sábado, 24 de abril de 2010
TEc "An extreme necessity" A short write-up on Greece's call for a bail-out that is not...
Push has come to shove, worst has come to worst - Greece has officially thrown in the towel asking for a bail-out under a different name.
The figures set forth speak for themselves and no-one should be in any doubt that yesterday marked the beginning of something new in Euroland.This is unchartered territory where the starting point is now known but the finishing line is way too far and blurred to warrant anything other than a feel of unsettling uncertainty.
This is a temporary fix in any case.
So far the non-believers, the sceptics, those who saw it coming and financial markets that refused to bow to tough wording from politicians have been proved right.
Greece's PM who for months had been going around talking to peers in the EU and elsewhere trying to drum up support must be at great loss in his tight spot.
From his viewpoint it will have been either a successfully accomplished political ploy or a complete failure to tame the faceless, nameless actions of powerful moneymen ruling the financial markets.
Greek society and government must now get real and effective turning the country's fortunes around for the right reasons.
The latest raise to the country's 2009 fiscal deficit will have been the last drop for the simmering markets.
For the rest of us powerless onlookers there are many more questions than answers as to Greece rising up to the adjustments that lie ahead.
The figures set forth speak for themselves and no-one should be in any doubt that yesterday marked the beginning of something new in Euroland.This is unchartered territory where the starting point is now known but the finishing line is way too far and blurred to warrant anything other than a feel of unsettling uncertainty.
This is a temporary fix in any case.
So far the non-believers, the sceptics, those who saw it coming and financial markets that refused to bow to tough wording from politicians have been proved right.
Greece's PM who for months had been going around talking to peers in the EU and elsewhere trying to drum up support must be at great loss in his tight spot.
From his viewpoint it will have been either a successfully accomplished political ploy or a complete failure to tame the faceless, nameless actions of powerful moneymen ruling the financial markets.
Greek society and government must now get real and effective turning the country's fortunes around for the right reasons.
The latest raise to the country's 2009 fiscal deficit will have been the last drop for the simmering markets.
For the rest of us powerless onlookers there are many more questions than answers as to Greece rising up to the adjustments that lie ahead.
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