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Money
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Crude oil prices and its influence on economy
Crude oil is one of the most demanding commodities in the world. Hence any slightest variation in the prices of crude oil can have a notable influence on the economy of many countries. The highly volatile nature of crude oil has forced many companies to move away from crude oil industry. The prices of crude oil are often monitored by economists around the world and they pass crude oil news to the leading companies in crude oil industry. The consumption level of crude oil has increased is increasing continuously every year.
Like any other products crude oil prices too undergo more variations during its shortage and excess supply. It has been found that a massive rise or fall in crude oil price will have a notable impact on the stock market of many countries. Therefore the stock exchanges of most of the countries always keep a close eye on the changes in crude oil prices.
Most of the oil producing nations imports oil to other non-oil producing nations. For example India imports crude oil from other countries to fulfill the oil requirements.
Most of the oil investors are keen to know the latest crude oil news as they are always wager to know the latest crude oil price and the impact it can bring on the market.
Any variation in crude oil influences the other industrial segments too. Higher crude oil price means higher price of energy, which negatively affects other trading practices which are directly or indirectly connected to it.
Many factors influence the price of crude oil. But the basic influence is the demand and supply, which often helps in a self price correction method.
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October 31, 2010 at 3:09 pm
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The Scheme – BBC One
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00sjs1t
An observed documentary series following the dramatic and often emotional highs and lows of daily life for six different families all living in one large housing scheme in Kilmarnock
this programme is comedy gold at times . episode 1 on iplayer now
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October 18, 2010 at 8:37 pm
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Voluntary work in Nepal,Nepal Tourism Year 2011 be a Volunteer in Nepal
MOVE Nepal (Master organisation of Volunteers for Experience)- Voluntary work in Nepal
MOVE Nepal is registered as non profit and non government organisation (NGO) associated with social welfare council of Nepal. we offers
Affordable Volunteer programs in Nepal to the people from all over the world in the Field of -
-Teaching various subjects at School
- Assisting orphanage Home
-Teach and Learn at Monastery
-Homestay and cultural Exchange
- Assisting at Health post or Hospital
-School and community maintenance
-Photography and Journalism Experience
Also You can Join Reacational Activities -Trekking in Himalayas,White water rafting,Wildlife Jungle safaries ,Travelling to Birth place of Lord Buddha,Bunjee Jumping,Hiking and more during the time of your program or After finishing your programme,MOVE Nepal always arrange the safety and quality services to their Volunteers and also get the discounted rates for Reacational activities.
The volunteer program is available to individuals or to groups of up to 30 people. Placements range from two weeks to three months. We also focusing on school groups, university students, adult groups and professional organizations to create and run custom programs for cultural visits, service projects, volunteer works,Researcn, and internship works in the Himalayan kingdom of Nepal.With our extensive local network, experienced staff and comprehensive information about all aspects of Nepal, Our staff is able to develop extraordinary opportunities in any corner of Nepal.Our group program is equal in quality to other international groups working in Nepal, while our fee is much cheaper (40 - 50%), as we use local manpower and resources to run and develop our program.
Volunteers are welcome to design their own program, if they have the necessary skills and knowledge to do the tasks. Previous volunteers have participated in business development, teacher training programs, and local economic development schemes.
It is possible to participate in almost all of these programs in each development community or region. Please let us know if you have a preference for a particular location.Volunteers can participate in any of the following programs throughout our communities. In some cases, it is possible to blend certain programs together.
For more information plez do not hesistate to contact us-
Mr. Bishal paudel
Director
MOVE Nepal-Global Voolunteers for Nepal
Paknajol-16,Thamel,kathmandu
POB- 23889
Phone no - 00977 9841829102
Website- Welcome to Movenepal | movenepal | travel & volunteer in Nepal |
Email- info@movenepal.org or movenepal@gmail.com
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August 29, 2010 at 6:02 pm
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Work for Life, or Live for Work
Something that has plagued my mind for so long now. Do I live for work, or work to live.
