Archive for October, 2014

European Union puts divisions on display at latest jobs summit

MILAN: Deep divisions within the European Union over the rules governing the euro will be aired once more at an emergency jobs summit here on Wednesday.

Italy's energetic young prime minister, Matteo Renzi, has billed the meeting, the latest in a long series of similar gatherings, as an opportunity to begin a debate on how to reshape the bloc's policies towards measures to bolster demand and growth, although the official agenda is supposed to be all about youth unemployment.

The initiative by an Italian government which has pledged to shake up its own labour market, is the latest salvo in an intensifying debate over the direction of the EU, the world's largest trading bloc, at a time when its biggest economies are sliding back towards recession.

Italy, the current holder of the EU's rotating presidency, called the summit in response to a shock deterioration of the economic outlook in the eurozone's major economies over the summer.

The gloom was heightened on Tuesday with new data showing that German industrial output slumped in August.

The slowdown has been particularly severe in Italy, which is back in recession for the third time in seven years and beset by deflation.

France and Germany are scarcely doing better and some economists worry that the eurozone as a whole is heading for a Japan-style "lost decade" of prolonged negative or zero growth.

Emergency jobs summits have been a regular fixture on the EU calendar for the best part of two decades but the jury remains out on how much impact they have had.

"The tangible results of the jobs summits are small," said Christian Schultz, an economist at private German bank Berenberg.

"Labour market policy remains a domain of member states. The European level can merely provide a little financial support or facilitate the exchange of best practices.

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European Union puts divisions on display at latest jobs summit

Amazon becomes latest EU target in tax probe

European Union officials contend that a Luxembourg ruling from 2003 could represent an improper tax shelter and thus require Amazon to pay back taxes.

Declan McCullagh/CNET

Amazon is under investigation over a deal with the Luxembourg government that has allegedly allowed to company to pay less in taxes to other European countries.

The European Union's European Commission on Tuesday launched an "in-depth investigation" into Amazon and Luxembourg over a "tax ruling" from 2003.

"It is well known that some multinationals are using tax planning strategies...to reduce their global tax burden, eroding tax bases in EU Member States," the European Commission wrote in a statement on Tuesday. "We are looking at whether selective tax advantages have been granted to a particular company."

The investigation is nearly identical to the one impacting Apple in Ireland. In that case, the European Union is investigating whether a special deal between Apple and Ireland's government allows the company to sidestep much of its tax liability. The country's corporate tax rate is 12.5 percent, but Apple pays less than 2 percent in taxes in Ireland. If the European Union decides that this is improper, then Apple could be forced to pay billions of euros in unpaid taxes stretching back 10 years.

A similar scenario could play out with Amazon, if the European Union finds that the agreement between Luxembourg and the e-commerce giant allows the company to safeguard profits and improperly limit tax liability.

"The ruling we are looking at concerns Amazon's subsidiary in Luxembourg, which records most of the group's European profits," the Commission wrote. "This company pays a royalty to another entity [that is] based in Luxembourg but not subject to corporate taxation in Luxembourg. Today we observe that through this mechanism most European profits of Amazon are recorded in Luxembourg but are not taxed there."

The Commission added that the royalty reducing Amazon's tax liability "might not be in line with market conditions" and that "Luxembourg's tax authorities agreed to limit the proportion of Amazon's turnover that is being taxed in Luxembourg whatever the profit that Amazon is making."

If it does find that the deal is improper, the company could face a significant bills for back taxes.

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Amazon becomes latest EU target in tax probe

EU's Jean-Claude Juncker Faces Pressure to Reshuffle Team

File photo of European Union's incoming boss Jean-Claude Juncker. (Agence France-Presse)

Lawmakers in Brussels have raised doubts over key members of the European Commission, the EU's executive arm for the next five years, including the British, Spanish, Hungarian and Slovenian nominees.

Juncker was in talks with senior parliamentary figures to cut a deal which could see him change some portfolios, or even drop one or more members, in order to push the team by the deadline of later this month, officials said.

His spokeswoman Natasha Bertaud said he was "happy" that "certain obstacles" were out of the way but would not comment on whether Juncker was prepared to make any compromises.

"The relevant committees are meeting tonight to discuss their assessment, and Mr. Juncker will then meet with the European Parliament leaders to discuss the overall assessment," she said.

The row stems from a power struggle between an increasingly assertive parliament and the European Commission, as well as from a split between conservatives and socialists in parliament itself.

The European Parliament can ask for European Commission candidates to be changed or be assigned new portfolios, as it did in 2004 and 2009.

It will also vote to approve or throw out the full Juncker team line-up on October 22.

On Tuesday, Britain's candidate Jonathan Hill faced further questions over his suitability for the role of financial services commissioner after being summoned for an unprecedented second hearing by parliament's ecomomics committee.

"I've had to overcome some suspicions about being a Brit, especially about being a Brit in this portfolio,' he said, referring to doubts about whether he would be biased towards Britain's huge financial services industry.

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EU's Jean-Claude Juncker Faces Pressure to Reshuffle Team

1TV Afghanistan Farsi News 05.10.2014 – Video


1TV Afghanistan Farsi News 05.10.2014
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By: 1TV

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1TV Afghanistan Farsi News 05.10.2014 - Video

Pull Us Home – International Tug of War, Kandahar, Afghanistan, 2014 – Video


Pull Us Home - International Tug of War, Kandahar, Afghanistan, 2014
Organised by Royal Air Force Physical Training Instructor, Sergeant Khym France, sixteen teams from around the World competed for the title of Kandahar #39;s Str...

By: royalairforce

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Pull Us Home - International Tug of War, Kandahar, Afghanistan, 2014 - Video