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in 2005 almost 100 protestors

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PostWysłany: Pią 19:43, 27 Wrz 2013 Temat postu: in 2005 almost 100 protestors

so much as peeped about a global trade deal this time around.In fact, a new report by the governments of the UK, Germany, Turkey, and Indonesia said world trade negotiations (aka the Doha round, named after the Qatari capital where the most recent round of global tariff haggling began) are doomed to failure unless countries reach a final agreement by year-end to scrap barriers on things like agriculture, industrial products, and intellectual property.Free-trade gurus like Peter Sutherland and Jagdish Bhagwati (who headed up the report) are pointing fingers at the U.S. and China for holding up a deal. They say the short-term sacrifices (in jobs and exports) would be fairly small and painless, while helping to jolt global growth. That sounds like a pretty simple equation. So why aren’t more politicians on board?First off, the gains of a big free-trade-fest might not be as growthtastic as WTO lovers want to believe. Pankaj Ghemawat, a business professor at the University of Navarra,[url=http://www.tinfoti.com]Christian Louboutin Outlet[/url], estimates the global gains of a Doha agreement would only add up to a piddly .1% of global GDP. And in the meantime, leaders around the world would get a lot of heat for the jobs lost to local economies in the hopes of longer-term gains. There’s also the problem of perceptions. People tend to think that their country is doing better if it’s ahead of the pack, even if that leaves all countries around the world, including their own, a little worse off. A Harvard study conducted by Robert Reich found that people would rather see the U.S. economy growing at .2% and Japan growing at .1% than have the U.S. growing at 3% with Japan growing at 4%.In other words, we’re all happy with our Honda Civic until the next door neighbor gets a Ferrari. No wonder then that, like most economic theories,[url=http://www.tinfoti.com]Christian Louboutin Sale[/url], free trade sounds great on paper but not so hot in practice.G-20 Violence at Toronto Already?WARREN TODA/epa/CorbisEmailPrintShareFacebookTwitterTumblrLinkedInStumbleUponRedditDiggMixxDeliciousGoogle+Comment Follow @timenewsfeedThe G-8 and G-20 summits are being held back-to-back next week in Canada, and the protests that traditionally greet both events have gotten started early.On Monday afternoon, a group of 100 activists — the usual mix of anti-poverty, anti-globalization and anti-fossil fuel protestors — marched down Toronto’s Dundas Street, briefly occupying an Esso gas station. (Esso is an international subsidiary of Exxon.)“Corporations like Esso have caused irreparable damage all over the world,” the Toronto Star quoted one activist as saying. “There is a lack of housing. This is our housing now.”The group then picketed the Children’s Aid Society. In all, one protester was arrested at the beginning of the march. Another was arrested as the demonstration broke up. Light protests are scheduled for the entire week (today’s theme was gender equality and queer and disability rights), but the largest is the ‘People First’ rally planned for Saturday, June 26. Organizers claim it will be a peaceful protest,[url=http://www.tinfoti.com]Christian Louboutin Men[/url], but violence seems to follow the anti-globalization rallies. In 2001, an activist was shot and killed by police during the G-8 in Genoa; in 2005 almost 100 protestors,http://www.tinfoti.com, some of them armed, were arrested outside the Gleneagles summit; in 2008 nearly 900 protestors and 150 police were injured in street fighting in Heiligendamm.Ironically, this round of summits has come under fire from voices on the right as well as from the radical left. The Wall Street Journal has been emphasizing the ironically-high cost of the summits, which this year are focusing on slashing deficits, on the Canadian taxpayer. ‘Canada Spends Over C$1 Billion To Urge G20 Nations To Reduce Debts,’ ran a recent headline.The protests and security have the city a little on edge — the news ran wild with the story of three gunshots fired into the air near the G-20 site until officials confirmed they were unrelated to the summits — and it’s worth asking: If it’s like this now, what will it be

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