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Mobility has become one of the main issues that affect the quality of life of Colombians.

And it is not for less, because according to international statistics Several cities in our country are among the most congested in the world and three of these appear in the first places where the most hours were lost in traffic jams during 2021.

(Also: The challenge of the ‘transmilenios’ so that in Colombia they do not get off the bus)

This is why local administrations have decreed measures such as the pico y placa, which is becoming more severe, as in Bogota and Medellín, where the restriction is practically all day.

But this has not been enough to prevent us from spending hours detained on the streets of our cities with no chance of moving forward.

Each driver in the capital of the country lost 94 hours last year in traffic jams, while in the capitals of Antioquia and Valle del Cauca it was 53 and 51 hours, respectively. This, according to data from the company Inrix, which analyzes mobility in the world.

(Also read: The ABC of the payment to circulate during peak and plate in Medellín)

In other words, the time lost in the capital, for example, is the same time spent watching 62 soccer games without counting the added time. It is even almost the same as seeing a World Cup, because in this contest 64 commitments are played.
Bogotá is in 12th place worldwide – it is the first in Latin America –, Medellín in 94 and Cali in 109. The list is led by London (United Kingdom), Paris (France) and Brussels (Belgium), with 148, 140 and 134 hours lost in 2021, respectively.

traffic jams Bogota

This is what the traffic jams look like on the streets of Bogotá.

Photo:

Maurice Moreno. TIME

And not only those who drive a private vehicle lose hours in traffic jams, but also those who travel by bus and van.

According to Ricardo Montezuma, an expert in mobility, this situation occurs in our country basically due to three aspects: “We have not been able to order the cities. We have not been able to generate the accessibility infrastructure. I would say that there is another structural factor and it is the disastrous way in which we drive, such precarious forms of driving linked to violence and road insecurity. We have very disorderly ways of driving.”.

For example, explains the expert, Bogotá is a structurally blocked city, it is a city that has very few entrances and exits. However, this is repeated in most capital cities of the country.

(You may be interested in: This is how the bill and plate remain in Cali and the amount to pay to be exempt)

Precisely, for the expert, these three aspects are the ones that should be focused on in order to solve mobility problems, which are one of the main concerns of citizens.

As for the pico y placa that were implemented in Bogotá and Medellín, for Montezuma these do help mobility, but they can have “dire” effects in terms of the purchase of motorcycles and other “older, obsolete and polluting” cars. , asserted the expert and added that “it helps, but the change is not structural.”

Darío Hidalgo, who is also an expert in mobility, agrees on this: “Vehicle restrictions are measures that solve the issues in the short term, but they do not generate structural solutions. In fact, many people who have the possibility pay to drive or buy another vehicle”.

We have such precarious forms of driving linked to violence and road insecurity. We have very disorderly ways of driving

In addition, there is controversy because in these two capitals you can pay to be exempt from the restriction.

Are there many cars and few roads in the cities of Colombia?

Another debate that has been raised to improve mobility in the country, beyond restrictions such as the pick and tag, is that we have many cars and few roads. There are those who say that there is nowhere to go.

(We also recommend: The proposal of the taxi drivers on the new pick and plate in Barranquilla)

According to the Single National Traffic Registry (Runt), as of December 2021 there were 17,020,451 vehicles in Colombia, of which 10,136,593 are motorcycles and 6,701,970 are cars, vans, trucks, buses, vans and dump trucks. The remaining percentage corresponds to machinery, trailers and semi-trailers, which are 181,888.

In 2019, the total registrations in Colombia were 15,337,965 and in 2020 they were 16,043,484. Practically one million new means of transport are registered each year in the country.

The number of vehicles has grown by more than 50 percent over the last 10 years, since in 2011 there was a record of 7,220,219 in the country. And currently the majority are in Bogotá, with 2,626,905.

“We have a high level of road congestion that is reflected in lost hours. That is driven by a rapid increase in vehicle ownership,” Hidalgo said.

(In other news: InDriver driver denounced by Councilman Osorio has already recovered his car)

For him, the vehicle fleet has grown considerably over the last 10 years, but there have been no major improvements in infrastructure for vehicle circulation. However, he also believes that building more roads is not the solution to the problem, as this could even generate more traffic, as many would be motivated to purchase a vehicle.

