Category: News

  • Can the G8 help Kenya increase trade?

    I have lots of family in Kenya, and a few days ago, my dad received the news that a cargo of furniture and other household goods that he’d shipped over was about to arrive at the port. To my surprise, he promptly booked a plane ticket to Kenya, and explained that it was cheaper for him to fly to Kenya and back than to leave the container at the port – as he would be charged high costs for each day that he left it there.

    Before I began lamenting Kenya’s trade policy, I recalled a seminar that I’d attended a few weeks ago at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.  The seminar was entitled “Transparency: Tackling Poverty at its Roots”, and was opened by Mark Simmonds, the Minister for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, and chaired by Michael Anderson, the Prime Minister’s Special Envoy for the UN Development Goals. 200 civil servants from all over Whitehall attended, and others from Moscow, Paris, Cape Town and Kinshasa dialled in.

    I had gone along to the seminar to hear more about the rationale for the UK’s plans to promote transparency by governments and companies at the G8 Summit in June this year. I wanted to know whether the panellists thought transparency could really reduce poverty in developing countries.

    During the seminar, one of the panellists Paul Collier, an economist most famous for his book The Bottom Billion (though my personal favourite is Wars, Guns and Votes) gave an unusual explanation for why he thought transparency was so critical to poverty reduction.

    He began by noting that many developing countries, particularly in Africa, impose high trade tariffs, duties and other costs at their ports. This is why my dad had to rush to Kenya. However, Collier explained that this isn’t just because the countries don’t like trade or want to protect their local industries. He said it often comes down to the fact that trade taxes are easiest to track and collect compared to other types of tax, such as income and value-added taxes. Many countries have a narrow tax base, which in turn creates an incentive to hike up trade tariffs and duties to meet their spending needs.

    The coast is clear at Kenya’s Mombasa port, credit: NazarethCollege, 2009

    Collier therefore suggested, rather than pushing such countries to reduce their tariffs, that they should be helped to raise revenues from other sources. And a key means could be more transparency by companies.

    Many large companies often have complex structures. These exist for many good management reasons but they can also be associated with tax avoidance. Though not illegal, aggressive tax avoidance indicates some effort to circumvent norms and rules put in place by countries for social benefits. Complex, opaque company structures can also be associated with wrongdoing, such as corruption and money-laundering (also known as “illicit flows”).

    Coordinated action by G8 countries to increase transparency around the ownership of companies could help reduce the potential for tax avoidance and wrongdoing. It could also help identify when companies aren’t paying enough taxes. This will mean that developing countries have the chance to collect more company taxes and develop a broader tax base. It will reduce their incentive to rely on hiking up trade costs. The UK Prime Minister argued in a speech in Davos earlier this year that this will be good for business – creating a level playing field and providing governments with more tools such as cheaper trade to enable the private sector to grow.

    My colleagues in HMT, BIS and DFID are currently considering, along with the UK’s G8 partners and other stakeholders, the best mechanism for achieving greater transparency by companies and governments – for example, how information should be gathered and to whom it should be made available. If you have any views, please set them out in the comments below!

    It’s worth also noting that over the weekend, DFID’s Secretary of State Justine Greening announced that the Global Partnership for Effective Development Cooperation will, at its first-ever Ministerial later this year, aim to build consensus beyond the G8 on actions to help developing countries raise more tax.

    In the meantime, I’m hoping my dad manages to pick up his goods at the port in Kenya soon.  And I’m hoping there will be more seminars to help me and other policy makers better understand how agreements by the G8 and Global Partnership can really make a difference to development.

  • From one extreme to another in Kinshasa

    A guest blog by Susanna Moorehead, DFID West and Southern Africa Director, about her recent visit to a center for girls living in the street in Kinshasa.

    During my recent visit to DRC, I witnessed life in the huge, vibrant but troubled capital city, Kinshasa.

