Antagoniste


19 janvier 2012

La crise des pensions: enjeux universel Économie Europe Revue de presse

The Daily Telegraph

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Doctors may strike over cuts to their pension pots
The Daily Telegraph

The British Medical Association, which represents 130,000 doctors and medical students, said two thirds of its members support industrial action which could cripple hospitals and GP surgeries throughout the country.

The association rejected cuts to doctor’s pensions despite warning that some hospitals are so financially stretched that patient safety can no longer be guaranteed and that “accidents will happen”.

Senior government figures said the reductions in their pensions were “modest” and in line with other public sector staff.

Over the past decade, the average consultant has seen their pay rise by 54 per cent, with less qualified doctors enjoying a rise of 30 per cent. Their pay has recently been frozen, with the average GP now earning about £110,000.

Under the proposals, doctors will have to work beyond 60 to earn the same pension, although anyone within 10 years of retirement will not see any change in their situation.

Au Canada, on a appris hier, que les divers régimes de pension des employés du gouvernement fédéral sont déficitaires de143 milliards de dollars !

« If we don’t cut spending, we will be bankrupt. Yes, the medicine is harsh, but the patient requires it in order to live. Should we withhold the medicine? No. » -Margaret Thatcher

18 janvier 2012

Un pays en faillite ça veut dire quoi ? Économie Europe Récession Revue de presse

The Sydney Morning Herald

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Available for rent: The Acropolis, for under $2000 a day
The Sydney Morning Herald

In a move bound to leave many Greeks and scholars aghast, Greece’s culture ministry said Tuesday it will open up some of the debt-stricken country’s most-cherished archaeological sites to advertising firms and other ventures.

The ministry says the move is a common-sense way of helping « facilitate » access to the country’s ancient Greek ruins, and money generated would fund the upkeep and monitoring of sites. The first site to be opened would be the Acropolis.

According to a ministerial briefing dating from the end of December, a commercial firm could rent the Acropolis for a professional photographic shoot for as little as 1600 euros a day ($A1965). Demonstrators could also rent the ancient landmark.

Greece needs every euro it can get. The country’s public coffers are drained and the nation is struggling to avoid a historic debt default in March.

Malheureusement pour les Québécois, je doute que nos ruines (State Olympique, routes, viaducs, ponts, écoles, etc.) puissent être louées pour renflouer les coffres de l’État…

17 janvier 2012

L’indépendance: Écosse & Québec Europe Revue de presse

The American Interest

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England To Scotland: Hurry Up And Leave!
The American Interest

As Scottish nationalist leader Alex Salmond prepares for what could be a historic meeting this week with British Prime Minister David Cameron to discuss the timing and content of a referendum on Scottish independence, some new poll numbers are shaking up elites on both sides of the border.

The English, the polls seem to be saying, want the Scots out of the United Kingdom, while the Scots want to stay in. 43 percent of the English want the Scots out, according to an ICM poll in the Daily Telegraph, and only 32 percent want them to stay. Since 52 percent of the English want a referendum “as soon as possible,” it appears they can’t wait for the kilts and the bagpipes to be gone.

The Scots, meanwhile, seem to be getting cold feet. 43 percent want the Kingdom to stay United, and while 40 percent want to go it alone. On one subject the voters in both places appear to agree: Scotland would be worse off on its own.

Le mouvement indépendantiste écossais s’est souvent inspiré du mouvement indépendantiste québécois et le mouvement indépendantiste québécois s’est souvent inspiré du mouvement indépendantiste écossais… Et j’ai bien l’impression que les deux mouvements vont connaître le même sort: ceux qui voulaient leur indépendance vont réaliser qu’il est préférable de rester, alors que les pays d’attache qui ont toujours milité contre les mouvements indépendantistes vont réaliser qu’il serait préférable de procéder à la séparation.

11 janvier 2012

Un pays qui fait faillite, ça veut dire quoi ? Économie Europe Récession Revue de presse

Bloomberg BusinessWeek

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Greek Crisis Has Pharmacists Pleading for Aspirin
Bloomberg BusinessWeek

For patients and pharmacists in financially stricken Greece, even finding aspirin has turned into a headache.

