UPDATE 1-ECB’s Wellink: EU should have helped Greece earlier

June 11 (Reuters) – The European Union should have stepped in earlier than it did with a rescue package for Greece, European Central Bank board member Nout Wellink said on Friday.

“They should have stepped in earlier. Let me also say, they should have stepped in years ago. Greece ran a budget deficit for years,” Wellink told reporters.

“There should have been peer pressure on Greece years ago… The whole country lived beyond its means and the public sector lived beyond its means,” Wellink said.

But Wellink, who is also governor of the Dutch central bank, said it was too early to talk about further expansion of the European Union’s massive package to aid countries unable to cope with ballooning debt.

“It seems to me a little bit early to talk about further expansion,” Wellink said.

He said the most important part of the package is that “the Germans decided to really support the euro. Otherwise they wouldn’t have been prepared to take part in this huge programme”.

Current market uncertainty was reflected in increased use of the ECB’s deposit facility, but inflation expectations in the euro zone were better anchored than in the United States, he also said.

“For a fair assessment you have to consider that inflation expectations are anchored more solidly in Europe than in the U.S.,” Wellink said. (Reporting by Boris Groendahl, editing by John Stonestreet)

Williams outclasses Peer pressure to march on in Madrid

Madrid, May 15 (DPA) In-form Venus Williams played ruthless tennis Saturday to move into her first clay final of the European spring season with a 6-3, 6-0 win over outclassed Israeli Shahar Peer at the Madrid Masters tennis.

American fourth seed Williams – set to become second in the world Monday behind her sister Serena – now stands 5-0 without the loss of a set against the world number 22, who never stood a chance in the hammering.

‘She’s a really tenacious player, very talented, with a never-say-die spirit,’ said Williams. ‘I was ready for that. I just seemed to be able to find the corners.

‘I can’t complain about being able to play that well against a player like her. To have come out on top so far feels good. I’ve been happy with my form and I’m going to try to keep it going tomorrow.’

Williams quickly recovered from an early break of her serve, taking the 66-minute contest by the neck to win the last nine games in a canter.

The 29-year-old who celebrates a birthday next month, will be playing her fourth final of the season – the second on clay after winning Acapulco – against either Czech Lucie Safarova or Arvane Rezai of France Sunday.

Williams now stands a formidable 12-1 on the red dirt in 2010, firing 17 winners and breaking her flustered opponent six times.

‘The ultimate is to win the French, and I’ve come close (2002) final against her sister). ‘I think I’ve won every other tournament except the French on clay, so I’d like to take it one more step.’

Williams is seeking a tenth career trophy on clay. Peer had been hoping to claim the sixth Top-10 win of her career after putting out Russian number seven Svetlana Kuznetsova in the first round in the capital.

Peer still heads the WTA match-win table on 27 this season.

Celeb endorsements play almost no role in fuelling internet banking trend

Washington, April 27 (ANI): People use internet banking either because of its benefits or peer pressure but very rarely due to perceived prestige or celebrity endorsement, a new study has found.

Understanding what makes people adopt a particular technology could be crucial to the future success of internet banking, according to Weihua Shi and Kenneth Zantow of the College of Business, at the University of Southern Mississippi, Long Beach.

They point out that while there are various research models that have attempted to explain the adoption of new technologies, the majority of these assume that people make a rational choice based on a systematic decision process.

In many cases this may be entirely contrary to how people behave and they suggest that it is more likely that people simply follow the herd.

If large numbers of people are already using a particular technology, then once a tipping point is passed, peer pressure causes other people to adopt the innovation too.

Imitation, they say, is the best form of flattery, and yet there are very few published research studies that discuss how irrational imitation can influence technology adoption.

Shi and Zantow hope to remedy this situation and have looked at three types of imitation: frequency-based, trait-based, and outcome-based that influence adoption.

Frequency-based imitation simply implies that people will follow the herd, individuals are more likely to imitate an action if that action has been taken by a large number of other individuals.

Trait-based imitation is usually associated with individuals taking a particular action because other specific people whom they hold in high regard have previously taken that action.

Outcome-based imitation is a more sophisticated approach to decision-making in which individuals assess the impact adoption of the technology has on other people.

The team quizzed individuals on their attitudes and their adoption of internet banking and adjust their results to control for gender, age, and income.

Specifically, for frequency-based imitations, respondents were asked to indicate the degree to which they agree that using internet banking was popular, particularly in their peer group.

For trait-based imitations, respondents were asked about whether people of high status use internet banking and whether that in itself is a status symbol.

For outcome-based imitation, the team asked whether people using internet banking were more efficient and profitable in their banking.

A sliding scale of agree-to-disagree was used and the team could then analyze the data statistically.

The results showed that frequency-based and outcome-based decisions were the strongest predictors of whether someone would adopt internet banking.

“The results indicate that awareness of the positive outcomes associated with internet banking, or that a large number of customers had made the decision to use internet banking, would influence potential customers to jump on to the bandwagon,” the team notes.

Moreover, banks could boost adoption if they improve the online banking service as outcome-based decisions were predominant rather than people simply following the herd.

Trait-based imitation was not a significant factor.

While other products are often associated with celebrities or other successful people through their advertising efforts, the participants in our study indicate this may not be helpful for promoting internet banking, the researchers add.

The study has appeared in the International Journal of Banking, Accounting and Finance. (ANI)

Miss India Worldwide UK trying to find pulmonary hypertension cure

London, March 10 (ANI): Beauty and brains come together in the case of recently crowned Miss India Worldwide UK, Niharica Raizada who continues to be engaged with her job in stem cell research at a London hospital.

