Maybe Sunday.  Orn hogged all my internet time last couple of days and I'm
busy tomorrow.  I figure a couple hours Sunday morning is all I'll need to
solve all Europe's problems.  I'll be in touch.

dj


On Fri, Mar 26, 2010 at 10:20 PM, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote:

> Okay Don, its been two days now, plenty enough time to digest and
> research.  The tickling is over and I and Francis are waiting for your
> advice on how his government should be running his country.  Don't
> feel too pressured, you still have 48 hours to respond, after that
> there will be fines and levies imposed upon you and possibly some
> liens on your property if Fran doesn't like what you have to say.
> I know there is a lot of meat in the OP but I doubt very highly that
> you are a vegetarian.  ;-)
>
> On Mar 24, 4:01 pm, Don Johnson <[email protected]> wrote:
> > There's a lot of meat in this post Slip.  I need to read it again and
> digest
> > it and do a bit of research.  Thanks for tickling my brain.  When I come
> > back I'm going to tell Fran how his government should be running his
> > country.
> >
> > Ha!
> >
> > dj
> >
> > On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 11:37 PM, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > Tell us what you think after you check out this Interview conducted by
> > > Thomas Tuma and Alexander Jung of Spiegel Online International
> > > with.........
> >
> > > Peter Bofinger, 55, a member of the German Council of Economic
> > > Experts, a respected panel of five economists who advise the federal
> > > government in Berlin. The economist, who lives in the Bavarian city of
> > > Würzburg, founded a pro-euro initiative in 1997.
> >
> > > AND
> >
> > > Joachim Starbatty, 69, a professor emeritus in economics at the
> > > University of Tübingen in southwestern Germany. In 1997, he and three
> > > other academics filed a lawsuit against the introduction of the euro
> > > at Germany's Constitutional Court, though it was ultimately
> > > unsuccessful.
> >
> > > The Interview is titled:
> > > Bringer of Prosperity or Bottomless Pit?
> > > Top German Economists Debate the Euro
> >
> > > SPIEGEL: Mr. Bofinger and Mr. Starbatty, do you think it was a mistake
> > > to introduce the euro?
> >
> > > Peter Bofinger: No, of course not. Today, we live in a currency zone
> > > that, despite everything, is significantly more stable than where the
> > > dollar or yen are used. The euro has brought growth and prosperity to
> > > Europe.
> >
> > > Joachim Starbatty: Actually, the euro was a mistake with particularly
> > > serious consequences. A monetary union requires its members to pursue
> > > the same policies and be similarly productive. The so-called
> > > convergence criteria were meant to ensure that this would happen. But
> > > -- as the dramatic developments in Greece are now showing -- they
> > > didn't.
> >
> > > SPIEGEL: Do you feel vindicated today?
> >
> > > Starbatty: Unfortunately, our fears have become a reality. The
> > > monetary union was launched with real self-deception.
> >
> > > Bofinger: Excuse me?
> >
> > > Starbatty: The euro was sold to us as a modernization program for
> > > Europe, and we were also told that it would push the Community toward
> > > stability. But, in reality, it has drifted apart and become a truly
> > > unstable entity.
> >
> > > Bofinger: Unstable? The inflation rate has been very moderate,
> > > hovering at around 2 percent since 1999, and it is significantly lower
> > > than it was when Germany used the mark. We have a lower budget deficit
> > > than the Americans, the Japanese and the British. Our debt-GDP ratio
> > > is also lower than it is in the United States and Japan. There is no
> > > reason why the euro should be coming under pressure. The decision to
> > > introduce it was smart and far-sighted.
> >
> > > SPIEGEL: Without any drawbacks?
> >
> > > Bofinger: Sure, the euro zone is currently looking a little worse for
> > > the wear. But that's to be expected, given the storm the global
> > > economy has gone through. Still, thanks to the common currency, it's
> > > no longer possible, for example, to wage speculative attacks on
> > > individual currencies. This eliminates a key disruptive factor that
> > > massively destabilized markets in the past.
> >
> > > Starbatty: But that's exactly the problem! In the past, exchange rates
> > > served as a valve. Individual countries could control their economies
> > > by allowing their currencies to gain or lose value. Now, this
> > > adjustment mechanism no longer works and, as a result, a completely
> > > different sort of dangerous imbalance has emerged. Today, there are
> > > two blocs within the monetary union: a strong currency bloc in the
> > > north and a weak one in the south. The robust north has joined forces
> > > with countries that have constantly devalued their currency throughout
> > > their histories. Just look at the Italian lira, for example. At the
> > > end of the 1950s, I paid 6.70 German marks for 1,000 lire. The final
> > > exchange rate was less than one mark for 1,000 lire.
> >
> > > SPIEGEL: What would happen if the old currencies were reintroduced in
> > > the euro zone tomorrow?
> >
> > > Bofinger: It would be a catastrophe. The German mark would have to
> > > appreciate significantly -- I'd say by 10 percent to 20 percent.
> > > Everything that we've worked so hard to attain in terms of
> > > competitiveness would vanish overnight. There would be wailing and the
> > > gnashing of teeth in Germany. And Europe would be making a serious
> > > mistake if it were to revert to regionalism and nationalism during
> > > this phase of advancing globalization.
> >
> > > Starbatty: I see things completely differently. The euro was also sold
> > > to citizens as an instrument for securing peace. I never understood
