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Poslao: 03 Apr 2022 09:37
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- Pridružio: 18 Feb 2015
- Poruke: 87
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@Tragač
Meni je upravo to jedna od odličnih stvari na ovom forumu. Da bismo imali diskusiju moramo imati ljude koji zaista misle različito, zar ne? Jednoumlje je otrov.
Ne znam koji deo tih zapadnih investicija u Indiji ide na IT sektor, ali nalazim podatke da je od IT sektora zarada skoro 200 milijardi godišnje, i da je trend da će i dalje rasti. To je oko 8% njihovog BDP-a.
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Registruj se da bi učestvovao u diskusiji. Registrovanim korisnicima se NE prikazuju reklame unutar poruka.
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Poslao: 03 Apr 2022 14:54
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- Pridružio: 27 Okt 2018
- Poruke: 961
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Litvanija od ovog meseca više ne uvozi ruski gas. Pozvala i ostale članove EU da krenu njenim primerom :
[Link mogu videti samo ulogovani korisnici]
Za sada neće sprečavati snadbevanje gasom Kalinjingradske oblasti.
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Poslao: 03 Apr 2022 15:00
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- aramis s

- SuperModerator
- Pridružio: 18 Jul 2007
- Poruke: 29257
- Gde živiš: iznad smoga Beograda
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- 13Ovo se svidja korisnicima: amaterSRB, voja64, peruni, Bubimir, MB120mm, Niske, nemkea71, S2M, nuke92, Tragač, pein, miodrag, BraneS
Registruj se da bi pohvalio/la poruku!
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Poslao: 03 Apr 2022 15:29
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- Pridružio: 25 Okt 2006
- Poruke: 322
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Slovacka pristala da placa gas u Rubljama!
[Link mogu videti samo ulogovani korisnici]
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Poslao: 03 Apr 2022 15:48
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- rikirubio
- Ugledni građanin
- Pridružio: 14 Feb 2015
- Poruke: 437
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[Link mogu videti samo ulogovani korisnici]
Vezano za gas i generalno energente.
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Poslao: 03 Apr 2022 15:52
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- danijell
- Legendarni građanin
- Pridružio: 30 Mar 2011
- Poruke: 2850
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liman ::Litvanija od ovog meseca više ne uvozi ruski gas. Pozvala i ostale članove EU da krenu njenim primerom :
[Link mogu videti samo ulogovani korisnici]
Za sada neće sprečavati snadbevanje gasom Kalinjingradske oblasti.
Zanimljiv zadnji pasus
Citat:Gas in transit through Lithuania continues to be transported for the needs of Königsberg, but in a different technical mode than usual, ensuring only the transfer of the amount of gas required for transit.
Neće biti neće, Njemačka ni Pruska...
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Poslao: 03 Apr 2022 17:31
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- Pridružio: 26 Jan 2022
- Poruke: 39
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Мишљење Економиста о ефектима санкција Русији (у спојлеру копија текста ако вас зеза пејвол)
[Link mogu videti samo ulogovani korisnici]
+ Текст под пејволомUnder unprecedented sanctions, how is the Russian economy faring?
Better than you might think
Mar 30th 2022
IN RESPONSE to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the West launched an economic war. America banned the sale of a wide range of goods to Russia; big companies pulled out by the dozen; and a number of countries together froze 60% of the central bank’s international reserves. The idea was to send Russia’s economy into free fall, punishing President Vladimir Putin for his aggression. In the week after the invasion the rouble fell by a third against the dollar, and the share prices of many Russian companies collapsed.
Is the West’s strategy still going to plan? The chaos in Russian markets seems to have subsided. Since its low in early March the rouble has jumped, and is now approaching its pre-war level (see chart). The main benchmark of Russian stocks plunged by a third, but has since recovered a chunk of its losses. The government and most firms are making payments on foreign-currency bonds. A run on banks that saw nearly 3trn roubles ($31bn) withdrawn came to an end, with Russians returning much of the cash to their accounts.
A battery of policies has helped stabilise the markets. Some are orthodox. The central bank has raised interest rates from 9.5% to 20%, encouraging people to hold interest-bearing Russian assets. Other policies are less conventional. The government has decreed that exporters must convert 80% of their foreign-exchange proceeds into roubles. Trading on the Moscow stock exchange has become, to use the central bank’s euphemism, “negotiated”. Short-selling is banned, and non-residents cannot offload stocks until April 1st.
The real economy, though, is in some ways the mirror image of the financial one: healthier than it seems at first glance. A weekly measure of consumer prices shows that they have risen by more than 5% since the beginning of March alone. Many foreign firms have pulled out, cutting the supply of goods, while a weaker currency and sanctions have made imports more expensive. But not everything is surging in price. Vodka, largely produced domestically, costs only a bit more than it did before the war. Petrol costs about the same. And though it is early days, there is little evidence yet of a big hit to economic activity.
According to an estimate using internet-search data produced by the OECD, a rich-country think-tank, Russia’s GDP in the week to March 26th was about 5% higher than the year before. Other “real-time” data gathered by The Economist, such as electricity consumption and railway loadings of goods, are holding up. A spending tracker produced by Sberbank, Russia’s largest lender, is slightly up year on year. Part of this reflects people stockpiling goods before prices rise: spending on home appliances is especially strong. But spending on services has fallen only a bit, and remains far healthier than it was during much of the pandemic.
Russia still seems sure to enter a recession this year. But whether it ends up faring as badly as most economists predict—the wonks are pencilling in a GDP decline of 10-15%—depends on three factors. The first is whether ordinary Russians start worrying about the economy as the war drags on, and reduce spending—as happened in 2014, when Russia invaded Crimea. The second is whether production eventually grinds to a halt as sanctions block firms’ access to imports from the West. Russia’s aviation sector looks particularly vulnerable, as does the car industry. Yet many big businesses that started during Soviet times are used to operating without imports. If any economy could come close to coping with being cut off from the world, it would be Russia’s.
The third and most important factor relates to Russia’s fossil-fuel exports. Despite the sheer number of sanctions imposed on it, Russia is still selling about $10bn-worth of oil a month to foreign buyers, equivalent to a quarter of its pre-war exports; revenues from the sale of natural gas and other petroleum products are still flowing in, too. This provides a valuable source of foreign currency with which it can buy some consumer goods and parts from neutral or friendly countries. Unless that changes, the Russian economy may stumble on for some time yet. ■
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Poslao: 03 Apr 2022 19:27
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- Apok

- Legendarni građanin
- Pridružio: 27 Apr 2013
- Poruke: 2531
- Gde živiš: Beograd
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^Кад прочитам "think tank" одмах помислим да је наручен текст/"анализа".
Наводно пристали да плате рубљама Словачка, Бугарска и Молдавија.
А баталили Латвија, Литванија и Естонија.
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Poslao: 04 Apr 2022 07:46
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- Srle993
- Legendarni građanin
- Pridružio: 24 Nov 2021
- Poruke: 3572
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Pa oni koji moraju ce i placati, Baltik i ne zavisi toliko.
U EU od Rusa jos ne zavise i Portugal, Spanija.
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