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El sector turístico de la Costa del Sol busca 8.000 trabajadores Organiza una feria de empleo, que se celebrará el próximo 20 de marzo en el Palacio de Ferias y Congresos de Málaga, para incorporar de forma inmediata al nuevo personalhttps://www.diariosur.es/turismo/sector-turistico-costa-sol-busca-8000-trabajadores-20250307002049-nt.htmlSi buscas trabajo tienes una oportunidad el próximo día 20. El sector turístico convoca una feria de empleo para cubrir más de 8.000 puestos que necesitan de forma urgente para reforzar las plantillas ante la llegada de la Semana Santa, que marca ya el periodo en el que se configura el personal para atender la temporada alta. Más de medio centenar de empresas y una decena de organismos, escuelas y centros de formación participarán en este evento que se celebrará el próximo día 20 en el Palacio de Congresos y Exposiciones de Málaga. Los interesados sólo deben acudir con su currículum en mano a esta jornada de reclutamiento en la que las empresas realizarán 'in situ' unas primeras entrevistas. Los organizadores insisten en que el acceso es gratuito y en que no se precisa realizar ningún tipo de inscripción. Se trata de la tercera edición de este tipo de jornadas que se han convertido en un recurso exitoso para esta industria, que tiene en la falta de profesionales uno de sus principales caballos de batalla desde que con el parón de la pandemia fueron muchos los trabajadores del turismo que buscaron refugio en otros sectores y que no han vuelto una vez que la actividad turística se ha recuperado. Desde las nueve de la mañana y hasta las seis de la tarde podrán entregar sus currículums y contactar con responsables de recursos humanos de empresas del turismo de la provincia que buscan sobre todo camareros, cocineros, personal de sala, de pisos, recepcionistas y trabajadores de mantenimiento, así como algunos cargos intermedios y de dirección hotelera.Desde la Asociación de Empresarios Hoteleros de la Costa del Sol (Aehcos), su vicepresidente, Javier Hernández, avanza que la incorporación de los seleccionados será inmediata porque el objetivo es incorporarlos a las plantillas para atender el primer tirón turístico que se produce con la Semana Santa y que marca ya el periodo de máxima llegada de viajeros. «Animo a todos los que se encuentren sin empleo o que quieran pertenecer al de turismo a que aprovechen esta oportunidad», asegura. Además, explica que en esta jornada se han organizado talleres de trabajo para enseñar a los participantes a realizar un currículum. Hernández ha cifrado en un mínimo de 1.800 las vacantes que necesita cubrir el sector hotelero de la Costa del Sol. Una cifra que se dispara hasta las 5.000 plazas de máximo. A este volumen de oferta de empleo hay que añadir las que precisa la hostelería de la provincia, que ya se está moviendo en una media anual de 100.000 empleos y que en periodos como Semana Santa o verano se dispara hasta los 106.000. De ahí que el presidente de la patronal hostelera Mahos, Javier Frutos, eleve hasta los 6.000 o 6.500 las vacantes que ofrecerán en esta feria. «En las anteriores ediciones se ha puesto de manifiesto que este evento es una oportunidad buena para todos, para el que busca trabajo y para los empresarios que han podido encontrar ese personal que necesitaban. Es un recurso en el que ganamos todos», afirma para invitar a quienes estén sin trabajo, quieran cambiar de empleo o entrar a formar parte de la familia del turismo a que participen en esta jornada de empleo.
