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Brown to unveil revised California budget, tax proposal

Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

Sacramento, CA, United States (AHN) – California Gov. Jerry Brown on Monday was set to unveil an updated budget plan to close a record $26.6 billion deficit while taking into account better-than-expected April tax receipts and Republican opposition to a June ballot on tax extensions.

The announcement will come as the end of the fiscal year looms, and teachers and students in the state, which has the nation’s largest university system and the world’s eighth-largest economy, protest further cuts.

Brown early this year proposed a plan reducing spending by $12.5 billion, including $1.4 billion in cuts to higher education, and generating $12 billion from an extension of taxes that are due to expire this summer.

The tax extensions require a June ballot that in turn, must first be approved by two Republicans from the Assembly and two from the state Senate. The deadline for including the extensions in the ballot has passed, and unions have asked lawmakers to instead pass a bill allowing the ballot.

The governor’s revised budget plan is expected to seek at least some of his revenue-generating tax hikes even as Republicans point out the state’s more than $2 billion in unanticipated April tax revenue.

Last week, Brown announced drastic measures such as eliminating the Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board and shuttering 70 of 278 state parks, including the governor’s mansion.

Eliminating the appeals board, which is composed of appointees who preside over appeals on disputes about jobless and disability claims, would save the state $1.2 million.

The closure of parks would reduced spending by $11 million in the fiscal year starting in July, and another $22 million the following year. Parks with the least attendance and cultural and environmental significance were chosen for the closure, which will not affect 92 percent of public attendance in parks.

Brown, who served as governor for two terms nearly three decades ago, also plans to merge the state’s two personnel agencies into a single human resources department to save at least $5.8 million.

Previously, he ordered a hiring freeze and slashed the number of state cars and cell phones by 50 percent.

Republicans, who released an alternative budget plan last week, have railed against the latest proposals as “posturing” and ” misguided threats.”

State GOP spokesman Mark Standriff called the planned closure of parks “a ‘Washington Monument Strategy’ that is both cynical and manipulative, and shows little respect for the taxpayers.”

The Republican plan relies on the higher April revenue to prevent cuts to education and law enforcement. It does not raise taxes and calls on state workers to “do their part” with a 10 percent reduction in pay, benefits and other employee costs, which the GOP says would provide the government with $1.1 billion in savings.

The California Teachers Association, which held statewide protests last week, said the GOP’s alternative proposal would leave a $14.7 billion budget gap and fails to provide “real solutions.”

The San Francisco Chronicle said in its editorial on Monday that the GOP plan “should be dismissed as a nonstarter,” because it “included a heavy dose of borrowing and reliance on ‘savings.’ ” The newspaper also blasted Republicans for pushing “a ridiculously long wish list that strayed far from the subject of the budget.”

In March, Brown ended negotiations with Republicans after what he said was “an ever changing list of collateral demands” in return for support for a special election, such as giving a $1 billion tax break to out-of-state corporations so the companies would bring jobs to California.

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17-nation euro-zone sees best economic growth in three years

Linda Young – AHN News Writer

London, United Kingdom (AHN) – The 17-nation euro-zone economy grew at its most robust annual rate in more than three years during the first quarter of 2011.

However, economic growth was not uniform across all euro-zone member states with Spain and Italy growing less than expected.

Economic growth in France and Germany boosted euro-zone growth to 0.8 percent during the first three months of the year, which was up from the 0.3 percent growth registered during the last three months of 2010.

Germany grew at 1.5 percent and France registered a 1 percent growth rate. Even heavily indebted Greece managed to match the average growth rate of 0.8 percent.

Italy grew at only 0.1 percent while Spain grew at 0.3 percent. Portugal fell into recession after its economy shrank for the second consecutive quarter.

In addition, the robust growth of the euro-zone overall means the European Central Bank will likely raise its interest rates again in July. That tighter monetary policy will pose a hardship for member nations struggling with serous debt and economic problems.

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Initial jobless claims drop to 434,000

Linda Young – AHN News Writer

Washington, DC, United States (AHN) – Initial claims for jobless benefits decreased slightly during the week ending May 7, with 434,000 newly unemployed workers filing claims compared to the 478,000 the prior week.

That amounted to a 44,000 decrease in first time claims for unemployment compensation insurance benefits.

Although that is a move in the right direction, analysts say that only getting the numbers below the 400,000 mark and keeping them down will signal the nation’s economy is turning around.

