Euro magicians must find new tricks
Europe's leaders meet again on Thursday. The question they must answer this time is not whether they can rescue this or that country, but whether they can rescue the eurozone - if not the European Union in its current form.
To see why, we just need to review the last 12 months. In July 2011, Europe's leaders agreed on a limited restructuring of Greek debt, while at the same time making financial assistance nimbler and cheaper. A year later, Greece remains on knife-edge.
Throughout last autumn, they agonized over the rise of Spanish and Italian bond rates, until finally the European Central Bank decided to administer pain relief in the form of large-scale liquidity provision to banks. But, despite the arrival of new, reform-minded governments in both Italy and Spain, the relief proved short-lived.