CitarEl sector turístico de la Costa del Sol busca 8.000 trabajadores Organiza una feria de empleo, que se celebrará el próximo 20 de marzo en el Palacio de Ferias y Congresos de Málaga, para incorporar de forma inmediata al nuevo personalhttps://www.diariosur.es/turismo/sector-turistico-costa-sol-busca-8000-trabajadores-20250307002049-nt.htmlSi buscas trabajo tienes una oportunidad el próximo día 20. El sector turístico convoca una feria de empleo para cubrir más de 8.000 puestos que necesitan de forma urgente para reforzar las plantillas ante la llegada de la Semana Santa, que marca ya el periodo en el que se configura el personal para atender la temporada alta. Más de medio centenar de empresas y una decena de organismos, escuelas y centros de formación participarán en este evento que se celebrará el próximo día 20 en el Palacio de Congresos y Exposiciones de Málaga. Los interesados sólo deben acudir con su currículum en mano a esta jornada de reclutamiento en la que las empresas realizarán 'in situ' unas primeras entrevistas. Los organizadores insisten en que el acceso es gratuito y en que no se precisa realizar ningún tipo de inscripción. Se trata de la tercera edición de este tipo de jornadas que se han convertido en un recurso exitoso para esta industria, que tiene en la falta de profesionales uno de sus principales caballos de batalla desde que con el parón de la pandemia fueron muchos los trabajadores del turismo que buscaron refugio en otros sectores y que no han vuelto una vez que la actividad turística se ha recuperado. Desde las nueve de la mañana y hasta las seis de la tarde podrán entregar sus currículums y contactar con responsables de recursos humanos de empresas del turismo de la provincia que buscan sobre todo camareros, cocineros, personal de sala, de pisos, recepcionistas y trabajadores de mantenimiento, así como algunos cargos intermedios y de dirección hotelera.Desde la Asociación de Empresarios Hoteleros de la Costa del Sol (Aehcos), su vicepresidente, Javier Hernández, avanza que la incorporación de los seleccionados será inmediata porque el objetivo es incorporarlos a las plantillas para atender el primer tirón turístico que se produce con la Semana Santa y que marca ya el periodo de máxima llegada de viajeros. «Animo a todos los que se encuentren sin empleo o que quieran pertenecer al de turismo a que aprovechen esta oportunidad», asegura. Además, explica que en esta jornada se han organizado talleres de trabajo para enseñar a los participantes a realizar un currículum. Hernández ha cifrado en un mínimo de 1.800 las vacantes que necesita cubrir el sector hotelero de la Costa del Sol. Una cifra que se dispara hasta las 5.000 plazas de máximo. A este volumen de oferta de empleo hay que añadir las que precisa la hostelería de la provincia, que ya se está moviendo en una media anual de 100.000 empleos y que en periodos como Semana Santa o verano se dispara hasta los 106.000. De ahí que el presidente de la patronal hostelera Mahos, Javier Frutos, eleve hasta los 6.000 o 6.500 las vacantes que ofrecerán en esta feria. «En las anteriores ediciones se ha puesto de manifiesto que este evento es una oportunidad buena para todos, para el que busca trabajo y para los empresarios que han podido encontrar ese personal que necesitaban. Es un recurso en el que ganamos todos», afirma para invitar a quienes estén sin trabajo, quieran cambiar de empleo o entrar a formar parte de la familia del turismo a que participen en esta jornada de empleo.
[Hoy la oligarquía es cutre y hortera en todo lugar, Reino Unido incluido, ya sea por vocación o por impostura.'Pro memoria':• sinónimos de cutre: tacaño, miserable, avaro, avaricioso, agarrado, mezquino, mísero, ruin, roñoso, cicatero. guarro, sucio, mugriento, cochambroso, indecente.• sinónimos de hortera: vulgar, ordinario, basto, chabacano, macarra.]
[La derecha delirante contestaria conservadora de todo el mundo sabe que, desde el 28-02-2025, ya no da votos ser educado y portarse maleducadamente. ¡Lo saben hasta en Argentina!En Reino Unido cualquier cosa que se llame reforma venderá. Son como muy reformistas. En España lo sabemos desde la época de la casi granadina Catalina de Aragón, viuda del hermano de Enrique VIII, quien la eligió cual Onán como 1.ª esposa y de la que, cuando le subió el 'lowe' por Ana Bolena, no se podía divorciar según Roma, lo que colmó el vaso de la reformuqui —reformUK—.No me digan que no tiene gracia que el talón de Aquiles de un tío que se llama 'Love', je, je, sean cuestiones sexuales.En España, todos de negro, la escisión es carpetovetónicos vs. proanglo.]
Russia launched offensive in 'all areas' of Kursk regionThe Deputy head of the Main Military-Political Directorate of the Russian Armed Forces, Lieutenant General Apty Alaudinov, announced on Saturday that Russian forces launched an offensive in "all areas" of the Kursk region."In all directions of the Kursk section of the front, all units have launched a large-scale offensive. The enemy is abandoning positions, leaving established areas. Our guys are moving forward very well," Alaudinov said.Earlier, the Russian Ministry of Defense reported that three settlements were recaptured from the Ukrainian forces in the Kursk region.
