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Government Implode: Latvian Edition

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  • Government Implode: Latvian Edition

    You thought the treasury auction was bad in the Banana Republic of America? At least you sold a bond:


    Latvian debt crisis shakes Eastern Europe

    Latvia has become the first EU country to face a sovereign debt crisis after failing to sell a single bill at a treasury auction worth $100m (£61m), prompting fears of a fresh storm in Eastern Europe as capital flight tests currency pegs.

    The central bank has been burning reserves to defend the lat in Europe’s Exchange Rate Mechanism, but markets doubt whether Latvia has the political will to carry through draconian cuts in spending – or whether such a policy even makes sense at this stage.

    Tremors hit bank shares in Stockholm and triggered a sharp fall in Sweden’s krona. Swedbank, SEB and other Swedish banks have $75bn of exposure to the Baltic states, and face cliff-edge losses if the pegs snap.

    “Latvia may be a small country but it has vast repercussions for the region,” said Bartosz Pawlowski, of BNP Paribas. “If the currency breaks in Latvia, it is likely to break in Estonia and Lithuania as well, and perhaps Bulgaria, with effects on other countries like Romania.”

    Fresh turbulence in the ex-Communist bloc would rattle West European banks, which have €1.3 trillion of exposure to the region. “We haven’t yet seen the full extent of the crisis in the East European banking system. Defaults are creeping higher,” he said.

    The G20 deal in April to triple the IMF’s fire-fighting fund to $750bn has reduced the risk of a currency conflagration, but while larger reserves will buy time, it does not change the fact that some countries have taken on too much debt.

    Latvia’s premier Valdis Dombrovskis warned against a devaluation “quick fix” but may have fuelled the flames further by admitting that the lat is overvalued by a third.

    “If we’re talking of devaluation, it definitely won’t be less than 15pc. It’ll most likely be 30pc. Real incomes will shrink very fast. The immediate shock will affect absolutely everyone and everything,” he said.

    Latvia faces a calamitous hangover after blazing the trail of euro, Swiss franc, and yen mortgages. Fitch Ratings says foreign debt maturing in 2009 is equal to 320pc of foreign reserves.

    The finance ministry expects GDP to contract 18pc this year. House prices have fallen 50pc , the world’s most spectacular crash. A third of the country’s teachers are being fired and public salaries will be slashed by up to 35pc to meet bail-out terms imposed by the IMF and the European Commission. The policy risks a deflation spiral that defeats its own purpose.

    “The level of adjustment is too extreme and it is testing the social and political fabric of the country,” said Tim Ash, from the Royal Bank of Scotland. “You have to ask whether they are sacrificing the Latvian economy to protect Swedish banks. It would be better to devalue now and clear the air.”
    Mr Ash said Latvia had crossed the Rubicon this week when the justice minister called for a debate on the peg and key adviser Bengt Dennis, ex-governor of Sweden’s Riksbank, said the only question about devaluation now was “how it will be carried out”.

    Days earlier the Riksbank said it was boosting foreign reserves by $13bn, clearly a precaution in the face of Baltic risk. Swedish officials seem to have accepted that nothing is to be gained from prolonging the Baltic agony. SEB said it faces equal losses either way, slowly under the peg or short and sharp through devaluation.

    Leaks suggest that the IMF favours devaluation, the normal cure for countries that overheat. It was overruled by the European Commission, deeming retreat from the ERM peg to be a threat to Europe’s fixed-exchange orthodoxy.
    Mr Ash said the crisis was playing out much like the final days of the Russia debacle in 1998 and the end of Turkey’s crawling peg in 2001, with momentum building until a critical point of no return.

  • #2
    Hudson & Sommers: "It’s time for Latvia to confront its structural problems"

    Good long discussion of the Latvian situation, applicable to much of eastern Europe in varying degree I would suppose.

    imho they are spot on, unfortunately the chances of any of their proposals being adopted (without an intvervening collapse) are small.

    Aivar Lembergs, the mayor of Ventspils and considered to be one of two possible candidates as next prime minister, is the only politician I have noticed uttering things along this line ("I would never have signed that IMF agreement").

