Here I guess, is one plausible answer (among a number) to the question that I 
was posing...

M

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sid 
Shniad
Sent: Saturday, November 26, 2011 10:02 AM
Subject: Painful Euro Crisis And Lessons For The World – Part II

http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/content/painful-euro-crisis-and-lessons-world-part-2

 While overspending and giving citizens a false sense of prosperity,
leaders of wealthy governments anticipated future economic growth to
resolve all imbalances. This YaleGlobal series analyzes how the debt crisis
unfolding in Europe may offer lessons for the rest of globe. A relatively
small group of banks and investors control substantial global revenue,
explains researcher Joergen Oerstroem Moeller in the second and final
article of the series, and creditors naturally want to protect and further
increase profits on their investments in sovereign bonds. Creditors will
likely favor Europe’s strategy for addressing the debt crisis – imposing
austerity programs while raising taxes. Such a strategy will reduce future
borrowing, reduce inflation, and minimize attempts by creditors, many in
emerging economies, to control national and global policies. A small group
of large financial institutions have emerged, wielding enormous power over
fiscal policies of sovereign countries. Their pursuit of profit may pay no
heed to the interests of the countries in debt. – YaleGlobal
 Painful Euro Crisis and Lessons for the World – Part II
 To secure credit, Europe finds global financial markets no longer attuned
to Western interests

Joergen Oerstroem Moeller
YaleGlobal, 18 November 2011

SINGAPORE: The eurozone crisis has not only raised questions about the
viability of the common currency, but could also jeopardize an economic
model that has so far reigned supreme. The course taken to resolve the
crisis in Europe will have long-term impact on the most vibrant parts of
the world – from Asia to Latin America.

In developed countries of the West, debtors have run up a high debt ratio
to gross domestic product, even while economic growth was high –
overspending when they should have saved. They borrowed to spend more,
demonstrating a disastrous failure to grasp basic economic principles as
well as flaws in moral behavior and ethical judgment. Among these borrowers
are established heavyweights – the United States, most European nations and
Japan. The United States, one of the wealthiest countries, became an
importer of capital instead of exporting capital, registering its last
balance vis-Ã -vis the rest of the world in 1991.

After accumulating savings over several decades through prudent and
cautious policies, the creditors sit on a large pile of reserves with low
domestic debt and government deficits. These reserves are largely held by
emerging countries with China at the forefront. As a paradox, the emerging
economies have taken it upon themselves to lend to the richer countries –
exporting capital almost as vendor’s credit. Indeed, this reversal of roles
is one explanation for the global financial crisis. The global monetary
system is not geared to function under such circumstances.

*N*ations that overspent failed to grasp basic economic principles,
revealing flaws in ethical judgment.

This development was framed by the so-called Washington Consensus of the
1980s – a neoliberal formula that spurred globalization by promoting
liberalization of trade, interest rates and foreign direct investment;
privatization and deregulation; as well as competitive exchange rates and
fiscal discipline. Fundamental flaws were exposed, raising the question
about which economic model might replace it.

There are two possibilities in this competition: One strategy is from the
United States and a group of Democrats who suggest that more short-term
borrowing and spending could lead to growth, tax revenues and exit from
recession – even if the debt grows and deficits become permanent. A
breakthrough by the US Congressional super-committee to make substantial
cuts over the next 10 years won’t fundamentally change this stance, merely
reducing rather than eliminating the deficit. The Europeans have taken the
opposite view: They advocate starting the recovery by reducing deficits and
debt even if that seems counterproductive for economic growth in the short
run. The Europeans are also raising taxes across the board, regarded as
indispensable for restoring balance in government budgets.

The results of either plan won’t be known for a few years. Chances are,
however, that the European policy will carry the day for the simple reason
that creditors call the tune. It’s highly unlikely that creditors favor
continued reliance on deficits as the inevitable consequence will be
inflation, eroding the purchasing power of their reserves. Indeed, the
Chinese rating agency Dagong has announced that it may cut the US sovereign
rating for the second time since August if the US conducts a third round of
quantitative easing.

