Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Look at Cambodian Banks' Rate!

Fixed Deposit Interest Rate (26 December 2008)
Name of Banks Interest Rate
3 Months 6 Months 12 Months
USD
Riel
USD
Riel
USD
Riel
ACLEDA 5.50% 6.00% 6.50% 8.00% 7.50% 9.50%
ANZ Royal 4.55% 4.60% 5.25% 5.55% 5.40% 6.70%
Cambodia Asia Bank 5.50% N/A 6.50% N/A 7.50% N/A
Cambodia Comercial Bank 3.00% 3.00% 3.25% 3.25% 3.25% 3.25%
Cambodia Mekong Bank 2.50% N/A 3.25% N/A 3.50% N/A
Cambodia Public Bank 5.25% N/A 6.25% N/A 7.25% N/A
Canadia 5.00% 5.00% 6.00% 6.00% 7.00% 7.00%
May Bank 2.00% N/A 2.50% N/A 3.25% N/A
SBC Bank 3.00% N/A 3.50% N/A 4.50% N/A
Vattanac Bank 4.25% N/A 5.25% N/A 6.00% N/A

Source: The Phnom Penh Post, Monday, 29 December 2008

Yet the capital inflow remains very low? The rate is very high compared to Japan's rate!
Seems like Cambodian banks havent earned the trust from investors. With such a high deposit rate, Cambodia should attract many investors, but it did not, even though the local banks were ranked B+ by S&P last year.

Why cant we make them ourselves?


The authority should help provide skills to the local people!
It is a very great deal of potential and benifit for the local people. We can add more value to the products before exporting! where is the " one village one product" spirit?


From the Kohsantepheap newspaper!

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RkumQµÜjrksIuTijedImepþA)an[ekaHsnþiPaBdwgfa Caerogral;qñaMrUbKat;)anRbmUlTijedImepþA nig cugepþABIRbCaksikrExµrykeTAlk;[ksikresom taMgBIExmifuna rhUtdl;Extula KWrUbKat;RbmUl TijcugepþABIRbCaksikrExµrEdlmanRbEvgknøHEm:Rt RtUvcgCa)ac;ehIyføwgCaKILÚkñúg1KILÚRkam TijBIRbCaksikrExµrkñúgtMél3Ban;erol rYcdwkCBa¢ÚnykeTAlk;[ksikresom )antMélkñúgmYy KILÚ50)at ebIKitCaluyExµrvij RbEhl5>500erol luHdl;Exvicäika rhUteTAdl;ExFñÚ KWrUb Kat;)anedIrRbmUlTijedImepþAvijmþg eday[tMélkñúg1edIm300erol ehIyKat;)andwkCBa¢ÚneTA lk;enAmat;RckCaM [ksikresomkñúg1edIm)antMél7)at ebIKitCaluyExµrRbEhl1>000erol.
QµÜjrksIuTijepþAbnþfa karrksIuTijepþAenH KWrUbKat;)anRbmUlTijBIRsukCaMkSan extþRBHvihar RsukRtBaMgR)asaT extþ]tþrmanC½y EteBlenHBuMsUvmanepþA Kat;eTARbmUlTijrhUtdl;extþkMBg; FM. rUbKat;bBa¢ak;fa cugepþAksikresomcUlcitþykeTAeFVImðÚb b¤eFVICaGnøk;CabEnøeTAvij ebIedImepþA KWykeTAEkécñeFVICaeRKOgsgðarimdUcCa ekAGI b¤eFVICatu>>> karrksIumuxrbrenH KW)ankak;kb RKan;ebIEdr .

Thursday, December 25, 2008

យួន​ស៊ី​លៀស​រអៀស​ខ្លួន

Vietnam is hidding its guilts!
It is so obvious now!

