 When you read about the mess in Europe, what you mainly read about is, one, will the euro, the common currency, survive? And two, will some country probably grease default on its debts and thereby throw financial markets into a turmoil? But the basic question is more fundamental. That is, even if all of Greece's past debt were wiped out by good fairy, and even if it had its own currency and could devalue, it would still have some serious problems. On the one hand, Greece and a lot of the other European countries are in recession. In Greece, the suicide rate is spiking. In Spain, the unemployment rate is 25%. They can't just have austerity, so also have to find a way to grow and get rid of their deficits at the same time, which means not cutting way back now, but making a credible commitment to cut back over a longer-term future. There are things they could do. They could raise pension ages. They could reduce the generosity of pensions. They could loosen up their labor markets. They could actually demand that their citizens pay their taxes, which they don't. But at the moment, there's all this focus on short-term austerity, and the Germans keep saying more and more and more austerity, and the French keep saying, but we also got to have growth. But they're not really talking about the things they could do to get both at once.