Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Default

The problems faced by the Greek economy are inherent to the structure of the

European Community as such. The EC has been holding to a monetary policy

suited to a mature industrial economy - Germany, in point of fact - whereas the consditions in

Greece would have called for quite another. A cheaper currency would have helped Greece.


I have always seen the European Community as an evolving thing, making necessary certain kinds

of economic integration or arrangements. This 'become like us or die' position is unrealistic.

Greece appears to me in an untenable position. All very unfortunate.

http://www.vox.com/2015/6/29/8863313/theres-a-simple-solution-to-greeces-problems-but-europe-wont-try-it

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Dark Stuff

Watched the We're the Millers movie on the Web last night. 

Improbable plot, but fully likeable crew. And discovered the 

Waterfalls song - a sing-along moment in the movie -

which is very catchy. The most interesting line in the movie - 


a throwaway, really - occurs when Jennifer Aniston's Rose stripper 

character is told that henceforth she will have to agree to sex with

the customers so that her boss can keep up with the competition that 


just moved in across the  street. "The Apple Store?", she asks bemused. 


Well yes, the Apple store. Ain't it the truth that the advent of the Internet 


has meant an opening up of the illicit sex trade in all kinds of ways. I had 

never seen things like that. Heck, the bulk on what

goes on on the Net is gambling, sex, arms dealing etc. Dark stuff. 


Ça fait réfléchir...

 

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Happy Father's Fay!

Showdown!

So it's showdown at the coral for the Greek government this week. There are
troubling aspects as to how we got here. Greek already got debt relief
from its private creditors, what has now stalled is the agreement with the
institutional lenders. Anf it did reach a surplus debt service not considered, as
it was supposed to. Trouble is, when it did, the economy started to
slow down dangerously. So the government is resisting further cuts in government
spending for the moment. That's the Greek government's position.

There is no doubt participation in the Eurozone is precious to Greece,whose
economy is 85% service, with some agriculture. They have made cuts to pensions already,
and if the remaining provisions appear out of step with the European norm, surely
that can be worked out calmy with an eye to Greek demographics.

Europe is a diverse space. Greece is a jewel, perhaps not always cashing in on
all those romantics who gather there as tourists. (Indeed Greece welcomes in a
year 20 million tourists for its 10 million population. Phew!). It would be a great
 pity to force things otherwise.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Greek Pensions


from: Le Monde Economie 12.06.2015
author: Adéa Gouillot
translation: doxa-louise

Greek Retirees: «Impovrishing us will not resolve the crisis»

The pensions question remains one of the principal difficulties between Athens and its
creditors (the International Monetary Fund, the European Commission, the European Central 
Bank). Sunday night the 14th of June, they were still not able to arrive at a compromise on 
the measures needed to be undertaken by the Greek government so that the latter could receive 
an aid payment of 7.2 billon Euros (10 billion CAN).

Greece must act on reforming pensions within the context of the negotiations, warned, Monday 
the 15th, Gunther Oettinger, the European Commissioner for the Digital Economy. A bit earlier, 
the prime minister from the radical left, Alexis Tsipras, had declared that the insistance of the 
creditors for additional cuts to pensions «served a political end». «We will patienttly wait for the 
creditors to become realistic», he warned.

Mr Tsipras is opposed to all further cuts to pensions, while, starting from the first austerity 
measures, voted in may 2010, these have already gone down by about 15% for the weakest 
(less than 500 Euros (693 CAN) per month and by more than 44% for the more generous 
higher than 3 000 Euros (4 157 CAN).

The Greek prime minister is also opposed, and especially so, to a suppression of the EKAS, a 
solidarity payment for small pensions less than 8 472,09 Euros (12 112.17 CAN) per year.

It is notably on this payment that negotiations between the Greek government and its creditors 
have once again come to a standstill in the past few weeks. The last position
out of Brussels, dating from June 2, calls for a gradual elimination of the EKAS by 2016.

«651 Euros (902 CAN) net per month»

In 2014, 195 000 people benefited from this payment, which cost the State a bit under 630 
million Euros (873million CAN). Thanassis Tzouras is one such recipient. He has the 
weathered face and marked hands of a man who has worked hard. «Outside in all weather, 
on all kinds of worksites and for all kinds of bosses», explains this construction worker aged 
78 from a small village in Central Greece.


The demanding nature of his work put him in a special category allowing him to retire 
aged less than 50, after thirty-three years of contributions. «I receive in total 651 Euros 
net per month», states the old man. As with all the pensions in Greece, that of Thanassis 
is made up of a principal amount (481 Euros (666 CAN) in this case) and a complementary 
amount (here 113 Euros (157 CAN)), often financed by payments to an account related to 
work sector. But because he receives less than 700 Euros (970 CAN) per month, he is 
entitled to an additional monthly 57,50 Euros (80 CAN), the EKAS.

In his charming little house in the residential neighborhood of Cholargos, east of Athens, 
Nikos Tassios, aged 72, remembers his 37,5 years of work. Geological engineer with a 
diploma from the Polytechnical School of Hanover, in Germany, he directed a team at the 
Greek Geological Institute before retiring aged 66 in 2006.

Retirement age 67, since 2013 

Since then, the legal age of retirement has been set at 65 in 2010, then at 67 in 2013. Greece 
is thus among the high average for Europe. But the actual average is around 61, and the 
creditors would like to see this rise, and shortly.

Up until 2010, Nikos’ retirement came to 2 450 Euros (3 394 CAN) per month. «Today, I am in 
receipt of  1 425 Euros (1 974 CAN) per month, thus a reduction of close to 42%.»  Nikos and 
his wife had to completely rethink their lifestyle. «Clearly, when compared to my fellow citizens 
who survive on less than 700 Euros (970 CAN), I am still quite priviledged», he claims, almost 
excusing himself. «But after a lifetime of work, I had made calculations to live my retirement in 
a certain way. Our entire life became restricted at the moment when we expected to enjoy it.»

