The linked sovereign-debt and banking crises in Europe represent one of the most significant challenges
to global recovery. In 2010 both Greece and Ireland needed bailouts to stabilize their economies, and this
year Portugal decided it needed help too.
While European politicians, with an eye to national interests, squabbled over what should be done,
Jean-Claude Trichet, 68, the president of the European Central Bank since 2003, took a leading role,
pressing for reform of the governance of the euro zone while working to put in place mechanisms that
provide assistance to those most in need.
Along the way, Trichet — who combines the rigorous logic of the classic French bureaucrat with a truly
global outlook — has ensured that the euro remains a currency whose value all can trust, while keeping
European inflation enviably low. He retires from the bank this year. Europe — and the world — will miss
him. |
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