TimeLine Layout

December, 2016

  • 8 December

    Bangladesh arrests five suspected extremists

      Dhaka / AFP Bangladesh’s elite security force on Thursday arrested five suspected members of a banned extremist outfit who it said were planning to break their leaders out of jail. The Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) said the men were members of the banned Harkatul Jihad al Islami (HuJI), whose leader Mufti Abdul Hannan this week had his death sentence upheld ...

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  • 8 December

    Urgent appeal for supplies after strong Indonesia quake

      Meureudu / AFP Aftershocks rattled the survivors of a devastating Indonesian earthquake that killed more than 100 people, as officials urgently appealed on Thursday for medicine and doctors to treat the hundreds injured. The shallow 6.5-magnitude quake levelled hundreds of homes, mosques and businesses across Aceh province, one of the areas worst affected by the devastating 2004 tsunami. Search and ...

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  • 8 December

    The real productivity problem

      Our thinking about productivity is cockeyed, according to a new economic report. We’re ignoring the real productivity problem: surging costs for health care, housing and education. We need to understand this argument, because it just might be correct. Unless you’ve been vacationing on Mars, you know that productivity is the catchword for economic efficiency — and also that we’re ...

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  • 8 December

    Poland has a lesson for central banks

      Simply holding still shows backbone when other Polish institutions are under siege. By sticking with its longest policy pause in almost two decades, the National Bank of Poland is winning over the biggest doubters of the country’s course after the Law & Justice party’s sweep into power last year. S&P Global Ratings, which in January handed the sovereign its ...

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  • 8 December

    Keep politics out of FDA’s drug-approval system

    Congress has voted to change the way new prescription drugs are approved, in a way that could endanger patients. The deal now under consideration contains a sweetener for lawmakers who might be wary of such a change (Democrats, that is): substantially increased funding for medical research. It’s very effective politics, but not necessarily good policy. The bill in question would ...

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  • 8 December

    Early Brexit talks good for UK’s economic health

      British parliamentarians voted 448 to 75 to endorse Prime Minister Theresa May’s plan to trigger Brexit talks by the end of March. The MPs also secured the right to scrutinize her negotiating plan first. The debate in the House of Commons continued for six hours before the voting. The vote is not legally binding. But it is politically significant ...

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  • 8 December

    Obama’s climate rules are safer than they seem

      Those who support aggressive action to reduce greenhouse gases fear that the Donald Trump administration will undo all or most of President Barack Obama’s climate change initiatives. But those fears are probably unwarranted. A good guess, based on a close look at the regulations that matter most, is that the Obama administration’s work on climate is more secure than ...

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  • 8 December

    Good UK data looks likely to break bad in 2017

      Economists and investors wondering how much longer they will have to wait before fallout from June’s Brexit vote appears in the data may get their answer soon. While much has been made of the resilience of the UK economy, with GDP data and PMI readings beating expectations while unemployment continues to fall, the tide may be turning on the ...

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  • 8 December

    Mexico, China are very different trading partners

      With free trade under fire from the incoming administration and under question from many other quarters, it is U.S. trade relations with China and Mexico that have been getting the most attention and criticism. That makes sense, given that those are two of this country’s three biggest trading partners — and the third is Canada, which is hard to ...

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  • 8 December

    Glencore, Qatari fund buy 19.5% in Russia’s Rosneft

      MOSCOW / AP Commodities giant Glencore and Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund have together acquired a 19.5 percent stake in Russia’s top state-controlled oil company, Rosneft, in a deal worth 10.5 billion euros ($11.3 billion), officials said. The long-planned sale is part of the Russian government’s efforts to sell some state assets to help balance the budget amid a two-year ...

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