Europe’s Economic Laggards Have Become Its Leaders
More than a decade after painful austerity, Greece, Portugal and Spain have been growing faster than traditional powerhouses like Germany.
By Liz Alderman and Melissa Eddy
More than a decade after painful austerity, Greece, Portugal and Spain have been growing faster than traditional powerhouses like Germany.
By Liz Alderman and Melissa Eddy
Spain is the latest European country to end its program, which brought in billions of euros from real estate investors seeking residency status but worsened a housing crisis for locals.
By Liz Alderman
The economy shrank last year and is not predicted to grow much in 2024. Farmers are angry, industrial output is falling and the government is bickering.
By Melissa Eddy
As the executive of the European Union for a decade, he oversaw its increasing economic integration and led the drive for a single currency, the euro.
By Paul Lewis
Next year could see increasing volatility as persistent military conflicts and economic uncertainty influence voting in national elections across the globe.
By Patricia Cohen
A war in the Middle East could complicate efforts to contain inflation at a time when world output is “limping along.”
By Alan Rappeport and Patricia Cohen
It is one of Europe’s fastest-growing economies, and while investors and tourists are flocking to the country, memories of austerity measures are still fresh for Greeks.
By Liz Alderman
He served for 38 years in Parliament and, after being elected president at a critical moment in Italy’s fortunes, helped stabilize the country.
By Robert D. McFadden
Voters seemed to embrace Kyriakos Mitsotakis’s approach to the economy and tough stance on migration, and were less concerned about revelations of spying on the opposition.
By Niki Kitsantonis and Jason Horowitz
Many children of Greece’s traumatic years of economic collapse have opted for pragmatism over radicalism and say they will back a conservative on Sunday.
By Jason Horowitz and Niki Kitsantonis
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