Saturday, May 29, 2010

Black And Decker Ps160

31. Neither officials nor pensions are guilty of public and external deficits in Spain: Report EEDI 2010

; Bags News from the Ministry of Economy and Finance of Spain.
Ministry of Economy: The Ministry of Economy and Finance presents a plan to cut the budget deficit by shifting the setting of public officials (lower wages) and pensioners (freezing funds), which have been the cause of the imbalance. The Ministry should include in the Web a clear explanation of the causes of the deficit and also listen to those who advise you on the real solutions, rather than harm workers and pensioners. In several entries of this blog have stressed the importance of increasing industrial production per capita in Spain, both to encourage the development of other sectors and increasing per capita income to increase exports and reduce trade deficit. If that policy had been developed in recent years now would not have a trade deficit so high, nor so much foreign debt, unemployment or both. With lower unemployment, and less wastage of public money on activities that have little or nothing to do with the public, the situation of the English economy would be better than today.

Our defense of the Civil Service in Spain: We believe that the number of public sector workers in Spain, in proportion to population, is not excessive but rather low compared with other developed countries.
Most public officials English made an important and valuable work in support of health, education, public safety, and many other aspects of paramount importance for the quality of life of citizens. It is true that they are too numerous, or that charge too much, nor be the cause of the current deficit in Spain. We defend the quality of most of public sector officials in Spain and therefore we should not reduce their salaries. On the contrary we believe is a government should promote economic policies that take into account the real causes and solutions of deficits, interior and exterior, Spain and allow for better jobs and wages of both public officials and other workers, of course increasing the employment rate and reducing unemployment.

In the coming days will include a report with selected data on this subject.

In entry # Blog 16 of our international economic comaprativo present an analysis of employment in the public sector and social and community services (both public and private) in many OECD countries, where we found that no Spain has excess staff or workers in public and private sectors dedicated to social and community services (Education, Health, Public Administration and others) or excessive salaries. Other selected readings
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article V. Navarro Public
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Thursday, May 6, 2010

Buying Tempeh Starter

30. Increase in the unemployment rate in the Spanish regions 2009-2010. Report Hispalink Galicia.




; Source: Prepared by the Association Hispalink-Galicia from INE data

The graph shows the evolution of the rate arrest of 17 English regions in 2009-2010. The order of the regions in the graph is: Andalucia, Aragon, Asturias, Baleares, Canarias, Cantabria, Castilla y León, Castilla-La Mancha, Cataluña, Comunidad Valenciana, Extremadura, Galicia, Madrid, Murcia, Navarra, Basque Country and Rioja .
Unemployment rates are lowest in Navarra and the Basque Country, where unemployment also rose very slightly in recent quarters.
The highest rates correspond to Andalusia and the Canaries.
The unemployment rate for all of Spain, in the 1 st quarter of 2010, stood at 20.5% of the workforce. Ceuta and Melilla had rates slightly above average, with 22.42 and 21.02 respectively.
In all regions there was an increase in the rate of unemployment in the period from 2 nd quarter of 2009 and 1 quarter of 2010.
Comments: stress the desirability of political parties and media commentators more often consult the views of economists, experts in employment and development, and other experts, in order to design economic policies taking into account the real problems that explain the persistence of economic crisis in Spain, some of which we mentioned in previous entries.
We especially want to stress the attention to the problems that limit the development of industrial production per capita, which must be promoted to grow the production of non-industrial sectors and generate enough jobs to reduce unemployment. It is also important to increase support for scientific research in all specialties, and especially to listen to good English economists, for their help will certainly be important for improving economic policies.
Although per capita industrial production in Spain is low in compared with other advanced countries, it is noteworthy that we are in a better situation than that of the Greek economy and do not seem appropriate to us neither triumphalism nor catastrophic so often dominate the statements highlighted in the media communication. In our International Economics Blog include an entry for this date comparing the situation in Spain, Greece and other OECD countries.
Employment and unemployment in Galicia: The Galicia unemployment rate is below the English average but has increased in the period 2009-2010. In the Blog Hispalink-Galicia analyze the evolution Employment and unemployment in the 4 provinces of Galicia.