David Stockman has a way with words. Here's an excerpt from his latest column on the Greek crisis.
If you don’t believe financial markets are well and truly broken Monday’s tepid response to the Greferendum should be dispositive. The house of cards known as the Eurozone is about to hit the wall, unleashing financial contagion and turmoil far and wide. So any investor or trader in their right mind should have been slamming Jim Cramer’s triple sell button early and often.
For lack of doubt, consider what Merkel’s Vice-Chancellor and leader of the German socialists had to say on Monday. Recall Herr Gabriel is purportedly the voice of the enlightened left and the politician hoping to soon relieve Angela Merkel of her job:
Sigmar Gabriel, the German vice-chancellor and economy minister, said there could be no question of writing off Greek debt because other countries that have had loans such as Ireland, Portugal and Spain would demand equal treatment.
‘I really hope that the Greek government – if it wants to enter negotiations again – will accept that the other 18 member states of the euro can’t just go along with an unconditional haircut,’ he said.
‘How could we then refuse it to other member states? And what would it mean for the eurozone if we’d do it? It would blow the eurozone apart, for sure.’
Oh, yes, he used the “conditional” word, meaning that if Greece signs up for a permanent regime of reform, austerity and depression its paymasters in Brussels and Berlin might be open to an accounting double shuffle. That is, to having Greece’s crushing loans extended to 40 years from 25 years, its grace period on interest and principle repayments stretched beyond the current 2023 time frame and its interest rates pared to something less than 1.5%. On an NPV basis, this is supposed to be some big deal concession.
But who do these clowns think they are kidding? Some day all of this debt will have to be rolled over, and eventually the monetary mountebanks running the ECB and other central banks will be unable to prevent interest rates from normalizing.
So put an honest interest rate - say 6% on a country that has been a chronic deadbeat for two centuries - on its current $350 billion of fiscal debt and the pro forma interest computation rounds out to 10% of GDP. It is doubtful that even Art Laffer would claim Greece could grow out from under that kind of financial albatross.
So the real red line is very simple. Above all else, 61% of the Greek public voted for relief from the onerous debt that has been imposed upon them by the troika and faithless Greek politicians in Athens. If they don’t get an outright haircut in excess of $100 billion, Greek democracy will remain permanently indentured to its troika paymasters.
Yet is there an iota of chance that the other 18 Eurozone nations plus the IMF will agree to a meaningful and honest “haircut” during the next 48 hours that Angela Merkel has allotted for reaching a new deal or a Grexit?
. . .
The Germans have an impolite term for what that adds up to - einen shitschturm!
And it will be a doozy. What the referendum did was to force the troika con job out of the accounting shadows. The Greek people now fully understand that it was not they, but the European banks and bond funds which were bailed out by the troika.
And the taxpayers of Europe now understand that it is they who are on the hook, not the Greeks who can’t and won’t pay; and not the Brussels apparatchiks, who committed them to off-budget guarantees that they falsely assured would never come due.
There's more at the link.
Go read the whole article. It raises all sorts of issues that the mainstream media are carefully avoiding - and it's true.
Peter
And now, the REST of the story... sigh
ReplyDeleteI want to take a minute to tell you how much I appreciate the wide range of issues you bring to your blog. They are timely and you support them with data.
ReplyDelete"Look mom, the Emperor is neckid!
It should be noted that all the reforms that the troika demanded had nearly nothing to do with repaying the Greek debt.
ReplyDelete1. Even among all that posturing, everyone knew in 2010 that any repayment would be questionable at best.
2. The Greek have 10 years to get their economy back on its legs before the first repayments have to be made.
The reforms where intended to reduce the spending of the Greek government to something sustainable and (with the reforms that Greece "conveniently" did not implement) build up the greek industry and economy so that they don't have to rely on tourism (that is notoriously fickle), shipping (that is exempted from taxes by law) and agriculture (together somewhat around 60-70% of the GDP).
As I wrote before, Greece could repay it, if it closed down on the corruption and the red tape.
Again, there are potential investors who waited more than a decade for an license.
And Greece yanked the license from the investor into a Gold mine just before it began producing, voiding a 1.2 Billion € investment.
Meaning, it is impossible to do business in Greece, and until they change that Greece will crash and burn eventually.
It's actually Scheisse Sturm......two words, not one.
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