The markets had just gotten comfortable with the botched Cyprus bailout and the turmoil that followed, when Slovenia emerged as yet another country to potentially require a bailout. If the eurozone’s history is any indication, rumors tend to come true. Now, Slovenia, with successive governments rejecting attempts to privatise the country’s banks, is facing a banking crisis. The small Balkan state needs to recapitalise its banks, but does not have the means to do so. The eurozone leaders are once again faced with a new challenge likely to spur resentment across Europe. Citizens all over the eurozone are growing tired of seeing a constant flow of tax money to countries that have – for a variety of reasons – mismanaged their economies.