From the PP Post:
VN blocks entry of Euro MPs



Written by Brendan Brady
Wednesday, 24 December 2008

Khmer Krom advocates barred from flight to Ho Chi Minh City

EUROPEAN government officials visiting the region to advocate for greater cultural and religious freedoms for Khmer Krom were stopped from boarding a flight Tuesday to Ho Chi Minh City from Phnom Penh's International Airport.

Marco Perduca, an Italian parliamentarian, and Marco Pannella, a parliamentarian with the European Union, were both on an unofficial visit as members of a global human rights and democracy advocacy group, the Non-Violent Radical Party, which has consultative status with the United Nations.

The last-minute rebuff was especially surprising, they said, because the foreign minister and parliamentarians from Vietnam had agreed to meet them in Hanoi today.

"I think there are some disagreements in the government," Pannella, who is the advocacy group's president, said, suggesting that some
Vietnamese officials may have been behind the denial.

"There are parts of the government that fear demonstrations" from ethnic Khmers in Vietnam would be provoked by their visit, he said.

He said the Italian government was trying to contact Vietnamese officials to resolve the problem.

As they were about to board their flight, airport authorities presented them with a vaguely composed fax from a Vietnamese state tour agency claiming they had not followed a rule requiring that "when you are issued (an) entry visa for traveling, you must supply your tour program and details schedule".

They noted that the travel agency that sent the fax, Vungtau Intourco Hanoi, had not previously been involved with their travel plans, and their visas were valid until the middle of next month.

They had planned to meet Tuesday with Khmer Krom leaders in Ho Chi Minh City to discuss rights violations against their community including the arrest of activists.

Officials with the Vietnamese embassy in Phnom Penh could not be contacted on Tuesday

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Health Facts: Why Carb is bad?


CARB or Carbohydrate or the socalled starch is a chemical substance abundantly contained in almost every food , but it is found low in vegies and fruits, basically, and very high in rice, potato, and wheat.

When eaten, carb will be quickly digested and converted into SUGAR or Glucose in the blood, irregardless of where it is from. So the excess amount of glocose will be absorbed by INSULIN ( hormone in charge of storing body fat) and converted to glycogen ( that is the source energy) that will be stored in liver and muscle. Basically human body can only store a limit amount of glycogen, so the extra glycogen formed will be store as fat.

According to a Japanese TV I have watched the other day, eating to much carb can lead to diabetes (糖尿病) when you eat too fast and too much . Why?

When you eat too fast or too much carb, the glucose amount in your blood will be high. And when you eat too fast or too much, the insulin cannot absorb glucose contained in your blood, ontime, and thus release it into urine.

However, it doesnt mean you have to avoid carb. Just balance what you eat, which is probably hard!

Mua SocHua: "Justice is for sale in our country for those who can pay

10000000% Agreed!




Written by Chrann Chamroeun and Thomas Gam Nielsen
Friday, 19 December 2008 From the PP post.

With a new police chief, are criminals taking advantage?

THIS week, heavily armed, seemingly well-trained gangs stole an estimated US$400,000 worth of gold from jewellery shops across the capital in three carefully coordinated daytime hits, which observers say belies a marked deterioration in the capital's security following the sudden death last month of National Police commissioner Hok Lundy.

"The perpetrators might believe that the police are demoralised and are busy restructuring themselves," said lawyer Sok Sam Oeun, director of the Cambodian Defenders Project. He could not provide any statistics on crime trends.

Ministry of Interior spokesman Khieu Sopheak said that an observed increase in serious crime was not connected to the recent reshuffle at the National Police.

"Overall, crime is decreasing, and the fact that we have seen more serious crime recently is not connected to the death of Hok Lundy," he said, adding that he also did not have exact figures on crime rates in the capital.

Khieu Sopheak said the police are hunting for the perpetrators of this week's gold robberies, which took place Tuesday and Wednesday, but said that to bring crime down "prevention is better than investigating after the crimes have happened".

US embassy spokesman John Johnson said, "[We] have noticed a slight increase in purse-snatching and similar crimes against American citizens and other expatriates this year." But he added that the embassy did not anticipate the change in police leadership to significanly affect crime rates.

"The embassy has a solid and cooperative relationship with the Cambodian National Police, and we expect that to continue under the leadership of Neth Savoeun," he said.

The new National Police commissioner, Neth Savoeun, was not a available for comment Thursday.

Sam Rainsy lawmaker Mu Sochua said that more severe crime was not a result of Hok Lundy's death but an inevitable by-product of the Kingdom's ongoing culture of impunity.

"Justice is for sale in our country for those who can pay," she said.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Experts predict Cambodian real estate market to recover by 2010

Whoever can predict, but whether it will be right or wrong is still unknown.

PHNOM PENH, Dec. 16, 2008 (Xinhua) -- Economists said that the nearly one billion U.S. dollars in foreign aid pledged to Cambodia by donor nations last week could boost the country's sagging real estate market as early as 2010, national media reported Tuesday.

Kang Chandararot, president of the Cambodia Institute for Development Study, told the Phnom Penh Post that he expected the real estate market will rebound in two years, largely on the strength of foreign aid.

"If the government uses the aid to develop the country...then I think real estate may begin to stabilize," he was quoted as saying by the Post.

But he cautioned that aid would not boost prices to the unprecedented levels seen last year.

Local real estate peaked in 2007 and 2008, partly driven by South Korean investment.

The market started to drop in September, although low transaction volume and scant figures make the depth and impact difficult to assess.

Kang Chandararot said foreign investment would be key to rebuilding the sector, but that other factors, such as the global economic crisis and border tensions with Thailand, could remain obstacles to growth.

Hang Choun Naron, secretary general for the Ministry of Economy and Finance, agreed that the sector was poised to recover.

"I (think) the real estate market will return to normal within the next two or three years," he told the Post.

Briefing interesting news:

WSJ Tuesday, December 16, 2008

--- German industrial conglomerate Siemens AG pleaded guilty on Monday to severeal charges of international corruption related to a long-running bribery-for-business investigation. The company will pay $800 million in criminal and civil fines after admitting it paid bribes to government officials around the globe.

--- Yen will be boosted and USD weakened thanks to the Fed expected rate cut. Many economists expect the Fed to cut its policy rate by half a percentage point to 0.5% while BOJ policy rate is 0.3%. The move could deter japanese investment in the U.S.


---- Asian stocks rose braodly led by Tosho(東証- Tokyo Stock Exchange)'s 5.2% gain due to the announcement by the Bush administration that it will not let the big 3 fall mainly leads to the expectectation that the Fed will cut rate steeply.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Khmer song: សុំ​ទោស​ដែល​ធ្វើ​អោយ​អូន​យំ


​​​Kulen Waterfall, Siem Reap, Cambodia

Lyrics: បង​​នៅ​ចង​ចាំ ចាំបាន​រឿង​គ្រប់​យ៉ាង
រឿង​ស្រស់​កល្យាន​តាម​សូម​ទោស តែ​បង​មិន​ស្តាប់​ហេតុ​ផល ដល់​ពេល​ដែល​បង​ត្រូវ​ចេញ​ពី​អូន ហេតុ​ផល​មាស​ស្ងួន​បង​មិនស្តាប់ ក៏មិន​មែន​យក​លេស​កំហុស​តិច​តួចមិន​យល់ ​អ្វីៗ​បង​ធ្លាប់​គិត​ទុក​យូរ​ហើយ បង​ដឹង​ខ្លួន​ថា​យើង​ទាំងពី​រ​មិន​បាន​ជួប​គ្នា​ឡើយ ទើប​មិន​បក​ក្រោយ​អោយ​អូន​ទឹក​ភ្នែក​ទៀត Noh!!!!អូន​យំ​រាល់​ថ្ងៃ​ពេល​ដែល​បង​ចាក​ចេញ​ទៅ​ ពៅ​អូន​លំបាក អូន​ចោទបង​កំសាក មិន​ព្រម​តស៊ូ ព្យាយាម​ដល់​ណា​បើ​ជីវ៉ា​ក៏ដឹង​ពី​គ្រួសារ​អូន​គ្មាន​ប្រណី អភ័យ​ទោស​ផង​ស្រី​បង​គ្មាន​វាសនា នៅ​តែ​ស្រលាញ់ ស្រលាញ់​អូន​ដូច​ដើម​ ពេល​ខ្លះ​ចង់​ផ្តើម​ស្នេហ៍​ឡើង​វិញ តែ​វា​ពំអាច​ដូចមុន អ្វី​ៗ​ត្រូវ​ចប់​ហើយ​ជីវ៉ា យើង​ត្រូវ​ឈឺ​ផ្សារ​រៀង​ៗ​ខ្លួន​ ក៏មិន​មែន​យក​លេស​កំហុស​តិច​តួចមិន​យល់ ​អ្វីៗ​បង​ធ្លាប់​គិត​ទុក​យូរ​ហើយ បង​ដឹង​ខ្លួន​ថា​យើង​ទាំងពី​រ​មិន​បាន​ជួប​គ្នា​ឡើយ ទើប​មិន​បក​ក្រោយ​អោយ​អូន​ទឹក​ភ្នែក​ទៀត Noh!!!!អូន​យំ​រាល់​ថ្ងៃ​ពេល​ដែល​បង​ចាក​ចេញ​ទៅ​ ពៅ​អូន​លំបាក អូន​ចោទបង​កំសាក មិន​ព្រម​តស៊ូ ព្យាយាម​ដល់​ណា​បើ​ជីវ៉ា​ក៏ដឹង​ពី​គ្រួសារ​អូន​គ្មាន​ប្រណី អភ័យ​ទោស​ផង​ស្រី​បង​គ្មាន​វាសនា អូន​យំ​រាល់​ថ្ងៃ​ពេល​ដែល​បង​ចាក​ចេញ​ទៅ​ ពៅ​អូន​លំបាក អូន​ចោទបង​កំសាក មិន​ព្រម​តស៊ូ ព្យាយាម​ដល់​ណា​បើ​ជីវ៉ា​ក៏ដឹង​ពី​គ្រួសារ​អូន​គ្មាន​ប្រណី អភ័យ​ទោស​ផង​ស្រី​បង​គ្មាន​វាសនា ព្យាយាម​ដល់​ណា​បើ​ជីវ៉ា​ក៏ដឹង​ពី​គ្រួសារ​អូន​គ្មាន​ប្រណី អភ័យ​ទោស​ផង​ស្រី​បង​គ្មាន​វាសនា Eh!!!!!

Saturday, December 13, 2008

"floating" toilets in Cambodia

Very interesting! Hope they succeed!

Singaporean group introduces "floating" toilets in Cambodia
By Channel NewsAsia's IndoChina correspondent Anasuya Sanyal | Posted: 13 December 2008 0006 hrs

Singaporean group introduces "floating" toilets in Cambodia
By Channel NewsAsia's IndoChina correspondent Anasuya Sanyal | Posted: 13 December 2008 0006 hrs












Related Videos
Singaporean group introduces "floating" toilets in Cambodia

CAMBODIA: In rural Cambodia, only 16 per cent of residents have a proper toilet -- the lowest rate in Southeast Asia.

However, one Singaporean group is working to change that.

On Cambodia's great lake, Tonle Sap, water stretches for miles in every direction.

But getting clean drinking water and proper sanitation is another story entirely.

Homes here are floating platforms and must move seasonally, and outhouses are simply a wooden plank over the open water.

Water and sanitation issues are of crucial importance to people who are on Tonle Sap, where safe drinking water comes at a price and toilet facilities are rudimentary.

People have no choice but to contaminate the very same water they use for drinking and washing.

Singaporean non-governmental organisation Lien Aid aims to make a difference in this community of about 10,000 people.

They are introducing the concept of "floating" toilets which are affordable, locally-made, and therefore sustainable.

"It is actually a simple system… We're going to use locally available buckets where they can collect the faeces. We are going to use some locally available agent to dry the faeces, that is, using ashes and other local material," said the CEO of Lien Aid, Sahari Ani.

One key to the project is that locals will have to source and build their own toilets, to ensure that all parts of the community are involved.

"The toilet that we introduce to the community -- they are very happy to get that one and they try to find their own resources to contribute to the project," said the director of the Department of Rural Health Care, Ministry of Rural Development, Chea Samnang.

A young couple, who has two children with another on the way, says they are happy to have a simple and hygienic toilet.

They worry that people's lifelong habits will be difficult to change.

But they hope the affordable toilets will catch on with the lake's residents, just like other modern conveniences that have done so.

And it is testimonies like theirs that makes this project look set to be flush with success.














National Bank slams World Bank projections

Let see which one is right! The prestigious world organization or the corrupt government?

From the PHNOM PENH post

The National Bank head said that the World Bank growth figures for 2009 failed to account for the possibility of higher agriculture yields

081212_14_2.jpg
Photo by: Tracey Shelton
Strong agricultural yields might help economic growth exceed World Bank estimates, said the National Bank.
THE Director of the National Bank of Cambodia rejected Thursday a gloomy World Bank assessment for the Cambodian economy that predicted 4.9 percent growth for 2009.

The World Bank figures stand in sharp contrast to government predictions of 6.5 percent growth for 2009.
"The [World Bank] prediction is not completely correct. It can be slightly wrong," said Tal Nay Im, director general of the National Bank of Cambodia.

She pointed to agricultural yields as a source of growth next year, saying that favourable weather next year will boost the local economy.

She told the Post on Thursday that the World Bank forecast was based on the impact of the global financial crisis on Cambodia and that it over-emphasised garment exports, especially to the US and Europe, as well as tourist arrivals.
"Right now, we expect that the weather will be good [in 2009]. If there is no drought and enough rain, agricultural production will be high.

"If [agricultural] yields are high, we expect that economic growth will be above the World Bank's prediction," she said.
"But if crops are unfavourable, growth could drop to the World Bank's forecasted growth rate."

The government has repeatedly issued growth forecasts that exceed those of international institutions.
Forecasts by the Asian Development Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have all been lower than those of the Cambodian government.

The World Bank on Wednesday said that Cambodia's openness to the global economy has also exposed it to international market fluctuations.

Officials from the bank said by video link from Tokyo that the economy would likely bottom out at the end of 2009. The banks said the current crisis would be "at least as bad" as 1982 and that the current troubles represent a "structural break" from past economic cycles.

Ouk Rabun, a secretary of state at the Finance Ministry, said the growth for 2009 will be 6.5 percent and inflation rate will drop to 10 percent.

Friday, December 12, 2008

World Bank: Cambodian Economy Growth to slow in 2009

World Bank issues grim 2009 forecast for Cambodian economy

December 11, 2008 12:44 pm by pna

PHNOM PENH, Dec. 11 — The World Bank has issued a bleak assessment for the Cambodian economy, predicting only 4.9 percent growth in 2009, national media reported Thursday.

Cambodia's reliance on South Korean tourism and U.S. garment sales would expose the country to crisis-hit economies, Stephane Guimbert, the World Bank senior economist for East Asia and Pacific, was quoted by the Phnom Penh Post as saying.

"Compared to many other countries in the region, (Cambodia) is even more open to the external environment," she said.

Guimbert said that though the country has benefited from its open policies, the slow global economy will cut demand for Cambodian exports and reduce tourism arrivals and foreign investment.

Meanwhile, the World Bank put 2008 growth at 6.7 percent, adding that remittances, which made up four percent of national income last year, would also fall.

However, Ouk Rabun, secretary of state for the Finance Ministry, told the National Assembly Monday that 2009 growth would hit 6.5 percent and inflation would drop to 10 percent. (PNA/Xinhua)

A serious slowdown in China

According to the WSJ dated Dec 11, 2008, Chinese slowdown is obvious when its export was reported to fell 2.2% from a year earlier, imports fell 17.9%, crude oil import fell 17.3% from october.

Yet, China gained in terms of current account surplus. The hopes that China resurrects the world from crisis is getting dimmer. China has to share it is current account surplus to the rest of the world especiall America or the crisis will never end. It is time to end the only China wins game , it should be win-win for everyone.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

My favorite song update

Backstreet boys
Unsuspecting sunday afternoon


[Brian:]
How come I was the last to know
Took the stage then you stole the show
Another unsuspecting sunday afternoon
I was captured by that stare
Now I'm shattered, but I don't care
And the people walking by don't have a clue

[Brian/AJ:]
That I kissed your face

[Brian]
Till the sun was in our eyes
Till the afternoon arrived

[Brian/AJ]
And I can't explain

[Brian]
Last night I saw the fireworks
The kind of pain that never hurts
The one you hate to love is made for you
Another unsuspecting Sunday afternoon

[Nick:]
Monday is a funny thing
Still waiting for the phone to ring
Will my imagination take it slow?
After Saturday, my life is changed
In a moment it was rearranged
Strange how easy it is letting go

[Nick/AJ/Brian:]
And I miss your face
Like the sun was in my eyes
And now I'm running blind
And I can't explain

[Nick]
Last night I saw the fireworks
The kind of pain that never hurts
The one you hate to love is made for you
Another unsuspecting Sunday afternoon

[Brian/Howie:]
This sweet relief
Unexpected things
Is this the end or only the beginning

[All:]
I miss your face
Like the sun was in my eyes(Like the afternoon)
Now I'm running blind (running blind)
I can't explain (can't explain)

[AJ:]
Last night I saw the fireworks
the kind of pain that never hurts
The one you hate to love that's made for you
Another unsuspecting Sunday afternoon
Another unsuspecting Sunday afternoon

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Slide in oil prices now presages trouble later

the wall street journal, December 8, 2008

Dive threatens push for renewable energy, production projects

Already in free fall, the price of oil could soon push much lower as the effects of a global recession take hold.

Crude fell $2.86, or 6.5%, to settle at $40.81 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange on Friday. Many oil-industry insiders and traders now say prices could fall further, into the $30s, before supply cuts push prices back up, perhaps much later into next year. The changes come from a combustible mix of factors—a rise in inventories, shifts in the quality of oil used by refiners, and severely deteriorating demand.

“I don’t think we’re through with the drop. I don’t know where it stops, but I don’t think we’re through,” said Steve Chazen, president and chief financial officer of Los Angeles-based Occidental Petroleum Corp.

Lower oil prices are a short-term gain for consumers and businesses, but a sustained decline in the price of oil also has painful downsides. Energydriven economies—in areas from Texas and Alaska to Venezuela and Russia—can face huge busts, with job losses affecting employment for engineers and roughnecks on rigs as well as the accountants, hotels and restaurants that support them.

Sinking oil prices also reduce the political will to push ahead with costly renewable-energy projects, and reduce the urgency to prioritize energypolicy debates on topics ranging from auto efficiency to offshore drilling. The danger is that when demand does bounce back, prices will boomerang far higher because the supply cushion has shrunk.

The swift decline in prices—crude hit an intraday high this summer of $147 a barrel—is hurting industry players, who have less cash to spend on projects as lower prices hurt their revenue.

They also have less incentive to invest as their margins get crushed. Wednesday, Schlumberger Ltd., the world’s largest oil-field-services firm by market capitalization, said its 2008 earnings will miss analysts’ estimates as oil and gas production slows world-wide. Industry drilling-rig counts have begun falling sharply.

Research firm Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. puts the oil industry’s average break-even cost zone at $35 to $40 a barrel, though the figure can vary by project and based on other factors. Friday’s closing price is well below the $70 to $75 marginal cost at which producers this year could earn an expected return of roughly 9% on new drilling projects.

North America is likely to see the sharpest retrenchment, but Schlumberger’s announcement suggests projects elsewhere could follow. Projects that revived long-dormant wells in Oklahoma, used new technologies to salvage old West Texas oil fields or extracted oil from tar sands in Canada require prices above current levels, unless costs also fall. Some deepwater projects in the Gulf of Mexico or the North Sea would be imperiled if prices fell below $40 for an extended period.

Occidental’s Mr. Chazen says even announced production cuts may be months from taking place, adding to the glut. “Slowing it down is hard. You sign contracts, you make plans,” he says. “It may take you two or three quarters. It can’t be done instantly.”

A further collapse in prices could be forestalled by unexpected supply disruptions. Producers are still struggling long-term to keep pace with global consumption trends. The price drop could stiffen the resolve of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to slash production when members meet Dec. 17 in Algeria. King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, recently was quoted as saying $75 a barrel is the “fair price” of oil. If anything, unpredictability is the only certainty in today’s volatile oil markets.

But a growing number of industry insiders say conditions are ripe to test the market’s lows. It has historically taken OPEC many attempts to stem price declines. A sea of excess inventory is building from Cushing, Okla., to Singapore. Even in China, one of the few growing markets around the globe, stockpiles are rising.

One of the most striking shortterm pulls on oil prices is a futuresmarket condition called contango. Simply put, oil is vastly cheaper to lay hands on now than it is for delivery months or years in advance. Thursday’s settlement for January delivery, $43.67, was roughly $14 cheaper than delivery a year from now, $23 cheaper than two years from now, and a whopping $39 cheaper than delivery in 2016.

Not only does the opposite condition often occur, where spot oil is more expensive, but the contango conditions present today also feature spreads at their widest in years, Barclays Capital says. Contango incentivizes those who can afford to hold oil to hold on to it. Storage fills up, and that causes the spot price to fall because people need to unload oil.

The debt crisis is one reason for the imbalance, since inventories tie up scarce working capital. “Even people who require physical barrels are trying to take it on Jan. 2, so it won’t show up on their balance sheet at the end of the year,” says Mike Loya, an executive with large international oil trader Vitol Group.

Industrialized countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development saw stocks rise to 56 days of forward consumption as of the end of October, well above historic levels, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

In the U.S., crude-oil stocks are above five-year averages. Traders have also found it profitable to lease tankers for floating storage, which helps inventories to build.

It isn’t just financial maneuvers threatening the price of oil. The premium that the market gave light, sweet crude oil, which is well-suited for making diesel, has dwindled as diesel demand has shrunk.

Deutsche Bank AGanalyst Adam Sieminski expects further weakness in the widely quoted Nymex and London light, sweet oil benchmarks “that generate pricing headlines” because substantial new refining capacity is starting up in India and China designed to make products from lower-quality crude. Reliance Industries Ltd.’s Jamnagar refinery complex in India, set to become the world’s largest single-location refinery with a major new expansion, is expected to start full operations in the first quarter of 2009.

A popular research note brimmed with pessimism from energy executives at the end of Thanksgiving week, when Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. Securities Inc. invited clients to help write its morning missive. One exploration and production executive wrote in: “Is E&P where the banking sector was six months ago—recognizing the fundamentals have deteriorated but not yet seeing the cliff we’re headed for?”

China's social spending a key to long-term growth

Another trick from China, or the tricky advice?

Source: The wall street journal , Monday, December 8, 2008

Beijing -- In its drive to avoid a sharp economic downturn, China plans to spend four trillion yuan ($581 billion) on a stimulus package that focuses on railways, airports and other hard assets. But just 1% of that sum is going to increased social services.

That balance needs to be corrected, many scholars say, if China is to keep growing rapidly and improving living standards in the years ahead. More spending by its own consumers would both support growth and reduce reliance on exports, but that isn't going to happen unless the government eases the burden on families to provide for education, health care and old age. A healthier and better-educated populace should also be more productive.

[China Hits Snag on Social Safety Net]

"You need investment in human capital to produce high growth rates in the future," says Khalid Malik, head of the United Nations Development Program in China.

It's easy to understand why China is investing so heavily in infrastructure. Construction is the part of the economy that has slowed most sharply, and thus is most in need of support. Putting money into infrastructure has a quick payoff and is a tested strategy that China employed in 1998 to pull out of the Asian financial crisis.

But improving infrastructure may not be enough to support long-term growth -- especially in China, which already has one of the highest investment rates of any major economy. Some worry that China could eventually go down the same road as Japan, which kept spending even after officials ran out of worthwhile projects.

Yet weaving a social safety net has proved a particularly tricky task in China. President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao have made social programs a higher priority, but spending has usually lagged behind government promises. In 1997, the government said it would spend 4% of China's annual gross domestic product on education by 2000. The goal was never reached. Last year spending totaled 2.8% of GDP.

"We have no shortage of goals and targets. What we lack are specific policies and measures to achieve these targets," Zhao Dianguo, director of the department of rural social security at the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security, said at a recent U.N. forum.

In the U.S., expansion of social programs is a conventional part of measures to cope with economic downturns. Congress has already passed an extension of unemployment benefits, and more measures are likely in the stimulus package President-elect Barack Obama has promised to push through after he takes office in January. Options being discussed include increasing support for lower-income families' health-care costs, expanding food stamps and college grants, and further extending jobless benefits.

Earlier, the administration of President George W. Bush offered tax rebates to boost consumer spending. But fiddling with personal taxes wouldn't help as much in China. That is because the country's nascent tax system covers so few people to begin with.

And increasing social spending is surprisingly difficult in China because it is often unclear which parts of government are responsible for funding and operating the programs. China is a huge country with a bureaucracy to match: It has 31 provinces, 333 municipalities, 2,859 counties and 694,745 rural villages. For decades, there has been little direction on this issue from Beijing, which generally lets local governments fend for themselves financially.

Local officials are often more interested in supporting industrial projects that boost their tax revenue than in expanding social programs that only cost them money. For instance, the program to support incomes of the worst-off -- the urban minimum living allowance, often known by its Chinese shorthand dibao -- reaches only a fraction of the people who are eligible for it, and its rolls haven't significantly expanded in recent years.

Beijing often doesn't have the means to control how money is spent locally, where priorities are different. While local officials complain of unfunded mandates for new programs, central officials worry that any money they send to the provinces will get lost. "The central government has great difficulty in monitoring local government spending," says Mark Williams of Capital Economics in London.

The lack of much of a social safety net is one reason Chinese consumers save so much. Urban households put away more than a quarter of their income, and that proportion has been gradually rising. That thrift is less a sign of virtue than of the great pressures on most families.

Many of China's public institutions collapsed in the transition to a market economy and have mostly not been replaced. In today's China, welfare for the poorest and pensions for the elderly are minimal. There is little government or private health insurance. So families need to pay for education, health care and to support aged parents -- expenses that are broadly covered in Europe and to a lesser extent in the U.S.

Optimists point out that China's government has been building up social programs for the past couple of years, such as free primary education and expanded health and welfare benefits for the rural poor. Though they are small now, the new programs mean the government may now be better able to live up to its promises.

The government says improving living standards is a priority of the stimulus plan: It has promised to increase state pensions and welfare payments to the urban and rural poor. There is also 4.8 billion yuan in new funds going to support thousands of clinics in poor rural areas. That isn't much compared with China's other spending plans, but it's a start.

And China's leaders, facing many calls for additional stimulus measures that will more directly aid consumers, could well do more in coming weeks. But a longer-term fix also requires sorting out the division of labor between central and local governments -- a messy task that could take years.