Development actors have long argued for an overarching international mechanism that would resolve sovereign debt crises in a fair, transparent, and consistent manner. Such a mechanism would assist poor countries that often suffocate under unsustainable levels of (sometimes odious) debt, lacking the political power and legal rights to negotiate with their creditors in an impartial and efficient forum. It would make handling sovereign debt problems less messy, more predictable, and the burden sharing simpler and fairer. It would also provide incentives to curtail irresponsible lending policies on behalf of creditors.
5 hours 52 min ago —
This is big...for #France :-) next English as second Lang :-) “@PlaceLuxEU: France approves English language classes http://t.co/MdAjgA8qSd
8 hours 53 min ago —
Enjoying a pint with @LorcanRK who I have finally had the pleasure of meeting face to face :-)
16 hours 45 min ago —
The #bankingunion is essentially a back door covert #fiscalunion
18 hours 41 min ago —
I thought those calling 4 a #Lehman like moment in #EU were idiots; I am starting 2 think I was an idiot 4 calling them names - complacency
1 day 5 hours ago —
Irony? “@moorehn: I assume UK will stop criticizing US gun laws after meat-cleaver street beheading? http://t.co/sb5mLVZ1Xj”