The reasons for the shortages are complex. One major cause is the Greek government, which sets prices for medicines. As part of an effort to cut its own costs, Greece has mandated lower drug prices in the past year. That has fed a secondary market, drug manufacturers contend, as wholesalers sell their shipments outside the country at higher prices than they can get within Greece.

Parallel imports peaked in 2004, then flattened out about two years ago once drugmakers imposed quotas of the maximum amount of medicines they think the Greek market will need, said Kobelt, whose Brussels-based association represents companies engaged in the trade. Still, if pharmacies can’t pay, it makes economic sense to ship the drugs back out again rather than let them languish on wholesalers’ shelves, he said.

Kobelt said he’s seen boxes of Bayer AG (BAYN)’s Aspirin in Poland that originated in Greece, suggesting that the medicine fetches higher prices in eastern Europe. “Even Polish people pay more than Greeks for Aspirin,” he said.

Vous aurez compris que le problème des grecques c’est qu’ils ne reçoivent pas de péréquation de l’Alberta…

14 décembre 2011

Une chance que l’État est là… Économie Europe Revue de presse

The Australian

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Shelves empty as butter shortage hits Norway
The Australian

EUROPE’S richest country is in the grip of a spreading crisis. Supermarket shelves in Norway have been stripped bare of butter after its people ate their way through the nation’s entire stockpile.

A craze for a popular « fat-rich, low-carb » weight-loss diet has been blamed, as has a shortage of animal feed which caused a drop in milk production.

Some analysts say that the root of the problem is the near-monopoly held by the giant domestic company Tine, which controls 90 per cent of the butter supply in a country protected by trade barriers from European Union imports. Tine in turn blamed the popular diet routine.

But Arne Nygaard, a professor of marketing at the BI Norwegian Business School, said that Norway’s outdated state monopoly system was to blame. It had been created to keep prices high to protect small Norwegian farms in the north. « You have this old-fashioned market structure from the post-war era which creates a monopoly, and like all monopolies they do not really care about the consumer, » Professor Nygaard said.

Mais on sait tous que sans l’intervention de l’État la pénurie serait bien pire. Qui serait assez fou pour confier au libre-marché la production et la vente de beurre…

13 décembre 2011

Les moulins à vent Économie Environnement Europe Revue de presse

The Daily Telegraph

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Over-reliance on wind farms ‘will lead to power cuts’
The Daily Telegraph

A report by the Adam Smith Institute and the Scientific Alliance says that wind farms cannot meet the need for energy, leading to « a crisis by the middle of this decade ».

It estimates that five turbines would have to be put up every day to generate the Government’s targeted amount of electricity from wind, which is championed by Chris Huhne, the Energy Secretary.

Martin Livermore, a director of the Scientific Alliance, said turbines cannot be built quickly enough to replace Britain’s current coal and nuclear stations, which will mostly have closed by the end of the decade. « It’s a real lack of energy security, » he said. « The rather frightening comparison is with South Africa, where they didn’t build nearly enough power stations and they’ve had rolling blackouts for a number of years.

The report challenges the Government’s claims that generating energy from wind will be cheaper in the long run.

En passant, ces cinq dernières années on dénombre en Grande-Bretagne 1 500 incidents associés aux éoliennes. Ces incidents ont fait 300 blessés et 4 morts.

6 décembre 2011

Death panel britannique Économie Europe Gauchistan

The Daily Telegraph

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Loved ones not always told their relative is on controversial ‘death pathway’
The Daily Telegraph

NHS doctors are failing to inform up to half of families that their loved ones have been put on a scheme to help end their lives, the Royal College of Physicians has found.

Tens of thousands of patients with terminal illnesses are being placed on a “death pathway”, almost double the number just two years ago, a study published today shows.

Health service guidance states that doctors should discuss with relations whether or not their loved one is placed on the scheme which allows medical staff to withdraw fluid and drugs in a patient’s final days. In many cases this is not happening, an audit has found. As many as 2,500 families were not told that their loved ones had been put on the so-called Liverpool Care Pathway, the study disclosed.

In addition to the withdrawal of fluid and medication, patients can be placed on sedation until they pass away. This can mean they are not fed and provided with water and has led to accusations that it hastens death.

Imaginez le scandale si un hôpital privé, pour sauver quelques dollars, arrêtait les traitements sans en informer la famille et laissait les patients mourir de faim et de soif. C’est la réalité du système britannique et puisque cette situation est devenue la norme, personne n’est scandalisé. Qu’en est-il au Canada ? La question se pose…

3 décembre 2011

Nous, capitalistes, croyons que… Économie Europe Philosophie

« There is a world of difference between being pro-market and being pro-business. Sometimes, the two positions happen to coincide; often they don’t. »

The Daily Telegraph
Memo to the Occupy protesters: here are ten things we evil capitalists really think
By Daniel Hannan

CapitalismeChatting to some Occupy protesters this morning, I was struck by how wide of the mark were the beliefs they attributed to me as a Right-winger. In the interests of deeper understanding, here are ten things which – trust me – most of the Tory scum I hang around with think. Obviously, I don’t expect to turn my Leftie readers in a single post; still, they might get a clearer idea of what we actually believe.

1. Free-marketeers resent the bank bailouts. This might seem obvious: we are, after all, opposed to state subsidies and nationalisations. Yet it often surprises commentators, who mistake our support for open competition and free trade for a belief in plutocracy. There is a world of difference between being pro-market and being pro-business. Sometimes, the two positions happen to coincide; often they don’t.

2. What has happened since 2008 is not capitalism. In a capitalist system, bad banks would have been allowed to fail, their profitable operations bought by more efficient competitors. Shareholders, bondholders and some depositors would have lost money, but taxpayers would not have contributed a penny (see here).

3. If you want the rich to pay more, create a flatter and simpler tax system. This is partly a question of closing loopholes (mansions put in company names to avoid stamp duty, capital gains tax exemption for non-doms etc). Mainly, though, it is a question of bringing the tax rate down to a level where evasion becomes pointless. As Art Laffer keeps telling anyone who’ll listen, it works every time. Between 1980 and 2007, the US cut taxes at all income levels. Result? The top one per cent went from paying 19.5 per cent of all taxes to 40 per cent. In Britain, since the top rate of income tax was lowered to 40 per cent in 1988, the share of income tax collected from the wealthiest percentile has risen from 14 to 27 per cent.

4. Those of us who believe in small government are not motivated by the desire to make the rich richer. We’re really not. We are, in most cases, nowhere near having to pay top rate tax ourselves; our most eloquent champions over the years have been modestly-paid academics. We believe that economic freedom will enrich the country as a whole. Yes, the wealthy might become wealthier still, but we don’t see that as an argument against raising living standards for the majority.

5. We are not against equality. We generally recognise the benefits in Scandinavian-style homogeneity: crime tends to be lower, people are less stressed etc. Our objection is not that egalitarianism is undesirable in itself, but that the policies required to enforce it involve a disproportionate loss of liberty and prosperity.

6. Nor, by the way, does state intervention seem to be an effective way to promote equality. On the most elemental indicators – height, calorie intake, infant mortality, literacy, longevity – Britain has been becoming a steadily more equal society since the calamity of 1066. It’s true that, around half a century ago, this approximation halted and, on some measures, went into reverse. There are competing theories as to why, but one thing is undeniable: the recent widening of the wealth gap has taken place at a time when the state controls a far greater share of national wealth than ever before.

7. Let’s tackle the idea that being on the Left means being on the side of ordinary people, while being on the Right means defending privileged elites. It’s hard to think of a single tax, or a single regulation, that doesn’t end up privileging some vested interest at the expense of the general population. The reason governments keep growing is because of what economists call ‘dispersed costs and concentrated gains’: people are generally more aware the benefits they receive than of the taxes they pay.

8. Capitalism, with all its imperfections, is the fairest scheme yet tried. In a system based on property rights and free contract, people succeed by providing an honest service to others. Bill Gates became rich by enriching hundreds of millions of us: I am typing these words using one of his programmes. He gained from the exchange (adding fractionally to his net worth), and so did I (adding to my convenience). In a state-run system, by contrast, third parties get to hand out the goodies.

