Sunday, October 14, 2012

Global Social TV Market Worth $256.44 Billion by 2017


12 Oct 2012 07:30 Africa/Lagos

Global Social TV Market Worth $256.44 Billion by 2017

DALLAS, October 12, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --

According to a new market research report, " Social TV Market: Global Advancements Forecasts & Analysis (2012 - 2017) ", published by MarketsandMarkets (http://www.marketsandmarkets.com), the total Social TV market is expected to reach $256.44 billion by 2017 with a CAGR of 11.2%.

Browse 62 market tables and in-depth TOC on " Social TV Market: Global Advancements Forecasts & Analysis (2012 - 2017) " .
http://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Market-Reports/social-tv-market-815.html
Early buyers will receive 10% customization of reports.

To make television a more active and interactive experience, Social Television came into existence. Television viewers are currently looking for something interesting to watch and get opinions from their friends and family. The social layer on television makes television interactive. Internet and social networking acts as a medium for the convergence of the social layer with television and to enable viewers to communicate electronically with their friends watching the same program.

Television viewers are able to personalize the television experience by analyzing the various statistics provided by Social TV. Viewers are provided with a wide variety of choices from content discovery applications, check-in applications, and social programming application. Many social television tools and applications have given a customized television experience based on the viewer's choice of interest. Many companies have developed second screen applications to engage more viewers and to increase the targeted audience.

The future for the television is social through integration of social interaction on the television. Broadcasters are developing and enriching social TV integration; they are targeting the tune-in customer, engagement and their loyalty to boost the rating and they are also discovering the social TV challenges.

LG Smart TV packs in a ton of apps and Wii-style remote.

The global Social TV market revenue is expected to grow from $151.14 billion in 2012 to $256.44 billion by 2017, at an estimated CAGR of 11.2% from 2012 to 2017.

Europe commanded the largest share of the Social TV market revenue in 2012 at $55.48 billion; and is expected to reach $77.74 billion by 2017, at a CAGR of 7.0% from 2012 to 2017.

Scope of the Report

This report analyzes the Global Social TV market based on:

Hardware/Smart TV market by Value & Volume
Social TV technology & Platform
Social TV End users technology
Social TV trends and forecast 2012-2017 in terms of use of Second screen usages, TV viewing behavior etc.
Industry and region specific market data for Smart TV, technology and platform, and end user technology respectively


In addition to market sizes and forecasts, the report also provides a detailed analysis of the market trends and factors influencing market growth, offering in-depth geographic analyses of the Social TV market in North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America and Middle East & Africa. The report draws the competitive landscape of the Social TV market, providing an in-depth comparative analysis of the technological and marketing strategies the key players are adopting in order to gain an edge over the their competitors.

About MarketsandMarkets

MarketsandMarkets is a global market research and consulting company based in the U.S. We publish strategically analyzed market research reports and serve as a business intelligence partner to Fortune 500 companies across the world. MarketsandMarkets also provides multi-client reports, company profiles, databases, and custom research services.

MarketsandMarkets covers thirteen industry verticals; including advanced materials, automotives and transportation, banking and financial services, biotechnology, chemicals, consumer goods, energy and power, food and beverages, industrial automation, medical devices, pharmaceuticals, semiconductor and electronics, and Telecommunications and IT [ http://www.marketsandmarkets.com/telecom-and-IT-market-research-113.html ].

We at MarketsandMarkets are inspired to help our clients grow by providing apt business insight with our huge market intelligence repository. To know more about us and our reports, please visit our website http://www.marketsandmarkets.com.

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World Population of Hungry People Reducing But Burundi Has Most Hungry People


2012 Global Hunger Index: World Hunger Declines, but Progress Is Slow and Threatened by Unsustainable Use of Natural Resources

WASHINGTON, Oct. 11, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The 2012 Global Hunger Index (GHI), launched today by International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), Welthungerhilfe, and the international humanitarian organization Concern Worldwide, shows that progress in reducing the number of hungry people in the world has been tragically slow. According to the Index, world hunger remains serious while unsustainable use of land, water, and energy threaten the food security of the poorest and most vulnerable.

Launched in advance of World Food Day on October 16 th, the 2012 Index, "The Challenge of Hunger: Ensuring Sustainable Food Security under Land, Water, and Energy Stresses," analyzed the level of hunger in 120 countries and found that 20 face levels of hunger that are "alarming" or "extremely alarming." The majority of those countries are in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. Burundi topped the list as the country facing the highest level of hunger, followed by Eritrea and Haiti. However, all regions have made progress against hunger, driving the global GHI score down 26 percent since 1990.

The 2012 Index focuses in particular on the effects that land, water, and energy stress have on global food security, particularly for the world's poorest people. To feed nine billion people—the projected world population in 2050—who will consume at the rate of 12 billion people if they follow the current consumption pattern of industrialized countries like the United States, it is clear that more food must be produced with fewer resources, and wasteful practices and policies must be eliminated.

"Agricultural production must increase to meet the demands of a growing and increasingly wealthy population," said Tom Arnold, Chief Executive Officer of Concern Worldwide. "Yet to avoid more stress on land, water, and energy resources, and to ensure that all have access to adequate food, that production must be sustainable and must prioritize the poor."

