Search Results | Showing 421 - 430 of 911 results for "Deficit" |
| | | ... markets, credit ratings agencies and/or other investors would care if this smaller surplus actually turns out to be a small deficit. Relative to the big economies of the United States, Japan, the Eurozone and the UK, Australia's budget, even the 2011/12 ... |
| | | | The 100 largest US-based public pensions face a funding deficit of $1.2 trillion, $300 billion more than the pension providers have reported themselves, according to a new study by Milliman. The consulting and actuarial firm's first Public Pension Funding ... |
| | | | ... and 6.7% next year from 7.0% and 7.5%, respectively, because of high inflation, slowing consumption and its huge fiscal deficit. That may be so but Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's administration and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) are now doing ... |
| | | | ... liabilities as a percentage of GDP are very high in the world, they're not low and we have this persistent current account deficit," Murray said. "In short, all the entitlements we want to have are not ours; they're being funded at the pleasure of some ... |
| | | | ... equals deteriorating external accounts in Australia. The Australian Bureau of Statistics reported that the country's trade deficit widened to A$2 billion in August from A$1.5 billion in the previous month - the widest in more than four years - as the ... |
| | | | ... printed that Spain would miss its budget targets - yes, target with an s. According to WSJ, it re-stated it 2011 budget deficit to 9.44% of GDP from 8.96% and the 2012 budget shortfall is now estimated to be 7.4% of GDP (more than the 6.3% target promised ... |
| | | | ... have opened marginally weaker as investors had a subdued reaction to the Spanish government's plan to slash the nation's deficit. At 1015 AEST on Friday, the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was down 12.8 points, or 0.29 per cent, at 4,371.4 points, while ... |
| | | | ... in America and Europe overnight following the Spanish government's announcement of its 2013 budget that aims to cut the deficit from 8.9% in 2011 to 6.3% this year, 4.5% next year and 2.8% the year after. Financial markets saw that this was good. By ... |
| | | | ... posted its first gain of the week after Spain announced severe budget cuts intended to convince the world that it can meet deficit-reduction targets. It was the best day for the US market since September 13, when Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke ... |
|