Mês: PM32025 f44232025-03-20T18:44:23+00:00pmquinta-feira

Georgia House passes sound lawfare liability and tort reforms to save costs for consumers

ATLANTA,GA – Earlier today, the Georgia House of Representatives passed SB68, a civil justice reform bill to modernize liability standards for firms and help save costs for consumers by cutting down on frivolous lawsuits that raise prices for firms and businesses that serve them.

The bill caps non-economic damages in civil trials, adjusts liability standards for responsible establishments, and limits medical cost awards to “reasonable and necessary” amounts to keep price inflation in check.

The bill will now be reconciled with the Senate version before it is sent to Governor Brian Kemp, who has championed the law.

The Consumer Choice Center (CCC), a nonpartisan consumer advocacy group and think tank, applauded state legislators for enacting tort and liability reforms that will bring more certainty to innovators while reserving liability courts for consumers are who legitimately harmed.

“Every consumer pays the cost of unjustified litigation, whether they know it or not. Georgia’s novel attempt at reforming the civil justice system will help keep companies accountable while safeguarding the court process for consumers and victims who have been harmed,” disse Yaël Ossowski, deputy director at the Consumer Choice Center.

Exaggerated liability claims pursued by crafty attorneys creates massive price inflation for firms and insurers and deprives those who are legitimately injured from seeking adequate and timely justice,” he added. “A less costly and inflationary legal system for responsible entrepreneurs and innovators who follow the law will allow consumers to benefit from less litigious system that remains responsive to actual harms.”

This week, the Consumer Choice Center published a cartilha política analyzing similar tort and liability reforms passed in Florida in 2023 that have shown positive impacts by lowering costs for consumers by creating a more stable environment for small businesses.

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The CCC represents consumers in over 100 countries across the globe. We closely monitor regulatory trends in state and national capitals, as well as other hotspots of regulation, and inform and activate consumers to fight for #ConsumerChoice.

Exempt Small Online Businesses from E-Invoicing Requirement

The Consumer Choice Center (CCC), a global consumer advocacy group, today called on the Government to review and amend the current e-invoicing framework, urging authorities to exempt small online businesses earning RM150,000 or less annually. 

Under the present policy, small physical businesses with similar revenue thresholds are exempted, while online businesses are still required to comply with e-invoicing obligations.

The association expressed concern that the unequal treatment of small businesses based solely on their sales channel—physical or online—places unnecessary burdens on micro and small online entrepreneurs. This disparity may also result in higher costs being passed down to consumers, affecting product pricing and limiting variety in the market.

Tarmizi Anuwar, Malaysia Country Associate at the CCC disse “As a consumer association, we are deeply concerned that the current e-invoicing policy unfairly penalises small online sellers, many of whom are everyday Malaysians trying to earn an honest living. It is not reasonable that small physical shops are exempt, yet online businesses operating at the same scale are forced to bear additional compliance costs and administrative burdens. Such an imbalance not only discourages digital entrepreneurship but may also reduce healthy market competition, ultimately impacting consumer choice and pricing.”

Many online businesses already use e-wallets, online banking, and digital payment platforms that automatically generate transaction records. These existing financial systems provide transparency and traceability, making additional e-invoicing requirements redundant and unnecessarily bureaucratic. Instead of imposing rigid compliance measures, policymakers should recognize that digital payment adoption itself enhances financial accountability without burdening small entrepreneurs.

“We strongly urge the Government to level the playing field by extending the same exemption to small online businesses. Supporting the growth of small businesses, regardless of whether they operate online or offline, ensures that consumers benefit from a broader range of affordable products and services, while encouraging the development of a fair and inclusive digital economy in Malaysia.”

CCC reiterated its commitment to safeguarding the interests of consumers and small businesses and welcomes engagement with relevant stakeholders to review policies that affect the broader marketplace.

There is no such thing as chemical-free food – there never has been and there never will be’

Chemicals are inherently perceived as bad, while substances of natural origin are seen as positive. Laypeople generally disregard the dose of a toxic substance altogether and classify even the smallest amounts of pesticides as dangerous – for example, chemical residues in their food – without any justification. 

An ORF report addresses the complex challenges associated with the various residues on our plates. In addition to synthetic pesticides, the report also identifies mycotoxins in grain and natural toxins as serious threats to nutritional health. It shows once again that natural substances can be highly toxic, while synthetically produced substances are often harmless.

And crop protection products are often essential. In the ORF report, Austrian farmer Lorenz Mayr gets to the heart of the matter: ‘Without crop protection products, the field would become barren in no time. If the fungal infection is severe, it will penetrate the tubers and cause them to rot.’ A total crop failure would be the direct result. Mayr explains that the use of pesticides is essential. He has to adhere to strict guidelines: ‘There are strict rules about when pesticides can be used. The main thing is that we can protect our plants from disease so that we can produce food for Austrian production.’

