Monday, June 29, 2015

Greece Has Gone Over The Brink


Paul Krugman, New York Times: Greece Over the Brink

It has been obvious for some time that the creation of the euro was a terrible mistake. Europe never had the preconditions for a successful single currency — above all, the kind of fiscal and banking union that, for example, ensures that when a housing bubble in Florida bursts, Washington automatically protects seniors against any threat to their medical care or their bank deposits.

Leaving a currency union is, however, a much harder and more frightening decision than never entering in the first place, and until now even the Continent’s most troubled economies have repeatedly stepped back from the brink. Again and again, governments have submitted to creditors’ demands for harsh austerity, while the European Central Bank has managed to contain market panic.

WNU Editor: Aside the fact that his analysis on how Canada got out of its financial hole in the 1990s is wrong (I live in Canada so I know that it was not the low Canadian dollar that helped us but the federal government raising taxes and slashing its spending that changed the dynamics that resulted in budget surpluses) .... but Nobel Economic Prize laureate Paul Krugman is right on this point .... Greece has now gone over the brink. For someone who has valued the importance of government's need to accept debt .... this has probably been a philosophical problem for him .... and his proposed proposed solution for Greece reflects that. Unfortunately .... I do not see how his proposals .... if accepted ..... are going to solve their underlying economic/fiscal/debt problems. Leaving the Euro is a temporary measure .... but the problem has been, is, and will be the Greek government's inability and unwillingness to balance its books, further helped by Greek voters always voting in politicians with this mindset. The Greek political culture on how they view government money and debt and the role that they play in the economy has to change .... absent that they will just be like Argentina .... repeating the mistakes every generation and being the poorer because of it.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

You are wrong, sir. It is not Greece that's bankrupt, but the entire trans-Atlantic financial system of speculation and looting. For five years, the people of Greece were being forced to pay for the bankrupt system through vicious austerity that forced unemployment sky high, lowered living standards and increased the death rate by the denial of basic, but vital social services. By voting Syriza into power, Greek voters were saying "Enough! No more bailouts for the European banks paid for by the blood of Greeks!" Had Greece given in to the demands, the EU-ECB-IMF troika would be looking for another victim by now, perhaps Spain or some other collapsed economy.
https://larouchepac.com/20150628/we-are-all-greeks-europe-only-has-future-new-silk-road