In Cali there are 454,389 private vehicles registered with the city's Ministry of Mobility.

He argues that “attractive” solutions for citizens should be proposed. “On the one hand, we must improve access to cities. Although we need very attractive alternatives. That public transport improves, but also the opportunity to go on foot and by bicycle”.

Even the debate of regulating the vehicle fleet has been planted, despite the fact that some experts point out that this is not the real problem. “We have a lot of old obsolete cars. We do not have many cars if we compare ourselves with other countries, although there will be a lot, it will continue to grow, it will not stop. We do have a lot of motorcycles, motorcycles are a more serious problem for me than even cars. The motorcycles seem to have no regulation, “said Montezuma.

(We suggest you read: January ended with 66 murders and 1,284 displaced persons in Arauca)

From the Mayor’s Office of Medellín they point out that the Territorial Ordering Plan (POT) is focused on improving and strengthening non-motorized modes and public transport in the first order. Proof of this is that the tender for the third line of the Metro has already been opened.

“It should be noted that the city has a fleet of approximately 1,788,000 vehicles, where the road network, due to the densification of the city itself and due to topographical conditions, does not grow at the same rate as the vehicles, a situation that generates a phenomenon of important congestion”, commented Víctor Hugo Piedrahíta Robledo, Undersecretary of Mobility of Medellín.

traffic jams Bogota

This is what the traffic jams look like on the streets of Bogotá.

Photo:

Maurice Moreno. TIME

And he added that another problem is that culturally there is a perception that the private vehicle represents the best way to get around and “that is why the invitation from the Municipality is to discourage the use of the private vehicle and bet on sustainability.”

There is also concern about the delay in each journey

On average, a private car trip in our country lasts 45.57 minutes, according to information from the Numbeo platform.

This figure is made taking as a reference each journey reported to this platform. While there are trips that can last 10 minutes, others can last more than an hour. In other words, there may be people who take up to 45 minutes to go to work and another 45 to return home.

(Keep reading: This is the image of Mayor Daniel Quintero in Medellín)

This indicator in Bogotá is above the national average, as it reaches 52.13 minutes. This makes it the Latin American city with the worst weather -followed by Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) and Mexico City (Mexico).

We have a high level of road congestion that is reflected in lost hours. That’s fueled by a rapid increase in vehicle ownership.

As for the other cities in the country, the travel time is considerably reduced when compared to Bogotá. However, experts explain that this is due to the size of the territory. On average, a car trip in Medellin lasts 36 minutes, while in Cali and Barranquilla it takes 35 and 27.67 minutes, respectively.

In addition, it is necessary to see who are spending the most time on the journeys. Experts say that the lower class is the most affected.

Numbeo also collects information from some intermediate cities, such as Manizales, where each tour lasts 12 minutes.

This is what drivers think about mobility in Bogotá, Medellín and Cali

Drivers in these cities agree that getting around by car is becoming more and more complex and point out that if public transport were more accessible, they could get out of the car more often.

Alejandro Álvarez, who travels frequently between the north and south of Medellín and its metropolitan area, says that entering the southern municipalities, such as Envigado, is increasingly complex, both through main and alternate roads, regardless of the time. This can often take up to an hour, but it is also a journey that could be done in 25 minutes if the traffic is flowing, but this is rare.
From Cali, Kevin López says that one of the problems of mobility is that there is no respect on the roads, something that worsened after the national strike.

(Another recommended story: Álvaro Lemmon, from famous comedian to selling backpacks in Santa Marta)

Medellin Mobility

Overview of mobility on Oriental Avenue, in Medellín.

Photo:

Javier Grandson. TIME

“People no longer respect the roads, they get into the wrong way, they pass the traffic lights.” These situations, he explains, can end in accidents that ultimately cause traffic jams.
Antonio, who works as a driver for a private company in Bogotá, says that with the pick and tag all day he has improved mobility in the city.

However, he finds the number of hours lost in traffic jams worrying.
“It’s a long time and most of it causes stress,” he explained. For him, you can’t walk on roads like the NQS, so he prefers to always travel along the 68. But he is emphatic when saying that “we lack a lot of civic culture when it comes to driving.”

