Zaz_pi Posted December 3, 2014 Posted December 3, 2014 Kako kada MMF i SB kazu da su prakticno na istom nivou? Koje podatke koristis. Ako ti tako kazes. Ruski uticaj je ogromna samo je pitanje da li zele da ga koriste, ne na EU nego svetsku ekonomiju ;)
Zaz_pi Posted December 3, 2014 Posted December 3, 2014 Ni standard nije kao sto je bio. SWEDISH PM LOEFVEN SAYS SWEDEN IN SERIOUS SITUATION SWEDISH PM LOEFVEN SAYS WON'T ACCEPT NEW POLITICAL SITUATION SWEDISH PRIME MINISTER LOEFVEN CALLS FOR NEW ELECTION IN 2015 SWEDISH PM SAYS NEW ELECTION TO BE HELD ON MARCH 22 SWEDISH GOVT: WILL NEVER ALLOW SWEDEN DEMS TO DICTATE RULES SWEDISH PM LOEFVEN WON'T SEEK ANY FURTHER TALKS WITH OPPOSITIO This follows after Sweden's Democrats, the third-largest party, "plunged the Nordic nation into a crisis" yesterday after vowing to oppose any government budget that promoted immigration.
Zaz_pi Posted December 4, 2014 Posted December 4, 2014 Evo, predsednik na ECB se slaze sa mnom Oil price: some effects positive, others not. Need to see what the second round effects are - Draghi Mozda moze nas dragi poznavalac sused da nam objasni ovo, vidim da je znalac. Inace je danas ECB zestoko isekao procene rasta za ovu i narednu godinu. Draghi revises growth projections “substantially downward” Sta je ovo prijatelji, rodjaci?
Zaz_pi Posted December 9, 2014 Posted December 9, 2014 Danas je Grcka imala najgori pad berze od 1987, skoro 15%. To je povuklo i druge evropske indekse zestoko dole. Ali hteo sam nesto drugo da predocim kao zanimljivost: Net wealth of median households (1000€) European Central Bank (2013) The results are also qualified by the fact that the study takes real estate as one of the decisive factors in a household's private wealth. In Spain, 83 percent of households own a house, while in Germany, only 44 percent own the flats or houses they live in. Doduse, nisu uracunate ni penzije kao znacajni faktor. Sa druge strane, Nemacka je jedna od najraslojenih drzava EU na bogate i siromasne: We find that in Germany the top 20% of the income class has 149 times more wealth than the bottom 20% of the income class. Judged by this criterion, Germany has the most unequal distribution of wealth in the Eurozone. :)
Tribun_Populi Posted December 28, 2014 Posted December 28, 2014 (edited) Fallout from Obama’s Russia Strategy Is Spreading through Europe By Patrick Smith, The Fiscal Times December 22, 2014 The Obama administration’s sanctions against Russia, reluctantly supported by the Europeans, bite more deeply every day. But it is also clearer with each daily news report that Russians are not going to suffer alone. Russia’s immediate neighbors and the Europeans will, too. And—not to be missed—so will the trans-Atlantic alliance that has served as the backbone of Western policy since the postwar order was established 70 years ago next spring. This president is intent on making history. But does he distinguish between good history and the other kind? Related: Can Financial Contagion in Putin’s Russia Spread West It’ll be the other kind if the European Union swoons into another recession as a consequence of America’s geopolitical ambitions to Europe’s east. Emphatically it’ll be the other kind if Obama hastens a drift in Washington’s ties to the European capitals that have been faintly discernible, if papered over, for decades. Let’s look at this from all angles. President Putin, in his freewheeling annual encounter with journalists last week, told Russians they faced not a crisis but two years of “trying times.” Then he added offhandedly, “Call it what you want.” Taking his advice, let’s say the Russian economy is now either in crisis or at the edge of one. That’s today’s news: The world’s No. 8 economic power could well go down. Tomorrow’s is all about contagion. The Commonwealth of Independent States, as well as former Soviet satellites that are not CIS members, are catching cold and starting to shiver. Those West Europeans whose economies are most extensively interdependent with Russia’s, notably but not only the Germans, are next. Now, there’s an even bigger body headed for sickbay. In a single week, Obama signed a bill authorizing a new round of sanctions against Russia while several members of the European Union voiced open objections to the sanctions