The 24-year-old, who works at Hammersmith Hospital, believes being beautiful is just not enough.

“Maybe it is the peer pressure in India these days that pushes the women to be acknowledged as smart, independent, highly qualified individuals,” the Telegraph quoted Raizada as saying.

She added: “There is a sense that, having only relatively recently achieved greater parity with the boys, we now have a need to prove ourselves. It is not enough just to be seen to be a beauty or a home maker.” (ANI)

College students less likely to drink if they know peers’ actual habits

Washington, July 10 (ANI): While peer pressure is known to play a vital role in alcohol misuse among college students, a new study has shown that when the students learn that they are mistaken about the actual normal drinking habits of their peers, they tend to drink less often.

The study has shown that much of that peer influence is the result of incorrect perceptions.

“In the UK, young people are drinking earlier and heavier than ever before,” said co-author David Foxcroft of Oxford Brookes University, in England.

“Levels of alcohol consumption amongst 11- to 13 year-olds have almost doubled in the last 10 years or so,” he added.

The researchers say if a student believes that his or her peers drink heavily, it would likely influence the amount of alcohol the student personally drinks.

During the study, they placed students into either intervention or control groups.

Those in the intervention groups received personalized feedback about actual college students’ normal drinking habits, their own personal drinking profiles – quantity of alcohol consumed, calorie intake and money spent on alcohol – as well as the health risk factors involved in heavy drinking.

The interventions occurred in different ways: alone, either by mail or via the Web; or together with individual face-to-face or group counselling.

Interventions that occurred electronically reduced the students’ alcohol-related problems, drinking frequency, peak blood-alcohol content and drinking quantity.

The study showed that 62 percent of the students reported a reduction in alcohol-related problems.

In addition, 65 percent of the students reported that they were drinking less frequently.

“There were only a small number of good quality studies that we could draw on to make this somewhat tentative conclusion,” said Foxcroft.

“More research is definitely needed, especially in different settings. We don’t know, for example, how well Web feedback would work in the UK, where the drinking context and culture is quite different,” he added. (ANI)

It’s official: Men, not women, are the weaker sex

London, May 27 (ANI): Scientists have finally put an end to the age-old battle of the sexes, by claiming that men are the weaker sex.

Professor Marek Glezerman, a gender-based medicine expert, examined 66,000 births at Israel’s Rabin Medical Centre between 1995 and 2006, and concluded that baby boys are more at risk of complications in the womb and more likely to have difficult deliveries, reports The Daily Express.

And the gender gap remains when they grow up, as men are more vulnerable to infections and less able to withstand disease than women, research suggests.

In the study, which has been presented to the Israel Society for Gender Based Medicine, Glezerman found that pregnancies with a male foetus were more often complicated and carried greater risk of difficult or premature delivery.

He said: “Men are known to have a shorter life span, are more susceptible to infections and have less chance of withstanding disease than women.

“In short, men are the weaker sex.”

Glezerman said: “Males are also associated with higher risk in the neonatal period after birth and are more likely to expose themselves to risky behaviour later in life.”

Boys may take more chances as the result of peer pressure, and testosterone in their bloodstream could also lead to more dangerous behaviour, he claimed.

“Men become soldiers, construction workers, and work as firefighters. They take on these risks quite naturally to protect their society, and they’re trained to do this without question,” he said. (ANI)

Young Aussies self-impose sex peer pressure

Sydney, May 21 (ANI): Young Australians, who wrongly assume that their peers are having more sex than them, are imposing pressure on themselves, according to a study.

Around 70 per cent of the young participants in the Melbourne-based study reported believing that they had had fewer sexual partners than their “average” peers.

“We can make an observation that young people seem to think other people are having more sex than they are,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Associate Professor Margaret Hellard, of the Burnet Institute’s Centre for Population Health, as saying.

“It’s worth investigating further … whether or not this feeling changes how they think they ought to be behaving,” she said.

The survey was conducted on almost 450 people between the ages of 16 to 29.

Hellard says that the study suggested that Aussies have a mean number of 5.5 sexual partners each over of their lifetimes, higher than what was found in similar other studies.

The researcher said that the participants believed that their peers had had a mean of 6.6 sexual partners each.

“What it all comes down to is we don’t have clear conversations with young people (about sex),” Hellard said.

“That’s why many young people spend their time thinking something else is happening out there than what is actually happening,” she added.

Hellard further said that it was important that young Australians be told it was okay to hold off starting to have sex, or to go without for a time, and that it was “not always the case” their peers had multiple sexual partners.

The study’s findings have been reported in the journal Sexual Health. (ANI)

It’s often too late for teen girls to say no to sex

Melbourne, May 20 (ANI): Teen girls often don’t know how to say no when it comes to sex because it’s often too late that they are taught about the ‘birds and the bees’ in school, according to an academic.

Adolescent health specialist Rachel Skinner says that sex education in schools is often too little too late.

He analyzed the sexual experiences of 68 girls aged between 14 and 19, and found that the girls were aware of the consequences of unprotected sex but unaware of the negotiating skills to resist peer pressure.

Most of the girls said that they regretted their first sexual experiences.

Skinner revealed that a large number of girls were not even ready when they lost their virginity.

“Many of the teenagers said how sex education was something that was too little and too late in their schooling years,” the Courier Mail quoted Skinner as saying.

She added: “These young people knew about the risks of unprotected sex … rather than how to negotiate with a partner about having sex at the time that they feel ready for it.” (ANI)