According to official numbers given by the Greek finance ministry in its database Helios, in
March 2015, Greek had some 2,6 million retirees. The average gross pension - before taxes 
and health contributions - came to 960,66 Euros (1 330.99 CAN). «Whatever cuts done and 
those demanded by creditors, the system will continue in the red so long as contributions are 
not sufficient» opines the economist specialist in pensions Plato Tinios. «We must before all 
stimulate the economy to create wealth and a unified system.»

At the price of an enormous effort to consolidate, the number of pension funds has gone from 
many hundreds before 2010 to 13. « The other priority, is to stop the hemorrhaging from early 
retirement, which greatly influences the levels of contributions intake», argues Mr Tinios. Since
the beginning of the recession, in 2009, these have progressed by 14 % in the private sector 
and 48% in the public sector, where the number of annual departures has gone up by 178% 
between 2009-2013 with respect to the period 2000-2008.

«Stability is jeopardized»

In a society where unemployment has exploded to reach 26% of the active population and 
where there is no guaranteed minimum income (like the French RSA), pensions have become 
the income net for many families, where intergenerational solidarity plays fully.

«I chose to go on early retirement in 2010 at 59 after the first announcements of cut in salary and 
pensions imposed by creditors. I told myself it was better to leave now. There is so much 
uncertainty surronding these questions that I do not regret my decision» tells us Dimitria Benatatou. 
This ex administrative assistant receives today a bit less than 1 000 Euros (1 331 CAN) per 
month. She has her 35 year old son living with her and her daughter-in-law, both unemployed.

«The possibility for early retirement was used during the recession as a substitute for social 
policy, and the cost of this is now falling on the retirees themselves, because the
stability of the social security system is compromised», observes with severity a report from the 
German foundation Bockler, published in March 2015.

Two billion Euros in the red

Pension funds are for the most part in the red with a deficit reaching for 2105 more than 
2 billion Euros (2.77 billion CAN). It is in this context that the creditors are insisting that 
Greece accept, in this aid plan, reforms that aim for ‘zero deficit’.

According to a Greek governmental source, «No European country has succeeded in imposing 
a reform in pensions this drastic with zero deficit in such a short time span. This will not go through 
here». The Greek State Council has just, in this vein, Thursday June 11, declared unconstitutional 
the salary cuts imposed by the previous government in 2012.

The unions representing the retired have, for their part, called for a massive demonstration 
June 23. «The government must not give in, warns the president of the Association of retired 
postal employees, Anastassios Georgiads, and Europe must understand that it is not by 
impovrishing us all the more that we can hope to get out of this recession.»

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/06/10/eurozone-greece-pensions-idUSL5N0YW4AD20150610

Friday, June 5, 2015

Party On!


Friday morning 9 am; McDonald's is full and boisterous.
Happy Birthday week. Party On.

Thursday, June 4, 2015

Fat


I have to admit it: I binge watch television shows on morbid obesity.
I just never found I understood what all that was about. The site for Dr Nowzaradan, bariatric surgeon in Houston Texas, has explained to me something very basic, which I find enlightening. Below:

Now that is clear: body fat is metabolically inert tissue, like too much junky clothes in
one's wardrobe, and one does - joking aside - end up with nothing to wear.

The site goes on:

And when I crash diet, I risk ending up with thinning hair.

Finally, clarity!

http://www.drnowmd.com/hos/Pages/ObesityFactsPages/DefinitionsOfObesity.html

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Fierce



The first step in arriving at a proper appreciation of things is to work from the facts,
and accept that things are what they are. In this respect, Caitlyn Jenner is not a
woman, she is a transgender woman. This said, the pictures in Vanity Fair are
indeed stunning, a wondrous coming together of Annie L's skills as a photographer,
the stylists' efforts for their subject, and Caitlyn's physique.

I really have not much to offer Caitlyn herself, only my recognition of the difficult
road she has travelled. But I am bent on reflecting on how social movements - and
the LGBT is one - are often introduced, lived through and later looked back on in
markedly different terms for each phase.

This can be said of pederastry, as practiced in Ancient Greece: it appeared at a time
when the citizens of Greece were starting to live and interact in cities, and gave rise
to institutions where the elder man and his young lover could be seen in public - such
as the symposium - while women weresocially secluded in the home. Indeed, we  are
told that the young man might be impervious to the seductiveness of the elderly one,
would receive gifts and other signs of courtship but not respond.Acts of actual penetration
were frowned on, (and use of slaves fore this purpose forbidden).

By the 4th C BC, Socrates praises chastity in the relationship, and descries how to
achieve it. While fathers would hire pedagogues to protect their young men from
unwanted advances. Plutarch, looking back on this phase AD, gave the opinion that
it was meant to calm the fierceness of young men.

Perhaps were in a moment when it is necessary to calm the fierceness of women.
You tell me...

                                               * * *

As for Roman Society:
"So long as you abstain from married women, widows, virgins(young women), young men and free-condition children, love what you will".   Plautus


Monday, June 1, 2015

Four Color


While reading about computer-assisted proof in Mathematics ( a huge subject),
I came across the four color problem and all the work done around it. Let me
join the myriad other innocents who feel it should be a straightforward affair with
a proof on the following visuals.

  Two Colors: Each piece needs another boundary color.
Three Color: The purple rectangle needs two others.


Four Color: Two of the purple rectangles need three others.

We are on a two-dimensional plane; that's it.