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News
PartyGaming
to Launch Online Poker Service in Italy
Joint venture with Intralot announced
April
8, 2009 (CAP Newswire) -- Apparently unrelated
to yesterday’s story that PartyGaming has
agreed to settle with the U.S. Department of Justice
comes the news that the company also has plans
to expand into the currently red-hot Italian market
in the very near future.
The
expansion will be in partnership with Intralot,
a Greek lottery systems provider. The two companies
are hinting that, if the Italian venture proves
successful, they will attempt to enter into more
overseas deals in the coming months, as well.
“Intralot
is the first member of PartyGaming's poker network
in Italy and will promote the new service through
its retail network, which includes 600 betting
outlets,” reported Reuters news service
this week.
"This
is our third business-to-business deal in 2009
and we are confident of continuing to build our
portfolio over the coming months," PartyGaming
Chief Executive Jim Ryan commented in the Reuters
article.
Profile
Italy
(Italian: Italia), officially the Italian Republic,
(Italian: Repubblica Italiana), is located on
the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe, and
on the two largest islands in the Mediterranean
Sea, Sicily and Sardinia. Italy shares its northern
Alpine boundary with France, Switzerland, Austria
and Slovenia. The independent states of San Marino
and the Vatican City are enclaves within the Italian
Peninsula, while Campione d'Italia is an Italian
exclave in Switzerland.
Italy
has been the home of many European cultures, such
as the Etruscans and the Romans, and later was
the birthplace of the movement of the Renaissance,
that began in Tuscany and spread all over Europe.
Italy's capital Rome has been the center of Western
civilization, and is the center of the Catholic
Church.
Today,
Italy is a democratic republic, and a developed
country with the 7th-highest GDP, the 8th-highest
Quality-of-life index, and the 20th-highest Human
Development Index rating in the world. It is a
founding member of what is now the European Union
(having signed the Treaty of Rome in 1957), and
also a member of the G8, the Council of Europe,
the Western European Union, and the Central European
Initiative. Beginning January 1, 2007, Italy became
a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security
Council.
Economy
According
to GDP calculations, Italy was ranked as the seventh
largest economy in the world in 2006, behind the
United States, Japan, Germany, China, UK, and
France, and the fourth largest in Europe. According
to the OECD, in 2004 Italy was the world's sixth-largest
exporter of manufactured goods. This capitalistic
economy remains divided into a developed industrial
north, dominated by private companies, and a less
developed agricultural south. The Mafia represents
the biggest segment of the Italian economy, accounting
for more than $127 billion; making organized crime
7 percent of Italy's GDP.
Most
raw materials needed by industry and more than
75% of energy requirements are imported. Over
the past decade, Italy has pursued a tight fiscal
policy in order to meet the requirements of the
Economic and Monetary Union and has benefited
from lower interest and inflation rates. Italy
joined the Euro from its introduction in 1999.
Italy's
economic performance has at times lagged behind
that of its EU partners, and the current government
has enacted numerous short-term reforms aimed
at improving competitiveness and long-term growth.
It has moved slowly, however, on implementing
certain structural reforms favoured by economists,
such as lightening the high tax burden and overhauling
Italy's rigid labour market and expensive pension
system, because of the economic slowdown and opposition
from labour unions.
Italy
has a smaller number of world class multinational
corporations than other economies of comparable
size. Instead, the country's main economic strength
has been its large base of small and medium size
companies. Some of these companies manufacture
products that are technologically moderately advanced
and therefore face increasing competition from
China and other emerging Asian economies which
are able to undercut them on labour costs. These
Italian companies are responding to the Asian
competition by concentrating on products with
a higher technological content, while moving lower-tech
manufacturing to plants in countries where labour
is less expensive. The small average size of Italian
companies remains a limiting factor, and the government
has been working to encourage integration and
mergers and to reform the rigid regulations that
have traditionally been an obstacle to the development
of larger corporations in the country.
Italy's
major exports are motor vehicles (Fiat Group,
Aprilia, Ducati, Piaggio), chemicals, petrochemicals
and electric goods (Eni, Enel, Edison), aerospace
and defense tech (Alenia, Agusta, Finmeccanica),
firearms (Beretta); but the country's more famous
exports are in the fields of fashion (Armani,
Valentino, Versace, Dolce & Gabbana, Benetton,
Prada, Luxottica), food industry (Barilla Group,
Martini & Rossi, Campari, Parmalat), luxury
vehicles (Ferrari, Maserati, Lamborghini, Pagani)
and motoryachts (Ferretti, Azimut).
Tourism
is very important to the Italian economy: with
over 37 million tourists a year, Italy is ranked
as the fifth major tourist destination in the
world. (Credit:
Wikipedia).
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