Saturday, December 27, 2008

Montenegro


It's been almost four years already.

Quantitave easing explained


Quantitative easing from Marketplace on Vimeo.

Friday, December 26, 2008

Iranian President Ahmadinejad 2008 Christmas Message Speech

Sometimes I take part in the Press TV programs Off the Cuff and Forum. These two programs are not fundamentally religious and you would not recognised that they are produced by Iran-funded TV:
Press TV is an English language international television news channel which is funded by the Iranian government, based in Tehran and broadcasts in English on a round-the-clock schedule. With 26 international correspondents and more than 400 staff around the world, its stated mission is to offer a different view of the world events

In Turkey I had the option to watch Al-Jazeera more often and I realised that what Western media cover can biased. It does not mean that there is an intention to be biased but simply because they can not often understand local problems.
As my Turkish friend in Adiyaman said about the US attempt to rule the Middle East:
They have only 300 years of history, they don't know where Turkey is, and they want to rule our region?


Therefore it was very interesting to watch the alternative Christmas message by Iranian President Ahmadinejad.The Christmas speech by President Ahmadinejad to the British people is surprisingly tolerant, he speaks about hope that countries will unite, that atheism can not be the option and that next year shall be the year of happiness and humanity. Ahmadinejad congratulates the British on the anniversary of the birth of Jesus Christ:

.

Channel Four's facing increasing criticism for allowing the Iranian president to broadcast an alternative Christmas message:
.
I don't think that banning information is the key to solve any problem. It is education, learning about the Iranian history, negotiation and staying with democratic principles (I know it might be a contradiction to use democratic principles and to negotiate with a President who wants to wipe Israle out of the world map).
Hopefully, the new Obama administration will understand that.

Inside Story - The future of Gaza - Dec 25 - AlJazeeraEnglish

Interesting and very tough discussion between leaders from Israel, Palestine, and Egypt:

Monday, December 22, 2008

Stiglitz

The Global Financial Crisis: Lessons for Policy and Implications for Economic Theory

Interview with Dr. John Nash

Interview with Dr. John Nash at the 1st Meeting of Laureates in Economic Sciences in Lindau, Germany, September 1-4, 2004. Interviewer is freelance journalist Marika Griehsel. Dr. Nash talks about the impact the Prize had on his life, his talent for mathematics as a child (5:31), the work that gave him the Prize (8:55), gives some advice to young students (13:00), talks about important economic issues of today (15:20), and shares his thoughts about the movie on his life, A Beautiful Mind (21:10)

The Lecture in Text Format

The Czech society lacks well-educated elites

“Identify the most important economic, political or social issue
facing your country. Please explain its significance and offer at
least one solution“:


The Czech Republic is a very successful country according to statistical data. There
are, however, certain problems that lie behind statistics and are difficult to deal with.
During the communist regime, elites were either forced to leave the country or were
not allowed to study properly. This is the reason why our country still lacks well-
educated elites.
The Czech Society Lacks Well-educated Elites ESSAY

The story of Madonna of the Pinks

The story of this painting is very interesting.
For many years the painting was considered as the best of several copies of a lost Raphael's original (worth 2,500 pounds). In 1991 was recognized as original (only thanks to the fact that the Renaissance scholar - and now the director of the British Gallery - personally visited the place). In 2004 the painting was sold for 35 million pounds.
This visit paid off. The price of the painting increased 14 000 times.

Check your walls whether you don't have originals there.

Wiki:
Only in 1991 was the painting identified as a genuine Raphael, by the Renaissance scholar Nicholas Penny. Although Raphael scholars were aware of the existence of the work, which had hung in Alnwick Castle since 1853, they considered it merely the best of several copies of a lost original. After a huge public appeal the Madonna of the Pinks was bought in 2004 by the National Gallery from the Duke of Northumberland for £34,88 million, with contributions from the Heritage Lottery Fund and the National Art Collections Fund. To justify the vast expenditure it went on a nationwide tour to Manchester, Cardiff, Edinburgh and Barnard Castle.


British National Gallery:
This small devotional picture was painted for Christian contemplation; its original owner would have held the painting in his or her hand. It shows the Virgin and Child seated in a bedchamber (the bed-curtain is looped behind the Virgin's head) with a view of a sunny landscape seen through a window. They hand flowers between them - pinks which are symbols of marriage - depicting the Virgin Mary as not only the Mother but the Bride of Christ.


Learn English with Iva

Here

Mankiw on GDP measure

Here
Usually, GDP is a reasonable proxy for economic well-being, so more is better, but that is not true in this example. Part of the problem here is that GDP includes government purchases at cost. If the government hires people to produce stuff that is worthless, that stuff is included in GDP just as much as if the government buys something valuable. When calculating GDP, the national income accountants do not pass judgment on the social utility of government spending. Anyone concerned with economic well-being has to go beyond thinking about GDP.

All you need is a helicopter..Ben.

‘Helicopter Ben’ confronts the challenge of a lifetime
By Martin Wolf


Is deflation a realistic likelihood? Core measures of inflation strongly suggest not. But one measure of expected inflation – the gap between yields on conventional and index-linked Treasuries – has collapsed to 14 basis points. Moreover, yields on 10-year US Treasury bonds are already where Japan’s were in 1996, six years after the latter’s crisis began. (See the charts, which start one year before respective asset price peaks.)

Friday, December 19, 2008

Innovations in the organisation of firms..

Globalisation, coupled with advances in information  technology  and  more 
demanding capital markets, has set in train “innovations in the organisation of 
the firm that may ultimately be as momentous as the invention of the multi-
the 20th century”  (Roberts,  The divisional form in the first two decades of the 20
Modern Firm, p2) 

In this paper, I will try to assess the organisation of a company from an evolutionary perspective. I am going to show that changes that took place in the previous years are as well as important as those changes  that took off in 1920s. There are significant similarities between the recent evolution of organisation of a company and the invention of the multi-divisional form in the first two decades of the 20th century. The conclusion is that innovations in the 
organisation of the firm may be as momentous as the invention of the multi-divisional 
form. In order to satisfy my research aims, I will firstly describe recent development; 
present some theoretical arguments of organisation,  and  an  insight  into  the  link 
between performance and strategy. Then I am going to describe the multi-dimensional 
organisation that took off in 1920s with a specific reference to the Czech entrepreneur 
Tomas Bata. Lastly we will discuss whether the changes are as momentous as those in 
1920s and what will be the impact of current economic crisis on company’s 
organisation. 

