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  1. Greek primary cash surplus reaches 1.8 bln in H1 2014

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    debt, while long term bonds amounted to 68.16 billion (21.1 percent of total) and T-Bills at 14.97

    5%
  2. The IMF crisis and how to solve it
    Photo via IMF photostream on Flickr [https://www.flickr.com/photos/imfphoto/]

    Agora

    due within the life of the programme. But the rating agencies would spell “reprofiling” D-E-F-A-U-L-T

    5%
  3. The tarnished legacy that will haunt the Athens Olympics

    Agora

    the questions that still haven’t been answered a decade on. Who was responsible for losing control

    5%
  4. Greek primary cash surplus widens to 3.2 bln in 7-month
    Photo by MacroPolis

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    , while long term bonds amounted to 69.56 billion (21.5 percent of total) and T-Bills at 14.96 billion

    5%
  5. Current account surplus reaches 1.68 bln in July thanks to services
    Photo by MacroPolis

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    of foreign bonds and T-Bills. However, the 7-month figure still shows a net inflow of 3.8 billion euros

    5%
  6. Greek primary cash surplus more than doubles to 2.45 bln at end of August

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    , while long term bonds amounted to 65 billion (20 percent of total) and T-Bills at 15 billion (4.7

    5%
  7. Growth, recovery, change and other words lost in the wind
    Photo by Harry van Versendaal

    Agora

    . In this context, words become so devalued they really don’t mean that much at all. Further on down the road

    5%
  8. How Samaras backed himself and Greece into a corner over bailout exit
    Photo by MacroPolis

    Agora

    the opposition. The argument emanating from the government camp was that if the leftists couldn’t score

    5%
  9. No green light from troika yet as Greece moves towards bailout extension
    Photo by MacroPolis

    EconomyProgramme

    days. “Otherwise the risk is big and we won’t take decision on Greece in the upcoming Eurogroup (due

    5%
  10. Greeks most pessimistic about EU's prospects
    Photo by MacroPolis

    Society

    Greeks are the most pessimistic among their European Union counterparts about the future of the 28-member bloc, view it mainly in a negative light and most don’t see themselves as European citizens, according to the results of a biannual survey from the European Commission. The latest issue

    5%