    One street in the Kimbanseke commune in Kinshasa
    Picture: DFID DRC

    In the tree-lined streets of Gombe, the diplomatic quarter on the banks of the Congo River, I discussed questions of governance, the mining sector, the business environment and donor coordination with the Prime Minister. Then, I travelled to Kimbanseke, the poorest commune of Kinshasa, a sprawling settlement of slum dwellings off the airport road. There, I visited a centre for girls living on the street supported by War Child UK *. I toured the centre and met staff. The 30 or so girls who live at the centre were engaged in a lively maths class; for many of them it is the first chance they have had to access any form of education. Finally, I had the opportunity to sit with eight of the girls and talk to them about their lives, experiences and the support that the centre offers.

    Claudine’s story is typical: her mother died when she was 9 years old and her father married another woman. The family was poor and there was often not enough food. Claudine was accused of witchcraft and fled her home. She started to beg on the street. After a few days, she met an older girl, a yaya (big sister in Lingala, a Congolese language), who helped her to ‘look for money’ (initiated her into prostitution). Claudine earned between 500-1,000 Congolese Francs (US$ 0.6 – $1.2) per client and was obliged to give the money she earned to the yaya in return for food and protection. Claudine lived like this for 3 years. She was raped several times, including by soldiers based at the nearby camp. The last time she was raped, she became pregnant and fell very ill. The yaya brought her to the day centre for street children based in Matete to get medical treatment. Claudine now visits the centre most days. She has just started literacy lessons and after the birth of her baby, she hopes to start vocational training as a beautician. She dreams of being one of the country’s top beauticians and, one day, she says that she wants to use some of the money she makes to help other street girls.

    War Child’s center for girls living in the street in Kinshasa.
    Pictures: DFID DRC / War Child

    According to aggregated development statistics, Kinshasa province performs well relative to other provinces of DRC and few international aid agencies support programmes there. Yet, scratch below the surface and a very different picture emerges. Everyday life is especially difficult for women and girls in Tshangu. In this situation, many women – especially adolescent girls – resort to risky livelihood strategies such as transactional sex and commercial sex work – sometimes encouraged by their own families; sometimes after fleeing from home. Locally-collected data** reveals high and increasing numbers of girls living and working on the streets and a widespread phenomenon of “filles-mères” (girl-mothers) in the district. These vulnerable girls and young women are often excluded from school, unable to access healthcare and exposed to HIV, sexually transmitted infections, and both sexual and physical violence. There are very few services targeted at them, apart from a few day centres and vocational training centres run by local or international NGOs.

    War Child has set up a night ambulance gives support to the girls living in the street of the Tshangu district in Kinshasa
    Picture: War Child

    The project’s main activities are providing street children with support including a mobile ‘night-ambulance’ offering immediate access to medical and psychosocial support, a 24-hour drop-in centre, counselling, medical support and referral. Where possible, girls are reunified with their families or other long-term solutions are sought. Awareness-raising campaigns to promote awareness of children’s rights are being undertaken to tackle negative community attitudes towards street girls, so as to address stigmatisation and other factors preventing family reintegration, such as peer influence, behavioural difficulties, lack of income, lack of education and of employment opportunities. My experience in Kinshasa reflects some of the challenges facing both our programme and staff in DRC. On the one hand, we need to engage politically at the highest level if we are to support real change for the people of DRC. While on the other we need to have enough knowledge and understanding of how people live, and in particular, the poorest and most vulnerable, to be able to listen to their views, and respond appropriately. The Secretary of State for International Development, Justine Greening, recently announced a package of new measures to support women and girls living in poverty and has repeated her determination to step-up the UK government’s implication in front of the Commons. At the same moment, the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State, Lynne Featherstone, attended the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women in New York to make sure the UK plays a leading role in protecting women and girls rights.

    DFID DRC is exploring ways of funding innovative work, specifically in relation to catalysing better results for women and girls. The challenge then, is how to use the lessons learned from this work to influence the policy and practice of key partners, as well as tackling damaging social norms and practices that leave Claudine, and thousands like her, with no other option but to live on the streets of Kinshasa.

