Monday, May 3, 2010

Find Out How Much The Greek Bailout Is Costing The World


The Greek bailout has yet to be approved by the government's involved, but the costs for the citizens of each country are starting to settle.
Spoiler alert: Germans get a bargain, but a debt-ridden Ireland has to face heavy per household costs.
Households across the globe are going to have to help with the Greek bailout over the next three years, and through the IMF portion of the deal, some of those costs will be passed on to Americans as well.


United States (IMF Stake): $345.82 per U.S. household
Slovakia: $617.99 per household
Slovenia: $684.17 per household
Portugal: $707.33 per household
Germany: $745.19 per household
Malta: $769.54 per household
Spain: $776.03 per household
Finland: $776.95 per household
Cyprus: $789.92 per household
Italy: $803.16 per household
France: $877.02 per household
Belgium: $845.40 per household
Austria: $861.13 per household
Netherlands: $866.96 per household
Ireland: $1084.69 per household
Luxembourg: $1675.41 per household


More Here..

16 comments:

  1. $345.82 ?? They can kiss my Gyro ASS !!!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I had lunch yesterday with a Greek-born friend who owns a restaurant (no surprise). She visits Greece at least once a year and bluntly admits that in general, the Greeks there are very lazy, and despite the apparent economic downturn, tha bars and niteclubs there are packed 7 nights a week. Due to high taxation, the underground economy in Greece is enormous.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Very hard measurements are now being taken in Greece.
    The 13th and 14th month salary bonus disappears and you now have to work until you're 67 instead of 53.

    $866.96 for me to pay. "But we will get it back with interest."

    Nice to see Spain, Portugal, Ireland en Italy are paying too. They are the next ones to be bailed out.

    ReplyDelete
  4. DOn't worry, 1:40pm, you won't be paying a dime.
    This charade will go on for a while, meanwhile you'll be hunting squirrels in the park with rocks to survive.

    That's about the size of the disconnect between the talking heads and street level reality.

    ReplyDelete
  5. By the time we have to pay the $345, that will be the price of a gallon of gas or a gallon of milk. So it's all very moot to be worried about anyway.

    ReplyDelete
  6. What a complete waste of US tax dollars.

    ReplyDelete
  7. And to think, in the end this will all fail anyway and Greece will still default, followed by others. Still, the charade must go on.

    ReplyDelete
  8. russia china mexico
    all countrys stealing our jobs
    and forceing us into lower wages
    pay nothing
    what a bunch of bs this article
    we are so screwed
    buy gold and silver

    ReplyDelete
  9. .
    "All the Eurozone and World require is this...
    enslavement of Greece. A token of Greece's submission to the World."

    Greece: "Submission! You threaten Greece with enslavement and death?
    Madness?! This is AUSTERITY!"
    .

    ReplyDelete
  10. Greece has found a way to f us all in the a**!

    ReplyDelete
  11. School cuts! Yippee.

    http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/7d5ec0278e/megan-fox-is-hot-for-teachers

    ReplyDelete
  12. Looks like we got a deal!!! Less than half as much as the rest of the civilized world. Actually anything over 1c is too much. OK. 1c is too much. These crooked bastards need taken down with impunity. They need to learn to live like the rest of us. That would be punishment enough.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Where will fat and lazy America get a bailout from ?
    Printing more Dollars in a fantasy economy!

    ReplyDelete
  14. Glad I don't live in Luxembourg.

    ReplyDelete
  15. All I want to know is where's my bailout!

    No bailout will help Greece or any other country until they change their ways. It's just like AEG, they get bailout money and the first thing they say... "lets party dude"! Remember all the bonus checks they started writing?

    ReplyDelete

Everyone is encouraged to participate with civilized comments.