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https://www.eleconomista.es/vivienda-inmobiliario/noticias/11927759/09/22/Mejorar-la-eficiencia-energetica-de-una-casa-eleva-un-10-su-valor-de-venta-y-alquiler.htmlSaludos.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-62788447CitarGermany announces €65bn package to curb soaring energy costsGerman Chancellor Olaf Scholz has announced a €65bn (£56.2bn) package of measures to combat the threat of rising energy costs in the coming months.The package, much bigger than two previous ones, will include one-off payments to the most vulnerable and tax breaks to energy-intensive businesses.Countries across Europe are considering similar measures.Energy prices have soared since Russia invaded Ukraine, and Europe is trying to wean itself off Russian energy.Two days ago, Russia said it was suspending gas exports to Germany through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline indefinitely.But the stand-off with Russia has forced countries like Germany to find supplies elsewhere, and its stores have increased from less than half full in June to 84% full today.The latest measures come as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says Russia is trying to destroy the normal life of every European citizen.Mr Scholz told journalists Germany would get through the winter, adding that Russia was "no longer a reliable energy partner".He said the government would make one-off payments to pensioners, people on benefits and students. There would also be caps on energy bills.Some 9,000 energy-intensive businesses would receive tax breaks to the tune of €1.7bn.A windfall tax on energy company profits would also be used to mitigate bills, Mr Scholz said.The latest package brings the total spent on relief from the energy crisis to almost €100bn, which compares to about €300bn spent on interventions to keep the German economy afloat during the Covid-19 pandemic.Meanwhile UK Tory leadership hopeful Liz Truss has said she will announce a plan to deal with energy costs within a week if she becomes prime minister on Tuesday.And EU energy ministers are due to meet on 9 September to discuss how to ease the burden of energy prices across the bloc.
Germany announces €65bn package to curb soaring energy costsGerman Chancellor Olaf Scholz has announced a €65bn (£56.2bn) package of measures to combat the threat of rising energy costs in the coming months.The package, much bigger than two previous ones, will include one-off payments to the most vulnerable and tax breaks to energy-intensive businesses.Countries across Europe are considering similar measures.Energy prices have soared since Russia invaded Ukraine, and Europe is trying to wean itself off Russian energy.Two days ago, Russia said it was suspending gas exports to Germany through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline indefinitely.But the stand-off with Russia has forced countries like Germany to find supplies elsewhere, and its stores have increased from less than half full in June to 84% full today.The latest measures come as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says Russia is trying to destroy the normal life of every European citizen.Mr Scholz told journalists Germany would get through the winter, adding that Russia was "no longer a reliable energy partner".He said the government would make one-off payments to pensioners, people on benefits and students. There would also be caps on energy bills.Some 9,000 energy-intensive businesses would receive tax breaks to the tune of €1.7bn.A windfall tax on energy company profits would also be used to mitigate bills, Mr Scholz said.The latest package brings the total spent on relief from the energy crisis to almost €100bn, which compares to about €300bn spent on interventions to keep the German economy afloat during the Covid-19 pandemic.Meanwhile UK Tory leadership hopeful Liz Truss has said she will announce a plan to deal with energy costs within a week if she becomes prime minister on Tuesday.And EU energy ministers are due to meet on 9 September to discuss how to ease the burden of energy prices across the bloc.
Y esto, ¿qué les parece?CitarSE CUMPLE EL PRONÓSTICOEl 'rechazo' se impone de forma contundente en Chile y golpea directo al mandato de BoricCasi el 62% de los votos ha votado a favor de mantener la Constitución actual, redactado en 1980 por la dictadura militar de Augusto Pinochet y reformado parcialmente en democraciahttps://www.elconfidencial.com/mundo/2022-09-05/elecciones-chile-constitucion-gobierno_3485315/Chile ha dado la espalda a una nueva Carta Magna, la que iba a ser una "de las más progresistas" de la región, pero también especialmente divisiva. Con el 99,9% de las mesas escrutadas, la opción del ‘rechazo’ a la propuesta de nueva Constitución logró el 61,8% de los votos, mientras que el ‘apruebo’ se quedó en el 38,1%. Con este resultado, sigue vigente la Carta Magna heredada de la dictadura de Augusto Pinochet, contra la que gran parte del país se manifestó hace apenas tres años. La votación de este 4 septiembre ha tenido una participación del 85% del electorado -13.016.943 personas-, la más importante en la historia electoral de Chile, con el componente de inscripción automática en los registros y voto obligatorio. La jornada confirmó con creces lo pronosticado por diferentes encuestas en las semanas previas al referéndum.[...]
SE CUMPLE EL PRONÓSTICOEl 'rechazo' se impone de forma contundente en Chile y golpea directo al mandato de BoricCasi el 62% de los votos ha votado a favor de mantener la Constitución actual, redactado en 1980 por la dictadura militar de Augusto Pinochet y reformado parcialmente en democraciahttps://www.elconfidencial.com/mundo/2022-09-05/elecciones-chile-constitucion-gobierno_3485315/Chile ha dado la espalda a una nueva Carta Magna, la que iba a ser una "de las más progresistas" de la región, pero también especialmente divisiva. Con el 99,9% de las mesas escrutadas, la opción del ‘rechazo’ a la propuesta de nueva Constitución logró el 61,8% de los votos, mientras que el ‘apruebo’ se quedó en el 38,1%. Con este resultado, sigue vigente la Carta Magna heredada de la dictadura de Augusto Pinochet, contra la que gran parte del país se manifestó hace apenas tres años. La votación de este 4 septiembre ha tenido una participación del 85% del electorado -13.016.943 personas-, la más importante en la historia electoral de Chile, con el componente de inscripción automática en los registros y voto obligatorio. La jornada confirmó con creces lo pronosticado por diferentes encuestas en las semanas previas al referéndum.[...]
https://www.eleconomista.es/economia/noticias/11929124/09/22/El-69-de-empresas-haran-frente-a-la-inflacion-con-inteligencia-artificial-.htmlSaludos.
