tv Business - News Deutsche Welle May 30, 2018 3:02am-3:16am CEST
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market may have been global stock slide analysts say you can now call this a crisis the political turmoil in italy hits equities and pounds the euro. plus germany's refugee work force getting more skilled migrants into work even without the official qualifications. and what happens when you say the controller out of airport control tower. this is your business update on helen humphrey in berlin glad you could join me. mayhem in milan and on all the european exchanges traders are worried that a snap election in italy will be a referendum on the eurozone now there's also serious concern that the country's debt burden is spiraling out of control analysts say europe may well be on the brink of another euro crisis. fear of a new financial crisis is creeping back into european markets italy faces and in
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terrible government the new elections this has shaken up investors worldwide. the dillies lead in the next temporarily drop by almost four percent on tuesday at the end of trading it stood at minus two point seven percent losses in madrid were almost as high the german dax index also lost ground one point five percent. especially bank stocks were on a downhill ride. but it's about more than stock markets wanted to leave central bank to do least future within the eurozone can only be secure as a reliable partner for your book cooper be on the route a simple presuming you we have to keep in mind the great risk of losing irreplaceable trust in a short period of time. lovely trust in the strength of our country that beside the patty in the unbalanced judgments is great. both on an economic and
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civil level ground so gonna grow normally go it's a quote should be either. but it's not only italy that needs the euro zone the currency union stability relies on the financial stability of its member to the south. and we can speak to a financial correspondent in new york so fishermans key joins us now sophie what are investors in the united states saying about this drama all unfolding in italy. well we have been observing a remarkable reaction in the markets here today and early trading the dow lost the around two hundred points in and the loss got even bigger during the day we were down to four hundred fifty points at one point and that is a debt crisis caused by political turmoil surrounding potential reelections and italy and the result was a violin fell off in father in european debt that blasted into the broader
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financial markets so we could see a sell off of stocks as well investors let into safe havens like the u.s. dollar for example and banks who are leading here the downturn on wall street and in the center of all of this is the european currency the stability of the euro and the economy in the euro zone because the worst case scenario is a queer quivery so italy leaving the european union potentially leaving an even bigger mess than the breck that it and traders i have talked to have been saying all day they're going to stay away from big investment decisions at the moment or a surgery much a global reaction the moment thanks so if you stay with us we're going to come back to you in just a moment but first let's talk about a deal two years in the making now u.s. antitrust authorities have approved by is takeover of the american sea giant monsanto it marks another major hurdle in the sixty two and all billion dollar deal
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but the german german farmer just firm has agreed to sell assets including seed in crop chemical activities to its rival b a s f o eight and a half billion dollars to come to trust concerns the life science company already has the green light from the e.u. brazil and russia but it still needs clearance from canada and mexico right let's go back over to sophie then that green light from regulators where you are sir pretty much looks like a done deal. well buyer still has to wait for the other two countries to give them green light but fire has said it comprehend that the deal will close by the june fourteenth deadline for the company acquiring one firm told that would be the last step off a transformation buyer was founded more than one hundred fifty years ago and is plastics business and for you may to have as a lie prions company with
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a health and agriculture unit and once this deal is group three global the hem of would dominate the world's agriculture industry and this of course is a prospect that has left farm as worried because they fear higher prices and less choice but now wire has definitely managed a major hurdle so if you own will three thank you. top german european officials are pressing the u.s. for a permanent exemption to high import tires from metals imported from europe they're expected to go into effect on friday now european trade commission to see amongst women german economy minister pay to outsmart expected to meet this week with that wilbur ross the u.s. commerce secretary a huge trade representatives failed to win a permanent exemption to the u.s. tariffs at the start of this month policy may make is to say they will take countermeasures that could damage economies on both sides of the atlantic if they
