Tuesday 26th of November 2024

macronleon, the former bank teller, wants a new window dressing....

Exclusive: France's Macron calls for international taxation in push for climate solidarity

In a exclusive interview with FRANCE 24, RFI and franceinfo, French President Emmanuel Macron outlined his vision for tackling the twin issues of climate change and the fight against extreme poverty. Speaking from the Summit for a New Global Financing Pact, which he hosted in Paris, Macron answered questions from Stéphane Ballong (FRANCE 24), Mounia Daoudi (RFI) and Marc Fauvelle (franceinfo).

 

During a live appearance on FRANCE 24, French President Emmanuel Macron emphasised the need for global cooperation and "mobilisation" in implementing international taxes to support climateaction and poverty alleviation.

Macron urged assistance in identifying countries that currently lack financial transaction taxes (FTT) and taxes on airline tickets. Additionally, he called for support in rallying international taxation efforts at the International Maritime Organisation in July, highlighting the ineffectiveness of unilateral taxation.

 

Chinese debt can become a trap 'beyond a certain threshold'

Macron also stressed the importance of cooperating with China on international debt restructuring efforts, since Beijing has become a major international creditor in recent years, particularly in Africa.

The French leader admitted that Chinese debt can become a trap "if if gets beyond a certain threshold". He highlighted the importance of producing a plan in adherence with OECD practices for financial bailouts and lending.

When discussing the challenge of the green transition, Macron underscored the importance of not only saving the planet but also reconciling efforts to combat poverty. He stressed the need for greater mobilisation of private funding.

Regarding Senegal, the French president expressed an intention to facilitate the country's exploitation of its gas projects and boost its renewable energy development.

 

'Russia has to stop the war and respect international law'

Finally, when asked about Russia and its absence from the Paris summit, Macron called for Moscow to end the war in Ukraine and respect international law. He emphasised that resuming dialogue with Russia would be contingent on the latter.

Asked if he would take a hypothetical phone call from Russian President Vladimir Putin tomorrow, Macron replied: "Of course I'll take his call. I have no reason to call him at present."

Furthermore, he accused Russia of being "a destabilising influence in Africa", citing atrocities committed by Wagner Group mercenaries in the Central African Republic.

 

READ MORE:

https://www.france24.com/en/tv-shows/the-interview/20230623-live-watch-our-exclusive-interview-with-france-s-macron-on-climate-solidarity

 

RUSSIA AND CHINA ARE ALREADY ON THE CASE OF CREATING A NEW FINANCIAL SYSTEM AWAY FROM THE AMERICAN DOLLAR. THIS IS WHY RUSSIA ISN'T PARTICIPATING IN FRANCE'S Summit for a New Global Financing Pact... AMERICAN DEBT IS THE WORST PROBLEM ON GLOBAL FINANCES AND POVERTY AT HOME. IN REGARD TO THE MILITARY INTERVENTION IN UKRAINE, HAD FRANCE AND GERMANY BEEN HONEST IN REGARD TO THE MINSK AGREEMENTS, RUSSIA WOULD NOT HAVE HAD TO "INVADE" ANYTHING...

BUT THE GREATER GEOPOLOTICAL GAME BEING PLAYED BY THE LITTLE PAWN MACRON ON BEHALF OF THE UNITED STATES IS THE ECONOMIC CONQUEST OF THE "HEARTLAND", BY DESTROYING RUSSIA and CHINA...

 

 

MAKE A DEAL PRONTO BEFORE THE SHIT HITS THE FAN:

 

 

NO NATO IN "UKRAINE" (WHAT'S LEFT OF IT)

THE DONBASS REPUBLICS ARE NOW BACK IN THE RUSSIAN FOLD — AS THEY USED TO BE PRIOR 1922. THE RUSSIANS WON'T ABANDON THESE AGAIN.

CRIMEA IS RUSSIAN — AS IT USED TO BE PRIOR 1954

(SEE ALSO: https://www.rt.com/russia/578526-kremlin-praises-obama-crimea/)

 

A MEMORANDUM OF NON-AGGRESSION BETWEEN RUSSIA AND THE USA.

 

EASY.

 

THE WEST KNOWS IT.

 

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of debt ceilings....

Russia is seeking constructive relations with all African nations based on mutual respect, and does not aim to destabilize the continent, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said in response to allegations made by French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday.

