tv Business - News Deutsche Welle September 6, 2018 7:15pm-7:31pm CEST
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and it was start work among those drafted in from the lower leagues to play in the game and they were enthusiast tickly applauded on their return home and down markets like wells in the nation's league on sunday with a similar makeshift side expected. you heard the applause there in the background all right thank you so much for watching and carousel for us is up next. life. all. full of energy. europe's best rock and pop musicians in captivating performances. and. european concert hall and g.w. . every journey begins with the first step and every
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language for the first word emerged from the. eco is in germany to learn german and why not with him simple online on your mobile and free shop d w z e learning course nikos speak german made easy. ready to strike back if washington goes ahead with another round of tariffs on chinese goods china will retaliate and many farmers in the u.s. could be hit hardest by beijing's counter measures. cuban spies soldiers of many goods but they are very creative in finding alternative uses for products including the called the. this is the w. business i'm good how about as welcome to the. u.s.
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is poised to move ahead with another round of tariffs on chinese imports this time it's a twenty five percent levy on two hundred billion dollars in goods it will be the latest measure in a dispute that is hitting businesses around the world including american farms american meat called oranges caught now facing counter-terrorist and that's threatening the livelihoods of many farmers in the u.s. . last summer the m barger family farm in virginia faced a bright future thanks to china wholesalers there wanted to buy its beef in huge quantities. that's what they told farmers set on barger when he went on a business trip sponsored by the us government to beijing. potential buyers they were they were very excited they want to be frightening and they wanted to go ahead and sign a contract they wanted to make a deal that day but that all changed when china imposed retaliatory tariffs on american products over the summer after the u.s.
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imposed its tariffs china imposed thirty seven percent import duties on beef and at such high prices the chinese prefer to buy elsewhere like in canada the farmers there are the winners of the u.s. is trade disputes and it's not just china european companies are also increasingly buying meat grain and other ira cultural products here the reason is simple. the terrace that you're placed on u.s. corn twenty five percent tariffs that would be the main driver that would then make u.s. corn more expensive thank you nade in course so i'm barger family has passed down its farm from one generation to the next but now it's under threat from those tariffs. and to think that it can come to an end and us. the fact that it would end at the fifth generation is hard to swallow sometimes. the family now hopes that the u.s. government can come to an agreement on tariffs with its trading partners as quickly
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as possible. germany's leading economic research institutes the country can look forward to steady growth at least for the next two years and the autumn forecast out today the uptake in the midst of demand that will sustain stable growth of up to two percent through at least twenty twenty boss after that they're less optimistic for now growth will be sustained by factors like an expected sixty billion euro government budget surplus. just a little earlier i asked our correspondent in frankfurt when he bought if analysts are right to be so pessimistic about long term growth in germany. i don't think it's a given yet that in two thousand and twenty the growth will be worse possibly predict but oftentimes you forward and others correct themselves from half year to half year projections because the economy doesn't expect that things because politicians
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and players in the economy do unexpected things trade being one example but for example the incoming orders that came today they were they were down zero point eight percent but still coming from a very high level and part of the reason for let's say germany's economy is showing perhaps some problems on the export side a lack of qualified workers and that of course cannot be rectified overnight and possibly plays a role in the projections going forward with info for example. our financial correspondent only bonds that. it's in germany where the government is considering new proposals on immigration that would give priority to skilled migrants it's not clear whether the criteria would apply to the more than one million migrants and refugees who have arrived in germany since twenty fifteen new official figures suggest at least some of them are beginning to end to the job market while more than half a million are registered unemployed three hundred thousand on employment or job
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training that's up fifty percent compared to you before for. its highly skilled technical jobs and those doing it have worked hard to get here. until a few years ago hi tom our nuffield lived in syria but fears about his fate there prompted him to flee. yet almost all the game on for me everyone has to join the army and fives being in the army means shooting and killing others i didn't want the focus. since coming to germany he's learnt the language and is currently doing professional training funds the carcass of the cecil i'm training to become a coaching technician i simply took my first year and i'm now in my second. german industrial services company i.d.s. employs some nine hundred people. of those over one hundred are migrants.
