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The Latin Troika's Coup: what is left of the joy it generated a week later

, 04/07/2012

The half life of joy and celebration, following Europe’s Summits, is continuing to slide. The 19th such Summit since the Crisis erupted was, as I wrote here, the most successful (in that it produced, for the very first time in two and a half years) a decision that is not wholly fraudulent, irrational and irrelevant. It was, […]

Unanimity is not essential to cutting the ‘Gordian debt’: our letter to the FT as published today

, 02/07/2012

The other day I posted a letter that Stuart Holland and I sent to the Financial Times. Today it was published. Click here for the FT or…

June 2012 EU Summit Verdict: A good decision that will, probably, go to waste

, 29/06/2012

Mrs Merkel went to Brussels intent on striking two birds with one stone, pick up her bag immediately and return to Berlin with no further ado. The stone was the fraudulent re-packaging of existing structural and EIB funds (with the addition of a paltry 10 billion euros) into a grandiose-sounding ‘Growth Pact’. The two birds […]

Saving the Eurozone does not depend on Germany: Our letter to the Financial Times

, 28/06/2012

From Professors Stuart Holland and Yanis Varoufakis   Europe is deadlocked in assuming that resolving the Eurozone crisis must be unanimous. Yet it does not need this. It could do so by ‘enhanced cooperation’ which needs support by nine or more member states while, on a motion for an enhanced cooperation policy, only those supporting it […]

A(nother) PROPOSAL FOR SAVING THE EURO ZONE: Guest post by Marshall Auerback

, 28/06/2012

This blog was established, initially, for the purposes of proposing solutions to the euro crisis; and in particular to propagate our Modest Proposal for Resolving the Euro Crisis. Two and a half years later, the eurozone is crashing and burning, while European politicians are steadfastly refusing to adopt a systemic solution. Those of us who […]

Open letter to a good friend and colleague (who happened to become Greece’s Finance Minister yesterday…)

, 27/06/2012

Dear Yanni, On the one hand I am writing to congratulate you. And on the other to express my disdain towards those who handed my friend the good ship’s wheel after the vessel has struck the iceberg. Utterly familiar with your effervescent optimism, I know you mean it when you declare confidence in Greece’s capacity […]

Greece is ungovernable (while the euro's derailment continues): On ABC tv 7.30 Report

, 26/06/2012

Following the latest Greek election, I was interviewed on the ABC’s 7.30 Report. In the interview (which you can watch here), I presented a gloomy, yet realistic, view that it really matters little now what happens in Greece. “Greece is finished”, I argued, as long as the derailment of Europe’s euro-system is proceeding unhindered. Read […]

And the Good Ship Greece Sails On: ‘Letter’ to an italian colleague

, 24/06/2012

A few weeks ago I was approached by Andrea Adriatico, a theatre director from Bologna’s Teatri Di Vita with an interesting request: Could I write a ‘letter’ to some fictional Italian economics professor, outlining on a colleague-to-colleague basis, the Greek ‘situation’ as it is experienced by a Greek economics professor. That letter would then be read […]

Mariana Mazzucato on the role of the EIB in spurring Investment-led Growth

, 21/06/2012

Professor Mariana Mazzucato, of Sussex University, has produced pivotal research on the role that public financing plays in fostering not only investment but also competition. Here she is appearing on Bloomberg to explain the importance of the European Investment Bank as a potential driver of growth, innovation and competition in the European Union. She also […]

My duel with Deutsche Bank exec, Wolfgang Nowak (on CBC Radio)

, 21/06/2012

Here is my reply to Wolfgang Nowak, Deutsche Bank executive and former Merkel advisor, telling CBC that Greece should be thrown out of the Eurozone.  Click here for Mr Nowak’s audio 

A technical failure foretold? My interrupted BBC TV interview on the… BBC's bias

, 20/06/2012

You may recall that on Greek election day I issued a missive to the BBC, suggesting that they recover forthwith the journalistic standards which they seemed to have dropped in the run up to the Greek election. That missive, might I add, came from a long standing friend and contributor to the BBC. Indeed, I […]

We don’t need more time to hang ourselves – on CNN Int's Amanpour show, last night

, 20/06/2012

Click here for a brief clip and CNN’s own blog on this interview.  (CNN) – In the aftermath of its most recent election, will Greece remain in the eurozone, and will a pro-bailout government begin a recovery? Yanis Varoufakis, Professor of Economics at the University of Athens doesn’t think so: “Even if God, his angels and every […]

The Greek Election as a manifestation of Europe’s Hobbesian Moment

, 19/06/2012

The frenzy of reporting the Greek election is coming to a close. The world is now, quite understandably, swivelling its antennae toward Spain, Italy, Mexico and the G20. It is, therefore, a good moment to take stock of the main lesson the Greek crisis’ recent twist should teach a wary world: Beware of free riders […]

Interviewed by Robert Wright on the Euro Crisis

, 18/06/2012

Extensive interview with Robert Wright (author of The Evolution of God, Nonzero) on the Euro and Greek Crisis – for bloggingheads.tv. Click here.

Greek Election Result: An assessment

, 18/06/2012

Greek voters gave their contradictory verdict: While 55% voted for parties that stood explicitly against the ‘bailout’ terms and conditions, a pro-’bailout’ government is about to be formed – such is the nature of Greece’s electoral system (which rewards the largest party with a bonus of 50 additional MPs in the 300 seat chamber). The […]

Message to the BBC and assorted international media on this Greek Election Day: Try to recover your journalistic principles even at the eleventh hour!

, 17/06/2012

Over the past 48 hours, as Greek voters are mulling over their options prior to entering the polling stations, the international media have indulged in a frenzy of disinformation and scaremongering. Gone is the nuanced reporting of the BBC, nowhere to be seen the critical approach to the Euro Crisis that the rest of the […]

Greece’s Choice: Bargaining versus pleading (a piece to appear in the Huffington Post)

, 15/06/2012

This piece was prepared for the french version of Huffington Post and was also published in English by The Conversation When two sides bargain, their interaction reflects a potential mutual benefit but also a measure of conflict. For instance, when a firm and its supplier reach a deal, there is often more than one price […]

Ponzi Austerity: Interviewed on the Keiser Report

, 15/06/2012

Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert interviewed me, on the Keiser Report, on my notion of Ponzi Austerity, with particular reference to Spain, Ireland and Greece. Watch the video below and let me know what you think. But before you watch it, allow me to state one disagreement of mine with Max and Stacy’s interpretation. Max […]

Is the ECB's Target2 critical for the euro's future? A debate between Felix Salmond and Marshall Auerback

, 14/06/2012

Following Marshall Auerback’s guest post on the problem with Target2, and how it can potentially lead the German Constitutional Court to throw a spanner in the works of the euro system, Felix Salmon published an interesting article arguing that all this fuss about Target2 is the result of a misunderstanding of what Central Banks do […]

GERMANY’S CONSTITUTIONAL CONUNDRUM: Guest post by Marshall Auerback

, 13/06/2012

Hans-Werner Sinn, president of Germany’s Ifo Institute and the director of the Center for Economic Studies at the University of Munich, has taken to the pages of the NY Times to explain why Berlin is balking on a further bailout for Europe.  Amongst the points that Sinn makes against German sharing in the debt of the [...]

Euro-Australia: An instructive counter-factual

, 12/06/2012

In this counter-factual history I narrate (in ‘real time’) the disintegration that would have befallen the Federation of Australia if, in 1901, its founding fathers had used the Eurozone as a template. (A piece commissioned by www.theconversation.edu.au)

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