Automakers race to Russia

Automakers look for safe harbour on emerging markets as rest of the globe urged into austerity. Russia’s car market has become attractive to car makers since car sales continue to increase with 41% growth in the first ten months of 2011. “According to the results of 2011, we are expecting about 1,7 million vehicles would be produced in Russia next year, it would be a 41% growth comparing to 2010 and a historic high”, Stanly Root from... [more]

Clinics In UK Ordered To Reveal Breast Implant Data

The Government has ordered private cosmetic clinics to produce data within the next 48 hours as part of an urgent investigation into suspect French breast implants. Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said he hoped to publish the results by the end of the week. He said there was still no evidence of a link to cancer or to support the routine removal of the implants but for the first time he admitted there were problems getting information from... [more]

Germany and France end tussle over ECB job

The European Central Bank put an end Tuesday to a bitter battle between France and Germany over a key post within the bank by naming a Belgian to the highly coveted position of chief economist. The ECB said executive board member Peter Praet of Belgium would be taking over as the head of its economics department, succeeding Jürgen Stark of Germany, who stepped down at the end of 2011. Praet, who turns 63 later this month and has been a... [more]

Wellink: Greek debt partly written off

It is almost certain that euro countries will have to write off part of their loans to Greece, former Dutch Central Bank President Nout Wellink says. The funds the banks have provided to save Greece are insufficient, Mr Wellink says in an interview with Dutch daily Het Financieele Dagblad. European governments have by now financed such a large part of the Greek debt that a debt restructuring is bound to affect them, Mr Wellink is quoted... [more]

Norway Prime Minister’s New Year speech to the nation

Terrorism, global health, the environment, the financial crisis and peace keeping efforts were main themes in Prime Minister Jens Stolteberg’s address to the Nation on New Year’s Day. Many people were deeply affected by the events of 22 July last year, Stoltenberg said. Fathers, mothers, siblings and grandparents had to follow their loved ones to their graves. - It was heartbreaking. I have thought of the survivors and the... [more]

German President ‘used threats to try to stop scandal story’

Embattled German President Christian Wulff has been accused of trying to block the first reports of his financial affairs by threatening criminal charges against journalists working on the story – leaving a furious rant on an answer machine.  When he realised that the country’s biggest-selling newspaper Bild was about to publish details of a €500,000 load he got from the wife of a businessman friend but had not declared, Wulff apparently... [more]

Greek pharmacists, doctors on strike

Greece is already seeing its first strike of the year, with pharmacists and doctors walking off the job to protest health sector reforms that include cuts in drug prices. Pharmacists across the country began a 48-hour strike Monday to protest government plans to trim their profits by cutting the retail prices of drugs. They are also demanding payment of hundreds of thousands of euros owed by social insurance funds. State hospital doctors... [more]

Europe shares seen lower as growth worries weigh

European shares were set to fall on Monday in the first trading day of the year after making their biggest yearly fall since 2008, as global growth worries hit investor sentiment with Chinese purchasing managers’ index (PMI) data suggesting factories in the world’s second largest economy were struggling. Trading is expected to be light, with the UK market closed for a bank holiday and many other markets such as the United States... [more]

Chairman says Samsung to focus on new products

South Korea’s Samsung Electronics will this year focus on developing new products and tapping into new businesses to get ahead of competitors amid the global economic slowdown, its chairman said Monday. Lee Kun-Hee, in a New Year’s speech to employees, said existing businesses would experience a stagnation in growth, and that new start-ups would provide the best opportunities even although they will find it increasingly competitive... [more]

Debt crisis cools Greek gambling ardour

George, a 39-year-old lawyer, is among many Greeks who traditionally sit around a gambling table on New Year’s Eve, hoping to snare a little luck for the months that lie ahead. But with Greece looking at a fifth straight year of recession and thousands of households reeling from waves of pay cuts and tax hikes, the spare income left to Greeks can no longer fuel their prodigious love for gambling. “I’ve sat at card tables... [more]

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