The New York Times International - 31.07.2019

(Nandana) #1

T HE NEW YORK TIMES INTERNATIONAL EDITION WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 2019| 7


Business


One morning last fall in Los Angeles, the
comic and actress Kate Micucci sat
chewing over a pitch for a television se-
ries with her writing partner, Felicia
Day. How conventional would the gen-
der roles have to be, they wondered, be-
fore a studio would bite?
Their basic premise was “manic pixie
dream girl grows up”: Suppose you took
a quirky-but-adorable female character,
a staple of small films like “Amélie” and
“Garden State,” and showed what she
and her best friend would be like push-
ing 40.
The role was not a stretch for either
woman. Ms. Micucci has played her

share of manic pixies on shows like “The
Big Bang Theory” and “Scrubs.” Ms.
Day built a following as the creator of
the web series “The Guild,” and as the
love interest in Joss Whedon’s antihero
sendup, “Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along
Blog.”
When they pitched the concept
around town, though, they got a typical
Hollywood response. Producers told the
pair they loved the idea — but that
they’d love it more with just a few
changes.
The series that excited the producers
would indeed feature two women in
their late 30s. But there would be a
younger man at the center of the show,
who would be a source of inspiration and
self-knowledge.
Ms. Micucci began to muse about this
new version of the show, tentatively
called “Hot Guy in the Basement.” They
still hadn’t committed to the producers’

Peak TV not so golden for women


WOMEN, PAGE 8

It was said to be an opening
for female comics. Guess
who gets the final laugh.

BY NOAM SCHEIBER

Kate Micucci, right, and Felicia Day. “Hollywood is perfect at taking what you’re enthu-
siastic about and just draining it till you’re not excited about it,” Ms. Day said.

ELIZABETH LIPPMAN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

The Federal Reserve this week will most
likely cut interest rates for the first time
since 2008, when the United States
economy was mired in a deep recession,
as the central bank tries to keep a record
economic expansion from petering out.
The expected change, while likely to
be small, will end an era of gradual rate
increases intended to return the econ-
omy to a more “normal” state after the
Great Recession, when the Fed slashed
rates nearly to zero as it tried to rescue
the economy. The Fed’s approach has
largely worked — the United States
economy is growing, unemployment is
at a 50-year low and wages are slowly
rising.
But a rate cut at this moment in the
cycle sends a signal: The current econ-
omy could be as good as it gets.
The Fed’s move on Wednesday may
cheer President Trump, who has jaw-
boned the central bank for a year over
its 2018 rate increases, saying the econ-
omy would have gone up “like a rocket,”
had the Fed not gotten it wrong.
“The Fed acted too soon. I turned out
to be right. They acted too soon and too
violently,” Mr. Trump said on Friday at
the White House.
But the Fed, which operates inde-
pendently of the White House, is likely
to make a decision driven by precaution,
not politics, as it tries to inoculate the
economy against the harmful effects of
slowing global growth and Mr. Trump’s
trade war.
While the United States economy con-
tinues to chug along, cracks are begin-
ning to show. Manufacturing gauges,
which often lead the rest of the economy,
are slumping across the world. Business
investment and confidence have suf-
fered under Mr. Trump’s trade spats and
tariffs. A potent recession indicator is
flashing red — rates on 10-year bonds
have been lower than those on 3-month
government securities, a sign that in-
vestors are pessimistic about the future.
The effect of Mr. Trump’s $1.5 trillion
tax cut is waning and businesses report
that they are holding off on expanding,
in part because of concern about global
economic growth and a protracted trade
dispute between the United States and
China. Gross domestic product, the
broadest measure of goods and services
produced in the United States economy,
rose at a 2.1 percent annual rate in the
second quarter, according to data re-
leased on Friday. That is a decent pace,
but it shows the economy is reverting to
normal after a 3.1 percent growth rate in
the first quarter.
Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, has
been signaling a possible rate cut,
telling lawmakers this month that “the
uncertainties around global growth and
trade continue to weigh on the outlook”
and that the Fed would act as needed to
sustain the economic expansion.
Anticipation of a cut may already be
providing a slight economic jolt by low-
ering consumer interest rates and send-
ing stocks soaring, giving companies
more reason to invest and consumers an
extra nudge to buy a house or a car. The
Fed raised rates nine times in total, and
four times in 2018, before pausing this
year. This move is seen by many as a re-
calibration to help the economy remain
on track, not the start of a cycle that will
return rates to rock bottom.
Yet in cutting now, the Fed is effec-
tively ending its campaign to put eco-
nomic policy back to normal. The shift
confirms that interest rates will be much
lower from now on, leaving the economy
in a much more fragile state.
After years of increases, interest
rates remain historically low and eco-
nomic output, while growing, has hov-
ered at a disappointing 2 percent for
most of the past decade as population
aging and slow productivity gains weigh
down its potential. Inflation also re-
mains mired below the Fed’s goal.
The Fed’s target interest rate stands
between 2.25 and 2.50 percent, roughly
half of its 5.25 percent level before the
financial crisis, leaving the central bank
with limited room to act in the event of a
recession. “It’s much more fragile,” Di-
ane Swonk, chief economist at Grant
Thornton, said of the economy, explain-
ing that consumers and businesses
should be “euphoric” this late in a cycle
but are not.
That reflects “the uncertainty, and the
scars — we still have scars from the cri-
sis,” she said.
The stock market has gyrated over
the past year on worries about Mr.
Trump’s trade wars, a slowdown in
China and the prospect of the Fed push-
ing through more rate increases. Con-
sumers pulled back their spending late
last year as uncertainties mounted, a
sign of how susceptible they might be to
any downturn.
The central bank is paying attention
to that vulnerability. Following signal-
ing by policymakers, investors antici-
pate that the Fed will cut rates by a quar-
ter-point this month and once more this

