I wasn't ranting, and why do you keeping speaking to me like I'm an American? I live in Canada - you know, that big northern country with a small population that has its financial **** together [mostly]? FYI - racism implies denigrating a race. I'm denigrating governments that can't tell their fiscal balance sheets from tourism advertisements. And I did read the whole op ed which is a very good take on the problems with the Euro and how they may be resolved, but has no comment whatsoever on the fundamental systemic cause of the whole mess which can and should be laid directly at the feet of a few national governments.
The fundamental systemic cause was what Soros described in detail. You have a different idea on what is at "the core" of the Euro problem, but what I think you fail to understand is that the problem in the Euro is in its architecture, not at the "cultural ****tiness of some countries". (BTW when you rail against a culture for being "lazy" that's racist). This problem would have come up even if Greece was not in the eurozone. What happens is that it cracked on the weakest link, and because the weakest link is, by definition, weakest, people blamed the weaknesses instead of the whole architecture.
Yes - every modern democracy runs a debt. Not all of them run deficits (ours had been eliminated prior to the 2008 mess). Now, the difference between a country like Greece running a deficit and a country like the United States running a deficit is what backs those deficits, how they are reported, and how accurately they are reported. The Greek deficit had virtually no backing (Greece's economy was not export, manufacturing, technology, or resource driven), those deficits were never reported properly, and the Greek government outright lied about their fiscal situation until a new government was elected and they were forced to come clean.
They lied about their past deficits when they entered the euro union. Your explanation is still lacking when it comes to explain what happen with Spain and other countries which had a not-so-bad deficit. No, the problem was not the deficit, and the focus on it was precisely what made the matters worse. Every country that adopted the so-called "Austerity" measures only made it worse, exactly what the latest FMI report concluded. The ****ing
FMI, not a communist paper.
Now, the reason the Greeks faced those deficits is because their expenditures outpaced their revenues - Greeks work short hours, their economy wasn't strong to begin with, and the government faced constant pressure to continue with generous social benefit programs (and retirement ages, and low taxes, etc) which were a continual net drain on the economy.
Bollocks. The greeks work by far the largest amount of hours per year inside the eurozone.
Oh, what's that? Did you think otherwise? Well, it doesn't surprise me in the least that you've been lied to. You were not the only one. Here:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/2011/dec/08/europe-working-hours I have nothing against social programs - Canada has a strong history of them - but you have to pay for the things that you want to benefit from, and Greece didn't. It was and remains a ingrained attitude that their lifestyle was sacrosanct and untouchable by lesser concerns like the whole country essentially headed for bankruptcy. Social programs are not the root of the evil here (as morons like Beck would have us believe) - it's demand for them coupled with an unwillingness to properly pay for them. Exhibits: P, I, I, G, S.
Jesus. Do you even know what the "S" in the PIIGS stands for? Spain. Spain had a surplus (not a deficit!) before the crisis hit. A
****ing surplus. The percentage of debt against GDP was like 60% or less. Do you consider having a surplus "heading for bankruptcy"? What bollocks are you trying to share here? The other countries did not have huge deficits, too. In 2009, however countries decided to go Keynesian against the biggest crisis they had faced yet, while their revenues bottomed, so sure the deficits skyrocketed. The problem was not that. The problem was that while they did this,
Merkel decided to leave them in the ****ters, telling them that the banking problem was for each country to solve on their own, which then skyrocketed the borrowing yields, bankrupting everyone.
Yes, we can trace much of current Euro dire situation directly into Merkel's appalling political moves that were almost perfectly synchronized in time just to get the problems even worse each year.
Had that issue been resolved earlier (everyone knowing that the bank risks were not shared by the whole eurozone), it would have created problems in the periphery but they would have had been resolved on their own much easier.
If fiscal liabilities matched revenues and fiscal backing, none of those countries would have landed in the mess they're in. Yes, the Euro made it worse, but the fundamental source of this problem is systemic in the nations themselves - and they were all still operating their budgeting process as if they could rely on currency devaluation to bail them out, which is a bad backup plan anyway.
No. This was not the problem at all. You are still not getting it.
The problem was that when these countries entered the Euro, everyone was fooled in thinking that the risks were shared and thus the borrowing yields lowered for the PIIGS, etc. By doing so, everyone in these countries thougth they had more cash in their hands (because they, ahhh, literally did), and thus they
used it. Why shouldn't they? An argument that states that they shouldn't have done so is an argument against free markets (irony).
But the lack of risk was an illusion. And it shattered right when it shouldn't have, inside the 2009 crisis.
So to add up to the Keynesian measures every government decided it was sane to do, they ended up having to deal with the rise of those borrowing costs. And suddenly it all fell down.
As for the "faulting Germany" comment, there is an awful lot of whining coming from the PIIGS countries about the Germans - some of it justified, most not. The fact is that Germany has their fiscal **** together and these countries don't. Part of the reason is the Euro, no doubt, but part is because they got themselves into the mess in the first place and now expect Germany to solve their problems without any fiscal hurt at home, and that just isn't going to happen.
Keep in mind you're getting an observer's opinion here while you're embroiled in the Portuguese mess.
Faulting Germany is justified for plenty of reasons. Not only it was proved that their recipe is wrong (by empirical means), they had this canning ability to do everything exactly wrong in the exact right time to get things worse. And worse, they profited by this: by extending the crisis, they still have the splendid state of affairs of having amazing commercial balances against countries which should have devalued their own currency against Germany already (but can't, they are inside the Eurozone). This is why Germany's growth hasn't been negative lately, and why they don't care much about us. However, this thing can't go on, and even Germany will taste its own poison.