Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou said voters will give him support to forge ahead with economic reforms as he pledged a referendum on the European Union’s latest accord on the nation’s financing. “For the new agreement, we must go to a referendum for Greeks to ...
Related News:-
Greek PM urges national unity over debt rescue plan
Greek PM George Papandreou calls on MPs to show unity and back the cabinet in its economic rescue plans.
The Greek Crisis: Alternative scenarios . . .
Financial Times June 22, 2011 Bond investors are already pricing Greece’s government debt as though it has defaulted. Writing for today’s Financial Times, Professor Martin ...
Current News
The Embassy of Greece in the United States of America - Washington, DC
The Greek Crisis: Crime casts long shadow over Athens
by Anthee Carassava Los Angeles Times May 31, 2011 Manolis Kandaris' wife was in labor and he wanted to get her to a hospital, fast. So he reached for the car keys, fetched the ...
Athens Greece Now | Greece and its environs | The EU Economic ...
The Greek economic meltdown and a gathering of news about the financial and social stresses on Athens Greece
Greeks Strike Against Papandreou Cuts, March to Parliament
Greeks walked off their jobs across the nation and as many as 20,000 marched through Athens’ central square to protest Prime Minister George Papandreou’s 6.6 billion-euro ...
EU: "Greek Eurozone Membership Is At Stake" And Greece Must Agree ...
The loudest warning to date. From Reuters:EU Commissioner Damanaki says Greece's Eurozone membership is at riskEU Commissioner Damanaki says Greece must agree on tough measures ...
Brevan Howard says no exposure to Greek debt, CDS - Worldnews.com
* No short exposure to Greek bonds since mid-Dec - letter * No "meaningful" Italian, Portuguese, Spanish debt exposure * Other fund firms decline to comment By Laurence ...
Euroland
IMF and 15 eurozone nations pledge €110bn in financing to Greece over three years; IMF: €30bn GERMANY: €22.3bn FRANCE: €16.8bn ITALY: €14.7bn
No comments:
Post a Comment