Daily Archives: August 16, 2015

Η Ελλάδα στην 38η θέση με 11 δισ Χρυσή εποχή των κροίσων: Η Ελλάδα στην 38η θέση με 11 δισεκατομμυριούχους

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Στα 164 τρισ. δολάρια αυξήθηκε ο ιδιωτικός πλούτος του πλανήτη σύμφωνα με τις λίστες της Wealth-X, στις οποίες βρίσκονται 11 Έλληνες δισεκατομμυριούχοι και 565 με κινητή περιουσία άνω των 300 εκατ. δολαρίων.

Το 8,6% του παγκόσμιο πληθυσμού ελέγχει το 85,3% του παγκόσμιο πλούτου, την ώρα που το 69,8% του πληθυσμού του πλανήτη μοιράζεται μόλις το 2,9% του πλούτου.

Οπως αναφέρει σημερινό δημοσίευμα της εφημερίδας «Το Βήμα», στις λίστες ελβετικών τραπεζών και εξειδικευμένων εταιρειών που συγκεντρώνουν πληροφορίες για τους πλούσιους του κόσμου (με περιουσία άνω των 30 εκ. δολαρίων) υπάρχουν 576 Έλληνες που διαθέτουν περιουσία 88 δισ. Δολάρια. Στις σχετικές λίστες των Wealth-X π.χ., συμπεριλαμβάνονται 11 Έλληνες δισεκατομμυριούχοι που διαθέτουν περιουσία 18 δισ. δολαρίων ενώ παράλληλα 565 Έλληνες εμφανίζονται με συνολική περιουσία 70 δισ. δολαρίων.

Οι απλώς εκατομμυριούχοι Έλληνες, από την άλλη πλευρά έχουν υπολογιστεί από την ελβετική Julius Baer 34,723. Σύμφωνα με την καταγραφή των κροίσων από τη Wealth-X, μια εξειδικευμένη εταιρεία που συγκεντρώνει πληροφορίες για λογαριασμό των τμημάτων αξιοποίησης περιουσίας των μεγαλύτερων τραπεζών, σήμερα στον κόσμο υπάρχουν 211.275 εκατομμυριούχοι με κινητή περιουσία άνω των 30 εκατ. δολαρίων ενώ την ερχόμενη πενταετία εκτιμάται ότι θα ξεπεράσουν τις 260.000. Από τη λίστα αυτή, το 1% αφορά απλώς τους δισεκατομμυριούχους, οι οποίοι από 2.325 το 2014 αναμένεται φέτος να αυξηθούν στους 2.508 με πρόβλεψη να ξεπεράσουν τους 3.800 την ερχόμενη πενταετία.

Οι χώρες με τους περισσότερους δισεκατομμυριούχους

1.ΗΠΑ 571
2.Κίνα 190
3.Βρετανία 130
4.Γερμανία 123
5.Ρωσία 114
6.Ινδία 100
7.Ελβετία 86
8.Χονγκ Κονγκ 82
9.Βραζιλία 61
10.Σ.Αραβία 57
38. Ελλάδα 11

Πηγή:nicemagazine.gr

Shock Olympic defeat 0-2 at the hands of Maitland Magpies

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Hamilton Olympic lost their first home game on the last round of the season against a Maitland team which secured it’s place in next year’s NPL 24 hours earlier!

In perfect conditions Olympic began the match with a statistic which would send fear in any opposing defence – 17 goals scored in the last three matches played!
Maitland’s tactics to overcome this statistic was to play deep and with everyone behind the ball but the centre forward.

As a result, Olympic had to wait almost 10 minutes for their first sniff at goal with Simon Mooney firing a free kick from outside the box which didn’t trouble Ben Kelly.

Maitland returned the compliment with an opportunity of their own in the 21st minute with a failed diving header by Joel Wood.

On the half hour mark Maitland’s confidence grew and they began committing numbers in the middle third of the field swamping our midfield and denying our attack of service.

Despite this, a good through ball by Kane Goodchild to Matthew Swan on the left, enabled the later to get a shot on target from a narrow angle which didn’t trouble Ben Kelly.

A few moments later, Kane Goodchild receives the ball in midfield, makes a darting diagonal run, fires a shot on target but Ben Kelly is there again!

A replica run a minute later by the same player sees his shot well over the bar.

Just before half time a good cross from Matthew Swan from the left enables Kane Goodchild to fire-in a header which looked to have crossed the goal line, but which the referee claimed, it did not!

Half time finds both teams locked at 0-0 with Maitland playing a disciplined game defending in numbers and denying Olympic time on the ball and space in which to attack. The only way Olympic look like breaking the deadlock is through a flash of individual brilliance from one of our players.

Olympic create the first goal scoring opportunity of the second half when Kane Goodchild fires over the bar while 10 minutes later Danny Ireland is forced to bend a ball around the post.

On the hour mark a well taken free kick by Maitland finds Harrison Maguire on the edge of the far post, who brings it under control and who has no difficulty finding the back of the net.

Trailing 0-1 and with Maitland’s confidence growing, Olympic pushed forward but nothing seemed to be coming off.

