Pagina 1 di 3 12 ... UltimaUltima
Risultati da 1 a 10 di 26
  1. #1
    La Vengeance
    Data Registrazione
    18 Dec 2009
    Messaggi
    19,003
     Likes dati
    10,350
     Like avuti
    8,907
    Mentioned
    8 Post(s)
    Tagged
    1 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Il fmi: L'euro e' una pessima idea

    Dal sito del FMI, il famigerato Fondo Monetario Internazionale, uno dei membri dell'ancor più famigerata trojka che ha devastato l'eurozona mediterranea. ecco cosa scrivono, papale papale: "the euro area economy is in a terrible mess" (finalmente se ne sono accorti!) e (udite udite) "the euro is a bad idea". il perché lo spiegano dopo: "The currency area is too large and diverse—and given the need for periodic real exchange rate adjustments, the anti-inflation mandate of the European Central Bank (ECB) is too restrictive."


    Quest'ultima frase specialmente andrebbe incisa sulla pietra. traduzione, l'economia dell'eurozona è al disastro e l'euro è una pessima idea in quanto l'area è troppo vasta e troppo diversa, e given the need for periodic real exchange rate adjustments… La BCE sta portando avanti una strategia anti inflazionistica totalmente sbagliata.
    Indovinate cosa vuol dire la frase sottolineata? Che è necessario poter svalutare la moneta secondo le esigenze, cosa impossibile ora vista l'opposizione tedesca.
    Svalutare e rendere flessibile il cambio, capito? Ciò che i soloni fautori dell'austerità ad ogni costo contro i maiali mediterranei -FMI in prima linea- hanno sempre negato, inclusi i soloncini da due soldi di cui questo forum è pieno. Quelli che appena ti azzardi a fiatare contro il loro vangelo ti aggrediscono immediatamente, mettendosi un gradino più su dei nobel...



    E mo?

    (chissà che faccia faranno gli adoratori dell'euro adesso...mi sa che si complicheranno leggermente la vita.)


    Whither the Euro?


    FINANCE & DEVELOPMENT, March 2014, Vol. 51, No. 1
    Kevin Hjortshøj O’Rourke
    Historians may wonder how it came to be introduced in the first place
    The euro area economy is in a terrible mess.
    In December 2013 euro area GDP was still 3 percent lower than in the first quarter of 2008, in stark contrast with the United States, where GDP was 6 percent higher. GDP was 8 percent below its precrisis level in Ireland, 9 percent below in Italy, and 12 percent below in Greece. Euro area unemployment exceeds 12 percent—and is about 16 percent in Portugal, 17 percent in Cyprus, and 27 percent in Spain and Greece.
    Europeans are so used to these numbers that they no longer find them shocking, which is profoundly disturbing. These are not minor details, blemishing an otherwise impeccable record, but evidence of a dismal policy failure.
    The euro is a bad idea, which was pointed out two decades ago when the currency was being devised. The currency area is too large and diverse—and given the need for periodic real exchange rate adjustments, the anti-inflation mandate of the European Central Bank (ECB) is too restrictive. Labor mobility between member countries is too limited to make migration from bust to boom regions a viable adjustment option. And there are virtually no fiscal mechanisms to transfer resources across regions in the event of shocks that hit parts of the currency area harder than others.
    Problems foretold

    All these difficulties were properly pinpointed by traditional optimal currency area theory. By 1998 Ireland was experiencing an unprecedented boom, and house prices were rising rapidly. Higher interest rates were warranted, but when Ireland joined the currency union in January 1999 the central bank discount rate was lowered from 6.75 percent in the middle of 1998 to just 3.5 percent a year later. With the Irish party well under way the new ECB was busily adding liquor to the punch bowl.
    Similar stories were repeated around the euro area periphery, where capital inflows pushed up wages and prices. But what goes up does not come down so easily when there is no independent currency. Labor mobility within the euro area remains limited: young Irish workers emigrate to Australia or Canada, the Portuguese to Angola or Brazil. And with no federal budget to smooth asymmetric shocks, procyclical austerity, which exacerbates rather than ameliorates recessions, has been the policy weapon of choice during this crisis—whether imposed by the markets or by euro area politicians and central bankers. Mass unemployment in the periphery is exactly what theory would predict in such circumstances.
    Indeed, since 2008 we have learned that traditional optimal currency area theory was too sanguine about European monetary union. In common with much mainstream macroeconomics, it ignored the role of financial intermediaries such as banks, which link savers and borrowers. Many of the euro area’s most intractable problems stem from the flow of capital from the core to the periphery via interbank lending. When that capital stopped flowing, or was withdrawn, the resultant bank crises strained the finances of periphery governments. That further worsened bank balance sheets and credit creation, leading in turn to worsening economic conditions and rising government deficits—a sovereign bank doom loop that kept replaying.
    Political ramifications