Higher food and oil prices have increased the number of international and national agricultural deals in recent years, with many of the leases and other agreements targeted at Sub-Saharan Africa where land rents are cheaper and regulatory systems are weaker. "Large-scale foreign investments in land should be closely monitored," said Welthungerhilfe President Bärbel Dieckmann. "Local organizations are needed to secure transparency and the participation of smallholder farmers whose livelihoods are impacted by land deals."

The Index lays out clear policy recommendations on how to use land, water, and energy for sustainable food security. These include improving governance of natural resources; scaling up technical approaches to food production and natural resource protection; and addressing the drivers of natural resource scarcity. Among these suggestions is to phase out subsidies for fuels and fertilizers, including the biofuel mandates of the United States and European Union, which are increasing prices and competition for land.

"If local, national, and international natural resource policies focus on sustainable, long-term gains, if policies are coordinated and tradeoffs among land, water, and energy policies are minimized, we can strengthen the global food system while preventing resource depletion," said Claudia Ringler, IFPRI

Deputy Division Director. "Such a shift to sustainable food security would benefit billions of people today and many more in future decades."

About the Global Hunger Index
The Global Hunger Index presents a multidimensional measure of global, regional, and national hunger by ranking countries on a 100-point scale, with 0 being the best score (no hunger) and 100 being the worst. A country's GHI score is calculated from three equally measured indicators: the proportion of people who are undernourished; the proportion of children younger than five years old who are underweight; and the mortality rate of children under five. The 2012 GHI scores are based on data from 2005-2010, the most recent available. To download a copy of the report, please visit: http://www.concernusa.org/media/pdf/2012/10/ghi2012_final.pdf

About the Contributing Organizations
Concern Worldwide is an international, non-governmental humanitarian organization dedicated to reducing extreme poverty, with more than 3,200 personnel working in 25 of the world's poorest countries in Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean. Concern Worldwide targets the root causes of extreme poverty through programs in health, education, livelihoods and microfinance, HIV and AIDS, and emergency response, directly reaching more than 9.5 million people. For more information, please visit concernusa.org or follow us on Twitter and Facebook .

The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) seeks sustainable solutions for ending hunger and poverty. IFPRI was established in 1975 to identify and analyze alternative national and international strategies and policies for meeting the food needs of the developing world, with particular emphasis on low-income countries and on the poorer groups in those countries. It is a member of the CGIAR Consortium. www.ifpri.org .

Welthungerhilfe is one of the largest non-governmental aid organizations in Germany. It provides fully integrated aid from one source, ranging from rapid emergency relief to reconstruction programs, as well as long-term projects with local partner organizations following the principle of help towards self-help. Since its foundation in 1962, more than 6,247 projects have been carried out in 70 countries with a total funding of $2.6 billion, striving for a world without hunger or poverty. For further information, visit www.welthungerhilfe.de .

PRESS CONTACT:
Crystal Wells: crystal.wells@concern.net / 212.557.8000
Sarah Immenschuh: s.immenschuh@cgiar.org / 202.862.5679
Simone Pott: simone.pott@welthungerhilfe.de / +49.0.228.22.88.132

SOURCE Concern Worldwide US

Web Site: http://www.concernusa.org

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"Your Beauty is Worth Nothing" Wins Top Awards at Antalya Film Festival


13 Oct 2012 14:00 Africa/Lagos



"Your Beauty is Worth Nothing" Wins Top Awards at Antalya Film Festival




ANTALYA, Turkey, Oct. 13, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- "Your Beauty is Worth Nothing," a film about an immigrant Turkish boy who struggles with his new life in Austria won the Best Film Award in the National Competition at the 49th Antalya Golden Orange Film Festival. The winners were announced at a Closing Night Gala on October 12, 2012.

This year's festival sent out a strong message for peace and against a possible intervention in the conflict in Syria. Many participants also spoke out for peace and tolerance and their films focused on important social issues like recognition of ethnic identities, women's rights, child abuse, gay rights and freedom of expression.

"This film is about a Turkish-Kurdish family and it's a film that doesn't take sides," said the director Huseyin Tabak, the German-born director of "Your Beauty is Worth Nothing." "It's on the side of humanity." The film also won the Best Screenplay, Best Supporting Actress, Best Editing awards and a Special Jury Prize.

"We don't want to fight with anyone. We don't want to fight with Syria," said Ali Adnan Ozgur, whose film "Children of the Land," about two children who take refuge in a village school won a Special Jury Prize.

In the International Competition, "Aglaya" a film by Hungarian director Krisztina Deak about a Romanian circus family who escape persecution in the 80s, won The Best Film Award and a Special Jury Prize.

"This is my first premiere and international festival and I'm very, very happy," said the director of "Aglaya" who applied to Antalya right after finishing her film. "This is a wonderful festival, and the organization and the events were very good."

The ten films in the International Competition came from Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East.

"What is most impressive is that all the National Competition films deal with really important issues for the country and the artists," said Barbara Boyle, Associate Dean at UCLA's Film Department. Boyle was the only member of the National Jury from the U.S. "For me that is the role of the artist, particularly the film artist, and it is important for audiences to deal with these issues and not be afraid."

The festival was not without controversy. There was a public dispute within the national jury about censorship and artistic merit, and statements were made to the Turkish media during the festival.