In addition, the less volatile 4-week moving average was 436,750, which represented an increase of 4,500 from the previous week’s revised average of 432,250, the U.S. Department of Labor said.

The total number of people claiming benefits in all programs has dipped down below the 8 million mark, standing at 7,983,672 for the week ending April 23, which is the most recent week such data is available. That was a decrease of 31,247 from the week ending April 16.

Here’s a look at the states with the largest increases in first time claims for the week ending April 30, the latest week for which that data is available:

  • New York (+24,431)
  • Michigan (+3,948)
  • Wisconsin (+3,746)
  • North Carolina (+2,749)
  • Ohio (+2,319)
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China records explosive $11.4 billion trade surplus growth fueled by exports

Linda Young – AHN News Writer

Beijing, China (AHN) – China just reported that it had a trade surplus in April of $11.4 billion, which was nearly four times larger than expected with the nation exporting far more than it imported.

This comes on the heels of an unexpected $140 million trade surplus in March.

China’s huge trade surplus was fueled by a growth in exports of 29.9 percent in April compared to a year earlier, coupled with import growth shrinking by 21.8 percent from last year.

The news of China’s huge favorable trade imbalance comes as China’s devalued currency increasingly becomes a point of contention with other nations that are importing more from China than they export there. That situation is caused by China’s low currency making its exports cheap in other countries while making the products of other nations too costly in China.

The United States is now in trade talks with China. News of China’s whopping $11.4 billion trade surplus will put the spotlight on its currency.

China’s economy has largely been fueled by its exports. China is the world’s second largest economy after the U.S.

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Slighly higher unemployment rate despite more jobs in April

Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – The unemployment rate grew 9 percent in April despite the economy adding more jobs than was expected.

The Labor Department said on Friday nonfarm payroll increased 244,000 during the period, boosted by gains in the service, manufacturing and mining industries. In the private sector, 268,000 jobs were added while the federal and state governments lost 24,000 jobs.

There was an increase of 51,000 positions during the month in the professional and businesses services, specifically in technical consulting and coputers systems design.

Jobs related to healthcare rose 37,000, largely due to a 22,000 increase in employment in ambultory healthcare. Hospitals accounted for 10,000 jobs.

In the hospitatility industry, there was continued growth with 46,000 more jobs, mainly from a 30,600 spike in employment in accomodation and food services.

Manufacturing added 29,000 jobs to the economy and mining 11.4 percent.

Despite the gains, the unemployment trate rose to 9 percent in April from 8.8 percent in the previous month.

The number of jobless Americans remained little changed at 13.7 million. Those unemployed for less than five weeks rose by 242,000, but the number of jobless for at least 27 weeks dropped by 283,000 to 5.8 million.

There was virtually the same number of people involutarily working part-time, at 8.6 million.

House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) used the jobs report to assail the White House for “causing renewed uncertainty for private-sector job creators, crowding out private investment and punishing small businesses and entrepreneurs who are willing to invest.”

“While any improvement is welcome news, job growth in America is still nowhere close to what it should be,” the Republican leader added.

“Over the past month, rather than joining Republicans in focusing on policies that promote long-term economic growth to help balance the federal budget, the Democrats who control Washington have indicated they are planning to increase taxes and allow the government’s spending binge to continue.”

But the White House pointed out that there was an averge of about a quarter of a million private sector jobs created each month for three consecutive months.

“We’re pleased about that. We obviously have a lot more work to do,” presidential spokesman Jay Carney told reporters. “The recession cost the American labor force 8 million jobs and we’re still digging ourselves out of that hole.”

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Medicare ‘Doc Fix’ put on life support by AMA lobby

United States (KaiserHealth) – The annual scramble to prevent next year’s scheduled pay cut for doctors who treat Medicare patients kicked off Thursday with physician leaders calling for a five-year program of guaranteed annual raises and a high-ranking House Republican calling for another short-term fix.

The issue – known inside the Beltway as “the doc fix” – is the residue of a law enacted by Congress in the late 1990s that sought to limit the growth of Medicare spending on seniors’ health care. The law limited physician pay increases to same growth levels as the overall economy, which became known as the sustainable growth rate or SGR. Since health care spending over the last decade grew twice as fast as gross domestic product, implementing the SGR would dramatically shrink physician pay as a share of overall Medicare spending.

It never happened. Every year members of the American Medical Association and specialty societies bombard Capitol Hill with demands to restore the old system. And every year, Congress voids the SGR-mandated cuts.

