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Madrid debatirá cambiar la ley para poder desalojar okupas en pisos de bancos y fondosCs lleva al pleno una propuesta para que los ayuntamiento puedan actuar por ejecución sustitoria en aquellos casos en los que la okupación impida la convivencia vecinal
Los contratos de trabajo y de vivienda ya no pueden ser más inseguros ni el endeudamiento total más elefantiásico.Los popularcapitalistas se han hecho fuertes en el poder político de algunos Estados de anglosfera. No entendemos qué hace España ahí. Oficializado el crash bursátil norteamericano, la situación es parecida a la del Berlín del búnker de 1945, aunque con China en el lugar de la URSS.No es bonito lo que viene... para ellos.Publicado por: pisitófilos creditófagos | 02/12/2018 en 10:38 a.m.
Proposal to keep UK in single market for goods reportedly rejected by cabinetMeanwhile, Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar has warned that “time is running out” in the Brexit negotiations. In an interview yesterday he said, “It is 20 months now since the Brexit referendum, 20 years since some of them started campaigning for it and we still don’t really know what Brexit means, or what the British Government wants Brexit to mean.” Varadkar added, “The UK is due to leave the European Union in March 2019, it’s a little over a year away, and I think we need clarity and urgency from London.”
UK tenants paid record £50bn in rents in 2017 Rents double in a decade and could eclipse entire sum paid for mortgages by homeowners(...) With many tenants paying more than half their salary in rents, campaigners said rent controls are now urgently needed. AdvertisementDan Wilson Craw of Generation Rent said: “The private rental market has not only doubled in the past decade, but it is costing the economy more. With social housing unavailable and home ownership out of reach, millions of people have no option but to rent from a private landlord. “This £30bn increase in the rent bill is money that people would rather be using to pay off their own mortgage or simply put food on the table.
Las sicavs de las grandes fortunas invierten más del 80% de su capital fuera de España El patrimonio que manejan los principales vehículos de inversión españoles es cada vez más pequeño dentro de España
Are Stocks Falling Into A Deep Market Freeze Here?(...) market momentum is near its highest levels ever… comparable to 1929, 1987, 2000, and 2007.That should be enough to keep investors honest here. But will these headwinds lead to a broader “market freeze”? Stay tuned!
Ray Dalio: 'Risks of a recession' are rising"What we do know is that we are in the part of the cycle in which the central banks' getting monetary policy right is difficult and that this time around the balancing act will be especially difficult (given all the stimulation into capacity constraints and given the long durations of assets and a number of other factors) so that the risks of a recession in the next 18-24 months are rising," Dalio wrote in a LinkedIn blog post. "While most market players are focusing on the strong 2018, we are focusing more on 2019 and 2020 (which is the next presidential election year)."
This chart shows ‘the modern equivalent of Bread and Circuses to sate the masses’
Trump’s 2019 budget: what he cuts, how much he cuts, and why it mattersThe budget proposes massive, historic cuts to everything from the EPA to Medicare.The big proposed policy changes include:A 42.3 percent cut to all “non-defense discretionary” spending, from the currently planned level of $756 billion in 2028 to $436 billion. This category includes funding for government agencies like the Environmental Protection Agency and the State Department, certain safety net programs like Head Start, law enforcement spending at the FBI and Department of Justice, and scientific research through the National Institutes of Health and National Science Foundation.A 33.7 percent cut to the EPA, a 29.5 percent cut to the National Science Foundation, a 22.2 percent cut to the Army Corps of Engineers (a major infrastructure program), a 21.4 percent cut to the Labor Department, and a 26.9 percent cut to the State Department, among many other discretionary spending cuts.A $777 billion boost to defense spending over 10 years, paid for partially by reducing “overseas contingency operations” spending (also known as the war budget). By 2028, total defense spending will be lower, but over the next few years it will be significantly higher (7.9 percent higher in 2020, for instance).A 7.1 percent cut to Medicare by 2028, due to reforms meant to cut payments to providers and reduce wasteful treatment without limiting access to health care. The Affordable Care Act in 2010 included many similar provisions with related goals.A 22.5 percent cut to Medicaid and Obamacare subsidies by 2028, through repealing and replacing Obamacare.A 27.4 percent cut to SNAP (food stamps) and a 20.1 percent cut to Section 8 housing assistance by 2028:$550 billion in new tax cuts achieved by making the individual and estate tax provisions in last year’s tax bill permanent.$199 billion over 10 years for a new infrastructure program meant to generate $1 trillion through private partnership spending; this is offset by a 28.6 percent cut to transportation spending from 2017 to 2023, cuts which over the same 10-year period total $178 billion. Combined with cuts to water and other infrastructure programs, it’s not clear the budget actually spends more on infrastructure.