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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TobagoJack who wrote (49130)4/25/2009 2:32:54 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 220063
 
Jobs that disappear should not have been there. The firm is structure is affected by three major factors:

Fear of the communist raise of 1917=>Labour laws create for that. Today's labor laws are anachronic and must be dealt away immediately.

Why that.

The labor laws protect who has a job to the detriment of the jobless.

This explains the high rate of unemployment among the youth for the past 30 years. Labor laws were created to protect who had a ob, which in its turn created a cadre of old people rich and poorer youngsters.

Note the raise of single mothers since they did not find young men with economic means to marry.

But you need to be versed in how the real world world to be able to see all that.

Labor laws out of the way, the firm will have only temporary workers and contractors. All hired on as needed basis.

That will makes the guy to constant upgrade himself to compete for the jobs offered.

It will create savings culture.

It makes the guys seek information on how the firm operates to seek better opportunities.

This is all good and positive for the economies.



To: TobagoJack who wrote (49130)4/25/2009 4:11:37 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 220063
 
Many economies in the region have benefitted from sound macroeconomic policies ahead of the crisis, such as paying down external debt and balancing budgets, he said.

IMF Official: Latin American Economies Reaching A Bottom

Latin American economies are starting to reach a bottom in the downturn and should post a stronger recovery than advanced economies, an official from the International Monetary Fund said Friday.

"The Latin American region is reaching a bottom around this quarter, and from here will begin to recover," Nicolas Eyzaguirre, director of the IMF's western hemisphere department, said in a briefing to discuss the regional outlook.

Many economies in the region have benefitted from sound macroeconomic policies ahead of the crisis, such as paying down external debt and balancing budgets, he said.

Still, Eyzaguirre warned that the recovery will depend in large part on progress made in advanced economies to revive growth and restore financial- sector health. Thus, he recommends that local governments continue to pursue countercyclical policies where possible and remain on alert for financial turmoil.

Earlier this week, the IMF predicted that the region will contract 1.5% this year and post a 1.6% growth rate in 2010.

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