If Blockchain Is the Door to the Future of Finance, Liquidity Is the Key – Cointelegraph

In the cryptocurrency industry, liquidity is king. But how we measure and perceive liquidity varies greatly. Amid uncertain times and volatile market conditions, many traders are revising their trading strategies to consider every facet of their portfolio. This includes how they evaluate the liquidity of an asset or an exchange altogether. While it is evident that trading volume can be easily manipulated, weve nonetheless been conditioned to look to it as a way to measure liquidity and by extension the health of markets and exchanges.

At its core, liquidity can be divided into three categories: market liquidity, exchange liquidity and asset liquidity.

Traditionally, market liquidity is viewed as the swiftness in which an asset can be bought or sold without affecting the general price of the asset. But in crypto trading, its much more than that.

Just because theres a high volume of activity, it doesnt mean that trades are happening quickly or efficiently, or that theyre even happening at all for that matter. As weve seen in the first years of cryptocurrency trading, volumes can be generated by a handful of actors, which doesnt necessarily reflect a healthy market. Bear in mind, what matters isnt the noise of high volume, but the signal of an efficient, genuine market one where a trade can be made as quickly as possible and with as little friction as possible against the demand of genuine counterparties. More importantly, a highly liquid market one with many buyers and many sellers is an efficient and economical one where transaction costs are low and profits are maximized.

By contrast, an illiquid market typically has high transaction costs, a lack of interested buyers, and large spreads between the highest prices of buyers and lowest prices of sellers.

Then we have exchange liquidity for custodial and noncustodial services. In both cases, liquidity matters to traders because without it they can suffer high costs in slippage. Theyll be exposed to more risk by way of fewer trading options for an asset. And of course, its easier to manipulate price on illiquid markets as well. For noncustodial exchanges, at their current stage of development, it is the most serious challenge they face on the road to mainstream adoption.

Illiquid exchanges, both custodial and noncustodial, can be easily identified because during periods of high market activity they might be unable to fulfill large orders, as there arent enough people or capital to absorb major sell-offs.

Currently, the vast majority of liquidity is found in custodial exchanges referred to as CEXs while noncustodial, or decentralized exchanges referred to as DEXs suffer from severe illiquidity.

Centralized exchanges such as Bitfinex, Coinbase and Binance are vastly more liquid than decentralized exchanges, with Bitfinex used by professional traders, given its market-leading liquidity pool; Binance used by crypto enthusiasts to discover new assets and access more diverse trading opportunities; and Coinbase used as the on-ramp for newcomers looking to start learning about cryptocurrency.

DEXs have only seen a fraction of the liquidity of CEXs but have been mission focused on bridging the liquidity gap and increasing usability, decreasing fees and reducing price slippage.

For example, Kyber Network is an on-chain exchange that allows instantaneous trading and conversion of cryptocurrencies and tokens with reasonable liquidity. It does this by collecting liquidity from a wide range of reserves. Kyber Network uses an on-chain liquidity protocol, which benefits from the growth in decentralized finance.

More recently, the noncustodial technologies employed in DEXs have given rise to hybrid noncustodial exchanges. These services aim to combine the benefits of decentralization for example, eliminating third-party involvement and thus increasing security with the performance and liquidity of their centralized counterparts. While many noncustodial crypto services have launched in the past years, very few have been able to assemble significant liquidity. However, Eosfinex, a hybrid noncustodial exchange built on EOSIO technology, is aiming to solve for the illiquidity of noncustodial exchanges. A Bitfinex service, the platform is able to accomplish this with an innovative architecture that grants noncustodial access to Bitfinexs liquidity.

Related: Crypto Exchange Liquidity, Explained

The most liquid asset is, as of today, cash specifically the United States dollar. And any asset that is easily converted to cash is also considered highly liquid. Similarly, in crypto the most liquid asset is Tether (USDT), which accounted for nearly half of all crypto trading activity at the beginning of the year. Yet as weve learned, volume isnt a reliable measure of liquidity. What makes Tether so liquid is also its market capitalization and the fact that its value being pegged to the U.S. dollar has helped investors manage volatility.

Thats why when we try to identify an assets liquidity, we look at the variety of its trading pairs on exchanges, how many exchanges an asset is traded on, its price activity and its trading activity across different exchanges. If there arent well-established trading pairs for the asset, extra steps, such as hopping from one coin to the next or trading across exchanges, may be required to enter and exit positions in the asset, and this inevitably incurs additional costs. Also, during high sell-off periods, an assets liquidity and ability to move into other assets becomes critical to managing risk in a trading strategy.

For crypto assets, being listed on popular exchanges and giving people the opportunity to buy into them directly impacts the success of the projects behind the assets. If an asset isnt listed on enough exchanges, it means fewer people can buy, which impacts the ability to scale and diversify token holders which is an important hedge against pump and dump schemes that can give a project a black eye. As important, asset illiquidity means customers face steep costs to buy the token, which causes the project serious headwinds for adoption.

As investors seek refuge in volatile markets, trading volumes tend to mislead market participants with inflated numbers when in fact, they dont actually tell us a whole lot about the quality of an exchange, asset or the market in general.

Highly liquid assets and exchanges are at the forefront of innovation this year, enjoying a disproportionate advantage when it comes to awareness and adoption. These market leaders have understood early on that liquidity begets more liquidity and equally important that liquidity goes hand in hand with scalability. If blockchain and cryptocurrency technologies are the door to the future of finance, liquidity is the key.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Steven Quinn is a product manager at Eosfinex and Bitfinex. He focuses on the EOSIO ecosystem of blockchains and communities, blockchain technologies such as smart contracts and noncustodial wallets, and global trends toward decentralization and financial sovereignty.

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If Blockchain Is the Door to the Future of Finance, Liquidity Is the Key - Cointelegraph

Blockchain the key to connecting the world post-pandemic – Port Technology International

The COVID-19 has revealed the extent to which the global supply chain is disconnected, something that blockchain will be able fix, according to the World Economic Forum (WEF).

Ports and supply chains around the world have seen their volumes crash as a result of the pandemic, in particular those in southeast Asia and the West Coast of the US, Los Angeles and Long Beach.

The WEF said the supply chain had been brought to its knees by the COVID-19 pandemic, and that economies and ecosystems had been dislocated as a result.

PTI Webinar: End-to-End Supply Chain: The Real Value of Port Digitization

What has become abundantly clear over the last three months is a general lack of connectivity and data exchange built into our global supply chains, the WEF said.

This is a phenomenon it described as staggering considering the prominence of fourth industrial revolution (4IR) era and Internet of Things (IoT) technologies that are currently available.

The fact we can track our Uber driver but not shipment placed three weeks ago from a department store less than 10 miles from our home is startling, humiliating and needs addressing, it said.

However, the WEF said blockchain could be the answer to the supply chains problem as the technology is already helping to track and trace medical supplies to areas most badly affected by the pandemic. This, the WEF said is improving the efficiency of movement permits to residents in a near-future of controlled social movement.

It went on to say that visibility, traceability, and interoperability of blockchain platforms to fortify, better connect and improve the resilience of supply chains will also be critical to getting the recovery underway in the world beyond the COVID-19 crisis.

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Blockchain the key to connecting the world post-pandemic - Port Technology International

Registration Open for Inaugural IEEE International Conference on Quantum Computing and Engineering (QCE20) – thepress.net

LOS ALAMITOS, Calif., May 14, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Registration is now open for the inaugural IEEE International Conference on Quantum Computing and Engineering (QCE20), a multidisciplinary event focusing on quantum technology, research, development, and training. QCE20, also known as IEEE Quantum Week, will deliver a series of world-class keynotes, workforce-building tutorials, community-building workshops, and technical paper presentations and posters on October 12-16 in Denver, Colorado.

"We're thrilled to open registration for the inaugural IEEE Quantum Week, founded by the IEEE Future Directions Initiative and supported by multiple IEEE Societies and organizational units," said Hausi Mller, QCE20 general chair and co-chair of the IEEE Quantum Initiative."Our initial goal is to address the current landscape of quantum technologies, identify challenges and opportunities, and engage the quantum community. With our current Quantum Week program, we're well on track to deliver a first-rate quantum computing and engineering event."

QCE20's keynote speakersinclude the following quantum groundbreakers and leaders:

The week-long QCE20 tutorials program features 15 tutorials by leading experts aimed squarely at workforce development and training considerations. The tutorials are ideally suited to develop quantum champions for industry, academia, and government and to build expertise for emerging quantum ecosystems.

Throughout the week, 19 QCE20 workshopsprovide forums for group discussions on topics in quantum research, practice, education, and applications. The exciting workshops provide unique opportunities to share and discuss quantum computing and engineering ideas, research agendas, roadmaps, and applications.

The deadline for submitting technical papers to the eight technical paper tracks is May 22. Papers accepted by QCE20 will be submitted to the IEEE Xplore Digital Library. The best papers will be invited to the journalsIEEE Transactions on Quantum Engineering(TQE)andACM Transactions on Quantum Computing(TQC).

QCE20 provides attendees a unique opportunity to discuss challenges and opportunities with quantum researchers, scientists, engineers, entrepreneurs, developers, students, practitioners, educators, programmers, and newcomers. QCE20 is co-sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society, IEEE Communications Society, IEEE Council on Superconductivity,IEEE Electronics Packaging Society (EPS), IEEE Future Directions Quantum Initiative, IEEE Photonics Society, and IEEETechnology and Engineering Management Society (TEMS).

Register to be a part of the highly anticipated inaugural IEEE Quantum Week 2020. Visit qce.quantum.ieee.org for event news and all program details, including sponsorship and exhibitor opportunities.

About the IEEE Computer SocietyThe IEEE Computer Society is the world's home for computer science, engineering, and technology. A global leader in providing access to computer science research, analysis, and information, the IEEE Computer Society offers a comprehensive array of unmatched products, services, and opportunities for individuals at all stages of their professional career. Known as the premier organization that empowers the people who drive technology, the IEEE Computer Society offers international conferences, peer-reviewed publications, a unique digital library, and training programs. Visit http://www.computer.orgfor more information.

About the IEEE Communications Society The IEEE Communications Societypromotes technological innovation and fosters creation and sharing of information among the global technical community. The Society provides services to members for their technical and professional advancement and forums for technical exchanges among professionals in academia, industry, and public institutions.

About the IEEE Council on SuperconductivityThe IEEE Council on Superconductivityand its activities and programs cover the science and technology of superconductors and their applications, including materials and their applications for electronics, magnetics, and power systems, where the superconductor properties are central to the application.

About the IEEE Electronics Packaging SocietyThe IEEE Electronics Packaging Societyis the leading international forum for scientists and engineers engaged in the research, design, and development of revolutionary advances in microsystems packaging and manufacturing.

