quarta-feira, junho 27, 2012

Continuar a roubar o futuro das gerações seguintes

"Espanha não pode continuar “durante muito mais tempo a financiar-se a estes preços” e que desta forma a economia não poderá crescer."
O que significa a economia espanhola não deixar de crescer nos tempos mais próximos?
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Como a economia espanhola tem um perfil que não é sustentável, continuar a crescer nos tempos mais próximos significa continuar a torrar dinheiro dos contribuintes, para manter essa economia ligada à máquina. Significa continuar a roubar o futuro das gerações seguintes.
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Trecho retirado de "Rajoy diz que Espanha não pode continuar “a financiar-se a estes preços”

3 comentários:

Anónimo disse...

Martelar continuamente que os défices de hoje são os impostos de amanhã é completamente falso.

CCz disse...

Eheh, inspirado hoje, hem!

Anónimo disse...

Sim e não...

Roubar o futuro às gerações seguintes é isto..

US and UK authorities have fined Barclays more than $450m for attempting to manipulate the London interbank offered rate, a benchmark interest rate that is used globally to set the price of everything from credit card fees to corporate loans.

Bob Diamond, Barclays chief executive, said he and three of his top lieutenants would waive any bonus for this year “to reflect our collective responsibility as leaders” as the British bank admitted to “misconduct” spanning five years and three contintents in its submissions to the bank panels that set Libor and Euribor, the Brussels rate.

The Barclays settlement is the first shoe to drop in a sprawling probe that was launched by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission and now spans nearly a dozen regulators and more than 20 banks. Wednesday’s settlements were with the UK Financial Services Authority, the CFTC and the US Department of Justice.

The investigations are continuing and the record fines from the FSA and CFTC are expected to set a basis for settlement negotiations with individuals and other institutions. Libor, the reference rate for $360tn in contracts worldwide, is set by banks submitting rates at which they believe they can borrow in a reasonable market.

But the statements by the authorities included email exchanges in which Barclays’ submitters agreed to requests from traders to adjust their rates, sending responses including “always happy to help” and “done ... for you big boy”.

In one email exchange, an ex-Barclays employee successfully asks a derivatives trader to submit a lower Libor rate and then writes “Dude. I owe you big time! Come over one day after work and I’m opening a bottle of Bollinger.”

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