Thursday, December 18, 2008

quantitative easing

By John Richards

Does quantitative easing work? Does it have unforeseen
consequences? Japan is the only economy in recent times to have tried a
full-scale version of quantitative easing for a significant period.

The
Bank of Japan lowered the policy rate to zero in February 2001 and then went to
quantitative easing the next month. It ended both quantitative easing
and its zero interest rate policy only in 2006.

In Japan’s
case, the mechanics were simple. The BoJ added reserves to the banking
system through open market operations and by directly purchasing government
securities from the secondary market.

The size of the
bond-buying operation (Rinban) became the policy tool to target the level of
reserves rather than the policy rate, which was fixed at virtually zero.

The BoJ’s monetary policy committee voted on the desirable level of
reserves and the size of the Rinban, much as it had previously voted on the
level of the policy rate.

And, when the economy deteriorated further,
the BoJ increased the Rinban, pumping up reserves. At its peak, reserves
reached around Y35,000bn of which only around Y8,000bn were required.

It is a matter of debate whether or not quantitative easing had
much impact on the Japanese economy, even though it coincided with the longest
expansion in Japan’s post world war two history (2002-2007). But, I think not.

Quantitative easing was nearly irrelevant to the expansion of
real economic activity that began in 2002. The expansion was largely
self-financed by corporations’ free cash flow and therefore not constrained by
an absence of banks’ lending.

Neither were there big liquidity problems
in Japan to be solved by quantitative easing
. Capital injections and
guarantees to the banks had largely cured them well before the process began.

Money market rates were already low and their spreads were tight to the
policy rate. High oil and other input prices ended headline consumer price index
deflation, but the CPI less food and energy continue to be nearly flat even now.

This makes it hard to argue that quantitative easing ended
deflation;
high oil prices did that. Meanwhile, the economy cured on
its own most of the structural problems such as excess capacity and too much
debt associated with the deflationary environment.

However, the
bond market during quantitative easing was anything but smooth. The process
ignited a bond bubble, whose eventual collapse destabilised financial markets,
even threatening Japan’s hard-earned economic recovery. Long- term interest
rates began to plummet in the spring 2002, with 10s reaching 0.48 per cent in
June 2003, down 120 basis points over the year.


The yield curve experienced a rolling flattening in which
successively longer maturities tightened down on the zero policy rate.

When the bond-bubble burst in June 2003, rates soared and the
curve steepened sharply.
This created what in Japan is still known as
the Var-shock because of the sudden rise in yields and
the accompanying jump in volatility triggered when banks, which were using
similar risk management models, tried to dump Japanese government bonds at the
same time.

The effects on banks’ earnings were so severe that it raised
concerns that the economy would be plunged back into another 1990s-style period
of economic stagnation.

About all quantitative easing did on the
positive side for Japan was to help the BoJ keep its independence from the
politicians by giving the appearance of action.

The costs were the
shutting down of the money market, although it revived fairly quickly when QE
ended, and a dangerous bond-bubble, whose popping threatened the recovery and
destabilised the financial system.

One of the lessons of this
episode for policymakers is that while quantitative easing may help to solve the
short-run liquidity problems that arise in times of extreme financial duress, it
is not a substitute for some of the harder choices governments must make.


These include underwriting of systemic financial risks, e.g. by
guaranteeing bank deposits, the re-capitalisation (forced or voluntary) of the
banks, regulatory pressure on banks to disclose and write down the bad assets,
or the pressures on businesses directly via their banks to restructure and
deleverage or shut down.

A worst-case current scenario is that
policymakers rushing to quantitative easing fail to understand this, giving us a
bond-bubble but no permanent fixes of the underlying structural problems.

In that case, when the bond-bubble bursts, paradoxically, quantitative
easing will have increased systemic financial risks instead of decreasing them.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Welcome to North Korea by Peter Tetteroo and Raymond Feddema / Documentary Educational Video

Karel Schwarzenberg: The only minister


I am really happy that it is Karel Schwarzenberg who is the Czech minister for international relations leading the Czechs to preside the EU. As the Czech politics terribly lacks any (educated, matured and intelligent) elite, I am so glad this exceptional politician is right there where he is.

You don't have to agree with him but you will respect and listen to him. So will Europe.

Recent article in Le Monde:
Il en a tiré aussi son humanisme sceptique. Il a connu le nazisme et le communisme. Il est catholique par tradition, conservateur par habitude, libertaire par penchant naturel, de gauche par sentiments, Vert par nécessité. "J'adore violemment l'art moderne et mes meilleurs amis sont sociaux-démocrates. Est-ce que je suis de droite ou de gauche ? Aucune idée. Cela n'a plus de sens quand on vient de ce coin-là du monde." De son air détaché, il dit au revoir, la tasse de thé à la main, sur le seuil de son relais de chasse à la façade bleu ciel, dans une forêt des environs de Prague.




English version

Sunday, December 14, 2008

I switched from Explorer to Chrome



Chrome is much faster and much more user-friendly. I am convinced that Microsoft is not able to succeed in the long run with Google mostly because of its approach to innovation. Google starts with creating things that are interesting and they don't intend to make it profitable immediately. Later - if it works - they will try to find out what is the best way to earn money from the product.
So Chrome - should upgrade from beta to Version 1 - is one of these examples.
Try it. My experience is positive.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Chapter 11 is the right road for US carmakers By Joseph Stiglitz

US car manufacturers will probably receive the huge bailout package. It is nonsence because they were in troubles even before the crisis. Generally they produce inefficient, big, and expensive cars. When they were creating strategies they were so self-confident that they did not learn from the Japanese, South Korean, or even Chinese manufacturers how to cut costs or produce more effectively.
It was exactly what Harvard professor Clayton Christensen describes in his his book The Innovator’s Dilemma (Harvard Business School Press).
The central theory of Christensen’s work is the dichotomy of sustaining and disruptive innovation. A sustaining innovation hardly results in the downfall of established companies because it improves the performance of existing products along the dimensions that mainstream customers value.

Disruptive innovation
, on the other hand, will often have characteristics that traditional customer segments may not want, at least initially. Such innovations will appear as cheaper, simpler and even with inferior quality if compared to existing products, but some marginal or new segment will value it.




