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America′s interest lies in preventing a repetition. We ought to support Europe′s rescue package. Europe′s problems don′t belong to it alone; markets are global.

Why the U.S. should support Europe′s rescue package

By: The Washington Post | Thursday, May 27, 2010

The European Union's decision to rescue Greece and to create a massive financial safety net for its other vulnerable debtors is a momentous event -- though success is hardly guaranteed. Contrary to popular belief, the main purpose was not to save Greece but to prevent another financial panic.

Now, the German ant nest is very close to some small colonies of grasshoppers. German ants say: “We want to be friends. So why do we not all use the same money? But, first, you must promise to behave like ants forever.” So grasshoppers have to pass a test: behave like ants for a few years. The grasshoppers do so and are then allowed to adopt the European money.

The grasshoppers and the ants – a modern fable

By: The Financial Times | Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Everybody in the west knows the fable of the grasshopper and the ant. The grasshopper is lazy and sings away the summer, while the ant piles up stores for the winter. When the cold weather comes, the grasshopper begs the ant for food. The ant refuses and the grasshopper starves.

For Paris the answer is obvious -- Germany should boost domestic demand and cut taxes to encourage imports. For Berlin, the answer lies outside its borders -- other countries should simply copy it, primarily by lowering wages.

Economic Governance divides France and Germany

By: Reuters | Thursday, May 20, 2010

Germany's curb on speculative trading has cast doubt on Europe's ability to build the sort of economic governance that many believe is now essential for the euro's survival. At the heart of the problem are core contradictions between France and Germany, with no easy solutions in sight.

Across Europe, about 60% of the population use internet regularly and 48% on a daily basis. These levels compare well to the US where 56% use internet daily and 65% used it in the last three months. Nevertheless, in both the EU (30%) and the US (32%) about one third of the population has never been online.

Investment in Digital Economy holds key to Europe′s future prosperity

By: EC Press Room | Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Six out of ten Europeans regularly use the internet. However, if Europe wants to fully exploit the potential benefits of the digital economy, it must step up a gear and provide faster broadband and an internet people trust, improve citizens' skills, and encourage even more ICT innovation.

Most solutions to rebuilding trust in the financial industry boil down to four generic approaches: structural, regulatory, compliance, and incentives. They are all rooted in either economic or legal perspectives.

Rebuilding Trust in the Financial Sector

By: Business Week | Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Trust is the bedrock of financial institutions, according to authorities including, but hardly limited to, the two cited above. Yet trust in the financial sector lags even trust in government, itself now at a 50-year low, according to recent survey data from Pew, Edelman, and Harris.

Inevitably, the crisis on Wall Street has revived the never-ending notion that markets undermine morality. Oliver Stone, ever restless to recapture the days of former glory, has begun production on a sequel to the 1987 movie Wall Street, which immortalized Gordon Gekko as the symbol of markets and greed.

Feeble Critiques: Capitalism′s Petty Detractors

By: EBR | Monday, May 17, 2010

When the twin crises erupted on Wall Street and Main Street, each one of them fierce in itself but far more frightening when they interacted, populists rushed forward to celebrate the demise of capitalism and, for added gratification, plunge their pitchforks into its dead corpse.

Greece is the destination where comfort, style and culture are combined with sun, sea and joy to provide a true holiday experience. Greek tourism sector is investing at large in modernization, and is ready to welcome guests for the 2010 season.

Greek Tourism ready for the Summer

By: EBR | Monday, May 17, 2010

Greece is the destination where comfort, style and culture are combined with sun, sea and joy to provide a true holiday experience. Greek tourism sector is investing at large in modernization, and is ready to welcome guests for the 2010 season.

Member States would benefit from early coordination at European level as they prepare their national budgets and national reform programmes. Early guidance at the beginning of each year from the European Council on economic policies would facilitate the preparation of Stability and Convergence Programmes and National Reform Programmes.

Commission proposes reinforced economic governance in the EU

By: EC Press Room | Wednesday, May 12, 2010

The recent crises and the risk for the stability of the euro area have underlined vividly the interdependence and exposed the vulnerability of Member States, in particular inside the euro area. The European Union and Member States have taken coordinated and determined action.

The package of standby funds and loan guarantees that could be tapped by euro zone governments shut out of credit markets, plus central bank liquidity measures and bond purchases to steady markets surprised financial analysts by its sheer scale.

European banks buy bonds after $1 trillion rescue package

By: Reuters | Monday, May 10, 2010

European central banks began buying euro zone government bonds under a $1 trillion global emergency rescue package agreed on Monday, sending the euro and European stocks and bonds surging on relieved markets.

