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Ellison Chair in International Floriculture
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New water webinar series upcoming

July 28, 2009 by Charlie

Given the success of its inaugural Shine in 09 webinar series (recordings are online at http://ellisonchair.tamu.edu/webinar.htm), the Ellison Chair in International Floriculture announces a new 3-part webinar series that focuses on water quality, conservation, and management.

Why water?

Access to an adequate supply of high quality water is also a growing concern for the nursery/floral industry due to drought, urbanization, and competing demands have decreased available irrigation water. Additionally, regulations on consumption and runoff have greatly impacted greenhouse and nursery management and profitability!

The first of these water-related webinars will be presented on August 17 at 2:00 p.m. CDT by Dr. Paul Fisher, Associate Professor and Extension Specialist at the University of Florida. His topic will be: “What’s living in your water? Water quality and treatment for pathogens and algae.”

Paul also serves as the lead collaborator for the Water Education Alliance for Horticulture. The goal of the Alliance is to reduce runoff and water-related disease issues in the greenhouse and nursery industry by increasing grower knowledge of water technologies and water conservation practices. Current projects are focusing on the development of accessible educational materials for growers. They are also researching practical methods to assess how well treatment technologies work to treat pathogens. Click here to review some of the activities, programs, and educational materials of the WEAH.

To register, click here, or copy the link below into your browser:

Program: Ellison Chair Water Webinar Series
Program address: https://tamu.webex.com/tamu/onstage/g.php?p=1&t;=m

Filed Under: News Tagged With: water

From the latest SAF Trend Tracker

July 28, 2009 by Charlie

From Robert Barr…

Has the economic storm passed? The trashing of the wind and rain has settled down significantly, and perhaps it’s time for consumers and business to come up out of their shelters, look around, start removing debris, and start the economic recovery.

That’s one way to think about the economic conditions today — but a more appropriate analogy is that the relative calm we’ve seen during the late spring and early summer is only the eye of a passing hurricane. We’ve gone through great economic tumult, especially since September 2008, but there’s still more economic adjustment yet to come.

Two areas of particular concern that haven’t yet grabbed the headlines in the same way that residential real estate has are commercial real estate, where refinancing maturing loans is becoming more and more difficult, and consumer credit cards, which will probably face huge write-offs in the coming few years.

And we’re still facing an adjustable-rate mortgage reset problem, as the popular five-year ARMs taken out in 2005-06 go through the same initial reset phase we saw in subprime mortgages (which generally reset after the first two or three years). One mitigating factor is that today’s lower interest rates mean that the new, reset rates won’t generate the same amount of payment shock seen with the subprime mortgages.

Meanwhile, consumers aren’t spending in the same way they had a few years ago, pushing the consumer savings rate from about zero a few years ago to almost 7% of GDP this spring. That’s prudent, of course, and good news for the long-term health of the economy. Consumers know that jobs are being cut and that the soaring government deficit will have to result in higher taxes down the road. Baby boomers, seeing the devastation in their 401(k) accounts just as their oldest members reach retirement, know they need to save more today to ensure a financially secure tomorrow. All of this is keeping consumers from reaching for their wallets, and it amounts to another difficult economic adjustment.

Meanwhile, in addition to grappling with the recession, businesses face a couple of critical unknowns in how they will be able to operate within the next few years. Whether or not you support national healthcare or the cap-and-trade energy legislation working its way through Congress, there’s great uncertainty about how this will play out in two to five years from now. Sound long-term investment decisions are difficult to make when the rules of the game are subject to such significant change – even apart from whether the changes actually support or harm the business climate. Even if the recovery does take hold, expect another “jobless” recovery as businesses bide their time to sort out the ramifications of what the federal government decides to impose.

Meanwhile, the rate of economic contraction in the global economy accelerated during the first half of 2009, and that of course will harm our exporting industries.

What to make of all this? Despite the media reports of the “green shoots” of economic recovery, we still have many difficult economic adjustments ahead of us that will keep any recovery subdued for some time. And that timetable is subject to whatever comes out of Washington, DC – not a good position for private businesses looking to rebuild after the destruction of the storm of the past couple of years.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: recession, recovery

Hmmm…

July 25, 2009 by Charlie


Michael Ramirez (HT: Tom Sullivan)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: health care

More on Walmart's sustainability push

July 22, 2009 by Charlie

Wal-Mart’s Environmental Game-Changer
Wal-Mart Exposes the De-Value Chain
How the Wal-Mart Eco-Ratings Will Save Money
Wal-Mart Asks: Where’s the Beef (From)?

Filed Under: News Tagged With: sustainability

Leading indicators show continued improvement

July 21, 2009 by Charlie

The Conference Board’s index of leading indicators rose by 0.7% in June after gaining 1.3% in May. This index is comprised of the top 10 economic indicators such as unemployment claims, building permits, and stock prices. In past recessions, sharp increases like the index has experienced over the last 3 months have indicated that recovery was underway.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: recovery

Housing highlights

July 17, 2009 by Charlie

The latest figures on home construction just came out. Here’s a rundown:

  • Total housing starts came in at 582,000 in June, up 3.6% from an upwardly revised 562,000 in May. Permitting activity also climbed — 8.7% to 563,000 from 518,000 a month earlier. Starts haven’t been higher than this since November..
  • By property type, single family construction activity rose 14.4%, while multifamily construction dropped 25.8%. Single family permits rose 5.9%, while multifamily permits rose 18.8%. The increase in single family building was the biggest since December 2004.
  • Regionally, starts rose 28.6% in the Northeast and 33.3% in the Midwest. Starts fell 1.4% in the South and 14.8% in the West. Permitting activity was up in all four regions, with the South leading the way at 13.9% and the West showing the weakest growth at 1.9%.