Another article where I agree with Joseph Stiglitz:

Chapter 11 is the right road for US carmakers
By Joseph Stiglitz

Published: December 11 2008 20:02 | Last updated: December 11 2008 20:02

The debate about whether or not to bail out the Big Three carmakers has been mischaracterised. It has been described as a package to help the undeserving dinosaurs of Detroit. In fact, a plan to bail out the carmakers would benefit shareholders and bondholders as much as anybody else. These are not the people that need help right now. In fact they contributed to the problem.

Financial markets are supposed to allocate capital and monitor that it is used to good effect. They are supposed to be rewarded when they do that job well, but bear the consequences when they fail. The markets failed. Wall Street’s focus on quarterly returns encouraged the short-sighted behaviour that contributed to their own demise and that of America’s manufacturing, including the automotive industry. Today, they are asking to escape accountability. We should not allow it.

What needs to be done is to help the automakers get a fresh start and allow them to focus on producing good cars rather than trying to juggle their books to meet past obligations.

The US car industry will not be shut down, but it does need to be restructured. That is what Chapter 11 of America’s bankruptcy code is supposed to do. A variant of pre-packaged bankruptcy – where all the terms are set before going before the bankruptcy court – can allow them to produce better and more environmentally sound cars. It can also address legacy retiree obligations. The companies may need additional finance. Given the state of financial markets, the US government may have to provide that at terms that give the taxpayers a full return to compensate them for the risk. Government guarantees can provide assurances, as they did two decades ago when Chrysler faced its crisis.

With financial restructuring, the real assets do not disappear. Equity investors (who failed to fulfil their responsibility of oversight) lose everything; bondholders get converted into equity owners and may lose substantial amounts. Freed of the obligation to pay interest, the carmakers will be in a better position. Taxpayer dollars will go far further. Moral hazard – the undermining of incentives – will be averted: a strong message will be sent.

Some will talk of the pension funds and others that will suffer. Yes, but that is true of every investment that has diminished. The government may need to help some pension funds but it is better to do so directly, than via massive bail-outs hoping that a little of the money trickles down to the “widows and orphans”. Some will say that bankruptcy will undermine confidence in America’s cars. It is the cars and carmakers themselves – and the dismal performance of their executives – that have undermined confidence. With industry experts saying $125bn (€94bn, £84bn) or more will be needed, with bail-out fatigue setting in, why should US consumers believe that a $15bn gift will do the trick of a turnround?

It is more plausible that confidence will be restored if the industry is freed of the burden of interest payments and is given a fresh start. Modern cars are complex technological products and the US has demonstrated its strength in advanced technology. US workers, working for Japanese carmakers, have shown their hard work can produce cars that are desirable. America’s managers too have demonstrated their managerial skills in many other areas.

The failure lies with the managers of US carmakers and America’s financial markets, which failed in their oversight and encouraged short-sighted behaviour. The “bridge loan to nowhere” – the down payment on what could be a sinkhole of enormous proportions – is another example of the short-sighted behaviour that got us into this mess.

As the bail-outs continue, numbers that once looked huge are starting to seem almost normal. Hundreds of billons are being given to banks and insurance companies. AIG got $150bn. Compared with that $34bn, or even $125bn, for the automotive industry seems a modest request. Even so, we should not forget that a few months ago, President George W. Bush said there was not enough money for health insurance for poor children although it cost just a few billion dollars.

Even if Congress does now give carmakers $15bn as a “stay of execution,” postponing the hard decisions, before the next multi-billon dollar dose of medicine we need to think more carefully about who we are really bailing out and why. This should not end up as just another rescue package for bondholders and shareholders

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Would the CEMS at VSE become Veblen good?


The tuition for the CEMS at VSE is increasing to EUR 1400 a year.

Would it become the Veblen good then?

In general Veblen good's consumption increases when the price increases (contraintutive upward sloping demand curve). Similarly to the Giffen good BUT due to different reasons.

Veblen good is explained via snob effect or bandwagon effect. I don't see any of these to be particularly significant for the CEMS at VSE.

However the explanation is similar to the one that is proposed by pro-tution scholars. With a tuition, students generally might become more involved in the education process, they start valuing their studies more, they become more demanding.

We will see whether it works.

Seznamte se s ARMÉNIÍ

Poradna pro uprchlíky si Vás co nejsrdečněji dovoluje pozvat na Multikulturní večer, na kterém se můžete seznámit s kulturou a tradicemi Arménie. Akce se koná v neděli 14. 12. 2008 od 18.30 hodin v klubu cestovatelů Karavanseraj (Masarykovo nábřeží 22, Praha 1 - nedaleko Národního divadla).


Pokud dorazíte, můžete se těšit na:


- přednášku o Arménii, ve které se Vám představí tento region, zejména jeho tradice, zvyky a další místní zajímavosti

- typickou arménskou hudbu, tanec a hudební nástroje

- ochutnávku arménských dobrot

- výstavu fotografií

- krátký film o Arménii


Vstup zdarma!


Těšíme se na Vás a prosíme, šiřte tuto pozvánku dál!
armenie

What were the reasons for Europe’s lag behind the US, in terms of productivity growth, after the mid-1990s?


The answer is here
version_08_12[1][1][1]

Monday, December 08, 2008

Life in the Left Tail


again from Gregory Mankiw's blog (we should all read it more often).

however, the market is cathing up:
here is 5-y-average for Dow Jones Industrial

But here is what happened right now ()3:19PM EST .
DJ is above 9 thousand!!

Dow 9,000.04 +364.62 (4.22%)
S&P 500 915.67 +39.60 (4.52%)
Nasdaq 1,580.35 +71.04 (4.71%)
10y bond 2.74% +0.02 (0.74%)

The Price Effects of an Emerging Retail Market

CNB working paper here


Nontechnical Summary
One of the most apparent changes in the Czech
Republic (one of the transition countries in Central
and Eastern Europe) –
one that daily influences every single inhabitant – is the change in the
way
people do shopping. At the start of the transition from a command to a
market economy, there
were chains of isolated small shops. Now, 15 years
later, a small number of large retailers operate
in extensive shopping
centers. This development poses the question of to what extent has such
a
significant and quick transformation of the retail market structure
affected the prices of retailed
products.
The available empirical evidence
on the price effects due to changing market structure is much
more often in
favor of the hypothesis that concentration causes price increases. There is
however,
no evidence so far for transition countries. In this original study,
the price effects of changing
market structure on retailed products are
evaluated by means of the size of the downstream and
upstream market power of
retailers during 2000–2005 in the Czech Republic.
Our findings suggest that
downstream market power was dominated by upstream market power
and thus
prices of retailed products declined, on average by 0.8 p.p. a year (2000–2005).
At the
same time, the tendency toward mergers and acquisitions among retail
chains, which had already
started in 2004, gradually leading toward a more
standard ratio of number of retailers to market
size – as observed in Western
countries, would cause average extra inflation of retail prices of 1.2
p.p.
(approximately 0.5 p.p. in the CPI) a year over the next ten years