About the IEEE Future Directions Quantum InitiativeIEEE Quantumis an IEEE Future Directions initiative launched in 2019 that serves as IEEE's leading community for all projects and activities on quantum technologies. IEEE Quantum is supported by leadership and representation across IEEE Societies and OUs. The initiative addresses the current landscape of quantum technologies, identifies challenges and opportunities, leverages and collaborates with existing initiatives, and engages the quantum community at large.

About the IEEE Photonics SocietyTheIEEE Photonics Societyforms the hub of a vibrant technical community of more than 100,000 professionals dedicated to transforming breakthroughs in quantum physics into the devices, systems, and products to revolutionize our daily lives. From ubiquitous and inexpensive global communications via fiber optics, to lasers for medical and other applications, to flat-screen displays, to photovoltaic devices for solar energy, to LEDs for energy-efficient illumination, there are myriad examples of the Society's impact on the world around us.

About the IEEE Technology and Engineering Management SocietyIEEE TEMSencompasses the management sciences and practices required for defining, implementing, and managing engineering and technology.

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Registration Open for Inaugural IEEE International Conference on Quantum Computing and Engineering (QCE20) - thepress.net

What part of ‘public’ does PSC not get? – The Bozeman Daily Chronicle

Several state news organizations have asked for what are clearly public documents from the state Public Service Commission. The commissions response? It has filed a lawsuit against those news organizations.

This represents a troubling pattern of behavior on the part of public agencies. The agencies claim they sue in order to get the courts to tell them what documents they are required to turn over. But this action forces anyone who makes a request for public documents not just media organizations to retain legal counsel, often at considerable expense.

The case in point involves emails sent and received by one commissioner, Roger Koopman. Koopman has been embroiled in internal disputes within the all-Republican commission. And some of the emails in question were leaked to a right-wing media website that posted them online. That prompted other news organizations the Billings Gazette, Yellowstone Public Radio and the Great Falls Tribune to request all the emails associated with the controversy.

This isnt quantum physics. The courts have long established that emails sent and received by public officials using government computers and email services are public documents and must be turned over on request from the public. State open government law requires public officials to balance the right to privacy with their obligations to hand over public documents. And Koopman maintains that three of the emails leaked to NorthWest Liberty News were personal in nature and should be exempted from public disclosure. These are simple determinations to make and the commission does not need a district court judge to make those determinations.

Lets call this what it is. The net effect of dragging these requests into court is to discourage requests for public documents. Any member of the public has a right to see public documents. But not everyone has the resources to hire a lawyer to get those documents nor should they have to.

The Montana Constitution and the statutes that emanate from it are clear. Government is to be transparent in all its actions. All meetings are to be open to the public and what are clearly public documents must be produced when requested.

Lets put the public back into the Public Service Commission: rescind the court action and hand over the emails in question.

To see what else is happening in Gallatin County subscribe to the online paper.

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What part of 'public' does PSC not get? - The Bozeman Daily Chronicle

Ninja Sex Party’s Brian Wecht ’97 talks rings, physics and musical comedy The Williams Record – The Williams record

When Brian Wecht 97 lost his high school class ring while living in Gladden his junior year, he didnt think much of it. The ring was bulky and ornately carved, with a hefty green gemstone embedded in the center definitely not my vibe, Wecht said and he was content to forget about it.

That was until a little over two months ago, when he received an email from Assistant Director of Alumni Relations Juan Baena 07 with the subject line: Your high school ring?

A forgotten class ring had been recovered from Room 46 in Gladden, Baena explained, back in May of 1996. The ring spent the following 24 years in a custodians drawer, forgotten again, until it ended up on Baenas desk just days before campus closed this March. Tracking down the owner was a matter of a simple search in the records database, as Wechts initials and the name of his high school are engraved on the ring.

Wecht shared the exchange on Twitter, and the post quickly gained traction, receiving more than 40,000 likes. He was nonchalant about the response.

Im kind of a public figure because of this band Im in, he said. I dont mean this to come across in a jerk-y way, but its not the strangest thing in the world for my tweets to get a couple thousand likes.

Actually, Wecht was being modest: His Twitter account has almost half a million followers, and as a founding member of the musical comedy duo Ninja Sex Party, hes no stranger to public attention. In the band, Wechts stage persona is Ninja Brian, a supernatural psychopath whose silent demeanor and shadowy image contrast sharply with the colorful spandex of his flamboyant bandmate Dan Avidan, known on stage as Danny Sexbang.

Their work ranges from raucous comedy-rock, with lyrics that are raunchy but good-natured, to cover albums that display their affinity for 70s and 80s hair metal and prog rock. Avidan performs the vocals, and Wecht focuses on keyboards; for their first few albums, Wecht handled all of the instruments, but the duo now works with a backing band.

On Ninja Sex Partys first international trip, to a sketch comedy festival in Toronto, Wecht almost lost the only other ring hes ever owned: his wedding ring.

I try to stay in character in the sense that I take my wedding ring off when Im in costume, and when I got back to the green room to put back on my normal clothes, it was gone, Wecht said. A group of other performers helped him scour the green room (luckily, comedians are generally good people, he said) and Avidan eventually retrieved the ring. Ive had some close calls a couple of other times with it, Wecht said, but I havent lost it yet.

But before hed donned Ninja Brians black balaclava and perfected his steely glare before hed dreamed of starring opposite Danny Sexbang in over-the-top music videos that regularly get millions of views Wecht was a theoretical physicist.

And before that, he was a long-haired, spectacled kid from northern New Jersey who was trying to figure out what courses to take. His first-year advisor, Professor Emeritus of Mathematics Edward Burger, persuaded Wecht to try an advanced math class, and Wecht ended up carving out a path at the College as a music and math double major.

In his free time, Wecht participated in almost every instrumental ensemble in the music department: He conducted the student symphony, was in the jazz ensemble and Symphonic Winds and occasionally played saxophone in the Berkshire Symphony or joined small jazz groups. He was also in the band for Frosh Revue the only comedy group he was at all involved with and conducted and played in the pit for several Cap & Bells musicals.

Math and music were Wechts passions in the classroom, but he also found space for the first two years of the core physics curriculum, leading him to take quantum mechanics as an elective in his senior year. That class, with Professor of Physics Tiku Majumder, inspired Wecht to consider pursuing physics after graduation, setting him down what he described as a very curvy path to graduate school.

Though he was initially set to enroll in a doctoral program in music composition at Duke, Wecht canceled his plans, got a short-term job teaching in Connecticut and spent the summer studying for the physics GREs. After getting essentially a zero on his first try, he managed to eke out an adequate score, and he soon began working toward his doctorate at the University of California, San Diego, which he completed in 2004.

Following graduate school, where he concentrated on theoretical particle physics, Wecht took a series of postdoctoral positions at Harvard, MIT, the Institute for Advanced Study and the University of Michigan. While he was at MIT, he indulged his passions for music and comedy as the musical director for the Boston sketch club Improv Asylum.

My main improv gig for a while was coaching Create an hour-long musical from a title suggestion kind of stuff, he said. Its like all improv: When its done well, youre like, Oh my god, this is literal magic. And when its bad, youre like, Oh, kill me.

When he was at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J., Wecht took advantage of the relatively close proximity to New York City to get involved with the musical comedy scene there. He was introduced to Avidan by a mutual friend at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre in 2009.

We met because Dan sent me an email and was like, I have this idea for a band. Its called Ninja Sex Party. Thats everything I know about this idea so far. So, like, lets talk about it, Wecht recalled. I was like, Thats a cool name. Lets discuss.

And so Ninja Brian was born. While Wecht differs from his character in that he is not a homicidal maniac, his natural deadpan and knack for intense stares complement Danny Sexbangs rakish exuberance.

Not long after the pair began collaborating, Wecht secured a position at the Centre for Research in String Theory at Queen Mary University in London. He and his wife, Rachel Wecht, hoped it would be their final move after years of traveling for work. Around the same time, Avidan moved to Los Angeles, on the opposite end of the globe, and ended up joining the YouTube channel Game Grumps, a popular comedic gaming web series.

Suddenly, Ninja Sex Party had a soapbox YouTube provided an ideal platform for connecting with the kind of audience who would appreciate what they were trying to do, and a video-game-oriented side project, Starbomb, soon cropped up.

After a year, a baby, and a lot of soul searching, the groups popularity continued to grow, and Wecht began to sense that the band was on a trajectory where maybe it wouldnt be the dumbest idea to do this full-time.

He was faced with an agonizing decision choosing between a stable job in physics after years of drifting through academia, and the unpredictable life of a full-time comedy musician and having recently turned 40, Wecht said he was aware that the situation carried the whiff of midlife crisis.

But when he received a formal job offer from Game Grumps, he knew that he would never have such a chance again. I thought, If I dont do this now, this is going to be the thing I regret forever, he said.

When it came to quitting his job at the university, Wecht said he made one huge tactical mistake he broke the news to his colleagues on April Fools Day. After explaining to some of the older faculty what a YouTube channel was, and making clear that he was serious, he still had to admit, On paper, thats pretty damning. It really doesnt look good.

With his wifes reluctant approval, Wecht and his family moved to Los Angeles in the summer of 2015, and Ninja Sex Partys third album came out a few weeks later, peaking at No. 1 on Billboards U.S. Comedy Albums chart.

Ninja Sex Party has since released eight albums and toured around the world. In addition to live shows in which Ninja Brian often acts on stage as an agent of chaos and an arrogant jerk in order to rile up the audience the band maintains a massive YouTube presence, with 1.32 million subscribers.

Every song we write, we think about what the video is going to be, Wecht said, noting that the music videos, which have starred guests such as Stranger Things actor Finn Wolfhard, are a major way that their work gets attention.

Last summer, Wecht teamed up with songwriter and producer Jim Roach to form a childrens music group called Go Banana Go! The band was profiled last week on NPR and released their debut album, Hi-YA!, earlier this month.

Its going well, and Im grateful every day that I get to actually do this, Wecht said. Its an unusual, fun career thats easy to explain, even to little kids. I can explain to my five-year-old that I get to play music for a living and it even seems cool to her.

His daughter (known by fans as Ninja Audrey) contributed lyrics and conceptual inspiration for Pizza Feet, which is accompanied by an animated music video, and Rachel Wecht is featured on Queen of No Share.

Although he tries to stay up to date on the world of physics through contact with friends and former colleagues on social media (half of my Facebook feed is theoretical physicists) and attends the occasional lecture, Wecht said the fast-paced nature of physics research means it would be very difficult for him to jump back in. I remember taking time off when my wife had a baby and after just a few months, I was like, Wait, I dont understand whats happening in physics, he said.