9. Talking of fairness, let’s remember that the word doesn’t belong to any faction. How about parity between public and private sector pay? How about being fair to our children, whom we have freighted with a debt unprecedented in peacetime? How about being fair to the boy who leaves school at 16 and starts paying taxes to subsidise the one who goes to university? How about being fair to the unemployed, whom firms cannot afford to hire because of the social protection enjoyed by existing employees?

10. Let’s not forget ethics, either. There is virtue in deciding to do the right thing, but there is no virtue in being compelled. Choosing to give your money to charity is meritorious; paying tax is morally neutral (see here). Evidence suggests that, as taxes rise, and the state squeezes out civic society, people give less to good causes.

Well, there you go, comrades. I don’t expect the tents outside St Paul’s to fold overnight. But perhaps we might at least engage honestly on some of these issues rather than talking past each other. ¡Hasta la victoria siempre!

Daniel Hannan is a writer and journalist, and has been Conservative MEP for South East England since 1999.

28 novembre 2011

Nouvel empire colonial Économie Europe Récession

Médias

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En 1575, l’Angola est devenu une colonie portugaise.

En 1975, l’Angola a obtenu son indépendance du Portugal.

En 2011, pour sauver le Portugal de la faillite, le gouvernement angolais a proposé d’acheter des compagnies détenues par le gouvernement portugais…

Les économistes prévoient qu’en 2012, l’économie de l’Angola va croître de 12,0% alors que l’économie portugaise devrait croître de 2,8%.

28 novembre 2011

L’hiver pourrait être long en Europe Économie Europe Récession Revue de presse

The Daily Telegraph

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Prepare for riots in euro collapse, Foreign Office warns
The Daily Telegraph

As the Italian government struggled to borrow and Spain considered seeking an international bail-out, British ministers privately warned that the break-up of the euro, once almost unthinkable, is now increasingly plausible. Diplomats are preparing to help Britons abroad through a banking collapse and even riots arising from the debt crisis.

The Treasury confirmed earlier this month that contingency planning for a collapse is now under way. A senior minister has now revealed the extent of the Government’s concern, saying that Britain is now planning on the basis that a euro collapse is now just a matter of time.

Recent Foreign and Commonwealth Office instructions to embassies and consulates request contingency planning for extreme scenarios including rioting and social unrest.

Greece has seen several outbreaks of civil disorder as its government struggles with its huge debts. British officials think similar scenes cannot be ruled out in other nations if the euro collapses. Diplomats have also been told to prepare to help tens of thousands of British citizens in eurozone countries with the consequences of a financial collapse that would leave them unable to access bank accounts or even withdraw cash.

24 novembre 2011

L’orage gronde Économie Europe Récession Revue de presse

National Post

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Contagion seeps into once untouchable Germany
National Post

German immunity to debt contagion vanished Wednesday as the country was rebuffed by capital markets, a new indication the crisis has seeped into Europe’s core.

A disastrous bond auction, in which Germany failed to get bids for 40% of its securities, put a big dent in the country’s creditworthiness, which until now has been treated as without blemish.

“We are in uncharted waters,” said Nicholas Spiro, managing director of Spiro Sovereign Strategy in London. “There’s the fear you’ve got a broken eurozone bond market and no amount of funds and reforms can repair it.”

Bids for German 10-year bonds totaled €3.9-billion, forcing the country’s financing authority to take down the additional €2.1-billion and sending shivers through a pillar of support that has redeemed the eurozone since the outset of the crisis two years ago.

Speaking Wednesday at an event in Montreal, Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney said, “The crisis appears barely contained.”

22 novembre 2011

Violence politique Europe Gauchistan Terrorisme

Gauche = ViolenceQuelques chiffres très intéressants sur les attentats terroristes menés en sol européen en 2010, compilés par l’Europol, un office de police criminelle intergouvernemental.

