Mail & Guardian
Mail & Guardian
Phillip Inman

Creator

Phillip Inman

Stock markets plunge as investors fear global economic slowdown

Dow ends day down 248 points while slumping oil price and gloom at Davos sends FTSE 100 tumbling officially into bear market territory.

Few agree on success of Greece’s ‘cut the debt’ tour

A diplomatic offensive by new Greek prime minister Alexis Tsipras to ease bailout aid requirements has been failing to win converts.

The Doha round of talks

Concessions to India finally clinch global trade deal

Anti-poverty groups condemn the first global trade deal since the creation of the World Trade Organisation.

Europe’s digital euro has got off to a late start in terms of geopolitical leverage in the digital era. Photo: File

EU frets over jobless youths

The eurozone’s youth unemployment rate worsened last month to reach a new record high of 24.4%.

China signs its own debt warrant

An audit of state agencies’ borrowing may rein in profligacy and graft, but will it slow the economy?

Debt ratio prompts EU analysts to rethink ranking

The United States is even worse than Greece, with a debt equivalent of 105% of GDP.

Paul Krugman goes against the grain

A renowned academic is adamant that austerity and deficit reduction will not aid a recovery.

France’s hopes die in car crash

Despite some positive figures in December, France’s January sales have reflected the gloom cast by Italy.

Italy shatters eurozone’s uneasy peace

As the country tries to form a government, the region’s leaders are again sniping at each other.

China’s roaring trade is hard to beat

Official figures show that the United States no longer dominates trading in goods.

Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa.

Bank of Japan plans open-ended stimulus

The Bank of Japan has bowed to pressure from the new government with a plan for a bigger than expected financial stimulus

Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne

UK’s new central bank boss has clout

The UK’s finance minister, George Osborne, has sprung a surprise by putting Canada’s central bank chief in charge of the Bank of England.

A government suggestion to cut 50 000 jobs in Spain’s public sector as part of its austerity measures has been met with protests from senior ministers and the public.

Spain slashes spending in bid to head off bailout

Spain has crept closer to a bailout as the government leaked plans to cut pension spending.

Greek Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras said a decline in tax revenue and spiralling unemployment would deepen the country’s four-year recession.

Greeks make big stink of austerity effect

The Greek economy is on the verge of a 1930s-style Great Depression, as the Athens government predicts a 25% fall in gross domestic product by 2014.

Martin Sandbu

Professional class drags down Greece

There is one good reason for Greece to stay in the euro: to combat corruption. The country is riddled with it.

Martin Sandbu

Euro dither aggravates UK recovery

Investment remains on hold as the outlook for the global economy worsens and national debt rises, writes Phillip Inman and Larry Elliott.

After an election that pushed Greece’s pro-euro parties into a minority

Likely economic scenarios for Greece

After an inconclusive election in Athens, these are some economic scenarios and their likely impact on the Eurozone.

Profligate regions turn to Madrid

Senior officials in Spain have believed that some areas will have no option but to turn to the central government for bailouts.

Brazil pays for its popularity

Brazil pays for its popularity

Success is threatening to become a problem for Brazil.

MPs in standoff over severe cuts

MPs in standoff over severe cuts

Talks appear to be stalling between EU, IMF negotiators and Greek officials.