ROME (Reuters) - Of all the statistics available on Italy and its varied economic problems, few are as eye-opening as the fact that at around 1 p.m on any given day, three quarters of the population will normally be sitting down to lunch in their own homes.
September 06, 2013
September 05, 2013
Sovereign Debt and Beyond: Toward a New Magna Carta?
Source: The Globalist
Alexander Mirtchev
and Norman Bailey
The global debt burden
appears to have gathered an unstoppable momentum, prompting divergent
reactions. The world economy cannot count on growth to solve the global debt
problem — and stimulus measures are not a sustainable solution. In the second
installment in the series “The Search for a New Global Equilibrium,” Dr.
Alexander Mirtchev and Dr. Norman Bailey explain why the solutions currently
being offered are wholly inadequate to the scale of the problem, and argue the
time is ripe for a “new Magna Carta” — a redefinition of the social contract
among the government, Main Street and Wall Street.
European banks to quit London if UK left EU: Goldman executive
LONDON: European banks would leave London "in very short order" if Britain voted to exit the European Union, a senior Goldman Sachs executive said in a newspaper interview published on Monday.
September 04, 2013
Will G-20 Counter Power of Uncertainty?
By
Alexander Mirtchev
In 2009, G-20
leaders met in Pittsburgh and emerged with a mandate ‘to be the premier forum
for international economic cooperation,' endowing the G-20 with a leading
economic role on the global stage. It appeared at the time that the leaders of
the G-20 had successfully defeated pessimism. However, the rising tide of
global economic turmoil and problems ranging from sovereign indebtedness to
consumption and saving imbalances have created a ‘perfect storm' that is far
from abating.
Germany's Merkel Taunts Opponents Over Euro Crisis
Chancellor Angela Merkel taunted her election opponent Tuesday over Europe's debt crisis, noting that his party had backed practically all of her rescue policies and arguing that their proposals might make things worse by pooling countries' debt.
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