Highest minimum wage for fast food workers goes into effect Monday in California


Highest minimum wage for fast food workers goes into effect Monday in California – CBS News

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The highest state minimum wage for fast food workers in the country will go into effect Monday in California. Jeff Nguyen takes a look at the possible impacts.

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Solar eclipse expected to boost local economies as travelers pay a premium


Solar eclipse expected to boost local economies as travelers pay a premium – CBS News

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On April 8, a total eclipse will be visible from Texas to New England. If you’re thinking of traveling to one of the places in the path of totality, get ready for crowds and high prices. CBS News’ Robbie Owens reports.

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Navy supplying 4 cranes for Key Bridge clean up effort, Maryland governor says


Navy supplying 4 cranes for Key Bridge clean up effort, Maryland governor says – CBS News

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Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and other officials gave an update Friday on the Key Bridge collapse, announcing the U.S. Navy is supplying four heavy lift cranes to help clear the wreckage. The governor emphasized the “mission isn’t just about Maryland” because the economic impacts affect the entire U.S. as the port of Baltimore is responsible for more cars and farm equipment than any other port in the country.

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Thailand Takes First Step to Legalize Casinos to Aid Economy


(Bloomberg) — Thailand took the first step toward legalizing casinos, as the government looks to attract high-spending tourists to support Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy while also checking revenue leak from illegal gambling.

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The nation’s 500-member House of Representatives Thursday voted in favor of a study by a panel of lawmakers to allow casinos to be housed within large entertainment complexes. A total of 253 out of 257 lawmakers present voted in favor of the plan.

The lower house also gave initial nod this week to a clutch of draft bills that seek to reform the alcohol industry, including a proposal to scrap a 52-year-old rule that bans liquor sale between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. Provincial officials may still be able to impose some kind of curbs on alcohol sale.

Deputy Finance Minister Julapun Amornvivat said the casino study will be forwarded to the Cabinet for a decision on whether legalizing casinos is “suitable for the nation.”

Thailand is the latest nation to consider competing for a pie of the global casino industry, which IBIS World estimates generated $263.3 billion in revenue last year. The United Arab Emirates set up a framework for legalized gaming in September, with the emirates of Abu Dhabi and Ras Al Khaimah seen as frontrunners to introduce casinos.

Galaxy Entertainment Group Ltd. and MGM Resorts International have been studying potential opening of casino resorts in Thailand as a hedge against uncertain prospects in Macau. Closer home, Singapore and Philippine casino operators are putting up a challenge to Macau, which garnered $22.75 billion in casino revenue last year.

The study found that Thailand can lift tourism revenue by about $12 billion by legalizing casinos and housing them within large entertainment complexes. Average tourist spending may surge 52% to 65,050 baht ($1,790) per trip once the entertainment hubs are built, netting an additional earnings of as much as 448.8 billion baht, according to the study.

Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin, who has been aggressively pushing policies to attract foreign investments to Thailand, had earlier Thursday backed the plan to legalize what he called “the grey economy” for better oversight and proper tax collection.

“It’s time for our society to stop hiding the gamblings, which are out there, and just properly regulate and take care of them,” he said. “I am not sure when the law will get approved and an entertainment complex can start operation. It will probably take some time. During the interim period, we need to tackle those illegal activities.”

Though most types of betting is illegal in Thailand — a majority Buddhist and conservative society — any opening of casinos will be in line with its recent embrace of a more liberal landscape to revive its tourism industry from the pandemic blow. In 2022, Thailand became the first country in Asia to decriminalize cannabis though it’s now moving to ban its recreational use, and is set to become the first in Southeast Asia to legalize same-sex marriages.

–With assistance from Patpicha Tanakasempipat.

(Updates with parliament move on alcohol industry in third paragraph.)

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Humans wasted 1 billion meals daily in 2022, U.N. report finds


Humans wasted 1 billion meals daily in 2022, U.N. report finds – CBS News

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According to the United Nations Environment Programme, humans wasted 19% of all available food in 2022. That’s equivalent to one billion meals per day. Brian Roe, agricultural and environmental economics professor at Ohio State University, joins CBS News to discuss the implications.

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Chinese Leader Rallies Asia; Economy Seen as ‘Weak’


(Bloomberg) — China’s No. 3 leader took a veiled swipe at the US at the annual Boao Forum on Thursday as the country seeks to push back against the global influence of the world’s leading power while trying to steady the countries’ ties at the same time.

