Wednesday, December 26, 2012

New study: Indecisive economic policy takes a lasting toll on financial markets

SEATTLE, Dec. 26, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ --?According to a new study from the University of Washington Foster School of Business, excessive debate and/or ambiguity on national tax, spending, regulation and debt decisions creates an environment of uncertainty that has an ill effect on financial markets. And this malaise can outlast the uncertainty itself.

The study by Jonathan Brogaard, assistant professor of finance, and Andrew Detzel, a doctoral student at the Foster School, demonstrates that when economic policy uncertainty increases, asset prices fall concurrently, and market volatility jumps significantly. What's more, the negative effect of government-induced uncertainty persists.

"We're finding," says Brogaard, "that the lack of a decision can be just as bad as a bad decision."

Many academic studies have sought to pinpoint the economic toll of policy uncertainty. Brogaard and Detzel are the first to connect a high-frequency measure with its effect on that most telling gauge of the economy, the financial markets.

They might have zeroed in on particularly contentious moments in recent policy history: Iraq war funding, Sarbanes-Oxley and Dodd-Frank reforms, the Affordable Care Act, the debt ceiling crisis, the sunsetting of Bush-era tax credits.

Instead, they measured uncertainty itself. Brogaard and Detzel built a web crawler that captures media mentions of terms commonly associated with economic policy uncertainty. The crawler scanned millions of articles in prominent magazines and newspapers over a 20-year period, monitoring the frequency of policy uncertainty reported in 21 geographically dispersed nations, among them the United States.

Separating policy uncertainty from trigger events affords a clearer picture of the life cycle of economic policy uncertainty. It allows for continuous tracking that takes into account periods of policy debate, inaction, inclusive action, ineffectual action, and anxiety over the need for future action.

"The passing of a bill does not necessarily indicate the resolution of all uncertainty," Brogaard says.

Once they?identified periods of heightened uncertainty about economic policy, Brogaard and Detzel analyzed the corresponding stock market returns representing each nation in the study. An uptick in uncertainty sinks asset prices across the economy.

The reason, Brogaard explains, is that nationwide uncertainty signals a decrease in future cash flows and an increase in the risk premium?the amount an investor demands to hold an asset. On average, the cash flow impact lasts six months and the risk premium is heightened for over a year. The overall negative effect can last long beyond the period of uncertainty caused by any specific policy event.

The study's message to policy makers is clear: be more decisive.

This is certainly a tall order in a democracy, especially a democracy as starkly polarized as the American variety. Brogaard says that the United States is about average in its amount of government indecision among the 21 nations in the study. But with federal, state and local government expenditures comprising more than 42 percent of the nation's GDP in 2009, "the ubiquity of US government policy makes it very hard to diversify against uncertainty," Brogaard adds.

And uncertainty is growing. While marking its frequency across 20 years of media reports, Brogaard and Detzel charted a recent rise in American economic policy uncertainty over the past five years, and a spike since 2008.

Something to consider as the nation hurtles toward a "fiscal cliff" of automatic tax hikes and spending cuts set to begin in 2013 unless Congress takes action. Decisive action would be best.

The full study is available for download at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2075375

SOURCE The University of Washington's Michael G. Foster School of Business

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/study-indecisive-economic-policy-takes-lasting-toll-financial-233700489.html

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Video: Former President Bush remains hospitalized

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Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50295989/

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Tuesday, December 25, 2012

NORAD Tracks Santa: Follow the Big Guy on Any Smartphone

Santa is already in action in Asia and Europe. Where is he exactly? NORAD will tell you on this lovely Christmas Eve. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/kanbsuZQSWw/norad-tracks-santa-follow-the-big-guy-on-any-smartphone

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GaryMoller.com - Health, Fitness - Naturally!: Widespread over ...

"Hi Gary

My doctor prescribed 50,000 ui(?) of vitamin D daily for a week then once a month - for a deficiency that showed in the blood test.? I think that?s why I was given it.? I have chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia and she said it would help.

The dose made me sick and within 3 days of taking the pills I stopped because a rash broke out on my entire neck and the sides of my face.? It was unbelievably itchy and painful."

_________________________________________

Gary:
It appears there was a General Practitioner's CME (Continuing Medical Education Conference) early this year, during which the issue of vitamin D was discussed.

If you have been following medical politics, you will be aware that doctors will not prescribe a natural substance that is not owned manufactured by Big Pharma and not on the Pharmac Prescribers' List. ?This includes natural vitamin D.

However, there is now a solution: Synthetic Vitamin D such as Ergocalciferol which doctors are now prescribing?indiscriminately?with no regard for the potentially dangerous side effects. ?Incidentally, Ergo means "same as". ?Vitamin D is otherwise known as "cholecalciferol". ?Note the connection?

Normal therapeutic doses of natural vitamin D are at about 2,000iu per day and no more. ?This poor woman was prescribed 50,000iu per day which is about 350,000iu for the week! ?She would have been lucky to live through this without more serious side effects.

Her skin condition may be the result of massive mobilisation of calcium from the bones into the blood stream, causing a severe skin dermatitis. ?This may be diagnosed as Lupus Erythmatosus or Rosacea and normally treated with powerful steroids. ?This is how one drug leads to another and another and another. ?Next thing you know, the poor patient is on half a dozen drugs and the original reason for?prescribing?the first drug has long been forgotten! ?Overwhelmed by dangerous side effects! ?This is the dangerous Cascade Effect of drugs prescribing.

