目前分類:英文快樂學 HAPPY ENGLISH (8)

瀏覽方式: 標題列表 簡短摘要

不藏私!多益獎學金得主:學英文靠這10個免費網站

 

撰文者張慶生(2011年多益獎學金得主)

 

最近聽過我講英文的朋友都太不願意相信:「其實我國小講英文曾經被老師和同學恥笑!」

我記得那個時候,老師要班上的同學輪流念英文課文,聽到真的是差點沒暈倒,當我前面的同學一一 念完,冷汗越冒越多,心想完蛋了!輪到我時,全身發抖地緩緩站起來,結結巴巴的念出用中文注音拼成的英文發音。我不太記得念完之後發生甚麼事情,大概因為 當時腦筋一片空白吧,只記得全班哄堂大笑以及面紅耳赤的自己。

就讀武陵高中,英文也是被慘電,大概都是班上倒數五名吧,高一剛開學時壓力真的是大到不行,有時候還會偷偷找朋友哭訴。

後來我好好想一想,英文不但是很實用的科目,也是在社會上生存的加分工具;更能幫助求職、加薪甚至是升官。後來我發憤要把英文學好,鞭策自己每天都要讀英文至少2小時。

我努力了一年從倒數幾名的名次慢慢往上爬,高二時大概是班上十幾名,高三時我已經能將英文的大大小小考試維持在班上前五名。並在大一的時候,獲得TOEIC多益測驗獎學金,讓不少朋友跑來問我:「到底怎麼把英文學好?」

跟朋友聊天時,我發現很多人會為了把英文練好而花大錢買高級的電子字典、雜誌、錄音帶,甚至是請家教、出國或是去補習班,其實真的不需要!所以特別寫這篇文章來破除學英文要花大錢的迷思。

不管你是學生、小朋友或是就業中,只要有想把英文學好的毅力、恆心和努力,再加上幾乎大家都有的電子產品和網路,那其實下面的10個免費英文學習資源其實就很夠了!

 

10個免費學好英文的網站

所屬類別分為四種:聽、說、讀、寫
適合程度分為三級:初級、中級、高級

特別強調一下,要把英文學好的前提是要釐清自己學英文的動機,如果這個動機夠強烈,那麼就可以支撐你一直主動學習英文,而不是被別人逼著學。動機可以是出國、炫耀、把妹、和世界接軌或是其他任何原因,沒有所謂的好壞,重要的是要能夠說服自己。

老話一句,學習語言的最好方式是把自己丟到那個環境裡,自然而然就會朗朗上口!如果你沒有這樣的資源,那就去爭取,可以是出國留遊學、交外國朋友、語言交換等等,如果真的沒辦法擁有這樣的環境,那以上10個網站也非常夠用了。

作者簡介_多益情報誌

多益情報誌為 台灣最大多益測驗及英文學習情報站,提供最新、最實用的英語資訊,讓學生、職場人士以及所有人都可以清楚瞭解自身的英語能力,以及如何增英文能力之方法; 並提供TOEIC多益最新消息,包括測驗訊息、相關活動、免費英文學習資源及介紹各種實用的工具及書籍,給讀者最及時、便利的英文資訊。

「多益時事通」專欄文章列表

Happy Face 發表在 痞客邦 留言(0) 人氣()

http://www.eisland.com.tw/Main.php?stat=a_suTJtK2

"這個世界可塑性比你想得還大,拿出你的鐵錘,把它敲成你想要的形狀。"

"The world is more malleable than you think and it's waiting for you to hammer it into shape." -- Bono. Le

創意像唱KTV? Why Creativity is Like Karaoke

這是一間全世界最會開動腦會議的公司—IDEO,他們訂定了brainstorm的7個原則:

  1.     Defer judgment 不批判
  2.     Encourage wild ideas 想法要夠野
  3.     Build on the ideas of others 讓想法長出另一個想法
  4.     Stay focused on the topic 不離題
  5.     One conversation at a time 一次一個人發言
  6.     Be visual 想辦法讓人看見
  7.     Go for quantity 越多越好

這也是一間把設計思考引進商業世界的公司。為什麼非設計思考不可?這個月的英語實驗室,IDEO創辦人David Kelly與Tom Kelly親自談怎麼打造創意文化,請把你找到的解答,註記在雜誌裡。

INC. 雜誌授權
文/LEIGH BUCHANAN 


Everyone is born creative, but schools and jobs and the hegemony of the conventionally minded steamroller it out of us. So argue David and Tom Kelley, who as leaders of iconic innovation firm IDEO have unparalleled cred on this subject. In their new book, Creative Confidence: Unleashing the Creative Potential Within Us All, the brothers urge a universal uncorseting of our creative selves. Editor-at-large Leigh Buchanan spoke with the Kelley brothers about how companies can tap this undeveloped human resource.

