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POLITICAL ECONOMY
Asia to maintain growth despite global headwinds: ADB
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) April 11, 2012

Clinton to visit Brussels after trip to Colombia, Brazil
Washington (AFP) April 11, 2012 - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will travel to Brussels next week for high-level NATO talks following her trip to Colombia and Brazil, the State Department said Wednesday.

Clinton will join US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta for a meeting of NATO foreign and defense ministers in Brussels on April 18 as part of efforts to prepare for the NATO summit in Chicago in May, it said.

"Ministers will review the status of NATO's transition strategy for Afghanistan, new capabilities for the Alliance and NATO's global partnerships," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.

On April 19, North Atlantic Treaty Organization foreign ministers will hold talks with their non-NATO partners in the International Security Assistance Force, the alliance's security mission in Afghanistan that includes Australia and other countries.

Clinton will also take part in a foreign ministers' meeting of the NATO-Russia Council.

US officials had already announced Clinton's trip to Colombia and Brazil but Nuland gave more details.

The chief US diplomat will accompany President Barack Obama for the sixth Summit of the Americas in Cartagena, Colombia from Friday through Sunday.

"The US delegation will meet with democratically-elected heads of state and government from throughout the hemisphere to strengthen ties, expand partnerships and continue progress in economic growth, social inclusion and citizen security," Nuland said.

She said Clinton will visit Brasilia on Monday and Tuesday.

On Monday, she will lead the US delegation for the third US-Brazil Global Partnership Dialogue, which builds upon agreements the two sides reached during Obama's visit to Brazil last year and Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff's visit to the United States this week.

They will tackle development, education cooperation, as well as global political and economic issues. Clinton will also meet with government officials and private sector leaders.

On Tuesday, Clinton will give opening remarks with Rousseff at the First Annual High-Level Meeting of the Open Government Partnership.

Launched eight months ago by Obama and Rousseff, OGP will "formally welcome 42 new countries into the partnership as they announce concrete commitments to prevent corruption, promote transparency and harness new technologies to empower citizens," Nuland said.


Emerging Asian economies will experience flat growth this year before recovering in 2013, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said in a regional report released Wednesday.

The Asian Development Outlook report for 2012 said the region was shifting toward a "more sustainable long-run growth path" based on strong domestic demand instead of exports, which have been hit by wobbly Western demand.

But the study also warned that the region's rising wealth was fuelling inequality and income disparities, with the underprivileged at risk of being sucked into a "vicious circle" of poverty and neglect.

The vast region's gross domestic product (GDP) growth will "cool somewhat" to 6.9 percent in 2012, down from 7.2 percent last year, before edging higher again to 7.3 percent in 2013.

"Despite the weak global environment, developing Asia's growth momentum continues," it said.

"Strong domestic demand provided necessary support in 2011, and this will need to continue in light of the soft export demand expected from the major industrial economies of the United States (US), eurozone, and Japan."

Even with a slowdown this year, developing Asian economies would easily outshine Europe, the United States and Japan where output is forecast to grow only 1.1 percent this year and 1.7 percent in 2013, the report said.

"Continued uncertainties in the eurozone and a further slump in global trade pose the biggest threats to the growth outlook," ADB Chief Economist Changyong Rhee said in a statement.

"At the same time, Asian economies are gradually diversifying into new markets, private consumption is trending up and the region has limited direct financial exposure to the eurozone -- which should help sustain its momentum."

The stronger trend in domestic consumption -- in a group of countries known for high savings rates -- could be seen in the region's current account surplus, which fell to 2.6 percent of GDP from four percent in 2010.

The report covers most economies in Asia except Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan. The countries account for more than 80 percent of Asia's population.

Inflation was a concern for the region last year until the eurozone debt crisis and the patchy recovery in the United States sapped demand for exports, forcing policy-makers to worry more about growth.

The ADB said prices had eased but remained a "potential threat", especially given the volatility of food and fuel costs.

China, the world's second biggest economy, would see growth moderate to 8.5 percent this year and 8.7 percent in 2013, compared with 9.2 percent in 2011.

The region's other emerging giant, India, would post 7.5 percent growth in 2012.

Southeast Asia's GDP would expand 5.2 percent this year from just 4.6 percent in 2011, thanks largely to Thailand's recovery from last year's devastating floods.

The report said Asia had "lifted people out of poverty at an unprecedented rate" over the past few decades, but its recent growth had been characterised by widening income disparities between the super-rich and the rest.

If the spoils of growth had been more evenly shared and inequality rates had remained stable, another 240 million people -- or 6.5 percent of developing Asia's population -- would have moved out of poverty between 1990 to 2010.

Rhee said rising inequality is a concern for Asia -- cited as a successful example of high growth with low inequality in the 1970s -- as many African and Latin American countries have witnessed a decline in such divide.

"What we are worrying about is that if this trend continues Asia may lose one of our strong points," he told reporters in Hong Kong.

"Rising inequality can weaken the basis of growth by undermining social cohesion -- you can think of the Arab Spring -- and worsen the quality of governance," he warned.

The ADB recommended measures including greater spending on health and education, cutting fuel subsidies and broadening the sources of tax revenues to address rising inequality.

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PC sales beat expectations, China growth slowing
San Francisco (AFP) April 11, 2012 - Global sales of personal computers climbed more than expected in the first three months of the year but slowing in China's booming market tempered optimism about the figures released Wednesday.

PC makers shipped 89 million units worldwide in the first quarter of this year, a 1.9 percent increase from the same period in 2011, according to industry tracker Gartner.

"The results were mixed depending on the region," said Gartner principal analyst Mikako Kitagawa.

While the region including Europe, Africa and the Middle East had impressive PC shipments of 6.7 percent, the Asia-Pacific area containing India and China saw slower growth than anticipated, according to Gartner.

"While the PC industry has high expectations for strong growth in the emerging markets, the slowdown of these countries in this quarter provides a cautionary notice to vendors," Kitagawa said.

"The future growth for the PC industry cannot heavily depend on the emerging markets even though PC penetration in these regions is low."

Sales of business machines powered growth, with consumer purchases of PCs for personal uses continuing to slide, according to Gartner.

Non-business demand for PCs was being hurt by tight personal budgets as well as competition from tablet computers, especially Apple's coveted iPads.

The world's largest computer maker, US-based Hewlett-Packard, increased its share of the global market to 17.2 percent.

Second-place computer maker Lenovo saw the biggest gains, with the China-based company's piece of the market swelling more than 28 percent to 13.1 percent when compared to the same quarter a year earlier.

Gartner reported that "Lenovo has been enjoying healthy growth in the professional market, while the company is successfully expanding into the consumer space."

Dell and Acer lost market share, slipping to 11 percent and 10.9 percent respectively, according to Gartner.



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