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Archive for the ‘Battle for Europe’ Category

New treaty gets EU legal clearance, UK sidelined

Posted by seumasach on December 17, 2011

Euroactiv

16th december, 2011

A draft intergovernmental treaty to tighten fiscal discipline in the eurozone has received the green light from the European Council’s legal service, paving the way for a final text to be agreed by the end of January, EU officials said on Friday (16 December).

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Russia pledges billions in investment to help rescue the eurozone

Posted by seumasach on December 16, 2011

Deutsche Welle

15th December, 2011

Speaking at the close of what was his final summit with the EU as Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev offered his solidarity with the bloc, saying Russia was willing to contribute to the rescue plan managed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for the struggling euro currency.

“We are ready to invest all financial means to back the European economy and the eurozone,” Medvedev said following talks with European leaders.

The EU must be “preserved as a powerful political and economic force … [and the euro] preserved as one of the most important reserve currencies,” he added. The EU is Russia’s biggest trading partner.

Although the president didn’t mention specific figures, his economic advisor, Arkady Dvorkovich, said earlier on Thursday Moscow was prepared to offer up to 20 billion euros ($26 billion). That figure was dependent on progress towards a 200-billion-euro boost for the IMF agreed by European Union leaders, Dvorkovich said.

EU states have until Monday to work out the details of a number of bilateral loans to the IMF which are to be used in efforts to stabilize the eurozone.

With 41 percent of Russia’s currency reserves held in the euro and half of all Russian external trade conducted with the EU, Russia’s interests in the survival of the euro are clear.

“Europe has a stake in Russia’s success as I believe Russia has a stake in Europe’s success,” European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso commented on Thursday. “We should strive for a comprehensive and broad agreement with ambitious trade and energy chapters.”

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The pitfalls of the Merkozy fiscal pact

Posted by seumasach on December 16, 2011

Spiegel

16th December, 2011

The new fiscal compact that was agreed to at last week’s EU summit is supposed to help Europe out of the debt crisis. But it represents a briar patch of thorny legal and political questions. Until now, Chancellor Merkel’s government has adopted a take-it-or-leave-it approach with its euro rescue efforts. With the new pact, that is likely to change.

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Engineering the Eurozone Collapse

Posted by seumasach on December 15, 2011

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ECB can follow Fed and Bank of England, but won’t

Posted by seumasach on December 15, 2011

The author could also have pointed out that that the money printing option would in practice offload the crisis onto China and other countries of the Global South who hold euro-denominated assets as well as fueling inflation at home and abroad.. This is exactly what QE in the US/UK has done. Europe is, quite rightly, beginning to see the resolution of its problems in terms of partnerships with the BRICS countries, in particular, and will therefore, shun the “neo-Keynesian” solution so beloved of both the  City of London/Wall Street and most of the Western left.

Neurope

15th December, 2011

Over recent months, major English-language media have being promoting a scenario concerning how the Eurozone might disintegrate.

It goes like this – it all starts with Eurozone sovereign debt being further and dangerously downgraded by rating agencies for countries such as Italy or Spain (and, God forbid, France) dragging down some big lenders (major Eurozone banks) that are exposed to these countries.

The banks then have to be saved by governments, in order to avoid a run. Later on, however, treasuries become unable to honour all the debts (their own plus the banking sector’s), which leads to a second wave of toxic assets hitting banks and state budgets at the same time. Obviously, this vicious cycle would accelerate and finally explode, destroying all the major banks of the Eurozone together with the credibility of all sovereign borrowers.

However, note that it is the rating agencies that have kick-started the furore – at this point, it should be remembered that Germany did not support issuing Eurobonds because even all its own reserves of around €800-900 billion (from manufacturing trade surpluses), if being used to guarantee everybody’s debts through Eurobonds, may prove insufficient to stop such a vicious cycle from accelerating. And, in this deadly prospect, there will be nothing left to stop this destructive prophecy from materialising, since all of the Eurozone’s real money arsenal will be exhausted.

The media, however, seem to have forgotten that it was exactly this vicious cycle that was triggered in 2008 in Britain with the Northern Rock bankruptcy and in New York with the Lehman Brothers. In both cases, it was the corresponding central banks that saved the game, not the already over-subscribed treasuries. Washington and London spent a lot of borrowed money to directly support the capital of the major banks, but the ultimate saviour was in fact the central bank, which took care of the liquidity of both banks and treasuries, and this just by printing more money. The Fed and the Bank of England lent trillions to governments and banks and still kept feeding the financial industry with loans at almost zero interest, as if banking is a rare kind of activity that has to be safeguarded and supported by providing the raw material of their business (namely, money) for free.