For more information go to www.altinportakal.org.tr.

The winners are:

The International Competition:

Best Film: "Aglaya" by Kristina Deak/ Hungary
Special Jury Award: "Keep Smiling" by Rusudan Chkonia/ France
Best Performance: Marian Dziedziel for "Supermarket"/ Poland

The National Competition:

Best Film: "Your Beauty is Worth Nothing" by Huseyin Tabak.
Special Jury Award: "Children of the Land" by Ali Adnan Ozgur.
Best First Film and Best Director: "Zerre" by Erdem Tepegoz.
Best Actress: Anna Andrusenko in "Farewell Katya" by Ahmet Sonmez
Best Actor: Abdulkadir Tuncer in "Your Beauty is Worth Nothing" by Huseyin Tabak

Contact:

Elif Cercel
International Publicist
ecercelpr@me.com



SOURCE Antalya Golden Orange Film Festival

CONTACT: Elif Cercel, +1-323-600-3839, ecercelpr@me.com

Web Site: http://www.altinportakal.org.tr/








Paul Obazele’s Lie To Minister of Aviation Shocks Zik Zulu Okafor

Princess Stella Adaeze Oduah, OON, Honourable Minister of Aviation, Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Paul Obazele’s Lie To Minister of Aviation Embarrasses Zik Zulu Okafor

Paul Obazele.

The immediate past president of the Association of Movie Producers (AMP), Paul Obazele is in trouble again for allegedly lying to the Honourable Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Adaeze Oduah that he is still the President of AMP during a recent courtesy visit accompanied by Emeka Rollas who also claimed to be the new president of Actors Guild of Nigeria (AGN) even though it is no secret that he lost to the new President of the AGN, Ibinabo Fiberisima after a controversial election last month. Obazele’s false claim has embarrassed the office of Zik Zulu Okafor, the bona fide current President of the Association of Movie Producers (AMP). Top stakeholders in Nollywood like Fidelis Duker confirmed the report on the closing day of Victor Okhai’s In Short International Film Festival Saturday October 12, 2012, at the City Mall in Onikan, Lagos Island.

Paul Obazele has not been pleased since he lost his leadership role of AMP to Zik Zulu Okafor and after desperate attempts to unseat the incumbent chairman of the Edo State chapter of AMP, Peddy Okhai failed.

Zik Zulu Okafor.

Since his election, Zik Zulu Okafor has taken the Association of Movie Producers (AMP) to a higher level from the local status to the global arena and in fact led a delegation of top Nollywood practitioners to the annual New Media Nollywood Programme hosted by the Georgia Institute of Technology last December in Atlanta, Georgia, USA.









Saturday, October 13, 2012

Why The European Union Won the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize



Award of the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize to the European Union

WASHINGTON, Oct. 12, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Norwegian Nobel Committee has today awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for 2012 to the European Union, noting that the Union and its forerunners have for over six decades contributed to the advancement of peace and reconciliation, democracy and human rights in Europe.

"It is a tremendous honour for the European Union to be awarded the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize," said President of the European Council Herman Van Rompuy and President of the European Commission Jose Manuel Barroso in a joint statement.

"This Prize is the strongest possible recognition of the deep political motives behind our Union: the unique effort by ever more European states to overcome war and divisions and to jointly shape a continent of peace and prosperity. It is a Prize not just for the project and the institutions embodying a common interest, but for the 500 million citizens living in our Union.

"At its origins the European Union brought together nations emerging from the ruins of devastating World Wars – which originated on this continent – and united them in a project for peace. Over the last sixty years, the European Union has reunified a continent split by the Cold War around values of respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights.

"These are also the values that the European Union promotes in order to make the world a better place for all. The European Union will continue to promote peace and security in the countries close to us and in the world at large. We are proud that the European Union is the world's largest provider of development assistance and humanitarian aid and is at the forefront of global efforts to fight climate change and promote global public goods.

"This Nobel Peace Prize shows that in these difficult times the European Union remains an inspiration for leaders and citizens all over the world."

EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ashton said: "I am delighted at the news that the European Union has been awarded the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize, in recognition of its work on reconciliation, democracy, promotion of human rights and in enlarging the area of peace and stability across the continent.

"In the countries of the EU, historic enemies have become close partners and friends. I am proud to be part of continuing this work. The creation of the European External Action Service has enabled us to develop a comprehensive approach to better promote Europe's core values throughout the world.

"I will continue to work tirelessly to drive this process forward."

European Union Ambassador to the United States Joao Vale de Almeida said: "The Nobel Peace Prize recognizes the great achievements the EU has made in regional integration for peace. What started with six countries forming a Coal and Steel Community following World War II to help secure peace and stability has grown into a Union of 27 -- soon to be 28 countries -- working together. We are grateful for the indispensable support we have received from the United States over the years, and together with my fellow EU Member States Ambassadors here in Washington, D.C., I will continue to work closely with our American partners to promote peace, democracy, and prosperity around the World."

For further information, please see: www.EUintheUS.org & @EUintheUS.

SOURCE Delegation of the European Union to the United States

CONTACT: Silvia Kofler, (202) 862 9523; or Kasper Zeuthen, (202) 862 9530

Web Site: http://www.eurunion.org

Flag of 2012 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, European Union Portrait of 2012 Nobel Laureate in Literature, Mo Yan Portraits of 2012 Nobel Laureates in Chemistry, Robert J. Lefkowitz and Brian K. Kobilka Portraits of 2012 Nobel Laureates in Physics, Serge Haroche and David J. Wineland Portraits of 2012 Nobel Laureates in Physiology or Medicine, Sir John B. Gurdon and Shinya Yamanaka









Green Card for $500, 000 To $1, 000, 000


I don't know how many people outside the US who know about the EB-5 Program?

According to Darren Dahl Inc. magazine:

President Obama recently extended the government's EB-5 program, which grants foreigners green cards in return for an investment of between $500,000 and $1 million here which then creates at least 10 domestic jobs from that investment within two years.

How the EB-5 Program Works

Overview

The primary purpose of the program is to attract foreign investment to the U.S., which will create new jobs. From an economic viewpoint, the key requirement is that each investment must create a minimum of 10 new jobs.

In some cases, the foreign party must invest a minimum of $1 million, while in other cases, the minimum is $500,000. The smaller number applies if the investment is located in (a) an area of high unemployment, currently defined as more than 150% of the national average unemployment rate for 2010, or (b) a rural area, currently defined as an area that is not in an MSA and is not within a municipality with population of over 20,000.

Most of the EB-5 applications we have analyzed are based on the underlying assumption of a $500,000 investment per individual.

How are the 10 jobs per investor calculated?
In some cases, only direct jobs can be counted – the jobs that are actually created by the new businesses that are started. In other cases, indirect and induced jobs can also be counted. For that to occur, the plan must include the formation of an EB-5 regional center, which requires additional paperwork, documentation, and economic analysis.
However, because the job multipliers are usually at least 2, the incentives to form a regional center apply in almost all cases. We focus exclusively on those cases where regional centers are created.

The comments here apply to the economic analysis. You will also need an immigration lawyer to prepare the requisite documents, and a local lawyer to prepare the private placement memorandum.


Which model to use -- IMPLAN or RIMS II?


There are several different input/output models accepted by the USCIS, but the two major ones are IMPLAN and RIMS II. The principal difference is that IMPLAN is an employment-driven model, while RIMS II is an output-drive model.

To the non-economist, this may seem like a distinction without a difference. And in fact, the total number of jobs that are created as calculated by these two models is usually fairly similar. The big difference occurs at the verification stage.

After the proposal has been submitted, it takes the USCIS several months to issue a decision. Once the approval has been obtained, individual immigrant investors must then file an I-526 petition, requesting a temporary green card.
This process also usually takes several months. Once that is approved, another two years elapse. At that point, the immigrant investor files an I-829 petition requesting removal of the conditions on the temporary green card -- in other words, permission for the green card to become permanent. It is at that stage that the investor must show that 10 permanent new jobs have been created by the investment that was made at the beginning of the process.

This requirement has led many investors -- and some EB-5 developers -- to assume that in fact they must produce documentary evidence for all direct permanent full-time jobs in the form of W-2s, I-9s, and quarterly payroll tax records. That is indeed one way to meet this requirement. BUT IT IS NOT THE ONLY WAY.

Immigrant investors -- and hence their lawyers and EB-5
developers -- may also meet this requirement by showing that the total amount of construction expenditures, and the total amount of gross (top-line) revenues that have been achieved are equal to or greater than the amount of expenditures or revenues that were stated in the original proposal. In other words, verification can be made on expenditures and revenues as well as direct employees. If this latter method is used, then the economist uses the RIMS II input/output model for the economic impact analysis calculations.

Thus each EB-5 developer, at the time of the original application, must determine which method is likely to be superior for verification at the I-829 level. An overwhelming majority of our clients have recently chosen the RIMS II model for the following reasons:

1. Verification of full-time workers may be difficult. Each employee must work 35 hours a week every week. In USCIS arithmetic, two half-time employees do not equal 1 full-time employee. They equal 0 full-time employees. This is particularly critical for construction jobs, and for seasonal and part-time jobs that are likely to occur in such industries as hotels, resorts, or retail sales.

2. All newly hired employees must be U.S. citizens. We assume that no one would deliberately skirt this requirement. On the other hand, illegal immigrants may obtain false papers. If the USCIS, with its deeper knowledge and data base of illegal immigrants, determines that false papers have been used, the developer has no recourse, and the I-829 petition will be denied.

3. Although the USCIS has repeatedly stated that it accepts a variety of recognized input/output model, the USCIS economist recently reiterated her position that she prefers the RIMS II model because of its greater transparency.

Thus unless clients specifically state that they prefer the IMPLAN model and its direct employment approach, we will use the RIMS II model in our economic impact calculations.

A Generic Example -- Retail Shopping Center

To understand how the economic analysis works, consider the following generic
example. A foreign investor plans to build a retail shopping center of 100,000
square feet. The construction costs will vary substantially depending on the
location and type of buildings, but for purposes of this example, assume that the
actual “hard” construction costs are $100 per square foot. Total costs, including
soft costs, profits, and land purchases, are $200 per square foot. We make this
distinction because, as will be explained below, the hard costs have some input
into the total job count, whereas the other costs do not.

The total hard construction cost is $10 million. This figure is multiplied by the
RIMS II final demand multiplier for construction, which varies widely by region and can range anywhere from 5 to 20, although it is usually in the 10-15 range.
Suppose it is 15. That means 150 total jobs would be created from construction
activity, PROVIDING that all construction jobs can be counted.

In many cases they cannot. The USCIS has ruled that for projects taking less than 2 years to complete, only the indirect and induced jobs can be counted. They are usually 1/3 to 1/2 of the total jobs. If the projects really do take more than 2 years, all jobs can be counted. However, in that case, the USCIS will require a timeline showing the expected expenditures each quarter. Do not be tempted to pretend that, for example, an 18-month project takes 2 years simply by stretching out the last 1% over a 6-month period. In general, a bell-shaped curve for expenditures would be appropriate.

The actual sales per square foot will be based on the mix of stores and the location, but assume that the average is $500 per square foot. That would be a
total of $50 million in sales. Here again, the RIMS II multiplier varies widely by
region, but an average figure would be about 8. On this basis, 400 permanent new jobs would be created from the operations of the retail space. If all construction jobs are permanent, a total of 550 jobs would be created in this particular example.

Since the EB-5 regulations require a minimum of 10 jobs per investor, that means there will be a maximum of 55 investors in this project. If each one puts up $500,000, the developer could raise up to $27.5 million, which would more than cover the $20 million total costs. However, it is always advisable to leave a cushion of 10% to 20% in case the sales goals are not met by the time the I-829 petition is filed.

Actual cases will vary from this example. They depend, among other things, on the following parameters. All of these vary by the region chosen.

1. Cost of construction, per square foot
2. RIMS II final demand multiplier for construction
3. Mix of buildings constructed (big box stores, specialty shops, restaurants)
4. Mix of retail stores (including restaurants)
5. Sales per square foot for each type of establishment
6. RIMS II final demand multiplier for retail sales

All these data must be calculated separately for each individual project. The
numbers are based on the RIMS II model, Census data, national and regional survey data, construction costs manuals, and individual research for specific projects. The numbers must be collected separately for each project and are not just “pulled off the shelf”.

What are indirect and induced jobs?

Indirect jobs are created when the business buys goods and services from local firms. For example, a construction firm might buy some of its materials locally, or
purchase locally produced doors and windows or roof tiles. A retail store would
buy some of its goods from wholesalers. It would probably hire outside firms for
building maintenance, waste management, and security. Also, it would probably
hire accountants, attorneys, and other professional business services.

Induced jobs are created when the employees of the new business spend part of their paychecks on locally produced goods and services. That would ordinarily include purchases at supermarkets and gas stations, banking and real estate services, and health care.

How big should the regional center be?

It can range from a single project in a single location to a wide variety of projects covering an entire state. Currently, regional EB-5 centers exist for the states of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Florida, and Texas, as well as smaller states such as Vermont and South Dakota. The amount of investment per regional
center currently ranges from under $5 million to over $100 million.

A distinction must be drawn, however, between the area covered by the regional
center and the area used for calculating the employment multipliers. That area
generally covers about four or five counties based on the pattern of where people live and work. Suppose, for example, a new project would be built in Ft.
Lauderdale, FL. The employment multiplier would then include those counties
where people live who work in Ft. Lauderdale; data on commuting patterns are
available from the Census. In general, the counties are included that account for 90% to 95% of the total workforce of that county; in this example, the regional multipliers would be based on Miami-Dade and Broward counties.

If too few counties are included, then the induced effects – jobs created as new
employees spend part of their paychecks locally – would be understated. If too
wide a region is included, the job multipliers would be overstated, and for that
reason would probably be rejected by USCIS. Hence it is important to calculate
the employment multipliers separately for each individual project, even if there
are many such projects spread over a much larger area for the total regional center.

Determining Areas of High Unemployment

In some cases, entire counties will qualify because the unemployment rate is more than 150% of the national average. However, it is more often the case that the chosen area has a somewhat lower unemployment rate, but certain Census Tracts in the city or county have a sufficiently high unemployment rate to qualify as a Targeted Economic Area (TEA). In some cases, the governor of the state will provide such a list. In other cases, we calculate the TEAs based on unemployment and poverty statistics taken from Census data.

There has been quite a bit of confusion about what areas qualify for a TEA.
In a few cases, such as the state of Nevada for 2010, and a few urban counties
in California and Florida, the unemployment rate exceeds the threshold level for
2010, which is 14.4%, so any location in Nevada, or in these high-unemployment counties, may be used. In general, however, that is not the case. The usual default position is to calculate the unemployment rate by individual census tract.

While the BLS publishes monthly data on the unemployment rate for individual counties, and all cities with a population of over 20,000, the only unemployment rate data by Census Tract is for 2000. Hence these figures must be updated to 2010, using the Census Share method as explained in the Local Area Unemployment Statistics handbook. We will do these calculations for you.
For any given address, we will determine whether the Census Tract where the planned facility will be located is a TEA. If it is, no further analysis is needed.

However, it is more likely that the planned facility is NOT in a TEA. In that
case, we will attempt to construct a TEA by combining that census tract with
contiguous census tracts that have higher unemployment rates, such that the average unemployment rate in the combined area exceeds 14.4%. We will also undertake that calculation as part of our economic impact analysis report.