Define"creative confidence."

Tom: Creative confidence is the natural human ability to come up with breakthrough ideas combined with the courage to act on them. The courage turns out to be a really important part. Because lots of people have these ideas in passing but are too timid to put them into action.

David: Or afraid of the reactions they will get from the people when they do.

Why hasn's companies’obsession with innovation and risk-taking translated into greater creative confidence among employees?

Tom: Culturally we're trained--in business schools at least--to trust the analytical side and to trust the things you measure. And most companies are measured on this short-term stuff. To do the breakthrough innovations, sometimes you have to defer gratification. You've got to take a leap that may not pay off today or this month but that builds your brand and builds your company for the future.



If playfulness and experimentation are important to creativity, should managers think differently about scheduling and deadlines?

Tom: When people get creative confidence they focus more on iterations, doing experiments. Thomas Edison said that one of the greatest measures of your ability is how many experiments you can do within 24 hours. There was a leader from a financial services firm who went to the d.school. [Stanford's institute of design, founded by David Kelley.] He said, when we launch a new product it takes six months for planning, two months for visual representation of the framework of web pages, and two months for productizing a new online service offering. When he went back to his day job he said, starting next week I'm going to give them a day to do the whole thing. Then I'm going to give them an extension of a few more days. We will still make our deadline. But I can be on the twentieth iteration instead of the first iteration. And it will be better. 
 
David: You can have a deadline and have a first not-that-great idea and get it done. The trick is to get as many iterations in and as many generations in as possible before the deadline. Deadlines are kind of arbitrary anyway. I can spend the rest of my life designing a wastebasket and just keep making it better. You run out of time and budget. In our world it's just how many iterations can you get done given that they call time? In the Launchpad class at Stanford [where Kelley is a professor] students have five weeks to get a product live in the world. It's amazing what students can get done in that time.

Does virtually every conscious choice a person makes to change something involve design on some level?

David: Once you have that kind of design bias, everything you do is with intent. You wrap a present for somebody’s birthday or how you decide to get somewhere. It's all design. If you look around, everywhere there has been some decisions made about that object or about that experience. We notice that people do things with intent. They decided to do it this way as opposed to letting it happen to them.

You advise getting out into the field, observing potential users or customers. Who in the organization should do that? Just product designers? And how often do you have to observe a particular behavior before you consider it pervasive enough to address in your design?

Tom: In response to who does it, the answer is everyone in the organization. In response to how many: just to be clear, we're not sizing a market. We're not saying 82% of people do it this way or need this. You are looking for inspiration. And for inspiration, one person can be enough. In the book we talk about the team from a non-profit called Embrace going out in rural India with the prototype of an infant warmer for premature babies. They find this one woman who tells them that in her village they think Western medicine can be too potent. The product is supposed to be set to warm the baby to 37 degrees centigrade. She will only go to 31 or 32 degrees, just to be "safe." They changed the design based on a sample of one. Because lives were at stake. 

How do you make intuition coachable?

Tom: It's not so much coachable as practice. I think the great danger for people as they progress through their careers is they rely on intuition informed by old data. It's important to constantly refresh-to hold up the worldview you have in your head against the actual world out there in 2013. Also, your intuition is really the sum of your experiences. So the way that we say to improve your intuition is to have a lot more experiences and a variety of experiences.

Happy Face 發表在 痞客邦 留言(1) 人氣()



End of World in 2012? Maya "Doomsday" Calendar Explained


Monument text's "poetic flourish" confuses modern minds, experts say.


 








A painting of everyday life in a Maya village.



Illustration by H. Tom Hall, National Geographic



 


John Roach


for National Geographic News


Published December 20, 2011


It's remotely possible the world will end in December 2012. But don't credit the ancient Maya calendar for predicting it, say experts on the Mesoamerican culture.


(Related pictures: "2012 Doomsday Myths Debunked.")


It's true that the so-called long-count calendar—which spans roughly 5,125 years starting in 3114 B.C.—reaches the end of a cycle on December 21, 2012.


That day brings to a close the 13th Bak'tun, an almost 400-year period in the Maya long-count calendar.


But rather than moving to the next Bak'tun, the calendar will reset at the end of the 13th cycle, akin to the way a 1960s automobile would click over at mile 99,999.9 and reset to zero.


"We, of course, know that really means a hundred thousand [miles] and not zero," said William Saturno, an expert on Maya archaeology at Boston University.


"So, is [the end of Bak'tun 13] a large period ending? Yes. Did the Maya like period endings? Yes," Saturno said.


"Would this have been a period ending they thought was wicked cool? You bet. The biggest period endings they experience are Bak'tun endings."


But "was it predicted to be the end the world? No. That's just us."


Instead, for the Maya, the end of the long count represents the end of an old cycle and the beginning of a new one, according to Emiliano Gallaga Murrieta, the Chiapas state division director of Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History.


"It is like for the Chinese, this is the Year of the [Rabbit], and the next year is going to the Year of the Dragon, and the next is going to be another animal in the calendar," Gallaga said.


(Watch the full episode of 2012: Countdown to Armageddon online from the National Geographic Channel.)


Maya Prophecy for End of the World?


Written references to the end of Bak'tun 13 are few. In fact, most Maya scholars cite only one: a stone tablet on Monument 6 at the Tortuguero archaeological site in Mexico's Tabasco state. (Take a Maya quiz.)


What exactly the tablet says, though, is a mystery, because the glyphs in question are partially damaged.


Nevertheless, scholars have taken several stabs at translations, the most prominent in 1996 by Brown University's Stephen Houston and the University of Texas at Austin's David Stuart.


Houston and Stuart's initial interpretation indicated that a god will descend at the end of Bak'tun 13. What would happen next is uncertain, although the scholars suggested this might have been a prophecy of some sort.


This 1996 analysis was picked up "on many New Age websites, associated forum discussions, and even a few book chapters" as evidence that the Maya calendar had predicted the end of the world, according to Stuart.


(See "2012 Prophecies Sparking Real Fears, Suicide Warnings.")


Houston and Stuart, however, independently revisited the glyphs recently and concluded that the inscription may actually contain no prophetic statements about 2012 at all.


Rather, the mention of the end of Bak'tun 13 is likely a forward-looking statement that refers back to the main subject of the inscription, which is the dedication of Monument 6.


In an October blog post about his conclusions, Stuart makes an analogy to a scribe wanting to immortalize the New York Yankees' 1950 sweep of the Philadelphia Phillies in that year's World Series.


If this writer were to use the Maya rhetorical device thought to be in Monument 6's inscription, the text might read:


"On October 7, 1950, the New York Yankees defeated the Philadelphia Phillies to win the World Series. It happened 29 years after the first Yankees victory in the World Series in 1921. And so 50 years before the year 2000 will occur, the Yankees won the World Series."


Written this way, Stuart notes, the text mentions a future time of historical importance—the 50-year anniversary of the victory—but it does so in reference to the event at hand, i.e., the 1950 game.


"This is precisely how many ancient Maya texts are structured, including Tortuguero's Monument 6," Stuart writes.


2012 Apocalypse Just Poetic Flourish


According to INAH's Gallaga, this structure of Maya texts is what has confused modern minds, given our penchant for literal, straightforward reading.


Even if the Monument 6 inscription refers to a god coming down at the end of Bak'tun 13, it isn't a statement about the end of the world, he said.


"They are writing in a more poetic sense, saying, Well, on the 21st of December 2012, the god is going to come down and start a new cycle and the old world is going to die and the new world is going to be reborn—just to make it more poetic."


(Read about the rise and fall of the Maya in National Geographic magazine.)


Saturno, the Boston University archaeologist, agreed that the reference to a specific date is clear in Monument 6, but added that "there's no text that follows and says, Herein will be the end of the world, and the world will end in fire. ... That's not anywhere in the text."