For too long Ive worked a pointless job, earning to live for the weekend. Over the last year or so though, Ive become more of a person, more Independent. My social life has began to expand In such ways that I impact society as much as If I contributed through work. At least that's how my perception has changed.
I have always thought the goal of life, or the more mainstream less spiritual side of life, has been to get myself a career. Its drummed Into you from the earliest age.
However, over the last year, Ive seen how people can make a difference in their recreational life. For some people, their "weekend time" is their full time. That's their passion, and that's what they drive to progress. I'm talking more about some one's place in society that hasn't derived from their job, or chosen career.
Basically, without jibber jabbering on, I'm asking whether you work for life, or live for work.
I appreciate that some people's social life is mixed with their career. Like sound engineers, and other such jobs. But what about everyone else. I know alot of people are passionate about the free party scene, or just the "rave" scene, and for what It mostly stands for. I want to know what sort of place It has In your lives, or what place you want It to have.
I want to be rich. I think I can be; eventually. Although I'm at the point where i need to decide what Is important to me, and where I should go from here. I know there Is alot of folk on here that have lived the life already and have moved on. And on the contrary, there are some who of similar age, still life that live that they did as a teen.
I dunno, Its a funny one. Maybe the answer comes with age an experience. My mum was in my shoes many years ago. She was on the free party scene, living it just as I am now. However, she had me, and although she was still involved, naturally she had to give It up for the sake of my upbringing. She now owns a very successful business though.
What direction should I take? Well, What direction did you take... ?
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March 8, 2010 at 8:21 am
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Ebay stuff from China
Is it normal to take a month to receive stuff in this manor? or at least not unheard of? getting a bit annoyed now.
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February 14, 2010 at 10:49 pm
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Man Lives For One Year Without Money
Man lives for a year without money - MSN News - MSN UK
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November 29, 2009 at 7:04 pm
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UK : NW : £8000 of taxpayers money spent to improve old northerners sex lives..
more proof the North is getting gentrified :laugh_at:
A COUNCIL has spent £8,000 of taxpayers' money on a sex guide for the over-50s, it emerged today.
Manchester City Council, along with NHS Manchester, has produced 5,000 copies of the free booklet, which covers more than 40 pages.
It offers dating and bedroom tips for more mature lovers, including watching a "sexy movie", reading erotic books, trying new sex positions and vacuum pumps and Viagra to combat impotency in men.
The council said it felt that all of the literature in the field was aimed at younger people, and it wanted to produce something for older taxpayers.
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October 3, 2009 at 2:12 pm
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I’m entitled to a share of $22,500,000
Urgent Assistance
Dear sir/madam,
I am Umaru Migolo,I am the Credit and Audits Manager with Bank of Africa Ouagadougou Burkina Faso.I am contacting you with respect to transfer the sum ($22.500,000.00) Twenty-Two Million, Five Hundred Thousand United States Dollar) deposited by a major supplier of Agricultural Equipments in West Africa named Mr.Christian Eich who die along with his family on 31st July 2000 in Concorde Air Crash.
Through my investigation, I find out that he die along with his next of kin and the roll-over on the funds has also expire because the bank law stimulates that after Ten years where the next of kin did not appear for the claim funds, the fund will transfer into bank treasury as unclaimed funds. In order to avert this negative development, I will like to seek for your permission as a foreigner to stand as the next of kin to Mr.Christian Eich so that the fruits of this old man's labour will not be use for financing government. The money will be paid into your account for us to share in the ratio of 50% for me and 50% for you and any expenses incurred in the course of the transaction will be made by both of us.
There is no risk involve in this project as my position in my bank and with the aid of my personal information I will be provided to make you the legal beneficiary and the legality of this project will correspond with local and international laws of inheritance.Upon your response, I shall then provide you with further information and modalities that will help you understand the transaction.You should observe utmost confidentiality, and rest assured that this project would be most profitable for both parties because I shall require your assistance to invest my share in your country.
Awaiting your urgent reply
Best Regards
Umaru Migolo.
how should i reply to this?
