Monday, April 8, 2013

NEWS,08.04.2013



Six million jobs lost in EU since 2008


European Union economies have shed almost six million jobs since the global economic crisis struck in 2008, the International Labour Organisation said on Monday.
In a report on the European labour market, the UN agency said the employment rate across the 27-nation EU stood at 57.6% in 2012, down 1.6 percentage points on 2008.
"This means that there is still a deficit of 5.9 million jobs to restore employment rates to their pre-crisis levels," the ILO said.
A million jobs have been lost in the past six months alone, it noted.
It underlined that despite some signs of labour market recovery that started to materialise in 2010, only five EU members Austria, Germany, Hungary, Luxembourg and Malta - have employment rates above pre-crisis levels.
Countries such as Cyprus, Greece, Portugal and Spain have seen a steady decline in employment rates of more than three percentage points.
As of February, official unemployment stood at 26.3 million in Europe, or 10.2 million more than in 2008, the ILO said.
"Importantly, while the deterioration of employment paused during 2010-2011, it has gained momentum over the past year," it noted.
Average unemployment in the EU has reached 10.9% with double digit rates in some of the most crisis-afflicted countries - and a record of 12% in the 17-nation eurozone.
Young and unskilled workers have been the hardest hit, with youth unemployment across the EU at 23.5% and stark rates of 58 percent in Greece and 55% in Spain.
Companies have increasingly turned to part-time and temporary contracts meanwhile, underscoring the bleak outlook, the ILO said.
"The above trends suggest that is necessary to move to a job-friendly strategy. Much of the emphasis so far has been on reducing budget deficits and restoring external competitiveness through 'internal devaluations'," it said.
"While fiscal and competitiveness goals are important, it is crucial not to tackle them through ill-conceived austerity measures and structural reforms that do not address the root causes of the crisis," it added.
The ILO said that more measures were needed to resolve systemic problems in the financial sector and to unlock credit for small firms.
"More and more countries face downward pressures on wages and employment, thereby affecting domestic consumption and investment and eroding intra-EU trade," it warned.

Cyprus eurozone exit 'not an option'


Finance Minister Haris Georgiades said Monday that leaving the eurozone would take Cyprus back "centuries" and insisted the island has no "Plan B" for reneging on a €10bn bailout.
Leaving the European single currency, Georgiades told parliament's finance committee, was "not up for discussion".
"It's time to correct past mistakes. It's time to pay the bill. We can only spend what is in our pocket. There is no other option," the minister told the committee, which is looking into how Cyprus ended up with controversial and unpopular bailout terms.
"It's a question of reality. Government instructions to the ministries will be to compile next year's budget essentially from scratch. Each item, each programme of the ministries must be explained and justified," Georgiades said.
Addressing the committee earlier, central bank chief Panicos Demetriades blamed Cyprus's political leaders for the harshness of the terms of the bailout.
Under the deal struck with the European Union, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund, Cyprus will drastically reduce the size of its bloated banking sector, raise taxes, downsize the public sector workforce and privatise some state-owned firms.
The terms of the final bailout, Demetriades said, was a "political decision" with the central bank having the "institutional responsibility of addressing the painful situation".
"I understand there is anger and insecurity from the public. This is why I am here to present the facts with evidence, so everyone understands what really happened," he said.
Demetriades has been widely accused of mishandling the bailout deal and of destroying the island's banks, amid a groundswell of demands that he resign.
"The reforms are unprecedented for the Cypriot banking system and they were expected to cause a reaction," the central bank governor said.
"I respect and understand the people and the difficulties they face."
Demetriades also took aim at Eurogroup finance ministers, saying it was their idea to impose losses on all depositors in the island's banks - large or small - in an initial plan that was angrily rejected by Cypriot MPs.
"Eurozone finance ministers wanted a levy on all deposits insured and uninsured," he said.
European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi last week accused Cyprus of handling the bailout poorly, describing as "not smart" the initial plan to impose a "haircut" on all depositors, which rode roughshod over previous guarantees within the European bloc on balances up to €100 000.
Demetriades also said Cypriot officials had been caught wrong-footed when it turned out the amount of the bailout deal was €10bn instead of the €17bn they had earlier discussed with the lenders.
"During the meeting of the Eurogroup on March 15, the finance ministers of the eurozone informed the president of (Cyprus) and the minister of finance that the funding was limited to €10bn for the state and the remaining €7.0bn would be found from the Cyprus market."
He said when the Eurogroup agreed on March 4 Cyprus would get financing it was assumed it would get the full amount.
"Everyone thought that the reference was to the €17bn of the original (draft) memorandum, of which €10bn would be given to the banks," he said.

Greek banks to be recapitalised separately


Greece's central bank on Sunday said the country's main four lenders would be recapitalised separately, a move that put on hold a planned merger between two of them.
"The Bank of Greece confirms that the recapitalisation process for the four systemic banks (National Bank, Alpha, Eurobank, Piraeus) is proceeding normally and will conclude in April in any case," the central bank said.
"All four banks have already called - or will call in the coming days - shareholder meetings to approve capital increases," it added.
National Bank and Eurobank were several months into a merger process that foresaw a joint recapitalisation.
But a finance ministry source said on Sunday: "Further procedures (on the merger) are suspended."
Greece's so-called troika of creditors - the European Union, International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank - had reportedly expressed concern that the new NBG-Eurobank entity would both dominate the Greek market and would be tough to recapitalise.
"(The creditors) do not like the creation of such a major player with a market share of around 40%," Bank of Greece governor George Provopoulos said in a televised interview last week.
"The troika says, and I can also say, that there will be a greater difficulty in a combined National Bank-Eurobank entity, with capital needs in the order of €1.5bn or slightly higher, a very large sum under the current circumstances. So there is a concern that if private investors cannot be found, it will come under state control," he told state television NET.
The Bank of Greece announcement on Sunday came after new talks between the creditor representatives and Prime Minister Antonis Samaras on Sunday.
Their report will determine whether Athens will receive a loan disbursement of €2.8bn pending since March.
The recapitalisation of Greek banks, who took a major blow last year in helping the country reduce its sovereign debt, is a condition for the continued release of EU-IMF rescue loans for Greece's crisis-hit economy.
A sum of €50bn out of the total EU-IMF bailout fund of €240bn has been earmarked for this purpose.
Under the original plan, at least 10% of new capital was to come from private investors to keep the banks from being effectively nationalised.
This now seems unlikely for National Bank and Eurobank, who will need the full support of the Hellenic financial stability fund, a source close to the process told AFP.
"National Bank and Eurobank have admitted that they will be unable to raise the money," the source said.
The Bank of Greece said the stability fund would "fully" cover the capital increase for each bank.
But a source close to the process noted that the 10% rule "was still available" to whichever bank managed to raise the necessary funds privately.
Alpha Bank has called an emergency meeting of shareholders on Thursday.
Piraeus Bank will follow suit on Friday.
The Bank of Greece governor had noted in his interview that even if a bank had to turn to the Hellenic financial stability fund for help, "it's not exactly state control".
"In the Stability Fund there is ECB representation, and the EU Commission, and the troika has oversight. In no way would the troika want a major bank to operate as a traditional (state) bank. I am also concerned and would not want it to happen. I do not think it will," Provopoulos had said.

Iron Lady Thatcher changed face of Britain


Margaret Thatcher, the "Iron Lady", was a towering figure in British 20th century politics, a grocer's daughter with a steely resolve who was loved and loathed in equal measure as she crushed the unions and privatised vast swathes of industry.

She died on Monday, aged 87, after suffering a stroke. During her life in politics some worshipped her as a moderniser who transformed the country, others bitterly accused her of entrenching the divide between the rich and the poor.

The abiding images of her premiership will remain those of conflict: Huge police confrontations with the miners' union, her riding a tank in a white headscarf, and flames rising above
Trafalgar Square in the riots over an unpopular local tax which ultimately led to her downfall.

To those who opposed her she was blunt to a degree - "the lady's not for turning", she once famously informed members of her own Conservative Party who were urging her to moderate her policies.

Others who crossed her path, particularly in
Europe, were subjected to withering diatribes often referred to as "handbaggings", named after the black leather bag she invariably carried.

Britain's only woman prime minister, the tough, outspoken Thatcher led the Conservatives to three election victories, governing from 1979 to 1990, the longest continuous period in office by a British prime minister since the early 19th century.

Broke the mould

With
US president Ronald Reagan, she formed a strong alliance against communism and was rewarded by seeing the Berlin Wall torn down in 1989 though she worried a unified Germany would dominate Europe.

Her radical, right-wing views broke the mould of British politics, changing the status quo so profoundly that even subsequent Labour governments accepted many of her policies.

The woman who became known simply as "Maggie", transferred big chunks of the economy from state hands into private ownership.

"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money," she once said.

Her personal credo, founded on competition, private enterprise, thrift and self-reliance, gave birth to a political philosophy known as "Thatcherism".

But her tough economic medicine put millions out of work, alienated many and largely destroyed industries such as mining.

Winter of discontent

Her combative stance antagonised allies in
Europe and her intolerance of dissent eventually led to her downfall.

"A brilliant tyrant surrounded by mediocrities," was how former premier Harold Macmillan described her. "That bloody woman," was the less charitable verdict of Edward Heath, another prime minister and her predecessor as Conservative Party leader.

At the peak of her powers, Thatcher's sheer personality made her one of the West's best known figures. A workaholic, she put in 18-hour days, after which she would relax over a glass of whisky.

After winning the 3 May 1979 election, she launched social and economic reforms designed to end what she saw as a spiral of industrial decline, crippling taxes and intrusive state control, a period under the Labour government that had become known as the "winter of discontent".

Fighting inflation-boosting pay rises and modernising the economy meant curbing the power of organised labour.

After changes to the law and a bitter year-long strike which ended in defeat for the miners in 1985, the days when unions could dictate to British governments were over.

Era of popular capitalism

Britain held its breath in 1982 when Thatcher dispatched a naval task force to the Falkland Islands, which had been seized by Argentine invaders. Despite losing several warships, the British eventually reclaimed the south Atlantic islands 74 days later. A total of 649 Argentines and 255 British troops died.

An opinion poll in 1981 rated Thatcher
Britain's most disliked prime minister of all time. But, two years later, after the Falklands war, she was swept back to power on a wave of patriotism and in 1987, her third successive election victory gave her another big majority in parliament.

Thatcher ushered in an era of "popular capitalism" that raised home ownership in
Britain to 68% and made one person in five a shareholder.

She launched a sweeping drive to privatise state monopolies such as gas, oil, steel, telephones, airports and British Airways, with electricity and water to follow.

But while Thatcherism made many better off, unemployment doubled by the mid-1980s to more than three million - a level not seen since the hungry 1930s. Opponents said Thatcher had created a nation divided between the wealthier south and the poorer north.

Thatcher developed a close relationship with Reagan, who called her "the best man in
England".

Strained relations

It was the Soviet Communist Party daily Pravda that dubbed Thatcher the "Iron Lady", but she revelled in the nickname.

When Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in 1985 however she formed a strong working relationship with him.

After
Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in August 1990, Thatcher famously cautioned US President George Bush against being "wobbly" in opposing President Saddam Hussein.

Relations with
Britain's European neighbours were strained over her reluctance to embrace plans for closer integration.

She demanded a huge refund on
Britain's contributions to the European budget and brought European Community business to a virtual standstill until she got it.