Trump Team Is Pivoting to No Pain, No Gain as Economic MessagePresident Donald Trump during a joint session of Congress in the House Chamber of the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on Tuesday.Photographer: Win McNamee/Getty Images/BloombergPresident Donald Trump campaigned on a promise to cure what he said was an ailing US economy. Little more than a month into his second term, he’s starting to hint that the treatment might hurt.The administration is still lavishing Americans with visions of a golden age to come. Yet in the course of a madcap week – which saw a flurry of tariffs and reversals, sparking a global trade war and a sharp stock-market decline – the tone changed a bit.“There’ll be a little disturbance, but we’re OK with that,” Trump told Congress on Tuesday, defending his plans to throw up a protectionist barrier around the US with the biggest tariff increases in almost a century. By Friday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was arguing that the world’s biggest economy needed some “detox” to wean it off dependence on public spending.As Trump barrels forward with his agenda, he’s facing some cold realities that didn’t look so troublesome not long ago. Inflation won’t be easy to quell, especially as the president is determined to pile on new tariffs even as he walks back some of the early ones. Consumers and investors are getting anxious, and the economy appears vulnerable to a slowdown.A president who once measured his performance by the stock market is now brushing aside such worries. Hours before his address to Congress, the S&P 500 Index hit a post-election low as Trump’s threats of trade wars with Canada and Mexico turned into reality. It closed even lower on Friday. Treasury bonds declined on the week too, though a drop in oil prices – holding out hope for cheaper gasoline – was a brighter spot.‘Not Even Looking’Trump’s message is that any short-term pain will be worth it to bring manufacturing back to the country. “I’m not even looking at the market, because long term, the United States will be very strong with what’s happening here,” he said at the White House Thursday. “It’s going to take an adjustment period for folks on Wall Street,” said EJ Antoni, a research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation. “The sky is not falling just because we implement tariffs.” Bessent said earlier in the week that the administration’s focus was not on Wall Street, but on main street. There, the big economic data release of the week — Friday’s jobs report — offered a mixed picture. Payrolls increased by 151,000, solid enough, but a little below estimates, while unemployment ticked up to 4.1%.Trump, who’s empowered Elon Musk with recommending job cuts in the federal bureaucracy, pointed to higher factory employment in the February report. “The labor market’s going to be fantastic, but it’s going to have high-paying manufacturing jobs, as opposed to government jobs,” the president said.Kevin Hassett, director of the White House’s National Economic Council, said next steps in the administration’s economic program would push the gains further. “We’ve got to pass the tax cuts and get the deregulation train rolling,” he told Bloomberg Television on Friday. “We’re going to be reducing government employment and reducing government spending, and increasing manufacturing employment.”Still, there are plenty of signs that American industry — from small firms to giants like Ford Motor Co. — is worried about the trade war. That’s poised to escalate if trade partners retaliate, as they’re threatening to do, with their own duties that will hurt US exporters. The mounting uncertainty may not encourage hiring or investment.Trump initially pledged tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China in February, but then deferred the ones on the US neighbors. This week, he let the deadline pass and imposed 25% duties on Canada and Mexico, before rushing to offer exemptions, first to the auto industry and then to all trade conducted under the USMCA deal he brokered in his first term. Trump also doubled the China tariff rate to 20%.‘Probably Get Kicked Out’Few industries face a bigger shift than autos, and their reprieve came after bosses from the Big Three carmakers appealed to Trump. But he only gave them a month to rearrange supply chains across North America that have been years in the making. What’s more, Trump warned further delays were unlikely, even though auto companies are about to get hammered by a wave of other measures, too.Aides are downplaying hopes. “He really doesn’t like the word exemption,” Hassett told reporters Friday. “If I walk in and offer an exemption, then I’ll probably get kicked out of the office. We’ll see how it goes.”Next up for the auto firms and other industries is the 25% charge on steel and aluminum that’s scheduled to begin March 12 and will rattle supply chains once again. April is when the most sweeping measures are supposed to take effect. One set is the so-called “reciprocal tariffs,” which the US will impose on all countries, at a rate deemed equivalent to their own trade barriers. The other will single out specific products, from automobiles and semiconductors to lumber and copper.‘The Great Fleecing’Trump’s frenzied trade campaign may be distracting Americans from other policies in the pipeline that will disproportionately help the wealthy, according to Heather Boushey, who served in the Biden administration on the Council of Economic Advisers. She cited Republican efforts to renew tax cuts and reduce the workforces and spending at government agencies.“It is pure chaos and I worry every day that the chaos is aimed to distract us from the great fleecing of America,” Boushey said. “They have a very clear plan that will require cutting support for Medicaid and other really important programs.”Alongside spending cuts, Trump is on the hunt for new revenues to offset tax cuts, and tariffs are part of the plan. “The president believes if we can replace income tax revenue with tariff revenue, we can make everybody better off,” Hassett said.All this sets the stage for another showdown in a month’s time that will again test appetites – among consumers, businesses and investors — for a more wide-ranging trade war.A Harris poll taken for Bloomberg News last month found that almost 60% of US adults expect Trump’s tariffs will lead to higher prices, and that 44% believe the levies are likely to be bad for the US economy. Tariffs also have come up a record 700 times during quarterly earnings calls for S&P 500 companies, according to a Bloomberg analysis of transcripts.One thing that could dispel some of the mounting economic angst would be lower interest rates, but Federal Reserve officials have indicated they’re not likely to move for some time. They want more confirmation that inflation is on track to come down to their 2% goal – and more time to evaluate how Trump’s policies will affect the economy.At a New York event on Friday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell — who’s been careful to remain noncommittal on that topic until more hard data comes in — said the economy was basically in good shape, but acknowledged “elevated levels of uncertainty,” especially around trade.Powell’s description of what the Fed is doing right now may resonate for many Americans, after a roller coaster week. “As we parse the incoming information,” he said, “we are focused on separating the signal from the noise.”
