2013-03-25, 19:17
#1
Krisen på Cypern har knappt lagt sig förrän Washintong Post varnar för att nästa krisland är Slovenien
Vad vet vi om Slovenien och deras ekonomiska situation och varför har det gått åt skogen för detta lilla land som var rikast i fd Jugoslavien
Move over, Cyprus. Slovenia is the new tiny country you should worry about.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/...d-worry-about/
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/n...s-ecbs-kranjec
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100588092
Vad vet vi om Slovenien och deras ekonomiska situation och varför har det gått åt skogen för detta lilla land som var rikast i fd Jugoslavien
Move over, Cyprus. Slovenia is the new tiny country you should worry about.
Citat:
The Cyprus crisis, it appears, is soooo last week. The new country that’s provoking concern is Slovenia. The small former Yugoslav republic—wedged between Italy, Austria, Hungary, and Croatia and best known for its exceptional skiers and Slavoj Žižek—had a pretty bad week, with long-term bond yields spiking to 5.4 percent Friday morning amid fears that the country would need a bailout.
That’s not crisis-level — Cyprus’s yields are around 7 percent, for comparison — but it’s certainly in the “Danger Zone.”
That’s not crisis-level — Cyprus’s yields are around 7 percent, for comparison — but it’s certainly in the “Danger Zone.”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/...d-worry-about/
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/n...s-ecbs-kranjec
Citat:
Slovenian Infrastructure Minister Igor Maher resigned on Monday, only five days after taking office in the new cabinet, adding to the problems of a new government striving to avoid a banking collapse to mirror that in Cyprus.
The small eastern European country has been fighting for months to avoid becoming the latest euro zone member to seek a formal international bailout. Bad loans issued by its banks total 7 billion euros ($9.10 billion) or a fifth of national economic output and the cost of ensuring its government debt has risen by a quarter in the past week.
The small eastern European country has been fighting for months to avoid becoming the latest euro zone member to seek a formal international bailout. Bad loans issued by its banks total 7 billion euros ($9.10 billion) or a fifth of national economic output and the cost of ensuring its government debt has risen by a quarter in the past week.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100588092