Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta pois... comentários para quê. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta pois... comentários para quê. Mostrar todas as mensagens

terça-feira, dezembro 16, 2008

"Are We A Bunch Of Hypocrites In Southern Europe?

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One question I often ask myself when speaking with Spanish government employees who timidly ask me the predictable "crisis, what crisis? (BTW será sempre um dos meus dois albuns preferidos, together with The Allan Parson's Project... God I'm getting old!!!) Can't you see, all the bars are still full!" question is just what is meant by that much used and little understood word "solidarity". We are proud to note down here in Southern Europe that we have a complex set of collective institutions which are driven by objectives of "social solidarity", not like those nasty little anglo saxon types (you know, the "neo-liberals") who live up north. But why is it, I ask myself, that I don't here this "crisis, what crisis" stuff from those working in the private sector, who spend the best part of the day at the present time looking across the factory or office floor at their colleagues and asking themselves who it is who will find themself going out of the door this week?
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Solidarity means, if it means anything, that everyone shoulders some part of the burden in difficult times, and that people behave responsibily with their national resources and heritage, and accepting that when there is no money to pay for something, then there simply is no money to pay for it. If you find yourself having to depend on the stringent demands of others from outside your country, then the best thing you can do is to get your country out of the debt which is the cause of the problem, and then you can freely decide your own future for yourself. But while I can well understand how a relatively poor country like Ecuador gets itself into such a dependence-based mess, I am at a loss to understand how comparatively rich countries like Spain, Greece and Portugal have allowed things to come to the pass they have now come to, or how their citizens have let them get to the point they are at now.
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Trecho roubado a Edward Hugh "Why We All Need To Keep A Watchful Eye On What Is Happening In Greece"

quarta-feira, novembro 05, 2008

O problema deve ser meu


Resultados do Dow Jones do dia de hoje, uma queda de mais de 450 pontos.
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Entretanto,
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"Analysts at the US investment bank Morgan Stanley are recommending that clients start to buy shares again after more than a year of falling markets. In an investment strategy report, analysts at the bank said that all four indicators they use to gauge the equity market outlook have started to indicate a turn in the downward trend." (Bear market has ended, says Morgan Stanley)
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Isto faz-me lembrar um programa que a rádio transmitia há uns anos em que a evolução das acções na bolsa portuguesa era analisada só com base em factores psicológicos... fundamentais? Estado da economia? Estado de cada uma das empresas?
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Peanuts.