Early in the crisis, as Europe set up a stabilizing bailout fund, there
were rumors in the market that China, Russia and Japan might rescue of the
euro, either by buying European bonds or going through the International
Monetary Fund. It’s unclear how China wants to proceed with such an
undertaking, but Russia and Japan have allegedly acted to do that through
the International Monetary Fund or by buying European bonds.

*C*ountries with surpluses do not
dream of rescuing the euro; they act in their own interest.

Countries with surpluses do not dream of rescuing the euro; they act in
their own interest. Economically they prefer the European fiscal
discipline, reasoning that American prodigality will shift much burden of
adjustment onto them. They may dread being left with the US dollar as the
only major international currency, forcing them to endure, at times,
whimsical policy decisions by the Federal Reserve System, the US Treasury
Department or US Congress. The euro and the European Union are seen, and
indeed needed, as a counterweight.  The EU may look weak, but it’s a
respectable global partner, offering the euro as an alternative to the
dollar and serving as a major player in trade negotiations and the debate
about global warming, just to mention a few examples.

It can be expected that other nations will step forward to support the
euro. But at what price? What conditions, if any, will be put on the table
and will the Europeans consent? A case can be made that, as creditors
undertake investments to help the euro, they actually help themselves, and
there are no reasons why the eurozone should pay any price. We can expect a
game of hardball, in which nerves matters, and who gives what to whom may
not be clear at all.

Another question has arisen about who decides and who is in charge. The G20
meeting in Cannes revealed a growing consensus to stop the financial houses
amassing and subsequently abusing power. If the global financial system is
big enough to force Italy into a default-like situation, many countries are
surely asking whether they’ll be next. The big financial houses are viewed
by many as irresponsible stakeholders, if stakeholders at all. Consider,
the US government is suing 18 banks for selling US$ 200 billion in toxic
mortgage-backed securities to government-sponsored firms, the Federal
National Mortgage Association and the Federal Home Mortgage Corporation,
known as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. In April 2011 the European Commission
initiated investigations into activities of 16 banks suspected of collusion
or abuse of possible collective dominance in a segment of the market for
financial derivatives.

*C*reditor countries
can set the course on future economic
policies – and highlight fiscal discipline.

The market has muscled its way in as judge about whether a country’s
political system or economic policy are good enough.  But the market is
neither a single institution nor a broad, balanced mix of diverse players.
It’s become a small group of large financial institutions, the power of
which overwhelm what even big countries can muster: 147 institutions
directly or indirectly control 40 percent of global revenue among private
corporations. A sore point is that they pursue profits without concern over
implications for countries and societies. Rather than let measures work,
these financiers force the issue here and now, even as they speculate
against efforts, many admittedly delayed and inadequate, to resolve debt
crises. Financial institutions holding sovereign bonds that could default
insure themselves by buying a credit default swaps. What seems like prudent
corporate governance becomes a shell game as these obligations are traded
among financial institutions, some of which don’t hold sovereign bonds in
their portfolios – all of which heightens interest in forcing default.

The temptation to roll back economic globalization inter alia by breaking
up the eurozone or restricting capital movements has been resisted.
Economic globalization is holding firm.

Creditor countries can set the course on future economic policies – likely
highlighting fiscal discipline. While the West had vested interest in the
big financial houses, the incoming paymasters do not, and they can be
expected to increase their control over investment patterns. This can be
done either by setting up own financial houses or buying into Western
financial institutions as was the case in the slipstream of the 2008 global
debt crisis.

The global financial market is changing course, away from looking after
Western interests and acting in accordance with corporate governance as
defined by the West toward a more global outlook guided by the interests of
new group of creditors.


 Joergen Oerstroem Moeller is a visiting senior research fellow, Institute
of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore, and adjunct professor, Singapore
Management University and Copenhagen Business School.


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