year. Fed officials expect to eventually
resume raising rates, based on their
June economic projections, which show
a rebound in 2021 and a slightly higher
Fed funds rate over the longer run.
But many analysts say it is unlikely
that the Fed will lift rates again before
the economy tips into a recession. That
would make the current rate setting this
business cycle’s peak.
“We think we’re in the beginning of
the end,” said Subadra Rajappa, head of
United States rates strategy at Société
Générale. Her team expects a down-
turn, and further rate cuts, in 2020.
Even if it keeps a recession at bay, the
Fed is working against a perilous back-
drop. The central bank is tasked with
maintaining full employment and stable
inflation, which it defines as price gains
around 2 percent. That’s enough to fend
off economy-harming deflation.
Policymakers have yet to hit their
price goal sustainably: Their preferred
inflation gauge came in at just 1.5 per-
cent in the year through May. Officials
have been banking on continued eco-
nomic growth to push wages and prices
up — so any slowdown could ensure
they miss their goal, denting their credi-
bility. “On the basis of inflation alone, I
could feel confident in arguing for a cou-
ple of rate cuts before the end of the
year,” Charles Evans, president of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, said
on July 16.
Interest rates make matters worse.
The Fed policy setting that neither
stokes nor reins in growth has been
creeping lower as growth slows, a trend
that has been slowly playing out for
years across advanced economies.
That’s why policymakers have not
been able to lift rates more despite a
very long expansion: The economy
needs very low rates just to sustain his-
torically ho-hum progress. And it leaves
the Fed with far less ammunition to fight
future downturns. Gone are the days of
cutting 5 percentage points to goad
growth back to life, as the Fed did in
2007 and 2008.

