Why the EU won’t fix anything this weekend

Yes, the Germans are concerned that ECB bond buying and direct funding might be inflationary,
but there is something even more fundamental supporting their to objection to ECB support.

The problem is,
the EU leaders believe the high rates, failed auctions, and related funding and liquidity issues
are caused by the national government budget deficits being too high.

And therefore the fundamental solution is deficit reduction.
That is, only by reducing deficits,
will the ability to independently fund return to where it was before the 2008 financial crisis hit.

So while they recognize that ECB funding can keep them muddling through,
though with some perceived inflation risk,
they firmly believe it is deficit reduction that will allow them to return to pre 2008 funding dynamics,
where each member nation could independently fund itself in the market place at reasonable rates.

Unfortunately, that’s a bit like saying that by adjusting his financial ratios,
Bernie Madoff’s fund could return to pre crisis business as usual.

And just like Bernie could only be back in business if somehow he got
the Fed to guarantee his investors against loss,
the way I see it (but, unfortunately, not the way they see it),
the euro member nations now require ECB backing, directly or indirectly,
to be back in business.

As previously discussed, spending and deficits for currency issuers like the US, Japan, UK,
and the euro members when they had their own currencies are not constrained by income or
market forces. Observed debt to GDP levels for currency issuers can be anywhere from
50% to maybe 200%, as they serve to provide the net financial assets demanded by the
various institutional structures of those nations. And regardless of debt ratios, interest rates
are necessarily set by the Central Banks, and not market forces.

Spending and deficits for currency users, including the US states, businesses, households, and the euro member nations since
adopting the euro, are, however, necessarily constrained by income and market forces.
That’s why observed deficits for currency users are far lower than currency issuers.
California, for example, has seen its financing difficulties even though it’s debt to GDP ratio is under 5%.

Luxembourg’s debt to GDP ratio of about 15% when it adopted the euro was by far the lowest of the euro member nations.
And that’s because Luxembourg never did have it’s own currency. It was always a currency user,
and so market forces never let it’s debt get any higher than that. And even with the current financial crisis
Luxembourg’s debt is only about 20% of GDP.

So what happened about 13 lucky years ago is that the currency issuers of mainland Europe decided to turn themselves into currency users.
And at the same time, now as currency users rather than currency issuers,
simply waltz into the euro zone with their suddenly/absurdly too high existing debt ratios they incurred as currency issuers.

The ‘right’ way to do it back then would have been to have the ECB guarantee their debt from the inception of the euro,
and use the Growth and Stability Pact to avoid moral hazard issues and enforce compliance.
But that would not have worked politically.
The only way they would all come together is the way they did all come together.
The priority was union first, and work out subsequent problems as needed.

So now they have two problems-
a solvency problem where they can’t fund themselves without ECB support,
and a bad economy, now further deteriorating as evidenced by negative growth and rising unemployment.

And while the Germans aren’t entirely wrong in their belief that lower deficits would restore funding capacity,
I don’t think they recognize that as currency users debt to GDP ratios may need to be under 30% to get to that point.

Nor do they recognize that given current private sector credit conditions, deficits and debt ratios need to be higher
to offset the demand leakages (unspent income) inherent in their institutional structures. These include pension contributions,
insurance reserves, corporate reserves, individual retirement plans, and the demand for actual cash in circulation.
This means that what they call austerity- pro active tax increases and spending cuts- will slow the economy and therefore cause
tax revenue to fall and transfer payments to rise to the point where deficits increase rather than decrease.
The only remaining hope for growth is exports, but with all the world doing much the same that channel is not currently open.

So back to the present.

(And yes, without the 2008 financial crisis all of this may not yet have happened.
But it all did happen, and here we are.)

The firm belief is that deficit reduction is what is needed to return to independent funding.
And while funding by the ECB can allow things to muddle through, and hopefully not prove inflationary,
there is no exit from ECB funding and the inherent inflation risk it carries apart from deficit reduction.

Therefore I expect the upcoming discussions to focus entirely around deficit reduction, with little if any discussion of funding.
And, as is currently the case, funding assistance will only come conditionally with accelerated austerity.

That is, all options on the table will only cause a bad economy to get worse.
And all options on the table will tend to drive deficits higher,
which both makes matters worse, and,
as recent history has shown,
triggers demands for more austerity.

The chart, below, shows how the financial crisis of 2008 caused what seemed to be working just fine on the way up
to come apart when private sector credit expansion faltered, and the economy took a dive, driving up national government
debt to GDP ratios, and causing it all to go bad in typical ponzi fashion.

eu debt gdp

France, Germany to Propose New EU Treaty

They seriously believe that the crisis is all about deficits being too high,
and it all will be and can only be remedied by bringing deficits down.

Therefore they see ECB funding as not solving anything if it doesn’t serve the further purpose of deficit reduction.

Good luck to them, and good luck to us as we’re trying to do the same thing.

:(

France, Germany to Propose New EU Treaty

Published: Monday, 5 Dec 2011 | 10:55 AM ET
By: Reuters with CNBC.com

 
France and Germany have agreed on a series of reforms to address the euro zone sovereign debt crisis that will be presented to EU President Herman Van Rompuy on Wednesday, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said after a meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday.

