Pages
Categories
Archives
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
- August 2006
- July 2006
- June 2006
- May 2006
- April 2006
- March 2006
- February 2006
- January 2006
- December 2005
- November 2005
- October 2005
- September 2005
- August 2005
Meta
Autor: rod
~ 24/03/08
by Rod Hughes
Puntarenas fans yesterday must have thought the soccer match with San Carlos lasted about an hour too long. It took half an hour for the “Bulls of the North.” as the San Carlos club is called, to realize it was up against an opponent without spirit or a clear game plan. After that, the Bulls literally had a field day.
Of course, Leonardo Adams drew first blood after only four minutes of play, but for the next 30 minutes, San Carlos treated their adversaries with kid gloves. Then, Carlos Clark hit at minute 48. Feeling positively bullish (as they say on Wall Street) in the second half, San Carlos really began attacking. striker Luis Arroyo made it 3-0 and then Adams, having a sterling day, capped it off with his second goal.
Brujas 3, Santos 1
Brujas made the most of a strong midfield effort and won its first away match this year against a clearly outclassed Santos at their home pitch in Guapiles. The latter did not come within smelling distance of the goal during the first half.
After 18 minutes of play, Rodolfo Rodruguez’s header opened the festivities for Brujas of Escazu. Paolo Jimenez closed the first half on a pass from Josimar Arias. Opening the second half, Ricardo Steer made a penalty kick into the netting. That was all until Santos’s Marion Arias directed a pass from Marvin Chinchilla into the goal mouth at minute 80.
Goal Summary So Far
It is easy to see why Saprissa is flying so high this year. The two top goal scorers are Alejandro Alpizar with 9 and Armando Alonso with 6. One should not forget Jonathan McDonald of Heredia who is tied with Alonso. Three are tied with 5: Mario Arias of Santos, Minor diaz of Cartago and William Sunsing of Liberia. The come the rest of the pack including eight with 4 goals.
Standings for “Torneo de Verano”em>
Group A
1. Saprissa, 28 pts.
2. Heredia, 17
3. San Carlos 17
4. Puntarenas 13
5. UCR 12
6. Carmelita 6
Group B
1. Alajuela 18
2. Perez Seledon 16
3. Brujas 16
4. Liberia 15
5. Santos 9
6. Cartago 9
Autor: rod
by Rod Hughes
Could it be that Costa Rica’s lawmakers and government departments are learning to live within their means? Such an unlooked-for miracle may account for the unmistakeable figures showing the national debt has been reduced in the past five years, to quote the daily La Nacion’s word, in a “spectacular” manner.
The period reported includes the term of former President Abel Pacheco and the first year of the administration of President Oscar Arias. Ironically. the Pacheco Administration spent four years trying to push through the Legislative Assembly a tax reform package aimed at just such a result only, to have it overturned by the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court before it went into effect.
According to national authorities, the debt passed from 60% of the gross national product in 2003 to 45% last year. The International Monetary Fund put last year;s figure at 43%. Whoever is right about the latter figure, it is the greatest debt reduction since the debt renegotiation at the beginning of the 1990s. Those re-negotiations were brought on by the economic crisis during the Carazo Administration of the early 1980s when attending to the debt ate up nearly all the gross GNP. In 1992, that figure dropped to 60%, then stagnated for a decade.
It might be well to note that the crisis had been brought on by the worldwide fall of coffee prices after the Figueres and Oduber administrations had borrowed heavily. They had been counting on the high prices of coffee to pay the debt and President Rodrigo Carazo came into office just in time to be handed the bill. He then refused to listen to financial advisors and made a series of blunders such as trying to buoy up the national currency by using the country’s gold reserves. It should be noted that, since then, Costa Rica has diversified its exports to a point that only a world economic crisis could put the nation on the edge of bankruptcy again.
The IMF estimates that this year, the figure could fall to 40% of the GNP. What accounts for these happy figures? La Nacion economics writer Patricia Leiton suggest three important factors: 1. Increased national production, including exports. 2. Lower interest rates. 3. Governmental savings. Gross internal product, (the monetary value of goods and services produced by the country in a year) is up “significantly,” to used the reporter’s word. In the past three years it rose to 6.3% in 2005, to 8.8% in 2006 and to 6.9% last year.
So the government had larger income from taxes and less need to borrow. Couple this with a lowering of interest rates from 15% in 2005 to the current 5% and you have a drop in the cost of the debt. The capping achievement was a surprising curb in government spending, especially under President Pacheco’s austerity plan. Far from having to borrow to pay interest on the national debt as had been done in years past, the government actually created as surplus, something the World Bank had advocated Costa Rica accomplish.
Actually, the nation finds itself with a slight embarrassment of riches. Foreign investment has been so great that the Central Bank has trouble controlling the number of dollar floating around. The danger is overheating of the economy, resulting in runaway inflation. It is a dilemma economic officials would rather confront than that which faced the Carazo Administration.