But that means that every year the size of the scheduled pay cut under the original law grows larger. Unless Congress acts before January 1, physician pay next year will be reduced by 29.4 percent. The estimated 10-year cost for the “doc fix,” according to the Congressional Budget Office, is approaching $300 billion.

Rep. David Camp, R-Mich., chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, told a Health Affairs briefing on Thursday that finding $300 billion for a ten-year fix “was untenable in the current situation” when Congress and the White House are struggling to find ways to reduce the $1.5 trillion budget deficit. Rather, he said, the Republican-led House will consider a “several-year fix . . . to get out from under this, and then look to the long-term fix.”

However, even a short-term fix would cost tens of billions of dollars next year, which could wipe out a significant portion of the budget reductions that Republicans are seeking as part of the debt-ceiling negotiations that kicked off yesterday.

Legislators looking for a magic bullet to the physician pay issue received no help from physician lobbying groups who testified on Capitol Hill. At a hearing of the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on health, the American Medical Association called for scrapping the SGR and instituting a five-year program of regularly scheduled pay increases, during which time the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS) could experiment with alternative payment models like bundled payments — a single payment for all services related to a treatment or condition, rather than a series of separate payments — or special reimbursements for coordinating care.

“The SGR is a failed formula,” said Cecil Wilson, an internist from Winter Park, Florida, who is the current president of AMA. “The longer we wait to cast it aside, the deeper the hole we dig.”

The American Academy of Family Physicians, which represents relatively low-paid primary care physicians, called for higher reimbursement rates for their specialty. The American College of Surgeons, which represents some of the highest paid specialists and would be hurt by a shift in pay toward primary care, also called for SGR’s repeal and setting a “realistic” budget baseline for future payment increases for all specialties, which should reflect the actual cost of providing care.

Mark McClellan, who headed CMS during the George W. Bush administration and now heads the Brookings Institution’s health care policy shop, told the subcommittee “the payment reforms in the Affordable Care Act are a foundation for this.” That was an ironic statement coming from a former high-ranking Republican official, since the House majority, in a vote taken earlier this year, repealed the new health reform act in a largely symbolic gesture.

The special interest scramble to get Congress to ditch the SGR every year is a cautionary tale about strategies from both sides of the aisle for Medicare cost control. The health care reform legislation pushed through by President Obama and the Democrats achieves a half trillion dollars in Medicare savings over the next decade largely by putting a ceiling on the program’s annual growth rate that is one percentage point faster than GDP.

Obama, in his deficit reduction plan announced last month, upped the ante by calling for a ceiling growth rate of GDP plus 0.5 percentage point. The vehicle for achieving these savings in either case will be the reform law’s new Independent Payments Advisory Board, which starting in 2015 is scheduled to send mandatory cuts to Capitol Hill whenever health care grows faster than the target rate. Congress could either approve those cuts, or substitute a package of its own that achieved similar savings.

Camp attacked that approach yesterday, saying it was unacceptable for “a bunch of unelected bureaucrats” to dictate cuts that “will only cut payments to providers.” But the Republican plan for lowering Medicare’s unsustainable growth, which is called premium support because it would give future seniors a voucher to buy private insurance, has a cap of its own. It pegs the growth in the government’s annual contribution of premium support payments to a formula that is one percentage point higher than the consumer price index, which in most years is well below the growth in the economy.

In reality, any such formula could be thrown out the window by future Congresses – just as the SGR will be when Congress passes its next “doc fix” sometime before next January.

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

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Medicare ‘Doc Fix’ put on life support by AMA lobby

United States (KaiserHealth) – The annual scramble to prevent next year’s scheduled pay cut for doctors who treat Medicare patients kicked off Thursday with physician leaders calling for a five-year program of guaranteed annual raises and a high-ranking House Republican calling for another short-term fix.

The issue – known inside the Beltway as “the doc fix” – is the residue of a law enacted by Congress in the late 1990s that sought to limit the growth of Medicare spending on seniors’ health care. The law limited physician pay increases to same growth levels as the overall economy, which became known as the sustainable growth rate or SGR. Since health care spending over the last decade grew twice as fast as gross domestic product, implementing the SGR would dramatically shrink physician pay as a share of overall Medicare spending.

It never happened. Every year members of the American Medical Association and specialty societies bombard Capitol Hill with demands to restore the old system. And every year, Congress voids the SGR-mandated cuts.

