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Samppy Shac

Canada leads World Bank blacklist of fraudulent companies thanks to SNC-Lavalin - 1 views

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    Canada leads the world in companies and individuals that have been banned by the World Bank from contributing to international aid and infrastructure projects. Of the 608 companies and individuals listed on the World Bank's just-released blacklist for fraudulent or corrupt conduct, 119 are Canadian companies. But engineering firm SNC-Lavalin and its subsidiaries, many of which are registered outside Canada, comprise 16 per cent of the total. The World Bank bans companies from participating in aid and development contracts if they "have been sanctioned under the Bank's fraud and corruption policy." The number of companies included on that list soared in 2013, rising from only 65 banned entities on last year's list, according to the South China Morning Post. The World Bank says about $40 billion of the roughly $200 billion it has given out since 2008 has been stolen. Companies with head offices listed in Canada, which does not include overseas subsidiaries, comprise 119 names on the World Bank list, the most of any country. The U.S. is second with 44 debarred firms, Indonesia third with 43 and Britain close behind with 40. The grounds for getting blacklisted vary, but usually include some manner of bribery, fraud, collusion, coercion or obstruction either in bidding for contracts or in carrying them out. More Economic news: http://hendrengroup.biz/blog/ https://www.facebook.com/hendrenglobalgroup?ref=hl http://hendrengrp.livejournal.com/
Wilford Alexander Hill

SNC Lavalin Canadian Companies World Bank blacklist - 1 views

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    Canada leads the world in companies and individuals that have been banned by the World Bank from contributing to international aid and infrastructure projects. Of the 608 companies and individuals listed on the World Bank's just-released blacklist for fraudulent or corrupt conduct, 119 are Canadian companies. But engineering firm SNC-Lavalin and its subsidiaries, many of which are registered outside Canada, comprise 16 per cent of the total. The World Bank bans companies from participating in aid and development contracts if they "have been sanctioned under the Bank's fraud and corruption policy." The number of companies included on that list soared in 2013, rising from only 65 banned entities on last year's list, according to the South China Morning Post. The World Bank says about $40 billion of the roughly $200 billion it has given out since 2008 has been stolen. Companies with head offices listed in Canada, which does not include overseas subsidiaries, comprise 119 names on the World Bank list, the most of any country. The U.S. is second with 44 debarred firms, Indonesia third with 43 and Britain close behind with 40. The grounds for getting blacklisted vary, but usually include some manner of bribery, fraud, collusion, coercion or obstruction either in bidding for contracts or in carrying them out. More Economic News: http://www.good.is/posts/canada-leads-world-bank-blacklist-of-fraudulent-companies-thanks-to-snc-lavalin http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-1042164
brent nicholas

Hendren Global Group :Boiler Efficiency Regs - 2 views

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hendren global group boiler efficiency regs

Leztier Kashe

Uncertainties in the US haunt global economy - 1 views

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    With the global economy growing more slowly than expected, worries about a potential US government shutdown and the possibility of a default are keeping nations around the world and investors, cautious. Republicans in the US House of Representatives have so far refused to give in to President Barack Obama's demands for straightforward bills keeping the government running beyond September 30. House Republicans also challenged Obama on the debt ceiling increase, the amount the government is allowed to borrow; that the Treasury Department of the world's largest economy says is urgently needed by October 17. There is an October 1 deadline for Congress and the President to sign off on an emergency spending bill to avert a government shutdown. This is not the critical event that immediately leads to the risk of impending default - that comes on October 17 according to US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew - but it is significant enough that it can undermine investor confidence and further stymie an economic recovery. Last week Lew cautioned Congress that the United States would exhaust its borrowing capacity no later than October 17, at which point it would have only about $30bn in cash on hand. The fresh estimate adds another layer of pressure on lawmakers to raise the $16.7tn debt limit and comes as Congress struggles to pass a spending bill to keep the government funded beyond October 1, when the new fiscal year starts. "If the government should ultimately become unable to pay all of its bills, the results could be catastrophic," Lew warned in a letter to congressional leaders. The fate of the debt ceiling is up in the air with Democratic and Republican lawmakers once again deeply divided over how to extend the Treasury's borrowing authority. The trouble lies in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives push for a bill that includes a delay or complete halt to the Affordable Care Act (nicknamed "Obamacare") legislation passed in 2010 and set
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