What Happens to Europe When Germany’s Economy Slows?
Germany’s role as the locomotive and economic leader of the entire bloc has been crucial for the last decade.
Germany’s role as the locomotive and economic leader of the entire bloc has been crucial for the last decade.
The monetary czars at the world’s central banks are coming to terms with the fact that a no-deal Brexit now seems to be the most likely outcome.
Europe is falling behind North American and China in the tech sector. This is not by chance or bad luck, it is by design.
It is clear that for the planet to keep up with a rapidly growing population, it is necessary to liberate the global economy.
The Chinese debt is overwhelming not simply because of the volume, but because the figure has quadrupled in seven years.
New research is sparking fears that junk debt could trigger a repeat of the 2008 crash.
Many still to this day will not admit that the devastation witnessed in Venezuela is a problem inherent to socialism.
The Eurozone's massive "green" policy plan has the EU facing high unemployment, stagnating growth, and energy bills of twice as much as seen in the US.
It is challenging to see how governments can escape from their debt traps when interest rates rise above the levels currently forecasted.
Italy’s problems are yet to descend into a Greek-style crisis, but that is the direction of travel. And Italy is far more serious than Greece because of its sheer size.