6 December 2011

on the source of many beginnings

It is always difficult to explain a halt, a gap, a missing voice. I guess these are the moments when life takes over. This summer I was taken back to mine. I had to change a bit its course and here I am typing from Newcastle upon Tyne, which, I have discovered on road signposts, in English is understood as just: the NORTH. I guess, meaning far. Being displaced (from London) and the biggest uprising that has been seen in its latest history might have been distracting, and disappointing for me, but maybe it would also bring the new variety of this blog posts and meandering. I have no intention and no capability to represent here what happened the latest months in terms of understanding, representing and demising the corporation worldwide. Thus, I will just start with sharing my latest impressions and bad phone pictures, until I gather the money to develop analogue camera films. Alas. Debris.

Utrecht's main square. Redevelopment of the Music Hall


Abandoned site in Beogradska Street, Belgrade


I have recently been in the Netherlands and Serbia. How utterly different, different, but same crisis felt on both locations! Not to mention the famous 99% ,but we all know how much of a mainstream this blogger can be in Britain in this moment.




Well, in his home coutry, which is imho closest follower of british economic austerity measures in culture sector, he seems to be already a media star. I feel almost sorry for myself for not being consistent in writing this one. I guess the streets took me away from it. In praise for what Jean-Luc Nancy calls 'divine writing' here is my return to recording in words the daily thoughts on our daily existence under the requiem for corporation. On 'Ereignis' next time!


Newcastle has many bridges. They are the basics of its daily functioning. This sign is usually put at their ends we all know for which purpose. I wonder how humanistic would it be to put it on the office skyscrapers nowadays.

Solidarity,
t

27 May 2011

Any reviews yet?


I have just received an email, well, from the marketing assistant of the publisher, (since I am not the most devoted Guardian reader) still, with invaluable information about just published book Bankrupt Britain: An Atlas of Social Change, by Daniel Dorling and Bethan Thomas. I had a sneak peak in and it shows the research accompanied by a lot of maps and statistic data, which will apparently not be possible to reach so easy now, after the government cuts on collection data, this message warned. It also shows the rise in anti-depressant prescription, which I wish you will not need for reading it. Here is a promo information:

"This groundbreaking atlas reveals for the first time how the economic downturn has hit Britain, showing the changes from the economic heights of 2007 to the Britain of today, all presented against a background of other social and environmental factors. Maps on over 40 topics including crime, unemployment, house prices, volunteering and the Big Society, with corresponding 'best' and 'worst' tables, allow us to examine Britain both at local authority and parliamentary constituency levels. With additional resources online, this book makes an indispensable record of our time and will serve as an essential reference work for years to come. Due to government cuts on data collection, much of this information will not be collected in future, making this truly one of a kind.
Some of the striking facts it reveals include:
- Anti-depressant use has risen most in North and least in London but nowhere has it fallen since 2008
- Nowhere does any MP elected in 2010 have the support of even half their constituents
- Nowhere did more than 37% of the adult population engage in regular volunteering in 2008 with rates falling since then
- In 2009 in over 100 local authorities there were more households on the housing waiting list than there was council housing stock. In some cases people would have to wait up to 500 years to get to the top of the list!
Sample pages and maps are available from the companion website to the book, which can be ordered at 20% discount (plus p&p) at: http://www.policypress.co.uk/display.asp?K=9781847427472

17 April 2011

merchandizers' trap



Driven by the wish to learn more about Celine Condorelli's and Gavin Wade's project for the new function of the The Economist Plaza ground floor space, I am holding this book in my hands. As an introduction to the chapter: Navigate the Terrain, there is an excerpt from the Economist Style Book. Some instruction along the lines strangely resonate with the government politics in UK these days:

"Community is another word often best cut out. Not only it is usually unnecessary, it purports to convey the sense of togetherness that may well not exist."
...
I am also struggling to conceptualize what does it mean to be productive in this society and the following quote just does not help me much: "In general be concise. Try to be economical in your size and argument."
...
"TONE The reader is primarily interested in what you have to say. By the way in which you say it you may encourage him either to read on or stop reading."
...
"Use the language of everyday speech, not that of spokesmen, lawyers or bureaucrats ( so prefer let to permit, people to persons, buy to purchase, colleague to peer, way out to exit, present to gift, rich to wealthy, break to violate).
Economists just know it too well how to melt our hearts, don't they?

