The U.S. is angry Argentina has low unemployment, subsidized - TopicsExpress



          

The U.S. is angry Argentina has low unemployment, subsidized electricity, payments to poor families, and now has discovered a large reserve of shale oil the U.S. wants to control. Every country doing the same around the globe is also in their crosshairs. They want to force them to raise electricity rates, water rates, medicines, and food costs to create civil unrest, dependence on the West, and profits for U.S. companies. Its despicable and its no longer a secret. The Unemployment Rate in Argentina has decreased to a record low 6.40 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013, from 6.80 percent in the third quarter of 2013. Unemployment Rate in Argentina is reported by the Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Censos (INDEC). Unemployment Rate in Argentina averaged 9.96 Percent from 2002 until 2013, reaching an all-time high of 20.80 Percent in the fourth quarter of 2002 and a record low of 6.40 Percent in the fourth quarter of 2013. Generous social spending after the crisis in 2002, like freezing household electricity rates and making payments to poor families, has angered U.S. interests who value only dollar signs. The United States Department of Agriculture put severe restrictions on Argentine food and drug exports in 2003 to further enslave the Argentine economy. In a speech before the United Nations General Assembly on September 21, 2004, President Kirchner said that An urgent, tough, and structural redesign of the International Monetary Fund is needed, to prevent crises and help in [providing] solutions (The former Senior Counsel to the World Bank and whistle-blower Karen Hudes exposed last year the globalist loan sharking operation is rife with corruption, as did economic hit man turned whistleblower John Perkins). So to escape the austerity demands implemented predominantly by the United States, foreign currency reserves in Argentina were increased to reach US$28 billion by December 2005 (they were later reduced by the payment of the full debt to the IMF in January 2006). In a June 2006 report, a group of independent experts hired by the IMF to revise the work of its Independent Evaluation Office (IEO) stated that the assessment of the Argentine case suffered from manipulation and lack of collaboration on the part of the IMF (the IEO is claimed to have unduly softened its conclusions to avoid criticizing the IMFs board of directors, but Karen Hudes confirmed the exact same charges harming and enslaving countries all over the globe while Edward Snowden exposed the NSA spy operations to manipulate foreign economies). In 2010 a large oil discovery was made in the Vaca Muerta Formation in Argentina. Argentina now has the world’s fourth-largest shale oil reserves, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. In comments to an Argentine radio station recently, economy minister, Axel Kicillof, attributed the sharp fall in the peso to a “speculative attack” put into motion by the oil giant Royal Dutch Shell. U.S. Company Montsanto is also killing and exploiting Argentina for profits. Reporters Michael Warren and Natacha Pisarenko of the Associated Press recently published an in-depth story on the spiraling use of pesticides in Argentina, and the resulting health harms. “... the chemicals powering the boom arent confined to soy and cotton and corn fields. The spray drifts into schools and homes and settles over water sources; farmworkers mix poisons with no protective gear; villagers store water in pesticide containers that should have been destroyed. Argentinian doctors point to a change in the profile of diseases, with spikes in cancer and birth defect rates in agricultural areas — and increases in seldom-seen illnesses throughout the population.” Last year PAN Germany released a startling report on the global health effects of pesticide use.
Posted on: Tue, 04 Mar 2014 05:08:00 +0000

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