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the company employed many of them back in twenty fifteen before they were granted refugee status. now the c.e.o. fears that some of his workers could face deportation. from them i always must walk ons and i'm of the opinion that it makes no sense to deport people who are trained well and well integrated and all the especially here in the southwest where the unemployment rate is just over two percent from an economic point of view to crazy . the sort of western germ. in region between lake constance and the city of almost considered well to do in the last decade growth has been solid largely thanks to the success of family owned and small to mid-size companies but many employers are finding it hard to find skilled labor and are increasingly relying on migrants c.e.o. much inventor has this message for politicians. eventually. we want a new migration lot to give refugees who are well integrated have mastered the language
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are integrated into the labor market in taxes and doing a good job opportunity to stay here working for themselves and for as long as they want to because it is worth. my time i have now feels certainly wants to stay he's glad to be able to support himself and feels at home here in germany. to turkey every day items have become more expensive as a trade dispute with the u.s. is undercutting an already weak international currency the lira turks are now paying more for everything from groceries to gas and electricity and also for the magazines they read publishes are just barely getting by. is one of turkey's old a satirical magazines and it's got a problem it's been shrinking not its staff but the size of the paper itself.
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most paper stock is imported to turkey with the lira down forty percent against the dollar this year it's become much more expensive publishers are forced to cut back . last week it was a quarter of its normal size this week it went back up to a half uncertainty now hangs over the publication. this industry is dependent upon imports these costs are excruciating besides even if you can't come up with the money paper suppliers are not eager to take the papers out of their storage because it's not clear what the price will be in two hours when the. readers have more urgent needs meanwhile and even those are often out of reach. we used to buy eggs for ten turkish lira now at sixteen i can't make eggs i can't afford eggs for breakfast. lunch future doesn't look bright for these and. i think we already passed that threshold of being shut down to i believe that man
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is turkey's longest live satirical magazine but for the future we don't have a projection to. be shown just with almost. no laughing matter for a funny magazine. starbucks is venturing into the motherland of his friends so encompassing you know the u.s. coffee chain has just opened its first outlet in italy a store in milan is aimed at an upscale market starbucks is betting that premium coffees will win over customers in a country where an espresso is a quick and inexpensive daily routine comes of stocks plans to close one hundred fifteen branches in the u.s. in the coming. to cuba now after years of u.s. trade sanctions and an inefficient economy people have to live with very limited resources the response is what the cubans probably refer to as invent a substance using everyday items for things that are in short supply demonstrating
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for example. sometimes a little piece of raba can go a long way. you don't have to look far in just about any aspect of cuban life to find something like this a condom doubling at this rally as a balloon. condoms are so cheap and plentiful in cuba that they end up in the most unusual of places fisherman use them as barbers to float their hooks in the sea and every mechanic knows that a condom makes a terrific plug for a flat tire. the problem with all this repurchasing say health workers is that many people are liable to downplay the fact that condoms were actually invented for something completely different. from what they see the condom as a tool to use for other things that they really weren't made for like fishing and all those other things this is it for fishing it's used to protect your life and the lives of other people about
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a little to head. up us all. cubans are natural born inventors it seems so it's no surprise that the strong stretchy characteristics of the condom make it far more useful than its original brief of contraception and disease prevention. here or hobbyist has discovered the rubber has an excellent application in home winemaking he just covers a bottle of grape juice with a fresh condom and when the fermentation process is complete gas trapped in the balloon collapses signaling it's time for a drink. that's all for me on the business scene here in berlin thank you very much for watching.
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touched. one trigona international talk show for journalists to discuss the topic of the week a series of angry sometimes violent demonstrations by far right protestors has prompted soul searching here in germany how should politicians and civil society respond can germany defeat its demons that's our topic on foot really got china us . quadriga next.
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hundred small thieves in my hands. where i come from raj your remains uninformed found me soft transmitting and formation and when i was young my concert was drawing. the more prominent people most people were gods of all around my. to see. if one's mind joel two and one. just say it's sold on everyone in the town. and this goes against you as. nothing has been from inside my known copy it into a month or more of them. even. to us i was it's written for.
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my choice to use cognition because given their way toward transmitting patrols. my name is my gosh mom mitch and i would. be top. secret. welcome to quadriga a recent string of violent rightwing protests in the eastern german city of kevin that's some involving intimidation of foreigners hitler salutes and mob violence has prompted consternation worldwide and soul searching here at home but this week it was other images that made headlines as sixty five thousand people assembled in camps for a concert get it dedicated to taking.
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