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О жизни и другой лапше из Австралии / a russian blog about nothing from Australia
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20 Oct 07 Poland could block Russia’s entry to the WTO

from Jayed.us:

Poland threatens to block Russia’s WTO bid over meat dispute Published 15 October , 2007 by Jay MOSCOW, October 15 (RIA Novosti) - Poland could block Russia’s entry to the global trade organization if Moscow fails to lift the 2005 embargo on imports of agricultural products, a deputy agriculture minister said on Monday. “Poland would like Russia to be a WTO member. But if Russia fails to change its approach to Poland [in terms of veterinary control], then we will have to speak out against Russia’s membership in the organization,” Jan Krzysztof Ardanowski told a news conference in Moscow adding that Poland was reluctant to block Russia’s membership. Ardanowski said Russia said its refusal to lift the Polish meat embargo was down to the failure by Poland to meet Russia’s sanitary standards. “The world is trying to introduce uniform standards. And Polish products conform to these demands, which have nothing to do with the norms the Russian side is citing,” he said. The deputy minister said Warsaw believes there are no grounds for the Russian embargo to be continued. He said Russian and EU experts had made inspections at Polish meat plants. “European experts said there were small breaches, while the Russian side said the violations were very serious, which meant Russian representatives doubted [the effectiveness of] all European Union food control systems,” he said. Russia imposed a temporary ban on meat products and fruit and vegetable deliveries from Poland in November 2005 saying Polish companies re-exported the products from third countries representing a threat to sanitary standards. Demanding that Russia lift the embargo, Poland blocked talks on a new Partnership and Cooperation Agreement between Russia and the EU. The current agreement expires in December. Ardanowski said Poland believed there was a link between the Russian embargo and the veto by Poland over the partnership agreement talks, as most EU members, he said, back Warsaw in the meat dispute. Russia’s veterinary watchdog said Monday Russia is ready to discuss lifting its two-year ban on Polish meat imports if meat producers undergo new checks. “The problem is quite simple. We proposed holding inspections and resolving all issues long ago. We are ready to conduct inspections together with European Union representatives, but we have yet to be admitted,” Alexei Alexeyenko, the Russian regulator’s press secretary, told RIA Novosti. “We can’t open our borders to unchecked enterprises,” he said. According to Polish data, before the embargo, the country’s annual earnings from meat exports to Russia were about $560 million, or 5% of total exports.

20 Oct 07 Daimler plans commercial vehicle ventures in India, Russia

from Jayed.us:

Daimler plans commercial vehicle ventures in India, Russia Published 15 October , 2007 by Jay File picture shows a Chrysler 300 in Miami, Florida. The German automaker Daimler plans to…FRANKFURT (AFP) - The German automaker Daimler plans to expand its commercial vehicles division to India and Russia, the Financial Times Deutschland reported Monday, citing management board member Andreas Renschler. Daimler had picked a partner for its market entry in India after months of talks, the newspaper cited Renschler as saying. “We are currently still negotiating contract clauses and will release details shortly,” Renschler said. He also said Daimler planned to build a Mercedes truck in Russia. “We are discussing building a factory for truck assembly,” Renschler told the newspaper. “We will make a final decision by the end of this year.”

08 Apr 07 U.S. spending of almost $300 billion on knowledge

Forrester Report Claims R&D Studies Are Biased

Despite U.S. spending of almost $300 billion on knowledge, the analyst firm found common flaws: bias, flawed analysis, and shortsightedness.

By Thomas Claburn
InformationWeek
March 5, 2007 02:00 PM

…….Developed nations spend an average of $1,270 per capita per year to improve knowledge yet these investments fail to achieve the desired benefits, according to Forrester’s study.

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The U.S. spent almost $300 billion in public and private money on R&D in 2003, about half of all R&D spending by the 30 member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). America can claim 35% of all patents filed in Europe, Japan, and at home. But such spending doesn’t create jobs or boost the number of goods and services produced by a country — also known as the gross domestic product (GDP).

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“Whether you favor or oppose stem-cell research, strong intellectual property protection, or nanotechnology, you will find an innovation study to support your point of view,” the study says. “Rather than seek the truth, audiences choose and sponsor the studies that confirm their political goals or social biases.”

The report also finds that analysis of national innovation systems are overly simplistic and that they confuse innovation with invention. Invention, as defined by the report, is a subset of innovation and “national employment, power, wealth, and well-being depend more on the deployment of innovations than on the invention itself.”

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