Reece Cooper weaved his way into the box, forced a great save out of Ben Kelly, Pat Brown heads the rebound into the Maitland net but the linesman claims he was offside and the goal does not count!

Moments later, Reece Cooper turns his defender inside out and fires a shot on target, only to see Ben Kelly bend it around the post.

As Olympic commit players forward, one counter attack by the Magpies and a perfectly weighted cross to the head of Joel Wood and 0-2 is on the scoreboard!
This is our first home loss and the 2nd loss of the season. As a result we slip into 3rd position on the ladder and in next week’s semi-final we take on Lambton Jaffas.

NPL ROUND 18 (Final Round)
Adamstown – Newcastle Jets Youth 2-1
Lambton Jaffas – South Cardiff 2-1
Hamilton Olympic – Maitland 0-2
Broadmeadow Magic – Charlestown City 2-0
Edgeworth – Weston Workers 3-1
TABLE:
1 Edgeworth 40
2 Lambton Jaffas 37                                                                                                                           3 Hamilton Olympic 36                                                                                                                     4 Broadmeadow Magic 32
5 Weston Workers 29
6 Adamstown Rosebud 28
7 Newcastle Jets Youth 17
8 Maitland 15
9 Charlestown City 13
10 South Cardiff 9
NPL RESULTS:
U22s Hamilton Olympic – Maitland 1-1
U19s Hamilton Olympic – Maitland 2-0
SEMI FINALS:
U17s Hamilton Olympic – U15s Emerging Jets 1-4
U15s Weston Workers – Hamilton Olympic 2-0

JUNIOR RESULTS FOR SATURDAY 16/08/2015:
(season finished last week for most of our Junior Community teams but this week a washed out game from earlier in the season was played out with the following results)

U10s Hamilton Olympic – Beresfield 2-0
U9s Hamilton Olympic White – Minmi 9-0
U7s Hamilton Olympic A – Lambton 5-4
U7s Hamilton Olympic B – Minmi 23-1
Source: Tom Tsamouras

Aυστραλία:Συμπάροικος φύτεψε αυτί στο χέρι του!

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Ο Στέλιος Αρκαδίου, που είναι γνωστός με το καλλιτεχνικό του όνομα Stelarc

Kαι τώρα θέλει να το συνδέσει με το ίντερνετ!

Μετά από 20 χρόνια ένας εκκεντρικός Έλληνας καλλιτέχνης της Αυστραλίας που πέρασε στην ιστορία ως ο πρώτος άνθρωπος που ακούει (και) από το… χέρι του, θέλει τώρα να συνδέσει το αυτί του και με το ίντερνετ στο πλαίσιο της «τέχνης».

Όπως είχαμε γράψει και παλαιότερα στο «Νέο Κόσμο», πρόκειται για τον Στέλιο Αρκαδίου, που είναι γνωστός με το καλλιτεχνικό του όνομα Stelarc.

Ο Αρκαδίου επιδιώκει να εμφυτεύσει στο τρίτο «τεχνητό» αυτί του (στο χέρι του) ένα μικροσκοπικό μικρόφωνο το οποίο θα συνδέεται με έναν αναμεταδότη bluetooth ώστε οι άλλοι άνθρωποι να μπορούν να ακούν online τους ήχους που συλλαμβάνει το «ψεύτικο» αυτί του.

«Το τρίτο αυτί δεν είναι για μένα. Είναι για τον υπόλοιπο κόσμο. Εγώ έχω δυο καλά αυτιά» λέει ο κ. Αρκαδίου ο οποίος είναι επικεφαλής του Alternate Anatomies Laboratory του Πανεπιστημίου Curtain της Δυτικής Αυστραλίας.

Ελπίζει, μάλιστα, το μικρόφωνο στο αυτί του χεριού του να είναι ανοιχτό 24 ώρες το 24ωρο, επτά μέρες

την εβδομάδα.

Ήδη η τοποθέτηση του μικρόφωνου έχει γίνει με επιτυχία αλλά αφαιρέθηκε λόγω μόλυνσης.

Την δεύτερη φορά που θα τοποθετηθεί ελπίζεται ότι δεν θα υπάρξει πρόβλημα.

Ο Αρκαδίου που γεννήθηκε το 1946 στη Λεμεσό της Κύπρου, από ελληνοκύπριους γονείς, μεγάλωσε στην Αυστραλία και τα έργα του επικεντρώνονται κατά κύριο λόγο στον φουτουρισμό. και την επέκταση των δυνατοτήτων/ικανοτήτων του ανθρωπίνου σώματος.

Ο Αρκαδίου που χαρακτηρίζεται ως «βιοκυβερνητικός καλλιτέχνης», και που μόνο τυχαίος δεν είναι, πιστεύει ότι η τέχνη θα πρέπει να είναι κάτι παραπάνω από μια απλή εικόνα.

Ο 69 ετών, πρώην ερευνητής του Τμήματος Ψηφιακής Έρευνας για την τέχνη της performance στο Nottingham Trent University, τοποθέτησε το εμφύτευμα ανθρώπινου αυτιού στο αριστερό του χέρι το 2006 στο Περθ της Αυστραλίας, σε συνεργασία με την ομάδα «Tissue Culture and Art», μετά από πολλές δυσκολίες, αφού δεν μπορούσε να βρει χειρούργο για να κάνει την επέμβαση που ήθελε.

Σχεδόν όλοι οι Αυστραλοί χειρούργοι υποστηρίζουν ότι κάνουν τις επεμβάσεις τους για θεραπευτικούς ή αισθητικούς λόγους και όχι για να υπηρετήσουν την τέχνη, όπως λέει ο κ. Αρκαδίου, ο οποίος έχει δώσει παράσταση και στην Αθήνα όπου «επανεξέτασε» τα όρια μεταξύ του ανθρώπινου σώματος και των μηχανών χρησιμοποιώντας ιατρικά εργαλεία, το internet και

Το κυρίαρχο στοιχείο της δουλειάς του Αρκαδίου είναι: «το ανθρώπινο σώμα είναι ξεπερασμένο».

Σήμερα, παγκόσμια πια αναγνωρισμένος, ο Αρκαδίου έχει στο ενεργητικό του πολλά βραβεία, διακρίσεις, επιχορηγήσεις και δημοσιεύσεις.

Δεν είναι τυχαίο που έως το 2007 κατείχε την θέση του Principal Research Fellow στο τμήμα Performance Arts Digital Research του βρετανικού Trent University του Νότινγχαμ, ενώ υπήρξε καθηγητής στο School of Arts του Brunel University του Λονδίνου πριν πάει στο Πανεπιστήμιο Δυτικής Αυστραλίας.

Πολλοί είναι αυτοί που διερωτώνται αν είναι καλλιτέχνης, επιστήμονας ή πουλά «τρέλα» και γιατί καταφεύγει σ’ αυτά τα τεχνάσματα. Ο Αρκαδίου απαντά ότι «το σώμα σήμερα γίνεται το τοπίο των μηχανών και οι μηχανές δεν βρίσκονται πια στο εξωτερικό οπτικό πεδίο του ανθρώπου, αλλά στο εσωτερικό του ίδιου μας του σώματος… Επανασχεδιάζοντας το ανθρώπινο σώμα, επαναπροσδιορίζουμε το τι σημαίνει να είμαστε άνθρωποι».

Ο Αρκαδίου δηλώνει άθεος και λέει ότι δεν έχει πλέον νόημα να βλέπουμε το σώμα ως θέση όπου είναι εναποτεθειμένη η ψυχή ή ως πηγή κοινωνικότητας, αλλά να το αντιμετωπίζουμε ως κατασκευή.

Πηγή:Νέος Κόσμος

After Eurogroup approval, Athens faces milestones amid election rumors

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The approval by eurozone finance ministers of a third bailout for Greece paves the way for the disbursement of crucial rescue loans this week but also heralds a new period of political upheaval for Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras due to a widening rift in leftist SYRIZA.

The European Stability Mechanism is expected to approve the first tranche of the 86-billion-euro bailout on Wednesday. Some 26 billion euros will be disbursed in the first instance: 10 billion for Greece’s cash-strapped banks, with most of the rest to go toward paying off a 7.2-billion-euro bridge loan and covering a 3.2-billion-euro repayment to the European Central Bank on Thursday. As with previous bailouts, the loans come at a heavy price.

The bailout foresees new spending cuts and tax increases, which has prompted vehement reactions in the far-left of SYRIZA, as well as sweeping structural reforms that previous governments have failed to implement. These include an overhaul of the pension system, the opening of closed professions and the liberalization of markets.

Greece’s lenders secured the backing of creditor states, many of which were extremely skeptical of giving Greece another chance, by linking the disbursement of aid to strict “conditionality” and budget targets.

Another key commitment by Greece is the establishment of a privatization fund, which must be operational by the end of this year and into which some 50 billion euros in state assets are to be transferred over the duration of the new three-year program.

The question of relieving Greece’s huge debt burden is to be addressed after the program’s first review in late October.

On the domestic front, Tsipras is expected to ask soon for a vote of confidence in Parliament after seeing 43 of his MPs decide not to support the third bailout deal in a ballot that took place on Friday morning.

The defections meant that just 118 coalition lawmakers voted for the agreement, which is just below the absolute minimum of 120 that the government would need to survive a confidence motion.

However, sources close to the prime minister told Kathimerini that Tsipras would aim to secure a minimum of 151 votes in the ballot of 300 MPs. If he fails to meet this target then early elections will be called.

source:ekathimerini.com

Τήνος: Με λαμπρότητα και κατάνυξη τιμήθηκε η Κοίμηση της Θεοτόκου

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Σε κλίμα κατάνυξης, παρουσία του Προέδρου της Δημοκρατίας Προκόπη Παυλόπουλου, του υπουργού Εθνικής Άμυνας Πάνου Καμμένου και χιλιάδων προσκυνητών, τιμήθηκε στην Τήνο η Κοίμηση της Θεοτόκου και η 75η επέτειος του τορπιλισμού της «Έλλης».