More on The Economist Plaza project at Support Structure

18 March 2011

"life after the corporation"

Spotted recently a blog called Make Wealth History. The author lists the following companies which, in his opinion, do not run corporation models of businesses and which should be on our top priority list in the time corporations are sinking.

John Lewis, Gore, London Symphony Orchestra, Carl Zeiss, Loch Fyne Oysters, United Airlines, Tribune Company, Mozilla, Tower Colliery, BArcelona FC, Scott Bader.

In short, he explains example through example, how being anti-corporational does not mean being anti-business orientated. My personal doubts, and austerity of my imagination, do not allow me posting the branding images. Read the full original post here.




10 March 2011

Whose Fitzrovia?

Next Tuesday, March 15th, a screening not to be missed at Chandler House (Room G10), 2 Wakefield Street, WC1N 1PF: film RIPPLES, by Rastko Novakovic.
The film explores the BT telecommunication tower in London, surrounding area and its urban redevelopment in relation macroeconomic processes. More details can be found here.


In the meantime, here is a filmed interview by the same author, and with Anna Minton, author of a book Ground Control. She talks about sanitation of Fitzrovia area in London, in the name of its identity change and rebranding.


8 March 2011

a tribute...

because only Patti Smith can make the bureaucrat look so impressive.

skirt friendly RBS



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The wind is turning in London financial district gender politics. It is to be seen whether it is just one of the omnipresent lip-services associated to Government, but women are going to be more represented in the boards. It already sounds like something bringing more profit in the name of political correctness, but not necessarily - leadership positions, either a guarantee of the macho culture elimination in the City, as mentioned in the recent Telegraph articles.

1 March 2011

how far can the politics tolerate the decency













This months' screenings at ICA, London, include Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer, the documentary on famous Democratic New York Governor who fought corruption among investemnt banking circles of Wall Street, and has been labeled its "fallen angel" and "Luv Guv", after a sex scandal attributed to him has been revealed in 2008, months before the financial crises. The day the news leaked Wall Street brokers opened the champagne bottles and celebrated.

The film investigates why for Eliot Spenzer prosecuting the financial giants involved the impossibility of staying intact himself; why there is a need for the politicians to be portrayed as decent men; to which extent it can be disputed; and what are the absolute values that (at least in American political arena) are not to be challenged? Why is Wall Street Family indisputable and bigger than any other family the US?

Match point.

28 February 2011

absent from the political economy classes


Feeling an urge to share an expert's briefing on British market deregulations and potential re-regulation as well as his opinion on London City's dependence on EU policies, I just copy and paste the whole text by Nicolas Vernon on Global Mail:

Will City of London accept EU financial supervision?


The City of London, Europe’s main financial hub, has benefited throughout most of the late 1990s and the 2000s from a peculiar combination of factors. It gained hugely from European financial integration, spurred by the European Union’s efforts to create a single market for financial services and by a worldwide trend towards removing cross-border financial barriers. At the same time, the entire U.K. financial system, including the City, went largely unregulated under the “light-touch” oversight philosophy then adopted by the Financial Services Authority (FSA), the U.K. financial supervisor. Tax conditions were similarly lenient. The U.K. government and public opinion did not object, as they largely saw the City’s prosperity as a boon for the entire country. And EU authorities in Brussels were generally happy to go along the deregulatory agenda to tear down national barriers within the Union.

This combination has been swept away by the financial crisis. The U.K. political consensus shifted sharply towards blaming bankers for the current economic hardship. The heads of the FSA and of the Bank of England have become leading voices in global calls to restrict the business models of financial firms, and the Independent Commission on Banking, set up by the Cameron government, may propose measures along such lines in its final report later this year. Meanwhile, a ruthless drive towards fiscal consolidation increases pressure to turn the tax screws on the City and all the wealthy individuals that surround it.

