Wellink: Greek debt partly written off

It is almost certain that euro countries will have to write off part of their loans to Greece, former Dutch Central Bank President Nout Wellink says. The funds the banks have provided to save Greece are insufficient, Mr Wellink says in an interview with Dutch daily Het Financieele Dagblad. European governments have by now financed such a large part of the Greek debt that a debt restructuring is bound to affect them, Mr Wellink is quoted... [more]

Private Loan Borrowers in USA Need Increased Protections

In last week’s blog post we mentioned (not for the last time) how important it is to max out federal loans before taking out private loans. We also promised to follow up on the Department of Education’s recent report, “The Expansion of Private Loans in Postsecondary Education,” which shows students are, unfortunately, not taking our advice. Because the Student Loan Ranger never forgets (okay, sometimes we... [more]

Eurozone to pursue crisis action, Fitch doubts outcome

The euro zone will tackle its debt crisis this week by offering more cash to the IMF and long-term liquidity to banks, while moving toward tighter fiscal rules, after ratings agency Fitch cast doubt on its capacity to respond decisively. “We all know that Europe has not been able to convince markets that its governance set-up and its measures against the crisis were enough,” Italian Deputy Economy Minister Vittorio Grilli said... [more]

The high price of saving the euro

Has Germany saved the euro or doomed the European Union? ZEIT ONLINE’s Matthias Krupa looks at the high political price of the crisis summit in Brussels. So was that the night the euro was saved? Or will those ten hours on last week go down in history as the moment the European Union began to disintegrate? The leaders of the 27 EU nations certainly couldn’t have made their crisis summit any more dramatic. Even before it began on the... [more]

Greece losing ‘billions of euros to corruption’

Crisis-hit Greece is still losing billions of euros (dollars) to corruption in spite of efforts to stamp out graft and maximise the state’s tax revenue, a report said on Wednesday. The Ta Nea newspaper said that tax evasion cost Greece 13 billion euros ($17.4 billion) annually in lost revenue, citing remarks by experts and state officials at a conference on corruption on Tuesday. The finance ministry’s former information systems... [more]

European shares and euro slide on debt woes

European stock markets sank on Wednesday and the euro sat near one-year dollar lows on concerns about the eurozone, and after the US Federal Reserve decided against new economy-boosting plans. In morning deals, London’s FTSE 100 index slid 0.74 percent to 5,449.53 points, Frankfurt’s DAX 30 dipped 0.94 percent to 5,719.77 points and the Paris CAC 40 dived 1.28 percent to 3,039.35. The euro meanwhile tumbled as low as $1.3005... [more]

Greek opposition party rejects new austerity plan

Greece’s main opposition leader bluntly refused Monday to back new austerity measures designed to tackle the crippling debt crisis, arguing they would only bring further recession, despite the European Union’s insistence for cross-party support. Top EU finance officials have argued that Greece, which is struggling to meet the terms of an international euro110 billion ($154 billion) bailout and could require more help, needs all... [more]

Spyker finds new Chinese partner for Saab

Dutch car producer Spyker has announced that it has found a new Chinese partner to rescue the classic Swedish brand Saab, which was taken over by Spyker last year. The deal was unveiled today, with Spyker outlining plans to work together with Pang Da Automobile to resume production and distribution of Saab. Pang Da, the largest car distributor on the Chinese stock exchange according to Spyker, will have a 24 percent share in Spyker amounting... [more]

EU ministers wrangle over Greek debt

European governments wrangled over how best to keep Greece from defaulting on its mountain of debt, with one of them acknowledging for the first time that they had discussed a restructuring — a risky move to delay or cut debt repayments. Monday’s meeting was meant to focus on getting final approval for a euro78 billion ($110 billion) bailout for Portugal, but growing concern over Greece — and the arrest of Dominique Strauss-Kahn,... [more]

Dutch Majority: kick Greece out of eurozone

A majority of the Dutch (58 percent) want the government to stop giving financial aid to Greece and a slim majority (51 percent) want Greece expelled from the eurozone. Some 72 percent of those surveyed in a poll conducted by Maurice de Hond expect Greece will never be able to repay its debts. The view is particularly strong among voters of the Freedom Party (90 percent), which backs the government in parliament, and the opposition Socialist... [more]

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