Ο Πρόεδρος της Δημοκρατίας, συνοδευόμενος από τον υπουργό Εθνικής Άμυνας, επιβιβάστηκε στην τορπιλάκατο Σταράκης, από όπου κατευθύνθηκε στα ανοιχτά του λιμανιού της Τήνου και στο σημείο του τορπιλισμού του αντιτορπιλικού «Έλλη», πριν από 75 χρόνια, τον Δεκαπενταύγουστο του 1940, έριξε στεφάνι, ενώ τηρήθηκε ενός λεπτού σιγής στη μνήμη των πεσόντων ναυτών και αξιωματικών του αντιτορπιλικού.

Αμέσως μετά ο κ. Παυλόπουλος κατευθύνθηκε στον Ναό της Ευαγγελίστριας, προκειμένου να παρακολουθήσει την αρχιερατική λειτουργία στον Ιερό Ναό της Παναγίας της Τήνου.

Με λαμπρότητα γιορτάστηκε στην Παναγία Σουμελά, στην Καστανιά Ημαθίας, η Κοίμηση της Θεοτόκου.

Την κυβέρνηση εκπροσώπησε ο υφυπουργός Εξωτερικών Γιάννης Αμανατίδης, ο οποίος σε δηλώσεις του εμφανίστηκε αισιόδοξος για το μέλλον των Ελλήνων, παρά τις μεγάλες δυσκολίες που αντιμετωπίζουν τα τελευταία χρόνια.

Κατάνυξη σε όλη τη χώρα, αλλά και στην Παναγία Σουμελά του Πόντου. Ο Οικουμενικός Πατριάρχης Βαρθολομαίος προεξήρχε της Θείας Λειτουργίας, όπου για έκτη συνεχόμενη χρονιά τελέστηκε το προσκύνημα, αλλά και το αντάμωμα των απανταχού της γης Ποντίων.

Πηγή:in.gr

Τα Φιδάκια της Παναγίας στην Κεφαλονιά!

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Με λαμπρότητα τελέστηκε και φέτος στο Μαρκόπουλο, στην Κεφαλονιά, ο Μέγας Εσπερινός της Εορτής της Κοιμήσεως της Θεοτόκου. Της ακολουθίας προεξήρχε ο Αρχιμανδρίτης Φώτιος Γαβριελάτος, ενώ συμμετείχαν ιερείς από την Ελλάδα και τη Ρουμανία.

Για άλλη μία χρονιά, ο Εσπερινός συγκέντρωσε πλήθος πιστών που ήθελαν να δουν από κοντά, να αγγίξουν και να φωτογραφίσουν τα άκακα Φιδάκια της Παναγίας, τα οποία φέρουν σταυρό στο κεφάλι.

Πηγή:madata.gr

The Greek Debt Deal’s Missing Piece

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At long last, European creditor nations and Greece have reached an agreement on a third bailout in five years.

The bailout, which was approved by Greece’s Parliament on Friday, included familiar details: In return for an infusion of 86 billion euros, or $95 billion, Greece has promised to increase taxes, cut spending and enact measures to make its economy function more efficiently.

But there was one glaring omission. As it stands, none of that new money flowing into Greece will come from the agency that has, until now, played a crucial role in virtually every bailout, in Greece and elsewhere around the world: the International Monetary Fund.

That is because the I.M.F. says that Greece was simply incapable of repaying its staggering debt. Yet the accord reached last week makes no effort to reduce that burden. If you agree with the I.M.F.’s reasoning, you might have to conclude that despite all of the seemingly ironclad provisions of the agreement imposed by eurozone creditors, Greece will be no more able to honor the deal or to repay its new loans than it has been in other bailouts.

“I remain firmly of the view that Greece’s debt has become unsustainable and that Greece cannot restore debt sustainability solely through actions on its own,” the I.M.F.’s chief, Christine Lagarde, said on Friday, following the accord’s approval this week.

The Greek debt drama has had its share of twists and turns. Alliances have shifted, rivalries have deepened, and the back-room maneuverings have been appropriately Byzantine.

But the I.M.F. shift from being Greece’s most persistent scold to its main advocate for a break on its debt has been among the most intriguing developments so far.

Clashing Assessments

In late June, representatives of European countries and the I.M.F. gathered at a private meeting at the European Union’s headquarters in Brussels. The officials were racing against time to devise a plan to keep the country in the eurozone. But the dispute between Greece’s two largest lenders was about to boil over.

Poul M. Thomsen, the Danish fund official who served as the I.M.F. point person in the Greek talks, had been negotiating around the clock, and his voice was hoarse. Since early in the spring, he had been arguing that while Greece needed to follow through on tough economic measures, its debt was out of control. Europe, however, insisted that the Greek government had only to enact tough austerity measures to set itself on a prudent financial path.

Now the Europeans wanted to highlight their own, more sanguine view of Greece’s debt prospects at a crucial meeting of the creditor countries’ finance ministers the next day. And in doing so they took the I.M.F.’s conclusion — that Greece could no longer repay its debt and that Europe might have to face losses on its exposure there — and presented it, in one throwaway sentence, as a long-shot scenario.

