Re: Hudson: Euro Serfdom
The last time I checked, Steve, Greece is not Mexico. Mexico "dug out" by exporting oil, drugs and illegal emmigrants. The oil brought in royalty income, the drugs brought in drug lords and cash, and the emmigrants brought in remittances.
Greece has no oil or drugs to sell. It could export its citizens, and that is exactly what will happen whether they default or get bailed out. Their children will leave just like the Irish did and and now doing. The "math" that you don't want to discuss will not change. The economy will shrink, not grow, as Greece exports its children. When the stone cannot be squeezed for more blood, the taxpayers in Germany and France will be forced to make good the Greeks bad debts. Your morality play will be irrelevant.
As for your other prescription --- "cut taxes" --- how does that increase Greece's ability to pay its debts? If you've been paying attention at all, the IMF/ECU solution is to RAISE taxes, not lower them. The Irish are being told to RAISE their corporate tax rates, not lower them. The creditors you seem so fond of supporting against those "dead beats" have only one solution --- increase taxes.
Then there's your suggesting of lowering the cost of land, the cost of housing, the cost of energy. Hmmm. How do the Greeks do this? By legislative fiat? I think not. In a free market, there are only two ways to lower the cost of anything: make more of it (increase supply) or lower demand. So the Greeks should make more land (loosen land regulations), more houses and more energy? Care to explain that idea further?
Let me suggest a very simple way to lower the cost of Greek land and housing: default. Return to a sovereign currency, preferably backed by gold and silver.
Finally, what's this about tearing out the "solar energy crap" and "get real"? It appears to me that sun is an important Greek resource. Why the hell shouldn't they invest in solar? Because you think its not "real"? Or are you just a Canadian shill whose country benefits from selling a resource that you have a lot of (oil) vs. a resource that you don't have much of (solar)?
The last time I checked, Steve, Greece is not Mexico. Mexico "dug out" by exporting oil, drugs and illegal emmigrants. The oil brought in royalty income, the drugs brought in drug lords and cash, and the emmigrants brought in remittances.
Greece has no oil or drugs to sell. It could export its citizens, and that is exactly what will happen whether they default or get bailed out. Their children will leave just like the Irish did and and now doing. The "math" that you don't want to discuss will not change. The economy will shrink, not grow, as Greece exports its children. When the stone cannot be squeezed for more blood, the taxpayers in Germany and France will be forced to make good the Greeks bad debts. Your morality play will be irrelevant.
As for your other prescription --- "cut taxes" --- how does that increase Greece's ability to pay its debts? If you've been paying attention at all, the IMF/ECU solution is to RAISE taxes, not lower them. The Irish are being told to RAISE their corporate tax rates, not lower them. The creditors you seem so fond of supporting against those "dead beats" have only one solution --- increase taxes.
Then there's your suggesting of lowering the cost of land, the cost of housing, the cost of energy. Hmmm. How do the Greeks do this? By legislative fiat? I think not. In a free market, there are only two ways to lower the cost of anything: make more of it (increase supply) or lower demand. So the Greeks should make more land (loosen land regulations), more houses and more energy? Care to explain that idea further?
Let me suggest a very simple way to lower the cost of Greek land and housing: default. Return to a sovereign currency, preferably backed by gold and silver.
Finally, what's this about tearing out the "solar energy crap" and "get real"? It appears to me that sun is an important Greek resource. Why the hell shouldn't they invest in solar? Because you think its not "real"? Or are you just a Canadian shill whose country benefits from selling a resource that you have a lot of (oil) vs. a resource that you don't have much of (solar)?
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