Trump considers pulling troops out of GermanyIt is understood that the president is considering redeploying personnel to Hungary, which has maintained a close relationship with Russia[...]Connor StringerDeputy US Editor07 March 2025 6:00pm GMTConnor StringerDonald Trump is considering pulling US troops from Germany and redeploying them to Eastern Europe, The Telegraph can reveal.Mr Trump is weighing up withdrawing some 35,000 active personnel out of Germany in a move that would further sour US-Europe relations.The US president, who has repeatedly warned that Europe must commit more to its defensive capabilities, is becoming increasingly frustrated that the continent is “pushing for war”, sources close to the administration said.Around 160,000 active-duty personnel are stationed outside of the United States, a vast quantity of whom are in Germany.“Trump is angry that they [Europe] appear to be pushing for war,” a source close to the White House said.Brian Hughes, a US national security spokesman, said: “While no specific announcement is imminent, the US military is always considering the redeployment of troops around the world to best address current threats to our interests.”Hungary vetoes commitment to bolster UkraineThe Telegraph understands that the president is considering redeploying troops from Germany to Hungary, which has maintained a close relationship with Russia.At an emergency EU summit in Brussels on Thursday, Viktor Orbán, the Hungarian prime minister, vetoed a commitment to bolster support for Ukraine which was signed by all other member states.Mr Orbán has maintained a relatively close relationship with Russia, often opposing EU sanctions on Moscow.[...]Earlier this week, the two political parties expected to form the next German government agreed to loosen the country’s constitution restrictions on borrowing, enabling one trillion euros ($1.08 trillion) in spending on defence and infrastructure.It is a major change in Germany’s debt-averse political culture, rejecting conventional economic wisdom that long dominated Europe’s biggest economy and one of the world’s wealthiest countries.Fears that the US would pull its troops from the continent have been brewing for some time.Ahead of the Munich Security Conference, head Christoph Heusgen said: “The US will likely announce a massive withdrawal of American soldiers from Europe.”JD Vance, the vice-president, has floated the idea that America could reconsider its military presence in Germany, tying continued American defence commitments to Berlin’s stance on free speech.Speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Washington last month, he said: “Germany’s entire defence is subsidised by the American taxpayer. There are thousands upon thousands of American troops in Germany today. Do you think that the American taxpayer is going to stand for that if you get thrown in jail in Germany for posting a mean tweet? Of course, they’re not.”In January, it was reported that the president wants to reduce the American contingent in Europe by 20 per cent and plans to ask for a “financial contribution” for the maintenance of the remaining troops.Europe, which has long feared that Mr Trump might cut them adrift, launched a day of emergency talks on Thursday in a bid to beef up their own security.Twenty countries could join Sir Keir Starmer’s plan to deploy peacekeeping troops to Ukraine as part of a post-war settlement.British officials said the group of countries, made up “largely of European and commonwealth partners”, held a fresh round of talks over the strategy.Britain and France are leading efforts to form a so-called “coalition of the willing” prepared to put boots on the ground to uphold any agreement to end the three-year war between Russia and Ukraine.The Prime Minister and Emmanuel Macron, the French president, on Friday night spoke to “compare notes” on their work to get a lasting peace in Ukraine, Downing Street said.In Brussels, European leaders pressed ahead with their support for Ukraine despite Hungary’s veto.“Achieving ‘peace through strength’ requires Ukraine to be in the strongest possible position, with Ukraine’s own robust military and defence capabilities as an essential component,” a joint statement said.“The European Union remains committed, in coordination with like-minded partners and allies, to providing enhanced political, financial, economic, humanitarian, military and diplomatic support to Ukraine and its people.”
[En realidad, Rusia ha decido abandonar la trituradora de carne y taller de achatarramiento que es Kursk y concentrarse en torno a Jarkóv —que no será tomada por la fuerza, sino políticamente haciendo valer la alianza con los cabecillas prorrusos locales—. Para ello ha puesto en práctica el único plan táctico razonable que hay: cortar con artillería la carretera de abastecimiento, la H07, justo donde está el puesto fronterizo.Hoy hemos tenido en TVE1 al embajador de Rusia diciendo que Rusia se quedará con Lugansk, Donetsk, Zaporiyia y Jarkóv. No recuerdo que haya dicho Crimea. Crimea tiene otra lógica. Es importante que no haya hablado de Odesa.'Sensu contrario', esto quiere decir que la UE extenderá su dominio como sector público supraestatal a los otros 19 'óblast', toda una rus de las rusias.Empieza, pues, a hacerse realidad el Eje Finisterre-Vladivostock.Tampoco importaría mucho que Jarkóv se cayera de la lista. Se sentiría por su población, que es toda rusfóna y, en su mayoría, rusófila.]