El "tecnofeudalismo" de Cédric Durand no sólo es para los usuarios entregando sus datos, también lo es para los medios a merced de los intereses de los llamados en la UE "guardianes de acceso".
01.09.2025 15:23 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0@godoywulffen.bsky.social
Orgulloso conquense y opositor a la Carrera Diplomática 🇪🇦🇪🇺🇺🇳
El "tecnofeudalismo" de Cédric Durand no sólo es para los usuarios entregando sus datos, también lo es para los medios a merced de los intereses de los llamados en la UE "guardianes de acceso".
01.09.2025 15:23 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0El Imperium III, no el I ni el II, ya una pieza de museo 🫠 (p.d. buen trabajo del @culturagob.bsky.social )
29.08.2025 13:06 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0The countries of southern Europe have been outperforming the rest of the euro area since the end of the Covid pandemic, in part because of the strength of their service industries. Spain has been a standout, distinguished by its higher value-added services sector, and it has growth momentum that is expected to last for several years, according to Goldman Sachs Research. Our economists have raised their forecasts for
"The shift toward high value-added services is the least appreciated structural change of the Spanish economy in our conversations with investors," Filippo Taddei, senior economist focusing on southern Europe and European policy within the European Economics team, writes in the team's report. The share of high value-added services in Spain's GDP is now 3 percentage points higher than it was pre-pandemic and has increased by 1 percentage point more than in the rest of the euro area. Spain's shift toward high value added services signals a structural change
What is driving Spain's economy? In fact, Spain's recovery has benefited from a rebound in both manufacturing and services. The country took the biggest growth hit among EU member states during the pandemic, but it has been leading the recovery since then. In 2024, Spain completely closed the gap in GDP per capita that opened with the rest of the euro area during the pandemic. Spain's economy is also getting a boost from immigration. The country is taking in more people relative to the size of its population than Germany, France, or Italy, and the latest influx is characterized by immigrants with higher levels of education and job skills. This distinctive demographic trend "could set Spain on a better footing" than the rest of Europe, Taddei writes.
the same time, Spain has less exposure to the potential negative impact of US tariffs. The researchers expect Europe as a whole to see little economic growth in the second half of this year because of the tariff headwind, but Spain will be less hard hit because its share of exports to the Us is markedly below the European average. The products Spain produces also are less exposed to industrial competition from China. How is political uncertainty affecting Spain's economy? This year, the Spanish government has been unable to rely on a stable parliamentary majority, but this is not hindering the fiscal outlook. The country has a structurally lower level of taxation and spending compared with peers such as Italy and the average for the eurozone. In fact, political uncertainty has slowed down the pace at which the government is spending the European Recovery fund, the main EU fiscal program designed to facilitate the post-pandemic recovery and structural change. 2025 may be the first year in which deployment of these resources does not increase on an annual basis. This backloads fiscal support for the economy, shifting more spending to 2026 and (only in small part) 2027. Our economists also expect an additional increase in Spain's defense spending, and they
From Goldman Sachs on how Spain became Europe’s fastest growing economy.
In summary: bringing in more immigrants, on average higher-educated; shift towards high value-added services; rebound in manufacturing; less exposure to U.S. tariffs; lower taxes than peers.
www.goldmansachs.com/insights/art...
Jajajaja verdad, aunque visto que podía no haber llegado, los de Cuenca pensamos que fue mejor eso que no tener
10.08.2025 19:49 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0a qué te refieres con el "error de Cuenca"?
10.08.2025 17:02 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0Gracias @carloshidalgo.bsky.social igualmente! Una alegría encontrarte por aquí.
10.08.2025 14:55 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0Movilización en Grecia para impedir el acceso de turistas israelíes. El boicot popular, económico, deportivo, cultural y político, fue clave para poner fin al Apartheid en Sudáfrica. www.timesofisrael.com/greek-pro-pa...
07.08.2025 09:09 — 👍 185 🔁 93 💬 1 📌 5Hoy en Four Freedoms, el giro pro-Putin de la política exterior americana. www.4freedoms.es/p/europa-est...
20.02.2025 08:32 — 👍 40 🔁 30 💬 4 📌 4spotted on the european side of the internet:
19.02.2025 20:37 — 👍 524 🔁 107 💬 26 📌 8Y el de Cuenca, en la foto del artículo, el más bonito de todos ☺️
08.02.2025 15:33 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0La versión IA de la clásica ilustración de Diego Areso. Es un planeta sonriente, con aspecto de emoji, sobre un fondo azul cielo
✨ El mundo no empeora, ¡mejora! ✨
No es perfecto; ni siquiera un buen lugar. Pero de los escenarios globales que hemos conocido (no imaginado o deseado), este es el mejor.
¿Quieres señales? Aquí van 45 buenos datos para empezar 2025 con optimismo 👇
Una pena absoluta. Hablando tanto de transición ecologica, más ferrocarril y de luchas contra la despoblación para luego esto.
17.12.2024 20:52 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0The threat from Trump and Musk over EU IA and social-media platforms regulation could be an opportunity to lead international agreements and attract talent. Via @ecfr.eu ecfr.eu/article/glit...
17.12.2024 09:25 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0A bit of French history about constitutions, republics and De Gaulle. Instability always allows 'imaginative' ways of doing politics
05.12.2024 08:00 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0Por si no teníamos suficientes frentes abiertos🤦🏼♂️
03.12.2024 16:52 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0Qué alegría, el lince ibérico vuelve a Cuenca 😍. La imagen de este animal icónico se debería usar mucho más en la comunicación pública de nuestro país hacia el mundo cadenaser.com/castillalama...
23.11.2024 11:52 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0👉 "Failure to act would expose int. law as a facade ... allowing powerful nations ... to trample justice with impunity. Enforcing these warrants is not just a legal obligation, it is a moral imperative to uphold the principle that no leader is above the law" www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
22.11.2024 21:13 — 👍 3 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0He tenido que leer un par de veces lo de "maripostear" porque mi cabeza había cortocircuitado al entender "maricopear" @nanisimo.watif.es 🤣🤣
22.11.2024 15:01 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0Probando las listas por aquí, muy cómodo que se puedan anclar a la parte superior del feed
bsky.app/profile/did:...
Por qué se hace tan raro (y tan difícil) usar las redes en mitad de una tragedia
Tras la DANA, Instagram, TikTok o el X de Elon Musk se han convertido en una ensalada de vídeos de rescates, mensajes antipolíticos, plantillas pidiendo dimisiones y, cómo no, de bulos www.eldiario.es/era/superado...
Más evidencias para cambiar la mentalidad de que es razonable dar 2/3, o más, del espacio público al coche.
14.11.2024 13:19 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0Lo tengo un poco abandonado, pero estoy orgulloso de mi rinconcito en Flickr📷☺️ flickr.com/photos/15298...
14.11.2024 10:37 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0Tras Guindos y Calviño, un español más en los puestos top de la economía mundial 🇪🇸💪 www.bis.org/press/p24111...
12.11.2024 11:19 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0Me creeré que Pedro Sánchez es tan malo como dice la derecha cuando la derecha realmente haga todo lo posible para derrocar a Sánchez.
Esto quiere decir dejar de dar la matraca con Cataluña. www.vozpopuli.com/opinion/el-m...