(Related video: Surviving 2012—Preparation.)


Rather, Saturno said, the hype around 2012 stems from dissatisfied Westerners looking to the ancients for guidance, hoping that peoples such as the Maya knew something then that could help us through difficult times now.


In any case, even if the ancient inscriptions explicitly predicted the end of the world, Saturno wouldn't be worried, given the Maya track record with long-range prophecy.


"They didn't see [their] collapse coming. They didn't see the Spanish conquest coming."


 


 

Happy Face 發表在 痞客邦 留言(0) 人氣()














My favourite words of wisdom from Steve Jobs




This morning I woke to the news that Steve Jobs has died. At first I thought it was another ghastly Twitter hoax, but then I saw the links coming through and I realised that no, this time #iSad was anything but a sick joke.


I thought immediately of the quote I keep on my Facebook profile, one I’ve turned to many times to remind me to keep perspective when I’ve suffered a setback and I’m depressed. “Sometimes life’s going to hit you in the head with a brick,” he said during a Commencement address at Stanford University in 2005. “Don’t lose faith.”


I loved that quote, because it acknowledged that life has a way of punching you in the solar plexus when you least expect it — but you have to believe that things will get better. Coming from Steve Jobs of all people, that made sense. It was genuinely comforting.


Steve Jobs said a great many things over a career lived in the spotlight. Not all of them especially rousing — “It’s rare that you see an artist in his 30s or 40s able to really contribute something amazing” is one of the things he said once — but that Commencement address was intended to inspire, and it does.


You can read the entire text here, but in the meantime, these are the sections that resonated most with me, and to which I’ve returned again and again.


On figuring things out:


“Again, you can’t connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.”


On work (this is so, so true):


“You’ve got to find what you love. And that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers. Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle.”


On death (he had been diagnosed with cancer, but believed himself to be cured when he gave this speech):


“Death is very likely the single best invention of Life. It is Life’s change agent. It clears out the old to make way for the new. Right now the new is you, but someday not too long from now, you will gradually become the old and be cleared away. Sorry to be so dramatic, but it is quite true.”


And finally, on being true to yourself:


“Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.”


I’m giving a prize-giving speech at a boy’s school in early November. I’ll be talking to them about how to manage the balance between our digital selves online and our authentic selves — the people we are when nobody’s watching — and I don’t think it’s possible to say it any better than Steve did there. Perhaps we won’t achieve as much as he did living our own lives — but imagine what might be possible if we tried.


RIP Steve Jobs, the one crazy enough to think he could change the world, and did.


 


Happy Face 發表在 痞客邦 留言(0) 人氣()






The adventure of Taroko Trip      Mar. 05, 2012 speech


 


Gail, Gail where are you now?  Do you really go to Haulian today?  Yes, I took the Taroko train.  I just heard the news that the Taroko train was hit by the truck. It was horrible.  Dear Joyce, I just survived from that Taroko train.


 


My fellow Toastmaster, distinguished guests!  Have you ever experienced life’s danger?  Car accident, bike accident, motocycle accident, every day you can see those kinds of news from T.V. or newspaper.  We always think those kinds of things will not happen to us.  We only see those things on the news. 


 


To celebrate the Wedding anniversary, my husband-Hansen & I were planning a trip to Haulian.  This is the first time for us traveling Haulian, first time to take the Taroko train.  We have dreamed to visit Haulian for a long time.


 


We took a speeding Taroko express train to Haulian and sat at No.2 carriage. at 7: 24a .m. on Jan. 17.  I enjoyed seeing the scenery along the railway.  I closed my eyes and imaged how beautiful the Haulian was.  I was very tired and felt sleep. Suddenly, the train was shaking heavily. The carriage seemed being shaking away.  Was the earthquake hit the western of Taiwan ?  Many passengers were screaming and crying.  Hansen walked out of our railway carriage No.2 and found other railway carriage were all out of shape. He got in and told me, Honey, bring the luggage, let’s walk out from the carriage.  But, but I wanted to go to Hauliean.  Goodness me!  The Taroko train hit the truck at a crossing on Yangmei, it kept going after the impact, pushing the damaged truck along for 300 meters until it reached the Puxin Railway Staion.  The Ambulance and Emergency crew were all coming, many passengers were seriously hurt in the train accident. We are all safe, just Hansen was hurt on his legs and I hurt my neck.  Wow! If we took No.8 railway carriage, destiny would be quite different. The railway company urgently had the bus to transport us to ChungLi中壢.  Many passengers waited for the transportation at ChungLi, Hansen asked a help at the service counter of station, they said to Hansen –we are also the victims, please just wait at the lobby, everything was in a chaos now.   The railroad bureau evidently did not have good policy for crisis management


 


A family from Australia , they are really didn’t know where to go, whom to follow after the crash.  I applied all of the skill –communication I learned from Toastmaster to help them.  They followed us from 中壢to Hualien.  We waited for quite long time and took the train from Taipei to Haulian.  After the crash, there was only a lady who is in charge of the cleaning thing in the train  She was scared to death but she still leaded all of the passengers all the way from Puhsin to HaiLien  The passengers only can helped each other to reach their final estination –Haulian.   Finally, we arrived at Haulian about 3:55p.m.  It’s a long trip with experiencing dangers.  We are lucky to survive from the train accident.  It’s very pity to hear the train driver has been passed away.  He was trying his utmost to save all of the passengers till last seconds. He is really a hero.   Fortunately, we met very nice family and couple at Haulian.  They took us to travel and enjoy the beautiful of Hai-Lien. 


 


The adventure of Taroko trip is mysterious and unforgettable.   Life is unpredictable, a panning trip turned into a life experiencing danger.  The adventure of Taroko trip was mysterious and unforgettable.  Property and power are all not always possess by us, even our body would belong to the dust someday.  Like Steve Job said – Death is the best gift that God give to us. Treat every day is the last day in your life.  Sparkle your everyday’s life.  With the passion to do the things you desire.  Open your heart to care about those people who need a help.  Cherish what we have at this moment.  Cherish our beloved family and friends.  Our time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition.


 


 


Message from Friends


 


Yes, I agree with you , we should cherish everyone, everything around us. After I heard 鳳飛飛's death, I told myself , from now on ,no matter how, I must  live happily. Life is short,and I'm old, I really don't have much time, I need to live for myself, not for the others


 


 


Thanks for your message, but it is really terrible to hear that you took


the train with deadly accident weeks ago, fortunately, God stands at y


our side as you have bought a correct seats in a safe carriage, but it


 will be a unforgettable trip in your lifetime.


 


I agree that life is short because of unpredictable, obviously the illness


or accident will closer to us when we are getting older, undoubtedly,


we should cherish what we are at this moment, because yesterday never


come again.., anyway, thank God, because we are still alive on the earth


to have lovely family and close friend at ths moment... ..

Happy Face 發表在 痞客邦 留言(0) 人氣()

 


Fears SpreaEuro Fears Spread to Italy as the Debt Crisis Deepens


d to Italy as the Debt Crisis Deepens



By STEVEN ERLANGER

Published: November 9, 2011


STEVEN ERLANGER

PARIS — Since the start of the euro crisis two years ago, the big fear has been contagion, that market unease about the high debt and slow growth in Europe’s southern rim would infect the core. On Wednesday, contagion arrived with brute force.


Italy, a central member of the euro zone and its third-largest economy, struggled to find a new government as anxious investors drove Italian bond rates well above 7 percent and the markets tumbled worldwide. And although critics have warned of just such an escalation for months, European leaders again were caught without a convincing response.


Unappeased by the imminent resignation of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, investors appeared to have focused on the political gridlock in Italy that seemed likely to follow his departure from office, and the unenviable task awaiting a successor: restoring growth in a country that has seen almost none in a decade, and financing $2.57 trillion in debt. Italy, unlike Greece, is seen as too big to default and too big for Europe to bail out.


Only days after the Group of 20 meeting in Cannes, France, where President Obama and other world leaders urged European officials to take bolder action, they appeared frozen in past positions. The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, met with her kitchen cabinet of economic “wise ones.” They proposed the creation of a $3.1 trillion debt repayment fund that would pool and jointly finance debts of all 17 members of the euro zone in return for some conditions like legal debt limits and collateral.


But Mrs. Merkel effectively dismissed the idea, saying that it could be studied and would in any case require major treaty changes, which would take time. She instead emphasized that deep economic changes were required in some member states and that Europe needed to restore fiscal discipline.


“It is time for a breakthrough to a new Europe,” Mrs. Merkel said. “A community that says, regardless of what happens in the rest of the world, that it can never again change its ground rules, that community simply can’t survive.”


But the German prescription of austerity is not popular. It is Berlin, citing the very treaties that it now wants to adjust, that has resisted the boldest answer to the euro crisis — using the European Central Bank as the euro zone’s lender of last resort. Berlin does not even want to sanction American-style quantitative easing to promote economic growth, one recipe to stoking growth and reducing the debt burden.


“Contagion is alive and well,” said Rebecca Patterson, chief market strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management. Unlike Greece, she said, Italy could pose “systemic” risks to the global economy, accounting for 20 percent of the gross domestic product of the euro zone. “People are wondering if we’ve moved to a new level of the crisis.”


Europe has set up a special bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, but it has taken months to work out the details of how it would be financed and what its role would be, and at any rate it is far too small to cover the debts of a major country like Italy.


European promises to leverage the fund even up to $1.4 trillion have not been fulfilled. Efforts to get other nations to invest in it or in a proposed parallel fund were flatly rejected in Cannes. At most, surplus nations like China and Russia said that they would prefer to deal with an enlarged International Monetary Fund, where at least the rules are clear and there are firmer guarantees that money would be deployed effectively.


The European Central Bank itself appeared flat-footed on Wednesday. It has been buying Italian and Spanish bonds in a special and supposedly temporary program to try to keep down rates to sustainable levels while the bailout fund was allowed to enlarge.


On Tuesday, there was a suggestion that the new head of the bank, Mario Draghi, an Italian, had restricted its purchases of Italian bonds to try to put more pressure on Mr. Berlusconi to quit and on Rome to pass the deep economic reforms he had promised earlier in the summer. If so, the pressure worked. But if the bank was buying a lot of Italian bonds on Wednesday, as some reports suggested, it was overwhelmed by investors who are clearly beginning to wonder if the euro itself is failing.


Markets also seemed panicked by rumors out of Brussels that France and Germany were even discussing the expulsion of some countries from the euro zone, a suggestion quickly denied by French government spokesmen. France and Germany are discussing possible treaty changes that would create more coordinated “economic governance” for countries that use the euro, including more central surveillance of national budgets and their financial estimates, clearer rules and sanctions for those countries that violate them.


Britain and some of the other nine members of the European Union that do not use the euro are opposed to any treaty change, which should be approved by all 27 members. But Germany has suggested that countries using the common currency could adopt new political and fiscal treaties, accepting new rules that could potentially force some weaker countries to choose the difficult and equally uncharted path of leaving the euro.


Even if the euro stabilizes, that kind of treaty move would institutionalize a “two-speed Europe” — of the euro zone and the others — with different rules and conditions, which many members oppose. On Wednesday, Nick Clegg, the pro-European deputy prime minister of Britain, warned the euro zone nations not to create “a club within a club” as they integrate further to try to save the currency. That followed a quiet dinner of the 10 non-euro zone finance ministers in a Brussels hotel, a kind of warning to the others that the non-euro-using members intended to fight jointly for their interests.


It was another example of the way that the euro, which was meant to unite the Continent after the Soviet collapse and promote more federalism, is now pulling the European Union apart, both within the euro zone and between the euro zone and the others.


President Nicolas Sarkozy of France fueled anxiety on Tuesday when he said that the two-speed model for Europe was the only way forward given the prospect of an even larger European Union. “There are 27 of us,” Mr. Sarkozy told French students in Strasbourg. “Clearly, down the line, we will have to include the Balkans. There will be 32, 33, 34 of us. No one thinks that federalism, total integration, will be possible with 33, 34 or 35 states,” he said.


But in a speech delivered Wednesday night in Berlin, the president of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, pleaded for unity and called on all member states to join the euro. “A split union will not work,” a written draft said. “That is true for a union with different parts engaged in contradictory objectives; a union with an integrated core but a disengaged periphery; a union dominated by an unhealthy balance of power.”


