Back to Business as usual for Brussels
Posted: 12 Jul 2016, 15:00
Voting to take sanctions against Portugal and Spain for exceeding budget deficit targets. Rather than congratulating them for having dragged the deficits down by more than 50% since 2009.
All of this, of course, was put on hold for the UK referendum and is now on the "urgent" list. Expect much more business like this to pop up out of the woodwork over the next month or two as they clear the backlog.
Of course Brexit now means that Portugal and Spain may not be fined in order to keep anti EU sentiment down. Or maybe not. Maybe they want to make an example to keep anti EU sentiment down in the richer Northern EU states???
I never did understand this. It was like this in the Army. If someone bounced cheques then the were reduced in ranks and pay. They then had no option but to bounce more cheques to cover the commitments that did not vanish as fast as their pay did. The Army treated this by chucking them in Jail. Which is unpaid. Exacerbating the situation even more. Until the Army, eventually had to step in and organise a loan to dig out the soldier who's career, finances and, often, marriage, they had trashed....
I shall be watching as all the "business as usual" rolls in. I was phoned about a job in Belgium today, better pay than when I left last year. Thanks but no thanks, things are not going to be good in Euro Land in a year or two.
All of this, of course, was put on hold for the UK referendum and is now on the "urgent" list. Expect much more business like this to pop up out of the woodwork over the next month or two as they clear the backlog.
Of course Brexit now means that Portugal and Spain may not be fined in order to keep anti EU sentiment down. Or maybe not. Maybe they want to make an example to keep anti EU sentiment down in the richer Northern EU states???
I never did understand this. It was like this in the Army. If someone bounced cheques then the were reduced in ranks and pay. They then had no option but to bounce more cheques to cover the commitments that did not vanish as fast as their pay did. The Army treated this by chucking them in Jail. Which is unpaid. Exacerbating the situation even more. Until the Army, eventually had to step in and organise a loan to dig out the soldier who's career, finances and, often, marriage, they had trashed....
I shall be watching as all the "business as usual" rolls in. I was phoned about a job in Belgium today, better pay than when I left last year. Thanks but no thanks, things are not going to be good in Euro Land in a year or two.