NUMBERS
Friday, June 22, 2007
Congress's Honeymoon Winds Down Source: Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg, June 2007.
CEO Pay Rise of the Chinese Consumer
Source: The McKinsey Quarterly, June 2007. Note: Figures adjusted for real yuan, as valued in 2000. Projections based on Q1 2006 forecast. Hair Today
In a June Fox News/Opinion Dynamics survey, 44 percent of those surveyed correctly identified John Edwards as the presidential candidate who recently paid $400 for a haircut. Roughly equal numbers of Democrats, Republicans, and independents knew about it. Source: FoxNews/Opinion Dynamics, June 2007.
Americans had high hopes for the new Congress, but they don't think much has changed. On the question shown below, even Democrats are divided, 47 to 47 percent.


Note: Selected responses shown.
A new survey from the Los Angeles Times and Bloomberg News finds that large majorities of Americans across all political and income lines believe that most CEOs are overpaid. Maybe they should read the story on this subject that ran in our inaugural issue last November. Views of CEO pay, or for that matter the pay for top
Source:
While public attention in recent years has been focused on the ubiquity of Chinese manufactures, multinational corporations are just as interested in China's growth as a nation of consumers. A new study by the McKinsey Quarterly shows that between 1995 and 2005, urban disposable income in China tripled to over $600 billion. By 2025, this figure is expected to quintuple once more. Immigrants to China's cities are fueling the boom as they join a ballooning middle class that will account for over half of China's disposable income by 2015. As the chart below shows, consumption is expected to rise dramatically in every area, but especially in healthcare (11.8% a year) and in discretionary areas such as transportation (9.3%), personal products (9.3%), and recreation (9.5%).

