Is it the Euro or the Yugo?

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<http://blogs.marketwatch.com/fundmastery/2010/05/15/is-it-the-euro-or-the-yugo/>
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The highly-touted European currency, the Euro, is performing more like the 
ill-fated Yugoslavian car maker, the hapless Yugo.  And, there is a pretty good 
analogy between the problems inherent in the fractious group of countries that 
make up the European Union and the fractious group of countries that made up 
the now-defunct country of Yugoslavia, where the Yugo was born.  You know the 
regions I’m thinking of–Bosnia, Serbia, Montenegro etc. Once the veneer of 
nationality was swept away, Yugoslavia quickly descended into a hellish 
nightmare of civil war and racial hatred.

Maybe I’m overstating things a bit, but the events in Greece over the past few 
weeks do not suggest a peaceful outcome is nigh as riots, strikes and social 
strife rock the country.

David Callaway, Editor-in chief, at MarketWatch, recently wrote a lengthy piece 
on the history of the Euro and what is going on.  He believes the Euro can and 
should be saved, but only if the European Community goes to extraordinary 
lengths to do so [emphasis added].

 
<http://www.marketwatch.com/story/malignant-market-forces-set-sights-on-europe-2010-05-06>
 Malignant market forces set sights on Europe (MarketWatch, May 6, 2010, David 
Callaway)

…A cover story in Business Week magazine, perhaps 15 years ago before the euro 
was adopted, envisioned how it would collapse. As Greece was not seen as an 
eventual member then, the story imagined the crisis would start in Italy, and 
almost exactly as it has played out in Greece, with poor budget management 
leading to economic punishment from Europe, leading to rioting in the streets.

The story was shrugged off by the winners of the euro debate at the time, who 
with the momentum of historic change behind them claimed it was scare-mongering 
by a reckless financial media. Once instated, the euro could not collapse 
without economic chaos if member states tried to revive their former 
currencies, they argued. Now the markets are looking at the very real 
possibility of that happening.

There is still time to save the project, and indeed, it should be saved. But it 
will take an extraordinary effort not just by Jean Claude Trichet at the ECB, 
and the IMF, but by the leaders of the major European nations, Germany, France, 
and yes, the non-euro U.K., once it votes on a new government this week.

…The euro can be saved. But Europe’s leaders will need to trash their playbook 
and roll out a much more ambitious and expensive plan — one that will call for 
an unprecedented degree of cooperation and sacrifice among each other and their 
nations. And they need to realize that at the moment, nobody is betting that 
can happen.

The reason the financial markets are skeptical about the Euro is that Europe’s 
leaders have already given the crisis their best shot.  They united briefly on 
this nearly $1 trillion bailout, but that is almost certainly about as far as 
they can go.  In fact, the bailout is already causing severe political problems 
for Germany’s leadership.

Unfortunately, as New York Times columnist and Nobel prize-winning economist, 
Paul Krugman  <http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/05/10/shock-and-uh/> wrote 
at the end of a column about the Greek crisis, the bailout won’t be enough to 
do the trick [emphasis added]:

…The good news here is that for the first time in this crisis, European policy 
makers have gotten ahead of the curve, acting more strongly than almost anyone 
expected. That’s a shock, and it has awed the markets. But I still don’t think 
it’s nearly enough.

The problem Krguman refers to is solvency, not just liquidity.  That is, Greece 
has a budget deficit north of 13% of GDP and there is little likelihood that 
the political and social will exists to cut that back in a meaningful way.  
Government debt amounts to 125% or more of GDP.  Deficits and debt of that 
magnitude are well beyond what that economy can manage.  In other words, Greece 
is broke.

Earlier in the column referenced above, Krugman spelled out what has to happen 
if Greece is get become solvent [emphasis added:

…What the country must do, regardless of how it’s accomplished, is achieve 
relative deflation — reduce its costs and prices compared with Germany and 
France, regaining competitiveness. With German inflation low, this means an 
extended period of deflation, with high costs in employment and output. It also 
means fiscal difficulties, requiring spending cuts and tax increases that 
deepen the slump…

The prescription for regaining fiscal health as outlined above above would 
probably work, but it would also trigger negative consequences including lower 
economic growth and social unrest.  Truly, a no win situation.  And, I 
sincerely doubt if the political will exists in Greece or the EU to take the 
steps outlined by Krugman.

The currency markets have looked at the Euro and, at least for now, the trend 
is down as this MarketWatch  
<http://www.marketwatch.com/story/euro-hits-17-month-low-on-sarkozy-report-2010-05-14>
 report indicates:

The euro slumped Friday to the lowest level against the dollar since October 
2008, as worries about financial stability on the Continent and the political 
will to enact unpopular deficit-reduction measures led traders to dump the 
shared currency. The euro’s decline was sparked by a report, since denied, that 
France’s president had threatened to pull his nation out of the euro zone.

…The shared currency touched an intraday low of $1.2357, its weakest level 
since at least October 2008…

…“The euro is in a no-win situation at this point,” said strategists at Brown 
Brothers Harriman. “There is also concern that the much tighter fiscal stance 
in the euro-zone periphery will have significant negative impact on the growth 
outlook, with potential serious negative social consequences.”…

So, where does that leave the Euro.  Is it:

*       The Euro, the vaunted currency that is poised to supplant the U.S. 
dollar as the world’s reserve currency
*       The Yugo, a failing currency whose time has come and is now going?

I believe we will see some countries leaving the common currency as they become 
increasingly unable to manage their own economies under the Euro straitjacket.  
Candidates for this would be Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal and Ireland.  It 
also has become unlikely the United Kingdom will agree to give up the British 
Pound to go with the Euro.  What will be left are stronger countries such as 
Germany and France and perhaps a few more.  At that point, there will not be 
much reason to keep the battered Euro going.

Though it will take a long time, I believe the Euro is really the Yugo and it 
is doomed to a similar fate.

http://blogs.marketwatch.com/fundmastery/2010/05/15/is-it-the-euro-or-the-yugo/

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