Please read the article here which describes the dangerous side effects of over-dosing with vitamin D and also why you don't prescribe large doses for conditions like fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue or heart problems.
http://blog.garymoller.com/2011/06/is-monthly-administration-of-50000iu.html

You might think this unusual but it is not. ?I have had several similar cases come to my attention this year but this is the worst case of ever-prescribing yet. ?I hear of these cases because the person is being hurt and is desperate for relief and they may come to me as a last-ditch grasp for relief. ?Often there is no immediate connection between their distress and their "vitamin medication".

It really does beg the question:?


  • Do these people really know what they are doing to their patients?
  • Do they have the best interests of their patients in mind, or have they been totally captured by the huge medical-pharmaceutical money-making machine?
  • Do they even care?

The people most being prescribed these horrible synthetics in such massive doses are the elderly. ?Please keep a close watch on what is being given to your Gran. ?If the drug does not make her noticeably healthier, then she might be better without!

Source: http://blog.garymoller.com/2012/12/widespread-over-dosing-patients-with.html

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Google vs. Microsoft: Santa-tracking systems go out of sync

4 hrs.

Not even Santa Claus can avoid getting drawn into the tech clash between Google and Microsoft: The two companies have set up separate online systems to track where the Jolly Old Elf has been on Christmas Eve?? but they show him simultaneously at widely separated locations, delivering presents at a dramatically different rate.

On the official "NORAD Tracks Santa" website, powered this year by Microsoft, Santa Claus was in Rome, well past the 3-billion-present mark in his holiday rounds. At the same time, Google's Santa Tracker showed him buzzing through Agadez in the African country of Niger, not quite up to the 1-billion-present mark.

They can't both be right. Can they? Here's the word from Search?Engine?Land's Danny Sullivan, who has been tracking the discrepancy in this year's?Santa-tracking software:

"NORAD explains that it uses everything from radar to jets to track Santa. Google doesn?t explain its technology, but I suspect it tries to triangulate Santa using his cell phone signal or use of wifi hotspots.

"As for why NORAD shows Father Christmas delivering three?times the number of gifts that Google is listing, perhaps NORAD?s radars can better pinpoint presents while Google might be doing estimating.?Meanwhile? both services sometimes show presents being delivered over oceans! And why is NORAD showing Santa arriving in some places at 9pm rather than midnight, as has been the case in the past?"

Maybe this is just the sort of thing that happens when you switch software: NORAD (also known as the North American Aerospace Defense Command) has been monitoring Santa's flight as a public service since 1955, and five years ago, it teamed up with Google to keep up with the crush of Web traffic. This year, however, the NORAD Santa operation parted ways with Google and partnered with Microsoft instead.

Google stayed in the Santa game by setting up its own tracking system for "Santa's Dashboard" and Google Maps?? a system that doesn't make use of NORAD's tracking data.

Today, Canadian Maj. Gen. Andre Viens, a spokesman for NORAD, declined to intervene in the Santa-tracking war.

"It's not affecting our tracking," Viens told MSNBC. "We're not in competition with anyone. Our role, and we've been doing that for more than?50 years, is to track Santa and make sure that he has a safe and secure journey throughout the world, and throughout North America in particular."

TODAY:?Follow Santa's Christmas Eve flight

PhotoBlog: Inside NORAD's command center

Maybe it shouldn't be surprising to find?that it's so difficult to get a firm fix on Santa's position, considering how many presents he has to deliver in so little time. Some experts have speculated that the only way Santa could ?deliver gifts (or lumps of coal) to billions of homes in the course of just a few hours would be if he somehow harnessed quantum teleportation. And once you accept that, it's not that big of a leap to detect Santa in two places at once.

Alan Boyle is the science editor for NBC News Digital, and has been tracking NORAD's Santa tracker since 1998.?Boyle's usual online?hangout is over at Cosmic Log.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/google-vs-microsoft-santa-tracking-systems-go-out-sync-1C7657754

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Monday, December 24, 2012

Obama attends Inouye memorial in Hawaii (Washington Post)

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Xsens teases wearable 3D body sensors that won't cost, will track an arm and a leg (video)

Xsens teases wearable 3D body sensors that won't cost an arm and a leg video

When we think of full-body motion capture, we most often associate it with movie-grade equipment that demands a dedicated room, odd-looking suits and a corporate bank account to finance it all. Xsens hints that we may not have to rent a professional studio (or stand in front of a Kinect) to get complete body tracking for personal use. It's planning to show a wearable, 3D-capable tracking system at CES that uses "consumer grade" MEMS sensors to monitor joint positions and movement -- in other words, the kind of technology that might go into a phone's accelerometer, just strapped to our arms and legs. Further details are scarce, although Xsens is pressing for uses in everything from fitness to gaming. We'd like to see partners line up so that there's a product we can buy in a store. Until then, we'll have to make do with the company's skateboard-dominated teaser clip, which you can find after the break.

Continue reading Xsens teases wearable 3D body sensors that won't cost, will track an arm and a leg (video)

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Source: Xsens

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/12/23/xsens-teases-low-cost-wearable-3d-body-sensors/

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