budget-deficit

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(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) The U.S. budget deficit fell by nearly half in January compared to a year earlier as tax collections from individuals rose and outlays fell, Reuters quoted the …

Original post:
US January deficit fell sharply to $27 bln-CBO

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UK budget deficit widens

by on May 25, 2011

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UK budget deficit widens

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UK budget deficit widens

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S&P: California’s Rating Will Remain The Same — For Now

April 25, 2011

Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services on Monday affirmed California’s A-minus general obligation rating with a negative outlook, but warned any ratings downgrade would likely be related to liquidity problems. “The outlook on California’s rating remains negative, mostly because of our view of the risk to the state’s cash position in the coming months if state lawmakers are unable to reach the level of political consensus necessary to resolve the remaining projected budget deficit,” the credit rating agency said in a statement. California lawmakers have so far agreed to spending cuts and other measures to tackle $11.2 billion of the state’s $27 billion budget gap and S&P said that marked “good progress.” But it added that a protracted stalemate in dealing with the remainder of the gap “could expose the state’s liquidity to significant risk of being insufficient to fund all of the state’s operations,” possibly leading to aggressive cash management measures by the state controller. (Reporting by Karen Pierog, Editing by Andrew Hay) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Simon Johnson: Fiscal Conservatives Dodge $10 Trillion Debt

April 20, 2011

Washington is filled with self- congratulation this week, with Republicans claiming that they have opened serious discussion of the U.S. budget deficit and President Barack Obama’s proponents arguing that his counterblast last Wednesday will win the day.

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Video: Feldstein Says Economic Growth Alone Won’t Lower Deficit

April 15, 2011

April 15 (Bloomberg) — Martin Feldstein, an economics professor at Harvard University, talks about the U.S. budget deficit and tax code. Feldstein speaks with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Feldstein Says Economic Growth Alone Won’t Lower Deficit

April 15, 2011

April 15 (Bloomberg) — Martin Feldstein, an economics professor at Harvard University, talks about the U.S. budget deficit and tax code. Feldstein speaks with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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France budget deficit increases 45.6% in Jan

March 9, 2011

France budget deficit increases 45.6% in Jan

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Video: Radwan Says Egypt’s Budget Gap to Widen After Mubarak

February 14, 2011

Feb. 14 (Bloomberg) — Egypt’s Minister of Finance Samir Radwan talks about the country’s budget deficit and plans to stabilise the economy. He speaks with Bloomberg’s Lara Setrakian in Cairo. Francine Lacqua also speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Another EU Country Has Its Debt Downgraded

December 23, 2010

LONDON — Portugal had its credit rating downgraded Thursday by the Fitch Ratings agency amid mounting concerns over the country’s ability to raise money in the markets to finance its hefty borrowings. Fitch said it was reducing its rating on the country’s debt by one notch to A+ from AA- and warned that further downgrades may be in the offing by maintaining its negative outlook. “The downgrade reflects an even slower reduction in the current account deficit and a much more difficult financing environment for the Portuguese government and banks than incorporated into Fitch’s previous rating (in March), as well as a deteriorating near-term economic outlook,” Fitch said in a statement. Fitch’s downgrade follows a warning earlier this week from rival Moody’s Investor Services that it may cut its A1 rating on Portugal by a notch or two because of uncertain economic growth, the high cost of borrowing on global markets and worries about the banking sector. Fitch’s reasoning is very similar and is likely to stoke renewed speculation that Portugal could well be the next country using the euro in need of financial help from its partners in the European Union and the International Monetary Fund – Greece and Ireland have already suffered the ignominy of being bailed out. The agency said the Portuguese government would likely meet its target of reducing its budget deficit to 7.3 percent of national income this year, but voiced concerns that this is heavily dependent on one-time measures, which don’t make a dent on the long-term state of the public finances. As a result, Fitch said the government will find it “extremely challenging” getting the budget into shape, especially if, as the agency expects, the economy falls into recession next year. The Portuguese government aims to reduce the budget deficit to 3 percent of GDP by 2012 and to just 2 percent of 2013, which would be extremely difficult if the eurozone’s smallest economy starts to contract again – in effect, lower growth means lower tax receipts and higher social spending, hardly conducive to budgetary health. “Failure to meet its 2011 budget headline and structural deficit targets would erode confidence in the medium-term sustainability of public finances that underpins Portugal’s current sovereign ratings,” Fitch said.

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Trade Balance, Import Prices, and Budget Deficit Dominate U.S. Markets

December 10, 2010

Trade Balance, Import Prices, and Budget Deficit Dominate U.S. Markets

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Europe Ahead: UK budget deficit and retail sales data are under scrutiny

November 18, 2010

Europe Ahead: UK budget deficit and retail sales data are under scrutiny

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French budget deficit narrows to $172.6b

November 10, 2010

French budget deficit narrows to $172.6b

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IMF, Pakistan agree on budget deficit target

November 7, 2010

IMF, Pakistan agree on budget deficit target

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Video: Cote Says Obama Gets No Credit for Avoiding Depression: Video

October 25, 2010

Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) — David Cote, chief executive officer of Honeywell International Inc., discusses the implications of the U.S. budget deficit for the economy and President Barack Obama’s job performance. Cote, speaking with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop, ” also talks about Honeywell’s third-quarter earnings. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Collender Expects Political `Stalemate’ on U.S. Deficit: Video

October 1, 2010

Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) — Stanley Collender, managing director of Qorvis Communications, discusses the outlook for the U.S. budget deficit and the prospects of inflation. Collender speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Canada’s budget deficit narrows to $462m

September 26, 2010

Canada’s budget deficit narrows to $462m

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Paul Krugman: GOP Is ‘Pointing A Gun At The Heads Of Middle-Class Families’ Over Tax Cuts

September 17, 2010

Mr. McConnell, who was self-righteously denouncing the budget deficit just the other day, now wants to blow that deficit up with big tax cuts for the rich. But he doesn’t have the votes. So he’s trying to get what he wants by pointing a gun at the heads of middle-class families, threatening to force a jump in their taxes unless he gets paid off with hugely expensive tax breaks for the wealthy.

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US budget deficit narrows to $90.5b in August

September 14, 2010

US budget deficit narrows to $90.5b in August

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US budget deficit narrows to $90.5b in August

September 14, 2010

US budget deficit narrows to $90.5b in August

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Video: Wilbanks Says Deficit Cut Would Be `Bullish’ for Stocks: Video

September 10, 2010

Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) — Wayne Wilbanks, chief investment officer at Wilbanks, Smith, & Thomas, talks about the possible impact of a reduction in the U.S. budget deficit on stocks. Wilbanks also discusses the mid-term elections, President Obama’s economic proposals and corporate earnings. He talks with Carol Massar, Matt Miller, Julie Hyman, Adam Johnson and Dominic Chu on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” Alan Knuckman of Agora Financial also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Regalado Says Miami Is Bringing Downtown `Back to Life’: Video

August 24, 2010

Aug. 24 (Bloomberg) — Miami Mayor Tomas Regalado talks about the city’s budget deficit and property market. Regalado, speaking with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop,” also discusses the impact of LeBron James’ signing with the Miami Heat on the city’s economy. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Reinhart Sees Quantitative Easing, Not Fiscal Stimulus: Video

August 19, 2010

Aug. 19 (Bloomberg) — Vincent Reinhart, resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, talks about the U.S. Congressional Budget Office’s budget deficit forecast and the outlook for fiscal and monetary policies. The CBO predicted the budget deficit for fiscal year 2011 will be $1.066 trillion, revised upward from an estimate of $996 billion in March. Reinhart speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Purisima Says Spending Cuts Won’t Hurt Philippine Growth: Video

August 9, 2010

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) — Philippine Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima talks with Bloomberg’s Susan Li about the country’s finances and economy. President Benigno Aquino plans to more than halve spending growth next year, instituting a freeze on hiring and new buildings and cars, to narrow the budget deficit from the projected record this year. Purisima speaks from New York. (Source: Bloomberg)

