It was Europe's time to shine, and shine it did.
Europe's leaders should be lauded for their joint efforts to infuse banking systems with cash by nationalising important and responsible financial intermediaries - and without the tired partisan – albeit pre-election - bickering exhibited in Washington. Europe's response to the still-unfolding financial crisis is not only a vindication of sorts of Europe's steady financial acumen, it illustrates the strength of common purpose borne out of a common market. Interdependence, in this case, brought all parties to their best. And it was Gordon Brown's and Chancellor Angela Merkel’s schemes, not President George W. Bush's, that are setting an example.
Still, questions remain for whether the efforts to recapitalise banks address the underlying problem that created the mess. Flooding cash into a banking system that did not behave the last time money was cheap is like giving a drug addict even more of a fix. Still, leaders also understand the reality that, for the sake of households and businesses, the economy can't quit cheap cash “cold turkey.” Now, there is but one certainty: it's the risk analysts and credit rating agencies who will have any kind of job security in the credit-crunched months ahead.
3 years ago
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