For some time, the housing market has been showing signs of stabilization. Not a robust recovery, but an end to the “cliff diving” we saw in 2007 and 2008. This phase will be marked by ongoing price declines in many locales, albeit more gradual ones. We will also see a gradual stabilization in sales rates … a gradual decline in the level of inventory for sale … and a gradual bottoming out of construction activity. Today’s starts and permitting figures fit with this projection, as did yesterday’s NAHB report on builder optimism.

Again, though, the word to emphasize is “gradual.” The new home industry has done a good job of reducing supply — with inventory for sale now in line with the long-term average. But the existing home market is still vastly oversupplied, and we continue to be inundated with an influx of distressed and foreclosed properties. That means anyone hoping for a robust “V”-shaped recovery is likely to be disappointed.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: housing industry

Walmart unveils sustainability index

July 16, 2009 by Charlie

Walmart today unveiled its Sustainable Product Index, a guide for rating the sustainability of products. The project will be rolled out in three phases, beginning with a survey of all of Walmart’s suppliers around the globe. The survey consists of 15 questions in four categories: energy and climate, material efficiency, natural resources and people and community. Suppliers will be asked to fill out the questionnaire by October 1.

The second phase of the project involves the development of a Sustainability Index Consortium, a coalition of universities and suppliers, retailers, NGOs and government entities working together to build a global product-lifecycle database, measuring the impact and resource use of products from raw materials through to end-of-life. Walmart said it intends to make the database open to the world rather than use it as proprietary information, although the company has yet to choose a partner help develop of the database.

Finally, once all the lifecycle data has been compiled and analyzed, Walmart and its partners will develop a customer-facing rating system to enable shoppers to make choices based on the environmental impact of their purchases.

Click here and here for more information.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: sustainability

Minimum wage = minimum benefit

July 16, 2009 by Charlie

Here’s some economic logic to ponder. The unemployment rate in June for American teenagers was 24% and even White House economists are predicting more teenage job losses. When the minimum wage increases to $7.25 an hour from $6.55 on July 24, it will effectively raise the cost of employing teenagers (and other entry-level workers) once again, thereby exacerbating the situation.

The national wage floor will have increased 41% since the three-step hike was approved by Congress in May 2007. Then the economy was humming, with an overall jobless rate of 4.5% and many entry-level jobs paying more than the minimum. That’s a hard case to make now, with a 9.5% national jobless rate and thousands of employers facing razor-thin profit margins.

If Congress were wise and compassionate, it would at least suspend the wage hike for one or two years until the job market recovers. We know this Congress won’t do that, but someone has to speak up for the poorest, least skilled Americans.

Wall Street Journal (click here)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: labor

Retail sales up slightly

July 14, 2009 by Charlie

Today’s report indicates that advance monthly retail sales in June 2009 increased 0.6% from May but declined 9.0% from June 2008, to $342.1 billion. Excluding autos, June retail sales rose 0.3% from the prior month but declined 7.9% from the prior year.

Some might consider this a dead cat bounce given that the increase was almost entirely due to the combination of a 2.3% rebound in motor vehicle sales and a 5.0% price-related surge in sales at gasoline stations.

“On the whole, this was a decidedly mixed report as the better than expected print on the headline number masks the weak underbelly of core consumer spending, which continues to decline” as one commentator puts it.

Looking at the quarterly retail sales trend shows that retail sales have risen 3.5% over the last three months versus a 9.0% decline over the last year.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: retail sector

Proposal on table to tax wealthy to pay for health care

July 10, 2009 by Charlie

The House Ways and Means Committee might propose a tax on high-income Americans to help fund an overhaul of the health care system. The surtax probably would be levied on earners who make more than $250,000 per year. Another proposal favored by Republicans would tax employer-provided health benefits. See full story here.

Curious how this reminds me of the story of an economics professor at Texas Tech that said he had never failed a single student before, but had once failed an entire class. That class had insisted that socialism worked–that it was a great equalizer. No one would be poor and no one would be rich.

The professor then said OK, we’ll have an experiment in this class on socialism.

All grades would be averaged and everyone would receive the same grade so no one would fail and no one would receive an A. After the first test the grades were averaged and everyone got a B. The students who studied hard were upset and the students who studied little were happy. But, as the second test rolled around, the students who studied little had studied even less and the ones who studied hard decided they wanted a free ride too; so they studied little. The second test average was a D! No one was happy. When the 3rd test rolled around the average was an F.

The scores never increased. Despite the bickering, blaming, and hard feelings, no one would study for the benefit of anyone else. To their great surprise, they all failed. The professor told them that socialism would also ultimately fail because when the reward is great, the effort to succeed is great; but when government takes all the reward away, few will try or want to succeed.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: health care

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