Pour l’année 2010, on dénombre 249 attentats terroristes et tentative d’attentats terroristes.  Voici la répartition en fonction de l’idéologie des gens qui ont perpétré ces crimes:

-Séparatiste/Ethno-nationaliste: 160 attentats, 349 arrestations
-Extrême-gauche/Anarchiste: 45 attentats, 34 arrestations
-Islamiste: 3 attentats, 179 arrestations
-Environnementaliste/Droit des animaux: 1 attentat, 0 arrestation
-Extrême-droite: 0 attentats, 0 arrestation

Le reste, 40 attentats, n’a pas d’origines connues.

Depuis 2007, année à laquelle l’Europol a commencé à compiler des statistiques, on dénombre 1 750 attentats séparatistes/ethno-nationalistes, 189 attentats extrême-gauchistes/anarchistes et 6 attentats extrême-droitistes.

La réalité est assez différente du portrait que font les médias qui nous parlent constamment de la montée de l’extrême-droite et jamais de la montée de l’extrême-gauche. Si l’on désire voir des manifestations de frustration, de colère ou de radicalisme, c’est à gauche qu’il faut regarder, et non pas à droite et encore moins chez les libertariens.

Say it loud and say it proud: gauche égale violence.

Source:
EUROPOL
TE-SAT 2011: EU Terrorism Situation and Trend Report

21 novembre 2011

Dehors les socialistes ! (une défaite pour les indignés) Économie Europe Récession Revue de presse

Le Figaro

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Espagne: raz de marée à droite
Le Figaro

Les Espagnols ont tranché: pour sortir le pays du marasme économique, ils ont accordé leurs suffrages à Mariano Rajoy. Selon les résultats partiels des législatives, portant sur 85% des suffrages, sa formation, le Parti populaire (PP, droite), s’est imposée hier comme la première force du pays, en raflant 44% des voix. Mieux, Rajoy bénéficie d’une majorité absolue très confortable: 187 des 350 sièges du Congreso de los diputados reviennent au PP.

À l’inverse, le Parti socialiste (PSOE) qu’emmenait Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba a subi une défaite cinglante. «Ce n’est pas un bon résultat», a reconnu hier soir le candidat, qui a salué la «large majorité» obtenue par la droite. 110 députés et 29% des bulletins, son pire résultat de l’histoire, un score largement inférieur aux 169 parlementaires rassemblés en 2008. Rajoy, inversement, dépasse le meilleur résultat de José Maria Aznar (183 sièges), un père politique parfois encombrant, qui le désigna à la tête du PP en 2004.

Le premier objectif de Rajoy n’était pas de séduire ses propres électeurs, parmi les plus fidèles et disciplinés du continent. Dans ce pays structurellement plus à gauche que la moyenne européenne, il fallait surtout montrer un visage aimable et éviter d’effrayer les sympathisants socialistes.

N.B. Je vous signale que le mouvement des indignés est né en Espagne…

20 novembre 2011

L’austrité Économie En Chiffres Europe Récession

N’en déplaise aux keynésiens, l’austérité économique peut fonctionner:

Austérité

Pour la Grèce, les taux explosent alors que du côté de l’Irlande on est presque revenu au niveau d’avant la crise.

Lors du dernier trimestre, malgré la crise qui secoue l’Union Européenne, le PIB irlandais a cru de 1,6% et la demande intérieur a progressé de 0,8%.

Voici ce que disait Paul Krugman du plan d’austérité irlandais le 29 juin 2010: « That’s why the Irish debacle is so important. All that savage austerity was supposed to bring rewards; the conventional wisdom that this would happen is so strong that one often reads news reports claiming that it has, in fact, happened, that Ireland’s resolve has impressed and reassured the financial markets. But the reality is that nothing of the sort has taken place: virtuous, suffering Ireland is gaining nothing. Of course, I know what will happen next: we’ll hear that the Irish just aren’t doing enough, and must do more. If we’ve been bleeding the patient, and he has nonetheless gotten sicker, well, we clearly need to bleed him some more. »

Source:
Bloomberg
Government Bonds

20 novembre 2011

Voici pourquoi l’Union Euro est devenue une joke Économie Europe Gauchistan

The Daily Telegraph

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EU bans claim that water can prevent dehydration
The Daily Telegraph

Brussels bureaucrats were ridiculed yesterday after banning drink manufacturers from claiming that water can prevent dehydration.

EU officials concluded that, following a three-year investigation, there was no evidence to prove the previously undisputed fact.