But the crisis has sidelined Mr. Barroso, and plans for more integration seem almost utopian. In any case, they would take far longer to execute than most market investors want to contemplate.


The confusing Greek government drama — the country has yet to select a new interim prime minister — has already become a sideshow, given the small size of Greece. Investors, perhaps spooked by the 50 percent write-down in the face value of privately held Greek debt, want to hear that Italy is being fully backed and supported by its colleagues and partners. So far, that is a message that Germany, let alone France, is unwilling or unable to deliver.


And of course the fear in Paris is that France will be next. Mr. Sarkozy’s government just announced another set of budget cuts and tax increases in the face of lower growth, to keep to its promises to cut its own budget deficit.


But on Wednesday, the spread of 10-year French government bonds over their German equivalent rose to a euro area high of around 140 basis points. “Contagion” is not just a movie.




Reporting was contributed by Nicholas Kulish from Berlin, Rachel Donadio from Rome, Stephen Castle from Brussels, and Graham Bowley from New York.


Happy Face 發表在 痞客邦 留言(0) 人氣()





ILO: World economy on verge of new jobs recession


The ILO says the employment situation is already "precarious" around the world




The global economy is on the verge of a new and deeper jobs recession that may ignite social unrest, the International Labour Organization (ILO) has warned.


It will take at least five years for employment in advanced economies to return to pre-crisis levels, it said.


The ILO also noted that in 45 of the 118 countries it examined, the risk of social unrest was rising.


Separately, the OECD research body said G20 leaders meeting in Cannes this week need to take "bold decisions".


The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said the rescue plan announced by EU leaders on 26 October had been an important first step, but the measures must be implemented "promptly and forcefully".


The OECD's message to world leaders came as it predicted a sharp slowdown in growth in the eurozone and warned that some countries in the 17-nation bloc were likely to face negative growth.


'Moment of truth'


In its World of Work Report 2011, the ILO said a stalled global economic recovery had begun to "dramatically affect" labour markets.


It said approximately 80 million net new jobs would be needed over the next two years to get back to pre-crisis employment levels.


But it said the recent slowdown in growth suggested that only half the jobs needed would be created.


"We have reached the moment of truth. We have a brief window of opportunity to avoid a major double-dip in employment," said Raymond Torres from the ILO.


The group also measured levels of discontent over the lack of jobs and anger over perceptions that the burden of the crisis was not being fairly shared.


It said scores of countries faced the possibility of social unrest, particularly those in the EU and the Arab region.


Loss of confidence


Meanwhile, in its latest projections for G20 economies, the OECD forecast growth in the eurozone of 1.6% this year, slowing to 0.3% next year.


 













OECD's forecasts on GDP growth



Country
2011
2012

















US



1.7%



1.8%



Euro area



1.6%



0.3%



Japan



-0.5%



2.1%



China



9.3%



8.6%



In May, it had forecast growth of 2% per year in both 2011 and 2012.


It also cut its growth forecasts for the US to 1.7% in 2011 and 1.8% in 2012. It had previously expected growth of 2.6% and 3.1% respectively.


The organisation called for G20 leaders, who meet on Thursday and Friday, to act quickly.


"Much of the current weakness is due to a generalised loss of confidence in the ability of policymakers to put in place appropriate responses," the OECD said.


"It is therefore imperative to act decisively to restore confidence and to implement appropriate policies to restore longer-term fiscal sustainability."


It also called for the eurozone to cut interest rates.

Happy Face 發表在 痞客邦 留言(0) 人氣()





Turkey earthquake: More aid pledged to worst-hit areas


Hopes to find more survivors are fading now


Related Stories



The Turkish government has pledged more aid to thousands of people affected by Sunday's deadly earthquake in the east.


Officials said 12,000 more tents would be delivered to the cities of Ercis and Van and also to nearby villages.


Ankara has been criticised for failing to help some of the most needy who spent the second night in freezing conditions without heating and tents.


At least 279 people are now known to have died and some 1,300 were injured after the 7.2-magnitude earthquake.


Rescue teams with sniffer dogs continued through the night to search for survivors under the rubble of hundreds of collapsed buildings.


Cranes and other heavy equipment have been lifting slabs of concrete, and many residents have been joining in the rescue effort, digging with shovels.