But that means that every year the size of the scheduled pay cut under the original law grows larger. Unless Congress acts before January 1, physician pay next year will be reduced by 29.4 percent. The estimated 10-year cost for the “doc fix,” according to the Congressional Budget Office, is approaching $300 billion.

Rep. David Camp, R-Mich., chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, told a Health Affairs briefing on Thursday that finding $300 billion for a ten-year fix “was untenable in the current situation” when Congress and the White House are struggling to find ways to reduce the $1.5 trillion budget deficit. Rather, he said, the Republican-led House will consider a “several-year fix . . . to get out from under this, and then look to the long-term fix.”

However, even a short-term fix would cost tens of billions of dollars next year, which could wipe out a significant portion of the budget reductions that Republicans are seeking as part of the debt-ceiling negotiations that kicked off yesterday.

Legislators looking for a magic bullet to the physician pay issue received no help from physician lobbying groups who testified on Capitol Hill. At a hearing of the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on health, the American Medical Association called for scrapping the SGR and instituting a five-year program of regularly scheduled pay increases, during which time the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS) could experiment with alternative payment models like bundled payments — a single payment for all services related to a treatment or condition, rather than a series of separate payments — or special reimbursements for coordinating care.

“The SGR is a failed formula,” said Cecil Wilson, an internist from Winter Park, Florida, who is the current president of AMA. “The longer we wait to cast it aside, the deeper the hole we dig.”

The American Academy of Family Physicians, which represents relatively low-paid primary care physicians, called for higher reimbursement rates for their specialty. The American College of Surgeons, which represents some of the highest paid specialists and would be hurt by a shift in pay toward primary care, also called for SGR’s repeal and setting a “realistic” budget baseline for future payment increases for all specialties, which should reflect the actual cost of providing care.

Mark McClellan, who headed CMS during the George W. Bush administration and now heads the Brookings Institution’s health care policy shop, told the subcommittee “the payment reforms in the Affordable Care Act are a foundation for this.” That was an ironic statement coming from a former high-ranking Republican official, since the House majority, in a vote taken earlier this year, repealed the new health reform act in a largely symbolic gesture.

The special interest scramble to get Congress to ditch the SGR every year is a cautionary tale about strategies from both sides of the aisle for Medicare cost control. The health care reform legislation pushed through by President Obama and the Democrats achieves a half trillion dollars in Medicare savings over the next decade largely by putting a ceiling on the program’s annual growth rate that is one percentage point faster than GDP.

Obama, in his deficit reduction plan announced last month, upped the ante by calling for a ceiling growth rate of GDP plus 0.5 percentage point. The vehicle for achieving these savings in either case will be the reform law’s new Independent Payments Advisory Board, which starting in 2015 is scheduled to send mandatory cuts to Capitol Hill whenever health care grows faster than the target rate. Congress could either approve those cuts, or substitute a package of its own that achieved similar savings.

Camp attacked that approach yesterday, saying it was unacceptable for “a bunch of unelected bureaucrats” to dictate cuts that “will only cut payments to providers.” But the Republican plan for lowering Medicare’s unsustainable growth, which is called premium support because it would give future seniors a voucher to buy private insurance, has a cap of its own. It pegs the growth in the government’s annual contribution of premium support payments to a formula that is one percentage point higher than the consumer price index, which in most years is well below the growth in the economy.

In reality, any such formula could be thrown out the window by future Congresses – just as the SGR will be when Congress passes its next “doc fix” sometime before next January.

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

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Remaking Medicare: Saving money or shifting costs?

United States (KaiserHealth) – There’s no debating that the budget blueprint passed by the U.S. House of Representatives last month would make major changes to the Medicare program for the elderly and disabled.

What Republicans and Democrats don’t agree on, however, is whether those changes would actually save money or just shift costs now paid by the government to Medicare patients.

Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI), who as chairman of the House Budget Committee wrote the plan that passed that chamber, says his plan would help bring down costs.

“We say, let 40 million seniors have choice, have power, and have those providers compete against each other for their business so they’re in charge of their Medicare,” he said during the House debate.

But Democrats – led by President Obama – say the GOP plan would merely let the government pay less by making Medicare patients pay more.

“I mean, it’s not hard to save the government money if you’re willing to just say, ‘Here, you pay for it,’ ” the president said at a town hall meeting in northern Virginia two weeks ago. “That’s not a solution.”

At the heart of Ryan’s plan for Medicare is a proposal to give everybody in the program a limited pot of money every year instead of the government-run health insurance they get now. But it’s not really a pot of money. Technically, it would be a subsidy they could only use to buy private health insurance.

Ryan says the plan would make Medicare work just like the health insurance he gets as a member of Congress.

“Look at all these plans we get to choose from,” he said, reading from the federal employees health plan handbook on the House floor during the debate. “Kaiser, Aetna, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Coventry – pages and pages of choices and options. This is what we’re talking about for people [ages] 54 and below.”

Rising Costs, Inflation

Or not. “It’s not at all what you’ll have,” says Austin Frakt, a health economist at Boston University who co-authors a health blog called The Incidental Economist.

Frakt says one key advantage of the health plans available to members of Congress is that the subsidy they get to pay their health insurance premiums keeps up with rising health care costs.

“It keeps pace, it doesn’t erode over time,” he says.

That wouldn’t be the case with Ryan’s Medicare plan. It’s designed so that the amount seniors get to buy insurance would only go up as fast as inflation in the rest of the economy. Frakt says that could be a big problem. Health costs tend to rise much faster, sometimes twice as fast, as overall inflation.

“That difference means that the subsidy is kind of riding along, going up at a slow rate, and health care costs are going way up, and premiums reflect health care costs, so the entire difference is shifted to beneficiaries,” Frakt says.

In other words, Ryan’s plan allows the government to spend less on Medicare by making patients pay more – potentially a lot more.

To see exactly how much more, we did a little math experiment.

The most popular federal worker health plan is the standard option Blue Cross/Blue Shield Plan. Its total annual premium this year is just under $7,000.

The government (the employer in this case) pays just under 70 percent of that amount, and the workers (including members of Congress) pay 30 percent.

This year, those amounts would be roughly $4,900 and $2,100.

Say next year the plan’s total premium rises to $7,500; that would be a fairly modest increase of about 7 percent. Under the federal plan, the government still pays that 70 percent. So, Frakt says, using the new total, “70 percent of that is $5,250, and the difference would be what enrollees pay … $2,250.”

That’s a total annual premium increase for federal workers of $150.

Now let’s try the same exercise under the Ryan Medicare plan.

Assume, just for comparison’s sake, the first year the government provided the same $7,000 for an individual. (The subsidy would likely be considerably higher, since seniors tend to have more health problems, and their health care costs more). And assume that the first year that subsidy would be enough to cover the full cost of a low-cost insurance plan.

What happens to the subsidy, then, when that plan’s cost rises to $7,500 the next year?

“It depends on the inflation rate,” Frakt says. “But say inflation was essentially zero, the subsidy would stay the same. So that increase in $500 in the premium would be entirely paid by the beneficiary.”

In other words, the increase for the Medicare patient would be more than three times higher than the one for the federal employee. And each year, the Medicare enrollee would be responsible for that difference between overall inflation and health inflation.

‘Cost-Conscious Consumers’

Now, Ryan and his supporters dispute that exercise. They say their plan has elements that actually would reduce health care spending.

For example, Michael Cannon of the libertarian Cato Institute says having people spend their own money, rather than the government’s, helps.

“They’ll be cost-conscious consumers, they’ll choose economical health plans, they’ll put downward pressure on prices, because they will get to see the savings,” he says.

At the same time, Cannon adds, more competition within the health care industry will also help hold down prices.

“Because in order to capture the business of those cost-conscious consumers, health plans, providers, will have to find ways to cut costs while improving quality,” he says.

So far the Ryan plan is barely more than an outline. And it’s going nowhere in the Democratic-led Senate. But it’s an important marker in the emerging Medicare debate.

And that debate comes with more than a few political perils. Medicare clearly needs some kind of fix to withstand the onslaught of 78 million baby boomers.

But so far, public opinion polls show that neither Republican nor Democratic voters favor any big changes to the program.

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

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Palestinian Prime Minister pressuring Israel to transfer taxes

The Media Line Staff

Palestinian Territory David Rosenberg – Prime Minister Salam Fayyad says he is lobbying worldwide to get Israel to transfer tax money it is threatening to withhold from the Palestinian Authority (PA) after Hamas agreed to join in a Palestinian national unity government.

Fayyad warned, however, that even if Israel resumes the transfers, the PA faces a financial crisis and needs an infusion of foreign assistance. In the meantime, officials are counting on loans from domestic banks.

“We have been in touch extensively and intensively with all the key players on the international scene,” Fayyad told a news conference in Ramallah on Monday. “What we’re looking for is intervention that will release our revenues.”

