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Ámbito Financiero is an Argentine newspaper founded on December 9, 1976, by economist Julio A. Ramos. It is one of the main economic newspapers. It was initially sold in Downtown Buenos Aires, covering mainly the daily prices of the U.S. dollar, gold, stocks, etc., and included other editorials. Ámbito Financiero was acquired by Orlando ...
According to BBC Mundo, DolarToday was founded as "a form of protest against a dictatorship increasingly committed to silence and intimidate the media in Venezuela." [6] Up until today, the company's website publishes criticisms about the Maduro administration which the founder states "are selected by the site’s writers based in Venezuela ...
In 1990, the number of Internet users in Venezuela was minimal, but 35.63% of Venezuelans were Internet users by 2010. [236] In fact, the number of Internet subscribers has increased sixfold. [ 246 ] Programs such as the National Technological Literacy Plan, which provides free software and computers to schools, have assisted Venezuela in ...
Under Peru's single concession regime all telecom services, including fixed-line, mobile, pay TV, and Internet, are provided under unified concessions that cover the entire country. [ 1 ] Privatization began in 1994 when the state-owned companies Compañía Peruana de Teléfonos S.A. (CPT) and Entel Perú were auctioned to Telefónica de España .
An informal economy (informal sector or grey economy) [1] [2] is the part of any economy that is neither taxed nor monitored by any form of government. Although the informal sector makes up a significant portion of the economies in developing countries , it is sometimes stigmatized as troublesome and unmanageable.
Venezuela was listed in the 2015 Press Freedom Index as 137th out of 180 countries, [a] and its position has worsened since: in 2021 Venezuela was listed as 148 out of 180. [b] and in 2023 it was listed in the 159th place, with its situation devolving from "difficult situation" to "very difficult situation" level. [1]
Centro Financiero Confinanzas (English: Confinanzas Financial Center), also known as Torre de David (the Tower of David), is an unfinished abandoned skyscraper in Caracas, the capital of Venezuela. It is the third highest skyscraper in the country after the twin towers of Parque Central Complex .
According to the publication released this weekend, the Superintendency of Banking Sector Institutions (Sudeban) will grant a period of 30 continuous days from the publication in the Official Gazette of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela of this resolution, to finalize all the operations inherent to the Banco Occidental de Descuento, Banco ...