Is the Euro all but doomed? | Mail Online

How much longer can the euro survive? Bank chief says eurozone is tearing itself apart and PM warns of a break-up

  • David Cameron will attack Germany and other European countries for failing to stop the euro breaking apart
  • Will insist austerity measures is the only way to ‘keep Britain safe’
  • Experts say if the crisis isn’t contained 10 per cent of the national income could be wiped out in EU countries

David Cameron will today express grave doubts about the survival of the euro amid fears that a collapse could drag Britain into a decade-long depression.

He will warn of ‘perilous economic times’ and launch a startling attack on the failure of Germany and other major European countries to take the necessary steps if they want to prevent the euro breaking apart.

‘The eurozone is at a crossroads – it either has to make up, or it is looking at a potential break-up,’ the Prime Minister will say, insisting that sticking to the Government’s austerity measures is the only way to ‘keep Britain safe’ [continue reading in new window...]

 

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Entire Senate rejects Obama budget in 99-0 vote – The Hill’s Floor Action

A budget resolution based on President Obama’s 2013 budget failed to get any votes in the Senate on Wednesday.

In a 99-0 vote, all of the senators present rejected the president’s blueprint.

It’s the second year in a row the Senate has voted down Obama’s budget.

Obama’s 2012 budget failed 97 to 0 last May after Obama himself last April said he wanted deeper deficit cuts.

The House earlier this year unanimously rejected Obama’s budget.

The White House sought to provide cover for Democrats to vote [continue reading in new window...]

 

Greece on brink of collapse – Telegraph

As leaders in Athens accepted the need for a new general election to end a national stalemate, the International Monetary Fund said Europe’s leaders should prepare for the possibility of a Greek departure from the single currency.

 Christine Lagarde, head of the IMF, warned she was “technically prepared for anything” and said the utmost effort must be made to ensure any Greek exit was orderly. The effect was likely to be “quite messy” with risks to growth, trade and financial markets. “It is something that would be extremely expensive and would pose great risks but it is part of options that we must technically consider,” she said.

Raising tensions still further, Germany warned Greek voters that the wrong result in next month’s election will force their country out of the single currency.

Greece’s president warned, perhaps most alarmingly, that its banks risk [continue reading in new window...]

 

China In Much More Trouble Than Data Suggests – CNBC

In an unguarded moment in 2007, the man anointed to take over next year as the helmsman of the world’s second-largest economy revealed his doubts about China’s economic growth statistics.

The country’s official gross domestic product figures are “man-made” and therefore unreliable, Li Keqiang told the U.S. ambassador at the time, adding with a smile that he regarded them as being “for reference only.”

When evaluating the speed of economic growth Mr. Li, who is expected formally to replace Wen Jiabao as China’s Premier next March, said he focused instead on three sets of data — electricity consumption, rail cargo volumes, and disbursement of bank loans.

If Mr. Li’s assessment is correct, the Chinese economy is in a lot more trouble than headline [continue reading in new window...]

Merkel tells Greece to back cuts or face euro exit – Telegraph

Merkel tells Greece to back cuts or face euro exit

Greece may be forced to leave the euro if the country refuses to implement spending cuts agreed with the European Union, Angela Merkel warned.

Raising the spectre of a Greek exit, the German chancellor said “solidarity   for the euro” was threatened by the ongoing political crisis in Athens.

Stock markets around the world fell sharply with fears mounting that a euro   break-up could lead to renewed financial turmoil. The FTSE-100 index of   Britain’s major companies fell by two per cent to 5465, with bank shares hit   particularly hard.

The cost of Spanish government borrowing also hit a record high since the   single currency was [continue reading in new window...]

 

A Lethargic Dragon: Why China Is a Bad Model To Copy – National Review Online

Americans have always looked abroad for inspiration. Alexander Hamilton drew on the experience of Britain and France to shape the economic institutions of the early republic. In the early 19th century, Henry Clay championed tariffs, a national bank, and internal improvements in an effort to match Britain’s economic might. As the 19th century gave way to the 20th, Germany emerged as an industrial colossus, and American intellectuals had a new model. During the 1950s, at least some Americans, mainly but not exclusively on the political left, saw the breakneck modernization of the Soviet Union as a clear indication that the old-fashioned market economy was on its last legs.

There have been a variety of fads and fashions in the years since. Once it became clear that the Soviet model was not quite as impressive as it had once seemed, liberals and progressives started looking to northern Europe, and in particular to Sweden, for lessons on how to run an economy. Conservatives have swooned at various times over Switzerland and Chile and Singapore, among other capitalist success stories. And then, of course, there was the 1980s-era obsession with Japan, which in the view of some observers was destined to surpass a declining America.

Some of these enthusiasms proved less harmful than others, and some were even constructive. Hamilton was right: The United States really did have much to learn from Britain. Germany’s scientific breakthroughs were indeed enviable. Sweden, Switzerland, Chile, and Singapore all have their virtues, and not just of the culinary variety. Even Japan, for all its economic pathologies, taught U.S. manufacturers a great deal about how to [continue reading in new window...]

Why China’s Slowdown Could Be Good for US, Europe – CNBC

China’s economy may be on track to grow at its slowest pace in a decade, but there’s a silver lining to this: lower commodity prices may actually benefit the U.S. and Europe, just when they most need it.

“The U.S. might not be in too bad a shape because it would benefit form cheaper commodity and oil prices,” Frederic Neumann, HSBC’s Co-Head of Asian Economic Research told CNBC on Monday.

While there may be “severe headwinds” for the global economy if the Chinese government did nothing to stimulate growth, the impact will be uneven on [continue reading in new window…]

Highest & Cheapest Gas Prices by Country: Global Pain at the Pump – Bloomberg

Global Pain at the Pump

The cost of a gallon of gasoline ranks with bad weather as one of the most universal complaints. In the U.S., the price of gas is getting even more attention than usual this year as presidential contenders battle over energy policy. What’s lost in the debate is how much the U.S. and other countries actually pay for gas, relative to one another and to their citizens’ wages. The following ranking sorts 55 countries by average price at the pump and by “pain at the pump,” which is measured by the percentage of average daily income needed to buy a gallon of fuel [continue to full slideshow in new window...]

Euro Officials Begin to Weigh Greek Exit as Euro Weakens – Bloomberg

Greece’s possible exit from the euro moved to the center of Europe’s financial-crisis debate, rattling markets as authorities in Athens struggled to form a government.

Meetings brokered by Greek President Karolos Papoulias were set to continue today after Syriza, the leading anti-bailout party, rejected a unity government following inconclusive elections May 6. That moved the country closer to a new vote, with at least five European central bankers broaching the once-taboo topic of its exit from the euro [continue reading in new window…]