The Greek debt crisis and China

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debt default 债务违约

debt default 债务违约

"Failure to reach an agreement would... mark the beginning of a painful course that would lead initially1 to a Greek debt default and ultimately to the country's exit from the euro area and, most likely, from the European Union," the Bank of Greece said ina report.希腊央行在(年度货币政策)报告中说:“如果无法达成协议,将标志着一个痛苦过程的开端,最初将是希腊债务违约,到最后希腊退出欧元区,以及很有可能退出欧盟。

”“债务违约”可以用英文debt default 表示,这里default用作名词,指“违约”,如主权债务违约(sovereign default),default 也可以用作动词,表示“拖欠、不履行”,如债务违约(default on the debt)、拖欠利息(default interest)。

今年以来,希腊债务危机(debt crisis)一波三折,希腊与其三大国际债权人(international creditors)的债务谈判(debt talks)始终未达成一致协议。

18日举行的欧元区财长会议(meeting of eurozone finance ministers)被外界看作双方达成协议的最后期限(deadline),而再次谈判失败或将直接导致希腊出现债务违约并退出欧元区(euro zone)。

前两年出现的新词Grexit(Greece+exit)预示的希腊退出欧元区或将成为现实。

欧洲债权人和国际货币基金组织要求希腊进行进一步的紧缩改革(austerity reforms)以换取最后一笔纾困金(bailout fund),不过希腊政府一直以来都拒绝进行此改革。

【精品文档】浅论希腊经济危机始末-优秀word范文 (1页)

【精品文档】浅论希腊经济危机始末-优秀word范文 (1页)

【精品文档】浅论希腊经济危机始末-优秀word范文本文部分内容来自网络整理,本司不为其真实性负责,如有异议或侵权请及时联系,本司将立即删除!== 本文为word格式,下载后可方便编辑和修改! ==浅论希腊经济危机始末& nbsp ;How did Greece get to this point ?希腊如何落到今天的地步?Greece became the epicenter of Europe & rsquo ; s debt crisis after Wall Street imploded in 201X. With global financial markets still reeling , Greece announced in October 201X that it had been understating its deficit figures for years , raising alarms about the soundness of Greek finances .201X年,美国华尔街爆发了金融危机。

希腊成为欧洲债务危机的重灾区。

随着全球金融市场举步维艰,希腊在201X年10月宣布,在过去数年里,它的赤字都被有意低报。

这敲响了希腊金融问题的警钟。

Suddenly , Greece was shut out from borrowing in the financialmarkets . By the spring of 201X, it was veering toward bankruptcy , which threatened to set off a new financial crisis .突然之间,金融市场停止向希腊提供借贷。

到201X年春季,希腊开始走向破产,这预示了新的金融危机的爆发。

To avert calamity , the so - called troika & mdash ; theInternational Monetary Fund , the European Central Bank and the European Commission & mdash ; issued the first of two international bailouts for Greece , which would eventually total more than 240billion euros , or about $264 billion at today & rsquo ; s exchange rates .为了避免这一灾难,所谓的三驾马车(国际货币基金组织、欧洲央行和欧盟委员会)向希腊提供了两项国际援助中的第一笔,根据今天的汇率,这笔援助最终达到2400亿欧元或2640亿美元。

欧洲主权债务危机英文课件-PPT精品文档

欧洲主权债务危机英文课件-PPT精品文档

Ask EU to recognize China’s Market Economy Country Status and loosen the hightech products export to China ?
news.xinhuanet/world/2019-10/28/c_111131389.htm
1、What’s European Sovereign Debt Crisis ? (the definitions of 2 terms)


A sovereign default is the failure or refusal of the government of a sovereign state to pay back its debt in full. It may be accompanied by a formal declaration of a government not to pay , or only partially pay its debts. If potential lenders or bond purchasers begin to suspect that a government may fail to pay back its debt, they may demand a high interest rate in compensation for the risk of default. A dramatic rise in the interest rate faced by a government due to fear that it will fail to honor its debt is sometimes called a sovereign debt crisis.

听力答案1.1-20 Unit 1 Part A News item 1

听力答案1.1-20 Unit 1 Part A News item 1

Unit 1 Part A Business News News item 1Despite the global economic (1) slowdown and a rising anti-free trade trend, China’s (2) Belt and Road initiative has opened a new path for economic globalization, conference guests said. After the 2008 financial crisis, world economy and globalization hit a block, and are struggling amid impacts from the (3) Greek debt crisis and Brexit in recent years.According to Zeng Peiyan, vice-chairman of Boao Forum, the current anti-globalization trend is mainly caused by (4) discord among international rules, financial distribution (5) mechanism, internal adjustment of economies, and increasing economic globalization.Indian representative Sudheendra Kulkarni, head of the Observer Research Foundation, said the (6) emergence of Asia and developing countries has changed the global landscape, and China’s Belt and Road initiative will benefit the Asian-Pacific region. Australian Minister for Revenue and Financial Services Kelly O’Dwyer said the China-Australia free trade agreement has (7) unlimited potential, and Australia has already benefited from the agreement in agriculture and services.Linda Yueh, head of the China Growth Center at Oxford, said China, as the second-largest world economy, has (8) lifted hundreds of millions of people out of (9) poverty in the past 30 years, making great contributions to the world economy and economic globalization.Former New Zealand Prime Minister Jennifer Shipley said it was the right moment for New Zealand and Australia to join the (10) Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. China has demonstrated great leadership in win-win cooperation with other regional countries.。

