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


To: dvdw© who wrote (87355)2/21/2012 10:13:54 AM
From: Cogito Ergo Sum  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 219648
 
team USA is sitting pretty right now, even though its team at the top, is the wrong team...we've overcome worst teams in the past,

That is a thing to watch... maybe not quite pretty... but yes.. still USA game to lose.. and bleakness dissipating



To: dvdw© who wrote (87355)2/21/2012 10:15:36 AM
From: carranza27 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 219648
 
Apart from the insults, your poor command of language and reason makes it difficult to reply. I will reply to the insults, however: You have obviously built a world only you inhabit, complete with its own language, constructs, symbols, etc. This kind of grandiosity is of course an indication of mental illness. I am almost certain you have been the subject of serious psychiatric care in the past, and perhaps currently. But you're not alone, there are many like you here. Still, I don't condone nor mollycoddle the mentally ill when they misbehave, and will not make an exception for you.

Although I don't read your posts because they are utterly incomprehensible and redolent of gibberish, evidencing none of the charm or the insight of the merely eccentric, I have had no reason to put you on ignore, until now. There is no reason to deal with the mentally incompetent.

I will tell you this, I enjoyed two excellent cigars this weekend, one a Cuban Cohiba, the other a Cuban a friend gave me whose maker I don't recall but which was also outstanding.



To: dvdw© who wrote (87355)2/21/2012 1:53:35 PM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 219648
 
See the reactions? I can edit you. Are you really crazy like C2 says?



To: dvdw© who wrote (87355)2/27/2012 6:33:03 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 219648
 
Things are going to get really Russian in Western Europe

Recession-hit nations owe pharma firms billions

As austerity measures across Europe lead to healthcare spending cuts, hospitals in Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain are delaying paying for drugs by up to three years. Swiss pharmaceutical giants Roche and Novartis are examining whether to limit supplies to some of the worst culprits.

While European finance ministers shuttle between crisis meetings, the consequences of the debt problems continue to extend across the eurozone.

“The on-going financial crisis and its resultant drag on economic growth continues to impact the debt burden of many economies, most notably in Europe, where Greece is facing possible default of its sovereign debt obligations, and countries such as Spain and Italy have had their sovereign debt obligations downgraded,” said Novartis spokeswoman Isabel Guerra.

The debt crisis has also given rise to concerns that some countries may not be able to pay for Novartis’ products, she added.

Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain – the so-called PIIGS nations which face similar economic challenges – have agreed with Brussels to implement draconian austerity programmes to lower public debt, requiring the elimination of all non-essential expenditure.

“If you have cutbacks in the public sector, one way to save is not to pay or to delay payment of your bills,” Peter Zweifel, an economics professor at Zurich University who specialises in health matters, told swissinfo.ch.

“But if you do that in the medical field, there will be a political backlash. It is assumed that international pharma companies have deep pockets.”

This view is shared by Ignazio Cassis, vice-president of the Swiss Medical Association, and a centre-right Radical parliamentarian.

“For the past two or three years the situation has become more dramatic as the debt levels of some countries have become unsustainable. A number of public hospitals and state insurance schemes are close to bankruptcy. But before being unable to pay staff salaries they stop paying suppliers,” he explained.

According to the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (EFPIA), European states owe €12-15 billion (SFr14.4-18 billion) to the pharma industry, which includes groups like Roche and Novartis.

“On December 31, 2011, the group’s combined trade accounts receivable with public customers in southern Europe [Spain, Italy, Greece and Portugal] was equivalent to SFr2.1 billion,” Roche spokeswoman Claudia Schmitt told swissinfo.ch.

The number of unpaid bills from Spain, Portugal and Italy increased last year, while those from Greece fell as a result of ‘zero coupon bonds’ issued by Athens, she explained.

Novartis declined to give any figures.

Spanish debts Farmaindustria, the Spanish Pharmaceutical Industry Association, said that the Spanish health system last December owed €6.3 billion to pharma companies – up 36 per cent on 2010.

On average late bills were paid after 525 days, rising to 800 days for certain autonomous regions.

“In Spain, there are several hospitals that have not paid their bills for up to three years. Roche is evaluating a change to its commercial policy for the worst paying hospitals. This would mean to set a credit limit per hospital and drugs would only be delivered if the credit limit were not exceeded,” said Schmitt.

In 2011 Roche reduced the supply of certain medicines to Greek hospitals.

Novartis is also examining whether to make changes, said Guerra.

“Deteriorating credit and economic conditions and other factors in these countries have resulted in, and may continue to result in an increase in the average length of time that it takes to collect these accounts receivable and may require us to re-evaluate the collectability of these receivables in future periods.”

For now the company is focusing on the issue of cash payments, she said. It is also developing contingency plans and schemes like factoring and insurance policies to facilitate payments.

Delicate decision The decision whether to reduce supplies remains a sensitive one.

“Pharma companies are private. In a liberal, democratic society respect for private property is a fundamental value,” said Cassis, who believes private firms are the only ones able to weigh the pros and cons of stopping the supply of certain medicines.

“A firm must maintain a good image for its customers and for the public to ensure it has a market when the crisis is over. It’s therefore in its interest to put in place ad hoc strategies like reducing drug prices temporarily,” said the Swiss Medical Association vice-president.

“But the real problem will be if the crisis drags on. Without profit there is no innovation, and without that no future.”

Zweifel agreed, but felt companies had little room for manoeuvre as “governments can kick you out of the market, and you can be accused of endangering the health of millions of citizens”.

Andrea Ornelas, swissinfo.ch
(Translated from Spanish by Simon Bradley)