Los administradores de TransicionEstructural no se responsabilizan de las opiniones vertidas por los usuarios del foro. Cada usuario asume la responsabilidad de los comentarios publicados.
0 Usuarios y 10 Visitantes están viendo este tema.
Mi ticket-- 30 de junio -- FMIexit. [Checked de forma rara. Pero el FMI ya no interviene]Desplazado a post referendum:-- Lunes 6- Reunion Merkel Hollande en Paris. Consultas a los 28 Draghi facilita perfusion de bancos-- Martes 7 - Nuevo Gabinete Merkl IV == exit Schauble y Djisselbloem-- Final de semana: Discurso histórico de Merkel sobre Europa. Pasará a la Historia como "Madre Europa" Convocatoria a referendum de proclamación del Parlamento UE Asamblea Constituyente de la Union-- UK y Austria transforman sus referendums en ítems de adhesion-- 2 semanas después. Los Estados del Sí reconocen el P.E. constituyente El P.E. elige un Gobierno Provisional de la Unión (Exit Juncker)(Nota: tienen que conseguirlo antes de las elecciones españolas, y antes de la llegada del invierno en Ucrania)
La victoria es clara. A quién le cae la OXtIa, aun no está claro. Hay que esperar.
Pero en ese caso, me temo que para hacer justicia, la "madre Europa" sería Hellas, no la gordita teutónica (y eso más allá de las chacotas muy políticamente incorrectas que se me están ocurriendo con la imagen de Merkel als mutter von Europa...
Top Syriza officials say they are considering drastic steps to boost liquidity and shore up the banking system, should the ECB refuse to give the country enough breathing room for a fresh talks."If necessary, we will issue parallel liquidity and California-style IOU's, in an electronic form. We should have done it a week ago," said Yanis Varoufakis, the finance minister.
Syriza sources say the Greek ministry of finance is examining options to take direct control of the banking system if need be rather than accept a draconian seizure of depositor savings - reportedly a 'bail-in' above a threshhold of €8,000 - and to prevent any banks being shut down on the orders of the ECB.Government officials recognize that this would lead to an unprecedented rift with the EU authorities. But Syriza's attitude at this stage is that their only defence against a hegemonic power is to fight guerrilla warfare.
"Even if they forgave all the debt and gave us €300bn we would still be in deep trouble, if we didn't push through deep reform. No-one in Syriza thinks that everything was hunky-dory in 2008 and we all can go back to that," he said.
Greece Contemplates Nuclear Options: May Print Euros, Launch Parallel Currency, Nationalize Bankshttp://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-05/greece-contemplates-nuclear-options-may-print-euros-implement-parallel-currency-nati
When the Greek crisis hit in 2010, Merkel insisted on bringing in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as part of the troika that included the Eurozone states and the European Central Bank (ECB). There was no clear lead authority. Merkel did this against the advice of her finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble, who has long argued that the EU should solve its own problems. This was the first mistake.
With the financial crisis in Greece reaching a fevered pitch, many have wondered what might happen to the European Union if their most debt riddled member jumps ship. Will it cause a domino effect of defaulting nations, equally interested in leaving this unnatural union? It’s hard to say how it all might pan out, but it’s important to note that anti-EU rhetoric isn’t limited to Greece. Calls to leave the Union are being heard in unexpected places.Over 260,000 Austrians have signed a petition calling for the EU exit for the country, and now the Austrian parliament must discuss a referendum on the issue.Overall, the 261,159 people who signed the petition represent 4.12 percent of the electorate.The petition was most popular in the regions of Lower Austria (where 5.18 percent of potential voters signed it) and in Carinthia (4.85 percent).The threshold for calling a debate on a potential referendum is 100,000 people.The petition was launched by 66-year-old retired translator Inge Rauscher, who composed a similar petition in 2000. On that occasion, it was signed by 3.35 percent of the electorate.Rauscher told The Local that there was probably more support for a referendum now because of the economic crisis and the Greek crisis.In a press release, she said it was “a great result.”Unlike Greece, Austria is an extremely wealthy nation, with one of the highest standards of living in the world. Which kind of makes you wonder right? Everyone has been talking about the consequences of what would happen if a financial basket case like Greece leaves the EU, but what happens if one of the more stable and functional nations leave? What if the people who are carrying the weight of the insolvent, decide that they've had enough?All this talk about Greece causing the unraveling of the EU, hasn’t taken wealthy nations into account, even though the whims of their populations should really scare EU leaders. The woman who launched the petition claims that if their country leaves, each household would save 9,800 Euros per year. If that’s truly the case, then it doesn't sound like the EU can spare Austria.As for the chances of this happening, it’s hard to say. Current polls place support for measure at around 33%, but Austrian politicians like Robert Marschall think the number is closer to half of the population. He suggests that many of the polls are biased, because they don’t give any anonymity to voters.We’ll probably find out soon, one way or another. Now that this petition has achieved a sufficient number of votes, their parliament will have to debate the possibility of creating a referendum on the issue. Even if they don’t have enough votes now, that may change if Greece leaves the Euro, and wealthy countries like Austria are stuck with their bill.
AFIRMA QUE SÓLO PIENSA EN SOLUCIONAR LOS PROBLEMAS DE LOS CIUDADANOSVaroufakis: "No me importan nada mis votantes, pienso en los individuos"Yanis Varoufakis insiste en que es ante todo "un profesor, que por accidente se ha convertido en ministro". Critica a los "políticos profesionales" y añade que "uno debería ser un político a regañadientes". Por otra parte, afirma que "tenemos que asumir que en Europa ha habido un abuso de poder en los últimos cinco años convirtiendo la crisis en un drama".http://www.lasexta.com/programas/salvados/mejores-momentos/varoufakis-importan-nada-mis-votantes_2015041900192.html
Un « aristo de gauche » au ParlementDepuis 1990, il enseigne l’économie à Athènes, où il a acheté une villa dans un quartier chic, grâce aux revenus d’investissement qu’il a tirés de fonds comme Blackrock et JP Morgan, souligne Challenges. Malgré le surnom d’« aristo de gauche » que lui affuble une partie de la presse grecque, Euclide Tsakalotos défend depuis longtemps des idées révolutionnaires, et porte les couleurs du parti Syriza au parlement grec depuis 2012, où il il s’est fait réélire en 2015. Il est également membre du comité central du parti d’extrême gauche.
Euclide Tsakalotoshttp://www.lemonde.fr/europe/article/2015/07/06/euclide-tsakalotos-est-le-nouveau-ministre-des-finances-grec_4672879_3214.htmlCitarUn « aristo de gauche » au ParlementDepuis 1990, il enseigne l’économie à Athènes, où il a acheté une villa dans un quartier chic, grâce aux revenus d’investissement qu’il a tirés de fonds comme Blackrock et JP Morgan, souligne Challenges. Malgré le surnom d’« aristo de gauche » que lui affuble une partie de la presse grecque, Euclide Tsakalotos défend depuis longtemps des idées révolutionnaires, et porte les couleurs du parti Syriza au parlement grec depuis 2012, où il il s’est fait réélire en 2015. Il est également membre du comité central du parti d’extrême gauche.Profe de economia en Atenas, donde compró una villa en un barrio pijo, gracias a inversiones en Blackrock et JP MorganBah. LeMonde es cada vez más tendencioso. En los 90, un europeo de su nivel podía comprar lo que quería en Grecia. Pero es llamativo que recojan el dato (de la revista de bolsa/economia Challenges)