PDA

View Full Version : Portuguese economy continues to shrink



Baluarte
03-11-2013, 07:38 PM
Fourth-quarter GDP dropped 3.8 per cent from a year earlier. It was the biggest annual and quarterly contraction since the first quarter of 2009.
Prime minister Pedro Passos Coelho is battling rising joblessness and lower demand from Eu ropean trading partners as he raises taxes to meet the terms of a ¤78 billion aid plan from the Europe an Union and the International Monetary Fund.
Portugal may get an additional year to narrow its budget deficit as the country's economic outlook worsens, minister for finance Vitor Gaspar said on February 20.
Exports dropped 2.1 per cent in the third quarter from the second, today's report showed. Imports slipped 1.4 per cent in that period and household spending tumbled 2.3 per cent. Government spending declined 1.1 per cent.
The euro-zone recession deepened in the fourth quarter as Germany, France and Italy, its three biggest economies, suffered slumping output. GDP fell 0.6 per cent in the fourth quarter from the previous three months, according to the EU's statistics office in Luxembourg.
The Bank of Portugal predicted on January 15 that the economy will contract 1.9 per cent in 2013, more than previously forecast, as export growth slows.
Exports will rise 2 per cent this year, slowing from estimated growth of 4.1 percent in 2012, the central bank said.
The Portuguese economy may contract 1.9 per cent this year before expanding 0.8 per cent in 2014, the European Commission forecast on February 22. Economic growth has averaged less than 1 per cent a year for the past decade, placing Portugal among Europe's weakest performers.
The GDP forecast for 2013 may be revised downward by about 1 percentage point during a review of the aid program that began on February 25, Mr Gaspar has said. The government's last estimate was for GDP to drop 1 per cent in 2013 before expanding 0.8 per cent in 2014.
GDP dropped 3.2 per cent last year, according to the statistics institute. Mr Gaspar plans to cut spending by about ¤4 billion in the two years through 2014, when he forecasts debt will peak at 122.3 per cent of GDP after reaching 122.2 percent in 2013.

Lusos
03-12-2013, 04:43 PM
Obviously.
And It will continue.

The next move that allows that to happen,will be lowering the National minimum wage.

Vasconcelos
03-12-2013, 05:33 PM
Obviously.
And It will continue.

The next move that allows that to happen,will be lowering the National minimum wage.

That will not happen, it would be so outrageous that the Government would have riots or a revolution in hands if they did that.

Lusos
03-12-2013, 09:18 PM
That will not happen, it would be so outrageous that the Government would have riots or a revolution in hands if they did that.


Give It time.

There will be no riots.

Baluarte
03-12-2013, 09:22 PM
^^ Look at Greece, the country has been occupied politically and the people are expoliated all the time, one measure at a time. They still haven't revolted.

Peikko
03-12-2013, 09:26 PM
I hope it gets better in Portugal and Europe. Keep strong, mates!

Lusos
03-13-2013, 09:40 PM
I believe this goes beyond debt.

The stupid amount of money that has been thrown at Banks Its ridiculous.
Meanwhile,let's call the People lazy,spread the rumour that we(The People) have been living above our costs.
(And they do It with a grim in their face).

Lusos
03-13-2013, 09:46 PM
That will not happen, it would be so outrageous that the Government would have riots or a revolution in hands if they did that.


Sapo(Passos de Coelho)
"Relativamente à manifestação de sábado, o primeiro-ministro considera que"nenhum Governo deve ficar indiferente a essas manifestações públicas", mas refere que não se deixa condicionar. "Eu não governo em função das manifestações nem dos protestos."


"Pedro Passos Coelho rejeita aumentar o salário mínimo na actual fase da economia portuguesa. O chefe de Governo sustenta que quando um país enfrenta um nível elevado de desemprego, "a medida mais sensata que se pode tomar é exactamente a oposta". No debate quinzenal desta quarta-feira, no Parlamento, Passos Coelho deu o exemplo da Irlanda, que baixou o salário mínimo quando foi intervencionada pela "troika".

Vasconcelos
03-13-2013, 10:02 PM
I know, I heard the idiot say it the very same day, but he won't really do it.




I believe this goes beyond debt.

The stupid amount of money that has been thrown at Banks Its ridiculous.
Meanwhile,let's call the People lazy,spread the rumour that we(The People) have been living above our costs.
(And they do It with a grim in their face).

It's the country's elite that is to blame.
In fact they have been to blame for the last 140 years, especially the Government officials, they have been an absolute rubbish, their incompetence should be placed atop a pedestal for everyone to see how bad can politicians be, although that might not be necessary anymore because today's ones are SO BAD people just lost faith in pretty much everyone in the political class.