“No development model will be able to find a solution to unemployment,” he says bluntly, citing the grim reality that at about 800,000 are already unemployed and another 100,000 enter the labour force every year. “The best we can do is create 100,000 jobs a year but you still have the 800,000. The solution should be immigration. There’s no other way.”
Tunisia enters 'phase of absurdity' - FT.com - 0 views
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But to where?
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The government also has raised with European partners the prospect of absorbing some of the highly skilled graduates. But while immigration could alleviate some of the pressure, surely it cannot be the solution.
Bureaucracy's Salaries Defended in Europe - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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the monthly base salary of the most senior bloc officials is 18,370 euros, or $24,830.
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Ms. Merkel’s monthly base salary is 21,000 euros,
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European Union officials generally pay low taxes,
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European Union Leaders Gather in Brussels Over Budget - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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He has threatened to veto any new budget that does not at least freeze spending,
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“Europeans who are attached to the European Union are now in a minority.” Fifty-two percent of those surveyed said they felt little or no attachment, up seven percentage points since 2010. In Britain, only 27 percent felt attached to the union.
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Ahead of this week’s negotiations, at least seven countries, mostly those that contribute more to Europe’s coffers than they get back in farm subsidies and other payments, have already warned that they may veto a budget that does not give them a better deal. Among these is Austria, where, according to Mr. Ehrenhauser, who sits on the European Parliament’s budgetary control committee, “there is a critical mass building against the European Union.”
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Robert Samuelson: Japan's self-defeating stimulus cycle - The Washington Post - 0 views
Greece swamped by illegals from North Africa, Mideast - Washington Times - 0 views
Tomato Imports Deal Reached by U.S. and Mexico - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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The agreement, reached late Saturday, raises the minimum sales price for Mexican tomatoes in the United States, aims to strengthen compliance and enforcement, and increases the types of tomatoes governed by the bilateral pact to four from one.
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“The draft agreement raises reference prices substantially, in some cases more than double the current reference price for certain products,
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Florida growers contended it set the minimum price of Mexican tomatoes so low that the Florida growers could not compete.
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North Dakota Went Boom - NYTimes.com - 0 views
Bruce Bartlett: Outsourcing, Insourcing and Automation - NYTimes.com - 0 views
Sting operations reveal Mafia involvement in renewable energy - The Washington Post - 0 views
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But as he attempted to sidestep a push by organized crime to control the renewables sector — eschewing efforts to use mob-connected developers and refusing to make a customary payments of 2 percent of profits — his business came under attack.
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“It’s not only the criminal infiltration but the corrupt bureaucracy that makes it difficult to do business here,” Moncada said.
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Indeed, the mafia has targeted legitimate businesses in Sicily beyond renewable energy, with a 2008 probe revealing the island’s largest supermarket chain to be a front for mafia cash.
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Happy 2013? | vox - 0 views
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Hopefully the following ten observations are less controversial in 2013 than in previous years.
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As long known by elementary textbook readers, austerity policies have contractionary effects.
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Debt reduction is a very long process; we're talking about decades,
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Kenen on the euro | vox - 0 views
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Early work on optimum currency areas by Robert Mundell had emphasised the symmetry or asymmetry of disturbances hitting different regional economies as a key criterion on which to gauge their suitability for sharing a common currency.
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Peter took this insight further by arguing that disturbances were often sector specific and that the diversification of regional economies was therefore a key consideration in gauging their suitability for monetary union (the better diversified an economy was, the less likely it was to be badly destabilised by a sector-specific shock). (Kenen 1969).
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We now know that Kenen flagged a problem for which the Eurozone could have been better prepared. With an outsized capital-goods producing sector, Germany benefitted from a strong positive shock as a result of China’s emergence onto the global stage, given the Chinese economy’s voracious appetite for capital goods.
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