. Medical and Hospital News .




.
POLITICAL ECONOMY
Walker's World: The euro Titanic
by Martin Walker
Paris (UPI) Nov 14, 2011


They have rearranged the deck chairs, told the band to change their tunes and replaced some of the ship's officers. But the Titanic of the world's currency markets is still holed below the waterline and the passengers are all trapped on board.

The replacement of il cavaliere, as the Italians called their inimitable Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, is more symbol that substance, a ritual sacrifice to the stern Teutonic gods.

Berlusconi's last act, the austerity package for which both houses of Italy's Parliament voted over the weekend, isn't impressive. Greek households are taking an average 14 percent cut in income. Italians are taking a cut of just more than 2 percent -- less than either the British or the French are suffering.

Italy's austerity package is intended to raise $38.5 billion -- less than 1-10th of the debt Italy has to roll over next year.

Still, a new Italian government under Mario Monti, a respected former European commissioner, means the European Central Bank could now have some cover if or when it starts buying Italian bonds.

The problem is that everything else is going wrong. The Greeks are now dependent on importing oil from Iran because nobody else will extend them credit. This emerged just as the latest U.N. report says Iran has indeed been developing nuclear weapons, so the international community is gearing up for tough new sanctions against Iran. But Greece's need for Iran's oil may well mean that the European Union cannot take a united stance.

And then Britain's Daily Telegraph reported Saturday that the latest bond sale of the European Financial Stability Facility, initially hailed as a success, had only been fully sold because the EFSF spent as much as $412.5 million buying up its own bonds. The EFSF is Europe's own bailout fund and if it has to buy its own binds it means that it is losing credibility in the markets.

The main reason for the EFSF trouble is that the Chinese and Japanese, who enthusiastically bought earlier EFSF bonds, have decided the bonds are now too risky. The bond in question was a $4.1 billion 10-year security in support of the Irish bailout (and Ireland is economically the best performing of the troubled euro countries) and the Telegraph reported that only $3.7 billion of the bonds could be sold to the markets.

This is serious. The EFSF is the euro's safety belt. But if the markets won't buy it, the euro is in even worse trouble. The reason why was explained in figures released last week by the Banca d'Italia, which assessed the full exposure of the rich European countries to the broke ones. So while Britain had 25 percent of its gross domestic product in exposure to Portugal, Ireland, Greece, Spain, Belgium and Italy, Germany had 30 percent exposure and France more than 60 percent.

That is why France is coming into the target zone. Unless somebody buys the $412 billion in debt that Italy must roll over next year, then the value of those French holdings is going to collapse, which means a banking crisis in France.

It also means a banking crisis for American banks and pension funds that bought French bonds when the euro was weak and have been enjoying their exchange rate gains while it has been strong. The Bank of International Settlements says U.S. banks have close to $300 billion at risk in France. The temptation to dump them must be growing, but that would plunge France into an Italian-style crisis. It would also badly affect the United States.

As University of California Professor Brad DeLong argues, "The Federal Reserve needs to buy up every single European bond owned by every single American financial institution for cash before the increase in eurorisk leads American finance to tighten credit again and send us down into the double dip."

Quite unnecessarily, and because of the cowardice and ignorance of politicians, the euro mess is bringing the global economy to another 1931. They are toppling like dominos, Greece, followed by Ireland and Portugal and now Italy and France is starting to teeter. And if DeLong is right, that will plunge the United States back into recession.

Solving this shouldn't be difficult. There are only three things to be done with sovereign debt. Governments can pay it off, if national GDP grows faster than the interest on the debt, which is what happened in Europe and the U.S. in the post-war boom years when the WWII debts were paid down. Governments can default, which is what Argentina did a decade ago and what Greece is doing with the EU's plan for a 50 percent "haircut" on debts to the private sector. The third option is to inflate the currency, so that the value of the debt to be paid off starts to shrink as the money is worth less and less.

But Germany, with its folk memory of the hyper-inflation of the 1920s, is terrified of inflation and will use all its considerable influence in Europe to prevent this from happening. Germany is also digging in its heels and refusing to let the European Central Bank become a lender of last resort.

So if the debt cannot be inflated away, and if there isn't enough growth that allows it to be paid off, the remaining option is default which is the worst outcome of all. Just ask those who recall the domino defaults of 1931 and what followed. The Titanic of the currency markets sails on and the seawater pours in …

Related Links
The Economy




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



POLITICAL ECONOMY
Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway takes 5% stake in IBM
Washington (AFP) Nov 14, 2011
US billionaire Warren Buffett said Monday his Berkshire Hathaway investment firm has bought $10.7 billion worth of shares in information technology giant IBM since March. Buffett told business television network CNBC that his investment amounts to about 64 million shares, the equivalent of a 5.5 percent stake, The investment would make Berkshire Hathaway IBM's largest or second-largest s ... read more


POLITICAL ECONOMY
US offers disaster help to Asia-Pacific

Japan opens Fukushima reactors to outside eyes

China sentences three to death over hotel fire

Thaksin keeps low profile in Thai flood crisis

POLITICAL ECONOMY
In GPS case, US court debates '1984' scenario

Galileo satellites handed over to control centre in Germany

Map mischief creates furore in India

Russia launches navigation satellites

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Asian couples rush to wed on auspicious date

The selective advantage of being on the edge of a migration wave

Erasing the signs of aging in cells is now a reality

The benefits of being the first to settle

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Research team clarifies mechanics of first new cell cycle to be described in more than 20 years

Protecting predator and prey when both are in trouble

A Living Factory

US circuses circle wagons against elephants law

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Scientists find big chink in malaria's armour

Analysis reveals malaria as ancient, adaptive and persistent foe

Clinton says AIDS-free generation is US priority

Novel treatment protects mice against malaria; approach may work in humans as well

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Villagers in China riot over land dispute

China police blocks birthday visit to blind lawyer

Thirteen held in bid to mark China lawyer's birthday

Asylum quest: A Chinese dissident's journey

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Somali pirate attacks hit record level

China to send armed patrols on Mekong: report

S.Africa navy chief warns pirates could head south

Kenya to pursue kidnappers into Somalia: minister

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway takes 5% stake in IBM

Blair: Education disparity fix needed

IMF warns China's financial system vulnerable

Walker's World: The euro Titanic


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement