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Worldwise: Addicted to Fudge (Henry Farrell & Alex Massie)
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Re: Worldwise: Addicted to Fudge (Henry Farrell & Alex Massie)
Kudos to Henry & Alex for doing yeoman's work covering the terrifying/boring crisis in Europe. Also, this is probably the best 30-second sum-up of the EU I've ever heard.
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Re: Worldwise: Addicted to Fudge (Henry Farrell & Alex Massie)
At last a diavlog that isn't about American politics or the Middle East.
Excellent tour d'horizon by Henry Farrell---as usual. Alex Massie seems to be on the ball too, but perhaps a wee bit too pessimistic and Eurosceptical, as befits a denizen of gloomy, whisky-sodden Edinburgh. But I would rather hear a Scot talk about European politics than an Englishman anyday. They dislike the English almost as much as the English dislike the continent. So much gloom and doom though made me wonder if I should start shorting the euro. |
Re: Worldwise: Addicted to Fudge (Henry Farrell & Alex Massie)
Interesting, well-informed, persuasive. A 100' tsunami is clearly on its way towards Europe and America following the magnitude 9.0 earthquake in the sub-prime real estate market in L.A.
But not to worry, Bernanke will bail us all out in the end. He alone has the tools and knows how to use them. Count your blessings that he cannot be removed from office. I foresee a reprise of the 1970's in my neck of the woods -- much higher inflation, falling wages, and a rising burden of taxation. I also foresee (fear?) a replay of the 1930's in East Asia. Let us pray I am wrong about that (and that we don't get involved if I'm not). |
Re: Worldwise: Addicted to Fudge (Henry Farrell & Alex Massie)
BornAgainDemocrat,
Do you foresee another recession in the next 8 months? |
Re: Worldwise: Addicted to Fudge (Henry Farrell & Alex Massie)
Between the desire
And the spasm Between the potency And the existence Between the essence And the descent Falls the Shadow For Thine is the Kingdom For Thine is Life is For Thine is the This is the way the world ends This is the way the world ends This is the way the world ends Not with a bang but a whimper. Trust T.S. Eliot to capture the situation in Brussels. |
Re: Worldwise: Addicted to Fudge (Henry Farrell & Alex Massie)
It seems like a never ending wait for the shoe to drop.
I hadn't heard much bad about the German liberals. Perhaps because I hadn't heard much about them at all. |
Re: Worldwise: Addicted to Fudge (Henry Farrell & Alex Massie)
I'm a fan of Henry but I'd never know it from watching him on bhtv. He's done lots of great work on neo-liberalism, certainly an important topic these days but one strangely left at the wayside on bhtv. What gives?
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If indeed it was Gramsci who first said it. Apparently the saying has also been attributed to Romain Rolland. |
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In Math you have theorems named after people whose sole contribution was to give an incorrect proof of a result that had been proven correctly 100 years earlier. (Bezout is the classic example.) In physics, you have phenomena named after physicists whose only connection to the phenomenon in question was to deny its existence and fight those who claimed it. |
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bhtv does not seem to be hospitable to anything left of...hard to say what, exactly, I've been saying Matt Yglesias, but that is probably too harsh. But I don't understand why Farrell would feel compelled to be less left than he actually is on bhtv. But, then, some of the many "libertarians" also tone down their acts on bhtv, or so Bob Wright himself seems to suspect. "Maybe I should ask Matt Welch if he is revealing his true colors," he said on a recent Commenter Klatch. Anyway, I hope to be discussing this with Bob himself in the near future.
This particular dv was OK, hardly revelatory. There was at least one important point, however, that I have not heard elsewhere, namely that a "northern country Euro" would probably be quite expensive relative to other currencies and would hurt export-driven economies, such as Germany's or that of the Netherlands. This begs the question of whether countries like Greece were invited into the euro precisely in order to reduce its weighted-average value. I have heard that Greece has been an important market for German goods, but I have not heard about an advantage to big exporters in having a lower valued currency, I mean that I have never heard this mentioned as an explanation for why Greece would have been allowed into the euro in the first place. It would be nice if someone would explain in some detail the more important of the mechanical problems for the European banking system which would ensue if Greece were to default or to try to abandon the euro. I know someone who has worked for the EU for years in a high middle-management capacity in the financial part of the EU, and he explained to me that there would be runs on banks, not just in Greece, but in other peripheral countries, as soon as it seemed really possible that Greece could leave the euro and abandon some or all of its euro-denominated obligations. So the mechanics of orchestrating an exit for Greece are very, very difficult, for Greece, for the rest of Europe, for everyone. Hence, no exit, no exit strategy. But then the alternative is to mark Greece's sovereign debt to market and enforce austerity on Greece, a strategy that appears to create very serious problems for northern Europe's banks, which are undercapitalized. But I am optimistic, it's all good. |
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Apparently the euro is overvalued, as it continues to lose value vis-a-vis the dollar. I couldn't care less about German "economic needs." As long as I can short the euro and make a tidy a little profit, why should I care? |
Re: Worldwise: Addicted to Fudge (Henry Farrell & Alex Massie)
Not to mention a sharp political reaction to austerity in Greece. One doubts the Greek people have the political will to support austerity governments for the foreseeable future. The recent Greek decision to raise taxes rather than cut spending should be alarming to Europeans.