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State Bans on Sports Betting Are Not Helping Anybody

Last week, Georgia’s state legislature recusado once more to take up the legalization of sports betting as a ballot referendum in 2025. Georgians will now have to wait until 2026 for the measure to be reconsidered, despite polling from the University of Georgia showing that 63% of voters would have backed legalization. Across the country, 39 states have legalized the practice and nine holdouts remain, two of which include the population behemoths of Texas and California, where either referendum or the legislative cold shoulder has shut out legal sports betting. 

And yet, sports betting is still practiced in impressionante numbers in every state. A new relatório from NEXT/Blask shows that Bovada, a betting site based in Costa Rica, dwarfs the brand strength and earnings of regulated U.S.-based brands such as FanDuel and DraftKings.  

The rise in offshore sports betting, far from any U.S. jurisdiction, should be concerning for both advocates and opponents of this particular type of gambling. Blask, an AI-powered analytics firm, shows remarkable market share for Bovada at $13 billion in 2024, larger than FanDuel and DraftKings combined. At the state level, the report mostra Florida’s only regulated sportsbook, Hard Rock Bet, controls just 20% of the market, leaving the rest to offshore betting sites. 

With college basketball’s March Madness now in full swing, this is a fact state legislatures should take more seriously. It is understandable why skeptics of online sports betting are disinclined to condone the practice. Their concern is that legalization represents a societal stamp of approval on gambling, which leads people to place bets who otherwise wouldn’t have considered it. The truth is that the rates of increased problem gambling are almost insignificant in comparison to how much access has been expanded, a point made by leading researcher Howard Shaffer. 

The vast majority of overseas sportsbooks operate in the Caribbean and Latin America, where U.S. state regulations are a punchline. These sites will take whatever method of payment a willing gambler has, including cryptocurrency, money wires, or credit cards. For casual and problem gamblers alike, nothing is worse than betting on money you don’t have. 

Just recently, personal finance guru Dave Ramsey laid into sports betting on his popular radio show after hearing about a listener’s husband who ran up $300,000 in gambling debt using credit cards. This kind of behavior can destroy lives, but advocates against sports betting have yet to provide an answer for how prohibition helps to reduce this kind of harm.

It’s not entirely clear how many illegal bets are being placed in either California or Texas on unregulated sportsbooks, but we do know that these states boast the largest populations in the U.S. Former Texas Governor Rick Perry did a vídeo for the Sports Betting Alliance drawing attention to the estimated $8.7 billion in annual illegal bets placed in his state.

If that number is anywhere near accurate, it would explain why Bovada has such a dramatic lead over U.S. sportsbooks with basic consumer protections such as debit-only transactions and mechanisms for problem gamblers to limit their use or ban themselves altogether. 

We also know from publicly available search data that inquiries for illegal sportsbooks such as Bovada drop by as much as 50% in the states with legal sports betting that offer taxed and regulated options.

In a painful personal essay for The Free Press, compulsive gambler Allan Loeb shared his life story as a gambling addict and the rapid growth of the betting industry. 

He points out that the National Council on Problem Gambling has encontrado only 1% of American adults suffer from gambling addiction, plus a modest 2.5% who wrestle with more mild habits. Loeb reminds us that nothing is more dangerous than being in debt to illegal operators who threaten not just your financial health but your physical safety. 

This speaks to the fact that there is literally no way to restrict people in a free country with access to the Internet from engaging in gambling. This is the reality on the ground and is made even more complicated by a country with 50 states and a patchwork of varying regulations once you cross any state line. 

State legislators get caught up in debates over tax revenue and funding mechanisms for education and infrastructure, but at the end of the day, legalization shouldn’t be pitched as a financial solution for a state’s revenue problems. It is the only way to provide a layer of consumer protection to your citizens who can access unregulated sites with a VPN and a few clicks. 

Something has to change, whether that be California and Texas helping to starve the illegal market by legalizing their own sportsbooks, or a federal regulatory approach to get all U.S. states on the same page. 

What can’t continue is a circling of the wagons on sports betting that pretends to keep gambling at bay when no such thing is happening. 

Publicado originalmente aqui

FC TAXPAYER: HOW ORBÁN TURNED FOOTBALL INTO HIS PLAYGROUND

The Hungarian Prime Minister has made football one of his flagship projects since the very start of his reign, pumping billions of taxpayers’ money (and indirectly EU funds) into Hungarian clubs and stadiums. It may come as a surprise to many, but in Hungary, the majority of the electorate really believes that his involvement in football is so direct and important that his personal intervention was the deciding factor in any club’s future. But what does this really mean? Is Orbán’s football policy about developing Hungarian sports or consolidating power and winning over fans? Is the quality of Hungarian club football good for consumers, or is it not even about satisfying them?