Israeli Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz said on Sunday that Israel is freezing some 300 million shekels ($88 million) in tax money due to be transferred to the PA, saying that it could no longer be sure that the funds wouldn’t reach Hamas, an Islamic group sworn to the Jewish’s state’s destruction. Fayyad on Monday estimated as much as $110 million is due the PA.

The threat of lost tax revenues is the first of a series of challenges Fayyad and the PA face in the wake of the unity accord, which was widely supported by Palestinian public opinion but has raised serious concerns by Israel and the U.S.

Fayyad, a former International Monetary Fund official, has been leading the Palestinian drive to win United Nations’ acceptance of statehood, whose crowning achievement is supposed to be a General Assembly vote on independence in September. But his campaign is in jeopardy because of the national unity government.

Hamas is insisting that the prime minister cannot be the one to lead the interim cabinet expected to be formed. Fayyad, who is believed to strongly dislike Hamas, agreed to take over as prime minister after Fatah and Hamas split in 2007, thereby undermining Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haneya’s claim to be the sole legitimate holder of the post.

On Monday, Fayyad declined to address his future in government but reiterated his support of the unity accord. National unity is an urgent domestic concern of the Palestinians. Outside powers, including Israel, have no right to intervene, he said.

“If you are someone like me that sees the separation as a major problem … then you want to look for every possibility that can make [unity] happen,” he said. “We want something that can take off, something that can deliver for our people.”

If Israel follows through, that would deprive the PA of a big part of its revenue, preventing it from paying salaries and delivering services.

Fayyad has worked hard to raise the standard of efficiency and transparency, while cracking down on corruption, to bring PA government institutions up to international standards. Nevertheless, the PA is reliant on foreign aid as well as taxes collected by Israel to fund its operations.

The rapprochement between the two Palestinian factions raises as many questions as its answers. Under the terms of agreement, reached under the auspices of the Egyptian government, the two factions agreed to form a unity cabinet of technocrats like Fayyad, who isn’t affiliated with either movement, next year until elections are held next year. But Hamas said it intended to keep control of its own security forces in Gaza, which would severely limit the unity government’s powers.

The agreement also fails to square the difference between Hamas and Fatah over relations with Israel. Fatah favors a negotiated peace even as it pursues unilateral independence while Hamas is committed to the destruction of the Jewish state. The agreement would let the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), the umbrella group of Palestinian factions to which Hamas doesn’t belong, continue the talks under the direction of PA President Mahmoud Abbas.

But Israel has already made clear it sees no room for reviving the now stalled talks as long as Hamas is part of the PA. Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said last Wednesday that the Palestinians would have to decide between peace with Israel and national unity with Hamas.

Israel transfers funds collected from duties on Palestinian imports coming through Israeli ports and from other sources that Fayyad estimated on Monday would reach about $1.4 billion this year. That is about equal to all the foreign aid the PA receives annually.

PA Economy Minister Hassan Abu Libdeh. He said the salaries of at least 170,000 civil servants might be frozen if Israel didn’t transfer the money.

Israel has suspended the transfer of tax funds to the PA twice before, both times for about 18 months – starting in December 2000 after the second intifada broke out, and again from February 2006 after Hamas won the Palestinian legislative elections. This time, the impact of the revenue shortfall could be more serious as a booming West Bank economy has been powered by billions of dollars in foreign aid and Israeli tax transfers.

The IMF said last month that West Bank gross domestic product grew 8 percent last year. But as foreign aid declines – it will drop below $1 billion this year – the economy will have to rely more on the private sector and Israeli cooperation in easing movement of people and goods to sustain growth.

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Unemployment soars to 20.3% in Spain, a 14-year high

Linda Young – AHN News Writer

Madrid, Spain (AHN) – Spain’s unemployment rate reached a 14-year high of 21.3 percent during the first three months of the year, up from 20.3 percent for the last three months of 2010.

The economy lost more jobs during the first quarter than it had during the entire year of 2010.

That boosted the number of jobless people to 4.9 million and government officials say they do not expect to see much in the way of job creation until the end of the year.

In addition, the economy has been depressed and Spain’s government has instituted stringent austerity measures in an attempt to deal with high public debt and deficits.

The austerity measures are not helping the economy to revive.

Retail sales fell by 8.6 percent in April compared to a year earlier. In addition, inflation rose by 3.5 percent in from the 3.3 percent rate in March.

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