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  #46 (permalink)  
Viejo 07-06-2008, 03:13 AM
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Spain: Prime Minister Zapatero lashes out at European Central Bank
By Keith Lee
5 July 2008
Spain: Prime Minister Zapatero lashes out at European Central Bank

Cita:
Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has lashed out at the European Central Bank (ECB) and its president Jean Claude Trichet.

His anger was provoked by Trichet’s statements that he may raise its interest rates this month—a rise of 0.25 percent is widely anticipated—to contain growing inflation within the European Union (EU).
Consumer inflation in the euro-zone nations rose at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in May, well above the ECB’s target of 2 percent.

“I don’t say it’s certain,” Trichet said, “I say it’s possible.”

“A very solid anchoring of inflation expectations is essential,” Trichet added, making it clear that, despite rising energy and food prices, workers must bear the brunt of the growing economic crisis. The ECB is looking to land the first blow against demands for increased wages.

Urging Trichet to show “a bit more prudence,” Zapatero said, “We all respect the independence of the European Central Bank but we all expect the European Central Bank to behave responsibly.” He said an increase in the European Interbank Offered Rate (Euribor)—the average interest rate at which 50 of Europe’s top banks borrow from one another—was “surely excessive.”

Repeating his criticisms later, Zapatero called for “flexibility” from the ECB.

Zapatero’s mood was darkened by the political crisis arising out of Spain’s growing economic problems, which has led to him being summoned to the country’s National Congress to explain what is happening and what he is doing about it. The appearance has few precedents.

Trichet dismissed Zapatero’s pointed criticism, saying the ECB would not be pressured by politicians. “Everybody knows that we are independent,” he declared. “Everybody knows that this independence is totally guaranteed by the treaty.” After his remarks oil prices rose sharply and the Euribor rate went up.

The blunt character of Zapatero’s remarks reflects increasing differences between the European powers over what policy to pursue in the face of the growing economic crisis.

The Spanish government has in the past said that it would like the ECB to lower interest rates and that it was unhappy with the high euro-dollar exchange rate. Zapatero was not the only European leader to express displeasure at Trichet’s remarks. Portuguese Finance Minister Fernando Teixeira dos Dantos said a rate rise would mean “more difficult times” for his country’s economy and French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde criticised the ECB for focusing solely on fighting inflation. She warned against “an economic slowdown that could be induced by an interest rate increase.”

Trichet has been defended by the German government of Angela Merkel, which demanded an explanation of Zapatero’s outburst. Spokesman Thomas Steg said Germany viewed the ECB’s independence as untouchable. “We have no criticism to make of the ECB or of Mr. Trichet. If Mr. Zapatero sees this differently, he has to explain that,” Steg told a government news conference in Berlin.

Slovenian Finance Minister Andrej Bajuk praised the ECB’s independence, calling it “the right system, definitely at this time.”

Of all the European economies, Spain is one of the most vulnerable to interest rate rises.

Any rate change will have a disastrous impact on the construction industry, which has played a huge role in the national economy and is suffering badly under the credit crunch.

House prices have fallen 15 percent since September, according to real estate developers APCE. Some 90 percent of Spanish mortgages are indexed to Euribor rates.

Spanish workers who have relied on their properties to supplement their meagre wages will be hit hardest and with over 98 per cent of Spanish mortgages on floating rates, any increase in rates will push many workers further into poverty.

Because Spain has had one of the highest budget surpluses in the industrialised world, government ministers and officials from the ruling Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) have argued that the country is better positioned than most to weather the financial storm.
Zapatero declared during the election campaign in March, “We’ve saved, we’ve managed our finances well and we’ve got a bigger surplus than expected, so we can stimulate the economy and help families.”

He made a number of election pledges, including an annual income tax rebate of €400, relief on mortgage payments, a 26 percent increase in the lowest state pensions, and a public works programme aimed at building 150,000 affordable homes a year. The government also promised to invest in major road and rail building programmes, such as the high-speed rail link between Madrid and other regions.

However, within weeks the surplus tumbled as the government tried to compensate for the crisis in property and oil prices. Carlos Ocaña, Secretary of State for Housing, said that for the year to May there was a surplus in state budgets of €2.7 billion, 0.24 percent of GDP, down from €13.6 billion for the same period last year. It will fall even further if the government carries out its election promises.

Many commentators have expressed anger at Zapatero’s bullish forecasts and his refusal to give emergency credit to the wider construction sector, which is responsible for a fifth of Spanish GDP, double the average rate elsewhere in the European Union.
Spain built more homes than Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom put together and has been more dependent on housing than any Western country except Ireland.

According to Spanish Housing Minister Beatriz Corredor, the residential construction sector is in “a very severe, intense slowdown” and “it has accelerated significantly since the beginning of the year...causing problems for many households with mortgages.”

