Dominican Today Forum » Dominicans Abroad » Europe » EURO in the CRAPPER.. Euro Plummeting could reach parity with dollar soon:-?DOUBLE DIP?
#1 - Posted 10 May 2010, 11:25 AM
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EURO in the CRAPPER.. Euro Plummeting could reach parity with dollar soon:-?DOUBLE DIP?
EURO goes in the CRAPPER......Euro could reach parity with dollar:
Get out While You can EURO goes in the CRAPPER......Euro could reach parity with dollar: German economist
Sun May 9, 6:58 AM
BERLIN (AFP) - Battered by the Greek fiscal crisis, the euro could weaken to the point of parity with the US dollar, a top German economist said Sunday, as others warned of inflation in Europe's biggest economy.

"As long as uncertainty over Greece and other countries on the periphery of the euro area continues, the euro will remain under pressure," Thomas Mayer, chief economist at Deutsche Bank, told the Bild am Sonntag weekly.

"I think we could soon see 1.20 against the dollar and a further decline in the direction of parity is definitely possible," added Mayer.

On Friday, as volatile markets closed for the week, the euro fetched 1.2755 dollars as investors warned that failure to nail down a credible rescue plan at Sunday's meeting of EU finance ministers could pressure the euro even more.

Meanwhile, other economists warned of the dangers of inflation returning in Germany in the wake of the Greek crisis.

Wolfgang Gerke, president of the Bavarian Finance Centre, said he expected "maybe not hyperinflation, but around three to four percent, caused by high budget deficits."

The majority (52 percent) of Germans fear that inflation could result from the Greek crisis, according to an Emnid poll published Sunday, compared to 45 percent that saw no such danger.

Moreover, nearly two thirds (59 percent) of Germans think Berlin should consider a return to its pre-euro currency, the deutschmark, with one in three believing the euro will no longer exist in 10 years.

For the moment at least, inflation in Germany is under control, with the latest data from April showing prices rising 1.0 percent compared to the same month in 2009.
Edited on 6/7/2010 3:41 AM by Blutarsky.
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#2 - Posted 10 May 2010, 11:21 PM
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RE: EURO goes in the CRAPPER......Euro could reach parity with dollar: German economist
Trillion-dollar euro rescue won't solve low growth





AP – A stock trader works at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, on Monday, May 10, …
By AOIFE WHITE, AP Business Writer – Mon May 10, 6:27 pm ET
BRUSSELS – A bold $1 trillion rescue by the European Union halted the slide of the euro on Monday and sent markets soaring worldwide in a gambit that may ultimately be seen as the moment Europe truly became a union.

The sweeping cash injection was greeted with euphoria on Wall Street, where stocks rocketed to their biggest gain in more than a year.

Still, the package did not resolve the basic dysfunction at the heart of Europe's monetary union: Governments can still spend recklessly and saddle their partners with the bill.

The approval of a "shock and awe" level rescue package followed weeks of indecision that hammered the euro and sent world markets plunging on fears Europe's debt contagion could spread well beyond Greece, where the crisis began several months ago.

"For once the scope of actions unveiled dwarfed previous leaks and speculation. This is shock and awe Part II and in 3-D," said Marco Annunziata, the chief economist at UniCredit Group.
"Europe has unequivocally said, 'We will defend the euro's integrity,'" said Oliver Pursche, executive vice president at Gary Goldberg Financial Services in Suffern, N.Y.

After frantic talks lasting into the early hours of Monday, European officials agreed the 16 euro nations would put up $572 billion (euro440 billion) in new loans and $78 billion (euro60 billion) under an existing lending program. The International Monetary Fund will pump in another $325 billion (euro250 billion), for a total package of nearly $1 trillion.

The European Commission is to raise the money in capital markets, using guarantees from member governments, and lend it to crisis-stricken countries so they can pay their bills.
Many questions were left unanswered, such as how the money would be dispensed and on what terms.