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“Hegemonic and bullying acts are deeply harmful,” Zhao Leji said in his keynote speech attended by Asian leaders and global diplomats. “We must oppose trade protectionism and all forms of erecting barriers, decoupling or severing supply chains.”

The four-day Boao gathering, dubbed by some Asia’s version of the World Economic Forum at Davos, will end on Friday, when senior corporate executives and officials are set to meet to discuss issues including globalization to carbon pricing.

Latest developments (time in Boao, Hainan):

Economy Still ‘Relatively Weak,’ PBOC Adviser Says (5:28 p.m.)

The world’s second-largest economy still faces problems of inadequate demand and weak confidence, Huang Yiping, an adviser to China’s central bank, said.

China’s regulatory tightening has also hurt business confidence, Huang said.

Belt and Road Funding Sought for Green Projects (5 p.m.)

Nations including Colombia and Laos pitched environmentally friendly projects at a round-table discussion that included finance and engineering figures from Chinese companies.

Colombia is seeking support for two massive railway projects designed to connect its remote central region to its ports and borders, to be powered by hydrogen and electric locomotives. The country has historically spent the vast majority of its transport budget on roads but aims to shift that to less than 50% over the next few years as it boosts spending on railways, airports and river travel, said Carlos Eduardo Enriquez Caicedo, the vice minister of transport.

Laos is looking to build on the success of the China-Laos railroad, which connects Kunming and Vientiane and went into operation in 2021. The government is hoping rail access will draw Chinese firms to relocate parts of their supply chain to the Southeast Asian nation, as well as investing in agricultural projects along the route and clean energy programs elsewhere in the country, said Phonevanh Outhavong, vice minister of planning and investment.

Boao’s organizers plan bilateral meetings on Thursday and Friday to see if investment matches can be made.

West Dismisses China’s Initiatives at Their Peril: Author (3:30 p.m.)

After a panel devoted to security, Bill Hayton, an Asia expert at Chatham House and author of The Invention of China, said Western countries have tended to dismiss the Global Security Initiative and other projects as “slogan politics.”

“That’s because policymakers in the industrialized countries think they rule the world, controlling powerful institutions like the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank,” he said.

Such an approach is risky, he added. “The European powers, NATO states, Japan and Australia have got to realize there’s a wider game being played here and that China is doing a very good job of talking to Africa, Latin America and other Asian states.”

Read More: Sri Lanka Confident It’ll Meet Conditions for IMF Funding Soon

Consumption Key to China’s Transition: IMF Official (1:45 p.m.)

Consumption is expected to continue to play a pivotal role in China’s transition to a high-quality development model in the coming years, as the world’s second-largest economy cuts its reliance on real estate for growth, according to Steven Barnett, senior resident representative of the International Monetary Fund in China.

In the past year, the economy experienced a “welcome and necessary correction” in the property sector while consumption has emerged as the largest contributor to the country’s economic expansion, he said.

CanSino Will Talk to AstraZeneca About Further Cooperation: CEO (10:30 a.m.)

CanSino’s partnership with AstraZeneca for developing mRNA vaccines is a strategic one that doesn’t focus on just a single product, said CEO Yu Xuefeng in an interview with Bloomberg News.

Yu refused to disclose details of the partnership but said he will have a “fuller discussion” with Astra at Boao about “other potential opportunities”

AIIB Chief Says China, US Can Work Together (8:30 a.m.)

The US and China have “broad scope for cooperation, and in particular, dealing with climate change,” Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank President Jin Liqun told Bloomberg TV. In dealing with geopolitical issues, “big countries can sit down and talk with each other and lower the temperature,” he said.

Jin also gave his take on China’s “new productive forces,” the phrase used by Beijing officials to describe their latest investment priorities. He said the drive aims to develop capabilities in high tech, AI, bioscience and other “high-level” industries that are different from traditional manufacturing and will allow China’s growth to “move forward on a different kind of level.”

Japan, US, China Speak ‘Same Language’ on Climate (8:10 a.m.)

Japan, the US and China — the three biggest owners of the Asian Development Bank — are united in their desire to see the lender expand its role in green financing, according to Scott Morris, the bank’s vice president for East and Southeast Asia and the Pacific.

“We don’t see a lot of daylight between their positions on this issue of core mandate, the desire for us to do a lot more on climate, they’re all speaking the same language on this,” Morris told Bloomberg TV.

There is concern that geopolitical conflicts “could slow the pace of deployment or raise costs more than we would like to see,” he said.