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US budget deficit tops $1 trillion

July 14, 2010

US budget deficit tops $1 trillion

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Greece reduces H1 budget deficit by 46%

July 13, 2010

Greece reduces H1 budget deficit by 46%

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Video: Berlusconi Targets Fraudulent ‘Blind’ in Budget Cuts

July 1, 2010

July 1 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Flavia Rotondi reports on fraudulent disability benefit claims in Italy. Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has declared war on welfare swindlers as he seeks to cut Italy’s budget deficit by about 25 billion euros. Disability benefits from Italy’s pension agency account for 16 billion euros a year, or 1 percentage point of the country’s gross domestic product.

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Europe Ahead: U.K. Budget Deficit to Widen Ahead of the Emergency Budget

June 18, 2010

Europe Ahead: U.K. Budget Deficit to Widen Ahead of the Emergency Budget

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Canada’s budget deficit falls to $44.8 billion

May 31, 2010

Canada’s budget deficit falls to $44.8 billion

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Canada’s budget deficit falls to $44.8 billion

May 31, 2010

Canada’s budget deficit falls to $44.8 billion

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Chile eyes zero budget deficit by 2014

May 30, 2010

Chile eyes zero budget deficit by 2014

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Schwarzenegger Seeks $12.4 Billion of Spending Cuts to Narrow Budget Gap

May 14, 2010

By Michael B. Marois and William Selway May 14 (Bloomberg) — California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger proposed a new round of budget cuts, including eliminating the state’s main welfare program for families, to close a $19.1 billion budget deficit for the year starting July 1. The $83.4 billion plan calls for $12.4 billion in spending reductions, $3.4 billion in additional federal aid and $3.4 billion in fund shifts, fees and assessments, according to the governor’s budget. This year’s budget was $86.4 billion. The Republican’s revisions come four months after his first draft of a 2011 spending plan stalled in the Democrat-led Legislature. Schwarzenegger has vowed not to raise taxes, forcing him to rely on deeper cuts. The proposals include dismantling the state’s main welfare program for families, known as CalWorks, as well as reducing subsidies for county-level mental health programs and in-home care for the elderly and the disabled. The plan also calls for an almost 10 percent wage cut for all state workers, elimination of all but preschool child care subsidies, and a 4.8 percent surcharge on home and commercial insurance policies to finance firefighting. To contact the reporters on this story: Michael B. Marois in Sacramento at mmarois@bloomberg.net ; William Selway in San Francisco at wselway@bloomberg.net .

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US budget deficit hits $83.3b in April

May 13, 2010

US budget deficit hits $83.3b in April

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Portugal targets 7.3% budget deficit this year

May 9, 2010

Portugal targets 7.3% budget deficit this year

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Greek budget deficit falls 10.6% in Q1

April 17, 2010

Greek budget deficit falls 10.6% in Q1

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Austrian budget deficit reaches 3.4% of GDP

March 30, 2010

Austrian budget deficit reaches 3.4% of GDP

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French budget deficit hits $12.6b in January

March 14, 2010

French budget deficit hits $12.6b in January

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US budget deficit hits $221b last month

March 11, 2010

US budget deficit hits $221b last month

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New Jersey Transit Plans 25% Fare Increase to Cope With Expanding Deficit

