Showing posts with label EU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EU. Show all posts

Saturday, January 7, 2012

What caused the eurozone crisis?

The eurozone leaders have agreed new fiscal rules, insisted on by Germany, that will limit their governments' borrowing each year to just 3% of their economies. These rules should stop the massive accumulation of debt and make sure there won't be another financial crisis.

But, they agreed to exactly the same 3% borrowing limit back in 1997, when the euro was getting ready. The "stability and growth pact" was insisted on by German finance minister Theo Waigel. So, what happened?

Italy was the worst offender. It usually broke the 3% annual limit. But actually Germany was the first big country to break the 3% rule. After that, France followed them. Of the big economies, only Spain carried out with its duty until the 2008 financial crisis; the spanish government stayed within the 3% limit every year from the euro's creation in 1999 until 2007. Not only that; of the big four, Spain's government also has the smallest debt in relation with the size of its economy. Greece, by the way, never fulfilled to the 3% target, but manipulated its borrowing statistics to look good, which allowed it to get into the euro. This irregularities were discovered two years ago.

But the markets have other ideas. So Germany, France and Italy should be in trouble with all that reckless borrowing. Well, no. Actually, markets have been willing to lend money to Germany at low interest rates since the crisis began. Spain on the other hand is seen by markets as almost as risky as Italy.

So what caused the crisis? There was a big accumulation of debt in Spain and Italy before 2008, but it had nothing to do with governments. Instead it was the private sector who were taking out loans. Interest rates had fallen to unprecedented lows in southern European countries when they joined the euro. It motivated the increase of the debt.

All that debt helped finance more and more imports by Spain, Italy and France. Meanwhile, Germany became an export industry since 1999, selling more to the rest of the world than it was buying as imports. That meant Germany was earning a lot of surplus cash on its exports and most of that cash ended being lent to southern Europe. But debts are only part of the problem in Italy and Spain. During the boom years, wages rose in the south and German unions agreed to hold their wages steady. So Italian and Spanish workers now face a huge competitive price disadvantage.

So to recap, government public debt, which has grown exaggeratedly since the 2008 financial crisis, had very little to do with creating the current eurozone crisis in the first place, especially in Spain. Spain and Italy are now facing nasty recessions, because no-one wants to spend. Exports are uncompetitive and, now, governments have agreed to drastically cut their expenses.



Xabier

Friday, September 30, 2011

Finland enlarges the rescue funds

Yesterday, the parliament of Finland (Eduskunta) approved the extension of the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF). 103 parliamentarians, the whole coalition government ruled by prime minister Jyrki Katainen, have voted for this extension against 66 votes of the “True Finns” and “Center Party”, the biggest parties in the opposition.

Including this voting, the number of countries taking part in the enlargement of the EFSF is 11. This expansion, that could manage 2 billion €, has been approved by Spain, Belgium, France, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Portugal, Slovenia and Germany.

Its creation is related to the fragile economic situation of Greece. The decision taken the past June 24th was increasing it with 780.000 million € with guarantees. Anyway, if a loan would be necessary, its credit rating is around 440.000 million €.

It means that the contribution of the Nordic country will rise from 7.900 million to 14.000 million €. So, the EFSF is more flexible to face the Greek situation, that is extending day by day.
Behind this decision, we can find a combination of the confidence of financial markets, the wish of reassuring the European stock markets and the attacks against Spanish and Italian risk premium.

Xabi

Sunday, March 27, 2011

The leaders of the EU sit the base of the economic government

The bases of the architecture of the economic government of the EU remained established yesterday in the wide agreement reached by the leaders of Twenty-seven countries of the EU.
Besides monetary politics, the Union will start possessing the first instruments to elaborate an economic politics common European. The European Advice approved yesterday the instruments for this major economic governance that they are the Agreement for the Euro Bonus, the bottom of rescue (European Mechanism of Stability, MEDE), six legislative offers that reinforce the budgetary vigilance and the Agreement of Stability and Growth, and the severer accomplishment of endurance tests to the banking.
The Agreement for the Euro Bonus consists of a series of commitments that must assume the members of the Euro and other countries of the EU that voluntarily they it want to sign to stimulate the competitiveness
Such as
To promote the employment
To assure the sustainability of the public finance
And to reinforce the financial stability
The Agreement of the Euro Bonus, signed for the present time by other six countries (Poland, Denmark, Bulgaria, Romania, Lithuania and Latvia) has his origin in the German requirements to demand major efforts to the countries to improve his competitiveness and as condition of which Germany was accepting a bottom of rescue for the countries with difficulties since it has been the case of Greece and Ireland.

The European Advice passed also to create from 2013 the MEDE that foresees a bottom of 500.000 million really available and of which Germany is his principal contributor with 27,1 %.

The bottom will possess the capital spent of 80.000 millions

Six legislative dispositions approved yesterday to reinforce the economic governance, include a reform of the Agreement of Stability and Growth, reinforce the budgetary vigilance and new dispositions are established to reduce the macroeconomic imbalances.

MARIA JOSE GONZALEZ

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

The german economy grows up

The IBP grows 3,6 %, the most importe increase in 20 years.


The strength of the exports and the notable recovery of the demand are the principal reason of the strong growth. This strong growth of the country has carried a strong increase of the labor occupation, which reached last year a historical maximum.
The Department of German Economy thinks that with the decrease of the unemployment and the increase of the salary they are laid the foundations for an internal robust demand that establishes an economic healthy long-term growth.
In spite of the advance of the , the official calculations anticiped that the German economy will not recover until ends of this year the levels to which he was before the financial global crisis.

Let's hope that this increased of the economic moved to the rest of countries affected by the financial crisis

María José González