Tag Archives: Greece

Austerity In Europe: It Will Work If It's Ever Tried

By Jeffrey Dorfman, Contributor

The proponents of Keynesian-style deficit spending argue against austerity by claiming that it has failed in Europe. They point to the U.K., Italy, Greece, and onward, shouting that European government spending cuts have led to slow or negative growth and sky-high unemployment rates. The only problem with these arguments is that all the purported facts are misstated. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Extreme-right party faces ban on Greeks-only charity drive, vows to defy authorities

City authorities in Athens have banned a planned charity event by an extreme-right party in Greece, arguing that it is designed to “intentionally promote racism and xenophobia.” Mayor Giorgos Kaminis said he would block the Golden Dawn’s party’s plan to hand out food and clothing to Greeks only on Wednesday at Attica Square, in a rundown area of the capital. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

‘Keeping Up With The Kardashians’: Kris Snubs Brody Jenner, Leading To Confrontation (VIDEO)

By The Huffington Post News Editors

You know how Brody Jenner hasn’t been a very big part of “Keeping Up With the Kardashians” before this season? According to the latest episode, he might be trying to tell us that the one to blame for his absence is none other than the family matriarch, Kris Jenner.

When the entire Jenner-Kardashian crew was invited on an all-expenses-paid trip to Greece, Kris didn’t bother to tell Brody. When he found about it, he was understandably mad. So he came along on the trip anyway, and confronted Kris about it.

Kris immediately went on the defensive, blaming technology. “You never return my texts,” she said. She went on to say that she texts and calls him, but he never responds.

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More on The Kardashians

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Amid Greek austerity, plunder of priceless treasures

By hnn

The financial crisis in Greece has already had far-reaching consequences for many people, but now it is claiming a new casualty as some of the country’s ancient treasures become a target for thieves.

Detective Gergios Tsoukalis puffs nervously on his cigar. In the passenger’s seat of a taxi, he grapples with four different mobile phones as he tries to co-ordinate the arrest of yet another antiquities smuggler.

As the driver pulls into the port, he sees ahead of him that plainclothes police officers have already pounced on the unassuming man, who is completely shocked by the early-morning operation….

Source:
BBC News

Source URL:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-23373731

Date:
7-19-13

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

Merkel in warning over another Greek debt haircut

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is warning that a second debt writedown for Greece could undo much of the recent work done to stabilize the euro area.

Merkel’s comments Friday came a day after her finance minister visited Athens and told a Greek audience that it’s not in the country’s interests to seek a second write-off, or “haircut,” following last year’s debt restructuring with private-sector bondholders.

Merkel pointed to the possible consequences of another writedown in the 17-country eurozone and the danger that others might seek a similar deal. Portugal, Ireland and Cyprus have also received bailouts.

She said another debt relief deal “could lead to such massive uncertainty among all investors in the eurozone that everything we have done in recent years would again be in question.”

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Greece hit with new general strike over reforms

Greece on Tuesday braced for a fourth general strike of the year against fresh austerity measures the government is imposing in order to keep receiving EU-IMF loans.

Unions have called for a one-day national mobilisation against a new bill that implements fresh reforms, including the re-deployment of thousands of civil servants, who have been hit by sweeping pay and pension cuts over the past three years.

The bill is needed in order for Greece to start receiving 6.8 billion euros ($8.9 billion) of fresh aid that eurozone finance ministers agreed to release at a meeting last week.

The strike will shut down public services, slow down hospitals, block the national rail service and disrupt over a dozen domestic flights.

Protests will be held in Athens and Thessaloniki later in the day.

If the bill passes as expected on Wednesday, 4,200 civil servants — teachers, school wardens and municipal police who are to be integrated into the national force — will be placed under so-called redeployment.

They will receive 75 percent of their salary for an eight-month period, at the end of which, if they have not accepted a transfer to some other administrative department, they risk losing their jobs.

Under the terms of its latest EU-IMF bailout deal agreed in 2012, Greece is expected to axe 4,000 state jobs and redeploy 25,000 civil servants overall by the end of the year.

The debt-wracked country has had to enact a string of austerity measures over the past four years in return for multi-billion euro international bailouts to avoid default.

The measures — which include reforms to the bloated civil service — are deeply unpopular in the country that recently entered a sixth straight year of recession and where unemployment has climbed to 27 percent, a level unseen in Greece’s modern history. Among the youth, unemployment stands at 64 percent.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Greece faces general strike over state job cuts

Unions opposing austerity measures in Greece are staging their fourth general strike this year as the government prepares to start axing public sector jobs.

Tuesday’s walkout is disrupting flights, public transport, state hospitals and other services, while demonstrations are planned throughout the day.

The public sector has so far been spared from the job cuts that have hit the rest of the Greek economy since the country got its first international bailout in 2010.

However, the government has been forced to launch the cuts — 15,000 firings by the end of 2014 and 12,500 transfers this year — so it can continue receiving rescue loans from the International Monetary Fund and the other countries using the euro.

Parliament is set to vote on the new measures Wednesday.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Greek lawmakers vote to indict ex-finance minister

Greek lawmakers have voted to indict a former finance minister over his handling of data on Greeks with Swiss bank accounts.

A panel of senior judges will determine in coming days whether George Papaconstantinou should face trial on criminal charges of alleged breach of duty and tampering with a document.

A majority of lawmakers voted early Tuesday to lift Papaconstantinou’s immunity from prosecution over the fate of a list of about 2,000 names provided by French authorities in 2010 as Greece’s economy was struck by a major crisis.

Greek authorities failed to investigate the data for potential tax evasion, and the names of three of Papaconstantinou’s relatives were allegedly removed from the list.

Speaking in Parliament Monday, Papaconstantinou denied wrongdoing, arguing he was the victim of a smear campaign.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Fitch downgrades European rescue loan fund

Fitch Ratings has cut its credit grade for the European fund that provides rescue loans to Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

The agency says it lowered the rating for the European Financial Stability Facility — or EFSF — by one notch from AAA to AA+ as a result of its downgrade of France last week. The EFSF’s creditworthiness depends on that of the countries that provide its financing, which includes France.

Monday’s downgrade of the EFSF means the fund could have to pay higher interest rates to raise money. Fitch’s rivals Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s have already downgraded it.

The EFSF has been taken over by a new, permanent bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism. However, it still manages the rescue loans to Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Gold To Shine Again As Global Growth Thaws Commodities

By Stephen Leeb, Contributor

Don’t let depressed commodity prices fool you. They won’t stay depressed too long. The single most important global economic reality remains resource scarcity. At last, I see short-term commodity price depressants starting to dissipate. Very shortly, the overwhelming consensus against commodities will start to shift, possibly as early as yearend. Then the long-term upward climb of commodities will resume. Commodities slid mainly due to Europe’s fixation on austerity. They began to fall in 2011 at about the time the European Union started to falter. The euro zone hasn’t posted a single quarter of GDP growth since mid-2011. Overall regional unemployment stands well into the double digits, while auto sales hit generational lows. Even Germany, Europe’s economic powerhouse, is barely growing. Weaker economies, including Spain and Greece, sit mired in full-fledged depressions. As Europe represents the largest economic entity in this deeply interconnected world, its swoon instigated a sharp drop in global growth and therefore in demand for commodities. Now Europe shows signs of starting to recover, albeit very slowly. Forward-looking indicators including the Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) surveys have gradually risen over the past year. Though the rise has been very slightly sloped, its persistence suggests that Europe, while hardly ready to boom, will soon start generating at least marginal positive growth. These glimmers of growth come as Europe’s leaders increasingly realize that austerity is a dangerous economic recipe. Chancellor Angela Merkel’s likely reelection in September and the growing danger of social unrest in Spain and Greece will spur more growth-oriented policies. Whether Europe grows at 1% or 1.5%, it will grow, and any improvement in this massive economy will alter worldwide economic dynamics for the better. One upshot will be commodities’ emergence from the doghouse. As that happens, I expect gold to start to outperform. On balance, precious metals, base metals, and oil alike tend to move in the same direction. During overall periods of rising commodity prices, precious metals outperform all the others. In commodity price slumps, precious metals tend to underperform. Since their 2011 peaks, both gold and silver have underperformed other commodities. From their highs, you can see weakness especially in commodities ETFs that track the precious metals markets.  SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) fell nearly 33% since its September 2011 high, and iShares Silver Trust (SLV), tracking silver, declined almost 60%. The price of oil, on the other hand, strong of late, stands roughly level with that of two years ago. Since oil ETFs like USO and OIL tend to have a negative bias, however, I don’t recommend them. If you have a futures account, you might want to buy long-dated oil futures, expiring at year end in 2014. In 2008, by contrast, gold outperformed, although silver did uncharacteristically underperform. The same was true in the 1970s. When commodities rose, gold climbed much faster, but mid-decade when commodities faltered, the 50% plunge in the price of gold far exceeded the decline of virtually any other commodity. Gold’s outperformance during periods of rising commodity prices is consistent …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest