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Another weapon in the ECB's arsenal has also been put beyond use. The
euro1 trillion program of "all-you-can-eat" loans to banks in December and February did manage to take some heat off the debt crisis that was crippling governments including Spain and Italy. Some banks used the cheap money to snap up government debt that paid a higher interest rate. The program has helped lower costs at which governments borrow on the financial markets and stopped the economic malaise from becoming much deeper. But the ECB loans are seen as a stopgap at best. The bank is currently in a holding pattern before it can start further, similar, measures as it waits to see whether that money finds its way through to loans to businesses and the wider economy. The problem remains: Countries that don't slash spending risk being unable to borrow money from bond investors because the borrowing costs set by those investors
-- the so-called yields -- are too high. Once they are of cut off from the bond market by prohibitively high yields, a bailout is the only alternative to default. Greece, Ireland and Portugal have already been forced to seek help from the other eurozone member countries and the International Monetary Fund. Spanish and Italian yields were hitting dangerously high levels around 7 percent late last year before the ECB stepped in with its cheap loans. The countries' yields dropped to more manageable levels, but are beginning to creep up again. Spanish 10-year bond yields edged up to 5.42 percent on Tuesday, from under 5 percent a month ago. Italy's 10-year bonds yielded 5.15 percent, also up from under 5 percent last month. The solution to the debt crisis, eurozone officials, the ECB and economists all say, is structural reforms to make indebted countries more business-friendly by slashing regulation and eliminating costly restrictive labor practices. As the European economy gets bigger, the relative size of its debt pile shrinks, and higher tax revenues and stronger finances reassure bond investors
-- so they will loan money at affordable rates. But those changes to labor markets take time to win approval in parliaments
-- often against resistance from labor and business special interests. Then they may take years to show results in terms of higher growth. "The kind of structural reforms that we are talking about will take five, six, seven years to really have a full impact," said Guntram Wolff, deputy director of the Bruegel research institute in Brussels. For short-term growth, aside from the ECB loans, "we really don't have a story there," Wolff warns.
[Associated
Press;
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