    Visit to the War Child center in Kimbanseke, Kinshasa
    Picture: DFID DRC

    *The project, in partnership with OSEPER (Oeuvre de Suivi, d’Encadrementet de Protection des Enfants de la Rue) is funded by Comic Relief and has been running since August 2010.
    **REJEER / Réseau des Jeunes et Enfants de la Rue – A National Street Children’s Coalition, 2006
  • Sponsored post: The essential guide to SMS-enabled numbers

    What’s the deal with SMS-enabled phone numbers? Bandwidth has prepared an ebook providing essential information for application developers and service providers interested in learning more about this growing market opportunity. You’ll learn:

    • What SMS-enabled telephone numbers are
    • How SMS-enabled numbers interoperate with wireless networks, including a graphical depiction of the wireline to wireless ecosystem
    • What to look for when you decide you need SMS for your application or service

    Today there are countless applications across platforms using telephone numbers to drive development of in-demand text applications. With a growing demographic of tech-savvy users set to establish text messaging as the dominant form of communication across the globe, now is a great time to learn more.

    Get started by downloading your complimentary ebook on the essential guide to SMS-enabled telephone numbers today.

    For more information please visit http://go.inetwork.com/2013GigaOm_SMS.html

  • Morning Advantage: Why It Pays to Pay Your Employees Well

    It’s a common strategy to cut labor costs in order to increase profit margins — plenty of companies do it routinely. But Sophie Quinton at The Atlantic points to several companies that are turning that equation on its head, proving that the decision to offer lower wages is a choice — and not a necessity. She cites the examples of low-cost retailers such as QuikTrip, Trader Joe’s and Costco Wholesale, who have found that paying their workers more actually pays off in the form of increased sales and productivity. The average American cashier makes $20,230 per year — which is below the poverty line for a family of four in a single-earner household. In contrast, entry-level employees at QuickTrip get an annual salary of around $40,000 — with benefits. And while its competitors have spent the recession floundering, QuickTrip continues to grow.

    On the flip side, underinvestment in workers can lead to operational problems in stores, which ultimately decreases sales. Quinton points to Borders and Circuit City as prime examples of what happens when you devalue your workers: “Both big-box retailers saw sales plummet after staff cutbacks, and both ultimately went bankrupt.” Instead of thinking solely of high-level employees as the talent you need to pay well in order to help grow the company, Quinton argues that paying entry-level employees a solid living wage can help the bottom line, too.

    THE NURSE WILL SEE YOU NOW

    Nurses Can Practice Without Physician Supervision in Many States (The Washington Post)

    Nursing groups around the country are pushing for legislation that would allow nurses with a master’s degree or higher to order and interpret diagnostic tests, prescribe medications and administer treatments without physician oversight. If they succeed, the number of states that allow nurses to practice without a physician would jump from 16 to 30. While physician groups are adamantly opposed to the legislation, citing concerns about patient safety and quality of care, the nurses have won the support of faith-based organizations, social workers, patients’ groups, the National Governors Association, and the National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine. Starting in 2014, insurers will be required to pay nurses the same rates that they pay doctors for the same services — which further encourages the creation of nurse-run practices. Judging from the number of comments this Washington Post article is getting, it’s a hot-button issue that’s got doctors, nurses, and patients alike up in arms.

    GETTING TO “AHA!”

    The Right Ideas in All the Wrong Places (Booz & Company)

    Booz & Company partners and strategy experts Ken Favaro and Nadim Yacteen offer this advice for companies that want to innovate more strategically: First, you need to break your strategic challenge down into distinct components. Then, you can create a matrix of proven solutions for each piece of the puzzle in your strategic challenge. Finally, link the connections between the proven solutions to help uncover your own “Eureka!” moment. Easy, right?

    BONUS BITS:

    Branching Out

    Yahoo Acquires Hipster Mobile News Reader Summly for Close to $30 Million (AllThingsD)
    What Do PAAS and Manischewitz Do the Rest of the Year? (Bloomberg Businessweek)
    Agency Sends Briefs Back to Clients as Elaborate Paper Sculptures (AdWeek)

  • Big Switch open-sources software to ease the move to commodity switches

    Hot off a new round of funding, Big Switch Networks says it now has open-source and commercial software to help companies scale out networks more easily and cheaply with commodity switches, further threatening the likes of legacy network gear sellers.

    Big Switch’s new Switch Light software implements the OpenFlow networking protocol in physical and virtual switches. It lets data center administrators automatically and centrally send out policies from one location when new switches are added to the network, instead of having to go through with a time-consuming, hands-on process.

