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Europe
EU Leaders Confident Greece Bailout Will Succeed
2010-05-01
The head of the European Commission says he is confident an emergency aid package will keep Greece's crippling debt crisis from further threatening the financial health of other EU nations. Speaking at a press conference in Beijing Friday, Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said measures to contain the crisis will be in place in the coming days.
More unicorn dust!
Officials say a bailout being discussed with the EU and International Monetary Fund will likely cost about $160 billion, and will require Greece to drastically slash its deficit by 2011.
The Germans EU doesn't have that kind of money and Greece won't slash its deficit, next year or never. If they had the will do that they would have done it well before they got into trouble.
Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou told parliament Friday the cutbacks are a "patriotic responsibility" that must be done without regard to political cost.

Greek union officials said the proposed deal could cause extreme hardship.
It's a hardship when you can't retire at 55 ...
Police fired tear gas on protesters outside of Greece's finance ministry late Thursday as hundreds gathered to rally against the austerity measures. More protests are planned on Labor Day, which is on Saturday, while unions have called for a general strike on May 5.

Politicians and investors are worried that economic problems could spread if Greece fails to pay back its debt. Those concerns grew earlier this week, when a key credit rating agency, Standard and Poor's, downgraded its credit ratings of Greece, Portugal and Spain.

Greece faces a May 19 deadline for servicing a portion of its debt.

Any Greek bailout will require the approval of other euro zone members, and the plan has met political opposition in Germany.
Posted by:Steve White

#7  Not according to both the IMF and this chap.
Posted by: Pappy   2010-05-01 19:54  

#6  Not the other way around?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2010-05-01 16:14  

#5  Portugal, then Spain.
Posted by: Pappy   2010-05-01 16:10  

#4  Great! Who's next?
Posted by: gorb   2010-05-01 05:36  

#3  The German taxpayer would probably be more inclined to give Greece euros to build new prisons for its corrupt officials rather than throwing that good money after bad in propping up the sick Greek economy.
Posted by: Bulldog   2010-05-01 04:35  

#2  In a land of culture, pride lies in art of corruption
Got a problem with the tax inspector? That can be solved in a jiffy in Greece: you slip him a fat wad of euros and your pain is eased...Tasos Telloglou, an investigative journalist who has exposed scandals involving big corporate payoffs, said: “Corruption is everywhere. It is part of our mentality.” Greece’s new financial masters will find the locals running rings around them, he added.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2010-05-01 00:44  

#1  
Didn't expect to retire at 50 on full government pension.
Posted by: DMFD   2010-05-01 00:43  

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