March 5, 2010

By Terrence Dopp March 5 (Bloomberg) — New Jersey Transit proposed raising fares by 25 percent system-wide and reducing service to help close a $300 million budget deficit. The changes would take effect May 1 and raise $140 million in revenue, NJ Transit said in a statement today. James Weinstein , executive director of the third-largest U.S. transit system, has said the agency also will cut jobs and trim salaries to cope with declining ridership and less aid. Governor Chris Christie, a Republican who took office Jan. 19, said last month he was cutting NJ Transit’s $296 million annual subsidy by 11 percent, or $33 million, to help close a $2.2 billion deficit in the state budget for the current fiscal year, which ends June 30. Based on the $331 monthly train fare for a commuter from Princeton Junction to New York Penn Station, a 25 percent increase would mean an additional $82.75. Riders taking the bus from Jersey City to the Port Authority Bus Terminal in Manhattan would pay another $27.25 monthly above the current $109. The agency proposed eliminating 32 of 725 commuter trains, with at least two trains cut on each of the system’s 11 lines. The Northeast Corridor line would see a reduction of five weekday trains, while the Morris and Essex lines would be reduced by seven trains on weekdays. Under the plan, the interval between bus arrival times would grow by as much as 20 minutes. Service would be discontinued on three NJ Transit bus routes and several local routes operated by private carriers, the agency said. The interval between light rail stops also would increase, the agency said. NJ Transit scheduled public hearings on the proposal in 11 locations for March 25-27. To contact the reporter on this story: Terrence Dopp in Trenton at tdopp@bloomberg.net

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Clinton Calls U.S. Record Deficit, Debt Growing National Security Concern

February 26, 2010

By Peter S. Green Feb. 26 (Bloomberg) — The record U.S. budget deficit and debt should be viewed as a growing national security concern, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told lawmakers yesterday. “We have to address this deficit and the debt of the U.S. as a matter of national security, not only as a matter of economics,” Clinton said in testimony to the House Appropriations Subcommittee on State , Foreign Operations and related programs. The panel was reviewing the U.S. foreign affairs budget for fiscal year 2011. “It is heartbreaking to me to know that 10 years ago, we had a balanced budget, and we were on the way to paying down the debt of the United States of America,” Clinton said, a reference to the government’s fiscal situation during the last year of the administration of her husband, President Bill Clinton . Clinton said that when she served as a senator from New York from 2001 to 2009 she watched “with consternation” as the U.S. “threw away the greatest leverage we would ever have internationally, and the greatest opportunity we would ever have” in international affairs. “I do not like to be in a position where the United States is a debtor nation to the extent that we are, with the projections” of deficits “going far into the future,” Clinton said. The White House is projecting a record $1.6 trillion budget deficit for the 2010 fiscal year, following a $1.4 trillion shortfall in 2009. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projects that deficits over the next 10 years will total $6 trillion. To contact the reporter on this story: Peter S. Green in Washington at psgreen@bloomberg.net .

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India’s Economy May Grow 8.2% Next Year, Creating Room for Stimulus Exit

