Hmmm i just copied and paste the whole chunk from my blog over because im lazy to retype haha.
Firstly thank you 0804 for turning up for the NE trip, 21 out of 25 people was a great attendance :D
I was really touched when almost the whole class turned up, including those who usually prefer being in much smaller groups. It was like a dream come true seeing different cliques mixing and having fun together! I've been trying sooo hard to make this happen! For this, Thank you!!
Thank you also for having fun on the plain and boring green roof on the barrage. It's just grass, really lol.. and i didnt have any plan on what to do there. Luckily thanks to all the cameras, cards, kites and crazy people, we spent quality time under the scorching sun. Sorry for the tan again.
Thank you for actually being so orderly on that day.. i know its quite normal since we are jc students haha.. but i was really worried that i couldnt lead 20+ people on that day. It turned out that everyone were too obedient and kept asking me for instructions lol..
Last but not least thank you for not complaining! HAHA.. yup... no one sent a message back complaining about my mass message and none voiced out when we had to eat at J8 (: .... ok.. maybe abit of complains about the sun.. but so did I lol.
The trip's a success thanks to everyone who turned up :)
Plenty of photos are on facebook if you havent already noticed... mostly from Ryan and Diane.
-Zhiyong
Wednesday, October 7, 2009 @ 11:54 PM
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Sunday, September 20, 2009 @ 11:25 AM
INTERESTING ARTICLE on Current Account Balance (please read the article below) Rank Country Current account balance (million US $) 1 People's Republic of China (PRC) 179,100 2 Japan 174,400 3 Germany 134,800 4 Russia 105,300 5 Saudi Arabia 103,800 6 Norway 63,330 7 Switzerland 50,440 8 Netherlands 50,170 9 Kuwait 40,750 10 Singapore 35,580 11 Venezuela 31,820 12 Sweden 28,610 13 United Arab Emirates 26,890 14 Algeria 25,800 15 Hong Kong 20,900 16 Canada 20,560 17 Malaysia 17,860 18 Libya 14,500 19 Brazil 13,500 20 Iran 13,130 21 Nigeria 12,590 22 Qatar 12,510 23 Taiwan 9,700 24 Finland 8,749 25 Iraq 8,134 26 Angola 7,700 27 Oman 7,097 28 Belgium 6,925 29 Austria 5,913 30 Argentina 5,810 31 Chile 5,063 32 Denmark 4,941 33 Philippines 4,900 34 Luxembourg 4,630 35 Trinidad and Tobago 3,259 36 Azerbaijan 2,737 37 Egypt 2,697 38 Korea , South 2,000 39 Bahrain 1,999 40 Gabon 1,807 41 Botswana 1,698 42 Yemen 1,690 43 Indonesia 1,636 44 Peru 1,515 45 Israel 1,643 46 Uzbekistan 1,410 47 Burma 1,247 48 Republic of the Congo 1,215 49 Vietnam 1,029 50 Ecuador 727 51 Bolivia 688 52 Papua New Guinea 661 53 Namibia 572 54 Ivory Coast 460 55 Cameroon 419 56 Morocco 389 57 Bangladesh 339 58 Turkmenistan 321.2 59 Equatorial Guinea 175 60 British Virgin Islands 134.3 (1999) 61 Kazakhstan 113 62 Cook Islands 26.67 (2005) 63 Palau 15.09 (2004) 64 Tuvalu 2.323 (1998) 65 Samoa -2.428 (2004) 66 Tonga -4.321 (2005) 67 Comoros -17 (2005) 68 Kiribati -19.87 (2004) 69 Swaziland -23.13 70 São Tomé and Príncipe -24.4 71 Vanuatu -28.35 (2003) 72 Federated States of Micronesia-34.3 (2005) 73 Anguilla -42.87 (2003) 74 Cape Verde -44.43 75 The Gambia - 54.61 76 Burundi -57.84 77 Haiti -58.72 78 Tajikistan -73.95 79 Lesotho -75.44 80 Seychelles -78.59 81 Antigua and Barbuda -83.4 (2004) 82 Guyana - 84.3 83 Rwanda -104.1 84 Honduras -160 85 Zambia -165.4 86 Republic of Macedonia -167 87 Belize -173.4 88 Malawi -186 89 Ghana -219 90 Armenia -247.3 91 Togo -261.9 92 Zimbabwe - 264.6 93 Kyrgyzstan -287.3 94 Paraguay -300 95 Chad -324.1 96 Benin -342.7 97 Guinea -344 98 Cambodia -369 99 Mexico -400.1 100 Uganda -423 101 Eritrea -440..5 102 Mozambique -444.4 103 Fiji -465.8 104 Panama -467 105 Madagascar -504 106 Laos -404.2 107 Belarus -511.8 108 Syria -529 109 Moldova -561 110 Uruguay -600 111 Burkina Faso -604.6 112 Mauritius -651 113 Albania -679.9 114 Georgia -735 115 Tunisia -760 116 Slovenia -789.2 117 Nicaragua -883 118 Senegal -895.2 119 Thailand - 899.4 120 Tanzania -906 121 Malta -966.2 122 Jamaica -970 123 Cyprus -1,051 124 El Salvador -1,059 125 Sri Lanka -1,118 126 Kenya -1,119 127 Dominican Republic -1,124 128 Costa Rica -1,176 129 Cuba -1,218 130 Guatemala -1,533 131 Bosnia and Herzegovina -1,730 132 Estonia -1,919 133 Ukraine -1,933 134 Colombia -2,219 135 Serbia -2,451 (2005) 136 Latvia -2,538 137 Lithuania -2,572 138 Jordan -2,834 139 Croatia -2,892 140 Iceland -2,932 141 Ethiopia -3,384 142 Slovakia -3,781 143 Czech Republic -4,352 144 Sudan -4,510 145 Poland -4,548 146 Bulgaria -5,100 147 Lebanon -5,339 148 Pakistan -5,486 149 New Zealand -7,944 150 Hungary -8,392 151 Ireland -9,450 152 Romania -12,450 153 South Africa -12,690 154 Portugal -16,750 155 Greece -21,370 156 Italy -23,730 157 Turkey -25,990 158 India -26,400 159 France -38,000 160 Australia -41,620 161 United Kingdom -57,680 162 Spain -98,600 163 United States -862,300 Saving is sin, and spending is virtue... Interesting article written by an Indian Economist Japanese save a lot. They do not spend much. Also Japan exports far more than it imports. Has an annual trade surplus of over 100 billions. Yet Japanese economy is considered weak, even collapsing. Americans spend, save little. Also US imports more than it exports. Has an annual trade