WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. wholesale prices fell in April, reflecting a big decline in gas and energy costs. But outside that drop, inflation was tame.
The Labor Department says the producer price index, which measures price changes before they reach the consumer, dropped 0.2 percent in April. It was the first decline since December and the biggest drop since October.
Excluding volatile food and energy costs, the so-called core index rose 0.2 percent.
For the 12 months that ended in April, wholesale prices have risen just 1.9 percent, the smallest 12-month change since October 2009.
Modest wholesale inflation reduces pressure on manufacturers and retailers to raise prices. That helps keep consumer prices stable.
Gas prices spiked earlier this year. But they have dropped 5 percent since peaking last month.
New food hygiene score legislation will be launched this week - WalesOnline
New legislation to force all food businesses, including takeaways and restaurants, to display their hygiene scores will be launched this week.
If the Food Hygiene Ratings (Wales) Bill is passed, the nation will become the first part of the UK to make it an offence not to display the score publicly.
It is understood businesses, including wholesale food producers, school and hospital canteens, could face a fixed penalty fine of £200 for failing to display their score.
At present, food businesses such as restaurants and takeaways can choose whether to display their hygiene rating, which is based on their compliance with the law.
All the scores – from 0, which means urgent improvement necessary, to five, which means very good – are currently available online.
Scores of three or more are accepted as showing a business is compliant with food hygiene standards and regulations.
Research by the Food Standards Agency, which devised the ratings scheme, found less than a third of food businesses display their score. This falls to just 6% if a business has been given a rating of two or below.
A survey by Consumer Focus Wales has shown overwhelming public support for the mandatory display of hygiene ratings, with 94% saying it should be compulsory.
Liz Withers, head of policy for Consumer Focus Wales, said: “We have campaigned for mandatory display on food hygiene ratings to provide better information to consumers and to help them make more informed decisions about where they chose to eat.
“These proposals provide a real opportunity to drive up standards in premises serving food and reduce food-borne illness.
“The overwhelming majority of people in Wales have told us they want a simple and transparent food hygiene standards system. For that to be effective there has to be mandatory display of food hygiene ratings.
“Under the current voluntary scheme, businesses with poor scores are hiding them away – keeping consumers in the dark.
“Mandatory display will give consumers the information they want, and the power to make safer choices about where they chose to eat.
“We hope the Welsh Government’s bill will help make Wales a beacon of food safety.”
The Food Hygiene Ratings (Wales) Bill is expected to say businesses will be allowed to apply, for a fee, to be re-inspected after it has been awarded a rating and it has carried out any remedial work, rather than wait for their next routine inspection.
But the legislation is not expected to give people automatic access to the inspection reports explaining why a particular rating was awarded.
The ratings are not just based on how food is handled but they also take into account the physical condition of the premises and how the business manages and records what it does to make sure food is safe.
Julie Barratt, director of the Chartered Institute for Environmental Health in Wales, said: “We think this will be good for consumers as it will enable them to make informed decisions about where they buy food and it is good for compliant businesses to be able to show the standards to which they operate.
“As the hygiene ratings scheme gets embedded we hope it will help drive up standards in the food industry and, as a result, help improve public safety.”
A Welsh Government spokesman said: “This is good for consumers and has cross-party support. We are committed to driving up standards in Wales and this Bill will do that by giving everyone information that helps them to make informed choices about where they eat.
“For consumers going out to eat there will be a simple choice between eating at a five or a zero business.”
Mobile Online Shopping Holds The Real Opportunity In Mobile Payments - TechCrunch
Editor’s note: Bill Ready is CEO of Braintree, an online and mobile payments provider.
Every day there is a new headline about mobile payments focused on using a mobile phone to pay at retail locations. Paypal, Google and other industry giants are racing to provide new in-store mobile payment solutions. Large merchants, such as Wal-mart and Target have contemplated their own mobile payment solutions. The debate about whether NFC will be the preferred technology to enable mobile payments rages. However, despite all this press and efforts by industry giants, there is stunningly little traction to use a mobile device to pay at retail locations. This is largely because the solutions offered by industry giants thus far don’t solve a meaningful problem in the daily lives of consumers or merchants. Few things in life are easier for consumers than swiping a credit card at checkout and in-store payment systems are as easy and ubiquitous as dial-tone for merchants.
However, There is a massive mobile commerce opportunity that is a severe pain point for both consumers and merchants, but large industry players are failing to meaningfully address it. That opportunity is e-commerce on the mobile device or m-commerce. M-commerce is ramping up, proving that consumers not only like to shop via their mobile device, but also will purchase. However, the numbers also show that there’s significant room for improvement in the mobile device purchasing experience – mainly through optimizing the shopping and payment processes for consumers.
Online holiday shopping in 2011 showed substantial growth in mobile shopping activity, with both traffic and sales on mobile devices more than doubling their volume over the same period a year earlier, according to research from IBM. During the holiday shopping season, 14.6 percent of all online sessions on a retailer’s site were initiated from a mobile device (up from 5.6 percent the year before), and sales from mobile devices reached 11 percent versus 5.5 percent in December 2010. Clearly, more consumers are becoming comfortable shopping and buying from retailer web sites using their smartphones.
But this volume of mobile shopping is far below the potential. Total time online via mobile device already exceeds the amount of time spent online via traditional desktops and laptops according to data from Flurry. That’s largely because the web browsing capabilities of mobile devices and mobile apps have improved dramatically over the last few years. If consumers spend more time browsing the web on their mobile devices than traditional devices, they’ll ultimately end up shopping and purchasing more on those mobile devices as well. The mobile buying experience just needs to catch-up to where users are already. The opportunity now exists in making the mobile shopping experience as easy as possible for the consumer. This would increase sales and decrease the number of times a consumer gets frustrated with purchasing experiences that haven’t been optimized for mobile and likely abandons the purchase.
Here are four immediately actionable items that e-commerce companies and payment providers can take today to improve mobile purchasing and capture the m-commerce opportunity:
1. One-click checkout: As exemplified by Amazon, nothing beats the one-click checkout experience for online shoppers. The more steps we put between the consumer and the final transaction, the more we risk them dropping off (which, many times means the consumer never returns). This opportunity is amplified on the mobile device where it is significantly more cumbersome to enter your credit card data. E-commerce providers should be using a card vault solution that enables one-click checkout for both online and mobile transactions.
2. Mobile security: Security is an issue whether you’re shopping online using a laptop computer or a mobile phone. However, consumers are more likely to lose a mobile phone than a laptop or desktop and they are less likely to have password protected the phone than the laptop or desktop. Consumers need to know that if they lose their phone or it gets stolen, their credit card information is secure. Taking steps like encrypting credit card data directly on the device as soon as the user enters it or implementing a one-click checkout so that the user never has to enter credit card data on the device help to ensure that if a mobile device is lost or stolen, a fraudster can’t gain access to their credit card data.
3. Speed of transaction: Speed really does matter, particularly in the limited bandwidth environment of the mobile device. If a retailer’s process is not optimized for mobile, they are likely losing sales to a slow and painful experience consumers just don’t have patience for today. Through benchmarking, we have found that just the payment process alone with many payment providers requires multiple round-trips between the mobile device and the payment provider’s servers, some as many as sixteen, just to complete the payment transaction. Look for a payment process that makes a single, efficient round-trip to the server to complete the purchase. Otherwise, the consumer will likely be waiting a very long time for the transaction to complete or may even abandon after clicking purchase.
4. Websites that are fully optimized for the mobile shopping experience: If a consumer has to pan around, pinch and expand things in order to make a purchase, they’re likely not going to do it. Without a site and shopping experience that’s fully optimized for mobile, retailers risk losing the consumers who are shopping on their phones. When a user encounters a site that isn’t mobile optimized, they are increasingly likely to go to other sites that have optimized for mobile since there are a rapidly growing number of sites that are catering to the mobile experience. A good mobile shopping experience is one that is fully optimized for the smaller screen, takes advantage of touch screen technology and also offers a fast checkout in as few steps as possible.
