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The European Debt Crisis Visualized

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    The European Debt Crisis -- Visualized
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    What is the European Debt Crisis ?
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    It's the failure of the Euro.
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    The currency that ties together 17 European countries in an intimate but flawed manner.
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    Over the past three years,
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    Greece, Portugal,
    Ireland, Italy and Spain.
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    have all teetered on the brink of
    financial collapse
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    threatening to bring down the entire continent
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    and the rest of the world.
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    How did it happened ?
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    Uniting Europe
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    For most of Europe's history,
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    it's been a war with itself.
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    And countries at war with each other
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    tend to do less business together.
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    Europe ishas always been a continent of trade barriers,
    tariffs and different currencies.
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    Doing business across borders
    was difficult.
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    You needed to pay a fee
    to exchange currencies.
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    And you needed to pay a tariff fee
    to buy and sell to companies in other countries.
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    That tended to stifle economic growth.
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    Then came World War II,
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    which devastated Europe.
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    Because the situation was so dire,
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    the fastest way to rebuild Europe
    was to begin to remove these barriers.
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    Steel and coal tariffs came down
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    so that a steel mill in one country
    could sell to a builder in another.
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    This gave the survivors an idea.
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    A unified Europe,
    a union across the continent
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    that will end future wars.
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    Countries began to band together
    toward this goal,
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    bringing down trade barriers,
    lowering the cost of doing business.
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    One of the last barriers to fall
    was the Berlin Wall.
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    With the united Germany, Europe was ready.
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    27 countries signed the Maastricht Treaty
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    and created the European Union.
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    This made doing business
    across borders easier,
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    but there is one major obstacle:
    the different currencies.
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    A decade later, they had one.
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    The Euro, launched on January 1,1999.
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    Countries adopting the euro,
    called the euro area,
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    discontinued their own currencies.
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    They also discontinued
    their own monetary policies,
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    giving control to newly formed
    European Central Bank,
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    commonly referred to as the ECB.
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    The euro area now have
    one unified monetary policy,
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    but it still have many
    different fiscal policies,
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    a key reason for the current debt crisis.
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    Monetary policy versus Fiscal policy
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    You see it's important to understand
    the difference between
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    monetary policy and fiscal policy.
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    Monetary policy controls the money supply,
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    literally how much money there is
    in the economy,
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    and what the interest are
    for borrowing money.
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    Fiscal policy controls how much money
    a government collects in taxes,
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    and how much it spends.
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    A government can only spend
    as much as it collects in taxes.
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    Anything above that amount
    it has to borrow.
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    This is called "Deficit Spending".
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    Before the euro,
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    countries like Greece, not only had to
    pay high interest rates to borrow,
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    but they can only borrow so much.
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    Lenders weren't comfortable
    lending them to much money.
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    But now that they were part of
    the euro area new united monetary policy,
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    the amount they can borrow skyrocketed.
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    Smaller countries suddenly
    have access to credit like never before.
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    Greece and other countries
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    which previously could only borrowed
    at rates around 18%,
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    could now borrow for
    the same low rate as Germany.
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    How?
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    Germany's credit card.
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    You see, joining the euro area
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    is a lot like sharing a credit card,
    Germany's credit card.
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    Lenders now believe that if Greece
    was unable to repay its loans,
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    Germany and the other
    bigger economies of Europe
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    will stepped in and repay them.
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    Because they were now bond by
    a common currency.
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    With the new abundance of cheap credit,
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    Greece and other European countries
    were able to adjust their fiscal policies,
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    and increase spending
    to previously impossible levels.
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    Some countries embarked on
    huge deficit spending programs,
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    primarily for politicians to get elected.
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    They made promises such as
    more jobs and generous pensions,
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    all that paid for with the new money
    they could now borrow.
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    The government of Greece, Portugal,
    and Italy accumulated huge debt,
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    however, they were able to repay
    these debts with more borrowed money.
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    As long as the borrowing continued,
    so did the spending,
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    and the unbalanced fiscal policies.
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    In Ireland and Spain, cheap credit fueled
    enormous housing bubbles
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    just as it did in the United States.
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    Credit flowed, debt accumulated,
    and the economies in Europe became tightly intertwined.
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    Companies began opening factories
    and offices across Europe.
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    German banks lending to French companies,
    French banks lending to Spanish companies
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    and so on and so forth. This made
    doing business incredibly efficient,
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    while at the same time tying together
    the collective fate of the Euro area.
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    Things continue this way as long as
    credit was available and credit was available
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    until 2008.
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    Spurred by a collapse
    in the US housing market,
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    a credit crisis swept the globe
