Tag Archives: Tip

‘Out of control’: No one knows how much to tip


New York
CNN
 — 

A new checkout trend is sweeping across America, making for an increasingly awkward experience: digital tip jars.

You order a coffee, an ice cream, a salad or a slice of pizza and pay with your credit card or phone. Then, an employee standing behind the counter spins around a touch screen and slides it in front of you. The screen has a few suggested tip amounts – usually 10%, 15% or 20%. There’s also often an option to leave a custom tip or no tip at all.

The worker is directly across from you. Other customers are standing behind, waiting impatiently and looking over your shoulder to see how much you tip. And you must make a decision in seconds. Oh lord, the stress.

Customers and workers today are confronted with a radically different tipping culture compared to just a few years ago — without any clear norms. Although consumers are accustomed to tipping waiters, bartenders and other service workers, tipping a barista or cashier may be a new phenomenon for many shoppers. It’s being driven in large part by changes in technology that have enabled business owners to more easily shift the costs of compensating workers directly to customers.

“I don’t know how much you’re supposed to tip and I study this,” said Michael Lynn, a professor of consumer behavior and marketing at Cornell University and one of the leading researchers on US tipping habits.

Adding to the changing dynamics, customers were encouraged to tip generously during the pandemic to help keep restaurants and stores afloat, raising expectations. Total tips for full-service restaurants were up 25% during the latest quarter compared to a year ago, while tips at quick-service restaurants were up 17%, according to data from Square.

The shift to digital payments also accelerated during the pandemic, leading stores to replace old-fashioned cash tip jars with tablet touch screens. But these screens and the procedures for digital tipping have proven more intrusive than a low-pressure cash tip jar with a few bucks in it.

Customers are overwhelmed by the number of places where they now have the option to tip and feel pressure about whether to add a gratuity and for how much. Some people deliberately walk away from the screen without doing anything to avoid making a decision, say etiquette experts who study tipping culture and consumer behavior.

Tipping can be an emotionally charged decision. Attitudes towards tipping in these new settings vary widely.

Some customers tip no matter what. Others feel guilty if they don’t tip or embarrassed if their tip is stingy. And others eschew tipping for a $5 iced coffee, saying the price is already high enough.

“The American public feels like tipping is out of control because they’re experiencing it in places they’re not used to,” said Lizzie Post, co-president of the Emily Post Institute and its namesake’s great-great-granddaughter. “Moments where tipping isn’t expected makes people less generous and uncomfortable.”

Starbucks has rolled out tipping this year as an option for customers paying with credit and debit cards. Some Starbucks baristas told CNN that the tips are adding extra money to their paychecks, but customers shouldn’t feel obligated to tip every time.

One barista in Washington State said that he understands if a customer doesn’t tip for a drip coffee order. But if he makes a customized drink after spending time talking to the customer about exactly how it should be made, “it does make me a little bit disappointed if I don’t receive a tip.”

“If someone can afford Starbucks every day, they can afford to tip on at least a few of those trips,” added the employee, who spoke under the condition of anonymity.

The option to tip is seemingly everywhere today, but the practice has a troubled history in the United States.

Tipping spread after the Civil War as an exploitative measure to keep down wages of newly-freed slaves in service occupations. Pullman was the most notable for its tipping policies. The railroad company hired thousands of Black porters, but paid them low wages and forced them to rely on tips to make a living.

Critics of tipping argued that it created an imbalance between customers and workers, and several states passed laws in the early 1900s to ban the practice.

In “The Itching Palm,” a 1916 diatribe on tipping in America, writer William Scott said that tipping was “un-American” and argued that “the relation of a man giving a tip and a man accepting it is as undemocratic as the relation of master and slave.”

But tipping service workers was essentially built into law by the 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act, which created the federal minimum wage that excluded restaurant and hospitality workers. This allowed the tipping system to proliferate in these industries.

In 1966, Congress created a “subminimum” wage for tipped workers. The federal minimum wage for tipped employees has stood at $2.13 per hour — lower than the $7.25 federal minimum — since 1991, although many states require higher base wages for tipped employees. If a server’s tips don’t add up to the federal minimum, the law says that the employer must make up the difference. But this doesn’t always happen. Wage theft and other wage violations are common in the service industry.

The Department of Labor considers any employee working in a job that “customarily and regularly” receives more than $30 a month in tips as eligible to be classified a tipped worker. Experts estimate there are more than five million tipped workers in the United States.

Just how much to tip is entirely subjective and varies across industries, and the link between the quality of service and the tip amount is surprisingly weak, Lynn from Cornell said.

He theorized that a 15% to 20% tip at restaurants became standard because of a cycle of competition among customers. Many people tip to gain social approval or with the expectation of better service. As tip levels increase, other customers start tipping more to avoid any losses in status or risk poorer service.

The gig economy has also changed tipping norms. An MIT study released in 2019 found that customers are less likely to tip when workers have autonomy over whether and when to work. Nearly 60% of Uber customers never tip, while only about 1% always tip, a 2019 University of Chicago study found.

What makes it confusing, Lynn said, is that “there’s no central authority that establishes tipping norms. They come from the bottom up. Ultimately, it’s what people do that helps establish what other people should do.”

You should almost always tip workers earning the subminimum wage such as restaurant servers and bartenders, say advocates and tipping experts.

