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Añádame a su lista de popularcapicastuzos que cree que bajar impuestos reaviva la economía y aumenta la recaudación total a medio plazo. Los infiernos fiscales hacen que compense el dinero negro y la economía sumergida.
Cita de: el malo en Septiembre 29, 2022, 15:28:09 pmAñádame a su lista de popularcapicastuzos que cree que bajar impuestos reaviva la economía y aumenta la recaudación total a medio plazo. Los infiernos fiscales hacen que compense el dinero negro y la economía sumergida.Pues sería la primera vez en la historia de la humanidad que un país estando en guerra (porque estamos en guerra con Rusia, o no?) baja los impuestos a la población. Cosas de las Phoney war modernas de hoy...como las de ayer. A lo mejor es que cuando negociaron los presupuestos generales para este año ya sabian que iba a haber guerra y ya tenía las partidas presupuestarias preparadas para repartir los paquetes de ayudas y esas cosas tan necesarias para sujetar el capitalismo popular y sus artefactos-sumideros de gasto público, al mismo tiempo que nos preparamos para una guerra contra dos potencias nucleares. Así vamos de sobraos por estos lares, donde nada importa y con paquetes de ayudas y bajando los impuestos, todo tiene solucion.
Cita de: elarquitecto en Septiembre 29, 2022, 09:48:43 amhttps://www.economist.com/leaders/2022/09/28/how-not-to-run-a-countrybrutaljoder, ni un mes lleva y ya ha hundido el pais (boris estará descojonandose en su palacete victoriano o lo que tenga el hortera ese)By unveiling £45bn ($48bn) of unfunded tax cuts, alongside temporary measures to help with energy bills, Mr Kwarteng spooked financial markets in spectacular fashion. Most of the tax cuts and emergency spending had been signalled, but the vaunted supply-side reforms needed to pay for them were vague and the new government’s approach to the public finances was cavalier. Worse, the backdrop to Mr Kwarteng’s epic budget-busting was a slump in bond markets that raised borrowing costs for even the most creditworthy governments.ahora que vengan los popularcapicastuzos a decir que bajar impuestos aumenta la recaudaciónHombre, un país como GB no se hunde en un mes por tener dos patanes en el cargo (3 si contamos a Charles) Esto se ha ido cociendo a fuego lento y les ha explotado en la cara a estos dos. BoJo tuvo la suerte de tener al pueblo ocupado discutiendo sobre sus fiestas mientras se preparaba un huracán a sus espaldas.Añádame a su lista de popularcapicastuzos que cree que bajar impuestos reaviva la economía y aumenta la recaudación total a medio plazo. Los infiernos fiscales hacen que compense el dinero negro y la economía sumergida.
https://www.economist.com/leaders/2022/09/28/how-not-to-run-a-countrybrutaljoder, ni un mes lleva y ya ha hundido el pais (boris estará descojonandose en su palacete victoriano o lo que tenga el hortera ese)By unveiling £45bn ($48bn) of unfunded tax cuts, alongside temporary measures to help with energy bills, Mr Kwarteng spooked financial markets in spectacular fashion. Most of the tax cuts and emergency spending had been signalled, but the vaunted supply-side reforms needed to pay for them were vague and the new government’s approach to the public finances was cavalier. Worse, the backdrop to Mr Kwarteng’s epic budget-busting was a slump in bond markets that raised borrowing costs for even the most creditworthy governments.ahora que vengan los popularcapicastuzos a decir que bajar impuestos aumenta la recaudación
En la UE y en buena parte de Occidente hay cosas que las Élites han borrado de nuestro "espacio cognitivo".