FT Business - LSE European Institute The Future of Europe public lecture

A lecture by Mirek Topolánek, Prime Minister of the Czech Republic

Date: Thursday 18 December 2008Time: 6.30-8pmVenue: New Theatre, East BuildingSpeaker: Mirek TopolánekMirek Topolánek has been Prime Minister of the Czech Republic since September 2006. He has been chairman of the Civic Democratic Party (ODS) since November 2002. Mr Topolánek will lead the Czech Republic into the European Union Presidency in January 2009.

Ticket InformationThis event is free and open to all, but a ticket is required. One ticket per person may be requested from 10am on Thursday 11 December.Members of the public can request one ticket via the online ticket request form which will be live on this weblisting from 10.00am on Thursday 11 December.

http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/LSEPublicLecturesAndEvents/events/2008/20081203t1450z001.htmLSE students can collect a ticket from the LSESU reception, located on the Ground Floor, East Building, Houghton St, from 10am on Thursday 11 December.LSE's public events programme for Spring 2009 will be available in mid December at www.lse.ac.uk/events.

Sunday, December 07, 2008

Lecture by Czech PM at the LSE!


A lecture by Mirek Topolánek, Prime Minister of the Czech Republic.
Topolanek has just defended his post as the chairman of the conservative party (ODS).
Even though his governement is lacking majority in the parliament, he has been able to govern and will lead the EU Presidency in the next six month.

It is an interesting opportunity for the Czechs to show their organisational and negotiation skills. We all hope it would go well. This time requires leadership, exxperience, and courage. Will Mirek Topolanek be able to deliver it?

Friday, December 05, 2008

Which EU member states are net contributors to the EU budget?


money-go-round.eu run a unique project:
We collect data from EU budgets and various other official reports to show the amounts of taxpayers' money redistributed by the European Union.

Cimrman forever




Where is the purpose of studying?

Grumpy Uncle Vaclav

The article in The Economist about the Czech president Klaus
...Klaus may not have formal powers to muck up the Czech presidency. But he has already done it great harm by handing ammunition to EU countries that would love to shunt the Czechs to one side (read some European newspapers, and you would think Mr Klaus was the only political leader in Prague). That would be a shame, because the Czechs have some good ideas.
For a start, they are fervent free-marketeers. Their prime minister, Mirek Topolanek, calls the common agricultural policy “nonsensical”, and wants the EU to forge a “common energy policy” that would link internal grids and reduce European energy dependence on Russia. Mr Topolanek worries that EU diplomacy towards Russia has been “deformed” by some countries’ business interests. A firm Atlanticist, he has three large flags on display in his office: the Czech flag, the EU one and the blue-and-white standard of NATO. His government supports the installation of a radar base outside Prague for an American anti-missile shield that Russia has condemned (the Czech parliament is less keen). His EU presidency plans include a long-overdue push for Europe to pay much more attention to its eastern neighbours, such as Ukraine.

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Stiglitz was right? So why is he not a memeber of Obama's team?

Stiglitz was right? So why is he not a memeber of Obama's team? A very nice article by Michael Hirsh in the Neewsweek.
Earlier, in his book "Globalization and its Discontents" (2002), Stiglitz became the most prominent voice in Washington to say plainly that free-market absolutism, which began with the Reagan revolution and continued under Clinton (who upon being elected declared the era of "big government" was over), was ill-founded theoretically and disastrous practically. "In 1997 the IMF decided to change its charter to push capital market liberalization," he wrote. "And I said, where is the evidence this is going to be good for developing countries? Why haven't you produced some research showing it was going to be good? They said: we don't need research; we know it's true. They didn't say it in precisely those words, but clearly they took it as religion."

As far back as 1990, Stiglitz argued in a paper (it can be found on The Economist's Voice Web site at www.bppress.com) against securitizing mortgages and selling them because "when banks retained the mortgages which they issued, they had greater incentives to screen loan applicants." He asked, again with startling prescience: "Has securitization been a result of more efficient transactions technologies, or an unfounded reduction in concern about the importance of screening loan applicants?" None other than Milton Friedman, the founding father of the free-market era, told me in an interview before he died that Stiglitz also had been more correct than everyone else about how to transform Russia into a market economy when he argued that institution-building and creating regulatory authorities were an important preliminary step. "In the immediate aftermath of the fall of the Soviet Union, I kept being asked what the Russians should do," Friedman told me in 2002. "I said, 'Privatize, privatize, privatize. I was wrong. Joe was right. What we want is privatization, and the rule of law."

Top 10 Cities Europe

http://www.travelandleisure.com/ announced the top cities in Europe:
Top 10 Cities Europe

Rank 2007 Name Score
1 1 Florence 86.24
2 2 Rome 85.12
3 3 Istanbul 84.61
4 4 Paris 82.59

5 - Krakow 82.14
6 8 Prague 81.81
7 6 Venice 81.74
8 5 Barcelona 81.32
9 - Vienna 80.99
10 10 Salzburg 80.63



Cities that I visited are bolded
Personally I can not see how it is possible to compare Paris with for example Istanbul but in general this ranking might be true (as long as Prague is included).