    We shall see, said the blind man . . .


    (July 2009, version in Latvian also.)
    It’s time for Latvia to confront its structural problems

    Michael Hudson and Jeffrey Sommers


    http://www.rigaslaiks.lv/Raksts.aspx...h=7&article=21

    " Latvia has been independent for almost two decades, yet despite some fleeting periods of prosperity, its long-term economic survival has hit the same debt wall that nearly all the other post-Soviet economies are experiencing. Like its Baltic neighbors, Hungary and Ukraine, the drop-off in foreign mortgage lending has left the economy without a means of covering its chronic trade deficit, except through impoverishing its people through driving down living standards. It also faces the problem of carrying its heavy foreign-currency debt. Throughout these economies, as well as Iceland, hopes to join the euro and ultimately the EU are foundering. In almost every case the underlying problem is the failure to put in place production facilities to export enough to cover the cost of imports – a cost that now has been overburdened with steadily rising foreign debt or, (what is in fact the same thing, debt denominated in foreign currencies.
    The immediate problem is, where is future foreign exchange to come from, now that the global real estate bubble has burst? If Latvia borrows more from the IMF and EU, will this credit be used to put in place future export capacity to pay off these loans; or will it merely impose future debt-service outflows, paid for by taxing labor and thereby raising Latvia’s cost of living and doing business, pricing it even further out of world markets?
    It is time to take a look back and see where Latvia and nearly all its neighbors failed to address its long-term problems – and how it can best address them today. With independence came a dismantling of the production patterns that had been inter-linked throughout the entire Soviet Union. Few of the new nations had a viable industry of their own. As a result, they were dependent on imports for most consumer and investment goods.

    . . .

    Latvia needs to break its dependence on foreign banks. These banks have not shown any interest in financing industrial capital formation, agricultural capital formation or other means of production. Foreign credit has been almost entirely extractive and hence predatory – extended against property already in place. Public credit creation initiated by the domestic Treasury could supply much more productive credit.

    . . .

    For Latvia, it is preferable to recapture the “free lunch” of economic rent than to price its labor, industry and agriculture out of foreign markets. A tax on land-rent and natural monopolies also would have the benefit of preventing future speculation in property and to enable lowering income taxes.


    . . .

    A tax shift off labor and industry onto Latvia’s natural endowment – its land, and the public infrastructure and enterprise with which it emerged upon independence – is the only policy able to place Latvia on a trajectory of real economic development. Other tracks can be financed only by borrowing more and more foreign exchange, on terms that will impose steeper and steeper taxes on Latvian labor and its employers. The present foreign exchange crisis shows that hopes for this borrowing to continue are a blind alley.
    "
    Justice is the cornerstone of the world

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    • #3
      Re: Government Implode: Latvian Edition

      "From little things big things grow"
      This is the news I have been dreading as it will have a shockwave effect in Central Europe and if not hosed down quickly, it will spread.
      You can't say we were not informed that this was a possible spot fire.
      Defiantly an inflection point in confidence for all debt ravaged nations. We have so many chasing a diminishing pool of cash for support of proliferate expenditures. It reminds me of musical chairs at Kindy - the big boys got the chairs and the wimps the ground
      A prime example of Ka POOM Theory in the making.
      Thanks for the post.
      Last edited by thunderdownunder; August 19, 2009, 05:45 AM.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Government Implode: Latvian Edition

        Latvia is so small (4 million people) so if it were the only problem in the EU, a big dose of free money (from the EU, IMF & Sweden) would sweep it back under the carpet for good.

        I don't really expect Latvia to be the spark that sets off the next phase of the debt deflation crisis, as there seems to be much more "revolutionary" sentiment on Iceland.
        Justice is the cornerstone of the world

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Government Implode: Latvian Edition

          In 2004, I had a interesting conversation with a Hungarian in the U.S. for a 2 week job training program (company where I worked had set up an offshore site in Hungary and Hungarians came to the U.S. to train for their new jobs). She and most other Hungarians who came over for training were in their late 20's / early 30's.