Still, the move supplied the decisiveness — and the big headline — the markets had been craving. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 405 points to close at 10,785 — its biggest gain since March 2009 — and recouped two-thirds of last week's losses. At its peak Monday, the Dow was up nearly 455 points.

Broader U.S. indexes outpaced the Dow's 3.9 percent rise, while gains in several European markets topped 9 percent.
The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 48.85, or 4.4 percent, to 1,159.73. The Nasdaq composite index rose 109.03, or 4.8 percent, to 2,374.67.

The euro bounced back from 14-month lows around $1.25 on Friday to over $1.30 on Monday, reversing the ominous slides and sense of panic from last week.

The crisis had raised fears of a panic like the one following the collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008 and prompted nervous banks to cut back on lending to businesses and hammered stock markets.

A weaker euro and financial and economic disaster in Europe would hurt U.S. exports, and the U.S. Federal Reserve pitched in by agreeing to make dollars available to the European Central Bank in exchange for euros. The ECB will then loan those dollars at fixed rates to banks in Europe; the interest eventually goes to the Fed when it swaps the euros back for dollars at the same exchange rate as the original transaction.

European banks need dollars to lend to companies across the continent. European companies with operations in the U.S. pay their employees in dollars and buy raw materials with the U.S. currency. Also, oil and other commodities are priced in dollars around the world.
But because of the debt crisis, private banks in the U.S. have been leery of making loans to banks in Europe. Hence the need for the currency swaps between the central banks.
Analysts warned, however, that the emergency bailout fund would do nothing to reverse Europe's soaring public debt — and could even worsen it.

"The last thing you give a drunk is another drink," said Jeremy Batstone-Carr of Charles Stanley stockbrokers.

"The process of providing a bridging facility for Greece and possibly other indebted nations will add significantly to regional debt and deficit ratios without actually solving the underlying problem."
EU officials said the next step was to more closely coordinate member nations' economies, including tougher rules to keep them from running up too much debt. The eurozone has a limit on deficits of 3 percent of gross domestic product, but that was widely ignored.

"The key missing pieces ... are steps to strengthen fiscal discipline and structural reforms," said economist Annunziata. "I remain skeptical on this front, as greater fiscal integration at this stage requires deeper political integration."

Still, he noted, some experts argue the "current crisis is exactly what was needed to trigger a new quantum leap in European integration. I hope that turns out to be the case."

European Union President Herman Van Rompuy said European governments need to consider pooling their national powers and create a joint economic government.

"We can't have a monetary union without some form of economic and political union and that is our big task for the coming weeks and the coming months," he said.

He said he would draft tougher rules for EU leaders to discuss in October that go beyond current EU limits on debt and deficit.

The core problem is near-zero economic growth, high unemployment and governments unwilling to take painful steps to get people to work more and longer.

Simon Tilford, an economist at the Center for European Reform think tank, warned that EU governments so far haven't come up with anything "game changing."

"What Europe needs is a growth pact because without growth, public finances aren't going to be sustainable," Tilford said. "The bond markets are going to be forcing them to make those kind of changes."

Even EU president Van Rompuy warned that the bloc risks irrelevance and the end of its expensive welfare programs if it can't speed up economic growth, forecast to expand by just 1 percent this year.
"With 1 percent growth we can't finance our social model any more. With 1 percent structural growth we can't play a role in the world," he told the World Economic Forum in Brussels. "We need to double the economic growth potential that we now have."

Many are skeptical that can be achieved.

Jennifer McKeown, senior European economist at Capital Economics, said the rescue package won't stop euro economies like Greece, Portugal and Spain from suffering "a long period of extreme economic weakness" and won't erase fears of a default or collapse of the euro.

"We still see the euro weakening further to around $1.20 by the end of this year," she said.
Others worried over the prospect of EU policymakers stepping away from the strict rules that underpin the euro.

Marc Ostwald, a market strategist at Monument Securities, said Monday's rewriting of the rule book "in just a couple of hours" could foreshadow "a lot more in the way of absolute risk priced into government bond yields."

