domingo, 14 de fevereiro de 2010
Hooked on to The Economist's - Should Greece be left to go bust?
The question is increasingly on everybody's minds but the Greek PM and his government appear cool enough having assured European peers that this is their call to heed.
Indeed it is.
Greece has been playing it easy with accounting for too long.If I can stretch my memory back to 1980 when the country joined the European Community I recall concerns being voiced on how it spent funding from Brussels and kept track of it since.
The answers have been provided by the PM a few days ago when he candidly spoke about the internal malaise.The Greek economy and society have been on a merry-go-round for years with too powerful unions and lobbyists calling the shots.
Now a decent man has come along who realises there is no room for manoeuvre, no stopgap measures available, no way going forward other than facing up to the problems assertively.
I believe a bail-out should be ruled out because individual States through governments of the day need to be accountable and not count on European Union 'largesse' to take on board - most often than not - their own long-established overspending sprees.
This is certainly Greece's case only made worse by the latest financial crunch.
For the moment the Greek PM is putting up a brave face.
Hopefully he will succeed carrying with him the better part of his country.
Anyway, what Otmar Issing says cannot be argued against
Indeed it is.
Greece has been playing it easy with accounting for too long.If I can stretch my memory back to 1980 when the country joined the European Community I recall concerns being voiced on how it spent funding from Brussels and kept track of it since.
The answers have been provided by the PM a few days ago when he candidly spoke about the internal malaise.The Greek economy and society have been on a merry-go-round for years with too powerful unions and lobbyists calling the shots.
Now a decent man has come along who realises there is no room for manoeuvre, no stopgap measures available, no way going forward other than facing up to the problems assertively.
I believe a bail-out should be ruled out because individual States through governments of the day need to be accountable and not count on European Union 'largesse' to take on board - most often than not - their own long-established overspending sprees.
This is certainly Greece's case only made worse by the latest financial crunch.
For the moment the Greek PM is putting up a brave face.
Hopefully he will succeed carrying with him the better part of his country.
Anyway, what Otmar Issing says cannot be argued against
Subscrever:
Enviar feedback (Atom)
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário