Tag Archives: World Leaders

Royal Riches: What the Monarchy Costs Great Britain

By Eamon Murphy

Royal finances: what the monarchy costs Great Britain

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AP/Lefteris Pitarakis

Here’s a paradox about Great Britain. In many ways, it’s a more progressive country than the United States, its colonial offspring. It has a more generous welfare state (including national health care), a more progressive tax structure, and a third major political party to the left of Labour. Most workers are entitled to at least 28 paid days of vacation per year, and same-sex marriage will soon be legal throughout England and Wales.

And yet Great Britain maintains one of the most conservative institutions on the planet: a hereditary monarchy, something Americans would never countenance. This despite the fact that King Charles I lost two civil wars, leading to his own decapitation and the short-lived abolition of the monarchy, in the mid-17th century.

And though the royal family’s political significance has long since been reduced to the ceremonial, the Windsors still have a massive financial footprint. As sovereign, the Queen owns the Crown Estate, a property portfolio worth £8.1 billion ($12.4 billion) as of last month — the first time its value has exceeded £8 billion. It includes a lot of prime real estate — “large parts of London’s West End,” “15 retail parks in various towns and cities,” shopping centers, offices, agricultural lands, forests, and “most UK coastline,” according to the BBC — and 15 percent of its annual revenues is used to fund the monarchy. The rest goes to the Treasury.

As a result of the these assets’ recent performance, the Queen is getting a raise: the Sovereign Grant, as her cut of the Crown Estate’s revenues is called, is set to increase next year from £36.1 million to £37.89 million (more than $55 million) — a gain of 5 percent, and the second consecutive bump to her allowance.

“The Crown Estate as a whole dates from the time of the Norman Conquest,” explains the monarchy’s official website — more than 900 years ago — but the current arrangement came into effect in 1760. That was the year King George III — the intolerable tyrant of the Declaration of Independence — signed the revenues over to the Treasury, and in return, stopped having to pay for the civil government, the national debt, and his own personal debt. Those expenses were covered by something called the Civil List, funded by the Treasury and supplemented more recently by grants from other departments, until the Sovereign Grant Act of 2011. Buckingham Palace called the change “a modern, transparent and simpler way of funding the head of state,” but opponents of the monarchy are unconvinced. “Pegging royal funding to Crown Estate revenue makes no sense at all,” said the group Republic, which advocates replacing the Queen (or King) with an elected head of state. “The two are not related. Crown Estate revenue has always been there to provide funds for the government.”

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Thatcher's Death Renews Debate Over 1980s Economic Policies

By The Associated Press

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Howard L. Sachs/AP/DPA U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher speaks after visiting U.S. President Ronald Reagan at the White House in July 1987. Thatcher’s death Monday has renewed debate about the economic policies pursued by both leaders.

By ADAM GELLER

Believers hailed its reduced tax rates and deregulation as springboards for economic miracles under the leadership of President Ronald Reagan and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Critics dismissed the very same ideas as so much trickle-down hocus-pocus and voodoo.

It’s been most of three decades since debate over “supply-side” economic policies was at the center of U.S. politics. But for the moment, talk of conservative economic ideas that were as central to the story of the 1980s as Michael Jackson‘s moonwalk and the first MacIntosh personal computer is back. Why? A pair of its leading proponents have returned to the headlines.

Memories of economic days gone by were rekindled last week when David Stockman, Reagan’s budget director, unleashed a scathing attack on years of decision-making by U.S. leaders, including his former boss. It continued this week, when Thatcher’s death on Monday prompted recollections — some fond, others not so much — of how the Iron Lady imposed her will on a long-stagnant British economy.

‘Time Machine’

The confluence of events got economists waxing about what the past means for today, although there’s disagreement on how much supply-side’s ideas have been abandoned in the U.S. or are just awaiting their moment of return. In the meantime, there was Arthur Laffer, the U.S. economist often called the father of supply-side, back on television three times Monday, recalling a warm friendship with Thatcher that highlighted a time when prevailing wisdom on taxes, deficits, and the roles of government and individuals was very different.

“We’re back in the time machine,” said Yoram Bauman, a Seattle economist who makes a living doing stand-up comedy about the dismal science — and who has long opened with a joke or two about supply-side to test the depth and endurance of his audience’s knowledge.

Supply-side economists argued that reducing taxes through lower rates would encourage work, saving and investment. Early supply-side theory promised that the reduced tax rates could pay for themselves by raising tax revenues. Under Reagan, the government lowered tax rates and reduced government regulation as the Federal Reserve worked to rein in inflation. The administration’s focus on lowering tax rates for the wealthy, labeled “trickle-down economics,” reflected the belief that these gains would encourage the rich to spend and invest more to create jobs for others.

Now that theory — and Bauman’s comic material, for that matter — may have found its moment, but it’s not clear how long it will last.

‘Destruction of Fiscal Rectitude’

It began last week when Stockman wrote a lengthy opinion piece in The New York Times, followed by interviews, to …read more

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Margaret Thatcher's Economic Legacy Contested

By The Associated Press

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Terry O’Neill, Getty Images

LONDON (AP) – Love her or loathe her, one thing’s beyond dispute: Margaret Thatcher transformed Britain.

The Iron Lady, who ruled for 11 remarkable years, imposed her will on a fractious, rundown nation – breaking the unions, triumphing in a far-off war, and selling off state industries at a record pace. She left behind a leaner government and more prosperous nation by the time a mutiny ousted her from No. 10 Downing Street.

Thatcher’s spokesman, Tim Bell, said the former prime minister died from a stroke Monday morning at the Ritz hotel in London. Flags were flown at half-staff at Buckingham Palace, Parliament and Downing Street for the 87 year old. Queen Elizabeth II authorized Thatcher to have a ceremonial funeral – a step short of a state funeral – to be held at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London with military honors.

Prime Minister David Cameron cut short a trip to Madrid and Paris to return to Britain following news ofThatcher’s death, and his office confirmed that Thatcher would be cremated following the ceremonial funeral. It did not provide further details, saying only the arrangements were in line with the wishes ofThatcher’s family.

For admirers, Thatcher was a savior who rescued Britain from ruin and laid the groundwork for an extraordinary economic renaissance. For critics, she was a heartless tyrant who ushered in an era of greed that kicked the weak out onto the streets and let the rich become filthy rich.

“Let us not kid ourselves, she was a very divisive figure,” said Bernard Ingham, Thatcher’s press secretary for her entire term. “She was a real toughie. She was a patriot with a great love for this country, and she raised the standing of Britain abroad.”

Thatcher was the first – and still only – female prime minister in Britain’s history. But she often found feminists tiresome and was not above using her handbag as a prop to underline her swagger and power. A grocer’s daughter, she rose to the top of Britain’s snobbish hierarchy the hard way, and envisioned a classless society that rewarded hard work and determination.

She was a trailblazer who at first believed trailblazing impossible: Thatcher told the Liverpool Daily Post in 1974 that she did not think a woman would serve as party leader or prime minister during her lifetime.

But once in power, she never showed an ounce of doubt.

Thatcher could be intimidating to those working for her: British diplomats sighed with relief on her first official visit to Washington, D.C., as prime minister to find that she was relaxed enough to enjoy a glass of whiskey and a half-glass of wine during an embassy lunch, according to official documents.

Like her close friend and political ally Ronald Reagan, Thatcher seemed motivated by an unshakable belief that free markets would build a better country …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Bank Shutdown Hammers Cyprus' Businesses

By The Associated Press

cyprus financial crisis bailout bank shutdown

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Petros Karadjias/AP Protesters lie on the ground in front of riot police outside the Cypriot Parliament during a protest Tuesday. A bailout plan intended to raise $7.5 billion has been met with fury in Cyprus and has sent jitters across financial markets.

NICOSIA, Cyprus — Banks across Cyprus remain locked Tuesday after financial authorities extended the country’s bank closure, fearing worried depositors will rush to drain their accounts. The shutdown is hammering businesses, which have been without access to their funds for more than a week.

All but two of the country’s largest lenders had been due to reopen Tuesday, after being shut since March 16 while politicians figured out how to raise the funds necessary for Cyprus to qualify for an international bailout. Under the deal for a €10 billion ($12.94 billion) rescue clinched in Brussels early Monday, Cyprus agreed to slash its oversized banking sector and inflict hefty losses on large depositors in troubled banks.

After initially saying most financial institutions would reopen Tuesday, the country’s Central Bank made a surprise reversal just before midnight, announcing all banks would remain closed until Thursday.

ATMs have been operating throughout the closure, but many have quickly run out of money. A daily withdrawal limit of €100 has been imposed on ATMs of the two largest lenders, Bank of Cyprus and Laiki. An increasing number of businesses have stopped accepting credit or check payments, insisting on cash only.

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The bank closures have hammered businesses, who have found themselves unable to pay suppliers or fulfill orders. The retail market is sharply down too, shop owners say, with customers unwilling to spend on anything but the basics while they have limited access to cash.

“The continuation of this uncertainty is pushing the economy deeper into recession, some businesses could possibly lose their clients, but we’re hopeful once this situation is sorted out, the market can rebound quickly,” said Michalis Pilikos, head of the Cyprus Employers and Industrialists Federation.

Scores of angry students from a left-wing student union gathered outside Parliament, screaming “People, fight back, they’re sucking your blood.”