CEMS Annual Event

Some information about CEMS and its new logo:

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Times cartoon

After several keynesian measures announced yesterday in the Pre-Budget report by the Chancelor Alistair Darling, the Times published this cartoon on today's cover:

More of these here

Czech National Bank on the financial crisis

I would like to recommend some analyses by the CNB.
Governor Tuma and vice-governor Singer:

Causes of the global crisis:
Coincidence of many global factors synchronisation of business cycles worldwide
Economic Financial Political Institutional
Czech Specifics:
- Balanced financial system financed by deposits rather than by foreign funds
- Sound non-financial sector and households (in total, financial assets and liabilities, indebtedness, etc.)
- External balance (trade surplus, modest current account deficit)
- Negligible share of toxic assets in domestic financial system (less than 1% of total assets)
- High ability for rapid supervisory action (tested in practice and by Société Générale hiccup)


Member of the Board Tomsik:
The macroeconomic situations in Hungary, Iceland, or Belgium have shown that countries and their financial markets have been suffering from crisis no matter whether they are a member of the Euro zone or not
National currency obviously no guarantee against the crisis.
The point is to have reasonable and stable economic policy and prudential approach of domestic regulation.
Without it you cannot have stable economic environment disregarding whether the country is inside or outside the Euro zone.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

WSJ: Lawrence Summers to Head National Economic Council
President-elect Barack Obama will name former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers the director of his National Economic Council, placing the Harvard University economist he passed over for Treasury secretary inside the White House as his closest economic adviser, Democratic officials said Saturday night.

View Full Image

Getty Images
Obama with former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers in July.
The move came as the president-elect prepares Monday to introduce his new Treasury secretary nominee, Timothy Geithner, and the rest of his economic team at an event in Chicago Monday.

Among those on stage will be Mr. Summers, who was central to his campaign's economic team and is now leading efforts to draft a massive economic stimulus plan the president-elect hopes to sign into law as one of his first acts as the nation's leader.

Mr. Obama has instructed his economic advisers to draft a stimulus that could dwarf the $175 billion version he campaigned on, stretching it over two years and pushing to create 2.5 million new jobs with it.


Lawrence Summers
The plan, with its extended time horizon, could also push back planned tax increases on families earning over $250,000 from a planned 2010 start date to 2011, when they are set to expire in current law, economists familiar with the effort say.

"I have already directed my economic team to come up with an Economic Recovery Plan that will mean 2.5 million more jobs by January of 2011 -- a plan big enough to meet the challenges we face that I intend to sign soon after taking office," Mr. Obama said in his Saturday radio address.

The plan he campaigned on was supposed to be large enough to create one million new jobs, though aides cautioned a final price tag could not be determined simply by more than doubling the initial $175 billion figure. Experts have called for economic infusions anywhere from $300 billion to $500 billion, a range that Obama aides are working within.

Jan Machacek: Havlův růst růstu

Kazdy den vychazi zajimave glosy Jana Machacka v Respektu.

V jedne z poslednich, nazvane Havlův růst růstu, polemizuje s kritikou ekonomickeho rustu:
Bývalý prezident Václav Havel se rád zlobí na hospodářský růst, resp. růst jako takový. Naposledy tak učinil při besedě v Brně, kterou otiskly Lidové noviny. Havel zde mluvil o „růstu růstu“ a ptal se proč musíme stále růst, když je nás pořád stejně. Taky si myslí, že se fenomén růstu bojí kdokoli kritizovat, už to prý nečiní ani strana zelených.

Růst si ale lze představit i nefinančně, filozofičtěji. Je totiž inherentně zakotven v lidské povaze i společnosti. Srovnejme si to s dialogem. Normální lidé (nikoli někteří čeští politici a novináři) vstupují do diskuse nikoli proto, aby se vzájemně zničili, nýbrž proto, aby debata vedla k vzájemnému obohacení.

Podobně je to v obchodě. Lidé nevstupují do obchodních transakcí proto, aby jeden druhého okradl. Na konci úspěšné obchodní transakce jsou obohaceni oba (nebo více aktérů). Růst si můžeme „nefinančně“ představit tak, že když hospodářství roste, proběhne v ekonomice více transakcí, které vedou k obohacení aktérů. Když hospodářství klesá, přibývá transakcí, které jsou pro jednu nebo obě strany nakonec nevýhodné (a frustrující).
Měl-li ale Havel na mysli především nekontrolovatelný růst měst, skladišť, překladišť a aglomerací laciných šmoulodomů, lze mu dát jen za pravdu. A bývalý prezident je koneckonců „povoláním“ absurdní dramatik, nikoli tvůrce bezchybných logických systémů a nenapadnutelných tvrzení. Může se mýlit, ale stačí když zůstává inspirativní.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Varian on new economics

If there was a new economy, why wasn't there a new economics?
New York Times; New York, N.Y.; Jan 17, 2002; Hal R. Varian

THERE was never a new economics to go along with the new economy. Sure, there was a lot of talk about increasing returns, network effects, switching costs and so on. But these are hardly new concepts; they've been part of the economics literature for decades.
Furthermore, although these are important ideas, they aren't Big Ideas. They explain certain phenomena well, but they have limited reach. Those in search of a really big idea had to look further back in the economics literature. They hit gold with ''The Nature of the Firm,'' a 1937 paper written by the Nobel laureate Ronald Coase.

The Coase paper asked a deceptively simple question: If the market is such a great tool for allocating resources, why isn't it used inside the firm or company? Why doesn't one worker on the assembly line negotiate with the worker next to him about the price at which he will supply the partly assembled product?

That sort of negotiation rarely happens. Instead of using markets, companies tend to be organized as hierarchies, using a chain of command and control rather than negotiation, markets and explicit contracts. Paradoxically, the primary unit of capitalism, on close inspection, looks a lot like central planning.

Mr. Coase didn't just ask this question; he also provided a provocative answer: it all hinges on the costs of making transactions. What economists call firms, he said, are essentially groups of activities for which it is more effective and less costly to use command-and-control than markets to have things done.

New-economy advocates found this a compelling idea. One consequence of the Internet has surely been to make it cheaper to communicate. This should, in turn, lower transaction costs and change company boundaries. Their conclusion was that companies would inevitably downsize and outsource, spin off unnecessary functions, and carry out more and more transactions using the Internet instead of internal memos.

Not so fast. The Internet lowers communication costs, that's for sure. But that means it lowers transaction costs within organizations as well as across organizations. The internal memo might disappear, but only because it is replaced by the internal e-mail message.

It just doesn't follow that lower communication costs lead to smaller companies. In fact, Mr. Coase himself said that ''changes like the telephone and telegraphy, which tend to reduce the cost of organizing spatially, will tend to increase the size of the firm.''

There's a lot of other evidence in the economics literature for Mr. Coase's observation. The Harvard business historian Alfred D. Chandler's classic work ''The Visible Hand'' documented how the deployment of the telegraph and railroad led to the creation of the giant corporation.

Maybe the Internet's role is to provide the inexpensive communications that can support megacorporations. This thought is enough to make a new-economy guru shudder.

