the way the EURO is pegged with Greece
will not work. Germany will also be dragged down
the IMF will go broke which is 17% U.S. funded
so we will go down too...
Greece must leave the EURO now!
May 12 (Bloomberg) -- New York University professor Nouriel Roubini said Greece and other âlaggardsâ in the euro area may be forced to abandon the common currency in the next few years to spur their economies.
A âreal depreciationâ in the euro is needed to restore competitiveness in nations including Spain, Portugal and Italy, he said in an interview on Bloomberg Television today. The euro will remain the currency for a smaller number of countries that have âstronger fiscal and economic fundamentals,â Roubini said.
The European Union and International Monetary Fund last week approved a 110 billion-euro ($139 billion) lifeline for Greece to arrest the countryâs fiscal crisis and stop the turmoil from spreading. Europeâs debt woes may push it into a âdouble-dipâ recession, growth in advanced nations will be âanemicâ and Chinaâs overheating economy risks a slowdown, Roubini said, adding that Greece may still eventually need to restructure its debt.
âThe challenge of reducing a budget deficit from 13 percent to 3 percent in Greece looks to me like mission impossible,â Roubini said. âI would not even rule out in the next few years one or more of these laggards of the euro zone might be forced to exit the monetary union.â
will not work. Germany will also be dragged down
the IMF will go broke which is 17% U.S. funded
so we will go down too...
Greece must leave the EURO now!
May 12 (Bloomberg) -- New York University professor Nouriel Roubini said Greece and other âlaggardsâ in the euro area may be forced to abandon the common currency in the next few years to spur their economies.
A âreal depreciationâ in the euro is needed to restore competitiveness in nations including Spain, Portugal and Italy, he said in an interview on Bloomberg Television today. The euro will remain the currency for a smaller number of countries that have âstronger fiscal and economic fundamentals,â Roubini said.
The European Union and International Monetary Fund last week approved a 110 billion-euro ($139 billion) lifeline for Greece to arrest the countryâs fiscal crisis and stop the turmoil from spreading. Europeâs debt woes may push it into a âdouble-dipâ recession, growth in advanced nations will be âanemicâ and Chinaâs overheating economy risks a slowdown, Roubini said, adding that Greece may still eventually need to restructure its debt.
âThe challenge of reducing a budget deficit from 13 percent to 3 percent in Greece looks to me like mission impossible,â Roubini said. âI would not even rule out in the next few years one or more of these laggards of the euro zone might be forced to exit the monetary union.â