I gave an interview for SBS (Special Broadcasting Service), which is a
national multicultural radio/television network in Australia. They
wanted to know whether I thought the crisis in Europe had now stabilised
given the Greeks avoided “chaos” by voting for New Democracy and more
austerity. They also noted that the financial markets were turning on
Spain and Italy. I responded by suggesting their question answered
itself and that it would be better not to be seduced by the Euro elite
spin that Greece is now firmly in the Eurozone and markets will
stabilise with austerity. The reality is that the election outcome in
Greece just ensures the Greek people will have to endure more
debilitating austerity and their growth prospects are virtually zero. In
that sense, they were let down by Syriza who promised the impossible –
no austerity but retention of the Euro. Given the design of the EMU and
the conduct of the ECB, as the currency-issuer, within that monetary
union, austerity will be anti-growth and the problem will spread. But
then the EC President Barroso is sick of outsiders lecturing the
Europeans on how to run their economies. He said today – “this crisis
was not originated in Europe”. It all depends on which crisis one is
referring to. The Europeans have concocted their own crisis which made
the initial “flu” originating in the US turn into something much more
deadly. They are totally culpable in this and appear to require external
education given the ham-fisted attempts they have made to solve the
issue. I told SBS that the solutions proposed and implemented by the
Euro elites to the non-problem merely exacerbate the actual problem
which is the Euro itself.
The following graphs tell you why the Greek election outcome fails to address the real problem.
They depict the long-term using ECB data – the first graph includes Greece while the second excludes it just so you get to see the spread between the remaining nations more easily and don’t get seduced by vertical scale.
Read more: http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/?p=19893
The following graphs tell you why the Greek election outcome fails to address the real problem.
They depict the long-term using ECB data – the first graph includes Greece while the second excludes it just so you get to see the spread between the remaining nations more easily and don’t get seduced by vertical scale.
Read more: http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/?p=19893
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