The European Central Bank's agreement to buy government bonds also spurred concern that it had caved in to political pressure, ironically weakening a key euro institution in order to save the currency.
"It will be hard not to see this as a loss of credibility and independence for the ECB," Annunziata said.
Commerzbank economist Michael Schubert said the rescue could spur irresponsible behavior by other eurozone nations if they know there's a bailout when they overspend.

Dutch bank NIBC said in a research note that the only long-term solution for countries like Greece was an eventual debt restructuring — the polite term for a technical default, with lenders unlikely to receive anywhere close to the full value of their loans to the government.
___

"If you want to sleep well at night, it's best to avoid watching the making of sausages or politics." Otto Von Bismarck
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#3 - Posted 11 May 2010, 6:33 PM
Location: United Kingdom, Dominican Republic
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RE: EURO goes in the CRAPPER......Euro could reach parity with dollar: German economist
Quote:
Atabey previously said:

Trillion-dollar euro rescue won't solve low growth





AP – A stock trader works at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, on Monday, May 10, …
By AOIFE WHITE, AP Business Writer – Mon May 10, 6:27 pm ET
BRUSSELS – A bold $1 trillion rescue by the European Union halted the slide of the euro on Monday and sent markets soaring worldwide in a gambit that may ultimately be seen as the moment Europe truly became a union.

The sweeping cash injection was greeted with euphoria on Wall Street, where stocks rocketed to their biggest gain in more than a year.

Still, the package did not resolve the basic dysfunction at the heart of Europe's monetary union: Governments can still spend recklessly and saddle their partners with the bill.

The approval of a "shock and awe" level rescue package followed weeks of indecision that hammered the euro and sent world markets plunging on fears Europe's debt contagion could spread well beyond Greece, where the crisis began several months ago.

"For once the scope of actions unveiled dwarfed previous leaks and speculation. This is shock and awe Part II and in 3-D," said Marco Annunziata, the chief economist at UniCredit Group.
"Europe has unequivocally said, 'We will defend the euro's integrity,'" said Oliver Pursche, executive vice president at Gary Goldberg Financial Services in Suffern, N.Y.

After frantic talks lasting into the early hours of Monday, European officials agreed the 16 euro nations would put up $572 billion (euro440 billion) in new loans and $78 billion (euro60 billion) under an existing lending program. The International Monetary Fund will pump in another $325 billion (euro250 billion), for a total package of nearly $1 trillion.

The European Commission is to raise the money in capital markets, using guarantees from member governments, and lend it to crisis-stricken countries so they can pay their bills.
Many questions were left unanswered, such as how the money would be dispensed and on what terms.

Still, the move supplied the decisiveness — and the big headline — the markets had been craving. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 405 points to close at 10,785 — its biggest gain since March 2009 — and recouped two-thirds of last week's losses. At its peak Monday, the Dow was up nearly 455 points.

Broader U.S. indexes outpaced the Dow's 3.9 percent rise, while gains in several European markets topped 9 percent.
The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 48.85, or 4.4 percent, to 1,159.73. The Nasdaq composite index rose 109.03, or 4.8 percent, to 2,374.67.

The euro bounced back from 14-month lows around $1.25 on Friday to over $1.30 on Monday, reversing the ominous slides and sense of panic from last week.

The crisis had raised fears of a panic like the one following the collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008 and prompted nervous banks to cut back on lending to businesses and hammered stock markets.

A weaker euro and financial and economic disaster in Europe would hurt U.S. exports, and the U.S. Federal Reserve pitched in by agreeing to make dollars available to the European Central Bank in exchange for euros. The ECB will then loan those dollars at fixed rates to banks in Europe; the interest eventually goes to the Fed when it swaps the euros back for dollars at the same exchange rate as the original transaction.

European banks need dollars to lend to companies across the continent. European companies with operations in the U.S. pay their employees in dollars and buy raw materials with the U.S. currency. Also, oil and other commodities are priced in dollars around the world.
But because of the debt crisis, private banks in the U.S. have been leery of making loans to banks in Europe. Hence the need for the currency swaps between the central banks.
Analysts warned, however, that the emergency bailout fund would do nothing to reverse Europe's soaring public debt — and could even worsen it.

"The last thing you give a drunk is another drink," said Jeremy Batstone-Carr of Charles Stanley stockbrokers.

"The process of providing a bridging facility for Greece and possibly other indebted nations will add significantly to regional debt and deficit ratios without actually solving the underlying problem."
EU officials said the next step was to more closely coordinate member nations' economies, including tougher rules to keep them from running up too much debt. The eurozone has a limit on deficits of 3 percent of gross domestic product, but that was widely ignored.

"The key missing pieces ... are steps to strengthen fiscal discipline and structural reforms," said economist Annunziata. "I remain skeptical on this front, as greater fiscal integration at this stage requires deeper political integration."

Still, he noted, some experts argue the "current crisis is exactly what was needed to trigger a new quantum leap in European integration. I hope that turns out to be the case."

European Union President Herman Van Rompuy said European governments need to consider pooling their national powers and create a joint economic government.

"We can't have a monetary union without some form of economic and political union and that is our big task for the coming weeks and the coming months," he said.

He said he would draft tougher rules for EU leaders to discuss in October that go beyond current EU limits on debt and deficit.

The core problem is near-zero economic growth, high unemployment and governments unwilling to take painful steps to get people to work more and longer.

Simon Tilford, an economist at the Center for European Reform think tank, warned that EU governments so far haven't come up with anything "game changing."

"What Europe needs is a growth pact because without growth, public finances aren't going to be sustainable," Tilford said. "The bond markets are going to be forcing them to make those kind of changes."

Even EU president Van Rompuy warned that the bloc risks irrelevance and the end of its expensive welfare programs if it can't speed up economic growth, forecast to expand by just 1 percent this year.
"With 1 percent growth we can't finance our social model any more. With 1 percent structural growth we can't play a role in the world," he told the World Economic Forum in Brussels. "We need to double the economic growth potential that we now have."

Many are skeptical that can be achieved.

Jennifer McKeown, senior European economist at Capital Economics, said the rescue package won't stop euro economies like Greece, Portugal and Spain from suffering "a long period of extreme economic weakness" and won't erase fears of a default or collapse of the euro.

"We still see the euro weakening further to around $1.20 by the end of this year," she said.
Others worried over the prospect of EU policymakers stepping away from the strict rules that underpin the euro.

Marc Ostwald, a market strategist at Monument Securities, said Monday's rewriting of the rule book "in just a couple of hours" could foreshadow "a lot more in the way of absolute risk priced into government bond yields."

The European Central Bank's agreement to buy government bonds also spurred concern that it had caved in to political pressure, ironically weakening a key euro institution in order to save the currency.
"It will be hard not to see this as a loss of credibility and independence for the ECB," Annunziata said.
Commerzbank economist Michael Schubert said the rescue could spur irresponsible behavior by other eurozone nations if they know there's a bailout when they overspend.

Dutch bank NIBC said in a research note that the only long-term solution for countries like Greece was an eventual debt restructuring — the polite term for a technical default, with lenders unlikely to receive anywhere close to the full value of their loans to the government.
___

A lot of nonsense.
Cont over
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#4 - Posted 11 May 2010, 6:37 PM
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RE: EURO goes in the CRAPPER......Euro could reach parity with dollar: German economist
The trick in achieving economic balance is to work less, recycle, use resources sensibly, design all systems
for efficiency and use renewable energy sources in a sustainable way.
Green influence is growing historically UK has first Green MP.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/election-2010/7689660/General-Election-2010-Caroline-Lucas-becomes-Britains-first-Green-MP.html
What is Green Economics?
By Brian Milani

Green economics is the economics of the real world—the world of work, human needs, the Earth’s materials, and how they mesh together most harmoniously. It is primarily about “use value,” not “exchange value” or money. It is about quality, not quantity, for the sake of it. It is about regeneration—of individuals, communities, and ecosystems—not about accumulation, of either money or material.
The industrial or capitalist definition of wealth has always been about the accumulation of money and matter. Any use values generated (i.e. social needs met) have been secondary—a side-effect, by-product, spin-off, or trickle-down—to the primary goal of monetary accumulation. For two centuries, the quest to accumulate money or capital drove a powerful industrialization process that actually did spin off many human benefits, however unfairly distributed. But blind material and monetary growth has reached a threshold where it is generating more destruction than real wealth. A post-industrial world requires an economics of quality, where both money and matter are returned to a status of means to an end. Green economics means a direct focus on meeting human and environmental needs.

Tinkering with money, interest rates, or even state regulation is insufficient in creating sensible economies. One can scarcely imagine a more inefficient, irrational and wasteful way to organize any sector of the economy than what we actually have right now. Both the form and the content of sustainable agriculture, of green manufacturing, of soft energy, etc., are diametrically opposed to their current industrial counterparts, which are intrinsically wasteful. There is no justifiable rationale to be producing vast quantities of toxic materials, or generating more deskilled than skilled labor, or displacing labor rather than resources from production, or extending giant wasteful loops of production and consumption through globalization. These are economic inefficiencies, economic irrationalities that can only be righted by starting from scratch—to look at the most elegant and efficient ways of doing everything. As green economist Paul Hawken writes, our social and environmental crises are not problems of management, but of design. We need a system overhaul.

Green economics is not just about the environment. Certainly we must move to harmonize with natural systems, to make our economies flow benignly like sailboats in the wind of ecosystem processes. But doing this requires great human creativity, tremendous knowledge, and the widespread participation of everyone. Human beings and human workers can no longer serve as cogs in the machine of accumulation, be it capitalistic or socialistic. Ecological development requires an unleashing of human development and an extension of democracy. Social and ecological transformation go hand in hand.

Green economics and green politics both emphasize the creation of positive alternatives in all areas of life and every sector of the economy. Green economics does not prioritize support for either the “public” or the “private” sector. It argues that both sectors must be transformed so that markets express social and ecological values, and the state becomes merged with grassroots networks of community innovation. For this to happen, new economic processes must be designed, and new rules of the game written, so that incentives for ecological conduct are built into everyday economic life. The state can then function less as a policeman and more as a coordinator.

This is a very different kind of “self-regulation” than current profit- and power-driven market forces. The basis for self-regulation in a green economy would be community and intelligent design, which provides incentives for the right things.


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#5 - Posted 11 May 2010, 6:40 PM
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RE: EURO goes in the CRAPPER......Euro could reach parity with dollar: German economist
Ten Principles of a Green Economy:
1. The Primacy of Use Value, Intrinsic Value, and Quality: This is the fundamental principle of the green economy as a service economy, focused on end-use, or human and environmental needs. Matter is a means to the end of satisfying real need, and can be radically conserved. Money similarly must be returned to a status as a means to facilitate regenerative exchanges, rather than an end in itself. When this is done in even a significant portion of the economy, it can undercut the totalitarian power of money in the entire economy.


2. Following Natural Flows: The economy moves like a proverbial sailboat in the wind of natural processes by flowing not only with solar, renewable, and “negawatt” energy, but also with natural hydrological cycles, with regional vegetation and food webs, and with local materials. As society becomes more ecological, political and economic boundaries tend to coincide with ecosystem boundaries. That is, it becomes bioregional.

3. Waste Equals Food: In nature there is no waste, as every process output is an input for some other process. This principle implies not only a high degree of organizational complementarity, but also that outputs and by-products are nutritious and non-toxic enough to be food for something.