The late French President Francois Mitterrand once said she had "the eyes of Caligula and the lips of Marilyn Monroe".

In 1984 an Irish Republican Army bomb attack on her
Brighton hotel nearly killed her entire cabinet. She was unscathed, but five people died and some close colleagues were badly injured.

Decline into dementia

Within hours of the attack, and on schedule, she gave the closing address to her party's annual conference, vowing there would be no weakening in the fight against terrorism.

In 1984 Thatcher and
China's then-Premier Zhao Ziyang signed a declaration under which Britain agreed to hand over Hong Kong to China in 1997 after 156 years of British colonial rule.

After 11 years in power, Thatcher bowed to a revolt and pulled out of a leadership contest with her former defence minister Michael Heseltine. A new local tax, known as the "poll tax", which had led to riots, contributed to her downfall.

Thatcher retained enough influence to ensure Heseltine did not succeed her, advancing the claims of her protégé John Major, who served as prime minister until 1997.

"We are leaving Downing Street for the last time after 11 and a half wonderful years and we are very happy that we leave the United Kingdom in a very, very much better state than when we came here," Thatcher said with tears in her eyes.

She suffered a series of mild strokes in late 2001 and 2002, after which she cut back on public appearances and later cancelled her speaking schedule.

Her decline into dementia was chronicled in the Oscar-winning film The Iron Lady, with Meryl Streep. Cast as a bewildered widow, the very lonely Iron Lady was left only with her memories.

US gun control tops Obama's agenda


President Barack Obama heads to the site of December's deadly school shooting on Monday, looking for a breakthrough in his efforts to curb gun violence as the US Congress returns from a two-week recess with gun control legislation high on agenda.
Obama is headed to Newton, Connecticut, where a gunman killed 20 young children and six educators in one the worst school shootings ever in the US.
The administration moved quickly after the shooting amid concerns that the high emotions would settle and politics would go back to normal on one of the country's most sensitive issues.
The top gun lobby has opposed the gun control drive, and the president's proposals have weakened in the months since the shooting amid fears that the more controversial ones, such as an assault weapons ban, will harm an overall gun control package.
One of Obama senior advisers, Dan Pfeiffer, suggested to ABC on Sunday that the lack of a straightforward vote because of legislative manoeuvring would be an insult to people who lost family members in the shooting.
He pointed out that senators of both parties had applauded when Obama called for a vote during his State of the Union speech in January.
"Now that the cameras are off and they are not forced to look the Newtown families in the face, now they want to make it harder and filibuster it," Pfeiffer said.
Senators could start debating gun legislation before week's end, but leaders might take more time to seek a breakthrough deal on expanding background checks for gun buyers - the proposal seen as having the best chance of passage.
Two influential senators, one from the Democrats and one from opposition Republicans, are working on an agreement that could expand background checks on firearms sales to include gun shows and online transactions, Senate aides said on Sunday.
Federal background checks are currently required only for transactions handled by the roughly 55 000 federally licensed firearms dealers.
Private sales such as gun show or online purchases are exempt. The system is designed to keep guns from criminals, people with serious mental problems, some drug abusers and others.
Gun control
After the Connecticut massacre, Obama proposed applying the requirement to virtually all firearms sales. Gun control advocates consider expanded background checks to be the most effective step lawmakers could take to curb gun violence.
The National Rifle Association (NRA), the nation's most powerful gun lobby, and other critics say the checks are ignored by criminals, and they fear that expanding the system could be a step to the government maintaining files on gun owners.
Other Obama gun control priorities include banning assault weapons and ammunition magazines with more than 10 rounds.
Both bans are expected to be offered as amendments, but the assault weapons ban seems sure to be defeated, and the high-capacity magazine prohibition also faces difficult odds.
Gun control advocates are worried their allies might cut a deal that goes too far.
"We want a vote on the issues. We don't want them watered down so they're unrecognisable," said Josh Horwitz, executive director of the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence. "If they can't vote for it, let the American people judge them on that. Don't let a dumbed-down bill be the outcome of this."
Justice department figures show that from 1994, when the current background check system began, through 2010, 118 million potential gun buyers were checked and 2.1 million were denied firearms. Defenders say the data proves the checks prevent many dangerous people from getting weapons.
With or without an agreement, the Senate gun legislation would toughen federal laws against illegal firearms sales, including against people who buy firearms for criminals or others barred from owning them. The legislation also would provide $40m a year, a modest increase from current levels of $30m, for a federal program that helps schools take safety measures such as reinforcing classroom doors

China-US relations come under spotlight


China and the US will aim to "solve sensitive issues" during a weekend visit by Secretary of State John Kerry, Beijing's foreign ministry said on Monday, as the two row over trade and North Korea racks up tensions.
Foreign ministry spokesperson Hong Lei said Kerry would meet Chinese leaders on 13 and 14 April, in his first trip to Asia as America's top diplomat.
He is currently in the Middle East and will also go to Japan and South Korea.
The Asia leg of Kerry's travel comes as concern grows that North Korea is preparing a fourth nuclear test and a missile launch.
Pyongyang has ratcheted up tensions since it carried out its third nuclear test in February with provocative language and threats of a nuclear strike, despite repeated appeals for restraint by Beijing, its sole major ally.
The two sides will exchange views on "China-US relations and international and regional issues of common interest", Hong said.
China and the US are embroiled in a series of disputes over issues ranging from cyberspying to currency.
Hong said China was ready to "deepen practical co-operation across the board and manage and solve sensitive issues and continue to embark on the road of building a constructive partnership and a new type of major country relations so as to benefit the people of both countries".
Washington is concerned that the Chinese government is sponsoring some cyberattacks against US corporations, infrastructure and government.
The US also accuses China of undervaluing its yuan currency, keeping Chinese exports unfairly cheap.
"Currently, China-US relations are at an important period of carrying forward the past achievements," said Hong Lei.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

NEWS,07.04.2013



French minister confirms 0.1% growth

French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said Sunday that France's economy was expected to grow just 0.1% this year, revising downward an official target as the country struggles to get back on its feet.