strategy for the first time. Related: Putin Threatens to Move Nukes into Crimea as Ruble Tumbles The Ukraine Freedom Support Act has been in the making since the Senate Foreign Relations Committee reported it out last September. Given that it authorizes a new round of very stringent sanctions and $350 million in military aid to Ukraine, it is Cold War aggression by any other name. Obama was tone-deaf to sign it into law last Thursday. One, it is obvious now that sanctions already in place are devastating the ruble, Russia’s access to international capital, Russia’s equity and bond markets, and, as the economics ministry just reported, Russian GDP. Two, if you’re sitting in Europe instead of Foggy Bottom, it is cold-sweat obvious that Russia’s mess is heading westward. On Friday the Polish zloty hit a 15-month low against the euro—straight-ahead fallout from Russia’s crisis. Among the CIS nations, Belarus just doubled interest rates, to 50 percent, and imposed a 30 percent tax on forex transactions. Kyrgyzstan is closing private currency exchanges, and Armenia is letting the dram, its currency, collapse—17 percent in the past month—in a policy it calls “hyper-devaluation.” Further afield, the Indian rupee, the South African rand, and the Turkish lira are among the emerging-market currencies taking hits from the ruble crisis. Flipping these eggs over, Switzerland just imposed negative interest rates to discourage a stampede of weak-currency holders from piling into the franc in search of a safe haven. Related: Putin’s New Story Line—Oil Shock Has a Silver Lining It would take a genius to anticipate all these ripples. It would take a halfway smart economics graduate to know there would be ripples aplenty as Washington began its effort to take down the Russian economy and humiliate Putin to the max. What happened as E.U. ministers and heads of state convened in Brussels last week can come as no surprise. On one hand, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and British Prime Minister David Cameron insisted that Europeans must “stay the course” on Russia. Just before the Brussels summit, the E.U. barred investments in Crimea—a gesture more than anything else, but one with clear intent. On the other hand, deep divisions are now on the surface. Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi declared “absolutely no” to more sanctions, and François Hollande seemed to say no to the sanctions already in place. Noting signs of progress on Ukraine, the French president said, “If gestures are sent by Russia, as we expect, there would be no reason to impose new sanctions, but on the contrary to look at how we could bring about a de-escalation from our side.” Danish Foreign Minister Martin Lidegaard asserted that the sanctions already in place may be hitting too hard. We want to modulate Russia’s behavior, he said in an especially astute distinction, not destroy Russia’s economy. Related: Obama Says Putin Presiding Over Economic Contraction In short, two serious fissures are emerging as the hard line against Russia advances. One, the E.U. is plainly getting fractious. Reflecting the rainbow of political tendencies among their leaders, Europeans may have reached their limit in acquiescing in the Obama administration’s tough-and-getting-tougher policies. Note, in this context: Europe has nothing like the fiscal and monetary wherewithal it had six years ago to withstand another bout of financial and economic contagion. Two, Obama appears ever closer to overplaying America’s hand with the Europeans. Tensions between Washington and Europe have simmered just out of sight since the Cold War decades. There are significant signs now that Obama has let the Ukraine crisis worsen them to the point the tenor of trans-Atlantic ties is permanently modulated. If this goes any further it will be very big indeed. Chancellor Merkel, not surprisingly, is the very personification of these difficult divisions. As a former East German and a conservative she honors the E.U.