4. Elegance and Multifunctionality: Complex food webs are implied by the previous principle—integrated relationships which are antithetical to industrial society’s segmentation and fragmentation. What Roberts and Brandum (1995) call “economics with peripheral vision,” this elegance features “problem-solving strategies that develop multiple wins and positive side-effects from any one set of actions.” [1]

5. Appropriate Scale/Linked Scale: This does not simply mean “small is beautiful,” but that every regenerative activity has its most appropriate scale of operation. Even the smallest activities have larger impacts, however, and truly ecological activity “integrates design across multiple scales,” reflecting influence of larger on smaller and smaller on larger (Van der Ryn & Cowan, 1996).2

6. Diversity: In a world of constant flux, health and stability seem to depend on diversity. This applies to all levels (diversity of species, of ecosystems, of regions), and to social, as well as ecological organization.

7. Self-Reliance, Self-Organization, Self-Design: Complex systems necessarily rely on “nested hierarchies” of intelligence, which coordinate among themselves in a kind of resonant dance. These hierarchies are built from the bottom up, and—in contrast to civilization’s social hierarchies—the base levels are the most important. In an economy which moves with ecosystem processes, tremendous scope for local response, design, and adaptation must be provided, although these local and regional domains must be attuned to larger processes. Self-reliance is not self-sufficiency, but facilitates a more flexible and holistic interdependence.

8. Participation and Direct Democracy: To enable flexibility and resilience, ecological economic design features a high “eyes to acres” ratio (Van der Ryn & Cowan, 1996): lots of local observation and participation.[2] Conversely, ecological organization and new information/communications technologies can pro-vide the means for deeper levels of participation in the decisions that count in society.

9. Human Creativity and Development: Displacing resources from production and tuning into the spontaneous productivity of nature requires tremendous creativity. It requires all-round human development that entails great qualities of nurture. These are qualities of giving and real service that have been suppressed (especially in men) by the social and psychological conditioning of the industrial order. In green change, the personal and political, the social and ecological, go hand in hand. Social, aesthetic, and spiritual capacities become central to attaining economic efficiency, and become important goals in themselves.

10. The Strategic Role of the Built Environment, the Landscape, and Spatial Design: As Permaculturalist Bill Mollison has emphasized, the greatest efficiency gains can often be achieved by a simple spatial rearrangement of system components. Elegant, mixed-use, integrated design that moves with nature is place-based. In addition, our buildings, in one way or another, absorb around 40 percent of materials and energy throughput in North America. Thus, conservation and efficiency improvements in this sector impact tremendously on the entire economy. Green economic conversion must be radical, but it must also be incremental and organic. How is this possible? Rodale cites the need for a kind of economic succession which mimics ecological landscape change. We need “pioneer enterprises” that can thrive in today’s hostile economic landscape, but also prepare the ground for more ecological and egalitarian enterprises to come. A vision of what each sector of the economy would look like in an ecological economy—based on the specifics of each place—is a starting point. This vision must be coupled with practical action in each of these sectors, gradually moving toward this vision. Enough practical activity can eventually generate the impetus for state action to level the playing field for ecological alternatives.

Endnotes

1 Roberts, Wayne & Susan Brandum, GET A LIFE! How To Make a Good Buck, Dance around the Dinosaurs, and Save the World While You’re at It, Get A Life Publishing, 1995.
2 Van der Ryn, Sim & Stuart Cowan, Ecological Design, Island Press, 1996.

http://urbanhabitat.org/node/507
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#6 - Posted 26 May 2010, 1:27 PM
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RE: EURO goes in the CRAPPER......Euro could reach parity with dollar: German economist
EU Slips on Greece Spot, Falls on its Arse and Can't Get Up!



EU Suffers Major Stomach Upset: Greece Found Clogging Financial Arteries Threatening Stroke!


Naysayers pointed with alarm today as Financial Markets reacted to the down grading of Greece's ability to repay enormous loans, rating their bonds S-8, which unofficially is lower than whale shit on the bottom of the ocean.

Also down graded was Portugal which is the next marginal economic country doomed to go down the toilet in the 2 year old economic melt down.

