In 2012 we heard about sovereign debt in Europe. Everybody
had it. Each country had its own
problems and they were all based on too much welfare and not enough production
of goods and services to support their high-tax economies. Germany was the exception; they protected key
industries, tried to keep their welfare down to a roar and kept working, but
they were stuck with the Euro. Too many European countries based their
economies on tourism and welfare and had nothing to fall back on when tourism
wanes and they overspend in welfare. Excessive
Muslim immigration was taking its toll on the welfare states. Greece was the
poster child for insolvency. Banks in Cyprus stole money from customers. Italy
didn’t industrialize much. Spain and
Portugal didn’t either. France just continues to complain. Ireland got a little better. Poland actually attracted more activity. Former Soviet Union countries continued to
struggle. The ravages of UN Agenda 21
hit Europe and the high cost of “green energy” made it less attractive. Last year Australia rebelled against the
carbon tax and ended it.
This past year, the UK re-embraced the Pound Sterling to
distance themselves from their ailing Euro-partners. Also, the Federal Reserve in the US is
reducing money printing and the Eurozone thinks it needs another slush fund.
The EU is suggesting that their member countries should dissolve their
governments and unite under the EU. I doubt that will happen.
The real solution for all of these countries is the same as
ours. They need to increase production and work their way out of their
insolvency. They need to decide what free enterprise industries they can handle
and reduce regulations to encourage them to form. They also need to reduce
immigration and other regulations, lower their welfare costs and reduce their
government spending. The need to get cut
all spending related to environmental overreach. Their governments need to stop over-managing
the population and introduce personal responsibility to replace their
nanny-state mentality. They should cut
foreign aid and quit the UN.
It wasn’t a bad idea to have a “European Currency”, but it
does require that each of these governments remain solvent.
The following article by Money & Markets outlines the
pitch being made by Past President of the European Central Bank, of the
UN-loving Marxist “New World Order” EU:
The Last Days of the
Euro Zone?
Money and Markets, by Jon Markman, 12/9/14
Do you want to worry about something real, now that everyone
is in such a good mood? I suggest worrying about the breakup of the euro zone again.
Yeah, yeah, I know — that was the big fear two years ago during
the first round of the sovereign debt crisis. Then European Central Bank President Mario Draghi gave his famous
"bumblebee" speech, and said he would "do whatever it takes" to save the euro, and flash forward,
here we are, knocking on 2015, and
Europe is still standing.
But here's the thing: Draghi is having a really hard
time persuading his colleagues to launch
full-blown quantitative easing, and the
longer it takes, the more his authority erodes. He talked about a 1
trillion euro attack on deflation about six months ago, and nothing has
happened; actually conditions are worse.
Does the euro zone have a future?
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, the London Telegraph economics columnist, observed late last week that the
ECB is thus facing a "full-blown
leadership crisis," which has the potential to rock financial
markets if not halted or contained.
Media reports say that half the ECB's six-person
executive board — representatives of
Germany, France and Luxembourg — refused to sign off on Draghi's post-meeting statement last week,
a rare mutiny.
The problem is that the dissenters refuse to allow
full-blown QE until they are ready, and they never plan to be ready. This is because
they consider sovereign bond buying to be essentially a "fiscal transfer"
that would amount to the ECB stepping into a governmental, rather than a
monetary, role.
The Germans are afraid that Draghi is setting the ECB up
to be the buyer of last resort of a slew
of sovereign debt floated by Italy, Spain
and Portugal. They believe the German people did not sign up for that
when creating the euro, and that it violates their sovereign rights.
Draghi on the other hand is basically saying that the
only way to save the euro, and the euro
zone, is to acknowledge that a successful
monetary union depends on a fiscal union — so yes, a European
super-state is necessary going forward. Goodbye individual countries, hello
Super-Europe.
The euro zone has muddled through so far without really confronting
the hard issues. If and when they are forced to do so, either by persistent
deflation or recession or both, the global financial system will gasp — at
least for a while.
Euro-zone divisiveness over a monetary and fiscal union
could well turn out to be the financial story of 2015. We care about it because
we are depending on the Japanese, Chinese and the euro zone to pick up the QE
baton from the U.S. next year now that the Federal Reserve has completed its part
of the global reflation relay race.
If the euro zone never does launch QE because the Germans
and French continue to object, there will need to be a downward adjustment, or dislocation,
of market expectations. That adaption process would not be pretty for risky
assets, and it could come in the form of a sharp break rather than a slow bend
and twist.
While Draghi noted downside risks to inflation expectations in
his statement, some observers said that he did not signal the same sense
of urgency to address inflation as he
did last month.
Investors are trying to read something into everything that ECB
officials say because the region is in such terrible shape that there is a gnawing
fear that officials are not aware enough of the gravity of the situation. There
is a desire to make sure that the homeowner knows his house is burning, and
plans to call the fire department, rather than just pose for cameras amid the
glow of the flames.
Granted, Draghi is in a tough position, having to mesh so many
countries' interests, and getting so little cooperation from fiscal
authorities. But at some point, investors are saying, it is time to stop
talking and actually do something to help boost economic activity in the euro
zone.
BNP Paribas has said that euro-zone inflation is likely to average
zero percent in 2015, after turning negative this month. Ashoka Mody, a former
European Union and International Monetary Fund exec, told reporters that the
ECB's measures are "woefully behind the curve." According to the
London Telegraph, he added: "For anyone who wants to see it, a
debt-deflation cycle is ongoing in the distressed economies. The authorities
have very nearly lost control of a process that will become ever harder to
manage as it becomes more entrenched."
Mody noted that the ECB repeatedly asserts that it will act
"if needed" but declines to
spell out what that means and why it continues to delay when the inflation level, now 0.3 percent, is already
well below target. "Cheap talk is a legitimate policy tool. But talk can
also create a cognitive bubble," he said, according to the Telegraph.
No one is arguing that quantitative easing in the form of
sovereign debt buying will be a panacea, but it can at least help to keep down
the cost of capital while governments, businesses and individuals stabilize their
finances and start to invest and take risks again. [Jon Markman]
"Source:
moneyandmarkets.com", by Jon Markman
Money and
Markets: A Division of Weiss Research, Inc. | 4400 Northcorp Parkway | Palm
Beach Gardens, FL 33410 | 1-800-291-8545
Comments
Europe is
grateful it isn’t carrying the soon to be $20 trillion debt we have in the U.S.,
but the ‘global banksters’ are lobbying for a United Europe scenario. The wars in the Middle East are being
engineered to knock down sovereign countries and merge them into an Arab Caliphate.
UN Agenda 21 implementation in the US is continuing to support ‘regional
governance’ and total economic collapse in the U.S. to declare that the “North
American Union” has replaced the U.S. Mexico and Canada. If we let these global
Marxists win, we will regret it.
Norb Leahy,
Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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