The International Monetary Fund on Tuesday applauded members' efforts to cut their public debt but warned that the burden still posed a big risk as the global economy slows.
In its twice-yearly Fiscal Monitor report, the Fund measured the fiscal health of 60 member states including the United States, China, Japan, Greece, India and Brazil, and found that about half were on target to bring their budget deficits under pre-financial crisis levels by next year.
Full StoryRaising the bar on service excellence once again, King Food S.A.L., the BURGER KING® franchisee in Lebanon, has won the award for Best Customer Service at the 2012 BURGER KING® Convention for the Europe, Middle East and North Africa region, adding yet another accolade to the company’s growing stable of international awards and recognitions, a press release said Monday.
The award was presented to King Food S.A.L. last week in Dublin, Ireland - the venue of the Convention.
Full StoryAsian markets fell on Monday as concerns over the eurozone debt crisis overshadowed surprisingly good jobs data from the United States showing unemployment almost at a four-year low.
An underwhelming return for Shanghai after a week-long holiday added to the glum outlook for the day, while the euro erased gains made in New York on Friday.
Full StoryThe Bank of France said Monday that the French economy likely contracted by 0.1 percent in the third quarter of this year in its final estimation.
If the estimate is confirmed by France's official statistical agency INSEE, it would be the first quarterly contraction since France exited recession in the spring of 2009.
Full StoryThe World Bank on Monday slashed its 2012 growth forecast for developing countries in East Asia and the Pacific to 7.2 percent, dragged down by China's worst economic performance in 13 years.
It said China's economy would grow just 7.7 percent this year, down from 9.3 percent in 2011 and its slowest rate since 1999, but added that stimulus measures would help push it back above the crucial 8.0 percent mark in 2013.
Full StoryDubai will spend 1.5 billion dirhams ($408 million/313 million euros) to link the Business Bay with the Gulf, the chairman of the roads and transport authority said on Saturday.
Mattar al-Tayer said the extension of the Business Bay Canal is a strategic project that will run 2.8 kilometers in length, with a width ranging from 80 to 100 meters.
Full StoryIran sought on Saturday to reverse a collapse of its currency by imposing a fixed dollar rate, days after protests erupted over the rial's plunge on the open market, said money changers who were refusing to comply.
The order came as ordinary Iranians struggled with growing economic problems that have caused a big jump in daily prices.
Full StoryEU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso says a blueprint for a banking union and supervision of the banking system will be presented at the EU's October summit as part of measures to raise confidence in the euro currency.
Barroso spoke with reporters Saturday after meeting with Malta Prime Minster Lawrence Gonzi following a gathering of five southern European countries with five North African nations.
Full StoryMyanmar banking officials on Saturday sought to reassure nervous savers after rumors over the fate of the boss of the country's biggest private bank saw account holders dash to withdraw their cash.
Customers of Kanbawza Bank in Yangon pulled out around nine billion kyat ($10.5 million) net on Friday -- more than four times the maximum amount that would normally be expected -- according to the bank's vice chairman Than Lwin.
Full StoryA senior European Central Bank official is insisting that the bank can't help Greece by agreeing to roll over the government bonds it holds or accept lower interest rates.
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, who wants more time to enact reforms and budget cuts, has suggested the ECB could help that way.
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