Committing Financial Suicide to Appease Big Finance
"Other countries have gone through similar experiences. Latin American countries suffered a lost decade after 1982, and Japan has been stagnating for a quarter of a century; both have survived. But the European Union is not a country and it is unlikely to survive. The deflationary debt trap threatens to destroy a still-incomplete political union." George Soros, Financial Times
Money might "make the world go round," but it's not going to stop
the eurozone from breaking apart. That's the lesson investors learned on
Tuesday when global stock markets plunged on news that yields on
Spanish and Italian debt had again entered the red zone. Stocks
rebounded on Wednesday, but to little effect; after all, the cat is out
of the bag.
Now everyone knows that the European Central Bank's 1 trillion euro "adrenalin rush" (Long-Term Refinancing Operation or LTRO) is a short-term fix that won't relieve the debt troubles of struggling countries in the south or even reduce the prospects of a vicious credit crunch in the second half of the year. (As of Friday morning, Spanish 10-year bond yields are back in the nosebleed section, 5.92 percent, a rate which most economists see as "unsustainable.")
So, what exactly did the LTRO achieve anyway?
Not much, it appears. While the lavish three-year low-interest loans
allowed a significant number of underwater banks to roll over their
debts; it did not address the eurozone's institutional flaws, or -- as
economists Simon Tilford and Philip Whyte say -- "reverse the increasingly
perverse and self-defeating policies that the region is
pursuing."
Policymakers in Frankfurt and Brussels have refused to heed
the warnings of competent economists and other experts who've reiterated
ad nauseam that "a monetary union outside
a fiscal union is deeply unstable." What's needed is greater "fiscal
integration and debt mutualisation" they advise. But the ECB will have
none of it. The Central Bank has decided to pursue its own blinkered
strategy and use the crisis to push through excruciating anti-labor and
privatization reforms that will help to divert more capital to
big finance. The results speak for themselves. Spain is marching
headlong into a depression.
To say that Spain's financial situation is dire would be an understatement. According to International Finance Review:
"Covered bond syndicate bankers are expecting weak jobs data out of the US and a persistent deterioration of Spanish bank credit to weigh heavily on the new issue market for the foreseeable future. It's a backdrop that is likely to lock Spanish banks out of the primary market and deprive the country's banks of a funding plan B, according to one banker.
"'The Spanish are completely shut out of the market,' said a covered bond trader. 'You won't get any momentum for a deal, and for investors, they have no incentive to buy into a deal when the market is declining.'" ("Spanish banks face funding lock-out," IFR)
Also, while unemployment across Europe has risen to its highest point in more than 14 years, (17.3 million people) in Spain, joblessness has soared to 23 percent, and among young people, it's nearly 50 percent. An entire generation is being sacrificed so the 1 percent can grab a greater portion of the wealth.
If Spain is unable to manage its finances due to rising bond yields, then the eurozone will surely fail. The country is simply too big to bail out. It's more than twice the size of Greece, Ireland and Portugal combined. And Spain's three largest banks -- Banco Santander, BBVA, and La Caixa, "have combined assets of about $2.7 trillion. Spain's GDP is just about $1.4 trillion. In other words: Spain's three biggest banks are nearly twice as big as the entire Spanish economy." (CNBC)
Spain's problems go far beyond its collapsing real estate market, its skyhigh unemployment, its widening debt-to-GDP ratio, and its teetering banking system. A historic structural adjustment program ("Austerity measures") implemented by newly-elected Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has accelerated the rate of decline by slashing spending and thrusting the economy into a deflationary spiral. Here's a clip from Bloomberg:
"Under EU orders, Spain is promising what might be the tightest fiscal squeeze that it or any other European economy has ever faced. The new plan calls for the budget deficit to fall from 8.5 percent of gross domestic product to 5.3 percent this year. Since the economy is already shrinking, this requires a discretionary fiscal tightening of roughly 4 percent of GDP -- with the unemployment rate already standing at about 23 percent." ("Spain Not Greece Is the Real Test for the European Union," Bloomberg)
This is fiscal suicide authored by right-wing fanatics who want to use the ongoing crisis to impose their own business-friendly economic model on Europe. As journalist Pepe Escobar says in a recent article, (It's) "a counter-reformation that erases with a single stroke many labour and union rights acquired by the working class in decades and generations." That includes extremely harsh cuts in health, education and social services."
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