from UK Independent:
Analysts at the credit ratings agency Moody's have  issued a stark warning that even with budget deficit programmes and  savage cuts in public spending across the eurozone some of the weaker  peripheral nations will still default on their debts, requiring a  "restructuring".
They say: "It is hard to escape the conclusion  that austerity will not end the debt crisis, and that restructuring may  be necessary, as Germany's Chancellor Merkel has indicated."
Arguing that Europe is the "weakest link" in the  global economy, they say that the fortunes of Asia and the West will  diverge further next year, and that the United States' prospects have  "improved only somewhat" with the passage of the recent budget deal in  Congress. 
But China also represents a threat to  growth around the world. Reflecting recent caution from the Bank of  England on the flow of funds into emerging markets, the Moody's  economists add: "Although China will continue rapid growth, it faces  downside risks from inflation and a real-estate market correction.  Despite these problems, our baseline outlook for recovery assumes Europe  and China will go through orderly restructurings that will prevent  further financial panic."
Overall, downside  risks to the global outlook have increased since the start of 2010, say  the analysts, adding: "Even if these risks do not materialise, growth in  the world's largest economies is set to slow in 2011 before picking up  in 2012." 
That is the consensus view among  international bodies such the IMF. But Moody's is much more gloomy about  the chances of Europe being able to make it through the next few years  without a major dislocation – even comparing the situation with the  Argentine banking crisis of 2001, which saw riots as the value of  people's savings was wiped out by 75 per cent in what was in effect a  default as the country failed to maintain its link with the US dollar.  Similar stresses in nations such as Greece are foreseen by the Moody's  team. 
In a gloomy note, Moody's states: "The largest risks to global recovery stem from Europe's sovereign debt crisis.
"The  amount of austerity needed to correct Europe's imbalances may be as  politically unsustainable as it was for Argentina in 2001. Even in  Britain, which has not had a full-blown sovereign debt crisis, new  fiscal austerity measures have sparked demonstrations by students facing  higher university fees."
There is also a blunt  criticism of the EU's leaders: "Both European bondholders and  policymakers face problems in 2011 because officials clung too long to  the belief that government austerity plus bailout financing was  sufficient to handle debt overhang in periphery countries. 
"The  recent reconsideration of that position by German Chancellor Merkel and  the ECB has come too late to avoid draconian cutbacks, higher  unemployment, and declining output in the periphery countries."
Most  worryingly, there is also the suggestion that the current austerity  packages may not work economically even if they find political  acceptance: "Europe remains the weak link, not just because of its  sovereign debtcrisis but also because even its fiscally stronger states –  France, Germany and the UK – are tightening fiscal policy. With growth  still below potential, this could push the region's more vulnerable  economies into recession. Europe might still be able to muddle through,  but an orderly restructuring of sovereign debt is looking more desirable  as the damage from budget cuts mounts and as high-debt countries  struggle to escape recession."
Andres  Carbacho-Burgos, an economist at Moody's and author of its global  outlook, concludes: "Europe seems to have abandoned fiscal stimulus  measures as a macroeconomic policy tool, while the US has yet to find a  way to use a fiscal stimulus in a way that is debt-neutral over the long  term.
"The world economy continues to diverge as 2011 begins, in ways that could produce serious side-effects."