Other drivers from Bogotá point out that with the works that are being carried out in the capital, the trips are increasing. And they add that when the Metro works begin, it will be worse. They narrate for a route between the north and the Center you have to leave an hour in advance to arrive on time, but they fear that the weather will get worse.

(Also: Two Metro workers died when hit by a train)

Faced with this problem, experts indicate that the authorities must invest more in infrastructure, better conditions must be guaranteed in public transport, so that getting out of the car is not so annoying for those who are used to traveling in their own vehicle. But citizens must also contribute to the solution by having a better road culture.

MATTHEW GARCIA
Nation’s Editor
On Twitter: @teomagar
matgar@eltiempo.com

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned Friday that Russia could attack Ukraine at “any time” and warned Americans to leave Ukraine immediately.

Blinken issued the warning in Australia after meeting leaders of the Quad countries, the United States, Australia, Japan and India. Blinken cited “troubling signs” regarding Russia, including adding to the more than 100,000 troops it has amassed at the Ukrainian border.

“As we’ve said before, we’re in a window when an invasion could begin at any time. And to be clear, that includes during the Olympics,” Blinken said at a joint news conference in Canberra.

“We’re continuing to draw down our embassy, Blinken said. “We will continue that process. And we’ve also been very clear that any American citizens who remain in Ukraine should leave now.”

Russia maintains it has no plans to invade Ukraine but wants the West to keep Ukraine and other former Soviet countries out of NATO.

Blinken is visiting Australia as part of a Biden administration effort to show its long-term strategic focus remains on the Asia-Pacific region and that the Ukraine crisis will not distract it from its main priorities.

Blinken began Friday’s meetings with his Quad counterparts with Foreign Affairs Minister Marise Payne of Australia, who said the two would discuss China, North Korea and Ukraine.

After the meetings, the Quad ministers vowed in a joint statement to cooperate more closely to ensure the Indo-Pacific region was free of “coercion,” a veiled reference to China’s economic and military expansion.

They also promised to strengthen cooperation on the coronavirus pandemic, cyberthreats and counterterrorism, while condemning North Korea’s “destabilizing ballistic missile launches” in violation of U.N. Security Council resolutions.

Payne, who hosted the Quad meeting, said Wednesday the gathering sends a message to China that security in the region remains a priority for the United States.

Payne said the Quad ministers were “voting with their feet in terms of the priority that they accord to issues” important to the Indo-Pacific.

Blinken’s visit to Australia is his first trip there since an enhanced trilateral security partnership known as AUKUS — Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States — was announced in September. The agreement includes a deal to build nuclear-propelled submarines for Australia as part of enhanced deterrence against China’s military expansion across the Indo-Pacific region.

“The Quad is not a military alliance, but it is not lost on China that you have four democracies, all with a strong maritime presence and advanced military capabilities, concerned by the increasingly aggressive approach China takes with its neighbors,” said Charles Edel, the Australia chair of the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Blinken’s visit to Australia comes amid a growing partnership between China and Russia that was on display during Sunday’s meeting in Beijing between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping at the beginning of the Winter Olympics. The meeting occurred amid Russia’s military buildup along neighboring Ukraine’s borders and China’s increasingly assertive efforts to reunite Taiwan with the mainland.

In Beijing, Chinese officials have expressed wariness over the Quad and AUKUS.

China criticized the U.S. Friday for trying to “discredit, suppress and contain” the country’s development after Blinken said earlier this week there were concerns “that in recent years, China has been acting more aggressively at home and more aggressively in the regions.”

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian rejected the remarks, telling reporters at a daily briefing the U.S. revealed an “ideological bias.”

Zhao described the alliance as “a tool to contain China and maintain U.S. hegemony.”

The top U.S. diplomat’s weeklong trip includes Fiji as well as Honolulu, Hawaii.

Blinken will meet Saturday with Fiji leaders who consider fishing and climate change priority issues.

“We agreed to boost maritime security support for Indo-Pacific partners to strengthen their maritime domain awareness and ability to develop their offshore resources, to ensure freedom of navigation and overflight and to combat challenges such as illegal fishing,” Australian Foreign Minister Payne said after the meeting.

The Hospital Clínic de Barcelona has shown that a change in the timing of administering a treatment that is already used to treat ischemic stroke increases the chances of the patient obtaining an excellent recovery and without sequelae three months after the procedure by up to 59%. .

This marks a before and after stroke treatment”, highlighted the Head of the Cerebral Vascular Pathology Unit of the Clínic, Ángel Chamorro, coordinator of the CHOICE study with results on the sequelae, which has been presented at the International Stroke Conference in New Orleans (United States) and has been published in the journal «JAMA».

Ischemic stroke, which represents 85% of all embolisms, is caused by the obstruction of a cerebral blood vessel and causes 6 million deaths each year in the world, being the second leading cause of death.

If it does not kill, the stroke can leave important consequences for life -in fact it is the first medical cause of disability in the world-, even in those patients who, mechanically, manage to extract the thrombus from the blood.

an intravenous drug

In the first 24 hours after the appearance of the stroke, the treatment consists of administering an intravenous drug, alteplase; and performing a mechanical thrombectomy, which consists of inserting a catheter through the artery until it reaches the thrombus, in order to extract it.

In 85% of cases it is possible to remove the thrombus and restore blood circulation in the brain, but this is not always a guarantee of complete recovery, since after 3 months many patients present sequelae or some type of disability.

The researchers of clinic and the August Pi i Sunyer Biomedical Research Institute (Idibaps) suspected that the problem could be that there was thrombosis in the capillary vessels, the “peripheral roads” of the bloodstream network, which can become as fine as a hair and of which it is not possible to have images.

Thus arose the CHOICE projectwhose objective was to test whether the same drug that is given in the first hours of the stroke, alteplase, could help reduce possible damage to the capillaries if administered after thrombectomy to remove the thrombus.

The study, financed with funds from the TV3 Marathon, had 121 participants, randomly divided into two groups: one was administered the drug after removing the thrombus and the second, placebo.

sequelae stroke treatment
Javier, a 51-year-old patient who is recovering from a stroke, performs a rehabilitation exercise to avoid sequelae at the Vall d’Hebron Hospital Neurorehabilitation Day Hospital, EFE/Toni Albir

The results of the CHOICE project

The results have demonstrated the efficacy of this change in treatment: in the placebo group, 40% of the patients remained without sequelae and with independent life, without disability, while among those who received the drug after thrombectomy the percentage it rose to 59%, a difference therefore of 19% between the two groups.

The advantage of this study is that the drug is already available in hospitals, so as of this Thursday there will be “many professionals in the world who will begin to do it,” Dr. Chamorro ventured.

In any case, for the most “skeptical”, he has considered that a second study will be necessary with a more “robust” sample of patients so that the new procedure is validated and can be included in the clinical guidelines, a process that could be completed between this year and the next, he estimated.

For its part, the neurologist at Clínic-IDIBAPS and coordinator of the clinical trial, Arturo Renú, has specified that, although they have shown a “better efficacy” of the drug “once the artery is opened”, this does not mean that it has to be stopped before thrombectomy, as is currently done: “Only if You have a little drug left after the first administration, save it because it will work very well later, “he advised.

María Barranco is one of the patients who was fortunate to emerge unscathed from the stroke he suffered a year ago: “I was lucky that Dr. Renú’s team took me in right away and now I’ve realized that I was luckier to be in the drug group.”

RFE/RL’s Current Time Russian-language TV celebrates five years—despite incessant Kremlin attacks

February 8, 2022

Since its formal launch as a 24/7 TV channel on February 7, 2017, Current Time’s mission has been to bring real news to Russian-speaking audiences everywhere. Five years on, Current Time has established itself as a popular alternative to Kremlin-sponsored media, despite near-constant harassment of the channel and its journalists by Russian authorities.

Said RFE/RL President and CEO Jamie Fly, “Current Time was established to reach Russian-speaking audiences seeking honest news and information and unfortunately, as the Kremlin attempts to censor information, the need for Current Time is greater than ever. RFE/RL looks forward to many more years of growth and engagement with Current Time’s audiences in Russia and around the world.”

Pavel Butorin, director of Current Time since 2018, stressed the channel’s role in providing balanced reporting of issues that matter to its audiences. Said Butorin, “We don’t tell our audience what to think. Instead, we engage all sides of a debate and give voice to those who are too often silenced or ignored by authorities or government-friendly media.”

Current Time has been under attack from the Kremlin since the channel began. Current Time was designated as a foreign agent in December 2017, less than one year after its formal launch, and two Current Time journalists have been named as individual “foreign agents.” Current Time was forced to move production of some of its programs outside of Russia after authorities threatened to shut down RFE/RL’s Moscow bureau over RFE/RL’s unwillingness to submit to unjust labeling requirements in May 2021. This past weekend the Kremlin threatened to ban Current Time’s website and those of seven other RFE/RL services if they did not immediately remove content related to high-profile investigations by opposition leader and anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny that involve Russian President Vladimir Putin, former President Dmitry Medvedev, and other prominent Russian politicians.

“The Kremlin doesn’t own the Russian language,” said RFE/RL Editor in Chief Daisy Sindelar, who served as Current Time’s director when it first launched. “Current Time stands shoulder-to-shoulder with its audience and shows life as it is, not as politicians and autocrats claim it to be.”

While Current Time launched its 24/7 TV channel five years ago, the network’s roots reach back to August 2014 and the debut of the currenttime.tv website, soon followed by its YouTube and Facebook channels and, in October 2014, the launch of its first, 30-minute news program. In addition to reporting uncensored news and debunking disinformation through its Smotri v Oba (“Footage vs. Footage”) program, Current Time is the largest provider of independent, Russian-language films to its audiences. A sampling of Current Time’s best content can be found on the channel’s English portal.

The Current Time digital and TV network is produced by RFE/RL in cooperation with Voice of America. In September 2021, the network’s measured weekly audience was 8.5 million, an increase of 9 percent over the previous year. Current Time also currently reaches 7 million followers across social media platforms, a 35 percent jump up over September 2020.. Between October 2020 and September 2021, Current Time videos were viewed more than 1.3 billion times on YouTubeFacebook, and Instagram.

About RFE/RL

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty is a private, independent international news organization whose programs — radio, Internet, television, and mobile — reach influential audiences in 23 countries, including Russia, Ukraine, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, the republics of Central Asia and the Caucasus. It is funded by the U.S. Congress through USAGM.

The United States now believes a Russian invasion of Ukraine “could happen at any time,” White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said Sunday, in what would be the biggest military operation in Europe since World War II.

“We believe that the Russians have put in place the capabilities to mount a significant military operation into Ukraine, and we have been working hard to prepare a response,” Sullivan told NBC’s “Meet the Press” show.

In a separate interview on “Fox News Sunday,” Sullivan said, “Any day Russia could take action against Ukraine, or it could be a couple weeks,” with U.S. intelligence officials assessing that Moscow has 70% of its strike force in place for an attack.

Local residents attend an all-Ukrainian training campaign "Don't panic! Get ready!" close to Kyiv, Ukraine, Feb. 6, 2022.

Local residents attend an all-Ukrainian training campaign “Don’t panic! Get ready!” close to Kyiv, Ukraine, Feb. 6, 2022.

He said a Russian invasion would come “at an enormous human cost to Ukraine but at a strategic cost to Russia,” with the U.S. prepared to impose swift and severe economic sanctions against Russia to hobble its economy.

“Whatever actions Russia takes next, America is ready,” Sullivan said.

Sullivan, however, said the U.S. is willing to negotiate with Russian President Vladimir Putin over his professed security concerns about actions of the U.S. and its 29 NATO allies.

“That includes the placement of certain range systems of missiles,” Sullivan said. “It includes transparency around military exercises. It includes greater capacity to have a confidence building and to avoid incidents that could lead to escalation or miscalculation.”

“But what we’re not prepared to negotiate are the fundamental principles of security that include an open door to NATO for countries who can meet the requirements,” Sullivan said in rejecting Putin’s demand that NATO rule out the possibility of Ukrainian membership.