Producers of bottled water are now forbidden by law from making the claim and will face a two-year jail sentence if they defy the edict, which comes into force in the UK next month.

Last night, critics claimed the EU was at odds with both science and common sense. Conservative MEP Roger Helmer said: “This is stupidity writ large.

“The euro is burning, the EU is falling apart and yet here they are: highly-paid, highly-pensioned officials worrying about the obvious qualities of water and trying to deny us the right to say what is patently true.

“If ever there were an episode which demonstrates the folly of the great European project then this is it.”

14 novembre 2011

Révolution anglaise Économie Europe Revue de presse

The Guardian

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Private firm to run NHS hospital
The Guardian

A private company, listed on the stock market, has been given the right to deliver a full range of hospital services for the first time in the history of the NHS, reigniting a debate about the use of business in the health sector.

Circle Healthcare, a John Lewis-style partnership valued at around £120m, will manage the debt-laden Hinchingbrooke hospital in Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, from February after the government signed off on a decade-long contract on Wednesday.

Although private sector firms already operate units within the NHS – such as hip replacement centres – Circle, one of Britain’s most prominent healthcare providers, is the first to take over an entire hospital.

Circle is viewed by ministers as a model « mutual » with 49% of its ownership in staff hands. It operates a scheme to allow more shares to be gained through a performance-related rewards system.

Significantly this allows doctors to take a slice of the profits – and this landmark deal, the government hopes, will lead to other cash-strapped NHS hospitals consider outsourcing their management to private companies.

Quand verra-t-on finalement le même genre de chose au Québec ?

13 novembre 2011

Ainsi parlait Paul Krugman Économie En Citations Europe Gauchistan Récession

Prix Nobel d'imbécillité

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Citation de Paul Krugman, l’économiste préféré des gauchistes, faite le 10 janvier 2010 dans un texte ayant pour titre « Learning From Europe »:

« The real lesson from Europe is actually the opposite of what conservatives claim: Europe is an economic success, and that success shows that social democracy works. [...] After all, while reports of Europe’s economic demise are greatly exaggerated, reports of its high taxes and generous benefits aren’t. »

À ajouter à cette autre citation de Paul Krugman, faite en 2002, à propos du marché immobilier…

En passant, Le PIB par habitant (ajusté au pouvoir d’achat) de la zone Euro est de 31 829$. Le PIB par habitant (ajusté au pouvoir d’achat) du Mississippi, l’État américain le plus pauvre, est de 31 980$.

6 novembre 2011

Fini le ouzo à 3h de l’après-midi Canada Économie Europe Récession Revue de presse

National Post

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No Canadian money for eurozone bailout fund: Harper
National Post

Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Friday that Europe must sort out its own economic mess — and flatly stated that Canada will not provide any funds to bail out the continent.

Harper delivered his message during a news conference at the close of a two-day G20 Summit, during which the leaders of the world’s most powerful economies focused on the continuing economic troubles of one region — Europe.

“I think leaders here at the G20 are sending a message that we will do whatever is necessary in the event of a global crisis to provide stability to global markets,” said Harper.

Still, the prime minister became animated and categorical when asked if Canadian taxpayers would be required to contribute to a bailout fund for Europe. “It is the government of Canada’s conviction that Europe remains fully capable of dealing with its own European problems,” he said.

“There is a lot of wealth here. There is a lot of firepower here. And the Europeans have every ability to move forward to deal with their own problems.”

23 octobre 2011

Le prix du pétrole: ceci explique cela… Économie Europe Revue de presse

The Independent

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North Sea production slumps after Budget tax hike
The Independent

North Sea oil production has slowed to its lowest level since records began 15 years ago following the Chancellor’s recent tax raid on the industry.

An update from the Department of Energy yesterday showed the biggest fall in oil production since quarterly records started in 1995.

The slowdown follows the Chancellor’s controversial Budget decision to increase the supplementary tax on North Sea Oil production to 32 per cent from 20 per cent to pay for a cut in petrol duty. The Chancellor’s decision drew an industry-wide outcry and claims that mature fields would be closed.