    bringing borrowing to a halt. Everywhere.
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    Suddenly the Greek economy
    couldn't function.
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    It couldn't borrow money to pay for
    all the new jobs and benefits it created.
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    It couldn't borrow the new money it needed
    to pay its all debts.
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    This was a problem for Greece
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    but because of the unified
    monetary policy,
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    it was also a problem for all of Europe
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    Much of Europe have been on
    a spending spree
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    and borrowed more money
    than it could ever repay.
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    but the problem is
    somebody has to pick up the tab
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    or else every country
    in the euro area will suffer.
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    Since the countries that
    ran up the bill couldn't repay
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    everyone looked to Germany.
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    Austerity Measures
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    As the biggest and strongest economy
    in Europe
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    Germany reluctantly agreed
    to help bail out the debtor countries.
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    In other words,
    Germany agreed to repay the bill
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    but only if the debtor countries agreed
    to implement strict austerity measures
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    to ensure that
    it would never happen again.
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    Austerity measures meant sucking it up,
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    cutting spending, borrowing less
    and paying back more debt.
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    This sounds like a simple solution, right?
    It's not.
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    First of all, nobody wants austerity.
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    Austerity means
    cutting government spending
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    and since the government is by far
    the biggest spender in the economy
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    when the government cut spending, it cuts
    the earnings of many of its citizens.
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    People lose jobs, they get angry,
    they riot in the streets.
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    And austerity also doesn't automatically
    balance a country's budget.
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    You see, the government collects taxes
    based on people's earnings.
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    So when earnings are reduced,
    the government collects lesser taxes.
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    They still can't pay down their debts.
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    The pain is so bad that it's almost
    politically impossible to accomplish.
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    On top of that there are huge cultural
    differences within the Euro area.
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    Extreme Cultural Differences
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    Germany is very financially responsible.
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    Ever since the terrible hyper-inflation
    the country experienced after World War I
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    it's been extremely inflation averse
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    and incredibly careful about
    spending and borrowing.
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    In general, Germans work hard,
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    expect little
    in the line of state benefits
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    and meticulously pay all of their taxes.
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    Many Greeks, on the other hand,
    enjoy generous state benefits and don't pay taxes.
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    Greece has a terrible problem, it has never collected
    the majority of the taxes it imposes on its citizens
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    and its always been this way.
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    Joining the Euro just amplified it.
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    The German view is that doesn't work.
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    If you want our money,
    you need our morals.
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    As the debtor countries
    headed towards default
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    the whole continent of Europe
    was in danger.
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    Even though the economies of
    the debtor countries are relatively small,
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    they posed a huge threat
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    because the European financial system
    is so interconnected precisely because of the Euro
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    Remember, the debtor countries borrowed money from banks, investors, and other governments throughout Europe,
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    as the debtor countries
    get closer to default
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    everyone who lent them money
    becomes weaker
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    and everyone who lent those lenders money
    also becomes weaker,
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    and so on and so forth.
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    A problem in one country could reverberate
    across the whole continent,
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    triggering a chain-reaction of default.
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    If Greece defaults
    then Spain could default,
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    Italy, Portugal,
    and Ireland would be next,
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    then France, then Germany
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    pretty soon it could spread not just
    across Europe but across the world.
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    Fiscal Union or Breakup
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    The problem is even if the debtor nations
    adopt austerity measures
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    and even if the bailout from Germany in the stronger countries helps them pay down their debts and avoid the immediate crisis
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    There's no system in place
    to prevent this from happening again.
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    This brings us back to that fundamental division
    of monetary policy and fiscal policy.
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    Ultimately, the euro area requires a
    fiscal union to match its monetary union,
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    or neither.
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    That is, there must be a political organization with authority to set fiscal policy within every Euro area country.
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    It must have the power to cut spending,
    raise taxes and set laws.
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    A fiscal union like this could actually
    prevent excessive borrowing and spending.
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    However, this is an enormously complicated
    and unpopular notion.
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    It means surrendering sovereignty
    to a higher power,
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    in essence, a United States of Europe
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    Yet without a centralized fiscal union
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    countries will continue to
    run deficits, accumulate debt,
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    degrade the value of the Euro
    and threatens stability in Europe.
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    Can Europe take the necessary steps and create a fiscal union alongside the monetary union?
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    Or will the monetary union breakup and
    the Euro disappear?
Title:
The European Debt Crisis Visualized
Description:

Feb. 12 (Bloomberg) -- At the heart of the European debt crisis is the euro, the currency that tied together 17 countries in an intimate manner at the time of the crisis. So when one country teeters on the brink of financial collapse, the entire continent is at risk. How did such a flawed system come to be? Bloomberg Television and Jonathan Jarvis present "The European Debt Crisis Visualized." (Source: Bloomberg)

-- Subscribe to Bloomberg on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/Bloomberg

Bloomberg Television offers extensive coverage and analysis of international business news and stories of global importance. It is available in more than 310 million households worldwide and reaches the most affluent and influential viewers in terms of household income, asset value and education levels. With production hubs in London, New York and Hong Kong, the network provides 24-hour continuous coverage of the people, companies and ideas that move the markets.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
12:34
  • the guys who made the english subtitles didn't make their job well at all they are dozens of mistakes i'm correcting...

English subtitles

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