from the Q Gospel, though it is unusual for it not to also be present in either the Gospel of Matthew or that of Luke.

In the parable, Jesus likens the growth of the Kingdom of God to a man scattering seeds on the ground: they sprout and grow without the man doing anything more, or even understanding the process by which they grow. In time the grain ripens and the man harvests it. The Gospel of Thomas only contains the last part of this, the cutting down; the initial part is only implied.

Most scholars interpret the parable as meaning that one cannot, and should not try to, understand the process of spiritual growth, any more than other obscure and complex processes, though the end results themselves are rewarding. Most Evangelical Christians have similar opinions, but additionally interpret the parable in a similar manner to Dr R.A. Cole (in New Bible Commentary) - that one need not understand spiritual growth in order to share it.

June 17, 2008

Section 51(i) of the Australian Constitution

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Section 51(i) is a subsecton of Section 51 of the Australian Constitution enables the Commonwealth Government of Australia both to regulate and to participate in trade and commerce with other countries and among the States.

The potential reach of s51(i) is very broad. The words “trade” and “commerce” in s51(i) also occur in Section 92 of the Constitution, where the expression used is “trade, commerce, and intercourse”.

“Trade” and “commerce” have been broadly construed. The early case of W & A McArthur Ltd v Queensland held that the words extended to “the mutual communings, the negotiations, verbal and by correspondence, the bargain, the transport and the delivery”.

In Australian National Airways Pty Ltd v Commonwealth (ANA Case) (1945), the High Court held that the Commonwealth could use s51(i) to establish its own government-owned instrumentality in the form of the Australian National Airways.


Section 92 of the Constitution

Section 92 states that “trade, commerce, and intercourse among the States… shall be absolutely free”. In the case of James v Commonwealth, the High Court decided that this requirement restricted the Commonwealth Parliament as well as State governments. This impacted on the Parliament’s ability to exercise powers under subsection s51(i), regarding “trade and commerce with other countries, and among the States”.

June 14, 2008

List of download managers

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The following is a list of download managers.

Contents


Graphical

  • Aria
  • ConnectFusion
  • Download Accelerator Plus
  • Download Express
  • DownloadStudio
  • DownThemAll! (Firefox extension)
  • Faster Downloader
  • FlashGet
  • Free Download Manager
  • GetRight
  • Go!Zilla
  • Gwget
  • Interarchy
  • Internet Download Accelerator
  • Internet Download Manager
  • KGet
  • LeechGet
  • Orbit Downloader
  • Net Transport
  • NetAnts
  • Multi-Threaded Download Manager
  • ReGet
  • TrueDownloader
  • wxDownload Fast


Command-line

  • aria2
  • cURL
  • wget
  • axel


See also

  • Comparison of download managers
  • Offline Browser


External links

  • Review of download managers (this article is from 2003)

May 20, 2008

Ministry of Information

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — admin @ 10:26 pm

The term Ministry of Information may refer to the following:

  • Minister of Information - A position in the British government during the First and Second World Wars as head of the Ministry of Information.
  • The Thailand Ministry of Information and Communication Technology
  • A similar position in other countries:
    • Egypt: see Cabinet of Egypt
    • Saudi Arabia
    • Singapore: see Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts
  • A fictional government position in the book Nineteen Eighty-Four (see Ministry of Truth).
  • A fictional government position in the film Brazil.

May 16, 2008

Superintendent of Bankruptcy

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 5:30 pm

Superintendent of Bankruptcy (Canada)

The role of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy is to ensure that bankruptcies and insolvencies in Canada are conducted in a fair and orderly manner.

As stated on the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy Website:

“Whether you are a debtor (you owe money), a creditor (you are owed money) or a trustee (someone who administers bankruptcies and insolvencies), our goals are equally simple: to make the bankruptcy and insolvency process easier for you to understand and provide you with the information you need to best manage your situation.”

CO - Commerce Officers work here as Assistant Superintendents, Senior Bankruptcy Analysts and Bankruptcy Analysts.
PM - Program Managers work here as Assistant Bankruptcy Analysts.

May 8, 2008

Superintendent of Bankruptcy

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 6:20 pm

Superintendent of Bankruptcy (Canada)

The role of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy is to ensure that bankruptcies and insolvencies in Canada are conducted in a fair and orderly manner.