For the I.M.F. it was a breaking point. Not only were officials frustrated that Europe was not accurately reflecting their view, but they also wanted to make sure that their non-European shareholders, many of whom had become very critical of the fund’s aggressive lending in Greece, got the full picture of how their analysis had changed. So, in a highly unorthodox move, they decided to make their disagreement public. They released their full analysis — a 23-page document — a week later.

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Since then the fund has been adamant: Europe must provide significant debt relief in order for the I.M.F. to provide cash toward the next Greek bailout.

A growing number of economists agree that Greece needs more than another dose of austerity policies to recover. But they are also asking why it took so long for the fund to reach that conclusion.

“I applaud the fund for releasing the report, but at the same time it was too late,” said Gabriel Sterne, an economist at Oxford Economics in London who has closely studied the I.M.F.’s role in Greece. “For right or for wrong, they are the only honest broker here so they really should have gotten this out sooner.”

No More Argentinas

Founded in 1944 as part of a broad mandate to ensure global financial stability after the end of World War II, the I.M.F. for many years primarily lent money to developing economies — largely in Latin America and Asia — that experienced a financial crisis.

But after the 2008 financial crisis, the I.M.F. turned its attention to Europe. An astonishing 61 percent of the I.M.F.’s loan book is now tied up in Ireland, Portugal and, of course, Greece.

The standard prescription in a crisis is a dollop of loans in return for belt-tightening measures.

When this analysis is done correctly, the endings tend to be happy. The economy recovers, and the country goes back to the usual method of meeting its financing needs by borrowing on global bond markets, as has happened with Ireland and Portugal.

When the analysis is not done correctly, the results can be disastrous. The country goes bust. The I.M.F. is not paid back. And most acutely, citizens end up suffering from the failed policies.

Arguably, then, the I.M.F.’s most critical task is figuring out whether or not a country can pay back its loans. That calculation will determine how much the fund pushes pure austerity policies or whether it will also impose losses on lenders to return the economy to health.

As an emergency creditor — the world’s subprime lender, if you will — the I.M.F. has some failures. Before Greece, the fund’s biggest debacle had been Argentina. The fund lent billions of dollars to the country just before it defaulted in 2001, leading to an economic tailspin. It took years for Argentina to come out of it.

To guard against falling into a similar money pit, the fund put in place a “no more Argentinas” rule, according to the author Paul Blustein in his definitive paper on the I.M.F.’s Greek drama.

The rule decreed that the fund would hand out money only if there was a “high probability” that the applicant could make good on the loan.

In May 2010, Greece would be the first test of this new rule.

From the outset, most of the fund’s senior staff concluded it was highly unlikely that Greece could pay the money back, given its voluminous debts and dysfunctional economy.

Several top officials went so far as to push for an immediate debt “haircut” — a permanent loss to the lenders — in secret meetings with their European counterparts, according to Mr. Blustein’s recounting of those events.

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But the fund, then under the leadership of Dominique Strauss-Kahn, wanted to get back into the bailout game. Having hit a low of $9 billion in 2007, I.M.F. lending had been slowly ticking up through 2010. Mr. Strauss-Kahn, who was known to have his eye on the French presidency, was not going to miss an opportunity to play a central role in resolving the European debt crisis.

So the I.M.F. made a last-minute adjustment to its “no more Argentinas” decree. It would approve the loan request under a new “systemic exemption.” That is, the fund could justify the loan if it would prevent a broad financial panic.

Greece seemed to fit that exemption. The bailout request came less than two years after Lehman Brothers had failed. The global economy was still in a precarious state, and European debt markets had been rattled by Greece’s troubles. With the European Central Bank not yet ready to use its ability to print money to intervene, the fund decided to back Greece in spite of its disastrous finances.

It was a controversial decision. The bailout was a salvation for bond investors, namely large European banks, which owned the majority of Greek debt. But the Greek people would have to pay, as the country was required to institute severe budget cuts and tax increases to make the debt numbers add up. The immediate halt in government spending had a devastating effect in an economy dependent on state largess. Unemployment soared, suicide rates jumped, and pensioners took to begging on the streets.

The fund, nonetheless, produced optimistic reports about the outlook for Greece. (Since 2010, the fund’s growth estimates missed the mark by a cumulative 25 percent, a forecasting error of such a magnitude that the fund’s chief economist was forced to acknowledge in 2013 that the I.M.F. had underestimated the extent to which austerity policies could sink an economy.)

By 2012, Greece would need a second bailout, and this time fund officials were able to convince their European partners that bond investors must contribute to the rescue by accepting steep losses on their investments. In addition, they extracted a commitment from Europe that it would take steps to reduce Greece’s debt in the coming years.

With all the hoopla of the second bailout, this clause drew little notice, but for the I.M.F. it was a victory of sorts, as it gave voice to what officials had been saying internally: The time would come when Europe would have to take a hit on its Greek loans.

The Pressure Mounts

By mid-2014, Greece had made some progress. Excluding interest paid on its debt, its budget had reversed from a 10 percent deficit to a slight surplus.

The government was again able to tap global markets for cash, and Greek banks raised billions of dollars in New York and London.

That July, Rishi Goyal, a senior member of the I.M.F.’s Greek team based in Washington, hailed the achievement in a speech in Athens.

