Klein is a bus monitor for the Greece Central School District, and the harassers hail from a district middle school.
Klein is a bus monitor for the Greece Central School District, and the harassers attended a district school, Athena Middle School.
The European Central Bank is its central bank, but Greece cannot force it to monetize its debt.
Payoff: The European Central Bank should allow Greece to become the latest EU state to adopt the euro at the end of the year.
Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman, said next week the International Monetary Fund, the European Union and the European Central Bank will visit Greece to evaluate the progress toward meeting the conditions to allow the next tranche of the 2010 aid program.
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The European Central Bank stated that it wants Greece to remain in the euro zone, according to the central bank's president Mario Draghi.
Bank A signals to the Greek central bank, Bank of Greece, that the payment will go ahead using TARGET2.
In addition, euro-zone members would likely have to take a large hit on governmental and central banks' loans to Greece.
Belgium went into a public sulk when its nominee was rejected by all the other euro-area countries in favour of the governor of Greece's central bank.
He'd had an early-morning meeting at Greece's central bank, given the keynote speech at an event on corporate social responsibility, then had dinner with his wife, Nellie.
If the ECB followed up on that threat, Greek banks could see their funding dry up (although some think Greece's central bank might even then be able to keep providing funds to its banks through a scheme known as Emergency Liquidity Assistance).
That in turn could prompt Greece to veto the Central and East Europeans' applications to join the Union.
Every quarter the EU, the IMF and the European Central Bank (ECB) scrutinise Greece before releasing the next chunk of money.
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The ongoing sovereign debt issues with Greece reignited when comments from the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund suggested that without further austerity measures and sale of assets by Greece, the ability of Greece to be able to repay debt soon coming due comes into question.
This would force banks to write off more of what they're owed and would impose losses on public-sector lenders to Greece, including the European Central Bank.
Greece can now capitalize on its central Mediterranean location, says Harris Siganos, a managing director at Alpha Asset Management in Athens.
And in Greece, the government of former central banker Lucas Papademos has passed its first budget promising to reduce the deficit without further austerity measures.
The market has benefited from Europe's approval of another bailout agreement for Greece and from the new European Central Bank governor's efforts to provide financing for European banks.
Under ELA, banks borrow from their national central bank, in this case the Bank of Greece, with approval of the ECB's governing council.
In particular, attention has returned to sovereign credit risk, particularly in the eurozone and its periphery, where weaker countries, like Greece and the more indebted of the Central and Eastern European countries, are under pressure.
Cyprus's major banks, which suffered massive losses in Greece, are funded largely by deposits and central-bank emergency support.
The European Central Bank (ECB) is now thought to be Greece's biggest bondholder.
Bank of Greece's liability to the Eurosystem of central banks rises 1000 euros.
There were also concerns about Greece's finances, as the European Central Bank said that it would reject Greek government bonds as collateral.
Inspectors from the EU, IMF and European Central Bank, known as the troika, are due in Greece this week.
Greece was also in the spotlight, as European Central Bank executive board member Joerg Asmussen said the central bank won't take part in any potential debt restructuring of the debt-laden country.
The European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund have been pumping money into Greece to keep the country in the euro, but they have demanded that the Greek government slash spending to get the funds.
The European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund have been pumping money into Greece to keep the country in the euro and able to pay its debts, but they have demanded that the Greek government slash spending to get the funds.
The coming weeks, leading to the second Greek election, will see the interplay of opinion polls, depositor behaviour and the European Central Bank's bi-weekly decisions on the Bank of Greece's lending capacity.
Under this system, called Target2, one consequence of businesses and households taking their money out of the bank accounts of the deficit countries, such as Greece, Italy and Spain, is that the German central bank ends up lending vast sums to the central banks of those deficit countries.
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