Τρίτη 21 Αυγούστου 2018

Greece's Mountain Of Debt



Greece's Mountain Of Debt
Unemployment has fallen from 28 percent at the height of the crisis to 18.5 percent today and although the economy has returned to growth, crippling austerity is still a harsh reality in most Greek households. The economy remains 25 percent smaller than when the crisis began and the country has to face the reality that it will remain debt-ridden for the forseeable future and will most likely be paying off loans for decades to come. Athens has a total debt of €322 billion ($366 billion), 181 percent of economic output. EU creditors hope that will fall to 100 percent by 2060 and they are giving Greece more time to pay and have reduced interest payments. That target is a best-case scenario, however, and given the country's turbulent economic history, it is still entirely possible that it will have to borrow hundreds of billions of euros from private creditors to reduce that mountain of debt for years to come. Read more.

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