As stated on the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy Website:

“Whether you are a debtor (you owe money), a creditor (you are owed money) or a trustee (someone who administers bankruptcies and insolvencies), our goals are equally simple: to make the bankruptcy and insolvency process easier for you to understand and provide you with the information you need to best manage your situation.”

CO - Commerce Officers work here as Assistant Superintendents, Senior Bankruptcy Analysts and Bankruptcy Analysts.
PM - Program Managers work here as Assistant Bankruptcy Analysts.

Secretary of State of Illinois

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The Secretary of State of Illinois is the keeper of the official records, laws, and Great Seal of the U.S. state of Illinois. These duties have remained unchanged since Illinois became a state in 1818.

In addition, the Secretary of State shall perform other duties that may be prescribed by law. By statute, the Illinois Secretary of State is tasked with the duty of issuing licenses to Illinois-registered motor vehicles and their drivers. Enforcement of these duties has made the Secretary of State’s office a key bureau in the enforcement of driving-under-the-influence or DUI laws. In addition, the Secretary of State is the Illinois State Librarian and is the custodian of the Illinois State Capitol.

The Secretary of State, to be eligible to take his or her oath of office, must be a United States citizen of at least 25 years of age, and a resident of Illinois for at least three years preceding the election.

Contents


Facilities

The Secretary of State’s office occupies three buildings of the Illinois Capitol Complex in Springfield, Illinois. Many of the Secretary of State’s workers assigned to motor vehicle and licensing duties work in the Howlett Building, south of the Capitol. The State Archives are housed in the Norton Building, southwest of the Capitol. The Illinois State Library is located in the Brooks Library, east of the Capitol and named in honor of longtime state Poet Laureate Gwendolyn Brooks, winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1950.

In addition, the Secretary of State operates 136 Driver Services license-issuing facilities statewide.


Current occupant

As of 2007, the current Illinois Secretary of State is Jesse White. He is currently serving his third term. First elected in November 1998, he is the 37th Illinois Secretary of State and the first African-American to serve in this office. A longtime elected officeholder from Chicago, Illinois, White is a member of the Democratic Party.


Seal of Illinois

The official motto of the State of Illinois is “State Sovereignty - National Union“. The Illinois Secretary of State in 1867, Sharon Tyndale, disliked the word “sovereignty“, which he viewed as emblematic of the doctrine of state’s rights that Federal troops had fought against in the American Civil War. As the keeper of the Great Seal of Illinois, he had it re-engraved so that the offending word “sovereignty” was upside down. This 1867 seal redesign continues in use to this day, and can be seen, among other places, as the principal device on the flag of Illinois.


See also

  • List of Illinois Secretaries of State


External links

  • Illinois Secretary of State official website

May 7, 2008

Letter of protest

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A letter of protest is a diplomatic document presented by one state’s foreign ministry against another state.

A letter of protest is written in a highly formal manner, intended to be both courteous and critical at the same time. For example, in order to express an exceptionally strong anger towards a foreign government’s policy, a letter of protest would say “We condemn this action in the strongest possible terms.”

April 25, 2008

Life Insurance Corporation of India

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The Life Insurance Corporation of India (LICI) is the largest life insurance company in India; it is fully owned by the Government of India. It was founded in 1956.

Headquartered in Mumbai, which is considered the financial capital of India, the Life Insurance Corporation of India currently has 7 zonal Offices and 100 divisional offices located in different parts of India, at least 2048 branches located in different cities and towns of India, and has a network of around one million agents [1] for soliciting life insurance business from the public.

Contents


History

The Oriental Life Insurance Company, the first corporate entity in India offering life insurance cover was established in Calcutta in 1818. Europeans in India were its primary target market, and it charged Indians heftier premiums. The Bombay Mutual Life Assurance Society, formed in 1870, was the first native insurance provider. Other insurance companies established in the pre-independence era included

  • Bharat Insurance Company (1896)
  • United India (1906)
  • National Indian (1906)
  • National Insurance (1906)
  • Co-operative Assurance (1906)
  • Hindustan Co-operative (1907)
  • Indian Mercantile
  • General Assurance
  • Swadeshi Life (later Bombay Life)

The first 150 years were marked mostly by turbulent economic conditions. It witnessed, India’s First War of Independence, adverse affects of the World War I and World War II on the economy of India, and in between them the period of world wide economic crises triggered by the Great depression. The first half of the 20th century also saw a heightened struggle for India’s independence. The aggregate effect of these events led to a high rate of bankruptcies and liquidation of life insurance companies in India. This had adversely affected the faith of the general public in the utility of obtaining life cover.

