segunda-feira, 10 de maio de 2010
BBC Blog Network "Will the EU stability package work?" the unfolding saga of Eurozone...
It has been such a roller-coaster ride for the Eurozone that any answer to this one question is premature.
The figures put forth are so impressive that if financial markets don't take notice then it is pretty much anybody's guess whatever will.
Hardly a day goes by that does not derail the previous day's seemingly brave attempts by EU politicians to contain the spread of the rot.
I would hope to see the Eurozone finally stabilise and the EU engage in a multi-pronged attack aimed at propping up growth and growth prospects across Europe.This is truly the underlying structural weakness plaguing European economies.
It is obvious to the naked eye even to observers who are least keen on such matters. It got disguised over years of excessive consumption-led growth imploded by the financial meltdown and deep recession that followed.
Going forward economic growth on a changed model from the recent past is the biggest challenge of all.
Unless growth is restored to meaningful levels sustaining itself in the future, it is hard to see how the more heavily indebted economies will cope.
This is what credit rating agencies suddenly discovered following years of merrily conniving with many a government's borrowing binges in pursuit of questionable development and pay policies.
I certainly expect the latest moves to plug the problem allowing countries, especially the ones hit hardest, to cling to the lifeline now thrown.
Hopefully the extra time will be used to efficiently rein in public finances as well as kickstarting the economy to take it up to sounder footing.
If both objectives should fail then some EU members - within and without Eurozone - are condemned to irreversible economic decline and social fraying.
The figures put forth are so impressive that if financial markets don't take notice then it is pretty much anybody's guess whatever will.
Hardly a day goes by that does not derail the previous day's seemingly brave attempts by EU politicians to contain the spread of the rot.
I would hope to see the Eurozone finally stabilise and the EU engage in a multi-pronged attack aimed at propping up growth and growth prospects across Europe.This is truly the underlying structural weakness plaguing European economies.
It is obvious to the naked eye even to observers who are least keen on such matters. It got disguised over years of excessive consumption-led growth imploded by the financial meltdown and deep recession that followed.
Going forward economic growth on a changed model from the recent past is the biggest challenge of all.
Unless growth is restored to meaningful levels sustaining itself in the future, it is hard to see how the more heavily indebted economies will cope.
This is what credit rating agencies suddenly discovered following years of merrily conniving with many a government's borrowing binges in pursuit of questionable development and pay policies.
I certainly expect the latest moves to plug the problem allowing countries, especially the ones hit hardest, to cling to the lifeline now thrown.
Hopefully the extra time will be used to efficiently rein in public finances as well as kickstarting the economy to take it up to sounder footing.
If both objectives should fail then some EU members - within and without Eurozone - are condemned to irreversible economic decline and social fraying.
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