    Bank crises have had poisonous political ramifications, given their cross-border impact. Panic-driven decision making has been ad hoc and inconsistent—contrast the treatment of bank creditors in Ireland in 2010, who were largely made whole, with those in Cyprus in 2013, where they took a big hit. This will have long-term political consequences. Despite the understandable desire of European bureaucrats to regard such matters as water under the bridge, hypocrisy and bullying remain unpopular with ordinary voters. Small, vulnerable countries have had a painful lesson in European realpolitik that they will not soon forget.
    Where do we go from here? Since 2010 the focus of most economists has been on how to make the currency union work better. Even those who were skeptical about the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) worried sufficiently about the consequences of a breakup to shy away from advocating a country’s exit. The result has been a series of suggestions regarding how to prevent a collapse of the euro in the short to medium run, and how to improve its functioning in the longer run.
    In the short run, what is needed is looser monetary policy and, where possible, accommodative fiscal policy as well. If economic historians learned anything from the Great Depression, it is that adjustment based on austerity and internal devaluation (as deflation in individual euro area members is termed nowadays) is dangerous. First, nominal wages are sticky downward, which implies that deflation, if achieved at all, leads to higher real wages and more unemployment. Second, deflation increases the real value of private and public debt, raises real interest rates, and leads consumers and businesses to postpone expensive purchases in anticipation of lower prices to come. Britain ran large primary surpluses throughout the 1920s, but its debt-to-GDP ratio rose substantially thanks to the deflationary, low-growth environment of the time.
    Third, fiscal multipliers are large when interest rates are near zero, so spending reductions result in hefty declines in national income. The IMF has found that in the current crisis fiscal multipliers are closer to 2 than they are to 1—as was true between the world wars. The inescapable conclusion is that the ECB must act aggressively, not just to prevent deflation, but to set an inflation target above 2 percent for a transitional period to facilitate real exchange rate adjustment and promote the solvency of its member states. More investment spending by countries with sufficient fiscal capacity, or by the European Investment Bank, would help as well.
    For the longer run, there is widespread consensus—outside of Germany—that the euro area needs a banking union that promotes financial stability and that replaces ad hoc crisis decision making with a more rule-based and politically legitimate process (see “Tectonic Shifts” in this issue of F&D). This process should include common supervision for the euro area, a single resolution framework for failing banks with a euro area–wide fiscal backstop, and a common deposit insurance framework. The Euro-nomics group, made up of noted European economists, has proposed a “safe” euro area asset that national banks could hold. This would help break the sovereign bank doom loop described earlier and make it easier for national governments to restructure their debt when necessary (by reducing collateral damage to their country’s banking system). The example of the United States suggests that an element of fiscal union, beyond what is required for a meaningful banking union, would be an important stabilizing mechanism. A euro area–wide unemployment insurance system would be one small step in this direction.
    Less Europe