When given the option to tip in places where workers make an hourly wage, such as Starbucks baristas, customers should use their discretion and remove any guilt from their decision, etiquette experts say. Tips help these workers supplement their income and are always encouraged, but it’s okay to say no.

Etiquette experts recommend that customers approach the touch screen option the same way they would a tip jar. If they would leave change or a small cash tip in the jar, do so when prompted on the screen.

“A 10% tip for takeaway food is a really common amount. We also see change or a single dollar per order,” said Lizzie Post. If you aren’t sure what to do, ask the worker if the store has a suggested tip amount.

Saru Jayaraman, president of One Fair Wage, which advocates to end subminimum wage policies, encourages customers to tip. But tips should never count against service workers’ wages, and customers must demand that businesses pay workers a full wage, she said.

“We’ve got to tip, but it’s got to be combined with telling employers that tips have to be on top, not instead of, a full minimum wage,” she said.

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How to tell Amazon to tip your delivery driver $5

Amazon has announced a new initiative for the holiday season that will allow users to tip their delivery drivers $5 – at no cost to the customer.

Beginning this month, Amazon consumers are able to use Alexa-enabled devices to send a “thank you” to those who deliver their packages. 

“Starting December 7, any time a customer says ‘Alexa, thank my driver,’ the driver who delivered their most recent package will be notified of the customer’s appreciation,” Amazon said in a press release. “And, in celebration of this new feature, with each thank-you received from customers, drivers will also receive an additional $5, at no cost to the customer.”

AMAZON TESTS ALLOWING INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS TO USE PERSONAL VEHICLES FOR DELIVERIES

This picture taken on July 4, 2022 shows the logo of Amazon, a major online shopping company, displayed at Amazon Amagasaki Fulfillent Center in Amagasaki, Hyogo, Japan. (Photo by KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

The free $5 tip feature is only applicable to the first 1 million drivers thanked with the new technology.

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Amazon has also announced that the feature will be used for a company-wide competition, with the drivers who receive the most thank-yous winning a small cash prize.

“The five drivers who receive the most customer ‘thank-you’s’ during the promotional period, will also be rewarded with $10,000 and an additional $10,000 to their charity of choice.”

AMAZON SUED FOR ALLEGEDLY STEALING MORE THAN $1M IN TIPS FROM DELIVERY DRIVERS

Browsing the Amazon webpage on an iPad. (iStock / iStock)

The promotion comes following a recently announced lawsuit claiming that Amazon has been siphoning tips away from its drivers.

Washington, D.C., Attorney General Karl Racine is suing Amazon alleging that the e-commerce juggernaut stole tips from delivery drivers over the course of several years in order to subsidize its own labor expenses. 

The suit, which also names Amazon Logistics as a defendant in the case, claims that between 2016 and 2019, “Amazon misled consumers to believe that they were paying tips directly to their delivery drivers through Amazon’s online delivery portal, and that those tips were increasing driver pay by the consumer-designated amounts.”

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A parcel from the online retailer Amazon stands in a DHL transporter for parcel delivery. (Sebastian Gollnow/picture alliance via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Instead, the company is accused of using them “to pay a portion of the amounts Amazon had already promised its drivers—thereby subsidizing Amazon’s labor costs,” according to the 17-page lawsuit.

FOX Business’ Daniella Genovese contributed to this report.

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Always On Display draining your Galaxy phone battery? Here’s a tip to deal with it

Always On Display (AOD) has been a feature on Samsung phones for a long time (it’s finally on iOS, too, and Apple probably thinks it has the better implementation, but that’s an argument for another time). It can be quite draining on the battery, though, so it’s not easy to ignore the urge to turn it off altogether, especially on Galaxy devices with small batteries, like the Galaxy Z Flip 3/4 or the base Galaxy S22 model.

But hold on: do you really need to turn the feature off? Well, that was true for many years, but in recent One UI versions (4.x onwards, from what we know), AOD doesn’t have to be all that draining thanks to a setting that turns it on only when you have new notifications, which kind of works like a replacement for the old LED notification light Samsung phones used to have.

Set Always On Display on your Samsung phone to turn on only for notifications

Unless you’re getting notifications virtually every minute of the day, this particular setting is something everyone should try out. To set AOD to turn on only for new notifications, just open the Settings app, select Lock screen, tap Always On Display, then select the Show for new notifications option (refer the screenshots below for guidance). That’s it.

Once AOD is set up that way, it will only keep your screen lit up as long as there’s a new notification that you haven’t checked or cleared from the notification shade. And, in the process, save your device battery compared to having AOD turned off all day, while still using more battery than the options to show AOD only when the screen is tapped or scheduled to show at certain times. A good middle ground, basically.

Do you use Always On Display on your Samsung Galaxy smartphone? Let us know down in the comments!

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Sen. Warren ‘very worried’ the Federal Reserve ‘is going to tip this economy into recession’

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said Sunday she’s “very worried” that measures taken by the Federal Reserve to tame inflation are going to put “millions” of Americans out of work.

During an appearance on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Warren said she’s concerned that the Fed’s continued raising of interest rates could “tip” the country into a recession.

“I am very worried about this, because the causes of inflation, things like the fact that COVID is still shutting down parts of the economy around the world, that we still have supply chain kinks, that we still have a war going on in Ukraine that drives up the cost of energy and that we still have these giant corporations that are engaging in price gouging,” she said. 

