Beach Hut
Brighton Bhuna Boy
Not so. Tourism contributes just 15% to Greece's Gross Domestic Product.
Even I could work that one out
Not so. Tourism contributes just 15% to Greece's Gross Domestic Product.
Precisely no matter what posturing the money markets will decide their fate.
No it wasn't. West Germany really wasn't a force at all, more of a base for NATO forces.
One of the things Margaret Thatcher really did not want back in 1989 was a reunited Germany as she thought it would get up to its old tricks of parking Panzers on various countries front lawns.
It obviously didn't and instead it turned its back on doing anything except making lots of useful things that we all want (I plead guilty - I drive a BMW and my wife has a Mercedes)
The question is ... all this money that will be made ... where will it end up? In the private pockets of the speculators? Or as tax income for the governments of Europe? I think I can guess the answer.I think the phrase 'herd like exploitative speculators' is a better description of their activities than 'money markets'.
Where there is misery there is money to be made.
The question is ... all this money that will be made ... where will it end up? In the private pockets of the speculators? Or as tax income for the governments of Europe? I think I can guess the answer.
What I don't understand is why, if government borrowing is such a bad thing, the alternative (taxation) is also a bad thing.
The question is ... all this money that will be made ... where will it end up? In the private pockets of the speculators? Or as tax income for the governments of Europe? I think I can guess the answer.
What I don't understand is why, if government borrowing is such a bad thing, the alternative (taxation) is also a bad thing.
How about producing more STUFF, instead of expecting gambling on the future value of the euro (or bank shares) to deliver prosperity for everyone?
At the cost of higher employment and higher wages, to spend on STUFF.At what cost though, it is impossible to produce "STUFF" cheap in the UK
The question is ... all this money that will be made ... where will it end up? In the private pockets of the speculators? Or as tax income for the governments of Europe? I think I can guess the answer.
What I don't understand is why, if government borrowing is such a bad thing, is the alternative (taxation) also such a bad thing?
At the cost of higher employment and higher wages, to spend on STUFF.
How about producing more STUFF, instead of expecting gambling on the future value of the euro (or bank shares) to deliver prosperity for everyone?
I know that I'm turning the clock back by suggesting tarrifs, but it may well be the case that complete subservience to free markets might be the cause of the problem, rather than the solution to it. 52 per cent of the French electorate might just be right.How can we compete though, I source many goods at work through "providers" that get them made in China, even the competitors source from there because they are cheaper than anywhere else.
Investing in education never hurt any economy.So you expect people to work harder to make more money, but not for themselves, but instead to give to say a teacher who will spend the summer on holiday? Yes mate, i see a problem with that - its immoral.
Bottom line is our public sector have to work harder, just ask the hardworking, but well educated and still relatively poor who are keen to work in the emerging markets.
Currency markets are not forcing a country to do anything. No person or country has the right to force anyone to lend them money. As such, if they want to borrow then just as you pay the market price for a car, the country will pay the market price for the money they wish to borrow off someone else.
I agree most Greeks want to keep the Euro, but the markets want them out.
Germany will have a very big decision to make, plough untold amounts of their hard earned into Greece, or see the Euro semi-collapse.
My unprofessional view is that they will bin off Greece from the Euro.
TB
I know that I'm turning the clock back by suggesting tarrifs, but it may well be the case that complete subservience to free markets might be the cause of the problem, rather than the solution to it. 52 per cent of the French electorate might just be right.
Investing in education never hurt any economy.
So do the Germans spunk more money on Europe than the UK?