{"subscriptionTypes":[{"label":"Druck","categories":[{"label":"Soli-Abo","price":65,"id":"druck_solidarisch","hasShippingCosts":1},{"label":"Abo","price":45,"id":"druck_standard","hasShippingCosts":1}]},{"label":"Digital","categories":[{"label":"Soli-Abo","price":40,"id":"digital_solidarisch","hasShippingCosts":0},{"label":"Abo","price":20,"id":"digital_standard","hasShippingCosts":0}]}],"defaultCountry":"DE","teasers":[{"url":"https:\/\/www.ecosia.org\/2","published":"03.12","authors":[{"name":"Martine Orange","url":"http:\/\/ecosia.de"}],"headline":"Europe Is Saving the Financial Markets, But Not Coronavirus Victims","text":"After the 2008 crisis, European authorities saved the banks but forced welfare states to slash spending. Faced with the coronavirus, austerity-hit hospital services are under siege \u2014 yet the European Central Bank is again helping out the financial markets, not public health care systems.","image":{"url":"https:\/\/source.unsplash.com\/random","sizes":{"400":"https:\/\/source.unsplash.com\/random","800":"https:\/\/source.unsplash.com\/random","1200":"https:\/\/source.unsplash.com\/random"},"alt":"Ich bin ein Alt-Text."}}]}