Tuesday June 18, 2013

QUESTION OF THE WEEK

  • Forest fires are a fact of life in Northern Manitoba, although the number and severity vary year to year. How prepared do you feel you are to evacuate quickly if the need arose under a disaster management plan scenario?
  • Poorly prepared. I’d be running around like a chicken with its head cut off. I know better but I’m complacent
  • 87%
  • Well prepared. I keep current with Canadian Red Cross evacuation tips at: http://www.redcross.ca/article.asp?id
  • 13%
  • Total Votes: 128



Home »  News »  Business

France finance minister: Tools available to help Spain; Greece showing 'strong will'


French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici gives a news conference after his meetings with Greek government officials in Athens, Thursday, Sept. 13, 2012. Athens is seeking more time to fix public finances, arguing that austerity measures will be counterproductive if forced too swiftly on the country’s weakened economy. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

ATHENS, Greece - The European Union has the available mechanisms ready if Spain needs to request financial assistance to help deal with its borrowing concerns, France's finance minister said, praising the "determination" in Greece to see through another round of tough reforms.

"Spain will have to make its own decision. It's a matter of sovereignty, but now all tools are available, if there is a demand from Spain," Pierre Moscovici said on a visit to Athens.

EU Finance Ministers will meet in Cyprus on Friday and are expected to discuss concerns of Spain's troubled public finances as well as Greece's efforts to meet tough commitments set by rescue lenders.

Moscovici, who met with conservative Prime Minister Antonis Samaras and top Greece finance officials, said implementation of planned cost-cutting reforms in Athens would determine whether it receives any concessions from emergency lenders.

"This will (to carry out reforms) is strong and the key word is determination," he said. "But what we are now eager to see, what we want to achieve is implementation of this will and that is what we are here to discuss. The rest clearly relies on that."

Athens is seeking more time to ease its debt crisis, arguing that austerity measures will be counterproductive if forced too swiftly on the country's weakened economy.

Rescue creditors are demanding that Greece's conservative-led government slashes a further €11.5 billion ($14.8 billion) in budget costs over the next two years — resulting in a new round of wage and pension cuts — if the country is to continue getting vital bailout loans.

The austerity measures already imposed as part of this bailout deal have held back growth, pushing the country into a three-year recession — triggering a new round of strikes this week.

Government figures released Thursday reveal unemployment in Greece has risen further to 23.6 per cent in the second quarter of 2012, up from 16.3 per cent the previous year.

Greece's largest labour unions on Thursday called a general strike for Sept. 26 in response to a new government austerity package that is expected to worsen hardship in the recession-hit country.

The 24-hour strike by the General Confederation of Greek Labor will be joined by a civil servants' union.

About 200 disabled people gathered outside the Finance Ministry on Thursday to protest proposed benefit cuts.

"What we are saying is obvious: Blind and disabled people are not to blame for this crisis," Paraskevas Lambrou, a blind man from the central Greek city of Volos, told the AP at the demonstration.

"It is humiliating to be driven into poverty this way," he said.


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