Financial markets have been pounding euro zone countries with high deficits or debts as well as low economic growth, threatening to force Portugal, Spain and Ireland into a position where, like Greece, they would need to seek financial aid.

Euro zone agrees emergency steps to contain crisis

By: EBR | Friday, May 7, 2010

Euro zone leaders decided on Friday they have special measures ready before financial markets open on Monday to prevent financial turmoil in Greece spreading to other countries such as Spain and Portugal.

EU Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs, Olli Rehn, said:

Gradual economic recovery in progress in the EU

By: EC Press Room | Wednesday, May 5, 2010

The Commission's spring forecast confirms that the economic recovery is in progress in the EU. After having experienced the deepest recession in its history, the EU economy is set to grow by 1% in 2010 and 1¾% in 2011. This implies an upward revision of ¼ percentage point for this year.

EU transport ministers agreed on a single EU immediate response to the ash cloud crisis: a strong message given to the air transport sector.

Key outcomes of the Extraordinary Transport Council

By: EC Press Room | Wednesday, May 5, 2010

EU transport ministers were able to agree on a single EU immediate response to the ash cloud crisis: this is a strong message given to the air transport sector. They supported the Commission's approach on the need for flexibility to ease the pressure on airlines.

Many Greeks never miss an occasion to mention the importance of the solidarity between member states , in the hope that the country will not find itself standing all alone.

Greece crisis: how your average Greek yacht-owner is clamping down

By: Cafebabel.com | Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Greece’s ‘creative accounting’ has wreaked havoc. Whilst the EU examines ways in which to help the Greek economy, are the Greeks ready to overturn their state of mind in order to exit the crisis? Judith Sinnige from Cafebabel.com expresses her views.

The skeptical Millionaires club

By: EBR | Tuesday, May 4, 2010

An exclusive club whose members must have at least $10 million in investable assets and pay $30,000 a year, TIGER 21 is a veritable beehive of skepticism about the industry that wants to get its hands on their money.

EU, IMF agree 110 billion euros bailout for Greece

By: Reuters | Sunday, May 2, 2010

European finance ministers triggered a record 110 billion euro bailout for debt-stricken Greece. Euro zone ministers, approved the three-year package of emergency loans and agreed the first funds would be released in time for Athens to make a big debt repayment to creditors on May 19

Greece is in discussions with the European Union and International Monetary Fund (IMF) on a multi-year rescue package that some officials have said could total up to 135 billion euros ($180 billion).

Greek rescue momentum builds

By: Reuters | Thursday, April 29, 2010

ECB Governing Council member Axel Weber said on Thursday the impact of any Greek debt default on other states would be "incalculable" and urged quick approval of an aid package to prevent market upheaval and contagion to other states.

OECD unemployment rate remains at a level close to post-war highs.

OECD unemployment rate broadly stable at 8.6%

By: EBR | Tuesday, April 13, 2010

The unemployment rate for the OECD area was broadly stable in February 2010 compared with January. The headline rate fell 0.1 percentage point but this reflected the partial unwinding of effects that led to a temporary increase in Korea’s January rate.

The city hosts over 4,000 congresses and conventions every year. There is a wide range of venues on offer, which include Feria de Madrid trade fair grounds (Ifema) and the future International Convention Centre to be opened by 2011.

Madrid: Discover the diversity of a modern and vibrant Metropolis

By: EBR | Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Madrid is an open-minded city where culture, entertainment and business share an attractive, thriving space. Thanks to its modern and cosmopolitan flare and to the friendly and passionate character of Madrilenians, the Spanish capital makes everyone feel right at home!

Markets would remain severely dysfunctional, and regulators would see banks as utilities, not independent agents, and accordingly attempt to limit their returns and to suppress volatility. Strict regulation would be applied not only to systemically important banks but to smaller entities as well. In this scenario, banks would face much tighter capital requirements.

What’s next for global banks

By: McKinsey Quarterly | Monday, April 5, 2010

Banking giants in emerging markets will probably do well in any likely economic scenario. Other banks face a more challenging future. In 2008, as the credit crisis broke, banks underwent near-death experiences on a massive scale. Last year, many enjoyed a recovery that was nearly as abrupt.

The sudden collapses of Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and AIG demonstrated that our framework for supervision and regulation of large, highly leveraged and substantially interconnected financial firms--and the government's toolkit for managing their failure--is profoundly inadequate.

The Meaning of the Lehman Bankruptcy

By: EBR | Monday, March 22, 2010

We all know what happened after Lehman Brothers collapsed. There was a period during which the financial markets simply stopped functioning. No one had ever seen anything quite like this before.Banks and other financial institutions almost completely stopped lending to one another or to anyone else

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