Eso es. Una muestra:[ P R O P A G A N D A a M A N S A L V A ]
The ‘Sticky’ High Prices Unlikely to Come Down Any Time SoonWhen the prices of some goods and services go up, they tend to stay upAmericans struggling to adjust to inflation want to know when the rising costs of food, appliances and other necessities will come down. Yet prices for some items such as household furnishings and personal care products are “sticky,” economists say, and likely to stay high even when overall inflation levels off.The prices of some items, such as gas, are flexible, rising and falling on a regular basis, albeit with some wider swings. The average price of a gallon of gas shot above $5 in June, falling back down to $3.76 this week, according to the AAA. Prices for some other items, such as rent, change more slowly, and mostly in one direction. And when those prices go up, they tend to stay up. Other examples of some sticky-priced services include haircuts, which have risen 4.4% from a year ago, or car repairs, which are up 11%, according to the Labor Department’s August consumer-price index. According to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, items such as gas or your electric bill may rise and fall depending on a variety of factors, but a sticky item like the cost of your haircut will take longer to fall after a price hike, eating a bigger share of your budget from here on out. The sticky-price CPI, an economic indicator calculated by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, can help gauge which costs in your life might stay high for months to come. The sticky-price CPI tracks a basket of items within the broader CPI tracked by the Labor Department. These sticky items tend to have costs resistant to change. The Atlanta Fed labels an item as “flexible” when its price changes more frequently than every four or so months and sticky when a price change takes longer than the same amount of time to budge. On the Atlanta Fed’s sticky list: household furnishings, baby clothes, alcohol, education, public transportation and medical care. On the flexible: fresh fruits and vegetables, clothing and shoes. (The list of items in the sticky basket are fixed.)Consumer prices rose more slowly in August, 8.3% year over year compared with 8.5% recorded in July. Prices for sticky goods and services, meanwhile, rose 7.7% in August, accelerating from a 5.4% rise in July. On a year-over-year basis, the index increased by 6.1%. These sticky prices are part of the reason inflation can be so hard to stamp out, economists say. Sticky inflation makes it even harder for people to make financial plans, and the supply-chain crisis and pandemic shutdowns also changed the nature of these price changes, said Brent Meyer, assistant vice president and economist at the Atlanta Fed. “One thing we’ve seen during the pandemic is that the set of prices that we pull and call ‘sticky,’ we’ve seen some of those prices increase more rapidly and be more volatile than they would be outside of a pandemic,” Mr. Meyer said. Comparing the change in sticky and flexible prices won’t help Americans predict the future necessarily, said Jordan Jackson, global market strategist for J.P. Morgan Asset Management. But it can help when deciding what purchases to hold off on, what to buy now, and where to make sacrifices and trade-offs in their budgets. “Some prices, like for tomatoes, we can expect to change every three weeks,” Mr. Jackson said. “But for other items you may take 6½ years to see any sort of price changes.” Someone shopping for a refrigerator, which tends to have a sticky price, according to the Atlanta Fed, might expect to see prices fluctuate from $2,000 to $2,200, but not to $4,000, he said.Many sticky prices are likely to remain elevated, and bigger-ticket items, such as furniture, which is up 7.1% over the past year, and appliances, which are up 3%, according to the CPI, won’t be falling in price soon—and could get more expensive. “We’re seeing this area of persistent upward movement, which is not necessarily the most comforting signal when it comes to the trajectory of overall inflation,” Mr. Meyer said. Americans have already figured out several pieces of the budgeting puzzle. People know to make substitutions, seek out deals and shop around for the lowest prices possible. Sustained high prices may push people to cut their budgets down even more as it becomes harder to pay for necessities. “It’s hard to make your budget decisions when you’re not sure how much things are going to cost and how much things are going to cost in the future,” said Randall Wright, professor of finance at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
EEUU confirma que entra en recesión técnica tras caer su PIB un 0,1% en el segundo trimestre
Los precios pegajosos vamos a leer de todo sobre la inflación actual https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-sticky-high-prices-unlikely-to-come-down-any-time-soon-11664456030CitarThe ‘Sticky’ High Prices Unlikely to Come Down Any Time Soon
The ‘Sticky’ High Prices Unlikely to Come Down Any Time Soon
