The future of the Euro What is your opinion?
#341
Posted 2015-July-14, 09:24
#342
Posted 2015-July-14, 14:05
The losers, Rik, as always are the tax-payers and more so now with bail-ins looming, the savers. As long as banks can reserve lend and demand more than the reserve and interest there on, we are obliged to suffer the consequences.
#343
Posted 2015-July-14, 14:29
To perhaps harp a little on a previous point. History is useful, it is important to note differences as well as similarities. The Post World War II era was different than the present in many ways, the most obvious being that it was in the aftermath of a highly destructive war. The Marshall Plan, referred to in the blog and elsewhere lately, went to Europe generally, as well as simply Germany. Concentrating on Germany for a moment, there was, we could say, a change of direction and a change of leadership there.
At any rate, there were many differences between Post War Europe and the Greek situation today. This doesn't mean that the history of that time is useless but it does suggest that we go easy on a direct transplant of policy.
The Europeans, and the Germans in particular, are imposing changes in the Greek policy. You could say that the allies did something like that with Germany in 1945.
Mostly, I just wish them well. It's worth doing if they can do it. I freely acknowledge that I am not the person to go to for economic advice.
And I did like the blog. The above comments are thoughts about it, not arguments against it.
#344
Posted 2015-July-14, 16:12
y66, on 2015-July-14, 09:24, said:
Very interesting thanks for posting. I note this section:
"...Once more, panic and financial distress are widespread. And, once more, Europe lacks a hegemon – a dominant economic power capable of taking the interests of smaller powers and the operation of the larger international system into account by stabilising flows of finance and spending through the European economy...."
The theory demands a benevolent economic super power willing to sacrifice. The article goes on to say that none exists.
TO put it another way, Europe needs a kindly old sugardaddy.
#345
Posted 2015-July-15, 01:12
mike777, on 2015-July-14, 16:12, said:
TO put it another way, Europe needs a kindly old sugardaddy.
Including the package that is on the table right now, I think the Greek have gotten 350 billion euros over the last few years. To put this in perspective: That is 35000 euro per Greek, something like a new car every year for every Greek, including children.
I would say that the Greek have a sugar daddy.
And the point is that the rest of Europe doesn't mind helping out the Greek so much, but the condition is that they need to fix their system. But the Greek are yelling that sugar daddy is blackmailing them for setting conditions to the next two cars that are given.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!), but Thats funny Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#346
Posted 2015-July-15, 01:44
Trinidad, on 2015-July-15, 01:12, said:
I would say that the Greek have a sugar daddy.
And the point is that the rest of Europe doesn't mind helping out the Greek so much, but the condition is that they need to fix their system. But the Greek are yelling that sugar daddy is blackmailing them for setting conditions to the next two cars that are given.
Rik
But have "the Greek" really gotten that, or have others:
Quote
Most of the money went to the banks that lent Greece funds before the crash.
...
Less than 10% of the bailout money was left to be used by the government for reforming its economy and safeguarding weaker members of society.
Greek government debt is still about 320bn, 78% of it owed to the troika. As the Jubilee Debt Campaign says: The bailouts have been for the European financial sector, while passing the debt from being owed to the private sector to the public sector.
Gotta love crony capitalism all throughout the world. See original guardian article for the source of the quotes.
#347
Posted 2015-July-15, 01:51
Trinidad, on 2015-July-15, 01:12, said:
I would say that the Greek have a sugar daddy.
And the point is that the rest of Europe doesn't mind helping out the Greek so much, but the condition is that they need to fix their system. But the Greek are yelling that sugar daddy is blackmailing them for setting conditions to the next two cars that are given.
Rik
You are aware that of this 350 billion euros, 90% (= 315 billion) were used to save European banks, insurances and pension fonds (outside of Greece), which leaves 35 billion euros for Greecewhich were mainly used to save the Greece banks.
If Greece went bankrupt 5 years ago, people who had been saving money for their retirement would have lost a lot of money and they would have know why. Now that the debt was transfered to the ESM. IWF and EZB a bankrupt Greece is no longer a threat. People will still lose the money, but they will lose it over inflation and taxes.
The direct connection between cause and effect is camouflaged, the governments won't have to take the blame for it.
