Home Home Home
Home
HomeDiscussioniInfo & ServiziImpostazioniAiuto
Nascondi pannelli
Autenticazione utenti

Nome utente

Password
Aiuto
Seleziona la lingua del sito
ITItalian – Italiano
Private Messages
Navigazione in corso come ospite. Si prega di accedere cliccando su Entra per visualizzare tutte le opzioni disponibili.
Moderatori
Jacek K.
Visualizzazione messaggi
Dati del filone
Ultima attività 5/25/2012 07:44

1705 risposte
217079 visualizzazioni

Ricerca sito
Notifica

Modifica notifiche e-mail

XML RSS Feed
Raccomandaci
 del.icio.us facebook
Legenda
Messaggi Pubblicati
5000 5000
2000 2000
1000 1000
500 500
100 100
25 25
Codifica Colorata:
  • Amministratore
  • Moderatore forum
  • Utente Registrato
Top Contributors
Past Month

Eve Kil (16)
S. D. (9)
L C (8)
Filoni più popolari
Ultimi tre mesi

Ridiculous job offers 77

Unpaid internship: shameful slavery or invaluable experience? 38

Unbelievable.­.­.­ 22

What kind of translation do you deliver to your clients: T, TE, TEP or? 13

Can anybody help me to transcribe 3 tricky English sentences? 10

مقالات في الترجمة 9

Freedom of speech, under attack in the West 8



Ultimi tre anni

Ridiculous job offers 210

Unpaid internship: shameful slavery or invaluable experience? 64

Translating into your second language.­. A serious taboo? 25

The tag "Urgent Job" and the impression it gives about an agency 24

Unbelievable.­.­.­ 22

Is it important for a translator to have a degree in translation? 21

Payment by a counterfeit cheque 17

Messaggi più popolari
Ultimi tre mesi

RE: Unpaid internship: shameful slavery or invaluable experience? 4

RE: Unpaid internship: shameful slavery or invaluable experience? 4

RE: Unpaid internship: shameful slavery or invaluable experience? 4

RE: Ridiculous job offers 4

RE: Unpaid internship: shameful slavery or invaluable experience? 3



Ultimi tre anni

Top 10 things I have learned as a freelance translator 8

RE: Ridiculous job offers 5

RE: belittling, insulting, and verbal abuse 5

The tag "Urgent Job" and the impression it gives about an agency 4

RE: belittling, insulting, and verbal abuse (OT) 4

The hardest thing in the world to understand is the income tax.Albert Einstein
Pagina: 1168 169 170 171
Indietro
« Filone »
Pubblicato:
martedì 15 maggio 2012 18:10
Intervento #249091—in risposta a #249086
+0-0
Jacek K.
Master TC
Madrelingua: Polacco
Data di registrazione: lunedì 15 febbraio 2010
Località: Polonia
 
RE: Understanding the Financial Crisis

But, dear Dodo, that's everybody's plight! Have a look at the chart in Post #249034. It shows that the earnings of the top 0.1% tumbled from 700% in 2006 to just 400% two years later, while the top 1% saw their earnings shrink from 400% to just 250% over the same period time (with respect to 1976).

Just think how you would feel if, in 2006, you had been making 7 million a year and 2 years later just 4 million!



[Modificato da Jacek K. il martedì 15 maggio 2012 18:13]

Rispondi |Citazione |Modifica |Elimina
Pubblicato:
martedì 15 maggio 2012 18:20
Intervento #249092—in risposta a #249091
+0-0
Dodo Kaipdodo
Master TC
Photo
Expert
2000100010010010010025
Madrelingua: Lituano
Messaggi: 3444
35
Data di registrazione: mercoledì 8 agosto 2007
Località: Lituania
 
RE: Understanding the Financial Crisis

Originally written by Jacek K. on May 15, 2012 6:10 PM

Just think how you would feel if, in 2006, you had been making 7 million a year and 2 years later just 4 million!

It would feel OK if the 4 million in 2008 would buy me what the 7 million in 2006 used to.

But matter is...


Rispondi |Citazione |Modifica |Elimina
Pubblicato:
venerdì 18 maggio 2012 14:14
Intervento #249287—in risposta a #249092
+0-0
Jacek K.
Master TC
Madrelingua: Polacco
Data di registrazione: lunedì 15 febbraio 2010
Località: Polonia
 
RE: Understanding the Financial Crisis

An excerpt from http://www.salon.com/2012/05/18/corporate_criminals_gone_wild/:

“Inside Job,” Charles Ferguson’s Oscar-winning documentary film on how government, Wall Street and academia colluded to deliver us the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, made a powerful case that something was very very rotten at the heart of the American political/economic nexus. His follow-up book, “Predator Nation: Corporate Criminals, Political Corruption, and the Hijacking of America,” can be considered the legal brief that dots every “i” and crosses every “t” in his argument.

“Predator Nation” is an angry book. Were you this angry before you started making the film “Inside Job”?

No, I absolutely was not. I remember the first time I got any kind of inkling of what was to come was in August or September 2007, when Charley Morris sent me a copy of a galley proof of his book, “The Trillion Dollar Meltdown.” It was scary and powerful, but I couldn’t bring myself to believe it. I remember calling Charley and saying, “You lay out a very convincing case but really, these people aren’t that crazy, they aren’t that stupid. They are regulated. Can it really be this bad?”

And he said: “You just wait.” And boy, he was right.

