Hot Issues
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Securely transfer your personal information over the Internet
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Retirees make a comeback
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Some Terminology
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Retirement evolution
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Identifying Market Trends
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Market and Economic Update - December 2011
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Merry Christmas 2011
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Few know exactly what their true financial position is, do you?
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The art of balancing bad news
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How economic reality influences the market.
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Market and Economic Updates  -  November / December 2011
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Want to do some of your own research – no problems?
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Lump sum love affair
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How much money do you need to comfortably retire?
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You can afford to contribute more to super but .....
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10 most indebted nations
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Market and Economic Updates - October / November 2011
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Timeless lessons meet new challenges
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Securely transferring Your information to your Planner.
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Gender Gap
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The 5 types of earnings per share
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No more Star Trek conventions for Spock
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An introduction to behavioural finance.
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Market Updates - September / October 2011
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The Budgeting Tools /Calculators on our website have been upgraded.
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Stosur plan an antidote for volatility
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The best performing market over the past 10 years.
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Why it takes courage to stand still
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China buys US for a bargain
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Market Updates - August / September 2011
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Buckle up for a bumpy US recovery ride
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SMSF Management
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How the US debt downgrade impacts Australia
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Mixing business and super
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The tangled web of the Australian housing bubble
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Market Updates - July / August 2011
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Under your control
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Improving your financial literacy is vital to your future ......
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5 reasons you should care about Greece
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The more things change ......  (the Carbon Tax)
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Is the US already in a double dip recession?
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Market Updates  -  June / July 2011
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Wanted: a proper understanding of personal finance
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Will your retirement income be enough?
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Facing up to the wall of sound
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A look at Corporate profit margins
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Market Updates - May / June 2011
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A budget deficit worth watching
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Securely transferring your personal data over the Internet
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Hints on how to interpret a company's Prospectus
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The birth of a new class of Investor
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Demographic trends and the implications for investment
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Market and Economic Updates  -  April / May 2011
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Federal Budget 2011-12.   At a Glance
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Federal Budget 2011-12.   Overview
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Reality versus perception
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Improving the financial literacy of your children.
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The Economic Reasons behind Nuclear Power
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Room for improvement (Pensions)
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Some more terminology explained
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Market Updates - March / April 2011
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Uninformed and impatient
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Perspective on the tragedy in Japan.
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The essentials of Corporate cash flow.
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Out in the cold (the self employed)
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Some terminology explained.
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Market Updates - February / March 2011
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Improving financial literacy is an objective we should all have.
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Why baby boomers face a super sprint
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Don't buy yet - first calculate the stock's P/E and PEG ratio
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SMSFs:  Age matters
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Some more terminology explained
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Market Updates  -  January / February 2011
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Secure File Transfer
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CPI won't stop rate rises, says Economist
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Super contender
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Super birthday ahead
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Some terminology explained
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Market Updates -   December / January 2011
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Merry Christmas and Happy New Year
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A very good Budgeting Tool is available on our site.
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Flexibility the key to spending
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8 Financial Tips For Young Adults
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Retirement boomers
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Market Updates –   November / December 2010
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Finding your Super comfort zone
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What’s your debt really costing you?
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Out in the cold – and forgotten
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Tips For Buying The Perfect Investment Property
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Market Updates –   October / November 2010
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Professional help
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On-line Sales Under Scrutiny
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An often overlooked side of SMSFs
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6 basic financial ratios
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9 signs you can’t afford your mortgage.
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Market Updates –   September  / October 2010
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Jobs for Life
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Scams
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Breakdown shocker
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Market Updates –   August / September 2010
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Three Stages of Retirement
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Deemed Dividends
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When PEG beats the P/E Ratio
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Super Debt
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5 Billionaire habits…
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Market Updates –   July / August 2010
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Five things to do before interest rates go up.
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Save for retirement – 'I am not kidding'
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Commodities Boom Hinges on China
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Debt, Debt and more Debt
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Market Updates –  June / July 2010
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Help your young adult children better understand their financial position.
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Reality challenges many super perceptions
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Comparing the Japanese and U.S. Bubbles
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Watch out for overseas investment cons
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What is a cash Flow Statement
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Market Updates – May / June 2010
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Who are Australia’s best and worst savers?
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Greece:  The worst-case scenario
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Is your investing style Hot or Not?
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A need for simple guidance
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Market Updates – April / May 2010
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2010-11 Commonwealth Budget
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What does GDP measure?
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Super falls short for women
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World's worst countries for jobs.
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High controversy
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Market Updates – March / April 2010
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Personal Credit Ratings
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Evaluating a Company’s Management
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Super trouble for women
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Tips for the prospective Landlord.
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Forget those great expectations
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Market Updates – 28th February 2010
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A matter of age.
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Berkshire’s stock splits:  Good buy or Goodbye?
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Why no extra contributions? It's no mystery
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Stronger growth tipped for Australia
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Market Updates – 31st January 2010
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6 Reasons Why You NEED A Budget
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6 Months to a better budget.
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Amnesty – Overseas Undeclared Income
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The outsiders
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Inside self-managed super
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Market Update - 31st December 2009
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Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to all our clients.
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Powerful Superannuation tool on our site.
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When taking an average approach pays off
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Why retirement could be bad for you.
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Gifts Provided to Employees at a Christmas Party – any FBT?
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Saving for a longer life
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Market and Economic Updates – 30th November 2009
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Powerful Budget tool available on our site.
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Highly complex, highly emotional
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Retiring on investment interest: can it be done?
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Is it all over?
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Are you living house poor?
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Attitude of Banks to Insolvency
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Market and Economic Updates – 31st October 2009
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Powerful Superannuation modeling tools available on our site.
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The Alphabet Soup of Stocks
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Out in the Cold
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Insolvent Trading Defences
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Australian Super Admin Costs 'May Fall'
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Shape matters when it comes to recoveries
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Market & Economic Update - September 2009
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Dumb, dumber, dumbest
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Business confidence hits six year high
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Matching investment risk tolerance to personality
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Retirement incomes loom as super’s big challenge
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Market and Economic update - August 31 2009
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Something remarkable with SMSFs
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A determined tram driver
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Price of crude jumps to 2009 high
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Super Fund Members may be Entitled to more Age Pension
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Investments Market Data - 30th June 2009
World's worst countries for jobs.
By Investopedia.com | 31.03.2010
CompareShares.com.au  /
www.thebull.com.au

