A third
bail-out gets the green light
Aug 15th
2015, 12:51 BY P.W. | LONDON
The
Economist
A MONTH ago
Greek membership of the euro was in peril, as Wolfgang Schäuble, Germany’s
powerful finance minister, argued that Greece should leave the monetary union
for at least five years in what he euphemistically called a “time out”. Any
such exit, which would almost certainly have turned out to be permanent, would
have undermined a founding principle of the monetary union—that those joining the
euro do so irrevocably. Even after euro-zone leaders meeting at a crucial
summit managed to agree upon a framework for a bail-out agreement on July 13th
the chances of it actually being concluded and avoiding a “Grexit” seemed slim.
Mr Schäuble made clear in the following week that he still thought Greece should
be temporarily expelled from the euro while Alexis Tsipras, the Greek prime
minister, said he did not believe in the agreement he had just made at the
summit.