2011年10月10日星期一

they would prefer to support bright feather extensions

Two other parties won enough support to exceed bright feather extensions the 5 percent threshold to gain seats in parliament. The Palikot Movement, founded by former ruling-party politician Janusz Palikot, received 9.9 percent of the vote, which would give it 40 seats, and the Democratic Left Alliance won 8.2 percent of the vote, or 26 seats, according to the preliminary results.

Palikot, a former vodka distiller, clashed with Tusk last year. He urges a quicker overhaul of public finances by cutting spending on bureaucracy, the Catholic church and pensions.

Poland, a country of 38 million people, was the biggest net recipient of EU funding in the bloc’s 2007-2013 budget, getting 67 billion euros ($97 billion) in aid to iron out differences between richer and poorer states.

The funding, which helped the Polish economy grow 4.4 percent a year in 2007-2010, may be cut if the country doesn’t reduce its deficit to within the EU natural hair extensions limit of 3 percent of GDP next year from 7.9 percent in 2010.

‘Being Boring’

The EU aid has added an average of 1.5 percentage points to economic growth each year, according to Poland’s Regional Development Ministry, and remains essential for economic expansion as budget cuts may limit consumer demand and public investment.

Tusk may be the first Polish prime minister to be returned to power since the fall of communism in 1989. According to Andrew Michta, head of the German Marshall Fund’s Warsaw office, that shows the Poles have matured politically over the last two decades.

“If the numbers hold, this is in my book a vote for continuity,” he said. “I guess there is something to be said about being ‘boring’ in the Hair Extensions Online case of Poland.”
Dvorkovich, attending a conference in Moscow with Spanish Economy Minister Elena Salgado, said Salgado had met Russia's former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

Salgado left the event without taking questions from reporters.

The BRIC nations -- Brazil, Russia, India and China -- are a loose coalition of large emerging economies that together hold the bulk of the world's foreign exchange reserves.

Of Russia's total reserves, $109 billion are held in two sovereign wealth funds whose asset allocation is set by the finance ministry. The central bank decides how the remainder is invested.

Moscow has generally taken a sceptical approach towards offering bilateral financial support to euro-zone countries, saying it would prefer to invest in bonds issued by a common bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF).

Officials have also said that they would prefer to support any debt initiative that is put together under the auspices of the Group of 20 nations, which is due to hold a summit in Cannes, France, next month