sexta-feira, 7 de maio de 2010
BBC Blog Network "Greece and the story of George and Angela" Greece's troubles in my view
As far as I am concerned this is another of your thoughtful insights to the Greek financial crisis in the larger setting of Eurozone and the European Union. For the time being - following every step of the path footed down to get to this point - it would seem that the can has been successfully kicked forward.
Greece - the government and society at large - has been given three years of financial predictability.
No small gain for a country that willfully wreaked so much havoc over many years thinking it might get away with it endlessly.
Deceiving itself and deceiving others as well.
My criticism is directly proportional to the notion of what an organised State should be, whose roots lie firmly in that land.
Greece also gave the Old Continent its name millennia ago and is the proud birthplace of Western civilization.
I am still unsure whether or not this may have been an argument traded at closed-door negotiations to favour the country's entry to Eurozone...
May be not.
Greece was so unprepared back then that the sudden turnaround left me nagging to this day.
Well, hardly 9 years on - in the aftermath of a major financial meltdown started in the US and deep recession - everything came to the fore.
No matter what backstage deals made as the 2000's dawned, it is crystal-clear Greece should not have been taken on board.
Irrelevant point now but one that should be carefully looked into by the ECB, the European Commission and Council and political leaderships across Europe.
There are still 11 EU countries outside Eurozone.Joining is not enticing at the moment but the future will take care of itself.
The EU could use some broad-minded teaching from current woes.
I wish Greece a great future in the knowledge that an adjustment within its society and its governance is long overdue.
There was never a time so ripe for such changes to occur.
Politicians call them reforms.
Greece's massive budget overrun - shared by many other countries to different levels no doubt - is a consequence and a symptom of many unresolved problems built up over years of loose ways.
Its growth prospects are now shattered - so are those of many other countries across the EU - but there was always a Greek twist to things that made it so special.
The IMF - the single biggest contributor to the bail-out - and the remaining 15 Eurozone States - from Germany to Malta - have every right to expect Greece to rise up to its obligations.
The challenge is financial as much as it is cultural.
Greece - the government and society at large - has been given three years of financial predictability.
No small gain for a country that willfully wreaked so much havoc over many years thinking it might get away with it endlessly.
Deceiving itself and deceiving others as well.
My criticism is directly proportional to the notion of what an organised State should be, whose roots lie firmly in that land.
Greece also gave the Old Continent its name millennia ago and is the proud birthplace of Western civilization.
I am still unsure whether or not this may have been an argument traded at closed-door negotiations to favour the country's entry to Eurozone...
May be not.
Greece was so unprepared back then that the sudden turnaround left me nagging to this day.
Well, hardly 9 years on - in the aftermath of a major financial meltdown started in the US and deep recession - everything came to the fore.
No matter what backstage deals made as the 2000's dawned, it is crystal-clear Greece should not have been taken on board.
Irrelevant point now but one that should be carefully looked into by the ECB, the European Commission and Council and political leaderships across Europe.
There are still 11 EU countries outside Eurozone.Joining is not enticing at the moment but the future will take care of itself.
The EU could use some broad-minded teaching from current woes.
I wish Greece a great future in the knowledge that an adjustment within its society and its governance is long overdue.
There was never a time so ripe for such changes to occur.
Politicians call them reforms.
Greece's massive budget overrun - shared by many other countries to different levels no doubt - is a consequence and a symptom of many unresolved problems built up over years of loose ways.
Its growth prospects are now shattered - so are those of many other countries across the EU - but there was always a Greek twist to things that made it so special.
The IMF - the single biggest contributor to the bail-out - and the remaining 15 Eurozone States - from Germany to Malta - have every right to expect Greece to rise up to its obligations.
The challenge is financial as much as it is cultural.
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