-U.S. relationship, plainly. At the same time, she must address dissenters in the E.U. and keep the European alliance together. At home, Merkel faces a gathering crowd of Putin Versteher, “Putin understanders,” who include not only leftist political people, but a goodly number of business executives. The latter appear to be in a rising state of anxiety as relations with Russia deteriorate. Question: Do President Obama’s big-think people at State and the Treasury know the magnitude of the game they’re playing? This is the issue the economic fallout of sanctions and the new shifts in Europe raise. Follow-on query, not pleasant to ask but it must be put: Does Obama have any big thinkers in either department? As the consequences of this administration’s Russia policy unfurl, they appear to travel on a wing and a prayer—“making it up as they go along,” as a friend and Foreign Service refugee said over lunch the other day. - See more at: http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Columns/2014/12/22/Fallout-Obama-s-Russia-Strategy-Spreading-through-Europe#sthash.2cHuOAhk.dpuf Simpatično da je tetka hardliner, pitam se samo dokle. Edited December 28, 2014 by Tribun_Populi
Eraserhead Posted December 29, 2014 Posted December 29, 2014 (edited) Svaki tekst mu je sve gori. Uzmi ovo npr o "pogorsanju odnosa USA i Evrope oko Ukrajine". Covek je naveo to i nikakav dokaz za tako nesto. Deluje da ako ista nakon godina lutanja odnos USA u Evrope je nasao novi smisao. Onda imas ovo za Merkel gde deluje kao da ona ima vecih problema sa grupom putinoljubaca ali zapravo njen approval je vec duze vreme stabilan iznad 60%. Putinoljubci su marginalna grupa. Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Edited December 29, 2014 by Eraserhead
Tribun_Populi Posted December 29, 2014 Posted December 29, 2014 Deluje da ako ista nakon godina lutanja odnos USA u Evrope je nasao novi smisao. Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Da ne znam šta i kako pišeš, pomislio bih da si ironičan. Ovako - sve u najboljem redu. :D
bigvlada Posted January 10, 2015 Posted January 10, 2015 Hajde da ih za promenu i pohvalim. In Europe, Pirates Are Writing The Copyright LawBy Rick Falkvingeon January 4, 2015Strangely unreported by mainstream media, there is a major revision of the copyright monopoly underway in the European Union. And the person in charge, Julia Reda, is a Pirate Party representative. The tide is turning.For years – nay, for decades – net activists and freedom-of-speech activists have been fighting against the copyright industry’s corrupt initiatives. In country after country, the copyright industry was practically calling out for mail-order legislation, and receiving it every time.The collateral damage to liberties has been immense, and has spilled far outside the net. In the US, people are complaining that copyright monopoly law is now unintentionally preventing them to modify items they legally own, such as cars or games consoles. They’re absolutely wrong: that was the exact intention with the most recent round of revisions to copyright monopoly law – to limit property rights and to lock people out of their own possessions. (The copyright monopoly is, and has always been, a limitation on property rights.)Further, that collateral damage includes making messengers (“intermediaries”) liable for any damages caused by a message they carry, unless they immediately take sites offline – which they would of course rather do, rather than risking immense lawsuits. The messenger immunity was gutted around the turn of the century, by the EUCD and the DMCA alike. “Notice-and-takedown” has been abused by everybody and their corporate brother, up to and including the oil company Neste Oil who attacked a Greenpeace protest site by threatening the Internet provider of Greenpeace, thereby killing the protest site.As activists fought – and won! – against software patent monopolies in Europe in 2005, it became clear that we couldn’t fight one bad thing after another, never having the initiative, always being on the defense against onslaught from corporate mail-order legislation. For every exhausting victory, there were nine bad laws being passed in the shadows. We had to go on the offense. We had to aspire to write the law ourselves, keeping corporate lobbyists firmly out of any corrupt influence.On January 1, 2006, I founded the Swedish and first Pirate Party. It’s now on its tenth year, and on its second term in the European Parliament. This term, that European Parliament is revising the copyright monopoly – definitely