The future of the Euro What is your opinion?
#261
Posted 2012-May-14, 07:49
#262
Posted 2012-May-15, 12:28
#263
Posted 2012-May-25, 00:02
Spinning off the sunny Med countries I think makes sense. Keeping together France, Germany, Benelux and their Eastern European followers should be O.K. We live and learn.
#264
Posted 2012-June-04, 11:57
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His point about the euro bubble is particularly well taken. I’d put it this way: it so happened that the euro came into existence at a time when the German economy was in the doldrums. Then the euro made investors believe that southern Europe was safe, causing a huge fall in interest rates there:
This in turn led to vast inflows of capital; the flip side of these inflows was large trade deficits, and large counterpart German surpluses, which was just what the Germans needed. Everyone was happy! For a few years.
And then the bubble burst, leading to the crisis today.
Needless to say, this story bears little resemblance to the morality play of profligacy and its consequences that has dominated European discussion until just about now. If there were any villains, they were the architects of the euro, who waved away warnings about the system’s flaws. But never mind the villains: the question is what to do now. And time is running out fast.
Edit: replaced link to Soros speech.
#265
Posted 2012-June-15, 07:15
#266
Posted 2012-June-15, 07:38
y66, on 2012-June-15, 07:15, said:
Except that he seems to credit it as due to expansionary fiscal policy, which is wrong. They have had contractionary fiscal policy (in real terms) and expansionary money policy: scott sumner analyses it at greater length. To whit:
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Now you might wonder what all this has to do with market monetarism. Recall that we are the ones claiming that Britain and the eurozone need to combine tight fiscal policy with monetary stimulus. The tight fiscal policy addresses the looming debt crisis, and the monetary stimulus keeps AD (i.e. NGDP) growing at the sort of rate needed to keep the economy close to full employment. Is there any evidence that Iceland did some monetary stimulus? Here's Kevin Drum:
[]= my edits, bold emphasis mine..
So far the economic crises seems to score up as : Market monatarists = Winners, New keynesians= ok, Real buisness cycle = hard money austerians (i.e. Austrians) = EPIC FAIL.
#267
Posted 2012-June-17, 13:18
30 percent of Spain's GDP (2010) = $423 billion = €335 billion.
#269
Posted 2012-November-09, 06:43
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What else is new?
#270
Posted 2013-March-22, 05:39
#271
Posted 2013-March-22, 08:53
#272
Posted 2013-March-22, 12:45
They are still following Keynesian theory and running massive deficits.
They still have massive debt problems.
On top of that they dont have free movement of labor in many ways.
Austerity is not running 800 billion deficit year after year.
The most frequently asked question now is "can goverments walk away from their debt?"
#273
Posted 2013-March-25, 11:12
mike777, on 2013-March-22, 12:45, said:
Austerity is not running 800 billion deficit year after year.
The most frequently asked question now is "can goverments walk away from their debt?"
Is there going to be any other option when all is said and done?
What I know about economics would fit on the head of a very small pin but it would appear that virtually every country in the world including the US is extended way beyond its capacity to pay and the only other way out is borrowing or printing yet more money. Even printing money costs the government yet more interest so... Somehow this seems as though it is merely delaying the inevitable..certainly would be for an individual.
I have doubts that everyone would sit passively while their governments raid their savings accounts to pay the IMF or whomever. Especially when that won't even begin to solve the problem. I also have doubts that the majority of people will sit passively while their standard of living shrinks to that of serfs serving the will of the IMF and world banks.
It's certainly possible that I am missing something and have been watching the "wrong " videos from the "wrong" experts but..
Looks from here as though the longer they put it off the worse it will be when it finally and inevitably happens.
#274
Posted 2013-March-25, 13:02
No shortage of problems but at least we can see some crises coming. They are both visible and comprehensible, making crafting solutions possible via the admittedly slow moving political/economic system.
More dangerous for society at large is the crisis we dont see coming.
1) Derivatives blow up.
30$ trillion in unregulated derivatives in 2000 over 600 trillion today and counting.
2) Japan finally implodes.
Aging population that will spend more, save less means less domestic demand for govt bonds and interest rates that can only go up.
3)The Petrodollar dies.
Since 1973 Saudies only accept US dollars for oil and we would provide protection
4) U.S. Pension defaults spike.
5)Debt jubilee resets the system.
Widespread forgiveness of debt engineered by governments rather than the markets.
Have central banks simply write off the bonds they are now accumulating.
6) Cyber attack cripple the economy?
Sooner or later a major act of cyberterror, cybercrime or cyberwar will occur. It will happen with little advance warning.
#277
Posted 2013-April-03, 08:11
#278
Posted 2013-April-17, 09:01
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The other paper, which has had immense influence — largely because in the VSP world it is taken to have established a definitive result — was Reinhart/Rogoff on the negative effects of debt on growth. Very quickly, everyone “knew” that terrible things happen when debt passes 90 percent of GDP.
Some of us never bought it, arguing that the observed correlation between debt and growth probably reflected reverse causation. But even I never dreamed that a large part of the alleged result might reflect nothing more profound than bad arithmetic.
But it seems that this is just what happened. Mike Konczal has a good summary of a review by Herndon, Ash, and Pollin. According to the review paper, R-R mysteriously excluded data on some high-debt countries with decent growth immediately after World War II, which would have greatly weakened their result; they used an eccentric weighting scheme in which a single year of bad growth in one high-debt country counts as much as multiple years of good growth in another high-debt country; and they dropped a whole bunch of additional data through a simple coding error.
Fix all that, say Herndon et al., and the result apparently melts away.
If true, this is embarrassing and worse for R-R. But the really guilty parties here are all the people who seized on a disputed research result, knowing nothing about the research, because it said what they wanted to hear.
Paul Ryan and Ollie Rehn, now won't you please go home?
#279
Posted 2013-April-17, 10:12
y66, on 2013-April-17, 09:01, said:
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Don't tell Al_U_Card whatever you do.....