Some states will then certify these results by writing a letter stating that the appropriately authorized agency of the state has verified that the area in question is a TEA. Some states, such as Florida and New York, are very helpful about writing such letters. California used to be helpful, but we were recently informed that due to budget cutbacks, they might not be able to provide that service any more. Many other states have been unwilling or unable to provide such certification.

One final word about TEAs as they apply to rural locations. Your definition of "rural" may not be the same as the Census Bureau. Any county that is part of
a metropolitan statistical area may not be considered rural, even if in fact the
location you have chosen is devoid of population and overrun with scrub brush.
You have to be outside an MSA to get the rural definition. Furthermore, even in
rural counties, any city with a population of 20,000 or more will not qualify as a
TEA based on the rural definition.


What kind of businesses qualify?

Virtually any legitimate business qualifies for which at least 10 permanent new
full-time jobs are created per investor. It can be in manufacturing, retail trade,
services, non-profit, research and development, or agriculture. Some of the
businesses that have recently been approved include hotels, retail shopping
centers and restaurants, office buildings, warehouses, manufacturing plants, research facilities, community centers, hospitals and nursing homes, farms, movie production, inland port facilities, lumber mills, forestry projects, and aquaculture.

However, a few caveats apply:

1. The EB-5 regulations actually state that the contributions of each investor
must create 10 new OR SAVED jobs. Hence in certain cases, rehabbing an old
structure might also qualify if the existing jobs would have disappeared. In
general, however, this is more difficult to show, and most EB-5 projects work
best either with new construction, or with rehabbing old buildings that are currently vacant.

2. In general, residential buildings don’t work, unless they are combined with
others. The problem is that residences create very few direct jobs, and only
indirect and induced construction jobs can be counted. In general, residential
construction projects supply less than half of the jobs needed to meet the EB-5
target. You have to be able to borrow more than 50% of the funding in order to
make residential projects work.

3. The 10 new jobs must represent a net increase. For example, suppose someone builds a new shopping center next to an old one, and people start shopping at the new place, so the old one closes down and people lose their jobs. In that case, the total net effect would be a lot smaller than the number of new jobs at the new shopping center. The report must also to show there will not be a net loss of jobs elsewhere in the region when this new project opens.


The Concept of a Regional Multiplier

Not all multipliers are created equal. Some models generate larger multipliers
for any given project. Yet all of the basic input/output data come from the same
source, namely the Commerce Department. How could the results be different?

There are two major answers to this question: geography and timing.

The entire concept of a regional center is built around the idea that jobs will be
created in a fairly narrowly defined region near the area where the new business
is started. Generally that is a few contiguous counties. It is definitely not the
entire state. And it is certainly not other parts of the country that have no
geographical connection to the regional center.

In general, the economic multipliers for a state are greater than a four-county
region, and the multipliers for the U.S. are much greater than for an individual
state. In the past, some EB-5 studies have relied on those larger multipliers to
get the job count higher -- and some of them were accepted. In the past year,
however, USCIS has made it clear that methodology will not be accepted, and have rejected these approaches.

In terms of timing, other modeling processes use the methodology of a dynamic multiplier. In short, the idea here is that when a new business is started, more people will move into the area; that in turn will result in more new homes and shopping centers being built, which will create even more jobs, and so on. A variant of this approach is the "tourist" model, in which a new hotel, casino, amusement park, ski slope, etc. will not only create new direct and indirect jobs as defined by the input/output model but will attract many tourists who will then spend additional dollars on food, gifts, and tourist services, hence boosting the job creation figure substantially.

In fact such developments might occur. However, anyone planning to start an EB-5 regional center should be aware that the USCIS has different rules for counting jobs than are usually applied to economic impact analyses. For example, direct construction jobs are usually not counted (see below). Also, jobs must be full-time; full-time equivalents are not permitted. Only jobs held by citizens can be counted. And, with respect to multiplier analysis, only the indirect and induced jobs generated by the direct activity of the new business can be counted. In short, no super-multipliers need apply.

What About Distressed Properties?

Many EB-5 prospects are asking about purchasing distressed properties at 1/3 or 1/4 of the previously assessed value, finding tenants for these properties, and then reselling them later at a substantial profit. In the meantime, because the cost of purchase is so low, substantial income and also be earned on the rents received before they are sold.

Is this an appropriate model for the EB-5 program? As usual, the answer is "it all
depends" but here are some guidelines to help you make a decision.

1. If it is an existing building, there won't be any jobs generated by new
construction. However (see the next topic) that may not be a negative, because the USCIS often takes a jaundiced view of counting temporary construction jobs.

2. You will only get credit for new jobs, so for practical purposes the building
should be nearly or completely vacant. You need the job credits by filling up the
buildings with new tenants. If there are existing jobs there, you can only count
them if you can prove they are part of a troubled business, which is often difficult
to show.

3. Many new jobs can be created from retail, office, and industrial buildings; far
less from residential. For practical purposes, there will be a few jobs from
operating the residences, but the numbers only work out if you can buy the properties with substantial leverage (e.g., only 20% from EB-5 money, the rest
borrowed from banks).