The Western allies say no outside nation has veto power over which countries join the Atlantic alliance.

U.S. President Joe Biden last week ordered that 3,000 American troops be sent to two eastern NATO countries, Poland and Romania. Reports say troops from the U.S. 82nd Airborne Division have landed in southeastern Poland near the border with Ukraine.

Military personnel from the 82nd Airborne Division and 18th Airborne Corps board a C-17 transport plane for deployment to Eastern Europe, amid escalating tensions between Ukraine and Russia, at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, Feb. 3, 2022.

Military personnel from the 82nd Airborne Division and 18th Airborne Corps board a C-17 transport plane for deployment to Eastern Europe, amid escalating tensions between Ukraine and Russia, at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, Feb. 3, 2022.

Washington has ruled out dispatching troops to fight alongside Ukrainian forces in the event of a Russian invasion. The U.S. has, however, sent $500 million worth of arms and defensive missiles to the Kyiv government.

If Russia invades Ukraine, then cuts off its natural gas supplies to European countries in retaliation to U.S. sanctions, Sullivan said the U.S. is moving to help redirect natural gas supplies from elsewhere to its European allies.

In any event, Sullivan said if Russia invades Ukraine, its Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline running under the Baltic Sea from Russia to Germany “will not move forward.” The pipeline is completed but not yet operational.

In the NBC interview, Sullivan said Biden “has rallied our allies. He’s reinforced and reassured our partners on the eastern flank. He’s provided material support to the Ukrainians, and he’s offered the Russians a diplomatic path if that’s what they choose instead, but either way, we are ready, our allies are ready and we’re trying to help the Ukrainian people get ready as well.”

The Treasury Department this week reported that the total national debt of the United States surpassed $30 trillion for the first time in history, an amount equal to nearly 130% of America’s yearly economic output, known as gross domestic product. The eye-popping figure makes the U.S. one of the most heavily indebted nations in the world.

The federal debt has been high and rising for decades, but the federal government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, which involved massive infusions of cash into the U.S. economy, greatly accelerated its growth.

At the end of 2019, prior to the pandemic, the national debt stood at $22.7 trillion. One year later, it had risen by an additional $5 trillion, to $27.7 trillion. Since then, the nation has added more than $2 trillion in further debt.

A grim reminder

While the $30 trillion figure, by itself, has no significant meaning, it may serve to focus attention on what some see as a major concern for the future health of the country.

“Hitting the $30 trillion mark is a reminder of just how high our debt is and just how much we’ve been borrowing,” said Marc Goldwein, senior vice president and senior policy director for the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

Pedestrians pass signs in the window of an Urban Outfitters store advertising a sale, in downtown Seattle, Jan. 31, 2022.

Pedestrians pass signs in the window of an Urban Outfitters store advertising a sale, in downtown Seattle, Jan. 31, 2022.

“Debt held by the public, which is the measure we prefer to use, is about as large as the economy,” Goldwein told VOA. “In a decade, it’ll be larger than any time since World War II. Meanwhile, we have the highest inflation rate we’ve had in 40 years, and there doesn’t seem to be any sign that the borrowing is going to let up.”

Different debtors

The $30 trillion in outstanding debt is owed to a wide variety of creditors, including the federal government itself.

According to the Treasury Department, as of January 31, $6.5 trillion of the national debt was classified as “intragovernmental holdings.” This includes Treasury securities held by various agencies of the federal government, most prominently the Social Security Administration, which maintains a trust fund to provide income to senior citizens.

The far larger portion of the debt is classified as debt held by the public, which amounts to $23.5 trillion. The term “public” can be somewhat misleading because the category includes not just the debt instruments held by individual investors but also the debts held by the Federal Reserve, large investment funds and foreign governments.

According to the Treasury Department, foreign governments hold about $7.7 trillion in U.S. debt, though no country holds more than 5% of the total. As of the end of November, the most recent data available, Japan was the largest foreign holder of U.S. debt, with $1.3 trillion. China was the second-largest holder of U.S. debt, with $1.1 trillion, while the United Kingdom was in distant third place, with $622 billion.

