Europe's Economic Crisis

Opinion Brief

Can a new election save Greece?

Efforts to form a unity government seem to fail, setting up yet another showdown between Alexis Tsipras' anti-austerity forces and the old Greek guard

Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras seems to want no part in a Greek unity government, all but ensuring new parliamentary elections that his leftist party is poised to clean up in.

Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras seems to want no part in a Greek unity government, all but ensuring new parliamentary elections that his leftist party is poised to clean up in. Photo: AP Images SEE ALL 57 PHOTOS

Best Opinion:  American Thinker, NY Times, Boston Herald

Greece's anti-austerity Syriza party refused to participate in last-ditch efforts to form a unity government Monday, making it increasingly likely that the debt-burdened country will have to hold new parliamentary elections in June to break the impasse. European finance leaders, who are meeting in Brussels Monday, insist that Greece must stick to the harsh spending cuts that the last government agreed to in return for a massive bailout. But Syriza, which placed second in voting a week ago and could be the top vote-getter in fresh balloting, insists that the austerity measures are "catastrophic" and must be abandoned. Will new elections put the struggling nation back on track, or hasten its collapse? 

A new election will lead to disaster: Syriza's leader, Alexis Tsipras, calls the $200 billion bailout "blackmail," says Rick Moran at The American Thinker. But EU largesse is the only thing that spared Greece from collapse. A new election will almost certainly give the leftist Syriza party and the less radical Democratic Left the power to form a coalition government, end austerity, and scuttle the bailout. Then the "economic chaos" really begins.
"Greek radical socialists torpedo talks to form government"

And bring more uncertainty: Unless the Greek people change their minds in a "quickie second election," says the Boston Herald in an editorial, the anti-austerity crowd will win, Greece will get booted from the euro zone, the European Central Bank will withhold bailout money, and the country will run out of cash. Greece, unable to borrow, will "have to print money — drachmas — to pay its bills," causing inflation. Nobody can say where it all ends, but "Greece faces a grim future."
"Greece on a cliff"

But it beats a popular revolt: Greece's voters have had enough of the "current dead-end path of austerity-fueled recession," says Arianna Huffington at The New York Times. They're going to insist on change, "through either the ballot box or violence in the streets." So it's best to simply follow their will, even if that means leaving the euro and defaulting on the country's debt. Argentina defaulted in 2001 and its economy bounced back — Greece can, too.
"Greek tragedy"

 
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opinion brief

Will Germany cave in to the demands of Greece's anti-austerity parties?

The two countries are butting heads over Greece's refusal to comply with the terms of its financial bailout, and it's unclear which side will blink first

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is urging Greece to comply with the terms of its austerity program, or risk losing its place in the European Union.

In the aftermath of watershed elections this month, Greece's splintered political system is struggling to form a ruling coalition. The main obstacle is Syriza, a fringe party that rode to an unprecedented, second-place finish on a wave of popular anger against...

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opinion brief

Spain's escalating financial crisis: Is Europe committing 'economic suicide'?

The continent's fourth-largest economy could be heading toward a full-blown crisis, and Europe's political class only seems to be exacerbating the problem

Protesters demonstrate against spending cuts in Madrid: Spain's economy, the EU's fourth largest, is in increasingly dire straits.

The European Union might soon find itself in the hairiest stretch of its seemingly endless debt crisis. Spain's borrowing costs are shooting up to heights that are dangerously close to bailout levels, and as the continent's fourth-largest economy, it is "too big...

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opinion brief

After the bailout: Is Greece still doomed?

The debt-laden nation secures a whopping $170 billion lifeline — but few Greeks are breaking out the champagne

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos addresses reporters after securing a $170 billion bailout from Europe: Greece still faces extreme austerity measures and a crippling recession.

This week, the so-called troika of lenders — the European Union, the European Central Bank (ECB), and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) — agreed to extend another massive aid package to debt-plagued Greece, its second since 2010. The $170 billion... More

opinion brief

Greece's austerity deal: Too little, too late?

Trying to secure a massive European bailout, Greek leaders finally agree to major job and spending cuts. But European leaders insist that Greece do more

Anti-austerity protesters confront riot police Friday: Greek leaders have agreed to a new round of unpopular job and spending cuts.

Greek leaders just can't please anyone. Thousands protested in Athens this week after Greek politicians, trying to win a massive European bailout, finally accepted a new round of job and spending cuts. Then, European ministers declared late Thursday that the controversial... More

opinion brief

Will debt downgrades doom the eurozone recovery?

Standard & Poor's docks the credit ratings of France, Spain, Italy — and even the rescue fund charged with bailing out struggling European nations

French President Nicolas Sarkozy says S&P's credit downgrade of his country "changes nothing," though critics say it foreshadows disaster for the eurozone.

In the last few days, S&P has docked the credit ratings of France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Cyprus, Austria, Malta, Slovakia, Slovenia, and the European Financial Stability Facility — the temporary bailout fund charged with rescuing debt-plagued... More

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