Quantcast

ITALIANS FEAR A EURO APOCALYPSE AS CRISIS SPREADS TO GERMANY And remember all the banks are dominoes in a row.. The big US banks were downgraded on Friday..

iamnothere 2012/06/23 17:49:52
Going Going.......>


Saturday June 23,2012





By Alison Little


ITALY ­yesterday raised the stakes for the future of the euro by warning there is just one week to save the single currency.

Its prime minister Mario Monti painted an apocalyptic picture of what would follow if EU leaders failed to deal with the debt crisis at a summit of all 27 states in Brussels next week.

New fears have emerged that the eurozone’s biggest economy Germany could be slipping into recession which would be a blow to saving the single currency.

A key measure of German business optimism fell this month by more than market analysts had expected.

Earlier this week, a separate survey indicated that Germany’s manufacturing sector was also slowing down.

Weaker economic conditions could undermine its ability and the willingness of its already resentful public to help their debt-laden eurozone partners.

Leaders at next week’s summit will seek to focus on growth and jobs as well as sending out signals of unity in a bid to stabilise the eurozone.

This is the direct opposite of what is needed for economic growth

Mario Monti Nicknamed “super Mario”, Mr Monti warned failure to tackle the crisis would lead to “progressively greater speculative attacks on individual countries, with harassment of the weaker countries”.

These would focus not only on those who had failed to respect EU guidelines but also on those like Italy, he insisted, which had stuck to the rules “but which carry with them from a past a high debt”.

He added: “A large part of Europe would find itself having to put up with very high interest rates that would then impact on the states and also indirectly on firms. This is the direct opposite of what is needed for economic growth.”

Faced with that problem, “the frustration of the public towards Europe would grow” and turn against the integration he said was needed for the eurozone crisis to be resolved.

He hosted talks in Rome yesterday with the leaders of Spain, Germany and France, where German Chancellor Angela Merkel still resisted pressure to issue eurobonds.

Asked by a Spanish journalist why Germany could not simply direct bail-out cash to Spain’s struggling banks, she said she could not hand over money when she had no ability to control their activities.

On Thursday International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde demanded rapid progress on banking union, fiscal union and debt sharing.
You!
Add Photos & Videos

Sort By
  • Most Raves
  • Least Raves
  • Oldest
  • Newest
Opinions

  • Don Leuty 2012/06/24 08:22:07
    Don Leuty
    +1
    What? Tarp wasn't enough? Boy did the banking and finance boys really pull one off on the "smart" DC types.
  • JanHopkins 2012/06/24 03:17:13
    JanHopkins
    +1
    Poor old Germany. Everyone wants a piece of the Fatherland now.
  • Kane Fernau 2012/06/24 03:09:02
    Kane Fernau
    +1
    Europe is screwed. Pray it doesn't take us with it.

News & Politics

2013/05/23 16:13:01

Hot Questions on SodaHead
More Hot Questions

More Community More Originals