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The Euro zone crisis cannot be staved off. A building with the bad foundation cannot be durable.

When the Arab emirate Dubai was on the verge of bankruptcy, the international financial speculators became worried. The rating agencies simultaneously came to correct their assessments. The bankers started to check if their debtors were solvent. Another financial crisis is in the air.

It turned out that not only Ireland and Latvia, but also Greece and Spain face a default. Iceland has already become bankrupt.

Latvia has become bankrupt too, but this can be acknowledged slightly later if the country keeps borrowing money. While the European Union and the International Monetary Fund are willing to place billions of dollars to this bottomless pit, Latvia can pretend to make both ends meet. True, the debt is growing, and the gross domestic product is falling. For all that, the EU is still ready to place its financial resources to the Latvian “black hole”. However, it would be much more difficult to help Greece or Spain in the same way.

The Greek government said that Greece’s external debt was 300 billion euro. Meanwhile, the country’s gross domestic product in 2009 makes up about 240 billion euro. Therefore, the external debt has reached approximately 125% of the GDP. Greece has already been called Europe’s “weak link”, but if there was only one weak link, the situation would not be so bad. The point is that there are too few “strong links” in the “chain”.

The problem is aggravated by the fact that Greece, Spain and Ireland, unlike Baltic states, are in the Euro zone. In other words, their troubles automatically tell on the situation in other countries using the single European currency. At the same time, those countries cannot follow their own financial policies, as this would be blocked by other countries. Germany is interested in maintaining the stable euro rate, while Southern Europe – in the euro’s plummeting. Under the circumstances, there is nothing else left for Greece, Spain and Ireland to do but to dramatically devaluate their national currencies. But it is impossible to devaluate the euro in only one Euro zone country. That’s why there are rumours that Greece and then some other countries are going to withdraw from the Euro zone. Technically, this would be the only reasonable decision. But its psychological and political consequences would be extremely heavy, or even catastrophic. The dilemma is as follows: if the countries, which would like their currencies to be weaker, withdrew from the Euro zone, then the European monetary system would continue to exist, but the faith in the euro, as the world reserve currency, would be shaken. If Europe’s “weak links” were kept in the Euro zone by hook or by crook, all the other links of the chain would be weakened. As a result the faith in the euro would be shaken in any case, but that would occur later.

The euro sceptics predicted the current situation in the early 1990s. When uniting completely different economies in the single currency system, the neoliberal authors of the United Europe project has made all the countries hostages of each other and subordinated the entire European economy to interests and ambitions of the German financial capital. The inflation level in Spain cannot be equal to that in Germany, because for that the Spanish economy and society should resemble the German economy and society. It goes without saying that Greece did not turn into Germany, more than that, nobody defined such a goal as the differences between Europe’s markets were actively used by the mobile capital. As a result, too expensive currency hindered the development of Southern Europe, which, in its turn, exported the inflation to the North.

Ironically, now the countries, which joined the Euro zone most enthusiastically, are exactly the ones who may withdraw from that zone. Neither German nor French citizens were enthusiastic about adopting the euro. Nobody asked the people’s opinion and the new currency was imposed on them in spite of their vigorous protests (especially in Germany). In Sweden and Denmark, where the Parliaments asked the population whether they wanted the new currency or not, the majority of people strongly opposed the euro. Because of that, many European financial problems did not happen in those states. In addition the countries have much better opportunities to pursue their own policies, which are consistent with their interests, than their EU neighbors do.

By contrast Spain, Greece and Italy welcomed the new currency. There was a good reason for this. They had not very popular currencies, high inflation and weak banking systems. The single European currency seemed to put an end to all of that. Unfortunately, the weakness of the South European financial system just reflected the structural economical and social problems existing in that region. As nobody has addressed those problems, sooner or later they were expected to hit the new financial system.

Liberal commentators and politicians do not understand that a financial situation reflects the general economic situation rather than determines it. Fighting against an economic crisis by financial means is tantamount to reducing a person’s illness to fever. Here any decision made by a doctor boils down to prescribing higher and higher febrifuges doses to a patient, which, in its turn, only worsens the illness.

The Greek and Spanish people believed that after the currency change they would get rid of their financial and economic problems, but, as a matter of fact, the patient got a different thermometer to take his temperature.

Alas, the less reasonable in terms of economic interests of the European countries the single currency introduction was, the more steadfastly it will be adhered to, since the officials’ acknowledgement of their defeat and giving up the chosen policy means a failure for which they have to be amenable. Not only left radical “skeptics”, but also quite inoffensive (for the time being) ordinary people come to realize that the entire Europe’s interests were disregarded for the sake of ambitions of Frankfurt financial elites and the Brussels officials, who were close to them. Unlike intellectuals, ordinary people are pitiless.

