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The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

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  • The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/com...cle6426565.ece

    The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret
    Germany is at the heart of a huge plan to prop up crippled EU economies - not that the German people would ever know

    I will not vote in today's European election. Instead, I am doing something much more interesting and relevant to the future of Europe and Britain. I am travelling to Riga to speak at the centenary celebrations for Isaiah Berlin, the great Latvian- Jewish philosopher, who explained why democracy and freedom do not always work hand in hand. Why is this trip to Latvia more important than voting? Because, believe it or not, the future of Europe could be decided by this tiny Baltic state.

    Before explaining why this is so, allow me another digression - about a remarkable TV documentary to be broadcast on June 19 on BBC Two. Linked to another cultural centenary - that of Felix Mendelssohn - it is called Mendelssohn, the Nazis and Me. This film, charming, hilarious and horrifying in equal measure, is about the bizarrely legalistic efforts of the Nazis to expunge all traces of Jewish pollution from Germany's music culture, as well as the population, in the 1930s - and more generally about the sudden descent of one of the world's most highly educated and civilised nations into a state of collective insanity. Specifically the film is about bureaucratic attempts to determine whether Mendelssohn's German descendants were more or less “Jewish” than his music - a literally life-and-death issue that rested on the Nazi authorities' inability to establish whether the exact proportion of Jewish heredity in the Mendelssohn family was one-quarter or three-sixteenths.

    What does this nightmarish experience, which ended luckily for Mendelssohn's descendants, have to do with the future of Europe? Plenty - and the connection runs through tiny Latvia, where I am writing this.

    Europe is now in the middle of a perfect storm - a confluence of three separate, but interconnected economic crises which threaten far greater devastation than Britain or America have suffered from the credit crunch: the collapse of German industry and employment, the impending bankruptcy of Central European homeowners and businesses; and the threat of government debt defaults from loss of monetary control by the Irish Republic, Greece and Portugal, for instance on the eurozone periphery.

    Latvia, partly because it has followed an Argentine-style policy of “fixing” its exchange rate and encouraging its citizens to borrow in euros and Swiss francs, is now in the front line of the battle between governments and financial markets - and a humiliating devaluation looks increasingly likely. Last weekend a former Swedish finance ministry official brought in by the Government as an adviser admitted that devaluation was no longer a matter of “if” but of “when and how”. If Latvia does devalue, then the two other Baltic states will almost certainly be forced to follow and the panic will probably move to Romania and Hungary. Beyond that, the contagion is likely to spread to the weakest members of the eurozone - Ireland, Greece, Portugal and probably Austria.

    If the crisis expands, other EU governments - and especially Germany's - will face an existential question. Do they commit hundreds of billions of euros to guarantee the debts of fellow EU countries? Or do they allow government defaults and devaluations that may ultimately break up the single currency and further cripple German industry, as well as the country's domestic banks?

    Publicly, German politicians have insisted that any bailouts or guarantees are out of the question. Germany has vociferously blocked proposals from Italy, Spain and the European Commission for the EU as a whole to issue bonds and use the proceeds to support the governments with weaker credit. But as so often in Europe, the pass has been quietly sold in Brussels, while politicians loudly protested their unshakeable commitment to defend it.

    Last October a previously unused regulation was discovered, allowing the creation of a €25 billion “balance of payments facility” and authorising the EU to borrow substantial sums under its own “legal personality” for the first time. This facility was doubled again to €50 billion in March. If Latvia's financial problems turn into a full-scale crisis, these guarantees and cross-subsidies between EU governments will increase to hundreds of billions in the months ahead and will certainly mutate into large-scale centralised EU borrowing, jointly guaranteed by all the taxpayers of the EU.

    This policy of “fiscal federalism”, long advocated by France and high-debt countries such as Italy, Spain and Greece, has been fiercely opposed by Germany and Britain. In terms of its potential costs, it makes the agricultural policy and budget rebates seem like a vicarage tombola.

    How could German politicians accept such a policy, having repeatedly sworn to oppose it, without sacrificing their unbending sense of moral righteousness? And how can they pervert democracy by telling their electorates that they are doing one thing, while advocating the exact opposite within the EU?

    Much as they did in the case of Mendelssohn and the Nazis, the Germans focus on the letter of the law when they cannot bear to think about the spirit of the rules they are applying - whether unspeakably evil, as in the 1930s, or merely profligate and dishonest, as in the EU today. The new EU borrowing, for example, is legally an “off-budget” and “back-to-back” arrangement, which allows Germany to maintain the legal fiction that it is not guaranteeing the debts of Latvia et al. The EU's bond prospectus to investors, however, makes quite clear where the financial burden truly lies: “From an investor's point of view the bond is fully guaranteed by the EU budget and, ultimately, by the EU Member States.”

    And so the juggernaut of euro-federalism rolls on; but viewed from an increasingly liberal central Europe, there is a great consolation: the history of euro-federalism keeps being repeated but, as Marx once said, what began as tragedy tends to end in farce.
    Last edited by Sapiens; June 06, 2009, 04:07 AM.

  • #2
    Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

    It is amusing that a expatriate Russian in Britain is writing about Germany bailing out Latvia.

    To me the picture is not so clear or simple.

    The IMF is pushing for a devaluation, but the EU is not going for it.

    In my view a German bailout of Latvia - later the rest of Eastern Europe is still very much not assumable. The banks in questions are mostly not German but rather Swedish and possibly Swiss.

    Merkel is hardly in a position to be exposed to attack as a spender of German taxes on foreign assistance exactly in a time when Germany is not faring well. This same reluctance to open up exposure to attack underpins the equal reluctance of Germany to throw money at the problem as the Anglo-sphere has done.

    Despite all of Sarkozy's kissing up, ultimately it is Germany who has the money and will call the shots.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

      Originally posted by c1ue View Post
      It is amusing that a expatriate Russian in Britain is writing about Germany bailing out Latvia.

      To me the picture is not so clear or simple.

      The IMF is pushing for a devaluation, but the EU is not going for it.

      In my view a German bailout of Latvia - later the rest of Eastern Europe is still very much not assumable. The banks in questions are mostly not German but rather Swedish and possibly Swiss.

      Merkel is hardly in a position to be exposed to attack as a spender of German taxes on foreign assistance exactly in a time when Germany is not faring well. This same reluctance to open up exposure to attack underpins the equal reluctance of Germany to throw money at the problem as the Anglo-sphere has done.

      Despite all of Sarkozy's kissing up, ultimately it is Germany who has the money and will call the shots.

      Also, I suspect that the memories of the cost of integrating East Germany are still fresh in voters minds in Germany.

      However, as the 65th anniversary of D-Day reminds, the one overarching reason for every European nation to continue to support the EU is the avoidance of another European war...

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

        this is one reason the USD is not going to drop like a stone against other currencies. All currencies will drop at some point against gold, and then later against commodities, methinks. There will be some mad rushes to get into equities and in currency terms, equities will take off but in inflation adjusted terms gold, silver and oil, along with other commodities, are destined to go through the roof.

        I laugh at people that say the dollar is going to fall through the floor. It's not. Because all the other fiat currencies are as bad or worse.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

          Originally posted by grapejelly View Post
          this is one reason the USD is not going to drop like a stone against other currencies. All currencies will drop at some point against gold, and then later against commodities, methinks. There will be some mad rushes to get into equities and in currency terms, equities will take off but in inflation adjusted terms gold, silver and oil, along with other commodities, are destined to go through the roof.

          I laugh at people that say the dollar is going to fall through the floor. It's not. Because all the other fiat currencies are as bad or worse.
          Corollary to the above: FOREX is for the extremely well-connected or madmen.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

            Originally posted by grapejelly View Post
            this is one reason the USD is not going to drop like a stone against other currencies. All currencies will drop at some point against gold, and then later against commodities, methinks. There will be some mad rushes to get into equities and in currency terms, equities will take off but in inflation adjusted terms gold, silver and oil, along with other commodities, are destined to go through the roof.

            I laugh at people that say the dollar is going to fall through the floor. It's not. Because all the other fiat currencies are as bad or worse.

            Some people to laugh at then...;)
            U.S. dollar 'seriously overvalued': study

            Wed Jun 3, 2009 8:07pm EDT

            WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar is "seriously overvalued," mostly against the Chinese renminbi and some other Asian currencies, according to a new study published on Wednesday.

            The Peterson Institute for International Economics, a Washington-based think tank, said the majority of the 29 currencies it studied need to appreciate against the dollar, with a large rise especially needed by the Chinese currency.
            "The principal counterpart to the overvalued dollar is the undervaluation of the Chinese renminbi, which would have needed to appreciate about 21 percent on a weighted average basis and about 40 percent against the dollar to achieve equilibrium," said the study by economists William Cline and John Williamson.

            Investor flight to the dollar safe haven since last year has pushed the U.S. currency up by about 10 percent, which on top of an estimated overvaluation of about 7 percent a year ago made for an overvaluation of about 17 percent by March this year, the study said.

            But the dollar slid to its low in 2009 on June 1 against the euro and a basket of currencies amid optimism the prospect of a global economic recovery boosted riskier assets.
            Despite the dollar's recent slump, the study said the currency remained "substantially overvalued."

            Cline and Williamson said economic imbalances caused by the deficit and overvaluation of the dollar over the surplus and undervaluation of the Chinese renminbi posed systemic threats.

            "It is important that as the world emerges from the current crisis these imbalances be corrected," they said.

            To rebalance the global economy, Cline and Williamson argued China should change its peg from the dollar to a basket of currencies. Alternatively, China should resume the upward crawl of the peg against the dollar.

            "Unfortunately, the most recent evidence points in the other direction, as the policy over the past several months of keeping the renminbi unchanged against the dollar has remained intact, despite the dollar's reversal toward a declining trend subsequent to its peak in early March."

            "China has again begun to ride the dollar down," they added.


            Comment


            • #7
              Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

              And another...
              Gross Says Diversify From Dollar as Deficits Surge

              June 3 (Bloomberg) -- Bill Gross, founder of Pacific Investment Management Co., advised holders of U.S. dollars to diversify before central banks and sovereign wealth funds ultimately do the same amid concern about surging deficits.

              Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner’s plan to bring the budget back into balance won’t be successful as consumers shrink spending and the U.S. growth rate slows, Gross said in a Bloomberg Radio interview today. The budget deficit will be narrowed to “roughly” 3 percent of GDP from a projected 12.9 percent this year, Geithner said June 1.

              “I think he’ll fail at pulling a balanced rabbit out of a hat,” Gross said from Pimco’s headquarters in Newport Beach, California. “They are talking about -- once the economy in the U.S. renormalizes -- the move back toward balance or much less of a deficit. I suspect that will be hard to do.”

              Higher savings rates and an increase in the cost to service the national debt will drag on the U.S. economy, likely meaning “trillion-dollar deficits are here to stay,” Gross wrote in his June investment outlook posted today on the firm’s Web site.

              Gross, manager of the world’s biggest bond fund, said on May 21 the U.S. will “eventually” lose its AAA credit rating after Standard & Poor’s lowered its outlook on the U.K.’s AAA to “negative” from “stable” amid an escalating ratio of debt- to-gross domestic product. While U.S. marketable debt is at about 45 percent of GDP, annual deficits of 10 percent will push the amount to 100 percent within five years, a level that rating companies and markets view as a “point of no return,” he wrote...

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

                Originally posted by grapejelly View Post
                I laugh at people that say the dollar is going to fall through the floor. It's not. Because all the other fiat currencies are as bad or worse.
                Do people have to exchange dollars for other currencies in order for it to decline? What if they just prefer hard assets to dollars? Won't inflation increase and the value of the dollar decline if the velocity of money increases?

