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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
I can't see the Germans wanting to leave the Euro just yet - it's a lot weaker than the DM would be and this makes their exports cheaper. Who's to say what's around the corner though - I just hope it isn't chaos. The long this uncertainty goes on however the bigger the crisis when it happens. It's a bit like Brown's 'boom & bust', he didn't break the cycle he just prolonged them.
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
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From the link above this worries me, it shows just what the Euro elite will do to save the Euro Wreck Quote:
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Again in the Cyprus case the money wasn't there. If the bailout hadn't had happened the banks would have collapsed and the uninsured deposits would have been wiped out, everything above €100,000 would have gone. It's being portrayed as the EU, mostly Germany, stealing money but instead it was the EU, mostly Germany, only giving so much for the bailout and thus not fulling backing up the uninsured deposits. Their reasoning for this is that it was suspected that it was mostly Russian tax-dodgers whose deposits were being saved and this was politically untenable.
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Politically untenable in Germany, that is. That is where the real fault-line lies in all this. Sooner or later the logic of a single currency (that it requires single fiscal and monetary policy, and therefore single political control) will become irresistible, at which point there will be a backlash either from the German people, who will wonder why they are expected to underwrite the whole thing, or the German constitutional court, which will rightly point out that the whole exercise violates the country's constitution.
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
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The situation is the same as before. If a bank collapses you may not get all your money back. The problem with Cyprus is that it's being portrayed as a raid on the banks to bailout the Government rather than a bailout of the banks themselves. It's important to remember it was the banks, and therefore their customers' money, that were about to fall. What people are asking for when they complain about the bail-ins and precedents is not that the EU intervened but that they didn't intervene enough. They wanted Germany/EU to increase the bailout money. |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
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The bail-outs in each case are a political smash and grab, each one more difficult to pull off than the last, as the ultimate victims get wiser and harder to fleece with each passing job. It's no way to run a currency, and is why the Euro will fail. The only question here is just how much money they are prepared to pour down the drain attempting to shore up their vanity project in the meantime. On current evidence they may stretch out the end-game another five years. But the end will come, and the longer they delay, the worse it will be. |
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I don't disagree with anything else you've said. It was unfair. It's the nature of the beast the the timing of the collapse. The EU were less bothered about Cyprus because them leaving the Euro wouldn't have been as damaging as some of the other countries. Additionally other Eurozone nations were less exposed to Cypriot debt. Combine that with the impending German elections, bailout fatigue amongst the German people, the amount of Russian money in the country along with their weak position in negotiations and you have what happened. One of the telling incidents during the whole affair was Russia angrily protesting about the EU and then deciding not to help Cyprus either. If the Russian Government does want to be seen to be helping Russian tax-dodgers, as it would be spun, then Germany certainly isn't. My only problem is when people simultaneously have a pop at Germany for getting involved and issuing the bailout whilst condemning them for taking, by which they actually mean not giving, the money from people's bank accounts. What miracle solution was there that would have allowed all deposits to be protected without intervention from the EU? That's less common. What is common is the complaint that a precedent has been set. That next time a country/bank is in trouble people will run to take their money out because it may not be protected. As if prior to this the rumoured, let alone imminent, collapse of a bank would not have been greeted by an army of panicked depositors trying to take all their money out. The EU have never promised to back all deposits. Their only consideration was always going to be about how much it damages the rest of them. If you go into that with a weak hand then you're screwed. |
Another bailout on the way?
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Interesting to learn that a mostly state owned banking system appears to have suffered just like the rest. |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Spain is officially insolvent. Get your money out while you still can.
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
What is it going to take to make the Eurocrats admit their grand experiment is over? Their collective denial is as bizarre as it is dangerous.
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Breaking News
http://news.sky.com/story/1090503/ca...eferendum-bill Cameron To Publish In-Out EU Referendum Bill Quote:
Excellent news He also need to make sure that that whoever gets in power next cannot weasel out of it because if Labour or the Libs get in they will crap on us and cancel it. |
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