    The open-source version of Switch Light is available for free because “we want to make sure (OpenFlow) industry standards are enabled in the data plane,” said Jason Matlof, vice president of marketing at Big Switch. The commercial version comes with technical support and is more scalable and highly available than the open-source version, Matlof said.

    Switch Light is based on existing open-source technology developed a few years ago under the name Indigo. Customers can sign up to use the Switch Light software under a licensing agreement along with Big Switch’s other software-defined networking products — the Big Switch Controller for the network’s control plane, the Big Virtual Switch and the Big Tap monitoring program.

    Consider the news another blow to Cisco, as the Big Switch software is aimed at customers that want to move away from lock-in from the legacy network hardware vendor and shift elements of their network stacks to white-label suppliers. Cisco still holds 65 percent of marketshare for Ethernet switches. Arista and Juniper play here, too.

    As I reported earlier this month, Quanta Computer is keen on selling network gear such as switches directly to companies through a newly formed subsidiary, Quanta QCT, just as it has shifted from a primarily original-design manufacturer to a direct seller of servers. Quanta and other commodity switch makers, such as Supermicro, could benefit from the Switch Light release as well.

    All eyes are on Cisco and Arista to make the next move. Meanwhile, as the Switch Light affords Big Switch a more rounded out product line, the company could again look like a good buy, just as it did last summer.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • Researchers find a way to predict the date of a woman’s final menstrual period

    A new UCLA-led study suggests a way to predict when a woman will have her final menstrual period. The findings, published in the April issue of the peer-reviewed Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, could help women and physicians gauge the onset of menopause-related bone loss, which generally begins a year prior to the last period.

    The researchers used women’s ages, menstrual bleeding patterns and measurements of hormone levels to estimate the amount of time until they were likely to reach menopause, said the study’s lead author, Dr. Gail Greendale, professor of medicine in the division of geriatrics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.

     
    Greendale said women who are approaching menopause often ask their health care providers when they will be done with their periods, but the information is sometimes more telling than women realize. 
     
    “Being able to estimate when the final menstrual period will take place has taken on importance beyond just helping women gauge when they will stop having periods,” she said. “We know that potentially deleterious physiological developments, such as the onset of bone loss and an increase in cardiovascular risk factors, precede the final menses by at least a year.”
    The researchers used data collected annually for up to 11 years on 554 women, including Caucasians, African Americans, Hispanics and those of Chinese and Japanese descent, participating in the multi-site, multi-ethnic Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation. At enrollment, the women were between the ages of 42 to 53, had an intact uterus and at least one ovary, were not using medications affecting ovarian function and had experienced at least one menstrual period in the prior three months.

    The researchers measured levels of estradiol (E2), a hormone produced by the ovaries, and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), which comes from the pituitary gland and triggers the production of eggs. FSH starts increasing and E2 starts decreasing about two years prior to the final menstrual period, or about a year before bone loss and cardiovascular risk factors rise.

    The study found that the levels of the two hormones could be used to estimate whether women were within two years of beginning their final menstrual period, within one year or beyond their final period.

    The study had some limitations, including its modest sample size. In addition, hormone levels were sampled once a year and more frequent sampling might have allowed the researchers to more precisely estimate the woman’s place on the timeline.

    Study co-authors were Mei-Hua Huang and Dr. Arun Karlamangla of UCLA and Dr. Shinya Ishii of the University of Tokyo.

    The Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation was funded by the National Institutes of Health through the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute of Nursing Research, and the NIH Office of Research on Women’s Health (NR004061, NR004061, AG012505, AG012535, AG012531, AG012539, AG012546, AG012553, AG012554 and AG012495).

    The UCLA Division of Geriatrics within the department of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA offers comprehensive outpatient and inpatient services at several convenient locations and works closely with other UCLA programs that strive to improve and maintain the quality of life of seniors. UCLA geriatricians are specialists in managing the overall health of people age 65 and older and treating medical disorders that frequently affect the elderly, including memory loss and dementia, falls and immobility, urinary incontinence, arthritis, arthritis, high blood pressure, heart disease, osteoporosis and diabetes. As a result of their specialized training, UCLA geriatricians can knowledgably consider and address a broad spectrum of health-related factors — including medical, psychological and social — when treating patients.

