Repudiation of Sovereign Debt as a strategy
Crony-bankers, who should pay for their sins, do not represent Capitalism in the Greek debt crisis. Greece should repudiate its sovereign debt, and start anew with the drachma, liberalization, and a "balanced" budget. Syriza is incapable of setting the right blueprint however.
people can hear their feet shuffle and it just ain't right. -- j
p.s. I carry a meter to check this.
I just mentioned. . tough car. . my wife and I did the
sound for a wedding and reception / dance in VA
years ago, and packed it with the kilowatt system
plus 350 pounds of CDs and tapes . . . we blew
their circuit breakers! . whatta party! -- j
it wasn't quite as good as the first one, but fine
nevertheless! -- the $200 per month machine, all
costs included with 7500 miles of commuting and
many side trips. . great car!!! -- j
I thought you were saying inflation affects everything but whatever you happen to be selling. I now think you were saying any inflationary monetary policy results in inefficiencies that hurt growth. So maybe your wealth grows at 10% nominal, 6% real under a central banking system that tries to smooth the peaks and valleys with monetary policy. It might average 8% nominal, 8% real, I think you may be saying, if the central bank did not pursue inflationary policy. Trying to prevent unused production capacity, you're saying, the central bank allows inefficiencies, like keeping a plant running that would be utilized better if shut down a re-purposed.
Am I getting closer to understanding? I don't mean to put words in your mouth; I'm just re-stating in my own words for clarity.
I would NEVER say that. I advocate for a short term deep austerity. A correction that would be painful but not as painful as what is going to happen. I do not support expanding the money supply. that is theft. Some sectors were spared in the last crisis. they would not be spared if the markets were allowed free movement unhindered by the printing of money. Raising prices due to theft affects everyone except the top of the ponzi scheme pyramid. It is the worst sort of lying and theft. It is racketeering-yet if you work for the government or are an economist who advocates it-you never go to jail.
Yes, there is no way out without pain. Earlier, it looked like the fairy godmother was the 'supra-national' institutions and the German taxpayer. But the drunk did not reform.
In addition the German economy is in decline as they bring in policies to satisfy the greens, economic suicide for their industries. The big unions are waking up, many jobs will be lost as the big motor and chemical corporates pay higher energy costs and higher taxes to pay for green scams. As for Greece, perhaps there can be an even wider reach for more bail out money, perhaps the EU, ECB, IMF and other supras will find a way to intervene in the Greek economy, I suspect it is too late.
Another point raised by Vinay is interesting- the sanctity of contacts, but when is an agreement not a contract? I suggest that is the case here - when neither party sees the contract as fulfill-able, to both sides it is other people's money - fraud.
I'm all for repudiation. Let the EU suffer for their stupidity and inability to properly vet a loan, and let Greece pay for its fiscal problems with the inevitable international trade issues that come with default.
vulnerable to unseen dark forces out of his control --
we have prepared for the future as best we could,
and now it is happening. -- j
p.s. our health makes us more vulnerable, and
we are dealing with that as best we can.
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