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Who'll Be The Next World Banker?
The race is on to find a successor to James Wolfensohn, the longtime World Bank president who last week announced plans to retire at the end of May. A good chance for the Washington-based global lender's member countries to boost
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The U.S. Treasury promises an "open, candid and transparent" race, but a number of U.S. officials including Treasury official John Taylor, outgoing Secretary of State Colin Powell and former Environmental Protection Agency head Christine Todd Whitman are being mentioned. "We think it's outrageous," says David Timms of the London-based World Development Movement. Don't expect European governments to protest: "They think it's terrible but see advantages of belonging to a gentlemen's club," says Joseph Stiglitz, the bank's former chief economist. It's a small world, after all.
A New Kind Of Travel Book
With all eyes on Asia's tourist industry in the aftermath of the devastating tsunami, news from Europe's own sector seemed especially bright. VisitBritain, the U.K. tourism authority, announced a record 26.3 million visits for 2004, up 6.6% from the year before, and predicted another record this year. Train operator Eurostar, after several years of decline, reported an increase in passenger traffic, which some attributed to tourism inspired by The Da Vinci Code.
As the world's most popular tourist region, Europe continues to draw crowds. Between January and August last year, tourist arrivals in Europe climbed 6% from a year earlier. Who's traveling? Over four-fifths of Europe's international tourists come from within the region, but external arrivals down since 9/11 have been starting to rebound. But for euro-zone countries, that recovery is being put at risk by the strength of the single currency in fact, the World Tourism Organization suggests tourism in France, Italy and Spain is already hurting from the euro's rise. They can pray for a stronger dollar or a few more Dan Brown sequels set on their turf.
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| The most egregious and unacceptable form of intimidation... in this country in modern times |
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| TOM DONOHUE, CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, on New York State attorney general Eliot Spitzer's crackdown on alleged corporate crime | |||
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