Though he doesnt plan to return to the world of academia, physics will always be a part of Wechts identity. I say Im a musician and YouTuber sometimes throw comedian in there because thats a big part of it and then also a former theoretical physicist, he said. Some people will say retired theoretical physicist, which is accurate, but also makes me sound like Im 70.

He said he would be open to the idea of teaching in a more relaxed capacity, either on comedic songwriting or topics in science. In 2010, he co-founded The Story Collider, a nonprofit podcast organization aimed at blending science and storytelling, which hosted an event at the College in 2016. I would absolutely love to do something else academic, he said, but I think it would probably be a one-off, one semester, weird-topic class.

What about a Winter Study course, on comedy songwriting or storytelling in science?

I would love to come teach something at Williams, he said. The idea of spending January in Williamstown is very appealing to me.

Whether or not hell ever return to the College in a professional role, Wechts enduring appreciation for his time here shone through in his reaction to receiving the class ring, which arrived in the mail last week.

To me, its a testament to what kind of people Williams associates with, more than the actual object itself, he said, adding to his original tweet about the incident, where he wrote, What a wonderful, considerate gesture, and so typical of the kind of people I knew at @WilliamsCollege.

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Ninja Sex Party's Brian Wecht '97 talks rings, physics and musical comedy The Williams Record - The Williams record

Brexit Blog: Crucial Times Ahead – Will the Gap Narrow Between the Sides as Negotiations Continue – Government, Public Sector – Ireland – Mondaq News…

In Irish mythology, the salmon was a symbol of wisdom andknowledge. In early Christianity, the fish was a symbol used byChristians to identify themselves to fellow Christians. In thecurrent phase of Brexit negotiations, the fish is emerging as asymbol of the differences between the UK and the EU in terms ofstrategy, perspective and approach.

This week, what is only the second substantive round ofdiscussions between the EU and UK taskforces on Brexit, areunderway. While little clarity has thus far emerged on how thesides are likely to resolve their differences, it appearsincreasingly clear that an extension of negotiations beyond the 31December deadline using the mechanism agreed in the WithdrawalAgreement is highly unlikely. Speaking to the House of CommonsBrexit Committee, UK Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove spoke ofdeadlines concentrating minds. The deadline of 31 December seemsset to remain.

During the Brexit debate, there were many nostalgic referencesto the days when Britain's fleet opened and supported new traderoutes from the UK. In the emerging tactical battleground of thecurrent negotiations, the positioning by the UK of the fishingfleet suggests that preparations are well underway for a period ofbrinkmanship, with enormous potential consequences. While none ofthe UK position papers submitted to the EU to date have beenpublished, it is clear that no paper has been submitted onfisheries. The UK wants to be treated, in Michael Gove's words,"as an independent coastal state, like Norway,Icelandandthe Faroes". In short, the UK favourslimiting access to UK waters for EU vessels and agreeing theavailable quota of fish on an annual basis. The EU fundamentallywants continuance of the Common Fisheries Policy, arguing that anannual negotiation of the quota is impractical.

Those in the UK arguing for a reduction in the level of accessto UK waters granted to EU vessels point to the fact that vesselsfrom other EU member states land many times more fish from UKwaters than UK vessels land from EU waters. Those arguing for moreopen access note that some studies suggest that the UK imports mostof the fish it eats and exports most of the fish it lands. Thisdifference of perspective over fish mirrors the differingperspectives on many of the other outstanding issues between thesides. Many in the UK would argue that its position on how muchcertainty can be granted on fish quotas is akin to the EU'sposition on financial services equivalence. Politically andsymbolically, how and when agreement is reached on the issue offishing rights is important. It will speak to how and when progresson other matters is likely to be achieved.

Three countries, Canada, Australia and Ukraine, are alsoemerging as code words for the gap in perspective between the EUand the UK. The UK wants a Canadian or an Australian style tradedeal. It wants to use existing agreements the EU has with thosethird countries as the basis for agreement. In Mr Gove's wordsby relying on precedent "we can cut and paste in order toensure that we can reach agreement.". The UK regards issueslike fisheries as being issues which can be agreed on a case bycase basis rather than as part of one comprehensive agreement.

The EU wants a comprehensive agreement which upholds EUstandards on social, environmental, climate, tax and state aidmatters for the future. Michel Barnier's mandate is to reach anagreement which provides for continued reciprocal access tomarkets, and to waters, with stable quota shares. "The more wewill have common standards, the higher-quality access the EU willbe able to offer to its market" was Mr Barnier'ssummation.

The UK's reaction to the EU approach is that it is beingtreated more like a state seeking accession to the EU, likeUkraine, than one which is leaving the EU. The EU has equaldifficulty in accepting the comparison to Canada or Australia,because the UK is geographically closer and a much larger tradingpartner than Australia or Canada, sending 40% of its exports to theEU. Distance imposes natural quotas of its own.

There is at least agreement on what Michael Gove characterisedas the major obstacles to agreement so far. These are the levelplaying field, fisheries, governance and criminal justice. I willreturn to each of these in future blogs. The critical point,however, is that the EU is determined that the integrity of thesingle market is protected, and that future divergence in standardsor laws is not a backdoor for unfair competition whichdisadvantages the EU27.

Many in the UK argue that they are not interested in a 'raceto the bottom' on standards, that decades of EU membershipmeans that they are already aligned with the EU on those standardsand that UK law transposes many of those standards to UKlegislation. In a webinar which Matheson hosted with the BritishIrish Chamber of Commerce last week, Hilary Benn, the Chair of theHouse of Commons Committee on the Future Relationship with theEuropean Union suggested that the focus for some was on theprinciple of independence, as opposed to a desire to immediatelydiverge from the EU standards in many areas. Michael Gove expressedit as a "broad set of non-regression principles, as there arein all free trade agreements" but not the type of levelplaying field provisions that the EU is requesting of the UK. Onesuspects that the EU's appetite to rely on non-binding anddifficult to measure assurances on these issues will no doubt beinfluenced by its perception of the conduct of the negotiations todate.

The scale of the philosophical differences between the sides,the impact of COVID-19 on progress and the absence so far of anyreal sectoral negotiations prompted many to assume an extension tothe transition period was likely. What seems more likely now, isthat there will neither be the time nor political capacity tofulfil the EU negotiating mandate as set out in February by 31December.

In this game of brinkmanship, the UK is seeking to make time itssecretary. In telescoping negotiations into the second half of theyear, it appears to want to create an inevitable outcome where onlya few areas can be agreed. Others must be left for futureconsideration if a no-deal, hard Brexit is to be avoided. Thisseems to be the emerging tactical plan, in pursuit of what areclear strategic goals. It wants sectoral arrangements, not anoverarching arrangement, aligned with EU rules and arbitrated by EUinstitutions. The choice facing the EU next autumn will be one withfundamental consequences. Keep fishing and land what they'vecaught by 31 December, or prepare to raise anchor and sail awayinto the gathering storm.

The content of this article is intended to provide a generalguide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be soughtabout your specific circumstances.

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Brexit Blog: Crucial Times Ahead - Will the Gap Narrow Between the Sides as Negotiations Continue - Government, Public Sector - Ireland - Mondaq News...

Brexit: don’t extend the transition period – TheArticle

Just because Michael Gove says it, it does not follow that it is necessarily preposterous. Reporting to the Future Relationship Select Committee on last week, the Cabinet Office Minister acknowledged that there remain serious differences between the EU and the UK perspectives on the shape of any Future Trade Agreement. Mr Gove suggested that these differences flow from a fundamental difference in philosophy.

On a superficial reading of philosophy, he is quite correct: the UK sees itself as a sovereign state; the EU sees us as a supplicant. And it sees us like that for two reasons. The first is that what can fairly be called our lackey status, for the period of transition, is precisely what is implied for us by the Johnson-May Withdrawal Agreement, with its mechanisms of continuing membership. Secondly, the Covid-19 crisis has shown that the concept of national sovereignty is not really part of the EU worldview. For M. Barnier we are being impertinent to argue on the basis of national self-interest; for his counterpart, David Frost, it ought to be unthinkable to proceed on any other basis.

On a deeper reading of what counts as a philosophy, Mr Goves observation is also one worth making. The two parties to this negotiation have vastly different conceptions of what the process is about, because they operate within incommensurable metaphysical frameworks.

This is best illustrated by the very different views about the nature of law, which on the European model is something which is formulated and handed down. In the Anglo-Saxon model, it arises when real people settle real differences and thereby establish precedents. There is no fact of the matter that can establish which of these models is the correct one; and they are irreconcilable. You might just as well stipulate that pro-lifers and advocates of right to choose are given a time-limited opportunity for negotiation in which to settle once and for all the abortion issue. You notice, by the way, how important it is in that debate to control the language of the discussion. Likewise, with the ongoing EU-UK negotiation where, for example, the insistence that the other side be prepared to put on a metaphorical straitjacket is described as a request for a level playing field.

But the EU project is based not so much on a philosophy as on a theology. It sees itself as the engine of a historically inevitable redistribution of power from the nation state to a centralised managerial elite. If sometimes, as part of this process, it is helpful to pose as a facilitator of economic improvement, then so be it. If at other times it is theologically necessary to impoverish the citizenry then that is OK too. The EU appropriates the language and symbols of nationhood for itself, while at the same time crafting the dissolution of the idea of the sovereign nation state. It demands forms of allegiance to which it is not entitled those which are owed to family and country. It is, in short, an attempt to grow a country out of a set of political institutions, which is sort of the wrong way around.

The incoherence at the heart of the EU project has been illuminated by the Covid-19 pandemic. Its constituent member states have rediscovered their national identities as the best means of responding to the crisis. They have responded at the level of the nation while the EU nomenklatura have looked on, uselessly, like the bewildered priest who cannot understand why the parishioners have given up on Mass just because something more urgent is happening outside the church.

Of course, everything is being recontextualised by the pandemic. But those who advocate that Covid-19 requires an extension to our transition period need to accept that the burden of proof is on them. They need to explain how it can be right for us to remain de facto members of a set of institutions we have de jure left, when those institutions are facing an existential crisis of their own making one which has only been amplified, not created, by the C-19 catastrophe.

The problems that are being thrown up by the transition negotiations are indeed philosophical. That is why they cannot be resolved without one of the parties abandoning its default assumptions. This will not happen even if we extend the process by ten years. And why, in any case, should either side be required to do that?

Mr Goves intervention was timely, appropriate and welcome. Now he must, like any philosopher, embrace the logic of his position. The grounds for leaving on December 31st are only strengthened, not weakened, by the current philosophical differences.

