Esther Zaplana 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦📈🍒1️⃣9️⃣9️⃣0️⃣

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Esther Zaplana 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦📈🍒1️⃣9️⃣9️⃣0️⃣ banner
Esther Zaplana 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦📈🍒1️⃣9️⃣9️⃣0️⃣

Esther Zaplana 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦📈🍒1️⃣9️⃣9️⃣0️⃣

@w3zd

Choni militante ★ Universidad de la vida ★ Carnívora y antipática ★ Cafeína o barbarie

Katılım Ekim 2010
2K Takip Edilen694 Takipçiler
Esther Zaplana 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦📈🍒1️⃣9️⃣9️⃣0️⃣ retweetledi
Guaje Salvaje
Guaje Salvaje@GuajeSalvaje·
Concentración en Mérida en apoyo a Juan Carlos, funcionario del SEPE expedientado por atender sin cita previa. "La oficina vacía y pretenden que a quien entre con un problema le diga que sin cita no le puedo atender. ¡Una vergüenza!" Bravo, Yolanda Díaz.
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Alejo Schapire⚡️
Alejo Schapire⚡️@aschapire·
El gobierno laborista pide no politizar el caso Nowak. And also, Keir Starmer arrodillándose por el caso George Floyd en EEUU.
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Spainball
Spainball@Espball·
@EFEnoticias Sólo faltaría, todavía somos mayoría, hijos de puta.
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Alberto Olmos
Alberto Olmos@alb_olmos·
Tercer mundo es hombres sin camiseta por la calle.
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Catsauraga
Catsauraga@CatSauraGa·
% Salario dedicado al alquiler.
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El Periódico de la Energía
La justicia holandesa ejecuta el embargo de la sede del Instituto Cervantes e inicia su venta en subasta para saldar los impagos de las renovables
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Demographic Renaissance
Demographic Renaissance@DemographicR·
1/ Hidden in Paris for over 200 years: a high-fertility religious community known as “La Famille.” Marrying exclusively within their own sect, with ~4,000 members divided amongst only 8 surnames. A history so unusual that one of their prophets even appears in Les Misérables.
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MagistraThor🇪🇸
MagistraThor🇪🇸@MagistraThor·
🚨🚨Los jueces españoles desempeñarán su labor profesionalmente, haciendo cumplir la Constitución y el resto del ordenamiento jurídico. Las sucias presiones, amenazas y coacciones para impedirlo, son inútiles. Beatriz Biedma es el modelo a seguir por los nuevos jueces.
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David Bonilla
David Bonilla@david_bonilla·
De viaje en Valladolid, a mi suegro se le ha movido un stent y tienen que hacerle un cateterismo, pero no pueden acceder a su historial médico, gestionado por el Sergas gallego. Como si estuviera en un país extranjero. No sé como alguien puede justificar este disparate.
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Esther Zaplana 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦📈🍒1️⃣9️⃣9️⃣0️⃣ retweetledi
Andre Silva
Andre Silva@andresilvatw·
"The series also shows that Spain did not benefit from its empire. That is a problem for every theory tying colonies to modern growth." This is important and surprising: with all the gold and new territory, GDP per capita in Spain did not increase. The figure below shows the same message with a different dataset. GDP per capita in Spain is almost flat between 1500 and 1800. It is not gold that explains the wealth of nations
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Jesús Fernández-Villaverde@JesusFerna7026

How has the Spanish economy performed over the very long run? To answer, I use Leandro Prados de la Escosura’s (@LdelaEscosura) data on real GDP per capita from 1277 to 2024. I express Spain’s figure as a ratio to Britain’s, since Britain was the first economy to achieve modern economic growth, from around 1660, and has been the leader, or close to it, ever since. Spain, within its present borders, was prosperous in the Late Middle Ages, well ahead of Britain, then a peripheral corner of Europe. The Black Death and its aftermath hit Spain harder, and by 1360, the two economies had converged. That parity held until 1600, when Spain began a long decline, in absolute terms (on the eve of the French Revolution, it was barely above its 1600 level, after a deep slump in between) and in relative terms (Britain pulled steadily away). The standard explanations, the Habsburg wars, and the serial bankruptcies run into one problem. They can account for the poor performance between 1550 and 1650, but not for the stagnation between 1650 and 1789. 140 years of stagnation is far more than wars and debt under the Habsburgs can explain. The series also shows that Spain did not benefit from its empire. That is a problem for every theory tying colonies to modern growth. At most, one can argue that colonies were a necessary condition for takeoff (I do not believe even that, but leave it for another day). One cannot argue that they were sufficient. The period from 1789 to 1936 was no kinder. The economy grew a little, and Spain built a modern but unfinished liberal state. Yet it never closed the distance to Britain. It is hard not to read the period from 1789 to 1936 as a national failure and the Civil War as its final consequence. The recent efforts of some historians to paint those years in brighter colors strike me as unfounded. Spain did not fail at modernization as badly as China, but it did not succeed. A deeply corrupt dynasty, closed and incompetent elites in Madrid, Barcelona, and Bilbao, and an economic policy built on intervention and protection (by 1920, Spain was the most protectionist economy in the Western world, so much for the friends of protection) together made the country a basket case. A cruel civil war left Spain at its historical low, with just 31% of the British GDP per capita. The foreign visitors who arrived in the early 1950s found a poor, backward country. Policy in the first twenty years of the dictatorship was awful. Autarky was not so much imposed by the Allies as chosen. Spain’s rulers, using their quasi-fascist Weltanschauung, believed growth would come from state intervention, closed markets, and unorthodox fiscal and monetary policy. Then, in 1959, policy changed. Spain adopted a more orthodox fiscal and monetary policy and opened to foreign investment and trade. The results were spectacular. For forty years, Spain grew briskly and became the modern country it is today. By 2001, it had reached 77% of British GDP per head. But the internal contradictions of two things eventually became binding: the growth model launched in 1959, and the political regime created by the 1978 constitution. By 2024, Spain had slipped back to 74% of British GDP per head. This is worse than it looks. Britain itself has done poorly over the past twenty years, and losing ground to a weak performer is a bad sign. Spain stands at a crossroads, economic and political. The country’s foundations no longer work, but its political and business elites have failed to understand this fundamental reality. A good grasp of its economic history helps make sense of its present predicament.

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Juan Sánchez
Juan Sánchez@JSanchezTorron·
Pero, ¿acaso las leyes que hay permiten la corrupción, o la favorecen? ¿Desde cuándo la proliferación de leyes evita la corrupción? La fe en la ley es propia de quien desconoce lo más elemental de las relaciones de poder. ¿Acaso la "ejemplaridad" depende de un acto de voluntad, como si la corrupción no implicase ya un entramado institucional que envuelve a los que supuestamente tendrían que aplicar "medidas" y "ejemplaridad", y del cual dependen? De no ser así, la corrupción no tendría oportunidad alguna de prosperar. ¿Y acaso "Sumar" no depende indirectamente de esa misma trama corrupta? Su suerte está ligada a la del Partido mayoritario en el Gobierno. La ingenuidad, en estas lides, es culposa.
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Isaac
Isaac@isaacrrr7·
🚨 ÚLTIMA HORA: Funcionarios de la ONU admiten que las Naciones Unidas están al borde del colapso financiero total porque los estados miembros se niegan a pagar sus cuotas. “Nos enfrentamos al peligro real de quedarnos sin dinero.”
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Pedro Sánchez
Pedro Sánchez@sanchezcastejon·
Me preocupa el silencio de Rajoy ante los casos de corrupción de su partido. En política, como en la vida, quien calla otorga.
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