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As Greece girds for elections next month that could lead to its exit from the euro zone, economists are acknowledging an unsettling reality: No one knows what the bill will be, The Wall Street Journal reported. A wide range of potential price tags has been reported, anywhere from €150 billion to €1 trillion euros ($1.27 trillion). But none of these are comprehensive, nor are they meant to be—they don't, for instance, weigh the cost of an exit against the cost of avoiding one.
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The head of German carmaker Opel, under pressure from parent General Motors to end losses, refused to promise workers at its plant in Bochum on Monday that their jobs would be safeguarded after 2014, Reuters reported. The plant, located in the rust-belt Ruhr region devastated by coal mine closures, is expected to shut after the company chose to build the next generation of its popular Astra compact in Britain and Poland where wages are cheaper.
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In Ireland and across Europe, youth unemployment has become a social emergency, retarding economies and blighting lives. Job-creation policies are failing. Can anything reverse the trend? the Irish Times reports in an analysis. For many young people, qualifications, degrees and experience count for little in a distressed economy. About 30 per cent, or 80,000, are out of work; the rate is twice that of the general population.
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Home developer Unity Builders Group is seeking creditor protection after betting too heavily on luxury homes and condos in Alberta and the United States, the Edmonton Journal reported. The Calgary-based business, known for its Greenboro brand among others, is $180 million in debt to lending agencies and banks, with almost 10 per cent of that amount owed to trades, according to an affidavit filed by company founder Robert Friesen.
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A Greek exit from the euro zone could expose the European Central Bank and the currency bloc it seeks to protect to hundreds of billions of euros in losses, landing Germany and its partners with a crippling bill, Reuters reported in an analysis. A Greek departure would take Europe into uncharted legal waters. The size of the burden other euro zone states could bear gives them a powerful incentive to keep Greece in the currency club.
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Spain's government said 16 of the country's 17 regions are on track to meet this year's budget targets, a key part of its efforts to slash a towering budget deficit and ward off an international bailout, The Wall Street Journal reported. Budget Minister Cristóbal Montoro on Thursday hailed the approval of the regional spending plans, which have implemented measures equal to €18 billion ($22.9 billion) of spending cuts and increased tax revenue.
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Spain denied there was a deposit flight from troubled lender Bankia SA Thursday as shares in the partially nationalised bank plunged by as much as 30 per cent, the Irish Times reported. "It's not true that there is an exit of deposits at this moment from Bankia," economy secretary Fernando Jimenez Latorre, who reports to the economy minister, told a news conference. The government on May 9th took over Bankia, the country's fourth-largest lender, in an attempt to dispel concerns over the bank's ability to deal with losses related to the 2008 property crash.
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When growth in China's economy slows, government leaders typically call on state-owned banks to make loans to rev up activity. But that tactic may not work this time, The Wall Street Journal reported. Bank lending plunged in April, according to the People's Bank of China, and has remained weak in May, bankers and borrowers said. The decline owes to companies being wary about borrowing when demand is uncertain and profits are evaporating.
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A large Russian investment in a Waimate dairy processor has failed with receivers appointed to New Zealand Dairies, Stuff.co.nz reported. Plans to sell the $100 million Waimate dairy factory did not come off leading to the appointment of Colin Gower and Stephen Tubbs of BDO yesterday as receivers. Last month Christchurch company director Richie Smith, who advises the Russian owners, said the factory would keep processing milk as usual.
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Investors and financial analysts have their eyes on a bankruptcy case, pending in a Dallas courtroom, that they say could systematically shift how American firms do business with Mexican companies, KETK reported. The case also comes at a time when business interests from both sides of the Rio Grande are pushing to include Mexico in the current Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations. Mexican glass company Vitro S.A.B filed for voluntary bankruptcy in December 2010, after defaulting on about $1.2 billion in bond debt held by foreign banks, including American interests.
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