“There is nothing in raising the interest rates, nothing in Jerome Powell’s tool bag that deals directly with those, and he has admitted as much in congressional hearings when I’ve asked him about it,” she continued. “Do you know what’s worse than high prices and a strong economy? It’s high prices and millions of people out of work. I’m very worried that the Fed is going to tip this economy into recession.”

Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaks during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol on July 22, 2020. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images / Getty Images)

FED’S POWELL PLEDGES TO COMBAT INFLATION ‘FORCEFULLY,’ BUT WARNS OF ECONOMIC PAIN AHEAD

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell on Friday delivered a stark message on the state of the U.S. economy at the annual central bank gathering in Wyoming: Inflation remains painfully high, and cooling it will require forceful action that could soon bring “pain” to households and businesses nationwide. 

Sen. Elizabeth Warren and other progressive lawmakers call for reimposing a nationwide eviction moratorium, at the Capitol, Sept. 21, 2021. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite / AP Images)

In his hotly anticipated speech at the Kansas Federal Reserve’s Jackson Hole symposium, Powell reiterated a pledge to “forcefully” fight inflation that is still running near the hottest pace in 40 years and wrestle it closer to the Fed’s 2% goal. 

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference in Washington, July 27, 2022. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP Images)

“While higher interest rates, slower growth and softer labor market conditions will bring down inflation, they will also bring some pain to households and businesses,” he said. “These are the unfortunate costs of reducing inflation. But a failure to restore price stability would mean far greater pain.”

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Even with four consecutive interest rate hikes, including two back-to-back 75-basis-point increases, Powell stressed that the Fed is not in a place to “stop or pause” – an unwelcome sign for investors who were predicting a rate cut next year. 

Fox News’ Megan Henney contributed to this report.

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Langya henipavirus: New virus found in China could be ‘tip of the iceberg’ for undiscovered pathogens, researchers say

The virus, dubbed Langya henipavirus, infected nearly three dozen farmers and other residents, according to a team of scientists who believe it may have spread directly or indirectly to people from shrews — small mole-like mammals found in a wide variety of habitats.

The pathogen did not cause any reported deaths, but was detected in 35 unrelated fever patients in hospitals in Shandong and Henan provinces between 2018 and 2021, the scientists said — a finding in tune with longstanding warnings from scientists that animal viruses are regularly spilling undetected into people around the world.

“We are hugely underestimating the number of these zoonotic cases in the world, and this (Langya virus) is just the tip of the iceberg,” said emerging virus expert Leo Poon, a professor at the University of Hong Kong’s School of Public Health, who was not involved in the latest study.

However, the researchers say there is no evidence the Langya virus is spreading between people or that it had caused a local outbreak of connected cases. More study on a larger subset of patients is needed to rule out human-to-human spread, they added.

Veteran emerging infectious disease scientist Linfa Wang, who was part of the research team, told CNN that although the new virus was unlikely to evolve into “another ‘disease X’ event,” such as a previously unknown pathogen that sparks an epidemic or pandemic, “it does demonstrate that such zoonotic spillover events happen more often than we think or know.”

In order to reduce the risk of an emerging virus becoming a health crisis, “it is absolutely necessary to conduct active surveillance in a transparent and internationally collaborative way,” said Wang, a professor at the Duke-National University of Singapore Medical School.

Tracking a new virus

The first clues to the presence of a novel virus emerged when a 53-year-old farmer sought treatment at a hospital in Shandong province’s Qingdao city in December, 2018 with symptoms including a fever, headache, cough and nausea, according to documentation from the researchers.

As the patient indicated she had contact with animals within the past month, she was enrolled in additional screening being conducted across three hospitals in eastern China focused on identifying zoonotic diseases.

When this patient’s test samples were examined, scientists found something unexpected — a virus that had never been seen before, related to the Hendra and Nipah viruses, highly fatal pathogens from a family not typically known for easy human-to-human spread.

Over the next 32 months, researchers across the three hospitals screened for this virus in similar patients, ultimately detecting it in 35 people, who had a range of symptoms included cough, fatigue, headache, and nausea, in addition to fever.

Nine of those patients were also infected with a known virus, like influenza, so the source of their symptoms was unclear, but researchers believe symptoms in the remaining 26 could have been cased by the novel henipavirus.

Some displayed severe symptoms like pneumonia or abnormalities of thrombocytopenia, a blood platelet condition, according to Wang, but their symptoms were a far cry those seen in Hendra or Nipah patients, and no one among the group died or was admitted to the ICU. While all recovered, they weren’t monitored for longer-term problems, he added.

Of that group of 26, all but four were farmers, and while some were flagged by the same hospital as the initial case detected, many others were found in Xinyang, more than 700 kilometers (435 miles) away in Henan.

Because similar viruses were known to circulate in animals from southwestern China to South Korea it was “not surprising” to see spillover into humans occurring across such long distances, Wang explained.

There was “no close contact or common exposure history among the patients” or other signs of human-to-human spread, Wang and his colleagues wrote in their findings. This suggests cases were sporadic, but more research was needed, they said.

Once they knew a new virus was infecting people, the researchers, who included Beijing-based scientists and Qingdao disease control officials, got to work to see if they could uncover what was infecting the patients. They tested domesticated animals where patients lived for traces of past infection with the virus, and found a small number of goats and dogs that may have had the virus previously.