The LIFE INSURANCE Act and the Provident Fund Act were passed in 1912, providing the first regulatory mechanisms in the Life Insurance industry. The Indian Insurance Companies Act of 1928 authorized the government to obtain statistical information from companies operating in both life and non-life insurance areas. The subsequent Insurance Act of 1938 brought stricter state control over an industry that had seen several financially unsound ventures fail. A bill was also introduced in the Legislative Assembly in 1944 to nationalize the insurance industry.

Nearly a decade after India achieved independence, the Parliament of India passed the Life Insurance of India Act on 19th June 1956, and the Life Insurance Corporation of India was created on 1st September, 1956, by consolidating the life insurance business of 245 private life insurers and other entities offering life insurance services. Nationalization of the life insurance business in India was a result of the Industrial Policy Resolution of 1956, which had created a policy framework for extending state control over at least seventeen sectors of the economy, including the life insurance. The company began operations with 5 zonal offices, 33 divisional offices and 212 branch offices.


Current status

Over its existence of around 50 years, Life Insurance Corporation of India, which commanded a monopoly of soliciting and selling life insurance in India, created huge surpluses, and contributed around 7 % of India’s GDP in 2006.

The Corporation, which started its business with around 300 offices, 5.6 million policies and a corpus of INR 459 million, has grown to 2,048 offices servicing around 180 million policies and a corpus of over INR 3.4 trillion.

The organization now comprises 2048 branches, 100 divisional offices and 7 zonal offices, and employs over 1 million agents. It also operates in 12 other countries, primarily to cater to the needs of Non Resident Indians.

With the change in the India’s economic philosophy from the early 1990s, and the subsequent relaxation of state control over several sectors of the economy, the monopolistic position of the Life Insurance Corporation of India was diluted, and it has had to compete with a number of other corporate entities, Indian as well as transnational Life Insurance brands.

In the fiscal year 2006-07 Life Insurance Corporation of India’s number of policy holders are said to have crossed a whopping 200 million (fourth in terms of population of the countries of the world)


Subsidiaries

LIC owns the following subsidiaries:

  • Life Insurance Corporation of India International: This is a joint venture offshore company promoted by LIC which commenced operations in July, 1989 with the objectives of offering US$ denomimated policies to cater to the insurance needs of NRIs and providing insurance services to holders of LIC policies currently residing in the Gulf. LIC International operates in all GCC countries.
  • LIC Nepal: A joint venture company formed in 2001 with the Vishal Group of Industries, Nepal.
  • LIC Lanka: A joint venture company formed in 2003 with the Bartleet Group of Companies, Sri Lanka.
  • LIC Housing Finance: Incorporated in 19th June 1989, its main objective is to provide long term finance forconstruction or purchase of houses or apartments. It has a Dubai office.

    • LICHFL Care Homes: A wholly owned subsidiary of LIC Housing Finance, it builds and operates “Assisted Community Living Centres” for senior citizens.


Technology usage

The insurance giant opted for internet services for all its subscribers and developed massive networking for own usage and internal governance. While the pros and cons of internal networking remains concealed within the officials and hidden for the common customers, the customer portal somehow fails to satisfy the 21st century customers. Apparently, low bandwidth, unwise web page hyper linking, illogical page set ups, all just contribute to the irritation of common net age customers.

The portal gives opportunity to register any policy to be tagged up with any one. As a matter of fact, if Mr. ‘A’ knows the policy number and premium value of certain policy ‘X’ of Mr. ‘B,’ ‘A’ can tag up ‘X’ with his own Profile in LICI portal and get all the details of the policy.
Moreover, though the organization is officially known as Life Insurance Corporation of India, abbreviated, LICI, the portal welcomes a customer to LIC.
As a result of all these, online payment of premium through the site could not be a popular option for the customers.
The site fails to show the details of all its recognized agents in its Agent locator section.


External links

  • LICI - Official Website
  • LICI - International Website
  • LICI UK - UK Website
  • LICI Fiji - Fiji Website
  • LICI Sri Lanka - Sri Lanka Website
  • LICI Mutual - Mutual Fund Website

Provincial Bank of Canada

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 6:50 am

The Provincial Bank of Canada (French: Banque provinciale du Canada) was a Quebec-based bank in Canada that was the product of mergers between the Banque Jacques-Cartier (1861), the Banque d’économie de Québec (1848), the Banque populaire de Québec (1868), and the Unity Bank of Canada (1972).

It merged with the Banque Canadienne Nationale to form the National Bank of Canada in 1979.


See also

  • List of banks in Canada

April 10, 2008

Controlled Substances Penalties Amendments Act of 1984

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 3:55 am

The Controlled Substances Penalties Amendments Act of 1984, 98 Stat. 2068 (), generally enhanced the penalties for violations of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970. The 1984 legislation removed an ambiguity in the then-existing law by providing that a State drug felony conviction would trigger the provisions enhancing penalties for recidivists; it went further by providing that a Foreign drug felony conviction would have the same effect. Finally, the 1984 legislation doubled the penalties for distribution of controlled substances where the offense is committed on or within 1,000 feet of school property.

March 24, 2008

The Diffusion of Our Inherent Situation

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 9:40 pm

The Diffusion of Our Inherent Situation is the 2005 7″ single by the New Zealand post-rock band Jakob. It is the second single off their album Cale:Drew, after Semaphore.


Track listing

  1. The Diffusion of Our Inherent Situation 6:12
  2. Resounding 5:08

A video for The Diffusion of Our Inherent Situation was made by Ed Davis, and is available at the band’s official website.


External links

  • Jakob discography page
  • Jakob video page
  • Alternative video page

March 21, 2008

War of succession

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A war of succession is a civil war prompted by two or more individuals’ claim as successor to the monarch. The individuals are supported by competing factions within the royal court. Foreign powers might also intervene through allying themselves with a faction.

  • War of Spanish Succession
  • War of Austrian Succession
  • War of Breton Succession
  • War of the Succession of Flanders and Hainault
  • War of Polish Succession
  • War of the English Succession
  • War of the Bavarian Succession
  • Landshut War of Succession

February 27, 2008

The Diffusion of Our Inherent Situation

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 10:25 pm

The Diffusion of Our Inherent Situation is the 2005 7″ single by the New Zealand post-rock band Jakob. It is the second single off their album Cale:Drew, after Semaphore.


Track listing

  1. The Diffusion of Our Inherent Situation 6:12
  2. Resounding 5:08

A

video for The Diffusion of Our Inherent Situation was made by Ed Davis, and is available at the band’s official website.


External links

  • Jakob discography page
  • Jakob video page
  • Alternative video page

Economy of Switzerland

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 8:29 pm
Economy of Switzerland
Currency Swiss Franc (CHF)
Fiscal year Calendar year
Trade Organisations OECD, WTO, EFTA, JEC
Statistics
GDP Ranking (2007) [1] 36th
GDP (2006) [2] CHF486.2, $371.5 billion
GDP growth rate (2006) 4.9% nominal, 3.2% real
GDP per Capita (Q2 ‘04 annualised) $33,800
GDP by sector (2004) agriculture (1.5%), industry (34.0%), services (64.5%)
Inflation rate (Q1 2006) 1.4%
Pop below poverty line (2004) NA%
Labour force (June 2004) NA million (includes unemployed)
Labour force by occupation (2002) agriculture (4.6%), industry (26.3%), services (69.1%)
Unemployment rate (2007 est) 2.5%
Main Industries machinery, chemicals, watches, textiles, precision instruments
Trading Partners
Exports $130.7 billion (2004 est)
Main Partners (2004 est) Germany 20%, US 9.1%, France 9.1%, Italy 8.8%, UK 4.9%
Imports $121.1 billion (2004 est)
Main Partners (2004 est) Germany 29%, Italy 11.8%, France 11.1%, US 7.6%, Austria 4.5%, UK 4.5%, Netherlands 4.3%
Public Finances
Public Debt (2005) 57.2% of GDP
External Debt (2005 est) $NA
Revenues (2004) $131.5 billion
Expenses (2004) $140.4 billion
Economic Aid (ODA) (1997) $1.1 billion

The economy of Switzerland is one of the world’s most stable economies. Its policy of long-term monetary security and bank secrecy has made Switzerland a safe haven for investors, creating an economy that is increasingly dependent on a steady tide of foreign investment. Because of the country’s small size and high labour specialisation, industry and trade are the keys to Switzerland’s economic livelihood.

Contents


History

For much of the 20th century Switzerland was the wealthiest country in Europe by a considerable margin. However since the 1990s it has suffered from slow growth, and as of 2005 it dropped to fourth place among European states with populations above one million in terms of nominal Gross Domestic Product per capita , behind Ireland, Denmark and Norway and to the tenth place in terms of per capita GDP at purchasing power parity(see list).