欧美债务危机相关书

欧美债务危机相关书

欧美债务危机相关书
欧美债务危机是一个备受关注的经济话题,许多书籍都涉及了这个问题。

以下是一些涉及欧美债务危机的相关书籍:
1. 《欧洲债务危机》(The European Debt Crisis)作者,Julie Marshall.
该书深入探讨了欧洲债务危机的根源、影响以及未来走势,涵盖了欧洲各国的债务情况、政策应对等内容。

2. 《美国债务危机,历史、预警、应对》(The United States Debt Crisis: Origins, Warning Signs, and Policy Responses)作者,Robert E. Wright.
这本书从历史的角度出发,分析了美国债务危机的根源,提出了一些预警信号,并探讨了可能的政策应对方案。

3. 《债务危机的政治经济学》(The Political Economy of Debt Crises)作者,Martin Rapetti, Guillermo E. Perry, and Carmen M. Reinhart.
该书从政治经济学的角度分析了债务危机的发生机制、演变规律以及国际影响,涵盖了欧美债务危机的相关内容。

4. 《债务危机与金融稳定》(Debt Crises and Financial Stability)作者,George G. Kaufman.
这本书探讨了债务危机对金融稳定的影响,涉及了欧美等地区的债务问题,并提出了一些应对建议。

这些书籍从不同的角度对欧美债务危机进行了深入的分析和探讨,涵盖了经济、政治、历史和金融等多个领域,有助于读者更全面地了解这一复杂的问题。

希望这些书籍能够对你有所帮助。

It is only a matter of time before the next recession strikes

It is only a matter of time before the next recession strikes

It is only a matter of time before the next recession strikes. The rich world is not readyThe struggle has been long and arduous. But gazing across the battered economies of the rich world it is time to declare that the fight against financial chaos and deflation is won. In 2015, the IMF says, for the first time since 2007 every advanced economy will expand. Rich-world growth should exceed 2% for the first time since 2010 and America’s central bank is likely to raise its rock-bottom interest rates. However, the global economy still faces all manner of hazards, from the Greek debt saga to China’s shaky markets. Few economies have ever gone as long as a decade without tipping into recession—America’s started growing in 2009. Sod’s law decrees that, sooner or later, policymakers will face another downturn. The danger is that, having used up their arsenal, governments and central banks will not have the ammunition to fight the next recession. Paradoxically, reducing that risk requires a willingness to keep policy looser for longer today.The smoke is clearingThe good news comes mainly from America, which leads the rich-world pack. Its unexpected contraction in the first quarter looks like a blip, owing a lot to factors like the weather (see pages 24-26). The mostrecent data, including surging vehicle sales and another round of robust employment figures, show that the pace of growth is rebounding. American firms took on 280,000 new workers last month. Bosses are at last having to pay more to find the workers they need.In other parts of the rich world things are also looking up. In the euro zone unemployment is falling and prices are rising again. Britain’s recovery has lost a bit of puff, but strong employment growth suggests that expansion will continue. Japan roared ahead in the first quarter, growing by 3.9% at an annualized rate. A recovery so broad-based and persistent is no fluke.Inevitably fragilities remain. Europe is deep in debt and dependent on exports. Japan cannot get inflation to take hold. Wage growth could quickly dent corporate earnings and valuations in America. Emerging economies, which accounted for the bulk of growth in the post-crisis years, have seen better days. The economies of both Brazil and Russia are expected to shrink this year. Poor trade data suggest that Chinese growth may be slowing faster than the government wishes.If any of these worries causes a downturn the world will be in a rotten position to do much about it. Rarely have so many large economies been so ill-equipped to manage a recession, whatever its provenance, as our “wriggle-room” ranking makes clear (see page 72). Rich countries’ average debt-to-GDP ratio has risen by about 50% since2007. In Britain and Spain debt has more than doubled. Nobody knows where the ceiling is, but governments that want to splurge will have to win over jumpy electorates as well as nervous creditors. Countries with only tenuous access to bond markets, as in the euro zone’s periphery, may be unable to launch a big fiscal stimulus.Monetary policy is yet more cramped. The last time the Federal Reserve raised interest rates was in 2006. The Bank of England’s base rate sits at 0.5%. Records dating back to the 17th century show that, before 2009, it had never fallen below 2%; and futures prices suggest that in early 2018 it will still be only around 1.5%. That is healthy compared with the euro area and Japan, where rates in 2018 are expected to remain stuck near zero. When central banks face their next recession, in other words, they risk having almost no room to boost their economies by cutting interest rates. That would make the next downturn even harder to escape.The logical answer is to get back to normal as fast as possible. The sooner interest rates rise, the sooner central banks will regain the room to cut rates again when trouble comes along. The faster debts are cut, the easier it will be for governments to borrow to ward off disaster. Logical, but wrong.Raising rates while wages are flat and inflation is well below the central bankers’ target risks pushing economies back to the brink ofdeflation and precipitating the very recession they seek to avoid. When central banks have raised rates too early—as the European Central Bank did in 2011—they have done such harm that they have felt compelled to reverse course. Better to wait until wage growth is entrenched and inflation is at least back to its target level. Inflation that is a little too high is a lot less dangerous for an economy than premature rate rises are. Because America’s recovery is strongest, that is where debate about how fast to return monetary policy to normal is fiercest. Hawkish voices at the Fed argue that, with unemployment below 6% and hiring continuing at a torrid pace, it is plainly time to start raising interest rates. In this view, wages and prices are bound to pick up in future. Meanwhile excessively low rates are inflating asset prices and creating long-run financial risks. Those risks are real but manageable. Regulators have the ability to let the air out of asset prices by tightening rules on leverage and liquidity. An economy at full employment and with a healthy level of inflation will be better positioned to withstand a bout of financial instability than one that is flirting with deflation.The best defenceGovernments can also do their bit. There has still been shamefully little growth-boosting investment in infrastructure. The OECD, a club of mostly rich countries, was right to rap George Osborne, Britain’s financeminister, on the knuckles for the scale and pace of his proposedpublic-spending cuts. Growth is better than austerity as a policy for bringing debts under control. Governments should instead direct their energies towards overdue reforms to product and labour markets. Open product markets encourage enterprise. The freedom to hire worker sunder flexible contracts is the best way to keep people out of unemployment. Both reforms make an economy better able to cope with the next shock.Having fought off the effects of the financial crisis, governments and central banks are understandably eager to get back to normal. The way to achieve their goal is to allow the recovery to gather strength first.(From The Economist June 13th 2015)。