          She and another Hungarian trainee had driven around Houston, looking at houses over the weekend, and she told me she couldn't believe how inexpensive the houses were here. She told me that in Hungary the houses were more expensive, the salaries were significantly less (which I already knew), and that many young peoeple could not afford to buy a house or apartment, it was something they could only dream of.

          Of course, this was due to a real estate bubble there, though at time I didn't realize that, so I thought the conversation was interesting and a little baffling.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Government Implode: Latvian Edition

            Originally posted by cobben View Post
            Latvia is so small (4 million people) so if it were the only problem in the EU, a big dose of free money (from the EU, IMF & Sweden) would sweep it back under the carpet for good.

            I don't really expect Latvia to be the spark that sets off the next phase of the debt deflation crisis, as there seems to be much more "revolutionary" sentiment on Iceland.
            There is a recent Hudson post on Iceland here on iTulip: Hudson on Iceland's EU dilemma:

            Iceland promises to be merely the first sovereign nation to lead the pendulum swing away from an ostensibly “real economy” ideology of free markets to an awareness that in practice, this rhetoric turns out to be a junk economics favorable to banks and global creditors. Interest-bearing debt is the “product” that banks sell, after all. What seemed at first blush to be “wealth creation” was more accurately debt-creation, in which banks took no responsibility for the ability to pay. The resulting crash led the financial sector to suddenly believe that it did love centralized government control after all – to the extent of demanding public-sector bailouts that would reduce indebted economies to a generation of fiscal debt peonage and the resulting economic shrinkage.

            As far as I am aware, this agreement is the first since the Young Plan for Germany’s reparations debt to subordinate international debt obligations to the capacity-to-pay principle. The Althing’s proposal spells this out in clear legal terms as an alternative to the neoliberal idea that economies must pay willy-nilly (as Keynes would say), sacrificing their future and driving their population to emigrate in what turns out to be a vain attempt to pay debts that, in the end, can’t be paid but merely leave debtor economies hopelessly dependent on their creditors. In the end, democratic nations are not willing to relinquish political planning authority to an emerging financial oligarchy.

            No doubt the post-Soviet countries are watching, along with Latin American, African and other sovereign debtors whose growth has been stunted by the predatory austerity programs that IMF, World Bank and EU neoliberals imposed in recent decades. The post-Bretton Woods era is over. We should all celebrate.
            Last edited by don; August 19, 2009, 08:52 AM.

            Comment


            • #7
              The Governor of Latvian central bank earns more than Bernanke

              This apparently hit the fan first on Wed. on Latvian TV, where Rimsevic, angrily countering accusations that he was not doing his part to help Latvia, maintained that his pay had recently been reduced 25% (i.e., he was previously earning even more.)

              Wages have been reduced 20% to 40% across the board in the public sector.

              (This is from an Estonian business site, only English language version I could find on the quick.)

              __________________________________________________ ________

              The Governor of Latvian central bank earns more than Chairman of FED

              http://www.balticbusinessnews.com/De...ment=1#comment

              Ben Bernanke, the Chairperson of the Federal Reserve System, earned less money than Ilmars Rimsevic, the Governor of the Latvian central bank, Eesti Päevaleht reports.





              Bernanke’s last year wage was USD 191,300, which makes about EEK 167,000 a month.
              Rimsevic earned EEK 235,000 a month, which is EEK 68,000 more than counterpart from the US.
              Andres Lipstok, the Governor of the Estonian central bank earned EEK 111,000 a month
              Justice is the cornerstone of the world

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Hudson & Sommers: "It’s time for Latvia to confront its structural problems"

                The EU wants to keep Latvia et al in debt peonage and as dumping grounds for EU excess production, "neo-feudalism" at its best, says Hudson.

                Hudson is apparently behind the recent Latvian threats to stick it to the Swedish banks by changing all mortgages to non-recourse, his further advice if the Swedes don't agree to that is to unilaterally decide to change all foreign currency (= EUR) loans to Latvian lats and then devalue.

                This has yet to surface in Latvia, though haven't been paying all that much attention recently.

