Τετάρτη 10 Μαρτίου 2010

Δύο χρόνια dr.SeenG

Ήμουν στη… βρεφική ηλικία των 28, όταν με πρωτόπιασε φαγούρα να κάνω κι εγώ σάτιρα. Είχα αποφασίσει να δημιουργήσω έναν ψυχολόγο που θα φιλοξενεί στον καναπέ του, για συνεδρίες, διάφορα εκλεκτά πρόσωπα της επικαιρότητας. Το μόνο που είχε απομείνει, ήταν να ετοιμάσω μια γωνίτσα για να τον «στριμώξω»....


...Και στις 10 Μαρτίου του 2008, γεννήθηκε το drseeng.blogspot.com, (μην τρομάζετε από την επισήμανση, μου την έβαλαν λόγω αθυροστομίας αλλά και πικάντικου…συνέχεια στο Στο http://mediasoup.gr/node/10819

1 σχόλιο:

Ανώνυμος είπε...

Και να φανταστείτε ότι έξω οι αναλυτές λένε πως όλα αυτά είναι το πρώτο κύμα αυστηρών μέτρων και θεωρούν βέβαιο ότι θα αποτύχουν όλα τα μέτρα. Αυτός λένε θα είναι ο πρώτος χρόνος που δεν έχουν φανεί τα χειρότερα ακόμα. Πάρτε και το άρθρο βάλτε το στον μεταφραστή γκούγκλ και πάρτε μια γεύση.

"Fitch warns Britain and questions Greek rescue as sovereign risks grow

Separately, Fitch said it is too early to judge whether Greece can deliver on EU austerity demands once the social and political pain begins in earnest. "The first year is fiscally the easiest. Next year they have to cut another 3pc of GDP, and the following year a further 3pc," said Chris Pryce, the agency's Greece expert.

"The great question mark is whether the Papandreou government is going to conform. There is already dissent in the cabinet," he said.

"Greece has an appalling record. Underneath this fiscal crisis is a failing political system. Politicians regard the public sector as a something to exploit for their own enrichment, but also for votes," he said.

Fitch is not counting on an EU bail-out for Greece in assessing credit risk. While the EU game of 'constructive ambiguity' has succeeded in calming the markets, the agency noted that not a single "hard cent" has been put on the table so far. The outcome hangs on legal realities in Germany, not rhetoric from Brussels. "Even if German politicians wanted to bail out Greece, they know it would probably be overturned by Germany's constitutional court," said Mr Pryce.

Fitch said the risk of Greek contagion to Spain and Portugal has been exaggerated, but concerns about Italy may have been underplayed. While Italy avoided a financial and fiscal crisis, it started with high public debt and has seen the worst loss of export competitiveness of any EMU state. "The country that stands out is Italy. It has been losing world share for years but the market has not focused on it," said the agency.

Few of the rich economies are in good fiscal shape. Their public debt is jumping from a two-decade average of 75pc of GDP to105pc by next year. Unlike the rising powers of Asia and Latin America, they have not built up a reserve buffer to absorb shocks. "Advanced economies haven't self-insured, and that underscores the need for fiscal consolidation. Even a temporary loss of confidence can lead to financing problems," said Fitch.

The paradox is that what may be good medicine for one fiscal sinner cannot be good for half the world economy simultaneously. If everybody tightens together, the global recovery may stall. The rating process itself risks becoming the enforcer of destructive debt deflation. "

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/financialcrisis/7407663/Fitch-warns-Britain-and-questions-Greek-rescue-as-sovereign-risks-grow.html