DNB, dutch central bank, fails.
De Nederlandse Bank should see to it that coins and notes in purses of different people have the same buying power, not depending on position in society.
However foreigners pay more for several products in the Albert Heyn grocery shops as they do not know that to receive offered bonus a special card is required. In total Albert "Swine" thus cashed perhaps more than a million euros illegally.
Around the fifties the Treaty of Paris aimed to end dumping practices in the coal and steel sector. It was stated in art 60 that everybody can buy goods (and services) for the same low price as offered to others. Limiting conditions were forbidden. Of course this must be valid anywhere for a market to be open and honest.
May be you sit in a train next to a passenger who paid far less for the same trip on behalf of personal relations or age or detour via an agency allowed to sell cheaper than at the train station. Such favouring some has nothing to do with organisation of transport; the central bank failed to correct the evil managers.
Dutch government is cheating on large scale by giving tax reduction to well to do people who take mortgage and can buy a same house for netto tens of percents less than a minimumwager would be due. The latter has a too low wage for possessing a house of his own and the former can help him by renting, as he did not pay to the Treasury what he should according the principle of strongest shoulders.... High rent makes the "gap" still wider.
To the upper class is well known that the pensionfundsystem favours the richer half of the population. To which belong members of parliament, professors, bosses of trade unions an many journalists.
DNB did not make public in detail what is wrong; poorly educated people do not yet understand how is stolen from them. Therefor the president of the dutch central bank has to be fired.
Which directors of other central banks are in a similar position?
De Nederlandse Bank should see to it that coins and notes in purses of different people have the same buying power, not depending on position in society.
However foreigners pay more for several products in the Albert Heyn grocery shops as they do not know that to receive offered bonus a special card is required. In total Albert "Swine" thus cashed perhaps more than a million euros illegally.
Around the fifties the Treaty of Paris aimed to end dumping practices in the coal and steel sector. It was stated in art 60 that everybody can buy goods (and services) for the same low price as offered to others. Limiting conditions were forbidden. Of course this must be valid anywhere for a market to be open and honest.
May be you sit in a train next to a passenger who paid far less for the same trip on behalf of personal relations or age or detour via an agency allowed to sell cheaper than at the train station. Such favouring some has nothing to do with organisation of transport; the central bank failed to correct the evil managers.
Dutch government is cheating on large scale by giving tax reduction to well to do people who take mortgage and can buy a same house for netto tens of percents less than a minimumwager would be due. The latter has a too low wage for possessing a house of his own and the former can help him by renting, as he did not pay to the Treasury what he should according the principle of strongest shoulders.... High rent makes the "gap" still wider.
To the upper class is well known that the pensionfundsystem favours the richer half of the population. To which belong members of parliament, professors, bosses of trade unions an many journalists.
DNB did not make public in detail what is wrong; poorly educated people do not yet understand how is stolen from them. Therefor the president of the dutch central bank has to be fired.
Which directors of other central banks are in a similar position?
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