UK incomes fall 3.5% in real terms, ONS reveals | Money | guardian.co.uk - 0 views
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The median salary for a full-time worker in the UK rose 1.4% in 2011 to £26,244, against a headline CPI inflation rate of 5% or higher
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Progress in closing the gender pay gap has also slowed, with women in full-time employment earning on average £5,409 less than men – the gap narrowed by £179 in 2010 compared with £558 in 2009.
Money may be tight, but 'smart aid' to developing countries can really work | Larry Ell... - 1 views
Poverty Is Poison - New York Times - 0 views
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many children growing up in very poor families with low social status experience unhealthy levels of stress hormones, which impair their neural development
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That’s not surprising. Growing up in poverty puts you at a disadvantage at every step. I’d bracket those new studies on brain development in early childhood with a study from the National Center for Education Statistics, which tracked a group of students who were in eighth grade in 1988. The study found, roughly speaking, that in modern America parental status trumps ability: students who did very well on a standardized test but came from low-status families were slightly less likely to get through college than students who tested poorly but had well-off parents.None of this is inevitable. Poverty rates are much lower in most European countries than i
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came into office in 1997 made reducing poverty a priority — and despite some setbacks, its program of income subsidies and other aid has achieved a great deal. Child poverty, in particular, has been cut in half by the measure that corresponds most closely to the U.S. definition. At the moment it’s hard to imagine anything comparable happening in this country. To their credit — and to the credit of John Edwards, who goaded them
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Inflation, List by Country - 1 views
The State of Working America - 1 views
Inequality increasing globally including in India: Christine Lagarde - The Economic Times - 1 views
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adding that the richest 85 people in the world own the same amount of wealth as the bottom half of the world's population.
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"It leads to an economy of exclusion, and a wasteland of discarded potential," Lagarde said.
Google Is Developing Inflation Index Using Web Figures, FT Says - Bloomberg - 0 views
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Google Inc. is constructing an inflation measure that might eventually provide an alternative to official statistics, using its database of Internet shopping figures, the Financial Times reported.
Why some economists fear Osborne's upper cuts will leave Britain out for the count | Bu... - 0 views
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It is this gloomy backdrop which exercises the minds of the third and final group of experts, the bears. For them, the risk is both of a double-dip recession and a long, painful work out from the excesses of the past. Looking at the four main components of demand they would say that consumption is going to be weak so investment will disappoint. Government spending is going to be slashed, leaving a massive burden on exports at a time of slower growth and currency wars. The bears are currently the smallest group. Their numbers are likely to be swelled as winter progresses.
India Microcredit Sector Faces Collapse From Defaults - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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India Microcredit Faces Collapse From De
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faults
BBC News - UK unemployment total sees slight fall - 0 views
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The overall picture remains one of a jobs recovery that is much more sluggish than after previous recessions, analysts say.
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ear ago. This compares with the 1.7% rise previously reported for the thre
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as up 2% on a year ago. This compares with the 1.7% rise previously reported for the three
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Growth or cuts? Keynes would not back the coalition - especially over jobs | Business |... - 0 views
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Conversely, if the jobless total rises by Easter, inflation edges above 4% and consumers save rather than spend, Labour will be able to say that it is the coalition that has messed things up, killing off growth with its ill-timed and harsh austerity programme.
BBC News - Could Greece be Europe's Lehman Brothers? - 0 views
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Could Greece be Europe's Lehman Brothers?
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Three years ago today, US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson made a momentous decision - to let the investment bank Lehman Brothers fail. The US government had helped to rescue a string of financial institutions, but markets kept pushing more to the wall. Mr Paulson was running out of time and options. There was no political support in Washington to keep throwing money at the problem. Wall Street would just have to learn to bear the consequences of its own folly. Today, many say that it was the wrong decision. The resulting financial meltdown (the stock market plummeted 43%) forced the authorities to do exactly what they had been trying to avoid - commit trillions of dollars to rescue the financial system.
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Now fast-forward to the present. The "troika" of lenders to Greece - the European Union, International Monetary Fund (IMF) and European Central Bank (ECB) - may soon face a similar moment of reckoning.
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