Actualidad y política
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- Mensajes: 333
- Registrado: Jue Ago 10, 2006 4:42 pm
Re: Actualidad y política
Una muestra más de la ignorancia de este pueblo, que apoyó la convertibilidad hasta que la plata de las privatizaciones y la falta de crédito exterior se acabaron para sostener el dólar. Ahora es lo mismo, igual o mayor grado de corrupción y "Santa Soja" y los jubilados sosteniendo la economía. Ya lo decía el gran Facundo: "los hombres no aprenden jamás".
Re: Actualidad y política
quique43 escribió:Galaico, Milonga, Josecito, Jotabe, Darìo y toda la barra K, reciban mis felicitaciones. Ojalà, el gobierno tenga la vitud de mejorar lo que està mal, e impulsar los que està bien. Creo que hay muchas cosas para corregir, y el gobierno tiene todo a su favor para mejorar su gestiòn. Nuestro bendito paìs, merece de sus gobernates, acciones que impulsen la institucionalidad, afirmen la justicia, generen confianza y estabilidad, para asì mejorar la calidad de vida de todos nosotros.
Reitero mis felicitaciones.
Me gusta!


Re: Actualidad y política
Ocho años de politica han sido plebiscitados para continuarlos por cuatro mas. Eso es todo.
Re: Actualidad y política
diego0708 escribió:
http://www.elecciones2011.gob.ar/pagina ... htm?d=1022
por si a alguno le interesa
lamentablemente en lanús parece que sigue Dario, un muy mal intendente.
Gracias Diego, estaba buscando esa misma informacion y tambien sobre LANUS
Saludos

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- Mensajes: 148
- Registrado: Mar Feb 13, 2007 7:06 pm
Re: Actualidad y política
Sacado de ahora de bloomberg.com
quienes quieran leer una vision "de afuera" de juicio positivo, es decir sin hacer juicio de valor.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-2 ... -show.html
Argentine President Fernandez Re-Elected
Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner won re-election to a second four-year term today with the highest percentage of votes in four decades.
Fernandez had 53 percent support with 23 percent of votes counted, according to results on the Interior Ministry’s website. That is the biggest tally since Juan Domingo Peron returned to power in 1973 after a two-decade exile. Santa Fe province Governor Hermes Binner was second with 17 percent.
The 58-year-old president, who has overseen annual economic growth averaging 5.6 percent since 2007, was seeking to regain control of Congress, which she lost after threatening to raise taxes on farm exports in 2008.
“She has taken measures that have helped improve the quality of life of the people,” said Fabian Perechodnik, a political analyst at Poliarquia Consultores in Buenos Aires. “None of the opposition candidates have offered an alternative.”
About 29 million Argentines were eligible to vote today. In addition to electing their next president, voters were choosing governors for Buenos Aires and other provinces as well as half of the 257-seat lower house and a third of the 72-member senate.
Lower Unemployment
Argentines rallied behind Fernandez as the country’s economic expansion reduced unemployment to a record low of 7.2 percent in the third quarter and fueled a boom in consumption. Shopping center sales rose 34 percent in August from a year earlier, the fastest pace in eight months.
Even as Argentines are busy buying cars and flat-screen televisions, investors remain wary of South America’s second- biggest economy a decade after its default on $95 billion of bonds. Traders see a more than 40 percent chance that Fernandez will stop payment on the country’s debt in her second four-year term. The cost of insuring against default for five years rose 406 basis points to 1,016 this year. The increase is the biggest in the world after Greece, Portugal and Pakistan.
Argentines pulled $9.8 billion out of the country in the first half of this year, compared with $11.4 billion in all of 2010, as the debt crisis in Europe worsened and prices for grain exports to China fell. The capital flight led the central bank to sell $2.7 billion of reserves in August and September to control declines in the peso.
24% Inflation
A budget surplus left by Fernandez’s late husband and predecessor, Nestor Kirchner, has turned into a shortfall as the government boosted spending on social programs and subsidies to keep energy and transport costs low. Economists estimate that inflation is running at 24 percent, more than double the 9.9 percent reported by the national statistics agency in September.
Fernandez hasn’t signaled how she’ll address the economic challenges in a second term. An easy victory may be taken as a sign that no major policy changes are needed, BNP Paribas said in a report last week.
“We need to correct what we have to correct and improve what needs to be improved,” Fernandez, wearing a black dress that’s become her staple outfit since her husband’s death from a heart attack a year ago, told supporters at a campaign rally Oct. 20 in Buenos Aires.
