I'd say the deflationary tencencies originate from the weakness of the southern European economies, not from Germany's strength.Crown wrote:So back in 2013 Krugman was saying that a German surplus was creating a deflationary bias within the Eurozone, eh? Wonder if he was wrong or not;
Like Krugman, you act as if the successfull European economies are at fault for the situation. In my opinion, the southern European economies and France failed to adapt to the Euro, and they also failed to adjust to the world economy we have today, with the raise of the BRIC-states etc.
When I look at countries like Italy or France, I don't see much reforms they have taken since the cold war ended. No wonder that their economies are not fit for the competitive situation we have today.
But of course it is much easier to blame the successful countries.
Again you do not address the point:Crown wrote:There isn't, 80% of the money 'floated into Greece' floated its way straight out to the banks! Did it escape your notice that the 'myth' of austerity has caused a shrinkage of 25% of Greece's GDP which was completely avoidable?
Greece could only reach its "growth" by lending more money than it could stomach in the long run prior to 2010. Of course this is not sustainable in the long run, at some point this house of cards has to fall.
And this is exactly what has happened in Greece. The Greek economy now adjusts to realistic levels.
So no, the shrinking of the Greek economy was not "avoidable"! Sooner or later it had to crash down!
You cannot infinitely subsidize an economy from abroad, it has to stand on its own feet. Which brings me back to the point I made earlier:
A state can only "earn" money by taxing its companies and the people who work for them. Everything else is voodoo magic bullshit which is not sustainable. And this has been proven nicely by Greece.
And of course the money floated to the banks - this is money Greece already has already spent in the past after all! Do you think Greece gets the same money a second time? This is retarded.
I hope you do know that the main factor which led to the Great Depression was the bancrupty of the banks. This dried the economy of money, which led to the collapse in 1929.Crown wrote:Did it escape your notice that Greece is suffering a depression that has now outlasted the Great Depression? Do you remember how the Great Depression was made worse and how it was made better?
This you cannot even compare to Greece - they have no economy to speak of, and this is exactly the problem. If it would have been a similar situation, the rescue of the banks would have rescued the Greek economy.
And the voters of the Northern European countries would vote for politicans who make such suggestions? Dream on!Crown wrote:It does and it is. They can dress it anyway they want; growth package, stimulus package, hair cut, payment restructuring, etc.
Greece has an overboarding bureacracy which is a huge hindrance to investions. And no, Greece has not taken the necessary steps yet to fix this. Cutting wages alone is not enough.Crown wrote:How the FUCK does your internal logic work? You say that Greece having the Euro and the others not having it 'doesn't count' and then claim that Greece having the Euro means 'they have to deal with it'? You're internally self-contradictory. The only way that Greece can compete with these nations is by drastically slashing wages, which it did. But that is still not enough if its unemployment continues to grow. Hey, I've seen this scenario before; unemployment rising coupled with falling wages, wanna guess when?
And of course having the Euro is no excuse for not attracting investors - as I already have stated, if Greece thinks the Euro is a handicap they can leave the currency. If they want to keep it, they have to deal with it. I don't see any contradictions here.
OK, so I had the numbers wrong in mind (yes, I should have looked them up before posting).Crown wrote:Right so a possible 700 people committing fraud on an island of 40,000 is, and I quote; "islands where almost everybody was officially blind"
But I hope you don't think that fraud and Fakelaki is no problem at all in Greece.
You do not get the difference between a bank getting bancrupt and a state getting bancrupt. Fine, this is enough information for me.Crown wrote:And you've been told, time and time again that this is simply because Iceland allowed its banks to fail while Greek banks (along with French and German banks) weren't since Greece was 'rescued' by the Troika buy increasing it's debt with a 'bailout'.
The Greek economy got what it deserved. Of course the effects for the people are bad, but the standard of living was not sustainable anyways - as soon as the flow of foreign money stops, it's over. And this point has to come sooner or later.Crown wrote:I'll bring it up every time you try and make this as some kind of moral argument; i.e. 'they deserve it', 'they're thieves', 'they're lazy', 'they're fraudsters' etc
You can only drag it out, so that the collapse occurs later. The collapse itself was unavoidable.
You still haven't explained how your voodoo economy bullshit can work:Crown wrote:No I'm saying that the periphery countries should tell Germany; we're happy you're doing well but we're drowning here. Our unemployment is over 20% (with youth at around 50%) and we would really like an end to what is made up austerity bullshit which has extended a recession beyond a time frame of the Great Depression. If the creditors want to insist on reforms (crack down on tax evasion, corruption, etc) fine, but you cannot continue to contract an economy year after year and claim 'working as intended'.
The crisis in the PIIGS states was caused by cheap money flowing into these countries, with all side effects like housing bubbles etc.
If you keep the money flowing, you do not fix jack shit. You just shift the inevitable collapse into the future.
This does not change the fact that Greek's economy cannot live from free foreign money in the long run.Crown wrote:Because while the core economies (and their citizens) will find it unpalatable, the periphery will revolt. As it did in Greece; be thankful (as am I) that they voted for the left and not the right.
Yes, it is better to do the same thing than 10-15 years ago, which brought us into this situation in the first place. Brilliant.Crown wrote:I'm not going to claim that Greece between early 1980s to late 1990s was a shining example of a vibrant economy, but only a blind ideologue with an axe to grind can completely ignore what happened post Euro entry and not see a connection between the introduction of the single currency and absurdly cheap credit to what eventually transpired. However just because this happened doesn't mean we should continue with a policy which is so obviously discredited by every measurable index known to economists. When the goddamned IMF goes 'oops, we fucked up' it's time to re-asses.