> > > that because, if that really were the case, you would have to open the
> > > monetary union to everyone. Instead, in light of its failure, we are
> > > now witnessing just how nationalism arises in the first place. EU
> > > flags have already been burned in Greece.
> >
> > > SPIEGEL: Would it have been better if all countries in Europe had kept
> > > their own currencies?
> >
> > > Starbatty: Yes. A community can't function when it's made up of
> > > unequal partners who are supposed to behave as equals. With the euro,
> > > Germany has created an artificial competitive advantage for itself,
> > > which has enabled us to conquer markets all over the world. But this
> > > has also led to the buildup of massive excess capacity in our export
> > > industries and, consequently, the export-oriented companies in the
> > > southwestern state of Baden-Württemberg are hurting. The monetary
> > > union changed the structure of economies in an unhealthy way.
> >
> > > Bofinger: Oh, come on! You can't blame the euro for these imbalances!
> > > The blame primarily lies with economic policies. Since 1995, there
> > > have been almost no appreciable wage increases in Germany, partly as a
> > > result of pressure brought on from increases in subcontracted labor.
> > > Politicians have done everything to relieve employers of the burden of
> > > paying social security contributions because we fell into this strange
> > > panic, believing we weren't globally competitive. With our economic
> > > policies, we placed too much of a lopsided emphasis on exports. The
> > > Irish, Greeks and Spaniards, on the other hand, put too much emphasis
> > > on domestic demand.
> >
> > > 'Putting the Virtuous in the Dock Rather than the Real Offenders'
> >
> > > SPIEGEL: In recent days, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde has
> > > repeatedly criticized Germany's export surpluses for being high
> > > compared with those of other EU countries. Is she right to do so?
> >
> > > Starbatty: No. I think it's strange that Madame Lagarde is putting the
> > > virtuous, who have always been oriented toward stability, in the dock
> > > rather than the real offenders.
> >
> > > Bofinger: But the Germans have sinned just as much as the Spaniards,
> > > for example. The Spaniards made their wages too high, while we in
> > > Germany practiced the opposite by not increasing the purchasing power
> > > of workers for years.
> >
> > > Starbatty: So what? It made us successful. It arose from the concern
> > > that jobs would migrate abroad. And Germany's moderate wage policy has
> > > made the country attractive to companies again.
> >
> > > Bofinger: You should look at it more holistically. We wouldn't have
> > > been able to increase our exports if the other countries had behaved
> > > like us and had not increased their demand for an entire decade. In my
> > > view, the monetary union is like a relationship: To function properly,
> > > its participants must orient their behavior toward the general good.
> > > If each participant only contemplates his or her own benefit, it leads
> > > to the kind of relationship crisis we are currently experiencing.
> >
> > > SPIEGEL: Such crises occasionally also end in divorce. Would that be
> > > an option at some point in the future for Greece, a euro-zone member?
> >
> > > Starbatty: I think that step would make the most sense. The Greeks
> > > should voluntarily leave the monetary union and reintroduce the
> > > drachma. If they did, they would export more and could replace foreign
> > > products with domestic ones. Likewise, tourists would travel to Greece
> > > instead of Turkey because it would be the cheaper alternative.
> >
> > > Bofinger: Excluding Greece from the Union would be the completely
> > > wrong approach. Greece's problem is its inefficiency in terms of
> > > public finances. That can be corrected. Compared with other countries,
> > > Athens has always collected too few taxes. The government's budget
> > > wasn't even balanced in the good years, when there was strong economic
> > > growth. That's not the way to manage a country. Greece's government
> > > could, for example, raise the top tax rate from 40 percent, where it
> > > is today, to something much higher. After Germany's reunification,
> > > when Helmut Kohl was chancellor, our top tax rate was 56 percent.
> >
> > > Starbatty: And you seriously believe that would help? Following that
> > > approach, the Greeks would save themselves to death, just as the
> > > Germans did in the early 1930s under then-Reich Chancellor Heinrich
> > > Brüning. What you expect the Greeks to do is Brüning squared. The real
> > > problem is that Greece shouldn't have been accepted into the monetary
> > > union in the first place. The country submitted doctored numbers, as
> > > anyone who read the newspapers knew. And others did the same thing.
> > > But officials in Brussels, who were worried that the Greeks would go
> > > public with the fraud, said: 'Let's forget it!'
> >
> > > Bofinger: But that's all water under the bridge now! We have to deal
> > > with the current situation. In the Council of Experts, we proposed a
> > > consolidation pact, under which each country would be required to
> > > specify a fully verifiable path that it will follow as it puts its
> > > financial house in order. It wouldn't just be a solution for Greece;
> > > it would be for everyone. In return, the Community would be expected
> > > to provide guarantees to problem countries that they will be able to
> > > raise money in the capital markets at favorable, rather than extremely
> > > high, rates. It's unacceptable that governments have spent the last
> > > few years spending billions upon billions and
> >
> > ...
> >
> > read more »
>
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