Debt Restructuring
Against the worsening economic outlook, Argentina hasn’t regained access to global credit markets since its 2001 default. Fernandez restructured almost $13 billion in bonds outstanding from the default last year, yet creditors holding about $4.5 billion are pursuing payment in court. Without being able to sell bonds abroad, Fernandez has tapped central bank reserves to make payments on debt and plans to use $5.7 billion in savings next year for the same purpose.
The country hasn’t allowed the International Monetary Fund to review its finances, as it does for every other member country, since 2006. It’s also failed to reach an accord with the Paris Club group of creditor nations to settle claims on $9 billion in defaulted bonds.
“Is the central bank going to finance us for the rest of our lives or will we resolve differences with the Paris Club and IMF?,” said Maximiliano Castillo Carrillo, a former manager of macroeconomic analysis at Argentina’s central bank who now runs ACM, a Buenos Aires-based research company. “What we want to see is some kind of path.”
Salary Increases
A lawyer and mother of two, Fernandez has built popular support by creating monthly stipends for families who keep their children in school and supporting wage increases that have helped reduce poverty to 20 percent from as high as 54 percent in 2003, said Artemio Lopez, a political analyst who runs Consultora Equis in Buenos Aires.
“The improvement in employment and the social welfare plans have eased the impact of raising prices,” Lopez said.
She’s also benefited from an outpouring of sympathy following Kirchner’s death. By softening the confrontational rhetoric of her longtime political partner, she’s turned his haggling with the IMF and foreign investors into a virtue, said Perechodnik. Later this month, supporters in the couple’s home town of Rio Gallegos hope to erect a statue of Kirchner where one of Argentina’s 19th century patriarchs is currently located.
“She’s built a political narrative that resonates with people about their recent past,” Perechodnik said in an interview in Buenos Aires. “To younger voters especially, she’s a symbol of resistance, of having stayed the course even amid a great deal of international pressure.”
quienes quieran leer una vision "de afuera" de juicio positivo, es decir sin hacer juicio de valor.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-2 ... -show.html
Argentine President Fernandez Re-Elected
Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner won re-election to a second four-year term today with the highest percentage of votes in four decades.
Fernandez had 53 percent support with 23 percent of votes counted, according to results on the Interior Ministry’s website. That is the biggest tally since Juan Domingo Peron returned to power in 1973 after a two-decade exile. Santa Fe province Governor Hermes Binner was second with 17 percent.
The 58-year-old president, who has overseen annual economic growth averaging 5.6 percent since 2007, was seeking to regain control of Congress, which she lost after threatening to raise taxes on farm exports in 2008.
“She has taken measures that have helped improve the quality of life of the people,” said Fabian Perechodnik, a political analyst at Poliarquia Consultores in Buenos Aires. “None of the opposition candidates have offered an alternative.”
About 29 million Argentines were eligible to vote today. In addition to electing their next president, voters were choosing governors for Buenos Aires and other provinces as well as half of the 257-seat lower house and a third of the 72-member senate.
Lower Unemployment
Argentines rallied behind Fernandez as the country’s economic expansion reduced unemployment to a record low of 7.2 percent in the third quarter and fueled a boom in consumption. Shopping center sales rose 34 percent in August from a year earlier, the fastest pace in eight months.
Even as Argentines are busy buying cars and flat-screen televisions, investors remain wary of South America’s second- biggest economy a decade after its default on $95 billion of bonds. Traders see a more than 40 percent chance that Fernandez will stop payment on the country’s debt in her second four-year term. The cost of insuring against default for five years rose 406 basis points to 1,016 this year. The increase is the biggest in the world after Greece, Portugal and Pakistan.
Argentines pulled $9.8 billion out of the country in the first half of this year, compared with $11.4 billion in all of 2010, as the debt crisis in Europe worsened and prices for grain exports to China fell. The capital flight led the central bank to sell $2.7 billion of reserves in August and September to control declines in the peso.
24% Inflation
A budget surplus left by Fernandez’s late husband and predecessor, Nestor Kirchner, has turned into a shortfall as the government boosted spending on social programs and subsidies to keep energy and transport costs low. Economists estimate that inflation is running at 24 percent, more than double the 9.9 percent reported by the national statistics agency in September.
Fernandez hasn’t signaled how she’ll address the economic challenges in a second term. An easy victory may be taken as a sign that no major policy changes are needed, BNP Paribas said in a report last week.
“We need to correct what we have to correct and improve what needs to be improved,” Fernandez, wearing a black dress that’s become her staple outfit since her husband’s death from a heart attack a year ago, told supporters at a campaign rally Oct. 20 in Buenos Aires.
