March 10, 2007

Currencies

French Candidates: What is this EU thing anyway?

by Alex Harrowell

Why do the leading candidates in the French presidential election seem to have utterly strange European policies?
Take Nicolas Sarkozy. He supposedly believes in “rupture” with old ways and a dash for a new free-market, hard-nosed, toughness cult future. And Euroscepticism is at the heart of this. But at the same time, he has promised [...]

January 30, 2007

Economics and demography

Eurozone Economy: When Paradigms Collide

by Edward Hugh

When scientific paradigms collide everyone should duck, at least that is the best advice I can offer at the present moment. The provisional German retail sales for January are now in, and they don’t make especially pleasant reading:
“European retail sales dropped for the first time in 10 months in January as spending in Germany [...]

January 21, 2007

Currencies

The Plot!

by Alex Harrowell

I’m not sure what Jerome is driving at here. It seems quite clear that, by promising a further referendum on whatever arises from Angela Merkel’s efforts to revive the Constitution, Ségoléne Royal is taking quite a risk, not least by betting on her ability to get the Laurent Fabius fanclub on side. I wouldn’t bet [...]

September 6, 2006

Economics and demography

Is Trichet’s Optimism Justified?

by David Weman

Our next anniversary guest post is from the estimable Mark Thoma.
The Fed and the ECB have different economic outlooks for the U.S. and European economies. For instance, the Financial Times reports:

Fed and ECB diverge on economic outlook, by Chris Giles and Ralph Atkins, Financial Times: The Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank [...]

February 27, 2006

Economics and demography

Saving The Euro

by Edward Hugh

Do you want to save the Euro? Well one idea for how to do it has been proposed by University of Missouri-St Louis history professor John Gillingham: reissuing the 12 national currencies that were replaced with just one, while at the same time retaining the euro as a parallel currency that finds its market value [...]

January 13, 2006

Economics and demography

Is The ECB Measured-Pace Cycle Over?

by Edward Hugh

Well, not unexpectedly, the ECB decided to leave its main refinancing rate unchanged at 2.25% yesterday. Rather more surprisingly (for some at least) the German Federal Statistical agency reported that German economic growth ground to a halt at the end of 2005.
According to the Financial Times:
Johann Hahlen, president of the federal statistics office, said that [...]

December 2, 2005

Economics and demography

The Most Bizarre Monetary Policy DecisionOf Recent Times?

by Edward Hugh

This was Wolfgang Munchau writing in the Financial Times a week ago:
“The pre-announced interest rate rise that the European Central Bank is due to agree this Thursday must rank as one of the most bizarre monetary policy decisions of recent times. The economic recovery in the eurozone remains fragile, as last week’s German confidence indicators [...]

November 22, 2005

Economics

To Raise Or Not To Raise?

by Edward Hugh

European Central Bank (ECB) president Jean-Claude Trichet’s indication last Friday that eurozone interest rates are about to rise continues to make waves.
Yesterday the EU Observer had a piece indicating the Eurozone finance ministers were not amused, and today we have a retaliatory piece were Trichet explains theat the ECB is the ‘listening’ people bank, which [...]

Link Comments Off

November 10, 2005

Currencies

Promises, Promises, But More Than A Technical Detail

by Edward Hugh

Well the eurozone government deficit problem has hit the agenda with a thud again in the last few days. Yesterday the FT ran a story about how the ECB has decided that it will not accept government paper (bonds) in the future from any country which has not maintained at least an A- rating [...]

October 11, 2005

Currencies

ECB Interest Rate Policy

by Edward Hugh

Brad Setser has a post today on Kate Moss, not provoked by her evidently economically intriguing modelling properties, but due to the Kate-Moss-thin credit-spreads which Bloomberg’s William Pesek refers to in this article. What really turns Pesek on it turns out isn’t Kate Moss at all but the possible existence of links between [...]

Pages: 1 2 3 Next

Blogads

Text Link Ads

Google Adsense

Contact

editors [at] fistfulofeuros [dot] net Email an author at: firstname [dot] lastname [at] fistfulofeuros [dot] net

Google Adsense

The Fistful