There are always moments of anxiety when benefit claimants are weaned off their welfare support. ?442bn: it is today of
fering banks as much three-month money as they want. And more-or-less the whole eurozone banking sector - including big
German and French banks - is under the dark shadow cast by their huge holdings of eurozone government bonds, because of
deep-seated fears that Greece and perhaps other overstretched eurozone states will eventually default on their sizeable
debts. But it would be quite wrong to see the welfare dependency of banks as a purely eurozone phenomenon. ?800bn of
term funding and liquid assets over the coming 30 months. Comments
Sign in or register to comment. At 08:39am on 30 Jun 2010, onebadmouse wrote:
The game is to force government to interfere with the market. British Leyland again
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2. At 08:47am on 30 Jun 2010, nametheguilty wrote:
With a bit of luck debt will become a lot more expensive, and businesses and people will learn not to become so dependan
t on it. At 08:54am on 30 Jun 2010, Averagejoe wrote:
The bail out of the banks was simply delaying the inevitable, as many bloggers have been saying, and here we are again a
few years later.
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
price delta
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