The cost of debt

The cost of servicing the country’s outstanding debt has become a major part of the federal budget as the outstanding debt has grown. In 2021, the government made $562 billion in interest payments on outstanding debt. That is more than the annual budget of every individual federal agency except for the Treasury, the Department of Health and Human Services (which manages the Medicare and Medicaid government health insurance programs), and the Department of Defense.

Surprisingly, during the early part of the pandemic, the federal government’s interest payments fell even as the debt increased, because of a broad decline in interest rates.

FILE - The Federal Reserve building is seen before the Federal Reserve board is expected to signal plans to raise interest rates, as it focuses on fighting inflation in Washington, Jan. 26, 2022.

FILE – The Federal Reserve building is seen before the Federal Reserve board is expected to signal plans to raise interest rates, as it focuses on fighting inflation in Washington, Jan. 26, 2022.

However, with the Federal Reserve poised to begin raising interest rates in an attempt to ward off rising inflation, the rate the Treasury has to pay on newly issued debt will likely rise, meaning that the overall cost of servicing the federal debt will likely go up in the relatively near future.

Comparison with other countries

The United States’ ratio of debt to GDP, the measure most commonly used to gauge a country’s level of indebtedness, places it among the most indebted countries in the world.

According to data gathered by the World Bank in October, the country with the world’s highest debt-to-GDP ratio is Japan, which carries debt equivalent to 257% of its economic output. Other developed economies with very high debt-to-GDP ratios include Greece, at 207%, and Italy, at 155%.

With a ratio of 133%, the U.S. is the 12th most indebted country overall, and the fourth most indebted among the developed economies that make up the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. The OECD average is an 80% debt-to-GDP ratio.

Both parties added to debt

The national debt is the cumulative total of annual federal deficits. The U.S. has seen federal surpluses in just four of the past 50 years, from 1998 to 2001, encompassing the last three years of the administration of Bill Clinton, a Democrat, and the first year of the administration of George W. Bush, a Republican.

In recent decades, both Democrats and Republicans have contributed to the rising levels of federal borrowing, with the debt increasing on a regular basis, regardless of which party controlled Congress and the White House.

It’s a fact that causes some members of Congress to express frustration with their colleagues over a seeming lack of concern about the problem.

“$30 trillion in debt is an obscene number, but what’s even more depressing is the fact that most politicians in both parties don’t really care,” Senator Ben Sasse, a Nebraska Republican, said in a statement. “Someone is going to have to pay that money when these politicians are long gone, and — spoiler alert — it won’t be paid by them but instead by our kids.”

Indirect talks between the United States and Iran on returning to the 2015 nuclear agreement are entering the “final stretch,” with all sides having to make tough political decisions, a senior U.S. State Department official said on Monday.

The latest talks in Vienna were “among the most intensive that we had to date” on returning to the deal formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which former President Donald Trump pulled out of in 2018, the official said.

“We made progress narrowing down the list of differences to just the key priorities on all sides. And that’s why now is the time for political decisions,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to brief reporters on the talks.

U.S. President Joe Biden came into office a year ago promising to re-enter the deal, but Iran has continued work on its nuclear program and a deal has remained elusive.

The official said Washington has already laid out what it was prepared to do in terms of lifting sanctions that are inconsistent with the nuclear deal and that the ball was more in Tehran’s court.

“Now is the time… for Iran to decide, whether it is prepared to make those decisions necessary for a mutual return to compliance with the JCPOA.”

“We are in the final stretch,” the official added. “Given the pace of Iran’s advances, its nuclear advances, we only have a handful of weeks left to get a deal.”

In the event of no deal with Iran, the official said Washington would have to step up pressure — “economic, diplomatic and otherwise” — in the face of Tehran’s unconstrained nuclear program.

The official repeated Washington’s willingness to engage with Iran through direct talks, saying it would be very much in the interest of the process given the limited time frame but added that there was no sign that they were close to doing that.

“We have not met directly yet. We have no indication that’s going to be the case when we reconvene,” the official said.

The Spanish team, which was chasing its third consecutive title, lost the 2022 European handball final when it fell in the final against Sweden 26-27 with a penalty conceded with time served.