deficit of over $400 billion. Yet, the American economy is considered strong and trusted to get stronger. But where from do Americans get money to spend? They borrow from Japan , China and even India . Virtually others save for the US to spend. Global savings are mostly invested in US, in dollars.. India itself keeps its foreign currency assets of over $50 billions in US securities. China has sunk over $160 billion in US securities. Japan 's stakes in US securities is in trillions. Result: The US has taken over $5 trillion from the world. So, as the world saves for the US , Americans spend freely. Today, to keep the US consumption going, that is for the US economy to work, other countries have to remit $180 billion every quarter, which is $2 billion a day, to the US ! A Chinese economist asked a neat question. Who has invested more, US in China , or China in US? The US has invested in China less than half of what China has invested in US. The same is the case with India . We have invested in US over $50 billion. But the US has invested less than $20 billion in India . Why the world is after US? The secret lies in the American spending, that they hardly save. In fact they use their credit cards to spend their future income. That the US spends is what makes it attractive to export to the US . So US imports more than what it exports year after year. The result: The world is dependent on US consumption for its growth. By its deepening culture of consumption, the US has habituated the world to feed on US consumption. But as the US needs money to finance its consumption, the world provides the money. It's like a shopkeeper providing the money to a customer so that the customer keeps buying from the shop. If the customer will not buy, the shop won't have business, unless the shopkeeper funds him. The US is like the lucky customer. And the world is like the helpless shopkeeper financier. Who is America 's biggest shopkeeper financier? Japan of course. Yet it's Japan which is regarded as weak. Modern economists complain that Japanese do not spend, so they do not grow. To force the Japanese to spend, the Japanese government exerted itself, reduced the savings rates, even charged the savers. Even then the Japanese did not spend (habits don't change, even with taxes, do they?).. Their traditional postal savings alone is over $1.2 trillions, about three times the Indian GDP. Thus, savings, far from being the strength of Japan , has become its pain. Hence, what is the lesson? That is, a nation cannot grow unless the people spend, not save. Not just spend, but borrow and spend. Dr. Jagdish Bhagwati, the famous Indian-born economist in the US , told Manmohan Singh that Indians wastefully save. Ask them to spend, on imported cars and, seriously, even on cosmetics! This will put India on a growth curve. This is one of the reason for MNC's coming down to India , seeing the consumer spending. 'Saving is sin, and spending is virtue. But before you follow this neo economics, get some fools to save so that you can borrow from them and spend!!! diane :) |
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Thursday, August 20, 2009 @ 5:41 PM
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Sunday, August 2, 2009 @ 2:20 PM
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Saturday, June 27, 2009 @ 11:23 PM
yo, a good place to find summarised econs notes & some others (e.g. bio ics, math) are at fiveless.wordpress.com just in time for prelims. haha - michelle |
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Sunday, June 7, 2009 @ 1:23 AM
hey all firstly, say bonjour to the new blog template! chose a lj-styled template because I'm a uberduber fan of livejournal. & also because everything else I liked was too girl. enjoy! because it's shiny and green and obviously, everything you want it to be. all you have to do is close your eyes and imagine (sorry, this is a 1am post). so, apparently, this is my debut post, hence I shall attempt to announce important things #1: a thankyou to the organisers who organised the class outing for all their brainjuice used! to be honest, it's a pain to coordinate when the number >2 (and to be even more honest, I still have problems organising stuff when the number =2). so you and you and you etc are made of purely awesome sauce. really. & to those who didn't come, come next time okay. :D I know we're all kinda poor and barely legal and unable to do extremely cool things like a class outing to Shake the Hand of Obama or hiking in the Sahara...but yeah! being uncool together is cool too. #2: some publicity here for a go-back-to-school study group! commences every weekday from 10am to 6pm so that one can get at least 4 solid juicy hours of mugging done if one comes and looks very hard at their notes. those interested, sms terence I think. #3: I need to selfishly publicise myself because: I NEED YOUR OLD SCHOOL CANVAS SHOES. cause I have recently decided to teach myself how to vandalise shoes with acrylic paint, and to actually do this, I need some form of shoe to vomit colour on. I can customise FOR you, or you can just throw your old primary school shoes to me so I do my own independant thing. Yes. please, onegai, thanks! that's about it. night! michelle |
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