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Greece: Cuts keep budget on target, spur protests
Ag News - International Ag News
Wednesday, 13 February 2013 15:21

ATHENS, Greece - Greece's farmers launched a campaign of daily anti-austerity highway blockades Monday, as the conservative-led government insisted deep spending cuts were helping the crisis-hit country beat budget targets.


Mostly in central and northern Greece, the hour-long roadblocks started at 2:00 p.m. (1200GMT), forcing motorists to take lengthy detours or wait the protests out.

The farmers are angry at a government decision to scrap tax breaks on farming incomes and on gasoline for farm vehicles. They are also protesting against the serious delays in subsidy payments.

The dispute is the latest in an escalating series of labor disputes, fueled by a new round of government pay cuts and tax increases. The austerity measures, introduced this year as the country battles a sixth year of recession and high unemployment, are part of measures imposed in exchange for ongoing rescue loans from the other 16 European Union countries that use the euro and International Monetary Fund.

Deputy Finance Minister Christos Staikouras announced Monday that core government budget spending posted a €165 million ($221 million) surplus in January, compared to a deficit of €490 million ($655 million) for that month last year.

But the preliminary figure, which does not include spending on local government and health insurance, was achieved with a heavy reliance on spending cuts, as revenues remained below target.

January revenues totaled €4.42 billion ($5.91 billion) — €241 million ($322.3 million) short of the government target and €572 million ($765 million) worse than the monthly figure last year.

"For January, the balance is positive ... but there's no room to ease up," Staikouras said.

"Our policy of fiscal adjustment and discipline, across all sections of government, must continue."

The farmers' blockades Monday included a crossing point on the Greek-Bulgarian border. Outside the northern city of Thessaloniki, farmers handed out heads of cabbage and bags of rice to stranded motorists.

A government pledge last week to speed up several key subsidy payments and extend the adjustment period for stricter new retirement rules failed to stop the farmers' protests.

The government has already used rarely enacted emergency powers twice this year to force striking subway and ferry workers to end crippling strikes.

 
Peru seeks to protect little fish with big impact
Ag News - International Ag News
Tuesday, 05 February 2013 08:36

FRANK BAJAK and FRANKLIN BRICENO
Associated Press

CALLAO, Peru (AP) — The ocean off Peru boasts the world's richest fishing grounds, but Taurino Querevalu is returning to port empty again after a hunt for Peruvian anchovy, cursing his empty nets and an increasingly stingy sea.
Read more...
 
Ireland won't ease drunken-driving law for farmers
Ag News - International Ag News
Friday, 25 January 2013 15:45
By Shawn Pogatchnik 
Associated Press Writer  

DUBLIN - A license to drive drunk? Some small-town politicians think it's just the tonic for rural Ireland.
Read more...
 
UN appeals for $131 million aid for Zimbabwe
Ag News - International Ag News
Thursday, 17 January 2013 13:29
HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — The United Nations says it needs $131 million in humanitarian assistance to meet food, water and emergency needs in Zimbabwe.
Read more...
 
Farmers: Zimbabwe food production declines further
Ag News - International Ag News
Thursday, 17 January 2013 13:26
HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — An organization of mostly displaced white farmers in Zimbabwe says upcoming harvests of the corn staple are forecast to decline by tens of thousands of tons and the nation will again have to rely on food imports and donor handouts.
Read more...
 
China's money changes the landscape in Australia
Ag News - International Ag News
Tuesday, 11 December 2012 14:20
By Rod McGuirk 
Associated Press Writer    

GUNNEDAH, Australia (AP) — Tony Clift's family has plowed the rich black soil of Australia's Liverpool Plains for six generations. The thought of selling never crossed his mind — until a Chinese company came to town.
Read more...
 
House passes bill normalizing Russian trade
Ag News - International Ag News
Friday, 16 November 2012 15:13
By Jim Abrams
Associated Press


WASHINGTON — The House showed some bipartisan cooperation Friday by voting overwhelmingly to end Soviet-era trade restrictions so that American companies and farmers can take advantage of Russia's expanding and more open markets.

But Moscow reacted angrily to a provision that punishes Russian officials involved in human rights violations, threatening to increase tensions between the two countries at a delicate time. "A defiantly unfriendly and provocative attack," the Russian Foreign Ministry branded it and promised "a tough response."
Read more...
 
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