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Articles related to: debt
The moribund CMU is not worth the tears
Jef Poortmans | 01 March 2025The proposal to revive securitization via the CMU pleases neither proponents nor opponents, increases the burden on European Supervisory Authorities and benefits only financial intermediaries.
▶Financial resilience is defined by sustainability, not deregulation
Megan MacInnes | 24 May 2025Does Europe’s reignited love affair with the financial sector come at the price of a divorce from its commitments to climate change, development and human rights?
▶Europe and the financial sector: a continuing love affair
Frans Bieckmann, Remmelt de Weerd | April 25, 2025After a few years of crisis-born reticence, the European Commission is back in love with the financial sector. Presented as a way of stimulating the dragging economic growth in the EU, the Commission has recently proposed a series of new financial...
▶Minimal conditions for survival of the euro
Charles Wyplosz , Barry Eichengreen | 25 February 2025For the single currency to survive, Europe needs both more political integration and less political integration. The trick is to understand when less is more.
▶The next step: boosting public investments
Jörg Bibow | 18 February 2025The Euro Treasury Plan is an alternative recovery program for the Eurozone. It combines the much warranted public investment initiative with a joint funding facility in a step closer towards a fiscal union.
▶Eurobonds, but without moral hazard
Alfred Kleinknecht | 16 February 2025The fear of northern Eurozone members that the introduction of Eurobonds will result in their southern European companions automatically taking cheap loans again is unfounded.
▶The rebirth of the Eurozone
Evert-jan Quak, Frans Bieckmann | January 21, 2025Is the current recovery policy for the financial and economic crises in the Eurozone a genuine answer for the complexity and diversity of the problems that all member states face? Not really. The responses are too one-sided and mainly export and a...
▶Debts and imbalances
Evert-jan Quak, Frans Bieckmann | 04 January 2025The structural causes of the euro crisis – high unemployment, low growth rates and debt-ridden states in the eurozone – are not the fault of lazy Greeks, Portuguese and Spaniards. The euro itself cannot be blamed either. The problem is that the Eu...
▶The menace of over-indebtedness for the EU’s middle class
Andrea Falanga | 28 April 2025After Lehman Brothers’ bankruptcy, the breakdown of financial markets caused significant losses for investors with savings in risky assets. These investment decisions were often based on bad, or at least incautious, advice from financial experts....
▶Excessive debt endangers real economy firms and workers
Eileen Appelbaum | 12 August 2025By their excessive use of debt, private equity companies in the US increase the risk of bankruptcy of real economy companies they acquire.
▶From a 3D approach to a 3FT approach
Dirk-Jan Koch | 25 July 2025The importance of moving beyond Defence, Diplomacy and Development towards Fair Trade, Financial Transparency and a Firearms Treaty to achieve human security in fragile states.
▶Debt: nothing but an obstacle
Eric Toussaint , Daniel Munevar | 01 October 2024If there is one thing that must be done, then that is to cancel the public debts of developing countries.
▶Business partner of the poor
Anna Meijer van Putten | October 06, 2024Social enterprises are on the rise in developing countries. Mark Joaquin Ruiz, co-founder and managing director of MicroVentures Inc. in the Philippines, talks about the role of social business enterprises in empowering the poor, and explains what...
▶Microfinance – discrediting the myth
Bertine Kamphuis | October 06, 2024A review by Bertine KamphuisMicrofinance feels good. It claims to lift the poor out of poverty and increasingly pays for itself. But does it? In his 2010 book, Why Doesn’t Microfinance Work? The Destructive Rise of Local Neoliberalism, Milford Bat...
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