joi, 6 iunie 2013

inflatie-2009-2012

7 comentarii:

Anonim spunea...

Un cutremur cu magnitudinea de 3,8 grade pe scara Richter s-a produs, miercuri, în Ungaria, foarte aproape de graniţa cu România.

Cutremurul s-a produs la ora 18:45 la o adâncime de 31 de kilometri, la 47,98 grade latitudine nordică şi la 19,19 grade longitudine estică, potrivit Institutului Naţional de Fizică a Pământului (INFP).

Anonim spunea...

Din 1 iulie, orice bancă suspectată că ar facilita evaziunea fiscală sau care are controale inadecvate este pasibilă de amenzi usturătoare, dosare penale şi posibil pierderea licenţei de operare în oraşul-stat.

După ce au cules beneficiile de pe urma creşterii averilor din Asia şi a înăspririi reglementărilor bancare în alte părţi, băncile private din Singapore ar putea fi lovite cât de curând.

„Singapore va pierde puternic în scurt timp – am auzit bănci care îşi rezervă noi conturi în Dubai şi Hong Kong şi chiar bănci care îşi mută bancherii şi conturile în Dubai“, a declarat un bancer în vârstă de 39 de ani din Singapore, care a dorit să îşi păstreze anonimatul.

„Ceea ce se poate întâmpla este că o parte din banii «dubioşi» nu vor mai ajunge în Singapore, ceea ce nu este un lucru rău... dar nici măcar banii «sănătoşi» nu vor mai intra în ţară, deoarece clienţii vor să fie siguri că nu vor fi hărţuiţi“, spune un bancher, care a lucrat în Singapore timp de 11 ani.

Elveţia şi-a anunţat luna trecută planurile de slăbire a legilor secretului bancar, care odată erau de neatins, pentru a permite băncilor să ajungă la înţelegeri individuale cu SUA în cazul în care clienţii lor au eludat plata taxelor.

Anonim spunea...

Băncile private din centrul financiar asiatic Singapore sunt următoarea ţină a înăspririi reglementarilor din sistemul bancar după ce SUA şi Europa au cedat în faţa evaziunii fiscale.

Oraşul-stat din sud-estul Asiei, care ar putea întrece Elveţia drept cel mai mare centru de offshore-uri din 2020, potrivit firmei de cercetare Wealth Insight, este şi centrul de avere cu cea mai rapidă creştere la nivel global, având active în administrare în valoare de 550 mld. dolari, din care circa 450 mld. dolari reprezintă avere offshore.

Având în vedere dimensiunea uriaşă a acestei economii, băncile private din Singapore se întreabă dacă noile reglementări nu vor lovi în competitivitate.

Anonim spunea...

The IMF have completely changed their tune since they 'realised' that austerity does totally fook up (technical ecnomic term there) an economy.

They'd just got their maths a bit wrong before you see? Now they can crunch the numbers properly and see how dire austerity actually is and how much it takes out of GDP they are running around like headless chickens talking about some little thing called 'growth'.

Of course the fact that most right headed people could see austerity was a complete disaster waiting to happen - without doing any special maths to illustrate the fact - doesn't mean the IMF is in anyway incompetent.

Ruining millions of peoples lives because you'd got a mathematical formula wrong is entirely justifiable and nothing more than a tiny error - not a disgusting, ideological led attack on the worlds poorest that the IMF have been carrying out for decades - until the results in their own backyard became a little too unpalatable.

Anonim spunea...


Simon O'Connor, a spokesman for Olli Rehn, the commissioner handling the 2010 bailout, said Brussels "fundamentally disagrees" with the IMF on two of the central points raised by the Washington institution – that Greece's debt should have been restructured at the very outset of the crisis
What, when the Greeks were lying through their teeth at the very existence of a problem and producing doctored national statistics to the EU and the rating agencies? Fat chance.

Anonim spunea...

The 'cooked the books' misconception is largely the result of a decision by the New Democracy government that came to power in March 2004 to conduct an audit of public finances that led to Greece’s budget deficit figure being revised upward, above the 3 percent of gross domestic product limit for euro-area members. However, the deficit increase was mainly down to the conservative administration altering the way military expenditure was recorded. Rather than record the spending when the procurements were delivered, it attributed them to the date when the orders were made.

This exposed a flaw in the way that the eurozone managed statistics. By failing to agree on a standard system for all, it allowed statistics to be open to political manipulation in a number of member states, not just Greece. It is an issue that the European Commission has only recently addressed. The EU now uses the delivery method to record procurements, which means Greece’s deficit when it joined the European Monetary Union in 1999 met the three percent target.

Anonim spunea...

Early debt restructuring, said O'Connor, could have triggered "systemic contagion" across the eurozone. On structural reforms, he added, "this is plainly wrong and unfounded."

In an internal report released on Wednesday evening, the IMF conceded that a catalogue of blunders had been made in the dealings with Greece by the "troika" of officials from the IMF, the commission and the European Central Bank.

The report charged that the Europeans were inexperienced and amateur in their approach.

But the IMF's findings were swept aside by the ECB's president, Mario Draghi, on Thuesday afternoon. Draghi told reporters he had not read the report, but was confident that any criticism were based on hindsight.

"Often these mea cuplas are a mistake of historical projection. You judge things that happen yesterday with today's eyes," said Draghi.

O'Connor, though, conceded that "lessons have been learned" from the chastening experience.

"Of course, looking back we see what might have been done differently," he said, without highlighting where changes could or should have been effected. "This is a learning process."

Unlike the IMF report, there was no criticism from the commission of its own performance, although O'Connor said that a "full report" into the work of the troika over the past three years was being prepared. He did not say when it would be published. He also emphasised that the IMF criticism was contained in an internal IMF staff document and did not represent the official position of the IMF board.

In Athens, though, the IMF's admission was welcomed by finance minister Yannis Stournaras. He told the Guardian that the "good report" would help Greece to recover from the trauma of recent years.

"It is a good piece of self-criticism. It is an objective report reporting mistakes made by the international community and by Greece," Stournaras said.