Meanwhile in Greece, socialist public workers continued to strike, refusing to contribute to the governments efforts to cut costs on an out of control spending spree thereby encouraging non productivity, while penalizing free, prudent, and rational enterprise.

Following the EU implosion, the New York Stock Exchange put an emphatic period to the days disastrous events while dropping over 200 points in a dramatic 'no confidence' vote for the EU Economic Path, suicidally being pursued by US Regime Leader, Barrack Obamsky.

In a comical display of chutzpah, the newly elected President trotted out two egg heads recently appointed to tell him how to cut the "unsustainable' deficit, while he continues to push for more socialistic programs driving the country into deeper unemployment and overwhelming debt.

Anticipating their directed findings, the President said 'nothing was off the table' including the soon to be issued VAT tax, increased property tax, increased unemployment taxes, a carbon tax, a national sales tax, and a 'founders tax' placed on all natural born citizens now still working.

The President avoided any references to tax reform, cutting medicare fraud, collecting delinquent taxes from Federal Workers, or from Al Sharpton, for that matter, who happens to owe $1.5M in taxes and Penalties.

In fact, the President in continuing his candidacy stumping for the Head of the EU in 2012 after he is voted out of office, indicated an all out Justice Department Assault against the state of Arizona that signed into law a bill that enables them to enforce a Federal Bill regarding illegal aliens.

Arizona says the bill will control the unsustainable spending attributed to costs associated with feeding, clothing, educating, jailing, and burying ILLEGAL aliens while the Federal Administration looks the other way.

Obamsky said, if necessary he will deploy Airborne troops to secure all major cities in Arizona and take over day to day functions of the elected officials in order to keep unrestricted funds flowing to all non citizens.

Obamsky reiterated he had no intention to restrict access to the over run state by enforcing border crossings, and in fact said he would staff the border points with volunteer Acorn Workers to supply directions on how to apply for state aid, vouchers for free housing, food stamps, and bus chits to help cut costs as they moved in land to Detroit, Chicago and Boston.

Meanwhile in the UK Gordon Brown and Nick Clegg praised Obamsky's fight for 'human rights', while Cameron said he needed time 'to think it over.'

In late breaking news, the Arizona Attorney General filed several amendments to their bill, which also includes a stipulation that anyone on an election ballot produce a valid birth certificate.

Under the new amendments, anyone who has cheated on their tax returns, has an outstanding balance on taxes owed which have been repeatedly ignored, will be arrested and held until the matter reaches a satisfactory resolution. A spokesman said adjudication will take place on any case within 48 hours, thereby cutting the time currently taken by the congressional
'ethics committee' by 3 years and 363 days.

According to private jet carriers in Washington and New York, several high ranking elected officials and heads of non profit organizations, have suddenly canceled travel plans to the state to protest march in the streets, but in a prepared statement said their 'thoughts, prayers and future election hopes' are with their 'kindred illegal constituents'!

Arizona volunteer firefighters have voted Al Sharpton "Racial Arsonist of the Year."
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#7 - Posted 31 May 2010, 8:34 PM
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RE: EURO goes in the CRAPPER......Euro could reach parity with dollar: German economist
The end of indolence
The benefits system keeps the poor dependent on the state and is open to abuse, the government
The poverty trap: Minister says benefits system offers little incentive to work

Iain Duncan Smith, the secretary of state for work and pensions, whose department accounts for £141 billion of public spending per year, announced plans last week for a radical overhaul of the welfare system. More than 5m people receive welfare benefits. Duncan Smith said the system, while designed to alleviate poverty, trapped thousands in dependency because many were better off receiving benefits than they would be earning a salary at work. According to official figures, more than 670,000 households receive in excess of £15,000 a year in benefits, and about 50,000 households take more than £26,000 a year in benefits. To earn the equivalent of the latter, an employee would have to make £35,000 a year before tax. Duncan Smith said the benefit system was “breaking” and that “for far too many people, work simply does not pay”.