once, possibly twice. It starts out by evaluating what works and what doesn’t with the current set of laws on the matter. And the rapporteur for that dossier – meaning “the person writing the actual legislative document” – is Julia Reda, representative for the Pirate Party from Germany.Let’s take that again: a Pirate Party representative is writing the European Union’s official evaluation of the copyright monopoly, and listing a set of necessary changes.In 2006, did I imagine that a pirate would be writing the European Parliament’s official evaluation of how well the copyright monopoly has worked – and what needs to be changed – in the European Union, the world’s largest economy? No, I didn’t, to be honest. But neither did I expect that the Pirate Party representatives would manage to get “three strikes” schemes outlawed across all of Europe in 2009, or take a radical reform proposal (allowing file-sharing and more) into the political mainstream in 2012. When you open the floodgates of the unrepresented, things can apparently happen fast.Now, just because it’s a pirate writing the legislative document, that doesn’t mean that document is going to pass a vote in the European Parliament no matter what it contains. It needs to be negotiated to get majority support, as usual and as appropriate in a parliamentary democracy. The first of those votes is in the Legal Affairs committee on April 16, and the vote in the European Parliament as a whole is on May 20. So pirates aren’t “in charge”; democracy is, as it should be.But the initiative has shifted. It is no longer solely initiated by mail-order lobbyists for corrupt incumbents who gladly sacrifice civil liberties and the entire Internet to preserve an unjust and immoral lucrative monopoly. For the first time, legislation on the matter is initiated by net liberty activists.This shift of the initiative was what we set out to accomplish ten years ago. I think it went faster than most people had expected. http://torrentfreak.com/in-europe-pirates-are-writing-the-copyright-law-150104/ Inače, u potpunosti se slažem sa pogledom koji autor ima na kopirajt. Koga zanima, ceo tekst je ovde: The case for copyright reform http://falkvinge.net/wp-content/uploads/large/The%20Case%20For%20Copyright%20Reform%20(2012)%20Engstrom-Falkvinge.pdf Ako ovo prođe u EU parlamentu, biće snažna brana mafiaa orkovima iz "Novog sveta".
Кровавый Пастор Posted January 16, 2015 Posted January 16, 2015 Nemački nominalni BDP porastao je u 2014. za 1.5%. http://www.dw.de/%D0%BD%D1%96%D0%BC%D0%B5%D1%86%D1%8C%D0%BA%D0%B0-%D0%B5%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%BD%D0%BE%D0%BC%D1%96%D0%BA%D0%B0-%D0%B2-2014-%D1%80%D0%BE%D1%86%D1%96-%D0%B7%D1%80%D0%BE%D1%81%D0%BB%D0%B0-%D0%BD%D0%B0-15-%D0%B2%D1%96%D0%B4%D1%81%D0%BE%D1%82%D0%BA%D0%B0/a-18193285
Prospero Posted January 16, 2015 Posted January 16, 2015 Šta je to s tobom i poterom za džidipijevima?
Кровавый Пастор Posted January 16, 2015 Posted January 16, 2015 Svako nesto voli. :) Bugarska zapocela proceduru prelaska sa leva na evro.
hazard Posted January 16, 2015 Posted January 16, 2015 Svako nesto voli. :) Evo ti brate pa uzivaj: http://www.google.com/publicdata/directory Os' GDP? http://www.google.com/publicdata/explore?ds=d5bncppjof8f9_&ctype=l&strail=false&bcs=d&nselm=h&met_y=ny_gdp_mktp_cd&scale_y=lin&ind_y=false&rdim=country&idim=country:DEU:CHN:RUS:GBR:USA:FRA:IND&ifdim=country&tstart=-314326800000&tend=1389826800000&ind=false&icfg Il' rast istog? http://www.google.com/publicdata/explore?ds=d5bncppjof8f9_&ctype=l&strail=false&bcs=d&nselm=h&met_y=ny_gdp_mktp_kd_zg&scale_y=lin&ind_y=false&rdim=country&idim=country:DEU:CHN:RUS:GBR:USA:FRA:IND&ifdim=country&tstart=947977200000&tend=1358290800000&ind=false&icfg I ima sta oces, jos jedno milion indikatora. I jedno 5 nacina da ih vizualizujes...ako ne zna Gugl, ne zna niko
Кровавый Пастор Posted January 18, 2015 Posted January 18, 2015 http://www.b92.net/info/vesti/index.php?yyyy=2015&mm=01&dd=17&nav_category=78&nav_id=947998 Olandu porasla popularnostIzvor: Beta Pariz -- Popularnost predsednika Francuske, Fransoa Olanda porasla je za deset odsto i sada ga podržava 34 odsto građana, pokazuje danas objavljeni rezultat ankete. Kako se sve brzo okrene...
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