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US dockworkers suspend strike that threatened to cripple ports

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A strike that closed US east and Gulf coast ports will be suspended after the dockworkers’ union and the group representing ocean carriers reached an agreement on Thursday, averting for now a costly blow to the economy ahead of the presidential election.

The agreement extends the International Longshoremen’s Association’s employment contract, which had expired, until January 15. It will allow them to return to work for the first time in three days, the union and the shipping lines’ group said in a joint statement.

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Negotiations, which had been at an “impasse” over wages and automation for months, would now continue, the statement said.

The work stoppage, which started on Tuesday, had threatened to upend the US economy by snarling global supply chains and halting imports of fresh foods, pharmaceuticals and other consumer goods. JPMorgan analysts estimated that it could cost the US economy as much as $4.5bn a day.

The three dozen affected ports span from Maine to Texas and together handle one-quarter of the country’s annual international trade, worth $3tn, per a Conference Board analysis.

US President Joe Biden congratulated the union and the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX), which represents the carriers, on the deal, saying in a statement that it “represents critical progress towards a strong contract”.

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Frustration over the economic fallout of the strike, compounded by fears over how product shortages could delay relief efforts for states devastated by Hurricane Helene, had opened up a new line of attack on Biden and vice-president Kamala Harris, the Democratic candidate, ahead of the November 5 election.

Donald Trump, the former president and Republican nominee, claimed earlier this week the work stoppage “would never have happened” had he been in the White House.

Business leaders had also criticised Biden’s approach to the strike, repeatedly asking him to invoke a federal law that would temporarily force the longshoremen to resume loading and unloading container ships. Biden said he wanted the groups to come to an agreement on their own.

A coalition of 272 trade groups representing retailers, farmers, restaurants, meat processors, truckers and other industries had called the work stoppage a “dire situation” on Wednesday, with “massive negative ramifications for our industries and the economy”.

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It threatened the import of consumer items from bananas to coffee to clothing. Some Americans even began panic buying and hoarding toilet paper, prompting a trade group that represents paper manufacturers to issue a statement saying it did not expect the strike to have an impact on supply. An estimated 85 per cent of such products are manufactured in the US, the American Forest and Paper Association says.

ILA leaders told picketing workers the deal that included a 62 per cent raise over the six-year term of the contract. ILA members earned between $20-$39 an hour under the old contract — with overtime pay that pushed a third of New York-based workers’ annual earnings above $200,000 during fiscal year 2019-2020.

They are also fighting the adoption of port robotics that they say could eliminate jobs. Ports in the Netherlands and Australia are already primarily operated by remote-controlled cranes, employing few human workers.

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Business

Watches and Jewellery: October

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India becomes hot ticket for Swiss watchmakers; western brands are working closely with Chinese artists; high-tech lumes brightening up the face of watch design; the tools and ideas driving an intaglio renaissance

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Consumer laws are driver for innovation in Europe

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Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

In his letter “EU focus on protecting the consumer is stifling innovation” (September 30) Danny Leipziger is correct to highlight the importance of lowering barriers to entry and improving the functioning of the EU’s single market. But he could not be more wrong about the EU’s regulatory focus on consumer protection. It is the combination of high consumer protection standards and competition to meet the demands of millions of consumers across Europe that give companies the incentive to increase the quality of their products, improve their efficiency and deliver innovation.

Large companies, including those in Big Tech, are continuing to pursue a vigorous campaign against EU legislation to protect consumers’ interests like the Digital Markets Act precisely because it aims to lower barriers for new market entrants, bringing more competition and ensuring that innovation is not dictated and controlled by a few powerful companies.

Agustín Reyna
Director-General, European consumers’ organisation BEUC, Brussels, Belgium

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Important Update: Vistara and Air India Integration

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Important Update: Vistara and Air India Integration

Starting September 3, 2024, bookings for travel after November 11, 2024, cannot be made on Vistara’s platform.

Continue reading Important Update: Vistara and Air India Integration at Business Traveller.

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Letter: Take three economists

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Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

Mario Rizzo (Letters, September 14) paints a dismal picture of academic economists engaging in anti-competitive practices (oh the irony), as a kind of intellectual (or at least mathematical) cartel.

The problem is worse. Mainstream economics has had a dismal record of prediction. As John Kenneth Galbraith said, “The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectable.”

But the problem is even worse than that. For almost 50 years, economists, guided by early papers by American economist William Nordhaus, have peddled the line that it would be cheaper to let climate change rip, because the clean-up would be cheaper — as a percentage of overall wealth — at some point in the future. That’s not working out so well, is it?

At more or less the time Galbraith made his observation, another economist, Kenneth Boulding quipped: “Anyone who believes that exponential growth can go on forever in a finite world is either a madman or an economist.”

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Marc Hudson
Stone, Staffordshire, UK

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Letter: Austerity redux?

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Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

From Chris Partridge, Stratford-on-Avon, Warwickshire, UK

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Biomass-derived plastics are double-edged sword

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Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

You report that AP Møller Holding, the Maersk family’s investment group, is putting its weight behind moves to cut fossil fuel plastic pro­duc­tion (Report, October 1).

Plastics derived from renewable biomass, however, are a double-edged sword and may worsen environmental pollution rather than reduce it.

Bio-based plastics can only counter emissions from fossil fuel-based plastic if the electricity used in their production is entirely derived from clean, renewable sources. Otherwise, if they are produced from gas or coal-fired electricity, their emissions are four to seven times higher than that of fossil fuel-based plastics.

Furthermore, bio-based plastics do not address the root cause of the plastic pollution challenge. The current rate of plastic production is too high!

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Calling it bio-based does not mean that the plastic is biodegradable and decomposes. So, even if bio-based plastic recycling were at an optimum level globally, we would still be unable to recycle our way out of plastic pollution.

Innovators can focus more on alternative, sustainable materials with low environmental footprints and shift consumer behaviour to reduce the demand for plastic of whatever composition.

Edna Odhiambo
Climate Adviser, Nairobi, Kenya

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