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  1. Stomach for the fight
    Photo by Myrto Papadopoulos [www.myrtopapadopoulos.com]

    Agora

    in the 2011/12 interim government led by ex-central banker Lucas Papademos. It was the moment

    3%
  2. Greek banks' Eurosystem funding at lowest since Jan 2010; ELA also wiped out

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    that central bank funding was replaced by interbank lending. That said, Piraeus and National were the first two

    3%
  3. Samaras shoots, Samaras scores!
    Photo by MacroPolis

    Agora

    of central Athens to celebrate. There used to be a time when political leaders could generate large

    3%
  4. Greece raised lower than expected amount from 3-year bond issue, yield at the high end

    Economy

    receiving the pending SMP income of 1.8 billion from the eurozone central banks. On top of the bond

    3%
  5. DIMAR imploding and leaving gap in Greek center left
    Photo by MacroPolis

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    -privatisation of the Public Power Corporation (PPC). A member of DIMAR's central committee and once

    3%
  6. Public deficit and democratic duty

    Agora

    be no doubt that their debts were being paid from central government coffers. It is also absurd

    3%
  7. Coalition caught between pleasing lenders and voters ahead of next troika review
    Photo by Harry van Versendaal

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    largely on the outcome of the European Central Bank stress tests in October. Only then will Greece

    3%
  8. As imports rise, Greek C/A balance flips back to deficit in May

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    for ships, had a negative impact on goods’ balance. The central bank also noted that excluding oil

    3%
  9. Greece to recover at least 30 of 50 bln it borrowed to bail out banks, says HFSF chief

    EconomyBanking

    banks from European Central Bank stress tests in October will be manageable. Local lenders have

    3%
  10. Stress mounts ahead of ECB's tests on Greek banks
    Photo by MacroPolis

    Economy

    A report over the weekend suggests that the Greek government has expressed concerns to its eurozone partners and the European Central Bank about the imminent stress tests on local banks. Kathimerini newspaper reported on Sunday that Greek Finance Minister Gikas Hardouvelis warned his eurozone

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