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There Will Be Blood in Europe (Courtesy of the ECB)

IMG Auteur
Publié le 14 juin 2011
923 mots - Temps de lecture : 2 - 3 minutes
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SUIVRE : Europe Facebook
Rubrique : Editoriaux

 

 

 

 

The ECB (European Central Bank)'s plan to "kick the can down the road" as long as possible requires kicking in the teeth of the eurozone periphery countries. It could lead to uprising.

Europe is supposed to be the land of compassion and enlightened social policy. America is supposed to be the domain of "jungle capitalism" and brutal discrepancies between rich and poor.

Your editor heard this over and over as a student abroad in the late '90s. At the Oxford Union, a student debating society, there were spirited discussions on the treatment of the underclass. At Pulacky University in the Czech Republic, in the afterglow of the Velvet Revolution, we were reminded that America, too, had its brutal edges like the communists. Even the laid-back Aussies (during your editor's study time down under) thought the Yanks a bit harsh on social policy.

And yet now it is Europe, not the U.S., determined to grind the masses under the heel of a crony capitalism boot.

The ECB (European Central Bank)'s determination to force "austerity" on the periphery countries -- and to avoid debt restructuring at all costs -- is driving multiple generations to the brink.

There are families that can barely eat as neither mother nor father can find a job. There are millions of young and unemployed with no real hope of an economic future. Tens of thousands surround Greek parliament almost daily.

And meanwhile ECB bureaucrats, that enlightened bunch, can only think of the bankers and their ilk.

Europe's determination to "kick the can down the road" at all costs actually involves kicking in the teeth of the peripheral eurozone economies, forcing them to endure deep recession or even outright depression conditions for years to come.

Bankruptcy is frowned on in polite company, but there is a humane reason it exists. Beyond a certain point -- when the debt load becomes intolerable -- the prospect of financial freedom vanishes completely. Without bankruptcy, the noose of debt (interest on top of interest) can tighten around a man's neck for life.

Allowing for bankruptcy is not just humane, it helps keep the free market healthy. Debtors who find themselves in impossible situations are given a fresh chance to become productive again. And creditors who lose lending capital become more diligent (and thus more productive) in whom they choose to lend to.

Bankruptcy can happen to countries too. When a country is told "you are not allowed to default at any cost," this is where the moral questions get sticky. Should the debt sins of one profligate generation be passed on to the next? What about the next generation still, and the one after that?

And what if the great weight of debt was born of foolish loans -- stupid credit from stupid banks? Should the leverage-happy lenders be protected at all costs? Should the perpetrators and purveyors of such suicidal leverage be enabled to walk away scot-free?

What Europe is practicing has nothing to do with human compassion, or even free market capitalism. Instead it is the worst form of Darwinism. "Survival of the fittest" has simply come to mean "Survival of the most connected."

The europe banks are being looked after because they have the best connections, which they paid for with hard cash and soft influence. Those with deep hooks in the system have ensured their interests will prevail. Those without are left to go hang.

It has been predicted by many that America's experiment with leverage and debt is going to end in disaster. Your editor is fairly convinced, though, that the USA is not where such disaster is likely to strike first.

At some point -- perhaps quite soon -- the brute-force social inequalities in Europe are simply going to explode, like oil drums full of kerosene sitting in 100-degree heat. Citizens of Greece, Ireland and Portugal are going to realize they are not just getting a bad deal from the ECB, they are being financially mauled.

When this realization gathers full force, we could see a sort of "Fiscal Arab Spring" in the eurozone, embracing multiple generations of pissed-off and disenfranchised citizens. Europe's current crop of leaders, determined to sacrifice the economic future of multiple countries on the altar of the banks, will be told where they can go.

At some point, the citizens of Europe's periphery countries will remember what democracy is for. And if their rising voices are not heard, there will be blood and fire on a scale not yet seen. And the fallout will rock markets globally.

It will be a fairly awesome sight to behold. (As will the euro's spiraling decline -- and the dollar's jaw-dropping rally -- when this plays out.)

Stepping back a bit: What is so frightening right now, not just in Europe but China and America and Japan too, is the presence of fraud-fueled "Lehman 2.0" catalysts threatening to explode.

One could say that the 2008 financial crisis was the mother of all wake-up calls. But instead of actually waking up, the powers that be slammed the alarm clock, choked down a fistful of Ambien, and rolled back to sleep.

As a result, the world is going to get an even bigger wake-up call in the not-so-distant future.


Justice Litle

Taipan Publishing Group

 

Article brought to you by Taipan Publishing Group. Additional valuable content can be syndicated via their News RSS feed.  www.taipanpublishinggroup.com. Don't forget to follow Justice Little on Facebook and Twitter for the latest in financial market news, investment commentary and exclusive special promotions. Article originally published here

 

 

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