What do the facts say about company size? Alas, they are inconclusive. From 1962 to 1992, the average size of a company hardly budged, and the small reduction that did occur could be attributed to the increased importance of the service sector, which tends to have smaller companies.

Later on in his article, Mr. Coase acknowledges that inventions like the telephone might reduce a company's size, if they reduce the costs of using markets by more than they reduce internal communication cost. In other words, it could go either way. We need a deeper understanding of transaction costs to resolve the issue.

So what are the important transaction costs? Mr. Coase, citing another economist, mentions three general categories: search and information costs, bargaining and decision costs, and policing and enforcing costs.

The Internet certainly reduces search and information costs, but, as we have seen, this cuts both ways. Bargaining and decisions still require a team of managers and lawyers sitting around a table. What makes contracts easier is codification and standardization, trends that are important, but are not greatly affected by the Internet, at least so far.

Policing and enforcing costs are the most relevant category. The reason the assembly-line worker doesn't negotiate with the person next to him is that it's too easy for him to say, ''Give me a good deal or I'll stop the line.'' Putting all the assembly-line workers under command-and-control reduces this sort of opportunistic behavior, at least as long as it can be easily observed.

Oliver Williamson, a significant contributor to transaction cost economics, argues that the temptation to be opportunistic is a major component of transaction costs, and hence a major determinant of the boundaries of the company. If certain suppliers are critical to your success, you want them inside, under your control, not outside, where their objectives may differ from yours.

The temptation to be opportunistic hasn't been affected much by the Internet. The Internet has made it easier, however, to monitor some sorts of contracts. Nowadays it is easy to tell if your supplier's claim that it shipped the parts to you on time is true; you can get the tracking number and check the shipper's Web page. Within the company, smart cash registers, inventory management systems, vehicle monitoring systems and the like help ensure that workers are performing their tasks, even when not directly observed.

Computers are monitoring more and more contracts, and that may well, in time, make companies more comfortable about letting functions move outside the command-and-control boundaries.

The real issue confronting a company trying to decide if some unit will be inside or spun off is what incentives the spinoff will have. If you spin off something critical to your business, you leave yourself open to extortion down the road. An internal monopoly supplier may be sluggish and inefficient, but its incentives are at least party aligned with the rest of the organization. An external monopoly can be much worse.

Mr. Coase's point about transaction costs' determining how organizations are structured is both profound and subtle. The Internet certainly affects transaction costs, but determining whether that means companies will be bigger or smaller requires careful analysis of competing forces.

LSE Library's economics Bookmarks

Lots of good information sources

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Myers-Briggs Type Indicator: my results


I did Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) test. Moreover we spend one day analysing the results and personal characteristics with teachers from the LSE and London Business School.
In the past I was really sceptical towards all these tests. I though they were just some astrology you read in tabloid. What a surprise was it when I did MBTI test during the CEMS assessment process. Results were incredibely exact. Even though you are answering questions like "Do you like looking at fire" or "Do you like men with beard?".
So this time I was not suprised by the results as such but what I enjoyed more is the thourogh analysis of the results.


So my type is INTJ (Introversion, iNtuition, Thinking, Judging)

The words are not so much important, they just represent the characteristic but are not self-explanatory and for example E does not mean fully extrovert person. It just speaks about the prevailing characteristic. (my I is 5% only. That means that I am only 5% from being the same E and I) and so on.
Here is the characteristics of INTJ:

INTJs apply (often ruthlessly) the criterion "Does it work?" to everything
from their own research efforts to the prevailing social norms. This in turn
produces an unusual independence of mind, freeing the INTJ from the constraints
of authority, convention, or sentiment for its own sake... INTJs are known as
the "Systems Builders" of the types, perhaps in part because they possess the
unusual trait combination of imagination and reliability. Whatever system an
INTJ happens to be working on is for them the equivalent of a moral cause to an
INFJ; both perfectionism and disregard for authority may come into play...
Personal relationships, particularly romantic ones, can be the INTJ's Achilles
heel... This happens in part because many INTJs do not readily grasp the social
rituals... Perhaps the most fundamental problem, however, is that INTJs really
want people to make sense.

and another one:

INTJs are strong individualists who seek new angles or novel ways of looking at things. They enjoy coming to new understandings. They tend to be insightful and mentally quick; however, this mental quickness may not always be outwardly apparent to others since they keep a great deal to themselves. They are very determined people who trust their vision of the possibilities, regardless of what others think. They may even be considered the most independent of all of the sixteen personality types. INTJs are at their best in quietly and firmly developing their ideas, theories, and principles.



Anybody disagree?
Interestingly I have a similar result as famous economist Gregory Mankiw.

Moreover I shoul probably start playing war games
Some more links:
http://web.forret.com/tools/mbti.asp?type=INTP&lang=EN

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Tomáš Sedláček Doba d(l)uhová a křesťanská symbolika v ekonomice

Dalsi pekny clanek od Tomase Sedlacka, ktery propojuje krestanstvi s ekonomii.
Sedlacek studoval a uci na IES, jeho diplomova prace On the Morals of Homo Oeconomicus a jeho CV zde.
v jeho textech se dobre ctou profesori Sojka, Kouba, Mlcoch a snad i Pulpan.
Venuje se institucionalni ekonomii, etice a filosofii. Jeho prednasky jsou originalnim zazitkem, ackoliv ne kazdemu jeho soumenstvi sedi.

Scheider vs. Klaus o pricinach krize a ceske mene

http://blog.ihned.cz/c3-29881020-YSchne_d-debata-s-hradem-pokracuje-je-to-euro-neni-to-euro

Sunday, November 16, 2008

President Klaus in the British news again

Here is The Times article and The Irish Independent
article about the Klaus's visit to Dublin.
The story is clear, Klaus as a Eurosceptical and anti-federalist polititian who os obsesced with being controversial compared himself to a "dissident within the EU".
Such a comparision is of course inappropriate and attracted a lot of attention.
I am really looking forward how the Czech diplomacy lead by Karel Schwarzenberg will handle President Klaus during the Czech EU Presidency.
I just hope that I will not have to feel ashamed. We had worse times though. When Stanislav Gross was our Prime minister - that was too much.
However, the Czech politics still lacks educated elites. Therefore I feel somehow that our generation should perceive some kind of commitment to enter the politics in the future. We are actually the first generation that had most of the possibilities and options like the young in the democratic countries. Travelling, studying abroad, meeting people, speaking foreign languages, having a good education. All that what the previous generations could not have and what is so important for politics.

