|
|
|
ONLINE FEATURES
Book Reviews
BW Video
Columnists
Interactive Gallery
Newsletters
Past Covers
Philanthropy
Podcasts
Special Reports
BLOGS
The Auto Beat
Byte of the Apple
Europe Insight
Eye on Asia
Getting In
Investing Insights
The New Entrepreneur
NEXT: Innovation Tools & Trends
On Media
Technology at Work
The Tech Beat
Traveler's Check
TECHNOLOGY
Product Reviews
Tech Stats
Hands On
AUTOS
Home Page
Auto Reviews
Car Care & Safety
INNOVATION
& DESIGN Home Page Architecture Brand Equity Auto Design Game Room SMALLBIZ Smart Answers Success Stories Today's Tip FINANCE Investing: Europe Annual Reports Bloomberg BW50 SCOREBOARDS Hot Growth Companies: 2008 Mutual Funds Info Tech 100 B-SCHOOLS Undergrad Programs Rankings & Profiles |
OCTOBER 17, 2005
Europe Has An Inequality Problem Of Its Own I found Laura D'Andrea Tyson's "Land of unequal opportunity" (Viewpoint, Sept. 26) well substantiated with facts and figures. I sense that there's a similar underlying trend in Europe, as increasing numbers of Europeans see themselves sliding into poverty. They're fighting it off whenever they get the chance by voting non in France or for the former communists in Germany, but the fact remains that there's not much for them to do, particularly considering their inherent lack of mobility. With a few exceptions, Europe's corporations are not directly affected, just like their U.S. counterparts. In some cases they even benefit from lower costs. But in the long term they will be hurt. This is why governments (which are mandated to think in years, not quarters) should step in to reverse this trend. I hope that Europe won't have its own New Orleans wake-up call. Agis Hiliarhopoulos Athens A Rising Deficit Brings Higher Interest Payments, Too "Katrina will force hard choices" (Business Outlook, Sept. 26) included the subhead "Rebuilding costs and planned tax relief could swell the deficit." The authors use the terms "deficit" and "red ink" a combined 12 times. But how could the article address federal budget deficits as a serious concern without also mentioning debt and interest? The article reported that economists are already forecasting that Katrina will "swell" next year's budget deficit to over $412 billion. Unmentioned was that the deficit as forecast will also "swell" the government's $8 trillion debt to well beyond $8.5 trillion (including borrowing from Social Security). "Deficits do matter," the article assured readers. But the debt and its fiscal impact matter far more. Yes, the multiyear total cost of $200 billion for Katrina rebuilding is a "massive bill." But the $355.5 billion the government has already spent in fiscal year 2005 to service interest on the debt is an amount sufficient to have funded both the Iraq war to date and Katrina's "massive bill," with change left over. Dick Huopana Hillsborough, N.C. | |