The world has been watching and waiting for signs that the economic crisis is coming to an end. Unfortunately it's taking longer in some of the globe's richest and most socioeconomically generous nations. In these places unemployment continues to rise, with no clear signs of leveling off.

Recent data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), a wealthy-country think tank, have shown that among the world's 30 richest nations, including the United States, Japan and Germany, it is European countries that have seen unemployment increase the most in the last year.

European officials may be tied up with the debt problems of Greece, but the more widespread and keenly felt problem across certain parts of Europe is that of everyday people having difficulty finding a job. Ireland's unemployment rate worsened the most dramatically over the last year. It stood at 13.8% in January, but that was a whopping 4.4-percentage-point increase from this time last year. Back in 2008 the jobless rate was at just 6.3%.

Second-worst is the Slovak Republic, where the rate of unemployment rose by 4 points to 13.7%. Spain still has the highest unemployment rate out of the advanced world--an eye-wateringly high 18.8% in January--and that's also marked a 3-point increase from January 2009.

Outside Europe
Though most of the countries in the OECD are European, the other nations in the club have fared better when it comes to keeping their jobless rates under control. America's unemployment rate is still at a relatively high 9.7%, but that was a shift up of a fair 3 percentage points from the year before. In Japan the unemployment rate has risen by just 0.7 points to 4.9%, according to OECD data.

This is just a continuation of a trend that started with the credit crisis in 2008. Between that year and 2009, the biggest jumps in unemployment by region took place in the European Union and developed economies, where the overall jobless rate increased by 2.3 percentage points, according to the International Labor Organization.

While things leveled off in America and Japan, the outlook remains grim for Europe. Economic sentiment in the region has been improving in the last 10 months, according to the European Commission, but that rebound has already lost some of its momentum. "The E.U. economy is still facing headwinds, and the outlook for the labor market remains unfavorable for 2010," the commission said in its latest monthly report on the region's employment situation.

This shouldn't be surprising considering that the American economy contracted by 2.7% in 2009, while the European Union's contracted by more than 4.1% last year, according to the International Monetary Fund. The sharpest declines took place in the emerging-market nations of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, none of which are members of the OECD.

Real Estate Bust
In developed Europe, the countries hardest hit are those that went through the boom and bust of a rapidly growing construction sector and soaring property prices. Ireland, once hailed as the Celtic Tiger, now has one of the highest unemployment rates in Europe after thousands of construction workers--many of whom were on temporary contracts--lost their jobs and struggled to find work in other sectors.

Ireland's GDP plunged by 7.5% in 2009 and is expected to fall by another 1% this year, according to the country's Investment and Development Agency. The national economy is also heavily dependent on trade--with exports representing 90% of GDP--so the slow recovery in world trade is exacerbating the country's problems.

In contrast Germany has managed to keep unemployment in check because its companies, many of them involved in engineering or high-tech manufacturing, employ highly skilled individuals who are difficult to replace. Instead of firing workers, German companies try to shorten their hours; the government has a short-term plan of subsidizing wages where hours have been reduced. Thanks to government spending, Germany has had one of the lowest increases in unemployment in the last year: Its 0.3-point increase is on par with Norway and Australia.

Denmark, Turkey, Iceland and Spain are a few other rich countries that have seen big jumps in unemployment in the last year. While Spain and Iceland have suffered from construction and financial bubbles, the labor market troubles of Denmark are curious: The Danes have a relatively low unemployment rate of 7.3% and rank enviably high in terms of their standard of living.

Yet Denmark was the first country in Europe to dip into recession, thanks to a domestic property bust. And Nevlia Konika, an economist with IHS Global Insight, points out that the Danish labor market is actually weakening as wages in the country grow, making its exports and services less competitive.

This could be a growing problem. While emerging nations like China and Brazil make a speedy recovery from their recessions and traditional powerhouses Switzerland and Japan get back on their feet, some of Europe's largest economies are struggling to get their labor markets on track.

Even Germany may see its hefty government spending result in a bigger deficit that hits the job market down the line. Economists at Deutsche Bank expect the jobless rate in Germany to rise to 9.5% in 2011.

When it comes go jobs, Europe's troubles are far from over.

By www.compareshares.com.au – for more articles like this click here.
CompareShares.com.au is Australia’s pre-eminent news and investing site for investors and traders, covering shares, superannuation, property, financial planning strategies and more.

 


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