Tuesday, March 18, 2008

debunking the entrepreneur myth

i will most likely be poor but maybe happy i work for myself.

http://www.businessweek.com/smallbiz/content/jan2008/sb20080123_809271_page_2.htm

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Monday, March 17, 2008

why we love thailand

so far the trip had been idyllic. we spent 2.5 days in bangkok eating our hearts out (when have we not) and walking our feet sore- we were looking forward to relaxing on our little paradise of a hotel on phi phi island.

from krabi town we made it to ao tonsai on our illegally overloaded ferry. upon landing at the pier, we found two men waiting for us, one holding up a sign that said "phi phi relax beach" - the name of our little hotel.

we followed the other guy (who turned out to be our boat driver) to the longtail boat. we waited for some other guests but they never showed. phi phi relax was located on pak nam beach, a small stretch of beach on the other side of the the island of ao tonsai. it took us about 30 mins to get there but at every beach we passed, fede would pipe "i think this is it" - it happened about 5 times until i told him to stop guessing. when we finally pulled in towards pak nam beach, he said "i knew this was it! our's is the nicest!"

after we checked into our little eco hut (no AC, no electricity until 6pm, no heated water) i realized my new dior necklace (from my mother- i would never buy my own) was missing. we looked back at photos to see at which point i might have lost it and i made frantic calls to the hotel in krabi town to see if they had found it. and to my great delight, they had! but they refused to send it to me, insisting i had to go back and pick it up. (so we spent all of the last day on a ferry from phi phi to krabi then from krabi to phuket where we were flying out of early the next morning.)

after the 30 mins of panic and finally locating my dior necklace (what was i thinking even bringing it with me??!!), i felt like i could relax and we went for a quick swim to cool off. after about 10 minutes, fede, who is in huge deficit of attention, decided we should hit the main village for a meal and night out.

the only way out of our beach was by longtail boat or an hour's hike up the hill into tonsai village. we decide on the latter to get a workout since we were preparing to stuff our faces yet again. so we took an easy hike up the hill (spend a few minutes at the peak that has amazing views of the island) and down into tonsai village. as we head down we saw signs that point the tsunami evacaution route.

in the village we opted for a pizzeria called cosmic. the vibe in the village is very backpacker. lots of dutch and scandis in their braided hair and lobster red burns. we did our share of haggling for sarongs and shorts and by 9pm we were tired and in need of rest. we made our way to the pier and asked for someone to take us back to pak nam beach. as if in some collusion, everyone said no cannot too dangerous. winds very strong, waves very big (in friendly thai-accented english).

we upped the fare we were willing to pay but still no takers. we upped again and finally one guy said ok i will take you. he brought us to the beach where his friend's boat was tied - how he can tell one apart from the 30 boats there beats me but we got in anyway.

we drive out and it seems to be ok. as we exit the bay, the water gets more choppy and soon we are smashing down on the surface of the water, the waves rocking our frail longtail left and right. the driver pushes on and fede moves to the front to stabilize the bow. fede shouts back to ask our driver to turn on an indicator light and our driver just laughs - no light. more smashing and rocking. i am gripping the soggy wooden plank which is my seat and looking around for life vests. i see none.

more smashing and rocking. i squint to see if maybe life vests are tucked under something but i am pretty sure i don't see them. by this time i am a little more nervous. our driver keeps going as though we have a modern speedboat.

more smashing and rocking. by this time, we are somewhat fearful- i can tell by the way fede is sitting at the bow- his legs tense. he turns around and tells me to tell our driver to turn back.

we turn around. about 10 mins in, the engine starts sputtering. then it stops. our driver yanks on the ignition trying to resuscitate it. we ask what's wrong and he says water in engine and laughs dismissively. the boat is still being rocked left and right.

he declares our engine dead after about 5 mins. we ask earnestly what we need to do now, can you call someone for help? he says ok no problem and proceeds to whip out... a pack of cigarettes. instead of a an sos call, he lights up his cigarettes!!! fede is losing his patience for this guy and demands that this guy calls for help. we wait and wait but no one comes. thankfully the current is pushing us back towards the bay. we wait and wait some more but still no one shows up - maybe because we don't have an emergency flare light and our driver's friend cannot find us??? soon we are pushed all the way back and it is shallow enough for our driver to push us in with a pole.

we beach the boat and head back to shore thankful we are alive. our driver hooks up up with a friend who has another friend who has another friend who knows of a vacant room for cheap. we are tired and just grateful to be alive so we don't care. we get to the guesthouse, douse ourselves with fresh cold water. as we lie in bed, i wish fede happy valentine's.

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Friday, March 14, 2008

bleak

http://www.businessweek.com/smallbiz/content/jan2008/sb20080123_809271_page_2.htm

everytime someone says "oh you are starting your own internet business- wow remember me when you get rich!", i will point them to the above.

i will be poor all my life!!!

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Thursday, March 13, 2008

so the other day i went to get my eyelash extensions removed. i know, gasp! i actually had them extended, but i was so lazy to curl and mascara them every morning i thought to hell with it, let me try this thing that everyone is raving about. so i went and got the individually glued on ones, and i specifically asked for "as natural as possible". anyway, back to getting them removed...the lady sat me in her dentist chair and took a look at my eyes. she asked "eh, you got insect bite under your eye ah?"

"er no... that's just my eyebag."

she chuckled a little (btch) and proceeded to unglue the plastic lashes while i fell asleep.

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Wednesday, March 12, 2008

the end of cheap food

THE END OF CHEAP FOOD
Dec 6th 2007


Rising food prices are a threat to many; they also present the world with an enormous opportunity

FOR as long as most people can remember, food has been getting cheaper and farming has been in decline. In 1974-2005 food prices on world markets fell by three-quarters in real terms. Food today is so cheap that the West is battling gluttony even as it scrapes piles of half-eaten leftovers into the bin.

That is why this year's price rise has been so extraordinary. Since the spring, wheat prices have doubled and almost every crop under the sun--maize, milk, oilseeds, you name it--is at or near a peak in nominal terms. THE ECONOMIST's food-price index is higher today than at any time since it was created in 1845 (see chart). Even in real terms, prices have jumped by 75% since 2005. No doubt farmers will meet higher prices with investment and more production, but dearer food is likely to persist for years (see article[1]). That is because "agflation" is underpinned by long-running changes in diet that accompany the growing wealth of emerging economies--the Chinese consumer who ate 20kg (44lb) of meat in 1985 will scoff over 50kg of the stuff this year. That in turn pushes up demand for grain: it takes 8kg of grain to produce one of beef.


But the rise in prices is also the self-inflicted result of America's reckless ethanol subsidies. This year biofuels will take a third of America's (record) maize harvest. That affects food markets directly:
fill up an SUV's fuel tank with ethanol and you have used enough maize to feed a person for a year. And it affects them indirectly, as farmers switch to maize from other crops. The 30m tonnes of extra maize going to ethanol this year amounts to half the fall in the world's overall grain stocks.

Dearer food has the capacity to do enormous good and enormous harm. It will hurt urban consumers, especially in poor countries, by increasing the price of what is already the most expensive item in their household budgets. It will benefit farmers and agricultural communities by increasing the rewards of their labour; in many poor rural places it will boost the most important source of jobs and economic growth.

Although the cost of food is determined by fundamental patterns of demand and supply, the balance between good and ill also depends in part on governments. If politicians do nothing, or the wrong things, the world faces more misery, especially among the urban poor. If they get policy right, they can help increase the wealth of the poorest nations, aid the rural poor, rescue farming from subsidies and neglect--and minimise the harm to the slum-dwellers and landless labourers. So far, the auguries look gloomy.

IN THE TROUGH
That, at least, is the lesson of half a century of food policy.
Whatever the supposed threat--the lack of food security, rural poverty, environmental stewardship--the world seems to have only one solution:
government intervention. Most of the subsidies and trade barriers have come at a huge cost. The trillions of dollars spent supporting farmers in rich countries have led to higher taxes, worse food, intensively farmed monocultures, overproduction and world prices that wreck the lives of poor farmers in the emerging markets. And for what? Despite the help, plenty of Western farmers have been beset by poverty.
Increasing productivity means you need fewer farmers, which steadily drives the least efficient off the land. Even a vast subsidy cannot reverse that.

