Angela Merkel actually may believe that a large and generous bailout fund that would follow Greek aid, set up to help the next nation and the next, is a poor idea. There is no reason, she says, to tempt other countries to seek money. « Investment Watch Blog

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Angela Merkel actually may believe that a large and generous bailout fund that would follow Greek aid, set up to help the next nation and the next, is a poor idea. There is no reason, she says, to tempt other countries to seek money.


The deal to save Greece from default has come down to a battle of wills between Germany and the International Monetary Fund. It was always likely this would happen, but the forces for the two parties to settle were also present. Those forces, based on the possible implosion of the euro, just could not hold back Germany’s need to keep the benefits of a rescue as modest as possible and the IMF’s desire to save as much of Europe as needs saving.

Germany’s problem is hard to decipher. Angela Merkel actually may believe that a large and generous bailout fund that would follow Greek aid, set up to help the next nation and the next, is a poor idea. There is no reason, she says, to tempt other countries to seek money. It is better to let them bail themselves out, if that is even possible.

Merkel also is under pressure from German voters who are tired of seeing their taxes move into risky bailout funds. Why should their success be used to reward the failures of others? If Merkel is afraid of her own electorate, her real beliefs about the need for more rescue money may be masked.

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