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Brexit: don't extend the transition period - TheArticle

Theresa May humiliation: Ex-PM’s grovelling plea to union bosses amid Brexit vote exposed – Express

Over a year ago, Ms May, then Prime Minister, announced she would resign and not take Britain forward in the next phase of Brexit negotiations. It came after she suffered a string of Brexit deal defeats in the House of Commons, effectively locking the UK in a bind.

A combination of pressure within her own party and the fact she was not a democratically elected Prime Minister resulted in her being held in poor regard in politics and public.

Eventually calling an election in 2017 after refusing to do so for nine months, Ms May was forced to broker a deal with Northern Irelands Democratic Unionist Party after a hung Parliament ensued.

In April 2019, it was announced that leaders of 70 Conservative Associations had signed a petition calling for a vote of no confidence in Ms May.

Just one month later, Ms May confirmed that she would be resigning as leader in the following month of June.

It was nothing short of a calamitous period as Prime Minister, achieving little.

During his Oxford Union address in February, Len McCluskey, General Secretary of Unite the Union, said just as much, revealing how Ms May had met so many dead ends she turned to the trade unions in hope of support from somewhere.

It was the first time since Margaret Thatcher, who led the UK from 1979 to 1990, that a Conservative Prime Minister had engaged with a trade union.

Mr McCluskey said: The first Tory Prime Minister I spoke to since Thatcher decreed that no Conservative Prime Minister should talk to the unions - was Theresa May.

JUST IN:Len McCluskeys Brexit swipe at Keir Starmer exposed

It has been rejected by the House of Commons three times. Its demise is testament to the Prime Ministers failure to act as a national rather than a Party leader.

Her efforts to reach out beyond the ranks of the Tory hard right have been too little and too late.

Shortly after during his Oxford Union address, Mr McCluskey revealed how he thought the Labour Party should have stayed in line with its initial Brexit strategy - that it would take the Uk out of the EU.

He said:That Labour slide into being a perceived Remain party gave us some real problems in our northern and midlands heartlands.

There was a feeling of betrayal over Brexit.

Ive been trying for over a year to stop the Labour leadership from allowing the party to be pushed to abandon our 2017 election pledges.

Wed gone then to the electorate on the basis of respecting the 2016 referendum and pledging to take us out of the European Union if wed won.

We shouldve stuck with that while setting up about winning over Remainers.

The rest is here:

Theresa May humiliation: Ex-PM's grovelling plea to union bosses amid Brexit vote exposed - Express

Paul Routledge: Tories want us to forget Brexit and crash out – Mirror Online

Blustering Boris doesnt like talking about the trick that swept him into power.

His officials even banned the word Brexit from official communications. The job is done, he thinks.

Oh no, it isnt. Its only half-done, if that.

Legally and constitutionally we have left the European Union, but we are a very long way from charting a new relationship with our biggest trading partner.

While were still in transition and accepting EU rules, negotiations are under way.

They are due to conclude by the end of the year, and in Prime Ministers Questions, Johnson ruled out any extension of the deadline.

But the talks are stalled over UK strategy standing firm or intransigence, depending on your point of view.

Our government insists that we are now an independent, sovereign state, free to do whatever we like.

The EU of 27 nations demands that we must closely align with their way of doing things if we want zero-tariff trading. Brussels chief Michel Barnier will today brief the European Parliament on the stalemate.

This fight is coming down to Boris versus Barnier, the irresistible farce meeting the immovable object.

And Downing Street has floated a new hurdle: fear that extending negotiations would embroil us in EU legislation to counteract the coronavirus.

This manufactured threat is yet another fig-leaf behind which to hide the Tory Brexiteers true intention leaving Europe without an agreement, whatever the cost to jobs and businesses.

Thats the goal of the Eurohaters, led by Mr Rentagob, Iain Duncan Smith.

Hundreds of civil servants are engaged in virtual talks across the Channel, with only weeks before a draft deal should be in place.

Our ministers have yet to get off their ample backsides, so theres zero prospect of meeting the timetable for agreement.

Whether you think thats a good thing or a bad thing, at least the politicians should be straight with us.

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Paul Routledge: Tories want us to forget Brexit and crash out - Mirror Online

It’s crazy for UK to go ahead with Brexit given pandemic crisis – Yorkshire Post

NewsOpinionLettersFrom: John Cole, Oakroyd Terrace, Baildon, Shipley.

Thursday, 14th May 2020, 11:50 am

IN 2017 I had operations for a hip and two knee replacements. This was elective surgery in that, between us, the NHS and I chose to do it. My conditions were not life-threatening,

If I had been suffering from acute appendicitis with the threat of peritonitis, the NHS would have given me emergency surgery. Not a matter of choice.

The Covid-19 pandemic is the worlds most severe crisis since the Second World War. Dealing with this has to be the top priority. Brexit is an elective issue we can choose to go ahead with it or we can choose, under changed circumstances, to give up on it.

It is absolutely crazy for the UK to go ahead with Brexit in current circumstances.

To wish to proceed, you would need to be a swivel-eyed ideologue or a self-promoting narcissist.

Editors note: first and foremost - and rarely have I written down these words with more sincerity - I hope this finds you well.

Almost certainly you are here because you value the quality and the integrity of the journalism produced by The Yorkshire Posts journalists - almost all of which live alongside you in Yorkshire, spending the wages they earn with Yorkshire businesses - who last year took this title to the industry watchdogs Most Trusted Newspaper in Britain accolade.

And that is why I must make an urgent request of you: as advertising revenue declines, your support becomes evermore crucial to the maintenance of the journalistic standards expected of The Yorkshire Post. If you can, safely, please buy a paper or take up a subscription. We want to continue to make you proud of Yorkshires National Newspaper but we are going to need your help.

Postal subscription copies can be ordered by calling 0330 4030066 or by emailing subscriptions@jpimedia.co.uk. Vouchers, to be exchanged at retail sales outlets - our newsagents need you, too - can be subscribed to by contacting subscriptions on 0330 1235950 or by visiting http://www.localsubsplus.co.uk where you should select The Yorkshire Post from the list of titles available.

If you want to help right now, download our tablet app from the App / Play Stores. Every contribution you make helps to provide this county with the best regional journalism in the country.

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It's crazy for UK to go ahead with Brexit given pandemic crisis - Yorkshire Post

It’s 10 years since the Lib Dem-Tory austerity coalition birthed Brexit and our brutal tribalism – Nation.Cymru

David Cameron and Nick Clegg (CC BY 3.0)

Mike Parker

Last weekend, in a sterling attempt to keep the political nerds out from under everyone elses feet, the BBC Parliament channel kindly laid on a repeat of their coverage of the 2010 general election. The whole thing: from exit poll to exhausted speculation about the mathematics necessary to forge a coalition, in what transpired to be the first hung parliament since 1974. It was only ten years ago this month, yet had the sheen of antiquity you generally associate with Boxing Day movies: It Could Have Been a Wonderful Life perhaps.

No surprise, Ifan Morgan Jones (of this parish) was watching too. Once the bulk of the results were in, and daylight had broken over the hollow-eyed pundits in the studio, he tweeted: theyve begun discussing coalitions and Im yelling no, dont do it! at the LibDems as if they were a teenage couple sneaking into a haunted house in a horror movie.

Ah, the LibDems. Remember them? They were huge news ten years ago. After the first-ever leaders debate in British election history, I agree with Nick Cleggs party soared in the polls, topping a few. On the weekend after that debate, the Sunday Times declared that according to their polling, Clegg was the most popular British political leader since Churchill (the prime minister that is, not the nodding dog; that was to come much later at Facebook).

The election night coverage was all about the LibDems. When the exit poll was published as the clocks struck ten, the only talking point was that no-one believed its prediction of the party actually losing seats. How the pundits, normally so right about almost nothing, scoffed at that one. But it was true: for all the heady Cleggmania, they slipped back, even managing to lose Montgomeryshire, a seat that theyd held continuously (bar four years) since 1880.

Despite the setback, they were still the focus of discussion for days, as the Tories and Labour both wooed them furiously. Nick Clegg fluttered like a heroine in a Victorian melodrama, before spurning Gordon Heathcliff Brown, and caving in to the wily charms of David Flashman Cameron. After professing undying love in the number 10 rose garden, Flashman took Clegg home and inflicted years of psychological torture on him, and on us all. He was always careful to leave no visible scars.

Was this when the die was cast for the horrible mess that is our politics today? There is a case to be made, I think. Of course, there would still be a pandemic regardless of who was in government, and populism, that slithery codeword for assorted shades of actual fascism, would still have risen all over the globe. But 2010 marked a watershed, and its one thats worth unpicking.

Monster

Firstly, it did for the LibDems. In some ways, they deserved it, for their utter hubris: that they could buck two hundred years of history and somehow tame the Tory party, the most ruthless political machine in western Europe; that they were fobbed off so easily with nonsense like the AV referendum; that many of them so clearly loved the baubles of power way more than its judicious application.

Trouble is though, they took down with them (at least in the short term) the flame of liberalism, one needed so much right now, but which is sputtering badly in these harsh winds. They gave Cameron an easy run and six clear years to demonise and then decimate the public sector, the effects of which we are so painfully grappling with in the current emergency. The coalition gave Farage and his fellow travellers all the oxygen they could handle and more; it birthed Brexit and the brutal tribalism that went with it.

In Wales, the 2010 election inadvertently acted as a catalyst for another key ingredient in the unpalatable political diet of the past decade, the endlessly circular blame game. A new Conservative-LibDem coalition at Westminster coincided with the final year of a Labour-Plaid coalition in Cardiff Bay; suddenly, everyone and no-one was in power. It was a perfect storm for scapegoating, and through the middle sailed the wreckers. They couldnt believe their luck.

Yet those were the nice guys, and the good old days! Since 2016 the Tories have shape-shifted into an even freakier monster. Theyve eaten UKIP and the Brexit party alive, their full banquet of fruitcakes and racists included, made ever more explicit their fundamental dislike of devolution, booted out anyone with experience or a bit of a conscience, sold what was left of their soul to the darkest operatives in the game, and in December, filled parliament with people so grim, any contact will have you wanting to scrub your hands for hours. On that at least perhaps, they seemed to know what was coming.

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It's 10 years since the Lib Dem-Tory austerity coalition birthed Brexit and our brutal tribalism - Nation.Cymru

WATCH: Gina Miller meets online troll who sent hateful, racist and threatening messages over Brexit – The New European

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PUBLISHED: 13:27 14 May 2020 | UPDATED: 16:17 14 May 2020

Gina Miller meets a pro-Brexit internet troll as part of a BBC documentary. Photograph: BBC.

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Miller met with Alan before the coronavirus outbreak for the BBC as part of a documentary into internet trolls.

The man, who simply gave his name as Alan, had left comments calling for the businesswoman to be deported.