Here is the most interesting quotation about Klaus from the article by Jiri Dienstbier:

While we were concerned with running the country, Klaus was concerned with building his own Power through attacking us aselitist’,” said Jiri Dientsbier, a former foreign minister and the Civic Forum leader deposed by Klaus. This is a tactic he has continued to this day.”

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

VŠE - 1st Business School in Eastern European Zone


After returning from Paris I got surprised.
However I must admit that the university has improved a lot over several past years.
Good promotion because reputation matters.

Navrat z Parize

Tak jsem se vratil po nekolika dnech z Parize z konference TheDouble. Nejlepsi business school v Evrope HEC Paris je uprostred lesa a do Parize to trva dve hodiny. To bychom za chvili mohli mluvit o prazskych univerzitach polozenych v Brdech.
Aspon dalsi calnek Ondreje Schneidera:Obamův ekonomický tým a velká pokušení.

Friday, November 07, 2008

Craigův Bond je v Quantum of Solace ještě drsnější

Musím přiznat, že jsem se na nového Bonda hodně těšil. Předchozí Casino Royal totiž velmi příjemně překvapilo zajímavým příběhem,chybujícím hlavním hrdinou, rozvojem Bondovy osobnosti během děje a hlavně realističností celého filmu. Casino Royal – to byl jednoduše obrovský úspěch, který s sebou samozřejmě nesl velká očekávání pro Quantum of Solace.

Kino Odeon na Leicester Square uprostřed Londýna je fascinujícím zážitkem samo o sobě. Bylo postaveno v roce 1937, dnes patří k nejmodernější kinům, má ohromující zvuk a největší plátno v Británii.Na film se těšili také všichni diváci, kterých se do Odeonu vejde 1700, hned po úvodní znělce Metro Goldwyn Mayer se ozval radostný aplaus – nutno přiznat, že se po skončení filmu filmaři něčeho podobného nedočkali. Ale nepředbíhejme.


Úvodní píseň zpívá Alicia Keys s The White Stripes, což je zajímavá kombinace, která se však podle mě tak úplně nepovedla. Muzika odWhite Stripes je výborná, nicméně Jack Stripe a Alicia Keys nezníúchvatně. Předchozí ústřední motiv You Know My Name od ChriseCornella asi jen tak něco nepřekoná.Quantum of Solace na Casino Royal navazuje příběhem, ale méně užpojetím hlavního hrdiny. Je to snad poprvé, kdy se filmaři odvážili natočit pokračování předchozího dílu. Možná i proto působí zápletka komplikovaněji, ale nikoliv zajímavěji.

Příběh začíná zhruba hodinu po skončení Casino Royal, a to opět fascinující akční scénou,tentokrát automobilovou honičkou po italských silnicích, v tunelech,doprovázených střelbou ze samopalů. Bond zůstane nezraněn, alespoň jeho sporťák Aston Martin dostane co proto.

Postupně se před námi odkrývá velikost a síla zločinné organizace Quantum, která překvapí i samotnou MI6. Organizace zasahuje do nejvyšších pater politiky a byznysu na celém světě a přesto zůstávámimo zájem tajných služeb. Děj nás postupně zavede přes Itálii,Anglii, Haiti, Rakousko až do Bolivie, kde lidé trpí nedostatkem kvalitní vody, o kterou kriminálník Dominic Greene usiluje.Dočkáme se i zajímavých momentů – odkrýváme vztah americké abritské tajné služby, zjistíme proč organizovaný zločin chodí naoperu, pochopíme další vztahy v příběhu Casina Royal.Ve filmu skutečně nezazní proslulé „Bond, James Bond.“

Naopak se opět dočkáme dvou Bondových žen, se kterými se hrdina blíže seznámí a jedna z nich samozřejmě musí zemřít. Nicméně oproti předchozímu dílu působí charaktery obou ženských postav daleko ploštěji. Anglická agentka se filmu dokonce jen mihne.Bond se se smrtí femme fatale Vesper z Casino Royal ještě nevyrovnal anova Bond girl Camille nemá tendenci ji v jeho srdci nahradit. Ostatně
Vesper provází celý příběh, když Bond celou dobu odmítá přiznat, žeho Vesper milovala a že v podstatě zemřela pro něho.Camille to v podání ukrajinské modelky Olgy Kurylenkové ve filmu moc sluší, nicméně pojetí její role jí neumožňuje prokázat větší herecký talent. Camille je velmi samostatná žena, která vlastně Bonda vůbec nepotřebuje, v mládí byla její rodina znásilněna a zavražděna tyranským bolivijským diktátorem, teď se pomstí. Snad i proto ses největšími emocemi můžeme setkat při závěrečné scéně v hořícím komplexu bolivijského diktátora.

Bond i v tomto díle přijde o osobu, která mu je blízká a které – jak sám říká – jako jediné mohl důvěřovat. I proto se musí vydat svoji vlastní cestou, chvílemi je veden odplatou, touhou pomstít se, kterámu zatemní racionální uvažování. M v podání Judi Dench dostává ještě více prostoru než v předchozích pěti dílech, její vztah k Bondovi se mění, dokonce ho zprostí služby,aby si nakonec uvědomila, jak moc ho potřebuje.

Craigův Bond je jiný. Nepoužívá technologické vymoženosti, nakteré jsme byli zvyklí z časů Pierce Brosnana, Craig jde místy i přesodpor MI6. Jeho charakter je ovlivněn tím, co se stalo v Casino Royal. Žena, kterou miloval, ho zradila. Z Bonda se tak stává muž,který je místy veden spíše odplatou než rozumem, je méně sympatický, chvílemi zlý, bezcitný.Realističnost – to, proč se mnoho diváků k Bondovi po letech vrátilo nebo proč si noví našli k němu cestu – v Quantum of Solace chybí.Daniel Craig střílí jak o život, zabíjí protivníky ze zločinné organizace Quantum, sám však zůstává samozřejmě nezraněn. Ne že bychom se těšili na to, až si při honičkách zlomí ruku nebo vymkne kotník, ale některé akční scény spíše připomínají Smrtonosnou pastnebo Bourne Identity. Realističnost Casina Royal samozřejmě neznamená, že byl scénář napsán podle skutečné události, ale spíše to,že Bond v podání Craiga nebyl robotem, akční scény byly pochopitelné a nebylo k nim třeba nadpřirozených schopností nebo síly. Quantum of Solace ale přinese ku příkladu naprosto nereálnýse skok padákem nebo letecký souboj, který by se spíš hodil do nějaké videohry.

