Dutch leftwing parties: higher tax for rich

Labour, the Socialist Party and the Green Left Party have launched a joint call for a higher tax rate on high incomes as part of a plan for “clever, solidary, green investments.” The party leaders launched their plea in Dutch daily de Volkskrant but did not indicate how much they wanted to raise the highest tack bracket, which currently stands at 52 percent. Recent calculations suggest an increase of just one percent could see the state... [more]

Germany shows EU solidarity but keeps up demands

Germany displayed unflinching solidarity with its European partners after nine saw their credit ratings downgraded but did not let up the pressure for stricter policing of spending. Both Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble and Chancellor Angela Merkel were at pains to reassure investors after France and Austria were stripped of their top triple-A credit ratings. They both sought to downplay the impact of Standard and Poor’s decision... [more]

Merkel vows faster eurozone reform after S&P downgrades

European leaders promised on Saturday to speed up plans to strengthen spending rules and get a permanent bailout fund up and running as soon as possible, a day after U.S. agency S&P cut the ratings of several euro zone countries’ creditworthiness. In a conference call with reporters and analysts after downgrading nine of the euro zone’s 17 countries, Standard & Poor’s said it saw continued risks from the debt crisis... [more]

Ashton Kutcher invests in Berlin start-up Gidsy

Hollywood hearthrob Ashton Kutcher has invested in yet another Berlin start-up, taking a stake in event marketplace Gidsy.  The company confirmed on Friday that it had closed its seed round and had secured funding from a number of investors, including Kutcher, who has already invested in Berlin-based companies Amen and SoundCloud. Founded by Dutch brothers Edial and Floris Dekker and Austrian Philpp Wassibauer in May 2011, Gidsy allows... [more]

Friday 13th Nightmare For The Eurozone

You can say a lot of things about Standard & Poor’s, but the one thing you cannot question is their sense of timing. Last month, they could have chosen almost any day to warn that they were placing the entire eurozone on watch for a possible downgrade; but they elected to make the announcement just hours after Nicolas Sarkozy and Angela Merkel used an emergency summit to promise to safeguard the euro. And now they have chosen Friday... [more]

S&P downgrade of Italy “problematic”: ECB’s Nowotny

Standard & Poor’s two-notch downgrade ofItaly’s debt rating poses problems given large refinancing needs this year in that country and its banks, European Central Bankpolicymaker Ewald Nowotny said. S&P on Friday cut the ratings of Italy, Spain, Portugal and Cyprus by two notches and the standings of France, Austria, Malta, Slovakia and Slovenia by one notch each. That put highly indebted Italy on the same BBB+... [more]

Germany downplays S&P downgrades

Germany’s Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble has sought to play down the ratings downgrade of France and Austria, insisting eurozone nations were on the “right track” and warning against overestimating its impact. “In recent months, we have increasingly come to an understanding worldwide that we should not overestimate the ratings agencies in their assessments,” Schäuble told television station RTL. “That... [more]

Weaker Europe starts to lose appetite for US goods

A sign that Europe’s crisis has begun to weigh on the U.S. economy emerged Friday from a report that exports to the continent sank in November — far more than overall U.S. exports did. Europe, which consumes nearly one-fifth of America’s exports, may already be in a recession. A weakening Europe could further shrink demand for American goods and slow the U.S. economy just as the job market has started to strengthen. “The... [more]

Japan PM says must tackle debt to avoid rate cut

 Japan’s prime minister, attempting to build support for painful fiscal reforms, said Saturday that the country should be alarmed by ratings cuts in Europe and must tackle its massive public debts to avoid becoming the next target. Japan’s debt is more than twice its gross domestic product, higher than any of the struggling European economies whose fiscal problems have set off a eurozone crisis that has reverberated in markets... [more]

Woman put in jail for being poor

The recession ruined Linda Ruggles’ business and she has been selling plasma twice a week since to make ends meet. The blood bank couldn’t bail her out from behind bars though, which is where she ended up after she couldn’t pay a $480 fine. That fine, say cops in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, came about because Linda Ruggles had a messy yard. Barely getting by in recent years, Ruggles, 53, has been stockpiling scraps to pawn off... [more]

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