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The euro has been overvalued for years, mainly because the FED has done everything to prop up the dollar. The correction is long overdue. |
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I am not an economist or a prophet, so I cannot comment on your last sentence. But I am not terribly worried about Germany, which is the only country in Europe that has low unemployment and a huge trade surplus. |
Re: Worldwise: Addicted to Fudge (Henry Farrell & Alex Massie)
Florian said:
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If the Fed had done everything to prop up the dollar, then it should now be overvalued relative to the euro, not undervalued, as I think you have said that it is on more than one occasion. Prior to "the market's" rather tardy realization that the euro had very significant problems of its own, the dollar had been falling in a secular way relative to the euro over the past five years, with the exception of that short period of two-three months after the US stock market crash in October, 2008, when, paradoxically, there was a safe-haven flight to the dollar, according to the conventional view one gets in the WSJ. In any case, my impression has been that, since I moved to France five years ago, the Fed has done far from everything in its power to prop up the value of the dollar. To the contrary, it has regarded the value of the dollar with benign neglect, in an attempt to reduce the US current account deficit. When the Fed maintains a large interest-rate differential on the negative side with Europe, that tends to decrease the dollar's value relative to the euro. The Fed did not have much choice but to reduce interest rates, but very few people think that the Fed has been working hard to create a strong dollar, ceteris paribus. There is some famous economist at Berkeley, Barry Eichengreen, he might have appeared on bhtv, I saw him somewhere, who was arguing recently that the euro would be trading, and should be trading, at about $1.75 - $1.85, I think it was, largely because of the US current account deficit. That really put the fear of God into me. That was before it was widely recognized that there was a sovereign debt problem in Europe, though. How it is that Eichengreen missed that part of the story, I don't know. http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/Economics/International/?view=usa&ci=9780199753789 |
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Germany is the engine of growth.... of Germany. More than France or other European countries its economy depends heavily on trade with countries outside Europe, and its exports have benefited greatly from the existence of the EU (offshoring labor to former East Germany and other eastern countries with their lower labor costs). The main problem facing Europe today, as in the US in 2008, is the overleveraged banking system. Banks, among them several "too big to fail" French banks, lent too much money to the improvident Greeks, and now they find themselves undercapitalized as the bond vigilantes attack Greece and the other PIGS. If Greece is forced out of the euro--a real possibility---the "system," the euro, will no doubt falter, but no one is talking about the end of the European Union. |
Re: Worldwise: Addicted to Fudge (Henry Farrell & Alex Massie)
The banks may be over leveraged but they at least hold the minimum legally required reserves; whereas many governments are over leveraged with only the printing press in reserve.
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Why is that statement particularly dumb? The first part is true. There seems to be too much government debt around. The second part is not true, there would be other ways of retiring government debt than by inflating one's way out of it. But that's just normal ideological hyperbole for, "The easiest, or most probable means by which governments will try to reduce their debt burdens is via inflation of their money supplies."
If that were the dumbest thing written here in a month, we would be in the smartest nearly universally available public forum ever to exist. I say this as someone who has piscivorous filtered. I suspect that your reaction to this post would not have occurred if you only read him via the quotations of third parties. |
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At least, that is how I, hardly an expert, understand the situation. |
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Is unemployment calculated the same in France as it is here? |
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I have heard discussions of undercounting of the "unemployed" in France similar to those one hears in the US. There are differences in the way that unemployment is measured, but I don't think they are as simple as that "discouraged workers not actively seeking work" are counted as unemployed in France. I think such people are excluded from the labor force, as they are in the US.
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Generally speaking, I have the impression that unemployment is measured quite similarly in France and the US. Any differences are subtle, probably having to do with survey techniques, data collection techniques, and so on. Perhaps the main difference is in estimating the number of people who work "outside the system" of tax collection. http://brises.org/textbefore.php/a-s...xtbefBranch/4/ |
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