It’s not that I thought that investment bankers were like Mother Teresa. I knew that they weren’t. But the degree of nakedness and extremity of the dishonesty and its pervasiveness was a huge shock to me. It turned out that many banks, on a very large scale, and without any disclosure, had created and sold securities with the intent of betting on their failure. And this was done with the knowledge and approval of senior management of all these banks, including the oldest and most traditional.

How do you explain this behavior? How did we get to a point where it was routine for Wall Street bankers to behave in ways that most Americans would consider frankly immoral? 

I think this has its roots all the way back in the 1970s and the beginning of the era of deregulation. But there was a kind of inflection point during the five-year period between 1997 and 2003 — the late Clinton and/or early Bush administration — when all the rules just went away. You went from a period, a regime, where people did have at least some concern about going to jail, to a point where everything is legal, and derivatives couldn’t be regulated at all and nobody went to jail for anything. And looking back I would say that this period definitely started under Clinton. You absolutely cannot blame this on George W. Bush.

You say that everything is now legal, but in your book you dismiss Obama’s argument that he could not prosecute Wall Street bankers for criminal behavior because what they did was technically not illegal as “complete horseshit.” ...

 


Rispondi |Citazione |Modifica |Elimina
Pubblicato:
domenica 20 maggio 2012 17:48
Intervento #249328—in risposta a #249287
+0-0
John B.
Madrelingua: Inglese
Data di registrazione: venerdì 1 febbraio 2008
Località: Germania
 
RE: Understanding the Financial Crisis

I have blogged about this before, but one big aspect to the crisis was the end of relationship banking, where people knew their banker, to what they call "arms-length banking". Let's face it, you are not going to screw over some guy you see at the golf course every Saturday, but you might be ok with screwing over some guy in Thailand or Austria, who you don't know. 

Also, I disagree that de-regulation is to blame. I think that the laws on how much capital banks have to maintain at all times is the biggest factor. 

Japan had an extremely regulated financial sector in 1990 when it had its banking crisis. I think that the notion that bureaucrats will stop the excesses, is a bit naive. 


Rispondi |Citazione |Modifica |Elimina
Pubblicato:
martedì 22 maggio 2012 07:53
Intervento #249417—in risposta a #249086
+0-0
Jacek K.
Master TC
Madrelingua: Polacco
Data di registrazione: lunedì 15 febbraio 2010
Località: Polonia
 
RE: Understanding the Financial Crisis

Originally written by Dodo Kaipdodo on May 15, 2012 5:24 PM

To make folks happy, make things much worse for them and then make things a tad better.

In fact, all you need is simply threaten to make things much worse. Like, our natural gas monopolist saying they are going to raise gas prices twice and then raising those by, say, 3/4 only.

We pay happily!

The bad news: Russia Pleased With Current Oil Price

The good news: No empire or monopolist will last forever.

Thanks to its new shale gas production, the United States has lost the title of "gas importer" and become a "gas exporter" A new report prepared by Sberbank Lead Economist Kseniya Yudayeva suggests that by 2016 Gazprom will lose a significant share of its European market and prices will drop because of shale gas.

In the last ten years, the U.S.A. has been able to develop and produce shale gas very quickly, and will “drown the world with gas” with the sale of liquefied shale gas. As a result, European countries will no longer need to purchase expensive gas from Russia.
Currently Gazprom holds 27% of the European market. However they will not be able to maintain high prices as shale gas production continues. Gazprom cannot compete with shale gas, arguing that the cost is too high. However some experts warn Gazprom that the share of shale gas in the market has gone from zero to 29% in just 10 years, and that they should continue on with liquid gas production. http://gazday.com/


Rispondi |Citazione |Modifica |Elimina
Pubblicato:
martedì 22 maggio 2012 10:50
Intervento #249431—in risposta a #249417
+0-0
John B.
Madrelingua: Inglese
Data di registrazione: venerdì 1 febbraio 2008
Località: Germania
 
RE: Understanding the Financial Crisis

I read that North Dakota's supply of oil and gas is now 4 times higher than in 1990. And their unemployment rate is about 3 %. 

I wrote about why I think the US will still be the nr. 1 economy in 2050 here: www.econtranslator.com. 



[Modificato da John B. il martedì 22 maggio 2012 10:51]

Rispondi |Citazione |Modifica |Elimina
Pagina: 1168 169 170 171
Indietro
« Filone »
Home | Forum | Cerca
Discussioni recenti | Oggi | Questa Settimana | Top 25
Statistiche del Forum | Chi c'è on-line | Citazioni casuali
New TC Mobile | Impostazioni del Forum | Entra
TranslatorsCafé.com

Mappa sito | Fatti pubblicità | Seleziona la lingua del sito English | Spanish – Español | French – Français | Italian – Italiano | Di più...

Copyright © ANVICA Software Development 2002—2012. Tutti i diritti riservati.
Tutela della privacy. Termini e condizioni di utilizzo. L'utilizzo implica il consenso di tali termini e condizioni.
Invia per mail un commento e/o un suggerimento a TranslatorsCafe.com webmaster
Elenco di traduttori, interpreti e agenzie di traduzioni.

Nota sulla responsabilità: le opinioni espresse nei forum di discussione sono proprie degli autori e non corrispondono necessariamente alle idee del proprietario del sito e/o dei moderatori. Qualora un utente considerasse un intervento offensivo, è invitato a inviare una segnalazione al moderatore del forum in questione. La segnalazione dovrebbe essere presa in carico entro 24 ore, tenendo tuttavia in considerazione che il moderatore potrebbe vivere in una località con diverso fuso orario. L’uso dei forum implica l’accettazione del Regolamento per gli interventi nei forum.