英语-希腊债务危机

英语-希腊债务危机

希腊债务危机Finance ministers from the euro area meet Friday in Poland to discuss the Greek debt crisis. American Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner is joining them. Fabian Zuleeg, chief economist at the European Policy Center in Brussels, says the United States is right to get involved.On Wednesday, the leaders of France, Germany and Greece held a conference call to discuss how to contain Europe's deepening financial crisis.Germany and France are Europe's two largest economies.Seventeen European Union countries use the euro as their currency. Fabian Zuleeg says the future of the euro zone is anyone's guess right now.On Thursday, five major central banks agreed to lend additional dollars to European banks in the euro zone. The European Central Bank says the three-month loans will provide as many dollars as the banks need. The operations will end in December.The European Central Bank is acting with the United States Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan and the Swiss National Bank.The announcement helped lift European bank shares and major European stock lists.Last week, the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development lowered its growth estimates for the euro area. In Greece the economy has shrunk this year.German Chancellor Angela Merkel says eurozone nations must do everything they can to avoid an "uncontrolled insolvency" by Greece. On Tuesday Chancellor Merkel warned of far-reaching effects if Greece fails to pay its international rescue loans.If Greece defaults on its debts, she said, then the effects would quickly spread to other euro zone countries. And, she said, "if the euro fails, Europe fails."。

听力答案1

听力答案1

Unit 1 Part A Business News News item 1Despite the global economic (1) slowdown and a rising anti-free trade trend, China’s (2) Belt and Road initiative has opened a new path for economic globalization, conference guests said. After the 2008 financial crisis, world economy and globalization hit a block, and are struggling amid impacts from the (3) Greek debt crisis and Brexit in recent years.According to Zeng Peiyan, vice-chairman of Boao Forum, the current anti-globalization trend is mainly caused by (4) discord among international rules, financial distribution (5) mechanism, internal adjustment of economies, and increasing economic globalization.Indian representative Sudheendra Kulkarni, head of the Observer Research Foundation, said the (6) emergence of Asia and developing countries has changed the global landscape, and China’s Belt and Road initiative will benefit the Asian-Pacific region. Australian Minister for Revenue and Financial Services Kelly O’Dwyer said the China-Australia free trade agreement has (7) unlimited potential, and Australia has already benefited from the agreement in agriculture and services.Linda Yueh, head of the China Growth Center at Oxford, said China, as the second-largest world economy, has (8) lifted hundreds of millions of people out of (9) poverty in the past 30 years, making great contributions to the world economy and economic globalization.Former New Zealand Prime Minister Jennifer Shipley said it was the right moment for New Zealand and Australia to join the (10) Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. China has demonstrated great leadership in win-win cooperation with other regional countries.有缘学习更多+谓ygd3076考证资料。