Oil and Gas UK survey warned on Thursday that a quarter of 240 potential projects in the North Sea were less likely to go ahead after the tax increase. Gas production fell 17.6 per cent from a year ago.

Pourquoi je vous parle de ça ? Parce que les médias québécois tombent toujours à court d’explications pour expliquer la hausse du prix du pétrole au Québec. La plus grosse source d’approvisionnement en pétrole au Québec est… la Mer du Nord!

18 octobre 2011

Le modèle suédois Économie Europe Québec

Extrait d’un papier qui a été publié dans le Journal de l’Association Médicale Canadienne en 2008 à propos du système de santé québécois:

Canadian Medical Association Journal
Public–private health care delivery becoming the norm in Sweden

Compared to the controversy surrounding private health care in other countries, in Sweden, of all places, the private sector has taken on a larger role with relatively little fanfare.

In fact, Sweden’s success at adopting a public–private hybrid was cited by the Supreme Court of Canada in its 2005 decision to strike down prohibitions against private health care insurance in Quebec, saying that countries such as Sweden and Germany, that allow private insurance, have successfully delivered medical services that are superior to and more affordable than services available in Canada.

About 18% of overall health spending in the country comes from the private sector, according to the World Health Organization. But on top of that, private companies compete alongside public facilities for government funding and the right to provide health care to Swedish citizens.

The winning bid — whether public or private — receives government funding with the goal of leaving the end service (in other words, what the patient sees) unchanged, regardless of the service provider, while rewarding those who can provide the quickest and cheapest treatment. [...]

Compared to the sensitivity surrounding the public-versus-private health care debate in Canada, Sweden has thus far managed to introduce an increasingly hybrid system with relatively little controversy.

En 2011, on a observé en Suède une croissance de 400% des gens s’assurant au privé pour obtenir des soins de santé.  Cette décision est motivée par le désir des Suédois de réduire les délais d’attente et de s’assurer de recevoir des soins de qualité.

Pendant ce temps au Québec on va dans la direction opposée.  Pour des raisons nébuleuses, l’hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal a décidé de mettre fin à son entente avec la clinique de chirurgie privée Rockland MD malgré le succès de ce partenariat pour les patients.

4 octobre 2011

Message de l’Europe à Obama: dégage ! Économie États-Unis Europe Récession Revue de presse

Der Spiegel

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Why Europe Is Right and Obama Is Wrong
Der Spiegel

American economists, central bankers and fiscal policy makers have reinterpreted British economist John Maynard Keynes’s clever idea that government spending is the best way to counteract a serious economic downturn — and have turned it into a permanent prescription. The only problem is that this method of encouraging growth has not stimulated the US economy in recent years, but in fact has put it on a crash course.

Not even the financial sector, with its affection for cheap money, believes that this is the way to guide the United States out of the crisis. When the Fed recently announced a new version of its low-interest-rate policy, with the snappy name « Twist, » it led to a sharp decline in the stock market instead of the expected boost.

It is all the more disconcerting that Obama is now recommending that the Europeans emulate his failed strategy. To save the euro, the president has proposed that Europe take on more debt to augment their bailout funds and stimulate their economies. Like a doctor caught prescribing performance-enhancing drugs, Obama has not chosen to cease his activities. Rather he is trying to ensure that as many people as possible have access to his wares.

The fact that Europeans are unwilling to comply with Obama’s strange logic gives reason for hope. It makes no sense to pile up more and more debt on already unstable piles of debt. The world doesn’t have too little debt, but too much.

30 septembre 2011

Un pays qui fait faillite, ça veut dire quoi ? Économie Europe Récession

The Wall Street Journal

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Roche Keeps Drugs From Strapped Greek Hospitals
The Wall Street Journal

Swiss drug giant Roche Holding AG has stopped delivering its drugs for cancer and other diseases to some state-funded hospitals in Greece that haven’t paid their bills, and may take similar steps elsewhere, a stark example of how the European debt crisis that has jolted global financial markets is having a direct effect on consumers.

