EconWatch.com > La Journada (Mx) [translation]: Joseph Stiglitz On The Nationalization Of Bolivias Hydrocarbon Sector
[My Buffalo River Home] he will work with Repsol-YPF, a company affected by the nationalization of hydrocarbons in the Andean country, from which the Spanish government again demanded legal safeguards.
[Previous] Outsourcing Surgery and Other Medical Services...
[Next] Paul Krugman: Once and Again...
Some related posts from Technorati and Google.
CaribPundit Review: In presumingRepsol isn't drilling for charity, I'd say that they are fairly confident they'll find something that can be exploited. Given the potential region-changing implications, such what if's suddenly become - at the very least - prudent calculations that need to (via Cosmos)
[Racing Bets] History of Great Britain History of Great... : Despite a high level of emigration to British colonies and the United States more than 200,000 per year during the 1880s the population of England and Wales doubled between 1851 and 1911 (to more than 36 million) and that of Scotland grew by more than 60 percent (to almost 5 million). Both death rates and birth rates declined somewhat, and a series of changes in the law made it possible for a minority of women to enter universities, vote in local elections, and keep control of their property while married.
[LuciFerAngel Space] Legends : Adolf Hitler: Adolf Hitler Founder and leader of the Nazi Party, Reich Chancellor and guiding spirit of the Third Reich from 1933 to 1945, Head of State and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces Adolf Hitler was born in Braunau am Inn, Austria, on 20 April 1889. The son of a fifty-two-year-old Austrian customs official, Alois
[THE FILIPINO MIND] Multinational Corporations, Corrupt Dictators,... : As one writer sees it, "Historically, the oil companies preferred to work without any help, for government support always carried with it the potential of accountability. And so their appeals have often come in especially difficult situations" (Engler 1961, 193).
[Lost in Media] Che's Second Coming?: Located on the Plaza Murillo, one of the central squares of Bolivia's main city, La Paz, it is flanked by the Presidential Palace, the Cathedral and the mausoleum of Bolivia's second president, Andrés Santa Cruz, who fought alongside Simón BolÃvar. Around these decorous buildings, soldiers in red pseudo-19th-century uniforms stand at attention or march ceremoniously from point to point.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, International Trade, EconWatch.com