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Troika still rules Portugal

cttvanPortugal’s President said some days ago what many think and few have the courage to say: WE HAVE TO CHANGE AND CREATE JOBS! - writes Jack Soifer.

The Troika imposed what already had gone wrong abroad, such as the privatisation of public services. The theory was that they would be more efficient and that the supervisory agencies would stop abuses by the dominant corporations. In the UK, the government is trying to regain control over the railways while in Sweden the privatisation of some electricity distributors is being reconsidered.

In Portugal, the sale of most of EDP's voting shares to a Chinese group resulted in a brutal price rise. Granting the distribution to only three foreign giga-corporations resulted in a mega increase in complaints, without ERSE (the regulator) fining them for their abuses. We now have seen an obligatory reduction the price per Kwh but EDP simply increased the fixed fee, which the regulator, ERSE, does not regulate; this resulted in an increase in prices, especially for the poorest users.

In Northern Europe it is the large users, such as supermarkets and industries that can invest in renewable energy, such as IKEA does with solar panels, which pays more when consuming more.

For 15 years, telecoms regulator, ANACOM, has answered to any complaint with a standard phrase saying it is not a branch issue, rather uniquely, and that the client may file a lawsuit. Most customers do not do this because of the high cost and the knowledge that telecoms providers use lawyers with friends in courts. Telecoms always win the case in the low court or on appeal.

"ANACOM answers with standard phrase saying that it is not a branch issue ... POST in the future will worsen distribution to give more profit to foreign owners ... In other countries, in the Council of Agencies there are representatives from local associations."

And now, the Post Office (CTT)! In the majority of countries where PART of the final distribution of post has been privatised, it has leased out some of the post offices or closed them to allow kiosks that are open until 8 or 10 pm to receive and deliver letters to better serve the citizen. I do not know of any civilized country where the main collection and distribution of post has been privatised.

The Complaint Portal tells that the express post service, Correio Azul, now has an increase in delays of 212%! There are 5,776 unresolved claims, late deliveries, to the wrong site, lost and damaged orders. Of course! The new owners of CTT are financial funds with no experience in dealing with letters and packages. The key one, who allegedly influenced the privatisation rules, according to a meeting with their deceased former representative in the previous government, invested because of an existing authorisation for the Post Office Bank, which had yet to be used. This fund would hardly be allowed by the ECB to operate in the EU. Its only interest is Banco CTT and its huge potential profit. CTT borrows to pay dividends. In the future it will worsen distribution to give more Euros to foreign owners.

In my area, delivery went from daily to weekly. Many oldies get bills to pay the next day and suffer from worry. This led suppliers to force direct debit payments. Many oldies are no longer able to check their accounts; this facilitates systemic errors, always in favour of the supplier. On energy bills, the ‘estimate use’ is always in favour of the supplier dealer, which uses clients’ cash for 3 months, without ERSE interceding.

In most countries, the Council of Agencies has representatives from local consumer associations, parents and teachers, small trade associations and citizens who turn ideas into good practices.

Privatisations? Who won, who lost?

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Comments  

-1 #3 Elsa 2018-01-19 12:15
In terms of social and economic progress Portugal has stood still for at least the first 20 years it was in the EU. Far too much bad behaviour became the routine and, given that it is core part of any Portuguese history class, is still embedded today !
Consider this Aussie woman. Wanting the kind of advice on sustainable living that a Portuguese would expect in her country. Expecting lists of useful people to meet, places to view and suppliers of materials. Like so many others from what was the British Empire attempting to "effectively occupy" in Portugal over the last few EU decades and getting nothing of value in reply. Fire warnings to an Australian is telling them to suck eggs! Yet over 260 have viewed her query and if she now queries the lack of response she will be deleted as a troublemaker! Anyone else remember the Emma the Aussie blog in this area and her outcome? Going back to Australia.
http://www.expatforum.com/expats/portugal-expat-forum-expats-living-portugal/1383370-eco-build-planning-permisson.html
+1 #2 Peter Booker 2018-01-19 10:08
"I do not know of any civilised country where the main collection and distribution of post has been privatised."
The Royal Mail was privatised in 2015. Is Jack implying the UK is not civilised?
+7 #1 Marjolein Massis 2018-01-18 21:41
We have to chance and create jobs. Yes, but where to start? From one dictatorship they were more or less dropped into a second, more friendly, dictatorship the E.U. No time to adjust to normal life. The rest of Europe had mostly been oppressed by Germany and were eager to build up there country in freedom and their own way of life. Not Portugal. The same egocentric and dishonest rulers from Salazars time stayed.
Joint by a new group the communist. In the Alentejo they worked well but in the rest of the country they became socialist and started filling their own pockets not having learned that democracy means equal rights and care for everybody. Just when normality started to evolve in 2008 the economy collapsed and the E.U. came with rules that were based on North European mentality! Again a mix up for the Portugese people. So where do you start with mental and economic changes. Most of Portugal is sold to outsiders of Portugal and most of Portugese laws are changing, now and in the future, because E.U. laws and foreigners are always criticizing what Portugese are doing! Give them credit for their hospitality and all the obstacles they already have taken and don't expect them to become mentally a Northern European. Absolutely NO GOOD.

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