    These are all arguments for “more Europe” rather than less. I and many others have made such arguments over the past five years. But as time goes on, it becomes more difficult to do so with conviction.
    First, crisis management since 2010 has been shockingly poor, which raises the question of whether it is sensible for any country, especially a small one, to place itself at the mercy of decision makers in Brussels, Frankfurt, or Berlin. It is not just a question of hard-money ideology on the part of key players, although that is destructive enough. It is a question of outright incompetence. The botched “rescue” of Cyprus was for many observers a watershed moment in this regard, though the ECB interest rate hikes of 2011 also deserve a dishonorable mention.
    There are serious legal, political, and ethical questions that must be asked about how the ECB has behaved during this crisis—for example, the 2010 threat that if Dublin did not repay private creditors of private banks, the ECB would effectively blow up the Irish banking system (or, if you prefer, force Ireland out of the euro area). A frequent argument is that the ECB cannot loosen monetary policy because it would take the pressure off governments to continue structural reforms that Frankfurt believes to be desirable. Aside from the fact that there is less evidence of the desirability of these reforms than economists sometimes admit, deliberately keeping people involuntarily unemployed to advance a particular policy agenda is wrong. And it is not legitimate for an unelected central banker in Frankfurt to try to influence inherently political debates in countries like Italy or Spain, because the central banker is both unelected and in Frankfurt.
    Second, it is becoming increasingly clear that a meaningful banking union, let alone a fiscal union or a safe euro area asset, is not coming anytime soon. For years economists have argued that Europe must make up its mind: move in a more federal direction, as seems required by the logic of a single currency, or move backward? It is now 2014: at what stage do we conclude that Europe has indeed made up its mind, and that a deeper union is off the table? The longer this crisis continues, the greater the anti-European political backlash will be, and understandably so: waiting will not help the federalists. We should give the new German government a few months to surprise us all, and when it doesn’t, draw the logical conclusion. With forward movement excluded, retreat from the EMU may become both inevitable and desirable.
    Europe has lived through a golden age, largely as a result of European integration. This helped foster growth in the 1950s and 1960s and has given Europeans freedom to study, work, and retire abroad that is taken for granted. The EMU in its present form threatens the entire project. During the interwar period, voters flocked to political parties that promised to tame the market and make it serve the interests of ordinary people rather than the other way around. Where Democratic parties, such as Sweden’s Social Democrats, offered these policies, they reaped the electoral reward. Where Democrats allowed themselves to be constrained by golden fetters and an ideology of austerity, as in Germany, voters eventually abandoned them.
    Divergent paths

    Europe is now defined by the constraints it imposes on governments, not by the possibilities it affords them to improve the lives of their people. This is politically unsustainable. There are two solutions: jump forward to a federal political Europe, on whose stage left and right can compete on equal terms, or return to a European Union without a single currency and let individual countries decide for themselves. The latter option will require capital controls, default in several countries, measures to deal with the ensuing financial crisis, and agreement about how to deal with legacy debt and legacy contracts.
    The demise of the euro would be a major crisis, no doubt about it. We shouldn’t wish for it. But if a crisis is inevitable then it is best to get on with it, while centrists and Europhiles are still in charge. Whichever way we jump, we have to do so democratically, and there is no sense in waiting forever. If the euro is eventually abandoned, my prediction is that historians 50 years from now will wonder how it ever came to be introduced in the first place.


    Whither the Euro? - Finance & Development, March 2014

    Ultima modifica di Edmond Dantès; 05-03-14 alle 19:32
    "Due cose hanno soddisfatto la mia mente con nuova e crescente ammirazione e soggezione e hanno occupato persistentemente il mio pensiero: il cielo stellato sopra di me e la legge morale dentro di me" (Immanuel Kant)

  2. #2
    Forumista per hobby
    Data Registrazione
    04 Dec 2012
    Messaggi
    21,828
     Likes dati
    333
     Like avuti
    11,917
    Mentioned
    112 Post(s)
    Tagged
    2 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Il fmi: L'euro e' una pessima idea

    una bolla è destinata a scoppiare, sempre e comunque
    sinistri, siete dei luridi da vomito, fatevene una ragione

  3. #3
    Forumista senior
    Data Registrazione
    18 Mar 2013
    Messaggi
    3,334
     Likes dati
    839
     Like avuti
    1,011
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Il fmi: L'euro e' una pessima idea

    l'euro è una pessima idea secondo un economista inglese che insegna ad Oxford.
    Non mi sembra una grande notizia,onestamente.
    Se gli inglesi avessero ritenuto che l'euro fosse una buona idea oggi non esisterebbe più la sterlina.
    Loro la pensano così.
    Io per lavoro sono stato di recente in un paio di università del nord dell'inghilterra ed ho visto molta più miseria che in Italia.
    Evidentemente il Professore di Oxford non si sposta spesso da Londra ... altrimenti saprebbe che Londra è una cosa (un paradiso) e tutto il resto dell'Inghilterra un altro (un inferno).
    Detto questo se gli inglesi vogliono andare a finire sempre più nella merda per far arricchire i londinesi facciano pure ... cazzi loro

