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Many countries have restrictions and requirements on doctors,
nurses, lawyers etc. Greece
carries the idea to extreme.
According to Keep Talking Greece
"closed professions" include
beauticians, drama and
dance school instructors,
bakers, antiques dealers, insurance
agents, insurance consultants, employment
consultants, diagnostics centre staff, translators, divers, cameramen, driving school instructors, cab drivers, tourist
bus drivers, newspaper stand owners,
electricians, sound technicians, private school owners, tobacco sellers, gun manufacturers and sellers, hairdressers, private investigators, port workers,
real estate agents, lifeguards,
carpenters, financiers, opticians,
auditors, movie/theatre director and even car mechanics.
Restrictions will be lifted July 2. That is a much needed maneuver,
and the same applies in
the US as well.
Many states have prevailing
wage laws and other restrictions that have nearly the same effect as the insanity in Greece.
Greek Asset Fire Sale
Please consider Greece Will Accelerate State Asset Sales to Stem Debt Crisis as Bonds Drop
The Greek
government endorsed an accelerated asset-sale plan and
6 billion euros ($8.4 billion) of budget cuts to win extra aid and stem a market slide that threatens to swamp the most debt-laden euro-area nations.
Greek Prime Minister
George Papandreou’s Cabinet agreed yesterday to sell stakes in Hellenic Telecommunications Organization SA (HTO) by the end of next
month, as well as Public
Power Corp SA (PPC), Hellenic
Postbank SA, and the country’s ports.
The state’s direct stakes
in those three companies currently have a market value of 2.1 billion euros. The government also said it would
create a fund comprising assets to accelerate the sales, intended
to raise 50 billion euros by 2015. The bulk of that will come from selling 35 billion euros of real estate.
The government plans to complete
the sale of Postbank by the end of the year, and to
sell 75 percent stakes in
Piraeus Port Authority
and Thessaloniki Port Authority SA. It also intends
to extend the concession for Athens
International Airport this
year.
Greece owns 20 percent of
Hellenic Telecommunications,
or OTE, with a market
value of 3.2 billion euros. It has the right to sell
a 10 percent stake to
Deutsche Telekom AG, which already
holds 30 percent. The government
is seeking financial advisers to exercise the put option, and for the sale of a further 6 percent of the company,
the finance ministry said.
The Cabinet also announced
the additional budget cuts
worth about 2.8 percent of gross
domestic product need to reach a 7.5 percent deficit target for 2011 even as its economy
contracts for a third year, Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou said.
Greece has a “refinancing
hole” of 30 billion euros for both 2012 and 2013, according
to economist Nouriel Roubini. The nation could
restructure by issuing debt
with lower interest payments and extend maturities as it’s unlikely the nation will “regain market access for the next five to 10 years,” he said in an interview last week.
Untenable Timeline
Note that
Roubini's timeline is 5-10 years. The ECB an EU expect Greece to return to the
dent markets by 2013.
Structural reforms or not, Greece
will not pay back its debt in two
years, nor will Greece return to a healthy bond market in two years.
Greece will default.
Greece Compared
to US
Ending Restrictions on 130 "Closed Professions" is a badly needed reform. However, the near-term effect will be lower
wages, lower benefits, and increased competition.
Increased competition needs to happen in the US as well, with public unions kicking and screaming every step of the way. The SEIU, like the Greek unions, don't want reform at
all.
Regardless, the US desperately
needs to reduce red-tape and open up competition
for jobs in education, in garbage
collection, in prisons, in healthcare, in all government work.
Unfortunately Keynesian
clowns and politicians alike
want results now, and when it doesn't happen
now, they clamor for more stimulus, even though stimulus is a problem.
Fed's Misguided
Tactics
Compounding the problem,
the Fed fights wage
destruction with policies
that encourage speculation
and debase the dollar but don't
increase wages. The result is repetitive
asset bubbles and debt that cannot
possible be paid back.
Wages have not gone up, nor
have housing prices, nor has employment, yet the Fed persists with failed policies
that slowly destroy the
middle class.
It's a nasty brew. In many ways the US has more in common with Greece than
most realize, especially when it comes to public unions and lack of competition for protected government jobs.
Interestingly, self-serving
extortionists compared
the public union protests in Madison to freedom fighters in Egypt.
As I pointed out in Public Union Protesters More Like Greek Extortionists
than Egyptian Freedom Fighters; Unions Under Fire in Wisconsin, Ohio, Tennessee; Student
Idiocy, comparing
SEIU protests to freedom fighting is sheer
lunacy.
The Gimme, Gimme, Gimme
"Better Way" Chanting Mob looks more like the Greek public union extortion than it does anything
else.
Our cure is simple. Pass
national right-to-work laws,
scrap Davis-Bacon and all prevailing
wage laws, and end the
Fed.
Dissimilarities
Bear in mind Greece has other problems that are not
comparable, so does the
US. For example, the US has untenable
military spending and a health-care system that is the most costly
in the civilized world.
Greece is in a currency union with no fiscal
union. Greece has no way
to devalue its currency or set interest rates.
Greece has few exports while
the US is a huge exporter that simply imports far more than it exports.
Thus, I do not want to imply the US is Greece. I simply highlighted one area that is more similar than most think.
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
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