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A decisive week for the euro?

It's another big week for the eurozone, but what will it take to save the euro? We hear the challenges for the leading port in Bangladesh. And how some people in tech-savvy Japan still love the fax.

It's another big week of meetings in the eurozone, so what would it take to save the currency? Andrew Walker speaks to David Llewellyn, Vice Chairman of the Board of the Banking Stakeholder Group at the European Banking Authority. He's worked for the IMF and UK Treasury in the past and now he's Professor of Banking and Finance at Loughborough University.

The Â鶹ÊÓƵAV's Anbarasan Ethirajan reports from Bangladesh which is becoming an increasingly successful exporter. Compared with 1980, the economy is more than four and half times as large as it was. That owes a lot to the country's surging exports of textiles and clothing. There has been a key role in that success story for the port in the southern city of Chittagong, the departure point for much of the trade. The historic port celebrates its 125th anniversary this year. But as the country's economy continues to grow, Bangladesh's prime gateway to the world is facing new challenges.

Many people might wonder why we still put fax numbers on our business cards. But Mariko Oi reports from tech-savvy Japan where the fax is still a popular form of communication.

(A Bangladeshi boatman pushes a boat laden with sand across a channel in the port area of Chittagong, on January 1, 2009. Credit: AFP / Getty Images)

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18 minutes

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Tue 31 Jul 2012 11:32GMT

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  • Tue 31 Jul 2012 07:32GMT
  • Tue 31 Jul 2012 11:32GMT

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