Milken Institute Global Conference 2010 - The Eurozone: Still One for All and All for One?
 
2010 Global Conference Home
Program
Speakers
Panels with Videos
Global Dispatches
Contact Us
Sponsors
Who Attends
What They Are Saying
Expand All    Contract All
 
 
 
 
 
Milken Institute Milken Institute » Events
Program | Speakers | Videos

Panel Detail:

Tuesday, April 27, 2010
4:00 PM - 5:15 PM

The Eurozone: Still One for All and All for One?
View Slide Presentation

Speakers:

Bo Lundgren, Director General, Swedish National Debt Office; former Minister for Fiscal and Financial Affairs

James McCaughan, CEO, Principal Global Investors

Nouriel Roubini, Professor of Economics and International Business, Stern School of Business, New York University

Moderator:

Komal Sri-Kumar, Group Managing Director and Chief Global Strategist, TCW Group Inc.; Senior Fellow, Milken Institute

 

The eurozone is facing the first major test of its viability, said noted economist Nouriel Roubini, and the probability of a breakup is rising.

This session on the Eurozone seemed ripped from the headlines, coming on the same day that Greek debt was sharply downgraded, setting off concern throughout not only Europe but the world's capital markets.

A panel of experts convened to analyze the scope of the problem. Europe is staring down the unpleasant prospect of a major bailout — and perhaps further bailouts to come if the crisis spreads to throughout the PIIGS. Panelists focused on what kind of response is needed, the political pressures, the likelihood of peripheral countries enacting sufficient structural reforms and prospects for the long-term viability of Europe's monetary union. Jim McCaughan of Principal Global Investors praised Angela Merkel's handling of the crisis to date.

Time is of the essence, as the markets are losing patience. Roubini highlighted the urgency, noting the contagious effects of a disorderly collapse of the Eurozone or even Greece alone would be huge. The debt crisis has to be contained, one way or the other.

"While Greece is not too big to be allowed to fail — it's only 3 percent of Eurozone GDP — it’s too interconnected to fail," said Roubini. "Lehman was a $160 billion debt problem; Argentina was a $100 billion debt problem. But Greece is a $400 billion debt problem, three-quarters of which is held by non-residents, and therefore the contagious effects would be greater than Lehman."

Don't miss the video of this discussion — it captures the context needed to understand the implications of this week's rapidly unfolding events.

Share: email this page to a colleague or friend Facebook | Share Milken Institute Global Conference 2010 - The Eurozone: Still One for All and All for One? Twitter Milken Institute Global Conference 2010 - The Eurozone: Still One for All and All for One? Digg Milken Institute Global Conference 2010 The Eurozone: Still One for All and All for One? Share Milken Institute Global Conference 2010 - Program Menu by Day, Tracks, At-a-Glance or Detailed for Global Conference 2010 on LinkedIn