Sunday, April 19, 2026

Virtual Fashion Event Challenges

0

With most public gatherings closed, Vogue and Billy Porter has partnered to launch the #MetGalaChallenge on social media, which is tasking individuals with staying creative during these times of social isolation.

The Met Gala was cancelled this year, but that’s not stopping Vogue from ensuring the world sees some iconic looks. After seeing Billy Porter’s Quarantine Fashion Challenge go viral, Vogue wanted to take things one step further, with a high-fashion, Met Gala twist. To participate in the challenge, individuals just need to create a past Met Gala look from the comfort of their own home. Users can use the #MetGalaChallenge to gain visibility from Porter and the other judges. The selected winners will be featured on Vogue.

Image credit: Kevin Tachman/Mg19/Getty Images For The Met Museum/Vogue

Source link

Quarantine Fashion Photoshoots

0

Virtually every industry is having to rethink their usual operations, including the fashion industry but this Vogue Italia shoot proves there are ways to improvise. Creative remote workers Brianna Capozzi, Haley Woolens and Lauren Perez collaborated with Bella Hadid on a photoshoot over FaceTime, and as Hadid shared on social media, “Times are changing and working from home has a new meaning.”

Due to the current constraints around the world that are in place to support public health and safety, companies are being challenged to get more creative—and as a result, people are getting a more relaxed and casual look into businesses as they share content and campaigns crafted entirely from home.

Image Credit: @bellahadid



Source link

Govt likely to miss tax collection target by around Rs1500 billion

0

ISLAMABAD-The government is likely to miss the tax collection target by around Rs1500 billion during ongoing fiscal year mainly due to inability of Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) and slowdown in economic activities due to coronavirus.

Federal Minister for Planning and Development Asad Umar on Saturday said that tax collection could reduce by Rs1400-Rs1500 billion during ongoing financial year. The federal government had set ambitious tax collection target of Rs5550 billion for the ongoing financial year. However, later, the FBR was continuously missing its monthly tax collection targets. Therefore, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), on the request of Pakistan, had reduced the tax collection target to Rs5270 billion from the budgetary projection of Rs5550 billion.

The FBR was struggling to achieve the revised tax collection target even before the coronavirus. However, the coronavirus has halted the economic activities in the country, which would further dent the FBR’s efforts to achieve the revised tax collection target. The FBR was already facing massive shortfall in tax collection of Rs470 billion in nine months (July to March) of the current fiscal year. The FBR had collected Rs3050 billion in July to March period of the year 2019-20 as against the revised target of 3520 billion, leaving the shortfall at Rs470 billion.

Apart from other issues, the FBR was also facing governance issue after former chairman FBR Shabbar Zaidi went on leave for indefinite period. During this period, the FBR had faced over Rs100 billion shortfall each in January and February and Rs200 billion in March 2020. However, the government has now appointed Nausheen Javaid Amjad as the Chairperson Federal Board of Revenue (FBR). In her maiden interaction with the media after appointment, she said that the FBR would make all efforts to collect each and every due penny for the sake of national exchequer.

The FBR had also appealed to the taxpayers to pay their due taxes in time to increase the funds available with government. The body said that the government will utilize these resources to effectively provide services to the people and will fight the Covid-19 pandemic in a befitting manner.

On the other hand, the uncertainty created by the coronavirus pandemic might also result in shortfall of Rs400 billion in non-tax collection during current fiscal year. The government is unlikely to complete the privatization programme during ongoing fiscal year due to the prevailing situation. The government had projected to generate around Rs400 billion by privatizing the public sector entities before June 30, 2020. The massive shortfall in tax and non tax collection would broaden the budget deficit of the country. Pakistan had committed with the IMF to reduce the budget deficit to 7.2 percent of the GDP (Rs3.15 trillion) in the current fiscal year from all-time high Rs3.44 trillion (8.9 percent of the Gross Domestic Product) in last fiscal year.

The budget is expected to enhance in the second half (January to June) of the current fiscal year due to uncertain economic situation in the country. The government had successfully controlled Pakistan’s budget deficit which was recorded at Rs994.7 billion during first half (July to December) of the current fiscal year despite massive shortfall in tax collection. The country’s expenditures were recorded at Rs4226.6 billion as compared to the revenues of Rs3231.9 billion in July-December period of the ongoing financial year. The budget deficit was recorded at Rs994.7 billion (2.3 percent of the GDP), according to the data of ministry of finance.