Between the continuing shortfall and
the Fed’s more limited room to maneu-
ver, officials think the risks of waiting
too long to adjust policy are much great-
er than the costs of going early and later
discovering that they could have held
off. “It’s better to take preventive meas-
ures than to wait for disaster to unfold,”
John C. Williams, president of the Fed-
eral Reserve Bank of New York, said on
July 18. “When you only have so much
stimulus at your disposal, it pays to act
quickly to lower rates at the first sign of
economic distress.”
The Fed has acted early in the past. Of
the seven initial rate cuts that have hap-
pened outside of recessions in the past
30 years — moves that were or could
have been seen as precautionary — 1998
is the most similar to now.
As “Armageddon” smashed the box
office and 8-year-olds across the coun-
try struggled to keep Tamagotchis alive,
the job market looked hot, inflation lin-
gered below 2 percent, and, like today,
the economic picture at home looked
mixed as risks abroad mounted.
Back then a financial crisis in Russia,
a contraction in Japan and an election
and reforms in Brazil threatened the
United States expansion. The Fed cut by
a quarter-point in September 1998 and
followed that up with an impromptu cut
in mid-October and another in Novem-
ber. The economy righted itself.
But there are major differences be-
tween that experience and this one. The
Fed moved quickly in 1998 while stock
markets were sinking on the heels of
very real events, including the near fail-
ure of Long-Term Capital Management,
a major hedge fund.
This time, the Fed merely signaled
coming moves when both real economic
data and stocks were wobbling in May
and early June, spooked by the specter
of trade escalation. Economic data has
since improved, and the Fed’s guidance
helped to send equity indexes to record
highs. “We did not move at the June
meeting, but in effect we did move at the
June meeting, because markets already
priced that in,” James Bullard, president
of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis,
told reporters on July 19.
Mr. Bullard and other Fed officials
have tried to signal that this cut may be
isolated if the economy stays on track.
Despite their assurances that policy
will be flexible and data-dependent, and
in the face of a recent improvement in
several economic indicators, market
pricing suggests investors are betting
on further easing before the end of the
year.

Fed likely to make


first cut since 2008


WASHINGTON

Decision could be a signal
that this may be as good
as the economy will get

BY JEANNA SMIALEK

The Federal Reserve chief, Jerome H.
Powell, has said that the Fed would act as
needed to sustain expansion.

ZACH GIBSON/GETTY IMAGES

For years, the American agricultural gi-
ant Cargill has been on relatively good
terms with environmental advocates,
praised for agreeing to a landmark mor-
atorium on buying soybeans grown on
deforested land in the Amazon rain for-
est.
In recent weeks, though, that relation-
ship has soured over the company’s re-
fusal to agree to a similar moratorium in
another environmentally sensitive re-
gion of Brazil and, more broadly, over its
failure to meet its anti-deforestation tar-
gets. This month, the environmental ad-
vocacy group Mighty Earth released a
report titled “Cargill: The Worst Com-
pany in the World.”
The fierce reaction shows how corpo-
rations that fall short of ambitious envi-
ronmental commitments can be re-
ceived. And it demonstrates the speed
with which a company can go from envi-
ronmental leader to scourge in the eyes
of some advocates.
“What was disappointing was that
Cargill got lauded and then didn’t follow
through,” said Nathalie Walker, a direc-
tor at the National Wildlife Federation.
“I don’t think anyone is taking a person-
al view or an emotional view about a
company. It’s judging them by their ac-
tions.”
Cargill, which acts as a middleman be-
tween farms and big food companies, is
one of the top exporters of Brazilian soy.
Before it committed to the soy moratori-
um in 2006, advocacy organizations like
Greenpeace had pressed the company
to stop working with farmers who
cleared native vegetation in the Ama-
zon, where rampant deforestation was
creating an environmental catastrophe.
Eventually, Cargill agreed to the mora-
torium — a move that environmental
groups say has helped significantly re-
duce deforestation in the region.
The largest privately owned company
in the United States, Cargill has never
exactly been the darling of the envi-
ronmental community. But over the
years, advocacy groups, often pugna-