Decade of abuse: Many long-term claimants thought to be able to work

The system is unnecessarily complex and open to abuse, according to Duncan Smith. Under the former Labour government, the number claiming jobseeker’s allowance fell after the rules on eligibility for the benefit were tightened. However, at the same time, the number claiming incapacity benefits rose, leading critics to argue that jobseekers had simply switched to the less tightly regulated benefit. Reports suggest that most of the 2.6m people claiming incapacity benefit could work. Medical examinations, given to all new incapacity claimants since October 2008, have indicated 90% are either fit enough to work or could move back to the workplace in the future. Yet the number claiming incapacity benefit has remained stable for more than a decade.

Tough new rules: Minister plans to cut benefits for the workshy

The coalition government proposes to move people off benefits by adopting a carrot-and-stick approach. Incapacity benefit claimants who are found to be fit enough to work will be moved onto jobseeker’s allowance. Claimants who are able to work but refuse to do so will have their benefits docked. The task of getting the unemployed back to work will be outsourced: training organisations will be responsible for finding employment for jobseekers and paid according to their success. The welfare system will also be reformed to prevent people from in effect suffering a high rate of tax through loss of tax credits when they take a low-wage job. Duncan Smith hopes that this will make even a part-time job more attractive than staying on benefits. He also proposes the phasing-out of a mandatory retirement age, suggesting people will have to work longer.

Job shortage: Recession makes back-to-work schemes harder

The proposed reforms face high hurdles. The level of unemployment is likely to remain high while recovery from the economic downturn is weak. Though claimants may be encouraged to seek work, sufficient jobs may not exist. Duncan Smith’s plans have been likened to the Pathways to Work scheme rolled out by the previous Labour government in 2008 when James Purnell was work and pensions secretary. That scheme put incapacity benefit claimants through medical assessments, and people who found jobs were rewarded with cash top-ups on their salaries. The National Audit Office reported last week that the scheme had had “limited impact” and had been “poor value for money”. The auditor found that firms contracted to get people back into work had “universally underperformed”.
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#8 - Posted 1 June 2010, 2:08 PM
Location: Dominican Republic, No Spin Zone
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RE: EURO goes in the CRAPPER......Euro could reach parity with dollar: German economist
The welfare states of EU are Kaput ....Go back to work
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#9 - Posted 1 June 2010, 2:54 PM
Location: United Kingdom, Dominican Republic
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RE: EURO goes in the CRAPPER......Euro could reach parity with dollar: German economist
Quote:
Blutarsky previously said:

The welfare states of EU are Kaput ....Go back to work

If the Euro goes 1:1 with the dollar US airlines will be queuing up to buy Airbus A380 with RR engines.
Then cheap flights will be possible to the DR given fuel efficiency and only 2 pilots needed for 800 passengers.


French and UK built high speed trains will cross the US!


First French built train has opened in South Africa!

http://www.sagoodnews.co.za/countdown_to_2010/africa_s_first_high-speed_train_to_open_ahead_of_world_cup.html




The best champagne in the world will become a breakfast treat for Americans1


Huge exports to the US.

S.


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#10 - Posted 2 June 2010, 10:53 AM
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RE: EURO goes in the CRAPPER......Iran to sell 45 bln euros, buy dollars, gold
Iran to sell 45 bln euros, buy dollars, gold -Xinhua
BEIJING
Wed Jun 2, 2010 6:43am EDT
Related News
UPDATE 1-Top c.banks not planning shift out of euro-govt sources
3:19am EDT
Sun, May 30 2010
June 2 (Reuters) - The Iranian central bank has announced that it will sell 45 billion euros from its foreign exchange reserves to buy dollars and gold, China's official Xinhua news agency reported on Wednesday, citing unspecified Iranian media reports.

CURRENCIES | BONDS | GLOBAL MARKETS

Xinhua said that the sales would be conducted in three stages and that the first had already begun, citing unnamed sources.

It also said that other Gulf states had also started cutting their euro holdings. (Reporting by Michael Wei and Simon Rabinovitch; Editing by Neil Fullick)
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