Between 1991 to 1997, Switzerland had the weakest economic growth in Western Europe, averaging no appreciable increase in gross domestic product (GDP). Beginning in 1997, however, a global resurgence in currency movement provided the necessary stimulus to the Swiss economy. It slowly gained momentum and peaked in the year 2000 with 3.0% growth in real terms.

Being so closely linked to the economies of Western Europe and the United States, Switzerland was not able to escape the slowdown felt in these countries. In 2001 the rate of growth dropped to 0.9% and in 2003 the real GDP dropped by 0.5%. The recent economic slowdown has had a noticeable impact on the labour market. The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate rose from 1.6% in June 2001 to 3.7% in October 2004, although well below the European Union (EU) unemployment average of 8.9%.

The economic slowdown finally reached Swiss business in 2003. 1,157 companies declared bankruptcy during the first fiscal quarter, 21.9% more than a year ago. Despite these signs, however, experts from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology maintain that economic performance will remain solid well into the decade.

This is a chart of trend of gross domestic product of Switzerland at market prices estimated by the International Monetary Fund with figures in millions of Swiss Francs.

Year Gross Domestic Product US Dollar Exchange
1980 183,077 1.67 Francs
1985 242,045 2.43 Francs
1990 327,584 1.38 Francs
1995 372,250 1.18 Francs
2000 415,529 1.68 Francs
2005 456,859 1.24 Francs


Defining characteristics


Trade

Apart from industry, trade has been the key to prosperity in Switzerland. The country is dependent upon exports to generate income and on imports for raw materials and goods. With the notable exception of a strict policy of agricultural protectionism, Switzerland has liberal trade and investment policies. An expansive commercial and bank law system makes Switzerland one of the most secure investment places in the world. The Swiss franc is one of the world’s soundest currencies, and the country is known for its high standard of Swiss banking and financial services.

The machinery, metals, electronics, and chemicals sectors are known for precision and quality. Together, they account for well over half of Switzerland’s export revenues. The country is approximately 60% self-sufficient, taking only 7.5% of its imports from the U.S.

Switzerland ranks 18th among the main trading partners of the U.S. worldwide. The Swiss economy earns roughly half of its corporate earnings from the export industry and about 70% of Swiss exports are destined for the EU market.

The United States is the second-largest importer (9.1%) of Swiss goods after Germany (20.0%). Germany, on the other hand, exports more to Switzerland each year than to all the countries of the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe combined. In addition, the United States is the largest foreign investor in Switzerland, and conversely, the primary destination of Swiss foreign investment. It is estimated that 200,000 American jobs depend on Swiss foreign investments. Total U.S.-Swiss bilateral trade, nevertheless, decreased by 12% to $17.16 billion during 2002 compared to the previous year.


Agricultural protectionism

Switzerland is extremely protective of its agricultural industry. High tariffs and extensive domestic subsidisation ensures that the country will remain largely self sufficient agriculturally. According to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Switzerland is subsidizing more than 70% of its agriculture compared to 35% in the EU. The 2007 Agricultural Program, recently adopted by the Swiss Federal Assembly, will increase subsidies by SF 63 million to SF 14.092 billion.

The stringent policy of agricultural protectionism is generally harmful to the workforce. Domestic agriculture will monopolise labour that can be better deployed elsewhere and acts as a shield against beneficial import of labour. Consequently, Switzerland has a high cost of living in not only food but also rents, since much land needed for human occupation is retained by farms. About 40% of Switzerland is covered for agricultural purposes.


Tourism

Switzerland has a highly developed tourism infrastructure, making it a good market for tourism-related equipment and services. Tourism is the most important to Switzerland, contributing about SF 1.5 billion to the Swiss economy every year.


Workforce

The Swiss economy is characterised by a skilled and peaceful workforce. One quarter of the country’s full-time workers are unionised. Labour and management relations are amicable, characterised by a willingness to settle disputes instead of resorting to labour action. About 600 collective bargaining agreements exist today in Switzerland and are regularly renewed without major problems.

With the bankruptcies in 2003, however, the mood is changing. Massive layoffs resulting from the global economic slowdown, major management scandals, and different foreign investment attitudes have strained the traditional Swiss labour peace. Swiss trade unions have encouraged strikes against several companies, including Swiss International Air Lines, Coca-Cola, and Orange. Total days lost to strikes, however, remain among the lowest in the OECD.


Income

Switzerland is among the world’s most prosperous countries in terms of private income. In 2003 the median household income in Switzerland was an estimated 96,000 CHF or US$ 54,000, 26% higher than the 2003 U.S. median of $43,000, slighlty less than that of the wealthiest U.S. state, New Hampshire.


Economic policy


Terrorism

Through the United States-Swiss Joint Economic Commission (JEC), Switzerland has passed strict legislation covering anti-terrorism financing and the prevention of terroristic acts, marked by the implementation of several anti-money laundering procedures and the seizure of al-Qaeda accounts. Continued relationship with the United States through the JEC has brought the Swiss economy into closer proximity with that of the Western world, with mutualistic goals in terrorism prevention providing the impetus.


European Union

With exception of agriculture, economic and trade barriers between the European Union and Switzerland are minimal. In the wake of the Swiss voters’ rejection of the European Economic Area Agreement in 1992, the Swiss Government set its sights on negotiating bilateral economic agreements with the EU. Four years of negotiations culminated in Bilaterals, a cross-platform agreement covering seven sectors: research, public procurement, technical barriers to trade, agriculture, civil aviation, land transport, and the free movement of persons. Parliament officially endorsed the Bilaterals in 1999 and it was approved by general referendum in May 2000. The agreements, which were then ratified by the European Parliament and the legislatures of its member states, entered into force on June 1, 2002. The Swiss government has since embarked on a second round of negotiations, called the Bilaterals II, which will further strengthen the two organisations’ economic ties.

Switzerland has since brought most of their practices into conformity with European Union policies and norms in order to maximise the country’s international competitiveness. While most of the EU policies are not contentious, police and judicial cooperation to international law enforcement and the taxation of savings are controversial, mainly because of possible side effects on bank secrecy.

Swiss and EU finance ministers agreed in June 2003 that Swiss banks would levy a withholding tax on EU citizens’ savings income. The tax would increase gradually to 35% by 2011, with 75% of the funds being transferred to the EU. Recent estimates value EU capital inflows to Switzerland to $8.3 billion.


Institutional membership

Switzerland is a member of a number of international economic organizations, including the United Nations, the World Trade Organization, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.


See also

  • Merchant Marine of Switzerland
  • Economy of Europe
  • Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry FH
  • 2000 Watt society


References


External links

  • OECD’s Switzerland country Web site and OECD Economic Survey of Switzerland
  • SWISS MARKET IND
  • Schweizerische Nationalbank (Swiss Central Bank)
  • Swiss Federal Statistical Office
  • Gross Domestic Product Growth - Switzerland

http://www.ubs.com/1/e/ubs_ch/wealth_mgmt_ch/research/swiss.html

List of asteroids/106001–107000

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 8:12 pm

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”001″| 106001–106100 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”101″| 106101–106200 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”201″| 106201–106300 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”301″| 106301–106400 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”401″| 106401–106500 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”501″| 106501–106600 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”601″| 106601–106700 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”701″| 106701–106800 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”801″| 106801–106900 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”901″| 106901–107000 [ edit]

American Institute of Instruction

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The

American Institute of Instruction was formed in 1830. The original purpose was to secure a Massachusetts Superintendent of Common Schools. Due the work of Samuel Read Hall, George B. Emerson and E. A. Andrews, legislation was passed leading to both the appointment of Horace Mann as Secretary of the State Board of Education, and the Acts of 1837, providing for a Superintendent of Public Education.Torrey, George Nelson . Reverend Samuel Read Hall - An early Yankee Educator. The Melrose Mirror. Accessed August 23, 2007.


References

February 21, 2008

River of Eternity

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River of Eternity is an early version what became the Riverworld series by Philip José Farmer.

The original “Riverworld” story was a 150,000-word novel titled Owe for the Flesh, which ended with the protagonist (called Richard Black in this version) finding the tower at the end of the river. Farmer wrote it as his entry in a science fiction novel contest run by Shasta Press and subsidized by Pocket Books. He won the contest but received no money. The work was never published and was lost in its original form. Farmer revised and retitled the book River of Eternity, but that version remained unpublished as well and was thought lost. In the 1960s, Farmer reworked the material yet again into the magazine novellas and serials that would form the final Riverworld sequence. Then in 1983, a copy of the River of Eternity manuscript was discovered in a garage and published by Phantasia Press. Farmer recounts the whole story in his introduction to the Phantasia edition of River of Eternity.