Věci, které fungovaly v předchozím díle – úžasné scenérie, zběsilé tempo střídající pomalé úseky, dynamická kamera, originální akční scény, cestopisy z celého světa – toho všeho se dočkáme. A také proto neodejdete z kina zklamáni. Myslím však, že předchozí díl bylo fous lepší právě kvůli větší realističnosti a lidskosti celého příběhu.Očekávejte málo jako před prvním Bondem s Danielem Craigem a budete velmi příjemně překvapeni. Budete-li vsak čekat druhé Casino Royal, budete zklamáni.

Film by mohl ubrat na akčnosti a příběh by mohl být zajímavější.

Není jisté, jestli Bond našel dostatečné množství útěchy – quantum of solace – ale pro pokračování Bonda v Craigově podání by to bylo potřeba. Příběh končí otevřeně, což autorům dává možnosti natočit trilogii nebo začít kompletně nový příběh. K čemu se přikloní není jasné, Craig si myslí, že trilogie není vůbec špatný nápad. V každém případě by se Bond měl stát opět postavou, která nejen zabíjí, ale i prožívá. Autoři již od počátku pojali projekt s Danielem Craigem jako příběh přes více filmů, Bond tak může díky Quantum of Solace ukázat lepší tvář v příštím filmu. Jestli tomu tak bude, na to si budeme muset počkat nejméně do roku 2010.

Autor shledl film behem londynske premiery na Leicester Square.


Mark Kermode reviews Quantum of Solace - BBC 5 Live: "There is no pain"

Jak jsem potkal kralovnu..UPDATE


Dnes se to stalo. Potkal jsem kralovnu Alzbetu. Kralovna dnes prisla do skoly otevrit novou budovu a pritom se zucastnila prednasky na tema Climate Change and Africa. Celkove tam pobyla asi deset minut, dalsich deset minut ji recnik dekoval za navstevu a dalsich deset minut ji lide tleskali. Kralovna samozrejme nepromluvila ani slovo, asi to je proti protokolu a ve svem bilem klouboucku skolu v doprovodu Howarda Daviese opustila.


UPDATE: Clanek o jeji navsteve na LSE je zde



To by se mi na VSE nestalo.

Thursday, November 06, 2008

Jean-Claude Trichet, President of the ECB,

Inflation rates are expected to continue to decline in the coming months, reaching a level in line with price stability during the course of 2009. The intensification and broadening of the financial market turmoil is likely to dampen global and euro area demand for a rather protracted period of time.


The whole speech is here

Who reads what

ETS Powerprep 2002 software -> EconPhD
->
Mark J. Perry -> Greg Mankiw - > Ondrej Schneider - > Martin Gregor a konecne ja:

Wow

Měnové rozhodnutí bankovní rady

a reakce v Guardianu

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Priciny krize podle Miroslava Singera

Pohled clena bankovni rady.
Vynatek:
Ex post evidentně šlo o mnohem sofistikovanější
formu hry „letadlo“


Rizika dalšího vývoje ve světě:
• Pokračující vysoká fluktuace měnových kurzů,
akciových trhů, cen komodit
• Další eskalace potíží a bankrotů bank a delší dobu
trvající „zadrhnutí úvěrů“ (credit crunch)
• Prudké zpomalování růstu reálné ekonomiky a zřejmě
několik let trvající recese vyspělých tržních ekonomik
• Další znárodňování bank a strategických firem
• Růst vládních dluhů a zvyšování morálního hazardu
• Obchodní protekcionismus (ožebračování souseda)

V podnikové sféře budou silné tlaky na zeštíhlování a fúze
Česká ekonomika výrazně zpomalí a její růst
bude několik let nízký; inflace klesne během tří
měsíců na nízké hodnoty a setrvá na nich

A-Z of the Financial Crisis

Welcome to our compendium of the financial crisis. The links below will take you to simple but robust explanations of some of the key concepts and terms behind the unprecedented problems facing the financial system. We also look at key players and the biggest victims of events so far.

Let us know if you think we've left anything out (we unquestionably have), or if you think any of our explanations require more colour. If you have any questions about any of the terms listed, leave them at the bottom of the entry and we will endeavour to come in and answer them.

We'll be updating the entries regularly and will be sending email alerts to inform graduate readers of new entries. If you want to land a first job in investment banking in 2009, we hope this will prove an invaluable resource to help get you through the interview.


AIG*
Alt A
Asset backed securities (ABS)
Babcock & Brown
Bailout
Basel II
Bear Stearns
Ben Bernanke
Black swan
BNP Paribas
Bradford & Bingley
Broker dealer model
Capital
Capital adequacy
Collateralized debt obligations (CDO)*
Credit default swaps (CDS)*
Collateralized loan obligations (CLO)
Commercial mortgage backed securities (CMBS)
Credit crunch
Credit spread
Deficit*
Discount window
European Central Bank (ECB)
Federal Reserve (The Fed)*
Fannie and Freddie
Great Depression
Haircut
Hank Paulson
HBOS
Hedging
Iceland
IKB
IndyMac
Japan
Jérôme Kerviel
Lehman Brothers
Leverage
London Inter Bank Offer Rate (LIBOR)*
Liquidity
Marking to market
Meltdown
Merrill Lynch
Money market
Moral hazard
Mortgage backed security (MBS)
Northern Rock
Prime
Ratings agencies
Rights issue
Securitization
Short selling
Structured investment vehicle (SIV)
Special purpose entity (SPE)
Sub-prime
TARP (The Troubled Asset Relief Programme)
Toxic assets
UBS
Value at Risk (VaR)
Washington Mutual
Writedown


see here

European Union to Be Led by Former Soviet Satellite

V zajimavem clanku NY Times popisuji ambivalentni vztah Cechu k Evropske Unii, ale halvne fakt, ze 1.ledna se vedeni nejvetsich ekonomickych bloku sveta ujme Obama s Topolankem (a Klausem).

Je vic nez fascinujici, ze clanek o Ceske republice vysel v NY Times spolecne s oznamenim o vitezi americkych voleb.




No a zajimava je taky citace Tomase Sedlacka, slavneho mladeho ekonoma z IES. Jeho blog na aktualne.cz zde.