The French government had initially forecast 0.8% growth in 2013 for the eurozone's second largest economy, which continues to battle rising unemployment, stagnant growth and a stubborn budget deficit.

Speaking on Europe 1 radio, Moscovici also predicted growth for 2014 at around 1.2%.

For 2015, "I think French growth will get back to a cruising speed that will enable it to create jobs," he said, pointing to an expected growth of 2%.

His 2013 prediction confirms those already made by the European Commission and Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, which both forecast that the French economy would manage to grow by just 0.1% this year.

Moscovici already said last week that he "feared" growth in France would be around that figure, and Sunday's announcement confirmed this.

Last month, French President Francois Hollande insisted that the country's promised turnaround was still on course, despite near record unemployment, a drop in household purchasing power and thousands of layoffs.

Offshore accounts data reveal crimes


A trove of data obtained by a US-based journalists' group that details thousands of offshore accounts reveals several instances of swindles and other financial crimes, The Washington Post newspaper reported Sunday.

Among the 4 000 US individuals listed in the records, at least 30 were American citizens accused in lawsuits or criminal cases of fraud, money laundering or other serious financial misconduct, the report said.

They include billionaire hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam, who was convicted in 2011 in one of the biggest insider trading scandals in US history, and Paul Bilzerian, who was convicted of securities fraud, the paper noted.

The report was the latest by prominent newspapers around the world which were given copies of the data for scrutiny by the Washington-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.

The head of the ICIJ, Gerard Ryle, obtained the data, involving 2.5 million records of more than 120 000 companies and trusts set up by two offshore companies operating in the British Virgin Islands and in Asia and the South Pacific, on a hard drive after investigating a fraud and offshore haven case in Australia.

Several newspapers, including France's Le Monde and Britain's Guardian, have been publishing revelations based on the data.

The Washington Post's report said the records contained information on at least 23 companies linked to an alleged $230m tax fraud in Russia that was investigated by a Moscow-based lawyer named Sergei Magnitsky.

After Magnitsky informed Russian authorities of his findings, he was accused of fraud himself and thrown in prison, where he died in 2009 under suspicious circumstances.

One of the companies mentioned in the records was used to set up Swiss bank accounts, into which the husband of a Russian tax official deposited millions in cash, the paper said.

Today, there are between 50 and 60 offshore financial centers around the world holding billions of dollars at a time of historic US deficits and budget cuts, The Washington Post said.

Groups that monitor tax issues estimate that between $8 trillion and $32 trillion in private global wealth is parked offshore, according to the paper.

According to fraud experts, offshore bank accounts and companies are vital to those wishing to conceal complex financial crimes.

For example, Allen Stanford, who ran a $7bn Ponzi scheme, used a bank he controlled in Antigua, The Post noted.

And Bernard Madoff, who ran the largest Ponzi scheme in US history, used a series of offshore "feeder funds" to fuel the growth of his scam.

The Washington Post quoted a top official in the US Justice Department's fraud section, Paul Pelletier, as saying US owners of offshore accounts were sometimes trying to hide money from US tax authorities, law enforcement or regulators.

"As a prosecutor, it was very difficult pursuing these people," he said.

Italy to pay €40bn owed to business

The Italian government on Saturday gave its go-ahead for a bill to repay €40bn in debts owed to the private sector over the next 12 months in a bid to stimulate growth.

"The cabinet meeting today approved an urgent decree to pay back the debts of the public sector to the private sector," Prime Minister Mario Monti told a press conference after the talks.

US preparing for possible N Korea actions


The top US military officer said on Sunday the Pentagon had bolstered its missile defences and taken other steps because he "can't take the chance" that North Korea won't soon engage in some military action.
Heightened tensions with North Korea led the United States to postpone congressional testimony by the chief US commander in South Korea and delay an intercontinental ballistic missile test from a West Coast base.
North Korea, after weeks of war threats and other efforts to punish South Korea and the US for joint military drills, has told other nations that it will be unable to guarantee diplomats' safety in the North's capital beginning Wednesday.
US General Martin Dempsey, the Joint Chiefs of Staff chair who just wrapped up a visit to Afghanistan, was asked in an Associated Press interview whether he foresees North Korea taking military action soon.
"No, but I can't take the chance that it won't," he said, explaining why the Pentagon has strengthened missile defences and made other decisions to combat the potential threat.
Dempsey said the US has been preparing for further provocations or action, "considering the risk that they may choose to do something" on one of two nationally important anniversaries in April - the birth of North Korean founder Kim Il Sung and the creation of the North Korean army.
US General James Thurman, the commander of the 28 000 American troops in South Korea, will stay in Seoul as "a prudent measure" rather than travel to Washington to appear this coming week before congressional committees, Army Colonel Amy Hannah said in an e-mail on Sunday to the AP.
Thurman has asked the Senate Armed Services Committee, the House Armed Services Committee, and the House Appropriations subcommittee on defence to excuse his absence until he can testify at a later date.
Dempsey said he had consulted with Thurman about the rising tensions on the Korean peninsula.
Missile test
The Pentagon has postponed an intercontinental ballistic missile test that was set for the coming week at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, a senior defence official told the AP on Saturday.
The official said US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel decided to put off the long-planned Minuteman 3 test because of concerns the launch could be misinterpreted and exacerbate the Korean crisis. Hagel made the decision on Friday, the official said.
North Korea's military said this past week that it was authorised to attack the US using "smaller, lighter and diversified" nuclear weapons.
North Korea also conducted a nuclear test in February and in December launched a long-range rocket that could potentially hit the continental US.
The US has moved two of the Navy's missile-defence ships closer to the Korean peninsula, and a land-based system is being deployed to the Pacific territory of Guam later this month. The Pentagon last month announced longer-term plans to strengthen its US-based missile defences.
Citing North Korea's suggestion that diplomats leave the country, South Korean President Park Geun-hye's national security director said the North may be planning a missile launch or another provocation around Wednesday, according to presidential spokesperson Kim Haing.
In Washington, an adviser to President Barack Obama said "we wouldn't be surprised if they did a test. They've done that in the past."
US Senator John McCain said the North's young leader, Kim Jong Un, is playing a game of brinksmanship.
"In the past we have seen this repetitious confrontation, negotiation, incentives to North Korea to better behave, hopes that they will abandon their nuclear quest - which they never will, otherwise, they'd be totally irrelevant," McCain told CBS's Face the Nation.
"And so we've seen the cycle over and over and over again, for last 20 or 30 years. They confront. There's crisis. Then we offer them incentives - food, money. While meanwhile the most repressive and oppressive regime on earth continues to function," he added.
McCain said China "does hold the key to this problem. China can cut off their economy if they want to."