    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.

  • Survey: Tell us your thoughts on the future of the smart watch

    Wearable computing continues its trek towards the mainstream. Smart watches, in particular, are generating many a headline these days. Apple and Samsung are battling for dominance, Google is rumored to be making one, and the Pebble watch is already a hot item on the market. With that in mind, we invite GigaOM readers to fill out the questions below and share their thoughts on whether they would buy a watch, which features they want, and who will ultimately rule this space.


    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • FDA now forcing supplement companies to censor consumer free speech on the internet

    The ever-expanding federal autocracy, which is filled with career government bureaucrats who have union-protected tenure and far too little congressional scrutiny, are slowly but steadily eroding every original intent contained in the Bill of Rights. The most recent…
  • CDC: Gun homicide victims 10 times more likely to be shot by a black person than a white person

    A new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has broken down by race the number of gun deaths in America, and – according to this government agency’s own figures – the divide is especially pronounced between whites and blacks. According to data…
  • Health Basics: A day in the life of the oblivious consumer

    This is the story of a working couple, she who eats organic and researches natural remedies, and he who thinks his food and product “regimen” is harmless. She is leaving on a short trip, so she tells him to keep a journal of everything he eats, drinks, and puts on his…
  • Health experts warn untreatable tuberculosis threatens world

    Tuberculosis (TB) was declared nothing less than a world-wide health emergency by the World Health Organization 20 years ago. If you haven’t heard much about the threat of that disease lately, does it mean modern medicine has it under control? Far from it. In fact…
  • Supercharge your brain with sunshine

    Researchers believe that vitamin D3 acts to protect an aging brain and boost overall memory and cognitive function. This is thought to be done by increasing levels of protective antioxidants, increasing key hormones and suppressing a hyperactive immune system that can…
  • Boost your thyroid health and shift your thyroid hormone levels with zinc

    Thyroid dysfunction is one of the most common hormone disorders in the world, but new research shows that supplementation with zinc can have dramatic benefits for those suffering from abnormal levels of thyroid hormones. The thyroid is a two-inch gland that releases…
  • The 10 worst toxins hidden in vitamins, supplements and health foods

    I’m absolutely shocked at how many people don’t investigate what’s really in the products they swallow. When something is sold as an herb, vitamin, superfood or supplement, they think it’s automatically safe. And while the natural products industry has a truly remarkable…
  • Lab-made ‘Swerve’ sweetener marketed as all natural: Here’s what you need to know about it

    Perhaps you’ve seen it while strolling down the baking aisle at your local health food store — Swerve, the “all-natural sweetener” with no synthetic chemicals, no aspartame, and no genetically-modified organisms (GMOs). But is Swerve really a healthy sweetening alternative…
  • Health insurance rates to double as Obamacare fully kicks in

    Writing on the blog of the Department of Health and Human Services on the third anniversary of the passage of the Affordable Care Act, more popularly known as Obamacare, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius had this to say about the impact of the law on insurance rates: As…
  • New York government threw man in prison for 23 years for murder he never committed

    For most Americans, being locked up behind bars for 23 years for any reason is unthinkable. Now imagine being locked up for that long – and being innocent. That’s exactly what happened to David Ranta, 58, of New York, who was wrongly convicted of killing a Hasidic…
  • IRS used taxpayer money to film Star Trek parody; total detachment from reality

    Some members of Congress and President Obama are fond of blaming the decision to end tours of the People’s House on the sequestration (which the president has further blamed on Republicans, even though the sequester was his idea). That darned sequester has made it…
  • Lasagna gardening: A sustainable and no-till method of gardening

    Lasagna gardening is a method of gardening that requires no tilling or weeding from the gardener, yet produces rich and fluffy soil. Also called ‘sheet composting,’ lasagna gardening involves building layers and layers of organic matter in a designated area of the garden…
  • Hawaii’s genetically modified politicians strike again (opinion)

    (NaturalNews)On March 21, 2013, Hawaii had their largest hearing on a GMO lableing bill since fluoridation got defeated in 2003. Unfortunately, due to the genetic modification of our politicians, the bill got “deferred”, which is euphemism for ‘flushed down the toilet’. Here’s…