Greek Debate

Germany is unfit for the euro

By: Joerg Bibow

21.04.10

Portents of the Greek Rescue

By: Barry Eichengreen

15.04.10

Finally a deal, but I am still sceptical

By: Wolfgang Münchau

13.04.10

Why Greece will default

By: Wolfgang Münchau

07.04.10

Why an IMF solution is most likely

By: Laurence Boone

24.03.10

How should the Eurozone handle Greece?

By: Daniela Schwarzer and Sebastian Dullien

01.03.10

The Euro Area's political constraints

By: Wolfgang Münchau

16.02.10

Daily Morning Newsbriefing

ECB intervenes to buy Irish bonds

10.09.2010

Small invention design to stabilise Irish bond yields, as 10 year spread reaches a new record; Ireland is to launch another 10 year bond today; Thilo Sarrazin, Germany’s renegade central banker, finally quits as pressure became unbearable; OECD says economic slowdown may require a slower monetary and fiscal exit; Trichet supports ultra-hard line in dealing with deficit sinners, including the suspension of voting rights; Commerzbank chief contradicts German bank establishment warnings of a credit crunch; a Deutsche Bank director says credit crunch is possible as banks with from the German domestic market; French diplomats, meanwhile, held a secret meeting in July, to discuss the strategic implications of the Belgian political crisis.



Eurointelligence Syndicated Column

The case against speed

08.09.2010

By: Gustav Horn

The appropriate option would be that those countries in Europe which are not under pressure from financial markets compensate for the restrictive impact of tighter fiscal policies in highly indebted countries. Germany, in particular, should take the lead in designing an adequate European response to the current public debt crisis that goes well beyond the emergency measures already taken.


Illusions of Safety

08.09.2010

By: Satyajit Das

Pre-summer debt concerns of Greece, Spain and Portugal have receded. Market volatility and angst have eased. As Northern hemisphere markets return after the summer break and normal activity resumes, caution is the watchword.


Policy Makers of Last Resort

02.09.2010

By: Barry Eichengreen

It is clear that the risk of a double dip is now high. While I am mindful of the eminent forecaster Edgar Fiedler’s admonition that he who lives by the crystal ball soon learns to eat ground glass, I would now put the odds of a double dip at 3 to 1. The recent data flow, from home sales and new unemployment claims to exports and manufacturing activity, leave no doubt that U.S. growth will be less than 1 per cent in the second half of the year. That could be stall speed.


Fiscal adjustment in Germany: No risk for the euro-area’s recovery, but for its long run stability

26.08.2010

By: Sebastian Dullien

The German budget cuts may not be not big enough to derail the recovery in the euro-zone, but they will lead to renewed current account imbalances. The latest data confirm that nominal unit labor costs are set to drop drastically in Germany this year, wiping out most of the progress which has been made in correcting the divergences in price competitiveness since 2008.


German miracle or mirage?

05.08.2010

By: Wolfgang Münchau

If you compare German and US real GDP, say over the last 10 years, the US is faring better both in terms of the total period, but, most importantly, also in terms of catch up to the pre-crisis level of real GDP. The data, at least up until the first quarter, do not suggest that there is a particular German miracle.


Europe’s Stress Tests: Only One Step Toward Banking Repair

28.07.2010

By: Nicolas Véron

Ultimately, history’s verdict will depend on what happens now. First, Europe’s banks still need to raise more capital, and authorities must find a way to encourage this even after having ostensibly given them a clean bill of health.


Stress test for major European Banks: what is it good for?

22.07.2010

By: Jan Pieter Krahnen

We find two good reasons for cheering the ongoing stress test of banks in Europe. Provided that there is government backed support in capital restructuring –either directly via capital injection or indirectly via insisting on additional equity issues-, the test is expected to raise the confidence of market participants, and to stabilize the interbank market. In addition, the test offers the opportunity for preventive capital restructuring, thereby strengthening the country’s financial architecture.


Detailed disclosure is the key to stress-test success

15.07.2010

By: Nicolas Véron

The European decision to publish stress-test results is momentous. If its outcome is to be credible, it will necessarily reveal significant capital shortfalls in a number of banks. Otherwise, the gap with market perceptions, anecdotal evidence, and past top-down assessments by the International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank will be impossible to reconcile, and will increase market distrust and volatility.



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