But the real breakthrough came when they tested samples taken from small wild animals captured in traps — and found 71 infections across two shrew species, leading the scientists to suggest these small, rodent-like mammals could be where the virus naturally circulates.

What remains unclear is how the virus got into people, Wang said.

Further studies screening for Langya henipavirus would follow and should be conducted not only in the two provinces were the virus was found, but more widely within China and beyond, he said.

China’s National Health Commission did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether monitoring for new infections of the virus was ongoing.

Risk reduction

Globally, 70% of emerging infectious diseases are thought to have passed into humans via contact with animals, in a phenomenon scientists say has accelerated as growing human populations expand into wildlife habitats.

China has seen major outbreaks from emerging viruses in the past two decades, including SARS in 2002-2003 and Covid-19 — both first detected in the country and from viruses thought to originate in bats.

The devastating effects of both diseases — particularly Covid-19 that has to date killed more than 6.4 million people worldwide — demonstrate the importance of identifying cases of novel viruses quickly, and sharing the information about potential risks.

Scientists not involved in the new research agreed more work was needed to understand the Langya virus and confirm the latest findings, and said the discovery underlined the importance of tracking which viruses may be spreading from animals to people.

“Because this (new henipavirus) may not be only circulating in China, sharing this information and allowing others to get prepared or do some further investigation in their own countries is important,” said Poon in Hong Kong.

Scientists say critical questions need to be answered about how widespread the new virus may be in nature, how it is spilling into people and how dangerous it is to human health — including the potential for it to spread between people or gain this ability if it continues to jump from animals into humans.

The geographic span of where the infections have been found “suggests that this infection risk is rather widespread,” said virologist Malik Peiris, also of the University of Hong Kong, adding studies elsewhere in China and neighboring countries were important “to ascertain the geographic range of this virus in the animals (shrews) and in humans.”

He, too, said the latest findings hinted at the large number of undetected infections spilling over from wildlife to people, and the need for systematic studies to understand not just this virus, but the broader picture of human infection with viruses from wildlife.

“This is important so that we are not taken unawares by the next pandemic, when — not if — it comes,” he said.

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Health Chief Warns Polio Case Could Be ‘Tip of the Iceberg’

New York State health officials on Thursday intensified their push for people who have not been immunized against polio to get vaccinated “right away,” saying the one confirmed case of the disease found in the state may be “the tip of the iceberg” of a much wider threat.

The urgent call came as officials said polio had been detected in wastewater samples taken in several locations and at different times in two counties north of New York City, potentially signaling community spread of the disease.

“Based on earlier polio outbreaks, New Yorkers should know that for every one case of paralytic polio observed, there may be hundreds of other people infected,” Dr. Mary T. Bassett, the state’s health commissioner, said in a statement.

“Coupled with the latest wastewater findings,” Dr. Bassett added, “the department is treating the single case of polio as just the tip of the iceberg of much greater potential spread.”

Polio is caused by the poliovirus and children under 5 are most at risk of contracting it, but anyone who is unvaccinated is at risk. Polio is highly contagious, typically spreading from person to person when someone comes into contact with the feces of an infected person and then touches their mouth.

Many cases are asymptomatic, and some can cause flulike symptoms, but the disease, also known as poliomyelitis, can be disabling and even life-threatening. There is no cure.

Paralysis is a rare outcome, but before vaccines were widely available in the 1950s, polio outbreaks caused more than 15,000 cases of paralysis a year.

Last month, a case of polio — the first to be reported in the United States in nearly a decade — was identified in an unvaccinated adult man in Rockland County. No cases had originated in the United States since 1979.

State and county health officials said the infection in Rockland County had been transmitted from someone who received the oral polio vaccine, which has not been administered in the United States since 2000.

The virus circulating in New York may have originated outside the United States, where the oral vaccine is still administered, officials said. The oral vaccine contains weakened virus. It is safe, but if vaccine-derived virus circulates in a community, it can infect unvaccinated people and spread the disease.

In announcing the case, officials emphasized that the infected person was no longer contagious and said that their efforts would focus on increasing rates of vaccination and on determining whether anyone else might have been affected.

Officials have said that polio had been found in Rockland County wastewater samples taken in June, before the polio case was confirmed. On Thursday, they said evidence of the illness had also been found in wastewater samples taken in June and July from two “geographically different” parts of Orange County, which is adjacent to Rockland.

“The findings,” the state Health Department said in a news release, “provide further evidence of local — not international — transmission of a polio virus.”

There was no indication that the infected man in Rockland County was the source of the polio found in the wastewater samples, officials said. The investigation into the virus’s origin is continuing.

Because widespread vaccination has proved to be an effective prevention strategy, areas with low immunization rates can be at particular risk of an outbreak.

In both Rockland and Orange Counties, about 60 percent of 2-year-olds have received all three doses of the polio vaccine, according to state data — a considerably lower rate than the 80 percent in the rest of the state excluding New York City. (To achieve herd immunity for polio, the target vaccination rate is 80 percent, according to the World Health Organization.)

Most adults in the United States need not get vaccinated against polio because they most likely were immunized as children, although some may be eligible for booster shots if they have an increased risk of exposure.

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The US’s selfish war on inflation will tip the world into recession | Phillip Inman

Later in July US interest rates are expected to jump for a second time this year, and that’s going to wreck any chance of a global recovery.

The Federal Reserve could push its base rate up by as much as a full percentage point, ending 15 years of ultra-cheap money, intended to promote growth.

This jump, to a range of 2.5%-2.75%, would take the cost of borrowing money in the US to more than double the Bank of England’s 1.25%. And yet the Fed could just be taking a breather as it contemplates even higher rates.

This column, though, is not about the US. It is concerned with the terrible impact on Britain and countries across the world of America’s selfish disregard when it decides to tackle high inflation with higher borrowing costs. Britain is already feeling the effects of the Fed’s pledge to tackle inflation until it is “defeated”, come what may.

Higher interest rates in the US make it a more attractive place for investors to store their money. To take full advantage, investors must sell their own currency and buy dollars, sending the price of dollars rocketing higher.

In July the US dollar increased in value against a basket of six major currencies to a 20-year high. The euro has slipped below parity with the dollar in the last few days. The pound, which has plunged by more than 10% this year to below $1.20, is losing value with every week that passes.

In Japan, the central bank has come under huge pressure to act after the yen tumbled to its lowest level against the dollar since 1998.

There are two important knock-on effects for those of us that live and work outside the US.

The first is that goods and raw material priced in dollars are much more expensive. And most commodities are priced in dollars, including oil.

Borrowing in dollars also becomes more expensive. And while getting a loan from a US bank is beyond the average British household, companies do it all the time, and especially those in emerging economies, where funds in their backyard can be in short supply.

The Bank of England interest-rate setter Catherine Mann recently said that her main motivation for wanting significant increases in the UK’s lending rates was her fear that the widening gap with the dollar was pushing up import prices. And higher import prices meant higher inflation.

If only she could persuade her colleagues on the Bank’s monetary policy committee that the devaluation of the pound was a serious issue, maybe they would push up the Bank’s base rate in line with the Fed rate increases. After the Fed makes its move, more may join her.

Until January this year, Britain’s inflation surge was on course to be short-lived. Now it seems the Russian invasion of Ukraine and a splurge of untargeted handouts by the Biden administration during the pandemic, which have served to push up prices in America, will keep inflation in the UK high into next year.

Those governments that have borrowed in dollars face a double whammy. Not only will they need to raise domestic interest rates to limit the impact of import price rises, they will also face a massive jump in interest payments on their dollar borrowings.

Emerging markets and many developing-world countries will be broke when these extra costs are combined with a loss of tourism from the Covid pandemic. Sri Lanka has already gone bust and many more could follow.

For the past three decades, western banks have marketed low-cost loans across the developing world as a route to financial freedom.

Zambia’s government borrowed heavily before the pandemic to become self-sufficient in electricity. It is a laudable aim, but has left the central African state with a ratio of debt to national income (GDP) much the same as France’s – about 110%.

The problem for Zambia is not the same as for France, which pays an interest rate of 1.8% to finance its debts, measured by the yield on its 10-year bonds. The Zambian 10-year bond commands a rate of 27%. Now Zambia, like France and so many other countries, must borrow simply to live. To invest is to borrow more.

There is no sign that the US will change course. Joe Biden is in a panic about the midterm elections, when fears of spiralling inflation could favour the Republicans. This panic has spilled over to the Fed, which has adopted hysterical language to persuade consumers and businesses that higher rates are coming down the track and to curb their spending accordingly.

The Fed knows inflation is a problem born of insufficient supply that only governments can tackle. But that doesn’t look like stopping it from pushing the US economy, and everyone else’s, into recession.

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Asian stocks slide as Fed hike fears tip Wall St into bear market

HONG KONG, June 14 (Reuters) – Asian shares slid sharply and the safe-haven dollar held near a two-decade peak on Tuesday after Wall Street hit a confirmed bear market milestone on fears aggressive U.S. interest rate hikes would push the world’s largest economy into recession.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) fell 0.45% in volatile trade, clawing back some of its earlier losses.

Australia’s benchmark S&P/ASX200 (.AXJO) closed 3.55% lower while Japan’s Nikkei stock index (.N225) was down 1.32%, having fallen as much as 2% earlier in the session.

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The negative tone in Asia followed a bleak U.S. session on Monday, which saw Goldman Sachs forecast a 75 basis point interest rate hike at the Federal Reserve’s next policy meeting on Wednesday. read more

However, investors appeared to be shaking off the gloom heading into European trade with the pan-region Euro Stoxx 50 futures up 0.83%, German DAX futures 0.9% higher and FTSE futures rising 0.62%. U.S. stock futures also added 1.17%.

“While there is clearly a risk from a significant policy tightening, it remains unlikely that there will be a fully fledged recession, with the unemployment rate jumping by two or more percentage points,” said Stephen Koukoulas, managing director at the Canberra-based Market Economics.

“Rather, it is certain growth will slow – which is the aim of the policy tightening – and by late this year, inflation pressures should start to ease.”

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index (.HSI) pared earlier losses to be up 0.26% after trading in negative territory for most of the day. China’s CSI300 Index (.CSI300) retraced some of its lost ground to be off 0.23%.

Expectations for aggressive U.S rate hikes have risen after inflation in the year to May shot up by a sharper than predicted 8.6%.

“The U.S. market is the biggest in the world so when it catches a cold the rest of the world does as well,” said Clara Cheong, global market strategist at JP Morgan Asset Management.

