Carlos
Banned
- Messages
- 2,647
- Reaction score
- 700
- Points
- 0
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- E-V22/YF66572
- mtDNA haplogroup
- J1c5c1
here is an interesting article
http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3441/europe-secessions
@ Carlos
I do not understand how you can be so undemocratic....you are basically on the verge of being a racist
How dare you?
This article is full of inaccuracies, and not captures the situation.
It is an indignity daring to say that the 17 regions only 14 can be considered totally Spanish, and is unworthy of an undocumented own daring to say something.
The regions have their own regional language also have Spanish as an official language, the language that is common to all Spanish and so mistreated by the government cataliban lately. So very protegias regional languages by regional governments at the official level, but that the street can not enforce or control and the Spanish language is used completely as in any other region of Spain.
Is Galician is a dialect of Portuguese? Almost all understand Spanish Galician to perfection because the talk more today is called "castrapo" I see the tv Galician and understand everything they say.
This article is written by a donkey.
The income per capita, as a unit of measure of social welfare and quality of life of the inhabitants of a country, has lost its credibility.
Catalonia is not Spain's richest region, the richest region of Spain is Madrid, when are going to find in the U.S.?
Catalonia is fully depleted.
The public debt of the Community of Madrid in 2010 was two and half times lower than in Catalonia. If at first amounted to 6.6% of regional GDP in the second comfortably exceeds 15%. In Madrid the debt / GDP ratio remains more or less stable since 2002 (around 6%) while in Catalonia has doubled in the same period of time. Madrid's debt is therefore inherited from the years of Government Ruiz Gallardón, the Catalan is the work of the tripartite political spenders Catalan, which opened a few months ago the custom of issuing debt to individuals with a very profitable bonds.
The deficit of both communities, ie the difference between what they earn and spend, is instructive. Madrid is virtually at a standstill with a deficit of 0.6%. Catalonia, meanwhile, continues to spend more than it takes in, almost 4% more. It is understood that difference, more sooner or later, will have to cubrírsela the state with taxpayer money in Spain, including Catalonia.
Catalonia and must spend a lot of money because the weight of the public sector is very high, double that of its counterpart in Madrid.
Much nephew, cousin, brother and neighbor plugged in public
Catalonia boasts the highest level of debt to GDP at 22%, while in the Madrid region is less than half, namely 9.1%, at the end of the second quarter of this year.
As expected, public debt has increased significantly in all regions of Spain, although in the case of Catalonia growth is particularly worrying since the third quarter of 2007. At that time was 7.7%, so that has increased almost three in just five years. In Spain's capital came down to 5.2% in September 2008, before rising steadily since that time but at a slower pace.