But hopes to find more survivors are fading now, with the officials warning that the death toll is expected to rise further.


'We're freezing'

At the scene



As night fell, rescue work continued by floodlight at some 80 different sites across the town.


Each is a collapsed apartment block shaken to the ground by the fierce earthquake.


At one site, a six-year-old girl called Ellis Janplolat is missing. She'd gone outside to play when the earthquake struck.


Most of the collapsed blocks housed around 100 people and dozens are missing at each of the sites, so the number killed is likely to rise sharply.


Ercis is full of diggers, cranes and volunteers scrambling at the rubble. Among them are four brothers hoping to dig out a fifth brother aged 29, still alive but trapped under his collapsed shop.


Tented encampments have grown up in Ercis and the regional capital Van to house the homeless and those terrified of aftershocks, but this is a high plateau and the temperature falls below zero after dark at this time of year.


So for those camping out and struggling to survive under the broken concrete, it is a long, cold night.



Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Besir Atalay, in charge of the relief operation, said late on Monday that "from today there will be nothing our people lack".


Officials also were setting up more field hospitals and kitchens to help the thousands left homeless or too afraid to return to their homes amid continuing aftershocks.


But some survivors in the ethnic Kurd areas complained that not enough help was reaching them.


"Tents will not be enough - we do not have food, no rescue teams have reached here yet," said Serif Tarakci, an official from the village of Halkali, about 50km (30 miles) from Van.


"It's cold at night, everybody is outside and we're freezing here," the New York Times quoted him as saying.


Another resident of Van said that even tents were in short supply.


"All the nylon tents are in the black market now," Ibrahim Baydar, a 40-year-old tradesman from Van, told Reuters news agency.


"We cannot find any. People are queuing for them. No tents were given to us whatsoever," he said.


Opposition politicians earlier decried what they called "a lack of crisis management", saying that many people still lacked food, heating and tents.


They also said Ankara was wrong to refuse offers of foreign aid.


Ercis, population about 75,000, has been the worst hit, with some 80 collapsed buildings.



Earthquake area



  • One of Turkey's most earthquake-prone zones

  • Kurdish-populated

  • Ercis, an eastern city of 75,000 close to the Iranian border, was the worst-hit

  • Van, large ancient city of one million on a lake ringed by mountains, less affected

The BBC's Daniel Sandford, in Ercis, says most of those destroyed buildings are apartment blocks with dozens of people missing at each site.


Both Ercis and the larger city of Van, about 100km (60 miles) to the south, lie on a high plateau surrounded by snow-capped mountains.


'Primitive tools'

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's office said 970 buildings in the earthquake zone had been destroyed.


Mr Erdogan visited the area on Sunday and said many villages made of mud brick had been almost completely destroyed.


Some of the rescue workers have complained of a lack of adequate equipment, said the Hurriyet Daily News.


"We are working with primitive tools, we have no equipment," one rescuer told the Turkish newspaper.


Despite the difficulties, five people were pulled from the ruins of one collapsed building in Ercis on Monday after one of them called for help on his mobile phone, Anatolia news agency said.


Another man was rescued later on Monday, some 30 hours after the earthquake struck.





The earthquake struck at 13:41 (10:41 GMT) on Sunday at a depth of 20km (12 miles), with its epicentre 16km north-east of Van in eastern Turkey, the US Geological Survey said.


About 200 aftershocks have hit the region, it added, including one of magnitude 6.0 late on Sunday.


Turkey is particularly vulnerable to earthquakes because it sits on major geological fault lines.


Two earthquakes in 1999 with a magnitude of more than 7 killed almost 20,000 people in densely populated parts of the north-west of the country.




Are you in the area affected by the earthquake? You can get in touch with the BBC using the form below:



Send your pictures and videos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7624 800 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.

Happy Face 發表在 痞客邦 留言(0) 人氣()

Close

您尚未登入,將以訪客身份留言。亦可以上方服務帳號登入留言

請輸入暱稱 ( 最多顯示 6 個中文字元 )

請輸入標題 ( 最多顯示 9 個中文字元 )

請輸入內容 ( 最多 140 個中文字元 )

reload

請輸入左方認證碼:

看不懂,換張圖

請輸入驗證碼