Baleful Greek chorus heralds economic doom
Everyone is waiting for who will flinch first in worldwide game of financial chickenPublished On Fri Mar 5 2010
Immanuel Wallerstein Everyone is discussing what Fortune magazine is calling the "Greek maelstrom" and everyone is pointing the finger at someone else. Whose fault is it? The Greek government is accused of cheating and allowing Greeks to live beyond their means. The European Union is accused of having created an impossible structure for the euro.
Or is the fault with Goldman Sachs? It is accused of having enabled the Greek government to falsify its accounts when it sought to join the euro monetary system. It is accused today of engaging in "credit-default swaps" that make the situation of the Greek government even more vulnerable, but to the bank's profit. The head of credit strategy at UniCredit in Munich says this is like "buying insurance on your neighbour's house – you create an incentive to burn down the house." Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany calls Goldman Sachs' actions in 2002 "scandalous" and Christian Lagarde, France's finance minister, calls now for greater regulation of credit-default swaps.
Economic historian Niall Ferguson says that "a Greek crisis is coming to America." He calls this "a fiscal crisis of the Western world." Ferguson is preaching the evils of public debt and of the concept of a "Keynesian free lunch," which in the end is a "drag on growth." Nobel-Prize-winning economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman says it's a "Euromess" because Europe should not have adopted a single currency before it was ready to have political union. But now the euro can't be allowed to break up since it would trigger a worldwide financial collapse.
Meanwhile, it seems everyone is pressuring the Greek government to reduce its public debt as a percentage of GNP from over 12 per cent to, say, 4 per cent in, say, four years. Can it do this? Should it do this? The Greek government says it will do something. This "something" has been enough to bring about massive strikes of farmers, hospital workers, air traffic controllers, customs officials, and all those who are being asked to reduce their income in the middle of an economic crisis and increased unemployment. ..........(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.thestar.com/opinion/article/775221--baleful-greek-chorus-heralds-economic-doom