  4. #4
    email non funzionante
    Data Registrazione
    25 Jan 2013
    Località
    Tra le montagne e il mare
    Messaggi
    952
     Likes dati
    251
     Like avuti
    424
    Mentioned
    1 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Il fmi: L'euro e' una pessima idea

    Vista la fonte, così, a pelle, mi viene voglia di rivalutare l'euro...

  5. #5
    Moderatore
    Data Registrazione
    09 Apr 2013
    Località
    Toscana - EU
    Messaggi
    7,424
     Likes dati
    2,179
     Like avuti
    1,744
    Mentioned
    103 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Il fmi: L'euro e' una pessima idea

    In realtà il professore all'interno dell'articolo fa delle considerazioni molto valide: la deflazione interna prospettata e ricercata dai fautori dell'austerity è non solo molto difficile da perseguire ma anche pericolosa e depressiva non solo per le economie che avevano precedentemente beneficiato della moneta unica, ma anche per le economie trainanti che vengono colpite dall'abbassamento dei consumi delle altre regioni europee.

    La soluzione è evidente a tutti da decenni: è necessaria una politica realmente federalista, con un unione bancaria e fiscale. Riporto:
    For the longer run, there is widespread consensus—outside of Germany—that the euro area needs a banking union that promotes financial stability and that replaces ad hoc crisis decision making with a more rule-based and politically legitimate process. [...] The example of the United States suggests that an element of fiscal union, beyond what is required for a meaningful banking union, would be an important stabilizing mechanism. A euro area–wide unemployment insurance system would be one small step in this direction.

  6. #6
    Forumista senior
    Data Registrazione
    28 Mar 2012
    Messaggi
    2,960
     Likes dati
    2,946
     Like avuti
    1,727
    Mentioned
    19 Post(s)
    Tagged
    3 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Il fmi: L'euro e' una pessima idea

    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da Korax Visualizza Messaggio
    Vista la fonte, così, a pelle, mi viene voglia di rivalutare l'euro...
    Assolutamente, a questo punto se loro dicono che è una cattiva idea dobbiamo tenercelo strettissimo...

  7. #7
    Crocutale
    Data Registrazione
    02 Apr 2004
    Località
    Parma
    Messaggi
    38,490
     Likes dati
    986
     Like avuti
    16,559
    Mentioned
    515 Post(s)
    Tagged
    29 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Il fmi: L'euro e' una pessima idea

    Ho idea che chi ha progettato l'euro sapesse perfettamente cosa sarebbe successo e lo volesse per poter costringere gli stati a cedere la loro sovranità.

    Un governo totalitario travestito da federazione, nato non da una libera scelta dei popoli, ma dal ricatto.
    Religione, Patria, Famiglia e Autogestione dei Mezzi di Produzione.

  8. #8
    email non funzionante
    Data Registrazione
    15 Aug 2011
    Località
    Italy
    Messaggi
    5,660
     Likes dati
    643
     Like avuti
    2,905
    Mentioned
    75 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Il fmi: L'euro e' una pessima idea

    si certo
    il Fondo monetario internazione da un giorno all'altro passa ad essere assolutamente incompetente ad osservatore cinico e spietato.


    decidetevi, o li ascoltiamo o non li ascoltiamo
    sentire solo quello che fa comodo è proprio da italiani

  9. #9
    STATI UNITI D'EUROPA!
    Data Registrazione
    02 Feb 2011
    Località
    Stati Uniti d'Europa
    Messaggi
    21,396
     Likes dati
    4,804
     Like avuti
    4,763
    Mentioned
    18 Post(s)
    Tagged
    2 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Il fmi: L'euro e' una pessima idea

    Evvai, altro titolo falso, altra discussione falsa.

