in reply to Re^3: How do North Americans find Europe as a workplace?
in thread How do North Americans find Europe as a workplace?

That's only part of the story. First ... the investors probably believe Ireland it less important than Spain and therefore less likely to be saved by other European countries in case of real problems. And second ... both Ireland and the PIGS had been overspending. But while Ireland economy used to grow fairly quickly and they just failed to accommodate to the slowdown quickly enough, Greece and other PIGS were overspending for years and years and their growth had been ... little. Their problems are chronic.

Or maybe not. I ain't no economy guru :-)

Jenda
Enoch was right!
Enjoy the last years of Rome.

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Re^5: How do North Americans find Europe as a workplace?
by Argel (Prior) on Aug 19, 2010 at 22:37 UTC
    The bond rates are very, very close (or were as a of a month or two ago), so I doubt expecting Spain to be bailed out but not Ireland explains it. Not to mention that there were some hard fought EU related battles in Ireland, so failing to bail them out would mean no more progress for the EU there (and while the EMU may collapse or change radically, I expect the EU to survive).

    As a side note, unlike Greece and some of the others Spain was not actually misbehaving (i.e. the government regarding irresponsible debt). I think the housing bubble burst bit them hard like it did in many countries (i.e. private sector screwed everything up like here in the US [excluding failures of regulatory agencies to do their job]).

    Update: Fixed grammar in first sentence

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