There are hospitals « who haven’t paid their bills in three or four years, » Mr. Schwan said. « There comes a point where the business is not sustainable anymore. » Roche may need to adopt the same measures in Spain. Some state-funded hospitals in Portugal and Italy have also fallen far behind on payments

Roche isn’t the first pharmaceutical company to stop supplies to some Greek buyers. Denmark’s Novo Nordisk S/A last year stopped shipping certain brands of insulin after Greece said it would cut the prices by more than a quarter. The cutoff lasted a few weeks, until Greece agreed to less onerous price reductions. Novo Nordisk continued shipping low-cost generic insulin throughout, but it was sharply criticized by diabetes groups and others for halting supplies of the more expensive products.

Greek hospitals have large debts to many drug companies, according to the Hellenic Association of Pharmaceutical Companies, or SFEE. As of June 30 this year, Greek’s state-financed hospitals had paid for just 37% of the €1.9 billion ($2.62 billion) worth of drugs delivered by SFEE member companies in the 18 months to June, 2011, the organization said in a recent report.

26 septembre 2011

Un bailout pour le FMI ? Économie Europe Récession Revue de presse

The Daily Telegraph

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Christine Lagarde: IMF may need billions in extra funding
The Daily Telegraph

Christine Lagarde has signalled that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) may have to tap its members – including Britain – for billions of pounds of extra funding to stem the European debt crisis.

The head of the IMF has warned that its $384bn (£248bn) war chest designed as an emergency bail-out fund is inadequate to deliver the scale of the support required by troubled states.

In a document distributed to the IMF steering committee at the weekend, Ms Lagarde said: « The fund’s credibility, and hence effectiveness, rests on its perceived capacity to cope with worst-casescenarios. Our lending capacity of almost $400bn looks comfortable today, but pales in comparison with the potential financing needs of vulnerable countries and crisis bystanders. »

The suggestion came after European officials revealed they were working on a radical plan to boost their own bail-out fund, the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), from €440bn (£384bn) to around €3 trillion.

19 septembre 2011

Victoire libertarienne en Allemagne ! Europe Revue de presse

The Guardian

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Pirate party snatches seats in Berlin state election
The Guardian

An upstart band of internet freedom activists are to enter Berlin’s state parliament, ousting the Free Democrats, Angela Merkel’s junior partner in the unpopular national government. It marks a remarkable success for the small Pirate party, which attracted 8.5% of the vote, winning its first ever seats in a state parliament, according to the first exit polls on Sunday.

Their irreverent campaign captured the imagination of young voters as the party expanded its platform from an original focus on filesharing, censorship and data protection, to include social issues and citizens’ rights. The party, which was founded in 2006, was « in tune with the Berlin vibe with their relaxed campaign », Holger Liljeberg of the Info polling institute, told Reuters. « They focus a lot on liberalism, freedom and self-determination. »

Once opinion pollsters began to predict that they might overcome the crucial 5% hurdle to get into parliament, the momentum behind the Pirates began to grow, with supporters no longer worrying that a vote for them would be wasted.

The result is not the first European success for the Pirates. The original Swedish version of the party won a seat in the European parliament in 2009 after capturing just over 7% of the vote.

15 septembre 2011

Taxer les riches ? Du pur gaspillage ! Économie Europe Revue de presse

The Wall Street Journal

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Do Taxes on the Rich Raise More Revenue?
The Wall Street Journal

Great Britain’s recent experience may be instructive. The U.K. has imposed a new tax rate of 50% for those making £150,000 a year (or about U.S. $236,000). There is a fierce battle between British Chancellor George Osborne, who wants to scrap the tax, and many Liberal Democrats, who want to preserve it.

The Chancellor has asked for a study to find out how much revenue the tax has raised, though hard numbers won’t be available until next year. It was expected to raise £2.7 billion a year.

That hasn’t stopped people from guessing. A report from Britain’s Institute for Fiscal Studies said the tax is costing the treasury £500 million a year, instead of earning billions. The reason: High earners are simply finding ways to avoid the tax.

The IFS, an independent think-tank that focuses on tax policy, said top earners are hiding income or moving their earnings offshore.

Of course, this is the argument that Arthur Laffer, Alan Reynolds and others have made for years. If you tax the rich too much, they say, the rich will just find loopholes. Tax them less, and they pay more.