• Log InLog In
  • Register
Liquid`
Team Liquid Liquipedia
EDT 09:43
CEST 15:43
KST 22:43
  • Home
  • Forum
  • Calendar
  • Streams
  • Liquipedia
  • Features
  • Store
  • EPT
  • TL+
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Smash
  • Heroes
  • Counter-Strike
  • Overwatch
  • Liquibet
  • Fantasy StarCraft
  • TLPD
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Blogs
Forum Sidebar
Events/Features
News
Featured News
[ASL21] Ro16 Preview Pt2: All Star10Team Liquid Map Contest #22 - The Finalists16[ASL21] Ro16 Preview Pt1: Fresh Flow9[ASL21] Ro24 Preview Pt2: News Flash10[ASL21] Ro24 Preview Pt1: New Chaos0
Community News
2026 GSL Season 1 Qualifiers19Maestros of the Game 2 announced92026 GSL Tour plans announced15Weekly Cups (April 6-12): herO doubles, "Villains" prevail1MaNa leaves Team Liquid25
StarCraft 2
General
MaNa leaves Team Liquid Maestros of the Game 2 announced 2026 GSL Tour plans announced Team Liquid Map Contest #22 - The Finalists Blizzard Classic Cup @ BlizzCon 2026 - $100k prize pool
Tourneys
Sparkling Tuna Cup - Weekly Open Tournament 2026 GSL Season 1 Qualifiers INu's Battles#14 <BO.9 2Matches> GSL CK: More events planned pending crowdfunding RSL Revival: Season 5 - Qualifiers and Main Event
Strategy
Custom Maps
[D]RTS in all its shapes and glory <3 [A] Nemrods 1/4 players [M] (2) Frigid Storage
External Content
Mutation # 522 Flip My Base The PondCast: SC2 News & Results Mutation # 521 Memorable Boss Mutation # 520 Moving Fees
Brood War
General
Leta's ASL S21 Ro.16 review FlaSh: This Will Be My Final ASL【ASL S21 Ro.16】 BGH Auto Balance -> http://bghmmr.eu/ ASL21 General Discussion BW General Discussion
Tourneys
[ASL21] Ro16 Group D [Megathread] Daily Proleagues Escore Tournament StarCraft Season 2 [ASL21] Ro16 Group C
Strategy
Simple Questions, Simple Answers What's the deal with APM & what's its true value Any training maps people recommend? Fighting Spirit mining rates
Other Games
General Games
Nintendo Switch Thread Dawn of War IV Diablo IV Total Annihilation Server - TAForever Starcraft Tabletop Miniature Game
Dota 2
The Story of Wings Gaming
League of Legends
G2 just beat GenG in First stand
Heroes of the Storm
Simple Questions, Simple Answers Heroes of the Storm 2.0
Hearthstone
Deck construction bug Heroes of StarCraft mini-set
TL Mafia
Vanilla Mini Mafia Mafia Game Mode Feedback/Ideas TL Mafia Community Thread Five o'clock TL Mafia
Community
General
US Politics Mega-thread Canadian Politics Mega-thread Things Aren’t Peaceful in Palestine Russo-Ukrainian War Thread YouTube Thread
Fan Clubs
The IdrA Fan Club
Media & Entertainment
[Manga] One Piece Anime Discussion Thread [Req][Books] Good Fantasy/SciFi books Movie Discussion!
Sports
Formula 1 Discussion 2024 - 2026 Football Thread McBoner: A hockey love story
World Cup 2022
Tech Support
Strange computer issues (software) [G] How to Block Livestream Ads
TL Community
The Automated Ban List
Blogs
Sexual Health Of Gamers
TrAiDoS
lurker extra damage testi…
StaticNine
Broowar part 2
qwaykee
Funny Nicknames
LUCKY_NOOB
Iranian anarchists: organize…
XenOsky
Customize Sidebar...

Website Feedback

Closed Threads



Active: 2064 users

Misconceptions about the European Debt Crisis

Forum Index > General Forum
Post a Reply
1 2 3 4 Next All
paralleluniverse
Profile Joined July 2010
4065 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-12-30 12:19:04
December 30 2011 10:34 GMT
#1
There is a common misconception that the European Debt Crisis was a result of massive government spending and that continue massive government spending by the US government will lead to a Eurozone-like crisis.

This is not true.

See:
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/beat-the-press/spain-did-not-run-up-high-public-debt?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed: beat_the_press (Beat the Press)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16301630

In summary, the European Debt Crisis was caused by:
1. Massive private (not government) debt.
2. Trade imbalances.
3. Eurozone countries surrendering control of their monetary policy to the European Central Bank, and the ECB refusing to lend to countries with high debt, like Greece, Italy and Spain, at low rates.

There is also the misconception that cutting spending (i.e. austerity) is the solution to recession, often said by Republicans and European leaders. This is also not true, in fact it will deepen the recession.

See:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/11/opinion/legends-of-the-fail.html

It seems the solution to the European Debt Crisis is inflation to erode away debt, and the ECB to act as a lender of last resort.

See:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/24/opinion/the-hole-in-europes-bucket.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/02/opinion/krugman-killing-the-euro.html
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/09/inflating-your-way-to-prosperity/#
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/dec/05/ecb-save-eurozone-fed-must-step-in
shell
Profile Joined October 2010
Portugal2722 Posts
December 30 2011 11:19 GMT
#2
The european debt crisis is caused by all that plus:
-American suprime crisis that sent the world into a "economic" crisis
-American finance greed that with the help of the rating companys, the same that gave Madoff and the suprime funds TRIPLE AAA+
-Stupid corrupted european politians
-Greedy banks and politicians that would invest even public funds and pension funds in american toxic funds

etc... etc..
BENFICA || Besties: idra, Stephano, Nestea, Jaedong, Serral, Jinro, Scarlett || Zerg <3
Velr
Profile Blog Joined July 2008
Switzerland10877 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-12-30 11:29:42
December 30 2011 11:28 GMT
#3
There is also the misconception that cutting spending (i.e. austerity) is the solution to recession, often said by Republicans and European leaders. This is also not true, in fact it will deepen the recession.



Thats true.
BUT some countries spend to much and still need to cut spending, it won't help or potentially even harm these countries in this crisize, but in the long run... Some countries just spent more than they should have and need to cut spending.

The problem is, this should have happened during "the boom years", not during a crisis.



Greece for instance just could not support itself for all eternity.. "thanks" to the crisize the crash just came now and not later...
ParasitJonte
Profile Joined September 2004
Sweden1768 Posts
December 30 2011 11:31 GMT
#4
Uhm, I don't know where to start...

Public Debt IS Government Debt!. Trade imbalances is totally irrelevant here... Yes, centralizing power like is done in EU and the eurozone is not something I aplaud. But of course no one should lend to mismanaged economies at low rates!

Basically everything you mention is a result of politicians' actions.

And inflation as your solution? Really? Everyone will suffer from inflation. But what's worse, the people who have actually taken care of themselves and been responsible, i.e. the savers, will get all their wealth eroded. You're giving the wrong incentive to citizens and you're inviting a plauge (inflation) into your economy.

Careless austerity may deepen the recession. But long-term austerity plans to turn budget deficits into budget surpluses are definitely necessary.
Hello=)
paralleluniverse
Profile Joined July 2010
4065 Posts
December 30 2011 11:33 GMT
#5
On December 30 2011 20:31 ParasitJonte wrote:
Uhm, I don't know where to start...

Public Debt IS Government Debt!. Trade imbalances is totally irrelevant here... Yes, centralizing power like is done in EU and the eurozone is not something I aplaud. But of course no one should lend to mismanaged economies at low rates!

Basically everything you mention is a result of politicians' actions.

And inflation as your solution? Really? Everyone will suffer from inflation. But what's worse, the people who have actually taken care of themselves and been responsible, i.e. the savers, will get all their wealth eroded. You're giving the wrong incentive to citizens and you're inviting a plauge (inflation) into your economy.

Careless austerity may deepen the recession. But long-term austerity plans to turn budget deficits into budget surpluses are definitely necessary.

That was a typo, should have said private debt, instead of public debt. Fixed now.
Klive5ive
Profile Blog Joined January 2008
United Kingdom6056 Posts
December 30 2011 11:39 GMT
#6
Oh yeah we just inflate our problems away because obviously that has no down side :/
Inflation means that all public sectors workers will get paid a lot less. That basically IS cutting spending.
It's better to be upfront and honest about the problem and choose where you want to take money away.

The heart of the problem really is the trade deficit. Borrowing money is fine if the money is invested into something that gives a return. I.e. spend some to get lots back. But obviously what we did was spend lots and get less back. Then you're really in trouble.
Don't hate the player - Hate the game
sekritzzz
Profile Joined December 2010
1515 Posts
December 30 2011 11:47 GMT
#7
On December 30 2011 19:34 paralleluniverse wrote:


It seems the solution to the European Debt Crisis is inflation to erode away debt, and the ECB to act as a lender of last resort.

This is the only solution to the European debt crisis but it will also be the catalyst to the end of the current capitalist system and a major financial meltdown. I don't have the time to write a huge essay on it but basically my expectation for the year end is currency wars, lack of confidence in thought to be stable currencies, bank runs/bankrupies a-la-lehman style.
mdb
Profile Blog Joined February 2003
Bulgaria4059 Posts
December 30 2011 11:49 GMT
#8
I`m total economics newb and as far as I understand if we put it in simple words

- people get loans from banks
- they dont invest the money in smth that will return profit, but instead buy iphones and such stuff
- people cant return the money to the banks
- banks bankrupt

is this correct?
HoldenR
Profile Joined February 2011
Netherlands256 Posts
December 30 2011 11:58 GMT
#9
Hahaha, I can't believe someone actually recommends inflation as a way to get countries out of debt. "Well citizens, we realize you've been saving money and that's nice and all, but we're going to make all of that money worth fuck all. Enjoy your Deutsche mark circa 1923, guys!"

Really? It would work for government debt but it would kill off every single private persons' savings in the Eurozone. Are you absolutely mad?
Diks
Profile Joined January 2010
Belgium1880 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-12-30 12:07:24
December 30 2011 12:02 GMT
#10
On December 30 2011 20:49 mdb wrote:
I`m total economics newb and as far as I understand if we put it in simple words

- people get loans from banks
- they dont invest the money in smth that will return profit, but instead buy iphones and such stuff
- people cant return the money to the banks
- banks bankrupt

is this correct?


I'm also a newb but I think it's more like :
- Huge investor retrieve his capital invested in action in some bank
- People freak out when they see a sudden -20% value of the shares and retrieve their actions and money from the bank
- Banks (that heavily invested in actions) freak out too and in addition to that, they need to give money back to the customers that had title accounts in their bank.
- Banks sell their actions stock at deficit an become kinda red listed, creating panic amoung the last investors.
- Bank bankrupt.

Mainly due to huge investors pullling out of the market, this is about hundreds of millions retrieved in one day, not about iphones (computer, car...) bought with credit
paralleluniverse
Profile Joined July 2010
4065 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-12-30 12:14:55
December 30 2011 12:12 GMT
#11
On December 30 2011 20:31 ParasitJonte wrote:
Uhm, I don't know where to start...

Public Debt IS Government Debt!. Trade imbalances is totally irrelevant here... Yes, centralizing power like is done in EU and the eurozone is not something I aplaud. But of course no one should lend to mismanaged economies at low rates!

Basically everything you mention is a result of politicians' actions.

And inflation as your solution? Really? Everyone will suffer from inflation. But what's worse, the people who have actually taken care of themselves and been responsible, i.e. the savers, will get all their wealth eroded. You're giving the wrong incentive to citizens and you're inviting a plauge (inflation) into your economy.

Careless austerity may deepen the recession. But long-term austerity plans to turn budget deficits into budget surpluses are definitely necessary.

It's not my solution, it's one part of Paul Krugman's solution (he's an economics professor who won a Nobel Prize).

He explains why inflation is necessary to get prices between Eurozone nations to align here: http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/01/repost-european-inflation-targets/

The gap between German and Spanish wages he is talking about can clearly be seen in the Labor Cost graph in the BBC article I put in the OP (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16301630).

The inflation is also needed to close the large trade deficit, which partly caused the crisis (this gap can be seen in the graph in above article).

The other part is for the ECB to lend to the countries like Greece, Italy and Spain at low interest rates, so that they don't default.
mememolly
Profile Joined December 2011
4765 Posts
December 30 2011 12:15 GMT
#12
On December 30 2011 20:49 mdb wrote:
I`m total economics newb and as far as I understand if we put it in simple words

- people get loans from banks
- they dont invest the money in smth that will return profit, but instead buy iphones and such stuff
- people cant return the money to the banks
- banks bankrupt

is this correct?


No, you're wrong.

Greece lied about their deficit when they joined the Euro, if they had told the truth they wouldn't have been allowed into the Euro. 40% of taxable income in Greece goes unpaid, no one pays their taxes in Greece the entire country is corrupt and just fucks each other over, add in the fact that during the housing bubble they invested money widely and you have a recipe for disaster.
I'd be pissed if I was German and had to help those douches (the Greeks) out.

Although, Germany and Iceland both entered the housing bubble with their pockets open and didn't know what the fuck they were doing as they have no experience in the financial markets (at least not at the level they were playing), Germany and Iceland bought a shit ton of toxic debts and basically got fucked over by Americans who knew a mug when they saw one coming.
bumwithagun
Profile Joined January 2011
United States153 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-12-30 12:21:54
December 30 2011 12:17 GMT
#13
This is silly. For some Euro countries the problem does lie in government debt, but for others it does not. Making this a black/white story that supports a preferred policy as you make it out cheapens the problem and simplifies what is a complex issue.

The fact is Greece (lol check out the pork being shoveled out of the greek gov't - rail debt @ 5% of GDP http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/21/business/global/21rail.html), Italy, and Spain all spend WAAAY too much. Was it unsustainable before the recession? No. But the countries spent themselves into vulnerable situations.

Then, on top of all this, GIS do not control their currency, thus cannot devalue to improve the competitiveness of their industries. The trade imbalance isn't the problem per se, bu rather a symptom. Gov't control of the labor market and manufacturing has produced high wages and low productivity. This means no one buys GIS products. Therefore GDP cannot outgrow the huge increase in debt the recession added to the gov't debt accrued during the good times. From where i'm sitting it looks like gov't interference and a bloated labor market from the interference has made the problem even worse.

Though in the end, i'm convinced by Scott Sumner (themoneyillusion.com) that this the crisis part of the this goes away if the ECB steps up as a lender of last resort.

TLDR: Crisis + huge public debt + Private Debt + ECB unwilling to devalue euro or act as lender of last resort all contributed to the crisis.

PS- The Nobel winning Krugman was VERY different than the current Krugman

Edit: Also austerity doesn't mean strict monetary policy, which monetarists believe is more important than fiscal policy for keeping demand up and nGDP from collapsing. It is possible to do austerity without causing a recession.
Klive5ive
Profile Blog Joined January 2008
United Kingdom6056 Posts
December 30 2011 12:19 GMT
#14
On December 30 2011 20:49 mdb wrote:
I`m total economics newb and as far as I understand if we put it in simple words

- people get loans from banks
- they dont invest the money in smth that will return profit, but instead buy iphones and such stuff
- people cant return the money to the banks
- banks bankrupt

is this correct?

That's certainly part of it.

Then take that to a larger scale.
-Big companies borrow money to invest in high street stores.
-Another lot of big companies borrow money to invest in giant out of town shopping centers.
-First set of big companies lose the war and their investment is now worthless. They've borrowed lots of money and now contribute nothing to the economy.

This then led to problems for the Government.
-Take more money in tax to pay higher wages
-Tax reduces competitiveness of entire private sector, plus private sector is screwing itself over (see above) therefore tax revenue falls
-Now you can't afford to pay higher wages but you already promised them so you borrow the money.
-Now you can't borrow more money and interest rates are going up and the private sector is in real trouble.
-You have stop borrowing money, a lot of which props up the private sector, further screwing the economy.

And even that's just part of the problem. A lack of coherent economic strategy from almost every Country in the EU has led to some awful decisions being made.
Don't hate the player - Hate the game
paralleluniverse
Profile Joined July 2010
4065 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-12-30 12:28:07
December 30 2011 12:21 GMT
#15
On December 30 2011 21:17 bumwithagun wrote:
This is silly. For some Euro countries the problem does lie in government debt, but for others it does not. Making this a black/white story that supports a preferred policy as you make it out cheapens the problem and simplifies what is a complex issue.

The fact is Greece (lol check out the pork being shoveled out of the greek gov't - rail debt @ 5% of GDP http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/21/business/global/21rail.html), Italy, and Spain all spend WAAAY too much. Was it unsustainable before the recession? No. But the countries spent themselves into vulnerable situations.

Then, on top of all this, GIS do not control their currency, thus cannot devalue to improve the competitiveness of their industries. The trade imbalance isn't the problem per se, bu rather a symptom. Gov't control of the labor market and manufacturing has produced high wages and low productivity. This means no one buys GIS products. Therefore GDP cannot outgrow the huge increase in debt the recession added to the gov't debt accrued during the good times. From where i'm sitting it looks like gov't interference and a bloated labor market from the interference has made the problem even worse.

Though in the end, i'm convinced by Scott Sumner (themoneyillusion.com) that this the crisis part of the this goes away if the ECB steps up as a lender of last resort.

TLDR: Crisis + huge public debt + Private Debt + ECB unwilling to devalue euro or act as lender of last resort all contributed to the crisis.

PS- The Nobel winning Krugman was VERY different than the current Krugman

Yes, you're correct on Greece. For Greece, the problem is very much government debt. But for Italy and Spain government debt wasn't the problem.

Greece hid their debt through complicated derivatives, some of which were designed by Goldman Sachs. See: http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,676634,00.html

I also think the crisis part will go away if the ECB acts as lender of last resort, but the recession won't.
Lebesgue
Profile Joined October 2008
4542 Posts
December 30 2011 12:28 GMT
#16
On December 30 2011 21:12 paralleluniverse wrote:
Show nested quote +
On December 30 2011 20:31 ParasitJonte wrote:
Uhm, I don't know where to start...

Public Debt IS Government Debt!. Trade imbalances is totally irrelevant here... Yes, centralizing power like is done in EU and the eurozone is not something I aplaud. But of course no one should lend to mismanaged economies at low rates!

Basically everything you mention is a result of politicians' actions.

And inflation as your solution? Really? Everyone will suffer from inflation. But what's worse, the people who have actually taken care of themselves and been responsible, i.e. the savers, will get all their wealth eroded. You're giving the wrong incentive to citizens and you're inviting a plauge (inflation) into your economy.

Careless austerity may deepen the recession. But long-term austerity plans to turn budget deficits into budget surpluses are definitely necessary.

It's not my solution, it's one part of Paul Krugman's solution (he's an economics professor who won a Nobel Prize).

He explains why inflation is necessary to get prices between Eurozone nations to align here: http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/01/repost-european-inflation-targets/

The gap between German and Spanish wages he is talking about can clearly be seen in the Labor Cost graph in the BBC article I put in the OP (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16301630).

The inflation is also needed to close the large trade deficit, which partly caused the crisis (this gap can be seen in the graph in above article).

The other part is for the ECB to lend to the countries like Greece, Italy and Spain at low interest rates, so that they don't default.


Paul Krugman won the noble prize for his research on trade theory not on the debt crisis. For 10 years he resembles more a politician than an economist. He is not active in research anymore and yet voices his opinion on pretty much everything that concerns economics. In last 5 years his been ridiculed or proven wrong many times yet he keep preaching. I would take everything that he said with a bowl of salt. He has political agenda and he keep pushing it.

The crisis in Europe is a complex event and it will be studied for years before people converge causes. But so far it looked that it was caused:
- Greece: by huge budget deficit it was running for years
- Italy - uncompetitive economy - basically Italy has been not growing for years thanks to Berlusconi.
- Spain - burst of the housing bubble + other economic problems
- Ireland - subprime crisis in US
- Iceland - same as Ireland




bumwithagun
Profile Joined January 2011
United States153 Posts
December 30 2011 12:33 GMT
#17
I'm looking up the sources but I've seen reports saying the GDP "growth" that reduced spain and italy's Debt/GDP ratio was primarily real estate.

Hm Cowen has written alot about it:

http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2011/11/lessons-from-the-euro-crisis-part-ii.html
http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2011/11/how-mario-monti-can-solve-italys-immediate-fiscal-problems.html
http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2011/11/euro-contagion.html

Anyway, although Italy reached a primary budget surplus in 2009 and bond markets were optimistic, it still has always been over 100% gdp X_X
paralleluniverse
Profile Joined July 2010
4065 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-12-30 13:30:37
December 30 2011 13:12 GMT
#18
Some more comments on inflating away debt (although this is about the US, and not Europe): http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2010/02/monetary_policy_1

It quotes Olivier Blanchard, a IMF economist, who wrote a widely used macro 101 textbook.

I should note that the article doesn't directly apply to the Eurozone, as the point of inflation in the Eurozone is to close the trade imbalances between the countries.
EdSlyB
Profile Blog Joined September 2010
Portugal1621 Posts
December 30 2011 13:15 GMT
#19
On December 30 2011 21:15 mememolly wrote:
Show nested quote +
On December 30 2011 20:49 mdb wrote:
I`m total economics newb and as far as I understand if we put it in simple words

- people get loans from banks
- they dont invest the money in smth that will return profit, but instead buy iphones and such stuff
- people cant return the money to the banks
- banks bankrupt

is this correct?


No, you're wrong.

Greece lied about their deficit when they joined the Euro, if they had told the truth they wouldn't have been allowed into the Euro. 40% of taxable income in Greece goes unpaid, no one pays their taxes in Greece the entire country is corrupt and just fucks each other over, add in the fact that during the housing bubble they invested money widely and you have a recipe for disaster.
I'd be pissed if I was German and had to help those douches (the Greeks) out.

Although, Germany and Iceland both entered the housing bubble with their pockets open and didn't know what the fuck they were doing as they have no experience in the financial markets (at least not at the level they were playing), Germany and Iceland bought a shit ton of toxic debts and basically got fucked over by Americans who knew a mug when they saw one coming.


Don't blame the Greeks in general. The Greek polititions are the ones to blame. Like the polititions in my own country. But in the end the ones making the sacrifices and paying up their screw ups are the hard working people.
aka Wardo
mememolly
Profile Joined December 2011
4765 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-12-30 13:22:16
December 30 2011 13:22 GMT
#20
On December 30 2011 22:15 EdSlyB wrote:
Show nested quote +
On December 30 2011 21:15 mememolly wrote:
On December 30 2011 20:49 mdb wrote:
I`m total economics newb and as far as I understand if we put it in simple words

- people get loans from banks
- they dont invest the money in smth that will return profit, but instead buy iphones and such stuff
- people cant return the money to the banks
- banks bankrupt

is this correct?


No, you're wrong.

Greece lied about their deficit when they joined the Euro, if they had told the truth they wouldn't have been allowed into the Euro. 40% of taxable income in Greece goes unpaid, no one pays their taxes in Greece the entire country is corrupt and just fucks each other over, add in the fact that during the housing bubble they invested money widely and you have a recipe for disaster.
I'd be pissed if I was German and had to help those douches (the Greeks) out.

Although, Germany and Iceland both entered the housing bubble with their pockets open and didn't know what the fuck they were doing as they have no experience in the financial markets (at least not at the level they were playing), Germany and Iceland bought a shit ton of toxic debts and basically got fucked over by Americans who knew a mug when they saw one coming.


Don't blame the Greeks in general. The Greek polititions are the ones to blame. Like the polititions in my own country. But in the end the ones making the sacrifices and paying up their screw ups are the hard working people.


I'm not just blaming the Greek "hard working" people, but the "hard working" people of Greece don't pay their taxes, sure some do but the vast majority don't, everyone is looking to get one over on one another and no one wants to take responsibility, tbh Greece should never of been allowed to join the Euro but who knew they were lying about their deficit? Putting a country like Germany in financial bed with a country as corrupt as Greece was never going to turn out well
1 2 3 4 Next All
Please log in or register to reply.
Live Events Refresh
WardiTV Map Contest Tou…
11:00
Playoffs Day 4
MaxPax vs SHINLIVE!
Clem vs TBD
WardiTV1293
Ryung 927
IntoTheiNu 658
TKL 448
IndyStarCraft 260
Rex150
3DClanTV 103
Liquipedia
Sparkling Tuna Cup
10:00
Weekly #129 (TLMC 22 Edition)
ByuN vs StrangeLIVE!
CranKy Ducklings99
StrangeGG90
CranKy Ducklings SOOP68
LiquipediaDiscussion
[ Submit Event ]
Live Streams
Refresh
StarCraft 2
Ryung 927
TKL 469
IndyStarCraft 255
Rex 148
SortOf 125
Railgan 74
MindelVK 23
StarCraft: Brood War
Britney 44251
Calm 4608
Horang2 1932
Jaedong 1419
EffOrt 1353
Mini 618
Light 483
firebathero 351
ZerO 311
actioN 300
[ Show more ]
ggaemo 293
Last 138
Shinee 97
Hyun 97
Sexy 97
Pusan 94
Sharp 56
Sea.KH 51
Killer 29
Shine 27
HiyA 25
NotJumperer 23
Sacsri 23
IntoTheRainbow 18
Hm[arnc] 14
GoRush 8
SilentControl 7
Icarus 7
Noble 6
Dota 2
Gorgc6541
BananaSlamJamma132
Counter-Strike
byalli1066
x6flipin621
edward161
Super Smash Bros
Mew2King80
Heroes of the Storm
Khaldor431
Other Games
singsing2113
B2W.Neo1177
DeMusliM398
mouzStarbuck196
XaKoH 180
Beastyqt91
RotterdaM90
QueenE79
ZerO(Twitch)24
Organizations
Dota 2
PGL Dota 2 - Main Stream22648
StarCraft 2
Blizzard YouTube
StarCraft: Brood War
BSLTrovo
[ Show 13 non-featured ]
StarCraft 2
• AfreecaTV YouTube
• intothetv
• Kozan
• IndyKCrew
• LaughNgamezSOOP
• Migwel
• sooper7s
StarCraft: Brood War
• BSLYoutube
• STPLYoutube
• ZZZeroYoutube
Dota 2
• C_a_k_e 1480
League of Legends
• Nemesis2699
• Jankos2168
Upcoming Events
Ladder Legends
1h 17m
Solar vs GgMaChine
Bunny vs Cham
ByuN vs MaxPax
BSL
5h 17m
CranKy Ducklings
10h 17m
Replay Cast
19h 17m
Wardi Open
20h 17m
Afreeca Starleague
20h 17m
Soma vs hero
Monday Night Weeklies
1d 2h
Replay Cast
1d 10h
Replay Cast
1d 19h
Afreeca Starleague
1d 20h
Leta vs YSC
[ Show More ]
Replay Cast
3 days
The PondCast
3 days
KCM Race Survival
3 days
Replay Cast
4 days
Replay Cast
4 days
Escore
4 days
Replay Cast
5 days
Replay Cast
5 days
IPSL
6 days
Ret vs Art_Of_Turtle
Radley vs TBD
BSL
6 days
Replay Cast
6 days
Liquipedia Results

Completed

Escore Tournament S2: W4
RSL Revival: Season 4
NationLESS Cup

Ongoing

BSL Season 22
ASL Season 21
CSL 2026 SPRING (S20)
IPSL Spring 2026
KCM Race Survival 2026 Season 2
StarCraft2 Community Team League 2026 Spring
WardiTV TLMC #16
Nations Cup 2026
IEM Rio 2026
PGL Bucharest 2026
Stake Ranked Episode 1
BLAST Open Spring 2026
ESL Pro League S23 Finals
ESL Pro League S23 Stage 1&2
PGL Cluj-Napoca 2026

Upcoming

Escore Tournament S2: W5
Acropolis #4
BSL 22 Non-Korean Championship
CSLAN 4
Kung Fu Cup 2026 Grand Finals
HSC XXIX
uThermal 2v2 2026 Main Event
Maestros of the Game 2
2026 GSL S2
RSL Revival: Season 5
2026 GSL S1
XSE Pro League 2026
IEM Cologne Major 2026
Stake Ranked Episode 2
CS Asia Championships 2026
IEM Atlanta 2026
Asian Champions League 2026
PGL Astana 2026
BLAST Rivals Spring 2026
TLPD

1. ByuN
2. TY
3. Dark
4. Solar
5. Stats
6. Nerchio
7. sOs
8. soO
9. INnoVation
10. Elazer
1. Rain
2. Flash
3. EffOrt
4. Last
5. Bisu
6. Soulkey
7. Mini
8. Sharp
Sidebar Settings...

Advertising | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use | Contact Us

Original banner artwork: Jim Warren
The contents of this webpage are copyright © 2026 TLnet. All Rights Reserved.