–With assistance from Dong Lyu, Jason Rogers, Katia Dmitrieva, Martin Ritchie, Zheng Li, Ocean Hou, Mengchen Lu, Adrian Wong, Ben Westcott, Lucille Liu, Alan Wong and Grace Sihombing.

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Recovery efforts continue for Baltimore bridge workers


Recovery efforts continue for Baltimore bridge workers – CBS News

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Officials are continuing efforts to recover six workers who are presumed dead in the Baltimore bridge collapse. CBS News’ Kris Van Cleave and Caitlin Huey-Burns have the latest.

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How Baltimore bridge collapse will impact economy, supply chain


How Baltimore bridge collapse will impact economy, supply chain – CBS News

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The Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse will have an enormous economic impact on the Port of Baltimore. CBS News’ Ramy Inocencio reports on the potential financial losses.

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China’s Xi meets American CEOs in bid to boost confidence in ailing economy



BEIJING — Chinese President Xi Jinping met with top U.S. executives in Beijing Wednesday, as his government tries to reassure foreign businesses about a market that remains crucial for their bottom lines despite persistent tensions between the world’s two biggest economies.

Xi met the group of American businesspeople and academics at the Great Hall of the People, Chinese state media reported. The meeting was preceded by a group photo.

Participants included Blackstone founder Stephen Schwarzman, Bloomberg Chair Mark Carney, FedEx President Rajesh Subramaniam and Qualcomm President and CEO Cristiano Amon, according to state media reports.

During the meeting, Xi said the Chinese economy was “healthy and sustainable,” an achievement that “cannot be separated from international cooperation,” according to state media, which reported that he “listened carefully” to the American participants.

The executives were in China for a series of business-related events including the China Development Forum, an annual high-level meeting that ended Monday. Other prominent U.S. business leaders such as Apple CEO Tim Cook have also been in China in recent days, as the government and American companies engage in a mutual charm offensive.

China has been struggling to bounce back from three years of pandemic isolation, its economic recovery weighed down by structural issues including a real estate crisis, high local government debt, industrial overcapacity, lackluster consumption and youth unemployment, though the economy managed a 5.2 percent growth rate last year.  

“The mood here is still pretty dark — about the economy, about the trajectory of the country overall, about China’s place in the world,” Scott Kennedy, senior adviser and Trustee Chair in Chinese Business and Economics at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, said in an interview in Beijing last week.

“There’s been some economic recovery, but it has not translated into people having more positive, optimistic sentiment,” he said.

U.S. and other foreign companies who still see the potential for big business in China, meanwhile, have been alarmed by regulatory crackdowns, a new anti-espionage law, the use of exit bans, raids on consulting and due diligence firms, and other measures amid Xi’s national security drive.

“China’s success the last 40 years has been built on the private sector and openness and collaboration with the West,” Kennedy said. “And so people’s sense of the future is very unclear and ambiguous, and I think that’s what’s leading consumers to not spend as much, companies not to invest as much and for there to be this general malaise that you encounter just about everywhere you go.”

During a visit to China last year, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said U.S. firms had told her the country was “uninvestable because it’s become too risky.”

And a report released in February by the American Chamber of Commerce in China found that the top concerns of U.S. businesses in the country were U.S.-Sino relations as well as China’s regulatory environment and rising costs.

Hopes rose in November when Xi and President Joe Biden held a summit in California, their first encounter in a year. During that trip, Xi also met with U.S. business leaders at a dinner in San Francisco, where he received a standing ovation.

Among the attendees at that dinner was Apple CEO Cook, a frequent traveler to China who arrived for another high-profile visit last week.

Even as the company shifts some production to countries such as India, Cook emphasized on this visit that Apple is still committed to China, a key overseas market for the company as well as a major manufacturing base.

For the first time last year, Apple was China’s largest smartphone vendor, with market share of 17.3%. But the company is under intense pressure from domestic competitors such as Huawei, and iPhone sales reportedly fell by 24% in the first six weeks of this year compared with a year earlier.

The use of iPhones at Chinese government agencies and state-owned enterprises has also reportedly been restricted amid national security concerns, much like the Chinese app TikTok has been banned from U.S. government devices.

Those are not the only challenges facing Apple, which was sued by the U.S. Justice Department on Thursday over its alleged monopolization of the smartphone market.