The European Central Bank (ECB), however, is a different animal from the Fed and the Bank of England. Its statutes do not permit it to help governments by directly buying their bonds. However, the ECB can buy government bonds in the secondary market – for the time being, it is keeping such activity at relatively low levels, in the region of tens of billions rather than hundreds.

However, the ECB could jump to hundred of billions, if needed, so the institution can indirectly keep all 17 Eurozone governments liquid just as the Fed and the Bank of England are doing for Washington and London. Concerning the Eurozone’s banks, the ECB has already decided on a number of extraordinary measures to preserve their liquidity, with the latest and most significant being the extension of loan maturities to three years. That’s quite a long time for any crisis to last…

So, there is in fact no need for the English-language media to worry about the Eurozone, as the ECB will do exactly what the Fed and Bank of England have done, only we all hope that Eurozone will not find itself in such a pitiful position as London and Washington were in 2008

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France stokes eurozone row with call for UK credit downgrade

Posted by seumasach on December 15, 2011

Guardian

15th December, 2011

Tensions between London and Paris were heightened further on Thursday after the head of France’s central bank suggested that the UK was a candidate for a credit rating downgrade.

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Why Merkel’s Triumph Will Come at a High Price

Posted by seumasach on December 14, 2011

Spiegel

12th December, 2011

Everything was over after half an hour. At that point the summit, which was expected to be a historic one, had not even begun, and yet it was already clear that it would not end well.

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‘Clumsy’ Cameron’s walkout a blessing for Europe, says France

Posted by seumasach on December 14, 2011

Independent

12th December, 2011

Britain’s self-imposed isolation from European treaty reform talks is a “blessing” for other EU nations, one of President Nicolas Sarkozy’s leading advisers said at the weekend. Although Britain’s split with the rest of the EU was “regrettable”, it would make future negotiations on a fiscal union to save the euro much simpler, said Jean-David Levitte, President Sarkozy’s chief diplomatic adviser.

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Public announcement GEAB N°59-Global systemic crisis

Posted by seumasach on December 12, 2011

Global systemic crisis: 30,000 billion US dollars in ghost assets will disappear by early 2013 / The crisis enters a phase of widespread discounting of Western public debt

LEAP 2020

16th November, 2011

As we come to the end of the second half of 2011, it is evident that 15,000 billion in ghost assets have gone up in smoke since last July, just as was anticipated by LEAP/E2020 (GEAB N°56 ). And, according to our team, this process figures to continue at the same rate throughout the year to come. Indeed we estimate that, with the introduction of a 50% discount on Greek government debt, the global systemic crisis has entered a new phase: that of the generalized discount on Western public debt and its corollary, the fragmentation of the global financial markets. Our team believes that 2012 will bring an average discount of 30% of total Western public debt (1), plus an equivalent amount in loss of assets from the balance sheets of worldwide financial institutions. Specifically, LEAP/E2020 anticipates the loss of 30,000 billion ghost assets by early 2013 (2), with an acceleration in 2012 of the partitioning process of the global financial market (3) into three increasingly disconnected currency areas: Dollar, Euro, and Yuan. These two phenomena feed into each other. They will also be the cause of a sharp decline of 30% on the part of US currency in 2012 (4), as we announced last April (GEAB N°54 ), which will occur amidst a sharp reduction in demand for the US dollar and the worsening of the US governmental debt crisis. The end of 2011 will therefore see, as anticipated, the trigger of the European debt crisis detonating a US bomb.

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Europe 26- England 1

Posted by seumasach on December 11, 2011

Cailean Bochanan

11th December, 2011

For weeks now the mantra repeated ad nauseum in the British and English language media has been that the collapse of the Eurozone would be a disaster for Britain and that, therefore, it is overwhelmingly in our national interest that the euro crisis be resolved. And yet David Cameron, breaking, as I understand it, a previous pledge not to use the eurozone crisis as an opportunity to renegotiate the EU treaty, went to the Brussels summit and made a brazen attempt to do just that. This surely brings into question all the seeming concerns about the survival of the Eurozone: had these been genuine Cameron would have gone there in good faith, not to play another wrecking hand. Was it just that he was a hostage to the europhobes in his party? Surely, in the event of overriding British interests being at stake he could have faced them down. The truth is that overriding British interests as understood and represented by David Cameron are antagonistic to the eurozone and to the very existence of the euro.

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China an active supporter to European crisis settlement: Vice FM

Posted by seumasach on December 11, 2011

People’s Daily

11th December, 2011

China is one of the active supporters of the internationalcommunity to European crisis settlement, Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Fu Ying saidhere on Saturday.

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