Non-Fatal Suicide (def): A set of actions, policy decisions, strategies and positions taken by a business, regulatory agency or government which are so self-destructive that they would cause the demise of a lesser organization, but only inflicts huge but non-fatal harm to an organization that is strong enough to withstand the self-destructive behavior
Greece the Last Time Austerity Was Tried in Order to Fix the Economy |
The Dismal Political Economist wrote earlier about how the European policy towards Greece was a form of forcing the Greek economy to commit a version of non-fatal economic suicide. The problem in Greece is that for years the country had borrowed money to finance a government spending deficit, without reforming the economy so that economic growth would allow the deficit to be reduced.
So many European banks had purchased Greek debt that if Greek were allowed to default it could bring down the banking systems ofGermany , France and a whole bunch of other countries.
So many European banks had purchased Greek debt that if Greek were allowed to default it could bring down the banking systems of
On May 20 The Dismal Political Economist wrote
It was clear from the beginning that the so-called reforms were actually severe austerity that would cause the Greek economy to shrink, thus increasing its fiscal problems rather than ameliorating them.
Every day now brings news that this prophecy of doom is coming true. From the Wall Street Journal we have.
Greek bonds fell sharply with two-year and five-year yields hitting euro-era highs as investors trained their guns back on the cash-strapped country amid signs of discord over a bailout package. . . . The two-year Greek bond yield rose by 2.64 percentage points to 45.92%, . . .%. The five-year yield rose by 0.83 percentage point to 28.56%, while the 10-year yield climbed by 0.16 percentage point to 17.54%.
Yes, you are reading that correctly. Two year interest rates on Greek debt are 46%.
As far as the Greek economy is concerned, well here is how that is doing.
Greece is likely to miss its budget-deficit targets this year in the face of a deep economic contraction that is turning out to be even more severe than forecast, government officials said Thursday. . . Tax collection remains the main problem," one official said. "Many simply don't have the money to pay taxes. We have to get the economy going but the austerity is holding everything back."
Greece is likely to miss its budget-deficit targets this year in the face of a deep economic contraction that is turning out to be even more severe than forecast, government officials said Thursday. . . Tax collection remains the main problem," one official said. "Many simply don't have the money to pay taxes. We have to get the economy going but the austerity is holding everything back."
So what’s the next step. More austerity. Why? Because when a plan is not working, continue with the plan. The forecast after more austerity.
One Northern European diplomat said it will come down to a political decision to give Greece more time and acknowledging that letting Greece default could devastate euro-zone financial markets.
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