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HERVE GUYADER - Page 90

  • Dette grecque : «L'Allemagne veut se tailler un empire économique sans en supporter le coût»

    Comment les gauchistes justifient que la Grèce n'honore pas ses dettes :

    INTERVIEW

    Pour Kostas Vergopoulos, professeur à l’université Paris-VII, en mettant fin au régime en faveur des banques grecques, la BCE se range du côté d'Angela Merkel et met le nouveau gouvernement d'Aléxis Tsípras dans une position impossible.

     

    Stupeur et tremblement à Athènes. La Banque centrale européenne (BCE), qui refuse tout ajournement de la dette grecque, a en effet annoncé mercredi soir la fin d’un régime de faveur qui permettait aux banques grecques de se refinancer auprès d’elle. Elles pouvaient jusque-là fournir, comme garanties des obligations émises par Athènes, des titres de moindre qualité que ceux que la BCE accepte normalement. La BCE prive ainsi les banques grecques d’un canal de financement. Dès le 11 février, elles ne pourront compter que sur l’aide d’urgence en liquidité de la Banque nationale grecque. Kostas Vergopoulos, professeur émérite d’économie à l’université Paris-VII, revient, pour Libération, sur une décision très politique.

    http://www.liberation.fr/economie/2015/02/05/dette-grecque-l-allemagne-veut-se-tailler-un-empire-economique-sans-en-supporter-le-coup-minimum_1196278
  • PwC accusé de « promotion de l’évasion fiscale à échelle industrielle »

    La commission parlementaire britannique en charge des comptes publics a remis, vendredi 6 février, un rapport dévastateur pour PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC). Margaret Hodge, sa présidente, accuse le cabinet d’audit d’avoir mis en place « rien de moins que la promotion de l’évasion fiscale à échelle industrielle ».

    Le rapport concerne le dossier surnommé « LuxLeaks », ces fameux accords fiscaux signés entre les autorités du Luxembourg et des centaines de multinationales. Révélée en novembre 2014 par l’International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, en collaboration avec de nombreux journaux, dont Le Monde, l’affaire a mis à jour l’existence de 548 lettres entre PwC et le Luxembourg. Celles-ci concluaient des accords fiscaux concernant 343 grandes entreprises.


    En savoir plus sur http://www.lemonde.fr/economie/article/2015/02/06/pwc-accuse-de-promotion-de-l-evasion-fiscale-a-echelle-industrielle_4571552_3234.html#gOxyv68cWUL1YV8x.99
  • EU trade policy: Pascal Lamy hopes for Commission firmness

    In an exclusive interview with Borderlex, the former WTO director general, who has also served as European Union trade commissioner and as chef de cabinet of Jacques Delors, architect of the EU’s single market, shared some of his views on the current politics of trade in Brussels. One of his key concerns is the Commission’s ability to handle member state pressures and TTIP politics in a ‘post-Lisbon’ environment.

    The European Commission has not sufficiently faced down member states trying to wrangle power away from Brussels since the Lisbon treaty came into force five years ago. It also mishandled so far the politics of TTIP, Pascal Lamy told Borderlex.

    “I wrote the trade part of the Lisbon treaty myself”, Lamy quips in his high-ceilinged, wood-parqueted, office at the Jacques Delors Institute headquarters, the Parisian base from which he continues to act as political advisor in his new career after eight years at the helm of the World Trade Organization. The text that organises the functioning of the European Union since late 2009 shifted a great deal of powers away from the member states to Brussels. Its first version was finalised in 2004, the year Lamy’s term as trade commissioner ended.

    The EU’s constitutional text introduced important changes in the EU’s common commercial policy: foreign direct investment became an exclusive EU competence, and the European parliament obtained co-decision powers, in other words the right to decide on equal terms with the member states on trade.

    Many in Brussels criticise the members of the European parliament for not being technically competent enough on trade. Others worry about excessive politicisation of EU trade policy. But the parliament’s enhanced powers are a development Lamy welcomes – a view that could surprise some who remember him as an iron-fisted technocrat implementing ruthlessly Delors’ agenda.

    Enhancing the EU Parliament’s powers? “It had to be done,” Lamy said. “On issues which are so sensitive for public opinion, you cannot move this out of national parliaments and put it in a limbo. You have to put it somewhere where there is democratic scrutiny”.

    The Frenchman, who met the elected body’s trade committee in private last January, praised it: “there were a number of good old trade wonks still there, and the level of questions raised by different groups were from well-informed people”, he told of this behind-closed-doors encounter. He also noted that the MEP’s level of expertise is increasing, compared to the time when he was in charge of trade policy at the Commission.

    Soft in his judgement on the parliament, Lamy is hard on the Commission

     

    http://www.borderlex.eu/eu-trade-policy-pascal-lamy-hopes-commission-firmness/