#348
Posted 2015-July-15, 01:55
My Facebook newsfeed is full of people expressing their sympathy with Greece. I am very split on this issue. Several other EU countries have managed to get their deficit under control while implementing an austerity much worse than what Greece has to do - for example Croatia: http://understanding...Greece?share=1. On the other hand, destroying the Greek economy doesn't sound like the creditor's best interest. Then again, this could be said about many other countries, so the discussion should maybe be about austerity in Europe, not about austerity in Greece. Even in the UK, the government has mismanaged the economy, although of course the UK can afford a lot more political stupidity than Greece can.
#349
Posted 2015-July-15, 06:56
#350
Posted 2015-July-15, 07:34
#351
Posted 2015-July-15, 08:52
Trinidad, on 2015-July-14, 08:33, said:
I assume that this is facetious, and of course this is one of the problems. In the examples you give about American States, people really do identify themselves as American rather than residents of a particular state. Most have, in fact, lived in more than one state during their lives. And if jobs are scarce where they live, they can move to another state with better prospects. Of course retirement age and the like is standardised across the country.
These are only a few of the reasons that Europe is different from the USA. The Germans seem to have believed that huge transfers of sovereignty would do the trick of making people feel more attached to Europe than to their increasingly impotent countries. Instead this loss of sovereignty has engendered only resentment. And economic union lacks freedom of movement of labour, since most people are not going to uproot their families to move someplace where they don't know a word of the language, not to mention other differences like a different culture, important national holidays not being celebrated, inability to get their favourite foods, different school systems etc. Moving abroad is still moving abroad, EU or no EU.
In backgammon there is a concept known as "pay now or pay later". Greece should really "pay now" and get rid of the Euro. This at least will allow them to revitalise their economy.
#352
Posted 2015-July-15, 08:52
helene_t, on 2015-July-15, 01:55, said:
The problem, it seems to me, is that governments should not be in the business of "managing the economy" in the first place.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#353
Posted 2015-July-15, 09:01
blackshoe, on 2015-July-15, 08:52, said:
Well, why have you not yet taken up arms and formed a "well-regulated militia" yet?
#354
Posted 2015-July-15, 12:56
blackshoe, on 2015-July-15, 08:52, said:
Depends on what you mean by "managing the economy", the government enforces some rules for business esp. regarding product safty or laws.
The problem is that the intended impact of rules is sometimes missed by the reality.
#355
Posted 2015-July-15, 14:42
Vampyr, on 2015-July-15, 09:01, said:
Too tired.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#356
Posted 2015-July-15, 15:56
#357
Posted 2015-July-15, 16:43
blackshoe, on 2015-July-15, 08:52, said:
Yes, look what happened under Bush, when the US government decided to allow Wall Street to run with much looser rules. Can you imagine how much MORE fun 2008-2012 would have been had the rules been eliminated completely, and the government had been forbidden to intervene? Wow.....utter economic ruin except for the brave, intelligent men (and they are always men in your favourite novels, aren't they?) who saw their way to riches, and didn't give a damn about how the masses suffered. If people aren't rich enough, smart enough, and sociopathic enough to triumph, then they don't count, do they?
Nice philosophy* you have there, Blackshoe
* cue the attempt to claim that his philosophy is being mis-represented, lol.
#358
Posted 2015-July-15, 16:45
mikeh, on 2015-July-15, 16:43, said:
I thought it was Clinton?
#359
Posted 2015-July-15, 16:58
#360
Posted 2015-July-15, 17:00
helene_t, on 2015-July-15, 16:45, said:
Clinton started the process, as far as I know, but the process gained momentum under Bush, especially in terms of the ratios by which the financial firms could leverage their assets....my understanding is that the SEC greatly loosened the rules/enforcement and that this was likely politically influenced. In any event, the point I was trying to make wasn't where to place the blame but to reflect on the real-world result of having government attempt to allow the market to govern itself to a greater degree than had been seen, after the Depression, as being a good idea.
Interestingly, the Canadian banking system arguably survived the 2008 meltdown as well as or better than the banking systems of any other industrialized country, precisely because our federal parliament years ago enacted legislation that, in combination with regulatory rules, greatly limited the ability of banks to leverage assets or weaken lending rules. The Canadian experience was so well-perceived that the Bank of England hired away the head of the Bank of Canada, who was treated in Canada as almost a rock star.
So the real world experiments of the last few years, altho admittedly the Canadian economy is dwarfed by that of the US, suggests pretty strongly that government not only can but should have the power to manage. Obviously it is possible to mismanage, but the evidence seems to suggest that governments, if not overly ideologically driven, won't do as much harm as will naked, unrestrained greed, which tends to dominate in the absence of such governmental management (assuming a functioning, largely free-of-corruption society).