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The Employers and Industrialists Federation  Oev  on Tuesday said Cyprus economy growth rate in 2022 amounted to 6 per cent, adding that the current une [url=https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk]stanley thermos mug[/url] mployment rate is now at the same level it was before the Covid-19 pandemic.In a statement to mark the end of the year, Oev president Antonis Antoniou said the reduction of non-performing loans in the country has restored some credibility to Cyprus  beleaguered  banking system. We are well aware of the potential, tenacity and resourcefulness that distinguish the Cypriot entrepreneur,  Antoniou said. Thanks to prudent economic management implemented by the state, upgrades of the credit rating of the Cypriot economy by international rating agencies were also achieved, which, in turn, attracted many more foreign investments. Oev added that the governments reforms implemented throughout 2022 played a key role in the successful year for the Cypriot economy. The most important breakthroughs were without a doubt the one promoting a quicker administration of justice and the liberalisation of the electricity market, which will make way for a reduction in the cost of electricity in the upcoming months,  Antoniou said.Cyprus, he said, has managed to draw up a detailed Recovery and Resilience Plan covering a wide range of development projects and initiatives.  Thanks to  [url=https://www.cups-stanley.us]stanley usa[/url] the plan, w [url=https://www.stanley-cup.co.nz]stanley nz[/url] e will be able to recover the ground lost due to the pandemic and the war in Ukraine. But Antoniou said making any prediction for 2023 could be risky. In this p Efma Blinken, Mideast leaders in talks to quell Israel-Palestinian violence
At a recent meeting of German business and foreign-policy leaders, one participant summed up an anxiety thats almost palpable here:  Europeans have a sense of being left alone. You Americans dont understand how much we need you.  Europeans seem relieved that Barack Obama won re-election.  One German official wrote in an informal paper that his victory was  the best thing that could have happened to the U.S.   But Europeans remain worried that the Obama administrations famous  pivot  toward Asia will leave them abandoned at a time of severe internal economic and political trouble. But theres a big idea taking shape that could revitalize the U.S.-European partnership for the 21st century. It was the talk of Berlin and Hamburg when I was there a week ago, and theres a similar buzz in Washington. The idea is free trade 鈥?spec [url=https://www.stanleycups.it]tappo stanley[/url] ifically, a trans-Atlantic free trade agreement 鈥?which Ill optimistically call  TAFTA.  Secretary of State Hillary Clinton tipped the U.S. hand on Nov. 29 when she said at the Brookings Institution,  We are discussing possible negotiations with the European Union for a comprehensive agreement that would increase trade and spur growth on both sides of the Atlantic.  She noted the  long-standing barriers to trade and market access  that would have to be removed to make any such deal possible, such as the EUs protectionist agricultural rules.  Clinton is [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley vaso[/url]  said to envision an  economic NAT [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley cup[/url] O  鈥?a comprehensive agreement covering trade in goods, services, investmen
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