Debt Restructuring
Against the worsening economic outlook, Argentina hasn’t regained access to global credit markets since its 2001 default. Fernandez restructured almost $13 billion in bonds outstanding from the default last year, yet creditors holding about $4.5 billion are pursuing payment in court. Without being able to sell bonds abroad, Fernandez has tapped central bank reserves to make payments on debt and plans to use $5.7 billion in savings next year for the same purpose.
The country hasn’t allowed the International Monetary Fund to review its finances, as it does for every other member country, since 2006. It’s also failed to reach an accord with the Paris Club group of creditor nations to settle claims on $9 billion in defaulted bonds.
“Is the central bank going to finance us for the rest of our lives or will we resolve differences with the Paris Club and IMF?,” said Maximiliano Castillo Carrillo, a former manager of macroeconomic analysis at Argentina’s central bank who now runs ACM, a Buenos Aires-based research company. “What we want to see is some kind of path.”
Salary Increases
A lawyer and mother of two, Fernandez has built popular support by creating monthly stipends for families who keep their children in school and supporting wage increases that have helped reduce poverty to 20 percent from as high as 54 percent in 2003, said Artemio Lopez, a political analyst who runs Consultora Equis in Buenos Aires.
“The improvement in employment and the social welfare plans have eased the impact of raising prices,” Lopez said.
She’s also benefited from an outpouring of sympathy following Kirchner’s death. By softening the confrontational rhetoric of her longtime political partner, she’s turned his haggling with the IMF and foreign investors into a virtue, said Perechodnik. Later this month, supporters in the couple’s home town of Rio Gallegos hope to erect a statue of Kirchner where one of Argentina’s 19th century patriarchs is currently located.
“She’s built a political narrative that resonates with people about their recent past,” Perechodnik said in an interview in Buenos Aires. “To younger voters especially, she’s a symbol of resistance, of having stayed the course even amid a great deal of international pressure.”
Re: Actualidad y política
Si...porque el h... d re mil p... de Quindimil era buenisimo !!!
Creo que con Quindimil arreglaba el 3 delantero del auto, minimo 3 veces por año, pinchaduras y cubiertas otras tantas ...; con Dario solo una !!
No se si este Dario hara muchas cosas..., pero mas que el anterior seguro.
http://www.elecciones2011.gob.ar/pagina ... htm?d=1022
por si a alguno le interesa
lamentablemente en lanús parece que sigue Dario, un muy mal intendente.[/quote]
Creo que con Quindimil arreglaba el 3 delantero del auto, minimo 3 veces por año, pinchaduras y cubiertas otras tantas ...; con Dario solo una !!
No se si este Dario hara muchas cosas..., pero mas que el anterior seguro.
http://www.elecciones2011.gob.ar/pagina ... htm?d=1022
por si a alguno le interesa
lamentablemente en lanús parece que sigue Dario, un muy mal intendente.[/quote]
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- Mensajes: 25744
- Registrado: Mar Jul 29, 2008 6:52 pm
Re: Actualidad y política
apolo1102 escribió:carrio dice que esta en contra del regimen.... jua.... se le re-nota !!
¡Que vergüenza Lilita! No sólo salió última, sino que perdió hasta contra los votos en blancos, en una elección con alto porcentaje de votos positivos. Debería retirarse definitivamente de la política. Es indiscutible su gran impopularidad.
Darío de Junín
Re: Actualidad y política
diego0708 escribió:alguien sabe donde se siguen los computos para intendentes de la prov de bs as??
http://www.elecciones2011.gob.ar/pagina ... htm?d=1022
por si a alguno le interesa
lamentablemente en lanús parece que sigue Dario, un muy mal intendente.
Re: Actualidad y política
BB-K escribió:MOON seguro que usted si la voto y le va a ir mejor que a los que no la votaron, porque esta entongado!!
ahh bueno, ya perdieron como 8 sin hacer nada...van a perder 12!!! por favor!!!
Ud esta equivocado, nunca use este foro para hacer politica, mas en el foro del TVPP me canse de hablar contra la inflacion que genera el gobierno, solo me da mucho asco los que lo usan para hacer politica, y mas, aquellos miserables que usan la difamacion ocultandose desde el anonimato. Hoy puedo escribir esto con total libertad ya que mis mensajes estan en el hitorial, lamento me confunda con esos sujetos.
Re: Actualidad y política
alguien sabe donde se siguen los computos para intendentes de la prov de bs as??
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