Israel Holocaust memorial day begins


Israel's annual memorial day for the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust has begun with a ceremony marking 70 years since the Warsaw ghetto uprising.
The uprising has come to symbolize Jewish resistance against the Nazis in World War II.
Sunday's main ceremony was taking place at Yad Vashem, Israel's official Holocaust memorial. Israel's president and its prime minister were set to speak before hundreds of Holocaust survivors and their families, Israeli leaders, diplomats and others.
The Israeli flag flew at half-staff, and a military honour guard stood at one side of the podium as poems and psalms were read and the Jewish prayer for the dead was recited.
The annual Holocaust memorial day is one of the most solemn on Israel's calendar.

Acting president fears death plot


Venezuela's acting president Nicolas Maduro has accused former US officials Roger Noriega and Otto Reich of plotting to kill him to prevent his victory in next week's presidential elections.
Speaking at a televised campaign event on Saturday, Maduro said the plot also involved "right-wing forces" from El Salvador, which had already dispatched paid assassins to Venezuela to implement the plan.
"Their goal is to kill me," said Maduro, who had been designated by the late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez as his heir apparent. "They want to kill me because they know they cannot win free and fair elections."
A presidential election to replace Chavez, who died of cancer last month, will be held on 14 April.
Maduro said part of the plot also involved sabotaging the nation's electrical grid.
Parts of oil-rich Venezuela suffer from regular power outages, a problem opposition leader Henrique Capriles had seized upon to criticise the socialist government that Chavez led for 14 years until his death on 5 March.
On Thursday, Maduro also accused the opposition of plotting to sabotage the national power grid to cause a blackout ahead of the election.
A conservative Mexican-American, Roger Noriega served as US Permanent Representative to the Organization of American States (OAS) from 2001 to 2003.
Otto Reich, a Cuban-American, was the US president's special envoy for the Western Hemisphere, assistant secretary of state and US ambassador to Venezuela.
While vocal critics of Venezuelan policies, both have repeatedly denied any involvement in Venezuelan affairs.

UK wants to change welfare system


Prime Minister David Cameron said on Sunday that Britain's welfare system had "lost its way" and become a "lifestyle choice", amid a raging debate on government cutbacks to state handouts.
Cameron's Conservative-Liberal coalition government, trying to rein in the national budget deficit, is bringing in a series of changes to the system this month - in the face of bitter opposition from the Labour Party.
The debate has been fuelled by the case of Mick Philpott, a nationally notorious welfare-dependent father of 18, who was jailed last week for the manslaughter of six children in setting fire to his own house.
Conservative finance minister George Osborne was blasted by Labour in unusually fierce terms when, asked whether Philpott was a product of the welfare system, he suggested there needed to be a debate about whether taxpayers should be subsidising lifestyles like his.
Opposition Labour finance spokesperson Ed Balls said for Osborne "to link this wider debate to this shocking crime is nasty and divisive and demeans his office".
Writing in The Sun newspaper, Cameron launched a staunch defence of the welfare shake-up, which includes capping the amount a household can claim at national average earnings.
Backfiring
He suggested it was "crazy" that welfare claimants could have a bigger income than workers.
The Conservative leader suggested that a system originally designed to protect the frail and be a "stopgap" was now backfiring.
"It was invented to help people escape poverty, but has trapped too many people in it. It was meant to be a stopgap in hard times, but has become a lifestyle choice for some. It was designed to bring us together, but is causing resentment," he said.
"No-one wants to work hard every day and see their hard-earned taxes being used to fund things they themselves cannot afford or keep generations dependent on welfare.
"So this month we are making some big changes. They are changes that have a simple principle at their heart: we are restoring the fairness that should lie at the very heart of our tax and welfare systems.
"We are saying to each and every hard-working person in our country: we are on your side."
The debate has set not only politicians at each other's throats but also newspapers and commentators of opposing political stripes.
Meanwhile a YouGov opinion poll for The Sun found that six out of 10 voters thought welfare handouts were too generous.
About 67% said the system needed an overhaul while 79% back the government's move to limit a family's welfare payments to 26 000 pounds a year - the average working family income.


Saturday, April 6, 2013

NEWS,05 AND 06.04.2013



Obama to offer entitlement cuts in budget


President Barack Obama will make key concessions to Republican foes next week when he unveils his US budget that proposes cuts to cherished entitlement programs, the White House said on Friday.
Obama's fiscal blueprint slashes the deficit by $1.8 trillion over 10 years, in what a senior administration official described as a "compromise offer" that cuts federal spending, finds savings in Social Security, and raises tax revenue from the wealthy.
Republicans led by House Speaker John Boehner are widely opposed to any new tax hikes, after the president secured $600bn in increased tax revenue in a year-end deal.
But Obama's concession to conservatives in the form of reduced cost-of-living payouts for Social Security benefits could revive consideration of a deficit-reducing "grand bargain" that has proved elusive in recent years.
Such cuts to public pension programmes and public health insurance for the elderly - seen as sacred cows for Obama's Democrats  have been longstanding demands of Republicans.
"While this is not the president's ideal deficit reduction plan, and there are particular proposals in this plan like the CPI (consumer price index) change that were key Republican requests and not the president's preferred approach, this is a compromise proposal built on common ground," the administration official said.
The president is willing to "do tough things to reduce the deficit," but only in the context of a package that includes new revenues from the wealthy, the official added.
"This isn't about political horse trading; it's about reducing the deficit in a balanced way that economists say is best for the economy and job creation."
Obama's new revenues will draw in part from capping retirement savings plans for millionaires, and closing some loopholes that benefit the rich.
The annual budget deficit is projected at 5.5% of gross domestic product for the fiscal year ending in September. Under the Obama budget, that would decline to 1.7% of GDP by 2023.
Combined with the $2.5 trillion in savings already achieved since negotiations in 2010, the Obama budget would bring total deficit reduction to $4.3 trillion over 10 years, slightly higher than the overall goal agreed to by both parties for stabilizing the national debt.
Boehner offered a lukewarm reaction to the plan.
"One of the best things President Obama can do is follow the House and outline a balanced budget next week  one that includes entitlement reforms that are not conditional on enactment of more tax increases, which will suppress growth instead of encourage it," Boehner said in a statement.

Petrol price fixing probe ends - report


Prosecutors in Italy have wrapped up a probe triggered by suspicions that the country's steep petrol prices were the result of manipulation by several large oil firms, media reported Friday.
The results of the investigation into seven companies - ENI, Shell, Esso, Total ERG, Tamoil, Q8 and API - have been sent to legal authorities in Rome and Milan for possible further action.
Italian motorists pay the highest prices at the pump in the European Union, according to the European Commission's directorate general for energy.
The newspaper La Stampa said the Varese prosecutor's office in northern Italy, which conducted the probe at the urging of a consumer group, suspected the oil companies of "carrying out speculative moves to boost the price of fuel at the pump".
But the head of Italy's biggest oil company ENI, Paolo Scaroni, told reporters on Friday the probe was just the latest official scrutiny of what he described as unavoidably high petrol prices.
"There are several reasons fuel prices in Italy are higher than elsewhere in Europe. To name just one, there are 24 000 service stations in Italy compared with 9 000 in Britain with a total equivalent consumption, so these service stations, in Italy, need a bigger margin" to achieve profitability, he said.
He also cited reduced station opening hours, and noted that Italian service stations cannot sell other items, such as newspapers or cigarettes, to augment revenues.
"There is nothing underhanded," he said.
The average price for unleaded petrol in Italy at the end of 2012 was €1.75 per litre ($8.60 per gallon), according to the European Commission's directorate general for energy.
That compared with €1.50 per litre in France, €1.56 per litre in Germany, and €1.63 per litre in Britain, the data showed, according to the Commission's Eurostat statistics office.

Panicked Cypriots queue at banks


Panicked Cypriots queued outside banks on Friday on rumours that a new levy would be imposed on deposits as part of a bailout, but the authorities moved quickly to assure them this was not the case.
Cyprus wrapped up talks this week paving the way for the €10bn ($13bn) bailout from EU-led lenders, but fears swirled that it was still well short of the €5.8bn to fund its end of the deal.
As the speculation spread on Friday morning, customers formed long queues outside some of the larger branches of the Co-op bank, prompting the government to issue a denial of the reports as "unjustified" and "groundless".
"Such an issue was never tabled or discussed, therefore we categorically state that no such issue exists, not even as an intention," said the finance ministry.
"The memorandum has been agreed with the troika and it does not include any additional measure that leads to the need to implement any new haircut on deposits," it said, referring to the EU, European Central Bank and IMF.
The ministry said the measures agreed by the Eurogroup on March 25 for restructuring the Cypriot banking sector were being implemented and the system was "on track towards stabilisation and consolidation".
The central bank also denied reports of any plans to introduce a "general" haircut of deposits to pay for the conversion of uninsured deposits above €100 000 into shares in the island's biggest lender, the Bank of Cyprus (BoC).
"We refute this because such an action is not provided for in the policy decisions taken by the Eurogroup," it said in a statement.
The supervisory authority for the Co-op societies also warned anxious customers to ignore "slanderous rumours" being spread by text messages that a haircut on deposits was imminent.
Under the deal to downsize the banking sector, large BoC depositors could lose all of the remaining 60% of their balances over 100,000 euros depending on the costs of winding up and merging second-largest lender Laiki.
Savers in that bank will have to wait for years to see any of their cash over €100 000.
Banks have been operating under stringent capital controls since they reopened last week, after a near two-week lockdown prompted by fears of a run on deposits.

Global miners to hire more staff


Despite the unpredictability of the global mining industry, the prospect of hiring more staff is on the cards, according to a survey by Pedersen & Partners.

From the 160 companies surveyed across the sector, 33% indicated that they will be hiring more staff, while 50% said they will maintain their work force.

The results show that:
  • 28% indicate they will be hiring new employees,
  • 5% indicate they will be bringing back staff that were laid off,
  • 50% will maintain their current staffing levels, and
  • 15% suggest they will be restructuring.
The survey noted that the overall perception is that miners appear to be cautiously optimistic with most firms predicting that 2013 will be very similar to last year or improving somewhat.

However, it was not all good news, several small mining firms with market caps below $10m will not survive through the next year, the survey stated.

"Those with proven projects and strong management reputations may be subject to acquisitions or find more fluid funding through private equity, streaming, flow through shares and eventually, some institutional financing."

According to respondents 47% expect mergers and acquisitions to be a part of their growth strategy this year, while 31% said it will be considered for the right opportunity and 22% ruled it out altogether.

The last five years have been a turbulent time for mines with the global recession, operational restructurings, production cuts as well as expenditure reduction. This resulted in flagging confidence in the mining sector.

Mining in SA

The mining sector in South Africa, which is the backbone of the economy, has faced several challenges in recent months, including proposed job cuts, a series of wildcat strikes and the Marikana massacre in which more than 44 people died.

Data released by Statistics
South Africa in March showed that total mining production was 3.1% lower in 2012 compared with 2011.

Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan stated in his National Budget speech in February that mine strife resulted in a revenue shortfall of R16.3bn, estimated to be 5.2% of the 2012/13 gross domestic product.

However, Mines Minister Susan Shabangu said in February that the country is committed to a strong mining industry, adding that the industry had grown from 993 mines in 2004 to almost 1 600 mines.

"We will continue to ensure that an enabling environment is created, while at the same time developing an environment that is responsive to the changing global economic environment and the dynamism of the contemporary mining industry," she said.

US trade deficit shrinks to $43bn


The US trade deficit edged lower in February after a big jump in January, government data released Friday showed.
The commerce department reported the trade gap shrank to $43bn, down from the revised $44.7bn in January.
The decline, which came after a large 16.7% deficit increase in January, surprised analysts who had projected a deficit of $44.7bn.
US exports grew 0.8 percent to $186bn, strengthened by the exports of industrial goods (up 4.5%) and automobiles (up 1.6%).
Meanwhile, US imports held steady at $228.9bn.
US imports of crude oil, which represent more than 10% of imported goods by the US, dropped 5.6% to $23.6bn.
But US imports of foreign automobiles rose 4.6% between January and February to reach $24.8bn.
On a 12-month basis, the US trade deficit has dropped by 3.5%.

Ireland slowly recovering


Ireland's central bank said on Friday the country's gradual economic recovery was broadly on track, barely changing its growth forecasts but warning the government it could not afford to ease back on its austerity programme.
It predicted gross domestic product would expand by 1.2%, a touch below the 1.3% foreseen three months ago, and kept its 2014 growth forecast at 2.5%.
Bailed out in late 2010, Ireland has been one of the few eurozone economies to grow over the past two years and closed in on weaning itself off emergency assistance last month by raising €5bn ($6.42bn) in a landmark 10-year bond sale.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF), one of Ireland's bailout lenders, struck a similar note on Wednesday when it said the economy would grow by 1.1% this year, the first time in six quarterly reviews it has not marked down its view for 2013.
However like the IMF, which cautioned that Ireland's gradual recovery remained highly uncertain, the central bank said its medium-term assessment for the export-focused economy relied on a pick-up in external demand from the second half of 2013.
"The gradual recovery of the Irish economy is continuing," the central bank said in its latest quarterly review.
"The prospects for such a recovery must be treated with some caution, however, given the high degree of uncertainty regarding the near-term outlook for world demand."
The bank said that while recent surveys, particularly in consumer sentiment, pointed to an easing in the rate of decline in the eurozone, the bloc was facing a delayed emergence from recession, and that would have knock-on effects for Ireland.
Export growth - driven completely by the booming services industry - would fall to 2.5% this year as a result, down on the 3% expected in January, while expansion in 2014 was marked down by just under the same amount to 5%.
That should be mostly offset by a lower than previously expected drop of 0.2% in consumer spending this year and slightly quicker rise of 0.4% in 2014. The fall in domestic demand may, finally, be nearing an end, the bank said.
With any growth in the domestic economy slight at best, unemployment is still forecast to fall only slightly, to 13.9% next year even though the estimated rate fell to 14% over the last two months.
The bank added that while unemployment rates for those with the lowest levels of education were around four times higher than those with third-level qualifications, in absolute terms the majority of the unemployed come from higher education.
It gave a cool reception to the government's promise to voters of a 20% reduction in the €5.1bn of austerity measures planned by 2015, following a deal struck with the European Central Bank to ease its the burden of its bank-assumed debt.
"Full implementation of the announced budget measures remains essential to preserve market confidence and to keep a buffer against negative shocks," the bank said.

Germans back Merkel's crisis management


A new poll shows Germans widely approve of Chancellor Angela Merkel's crisis management following a bailout deal for Cyprus, suggesting it remains a key asset for the leader as she prepares to seek a third term in elections in September.
The poll for ARD television published on Friday also showed Merkel's popularity riding high and that of centre-left challenger Peer Steinbrueck, who had a gaffe-strewn start to his campaign, sinking further.
But, although Merkel's conservative bloc is easily the biggest single party, it gave neither Merkel's current centre-right coalition nor the combination of Steinbrueck's Social Democrats and the Greens a parliamentary majority.
Merkel's hard-nosed handling of the debt crisis has long been popular at home, though many in the nations that have been bailed out resent the austerity and reform policies attached to the deals.
The poll of 1 002 people, conducted on Tuesday and Wednesday, found 65% agreed that Merkel has "acted correctly and decisively in the euro crisis”.
Only 33% thought that the German government thinks too little about the well-being of people in crisis-hit countries as it works to rescue the euro.
Fifty percent said it was right that investors and bank depositors in Cyprus had to contribute to the bailout for the small island nation.
Merkel's government was insistent that large depositors should help pay, but was criticised by Germany's opposition for initially accepting a short-lived plan that would have involved a levy on small deposits as well.
The survey found that 68% were satisfied with Merkel's work, unchanged from last month, and that Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble was close behind, with 63%. But Steinbrueck's rating was down four points to 32%.
Still, the survey pointed to one risk for Merkel: It found that 75% of respondents believed the worst of the euro crisis is still to come.
Germany's economy so far has been relatively unscathed by the crisis, even as several countries suffer recessions.
A new group calling itself Alternative for Germany, which advocates scrapping the euro in its current form, plans to launch itself as a party on 14 April and run in the 22 September elections.
It's unclear whether it will be able to make any impact; another party, the Free Voters, has failed to make any inroads with a more moderate platform of opposition to the current bailout policies.
The ARD poll gave a margin of error of plus or minus up to 3.1 points.

