1.
Denmark
2.
Norway
3.
Switzerland
4.
Holland
5.
Sweden
6.
Canada
7.
Finland
8.
Austria
9.
Iceland
10.
Australia.
For
no good reason, I was surprised at the inclusion of Holland, where I
thought there were stresses and strains similar to those in the UK.
If I have a Dutch reader, perhaps he/she could set me straight.
As
for Spanish felicity, the Minister for the Economy has cheered us all
up with his insistence that Spain is no longer a problem for the EU
or the world. She will, he says, finally emerge this quarter from her
2-4 year recession and the end-year budget deficit target of 6.5% of
GDP will easily be achieved. Of course, the 2012 forecast for this
deficit was lower than 6.5%, as I recall, but one mustn't carp.
Unemployment will also be lower by the year end and will continue to
fall, albeit slowly, throughout next year. But, at 26.7%,the
number will still be very high and the minister admits that, although
the recession will be over, La Crisis won't be. As for
economic growth, this will be around minus 1.3% this year, following
last year's fall of 1.6%, but 2014 will see growth of 0.5%. Well,
let's hope so but what normally happens now is that the IMF and/or
the EU come out with numbers that are not quite as optimistic as
those of the Spanish government. So, you pays your money and takes
your choice.
Anyone
who's seen the institutionalised slanging matches on Spanish TV won't
have been surprised at the recent study which concluded that 86% of
programs for kids were unsuitable for them - because of "explicit
sex, dirty language and the denigration of women". Which
reminds me . . . It seems I was wrong to say the peak viewing time
here is 12.30am; it's now said to be only 10.30pm. However, the majority
of programs starting at this time don't end until 12.30 or later. The
TV channels say this reflects Spanish working hours but they agree
it's crazy and insist they'd be happy to bring things forward. But no one
wants to be first to do it and risk losing viewers. Institutionalised
inertia, then.
There's
been an unusual development down in Pontevedra; they've happened upon
a Roman grave inside the city walls; this is unprecedented (and
confusing) because the Romans always buried their dead - Whoever
buried the living? - outside the walls. Elsewhere, they've
almost finished covering a significant Roman and medieval site with
sand. This is sad victim of La Crisis, as the city can no
longer afford to finish the excavation, never mind turn it into the
planned museum. The end result is a permanent disruption to the
traffic flow, which was said to be essential 3-4 years ago to allow
for the creation of said museum. Now just a chimera.
Finally
. . . I'm doing a survey of all the escudos (coats-of-arms) on the
facades of houses once owned by the comfortable bourgeoisie of
Pontevedra. Of which this is just one fine example. More anon.
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