One deluded fat ****, go away now you lost, Johnsons got the majority, all you can do is **** and moan, said another message.

The single father, who works as a concierge, explained his comments were literally because of Brexit.

He said after the vote he felt there was no point in sitting back and being passive as he explained why he had trolled politicians.

People who are disenfranchised are people like myself, white single fathers. If you want disenfranchised in the world... I get nothing from nobody, he told her.

Everybody else can get seemingly what they like. So it got to the point where I thought Im going to stand up and say something.

But Miller explained the impact that the attacks had on her life - which escalated to verbal attacks in real life, and her needing security around her 24 hours a day.

She said: In the beginning I thought it was just words, just on social media. But I was out with my daughter recently, standing outside on a road to cross to my car.

And this car stopped, window rolled down, shouting You know black ****, you should be hung, traitor. You know, dying is too good for you.

She added: What I find really frustrating is that people think they know me because of whats in the media. I often read it and think, who is this woman?

Miller said that the comments about Brexit had stopped - but she has said now its about being a woman of colour, that I look like an ape.

She added: I actually get told worse things now than I was before.

In the segment, to be broadcast on television, the pair found some mutual understanding over their tougher experiences, and having sons of similar ages.

Miller was forced to flee from her second husband, who she claimed was a drinker who beat her badly, forcing her to sleep in her little blue car in a multistorey car park.

Alan said: Sleeping in a car, I did that for two years, because they couldnt house me. So I know exactly how it feels to be sleeping in the front of a car. I get that.

Now Ive met you and heard where youre at, its a wrong thing for me to do.

I never knew at the time, it was just angering. It was who do these people think they are? Youre all f****** rich and elite. What do they know about my life?

She hopes that Alan will become a messenger to other internet trolls.

She said: All I worry about is my son and your son. I dont want them to be in a country full of hate.

Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only rebalance the right wing extremes of much of the UK national press with your support. If you value what we are doing, you can help us by making a contribution to the cost of our journalism.

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WATCH: Gina Miller meets online troll who sent hateful, racist and threatening messages over Brexit - The New European

Stop the return to laissez-faire – The Hindu

Through the public health crisis created by the COVID-19 pandemic, we are witness to another massive tragedy of workers being abandoned by their employers and, above all, by the state. The workers right to go home was curbed using the Disaster Management Act, 2005. No provisions were made for their food, shelter, or medical relief. Wage payments were not ensured, and the states cash and food relief did not cover most workers.

Full coverage | Lockdown displaces lakhs of migrants

Staring at starvation, lakhs of workers started walking back home. Many died on the way. More than a month later, the Centre issued cryptic orders permitting their return to their home States. Immediately employer organisations lobbied to prevent the workers from leaving. Governments responded by delaying travel facilities for the workers to ensure uninterrupted supply of labour for employers.

Employers now want labour laws to be relaxed. The Uttar Pradesh government has issued an ordinance keeping in abeyance almost all labour statutes including laws on maternity benefits and gratuity; the Factories Act, 1948; the Minimum Wages Act, 1948; the Industrial Establishments (Standing Orders) Act, 1946; and the Trade Unions Act, 1926. Several States have exempted industries from complying with various provisions of laws. The Confederation of Indian Industry has suggested 12-hour work shifts and that governments issue directions to make workers join duty failing which the workers would face penal actions.

Thus, after an organised abandonment of the unorganised workforce, the employers want the state to reintroduce laissez-faire and a system of indenture for the organised workforce too. This will take away the protection conferred on organised labour by Parliament.

The move is reminiscent of the barbaric system of indentured labour introduced through the Bengal Regulations VII, 1819 for the British planters in Assam tea estates. Workers had to work under a five-year contract and desertion was made punishable. Later, the Transport of Native Labourers Act, 1863 was passed in Bengal which strengthened control of the employers and even enabled them to detain labourers in the district of employment and imprison them for six months. Bengal Act VI of 1865 was later passed to deploy Special Emigration Police to prevent labourers from leaving, and return them to the plantation after detention. What we are witnessing today bears a horrifying resemblance to what happened over 150 years ago in British India.

Also read | The face of exploitation

Factory workers too faced severe exploitation and were made to work 16-hour days for a pittance. Their protests led to the Factories Act of 1911 which introduced 12-hour work shifts. Yet, the low wages, arbitrary wage cuts and other harsh conditions forced workers into debt slavery.

The labour laws in India have emerged out of workers struggles, which were very much part of the freedom movement against oppressive colonial industrialists. Since the 1920s there were a series of strikes and agitations for better working conditions. Several trade unionists were arrested under the Defence of India Rules.

The workers demands were supported by our political leaders. Britain was forced to appoint the Royal Commission on Labour, which gave a report in 1935. The Government of India Act, 1935 enabled greater representation of Indians in law-making. This resulted in reforms, which are forerunners to the present labour enactments. The indentured plantation labour saw relief in the form of the Plantations Labour Act, 1951.

By a democratic legislative process, Parliament stepped in to protect labour. The Factories Act lays down eight-hour work shifts, with overtime wages, weekly offs, leave with wages and measures for health, hygiene and safety. The Industrial Disputes Act provides for workers participation to resolve wage and other disputes through negotiations so that strikes/lockouts, unjust retrenchments and dismissals are avoided. The Minimum Wages Act ensures wages below which it is not possible to subsist. These enactments further the Directive Principles of State Policy and protect the right to life and the right against exploitation under Articles 21 and 23. Trade unions have played critical roles in transforming the life of a worker from that of servitude to one of dignity. In the scheme of socio-economic justice the labour unions cannot be dispensed with.

The Hindu Explains|How can inter-State workers be protected?

The Supreme Court, in Glaxo Laboratories v. The Presiding Officer, Labour (1983), said this about the Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946: In the days of laissez-faire when industrial relations was governed by the harsh weighted law of hire and fire, the management was the supreme master, the relationship being referable to a contract between unequals... The developing notions of social justice and the expanding horizon of socio-economic justice necessitated statutory protection to the unequal partner in the industry namely, those who invest blood and flesh against those who bring in capital... The movement was from status to contract, the contract being not left to be negotiated by two unequal persons but statutorily imposed.

Any move to undo these laws will push the workers a century backwards. Considering the underlying constitutional goals of these laws, Parliament did not delegate to the executive any blanket powers of exemption. Section 5 of the Factories Act empowers the State governments to exempt only in case of a public emergency, which is explained as a grave emergency whereby the security of India or any part of the territory thereof is threatened, whether by war or external aggression or internal disturbance. There is no such threat to the security of India now. Hours of work or holidays cannot be exempted even for public institutions. Section 36B of the Industrial Disputes Act enables exemption for a government industry only if provisions exist for investigations and settlements.

Also read | Are Indias labour laws too restrictive?

The orders of the State governments therefore lack statutory support. Labour is a concurrent subject in the Constitution and most pieces of labour legislation are Central enactments. The U.P. government has said that labour laws will not apply for the next three years. Even laws to protect basic human rights covering migrant workers, minimum wages, maternity benefits, gratuity, etc. have been suspended. How can a State government, in one fell swoop, nullify Central enactments? The Constitution does not envisage approval by the President of a State Ordinance which makes a whole slew of laws enacted by Parliament inoperable in the absence of corresponding legislations on the same subject.

Almost all labour contracts are now governed by statutes, settlements or adjudicated awards arrived through democratic processes in which labour has been accorded at least procedural equality. Such procedures ensure progress of a nation.

In Life Insurance Corporation v. D. J. Bahadur & Ors (1980), the Supreme Court highlighted that any changes in the conditions of service can be only through a democratic process of negotiations or legislation. Rejecting the Central governments attempt to unilaterally deny bonus, the Court said, fundamental errors can be avoided only by remembering fundamental values, as otherwise there would be a lawless hiatus.

Also read | RSS affiliate BMS to protest against labour laws suspension in U.P., M.P., Gujarat

The orders and ordinances issued by the State governments are undemocratic and unconstitutional. The existing conditions of labour will have to be continued. Let us not forget that global corporations had their origins in instruments of colonialism and their legacy was inherited by Indian capital post-Independence. The resurgence of such a colonial mindset is a danger to the society and the well-being of millions and puts at risk the health and safety of not only the workforce but their families too.

In the unequal bargaining power between capital and labour, regulatory laws provide a countervailing balance and ensure the dignity of labour. Governments have a constitutional duty to ensure just, humane conditions of work and maternity benefits. The health and strength of the workers cannot be abused by force of economic necessity. Labour laws are thus civilisational goals and cannot be trumped on the excuse of a pandemic.

R. Vaigai and Anna Mathew are advocates practising at the Madras High Court

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Stop the return to laissez-faire - The Hindu

Tomlinson: Business cycle is diving, but it will bounce back – Houston Chronicle

Labor, land, capital and entrepreneurship underlie all economic activity, and all four are so profoundly intertwined that when one falters, the others stumble too.

Economists refer to these as the factors of production. To understand how the COVID-19 pandemic will impact the economy, all four need examination.

More than 30 million people have filed claims for unemployment insurance since our governments began ordering businesses shuttered in March. The world has never seen the labor force contract on such an enormous scale or at such a rapid pace.

Unemployment rates will soon reach the mid-teens. The $600 a week federal supplement for workers who lost their jobs due to COVID-19 will help, but the bigger problem is those who do not qualify. They will weigh heavily on the economy.

TOMLINSONS TAKE: Abbotts decision to resume business is reasonable given Texas tragic limitations

Land value is typically a reflection of a propertys income potential, either from commercial activity or residential use. When companies close, they struggle to pay leases. When people lose jobs, they fall short when the rent or mortgage comes due. Land values of all kinds are in trouble.

Americas pessimism shows up in the residential housing market, where new home sales are down 15 percent, and housing starts are down 22 percent, the Census Bureau reports. Construction workers are losing jobs, which contributes to the downward cycle.

Fewer people shopping for homes means sellers cut prices. Personal wealth evaporates, and people spend less.

Brick-and-mortar stores, already closing due to e-commerce, are creating even larger holes in the retail market. Nieman Marcus, JC Penney and J. Crew are among dozens of retailers considering or filing for bankruptcy.

Smart mall owners have been recruiting new kinds of tenants, such as restaurants, movie theaters and gyms. But consumers now avoid those businesses for fear of COVID-19.

More than a quarter of Houstons office space is already empty, with an astonishing 61 million square feet of available and another 3.4 million under construction, the Greater Houston Partnership reports.

San Antonio has a 10 percent vacancy rate with 1.5 million square feet under construction, according to NAI Partners, a commercial real estate firm. But more companies are moving out than moving in, according to data from the first three months of the year.

