Euro

Greece: No country for young people

Many of the brightest minds in Greece are leaving the country for opportunities abroad. That will only make it harder for the economy to ever recover.

Merkel’s victory, the eurozone and Canada

One grand coalition, no grand vision

Now is the time to mount a European army, leaders conclude

Decision comes amid threat of financial collapse in EU

The danger of a Greek exit and why it matters to Canada

The eurozone crisis: an illustrated guide to the biggest threat to the Canadian economy

Updated: Wells vs. Geddes on the Euro and the new Jim Flaherty

Merkel-Hollande, austerity-vs.-growth, blowing bubbles vs. tightening rules

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Free advice from Jim Flaherty

The Finance Minister may have been told to stop dumping on the Ontario government, but he apparently remains free to lecture Europe.

When democracy is denied, the people take to the streets

Greece: When democracy is denied, people take to the streets

Lucas Papademos quickly expelled members of the government who opposed the austerity package

The economy’s youngest victims

Economic orphans are Greece’s youngest victims

In Greece, hard times have overtaken abuse as a cause for referring kids to children’s charities

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How Germany finally took control of Europe

It’s hard to argue anyone else can save the Old Continent

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Franc talk about a money deadline

Nearly 10 years after France officially adopted the euro, a staggering amount of francs are still around

On Europe's crisis

In conversation: Mark Carney

On Europe’s crisis, fighting inflation, and his new job heading the financial stability board

Unpopular—but way ahead

Spain’s Mariano Rajoy isn’t popular—but he’s way ahead

Rajoy is poised to win the election, despite inspiring confidence in just 4.5 per cent of Spaniards