In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Archive for May, 2010

EU: “Who is S&P?” Questions rating agency’s downgrade of Greek, Portuguese debts

Posted by seumasach on May 3, 2010

New Europe

2nd May, 2010

European Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn was frustrated with the downgrade of Greek debt by Standard & Poor’s to junk status last week, questioning the credit rating agency’s decision. “Who is Standard & Poor’s by the way?” asked Amadeu Altafaj, the spokesman for Rehn, during a briefing in Brussels.
The European Commission sent a warning to rating agencies urging them to act “in a responsible way.” After Standard & Poor’s downgraded Greece and Portuguese debts, EU markets plunged. Following the downgrade, the euro collapsed more than 1.5% on 27 April. The downgrade added to fears that Greece’s crisis would spread to other weak EU members.

“We would expect that when credit rating agencies assess the Greek risk, they take due account of the fundamentals of the Greek economy and the support package prepared by the European Central Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the Commission”, the spokesperson of the EU Financial services Commissioner Michel Barnier said.
Barnier said on 30 April that he is considering setting up a new European credit rating agency. “I am thinking… about the idea, feasibility and the added value of adding an extra rating agency that would be European,” French daily Les Echos quoted Barnier as saying.
European Commission President Jose Barroso said on 29 April that the Commission “has already taken action to put in place a regulatory framework on credit-rating agencies, and will continue to watch closely the behavior of the financial markets during this crisis.”
Greek Prime minister George Papandreou, addressing an Economist’s conference in Athens on 28 April, stressed that “a small fire, a spark must not be allowed to get out of control and become a threat for the Eurozone.”
Papandreou said that from the situation that has been created from the beginning of the crisis “the markets do not ultimately regulate themselves and they do not always function rationally,” while for the specific case he said that the markets “are afraid and evaluate by depending on the worst possible scenario and not the most probable.”
A day later, Antonis Samaras, the main opposition Leader, President of the New Democracy Party, who is a former member of the European Parliament, said that he had also called for the creation of a European rating agency. He said at the Economist conference that the rating agencies “were not always transparent” and often were “self-fulfilling prophecies.”
On April 30, Papandreou held consecutive consultations with his top ministers on the progress in the negotiations with a visiting delegation of the so-called “troika” of the European Commission, theECB and the IMF on the new package of economic measures expected to be announced in the coming days. Barroso said that the European Commission is making “solid and rapid progress” with the European Central Bank (ECB), the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Greek authorities to finalize the Greek adjustment program.”The Commission expects this work to be finalized in the coming days,” he said. “There is no doubt that Greece’s needs will be met in time.”

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UK politicians fail the Afghanistan, economics and banking tests

Posted by seumasach on May 2, 2010

Christopher King

Redress

2nd May, 2010

Christopher King argues that Britain’s leading politicians lack the courage to acknowledge the only moral conclusion to the Afghan fiasco – withdrawal – and lack the vision, integrity and competence to tackle the country’s economic and banking crises.

Our politicians are trying desperately to convince us that they know how to run the country. Well, we’ve been listening to them and they’re rubbish. Their entire economic argument chases its tail around how much public expenditure each party will cut, how much we will be taxed, what and when. It’s all about the deficit and a mythical economic recovery, the basis for which or the possibility of it not occurring were never mentioned. And recovery is doubtful. In parallel, the Institute for Fiscal Studies says that there are massive spending holes in all their published budgets because they’re concealing how enormous the government’s deficit is. Call me a prophet of doom – I don’t care. Doom is on the horizon.

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Iran, Brazil and the ‘bomb’

Posted by seumasach on May 2, 2010

Pepe Escobar

Asia Times

30th April, 2010

Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim put it very politely at a joint press conference with his Iranian counterpart Manouchehr Mottaki in Tehran this Tuesday. Amorim said, “Brazil is interested to have a share in settling the Iranian nuclear issue in an appropriate way.”

“Appropriate” is code for dialogue – not a fourth round of sanctions slammed by the United Nations Security Council, much less the military option, which the Barack Obama administration has stridently kept on the table. Thus by positioning itself as a mediator in search for a peaceful solution, the Brazilian government is in fact on a “soft” collision course with the Obama administration.

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China breaks the Himalayan barrier

Posted by seumasach on May 2, 2010

M.K.Bhadrakumar

Asia Times

1st May, 2010

Two veteran diplomats, one from China and the other an American, trudge their weary way from their respective capitals to the remote Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan to witness as “observers” a gathering of eight leaders from South Asiaagonizing over the stasis of their 25-year old regional forum.

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Another ‘never again’ moment

Posted by seumasach on May 2, 2010

Eben Carle

The Daily Caller

30th April, 2010

If government insists upon regulating everything except itself, then those energies should be directed at a rather loud and rude killer: cell phones. Read the rest of this entry »

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Wi-fi in schools: protect our children!

Posted by seumasach on May 2, 2010

This is an excellent video on the dangers and health risks of installing Wi-Fi in schools. Kids (YES KIDS) describing many of the same symptoms I and others who are sensitive experience when exposed to Wi-Fi, cell towers, cordless phones and other sources of electromagnetic radiation.

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There is no alternative!

Posted by seumasach on May 1, 2010

There is no alternative!
Cailean Bochanan
1st May, 2010
The intervention of Mervyn King appears to represent the injection of that note of realism so evidently lacking in the electoral campaign. However, things have gone so far that even our realism is delusional. Is it really the case that some tough decisions, a dose of austerity, can bring us out of this crisis? Alas, the contradictions are just too deep and all our thinking depends on the assumption that what worked in the past will work again. We fail to grasp the uniqueness of our predicament, that it is no longer just a a question of more or less of the same: draconian cuts are no more a solution than was Bush’s mad mantra of endless patriotic spending. Something is coming to an end in Anglo-America and until we have grasped what it is and acquired the humility to face up to it we are just going to be flailing around helplessly.

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