Office building tenants are also laying off workers or asking many to work from home. Companies desperate to save money will likely shrink their floor space as much as possible.

Landlords and banks are doing what they can to help struggling families and businesses. Mortgage companies have given 7 percent of their clients permission to skip a payment. Commercial landlords are providing shuttered businesses breaks on rent.

Yet such generosity has long-term effects on property values, according to MSCI, a global financial data analysis firm. When landlords see reduced income from their property, appraisers mark down its value.

We often hear that were all in this together, but that goes beyond the risk of disease. We need to remember we also share the same economy, which depends on the flow of capital.

The government and the Federal Reserve recognize that unemployment, lost rents and lower property values compound one another to worsen economic recessions. They have injected capital into the markets to prevent a death spiral.

President Donald Trump and Congress have authorized $3.6 trillion in spending, while the Federal Reserve has announced $8.6 trillion in financial support. About 95 percent of the money is going to businesses.

Stock markets rally on news of every new program because they hope the cash will spur companies to rehire workers, who will pay their rent and buy more stuff. But so far, the unemployment numbers keep climbing, lines at food banks get longer, and the economy keeps shrinking.

TOMLINSONS TAKE: Oil collapse signals long-running economic crisis for Texas

If the numbers do not turn, we may discover that governments cannot spend their way out of this recession. In some places, the problems are more fundamental. If people do not resume travel, Houstons energy economy will not recover, and San Antonios tourism industry cannot restart.

The coronavirus experience is changing businesses and economies in unpredictable ways. Our fourth factor, entrepreneurship, will make the difference.

Successful entrepreneurs identify a societal problem and create a business to solve it: the more problems, the more opportunities. As COVID-19 changes our lives and presents new challenges, entrepreneurs will profit from addressing them.

The Great Recession led millions to give up wage slavery and open new businesses. Most new companies will need real estate as they grow, hire laborers and build capital.

This is, of course, the business cycle. As long as humans survive, we will be in one, and therein lies endless hope and optimism.

Tomlinson writes commentary about business, economics and policy.

twitter.com/cltomlinson

chris.tomlinson@chron.com

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Tomlinson: Business cycle is diving, but it will bounce back - Houston Chronicle

Ramadan in Times Like This – THISDAY Newspapers

For quite a while now, Ramadan comes handy as the Holy month of spiritual grounding or for what Farid Esack, the South African Scholar and former Commissioner for Gender Equality under Nelson Mandelas government called rootlessness with the communities, in his thought-for-food book entitled Finding a Religious Path in the World Today .

Of course my spiritual grounding during the month of mercy-seeking is in Kaduna, Ilorin and Makkah (in-that-order!). For over a decade , Ramadan offers an ample flight from work- overload, a kind of un-official holiday from the endless distractive work schedules that toss one from one part of the world to the other.It is pleasant to be over-employed in the age of massive unemployment and underemployment.

But are we to live to work or are we working to live and worship? We definitely need some balance, which often tilts in favor of work drudgery or what V.I Lenin, the 20th Bolshevik revolutionary, aptly called wage-slavery. Its been a battle to harmonize my spiritual calendar with religion-blind work erratic schedules.

I recall that last year, I started 2019 Ramadan in Brussels where I attended IndustriALL Congress Working Group and Executive Board Meetings from 19th May to 23rd May 2019 at ITUC Trade Union House. The then Nigerian Ambassador, Alhaji Ahmed Inusa, to Belgium hosted me and other Nigerian Muslim brothers to Iftar at his Brussels residence.

I had enjoined countless generous Nigerias consular services abroad, especially in Geneva which hosts the ILO, that harbors labour market Stakeholders all over the world annually. I often agonize about the prospects of Ramadan coming to an end, as one is again severed from the month of piety and serenity to the cult of matter, gluttony, noise making, work and the newest anti-faith, fake news . I deliberately refused to attend ILO conference every year, as the calendar of the UN agency increasingly falls into Ramadan. Luckily, last year the opening session of the ILO 108th centenary Conference held first week of June after the Ramadan.

Managing the spiritual and the secular had been my lot in the last three decades of work without rest.The point cannot be overstated: our world is (or should be) both spiritual and secular.

Any attempt to separate the two pushes us further into the abyss of ruination, material and spiritual poverty.Certainly not at times like this. COVID: 19 pandemic, which has hit 4,197,142 million mark cases with over 277,000 deaths worldwide, tasks our imagination for both spiritual and scientific reflections. For the past five months, globally religion, spirituality and science, rationality and epistemology make up the two sides of the same existential coin!

The pandemic theme runs through many Ramadan messages by religious and temporal leaders.President Muhammadu Buhari had congratulated all Muslims who witness this challenging years Ramadan fast. Some 150 have died, as many as 4651 are infected, 901 have recovered.

No thanks to the pandemic. But these are loved ones, brothers and sisters, mothers and fathers, not just Statistics. With aspirations distorted.

The President was on point in urging for measured socializing to avoid risking spreading the Coronavirus during the Holy month.

The real significance of Ramadan however is in its intrinsic values that include forbearances, discipline, mercy, forgiveness and sacrifice. Its one of the five pillars of Islam.First it is obligatory with defined exceptions and the discipline it imposes. Muslims certainly dont need sermons again on the imperative of personal hygiene (washing of hands) which we are enjoined to do before all prayers. I am often reminded of-the Islams pragmatism. It makes Ramadan fasting a loud social compulsion as distinct from a private affair.

And think about it .How difficult it would have been for individuals to live their spiritual doors open, by abstaining from food, drink, sex from dawn to sunset for a full moon month while others keep their spiritual doors shut and neck and body deep in indulgence.

Muslims live in a world of diverse faiths but it is remarkable that even at best of times, Muslims and non-Muslim alike (who are under no spiritual obligation to fast) still respect this spiritual/ social month long compulsion. COVID-19 has paradoxically made this years Ramadan a kind of universal compulsion in Nigeria.

All spiritual and temporal doors are widely open in the effort to overcome the challenge of the pandemic.The undercurrent lesson of Ramadan at the time of pandemic is the need for communal solidarity to cement our collective God consciousness so as to tame the spread of the Virus through prayers and wearing of face masks, washing of hands and respect for all public health protocols.

A Virus is defined as an ubiquitous piece of parasitic DNA. A cupful of seawater is said to contain more viruses than the entire human population of 8 billion.

Just imagine how many viruses would fill a bucket or are in the seven seas that encircle our globe! Interestingly, out of the trillions of viruses, God empowers only 219 viruses to target humans. And if one Virus could put the whole world on a tenterhooks just within four months as Coronavirus is audaciously rampaging, its better imagine if additional one Virus is on the loose. We have revealed the Quran in the month of Ramadan says Allah in the Quran, a guidance for humankind.

Thus let those who witness the month fast.As for others who may be ill or travelling, let them complete it some other time. Allah desires ease for you and not difficulty or discomfort (Q. 2:185) Kindly note that the Qurans injunction addresses point-blank humankind not race, tribe or class and the injunction is all inclusive.

The exclusion is on the compassionate practical and verifiable grounds of illness and travelling and not our artificially created purchasable status of first class or VIPs or distinguished or Honourables. I bear witness that throughout this month the difference would not be clear between the hitherto visible rich and the obviously miserable poor before the Ramadan.

We are daily erecting class society as the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Does it dawn on us that the rampaging Virus is also class and race blind? It takes head on some governors no less it attacks some Almajiris? We are at liberty to keep on agonizing about the unproved conspiracy theory of its causes.

We can even fuel unhelpful controversies over its cures. What is undeniable is its indiscriminate borderless spread. COVID-19 has exposed the futility of our fortress mentality expressed in thousands of artificially contrived walls, from border wall between Israel and the West Bank to proposed Donald Trumps Mexico border wall. Its clear that solidarity not personalization would assist to contain the infections.

If so why the selective criminalization and feverish deportations of Almajiris to their states of origin? Whence the empathy during the month we are all seeking for Allahs mercy and at times like this in which an infection to all is a threat to all?

The mosques and churches are rightly under lock and keys.But days and nights men and women of faiths especially during the last ten days of Ramadan, are still seeking extra bonus from Allahs bagful of mercies to forgive our shortcomings and make us overcome the present afflictions.

Ramadan Kareem.

Issa Aremu, Member, National Institute, Kuru Jos

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Ramadan in Times Like This - THISDAY Newspapers

Covid-19 Highlights the Need for Prison Labor Reform – Labor Notes

For decades, prisoners in American correctional facilities have worked for no wages or mere pennies an hour. As the United States attempts to reduce transmission of COVID-19, more than a dozen states are now relying on this captive labor force to manufacture personal protective equipment badly needed by health care workers and other frontline responders.

Prisoners in Missouri are currently earning between $0.30 and $0.71 an hour to produce hand sanitizer, toilet paper, and protective gowns that will be distributed across the state. In Louisiana, prisoners are making hand sanitizer for about $0.40 an hour. And in Arkansas, where incarcerated workers are producing cloth masks for prisoners, correctional officers, and other government workers, their labor is entirely uncompensated.

This unprecedented health emergency is re-exposing how our countrys long-held practice of paying nothing or next-to-nothing for incarcerated labor, with no labor protections, is akin to modern-day slavery.

Prisoners are not protected by the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), the federal law establishing minimum wage and overtime pay eligibility for both private sector and government workers. In 1993, a federal appeals court held that it is up to Congress, not the courts, to decide whether the FLSA applies to incarcerated workers.

Courts have also ruled that the National Labor Relations Act, which guarantees the right of private sector employees to collective bargaining, does not apply in prisons.

Even worse, prisoners are excluded from the U.S. Occupational Health and Safety Administration protections that require employers to provide a safe working environment. This dehumanizing lack of protection for prison workers has long subjected them to conditions that have endangered their physical safety.

Amid a health threat that worsens in crowded environments, many prisoners are working without any mandated protections. Congress must amend the language of federal employment protections to explicitly extend to work behind bars.

Forced labor in prisons has its roots in the post-Civil War Reconstruction period, when Southern planters faced the need to pay the labor force that had long worked for free under brutal conditions to produce the economic capital of the South.

Though the 13th Amendment abolished involuntary servitude, it excused forcible labor as punishment for those convicted of crimes. As a result, Southern states codified punitive laws, known as the Black Codes, to arbitrarily criminalize the activity of their former slaves.

Loitering and congregating after dark, among other innocuous activities, suddenly became criminal. Arrest and conviction bound these alleged criminals to terms of incarceration, often sentenced to unpaid labor for wealthy plantation owners.

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In the following decades, Southern states, desperate for cheap labor and revenue, widely began leasing prisoners to local planters and Northern industrialists who took responsibility for their housing and feeding, a practice known as convict leasing.

Under this system, the captive labor worked long hours in unsafe conditions, often treated as poorly as they had been as slaves. Records approximate that on an average day between 1885 and 1920, 10,000 to 20,000 prisonersthe overwhelming majority of them Black Americanscontinued to toil under these insufferable circumstances.

In the 1930s, a series of laws prohibited state prisons from using prison labor, but the federal government continued to rely on this workforce to meet the demands of the rapidly changing markets of mid-century. By 1979, Congress passed legislation allowing state corrections officials to collaborate with private industries to produce prison-made goods, birthing the modern era of prison labor.

Today, approximately 55 percent of the American prison population works while serving their sentences. Prison jobs are broadly divided into two categories: prison support worksuch as food preparation, laundry services, and maintenance workand correctional industries jobs, in which prisoners might make license plates, sew military uniforms, or staff a call center. It is prisoners in correctional industries who are currently being deployed to help meet the nations need for protective gear.

While so many behind bars are manufacturing items the country desperately needs to combat our health crisis, their low wages and lack of labor protections, among myriad other factors, mean they are not accorded the same benefits or recognition as other workers.

Whats more, the measly cents per hour that is typical compensation across often-dangerous prison jobs is not nearly enough to cover the court fees and fines, restitution, child support, and room and board expenses that most state departments of corrections deduct from prisoners earnings. When there is anything left, it is barely enough to pay for commissary goods such as food, hygienic products, and toiletries, let alone marked-up email services that prisoners rely on to stay in touch with their loved ones. Despite working for years, many prisoners are left with thousands of dollars in crippling debt by the time they complete their sentences.

In 2018, prisoners in dozens of facilities across the country went on strike and issued a list of demands, which included an immediate end to prison slavery and that prisoners be paid the prevailing wage in their state or territory for their labor.

This time of national emergency requires that everyone do their part to slow the spread of coronavirus. The significant shortage of face masks, protective gowns, and hand sanitizer that is putting the lives of our frontline workers in jeopardy necessitates bold and swift action. But if the states and federal government are going to rely on correctional labor to manufacture this equipment, they need to improve the wages and labor protections of our incarcerated workers. To fail to do so is not far off from the devaluation and brutalization of slave labor that was ostensibly abandoned a century and a half ago.

This piece originally appeared at the Brennan Center.

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Covid-19 Highlights the Need for Prison Labor Reform - Labor Notes

Ahmaud Arbery, Race and the Quarantined City – The New York Times

On Feb. 23, a 25-year-old black man named Ahmaud Arbery left his home in Brunswick, Ga., to go for a Sunday afternoon run. As he entered a nearby subdivision, he was followed and later shot dead by a father and son while their neighbor recorded the incident on his phone.

Mr. Arberys crime of running while black speaks to a history of racial surveillance and containment enforced by the American state and supported by white people with the means and opportunity to cause great harm.

Lately, the coronavirus has got me thinking a lot about the racial dynamics of containment. Under the quarantine, much has been made of Americans regulated lack of mobility. But our cities have long kept their black residents contained and at the margins. Populations trapped in place are easier to price-gouge and police. Capitalism and immobility work hand in hand.

The American state has restricted black peoples mobility at least since the time of slavery. These regulations included convict leasing, Black Codes, loitering laws, redlining, racial zoning, redistricting (legal and illegal), the prison-industrial complex and increased surveillance. This history has given us entire cities built to shepherd black labor and presence.

One might even consider the black experience as a kind of never-ending quarantine and indeed Jim Crow laws that grew partly out of concerns that black people spread contagion, like tuberculosis and malaria, affirmed as much. The eugenics movement, popular in the early 20th century, led many doctors and scientists to attribute the precarious state of black health to physiological, biological and moral inferiority, instead of structural causes like poverty and racism.

Nearly a century ago, my grandparents fled the Jim Crow South, joining the millions of black families that moved north and west as part of the Great Migration. No matter how many thousands of miles they crossed, they met the same thing: not freedom, but constraint. Even in some of Americas most progressive cities like San Francisco, where my family ended up, black people were relegated to parts of town with limited housing, overcrowded schools and low-paying jobs. The police were everywhere.

So black folks have been educated in a kind of quarantine since Day 1.

Yet mobility remains a big part of Americas narrative about freedom. The tone and complexion of the anti-quarantine protests shouldnt surprise us when white people have been accustomed to boundless freedom of movement.

Consider the glaring contrasts between the architecture and development of the large-scale public housing units and suburban bedroom communities of the 1950s. Two very different outcomes one black, one white from one ostensibly shared aim of creating affordable housing.

Black people were trapped in poorly maintained towers, like the notorious Pruitt-Igoe homes in St. Louis, that kept them far away from the citys arteries and public transportation. The 33 buildings of the complex were so uninhabitable that they had to be destroyed after only two decades.

Meanwhile, all-white suburbs like Levittown, N.Y., which also received government subsidies, were designed expansively with front lawns, public parks and wide sidewalks.

The same freeways and boulevards that made it easy for suburbanites like those from Levittown to zoom in and out of cities destroyed black neighborhoods, either by cutting them off or by bulldozing them entirely.

Now many of these roads are being retooled in the spirit of new urbanism to make way for more bike lanes and wider sidewalks. But who will these benefit the most? A wealthier and whiter population that wants better access to a walkable, gentrified city.

When black people can move freely about the city, that movement is often controlled by housing location, surveilled by the police and private security measures and allowed only in the service of providing cheap labor.

Today cities are asking, demanding and even coercing black people to shoulder the burden of work that is fundamental to their functioning, but without protecting those people in return. Whatever mobility people have is largely for executing low-wage jobs, which are now recognized as essential because they directly benefit white infrastructures.

This, in addition to the crowding in black neighborhoods, is one reason we see an overrepresentation of black people among the Covid-19 dead in places like Detroit; Chicago; St. Louis; Richmond, Va.; and Washington, D.C. Another reason is racial disparities in testing and treatment. In Illinois, just under 10 percent of those tested for the coronavirus are black. But among those who test positive, 18 percent are black. And among those who die, a stunning 32 percent are black.

Furthering the problem, some hospitals have turned black residents away, only for them to die, despite their showing the same symptoms as white people who receive testing and treatment. This suggests that bias is playing a role. If cities were to test all residents, treatment would not depend on any preconceived notions about who is deserving of care and who is not.

The historian Nikhil Pal Singh recently observed that the pandemic will not create the social transformation we need, but it will set the terms for it. The history of black quarantine provides us with our plan in reverse. Colorblind responses only make the problems worse.

Rather than corporate bailouts, we need a public bailout, one that involves an increase in public spending to support equal access to education, affordable housing and transportation. One that provides paid sick leave and health insurance for all.

The Department of Housing and Urban Development has declared a temporary moratorium on foreclosures of Federal Housing Administration-insured mortgages and evictions from public housing units. Several cities have offered similar solutions for their most vulnerable residents, and more should follow. Evictions disproportionately burden black people, especially black women, who experience homelessness at alarming rates.

Cities and the federal government should also come up with a plan for comprehensive debt forgiveness. This will make it easier for essential workers to pay for the increasing costs of education, food and transportation. Measures like these would actually contribute to the growth of our economy by freeing up capital for people to lead healthy lives.

We ask our cities to be smart, but are we asking them to be just? We talk about access in symbolic ways, but dont think about the core geographies of inequality that emerge in the making of a mobile, technologically driven city. The creative, progressive city with its fine dining, bike shares and crowded parks relies on the same workers of color that it relegates to the margins.

We can even take a lesson from the protesters demanding, wrongly, an end to the quarantine. We can fight for opening our cities politically, economically and racially with the same energy they are putting toward opening our streets. We must create solutions that benefit the masses, not a select few. A true end to quarantine demands ending the quarantining city. It may not be the best we can do, but its the least we can ask.

Brandi T. Summers, an assistant professor of geography and global metropolitan studies at the University of California, Berkeley, is the author of Black in Place: The Spatial Aesthetics of Race in a Post-Chocolate City.

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Illustration by Giacomo Bagnara

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Ahmaud Arbery, Race and the Quarantined City - The New York Times

COVID-19 outbreaks in German slaughterhouses expose grim working conditions in meat industry – Euronews

Working conditions for migrants in German slaughterhouses are under the spotlight after more than 200 workers tested positive for COVID-19 at a factory in Coesfeld, in the west of the country.

Coronavirus outbreaks have also been identified in at least two other meat processing plants in Germany. The majority of those infected were from Romania and Bulgaria.

Officials say the virus most likely spread through shared staff housing, and the outbreaks are drawing attention to the industrys difficult working conditions.

"Workers in the German meat industry work very often through subcontractors, not for the slaughterhouses themselves, and the working conditions at these subcontractors are often very, very bad," said Szabolcs Sepsi, a counsellor at DGB Fair Mobility, which defends migrant workers rights in Germany.

These workers contend with "extremely long working hours" insecure jobs and often squalid housing, Sepsi told Euronews in a live interview, adding that they typically share their bedroom with two or three other people and are shuttled to work together.

"Their living conditions simply do not allow social distancing measures," he said.

German broadcaster Deutsche Welle spoke to meat workers crammed in decrepit homes, writing that the outbreaks exposed "modern slavery" in the industry.

There have been outbreaks of COVID-19 at slaughterhouses in a number of countries in recent weeks, mostly in the United States but also in the UK, Ireland, Australia and Spain.

The trend is starting to expose an uncomfortable reality: much of the cheap meat on Western supermarket shelves is slaughtered by migrant workers who earn low wages, often live together in dorms and operate in crowded working conditions even in the midst of a pandemic.

"Its mostly the workers in the meat industry and other food industries who are actually paying the price for this cheap meat and for the cheap food," Sepsi said.

After years of debate and controversy, Germany introduced a minimum wage in 2015. It stands at around 1,500 per month gross for full-time workers.

But Sepsi says the various laws introduced over the past decade to improve the lives of migrant workers in the German meatpacking industry only address the symptoms and not the root of the problem: the fact that most slaughterhouse workers are hired by subcontractors that try to undercut each other.

"We believe the slaughtering companies have to hire people directly and give them direct jobs," he said, adding this would help workers afford their own apartments instead of having to live together in dormitories during a pandemic.

You can watch the interview in the video player above.

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COVID-19 outbreaks in German slaughterhouses expose grim working conditions in meat industry - Euronews

How farms are getting closer to consumers in the pandemic – The European Sting

(Kenan Kitchen, Unsplash)

This article is brought to you thanks to the collaboration ofThe European Stingwith theWorld Economic Forum.

As COVID-19 upturns supply chains around the world, consumers are increasingly conscious of where their food comes from.

