terça-feira, 11 de janeiro de 2011
BBC Blog Network, Gavin Hewitt: "The Euro: fear returns" Portugal is in the fireline now.
A few words here if only to let off some steam built up over this longtime (in) gathering financial storm.
So much for sovereign-debt that the whole exercise is no more than a déjà vu to the smallest detail.
Greece and Ireland from different tracks arrived at the same station.
The official denials, the unoffical uneasiness, the indirect pressures, the top economists and opinion-makers/(breakers) all signalling the apparent inevitability of the inevitable. A foreign rescue package now wrapped under the acronym EFSF tied up to the rather familiar but strongly disliked IMF.
In Portugal, for the right reasons only a tiny few had been buzzing bells for a while.
Currently everyone is at a loss to explain meaningfully what is going on to the nation at large .
Deep down who cares anyway so long as the money keeps flowing in wherever from?
That the unfolding events driven by financial markets should find Portugal in the middle of a presidential election campaign adds a little extra tempo. Turning the political speech spicier, acrimonious at times between candidates who so far chose to dwell mainly on side issues.
Despite the darkened clouds looming largest than ever.
Or the country's structural problems that always were.
The weather is prescient however, the New Year kicking off mostly overcast, rainy, windy and gloomy!
The good news is that the sun will come out to shine brightly again. Against cloudless blue skies.
It always does.
Will Portugal's public finances and economy re-enact the natural cycle too?
How long will the country's cycle of doom last?
So much for sovereign-debt that the whole exercise is no more than a déjà vu to the smallest detail.
Greece and Ireland from different tracks arrived at the same station.
The official denials, the unoffical uneasiness, the indirect pressures, the top economists and opinion-makers/(breakers) all signalling the apparent inevitability of the inevitable. A foreign rescue package now wrapped under the acronym EFSF tied up to the rather familiar but strongly disliked IMF.
In Portugal, for the right reasons only a tiny few had been buzzing bells for a while.
Currently everyone is at a loss to explain meaningfully what is going on to the nation at large .
Deep down who cares anyway so long as the money keeps flowing in wherever from?
That the unfolding events driven by financial markets should find Portugal in the middle of a presidential election campaign adds a little extra tempo. Turning the political speech spicier, acrimonious at times between candidates who so far chose to dwell mainly on side issues.
Despite the darkened clouds looming largest than ever.
Or the country's structural problems that always were.
The weather is prescient however, the New Year kicking off mostly overcast, rainy, windy and gloomy!
The good news is that the sun will come out to shine brightly again. Against cloudless blue skies.
It always does.
Will Portugal's public finances and economy re-enact the natural cycle too?
How long will the country's cycle of doom last?
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