    Chissà quanto pagano per far scrivere ogni due giorni una discussione contro l'euro, con le stesse menzogne.
    Ultima modifica di TEBELARUS; 06-03-14 alle 14:20
    PROPOSTE POLITICHE
    ► STATI UNITI D'EUROPA, SUBITO! Tutti gli Stati a Ovest della Russia!
    ♫ Top 25 Vocal Trance Spring 2015 l Amazing Vocal Trance Mix ♫

  10. #10
    STATI UNITI D'EUROPA!
    Data Registrazione
    02 Feb 2011
    Località
    Stati Uniti d'Europa
    Messaggi
    21,396
     Likes dati
    4,804
     Like avuti
    4,763
    Mentioned
    18 Post(s)
    Tagged
    2 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Il fmi: L'euro e' una pessima idea

    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da Edmond Dantès Visualizza Messaggio
    Dal sito del FMI, il famigerato Fondo Monetario Internazionale, uno dei membri dell'ancor più famigerata trojka che ha devastato l'eurozona mediterranea. ecco cosa scrivono, papale papale: "the euro area economy is in a terrible mess" (finalmente se ne sono accorti!) e (udite udite) "the euro is a bad idea". il perché lo spiegano dopo: "The currency area is too large and diverse—and given the need for periodic real exchange rate adjustments, the anti-inflation mandate of the European Central Bank (ECB) is too restrictive."


    Quest'ultima frase specialmente andrebbe incisa sulla pietra. traduzione, l'economia dell'eurozona è al disastro e l'euro è una pessima idea in quanto l'area è troppo vasta e troppo diversa, e given the need for periodic real exchange rate adjustments… La BCE sta portando avanti una strategia anti inflazionistica totalmente sbagliata.
    Indovinate cosa vuol dire la frase sottolineata? Che è necessario poter svalutare la moneta secondo le esigenze, cosa impossibile ora vista l'opposizione tedesca.
    Svalutare e rendere flessibile il cambio, capito? Ciò che i soloni fautori dell'austerità ad ogni costo contro i maiali mediterranei -FMI in prima linea- hanno sempre negato, inclusi i soloncini da due soldi di cui questo forum è pieno. Quelli che appena ti azzardi a fiatare contro il loro vangelo ti aggrediscono immediatamente, mettendosi un gradino più su dei nobel...



    E mo?

    (chissà che faccia faranno gli adoratori dell'euro adesso...mi sa che si complicheranno leggermente la vita.)


    Whither the Euro?


    FINANCE & DEVELOPMENT, March 2014, Vol. 51, No. 1
    Kevin Hjortshøj O’Rourke
    Historians may wonder how it came to be introduced in the first place
    The euro area economy is in a terrible mess.
    In December 2013 euro area GDP was still 3 percent lower than in the first quarter of 2008, in stark contrast with the United States, where GDP was 6 percent higher. GDP was 8 percent below its precrisis level in Ireland, 9 percent below in Italy, and 12 percent below in Greece. Euro area unemployment exceeds 12 percent—and is about 16 percent in Portugal, 17 percent in Cyprus, and 27 percent in Spain and Greece.
    Europeans are so used to these numbers that they no longer find them shocking, which is profoundly disturbing. These are not minor details, blemishing an otherwise impeccable record, but evidence of a dismal policy failure.
    The euro is a bad idea, which was pointed out two decades ago when the currency was being devised. The currency area is too large and diverse—and given the need for periodic real exchange rate adjustments, the anti-inflation mandate of the European Central Bank (ECB) is too restrictive. Labor mobility between member countries is too limited to make migration from bust to boom regions a viable adjustment option. And there are virtually no fiscal mechanisms to transfer resources across regions in the event of shocks that hit parts of the currency area harder than others.
    Problems foretold