The funding scheme

Orbán’s government has implemented an extensive financial support system for football clubs through multiple channels. One is corporate tax breaks, through which companies can redirect a portion of their corporate tax to sports clubs. This has resulted in billions of forints flowing into club infrastructure, youth academies, and salaries. The primary beneficiaries are clubs owned by the government’s oligarchs and friends. It is not surprising at all that the most money has flowed to the team of the Prime Minister’s home village, Felcsút, with a population of only 1800, boasting a nice stadium with literally no fans, but at the moment, the team is on its way to its first championship in the history of Hungarian football. The government has heavily subsidized this stadium, although the attendance figures do not justify such investment. Many similar stadiums struggle to fill their seats, leading to criticism that they serve as vanity projects rather than practical sporting infrastructure.

It must also be noted that key Hungarian clubs are now run by “businessmen” with close ties to Orbán. Lőrinc Mészáros, Orbán’s childhood friend and one of Hungary’s wealthiest men, owns Puskás Akadémia FC. István Garancsi, another government-linked oligarch, controls MOL Fehérvár FC. At present, all 12 Division One teams are owned by such oligarchs. This ensures that football clubs remain politically aligned and that funding flows where it is most beneficial for Orbán’s political network rather than where it is needed for true sporting success.

Another flagship project related to football was the creation of football academies. Although billions have poured into these youth academies, Hungary has failed to produce world-class players. The Puskás Akadémia, established as Orbán’s football project, receives massive state funding but has contributed little to the national team or top European leagues. Meanwhile, Hungary continues to rely on foreign-born or naturalized players and those who never benefited from the academy system and deliberately avoided it. This raises serious questions about the efficiency and purpose of these academies: they are less about developing players than funneling money into politically connected hands. 

Where are the results?

On the surface, Hungarian football has gone through massive investments. After decades of disappointment, the Hungarian national team has shown moments of promise, qualifying for the last two European Championships. Clubs like Ferencváros have made regular appearances in European competitions. However, there are some serious concerns about these successes. Despite the billions spent, Hungarian club teams are still uncompetitive in top European leagues. Unlike in countries where private investment and strong domestic leagues drive success, Hungary’s reliance on state money has not produced top-tier teams. Another major issue, as seen above with the team “saved by Orban,” is that many clubs would struggle without continued government backing. 

If state funds were withdrawn, clubs heavily reliant on political connections could collapse under financial mismanagement. This was, in fact, the case with the team mentioned above, as it enjoyed the goodwill of the political class as long as the owner (who was the son-in-law of the prominent oligarch) was still part of the family. After the divorce, his company received no state contracts, and his team started to feel hardships.

As we see, Orban’s focus on football serves a dual purpose—while it undoubtedly generates minor sporting results, it also fosters loyalty among voters. Many Hungarians, especially in smaller cities, believe Orbán saved their beloved teams from financial ruin.

The goal? Not goals in the opponent’s net necessarily

Is the objective of making Hungary a serious footballing nation, or is it about Orbán using the sport as a populist tool? The numbers show that Hungary’s football infrastructure has improved, but its clubs and national team still struggle to compete with Europe’s best. If the ultimate goal was football excellence, then the strategy has not fully been delivered. If the goal was to garner political influence, it has worked exactly as intended.

Publicado originalmente aqui

Beyond the trade war, Ford’s to-do list is long

Ontarians are also watching Ford closely to make sure he doesn’t take his eye off the ball when it comes to other critical issues. Pictured: Ontario Premier Doug Ford. Photo Credit: Doug Ford/X. 

After a cold and snow-filled election, Ontario Premier Doug Ford emerged as the victor, although he did not make the electoral gains he had hoped for. He was given the third mandate he desired to lead Ontarians through a difficult time marked by a trade war and a fracturing relationship with the United States. However, Ontarians are also watching him closely to make sure he doesn’t take his eye off the ball when it comes to other critical issues. 

Tariffs are not the only government policies set to harm Ontario consumers in the days, months, and years of this renewed majority government. Interprovincial trade, housing, alcohol policy, and broadband internet are all topics that are important to Ontarians and must be addressed. 