Earlier that day, Cook was all smiles as he opened a new Apple store in downtown Shanghai, the company’s 57th outlet in China and its second-largest flagship in the world after its Fifth Avenue location in New York.

Cook said he was “very confident” in the future of Apple’s China operations. “I love being here. I love the people and the culture,” he told reporters. “And it’s just like every time I come here, I’m reminded that anything is possible here.”

Though Cook was mobbed by fans at the store opening, where some people had lined up overnight, that doesn’t necessarily translate into sales. The economic downturn appears to be making Chinese consumers more price-sensitive, increasing the appeal of cheaper smartphones from Huawei and other local rivals.

“The iPhone is more expensive than other phones, so I think people will choose cheaper ones,” Shi Zhongnuo, 17, said in an interview Monday outside an Apple store in Beijing.

Cook also met with Commerce Minister Wang Wentao, who urged him to “continue to unlock the Chinese market and achieve shared development with China,” according to a ministry statement.

It was unclear whether Cook attended the meeting with Xi on Wednesday.

But China’s courting of executives is in part an effort to revive business interest from abroad. The country’s foreign direct investment fell 19.9% in the first two months of this year to 215.1 billion renminbi ($30 billion), the Commerce Ministry reported last week, after shrinking 8% year-on-year in 2023.

“There’s still huge numbers of multinationals and American companies here, but China has basically lost its place at the very top of the list of where they are targeting strategic investment long term,” Kennedy of CSIS said.

A Chinese regulatory official on Tuesday dismissed the drop in foreign investment as nothing unusual.

“The volatility is quite normal when viewed from a global or Asian perspective, or when the trend is viewed on a longer timeline,” Xu Zhibin, the deputy head of China’s foreign exchange regulator, said at the Boao Forum for Asia, an annual gathering in China’s southern island province of Hainan that is known as the “Asian Davos.”

Premier Li Qiang, China’s No. 2 official, told Cook and other global business executives at the China Development Forum in Beijing on Sunday that China welcomed foreign investment and was taking steps to improve its business environment.

Vice Commerce Minister Guo Tingting also said Monday that foreign companies would be treated the same as Chinese ones so that they “can invest in China with confidence and peace of mind.”

Last week, Chinese officials eased some rules on foreign investment as well as some security rules on the cross-border flow of data, an issue that has concerned foreign companies. Earlier this month, Beijing said it would make access to the manufacturing sector easier for foreign investors.

Sean Stein, chair of the American Chamber of Commerce in China, said that while such announcements were encouraging, “announcements don’t move markets and promises don’t drive investment.”

“The key, as ever, will be full and timely implementation,” he said.

Janis Mackey Frayer reported from Beijing, and Jennifer Jett reported from Hong Kong.



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Institute says German economy is “struggling” and lowers forecasts


A leading German economic research institute has significantly lowered its economic forecast for the country in the coming year.

The Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW) spoke on Wednesday of “headwinds” for the economy from within Germany and abroad.

“The economy in Germany is struggling,” said Stefan Kooths, from the IFW.

The institute expects growth of only 0.1% this year. In the autumn they had assumed that gross domestic product would increase by 1.3% in 2024. The institute has left its forecast for next year virtually unchanged at 1.4%.

In 2023, economic output in Europe’s largest economy fell by 0.3%. The IfW experts say that productivity in Germany has been “treading water.”

Private consumption is less dynamic than expected, and exports have declined despite rising global economic activity. The construction industry is also going through a deep trough.

Although the economy should start to recover in the spring, the overall momentum will not be very strong.

The institute also sees “political uncertainty” continuing to weigh on companies’ investment activity. The German government is currently struggling to finalize a growth package, with Finance Minister Christian Lindner and Economy Minister Robert Habeck each having their own, different ideas.

The German Chamber of Industry and Commerce says that the mood in the country’s economy remains poor. Their Managing Director Martin Wansleben blamed high energy costs, and pointed to “a worsening shortage of skilled labour and geopolitical uncertainties that are weighing on export business.”

There is some good news for consumers, with the experts saying they believe the phase of very high inflation rates since the middle of last year is over. They expect consumer prices to rise by 2.3% this year and by 1.8% next year.

Stefan Kooths, Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW Kiel), shows the booklet with the joint forecast of the economic research institutes for spring 2024 at the Federal Press Conference. Kay Nietfeld/dpa

Stefan Kooths, Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW Kiel), shows the booklet with the joint forecast of the economic research institutes for spring 2024 at the Federal Press Conference. Kay Nietfeld/dpa



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