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]

Cracks Start To Appear In EU Finance Pact

The Czech Republic and Hungary have said they will not sign the new European Union pact unless tax harmonisation plans are dropped. The announcement comes less than one week after the EU summit hailed as bringing unity to all but one of its member nations. In Brussels, 26 of the 27 members of the EU backed new fiscal rules to keep budgets in line, with only the UK abstaining. Neither Hungary or the Czech Republic uses the euro, and tax harmonisation... [more]

‘Eurozone Heading For Another Recession’

The eurozone is likely to slip back into recession next year, according to a report by audit firm Ernst & Young. It says it expects the economies of the 17 member countries to shrink in the first two quarters of 2012. The report predicts growth of just 0.1% for the whole of the year and warns unemployment in the eurozone is unlikely to fall below 10% before 2015. The warning was backed up by economic data from Markit suggesting that... [more]

German banks abandon US customers

German banks are closing US customers’ investment accounts because they say financial reporting requirements by American authorities are just too onerous. According to the Financial Times Deutschland (FTD) newspaper, HypoVereinsbank is the latest financial institution to tell US citizens and all its clients residing in the United States that it is closing their brokerage accounts. Deutsche Bank already made the move earlier this year... [more]

Struggling pensioners forced back to work in Germany

Germany, as Europe’s top economy, may be currently seen as the land of plenty but its senior citizens are increasingly being forced to take a part-time job in their twilight years just to make ends meet. With more inhabitants over the age of 65 than any of its European partners, Germany’s senior citizens are having to resort to jobs such as animal- or babysitting or as a caretaker to top up their pensions. Notices such as “Still... [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]

Nine charged in US in Siemens corruption case

Nine former Siemens executives and agents of the German industrial giant have been charged in the United States with allegedly bribing Argentine government officials, according to the US authorities. The nine, including a former member of Siemens’ central executive committee, were accused of involvement in a scheme to secure a $1 billion contract with the Argentine government to produce national identity cards, the US Justice Department... [more]

EU gives $5.3 million to help preserve Auschwitz

 Authorities at the Auschwitz memorial say that the European Commissionhas donated €4 million to help preserve the site of the World War II Nazi death camp. The authorities said in a statement Wednesday that the money will be used to help preserve women’s barracks of the Birkenau part of the camp. It will also be used to strengthen and improve the security of the archive building, to expand the database system and to modernize... [more]

Berlin prepares for Greek insolvency

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble is making preparations for a Greek insolvency, according to newsweekly Der Spiegel. His officials are reported to be preparing for several scenarios that might arise should Athens go bankrupt. There are two possible outcomes, in the view of the ministry. Either the country stays in the euro zone, or it re-introduces its former currency, the drachma. A key consideration in Schäuble’s thinking... [more]

Friedrich: 1,000 potential terrorists in Germany

Around 1,000 potential Islamist terrorists live in Germany, 128 of whom could be classed as capable of carrying out attacks, Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich said Monday. “We have almost 1,000 people who could be described as possible Islamist terrorists,” he told the Bild daily, adding that 128 could be considered ‘dangerous” and capable of committing attacks. He said that around 20 of those had received... [more]

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