Lost in all of the
news about the stupidity of European policy makers who are destroying some
European economies in order to save them is the announcement that the European
Union will bail out the Cypriot Banking system.
Well that news would have been lost
except for this.
Under an emergency deal
reached early Saturday in Brussels ,
a one-time tax of 9.9 percent is to be levied on Cypriot bank deposits of more
than 100,000 euros, or $130,000, effective Tuesday. That will hit wealthy
depositors — mostly Russians who have put vast sums into Cyprus ’s banks
in recent years. But smaller deposits will also be taxed, at 6.75 percent,
meaning that the banks will be confiscating money directly from retirees and
ordinary workers to help pay the tab for the 10 billion euro bailout or $13 billion.
The sanctity of the
banking system is, well, sacrosanct
Until now depositors have not suffered from the fact that those managing
the banking system in European countries like Spain have really messed up the
entire thing. But if the European action
holds, depositors will be paying for the mistakes of men and women the depositors
had no control over, the bankers.
And all of this
brings the world back to 1933, and the term ‘bank holiday’ rears its ugly
head.
The
government also extended a bank holiday that was put in place to try to stop a
run on the banks. The holiday was supposed to end Monday night. Now, banks will
not be opening their doors Tuesday, as planned. There was talk that they might
not open Wednesday, either.
A bank holiday is really a holiday for your money, it
doesn’t do any work, it just sits in the bank where nobody can touch it.
And who in the U. S. endorses such a
policy? Why conservatives of course.
“This
is the first time that senior creditors have taken a loss in a euro zone bank
rescue,” said Adam Lerrick, a sovereign debt expert at the American Enterprise
Institute who has long argued that debt-heavy countries in Europe must make
private investors — including bank depositors, if need be — share the cost of
bank bailouts. “It prevented the insolvency from being transferred from the
banking system to the government.”
Ah, yes, the
American Enterprise Institute, is there any policy position these people can’t get right?
The good news, everyone living today who hasn't lived through a run on a banking system is in for a front row seat to a phenomena everyone thought had been cured and done away with decades ago. Thanks European policy makers, you are making history come alive.
The good news, everyone living today who hasn't lived through a run on a banking system is in for a front row seat to a phenomena everyone thought had been cured and done away with decades ago. Thanks European policy makers, you are making history come alive.
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