With agflation, policy has reached a new level of self-parody. Take America's supposedly verdant ethanol subsidies. It is not just that they are supporting a relatively dirty version of ethanol (far better to import Brazil's sugar-based liquor); they are also offsetting older grain subsidies that lowered prices by encouraging overproduction.
Intervention multiplies like lies. Now countries such as Russia and Venezuela have imposed price controls--an aid to consumers--to offset America's aid to ethanol producers. Meanwhile, high grain prices are persuading people to clear forests to plant more maize.

Dearer food is a chance to break this dizzying cycle. Higher market prices make it possible to reduce subsidies without hurting incomes. A farm bill is now going through America's Congress. The European Union has promised a root-and-branch review (not yet reform) of its farm-support scheme. The reforms of the past few decades have, in fact, grappled with the rich world's farm programmes--but only timidly. Now comes the chance for politicians to show that they are serious when they say they want to put agriculture right.

Cutting rich-world subsidies and trade barriers would help taxpayers; it could revive the stalled Doha round of world trade talks, boosting the world economy; and, most important, it would directly help many of the world's poor. In terms of economic policy, it is hard to think of a greater good.

WHERE GOVERNMENT HELP IS REALLY NEEDED
Three-quarters of the world's poor live in rural areas. The depressed world prices created by farm policies over the past few decades have had a devastating effect. There has been a long-term fall in investment in farming and the things that sustain it, such as irrigation. The share of public spending going to agriculture in developing countries has fallen by half since 1980. Poor countries that used to export food now import it.

Reducing subsidies in the West would help reverse this. The World Bank reckons that if you free up agricultural trade, the prices of things poor countries specialise in (like cotton) would rise and developing countries would capture the gains by increasing exports. And because farming accounts for two-thirds of jobs in the poorest countries, it is the most important contributor to the early stages of economic growth.
According to the World Bank, the really poor get three times as much extra income from an increase in farm productivity as from the same gain in industry or services. In the long term, thriving farms and open markets provide a secure food supply.

However, there is an obvious catch--and one that justifies government help. High prices have a mixed impact on poverty: they hurt anyone who loses more from dear food than he gains from a higher income. And that means over a billion urban consumers (and some landless labourers), many of whom are politically influential in poor countries. Given the speed of this year's food-price rises, governments in emerging markets have no alternative but to try to soften the blow.

Where they can, these governments should subsidise the incomes of the poor, rather than food itself, because that minimises price distortions. Where food subsidies are unavoidable, they should be temporary and targeted on the poor. So far, most government interventions in the poor world have failed these tests: politicians who seem to think cheap food part of the natural order of things have slapped on price controls and export restraints, which hurt farmers and will almost certainly fail.

Over the past few years, a sense has grown that the rich are hogging the world's wealth. In poor countries, widening income inequality takes the form of a gap between city and country: incomes have been rising faster for urban dwellers than for rural ones. If handled properly, dearer food is a once-in-a-generation chance to narrow income disparities and to wean rich farmers from subsidies and help poor ones.
The ultimate reward, though, is not merely theirs: it is to make the world richer and fairer.

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Tuesday, March 11, 2008

power and pleasure

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/11/nyregion/11cnd-scandals.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

spitzer

Poor Spitzer.

i think prostitution should be legalized for medical and social reasons and hey, if the dude needs a break from his wife, so let him be.

not that i condone extramarital affairs but we don't know the situation in the bedroom and after all, it seems like he couldn't get his wife “to do things that, like, you might not think were safe.” (see http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/11/nyregion/11spitzer.html?pagewanted=2&th&emc=th)

seems like while the hotties in hollywood are getting into trouble while driving under the influence, people in government are busy getting caught in the act.

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Sunday, March 09, 2008

We have a food problem

Rising food prices is a cause for concern. While we in the developed world feel a small pinch in a few cents, imagine those few cents being a large percentage of the income of those in the developing world. If this rise in prices does not stop, what will happen in parts of the world where people just cannot afford it? Here's an article that provides so food for thought. From the NY Times:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/09/business/worldbusiness/09crop.html?ex=1205726400&en=1683a25369291f6c&ei=5070

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