Submit your comments on this article |
Europe |
Ireland following Greece in debt spiral |
2010-11-10 |
![]() For two years, Ireland had poured money on a raging banking crisis, to no avail. Each estimate of the rising price of rescuing Ireland's banks turned out too low. Mr. Lenihan needed to halt the drip-drip of bad news that was leading his country to ruin. "I want a final figure ASAP," he told the group. Two weeks later, the estimate came in: Up to €50 billion—nearly $50,000 for every household in the Emerald Isle. But now, investors are betting the bill could be higher still and could reignite Europe's sovereign-debt crisis. The unpopular government is bracing for collapse, and on Tuesday, Irish government bonds continued a week-long slide to a fresh record low. The debt is judged as risky as Greece's was this spring just before that nation begged for a European Union bailout. |
Posted by:DarthVader |
#5 BP- Of your list, Detroit easily meets items one and two, and is nowhere close to three and four. Worst of all is a fifth category - quality of state and local government. Cheap and plentiful housing, much of it simply abandoned awaiting repair, typical US consurmer goods availability, the home of rigid and recalcitrant unionization, moribund industry, and awful governance - though they're just beginning to fix that. |
Posted by: Halliburton - Mysterious Conspiracy Division 2010-11-10 23:21 |
#4 Best to burst those bubbles early. Get housing affordable, and the cost of living down, and keep wage pressure low, and start up the economy. |
Posted by: Bright Pebbles 2010-11-10 18:12 |
#3 Ireland had the mother of all real estate bubbles. The banking crisis will be over, when the RE bubble has finally burst completely, which is years away. cf Japan |
Posted by: phil_b 2010-11-10 17:08 |
#2 Q: What's the difference between Ireland and Iceland? A: One letter |
Posted by: Canuckistan sniper 2010-11-10 14:00 |
#1 FTA: Desperate to preserve the homegrown banking system, the government—blind to just how sour Irish loans had gone—yoked the fate of the nation to the fate of its banks. Along the way, the government was hobbled by faulty information from outside advisers, from a trust-and-don't-verify regulatory culture and from the troubled banks themselves. This sounds just like the ol' USA. |
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 2010-11-10 13:51 |