Source link

Plastic imports decrease 7.94pc in 8 months of FY2019-20

0

ISLAMABAD -The imports of plastic materials into the country witnessed decline of 7.94 percent during the first eight months of current financial year (2019-20) as compared to the corresponding period of last year.

Pakistan imported plastic worth $1326.052 million during July-February (2019-20) compared to the imports of $1440.492 million during July-February (2018-19), showing negative growth of 7.94 percent, according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS).

In terms of quantity, the imports of plastic witnessed increase of 7.23 percent as the country imported 1,059,006 metric ton of plastic during the period under review compared to the imports of 987,612 metric ton during last fiscal year.

Meanwhile, on year-on-year basis, the plastic imports into the country during February 2020 witnessed increase of 6.53 percent when compared to the imports of the same month of the last year.

The plastic imports during the months under review were recorded at $202.790 million against the imports of $190.354 million during February 2019.

On month-on-month basis, the plastic imports during February 2020 also increased by 15.54 percent when compared to the imports of $175.518 million in January 2020, the data revealed.

It is pertinent to mention here that the country’s merchandise trade deficit plunged by 26.45 percent during the first nine months of the current fiscal year (2019-20) as compared to the deficit of the same months of last year.

During the period under review, the country’s exports registered about 2.23 per cent growth, whereas imports reduced by 14.42 per cent, according the foreign trade statistics, released by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS).

During the period from July-March (2019-20), exports reached to $17.451 billion against the exports of $17.071 billion of the same period of last year, it added.

Meanwhile, the country’s imports witnessed significant decrease of 14.42 % as these went down from $40.679 billion in first nine months of last financial year to $34.814 billion of same period of current financial year, it said.



Source link

G20 ministers struggle to finalise oil output cuts despite US efforts

0

Riyadh -Top oil producers struggled to finalise production cuts during a virtual summit held by G20 energy ministers, despite US President Donald Trump’s mediation efforts to end a standoff with Mexico.

The final G20 communique appeared to gloss over simmering divisions over energy policy, making no mention of output cuts and pledging simply to ensure oil “market stability” amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Mexico was the lone holdout in a record OPEC-led agreement reached a day earlier that would see output slashed by 10 million barrels per day in May and June followed by a gradual reduction in cuts until April 2022.

The standoff had cast doubt on efforts to bolster oil prices, pushed to near two-decade lows by the demand-sapping pandemic and a Saudi-Russia price war that rattled global markets.

The subsequent G20 meeting — hosted by Riyadh — was expected to seal the deal more widely with non-OPEC countries in the group including Mexico, the United States and Canada.

But there was no sign of an agreement in the group’s final statement.

“We commit to ensure that the energy sector continues to make a full, effective contribution to overcoming COVID-19 and powering the subsequent global recovery,” said the statement released early Saturday.

“We commit to take all the necessary and immediate measures to ensure energy market stability.”

There was no sign that countries such as Canada — the world’s fourth largest producer — had committed to specific cuts, with Natural Resources Minister Seamus O’Regan saying the G20 summit “didn’t discuss numbers”.

Under the OPEC deal, Mexico was expected to cut production by 400,000 barrels per day but it resisted the suggestion.

Mexico’s President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said he had reached an agreement with Trump to cut production by only 100,000 bpd.

He added that Trump had agreed to cut US production by 250,000 bpd “as compensation” for Mexico.

Trump later confirmed the deal, saying the United States will “make up the difference” by cutting “some US production”.

The G20 statement was silent on the Mexico-US deal.

The tentative production cut deal, which hinges on Mexico’s consent for it to take effect, marked a possible end of the price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia.

Both oil producers took on the lion’s share of the cuts as they agreed to slash output to around 8.5 million bpd, according to Bloomberg News.

“Our global energy systems, from producers to consumers, is in uncharted territory and it is our responsibility to find the path forward,” Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman told the G20 gathering.

“Saudi Arabia urges all G20 members, including Mexico, as well as invited countries to take appropriate and extraordinary measures to stabilise market conditions.”

Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak also urged the G20 ministers to act in a spirit of “partnership and solidarity”, according to a local television station.

https://www.nation.com.pk/15-Sep-2022/participation-of-women-team-in-int-l-event-beginning-of-a-new-era-haroon-malik

OPEC Secretary General Mohammad Barkindo warned the global crude storage capacity would be exhausted before the end of May because of a supply glut and a “jaw-dropping” drop in demand.

“There is a ghostly spectre encircling the oil industry,” Barkindo told the ministers.

“We need to act now, so we can come out of (the) other side of this pandemic with the strength of our industry intact.”

The impact of the tentative deal on prices was not immediately clear as the global oil markets were shut on Friday for the Easter weekend.

But Stephen Innes, an analyst at AxiCorp, said the supply cuts were “less than the market hoped for” given the hit to demand from coronavirus lockdowns throughout the world.

“The deal currently tabled will only partially offset oil price distress,” he said.

“The storm clouds for oil prices will only completely dissipate when lockdowns are lifted.”

Rystad Energy also said the cuts were not enough to restore market equilibrium.

“The proposed 10 million bpd cut for May and June will keep the world from physically testing the limits of storage capacity and save prices from falling into a deep abyss,” the energy research firm said.

“But it will still not restore the desired market balance.”

Oil prices have slumped since the beginning of the year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Compounding the problem, Riyadh and Moscow had both ramped up output in a bid to hold on to market share and undercut US shale producers.

Trump has expressed optimism about the prospects for an agreement after a conference call with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Thursday.

Putin discussed energy developments separately with Trump and Prince Mohammed again on Friday, the Kremlin said.

While the US is not in the OPEC or the wider OPEC+ groups, it is supportive of a reduction in supply in order to stabilise prices and breathe new life into its shale industry.

Shale has transformed the US into the world’s top producer, but the industry cannot sustain its high cost base as prices collapse.



Source link

Quick Read

0

PCMEA wants committee formation to assess export industry situation
LAHORE – The Pakistan Carpet Manufacturers and Exporters Association (PCMEA) on Saturday called for constituting a committee comprising stakeholders and experts to assess export sector’s losses in the prevailing situation and formulate a policy accordingly for revival of the.

Source link

Fed policymakers working to limit damage as pandemic puts US economy on pause

0

WASHINGTON -The U.S. economy was on a strong footing before the coronavirus pandemic and Federal Reserve officials are working to help the economy rebound quickly once businesses that were shuttered because of the virus begin to reopen, two policymakers said.

Economic numbers could get “very ugly” in the near term because of that halt to activity, but policymakers are doing what they can to support the businesses and consumers affected the most, Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester said.

“What public policy needs to do, and this includes the Fed, is to help ensure that the shutdown in activity that is being felt doesn’t cause lasting damage to the economy,” Mester said during a virtual forum organized by the City Club of Cleveland. “And to make sure that we give aid and relief to the employees and workers and the businesses that are bearing the brunt of that shutdown.”

Close to 17 million Americans filed for unemployment benefits in the last three weeks, according to data released Thursday by the Labor Department, revealing the scale of the shock reverberating through the U.S. economy as businesses across the country shuttered to slow the spread of the virus.

The U.S. economy “has been placed in hibernation. Its temperature has been brought down. It can be revived without permanent damage,” Federal Reserve vice chair Randal Quarles said in a web presentation hosted by the University of Utah. “The measures we have taken in conjunction with the Treasury and additional measures that Congress has put in place are designed to ensure that the hibernation period we can go through with the least amount of damage, and I believe we will do that.”

Congress and the Fed have acted rapidly over the course of a few weeks to approve trillions of dollars in benefits and loans meant to reach every household and business in the country. Fed officials slashed rates to zero, launched open-ended bond purchases and introduced a suite of emergency lending tools.

However, the roll-out for some of the federal aid programs has been rocky. State unemployment insurance systems have struggled to process claims from the millions of newly unemployed, and the Small Business Administration has been overwhelmed with applicants for small business loans.

On Friday, Mester said the process for returning to work will be determined by health officials and that it will need to happen in stages. Until then, the Fed is working to make sure markets are functioning smoothly and that the households and businesses in need of credit can access it, she said.

Quarles said it would probably be two to three weeks before the Fed’s own new “Main Street” lending program, which will offer loans to medium-sized businesses, would be up and running.

“We are putting together the mechanisms for that credit to be distributed through the banks,” Quarles said of the program that would make up to $600 billion in loans available to mostly mid-sized companies. Final details are “probably two to three weeks away,” Quarles said.



