Showing posts with label World Economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World Economy. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 October 2011

BBC: Italy PM Silvio Berlusconi wins confidence vote


Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has won a key confidence vote in parliament, sparked by questions over his handling of the economy and personal scandals.
Mr Berlusconi won the vote in the lower house by 316 vote to 301.
Italy's government credit rating was recently downgraded and parliament failed to back a key part of the budget this week, triggering the vote.
Mr Berlusconi also faces trial on sex, bribery and abuse of power charges.
The outcome of the vote was in doubt until the last minute - even some of Mr Berlusconi's own MPs were expressing uncertainty.
Most of the opposition boycotted the first round of the vote, raising questions about whether there were enough MPs to form a quorum.
Berlusconi in numbers
·         At least 51 votes of confidence (including 14 October vote) in his government since it took power in 2008
·         Three election victories - 1994, 2001 and 2008
·         Two election defeats - 1996 and 2006
·         Four ongoing trials
·         $9bn - net worth of Berlusconi and his family (Forbes, 2010)
·         2,500 court appearances at 106 trials over 20 years
On Saturday, he also faces a mass demonstration of some 200,000 people in Rome - similar to recent ones in New York and Madrid - against austerity measures and financial mismanagement.
Italy is considered vulnerable in the current eurozone crisis, with the highest public debt among countries using the European single currency.
The country approved an austerity package last month to balance the budget by 2013 but its central bank chief this week urged the government to introduce more measures to stimulate growth.
Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-15302695

British Unemployment Rockets to 17-year high

LONDON: Britain's jobless total has hit a 17 year-high, data showed Wednesday, stoking fears of a new recession and denting government hopes that the private sector can compensate for massive cuts in state jobs.
Unemployment has riddled the world economy with severe economic problems

The number of jobless people jumped to 2.57 million in the three months to August, reaching the highest amount since late 1994, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) revealed.

Youth unemployment, or the number of 16 to 24 year-olds without a job, hit a record high of 991,000 in the three months to August and neared the psychological barrier of one million, the ONS added in a statement.

And the unemployment rate shot up to 8.1 percent during the quarter, the highest level for 15 years, while the numbers claiming jobseeker's allowance increased for the seventh month in a row to 1.6 million in September.

British Prime Minister David Cameron, whose coalition government is slashing public-sector employment as part of its austerity drive, described the latest data as "very disappointing."

However, he pledged once again that Britain would not deviate from the painful deficit-cutting measures, amid persistent turmoil on global financial markets over high levels of state debt -- particularly in the eurozone.

"Every job that is lost is a tragedy for that person and for their family and that is why this government is going to do everything it possibly can to help get people into work," he told parliament.

"We've got to do more to get our economy moving, to get jobs for our people but we mustn't abandon the (deficit-reduction) plan that has given us record low interest rates."

"If we changed course on reducing our deficit we would end up with interest rates like Portugal, like Spain, like Italy, like Greece, and we would send our economy into a tailspin."

Cameron's Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition faced more vocal calls from the opposition Labour party to slow the pace of cuts and reduce the risk of a so-called double-dip downturn.

"I want you to change course so you have a credible plan to get people back to work in this country," Labour leader Ed Miliband said on Wednesday.

He added: "Month after month, as unemployment goes up, the number of people claiming benefits goes up, the cost goes up and fewer people are in work and paying taxes.

"To have a credible plan on the deficit, you need a credible plan for growth and you don't have one."

Cameron responded that the previous Labour government, which was ousted by the coalition in May 2010, had left them nursing a record public deficit.

Britain escaped from a deep recession in the third quarter of 2009 but its recovery has been severely constrained by collapsing consumer confidence, state austerity cuts and the eurozone debt crisis.

Wednesday's data comes less than a week after the Bank of England said it will inject #75 billion (86 billion euros, $115 billion) of new money into Britain's stalled economy in a bid to boost growth and prevent a return to recession.

The BoE already pumped #200 billion into the economy between March 2009 and January 2010, but the economy has struggled and over the past nine months it has virtually come to a halt.

BoE governor Mervyn King has warned that Britain is facing possibly its most serious ever financial crisis.

Capital Economics analyst Jonathan Loynes said that the sharp deterioration in the labour market data would ramp up the risks of another recession.

"While the labour market's previous resilience was one of the few sources of hope earlier in the year, its subsequent rapid deterioration now looks likely to exacerbate the weakness in the broader economy and increase the risks of a renewed recession," Loynes said. (AFP)