“There will be short-term volatility in Asia but we think in the medium to longer term in Asia ex-Japan, earnings expectations have already been downgraded so there is a relatively brighter outlook here than other parts of the world.”

Cheong said China monetary easing and the re-opening of ASEAN economies from COVID-19 lockdowns could shield the region from some of the financial market fallout.

On Wall Street overnight, fears of a U.S. recession kicked the S&P 500 (.SPX) down 3.88%, while the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) lost 4.68%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) fell 2.8%.

The benchmark S&P 500 is now down more than 20% from its most recent record closing high, confirming a bear market, according to a commonly used definition.

Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields hit their highest since 2011 on Monday and a key part of the yield curve inverted for the first time since April as investors braced for the prospect that Fed attempts to stem soaring inflation would dent the economy.

The yield on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes rose to 3.3466% compared with its U.S. close of 3.371% on Monday. The two-year yield , which rises with traders’ expectations of higher Fed fund rates, touched 3.3804% compared with a U.S. close of 3.281%.

In currency markets, the dollar index , which tracks the greenback against a basket of major currencies, was at 104.98, just off a two-decade peak of 105.29 it hit on Monday. read more

Against the Japanese yen, the U.S. currency was at 134.59, just below its recent high of 135.17.

The European single currency rose 0.2% to $1.0432, having lost 2.8% in a month.

Bitcoin fell around 4.5% on Tuesday to $21,416, a fresh 18-month low, extending Monday’s 15% fall as markets were jolted by crypto lender Celsius suspending withdrawals. read more

Oil markets began to recover late in the Asian session with U.S. crude up 0.13% at $121.08 a barrel, having traded down most of Tuesday. Brent crude firmed slightly to $122.42 per barrel.

Gold shrugged off a weaker start with the spot price gaining 0.42% to $1,826.65 per ounce.

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Reporting by Scott Murdoch in Hong Kong; Additional reporting by Alun John; Editing by Sam Holmes

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Brooklyn shooting update live: Suspect Frank James called in tip that led to own arrest

Video shows Frank James being arrested in Manhattan

Suspected terrorist Frank Robert James called in the tip that led to his own arrest after spending 30 hours on the run following Tuesday’s subway shooting, said police.

Mr James reportedly called CrimeStoppers on Wednesday to say he was at a McDonald’s in Manhattan, leading officers to the East Village where he was taken into custody without incident at around 1.40pm.

The 62-year-old has now been charged with one federal count of terrorism and will appear in court on Thursday.

Mr James is accused of shooting 10 people and leaving at least 19 others injured in a horror attack on a Brooklyn subway during Tuesday’s rush hour.

At 8:24am, the gunman donned a gas mask on a packed N train travelling to Manhattan from Sunset Park and opened a gas canister. He then opened fire inside the train and on the station platform as it pulled into 36 Street.

A gun, magazines, gas canisters and fireworks were recovered from the scene and the NYPD recovered a U-Haul van allegedly rented by Mr James.

The motive remains unclear but disturbing YouTube videos show Mr James ranting about Mayor Eric Adams, gun violence, the subway system and NYC’s mental health system.

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Biden thanks law enforcement and first responders for arrest

Following the arrest of the suspect, Joe Biden expressed gratitude to everyone for their efforts leading up to the arrest of Frank James. He said, “we are keeping all those impacted in our prayers and staying in close touch with city officials”.

Shweta Sharma14 April 2022 07:00

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Police looking into motives in Brooklyn subway suspect’s videos

Even after the arrest of Frank James on Wednesday, police were searching for a motive from a flood of details about the 62-year-old Black man’s life.

The alleged shooter posted dozens of videos ranting about race, violence and his struggles with mental illness. Among all, one stands out for its relative calm: A silent shot of a packed New York City subway car in which he raises his finger to point out passengers, one by one.

His videos point at a deep, simmering anger in him with hours of rambling, bigoted, profanity-laced videos on his YouTube channel.

“This nation was born in violence, it’s kept alive by violence or the threat thereof, and it’s going to die a violent death,” said Mr James in a video where he takes on the moniker “Prophet of Doom.”

Police said their top priority was getting the suspect, now charged with a federal terrorism offense, off the streets as they investigate their biggest unanswered question: Why?

His YouTube videos are likely to play as a prime trove of evidence in the investigation. A federal criminal complaint cited one in which James ranted about too many homeless people on the subway and put the blame on New York City’s mayor. “What are you doing, brother?” he said in the video posted March 27. “Every car I went to was loaded with homeless people. It was so bad, I couldn’t even stand.”

Shweta Sharma14 April 2022 06:33

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Eric Adams says New Yorkers have been ‘abandoned and betrayed for years’

Speaking remotely at a press conference after testing positive for Covid, New York mayor Eric Adams said New Yorkers will not be betrayed anymore and he is committed in doing so, as he delivered a passionate speech announcing the suspect’s arrest.

“The failures of those with mental health, homelessness, the failure of our educational system did not start January 2022,” Mr Adams said. “We have abandoned and betrayed New Yorkers for years. That betrayal is going to stop, and I’m committed to doing so.”

He indicated that most crimes receive less attention because the victims were Black.

“Here’s my question that I put out to the city — I thought Black Lives Matter. Where are all those who stated Black Lives Matter?” Mr Adams said.

“If Black Lives Matter, then the thousands of people I saw on the street when Floyd was murdered should be on the street right now stating that the lives of these Black children that are dying every night matters. We can’t be hypocrites,” he added.

Shweta Sharma14 April 2022 06:15

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Witnesses say the suspect was arrested ‘without struggle’

An eyewitness, Lee Lloyd, who was working inside his bar at the St Marks Place in East Village, said Frank R James “went without a struggle” when he was put in a police car.

He said “everybody’s on edge because of what happened yesterday, obviously”, according to the New York Times. “When we saw five cop cars come through, I was like, ‘Oh, man, what now?’”

Several police cars were driving around McDonald’s after Mr James himself called the police and said he was there, before he left the place.

Another eyewitness, Aleksei Korobow, a software worker, said everyone who witnessed the arrest was in shock.

“He was just casually walking here,” Mr Korobow said.

Frank James, the suspect in the Brooklyn subway shooting walks outside a police precinct in New York City

(REUTERS)

Shweta Sharma14 April 2022 05:30

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‘Thank you Zack’: A Syrian man becomes NYC hero after spotting suspect

A Syrian man, 21, who helped NYPD police catch the person of interest in the Brooklyn subway shooting, is being hailed as a hero with #Thankyouzack trending on Twitter after he followed the suspected shooter and alerted the officers.

Zach Tahhan, who works as a security camera technician, was fixing the security system for a shop near St Marks Place and First Avenue in Manhattan’s East Village when he spotted a man walking on the street matching to the photos of James.

“I thought, ‘Oh my God, this is the guy, we need to get him.’ He was walking down the street, I see the car of the police, I said, ‘Yo, this is the guy!’,” he told reporters.

He said he ran onto the street and followed the suspect while warning everyone around him to keep their distance.

“People think I am crazy, like maybe I am on drugs. But I’m not. I’m fasting,” he said, referring to his Ramadan fast.

Prior to Mr Tahhan spotting him, Mr Jams himself gave a tip to police by calling in and saying he was in McDonald’s. But he left before the police arrived.

It is not yet confirmed if it was Mr Tahhan’s actions that led to his arrest. But he was cheered and clapped by onlookers as he was taken in the police car for the investigation.

Shweta Sharma14 April 2022 04:45

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Suspected terrorist Frank James documented his journey from Milwaukee to New York on YouTube

In a series of recent YouTube videos, Frank James documented his journey from packing up his apartment in Milwaukee to hiring a U-Haul van in Philadelphia to heading to New York, where he is accused of carrying out Tuesday’s attack.

He spoke of how the prospect of returning to the “danger zone” of Philadelphia had triggered negative thoughts, and that he had suffered from “post-traumatic stress”.

Mr James said in a clip uploaded on 23 February titled “negrotude” that his tax refund had been more than he was expecting, and he was using the several thousand dollars to fund his upcoming trip.

He’d been getting the “shakes” after trying to give up drinking, he said.

On 21 March, Mr James posted a clip apparently from Fort Wayne, Indiana. “Doomsday is actually about to be here,” he says in the clip.

Four days later, Mr James was seen driving through Philadelphia. Days later, he says he’s checked into a Best Western in Bordentown, New Jersey.

“Here I am, back, back, back in the place where all my troubles started,” he says.

“The state of f***ing stinking New Jersey, sitting here in Bordentown the next couple of days. And as you saw, the end of my journey, or part of the end of my journey, in Philadelphia, at my storage facility, getting everything put away.”

Mr James says he is only staying in New Jersey for a couple of days.

“Damage is just too deep. Damage is just way too f***ing deep. And so I think the second phase of what took place on 9/11 is about to take place. And that’s why Putin’s over here sabre-rattling.”

In one recent chilling video, Mr James says that he’s “made up his mind” that he “may have to hurt somebody”.

“Because there’s no way that I’m going to do what society asks me to do, which is to try to be—to work hard to play fair, keep my nose to the old grindstone, pull myself by the bootstraps, you know, go to work, pay my taxes, do everything you asked me to do, and then you’re going to smack me in the face.”

Rachel Sharp14 April 2022 01:20

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Brooklyn borough president calls faulty cameras a ‘large concern’

Brooklyn borough president Antonio Reynoso reacted to the news that the 36th Street station’s surveillance cameras failed to capture footage of Tuesday’s shooting in an interview with ABC News this morning.

“The fact that these cameras are not working is a large concern,” Mr Reynoso said.

“There’s a lot of work to do in the city now to check every camera, make sure they’re all working, and also a deeper dive into what happened and what we can do in the future to ensure this doesn’t happen.”

He added that he does not think putting more police officers in subway stations would help prevent future violence.

“I think there are root causes to this violence that exists, mostly mental health at this point, is what we’re seeing in New York City. And that’s where we should be spending resources and energy,” he said.

“More cops to respond to a crime won’t necessarily stop the crime. In this case, this individual was inside a train car – unless you believe that you can put a police officer in every single train car in New York City, which is physically impossible … that’s not the way we’re going to solve that issue.”

Rachel Sharp14 April 2022 01:00

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Governor Kathy Hochul says the ‘epidemic of gun violence that terrorizes communities must end’

Governor Kathy Hochul has vowed to restore “safety” to the streets of New York as she said the “epidemic of gun violence that terrorizes communities must end”.

“Like all New Yorkers, I am deeply grateful that the suspect in yesterday’s subway shooting has been apprehended. I am grateful to law enforcement and every first responder whose heroic efforts helped New York City respond to this horrific incident,” she tweeted following the arrest of the only suspect in the case Frank James.

“The epidemic of gun violence that terrorizes communities must end.

“My pledge to New Yorkers is this: I will fight every day to restore safety, get guns off our streets, & prevent these horrific acts.”

Rachel Sharp14 April 2022 00:40

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Brooklyn shooter said ‘oops’ moments before opening fire, says witness

The Brooklyn shooter said “oops” after launching a smoke bomb and moments before opening fire, according to a witness.

“We have witnesses on the train who said he was sitting in the back corner of the second car and he popped the smoke grenade,” NYPD Chief of Detectives James Essig said during Wednesday’s press conference.

“And we have one witness who says ‘what did you do?’ He goes ‘oops’ and he pops the tube, brandishes the firearm and fires 33 times.”

Mr Essig’s comments supported the account given by one survivor who has spoken out about his encounter with the gunman.

“I looked at him, and I thought to myself he was talking to himself for like a while, so I looked at him, and I was like, this guy must be on drugs,” said Fitim Gjeloshi.

“When [the train] was about to hit 36th Street, we stopped for 5 minutes. He takes out a gas mask from one of his little luggage.

“He opened one of his gas tanks and he said ‘Oops, my bad.’ He pulls out an ax, he drops it, he takes a gun out, he starts shooting.”

Rachel Sharp14 April 2022 00:20

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Motive remains unclear amid questions over whether Sunset Park community was specifically targeted

The motive for Tuesday’s terror attack remains unclear as questions continue to mount over whether the Sunset Park community was specifically targeted by the gunman.

Officials said on Wednesday that the investigation was still ongoing to determine the motive behind Tuesday’s attack.

NYPD Chief of Detectives James Essig said that investigators were looking into the social media posts of accused shooter Frank James.

Mr James posted more than 400 videos on a YouTube channel where he rambled about mental health services, subways, gun violence and racism.

Meanwhile, questions are being asked as to whether the Sunset Park neighbourhood was chosen by the shooter for the attack.

Sunset Park is home to a large community of working class Asian and Latin American immigrants.

New York City’s Asian community members have fallen victim to a growing number of hate crimes over the last year – something that many have attributed to the anti-Asian rhetoric pushed by former President Donald Trump during the Covidi-19 pandemic.

Rachel Sharp14 April 2022 00:00

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Israel’s current polio outbreak is tip of the iceberg – Health Min. D-G

Health Ministry director-general Prof. Nachman Ash addressed the renewed outbreak of polio in Israel on Tuesday morning.

In an interview on the program of Golan Yochpaz and Anat Davidov, he explained that “it is very acute in my eyes. Although the number of cases is small, it is just the tip of the iceberg that indicates infections mainly in Jerusalem, but also all over the country.”

According to Ash, “We must eradicate this disease, it is a disease that can simply be eradicated through vaccines and that is what we are doing. We set out with an extensive vaccination campaign that began in Jerusalem and will spread throughout the country. Children up to the age of 17 are vaccinated with the weakened oral vaccine, two drops, and I very much hope that we will eradicate this disease.”

Ash also clarified that he is aware that there is public fatigue regarding vaccines, following the vaccination campaigns against coronavirus:

“In 2013, there was a similar operation that caught the public’s attention widely, but this time it’s much harder. They’re tired of the coronavirus, of the vaccines, but we just talk about it as much as possible in public outreach. This is extremely important, it is not a big hassle, it is an old vaccine that we are familiar with, so I hope that the public will respond and come and get vaccinated.”

ARAB RESIDENTS of Jerusalem take their children to get the polio vaccine at a Tipat Halav clinic in the Armon Hanatziv neighborhood in 1988. (credit: AYALON MAGGI/GPO)

Who needs to complete the vaccination?

“This is a fairly large number of about 2 million children, with those who have not received two oral vaccines in the past being the ones who need to arrive. Since 2013, we have been vaccinating with two oral vaccines, but there is a large group between 2005-2013, who probably only received one dose and they need to arrive.”

How do you know about vaccines?

“There are several ways, either with the vaccine booklet, whoever kept it, or the small children have to get to the Tipot Halav (Baby Clinics) and the older children to the HMOs and there they will be told. If in doubt — you should get another dose, it is not harmful.”

Will the extra dose be boosted across the country?

“Yes, we started this in Jerusalem and will expand it to the whole country since we have found isolations of the virus in other places outside of Jerusalem,” said Ash. 

When asked about the vaccination of adults, he explained: “Our assumption is that they are vaccinated. The child population has the potential for infecting one another and therefore there is no need for an adult vaccine.”

Ash stressed that despite fears that Israel is not currently dealing with an epidemic: “Certainly not, we have one case of illness, but there is an outbreak of infections that in this case we, because of the possibility of eradicating the virus and because it can cause severe illness and lifelong paralysis, want to eradicate it.”

Referring to the coronavirus situation, he said: “We are not done with it, we have about ten thousand infected every day, we are a little dull to these numbers, these are very large numbers. We are still in the remnants of the fifth wave, slowly descending to lower numbers, and I hope we stabilize at such numbers And that we can continue to live almost as usual.”



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