4. You want to be in a TEA; however, if the building is vacant, it may well be in
a high-unemployment area, so this is not generally a very high hurdle.

5. In summary, then, you want to buy a vacant retail, office, or industrial building at 1/3 to 1/4 of its previously assessed value, find new tenants, collect the rents, and then sell out for a substantial profit in the next five years.

6. And now for the tough part: virtually every client asks us, how can I write a
business plan and have you generate an economic report if I don't have the
properties yet? I need EB-5 money to pay for them, so it seems like a chicken
and egg problem. So here's the answer. Choose several likely properties and
get USCIS approval on that basis. You will then be approved for those specific
industries. If the properties fall through, you can then file an amendment for the
specific property that is different from the one you orginially planned to purchase. Thie method is OK with USCIS as long as you inform them of the change.

How are Construction Jobs Counted?

We are probably asked that question more than any other. In general, it is always permissible to count the indirect and induced jobs from construction activity. These are calculated using the Expenditure Model. If, for example, construction expenditures for hard costs are $15 million, and output per construction worker in the county where the building is being constructed is $150,000, then 100 direct jobs would be created. These can't be counted, but the indirect and induced jobs, based on the IMPLAN multiplier, can be counted.

The USCIS has ruled that if the construction project takes at least 2 years,
direct jobs can also be counted. However, in order to use this method, you must
show that the jobs are permanent. It is the position, rather than the person, that
is important here. For example, if you were building a residential construction
development with 100 homes, and an electrician worked (say) 2 weeks on each house but was employed continuously for 2 years, the job could be counted. Also, if two different electricians worked over this time span, the job could still be counted as long as the employment was continuous. By comparison, if you are building a shopping center and the site excavation team works for 4 months, the electricians for 6 months, the plumbers for 5 months, and so on, all those jobs would be considered temporary and could not be counted.

Also, if you decide to use direct jobs, you must be able to produce W-2 and I-9
forms for each employee. Some contractors are reluctant to supply that information.

The bottom line here is that unless you need the direct construction jobs to raise enough money, it is better not to count them. The major exception to this rule is for residential projects, where the workers go from one house (or condo, or apartment) to another over a period of several years. In those cases, we have been successful in counting direct jobs.

A few other caveats: only hard construction costs can be counted. Yes, architects and engineers do represent new job positions, but they are included in the IMPLAN model in indirect jobs. Double-counting is not permitted.

Finally, please note that in general, you cannot use construction expenditures that took place before the EB-5 application has been filed. This is another gray area, but to be on the safe side, you should follow this guideline.

Why should you use Evans, Carroll & Associates, Inc for
economic analysis?

Go to: Why Evans Carroll.











The Sex Abuse Story of a Nigerian Girl Raped in France


My Life Has a Price: A Memoir of Survival and Freedom
The Sex Abuse Story of a Nigerian Girl Raped in France

The 192-page book, originally written in French, has just been translated into English.

My heart is pounding against my chest. I am having a hard time breathing and a hard time thinking. I cross the terrace. One step, one small step. Then another tiny step. Now I am on the lawn. The grass is cold and wet under my bare feet. A gust of wind pastes my green sweatshirt against my body. My long grey skirt sticks to my legs like the skin of a rhinoceros. My heart tells me to run, to run as fast as my legs can carry me, with all my might. But I can't....


One morning in the outskirts of Lagos, Nigeria, a lucky 13-year-old girl named Tina, who came from a modest family, is preparing to go to France to become part of Linda and Godwin Okpara's family. Linda is a homemaker and Godwin is a soccer player at the top French club Paris Saint-Germain, as well as for the Super Eagles, Nigeria's national squad. The couple have four children and Tina dreams of going with them to school and joining in their games, living the European dream. But, soon after her arrival, the reality becomes different. Written in collaboration with acclaimed French journalist, Cyril Guinet, Tina Okpara recounts how imprisonment, torture, and abuse - in a suburban house in the middle of gentrified Europe in the 21st century - could not break her. Tina's gripping story of survival and escape to rebuild her life is a moving testament to a remarkable woman, a true survivor.

Godwin is currently serving a 10-year jail term in France, while his wife, Linda, will be in jail for 15 years.



ALSO CLICK THE BOOK COVER BELOW TO READ MORE ABOUT IGBOS IN NIGERIA IN CHINUA ACHEBE'S NEW NOVEL THERE WAS A COUNTRY: A PERSONAL HISTORY OF BIAFRA.













Friday, October 12, 2012

OPEC Oil Output Drops To 31.15 Million Barrels Per Day


12 Oct 2012 13:50 Africa/Lagos

Platts: September OPEC Oil Output Drops to 31.15 Million Barrels per Day
390,000 barrel-per-day month-on-month decline from August

LONDON, Oct. 12, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Crude oil output from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) fell by 390,000 barrels per day (b/d) to 31.15 million b/d in September, with Saudi Arabia and Nigeria accounting for the bulk of the month-on-month drop, a Platts survey of OPEC and oil industry officials and analysts showed October 11. This follows August production of 31.54 million b/d and leaves OPEC overproducing its 30 million b/d ceiling by 1.15 million b/d.

Saudi Arabia pumped an average 9.85 million b/d in September, 150,000 b/d lower than August's 10 million b/d, a level it had maintained since May.

