Economy

No plan to ask for extra billion euros, says Latvian prime minister

Latvia Prime Minister Valdis DombrovskisRiga  - Latvian Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovskis said Monday his government did not intend to approach international lenders for an additional 1 billion euros (1.35 billion dollars) on top of an existing 7.5-billion assistance package, as reported by some media.

"Is Latvia's government requesting an additional billion? The answer is no," he said during a press briefing.

However, Dombrovskis stopped short of ruling out such action in future.

Hungary's central bank holds base rate at 9.5 per cent

HungaryBudapest  - The Hungarian National Bank opted to maintain its high base rate of 9.5 per cent at a meeting of its Monetary Policy Council on Monday.

The bank said in a statement that the decision was a response to worsening economic conditions and a need to maintain stability and the value of the national currency.

The decision was announced after a morning of wild swings in the value of the forint, when it weakened to 307 against the euro before firming slightly.

This volatility came two days after Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany's surprise announcement that he was ready to step down.

Do not accept your bonus, Dutch ING asks management

Do not accept your bonus, Dutch ING asks management Amsterdam - Dutch ING Bank has asked its top 1,200 managers not to accept their bonuses for the year 2008.

Quoted in Dutch daily newspaper Volkskrant on Monday, ING's Jan Hommen, who will formally be appointed as chief executive officer in April, said many managers are prepared not to accept their bonus.

Hommen, who spoke about a "moral appeal" to ING's managers, said the Dutch bank would only pay bonuses during 2009 "after a new reward system has been established."

Thailand's economy to contract 3 per cent

Thailand's economy to contract 3 per cent Thailand - Thailand's economy is expected to contract by 3 per cent this year and could contract by up to 9 per cent if the government fails to push through stimulus programmes, Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij said Monday.

"If the government had no stimulus programmes the gross domestic product (GDP) could contract 8 to 9 per cent this year," Korn told reporters.

The Fiscal Policy Office has lowered its GDP growth projection for 2009 from minus 2 per cent to minus 3 per cent, he said.

Singapore's poorest hit hardest by rising inflation

Singapore's poorest hit hardest by rising inflation Singapore - Singapore's poorest were hit hardest by rising prices for food, housing and electricity in 2008, as the city-state's inflation climbed to its highest level in 28 years, data published by the Department of Statistics on Monday said.

Singapore's consumer price index (CPI) for general households rose by 6.5 per cent in 2008, the highest level since
1981 when it came up to 8.2 per cent.

It was more than triple the 2.1-per-cent increase of 2007.

British thinktank warns of "global pandemic of unrest"

British thinktank warns of "global pandemic of unrest" London - A leading British thinktank Friday warned of the "grave threat" of social unrest in response to the global recession over the next two years.

The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), in a paper published Friday, rated the risk of upheaval that could "disrupt economies and topple governments" as "high or very high" in 95 countries.

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