Titoli di Stato area Euro GRECIA Operativo titoli di stato - Cap. 1

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buongiorno a tutti methos a sto' punto lìunica cosa che mi fa' paura e' l'uscita dall'euro dei greci mi accontenterei anche di un taglio dei capelli del 30% mi sa' che i nostri soldi no li recupereremo tutti sto' diventando pessimista gaudente ciao io sono con te' sempre w u piluuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu ciao
 
Ieri non è stata la telefonata di Obama a dare una spinta alla soluzione del problema greco ma un incontro diretto con Frau Merkel.
Come a maggio dello scorso anno ci vorrà l'America, con il suo assenso, per spingere gli europei ad un impegno più incisivo.
Le successive tappe saranno la chiave di volta della soluzione: da una parte Papandreou dovrà convincere i riottosi del Pasok o, in alternativa, raccogliere il dissenso dalle forze di opposizione e dall'altra parte le banche dovranno assumersi gli oneri di un sostegno al debito ellenico.
Sul fronte degli spread la situazione è stabile con una lieve tendenza positiva. Sempre incerta e tesa rimane la situazione sulla penisola iberica.

Grecia 1294 pb. (1298)
Irlanda 757 pb. (780)
Portogallo 704 pb. (705)
Spagna 223 pb. (225)
Italia 165 pb. (165)
Belgio 107 pb. (108)
 
Foreign pressure on Greece intensifies



Obama pushes for solution to crisis as Europeans urge consensus


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Foreign pressure grew on Tuesday for Greece to push ahead with measures aimed at getting its debt-ridden economy back on track, with American President Barack Obama stressing that a Greek default could have disastrous implications on the US economy.
Speaking at a news conference in Washington with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Obama called on Germany and other European countries to work together to help Greece stabilize its economy, noting that US economic growth depended on a solution to the Greek crisis.
We think it would be disastrous for us to see an uncontrolled spiral and default in Europe because that could trigger a whole range of other events,” he said.
His comments came as officials in Europe reiterated calls for Greek politicians to reach a political consensus on a new raft of austerity measures.
In Paris, French Prime Minister Francois Fillon urged visiting Antonis Samaras, the leader of Greece’s main opposition New Democracy party, to “support the new structural plan being negotiated by the Greek government” and emphasized “the need for Greek political forces to show responsibility at this crucial time.” Samaras has resisted overtures from the Greek government for consensus, proposing instead his own alternative fiscal program featuring tax cuts rather than hikes.
On Monday, the chairman of the Eurogroup, Jean-Claude Juncker, said that Athens needed to work harder on securing national consensus. “You can’t really expect other people to help, other people to show solidarity if you can’t sort yourselves out internally. This isn’t a matter of party politics. It is about Greece,” he said.
He added that he had received “many letters from Greece, many of which contain threats.”






ekathimerini.com , Tuesday June 7, 2011 (23:15)
 
:) Ci mancherebbe altro che alla mia età cambiassi idea ad ogni stormir di foglia, e non lo faccio per uno stupido principio, ma perchè sono convinto che la situazione greca complessiva (quindi non solo quella finanziaria, ma anche politica in ambito UE) sia migliore di quella di poco più di un anno fa. Gli egoismi europei si fermeranno ancora una volta davanti al baratro: troppa fatica hanno fatto per arrivare all'attuale costruzione europea e sanno benissimo che la mancanza di solidarietà verso uno stato come la Grecia minerebbe dalle fondamenta non la finanza ma la futura politica europea.
E senza l'Europa unita, gli staterelli che si chiamano Francia, Germania, Italia, Spagna, Gran Bretagna e altri più piccoli, diventerebbero entità politiche ed economiche quasi insignificanti di fronte alle potenze nordamericana, cinese e indiana.
Buona notte, Giuseppe
sono in perfetta sintonia con te, giuseppe; se cosi' non fosse l'unione europea si sfalderebbe in brevissimo tempo...
 
Ruling party MPs slam austerity plan



Gov’t comes under fierce criticism from own deputies in debate on midterm program


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The government, and in particular Finance Minister Giorgos Papaconstantinou, came under heavy fire on Tuesday during a heated discussion by PASOK deputies of a new raft of austerity measures that are scheduled to go before Parliament in the next few days.
A session by a parliamentary working group for economic affairs featured vehement criticism of the government’s midterm fiscal program - which has been drafted by Papaconstantinou - from several prominent deputies.
Some commentators noted that the rifts within PASOK had grown to such an extent that a rebellion was an increasingly distinct possibility.
Of the 70 deputies who addressed the marathon session on Tuesday, many did not focus on just one aspect of the midterm program but expressed general criticism of the government’s central policies and choices.
Some of the fiercest criticism came from Vasso Papandreou, a former minister and head of Parliament’s economic affairs committee.
There is no plan, just as there was no plan last year,” she said, claiming that current efforts by the government to slash spending and raise much-needed revenue would soon lose momentum.
Papandreou also accused the finance minister of treating her “like a fool” when she visited him in his office in November 2009, the month after national elections that brought PASOK back to power, and asked him to take measures to correct the economy.
Some of the deputies that spoke expressed opposition to the possibility of the midterm program - which foresees widespread tax increases and severe cuts to public spending - being put to a referendum, an idea that has been floated by Prime Minister George Papandreou.
Veteran PASOK deputy Costas Geitonas called for the proposal to be taken off the table, saying that this would be a “precursor to general elections.”
Another Socialist lawmaker, Paris Koukoulopoulos, claimed that the government risked “losing touch with reality.” “The only two things we have achieved are to drain bank deposits and fill city squares with people,” he remarked.
Despite internal opposition to the measures laid out in its midterm program, the government - under pressure from its international creditors to push ahead with reforms - aims to submit it in Parliament by the end of this week.






ekathimerini.com , Tuesday June 7, 2011 (23:19)

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Tensione crescente all'interno del PASOK sulle misure da adottare.
 
buongiorno a tutti methos a sto' punto lìunica cosa che mi fa' paura e' l'uscita dall'euro dei greci mi accontenterei anche di un taglio dei capelli del 30% mi sa' che i nostri soldi no li recupereremo tutti sto' diventando pessimista gaudente ciao io sono con te' sempre w u piluuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu ciao
buttozzo, non pensarci neppure al default;anche perchè se taglio fosse, sicuramente la percentuale minima sarebbe 50%.
 
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