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With Greek elections done for now, what's next?
Interview with
Jun 18, 2012
Looking ahead at what's to come for other eurozone countries and what's happening at the G20 summit.
What's up, Europe? After Greece, spotlight's on Spain
Interview by
Jun 21, 2012
Now that the Greek election has passed, people are looking at Spain -- which may be headed towards a full bailout.
Pro-bailout New Democracy party wins in Greece
Interview by
Jun 18, 2012
It appears Greece will be staying in the eurozone for at least a bit longer, as the pro-bailout, pro-austerity New Democracy party narrowly beat the anti-bailout Syriza party in yesterday's elections.
A guide to the Greek elections
Interview with
Jun 15, 2012
This weekend Greece will hold crucial elections that may determine its future in the eurozone. The results will test global markets and Germany's pro-austerity resolve.
If the eurozone were a barbershop quartet
by
Jun 15, 2012
A singing group and the countries of the eurozone have much more in common than one might think.
In Athens, uncertainty about weekend elections
Interview with
Jun 15, 2012
The general election in Greece this weekend could shape the pace of the world economy for months to come. What will we know and what won't we know after the polls close in Greece Sunday?
How Greek elections will impact worldwide markets
Interview by
Jun 15, 2012
The big story today is Europe and the upcoming Greek elections. Analysts are trying to make sense of what the results will mean for other markets around the world.
A man walks into a bar... in Athens
by
Jun 15, 2012
The spotlight is on Greece, where elections could determine its future in the eurozone. How are Greeks feeling about their future?
Germany continues to push austerity and reform
by
Jun 14, 2012
The Group of 20 top economic powers meets this weekend to discuss the eurozone debt crisis. German leader, Angela Merkel, has cautioned the region on overestimating Germany's capacity to fix the crisis.
A man walks into a bar... in Germany
by
Jun 14, 2012
Germany has been the paymaster during the euro crisis, shoring up its weaker neighbors. Do ordinary Germans support this role?










