The Economist - 04.12.2021

(EriveltonMoraes) #1

10 TheEconomistDecember4th 2021
The world this week Business


Jack Dorseystepped down as
chief executive of Twitter,
which he helped found in

2006. Investors have long
thought that Mr Dorsey was
spreading himself too thin
between Twitter and Square
(soon to be renamed Block), a
payments company that he
will still lead. He was sacked as
ceoin 2008, but returned to
the job in 2015. Last year a
hedge fund sought his remov­
al, after Mr Dorsey said he
wanted to spend some time in
Africa. He once likened Twitter
to a “global consciousness”.
The job of running this univer­
sal system of awareness now
falls to Parag Agrawal, the for­
mer chief technology officer. 


Britain’s competition regulator
looked to unwind a merger
involving Big Tech when it
directed Meta, the parent
company of Facebook, to sell
Giphy, a database of animated
gif files that social­media
users attach to their posts.
Both companies are American.
The regulator concluded that
Facebook’s acquisition of
Giphy last year could concen­
trate Facebook’s market power
in Britain, and also curtail
Giphy’s potential to expand its
own advertising services. 

A regional director of Amer­
ica’s National Labour Relations
Board ordered Amazonto
allow workers at a warehouse
in Alabama a second vote on
whether to unionise, finding
that the company had
“hijacked” the process. In April
a closely watched vote on
joining a union, the first at an
Amazon centre in America,
was overwhelmingly rejected
by employees. Amazon might
appeal to the full nlrbagainst
the decision to hold a re­run. 

Nubanklowered the target
share­price range for its forth­
coming ipoin New York. The
Brazilian fintech firm, Latin
America’s most valuable start­
up, could still be valued at
$42bn, placing it above Brazil’s
biggest bank in terms of mar­
ket capitalisation. Meanwhile
Grab, a “super app” offering a
wide range of services and
based in Singapore, prepared

tomakeitsstockmarketdebut
ontheNasdaqexchangeby
mergingwitha special­pur­
poseacquisitioncompany.

Omigod,Omicron
Markets were unsettled by the
potential for Omicron to ham­
per economic recovery. Global
stockmarketsplunged after
South Africa announced that it
had discovered the latest strain
of covid­19, and remained
febrile. Oil pricesalso
swooned on the prospect for
reduced demand. Brent crude
fell to $70 a barrel, from $82. 

Jerome Powell also spooked
markets when he said it was
time to drop the word
“transitory” from the Federal
Reserve’s statements on
inflation. The central bank’s
chairman admitted that the
risk of higher inflation had
increased, and indicated that
he would support a quicker
pace of monetary­tightening
measures. 

The euro zone’saverage annu­
al rate of inflation rose to 4.9%
in November, the highest it has
been since the creation of the
single currency more than 
years ago, adding more pres­
sure on the European Central
Bank to start winding down its
stimulus programme. In

Germanyinflationstoodat6%,
a levelnotseensincetheafter­
mathofreunificationthree
decadesago.

TheAustralianeconomy
expandedby3.9%inthesec­
ondquarteroverthesame
threemonthslastyear,but
shrankby1.9%comparedwith
thepreviousquarter.Mel­
bourneandSydneyended
theirextensivepandemic
lockdownsonlyinOctober.

Unorthodox

Withtheliraplungingtonew
lows, prompting another
intervention by the central
bank to prop up the currency,
Turkey’sfinance minister
resigned, and was replaced
with an ally of the country’s
president, Recep Tayyip Erdo­
gan. Mr Erdogan believes that
his insistence on interest­rate
cuts has created an economic
boom: gdpgrew by 7.4% in the

thirdquarter,yearonyear.But
theplungingliraandinflation
ofnearly20%havemade
householdgoodsmuchmore
expensive,leadingtorecent
streetprotests.

Theunreportedthatinterna­
tionaltouristarrivalswereup
by58%inJulytoSeptember
comparedwiththesamethree
monthslastyear,butwerestill
64%belowthesamequarterin
2019.Touristarrivalsforthe
wholeof 2021 areexpectedto
remain70­75%belowthoseof
2019,aboutthesameas2020.

Nissanoutlinedanambitious
plantoinvestinelectricvehi­
cles.TheJapanesecompany
willspend¥2trn($17.7bn)on
producingnewelectricor
hybridmodels,aimingforan
“electrificationmix”ofmore
than50%globallyby2030.It
willstillsellcarswithinternal­
combustionengines.

Australia’ssecuritiescommis­
sion said it would fine
Westpac, one of the country’s
biggest banks, for wrongly
charging customers, including
dead people. The regulator
found that, among other
things, Westpac had sought
fees from over 11,000 deceased
customers “for financial­
advice services that were not
provided due to their death”.

Tu r key

Source:RefinitivDatastream

20

15

10

5

2020 2021

Consumer prices
% increase on
a year earlier

One-week repo interest rate, %
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