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Showing posts with label Goods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goods. Show all posts

Thursday, June 23, 2011

U.S. industry wary of EU action in tech goods spat (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. technology companies are worried a victory against European Union tariffs at the World Trade Organization last year may not yield the bonanza they expected because of the way the EU intends to implement the decision, industry representatives said on Wednesday.

"The solutions they offered for each of the products were very disappointing and left a lot of ambiguity where there could have been clarity," said John Neuffer, vice president for global policy at the Information Technology Industry Council.

"It left us asking a lot of questions about what was going to happen to these products when they hit the border."

The United States, Japan and Taiwan several years ago challenged EU tariffs on flat-panel computer displays, multi-function printers and television set-top boxes that they said violated the WTO's Information Technology Agreement, or ITA, which eliminated duties on certain tech goods.

A WTO panel broadly backed the three countries in a ruling last year that the EU decided not to appeal.

"We'll comply with this panel, the conclusions, but not more than that," Jean Luc Demarty, a top European trade official, told reporters during a visit to Washington on Tuesday with EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht.

"I know that there are some frustrations here and there. We continue the dialogue, but it will be full compliance by the deadline of the end of June," Demarty said.

U.S. trade officials estimated worldwide trade in the three products at $44 billion in 2009 and said the EU's 27 member states imported about $7 billion worth of that total.

David Weller, a partner with the WilmerHale law firm that has represented U.S. industry in the case, said there were two problems with how the European Commission proposes to comply.

The guidance the commission has provided EU member states gives customs officials a lot of discretion to decide how they are going to classify flat-panel displays and set-top boxes, "not giving any legal certainty that these products will actually get duty-free treatment," Weller said.

There is a similar problem with the guidance for multi-function printers, with the additional concern that the European Commission has decided a portion of them should face a 2.2 percent duty instead of zero, he said.

Neuffer said the industry hoped the EU would offer a better solution before the June 30 deadline for compliance. After that, it will be monitoring U.S. exports of the three products to the EU to see how they are treated by customs officials.

It is possible the United States will have to return to the WTO if it judges the EU is not complying with the panel ruling and no other solution can be reached, Weller said.

(Reporting by Doug Palmer; Editing by Peter Cooney)


Yahoo! News

Sunday, May 29, 2011

When it Comes to Virtual Goods, Men Outspend Women 9 to 1 (PC Magazine)

Women love to shop: it's a common stereotype but one study shows that it doesn't always prove true. As far as the purchase of virtual goods in mobile games goes, men outspend women nine to one, social gaming company MocoSpace has found.

Boston-based MocoSpace culled data from 1,500 anonymous gamers on its mobile platform to determine the different habits men and woman have when it comes to gaming. The study revealed that 53 percent of MocoSpace gamers are male and 47 percent are female. Men spend a bit more time playing games every day, with an average of 21 minutes versus an average of 19 minutes for women.

While men and women seem to spend similar amounts of time playing games, men spend much more on virtual goods. Sixty-nine percent of male gamers buy virtual goods while only 31 percent of women do the same. But men are responsibly for the overwhelming majority of virtual goods that are purchased, buying 90 percent of them.

MocoSpace games include such titles as Street Wars, Stage Hero, and Happy Farms. Founded in 2005, there are 17 million players on the MocoSpace platform.

According to AppData, MocoSpace averages 15,348 daily average users on Facebook.

Another social gaming platform, Zynga, is rumored to be filing for an initial public offering as early as next week. Zynga is behind such popular games as FarmVille and CityVille and has around 250 million users playing its games each month. While Zynga reportedly brought in $400 million in revenue last year, critics have said that the rumored IPO is more evidence of the hotly-debated tech bubble.


Yahoo! News


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