"The continued ability for Saudi Arabia to continue producing 10-million b/d has been called into question by some skeptics; the decline to less than 10 million b/d, small as it is, will be viewed as significant," said John Kingston, Platts global director of news. "Skeptics will also point to a big drop out of Nigeria. Still, OPEC output is above various estimates of what OPEC needs to maintain to keep inventories balanced."

Nigerian output was down by 230,000 b/d at 2.05 million b/d in September from 2.28 million b/d in August, the survey estimated.

After a sharp drop in August, Iranian output showed a dip of just 30,000 b/d to 2.72 million b/d in September, the survey showed.

In Angola, maintenance helped push volumes down to 1.7 million b/d from 1.75 million b/d in August. Other smaller decreases came from Algeria, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

The only countries to increase output were Iraq, whose exports climbed further in September, and Libya. Iraqi output was estimated at 3.18 million, up 80,000 b/d from August, and Libyan output at 1.48 million b/d, up 30,000 b/d from August.

In recent months rising Iraqi production has set a series of post-1990 records, but the September figure of 3.18 million b/d surpasses even anything seen in 1990 and is the biggest recorded since Platts started thorough monthly surveys of OPEC production in March 1988.

Ecuador, Kuwait and Venezuela maintained production at August levels.

The OPEC production ceiling, agreed in December 2011 and extended in June 2012, does not include individual country quotas.

Ministers are next scheduled to meet on December 12 in Vienna.

For production numbers by country, click here. If prompted for a cost-free, one-time-only log-in registration, the log in is your email address and a password of your choosing.

Platts OPEC and oil experts are available for media interviews; please consult Platts Media Center to schedule an interview. For other oil, energy and related information, visit www.platts.com.

About Platts: Founded in 1909, Platts is a leading global provider of energy, petrochemicals and metals information and a premier source of benchmark prices for the physical and futures markets. Platts' news, pricing, analytics, commentary and conferences help customers make better-informed trading and business decisions and help the markets operate with greater transparency and efficiency. Customers in more than 150 countries benefit from Platts' coverage of the carbon emissions, coal, electricity, oil, natural gas, metals, nuclear power, petrochemical, and shipping markets. A division of The McGraw-Hill Companies (NYSE: MHP), Platts is headquartered in New York with approximately 900 employees in more than 15 offices worldwide. Additional information is available at www.platts.com.

About The McGraw-Hill Companies: McGraw-Hill announced on September 12, 2011, its intention to separate into two companies: McGraw-Hill Financial, a leading provider of content and analytics to global financial markets, and McGraw-Hill Education, a leading education company focused on digital learning and education services worldwide. McGraw-Hill Financial's leading brands include Standard & Poor's Ratings Services, S&P Capital IQ, S&P Dow Jones Indices, Platts energy information services and J.D. Power and Associates. With sales of $6.2 billion in 2011, the Corporation has approximately 23,000 employees across more than 280 offices in 40 countries. Additional information is available at http://www.mcgraw-hill.com/.

CONTACT:
Kathleen Tanzy
212-904-2860
Kathleen_tanzy@platts.com

SOURCE Platts

CONTACT: Elizabeth Catalano, elizabeth_catalano@platts.com, +44-207-176-6024

Web Site: http://www.platts.com








The Most Pirated Chinese Writer Mo Yan Wins 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature

Mo Yan.

Xinhua‎ reports the cheering news of Chinese writer Mo Yan and famous author of Big Breasts and Wide Hips winning the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature, announced by Peter Englund, Permanent Secretary of the Swedish Academy in Stockholm on Thursday.


Mo Yan's real name is Guan Moye and his famous pen name "Mo Yan" (Chinese: 莫言) means "don't speak" in Chinese. Donald Morrison of TIME news magazine called Yan "one of the most famous and widely pirated of all Chinese writers".

A writer should express criticism and indignation at the dark side of society and the ugliness of human nature, but we should not use one uniform expression. Some may want to shout on the street, but we should tolerate those who hide in their rooms and use literature to voice their opinions.
~ Mo Yan, Frankfurt Book Fair, 2009. 


About Big Breasts and Wide Hips.

In his latest novel, Mo Yan—arguably China’s most important contemporary literary voice—recreates the historical sweep and earthy exuberance of his much acclaimed novel Red Sorghum. In a country where patriarchal favoritism and the primacy of sons survived multiple revolutions and an ideological earthquake, this epic novel is first and foremost about women, with the female body serving as the book’s central metaphor. The protagonist, Mother, is born in 1900 and married at seventeen into the Shangguan family. She has nine children, only one of whom is a boy—the narrator of the book. A spoiled and ineffectual child, he stands in stark contrast to his eight strong and forceful female siblings.

Mother, a survivor, is the quintessential strong woman who risks her life to save several of her children and grandchildren. The writing is picturesque, bawdy, shocking, and imaginative. The structure draws on the essentials of classical Chinese formalism and injects them with extraordinarily raw and surprising prose. Each of the seven chapters represents a different time period, from the end of the Qing dynasty up through the Japanese invasion in the 1930s, the civil war, the Cultural Revolution, and the post-Mao years. Now in a beautifully bound collectors edition, this stunning novel is Mo Yan’s searing vision of twentieth-century China.

Click here for the full report.







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