Macron told France 24 that Russia was “using private paramilitaries” to embark on a “path of destabilizing Africa,” stating that Russia was “playing a role that does not benefit the world community.”

Peskov dismissed his accusations, and insisted that “Russia is developing its good and constructive relations based on mutual respect, mutual consideration of each other’s concerns and problems, with all African countries.”

The press secretary stressed that these relations “are in no way directed and cannot be directed against third countries.” He also pointed out that the Kremlin “would not want these relations to become a matter of concern to anyone.”

Russia has opposed Macron’s participation as an observer in the upcoming BRICS summit in South Africa. Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov argued on Thursday that there should be no place for the French leader at the conference and that it would be “inappropriate” due to the anti-Russian stance of Paris.

https://www.rt.com/russia/578532-peskov-russia-africa-destablization/

 

MEANWHILE: 

The Debt Ceiling Deal Is an “Eff You” to Poor People

 

MATT BRUENIG

The debt ceiling deal is a cruel agreement that imposes new work requirements on SNAP recipients and bureaucratic hurdles for those who still qualify. It will kick people off the rolls and inflict pain, seemingly randomly, with no regard for the human toll.

 

debt limit deal has been reached. The deal includes new rules for the food stamp program:

The bill imposes new work requirements for food stamps on adults ages 50 to 54 who don’t have children living in their home. Under current law, those work requirements only apply to people age 18 to 49. The age limit will be phased in over three years, beginning in fiscal year 2023.

The bill would also exempt veterans, the homeless and people who were children in foster care from food-stamp work requirements — a move White House officials say will offset the program’s new requirements, and leave roughly the same number of Americans eligible for nutrition assistance moving forward.

The rules being extended to ages fifty to fifty-four require individuals to complete, record, and report eighty hours of work in a month, either in the form of actual paid employment or by participating in an uncompensated “work program” organized by the government. The maximum monthly SNAP benefit for an individual is $281, which makes the eighty-hour work program route effectively the same as a job that pays $3.51 per hour. This is less than half the federal minimum wage of $7.25.

 Indiscriminate Culling of the Rolls

Most of the discourse about this change has been centered on the philosophical debate about the justness of conditioning benefit receipt on labor market activation and on the empirical debate about what effect these kinds of requirements actually have on employment.

These are interesting debates, but they miss the more mundane administrative reality of these kinds of rule changes. More than anything else, what happens when you tighten the requirements like this is that existing benefit recipients fail to realize that the rules have changed and that they need to submit new forms in order to keep their benefits going. This results in them being disqualified from benefits even if they are actually meeting the new requirements.

So while, in theory, this sort of reform aims to distinguish the active SNAP beneficiaries from the inactive SNAP beneficiaries and threaten benefit cuts to the latter in order to get them to take up work or a work program, in reality, this reform just uses information-dissemination frictions and paperwork burdens to indiscriminately cull the SNAP rolls of both active and inactive beneficiaries.

This happened in 2018 when Arkansas tightened work rules for Medicaid receipt. After that change, only 20 percent of people affected by the new rules even filled out the relevant forms and only 6 percent reported enough work to meet the requirements.

It happened again this year when the COVID-era Medicaid eligibility rules were rolled back. This change was meant to not only kick people off the program who would be ineligible for Medicaid but for the COVID-era expansion of the program. In practice, the vast majority of those who have lost coverage during the rollback have done so for procedural reasons related to failure to fill out new forms.

Early data shows that many people lost coverage for procedural reasons, such as when Medicaid recipients did not return paperwork to verify their eligibility or could not be located. The large number of terminations on procedural grounds suggests that many people may be losing their coverage even though they are still qualified for it. Many of those who have been dropped have been children. . . .

Other states have also removed a large number of Medicaid recipients for procedural reasons. In Indiana, nearly 90 percent of the roughly 53,000 people who lost Medicaid in the first month of the state’s unwinding were booted on those grounds. In Florida, where nearly 250,000 people lost Medicaid coverage, procedural reasons were to blame for a vast majority.

If we actually had some administrative ability to apply these new SNAP rules to only zero out the incomes of inactive recipients, then the philosophical and empirical debates would be much more compelling. But the actual policy we are talking about is randomly kicking out a bunch of fifty- to fifty-four-year-old SNAP recipients regardless of whether they are actually active.

 The Veteran Exemption Is Telling

To have a policy discourse, you need policy intellectuals of various political leanings to generate justifications for various policy choices. But justifications only work as justifications insofar as they connect to certain consensus values about what makes a policy good or bad.

This creates a strange situation for conservative policy intellectuals, because the welfare policy opinions of conservative voters and politicians are largely driven by resentments and punitive impulses that are not regarded as relevant to good policymaking. The role of conservative policy intellectuals thus becomes coming up with arguments that, though they don’t actually motivate conservative policymaking, nevertheless operate as justifications in a way that is legible to policy debates.

In the case of work requirements for SNAP, Medicaid, TANF, and similar programs, the real-life appeal is largely rooted in the desire to harm the kind of people who are imagined to fail the requirements: druggies, layabouts, and so on. Many think these kinds of people are scum and don’t want to see them receiving income.

 

But “fuck those people” doesn’t count as a justification within the norms of policy debate, and so conservative intellectuals are left trying to argue that these kinds of work requirements are actually good for the people who are subject to them. It nudges them out into work, which gives them meaning and community, and puts them in a position to advance in the labor market, which gives them more money.

This kind of stuff is entertaining to some extent, but the policymakers clearly do not think like this because, if they did, these rules wouldn’t always come with a laundry list of exemptions for sympathetic populations.

In this case, the SNAP work requirements are not going to be applied to veterans. This is obviously because veterans are a venerated group in our society. But if work requirements are good for the people who are subject to them, as conservative policy intellectuals claim, then they should especially be applied to venerated groups, like veterans, who we want good things for, right?

 How Are These People Supposed to Live?

Unlike most developed countries, the United States does not have what is often called a “social assistance” benefit — i.e., a last-ditch benefit that catches people who are otherwise unable to piece together a bare-minimum income from the market or the welfare state. The closest we have to that is SNAP, but SNAP has so many eligibility restrictions, which are now getting worse, that it does not function as a social assistance benefit. SNAP’s $281 per month in food vouchers is also nowhere near a bare-minimum income.

Elsewhere, social assistance at least nominally answers the question of how certain kinds of people who fall through all the cracks of the ordinary income system are supposed to live. These are usually very stingy benefits with very strict means tests, but they at least exist and serve this important function as a last-ditch protection.

But what is our answer to how these kinds of people are supposed to live in the United States? It’s weird that we don’t even seem to ask the question, let alone make any real effort to answer it.

What do we want a fifty-two-year-old who does not have a job and gets cut off of food stamps to do exactly? Beg on the streets? Die? Do crime? Seriously, what’s the idea? Does anyone know? Does anyone care?

 

 

https://jacobin.com/2023/05/snap-food-stamps-debt-ceiling-deal

 

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no pipe.....

Paris summit on climate and finance ends without deal on global shipping tax

Participants at the Paris summit on finance and climate stopped short of a deal to create a tax on greenhouse gas emissions produced from international shipping.

The two-day gathering of world leaders and finance bosses, aimed at tackling climate change and poverty, ended without a major announcement Friday. French President Emmanuel Macron, who hosted the summit, said upcoming reforms of the international finance system would be assessed within the next two years. 

The idea of a global tax on the greenhouse gas emissions produced from international shipping has been gaining traction and could potentially be adopted at a July meeting of the International Maritime Organization, the United Nations’ agency regulating shipping.

Some experts believe that a tax on shipping alone could raise $100 billion a year, and a strong endorsement of it in Paris would have provided Macron with a symbolic win.

“This is tax-free sector. And there’s no reason why it’s not taxed,” Macron said.

But the French president suggested that China and the US were not supporting the idea.

“If China and the US and several key European countries are not on board, then you would put a tax in place that would not have any impact,” he added. 

 

https://www.france24.com/en/environment/20230623-paris-climate-summit-ends-without-a-deal-on-global-emissions-shipping-tax

 

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it's a trick......

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XDO4GYm3_uQ

 

World Bank and IMF Pilot The New Financial Pact In Paris

 

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unhappy manu....

After BRICS rejection Macron is now accusing Russia of exploiting Africa

 

After facing rejection from Russia to attend this year's BRICS meeting in Africa, French President Emmanuel Macron criticized Russia's presence on the African continent.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCzAMkA-wpQ

 

 

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