But won’t mobile shopping cannibalize online shopping?
I’ve heard merchants say that optimizing mobile hasn’t been a priority for them in the past because they assume the consumer would just switch devices and fire up the laptop or desktop computer to complete their purchase. While this seems like a perfectly logical assumption, the evidence out there now doesn’t back it up. Mobile browsing didn’t surpass online browsing by cannibalizing online browsing. Traditional online browsing is still growing, but mobile browsing eclipsed traditional browsing through the addition of significant additional browsing time by the user in spare moments away from their computers (we’ve all seen people walking down the street or in the store looking at their mobile device). Therefore, mobile presents added opportunity to make purchases. If you compared this to offline shopping, the mobile device presents an opportunity equivalent to having your storefront on every street corner that a user walks by, given the always-on, always-available nature of mobile browsing.
Chasing the real opportunity
So far, the mobile payments debate has revolved around solving a problem that doesn’t really exist. There are few things in the life of a consumer easier than swiping a card at checkout. There are a number of reasons we’re not seeing major pickup in “use your phone as a credit card” technology, but one of the most significant is that we’re forcing change where it’s not yet needed.
Mobile shopping or m-commerce on the other hand is real and growing rapidly. In a 2011 survey by Pew Research, 25 percent of smartphone users in the U.S. said they do most of their online browsing on their phone. The real opportunity is in converting those browsers – who are growing by the day – into purchasers.
Braintree helps online and mobile businesses process credit card payments by providing a merchant account, payment gateway, recurring billing and credit card storage. The company is disrupting the payments industry by providing elegant tools for developers coupled with white-glove support. Founded in 2007, Braintree works with the world’s most discerning online merchants, including LivingSocial, 37signals, Airbnb, Fab.com, OpenTable, Heroku, Engine Yard and GitHub. The company is processing more than $4 billion in annual credit card volume from more than...
Wholesale handbags and scarves meet present trend - pressbox.co.uk
Added: (Sun May 27 2012)
Pressbox (Press Release) - Ultimate consumers of present world like things which add to the fashion. They are so fond of it that many potential customers pay for it and have it at wholesale price so that they can reduce per unit cost. Whether it is wholesale handbags or it is fashionable scarves in bulk, they prefer it because both add to the attractiveness of the person who takes it. Generally, handbags are used by girls but when it comes to fashion of men, it is wholesale scarves which dominate the market. Scarves has been a part of mens fashion since some decades and now people are very much accustomed to it so there is a part of society who always want to wear scarves for fashion.
Wholesale handbags industry has multiplied since decades due to the fact that handbags or purses have very high demand in the market. If we look back one or two centuries back, there were no such demand for handbags purses, but today, women of all over the world like purses. Previously, manufacturers of handbags purses used to produce it within certain time. This production was enough to supply purses in the market whole year. But today, producers manufacture handbags all year and supply wholesale handbags in the market still there is demand for purses. The main reason behind it is people were not very stylish few centuries back as they liked to live simply whereas people of present generation are very fashionable and look forward to live in style.
On the other hand, if we take up the demand for wholesale scarves, it can be analyzed that the demand for both, handbags and scarves, have increased tremendously in recent years. The reason of increase in demand of wholesale handbags has been discussed before, but what is the reason of increase in demand of wholesale scarves? Scarves are demanded in bulks by the ultimate customers because they need to wear different scarves with different clothes as one scarf will never suit all types of clothes.
Wholesale scarves include different varieties of scarves i.e. the quality, colors and design of scarves differ. Producers manufacture different creative sets of scarves for different types of customers. As all the customers do not have same taste and preferences, a person may not like one set of wholesale scarves which the other person liked very much.
As world is moving towards development and people like to go to places where every type of products can be found, many wholesale scarves sellers have started selling other stylish products and accessories like handbags in bulk. Today, if you want to buy wholesale scarves as well as handbags quickly and conveniently, the best thing you can do is search for commercial websites which sell both the products in bulks and order the quantity that you want after selecting the type of product.
Are you planning to buy wholesale handbags? You can also go for wholesale scarves to meet the trend of present society.
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