Anybody who blames a banking crisis in 2008 for a sovereign debt crisis 3 years later deserves to have his brain removed, as he's obviously not using it.
Capital markets are forward looking.
The Irish national debt is high due to their ill-advised decision to guarantee the debts of their banks. None of the other sovereigns can blame their problems on banks (other than Iceland, which I'm assuming sank back into the atlantic 3 years ago).
In order of "blame":
1) The ECB, for running monetary policy tighter than anybody would reasonably have believed
2) Sovereigns for SPENDING TOO MUCH MONEY AND PUTTING THEMSELVES IN THE POSITION OF ENORMOUS DEBT-GDP RATIOS
Capital markets are forward looking.
The Irish national debt is high due to their ill-advised decision to guarantee the debts of their banks. None of the other sovereigns can blame their problems on banks (other than Iceland, which I'm assuming sank back into the atlantic 3 years ago).
In order of "blame":
1) The ECB, for running monetary policy tighter than anybody would reasonably have believed
2) Sovereigns for SPENDING TOO MUCH MONEY AND PUTTING THEMSELVES IN THE POSITION OF ENORMOUS DEBT-GDP RATIOS
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