Canada’s premiers have long put interprovincial trade on the backburner, seeing it as something that was nice in theory but too difficult to achieve in practice. They wasted an enormous amount of time not making it a reality for the good of Canadian consumers and as an escape hatch in case of economic disaster like the one Canadians are now facing in a Canada-United States trade war. The lack of interprovincial free trade is costing consumers immensely, already by robbing our economy of more than $200 billion a year. Other premiers need to follow Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston’s lead immediately and introduce reciprocal domestic trade legislation. Ford has indicated he plans to do just that, but he should make it an early priority for his new government. 

In addition to interprovincial trade, Ford should set to work coordinating with the federal government to ensure Ontario diversifies its economy by building trade relationships with countries other than the United States. Consumers benefit when they have more economic choice, and this will allow for items to be exported and imported at a lower cost with much more stable and predictable partners. 

Ontarians feeling the financial pinch are more than likely also struggling to buy a home. The election was full of ideas and promises when it comes to housing, with the most prominent being rent control from Marit Stiles, the leader of Ontario’s NDP. Economists have long argued that rent control is actually very bad for low-income people looking for housing. However, even though Ford has peeled back this bad policy, the housing crisis persists. 

There is a housing crisis because there are not enough units to house people. And there are not enough units to house people because of outdated red-tape from the federal, provincial, and municipal governments. The Ford government is falling short of its own housing targets. Ford can take ownership of the slowdown experienced at the provincial level and work with his federal and municipal colleagues to make it easier and more attractive for builders to build. Ford has announced billions of dollars in new spending on housing and other projects, but this will turn out to be meaningless if developers are stuck in red tape. 

On the alcohol front, Ford has done more than any other premier in Ontario history to liberalize alcohol sales, but there is more to be done that will benefit both Ontario consumers and small and medium-sized businesses. The LCBO remains the only retail store that can sell spirits. Ontarians looking to buy whisky, vodka, or gin from their grocery or convenience stores are out of luck. Why liberalize alcohol and get stuck on this very simple detail? If wine can be sold in grocery stores, so too should vodka. The LCBO should be given less power, not niche areas of control. 

Ford should also promise not to build any more LCBO retail spaces, and indeed close retail stores that are no longer needed due to the amount of convenience and grocery stores surrounding it, and save the Ontario consumer money on retail rent and on running an inefficient operation. If you compare the LCBO’s operations to comparable private retailers in Alberta, it costs the LCBO approximately $1,000,000 more per store in operation costs. With 669 LCBO stores being inefficiently run in Ontario, that’s a lot of wasted money the government could otherwise spend on Ontarians’ core priorities, making the problem even worse simply doesn’t make financial sense. 

Finally, Ford has, under pressure, ripped up the contract Ontario had with Starlink. While perhaps understandable given the current trade dispute, the bad news is that Starlink was supposed to provide desperately needed high-speed internet access to 15,000 homes and businesses in rural and remote communities by June 2025. Now that this contract is cancelled, and assuming the relationship between the province and Elon Musk’s company is now strained, Ford must put significant effort into finding alternative companies to take on that project. It is outrageous that rural Ontarians do not have access to reliable internet when the economy and their lives rely on being online. Businesses in rural Ontario are also struggling to succeed in a modern economy without access to the internet, and the lifeline they thought was coming is now no longer an option. Businesses that are already in rural areas are struggling, and businesses who many want to start in rural areas will be scared away. This will only depress the local economy and isolate rural communities even further from the rest of the province.

Ford would do well to keep in mind that Ontario is a complex province with many problems to be addressed, even during a trade war and in its aftermath. Ontarians elected him to guide them through this turbulent time, but also to strengthen the economy, make their lives more consumer-friendly, and support the growth of businesses in the province. While much of the present focus is on the trade war, Ontarians still have many other pressing issues that need to be dealt with.

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Carney must change feds’ approach in dealing with trade war

Canada is set to get a new prime minister at a moment when the stakes could not be higher: the nation is in the midst of an unprecedented trade conflict with its biggest trading partner.

To date, the federal Liberal government has lacked a sense of urgency in responding to the crisis. Mark Carney, Canada’s prime minister-designate, has a chance to change that by shifting the feds’ approach to energy projects and eliminating internal trade barriers.

U.S. President Donald Trump has been talking about imposing tariffs on Canada for the past three months. Unfortunately, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spent months acting as if the tariff threat wasn’t real.

Trudeau only belatedly started taking actions to strengthen Canada’s border security as the clock ticked down the zero hour, in a desperate last-minute attempt to meet Trump’s demands.

Yet according to Trump, Trudeau failed to take enough action. Some punishing tariffs are already hammering Canada’s economy, while others are set to take effect early next month.

It’s long been evident that Trump’s decision to impose sweeping tariffs on Canada’s economy is not just about fentanyl crossing the border: less than one per cent of the fentanyl entering the United States comes through the northern border. 