 
“Things cannot continue as they have done up until today. Our preference is for a treaty among the 27 (EU members), so that nobody feels excluded, but we are open to a treaty among the 17 (euro members), open to any state that wants to join us,” Sarkozy told a press conference following the meeting.

 
“This treaty would contain the following things: We want automatic sanctions in the event of a breach of the rule on deficits below 3 percent (of GDP),” he said.

 
“We want a golden rule that is reinforced and harmonized on the European level so that the budgets of all 17 (euro zone states) have a constitutional rule to ensure that national budgets move toward a return to equilibrium,” Sarkozy added.

 
The French President said the Franco-German agreement would be written up in a letter and presented to (European Council President) Herman Van Rompuy on Wednesday.

 
“We want to make sure that the imbalances which led to the situation in the euro zone today cannot happen again,” he said.

 
Angela Merkel stressed the leaders wanted structural changes which go beyond agreements.

 
“We need binding debt brakes, which can be verified by the European court of Justice … in order for the Stability and Growth Pact to hold,” she said.

 
The Stability and Growth pact lays out the budgetary rules that member states must follow.

 
Berlin and Paris are under unprecedented pressure to see eye to eye in a crisis that has split them on issues such as the role of the European Central Bank in lending to troubled states and on whether the bloc should issue joint euro bonds.

 
“Regarding what we have said about the ECB, nothing has changed. We reject the idea of euro bonds,” Merkel said.

“This package shows that we are absolutely determined to keep the euro as a stable currency and as an important contributor to European stability.”
Top ECB policymakers have been reluctant to buy up debt from distressed euro zone states, as this would take the pressure off governments to get their financial houses in order.

 
But ECB chief Mario Draghi has signaled that a “fiscal compact” produced by the euro zone governments could nudge the bank to act more decisively on the crisis.

 
The hope is that private bondholders will be assured that they are not being singled out by European policymakers for losses, bolstering their confidence in buying euro zone bonds.

 
On Monday, an ECB policymaker described a plan for holders of Greek government debt to take heavy losses had led to a big rise in borrowing costs for other euro zone countries.

 
“It was a terrible mistake,” said ECB Governing Council member Athanasios Orphanides, who is also the Cyprus central bank chief.

 
Cyprus banks are big holders of Greek government debt, the value of which is due to be halved under a new 130 billion euro bailout deal for Athens.

 
In Dublin, Ireland’s government will unveil what it hopes will be the toughest budget of its five-year term, but as it tries to keep the public onside economists are warning that a global downturn means the worst may be yet to come.

 
On Tuesday, the Greek parliament is due to give final approval to a draconian 2012 austerity budget that is a condition for a second bailout package still under negotiation with private creditors, euro zone governments and the IMF.

eu leaders lunching at Élysée Palace

From the NY Times:

The leaders met over lunch at the Élysée Palace to prepare joint proposals to
offer the full membership the European Union in Brussels on Thursday night. They
agreed to propose automatic penalties for countries that exceed European deficit
limits as well as the creation of a monetary fund for Europe. They also backed
monthly meetings of European leaders.

Supporting suspicions it’s all for the further purpose of supporting their lifestyle…

Posted in EU

merkel and fektar on bondholder loss discussions

Forwarded Message

From the WSJ:

“Ms. Merkel signalled on Friday that she is having second thoughts about the wisdom of emphasizing bondholder losses. “We have a draft for the ESM, which must be changed in the light of developments” in financial markets since the Greek-restructuring decision in July, she said after meeting Austria’s chancellor in Berlin.

 

Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter, speaking at a conference in Hamburg on Friday, was more direct. “Trust in government treasuries was so thoroughly destroyed by involving private sector investors in the debt relief that you have to wonder why anyone still buys government bonds at all,” Ms. Fekter said.”

Posted in EU

Dutch PM Mark Rutte Comments

In this crisis of ignorance
the only thing they all agree on
is austerity:

By Jurjen van de Pol
Dec. 2 (Bloomberg) — The Netherlands isn’t in favor of
monetary financing by the European Central Bank to combat the
region’s debt crisis as it may spur inflation and takes away
pressure to reform, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said.
“Countries that are now forced to reform may get the idea
that there’s no need to reform because the printing press has
been switched on,” Rutte told reporters after the weekly
council of ministers in The Hague today.

DC takeaway

My takeaway from two days in DC is that Europe is headed to a blood in the streets outcome.

While ECB funding remains ongoing even as it’s uncertain,
in any case the underlying theme remains austerity.

There is no plan B.
Just keep raising taxes and cutting spending even as
those actions work to cause deficits to go higher rather than lower.

So while the solvency and funding issue is likely to be resolved,
the relief rally won’t last long as the funding will continue to be
conditional to ongoing austerity and negative growth.
And the austerity looks likely to not only continue but also to intensify,
even as the euro zone has already slipped into recession.

So from what I can see,
there’s no chance that the ECB would fund and at the same time mandate the
higher deficts needed for a recovery,
In which case the only thing that will end the austerity is
blood on the streets in sufficent quantity to trigger chaos and a change in governance.