    All these difficulties were properly pinpointed by traditional optimal currency area theory. By 1998 Ireland was experiencing an unprecedented boom, and house prices were rising rapidly. Higher interest rates were warranted, but when Ireland joined the currency union in January 1999 the central bank discount rate was lowered from 6.75 percent in the middle of 1998 to just 3.5 percent a year later. With the Irish party well under way the new ECB was busily adding liquor to the punch bowl.
    Similar stories were repeated around the euro area periphery, where capital inflows pushed up wages and prices. But what goes up does not come down so easily when there is no independent currency. Labor mobility within the euro area remains limited: young Irish workers emigrate to Australia or Canada, the Portuguese to Angola or Brazil. And with no federal budget to smooth asymmetric shocks, procyclical austerity, which exacerbates rather than ameliorates recessions, has been the policy weapon of choice during this crisis—whether imposed by the markets or by euro area politicians and central bankers. Mass unemployment in the periphery is exactly what theory would predict in such circumstances.
    Indeed, since 2008 we have learned that traditional optimal currency area theory was too sanguine about European monetary union. In common with much mainstream macroeconomics, it ignored the role of financial intermediaries such as banks, which link savers and borrowers. Many of the euro area’s most intractable problems stem from the flow of capital from the core to the periphery via interbank lending. When that capital stopped flowing, or was withdrawn, the resultant bank crises strained the finances of periphery governments. That further worsened bank balance sheets and credit creation, leading in turn to worsening economic conditions and rising government deficits—a sovereign bank doom loop that kept replaying.
    Political ramifications

    Bank crises have had poisonous political ramifications, given their cross-border impact. Panic-driven decision making has been ad hoc and inconsistent—contrast the treatment of bank creditors in Ireland in 2010, who were largely made whole, with those in Cyprus in 2013, where they took a big hit. This will have long-term political consequences. Despite the understandable desire of European bureaucrats to regard such matters as water under the bridge, hypocrisy and bullying remain unpopular with ordinary voters. Small, vulnerable countries have had a painful lesson in European realpolitik that they will not soon forget.
    Where do we go from here? Since 2010 the focus of most economists has been on how to make the currency union work better. Even those who were skeptical about the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) worried sufficiently about the consequences of a breakup to shy away from advocating a country’s exit. The result has been a series of suggestions regarding how to prevent a collapse of the euro in the short to medium run, and how to improve its functioning in the longer run.
    In the short run, what is needed is looser monetary policy and, where possible, accommodative fiscal policy as well. If economic historians learned anything from the Great Depression, it is that adjustment based on austerity and internal devaluation (as deflation in individual euro area members is termed nowadays) is dangerous. First, nominal wages are sticky downward, which implies that deflation, if achieved at all, leads to higher real wages and more unemployment. Second, deflation increases the real value of private and public debt, raises real interest rates, and leads consumers and businesses to postpone expensive purchases in anticipation of lower prices to come. Britain ran large primary surpluses throughout the 1920s, but its debt-to-GDP ratio rose substantially thanks to the deflationary, low-growth environment of the time.
    Third, fiscal multipliers are large when interest rates are near zero, so spending reductions result in hefty declines in national income. The IMF has found that in the current crisis fiscal multipliers are closer to 2 than they are to 1—as was true between the world wars. The inescapable conclusion is that the ECB must act aggressively, not just to prevent deflation, but to set an inflation target above 2 percent for a transitional period to facilitate real exchange rate adjustment and promote the solvency of its member states. More investment spending by countries with sufficient fiscal capacity, or by the European Investment Bank, would help as well.
    For the longer run, there is widespread consensus—outside of Germany—that the euro area needs a banking union that promotes financial stability and that replaces ad hoc crisis decision making with a more rule-based and politically legitimate process (see “Tectonic Shifts” in this issue of F&D). This process should include common supervision for the euro area, a single resolution framework for failing banks with a euro area–wide fiscal backstop, and a common deposit insurance framework. The Euro-nomics group, made up of noted European economists, has proposed a “safe” euro area asset that national banks could hold. This would help break the sovereign bank doom loop described earlier and make it easier for national governments to restructure their debt when necessary (by reducing collateral damage to their country’s banking system). The example of the United States suggests that an element of fiscal union, beyond what is required for a meaningful banking union, would be an important stabilizing mechanism. A euro area–wide unemployment insurance system would be one small step in this direction.
    Less Europe

