Posts Tagged ‘policy’

India Needs Tighter Monetary Policy to Cool Inflation, RBI Official Says

Posted 29 Jul 2010 — by Rarzi
Category Globalsources

India Needs Tighter Monetary Policy to Cool Inflation, RBI Official Says
India needs “aggressive” monetary policy tightening to slow inflation , a central bank official said, sending bond yields to the highest level in almost three months.

Read more on Bloomberg

Can you explain why the Commerce Claus would not apply to national health care policy as Republicans claim?

Posted 14 May 2010 — by Rarzi
Category Globalsources

The provision of the U.S. Constitution that gives Congress exclusive power over trade activities between the states and with foreign countries and Indian tribes.

Article 1, Section 8, Clause 3, of the Constitution empowers Congress “to regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among several States, and with the Indian Tribes.” The term commerce as used in the Constitution means business or commercial exchanges in any and all of its forms between citizens of different states, including purely social communications between citizens of different states by telegraph, telephone, or radio, and the mere passage of persons from one state to another for either business or pleasure.

Intrastate, or domestic, commerce is trade that occurs solely within the geographic borders of one state. Since it does not move across state lines, intrastate commerce is subject to the exclusive control of the state.

Interstate commerce, or commerce among the several states, is the free exchange of commodities between citizens of different states across state lines. Commerce with foreign nations occurs between citizens of the United States and citizens or subjects of foreign governments and, either immediately or at some stage of its progress, is extraterritorial. Commerce with Indian tribes refers to traffic or commercial exchanges involving both the United States and American Indians.

The Commerce Clause was designed to eliminate an intense rivalry between those states that had tremendous commercial advantage as a result of their proximity to a major harbor, and those states that were not near a harbor. That disparity was the source of constant economic battles between the states. The exercise by Congress of its regulatory power has increased steadily with the growth and expansion of industry and means of transportation.

What not to say to a big insurance company during a policy dispute

Posted 23 Apr 2010 — by Rarzi
Category Companies

What not to say to a big insurance company during a policy dispute
“No judge in the world is going to rule for a 200 billion dollar company,” Anthony Digati is alleged to have told the New York Life Insurance Company. He was wrong about that.

Read more on The Christian Science Monitor