Privately, however, fund officials were voicing doubts to their European partners over whether Greek politicians, notorious for their free-spending ways, could maintain fiscal discipline.

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Mr. Thomsen, the head of the I.M.F.’s European department, was among the most skeptical. A career technocrat from Denmark with a blunt manner, he had put together the original Greek program in 2010 and had become frustrated with Greece’s reluctance to follow through with reforms.

In particular, Mr. Thomsen was infuriated when the Greek prime minister at the time, Antonis Samaras, fired Harry Theoharis, a crusading young reformer in the Greek finance ministry.

Mr. Theoharis had the enthusiastic support of the I.M.F. to retool the country’s deplorable tax system. With the government backtracking on reforms, the country’s small surplus disappeared.

In January of this year, the anti-austerity party of Alexis Tspiras came to power. By April, negotiations over debt repayment had stalled, the government was hemorrhaging cash, and the economy was at a standstill.

On Easter Sunday, Yanis Varoufakis, who had become Greece’s finance minister, flew to Washington to meet with Mr. Thomsen and Christine Lagarde, who became the I.M.F.’s chief in late 2013, and threatened to stop payment on more than a billion dollars in loans that were soon coming due.

Relations between fund officials and the Greeks had reached their nadir. Mr. Tsipras said that the fund had “criminal responsibility” for the crisis, and Mr. Varoufakis was telling people that Mr. Thomsen’s work in Greece would go down in history as the I.M.F.’s greatest failure.

Yet having run the numbers, the fund now accepted the central argument being made by Mr. Varoufakis: Greece was bankrupt and needed debt relief from Europe to survive.

The fund was also feeling the pressure from the non-European members of its board who questioned the huge commitment to Greece (currently about $15 billion) relative to the small size of its economy.

Ms. Lagarde and David Lipton, her top deputy, became more insistent, pressing European nations that economic reforms alone were not enough and that a debt restructuring would be needed as well.

In late April, Mr. Thomsen took up the issue once more at a critical meeting of European finance ministers in Riga, Latvia.

Two months later, Ms. Lagarde found herself at the Brussels meeting of European finance ministers, with the country’s future in the eurozone hanging in the balance.

The Europeans were pressuring Mr. Varoufakis to agree to an austerity-loaded debt deal that he was resisting.

I have a question for Christine, he said. Can the I.M.F. formally state in this meeting that this proposal we are being asked to sign will make the Greek debt sustainable?

She could not. And when Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the Dutch finance minister and lead negotiator for Europe, cut off all discussion of debt relief, the die was cast.

Back at I.M.F. headquarters in Washington, the decision was unanimous: It would go public with its assessment that Greece’s debt situation was hopeless.

‘Old Wine in a New Bottle’

The 19 countries of the euro area make up the I.M.F.’s largest shareholder base, but as the world’s financial watchdog, the fund also represents 169 other nations.

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If the I.M.F. wants to be seen as an international, as opposed to a European, monetary fund, it must prove that it can speak with an independent voice. And if that means arguing that Europe, its senior partner in these talks, needs to take a loss on its loans — well, so be it.

Many have commended the fund for going public with its views. But the release of its debt reports has not yet had any practical effect.

The latest bailout is heavy on austerity measures like privatization of power companies and seaports, reduced pensions and tax increases in shipping and tourism, and says nothing about debt relief.

“This is old wine in a new bottle,” said Meghan E. Greene, chief economist at Manulife in Boston. “I see very little chance that the bailout will succeed — it’s too much like the other ones.”

Would it have made a difference if the fund had officially broken with Europe in the spring, when it began to conclude that the Greek debt had become unmanageable?

Probably not, says Susan Schadler, a former I.M.F. economist and author of a widely read paper on the fund’s Greece saga.

But she argues that by not forcing creditors to take a loss back in 2010, the pain has been borne almost exclusively by the Greeks themselves, and not by bond investors.

“The fund should have pushed for a restructuring then,” she said. “That, after all, is its job — to assess the risks and say whether or not the debt is sustainable.”

source:nytimes.com

Four helicopters and cavalcade of sportscars upset neighbours as Auburn Deputy Mayor Salim Mehajer weds

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The proud groom called it “AUSTRALIAS BEST WEDDING” on social media, but Lidcombe residents were less impressed.

Auburn deputy mayor Salim Mehajer​ married in a lavish ceremony on Saturday which included four helicopters, a fleet of stretch limousines, luxury cars including a Ferrari and and several Lamborghinis, a squad of motorbikes and a posse of police.

The opulent celebration began when Mr Mehajer​ arrived in a local park by helicopter with his wedding entourage, stepping onto a freshly-rolled red carpet where he was greeted by cameras. He then travelled with a fleet of cars worth $50 million to a home in Frances Street, Lidcombe, where his fiancee was waiting.

Residents were warned in a letterbox drop on Friday night to park on their own properties and to leave the street clear of vehicles. In the letter, titled “Important Notice Attention Frances Street Residence”, they were warned that any cars left parked illegally on the road would be “towed and removed by police”.

But police said they weren’t officially involved in the wedding and were only at the street to control traffic and the large crowd.

“We were never told, and as you can see it was out of control,” Inspector Chris Laird told media at the scene. “We’ll be asking regional command to send the family the bill.”

A police spokeswoman added to Fairfax Media: “He [the groom] didn’t call us. We weren’t there to make things easier for him.”

At its height, the celebration included performers banging on large drums, a jet flyover, and a plane towing a sign announcing the nuptials with a love heart. Security was provided by former NRL footballer John Hopoate.

“He must have a bit of money. I wish I had some of that,” said Hopoate, who was filming the spectacle on his phone.

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The bride and groom and their family and friends celebrated by dancing in the street.

“This is how you do a wedding,” the groom told TV cameras.

“Floyd Mayweather, you’ve got no chance on me motherf—–,” he added, referring to the boxing world champion.

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The letter distributed before the celebration was sent by “management” and had a mobile phone number to call as an emergency contact. When called by Fairfax Media on Saturday a man answered and said he was a friend of the groom and didn’t have time to talk about the wedding because it was still going on.

A resident said he ignored the letter because it wasn’t on headed notepaper. “I saw a policeman in the street in the morning and he told me they couldn’t block the street without council approval,” he said.

Asking not to be named, he added: “They put cones down the road last night. The police said they would send a patrol car up and down to make sure nothing happened.

“I called the council and asked them why they couldn’t send out a ranger but they wouldn’t answer that. I checked the council website and there is no approval to block the road. The council haven’t stepped in to do anything about it.”

A spokesman for the Civil Aviation Safety Authority said to land an aircraft the permission of the landowner was required. It also needed to be safe to land away from power lines, trees and with no risk of people wandering through the landing area, he said.

Auburn councillor Irene Simms said she had been contacted by numerous residents complaining and she said she was preparing an urgent motion for council asking questions about the arrangements for the wedding. Ms Simms said Mr Mehajer​ had been given approval to land a helicopter in the local park.

“I wish him every happiness in his marriage but this not the way to make friends with your neighbours,” said Ms Simms.

Mr Mehajer​ is no stranger to media after hitting the headlines in 2012 after being charged with negligent driving after running down two pedestrians – a mother and a daughter – with his Ferrari 612 Scaglietti in Lidcombe. Mr Mehajerwas acquitted on appeal in 2013.

The happy groom did not seem too put off by any of the complaints.

“To all the haters,” he said on social media on Saturday. “Keep hating. I work hard. 100% legit.”

source:smh.com.au

Νίκησε ο Παπαδόπουλος, με το δεξί Σάλκε και Ντόρτμουντ

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Με το… δεξί μπήκε στο πρωτάθλημα η Σάλκε, καθώς στην πρεμιέρα της εφετινής bundesliga επιβλήθηκε 3-0 εκτός έδρας της Βέρντερ Βρέμης. Ο Κυριάκος Παπαδόπουλος έπαιξε σε όλο το 90λεπτο (κεντρικός αμυντικός) με την φανέλα της Μπάγερ Λεβερκούζεν και πανηγύρισε με την ομάδα του το πρώτο «τρίποντο» της χρονιάς, με 2-1 επί της Χοφενχάιμ.

Tέλος επίδειξη δύναμης από τη Ντόρτμουντ που “σκόρπισε” 4-0 την Γκλάντμπαχ. Μπορεί να προετοιμάζεται για το Τσάμπιονς Λιγκ, όμως η Γκλάντμπαχ ένιωσε πρώτη στο… πετσί της τη δυναμική της νέας Ντόρτμουντ του Τόμας Τούχελ που πραματοποίησε ονειρική πρεμιέρα στη Μπουντεσλίγκα. Βασικός σε όλο το διάστημα της αναμέτρησης ήταν ο Σωκράτης Παπασταθόπουλος.

Τα αποτελέσματα και οι σκόρερ:

Μπάγερν Μονάχου-Αμβούργο 5-0

(27΄ Μπενάτια, 53΄ Λεβαντόφσκι, 69΄,73΄ Μίλερ, 89΄ Ντάγκλας Κόστα)

Μάϊντς-Ινγκολστατ 0-1

(68΄ Χίντερσεερ)

Λεβερκούζεν-Χοφενχάιμ 2-1

(45΄ Κίσλινγκ, 71΄ Μπραντ – 5΄ Ζούμπερ)

Ντάρμστατ-Ανόβερο 2-2

(31΄,54΄ Χέλερ – 48΄ Μπένσοπ, 62΄αυτ. Σουλού)

Αουγκσμπουργκ-Χέρτα Βερολίνου 0-1

(48΄πεν. Καλού)

Βέρντερ Βρέμης-Σάλκε 0-3

(34΄αυτ. Γκέμπρε Σελασιέ, 68΄ Τσούπο-Μότινγκ, 85΄ Χούντελααρ)

Ντόρτμουντ-Γκλάντμπαχ 4-0

(15΄ Ρόις, 21΄ Ομπαμεγιάνγκ, 33΄,50΄ Μχιταριάν)

Βόλφσμπουργκ-Αϊντραχτ Φρανκφούρτης 16/8

Στουτγκάρδη-Κολονία 16/8

Η βαθμολογία (1αγ.)