cious in their criticism of powerful cor-
porations, have occasionally lauded the
company for its promises to do better.
Cargill even received a Leadership in
Environment Award for its role in the
Amazon moratorium from the Keystone
Policy Center, a nonprofit organization
focused on compromise and civil dia-
logue.
Recently, however, the good will
seems to have evaporated. Last month,
Greenpeace questioned the company’s
commitment to ending deforestation in
Brazil, shortly before Mighty Earth re-
leased its scathing 7,000-word con-
demnation of Cargill, which criticized
the company for pollution and meat con-
tamination, as well as deforestation.
“It’s hard to hear,” said Ruth Kim-
melshue, Cargill’s chief sustainability
officer. “It doesn’t feel very good.”
Much of the recent criticism of Cargill
is focused on the continuing deforesta-
tion in the Cerrado, a vast Brazilian sa-
vanna where the company buys large
quantities of soy from local farmers. The
Cerrado accounts for around 60 percent
of Brazil’s total soy production, roughly
20 times the amount grown in the Ama-
zon.
“The economic stakes are much
greater,” said David Cleary, the director
of global agriculture at the Nature Con-
servancy.
Cargill’s experience also highlights
the thorny politics facing American
companies in Brazil, whose new popu-
list president, Jair Bolsonaro, has
sought to roll back environmental regu-
lations and accelerate economic growth.
The Brazilian section of the Amazon has
seen a major uptick in forest loss since
Mr. Bolsonaro took office in January.
Over the past few years, advocates
have called for the company to establish
a soy moratorium in the Cerrado, which
has lost more than half its native plant
life and has significantly less protection
under Brazilian law than the Amazon
does. Experts say the damage to the re-
gion has disrupted the local water sys-
tem and exacerbated climate change.
Cargill has refused to agree to a Cer-
rado moratorium. Last month, the com-
pany acknowledged that it would miss
an environmental target it had set a dec-
ade ago: the elimination of deforesta-
tion from its supply chain by 2020. In-
stead, it released a new “soy action

plan” that pledged $30 million toward
the development of “economically via-
ble options for farmers as alternatives
to converting native vegetation.”
The plan is light on specifics. But, in
an open letter sent to Brazilian farmers
this month, Cargill made its opposition
to a second moratorium explicit, assur-
ing the agricultural community that “we
understand that this is not the appropri-
ate instrument to solve the issue.”
Glenn Hurowitz, who runs Mighty
Earth, said Cargill’s chief executive, Da-
vid MacLennan, told him privately this
year that the company would get behind
a Cerrado moratorium.
“They’re speaking out of both sides of
their mouth,” Mr. Hurowitz said.
“They’re being two-faced in a fairly
transparent way.”
Ms. Kimmelshue denies that the com-
pany ever committed to instituting a
new moratorium and insists that the sit-
uation in the Cerrado is more compli-
cated than in the Amazon.

“Different place, different time, differ-
ent circumstances,” she said.
One important distinction: While
Cargill was the largest soy trader oper-
ating in the Amazon, it faces signifi-
cantly more competition, both local and
international, in the Cerrado. Chinese
companies buy most of Brazil’s soy.
“While we could stand up and say
we’re not going to buy anymore, and de-
clare a moratorium individually, that
just pushes the problem,” Ms. Kim-
melshue said. “We exit, and somebody
else moves in. We’ve got to get more
deeply involved to help find a solution.”
Another potential complication is the
importance of soy to the Brazilian agri-
culture industry. A Cerrado moratorium
would likely create tensions with local
farmers, who are legally entitled to clear
vegetation across much of the region,
said Carlos Klink, Brazil’s former na-
tional secretary for climate change.
“They want to be a part of the decision
making,” Mr. Klink said.
But environmental advocates argue

that Brazilian farmers could continue
growing soy on already-cleared land in
the Cerrado without damaging the hab-
itat.
“There’s nine times more cleared land
than there is habitat you could clear,”
said Ms. Walker of the National Wildlife
Federation. “There’s a real win-win.
Farmers can produce more and ex-
pand.”
Environmental advocacy groups are
not alone in their efforts to protect the
Cerrado. A number of business coali-
tions are working on solutions to defor-
estation in the region, including the Cer-
rado Work Group, a collaboration
among soy traders and Brazilian non-
governmental organizations. And doz-
ens of companies — including McDon-
ald’s, one of Cargill’s biggest customers
— have signed the Cerrado Manifesto, a
pledge to halt forest loss associated with
the agriculture business.
McDonald’s did not respond to a re-
quest for comment on Cargill’s opposi-
tion to a Cerrado moratorium.
Dr. Cleary, the Nature Conservancy
official, said he expected Cargill and
other companies to eventually agree to
a cutoff date after which they would not
buy soy from newly cleared areas.
“What’s going to happen in the Cer-
rado is some kind of agreement with a
financial package,” he said. “And it
would have to be big enough to encour-
age enough farmers to move in that di-
rection.”
Still, at least for now, Cargill is being
pilloried for its failure to meet its defor-
estation target and for its opposition to a
Cerrado moratorium. Cargill is not the
first major company to fall short of an
environmental commitment, and it is
unlikely to be the last.
“As more companies step up to the
plate and start doing something, there
are going to be more companies that are
unable to meet those commitments,”
said Nancy Landrum, an expert on sus-
tainable business management at Loyo-
la University Chicago. “I just hope they
can learn from their mistakes.”
Ms. Kimmelshue, the sustainability
officer, acknowledged that Cargill had
not acted quickly enough to combat de-
forestation. “We need to move with a
greater sense of urgency,” she said. But
she said the company did not regret
making ambitious commitments.

Much of the recent criticism of Cargill is focused on the deforestation in the Cerrado, a Brazilian savanna where the company buys large quantities of soy from local farmers.

NELSON ALMEIDA/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES

Hard fall from a green height


Environmental groups turn
on U.S. agricultural giant
over Brazil deforestation

BY DAVID YAFFE-BELLANY

Over the years, environmental
groups had lauded Cargill for its
promises to do better. But the
good will seems to have faded.

РЕ


ЛИ

ing 40.
И

ing 40.ing 40.ing 40.ЗЗП

and her best friend would be like push-
П

and her best friend would be like push-
ing 40.ing 40.П

and her best friend would be like push-and her best friend would be like push-ОО
ing 40.
О
ing 40.

and her best friend would be like push-and her best friend would be like push-ДДГ

“Garden State,” and showed what she
Г

“Garden State,” and showed what she
and her best friend would be like push-and her best friend would be like push-Г

“Garden State,” and showed what she“Garden State,” and showed what sheОО
and her best friend would be like push-

О
and her best friend would be like push-

“Garden State,” and showed what she“Garden State,” and showed what sheТТО

a staple of small films like “Amélie” and
О

a staple of small films like “Amélie” and
“Garden State,” and showed what she“Garden State,” and showed what sheО

a staple of small films like “Amélie” anda staple of small films like “Amélie” anda staple of small films like “Amélie” anda staple of small films like “Amélie” andВВИИ
Л
a quirky-but-adorable female character,
Л
a quirky-but-adorable female character,
a staple of small films like “Amélie” anda staple of small films like “Amélie” andЛ

a quirky-but-adorable female character,a quirky-but-adorable female character,АА
Г

dream girl grows up”: Suppose you took
Г

dream girl grows up”: Suppose you took
a quirky-but-adorable female character,a quirky-but-adorable female character,Г
Р
dream girl grows up”: Suppose you took
Р
dream girl grows up”: Suppose you took
a quirky-but-adorable female character,
Р
a quirky-but-adorable female character,

dream girl grows up”: Suppose you tookdream girl grows up”: Suppose you tookУП

Their basic premise was “manic pixie
П

Their basic premise was “manic pixie
dream girl grows up”: Suppose you tookdream girl grows up”: Suppose you tookП

Their basic premise was “manic pixieTheir basic premise was “manic pixieПП
dream girl grows up”: Suppose you took

П
dream girl grows up”: Suppose you took

Their basic premise was “manic pixieTheir basic premise was “manic pixieАА

"What's

“Garden State,” and showed what she

"What's

“Garden State,” and showed what she
and her best friend would be like push-
"What's

and her best friend would be like push-
ing 40.ing 40."What's

News"

a staple of small films like “Amélie” and
News"

a staple of small films like “Amélie” and
“Garden State,” and showed what she“Garden State,” and showed what sheNews"

VK.COM/WSNWS

a staple of small films like “Amélie” and

VK.COM/WSNWS

a staple of small films like “Amélie” and
“Garden State,” and showed what she

VK.COM/WSNWS

“Garden State,” and showed what she
and her best friend would be like push-

VK.COM/WSNWS

and her best friend would be like push-

The role was not a stretch for eitherThe role was not a stretch for eitherVK.COM/WSNWS
woman. Ms. Micucci has played her

VK.COM/WSNWS
woman. Ms. Micucci has played her

РЕЛИЗ ПОДГОТОВИЛА ГРУППА "What's News" VK.COM/WSNWS

Free download pdf