                Also, foreign investors like the Chinese might not agree with you that their local currencies are as bad as the USD, regardless of the reality.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

                  I already read somewhere (here?) that the ECB has broken the Maastricht treaty rule of not bailing out an euro-government implicitly. Appearantly they're bailing out Irish banks and as a collateral accept Irish republic bonds from these banks.

                  If this is true, then the cat is out of the bag already.
                  engineer with little (or even no) economic insight

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

                    Originally posted by Sharky View Post
                    Do people have to exchange dollars for other currencies in order for it to decline? What if they just prefer hard assets to dollars? Won't inflation increase and the value of the dollar decline if the velocity of money increases?

                    Also, foreign investors like the Chinese might not agree with you that their local currencies are as bad as the USD, regardless of the reality.


                    Sometimes, a little common sense will help. A union GM worker gets paid $70/hr with benefits. A worker in GM's shanghai JV gets paid $1.50/hr with benefits producing the same Buick.

                    Which currency is overvalued?

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

                      Originally posted by touchring View Post
                      Sometimes, a little common sense will help. A union GM worker gets paid $70/hr with benefits. A worker in GM's shanghai JV gets paid $1.50/hr with benefits producing the same Buick.

                      Which currency is overvalued?
                      The Buick is overvalued ;) Just joking.
                      The Renmimbi is severely undervalued, everybody knows. They will keep it there untill every valuable production has been shifted from the western countries to China. Then will rise it and sell us the same valuable we used to produce at ten time the price.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

                        Originally posted by grapejelly View Post
                        this is one reason the USD is not going to drop like a stone against other currencies. All currencies will drop at some point against gold, and then later against commodities, methinks. There will be some mad rushes to get into equities and in currency terms, equities will take off but in inflation adjusted terms gold, silver and oil, along with other commodities, are destined to go through the roof.

                        I laugh at people that say the dollar is going to fall through the floor. It's not. Because all the other fiat currencies are as bad or worse.
                        Part of iTulip's inflation (vs. deflation) prediction is based on repatriation of dollars. So, who's going to do the repatriating? Is China going to dump the dollar for Euros? Maybe not.
                        raja
                        Boycott Big Banks • Vote Out Incumbents

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

                          Originally posted by raja View Post
                          Part of iTulip's inflation (vs. deflation) prediction is based on repatriation of dollars. So, who's going to do the repatriating? Is China going to dump the dollar for Euros? Maybe not.

                          Why not? The EU is now China's greatest export and import market. The American media seems to have missed this out all the time. ;)

                          http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/20...t_11435372.htm

                          The EU is China's largest trading partner, largest export market and, now the Asian nation's largest import target. China's enormous market has provided great commercial opportunities for European enterprises. The flow of a range of cheap but quality made-in-China brands have delivered tangible benefits to the ordinary European consumer, saving about 300 euros every year for every European household.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

                            Originally posted by raja
                            Part of iTulip's inflation (vs. deflation) prediction is based on repatriation of dollars. So, who's going to do the repatriating? Is China going to dump the dollar for Euros? Maybe not.
                            In another post I noted a couple of possible ways:

                            1) China disintermediates the US from its own currency. While the US can always print money, ultimately the primary use of dollars outside the US is for trade purposes. China can use its existing dollars to promote trade with non-US partners and simultaneously provide a bridge to a different world reserve currency. We are seeing this already with the China swap agreements.

                            2) US$ instability leads to significant changes in its use in world trade. Present world trade is around $14T; the US$ share of this is at least twice what the actual trade to the US is. (12% export, 18% import). A reversion to US$ share equalling US export/import share could mean multiple trillions of dollars no longer being desired.

                            The reason dollars are being used for world trade are many including relative stability of the dollar, petrodollar standard, etc but recent gyrations in the dollar have hurt a lot of importers/exporters. Sufficient pain inflicted results in switching to some other more stable currency or local currency so that at least the pain can be capped at one end.

                            Note in 2) above that the dollars in question are not exactly what the CBs hold and use. It is the dollars taken up in float - the concept is similar to Buffet's use of insurance float to fund his BRK other activities.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: The great bailout - Europe's best-kept secret

                              Nice article. let's see how this song plays.

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