My comment will dwell on Portugal only as Greece is relatively out of bounds.I know not, detailed enough, the intricacies of its internal set-up.
Besides, it is too painful to watch the two countries banded together, apparently(?) following similar paths with a time lag.
With an economy in tatters, an exhausted debt capability and a fledgling financial position into the near future one wonders how top politicians still jostle incessantly to reap some immediate short-lived benefit.
Portugal is caught between a rock and a (very) hard place having played itself into the hands of financial markets simply to keep the State going. Unable to generate tax revenue large enough to meet its insatiable needs, the Portuguese State now faces slimmed-down renewal or quick demise in the current format size.
Much is said about the lack of strong and purposeful leadership to carry out long overdue reform.
I would rather say no non-sense good government.
The more it is talked about the less likely it seems to get done.
Some have long claimed the State is unreformable. They might well be right.
If current circumstances do not make reform mandatory, whatever will?
Regardless of short-term obligations and financing requirements the underlying issue remains the economy.
Wealth creation by digging into every material and intellectual resource available that will eventually set Portugal on a sounder footing.
Balances to the country's external accounts have been forcefully restored thanks mainly to the collapse in internal demand and economic activity in general.
Much harder, or the major structural challenge, will be to keep those balances once the economy finally starts to grow.
Reply to a comment by a fellow reader:
I'm definitely not going to be drawn into a play with words.
Anyway, 'now'(in the context) is meant as the point in time when it became obvious State expenditure was growing much faster than paltry economic growth for a full decade at least.
If State spending balloons over many years without the economy matching up then external financing is the only option to fill the gap, i.e. as long as there are interested parties to buy debt.
Budget deficits recur year on year to unmanageable levels, get thrown on to the country's public debt until the debt load itself becomes unsustainable.
Please figure out 'insatiable' in the context.
Besides, it is too painful to watch the two countries banded together, apparently(?) following similar paths with a time lag.
Portugal is caught between a rock and a (very) hard place having played itself into the hands of financial markets simply to keep the State going. Unable to generate tax revenue large enough to meet its insatiable needs, the Portuguese State now faces slimmed-down renewal or quick demise in the current format size.
Much is said about the lack of strong and purposeful leadership to carry out long overdue reform.
I would rather say no non-sense good government.
The more it is talked about the less likely it seems to get done.
Some have long claimed the State is unreformable. They might well be right.
If current circumstances do not make reform mandatory, whatever will?
Wealth creation by digging into every material and intellectual resource available that will eventually set Portugal on a sounder footing.
Balances to the country's external accounts have been forcefully restored thanks mainly to the collapse in internal demand and economic activity in general.
Much harder, or the major structural challenge, will be to keep those balances once the economy finally starts to grow.