国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

Emerging economies' euro crisis

By Kaushik Basu (China Daily) Updated: 2013-01-04 08:13

Most of today's economic institutions, from money to banking, evolved over many years the unintended consequences of decisions by millions of individuals. By contrast, the eurozone stands out for being a deliberate creation.

The eurozone is a remarkable experiment, a genuine vanguard of global progress. As 2012 ends, it is in trouble, and every effort must be made to nurture and strengthen it.

By the second half of 2011, it was evident that emerging economies, which had weathered the financial crisis that began in 2008 moderately well, were taking on water as the eurozone crisis deepened. Growth slowed sharply in Brazil, India, China, and other countries.

Central banks acted as lenders of last resort, thereby averting a major crisis. In December 2011 and February 2012, the European Central Bank announced the long-term refinancing operation (LTRO), whereby European banks were lent around 1 trillion ($1.3 trillion) in two tranches. Then, in July, came ECB President Mario Draghi's famous assurance to do "whatever it takes" to save the euro. The United States Federal Reserve injected liquidity, as did other developed countries' central banks.

There was a collective sigh of relief, financial markets stabilized, and industrial-production rebounded. The question on everyone's mind now is whether this post-storm calm will last, allowing the global economy to pick up.

Nowhere does this question loom larger than in developing and emerging economies, which are outside the main theater of the crisis, but are more precariously positioned than the developed countries. Many had only recently begun to grow rapidly, and, with vast reservoirs of poor people, economic growth has a moral urgency that it does not have in rich countries.

So, will the global economy stage a sustained recovery? Examining the past as carefully as I can, and aware of the risks of augury, my answer has to be no. Until 2015, the outlook is gloomy for Europe and, by extension, for the emerging and developing economies. The injection of liquidity that occurred over the last year was the right policy. But it only bought time; it did not solve the problem. And time is running out.

Unfortunately, most people have an instinctive propensity to look away from approaching problems until they are very close. America's "fiscal cliff," for example, was long in coming, but we started scrambling to avoid it only recenntly. So we should take early stock of the fact that there is another problem coming our way, which may be called (to give it the resonance of a coming storm) Edward the "European Debt Wall and Repayment Deadline."

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

The unique loanwords in our daily life By zoe_ting

In our daily life, more and more loanwords appear and change our habits in Chinese expression. Loanwords sound very similar with their original English words, and the process of learning them is full of fun to foreign students.

Going "home" for the first time in four years By SharkMinnow

It has been a while since I've contributed to this Forum and I figured that since now I am officially on summer holiday and another school year is behind me I would share a post with you.

...
香格里拉县| 宁都县| 焦作市| 饶平县| 安西县| 洛扎县| 陆河县| 咸宁市| 黑山县| 乌恰县| 江安县| 商丘市| 林甸县| 阿拉尔市| 米泉市| 田阳县| 孙吴县| 西盟| 桃源县| 高阳县| 米林县| 长兴县| 曲麻莱县| 宝丰县| 乌什县| 邵阳县| 苍山县| 顺义区| 长岛县| 基隆市| 阜南县| 云南省| 吕梁市| 兰考县| 子长县| 阜宁县| 韩城市| 泽州县| 南昌市| 巴东县| 安塞县|