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Showing posts from October, 2011

What the end of the Euro will mean Practically

I think that the end of the Euro as a pan national currency is very much on the cards. The recurring sovereign debt issues together with appropriate analysis even by historians (see Norman Davies's article in the FT on Saturday October 29th) bear this out. The only way out would be for the greater EU, those EU countries that have the Euro as their currency to become more like the United States. Why do I say this? Well if you look at the US it is clear that the different states have different economic conditions and economic strengths and weaknesses, from the highly industrialised states to those which was large agricultural and also tourism led. This is largely the same in Europe. Germany and then France are the two strongest and largest economies but they largely consume only from within their own "states". Yes the abiltiy to trade goods and services across these nation state borders has made economic flows move more in terms of volume and faster but this is not worked ...

Email Failings for Blackberry and Elsewhere

Alot has been said about what is turning out to be a switch and backup malfunction which has affected all non business based Blackberry users such as I. However, I along with many others may have then looked at their emails directly using the webmail services most ISPs offer. What I have seen is that there have been no emails available for periods of around 2 hours on at least two occasions during the day. Therefore, the question has to be asked, is this more than just a Blackberry problem and is this in effect a concerted attack on the whole email mechanism by someone or organisation that is therefore affecting general email availability on the backbone. My thought is that there is more to this than what is being said, at least publicly, but the chances of us knowing more about this are probably slim. However, that does not stop me asking the question and perhaps this is one that users need to ask their ISPs along with the actual speed of connection in the future.

International Financial Accounting Migration non Public Accountable Companies

In my profession the big rock is the conversion requirements and preparation for moving to IFRS from a local GAAP. That local GAAP includes USGAAP and therefore the version of IFRS that we would move to will be a USGAAP inspired ethos. In Europe the differences between the GAAP applied to say United Kingdom and Ireland and Germany, and France is significant so that even an EU applied IFRS is probably going to have different treatments depending on that origin. Then we have Australian IFRS at least so we will always have at least two accounting operaitons in use for each company, being USGAAP IFRS and local GAAP IFRS and hopefully the methods will be very similar.

Books - Paper or Digital

I was reading an article in this weekend's FT about the broadcaster Ed Stourton's experience with moving from hardbacks or paperback books to using an eReader and his mixed response to it. I have not yet moved to using an eReader for two reasons. Firstly, an eReader is a limited product, surely something akin to a tablet would have more use but then I believe that the tablet is a limited product where if you are able to type you will leave finger marks or residue unless the screen design is able to clean up without too much intervention. Secondly, it also means you are carrying more kit around and naturally the storage has to be enabled and of course you separately pay for soft and hardcopies potentially of that book. I therefore remain old fashioned with my book purchasing.