    These are all arguments for “more Europe” rather than less. I and many others have made such arguments over the past five years. But as time goes on, it becomes more difficult to do so with conviction.
    First, crisis management since 2010 has been shockingly poor, which raises the question of whether it is sensible for any country, especially a small one, to place itself at the mercy of decision makers in Brussels, Frankfurt, or Berlin. It is not just a question of hard-money ideology on the part of key players, although that is destructive enough. It is a question of outright incompetence. The botched “rescue” of Cyprus was for many observers a watershed moment in this regard, though the ECB interest rate hikes of 2011 also deserve a dishonorable mention.
    There are serious legal, political, and ethical questions that must be asked about how the ECB has behaved during this crisis—for example, the 2010 threat that if Dublin did not repay private creditors of private banks, the ECB would effectively blow up the Irish banking system (or, if you prefer, force Ireland out of the euro area). A frequent argument is that the ECB cannot loosen monetary policy because it would take the pressure off governments to continue structural reforms that Frankfurt believes to be desirable. Aside from the fact that there is less evidence of the desirability of these reforms than economists sometimes admit, deliberately keeping people involuntarily unemployed to advance a particular policy agenda is wrong. And it is not legitimate for an unelected central banker in Frankfurt to try to influence inherently political debates in countries like Italy or Spain, because the central banker is both unelected and in Frankfurt.
    Second, it is becoming increasingly clear that a meaningful banking union, let alone a fiscal union or a safe euro area asset, is not coming anytime soon. For years economists have argued that Europe must make up its mind: move in a more federal direction, as seems required by the logic of a single currency, or move backward? It is now 2014: at what stage do we conclude that Europe has indeed made up its mind, and that a deeper union is off the table? The longer this crisis continues, the greater the anti-European political backlash will be, and understandably so: waiting will not help the federalists. We should give the new German government a few months to surprise us all, and when it doesn’t, draw the logical conclusion. With forward movement excluded, retreat from the EMU may become both inevitable and desirable.
    Europe has lived through a golden age, largely as a result of European integration. This helped foster growth in the 1950s and 1960s and has given Europeans freedom to study, work, and retire abroad that is taken for granted. The EMU in its present form threatens the entire project. During the interwar period, voters flocked to political parties that promised to tame the market and make it serve the interests of ordinary people rather than the other way around. Where Democratic parties, such as Sweden’s Social Democrats, offered these policies, they reaped the electoral reward. Where Democrats allowed themselves to be constrained by golden fetters and an ideology of austerity, as in Germany, voters eventually abandoned them.
    Divergent paths

    Europe is now defined by the constraints it imposes on governments, not by the possibilities it affords them to improve the lives of their people. This is politically unsustainable. There are two solutions: jump forward to a federal political Europe, on whose stage left and right can compete on equal terms, or return to a European Union without a single currency and let individual countries decide for themselves. The latter option will require capital controls, default in several countries, measures to deal with the ensuing financial crisis, and agreement about how to deal with legacy debt and legacy contracts.
    The demise of the euro would be a major crisis, no doubt about it. We shouldn’t wish for it. But if a crisis is inevitable then it is best to get on with it, while centrists and Europhiles are still in charge. Whichever way we jump, we have to do so democratically, and there is no sense in waiting forever. If the euro is eventually abandoned, my prediction is that historians 50 years from now will wonder how it ever came to be introduced in the first place.


    Whither the Euro? - Finance & Development, March 2014

    .




    Putin, SpeculatoriFinanziari, OdioGliEuropei, forestalisiciliani and 4 others like this.
    Ultima modifica di TEBELARUS; 06-03-14 alle 14:44
    PROPOSTE POLITICHE
    ► STATI UNITI D'EUROPA, SUBITO! Tutti gli Stati a Ovest della Russia!
    ♫ Top 25 Vocal Trance Spring 2015 l Amazing Vocal Trance Mix ♫

 

 
Pagina 1 di 3 12 ... UltimaUltima

Tag per Questa Discussione

Permessi di Scrittura

  • Tu non puoi inviare nuove discussioni
  • Tu non puoi inviare risposte
  • Tu non puoi inviare allegati
  • Tu non puoi modificare i tuoi messaggi
  •  
[Rilevato AdBlock]

Per accedere ai contenuti di questo Forum con AdBlock attivato
devi registrarti gratuitamente ed eseguire il login al Forum.

Per registrarti, disattiva temporaneamente l'AdBlock e dopo aver
fatto il login potrai riattivarlo senza problemi.

Se non ti interessa registrarti, puoi sempre accedere ai contenuti disattivando AdBlock per questo sito