Cita de: el malo en Septiembre 29, 2022, 15:28:09 pmCita de: elarquitecto en Septiembre 29, 2022, 09:48:43 amhttps://www.economist.com/leaders/2022/09/28/how-not-to-run-a-countrybrutaljoder, ni un mes lleva y ya ha hundido el pais (boris estará descojonandose en su palacete victoriano o lo que tenga el hortera ese)By unveiling £45bn ($48bn) of unfunded tax cuts, alongside temporary measures to help with energy bills, Mr Kwarteng spooked financial markets in spectacular fashion. Most of the tax cuts and emergency spending had been signalled, but the vaunted supply-side reforms needed to pay for them were vague and the new government’s approach to the public finances was cavalier. Worse, the backdrop to Mr Kwarteng’s epic budget-busting was a slump in bond markets that raised borrowing costs for even the most creditworthy governments.ahora que vengan los popularcapicastuzos a decir que bajar impuestos aumenta la recaudaciónHombre, un país como GB no se hunde en un mes por tener dos patanes en el cargo (3 si contamos a Charles) Esto se ha ido cociendo a fuego lento y les ha explotado en la cara a estos dos. BoJo tuvo la suerte de tener al pueblo ocupado discutiendo sobre sus fiestas mientras se preparaba un huracán a sus espaldas.Añádame a su lista de popularcapicastuzos que cree que bajar impuestos reaviva la economía y aumenta la recaudación total a medio plazo. Los infiernos fiscales hacen que compense el dinero negro y la economía sumergida.pero tío, que el desplome ha venido justo porque han presentado un plan de ahorro fiscal de tropecientasmil libras y los "mercados" han dicho, vale, ok, pero entonces los bonos y toda la otra fiesta quién la paga??nomejodas con que llevan meses o años cociéndose a fuego lento (que vale, los llevan), cualquiera que anuncie que va a dejar de ingresar pasta y luego no explique cómo hace para seguir pagando su puñetera deuda va a entrar en la lista de morosos o de sospecha de morosos en cero comaque es justo lo que ha pasadopor qué a los países del sur nos metieron lo de la "austeridad fiscal" (subida de iva, de irpf, de todo, menos sociedades y tal) como soluciones a la crisis, porque las deuda se pagan (muy legítimo) y si no, quiebra??pues ahora, la brillante idea de bajar impuestos a ricos y terratenientes, ha supuesto una subida de tipos (porque no les va a quedar otra) y una libra en caída libre, las 3000 o lasquesean libras de "ahorro" fiscal van a suponer un sobre coste de 4000 o x2 o loquesea solo por la inflación desencadenada por la falta de "colateral" para sostener la propia librate apunto a la lista que quieras, pero estas mierdas de favorecer fiscalmente a ricos y terratenientes es popularcastuzismo que es justo lo que se está enterrandojusto lo que no tocano sé qué más pruebas quieres
Meta Announces Hiring Freeze, Warns Employees of RestructuringPosted by msmash on Thursday September 29, 2022 @02:47PM from the how-about-that dept.Meta Platforms, the owner of Facebook and Instagram, said it will freeze hiring and restructure some teams in an effort to cut costs and shift priorities. From a report:CitarChief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg announced the social networking company's freeze during a weekly Q&A session with employees, according to a person in attendance. He added that the company would reduce budgets across most teams, even teams that are growing, and that individual teams will sort out how to handle headcount changes -- whether that means not filling roles that employees depart, shifting people to other teams, or working to "manage out people who aren't succeeding," according to remarks reviewed by Bloomberg. "I had hoped the economy would have more clearly stabilized by now, but from what we're seeing it doesn't yet seem like it has, so we want to plan somewhat conservatively," Zuckerberg said.
Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg announced the social networking company's freeze during a weekly Q&A session with employees, according to a person in attendance. He added that the company would reduce budgets across most teams, even teams that are growing, and that individual teams will sort out how to handle headcount changes -- whether that means not filling roles that employees depart, shifting people to other teams, or working to "manage out people who aren't succeeding," according to remarks reviewed by Bloomberg. "I had hoped the economy would have more clearly stabilized by now, but from what we're seeing it doesn't yet seem like it has, so we want to plan somewhat conservatively," Zuckerberg said.
South Korean chip production falls as electronics demand weakensSouth Korea’s chip production declined for the first time in more than four years as chipmakers are facing slowing global demand amid the looming global economic recession.Semiconductor output fell 1.7 per cent in August from a year earlier, compared with a 17.3 per cent jump in July, according to Statistics Korea.Chip inventories surged 67.3 per cent as chipmakers dialled back production in the face of the slowing global economy.In a further sign of slowing demand, US-based Micron Technology on Thursday released weak guidance for the current quarter and said it was slashing output to cope with falling demand.Earlier this month, Samsung Electronics, the world’s largest memory chipmaker, warned of a gloomy outlook for the second half of this year. Kyung Kye-hyun, head of the company’s semiconductor business, said the chip cycle was not likely to recover next year.Dram sales dropped 36 per cent in June and another 21 per cent in July after posting the highest monthly sales in more than two years in May, according to IC Insights.“Concern over soaring inflation and recession has cut into consumer spending on new smartphones, computers, TVs, and other electronic goods,” the market research group said in a recent report. “In turn, system manufacturers have scaled back new DRAM orders, citing the need to burn through existing inventory that they have amassed.”Semiconductors are South Korea’s biggest export item and falling demand for chips and electronic devices, which were a major source of economic growth during the Covid pandemic, is clouding the country’s outlook as it battles high energy costs and the weaker won.