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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
It'd be nice if he was right but I can't help thinking it's the triumph of desperation over reasoning.
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Greece has closed ERT, its state broadcaster, giving staff just hours notice that they were losing their jobs. National and regional TV and radio stations have now all gone off air.
But it's ok, it's the price of keeping Greece in the Euro, and we all know the Euro's integrity must be preserved at all costs. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-22861577 |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Not to worry, it's just collateral damage...
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Wouldn't they have had to close it anyway? It's not as if they were floating in money before...
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
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The austerity measures in Greece (real austerity, by the way, not the softly-softly austerity lite we have in the UK), have been mandated by the Troika as a condition of bail-out funds. And at least one member of that Troika, the IMF, has been found to have ignored its own basic operating principles, its very reason to exist, in fact, because it has been acting to save a supra-national currency rather than to rescue a national economy. Greece's fundamental problem is that its exchange rate is too high. The Euro is simply too expensive for it to use as a national currency. The solution is for it to default on all its Euro-denominated debt, issue Drachmas and begin paying all public sector employees in that currency. The result would be a severe short-term economic shock for Greece, but let's face it, when you get to the point where you have to close down your state broadcaster at less than 24 hour's notice just to keep the rest of the country ticking over, how much worse can things actually get? With the Drachma floating freely Greece could start to rebuild. The Drachma would be worth next to nothing initially, but Greece has very strong tourism potential and still has something of a shipping industry, so therefore a ready means of earning foreign currency. This is inevitable, if not now, then within the next five years. The only question is whether they accept the inevitability and do it in a managed way, or wait until circumstances force them into an unplanned, chaotic fall out of the Euro system. |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
I wonder if the Greeks will be expected to keep paying the monthly subscription whilst the service is down?:erm:
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Greece's fundamental problem was surely utterly incompetent economics which were only made worse by an inability to control their exchange rate but were not caused by it? They had a large state, pensions and they weren't too fussed about collecting tax. ---------- Post added at 11:27 ---------- Previous post was at 11:26 ---------- Quote:
---------- Post added at 11:44 ---------- Previous post was at 11:27 ---------- Looks like they're defying the ban: http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2013...roadcaster-ert |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
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The "club med" countries have had ramshackle economies pretty much forever. The clue was in the number of zeroes on their low-value indigenous banknotes, because these were evidence of repeated devaluation and money-printing, which is what you do in lieu of actual competitiveness as your international rivals outstrip you. You can't get your unit labour costs down through efficiency, so you get it down by making your country a cheaper place in which to do business. These economies should never have been allowed into the Euro because they never ditched the loose attitude that required periodic devaluation. Now they are in, they have lost unit labour competitiveness against the industrious north (principally Germany) but they cannot devalue to make themselves competitive again because they share the same currency as the industrious north. While times were good, of course, they had a means of escape via cheap credit, far cheaper than they were ever allowed access to pre-Euro. That credit simply gave them another reason not to sharpen up their tax and spend policies. The upshot is, if Greece had nevere entered the Euro, ERT would not be getting shut down today. The country would not be crippled with debt, the currency would not be over-valued because the Greek government would have taken steps to correct it long before now and the short-term damage to the economy that causes, through expensive imports, would even now be being ameliorated by large flows of tourist cash in Sterling and Euro as foreign tourists were attracted to a relatively cheap holiday in the sun (when you have to pay in Euros, Greece really isn't the good value holiday it was 20 years ago). If ERT was a problematic Drachma money-pit then that would be addressed by planned reforms and efficiencies, not by the sudden, all-but-unannounced closure of a part of the state infrastructure. That you have come to see this "solution" to ERT's problems as in any way unremarkable, or reasonable, simply goes to show how bad things have become and for how long. Let me repeat: a country with any degree of control over its own finances does not entirely shut down an entire section of its own state apparatus with less than 24 hours notice. |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
I just can't believe that they keep throwing bad money after bad at Greece.
It's inevitable that Greece will drop out of the Euro, it's unsustainable. They should have bit the bullet when the crisis started and dropped out then, they would be recovering by now and the great Euro experiment would have been proved to have failed and may have collapsed by now, or certainly restructured to just Northern Europe states. |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Seems like Merkel has been studying the works of Norman Tebbit:
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11% up in spite of all the austerity eh?... |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
The UK's economic policy is tailored to the needs of the UK economy. But if we had only we'd listened to Ken Clarke and Peter Mandelson, and gone into the Euro, things could have been even better right now. Remember, staying out of the Euro means chaos and hardship.
What insightful prophets they turned out to be. I suggest we listen to everything they say about how awful things would be if we left the EU. |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
The pro-Euro lobby's gone a tad quiet it has to be said. :D
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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-23005499 Quote:
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