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The Greek debt crisis and ChinaUpdated: 2011-07-07 14:17By John Ross ()Comments(7)Print Mail LargeMedium Small1It is another sign of the growing international impact of China that its economic strengthhas become part of the discussion on how to resolve Greece's debt crisis. It was also forthis reason that Wen Jiabao's recent European visit received even more extensive than usual coverage in the continent's media.The visit, in overall impact and in two of its three destinations, appears to have beenmostly successful. In Germany, contracts worth $15 billion were signed. In Hungary,China's announcement that it would include that country in its international bondpurchases was described by its government as "a decision of historic significance."In Britain, there was a sour note when David Cameron wasted time trying to lecture Chinaon human rights - which came rather ridiculously from the government of a country that participated in invading Iraq, resulting in the deaths of several hundred thousand people.But even in the UK, $2 billion in trade agreements were signed - although David Cameron did jeopardize British citizens' jobs and incomes because, as the Financial Times reported: "a senior Chinese official told the... FT that the UK 'is losing its standing in Europe as faras China is concerned and that Britain is now viewed less favorably in Beijing than Germany, France, Italy and Spain.'"There are clearly two aspects to the aftermath of the visit. The first is overall economic relations between China and Europe. The second is the specific problems of China's exposure to the Greek debt crisis.The overall success of the trip, and of economic relations between China and Europe,were well summed up in an editorial on July 2 in The Economist - Europe's most influential business magazine: "Investment bankers there [in Europe] are now sure to dial Chinese clients if they hear that a firm is a possible bid target. China's banks are rapidly increasing their presence in Europe... Chinese direct investment abroad has increased faster inEurope than in any other region."The Europeans get more than just money. A Chinese partner is a good way for a European brand to gain access to the world's soon-to-be-biggest economy. Ask France's Club Med, which now has a big Chinese shareholder and recently opened its first holiday resort in the country. Or CIFA, an Italian construction equipment maker whose productsare now marketed as a premium brand by its Chinese owner. Or Sweden's Volvo, whichwas bought by Geely, a Chinese carmaker, in 2010 and now calls China its second home market." The magazine concluded its editorial: "In welcoming China, Europe is swimming with the tide of history. America is struggling against it."The Greek debt crisis is, however, a specific issue that needs to be carefully analyzed. Greece's debt next year is projected to reach 159 percent of GDP, its interest rates are 15 percent above German equivalents, and its balance of payments deficit is 5.5 percent of GDP. This combination is totally unsustainable. A starting point has to be that the present bailout packages are not going to work and in the end Greece will have to partially default on its debt - to the disadvantage of its creditors.The overwhelming majority of international analysts on the issue are also aware of the inevitable default. They are merely divided between those who believe default should occur now or whether it would be better to postpone it. So far European governments are, with little credibility in markets or among serious analysts, proclaiming that partial default is "unthinkable" - which means in practice they are going down the road of postponement.Clarity is therefore necessary on the purpose of the postponement and what is taking place during it. The core process is to give time for European and other banks to exit from holdings of Greek debt and transfer it to governments - which in the real world means taxpayers. The latter will therefore pick up the eventual bill when the partial default comes. This is why there is strong public opposition to the European Union’s bailout plans not only in austerity-hit Greece but in creditor countries such as Germany.The eventual division of losses between European banks and European taxpayers is evidently not China's affair. But China is being asked to pick up the bill for its taxpayers when the eventual default comes. The mechanism of this is that an eventual Greek default will have consequences not only in that country but across Europe. China's government is being asked to buy, and indeed is buying, bonds in some European countries on terms that are therefore likely to be worse after a Greek default.This is not at all necessarily the wrong thing to do. It may be that the overall benefits of participating in a deal to postpone Greece's default, which presumably will also make it more orderly, outweigh any direct financial losses to China that will be incurred by a partial default. That is a matter for China's government to assess.But it is necessary to enter such a process with eyes open and not believe partial default will be avoided. China's economic policy makers have on numerous occasions shown they are experienced enough to calculate whether the overall benefits of participation in a scheme to postpone Greece's default outweighs the financial costs. But that calculation needs to be made on the assumption of an eventual, at least partial, Greek default.John Ross is Visiting Professor at Antai College of Economics and Management, Shanghai Jiao Tong University. From 2000 to 2008, he was then London mayor Ken Livingstone's Policy Director of Economic and Business Policy. The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of the China Daily website.。

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