Disturbing Trends

Monday, November 23, 2009

Head of IMF says keep stimulus

When the head of the IMF speaks, the bankers sit up and listen. But is his advice going to be any more accurate than anyone else's?

It is hard to continue to mount up the debts investing in stability when jobs replacing all those that have vanished from the economy seem to fail to appear again anywhere else.

Governments may not recognise it is not just stability of the institutions that exchange and invest funds but the intergenerational pause that may work out far more costly.

There is a tendency to inherit old political stances and watch polls, instead of knowing what you are doing and hanging on for dear life as your popularity finally rises toward the end of your term.

More... Change is necessary

Labels: political inheritance


posted by Nicholas at 4:46 PM Digg this

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

  <$BlogBacklinkTitle$>  
<$BlogBacklinkSnippet$>
<$I18NPostedByBacklinkAuthor$> @ <$BlogBacklinkDateTime$>

Create a Link

Home






More Disturbing Trends

  • Disturbing Trends
  • Disturbing Trends - Predicting Future Politics
  • Disturbing Trends - Media Nightmare
  • Web Theory
  • Chaos and Matter (poetry)
  • David Blyth - Cult movie maker
  • Digitalwallpaper - music for your brain
  • NZBlues - featuring leading New Zealand Blues musicians
  • Auckland Poetry

Short link for Twitter : Disturbing Trends


Independent Journals



Subscribe to Disturbing Trends and we will list your site here
$US10 for one year



About Me

My Photo
Name: Nicholas Alexander
Location: Auckland, New Zealand

Content producer, programmer and poet creating websites, and now writing, publishing and reading.

View my complete profile



Previous Posts

  • Grisly Cosmetics
  • One answer
  • The Problem with Global Warming
  • Making Peace - Summary
  • Security Asylum
  • CO2 emissions
  • America
  • OBAMA WINS NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
  • Natures Design
  • Afghanistan – prospect of failure?
At last! - earlier editions of Disturbing Trends dug up from the archives
  • Disturbing Trends I
    rare early attempts at blogging
  • Disturbing Trends II
    2002 Disturbing Trends News on blogspot (2007)
  • Disturbing Trends III
    the Classic years
  • Disturbing Trends IV
    2006 Edition

Powered by Blogger

Subscribe to
Posts [Atom]




Copyright © 2007 by Disturbingtrends.org