Early this week I was with an Australian government representative in Beijing whom I have known for many
years and he told me that iron ore prices were currently around $ 83 (I think they dropped another $ 2
last week), and that while some people in Canberra were reluctant to say it too loudly, he and others were increasingly in agreement with my lower forecast of less than $ 50 well
before the end of the decade, in part because supply has come off much more slowly than predicted, but mainly because they now
recognize that China's rebalancing was indeed going to be a far bigger deal for Chinese demand than sell - side research had predicted.
Having seen an earlier Sherman survey in 1991 — several
years before making art or taking my first art - history class — I was struck by how much of her earlier work I instantly
recognized when I saw this retrospective at its San Francisco Museum of Modern Art stop
last year.
The majority opinion, written by Judge Stephen Reinhardt
before his death
last month,
recognized that the gender wage gap had existed for decades and continues to exist today, with the gap costing women in the U.S. over $ 840 billion a
year.