February 25, 2010

By Cherian Thomas and Kartik Goyal Feb. 25 (Bloomberg) — India’s economic growth may accelerate to as much as 8.2 percent in the year starting April 1, providing room for a “gradual rollback” of fiscal stimulus, the finance ministry said before tomorrow’s budget. “The economy has posted a remarkable recovery from the global recession,” according to the annual Economic Survey prepared by officials advising Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee , which was released in New Delhi today. “The recovery creates scope for a gradual rollback, in due course, of some of the measures undertaken over the last 15 to 18 months.” Mukherjee may raise excise tax by 2 percentage points and the service tax to 12 percent from 10 percent, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said last week. India and China, the world’s fastest growing major economies, are withdrawing stimulus as consumer demand strengthens, stoking inflation and asset bubble concerns. India’s benchmark wholesale-price inflation accelerated to 8.6 percent in January, the fastest pace since October 2008. In China, where the economy grew 10.7 percent last quarter, property prices have surged 9.5 percent in January, the most in 21 months, as total new loans surged to 1.39 trillion yuan ($204 billion), more than in the previous quarter combined. Sixty percent of India’s inflation reading is contributed by food items after monsoon rains were deficient last year, the ministry said. Since December 2009, there have been signs of food-price inflation spreading to manufactured goods and services, the ministry said. “Inflation management therefore should involve controlling the demand situation as well as reining in inflationary expectations through various monetary measures,” the Indian finance ministry said. Budget Deficit Mukherjee is scheduled to unveil the budget for the fiscal year starting April 1 tomorrow at 11 a.m. in parliament in New Delhi. He had cut excise tax by 4 percentage points and stepped up government spending on roads and power since December 2008 to support the economy amid a global recession. The budget deficit may widen to 6.5 percent of GDP in the year ending March 31, a 16-year high, the ministry estimated today. India’s central bank governor Duvvuri Subbarao last month said the government must withdraw fiscal stimulus steps and cut the budget deficit to help cool inflation. The central bank, on its part, last month raised the proportion of deposits that lenders need to maintain as cash reserves to 5.75 percent from 5 percent to contain inflation. India must cut its debt to 68 percent of GDP by March 2015 from the current 82 percent, the ministry said, citing recommendations of the 13th Finance Commission, a government panel appointed to suggest a roadmap to reduce government debt. Savings Rate Mukherjee can start to reverse tax cuts as India’s $1.2 trillion economy may “breach” the 9 percent growth pace by March 2012, the finance ministry said, citing the country’s savings rates that now match those in Japan, South Korea and Malaysia. The economy may grow 7.2 percent in the year ending March 31, the nation’s statistics department said today. India’s savings rate is at 32.5 percent of gross domestic product compared with 28 percent in Japan, 30 percent in South Korea and 38 percent in Malaysia, according to the report. “Since these indicators are some of the strongest correlates of growth and do not fluctuate wildly, they speak well for India’s medium-term growth prospects,” the ministry said. “The savings rate is likely to rise further as the demographic dividend begins to pay off in India.” The finance ministry estimates 440 million Indians out of a total population of 1.2 billion are under the age of 18. India’s population will rise to 1.7 billion by 2050 and will overtake China as the world’s most populous nation, according to the United Nations. Rising Demand “It is entirely possible for India to move into the rarified domain of double-digit growth and even attempt to don the mantle of the fastest-growing economy in the world within the next four years,” the finance ministry said. Rising demand helped Tata Motors Ltd. , India’s largest truckmaker, post a 68 percent gain in sales in the three months ended December, while sales at Bajaj Auto Ltd, the second- largest motorcycle maker, more than doubled in January. Still, expansion in gross capital fixed formation, a proxy for investment growth, is at 5.2 percent, below the economic growth rate. That makes it necessary to watch the growth recovery in private investment in the fiscal third and fourth quarters while scaling back fiscal stimulus, the ministry said. To contact the reporters on this story: Cherian Thomas in New Delhi at cthomas1@bloomberg.net ; Kartik Goyal in New Delhi at kgoyal@bloomberg.net .

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U.K. Retail Sales Drop Twice as Much as Forecast as Cold Curtails Spending

