04-Aug-2021 5:30 PM
âItâs a great time to be aviation ITâ â in conversation with IATA and Amazon Web Services
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In an interview between Kim Macaulay, head of data, quality and governance, IATA, and Sekhar Mallipeddi, worldwide travel tech leader at Amazon Web Services published in the Travel and Hospitality issue of AWS Architecture Monthly, the subject of aviation IT expanding past simply creating a data culture, but extending to create a unified culture in technology practices, was discussed.
Sekhar Mallipeddi: Please explain the current challenges with data products at IATA and the new products being developed?
Kim Macaulay: At the International Air Transport Association (IATA), we are data custodians. We pride ourselves on serving our aviation members with evolving and best-of-breed data products that further their business goals.
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The dangers of endless quantitative easing
Aug 02,2021 - Last updated at Aug 02,2021
CHICAGO Inflation readings in the United States have shot up in recent months. Labour markets are extremely tight. In one recent survey, 46 per cent of small-business owners said they could not find workers to fill open jobs, and a net 39 per cent reported having increased their employees’ compensation. Yet, at the time of this writing, the yield on ten-year Treasury bonds is 1.24 per cent, well below the ten-year breakeven inflation rate of 2.4 per cent. At the same time, stock markets are flirting with all-time highs.
Something in all this does not add up. Perhaps the bond markets believe the US Federal Reserve (Fed) when it suggests that current inflationary pressures are transitory and that the Fed can hold policy interest rates down for an extended period. If so, growth bolstered by pent-up savings and the additional government spending currently being negotiated in Congress should be