One of the big arguments being made by the economic ministry is, ‘We give you lots of defense business, so you have got to provide a lot of high-tech jobs in Germany.’
German Authorities Are Said to Investigate Deutsche Bank - NYTimes.com - 0 views
The Meaning of Cyprus by Daniel Gros - Project Syndicate - 0 views
asia_mediaeval_commerce.jpg (2286×1863) - 0 views
With Restructuring Done, EADS Faces New Challenges - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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EADS’s future in the United States, meanwhile, poses different challenges.
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Those attempts have included an ultimately unsuccessful bid for a $35 billion aerial refueling tanker contract with the U.S. Air Force as well as the failed attempt last year to merge with BAE, one of the Pentagon’s top 10 contractors.
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Cyprus adds to Europe's confusion - FT.com - 0 views
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First, the eurozone does indeed have the capacity to do the right thing in the end, though not before first exhausting all the alternatives.
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It protects the small deposits and imposes a rational resolution process.
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Second, a euro is indeed not a euro everywhere.
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Restarting the US small-business growth engine - McKinsey Quarterly - Strategy - Growth - 0 views
Kerry promotes U.S.-European trade deal - The Washington Post - 0 views
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France wants to slow down consideration of the proposed transatlantic free-trade zone encompassing about 40 percent of the world’s trade. Germany and Britain are in favor of the plan and want to move fast.
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The Obama administration says a comprehensive deal would further open European markets and expand exports to the euro zone of U.S. goods and services, currently worth $459 billion a year. Backers say the deal would add more than 13 million jobs in the United States and Europe.
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But supporters also fear that trade talks will bog down or collapse over parochial concerns, and must be streamlined to succeed.
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Financial Crisis Far From Over, Says Outgoing Bank of England Chief - 0 views
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He said that while the eurozone works for some countries, it was obvious that others were unable to keep up. "There is a basic question: what is the right size for a single monetary policy?" In a clear reference to Greece, Portugal and Cyprus, he said the crisis had exposed countries with weaker productivity and higher labour costs.
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Blanchard said the powers acquired by central banks created a "democratic deficit" that could eventually lead to social unrest. The situation in Europe was a cause for concern, especially when central banks were put in a position of making crucial decisions that affected millions of people's lives, he said.
Willem Buiter On The Economic Prospects For The Eurozone - 0 views
Hot Money Blues - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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for the time being, and probably for years to come, the island nation will have to maintain fairly draconian controls on the movement of capital in and out of the country.
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It will mark the end of an era for Cyprus, which has in effect spent the past decade advertising itself as a place where wealthy individuals who want to avoid taxes and scrutiny can safely park their money, no questions asked.
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To some extent this reflected the fact that capital controls have potential costs: they impose extra burdens of paperwork, they make business operations more difficult, and conventional economic analysis says that they should have a negative impact on growth (although this effect is hard to find in the numbers). But it also reflected the rise of free-market ideology,
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Canada Aims to Woo International Students - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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International students are allowed to seek part-time employment off campus after six months of full-time study, as a way to help them defray costs. They can also obtain foreign work credentials: After earning a four-year undergraduate degree, they can apply to work in Canada for up to three years.
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Other nations are not as generous: In the United States, international students are eligible to work only on campus, and many struggle to stay in the country after graduation. Tough visa rules have led to a foreign student “brain drain,”
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In Britain, international students can work no more than 10 hours a week and need an endorsement from their school to work after graduation.
Will bank supervision in Ohio and Austria be similar? A transatlantic view of the Singl... - 0 views
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At the inception of the euro, it was thought possible to have a centralised monetary authority and decentralised bank supervision, but the inability to separate sovereign-debt problems from those of bank stability has led the leaders of the member states of the EU to agree to centralise supervision in the Single Supervisory Mechanism.
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The states retained their powers to supervise the small number of state-chartered banks that seemed little threat to the stability of the new more tightly regulated national system.
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What was not anticipated was that the more stable national banks would fail to adequately supply credit to the economy.
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