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September 25, 2009 at 3:58 pm
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Real madrids credit crunch
40 million for Kaka and 80 millon for Ronaldo.
I like my footy but this is crazy stuff :you_crazy
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June 11, 2009 at 5:30 pm
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getting a loan
does anybody know any good companies? that arent going to totally rip me off? :hopeless:
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June 4, 2009 at 7:35 pm
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This is Awesome! Paid to Bang his Wife – lol
http://www.just-whatever.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/sex-sells.jpg
what a story... the irony at the end.
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April 1, 2009 at 6:24 pm
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Decisions that could Change the Rest of Your Life FOREVER!
basically, i'm in college doing a graphics course on my 1st year. the course was not what i expected, we do fuck they said we would, and i'm learning nothing at all, although it is relatively easy. because of this i keep missing lessons and go and for a smoke or stay at home in bed all day as i cant be arsed to ped for 45 mins each morning in the freezing cold. i've now fallen behind in my work and attendance.
i now have a choice, i can either stay on for the rest of this year and then another, work hard, go to all lessons and but be bored and unmotivated. or i could leave now and try to get a job in the real world.
i just don't know what to do, do i need these grades? if i leave will i regret it later? is it hard to work your way up the job 'ladder'? i don't even know what type of job i want, how i'm going to get it or if ill be good enough? i also don't want to be stuck doing the same crap job all my life, i always look at ppl doing menial tasks during the prime of their life and think i don't want to be like that. i don't want to be stuck doing the same low paid shit all my life, but then, if i leave now, is that what will happen to me?
i know a lot of you have been thru a lot harder shit, this ^ ^ may sound pathetic to you guys, but for me, i've never had to make any decisions that could change the rest of my life. ever. im too used to being in school were your spoon fed everything and don't have to think very far ahead. thats why im asking you ppl for advice. cheers
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March 31, 2009 at 9:00 pm
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The Credit Crisis Explained
[yt]Q0zEXdDO5JU[/yt]
[yt]iYhDkZjKBEw[/yt]
:you_crazy
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March 30, 2009 at 10:03 pm
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Bank of England to Manifest 75 Billion Pounds for the Economy
ok so the bank of england are gonna print 75 billion pounds worth of money that previosly didn't exist and buy bonds with it to try and flood the economy with cash to get us out of resesion ... this scares the shit out of me .. i feel that this could go horable horable wrong and make things ten times worce .. i don't know enoght about economics to give good reasons why .. but i understand this is a last resort and there are probably good reasons why it wasn't tried b4 when resession could of been avoided ... i think one risk is such a jump in our economy that we could get inflation start again strait away .. i can see horible things coming from this .. but then i have no better sugestions ...
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March 7, 2009 at 9:07 am
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Pinned
The British Economy
I'm sightly surprsied that there haven't been any topics on here about the state of the british economy, given that we are closer than any other country in the world to going bankrupt... escentially following Iceland
i don't normally agree with much Polly Tonybee has to say but with this article she is absolutely bang on
Owners must be weaned off the house-price drug
Now is the time to be honest about what is needed to avoid another wild boom: taxes geared to discourage inflation
Kick-starting the housing market is the urgent priority, isn't it? The engine is dead, not even a splutter. Brown and Darling keep stamping and jump-starting, but house prices keep falling by £140 a day. Rising repossessions will feed back into the loop, accelerating the price fall. New home building is down by some two thirds, and 450,000 construction jobs may be gone by next year.
So the government put money into preventing repossessions, and yesterday Northern Rock was reborn as a lender able to offer mortgages of up to 90%. HomeBuy Direct will soon offer mortgages to some 15,000 first-timers. It's a start, yet only a fraction of what used to be lent. But what, exactly, is the aim? House prices are still far too high - they are only back to about 2006 levels, still crazy money. Prices need to fall further to regain any reasonable multiple of people's incomes.
But every time prices fall, another round of bad debts hurt the banks' balance sheets and the taxpayer has to pump in more. The nation is still deeply dependent on house prices rising for ever. We still live in a bubble economy, with no way to live except by reinflating it. The state itself has been mainlining on the house-price drug, as addicted as the happy home-owners.
