Twenty-seven. One
from Brussels to identify that the object in question is, in fact, a light
bulb. Someone from Northern Europe to hold the bulb. A group from Southern
Europe to turn the guy holding the bulb around and around until the thing is
screwed in. A person from Germany or France to flick the switch and then the
rest of the group, after tea, strudel and champagne to stand in front of the
microphones and laud the effort.
In the recent
summit, however, they couldn’t even identify the light bulb. Since the European
countries could not agree on almost anything they performed their usual trick
once again. We will have a supervisor of banks in some fashion, at some time in
the future, under someone’s direction that will supervise some amount of banks.
More tea, more strudel, more champagne and at what time am I scheduled at the
microphone?
Nothing is as
foolproof as sufficiently engineered promises of future results.
Did the European
summit deal with the Cyprus issue; no. Did they provide an answer for Greece or
Spain; certainly not. Was anything of value accomplished at the European summit
past platitudes and congratulatory speeches that they had come up with a few
lofty notions of someone doing something with the European banks; decidedly a
negative answer. More fluff, more stuff and more “pass the risotto if you
please.”
In the meantime
the markets, all of the markets, are living off of intervention. The world’s central
banks provide capital and we all have to put the stuff somewhere. Euroloans by
the ECB, the printing of money by the Fed and the Bank of England and “the
spice must flow.” This is a rather famous comment in Frank Herbert’s wonderful
novel, “Dune.” In this science fiction book intergalactic commerce could only
happen if the navigators imbibed spice so that they could steer their ships
from one galaxy to the next. No spice; no commerce.
In our present
circumstances the normal course of some type of fiscal responsibility provided
by governments had significantly diminished and virtually faded away.
No one in America
or Europe wants to own up to the very serious problems facing both continents
and so the central banks are acting not only as lenders of last resort but
decision makers of last resort. This has been in play continuously since the
American Financial Crisis starting in 2008. We live in a dream state where no
one wants to decide anything and so the central banks not only provide
liquidity but they have taken over as the government by fiat. Ben Bernanke and
Mario Draghi, elected by no one, are effectively in control of the purse
strings of the western world. From here you get to two scary questions; “what
happens when all of this stops” and then “what happens if it never stops?”
“They did nothing, absolutely nothing and it was everything that they thought it would be.”
-The Wizard
While almost no
one recognizes it; we have not only “passed the buck” but we have passed the
government. The famous sign that once resided on Harry Truman’s desk, “The Buck
Stops Here” has now been moved to Ben Bernanke’s office. We have dysfunctional
governments now in both America and Europe and the central banks are now in
control because there is no one left. This is a dangerous state of affairs in
my opinion and the consequences are mystifying.
Pass the salt,
pass the government and no I did not ask for the check.
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