
Spain, the bloc's fourth-largest economy, is the latest country to be swept into the crisis. In June, it was forced to seek up to €100 billion in aid from its eurozone
peers to shore up its banking sector.
Spanish prime minister
Mariano Rajoy said the deal had demonstrated the advantages of
cooperation within the bloc and meant "European credibility won, the
future of the euro won [and] Europe won."
But the markets have
remained skeptical, pushing up the costs of Spain's borrowings despite
the bailout. Italian borrowing costs have also gone up as investors fret
the problems will spread. Greece, meanwhile, faces its second election
on June 17 and risks being ejected from the bloc.
Greeks divided on Euro austerity demands
Many analysts saw it all
coming of course, arguing that one fiscal system could never work for 17
EU countries that adopted the euro, serving more than 330 million
people.
Spain faces more bank downgrades
The flaws were
exacerbated after some countries were suspected of fudging their
numbers, including Greece which in 2004 admitted it gave misleading
information to gain admission to the eurozone. The crisis exploded after
Greece revised its figures to show its 2009 budget deficit would be
12.7% of gross domestic product -- far higher than the eurozone limit of
3%.
Spain struggling to stay afloat
The bloc -- whose financial fractures may not have been apparent during the boom years -- then began to unravel.
After Greece's dire
numbers were revealed, investors panicked and the country was unable to
raise money to fund itself. The country was forced to take a €110
billion bailout from its eurozone peers and the International Monetary
Fund.
But Greece's bailout, rather than stemming the panic, served as a harbinger to the debt crisis.
The European Financial
Stability Facility, or European bailout fund -- set up to deal with
further financial stumbles -- was quickly tapped again.
Ireland, felled by a
black hole in its banking system, was forced to take a €67.5 billion
bailout package in November 2010. After the markets then closed their
doors to Portugal, it was also forced to take a €78 billion bailout.
The troubled nations
implemented austerity measures to try to rein in their hefty piles of
debt, but confidence in the bloc's ability to stabilize itself continued
to fall.
The crisis may yet
engulf Italy, which makes up 17% of the eurozone economy. Greece,
Ireland and Portugal make up less than 6% between them.
And so Europe's
politicians and officials have desperately tried to sort out the mess by
coming up with ideas including boosting the bailout fund, bringing the
disparate economies closer financially, and tapping other markets for
funds.
Their previous measures
proved ineffective, as the markets -- and the world -- remained
unconvinced at the bloc's ability to survive in its existing form.
London CNN
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