Source link

Byco Refinery resumes production due to improved POL demand

0

LAHORE -Pakistan’s premier oil refining company, Byco Petroleum Pakistan Limited (BPPL) has informed that it has resumed production. In late march, the Ministry of Energy had issued an order to stop all import of petroleum products to all oil marketing companies to ensure that domestic refineries products are fully consumed. Fayaz Ahmad Khan, Vice President of Commercial at BPPL said: “Due to improved POL demand across the country, Byco has resumed production at its oil refinery.”

Khan praised the Ministry of Energy in its efforts to support the domestic refining industry: “We request the government to kindly abolish the IFEM, deregulating the pricing of petroleum products. This will allow market players to compete on prices and services, and save consumers money. Byco thanks the Ministry of Energy for its strong support to the E&P and refining sectors by halting the import of petroleum products since April 1st. Byco is hopeful that the Ministry can continue to facilitate improving demand for products so that we can raise our capacity utilization through firm consistent orders from OMC’s.”

Demand for petroleum products had earlier dwindled in Pakistan as a result of the closure of all schools in the country and the subsequent nationwide lockdowns. The Ministry of Energy therefore took the measure of banning import of all petroleum products. Byco had put its refinery in “cold circulation” earlier due to drying up of demand. Byco stands tall with the nation in showing resilience in the face of the pandemic and is confident Pakistan will emerge stronger as we eventually recover from this crisis.



Source link

Petroleum Div extends its unfailing support to govt

0

ISLAMABAD-Petroleum Division (Ministry of Energy) has extended its unfailing support to government of Pakistan in the fight to curb COVID-19 pandemic in country.

The SNGPL (Sui Northern Gas Pipeline Limited Co.) has allocated Rs38 million for relief activities across the country. The Board of Company has directed the company to deposit Rs19 million in Prime Minister’s Relief Fund for Pandemic and committed Rs 19 million to NDMA for procurement of medical supplies.

OGDCL, Oil and Gas Development Company Limited has already deposited the amount of Rs 53 million in Prime Minister’s Relief Fund for Pandemic COVID-19.

Pakistan Petroleum Limited (PPL) has released a handout of Rs10 million for four districts of Sindh with spirit of cash-support for procurement of necessary equipment in the province against COVID-19 pandemic.

Pakistan State Oil (PSO) has also extended support of Rs 50 million in Prime Minister’s Relief Fund for Pandemic COVID-19 with spirit of national responsibility in this challenging time.

Both gas utilities, SNGPL and SSGCL have undertaken immediate measures to facilitate the people during the Covid-19 Pandemic. SNGPL Bill App, recently launched by company, help the public to view their gas bills and pay the same through the mobile application. Same mobile App will be made available by SSGC soon. Moreover, gas bills of next crucial months can be paid through three easy installments amid COVID-19 crisis.

In addition to above, the prices of petroleum products have already been reduced by Rs.15 to provide relief to the common man and was part of the economic relief package announced by the PM.



Source link

Huawei Tech again becomes top corporate patent filer

0

LAHORE -According to the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) data, China’s Huawei Technologies, the world’s biggest maker of telecoms equipment, has become the top corporate patent filer for the third consecutive year. Hence, in a first, China knocks US from top spot in global patent race.

WIPO, which oversees a system for countries to share recognition of patents, said 58,990 applications were filed from China last year, beating out the United States which filed 57,840.

According to WIPO’s Head, Francis Gurry, China’s success was “down to a very deliberate strategy on the part of Chinese leadership to advance innovation and to make the country a country whose economy operates at a higher level of value.” “It is working, and intellectual property is certainly part of that strategy. I would put it down to that broad movement towards becoming a higher-value economy,” he said.

China was the biggest source of applications for international patents in the world last year, pushing the United States out of the top spot it has held since the global system was set up more than 40 years ago, the U.N. patent agency said.

China’s figure was a 200-fold increase in just 20 years, it said. The United States had filed the most applications in the world every year since the Patent Cooperation Treaty system was set up in 1978. More than half of patent applications – 52.4 % – now come from Asia, with Japan ranking third, followed by Germany and South Korea.

Ownership of patents is widely seen as an important sign of a country’s economic strength and industrial know-how.



Source link