                On the Edge with Max Keiser . . . and Michael Hudson
                http://maxkeiser.com/2009/10/17/ote2...ichael-hudson/
                Justice is the cornerstone of the world

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Hudson & Sommers: "It’s time for Latvia to confront its structural problems"

                  Swedbank produced a significantly worse report than expected today, it's stock is of course up on the bourse (what else), as trends are less worse than expected.

                  In the news today on Dagens Industri, the IMF threatens the Swedish banks that if they withdraw from the Baltics the IMF will not act to stop devaluations. Swedbank has previously noted that their losses in the end should be about the same in Latvia with or without a devaluation, a devaluation will just bring it all forward in time.
                  Justice is the cornerstone of the world

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Government Implode: Latvian Edition

                    http://www.baltictimes.com/news/articles/23794/

                    Oct 30, 2009
                    Oskars Magone

                    “This agreement, which follows months of negotiations, enshrines our common responsibility and mutual commitments for preserving Lithuania’s solvency and restoring its competitiveness,” Lithuanian Prime Minister Andrius Kubilius said.

                    In the document, which is known as the “National Agreement”, the government pledges not to raise taxes – except for a 2 percent increase to social insurance – until the agreement expires in 2011. It also says the government will ensure solidarity with the trade unions in making cuts, and will work to ensure that the most vulnerable social groups would be least affected.

                    Businesses, meanwhile, agreed to increase their social responsibility.

                    The National Agreement covers a wide range of topics, including pensions, maternity benefits, and public sector wages. It also outlines the dissolution of some state institutions.

                    Budget cuts this year amount to approximately 7 percent of the country's GDP.

                    However, the National Agreement was met with opposition from some members of Parliament.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Government Implode: Latvian Edition

                      http://www.forbes.com/feeds/afx/2009...fx7085109.html

                      RIGA, Nov 4 (Reuters) - Latvia's government may have to amend its 2010 budget to get backing from key lenders the IMF and the European Union, but sees the current package as meeting pledges to its donors, the prime minister said on Wednesday.

                      The five-party coalition on Monday submitted the 2010 budget to parliament. The bill, including a deficit cut of 500 million lats ($1.04 billion), is a key part of ensuring continuing loans from a 7.5 billion euro bailout programme.

                      But the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has raised objections to a plan to reduce salary earners' tax-free allowances, suggesting a progressive income tax instead.

                      'Of course certain corrections will come from the agreement with international lenders on the 2010 budget,' Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovskis told public radio when asked if there would be amendments between the first and second reading.

                      He said the government supported the draft which had been submitted to parliament and planned no major changes.

                      But he added: 'except if changes will be necessary to ensure agreement with the international lenders.'

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Government Implode: Latvian Edition

                        This whole Latvia situation is a farce.

                        Dr. Michael Hudson's previous view of the IMF as the 'international bank bail out fund' has been vindicated in Latvia and other parts of Eastern Europe: the IMF's loans to Latvia are multiples of GDP.

                        These can never be repaid.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Government Implode: Latvian Edition

                          "These can never be repaid."

                          Some time ago I proposed that Sweden should incorporate the Baltics as vassal states once again. That would just be to openly ackowledge the true state of affairs, and would fit in with the current world order - financial profits are privatized and the societal costs thereof socialized.

                          Things will come to a head some time this winter I'm guessing, question is if Iceland will be first.
                          Justice is the cornerstone of the world

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                          • #14
                            Re: Government Implode: Latvian Edition

                            Originally posted by cobben
                            Some time ago I proposed that Sweden should incorporate the Baltics as vassal states once again. That would just be to openly ackowledge the true state of affairs, and would fit in with the current world order - financial profits are privatized and the societal costs thereof socialized.
                            That's a nice idea, but I think a reprise of the Swedish-Russian wars over influence in the Baltics isn't going to get settled by FIRE tactics. ;)

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Government Implode: Latvian Edition

                              "a reprise of the Swedish-Russian wars over influence in the Baltics isn't going to get settled by FIRE tactics"

                              The Swedish banks have a near monopoly over the FIRE sector in the Baltics, the Russians still have a rather larger influence (both as owners, suppliers and customers) over the real economy. This does not look like war, rather like a defacto partition, and I'm thinking the Russians will come out ahead.
                              Justice is the cornerstone of the world

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