Cita de: Cadavre Exquis en Septiembre 05, 2022, 11:16:26 amhttps://www.eleconomista.es/economia/noticias/11929124/09/22/El-69-de-empresas-haran-frente-a-la-inflacion-con-inteligencia-artificial-.htmlSaludos.Y con blockchain, nuevas tecnologías, unicornios y esta moto que tengo aquí que la dejo muy barata.
Russia switches off Europe’s main gas pipeline until sanctions are liftedGazprom previously said it was halting flows through Nord Stream 1 because of a technical faultRussia’s gas supplies to Europe via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline will not resume in full until the “collective west” lifts sanctions against Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine, the Kremlin has said.Dmitry Peskov, President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, blamed EU, UK and Canadian sanctions for Russia’s failure to deliver gas through the key pipeline, which delivers gas to Germany from St Petersburg via the Baltic sea.“The problems pumping gas came about because of the sanctions western countries introduced against our country and several companies,” Peskov was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency. “There are no other reasons that could have caused this pumping problem.”Peskov’s comments were the starkest demand yet by the Kremlin that the EU roll back its sanctions in exchange for Russia resuming gas deliveries to the continent.(...)
Federal Reserve’s money-supply expansion still holding steady amid tighteningDespite the Federal Reserve raising interest rates and trimming its $8.9 trillion balance sheet, money-supply expansion has yet to fall off a cliff.Although there was a sharp drop in the M2 in the week beginning April 11, there has been an ebb and flow of the printing presses since the end of April.Here is what we are seeing based on the St. Louis FRED data:The U.S. central bank has turned ultra-hawkish, with plans to keep raising interest rates heading into 2023 and leaving them there by the time the world flips the calendar to 2024.But is this really tightening?When the fed funds rate is in the range of 2.25 percent and 2.50 percent, and the annual inflation rate is north of eight percent, the real rate (inflation-adjusted) is about negative six percent.Therefore, it is safe to say that monetary policy is still highly accommodative.Since it takes about six to nine months of policy updates to seep into the economy, the effects of a rising-rate environment are starting to be felt, whether it is in the form of waning consumer demand or slow business activity.Of course, investors are hitting the sell button with the financial markets forward-looking. How much they are pricing in a higher-for-longer rate policy remains to be seen.While the U.S. economy is in a technical recession, the nation might not witness a sharp downturn until next year.Until then, investors are split as to whether the Eccles Building will pull the trigger on a 50- or 75-basis-point rate hike at the September Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) policy meeting. But if Fed Chair Jerome Powell and his merry band of central bankers really wanted to restore price stability, it would need to emulate Paul Volcker.
Díaz aboga por topar los precios de alimentos básicos y espera acordarlo con la distribuciónLa vicepresidenta segunda y ministra de Trabajo y Economía Social, Yolanda Díaz, ha abogado por llegar a un acuerdo con la gran distribución y los consumidores para topar los precios de los alimentos básicos.En una entrevista concedida a eldiario.es recogida por Europa Press, la titular de Trabajo ha apostado por llegar a un acuerdo con la gran distribución y los consumidores para topar los precios de una cesta de productos básicos como el pan, la leche, los huevos o la fruta."No hay nada que tensione más la vida de la gente que no poder hacer la cesta de la compra, y esto está pasando en nuestro país", asegura la vicepresidenta del Gobierno, que culpa a los "márgenes empresariales" de parte de la subida de precios. En este sentido, ha señalado que "alguien" se está enriqueciendo por el camino y está utilizando la guerra."Los oligopolios de nuestro país no solo están en el sector bancario o en el energético, tenemos cinco grandes distribuidoras de alimentación que concentran el 50%", ha apuntado la vicepresidenta segunda, quien ha informado de que el Ejecutivo aún no se ha reunido con estas grandes distribuidoras, pero ha asegurado que lo hará.(...)
Por si quedaba alguna sombra de duda...https://www.ft.com/content/2624cc0f-57b9-4142-8bc1-4141833a73ddCitarRussia switches off Europe’s main gas pipeline until sanctions are liftedGazprom previously said it was halting flows through Nord Stream 1 because of a technical faultRussia’s gas supplies to Europe via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline will not resume in full until the “collective west” lifts sanctions against Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine, the Kremlin has said.Dmitry Peskov, President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, blamed EU, UK and Canadian sanctions for Russia’s failure to deliver gas through the key pipeline, which delivers gas to Germany from St Petersburg via the Baltic sea.“The problems pumping gas came about because of the sanctions western countries introduced against our country and several companies,” Peskov was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency. “There are no other reasons that could have caused this pumping problem.”Peskov’s comments were the starkest demand yet by the Kremlin that the EU roll back its sanctions in exchange for Russia resuming gas deliveries to the continent.(...)