reede, 19. november 2010

Iirimaast sai Läti, hea, et Eestist ei saanud Iirimaad

Väljavõte Wall Street Journali veebist.

3 kommentaari:

Anonüümne ütles ...

Sarnasusest kaks tsitaati.

The European Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs, Olli Rehn, in Dublin:
"In the case of Ireland in particular, we need to recall that sovereign debt has not been at the origin of the crisis. Rather, private debt has become public debt. The financial sector has misallocated resources in the economy and then stopped working. It needs reform."

Similarly, the Wall Street Journal — for whom Ireland was always a low-tax favourite, is anxious to distinguish Ireland from Greece:
"Ireland, by contrast, went into the crisis with a budget surplus, a debt-to-GDP ratio of some 27% and a strong record of recent growth that has left it one of the richest countries in the world. Ireland does have a serious problem with its banks, which are the source of its current and recent woes. A property boom and bust have left Ireland’s biggest lenders with billions in bad loans on their books."

elektritsaabtasuta.blogspot.com ütles ...

Iiri endine peaminister Bertie Ahern müüs maha Iirimaa mere all oleva maagaasi ja sellega röövis igalt iirlaselt 100 tuhat eurot.
Iirimaal on nõnda palju tuuleenergiat,et sellega saaks katta terve Euroopa.Mere ja ookeani lainete energiat on samuti niipalju,et iirlastel polekski vajadust teha tööd...pane aga robotid tööle...
Kuid IMF-i poliitika põhineb inimsöömisel ja sel põhjusel terves maailmas elavad hästi ainult püramiidi tipus olevad pankurid-ülejäänud on orjad

Anonüümne ütles ...

Elektrik tule koju, suur talent...