February 19, 2010

By Jennifer Ryan Feb. 19 (Bloomberg) — U.K. retail sales dropped more than twice as much as economists forecast in January as the nation’s winter freeze thwarted spending on items from food to furniture. Sales excluding gasoline fell 1.2 percent from December, the Office for National Statistics said today in London. Economists predicted a 0.5 percent drop, according to the median of 26 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. The report uses new methodology in line with European rules. The longest cold snap since 1981 snarled traffic and kept workers home last month just as Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling raised value-added tax. With jobless claims at the highest since 1997 and the prospect of a government budget squeeze taking hold after the election, weakness in consumer spending may jeopardize the economic recovery. “The snow has obviously had an effect on shoppers, and many of them may have pulled forward spending into 2009 to avoid the higher VAT,” David Page, an economist at Investec Securities in London, said in a telephone interview before the report. “We expect retail sales to expand as growth picks up, though that may happen slowly. We haven’t seen a significant pickup in taxation and that may happen in the next year.” The pound fell as much as 0.3 percent after the report and traded at $1.5374 as of 9:32 a.m. in London, down 1.4 percent on the day. The yield on the two-year benchmark government bond was up 5 basis points today at 1.178 percent. The January data’s new methodology now includes sales of gasoline and excludes the repair of personal and household goods. The most appropriate comparison with prior figures is the measure that strips out auto fuel, the statistics office said. Electrical Goods The retail drop in January was led by a 2.4 percent decline in sales at food stores, while non-food stores showed no change. Household goods shops reported a 13.4 percent decrease, led by electrical goods, furniture and home repair items, the statistics office said. Including fuels, sales dropped 1.8 percent on the month and rose 0.9 percent from a year earlier. London-based Kingfisher Plc, Europe’s largest home- improvement retailer, said yesterday fourth-quarter sales at stores open at least a year fell 3 percent, hurt by the snowy weather and the rise in VAT. Chief Executive Officer Ian Cheshire said the company’s B&Q stores in Britain ran out of salt used to stabilize snow-covered roads. Snow fell in Britain every day for four weeks, leaving officials to ration road grit and prompting a government investigation into preparations for the cold. At the same time, Darling ended a 2.5 percentage-point cut in value-added tax, withdrawing emergency support for the economy to shore up the public finances. Budget Deficit Britain posted a 4.3 billion-pound ($6.7 billion) budget deficit in January, the first for the month since data began in 1993 as the recession hammered tax receipts. Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s Labour Party and the opposition Conservatives have put the deficit and the economy center stage in their election battle. A YouGov Plc poll for The Sun newspaper that ended Feb. 17 showed the Conservatives with a 9 point lead. Faster price gains may also limit consumer spending. The sales-tax increase pushed the inflation rate to 3.5 percent in January, the highest level in 14 months and enough to require Bank of England Governor Mervyn King to write an open letter of explanation to the Chancellor. The retail sales deflator, a measure of price changes in shops, showed a 0.9 percent annual increase, the statistics office said. To contact the reporter on this story: Jennifer Ryan in London at jryan13@bloomberg.net

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Europe Ahead: Eyes on the U.K.’s Budget Deficit

February 18, 2010

Europe Ahead: Eyes on the U.K.’s Budget Deficit

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Greece Has No Plans For New Measures to Reduce Deficit, Papandreou Says

February 5, 2010

By Gaurav Singh and Rakteem Katakey Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — Greece has no plans to put in place new measures to cut its budget deficit and the already announced steps are “credible,” Prime Minister George Papandreou told reporters in New Delhi today. They need to be implemented to achieve their goals and the nation has substantial funds available from the European Union, he said. To contact the reporter on this story: Gaurav Singh in New Delhi at gsingh31@bloomberg.net

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Spanish Borrowing Costs Jump at 2.5 Billion-Euro, Three-Year Bond Auction

February 4, 2010

By Matthew Brown Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) — Spanish borrowing costs rose at a sale of three-year notes on concern that the government will struggle to narrow its budget deficit. The government sold 2.5 billion euros ($3.5 billion) of the securities to yield 2.63 percent today, compared with 2.14 percent the last time the notes were issued on Dec. 3. The sale attracted 4.6 times as many bids as securities on offer, up from 1.72 at the last sale. “The focus is shifting toward Spain and Portugal where the deficit-reduction plans have been far less ambitious than Greece,” said Kornelius Purps , a fixed-income strategist in Munich at UniCredit Markets & Investment Banking. Spanish government bonds fell, pushing the yield on the two-year note up 8 basis points to 2.24 percent as of 10:42 a.m. in Madrid. To contact the reporter on this story: Matthew Brown in London at mbrown42@bloomberg.net

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Canada’s budget deficit hits $4.13 billion

January 24, 2010

Canada’s budget deficit hits $4.13 billion

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US budget deficit hits all-time high

January 15, 2010

US budget deficit hits all-time high

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US budget deficit reaches $91.85b in December

January 14, 2010

US budget deficit reaches $91.85b in December

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Romanian budget deficit reaches 6% of GDP

December 31, 2009

Romanian budget deficit reaches 6% of GDP

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Spain’s budget deficit widens to $103 billion

December 29, 2009

Spain’s budget deficit widens to $103 billion

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Canada’s budget deficit swells to $3.1b in October

December 20, 2009

Canada’s budget deficit swells to $3.1b in October

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