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Wednesday 19 September 2012
Rob Lyons

Europe hasn’t yet
‘turned the corner’


As long as Eurozone leaders equivocate over the need for growth, Europe will lurch from one crisis to the next.
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In the manic-depressive history of the Euro crisis, the past week has seen the patient perking up and chatting enthusastically about the future. On 12 September, Germany’s constitutional court upheld the country’s participation in the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), a permanent bailout fund with up to 700 billion euros at its disposal. There are proposals on the table for common Eurozone banking supervision, which may ultimately lead to banking union. And after years of avoiding it, the European Central Bank (ECB) has agreed, where necessary, to buy unlimited quantities of bonds from countries that have accepted rescue plans.

In the manic-depressive history of the Euro crisis, the past week has seen the patient perking up and chatting enthusastically about the future. On 12 September, Germany’s constitutional court upheld the country’s participation in the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), a permanent bailout fund with up to 700 billion euros at its disposal. There are proposals on the table for common Eurozone banking supervision, which may ultimately lead to banking union. And after years of avoiding it, the European Central Bank (ECB) has agreed, where necessary, to buy unlimited quantities of bonds from countries that have accepted rescue plans…

This is a preview of the September edition of spiked plus, our exclusive ‘magazine within a magazine’ for readers who make invaluable contributions to spiked‘s fundraising drive. To read the rest of the article, sign in, or sign up, to spiked plus here.

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