Re: 2015 - Greece drops Euro?
What modern country really expects to pay off their debt? That's not how it works. No country will ever pay their debt down to zero. It's all about managing the debt. But more importantly, when it comes to Greece, what is the annual debt service? Everyone is complaining that Greece can never pay off its debt, and the debt is strangling its economy. But what percent of gdp goes to service Greek debt? Greece actually pays less than Italy and Spain, and not much more than France, as a percentage of gdp.
Here's a good article.
The biggest issue Greece has, IMO, is the mandatory 4.5% budget surplus. That's a lot. If Tsipras were smart, he would have only haggled over that, or at least have that as his ultimate goal. Everything else, was a non-starter and much of it Marxist/noncompetitive, basically, what got Greece into this mess beginning with Andreas Papandreou in 1981.
I have said it a million times. The real problem with Greece is competitiveness. The prior bailouts were all about lengthening maturities, lowering interest payments, and returning interest paid to the ECB to Greece. The Structural Reforms? Not going so well. Greece still has along way to go.
Greece hit the ceiling with the public sector years ago. Greece actually had an extremely bloated public sector. The private sector and foreign sector of the economy were always ignored. Greece is not foreign investment friendly nor is it business friendly. The Keynesian method has been tried relentlessly, with catastrophic results because until Greece becomes competitive and investment friendly, it will always be a patronage filled money pit. Seems to me that only the Germans understand this.
Plan A was working until Tsipras came into the picture. The Tsipras threat started around late November and grew through out December, and coincidentally, that's when Greece's economy and bond yields started changing direction.
The EU will be fine. If anything, the Germans understand the coming global currency crisis better than most countries, as Germany is not as reliant on the financial sector (or should I say "captured" by it) as the UK and US is. They are preparing Europe, and the Euro accordingly. It is a long term thing that most don't get. Unfortunately, it makes Germany look like the "bad guy" for now.
Originally posted by thriftyandboringinohio
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What modern country really expects to pay off their debt? That's not how it works. No country will ever pay their debt down to zero. It's all about managing the debt. But more importantly, when it comes to Greece, what is the annual debt service? Everyone is complaining that Greece can never pay off its debt, and the debt is strangling its economy. But what percent of gdp goes to service Greek debt? Greece actually pays less than Italy and Spain, and not much more than France, as a percentage of gdp.
Here's a good article.
The biggest issue Greece has, IMO, is the mandatory 4.5% budget surplus. That's a lot. If Tsipras were smart, he would have only haggled over that, or at least have that as his ultimate goal. Everything else, was a non-starter and much of it Marxist/noncompetitive, basically, what got Greece into this mess beginning with Andreas Papandreou in 1981.
I have said it a million times. The real problem with Greece is competitiveness. The prior bailouts were all about lengthening maturities, lowering interest payments, and returning interest paid to the ECB to Greece. The Structural Reforms? Not going so well. Greece still has along way to go.
Greece hit the ceiling with the public sector years ago. Greece actually had an extremely bloated public sector. The private sector and foreign sector of the economy were always ignored. Greece is not foreign investment friendly nor is it business friendly. The Keynesian method has been tried relentlessly, with catastrophic results because until Greece becomes competitive and investment friendly, it will always be a patronage filled money pit. Seems to me that only the Germans understand this.
Plan A was working until Tsipras came into the picture. The Tsipras threat started around late November and grew through out December, and coincidentally, that's when Greece's economy and bond yields started changing direction.
The EU will be fine. If anything, the Germans understand the coming global currency crisis better than most countries, as Germany is not as reliant on the financial sector (or should I say "captured" by it) as the UK and US is. They are preparing Europe, and the Euro accordingly. It is a long term thing that most don't get. Unfortunately, it makes Germany look like the "bad guy" for now.
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