no zobaczmy na ile bedzie mial racje !

31.12.05, 22:52
www.cbc.ca/story/business/national/2005/12/29/econ-051229.html
Ze swej strony zycze Nowej Funlandii jak najlepiej. Poznalem wielu Nufies i
oni sa tacy fajni, choc troche jakby smieszni. I ten przemily miekki akcent !

Zycze wszystkim powodzenia w Nowym Roku !

dradam1

    • sylwek07 Re: no zobaczmy na ile bedzie mial racje ! 31.12.05, 23:07
      ciekawy artykul w sam raz na nowy rok ..
      Zycze Wszystkim Szczesliwego Nowego Roku 2006
    • dradam2 Re: no zobaczmy na ile bedzie mial racje ! 01.01.06, 11:53
      osobiscie znalazlem to to funny :

      www.canada.com/edmontonjournal/news/business/story.html?id=4fc15617-c441-43be-b810-c40219c1c5e4&k=27856


      Cytuje, bo oni niestety nie daja akcesu dla publiki zbyt dlugo i jak sie w
      Polsce ludziska obudza, to moze byc juz zdjete z WWW.

      Say goodbye Saskatchewan & hello Paris
      Baby boomers will popularize phased-in retirement, investment planner claims

      Michael Kane, Vancouver Sun; CanWest News Service
      Published: Saturday, December 31, 2005

      VANCOUVER - Saskatchewan will secede from Confederation and Paris Hilton will
      run for the U.S. presidency.

      A Liberal minority government will pay Canadians to have children to fill
      government-run day-care centres.

      Those are some of the more fearless forecasts from financial soothsayers invited
      to identify trends likely to impact our personal finances in the coming year.

      Given that no one knows what 2006 will bring, we asked our crystal-ball gazers
      to spice up their opinions with a little seasonal eggnog. Some may have overdone it.

      Lloyd Craig, president and CEO of British Columbia's Coast Capital Savings,
      expects Canada's banks to lend the U.S. enough money to pay off its mountainous
      debt. Of course, the banks will set onerous conditions: The Americans will have
      to offer Texas as collateral and the Bush administration must agree to a
      one-year debt counselling program overseen by Jimmy Pattison.

      The idea that Ottawa will pay us to have more kids comes from aviation pundit
      Peter Paul de Souza, of Vancouver's Bains Travel, who is also flying the notion
      of Mandarin Chinese to replace French as the other official language and a new
      Alberta dinar to replace the loonie.

      Morley Lipsett, adjunct professor at Simon Fraser University, says
      next-generation, head-mounted displays will appear on the market giving wearers
      the experience of watching wide-screen, high-definition TV while going about
      their daily tasks.

      This will lead to GPS-enabled units for navigating while shopping, skiing or
      driving, although some provinces may ban their use while driving.

      York University professor Moshe Milevsky may or may not be joking when he
      predicts Canadians will cash in their equity mutual funds, registered retirement
      savings plans, guaranteed investment certificates and Canada Savings Bonds in a
      mad rush to purchase any available housing south of Nunavut.

      They will then renovate the kitchens, bathrooms and bedrooms with pure gold and
      start drilling for oil on their front lawns.

      At the first sign of any liquid, they will offer their two-bedroom bungalows as
      income trusts on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

      The bizarre linkage of Saskatchewan and Paris Hilton comes from nationally
      respected financial planner David Christianson, of Winnipeg. As a public
      speaker, he is expected to stay abreast of all the latest trends.

      On the home front, even if you don't cook with cheese, the kids will take longer
      to move out because of higher mortgage rates and zooming construction costs,
      says Arthur Coren, dean of the business school at Kwantlen University College in
      Surrey, B.C.

      Not that their aging baby boomer parents will notice because, with the first of
      them turning 60, they will be too busy redefining retirement, says Ida
      Templeton, regional director with Investors Group. Boomers will kill all
      vestiges of mandatory retirement, she says, while popularizing the notion of
      phased-in retirement and ensuring that health care remains at the front of the
      national agenda.

      House price growth will slow, with first-time buyers feeling the pinch of higher
      prices and financing costs, says Rob Regan-Pollock, of Invis Inc. mortgage
      brokers. He expects the Bank of Canada to stop raising interest rates after the
      spring, both for fear of hurting industry in Eastern Canada and because a rising
      loonie also acts as a brake on the national economy.

      Vancouver financial planner Larry Jacobson expects interest rates to rise no
      more than a half or three-quarters of a percentage point, while gold prices will
      continue to rise in direct correlation to Iraq body counts
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