Re: Pilger on Greece
Thanks astonas. When you say this:
You remind me of a few ideas that have been bothering me for a while.
Most to your point here, the total of all secured credit can only total the amount of collateral available, or we are lying about the debt being secured.
It seems like CDS are one way we are lying. We have lent and printed more money than the value of all the collateral in the world, including the expected production out 50 years in the future.
Dangerous indeed when, as you write, all those counter-parties default in a chain reaction.
Maybe we've confused SEcured with INsured.
Here's another idea about the ongoing PIIGS crisis, this one is less to your point.
The trade balances within Europe have Germany and the Netherlands running big trade surpluses, and the PIIGS running big trade deficits.
That's an accounting concept, so considering just trade within Europe the total of all trade surpluses must, by definition, equal the total of all trade deficits.
Now stay with me here. If the responsible Germanic nations in the north force the irresponsible Latin nations in the south to live within their means, then don't the Germans and Dutch ruin there own economies?
They can't sell all that machinery and stuff inside their own countries.
They can end their vendor-financing program for the nations in the south, but they should expect the result to be high unemployment at home in the north.
Here's another idea that seems related.
All these money printing activities by central backs to fund QE programs and bailouts appear to be contained by some ZIRP magic, so somehow there is no inflation.
But with ZIRP an individual person's life savings earn almost no returns over the years.
So today's pensioners and tomorrow's will find they can't live as they planned, and millions around the world will eventually consider buying cat food for dinner.
That situation is indistinguishable from high inflation to the old pensioner.
You can argue that the price of bread and eggs has not gone up in nominal terms, but if granny can't afford to buy them it feels just the same as high inflation to her.
High inflation by another name, courtesy of central bank QE/ZIRP.
I can't yet connect these ideas into a consistent and logical point, but they sure seem related to each other and to what we are seeing unfold in Greece.
Thanks astonas. When you say this:
...it became possible to place far more bets on an underlying debt than the debt itself was worth, on any debt, anywhere in the world...
You remind me of a few ideas that have been bothering me for a while.
Most to your point here, the total of all secured credit can only total the amount of collateral available, or we are lying about the debt being secured.
It seems like CDS are one way we are lying. We have lent and printed more money than the value of all the collateral in the world, including the expected production out 50 years in the future.
Dangerous indeed when, as you write, all those counter-parties default in a chain reaction.
Maybe we've confused SEcured with INsured.
Here's another idea about the ongoing PIIGS crisis, this one is less to your point.
The trade balances within Europe have Germany and the Netherlands running big trade surpluses, and the PIIGS running big trade deficits.
That's an accounting concept, so considering just trade within Europe the total of all trade surpluses must, by definition, equal the total of all trade deficits.
Now stay with me here. If the responsible Germanic nations in the north force the irresponsible Latin nations in the south to live within their means, then don't the Germans and Dutch ruin there own economies?
They can't sell all that machinery and stuff inside their own countries.
They can end their vendor-financing program for the nations in the south, but they should expect the result to be high unemployment at home in the north.
Here's another idea that seems related.
All these money printing activities by central backs to fund QE programs and bailouts appear to be contained by some ZIRP magic, so somehow there is no inflation.
But with ZIRP an individual person's life savings earn almost no returns over the years.
So today's pensioners and tomorrow's will find they can't live as they planned, and millions around the world will eventually consider buying cat food for dinner.
That situation is indistinguishable from high inflation to the old pensioner.
You can argue that the price of bread and eggs has not gone up in nominal terms, but if granny can't afford to buy them it feels just the same as high inflation to her.
High inflation by another name, courtesy of central bank QE/ZIRP.
I can't yet connect these ideas into a consistent and logical point, but they sure seem related to each other and to what we are seeing unfold in Greece.
Comment