Corredor said Spanish house prices were decreasing in real terms, but refused to say whether they would fall to the extent predicted by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and other financial institutions. The most recent IMF forecast suggests Spain’s economic growth will fall from 3.8 percent last year to 1.8 percent this year, one of the biggest drops among developed nations and that inflation may rise to 4 percent. The country’s current account deficit at 9.5 percent of GDP is the second highest in the industrialised world, after the United States.

Corredor refused to be drawn on whether she supported Zapatero’s outspoken concerns and although she said it was “not her job” to tell Trichet his responsibilities, said he had “to consider the impact of his statements.”

Up to a million job losses are expected in the construction sector this year. According to recently released figures, there are a billion unsold bricks. “Zapatero has hung us out to dry,” said Alameda building contractor Luis Ruiz.

Many brickyard owners have rejected Zapatero’s claim that the construction-dependent economy can be transformed without suffering high unemployment. Hector de Pinto Sanchez, of the La Alameda brickworks, said that, “85 percent of our workers have little education. What do you think they’re going to do if this factory shuts?”

In La Sagra, Spain’s largest brick and tile manufacturing region, many towns and villages have become wastelands, with half-built apartment blocks abandoned by building firms that have run out of cash and credit.
Nearly a million new Spanish homes stand empty.

Many economists have criticised Spain’s reliance on cheap euro-zone credit and low-skill and low-paid employment to drive its growth.

“The Spanish economy is in for a ferocious fall,” said economics professor Antoni Espasa at Madrid’s Carlos III University. “It’s going to suffer more than Europe and take longer to recover.”

Rafael Pampillon, head of economics at Madrid’s Instituto de Empresa business school, added, “We are not shifting to high-skill industries where we can compete. We are in an economic crisis where unemployment is rising.”

Zapatero recently announced further measures to pass the current economic crisis onto the Spanish working class. He has declared a salary freeze, and a 30 percent cut in hiring for civil service jobs from next year. The pay freeze will include top governmental salaries, but the brunt will be felt by ordinary workers who earn an average of €17,000 (US$31,000).

Unemployment currently stands at 9.6 percent, and is expected to be nearer 11 percent next year. Minister for Employment Celestino Corbacho has said that, although Spanish pensions are “plainly guaranteed,” it will be necessary to think about future provisions.

Miguel Angel Fernandez, Governor of the Bank of Spain, has told Congress that he does not consider Zapatero’s economic measures to be adequate and is calling for reform of the labour market, changes to collective wage negotiations that would end the link between salary increases and inflation and greater austerity measures from the Spanish regional governments.

The problem facing Zapatero is the radicalisation of Spanish society—an indication of which were the actions in recent weeks by Spanish fishermen and truck drivers, which threatened to bring the country to a standstill.
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  #47 (permalink)  
Viejo 07-06-2008, 08:00 AM
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Originalmente Escrito por perro Ver Mensaje
¿Qué han hecho ellos para controlar la inflación en España?
Joder, es que aun no te has enterado?. Coño, es que pareces un pavo. Pues "dar 400 lereles" para que la gente siga ese discurso de "trabajad y consumid".

Asinnn, es como se encontrola la jinflaccion in ejpein, endando 400 heuros, con medidas hinflacionistas. Ombreeeeee.
__________________
La politica es el arte de gobernar, no el orto de gobernar.
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  #48 (permalink)  
Viejo 07-06-2008, 09:01 AM
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Originalmente Escrito por >> 47 << Ver Mensaje
Spain: Prime Minister Zapatero lashes out at European Central Bank
By Keith Lee
5 July 2008
Spain: Prime Minister Zapatero lashes out at European Central Bank
En ese artículo está la explicación de porqué Zapatero critica al BCE. Se han publicado varios hilos con artículos en ese sentido. A Irlanda y España son los países a los que más les perjudica la subida de tipos, por lo que cualquiera que visite este foro lo sabe. Por otra parte, Zapatero no es el único. Sarko también arremete contra el BCE de vez en cuando.

No sé porqué este estúpido hilo tiene cinco estrellas.
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  #49 (permalink)  
Viejo 07-06-2008, 09:26 PM
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Sarkozy questions if ECB rate increase was ‘reasonable’


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BLOOMBERG AND AFP, PARIS
Monday, Jul 07, 2008

French President Nicolas Sarkozy recommenced his criticism of the European Central Bank (ECB) on Saturday, asking it was “reasonable”’ for it to have raised the region’s key interest rate this past week.

The ECB lifted its main interest rate on Thursday to a seven-year high of 4.25 percent in hope of putting a lid on record inflation, which has hit a 16 year high in the 15 nations that use the euro.

Sarkozy, who has repeatedly attacked the Frankfurt-based bank for focusing too much on inflation

...

