Troubling indeed to note how so many countries in the developed world got addicted to borrowing year on year simply to get by.
If smaller fish like Greece, Ireland and now Portugal have been caught in the net, albeit sailing different waters, the case is yet to be made as to where market fishing shifts to next.
Spain has been much talked about as the sequential domino. Lately decoupling is used to describe some of its fiscal successes.
Faced with multiple challenges internally and externally there is no escaping from core structural issues affecting each of its members.
There being inevitably some overlapping each weaker economy has to jumpstart growth by focusing primarily on good government and wealth creation. Broadly that means production long neglected by societies whose leadership badly failed to retain vital balance across sectors of the economy.
If politics is to remain meaningful seeking to resolve collective problems then an altogether new approach is called for.
One that will over time strengthen productive sectors of the economy, cutback on wasteful spending - beyond words and gimmicks - and achieve better management of public sector companies. All will have to be done concurrently in a major multipronged clean-up operation with clear goals in sight.
Events were only speeded up by the markets and those remarkable rating agencies.
Portugal will muddle through at the end of a fiction-like 20-year long movie of easy money.
Whether or not the leadership and wider society here change the country's fortune is yet to be seen.
Even with EU backing, Eurozone membership and ECB support politicians of the day found themselves in a woefully dejected mode.
They had the lower-hand throughout.
Whatever defensive supports were in place buckled under the overwhelming weight of numbers...
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