Under the new Cyprus bailout plan, the bulk of the funds will be raised by forcing losses on accounts of more than €100,000 in the country’s second- largest lender, Laiki, with the remainder coming from tax increases and privatizations.

The bank will be dissolved immediately into a so-called bad bank containing its uninsured deposits and toxic assets, with the guaranteed deposits being transferred to the nation’s biggest lender, Bank of Cyprus.

Deposits at Bank of Cyprus above €100,000 will be frozen until it becomes clear whether or to what extent they will also be forced to take losses. Those funds will eventually be converted into bank shares.

It’s not yet clear how severe the losses will be to Laiki’s large …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Talks with Russia to Avert Cyprus Crisis Fail

By CNNMoney

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Petros Giannakouris/AP An employee of Laiki bank, center, reacts during a rally outside the Cypriot parliament on Friday. Cypriot authorities were putting the final touches Friday to a plan they hope will avoid bankruptcy.

By Charles Riley and Mark Thompson

It looks like a Russian rescue of Cyprus is off the table, at least for now.

Talks between Russian officials and the government of Cyprus broke up early Friday, with no agreement on a cash infusion that could have helped the tiny island nation to secure an EU bailout.

Russian investors were ultimately not interested in the plans proposed by the Cypriot finance minister during a trip to Moscow, Russia‘s finance minister said Friday, according to state run news agency RIA Novosti.

One proposal was for Russian investors to develop the country’s natural gas reserves. But the Russians will stand aside while Cyprus tries to find a way to recapitalize its insolvent banks with help from the so-called troika of European Central Bank, European Commission and International Monetary Fund.

Another way Russia could contribute is by relaxing the terms of an existing €2.5 billion loan to Cyprus.

“We’re waiting for a decision by the troika, based on which we will react and make a decision on our participation in the debt restructuring,” Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said.

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Cyprus is racing against the clock to secure a €10 billion bailout from the European Union to avoid financial collapse.

The island nation’s banks are being kept afloat by emergency funding from the ECB, but that will end on Tuesday without a deal.

The fear is a full-on run on Cyprus‘ banks — a development that could ultimately threaten the country’s membership in the eurozone.

Officials have been scrambling to find ways to raise €5.8 billion since the country’s parliament threw out an unprecedented plan to tax bank deposits earlier this week. Without the money, Cyprus can’t access the rescue offered by the EU, and two of its biggest banks are likely to fail.

The Cyprus parliament is set Friday to vote on the latest plan to restructure the country’s banks, a critical step towards securing an EU bailout. A government spokesman implored the parliament to pass the plan.

“The next few hours will determine the future of this country,” the spokesman said.

CNN’s Alla Eshchenko in Moscow contributed to this report.

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Pope Benedict XVI: 5 Ways He Was Also an Economic Shepherd

By Bruce Watson

Pope in Vatican City, Vatican.

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In its two millennia of existence, the Catholic Church has picked up more than a few valuable tchotchkes, including billions of dollars worth of real estate, thousands of churches, and an art collection that is — literally — priceless. It’s not surprising, then, that when one thinks of the grandeur of the Church of Rome, saving money isn’t usually the first thing that comes to mind.

But as we attempt to sum up the soon-to-end papacy of Pope Benedict XVI, an interesting pattern emerges: The…

Pope Benedict XVI: 5 Ways He Was Also an Economic Shepherd originally appeared on DailyFinance.com on 2013-02-16T05:00:00Z.

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Presidents Day Pop Quiz: Funny Money Facts About the Men in the Oval Office

By Bruce Watson

Presidents day money one dollar bill

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Even when it comes to U.S. presidents whose faces aren’t on bills and coins, discussions about America’s commanders in chief frequently come back down to money. Whether the question is campaign donations or advances on memoirs, shady deals or funding for libraries, and of course, economic ups and downs (I’m looking at you, President Hoover!) it’s hard to separate White House occupants from their money connections.

In honor of Presidents Day, we’ve compiled a list of some fun and surprising…

Presidents Day Pop Quiz: Funny Money Facts About the Men in the Oval Office originally appeared on DailyFinance.com on 2013-02-16T05:00:00Z.

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Here's Why Gun Control Keeps Failing: Charting Influence vs. Stamina

By Bruce Watson

Newtown massacre

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It has been little more than a month since the Newtown massacre claimed 26 lives, yet the frenzied gun regulation push that it inspired already seems to be receding. It’s a pattern that should be familiar from the days after the Virginia Tech massacre, the Aurora shooting, the attempted assassination of Gabrielle Giffords, or any of the other notorious shootings of the last 10 years: A horrifying tragedy catches the public’s attention, a frightened populace calls for a few common-sense gun…

Here’s Why Gun Control Keeps Failing: Charting Influence vs. Stamina originally appeared on DailyFinance.com on 2013-02-07T06:00:00Z.

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