His major goal is clearly to cripple Canada’s economy in an attempt to get companies to move their jobs and economic activity to the United States.

How should Canada respond?

There are at least two key areas where immediate action is needed: unleashing Canadian energy and tearing down Canada’s internal trade barriers.

Since the Liberals came to power in 2015, $670 billion worth of natural resource projects have either been cancelled or put on hold by the federal government.

The feds have blockaded projects like Energy EastNorthern Gateway, e Énergie Saguenay that would have sent tens of billions of dollars’ worth of Canadian oil and natural gas to Asia and Europe, and allowed eastern Canada to be powered by Canadian energy rather than importing oil from dictatorships like Saudi Arabia.

Não menos que 77 por cento of Canada’s exports go to the United States, including $150 billion per year in oil, natural gas, and petroleum products. Canada needs to diversify. Trump’s tariff threats should have led to a sense of urgency, with the federal government reversing course and greenlighting some of the 31 energy projects it has stymied since coming to power in 2015.

Sadly, no action has been taken on the energy front. Just talk that the Liberals might have to reconsider their position on pipelines.

Carney is a well-known climate hawk. He’s talked about the need for 80 por cento of Canada’s natural resources to stay in the ground to fight climate change. 

But the moment demands a different approach. Unleashing Canadian energy is the key to diversifying our economy. Carney should shift the feds’ approach and approve energy projects that have been blocked over the past decade. If he doesn’t, Canadians will look to elect a new government that will.

Then there’s internal trade. Canada does have domestic free trade, but with a major caveat. There are more than 400 carve-outs to Canada’s internal free trade deal. The impact of those carve-outs is dramatic.

Because of the provinces’ non-tariff barriers on each other’s goods, Canada has a de facto 21 per cent domestic tariff when provinces want to trade with each other, according to the International Monetary Fund.

That means it’s easier to trade with a couple dozen countries Canada has free trade agreements with than it is for provinces to trade with each other.

Studies have shown that ending interprovincial trade barriers should be a bigger boost to the national economy than the cost of the tariffs the Trump administration has imposed on Canada.

Canada’s internal trade minister, Anita Anand, says progress has been made on eliminating int.erprovincial trade barriers, but the proof will be in the pudding.

Carney should convene a meeting of Canada’s first ministers immediately and demand that all internal trade barriers be torn down within 30 days.

Canada can’t afford to wait a moment longer.

Make no mistake: the Trudeau government has been behind the curve in responding to the Trump administration’s tariffs threats since day one. Carney has a chance to take a new approach by changing the feds’ approach to energy projects and finally pushing for a comprehensive deal on internal free trade.

If he fails to get this done, or lets ideology get in the way, Canadians will quickly be searching for a new prime minister who will.

Publicado originalmente aqui

Pentingnya Mempermudah Izin Usaha di Indonesia

Izin usaha merupakan salah satu faktor penting yang mempengaruhi tingkat investasi dan pembukaan lapangan kerja di suatu negara. Negara yang memiliki kebijakan ramah terhadap izin usaha tentu akan memberikan insentif bagi para investor dan pelaku bisnis untuk menaruh uang dan membuka usaha di tempat tersebut.

Sebaliknya, negara atau wilayah yang memiliki serangkaian aturan dan regulasi yang menyulitkan seseorang untuk membuka usaha tentu akan memiliki dampak yang negatif terhadap pertumbuhan ekonomi dan inovasi. Mereka yang memiliki modal akan memilih untuk menginvestasikan uangnya di tempat lain, dan bukan tidak mungkin juga talenta-talenta yang ada di negara tersebut akan pergi untuk membukan usaha dan berinovasi di negara luar.

Di Indonesia sendiri, diskursus mengenai sulitnya membuka usaha merupakan hal yang sangat umum dibicarakan, dan menjadi pengetahuan umum. Proses yang berbelit-belit, dan juga pendaftaran yang memakan jangka waktu lama, merupakan beberapa contoh umum yang menghambat pembukaan usaha di Indonesia.

Untuk mendirikan usaha di Indonesia misalnya, dibutuhkan banyak izin dari berbagai lembaga pemerintah. Badan Koordinasi Penanaman Modal (BKPM), Dinas Perdagangan, Dinas Lingkungan Hidup, serta kantor pajak dan tenaga kerja merupakan beberapa lembaga negara yang harus dimintai izinnya oleh pelaku usaha demi mendapatkan berbagai izin, seperti izin prinsip, izin lokasi, izin mendirikan bangunan (IMB), izin lingkungan, dan izin operasional. Belum lagi, izin ini juga berlapis tidak hanya di tingkat pusat, tetapi juga tingkat daerah seperti kota dan provinsi (seputarbirokrasi.com, 5/12/2024).

Masalah ini diakui oleh banyak pihak, bahkan oleh mantan kepala negara. Presiden ke-7 Indonesia, Joko Widodo misalnya, mengakui bahwa ketika masih menjadi pengusaha, dia juga harus mengalami berbagai kesulitan ketika mengajukan izin usaha. Bila tidak memiliki izin usaha, tentu akan sangat sulit bagi pemilik usaha untuk menjalankan dan mengembangkan usahanya karena ia tidak akan bisa mendapatkan pinjaman kredit dari bank (cnnindonesia.com, 13/7/2022).

Hal yang serupa juga disampaikan oleh banyak pelaku usaha, bahkan oleh pengusaha besar sekali pun. Direktur Utama Maspion Group misalnya, menyampaikan bahwa Indonesia memiliki masalah terkait dengan berbelitnya proses perizinan usaha. Adanya proses yang berlapis dan juga pembaruan izin berkala setiap tahun atau beberapa tahun merupakan beberapa isu yang harus dihadapi pelaku usaha (olenka.id, 31/12/2024).

Bila hal ini diakui oleh pelaku usaha yang besar, maka hal ini tentu akan semakin membebani pelaku usaha tingkat kecil dan menengah. Hal ini bisa dilihat dari jumlah kredit yang dikeluarkan oleh bank untuk kepentingan usaha misalnya. Dari 6.000 triliun rupiah dana yang dikeluarkan oleh sektor perbankan untuk usaha di Indonesia, kurang dari 20%-nya yang terserap untuk usaha level mikro, kecil, dan menengah. Hal ini disebabkan para pemilik usaha tersebut tidak memiliki izin usaha karena izin yang sangat berbelit dan panjang (kompas.com, 12/8/2021).

Kamar Dagang provinsi Kepulauan Riau misalnya, menyampaikan bahwa untuk mengurus Persetujuan Kesesuaian Kegiatan Pemanfaatan Ruang (PKKPR) misalnya, yang merupakan salah satu syarat dasar izin berusaha, memiliki proses yang sangat lambat hingga sampai 1 tahun. Belum lagi persetujuan lainnya, seperti persetujuan teknis (Pertek) yang memakan waktu tidak sebentar (batampos.co.id, 7/10/2024).

Terlebih lagi, kepulauan Riau merupakan provinsi perbatasan yang dekat dengan negara tetangga seperti Singapura dan juga negara bagian Johor, Malaysia. Adanya izin yang berbelit tentu akan semakin membuat investor enggan untuk menanamkan uangnya ke Indonesia, dan akan memiliki negara lain (batampos.co.id, 7/10/2024).

Untuk itu, adanya reformasi untuk mengubah dan mempercepat proses perizinan usaha adalah hal yang penting, Proses yang berbelit dan ditangani oleh berbagai lembaga pemerintah misalnya, dapat disederhanakan di satu pintu saja, dan dipercepat dengan melalui berbagai langkah seperti pemanfaatan sarana teknologi informasi, dan lain sebagainya.

Bila hal ini tetap dibiarkan, maka yang akan mengalami kerugian adalah berbagai lapisan masyarakat. Para pelaku usaha akan sangat sulit untuk membuka dan menjalankan bisnis. Akibatnya, lapangan kerja juga akan semakin sedikit, yang akan menyulitkan upaya untuk menurunkan pengangguran. Selain itu, konsumen juga akan terkena dampak karena akan semakin sedikit kompetisi dan mereka hanya akan bergantung ke sedikit perusahaan saja yang sudah established dan tidak memiliki kompetitor yang mampu bersaing.

Sebagai penutup, kemudahan izin usaha merupakan aspek yang sangat penting untuk pertumbuhan ekonomi, meningkatkan inovasi, dan juga membuka banyak lapangan kerja baru. Bila izin untuk membuka usaha malah dipersulit, maka dampak negatifnya tidak hanya akan semakin sedikit pelaku usaha yang dapat membuka bisnis baru, tetapi juga akan merugikan konsumen karena pilihan mereka untuk mendapatkan barang terbaik dengan harga yang terjangkau menjadi semakin sedikit.

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Up and about Trump’s tariffs: Cheaper foods for Malaysia?

BAKER Nuradilla Hamdan is concerned about the ripple effects of the United States’ recent and impending tariffs on imports from several countries.

The 28-year-old single mother from Cheras worries that the rising costs of imported ingredients, such as butter, may eventually force her to raise the prices of her cakes.

“In my five years as a baker, I’ve learned that price increases can be unpredictable. I’m already paying more for butter and wheat flour, which means my cakes are becoming more expensive. But I can’t keep passing the cost onto my customers,” she says.

The US recently imposed a 25% tariff on imports from Mexico and Canada, along with a 10% increase in duties on Chinese goods, which came into effect on March 4. US President Donald Trump has also announced reciprocal tariffs on the rest of the world, to come into effect on April 2.

This has raised concerns about the potential impact on Malaysian food security and affordability, particularly as Malaysia imports over 60% of its food needs.

Beyond price hikes, experts warn that escalating trade wars could fuel global protectionism. Adding to the uncertainty is the unpredictable nature of US tariff policies – just last week, Trump signed orders significantly expanding exemptions for goods from Canada and Mexico, leaving policymakers scrambling to adapt to shifting trade conditions. (Then at press time Trump threatened other new tariffs, including a 250% tax on Canada’s dairy products.)

Nevertheless, some Malaysian economic and geopolitical experts believe the new tariffs could indirectly benefit Malaysia if affected countries shift their trade focus to this region.

Leia o texto completo aqui

Farmers are struggling in Europe — don’t let RFK Jr. do the same to America 

President Trump took to Truth Social on Monday to announce April tariffs on all imported food, framing the move as a boon to U.S. farmers who will produce even more product for domestic consumption. But the MAGA movement is revealing a gap in its economic logic, and it will cost U.S. consumers and producers dearly.  

Consider the vídeo posted by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert Kennedy Jr., wherein the “Make America Healthy Again” leader pledged to work in coordination with the Department of Agriculture to ban all agricultural chemicals and pesticides used for farming if they’d been restricted overseas.  

Americans love to cite Europe for policy experiments, but not everything that happens on the old continent should be treated as secret knowledge which Americans lack.  

As a journalist covering European agriculture, I witnessed the sharp declineof farm profitability in the European Union. More than 5 million farmers have gone out of business there over the last two decades. Europe leads the world in restrictions on the use of herbicides such as atrazine, which was banned in 2004. Neonicotinoid insecticides were then limited in 2013.  

Como new taxes on diesel were introduced atop fertilizers restrictions and the pesticide bans, farmer protests shut down roadways in London, Paris, Berlin and parts of Poland over the last two years. Manure was sprayed on government buildings and cities shut down, forcing regulators to reassess. It’s not hard to imagine how a U.S. copycat movement could spring up under similar conditions.  

Europe regulates using the “princípio da precaução” in all things, including agriculture. In practice, it means regulators don’t need to prove that a chemical is directly having adverse effects — mere suspicion is enough to justify a ban.  

To obscure the economic losses, Europe spends twice as much on farm subsidies per acre compared to the U.S., and associated programs make up over a third of the entire EU budget. 

Farmers in Europe are seriously struggling. Productivity is down, farmers are stuck relying on subsidies to make a profit and navigate the regulatory labyrinth.  

It didn’t used to be this way. A 2004 USDA report showed that the U.S. was underperforming Europe on crop productivity, but today this has flipped,with the exception of wheat.  

This fully coincides with Europe’s hesitancy to adopt modern technology, including crop protection chemicals and genetic engineering, which remains illegal in the EU.  

America has made itself great by basing its food production system on innovation and a light regulatory touch. We need to stay grounded in the basics, and that means recognizing that feeding millions of people is about scalability, accessibility and price.  

Americans aren’t just richer than the rest of the world because they make more nominal dollars; it’s also because their purchasing power is greater. Households in the U.S. spend less of their disposable income on food than Europeans, despite also spending less of their tax dollars on subsidizing farmers. 

Pesticides don’t have a good reputation, in no small part due to environmental lawyers such as RFK Jr. But they do go through rigorous safety testing in the U.S. and overseas. Glyphosate, for example, the weed killer most visadas by Kennedy’s anti-modern farming narrative, remains legal even under the EU’s rigorous regulatory framework.

Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins appeared on Fox Business in February to bemoan the former Biden administration’s inability to bring food prices under control, because of the increase in prices for inputs. Rollins was right — the increase in prices for synthetic pesticides and fertilizers inflates food prices.  

Now imagine the cost of banning those inputs. 

There is nothing wrong with scrutiny of any chemical solution we use to produce food, but after decades of scientists holistically reviewing these products, it is past time to realize RFK Jr.’s position is rooted more in nostalgia than science. And nostalgia will not feed the world.  

Publicado originalmente aqui

Steering away from dangerous Brussels digital bureaucracy is essential for economic growth

The beginning of a new year always marks some sort of introduction of a new regulatory framework. The EU welcomed Romania and Bulgaria to the Schengen Zone, and the common charger policy went live (including in Northern Ireland, raising concerns of a BINO again). In the UK however, we had one of the most consequential digital legislation going live: the Digital Markets, Consumers and Competition Act 2024 (DMCCA), which is the framework for digital markets here in the UK.

Not soon after, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) with its newfound power, decided to investigate Google for its market dominance as a search engine and in search ads. This investigation is to establish whether Google has a “Strategic Market Status” (SMS) in these fields. Once designated as such, the CMA will then have the power to impose conduct requirements (CRs) or Pro Competition Intervention (PCIs) on how Google can provide its service, which very much affects consumers.

An example of what these interventions might look like can be found in the EU. If you google a restaurant or a shop, a map may be displayed, but clicking on the map has been disabled and the Maps link in the Google search bar has also been removed. This is because the EU believes that Google is promoting its own product, Google Maps, and not allowing other map providers to compete against its product, a concept that is called self-preferencing.

The EU’s demands have been a great source of inconvenience to many consumers, where consumer interface and efficiency have been made worse off thanks to bureaucratic overreach. The CMA will also investigate other companies in due course and has now launched an investigation into Apple.

The CMA has now pulled one of the classic tricks to legitimise their proposed intervention, by launching a consultation and bombarding it with incomprehensible gibberish that throws off the everyday consumer from being able to voice their concerns. Also note that the background for this consultation is pretty much a copy-paste job from their investigation into Google in 2019-2020. Since then, the industry has had seismic changes, such as the introduction of AI in search engines.

The reality is that this investigation is a very loaded question, with the potential to have wide-ranging consequences that the everyday consumer will bear the impact of. If a new independent restaurant is not able to use one of the biggest search engines to locate itself on the map, then how will it be possible for the restaurant to succeed and consumers to enjoy this new restaurant?

I understand the CMA’s dilemma: It is being scapegoated as the institution that has to regulate digital activity with a small team (even smaller now having had to fire 10 per cent of its employees due to a budgeting error). This is an impossible task to achieve, even if you spend 100 per cent of the UK GDP in attempting so. Regulators react to innovation and not preempt it. This also leads to far more restrictive legislation.

The other dilemma is squaring competition with the network effect. What makes the internet an interesting market is the fact that it gains additional value as more people use it. The more people input their data in Google, the more it becomes useful for everyone else. This intuitively would lead to a conclusion that eliminates competition as everyone will be inclined to use Google.

However, this has not been the case. If anything we have seen fierce competition between all the big tech companies, enabling the creation of more innovative products. This is amplified by the introduction of AI, where more and more people are now using Chat-GPT instead of Google, forcing Google to introduce its own AI capabilities in its search engines. This is not a monopoly, this is competition.

Crucially, these regulatory interventions are so bureaucratically minded that these investigations did not even consider current consumer satisfaction with products owned and used, or even attempt to quantify the change of consumer satisfaction before and after such interventions. Meanwhile, for businesses to profit in this sector, they need to greatly factor in consumer satisfaction, an arguably better means of self-regulating consumer protection.

The reality is at a time when the UK has been stagnating economically, it has been due to these restrictive measures. The Whitehall bureaucratic mentality values its ability to control and impose itself over industry rather than working with the markets to encourage innovation and consumer protection and convenience.

To grow, we need to encourage innovation and technological advancements, which will catalyze what resources we have now to increase our output exponentially. Rachel Reeves hinted at such measures when she mentioned the replacement of the CMA chair in her discurso. However, amending such a bureaucratically restrictive mentality requires more than just words, which will be the Government’s challenge in the next few years.

To conclude, The First and Second Industrial Revolutions were spearheaded by Britain. Whilst notable British figures assisted in driving the Third Industrial Revolution, we were not in a position to lead, and now as we approach the Fourth Industrial Revolution, the era of Artificial Intelligence, it is the Americans who have created the petri dish for such innovation.

With the inauguration of Donald Trump, it is most likely that their permissive environment for innovation is amplified. Reeves said all the right things in her speech at Siemens, but for the UK to have a decent chance at being a playmaker in digital innovation, we need less investigations and EU alignment, and more entrepreneurial and realistic thinking.

Publicado originalmente aqui

Kenaikan caj minimum kurier untungkan siapa?

Keputusan kerajaan memperkenalkan garis panduan harga rujukan bagi perkhidmatan kurier yang berkuat kuasa pada 1 Dis lalu menimbulkan persoalan utama: siapa yang sebenarnya dilindungi oleh dasar tersebut? 

Dengan kenaikan harga minimum penghantaran bagi bungkusan di bawah 2kg daripada RM4 kepada RM5, maka pengguna – terutamanya perniagaan kecil dan peniaga dalam talian – bakal menanggung beban kos yang lebih tinggi.

Leia o texto completo aqui

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