The Spanish team, which was winning 13-12 at the break, overcame two goals from a deficit that they had three and a half minutes from the end and even had a ball to beat. He did not take advantage of it and in the final action the Nordics forced a penalty that they did not miss.

«Como policía es la más dulce»: las llamativas palabras de ‘Tea Time’ a Carabineros tras nueva detención

Las cámaras de vigilancia grabaron al ex vocalista de Los Tetas hablando con la policía tras ser detenido por celebrar su cumpleaños en toque de queda.

24Horas.cl Tvn

05.05.2021

Carabineros detuvo nuevamente a Camilo Castaldi, conocido como ‘Tea Time’, por no respetar las medidas sanitarias debido a una reunión social registrada en horario de toque de queda, en Providencia.

Pese a que el artista dijo respetar el aforo de hasta cinco personas al encontrarse la comuna en Fase 2 de Transición, dicha medida solo rige para un horario que no sea el del toque de queda, por lo cual la policía procedió a detenerlo.

El capitán Óscar Sepúlveda, oficial de ronda de la Prefectura Santiago Oriente, cerca de las 21:15 horas recibieron un llamado de vecinos del sector para verificar la realización de una fiesta clandestina.

Al concurrir al edificio ubicado en calle Amapolas, lograron verificar la realización de una reunión social con motivo del cumpleaños número 43 del músico, al interior de uno de los departamentos.

Señalar que Castaldi ya había sido detenido el pasado 2 de abril por una infracción similar en el mismo inmueble.

Asimismo, en dicha oportunidad alabó la labor policial, situación que volvió a repetirse en esta oportunidad, quedando registrado en las cámaras de seguridad de los oficiales.

‘Tea Time’ emitió llamativas palabras a una policía que participaba del procedimiento: «Como policía, es la más dulce de la noche. La mirada de los cascos, puedo ver persona en sus ojos. Yo distingo las almas de su trabajo, lo mas importante es el respeto. A los que se ríen de la policía yo les digo ‘son mi banda'».

Durante esta jornada se espera que Castaldi enfrente a la justicia donde podría quedar con medidas cautelares más duras al ser un reincidente.



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Detienen nuevamente a ‘Tea Time’: Celebraba su cumpleaños durante toque de queda

De acuerdo a información preliminar, el exintegrante de ‘Los Tetas’ se habría encontrado festejando en compañía de otras cuatro personas.

24Horas.cl Tvn

04.05.2021

Durante la noche de este lunes el exvocalista de ‘Los Tetas’, Camilo Castaldi, más conocido como ‘Tea Time’ fue detenido en compañía de otras cuatro personas mientras realizaba una celebración al interior de su departamento durante horario de toque de queda en la comuna de Providencia.

De acuerdo con los antecedentes preliminares entregados por el capitán Óscar Sepúlveda, oficial de ronda de la Prefectura Santiago Oriente, cerca de las 21:15 horas recibieron un llamado de vecinos del sector para verificar la realización de una fiesta clandestina.

Al concurrir al edificio ubicado en calle Amapolas, logran verificar la realización de una reunión social con motivo del cumpleaños número 43 del músico, al interior de uno de los departamentos. Dicha celebración mantenía el aforo permitido, pero se estaba realizando en horario de toque de queda.

Esto, según explicó el oficial, se traduce en una infracción al artículo 63 de la resolución exenta número 43 del Ministerio de Salud que indica que «se permiten las reuniones en domicilios particulares con un máximo de 5 personas, incluyendo a sus residentes«, pero que «este tipo de reuniones sólo estarán permitidas de lunes a viernes y fuera del horario de aislamiento nocturno».

Debido a esto, se detuvo a las cinco personas que se encontraban al interior del domicilio, siendo trasladados hasta una unidad policial, en la cual se informó de los hechos al Ministerio Público, el cual determinó que el dueño de casa (Castaldi) y otro de los participantes pasen a ser formalizados durante la jornada de este miércoles por ser reincidentes, mientras que los otros tres quedaron apercibidos.

Cabe recordar que el músico ya fue detenido el pasado 3 de abril mientras participaba de una fiesta clandestina en compañía de seis personas, y se encontraba cumpliendo la medida cautelar de arresto domiciliario.



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