Μπάγερν 3

Ντόρτμουντ 3

Σάλκε 3

Λεβερκούζεν 3

Χέρτα Β. 3

Ίνγκολστατ 3

Ντάρμστατ 1

Ανόβερο 1

Αμβούργο 0

Μάιντς 0

Χοφενχάιμ 0

Αουγκσμπουργκ 0

Βέρντερ Βρ. 0

Ντόρτμουντ 0

Γκλάντμπαχ 0

Βόλφσμπουργκ 0

Αϊντραχτ Φρ. 0

Στουτγκάρδη 0

Κολονία 0

* Βόλφσμπουργκ, Αϊντραχτ Φρανκφ., Στουτγκάρδη και Κολονία δεν έχουν αγωνιστεί ακόμα.

Πηγή:in.gr

«Σίφουνας» από το «Σεντ Μέρις» η Έβερτον, έκλεψε με ανατροπή το βαθμό η Στόουκ

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Μετά το «στραβοπάτημα» στην πρεμιέρα στην έδρα της η Έβερτον πήρε μεγάλο «διπλό» στο «Σεντ Μέρις» επί της Σαουθάμπτον με 3-0 και πέτυχε την πρώτη εφετινή της νίκη στην Premier League.

Πρωταγωνιστής των «εφοπλιστών» ήταν ο 22χρονος Βέλγος διεθνής επιθετικός, Ρομέλου Λουκάκου που πέτυχε 2 γκολ, ενώ το «κερασάκι στην τούρτα» έβαλε ο Μπάρκλεϊ, ο οποίος ήταν ο δημιουργός και του δεύτερου τέρματος της ομάδας του.

Εν τω μεταξύ το εκπληκτικό ξεκίνημα της Λέστερ συνεχίζεται. Μετά το 4-2 στην πρεμιέρα επί της Σάντερλαντ η ομάδα του Κλαούντιο Ρανιέρι πέρασε κι από το Λονδίνο, επικρατώντας με 2-1 της Γουέστ Χαμ και πέτυχε το απόλυτο στις δύο πρώτες αγωνιστικές.

Μεγάλη ανατροπή πέτυχε η Στόουκ Σίτι στο «Γουάιτ Χαρτ Λέιν». Η γηπεδούχος Τότεναμ προηγήθηκε με 2-0, αλλά το συγκρότημα του Μαρκ Χιουζ κατάφερε να πετύχει δύο γκολ μέσα σε πέντε λεπτά στην επανάληψη και να φύγει με το βαθμό της ισοπαλίας.

«Σίφουνας» η Νόριτς πέρασε από το «Στάδιο του Φωτός» με το επιβλητικό 3-1 επί της Σάντερλαντ, ενώ η Σουόνσι με τα γκολ των Γκομίς και Αγιού νίκησε 2-0 τη Νιουκάστλ, που από το 41΄ αγωνιζόταν με παίκτη λιγότερο λόγω της αποβολής του Γιανμαατ με δεύτερη κίτρινη κάρτα (η πρώτη στο 17΄).

Τα αποτελέσματα και οι σκόρερ:

Αστον Βίλα-Μάντσεστερ Γ. 0-1
(29΄ Γιανουζάι)

Σαουθάμπτον-Εβερτον 0-3
(22΄,45΄ Λουκάκου, 84΄ Μπάρκλεϊ)

Σάντερλαντ-Νόριτς 1-3
(88΄ Γουότμορ – 26΄ Μάρτιν Ράσελ, 37΄ Γουίτακερ, 57΄ Ρέντμοντ)

Σουόνσι-Νιούκαστλ 2-0
(9΄ Γκομίς, 52΄ Αγιού)

Τότεναμ-Στόουκ Σίτι 2-2
(19΄ Ντάιερ, 45΄+2 Τσαντλί – 78΄ Αρναούτοβιτς, 82΄ Ντιουφ)

Γουότφορντ-Γουέστ Μπρομ 0-0

Γουέστ Χαμ-Λέστερ 1-2
(55΄ Παγιέτ – 27΄ Οκαζάκι, 38΄ Μαχρέζ)

Κρίσταλ Πάλας-Αρσεναλ 16/08

Μάντσεστερ Σίτι-Τσέλσι 16/08

Λίβερπουλ-Μπόρνμουθ 17/08

Η βαθμολογία (2αγ.)

Μάντσεστερ Γ. 6

Λέστερ 6

Έβερτον 4

Σουόνσι 4

Μάντσεστερ Σ. 3 (1αγ.)

Κρίσταλ Πάλας 3 (1αγ.)

Γουέστ Χαμ 3

Αστον Βίλα 3

Νόριτς 3

Λίβερπουλ 3 (1αγ.)

Γουότφορντ 2

Τότεναμ 1

Τσέλσι 1 (1αγ.)

Νιουκάστλ 1

Σαουθάμπτον 1

Γουέστ Μπρομ 1

Στόουκ Σίτι 1

Μπόρνμουθ 0 (1αγ.)

Σάντερλαντ 0

Αρσεναλ 0 (1αγ.)

Πηγή:in.gr