With five million on the housing waiting lists, the state acquired much social housing by demanding that property developers add in a quota for free. Through section 106 planning agreements, developers had to build schools, GP clinics, playgrounds and roads to pay back some of the value bestowed with planning permission.
All this, however, depended on ever-soaring house prices. If profits now return to earth, who will pay for all that infrastructure? Housing associations, councils and government depended on price inflation as much as property developers did.
When Gordon Brown moved into No 10 promising 3m new homes to make up for Labour's failure to build, that too depended on permanently rising prices. That explains the ambivalence about what housing policy should be now. So desperate is everyone to get the market moving that first-time buyers are rashly wooed with grants to buy homes that may ruin them if prices keep dropping.
Please can we have our bubble back, clamours just about everyone. The 70% who own homes and those who dashed into buy-to-let property yearn for the magical unearned wealth that came from nowhere. Most people will only judge that the slump is over on the day they see prices rise again in their local estate agent's windows. Normality returns at last! Everyone knows this fairy money caused the crisis, but since about 2003 real incomes have hardly risen, except among the top 10% of earners. House prices sustained the feelgood spending. Where, many economists ask nervously, is our growth to come from now if not in fantasy finance or property boom?
Sober observers watching the government trying to start the dead motor of the housing market warn that once the engine catches, an uncontrollable, rocket-fuelled turbo take-off will leave them standing. Pent-up demand is high: plenty of people have money to invest if they see a chance. Property speculation is hardwired in the British brain after decades of a one-way bet - with only a few small blips. Bricks and mortar are our pensions, piggybanks, casinos, our children's university and their first flat deposit. How do we return to regarding a home as just another commodity like saucepans?
Revive the private rented sector, the experts say. Be like France and Germany, where most people rent for life and young families aren't crippled with mortgage debt. But ask these same experts if they own their homes: they do. Ask if they help their children to buy and they do - with good reason. The British tax system urges us to use property as a bank, because it is barely taxed. In countries with a balanced choice between buying and renting, property is taxed the same as other investments. But not here.
Now is the time to tell people that house prices will not be allowed to go mad again. Announce a tax to be imposed on future gains (not retrospectively). There are plenty of ways to do it. Some administrations impose an annual tax, including many US states. Some urge a land value tax system. It would be easy to impose capital gains tax on all future rises: that 18% on any inflation in value, only to be paid on selling it, could stop another bubble. The money raised could be earmarked for building social and private rented homes, or helping others to buy.
But suggest that to politicians and they blanche at the very idea, even while agreeing that it should be done - in theory. Parties that dare not revalue the banding system for council tax - which has unchanged since 1991, letting enormous wealth escape even that modest rise - are certainly not in a mood to challenge the Englishman's right to inflate his bouncy castle. Current pressure is all for even less tax. Property developers want to escape their section 106 planning gain obligations. Progress suggests a stamp duty holiday. Inheritance tax cuts will ensure virtually no family homes are ever taxed.
The colossal housing shortage helps fuel BNP support. The government is trying to build, allowing councils to borrow and build again, a bit. Land is being acquired cheaply from bankrupt developers. The new Homes and Communities Agency is putting together a commercial consortium to build £1bn worth of private rented property. Northern Rock could become the national good lender bank. But none of this is enough to hold back the mighty thrust of the property market once it sets off again.
Light the blue touch paper and this small island with huge housing need and tight planning controls will see another unsustainable boom, South Sea and tulips all over again. Almost alone in the world, our tax regime is purpose-built to inflate property. Shares, savings and pensions have taken a hard knock: bricks and mortar will still be a better bet while they are untaxed. Most people will stay both seduced and enslaved by property, while 30% have no chance of joining in, apart for ever in social housing ghettos. Ignore any politicians talking about rebalancing the housing mix between ownership and renting, unless they are willing to use tax to dampen the incentive to buy.
polly.toynbee@guardian.co.uk
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February 26, 2009 at 4:26 pm
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