Shoppers in the developed world, used to supermarkets stocking seasonal food all year round, faced empty shelves in late March as retailers grappled with a spike in demand and uneven supply from producers struggling under new lockdown rules.

At the same time, dairy farmers saw prices collapse as restaurants and cafes closed their doors indefinitely, causing a 70% drop in demand from the food sector. Many were left with no option but to dump unsold milk. Now there are fears that fruit and vegetables will be left to rot in fields, as travel bans to curb the spread of COVID-19 have left farms across western Europe short of hundreds of thousands of migrant workers.

In the UK, some 70,000-80,000 seasonal pickers are usually needed, but travel restrictions mean migrant workers cant fill the vacancies. So the government has launched a Pick for Britain scheme to redeploy students and furloughed workers on farms across the country. There are concerns however, over how sustainable this will be if lockdown is lifted in June and many are able to return to their jobs.

Spain, the EUs biggest exporter of fruit and vegetables, faces similar shortages. Its government has said it will allow illegal immigrants to take farm jobs alongside the unemployed, an idea also being aired in Italy. Italys agriculture minister, Teresa Bellanova, said: For those who do not have legal documents, but who have perhaps worked in the fields, they should become legalized.

Germany and France have launched job-matching schemes, appealing for people who have lost work during the pandemic to plug the gap. The German government launched a website called The Land Helps to link farmers with the millions of people whose workplaces have closed, and with students whose exams have been cancelled.

Around 70 people from migrant and asylum seeker shelters in Seine-et-Marne, east of Paris, responded to calls to harvest berries and asparagus. The Guardian reports that they will receive contracts and at least the minimum wage. But the scheme is fraught with difficulties, with refugee advocates worried about modern slavery.

In the US, many farms are responding to the crisis by selling direct to consumers, a trend some small-scale producers hope will outlast the pandemic. Simon Huntley, founder of Harvie, a company that helps farmers market and sell their products online, told Reuters: I think we are getting a lot of new people into local food that have never tried buying from their local farmer before.

Many are adopting a community-supported agriculture (CSA) programme. One CSA in Wisconsin is using Harvie to offer customers in the area a selection of 95 products, from vegetables to honey and meat. Chris Duke, one of the farmers, said the farms made about $7,000 between them over one week in April, which is huge for a season when not much is growing.

In India, there is growing interest in a decades-old programme for farmers to supply fresh produce directly to consumers. Back in 2000, the government in Maharashtra State created smaller, less congested weekly markets in urban areas where growers can sell their produce, rather than going through large wholesalers.

During the pandemic, most producers are minimizing contact by selling pre-packed, customized packets of vegetables. In several areas of Pune and Mumbai, these decentralized markets have given way to growers delivering directly to the gates of housing societies. Elsewhere in Maharashtra, the Paani Foundation is collecting surplus produce from farmers for distribution, in order to reduce crowds at vegetable markets and ensure almost door-to-door delivery.

What is the World Economic Forum doing about the coronavirus outbreak?

A new strain of Coronavirus, COVID 19, is spreading around the world, causing deaths and major disruption to the global economy.

Responding to this crisis requires global cooperation among governments, international organizations and the business community, which is at the centre of the World Economic Forums mission as the International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation.

The Forum has created the COVID Action Platform, a global platform to convene the business community for collective action, protect peoples livelihoods and facilitate business continuity, and mobilize support for the COVID-19 response. The platform is created with the support of the World Health Organization and is open to all businesses and industry groups, as well as other stakeholders, aiming to integrate and inform joint action.

As an organization, the Forum has a track record of supporting efforts to contain epidemics. In 2017, at our Annual Meeting, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) was launched bringing together experts from government, business, health, academia and civil society to accelerate the development of vaccines. CEPI is currently supporting the race to develop a vaccine against this strand of the coronavirus.

3. Living the good life, vicariously

Meanwhile in France, city-dwellers who have been locked down for two months are being offered a taste of the good life via a new television service. Cultivons Nous.tv is styled as a Netflix for farming. It streams news, documentaries and clips filmed by farmers, to give a true picture of the hard work that goes into feeding the nation.

The subscription platform has been set up by Edouard Bergeon, a farmer and film director, and Guillaume Canet, a French film star, with the aim of educating the urban population.

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How farms are getting closer to consumers in the pandemic - The European Sting

What race and deprivation tell us about the pandemic – TRT World

Covid-19 is ravaging vulnerable communities, and can be prevented if the root causes of inequality are addressed.

'Inequality' is an insurgent word pervading popular and policy discourse since the 2008 financial crisis. From discussions surrounding Occupy Wall Street to Thomas Pikettys widely acclaimed book Capital (centered around income inequality), the concept of social, economic and political inequality rears its head in several contexts.

While someBritish politicians have implied and the New York governor has referred to the virus as the great equaliser, others have called it the inequality virus revealing the sharp equity gradient in societies globally.

While income inequality alone is a definite fault-line through which the coronavirus is expressing its devastation, a nuanced narrative is emerging through the statistics coming out of countries with marginalised ethnic minorities like the United Kingdom and the United States.

These stories are diverse but share some core themes which point to disparities in survival which follow racial or ethnic lines.

Available statistics are often rudimentary but aggregated data from some US states which have accounted for race and ethnicity are gradually emerging. These (as of April 30th) reveal a disturbing picture that black Americans across most states are experiencing coronavirus related deaths at elevated rates, relative to their population, in 31 of the 39 jurisdictions as analysed by the APM research lab.

Interestingly, a similar trend is noted in the UK. A recent analysis of four datasets reveal that the black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) communities have experienced disproportionately higher deaths among NHS staff as well as hospital and community deaths from the coronavirus.

Remarkably, the first 10 doctors to die from the coronavirus in the UK were all from minority communities.

These statistics are jarring, but come as no surprise. Racial and ethnic minority groupings face increased risk from coronavirus related death and illness (morbidity and mortality) through three major downstream pathways: increased direct exposure to the virus, poorer baseline health status including increased chronic conditions and finally through less accessible and lower quality healthcare.

As decontextualised risk factors it may seem logical that interventions at these levels would lead to health improvements and hopefully lower overall risk when faced with a future pandemic.

The problem though, is that these risks, like the coronavirus, are not neutral functions of nature or inevitable biology. They are a consequence of upstream determinants which are very much influenced by human intent.

It could be argued that these poor health outcomes in ethnic minority groupings could be accounted for by a lower socioeconomic status - since a poorer health status and lower income levels have well established associations.

However, US studies around the racial opportunity gap show us that when each income level is analysed, health disparities between black Americans and white racial groupings persist. Many of the upstream factors accounting for this are related to spatial issues linked to segregation.

Health inequalities have been proven to follow racial lines through various, and often interlinked pathways both at an individual level - through the individual experience of racial discrimination having a proven direct effect on health - as well as at the structural level.

Structural rot

Structural racism that perpetuates health inequalities have some similarities when looking at the US and the UK. These root issues include education, employment, income, housing, and proximity to pollution.

These factors place disadvantaged populations at greater risk of chronic and underlying health conditions which may allow for greater morbidity and mortality from the coronavirus.

BAME groupings, both in the US and the UK face increased exposure to the coronavirus as a result of the areas in which they live. In urban areas, these are often densely populatedspaces with overcrowded housing which may face multiple environmental risks.

These areas face chronic underinvestment from both government and the private sector leading to poorer educational opportunities and weaker health systems, especially in the US where citizens dont have the benefit of an National Health Service like the UK.

We see that black Americans and BAME populations in the UK are more likely to hold jobs which put them at greater risk to coronavirus exposure.

In the UK, "Pakistanis, black Africans and black Caribbeans are overrepresentedamong key workers overall," placing them at greater risk of "contact with contagious individuals."

Intriguingly, trends in the US are comparable to the UK where, "Black workers are about 50% more likely to work in the healthcare and social assistance industry and 40% more likely to work in hospitals, compared with white workers."

In the US, where income is tied to access to healthcare and health outcomes, there is still a wide household incomedifferential between black American and white households.

Individual income is also linked to food security and safe housing which are some of the underlying determinants of chronic conditions which then prove to be risk factors for coronavirus related morbidity and mortality.

As of 2018 (even after the Affordable Care Act), African Americans had an uninsured rateof 9.7 percent compared to 5.4 percent among whites. This translates to less health-seeking behaviour and less control of chronic conditions which may predispose these individuals to severe illness as a result of the coronavirus infection.

Among the uninsured, there may also be a reluctance to seek treatment for symptoms of the coronavirus infection because of the threat of out of pocket payments. These payments impact already-strained household budgets with resultant secondary adverse health impacts from decreased household financial reserves.

It's not theory

How we chose to explain these factors which place ethnic minorities at greater risk matters, because it has a bearing on outcomes.

Failing to recognise the root causes of health inequalities which follow ethnic lines means that interventions aimed at secondary measures will simply allow inequalities to persevere through other pathways.

Tying factors like education, occupation and housing to individual effort and choice erroneously misses the root cause of these issues.

The reality is that these inequalities need to be considered through the paradigm of structural, cultural and individual-level racism.

The individual experience of racism is well known to have direct effects on health, with emotional distress leading to physiological consequences including hypertension.

Centering risk factors for morbidity and mortality from the coronavirus around discussions ofVitamin D deficiency or explaining that unhealthy lifestyle choices places blame at the level of the individual.

By holding individual choice and cultural factors responsible for health differentials, broader entrenched prejudices and discrimination are obfuscated.

Here, the legacy of federal policies which have entrenched segregation or redlining and mortgage discrimination can be overlooked becuse inequalities in death and illness from the coronavirus are then tied to and bound within the bodies of ethnic minorities.

In the US, the argument around innate biological differences being responsible for health differentials dates back to slavery where there was a need to justify enslavement of Africans.

We see this same pattern playing out with some science attempting to sidestep issues of socioeconomic stratification along racial and ethnic lines with the vitamin D discussion as well as the provision of culturally bound reasons for certain groupings having a greater prevalence of chronic health conditions.

Are African Americans and BAME groupings destined to be low wage, front-line, high exposure jobs because of biological predisposition or would the legacy of racial segregation, redlining and chronic underinvestment in health, environmental and educational services be a more plausible rationale for higher coronavirus related mortality rates within certain communities?

These questions require evidence-based, theoretical probing and morally driven answers. As society conducts a collective post-mortem, an honest body of evidence needs to emerge so that the tragedy unfolding before us is not repeated.

Disclaimer: The viewpoints expressed by the authors do not necessarily reflect the opinions, viewpoints and editorial policies of TRT World.

We welcome all pitches and submissions to TRT World Opinion please send them via email, to opinion.editorial@trtworld.com

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What race and deprivation tell us about the pandemic - TRT World