Sarkozy repeated his call for the G8 nations to increase its ranks to include China and India. He and other leaders from the group are scheduled to meet in this week for their annual summit, this year in Japan.

“It’s not reasonable to continue to meet as eight to solve the big questions of the world,” he said.
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  #50 (permalink)  
Viejo 07-06-2008, 09:35 PM
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un ridiculo más, simplemente.
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  #51 (permalink)  
Viejo 07-06-2008, 10:03 PM
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Originalmente Escrito por >> 47 << Ver Mensaje
Sarkozy questions if ECB rate increase was ‘reasonable’
Sarkozy repeated his call for the G8 nations to increase its ranks to include China and India.

“It’s not reasonable to continue to meet as eight to solve the big questions of the world,” he said.
Los capitostes del planeta se reunen en Japon pa ensolusionar las grandes cuestiones del mundo mundial.

Sarko se fija en Chíndia, donde se concentra la mitad de la Humanidad, la mano de obra más barata, y la que más alimentos y petroleo consumen.

¿Cual es la maniobra que propondrá el G8 para que Chindia no consuma tanto petroleo ni biocombustibles y siga produciendo baratito pa forrar intermediarios transnacionales?

¿Teneis calorcito?

Pues esperarsus, no veais la ola que se avecina.

Cita:

Published: July 6, 2008

TOYAKO, Japan, July 6 (UPI) -- Group of Eight leaders meeting in Japan will push for more nuclear power generation

The Yomiuri Shimbun quoted anonymous sources saying the G8 nations will pressure China and India to satisfy a greater percentage of their electricity needs from nuclear power plants as a way to both reduce global warming and help battle the high price of oil.
Poner más centrales nucleares en el planeta no reducirá el consumo de petroleo si ese se abarata, si no que conllevará más generación de calor, aunque liberado de una más manera gradual, por la via de reactores, en vez de la inmediatez de las bombas atómicas.

El plan parece tremendamente perverso. Si se siembra de reactores nucleares allí donde se concentra la mitad de la Humanidad, y la mano de obra más baratita del planeta, la industria podrá seguir produciendo baratito y las élites intermediarias "podremos" seguir aprovechándonos de ellos mientras sean jóvenes, pero las espermatogonias mueren a partir de una determinada temperatura medioambiental sostenida, y con la edad es más fácil deshidratarse y ahogarse por las olas de calor. El plan voluntario para esterilizar y posteriormente eutanasiar media Humanidad, parece evidente.

El pais que obtiene un 80% de la electricidad via nuclear padeció una ola de calor que conllevó más 15.000 ancianos muertos en 1'5 meses. Menudo experimento. Menuda manera de eliminar la demanda petrolera se avecina, y sin ninguna guerra visible. Solo con talante y bajo la consigna de "progreso" sin decir pa quien.

Canicule européenne de 2003 - Wikipédia

Por si acaso irsus patentando dispositivos pa enfriar bolsas escrotales, o sus vais a quedar con los gwevos cluecos.

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-Cagwen er furgol y la Bruni, y todos los calienta-pelotas. Grrr...

Úlima edición por >> 47 << fecha: 07-06-2008 a las 10:25 PM.
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  #52 (permalink)  
Viejo 07-06-2008, 10:10 PM
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El otro día escuché por la radio que ZP había explicado las críticas diciendo que cuando Trichet sugería que podría subir los tipos, el euribor subía el doble: subía cuando hacía las declaraciones y luego subía de nuevo cuando efectivamente subía los tipos.

¿Alguien sabe si de verdad el ignorante este dijo esa gilipollez?
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  #53 (permalink)  
Viejo 07-06-2008, 10:45 PM
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Originalmente Escrito por dantitan Ver Mensaje
No se de que se van a quejar los alemanes del BCE si lo tienen a su servicio.

Estaria bueno que se quejen ellos , cuando hizo falta tipos bajos, ahora que ya no hace falta , y se le dispara la inflacion a alemania tipos altos.

Alemania y Francia creen que la UE es su cortijo privado y ya no es asi, a los que estan j****do se quejan .
Lo que tenia que hacer zapatero es aliarse con italia y unos pocos mas y echar a la mierda a los gabachos y los alemanes del consejo del bce.
O jugamos todos o rompemos la baraja.
Pero tu en que planeta vives? Ah! si, en Zapaterolandia. Como que se le dispara la inflación a Alemania? Tu has visto el diferencial de inflación de Espana con respecto a la Eurozona? Este anyo hemos ganado la eurocopa, wimbledon y el campeonato europeo de Inflación. Si el BCE no pone orden, los que mas lo vamos a pagar son los espanyoles (bueno, los que residis en Espanya...).
Pero en fin, Espanya voto y ahora tiene lo que se merece. Que lo disfruten...
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