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do not get what they want. now more refugees are finding jobs in germany two hundred sixteen thousand migrants and now in work in the need for skilled workers is so great to some abreu is giving experience refugees a job even without the official training certificates you might think so what's that's a big thing in a country the place is so much emphasis on paperwork. he's only twenty four years old but already a well rounded craftsman use of asa honey worked as a carpenter in syria for six years he also sewed in his father's tailor shop there he made everything from curtains to upholstery and even fabric auto interiors. you'd have to go switched on we had a big workshop with a lot of space and you'd have been why so things there were a lot of businesses would bring us work and we sewed and taylor that workshop is how my father made a living. and in english with my phantoms we got
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a way to. use of alcohol and he has been recognised as a war refugee and has been working for this small on a maker for two years the start ups which is ultraviolet resistant on ngs and mounts them for customers even this young company in a niche market worries about finding enough skilled workers there are hardly any more good stores in germany its owners say. well no it isn't wasn't on and we have contact with other automakers and we see that skilled staff are in high demand and those who have learned the trade are then turned off of it because of the heavy working load and it's very difficult always looking for new people in for. the manufacturer already has two permanent employees and a steady stream of in turns including at the moment marlon mostafa. he has from aleppo which was a textile hub before the war there the thirty nine year old employed twenty five people in his workshop. which. i have experience as
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a tailor of men's and women's fashion i could even open a tailor shop after maybe even a large workshop were a lot of people could common work for me and i can employ fifty people perhaps even one hundred s. in a short a long time should come see who i should be to i. most office current managers are giving him a good start towards his goal they're banking on both syrian's textiles experience even if the workers have no qualifications. on paper. of all to name on this it's down to the company not to insist too much on certificates or exam results that's a typical german obsession i think that these are the only things that matter when it comes to employment criteria. german language ability is still a must for angle in colts even if their employee skills are top notch they don't want misunderstandings and improperly cut fabric so they insist their staff take german language courses the need for such language skills is self-evident to use of fossil honey after all he says he does now live in germany you know most would say
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it is. it's an iconic image the ad traffic control responsible for the safety thousands of passengers every day perched on a tower above the runways the not kid is in hand but what if the tower wasn't located near an airport and what if instead of windows controllers relied on monitor has only a small airport in sweden may signal what's to come another day and soon fall north of stockholm another safe landing at the city's airport all with the help of air traffic controllers in this tower nothing unusual there things look much different inside controllers here rely on a panoramic digital display for a real time picture of air traffic all of it fed by cameras around the runways and projected on to fifteen massive screens in other words it's a remote air traffic control tower and since fall doesn't just control its own flights but those of two other airports hundreds of kilometers away. we do see some benefits with
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a remote system that you can actually increase safety regarding how you handling we can see in and out on the runway and the possibility that it has system support of detecting a craft so the safety is is high sweden's transportation agency approve the technology developed by saab in two thousand and fifteen since fall became the first to employ it now others are buying into the idea solve a signed contract with airports in the u.k. and it's running a trial in the us belgium is considering updating its control towers in the edge and shore law in the coming years on five dollars will be utopia and we see that in other european countries when a new tower is built in an airport most of our colleagues choose the digital tower and i think that it will eventually be the solution object adams said on a solution. a future of outsourced air traffic control it's ready for takeoff. that's what you're up to say with the latest from the wall of business from will
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odd. looking for the white house the first. round is shaking no but the books about the flu is your favorite too much food. and much of it is about to make the point that much of a church and the multiplicity of the entire country championed free treatment for the last sixty years doubling for mines. higher and higher going to further and further going to turn here and dirtier. the high gloss world of professional sports behind the scenes of bitter truth. manipulation exploitation and corruption b.s. style of business worth billions but just how murky is the world of sports in reality. judy. starting june sixth t.w. . where i come from we have to fight for
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a free press and was born and raised in a military dictatorship with just one to shadow and if you newspapers when official information as a journalist i had was all the strength of many can trust and they have problems are always the same for doing social inequality a lack of the freedom of the press. corruption who can afford to stay silent when it comes to the fans and the humans and seeing the microphones who have decided to put their trust in us. may mean jenny harrison and weren't a d.w.i. .
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