The crisis in the Euro zone inevitable becomes the whole Euro zone crisis, when all the system, its rules, ideology and institutions are called in question. The European officials will do their best to postpone this crisis, including by jettisoning the lumber – poor East Europe. Such a result of the attempts to “integrate those countries into the West” might be a good lesson for the countries’ inhabitants, who believed in their governments’ demagogy, if not for the elites (they are hopeless).

However, even if East European lumber is jettisoned, the Euro zone crisis cannot be staved off. A building with the bad foundation cannot be durable.

A historical inevitability can be delayed, but cannot be stopped.

Published by Eurasian Home

Person

Reading this commentary made me think of this:

By Jones, Lon at Dec 29, 2009 23:18 PM

Not too long ago, when the postmodernist world-view had gained ascendancy, intellectuals subscribing to that perspective buried the great grand narratives (meta-narratives, they called them) which had shaped minds and revolutions in the west for a couple of centuries as untenable, as a relic of a bygone epoch. In essence, the arguments were staked on reasoning that demonstrated human perception and "language" of experience (or "reality" and knowledge thereof) as so context- and time-specific and, thus, variegated, that meta-narratives, when attempted to be applied as a one-size-fits-all perscription, are bound to result in repugnant social outcomes. In fact, the examples of such outcomes throughout the 20th and current centuries are innumerable - whereby the contradictions between some context-specific situation and high-falutin meta-schema result in the disintegration of both, rendering the human guinea pigs of the experiment rudderless orphans (figuratively in all cases, literally in some).

You could call it "progess" if, perhaps, policy makers and "intellectuals" and the parroting minions of the early 21st century were capable of incorporating such lessons of the very recent past into the analytics and discourses concerning current sociopolitical challenges and the prospects for improving (or at least not making worse) material conditons for the species in general. But of course, another celebrated item of postmodernism was the idea of "discontinuities", such that any relations between cause and effect, past and present, at the social level, are all but effaced. Thus, in today's world, politicians, "intellectuals" and the parroting minions carry on as if little or no useful "knowledge" of this world that could be of some value to contemporary issues ever existed before. In fact, most "contemporary" issues are mere spawns of those effectively swept under the rug throughout the rise and flattening of western social systems. But without that recognition, they only appear to be "contemporary" and new. Given the fractured state of education, of the "academy", these days, it might not be a bad bet that many, if not most, of contemporary politicians and "intellectuals" are as knowledge-less of, and as dissociated from the critical thought of preceding epochs of westernism as the parroting minions. Thus, in contemporary times, the principal "continuity" (perhaps the only "continuity" that counts, in the post postmodern mindset) to be observed is that of personal ambition, so simply illustrated in this quote from the article:

"Alas, the less reasonable in terms of economic interests of the European countries the single currency introduction was, the more steadfastly it will be adhered to, since the officials' acknowledgement of their defeat and giving up the chosen policy means a failure for which they have to be amenable. Not only left radical "skeptics", but also quite inoffensive (for the time being) ordinary people come to realize that the entire Europe's interests were disregarded for the sake of ambitions of Frankfurt financial elites and the Brussels officials, who were close to them."

And so all the worst ideas a thoughtful person might imagine - if that person's thought were oriented towards the social v. the personal - continue to be pursued relentlessly, the likelihood of odious social outcomes be damned. This, of course, is why force and surveillance have become such dominant features of contemporary western societies. In fact, for the "real" agents behind the globalistic prescriptions being proffered in contemporary times, one could imagine that the only repugnant outcome would be the failure of the prescriptions to adequately increase their fortunes. Whether dealing with trade, economic development and finance, environmental stewardship, climate "change", or globalization in general, the drive is to impose some ambitious cabal's own meta-narrative will across all contexts on all continents for all time. Of course, it benefits such a project if the majority of people, no matter their class or political declaration (democrat or republican, progressive or conservative, left or right) are stupid of and dissociated from any kind of knowledge from any epoch that might pass as thoughtful consideration and critique of contemporary policy pursuits. There are too many investments of personal ambition for thoughtful consideration - even at the "minion" level. Thus, dis-education of the public, in general, seems to have been a major objective of the project, with the mission apparently pretty much accomplished. A dumbed-down population is more conducive to the harvesting of useful instruments, I suppose.

This straightforward, elegant article should resonate with any reasonably informed person, because it is a case in point that concisely illustrates the madness of (from a social and human perspective) contemporary globalist pusuits masquerading as social policy. I don't know how many others (whether "left" or "right" thinking - whatever that is)  might grasp and appreciate the thought behind the article - - but its underlying thesis is, in my mind, as valid today as it would have been 30 years ago when I was in college.

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Person

Interesting

By Hughes, Terrence at Dec 29, 2009 21:05 PM

Very interesting discussion.  Wish there was more detail..

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