Simultaneously, the U.K. is impacted by changes across the Channel. The EU has entered its own cycle of re-regulation. Three new European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs) have started operations on January 1, and are likely to affect London’s regulatory environment more directly than anything coming from the continent before the crisis – including the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) in Paris and the European Banking Authority (EBA) in London. They are tasked with creating a “single rulebook” that would harmonize financial rules further than the existing European directives. They would also directly supervise some market participants, such as rating agencies in the case of ESMA.

Britain endorsed this reform at a crucial summit in June, 2009, when memories of the Icelandic crisis were fresh and there was a pervasive fear of its being left isolated in the cold. But now many in London seem to have second thoughts. An interesting parallel may emerge. In the early 1990s, Germany agreed to delegate its monetary policy as the price for the creation of the euro and the corresponding strengthening of the EU single market. But the current crisis has forced the European Central Bank, despite its Frankfurt location, to cease acting as a Bundesbank writ large. The reactions in Germany, including the recent saga of Axel Weber’s resignation, have illustrated how sensitive the loss of monetary sovereignty remains there. Similarly, the U.K. accepted the ESAs for the sake of EU financial integration, but may not be fully prepared for the consequences.

The City’s worst fear is to see its gatekeeper position bypassed in what remains the world’s most important transcontinental financial relationship, between the U.S. and Europe. From this standpoint, a fight over the ESAs could prove a much bigger threat than, say, the merger between Deutsche Börse and NYSE Euronext. At this point the new agencies are small and fledgling. Their governance framework, which gives equal weight to all EU members, will probably lead to some dysfunction. The current stress-test process may dent the EBA’s credibility early on. But the ESAs are almost sure to grow over time. Large U.S. financial firms will back their efforts to fight financial protectionism on the continent. The inevitable frictions with London will mean much more than ordinary turf wars.

Of course, much larger challenges loom ahead for London’s EU policy. In the euro crisis, the U.K. currently behaves – unlike, say, Sweden or Poland – as if it could remain unaffected by the consequences of new economic governance arrangements. This is implausible. For better or worse, the U.K. will not stay out of what is likely to become a major overhaul of the EU institutions in which the single currency is embedded. But the corresponding developments may take some time to unfold. For any British politician facing euroskeptical electors, hiding one’s head in the sand is the easiest approach in the short term.

In the meantime, controversies over the ESAs’ powers will remain a focal point of the U.K.’s relationship with its European neighborhood. The pre-crisis conditions, in which the City developed pan-European activity in the absence of pan-European supervision, were unsustainable and cannot be expected to return. But many City players are still unwilling to recognize the new state of affairs. The near-total absence of debate about the EU in London these days is worrying.


Nicolas Véron is a senior fellow at Bruegel in Brussels and a visiting fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington

25 February 2011

Yujiapu













...while on the other side of the globe...

memorize that name, because it is all about Innovative Finance Investment. Just an hour away from Beijing - Tianjin Binhai New Area (TBNA), North China's fastest developing economic zone is soon to be completed. Masterplan is made by SOM, as sustainable, green, low-carbon emission city etc. Have a look at official Flickr page - it shows an interesting mixture of assembly lines and green heaven.


re-de-gentrification







An ex broker came to the idea of capitalizing on re-inhabitation of the Manhattan core. He is promoting it as a livable and lively space here. And the figures say the similar - since 2000, the population in its Southern part has tripled, no matter, the City still lacks services and life, in general, after the working hours...But, it looks like we have a second wave of gentrifying here.

4 January 2011

Bring your hang over

















Wish I have discovered them earlier!
I am too excited at the moment to try being witty and more ludic than these guys, describing how they practice and theorize hijacking the space around London. They have quite an informing text as well here. So, please have a look at these midnight cricket matches in the City of London; around St. Paul's Cathedral, Spitalfields Market, Bank of England etc.

Basically, the all-in-white dressed anarchitects would go to the City pubs, and after a couple of drinks challenge the suited bankers join them in a match. You can guess who was winning.
I thought it was brilliant how easy the reversal of gentle(wo)men happened. Applause.