North Korea advises diplomats to leave


Foreign diplomats in Pyongyang huddled on Saturday to discuss a North Korean evacuation advisory as concerns grew that the isolated state was preparing a missile launch at a time of soaring nuclear tensions.
The heads of all EU missions had agreed to meet to hammer out a common position after Pyongyang warned embassies it would be unable to guarantee their safety if a conflict broke out and that they should consider leaving.
Most of their governments made it clear they had no plans to withdraw any personnel, and some suggested the advisory was a ruse to fuel growing global anxiety over the current crisis on the Korean peninsula.
"We believe they have taken this step as part of their country's rhetoric that the US poses a threat to them," a British Foreign Office spokesperson said in London.
Missiles
The embassy warning coincided with reports that North Korea had loaded two intermediate-range missiles on mobile launchers and hidden them in underground facilities near its east coast.
"The North is apparently intent on firing the missiles without prior warning," the South's Yonhap news agency quoted a senior government official as saying.
They were reported to be Musudan missiles, which have never been tested, but are believed to have a range of around 3 000km, which could theoretically be pushed to 4 000km with a light payload.
That would cover any target in South Korea and Japan, and possibly even reach US military bases located on the Pacific island of Guam.
The White House said on Friday it "would not be surprised" by a missile test.
"We have seen them launch missiles in the past.... And it would fit their current pattern of bellicose, unhelpful and unconstructive rhetoric and actions," White House spokesperson Jay Carney said.
'Provocative act'
The Pentagon warned any such test would be "a provocative act", with spokesperson George Little urging Pyongyang to "follow international norms and abide by their commitments".
North Korea, incensed by UN sanctions and South Korea-US military drills, has issued a series of apocalyptic threats of nuclear war in recent weeks.
The North has no proven inter-continental ballistic missile capability that would enable it to strike more distant US targets, and many experts say it is unlikely it can even mount a nuclear warhead on a mid-range missile.
Nevertheless, the international community is becoming increasingly skittish that, with tensions showing no sign of de-escalating, there is a real risk of the situation spiralling out of control.
The latest expression of concern came from Communist icon Fidel Castro, who warned the danger of a nuclear conflict erupting was higher than it had been at any time since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis.
If war broke out on the Korean peninsula, "there would be a terrible slaughter of people", Castro wrote in a front-page article in Granma, the Cuban Communist Party's newspaper.
UN won't withdraw
The United Nations said it had no plans to pull staff out after the North Korean warning message to embassies and NGOs in Pyongyang.
Spokesperson Martin Nesirky said UN chief Ban Ki-moon was "studying the message," and added that UN staff "remain engaged in their humanitarian and developmental work" throughout North Korea.
According to the British Foreign office, embassies and organisations were told to inform the Pyongyang authorities by 10 April what assistance they would require should they wish to evacuate.
"Our understanding is that the North Koreans were asking whether embassies are intending to leave, rather than advising them to leave," the spokesperson said.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Moscow was consulting with China over the warning, as well as the United States and other members of the stalled six-party talks on North Korea.
In South Korea, a Navy official told Yonhap that two Aegis destroyers with advance radar systems had been deployed - one off the east coast and one off the west coast - to track any missile launch.
North Korea refused on Saturday to lift a ban on South Koreans accessing their companies in a joint industrial zone on the North side of the border.
Entry to the Seoul-funded Kaesong complex has been barred since Wednesday.

Castro urges calm in North Korean crisis


Communist icon Fidel Castro on Friday called on North Korea and the United States to avoid confrontation and reminded both sides of their "duties" towards peace.
"If a war breaks out there, there would be a terrible slaughter of people" in both North and South Korea "with no benefit for either of them”, Castro wrote in a front-page article in Granma, the Communist Party's newspaper.
Now that the North Korean government "has demonstrated its technical and scientific advances, we remind them of their duties with those countries that have been their great friends."
Castro urged North Korea to remember that "such a war would affect... more than 70% of the planet's population”, and decried "the gravity of such an incredible and absurd event" in such a densely populated region.
Castro said the present crisis presents the most serious risk of a nuclear war since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, a two-week standoff between the United States and the Soviet Union over placing nuclear missiles in Cuba.
The "duty" to avoid the conflict is also in the hands of Washington "and of the people of the United States”, Castro said.
If a war breaks out, President Barack Obama's second term "would be buried in a deluge of images that would portray him as the most sinister personality in the history of the United States."
Castro, 86, handed over power to his brother Raul in 2006 but remains influential in Cuba and among leftists worldwide.
Meeting Kim Il-Sung
In his article, the Cuban leader recalled "the honour" of meeting Kim Il-Sung, the founder of the North Korean regime and grandfather to current leader Kim Jong-un.
The late North Korean leader, who died in 1994, was a "historic figure, notably brave and revolutionary," Castro wrote.
Castro also wrote that North Korea "has always been friendly with Cuba, as Cuba has been always and will continue to be" friendly with North Korea.
Castro writes an occasional column titled "Reflections of Comrade Fidel" that runs in state media. This is his first column since June 2012.
North Korea, incensed by UN sanctions and South Korea-US military drills, has issued a series of apocalyptic threats of nuclear war in recent weeks.
On Thursday the North Korean army said it had received final approval for military action, possibly involving nuclear weapons, against the threat posed by US B-52 and B-2 stealth bombers taking part in the joint drills.