by Testosterone
Pit
Every country in
the Eurozone has its own collection of big fat lies that politicians and
eurocrats have served up in order to make the euro and the subsequent bailouts
or austerity measures less unappetizing. Here are some from the German point of
view, gleaned from the Wirtschafts Woche.
1999: “Can
Germany be held liable for the debts of other countries? A very clear
No!” said a multi-colored piece of
propaganda issued by the CDU, the party of Helmut Kohl who
was Chancellor at the time, and of Angela Merkel who is Chancellor now. It
explained: “The Maastricht treaty forbids explicitly that the EU or the other
EU Partners are liable for the debts of any Member State.” Sounds like a bad
joke today.
But fear not:
because of the 3% deficit limit in the Maastricht Treaty, “euro Member States
will therefore be able to service their debts over the long term without any
problems.” Thus, the big fat euro lies started before bank notes had even been
put into circulation.
January 2001:
“This money will have a great future,” said Kohl
during a speech celebrating the introduction of the euro that he’d pushed
through with all his corpulence. For a while, it worked. Euros were growing on
trees. Even Greece had access to cheap euro debt with which to buy votes and
fund the Olympics. Everyone was happy. Until it didn’t work anymore.
March 2010: “I’m
solidly convinced that Greece will never have to use this aid because the Greek
austerity program is credible to the highest extent,” said Euro
Group President Jean-Claude Juncker. He was trying to get disbelievers to
believe that Greece could and would cut spending and raise
taxes enough to bring its deficit under control without actually needing the
bailout funds. Hysterical! Turns out, Greek politicians would say anything to
get their hands on new money.
July 2010: “The
bailout funds will expire. That, we have agreed on,” said German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble. But now the big save-the-euro ESM bailout
fund is being bolted together, and it’s a “permanent” bailout fund.
February 2011:
“Italy is not a country at risk,” said former vice
chairman and managing director of Goldman Sachs, Mario Draghi, at the time
Governor of the Bank of Italy and member of the Governing Council of the ECB.
A year and a half
later, Italian yields were in the stratosphere. Investors doubted if the
country could fund its deficits or roll over its maturing debt. “Country at
risk” had become an understatement. Draghi, by then promoted to President of
the ECB, announced that the ECB would buy “unlimited” amounts of sovereign debt
to bail out countries like, well, Italy.
March 2011: “We
will pay back every penny,” said Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou. He
wanted to reassure the restive German taxpayer. A year later, a 70% haircut was
forced on private sector creditors, such as German banks, including Hypo Real
Estate, a failed bank that the German government had nationalized during the
financial crisis. And the German taxpayer got a haircut.
Now a much larger
haircut is in the works, this time for the official sector, such as the ECB,
that holds most of the Greek debt. The IMF has been pushing for it, against
stiff resistance. But suddenly Merkel said today that it
could happen by 2014.
March 2011: “We
cannot lower yields artificially so to speak,” Merkel said
even though the ECB—along with just about every other central bank in the
world—has been forcing them down to absurdly low levels.
March 2011:
“Germany can use its veto power if the conditions for aid are not fulfilled—and
I will use it,” Merkel said to bamboozle a disgruntled public
into swallowing the first bailout of Greece, or rather of German banks in whose
closets this Greek debt was decomposing.
During a period of
not fulfilling the conditions, Greece continued to receive money, and when that
wasn’t enough, a second bailout. Some payments were delayed—not vetoed. The old
unmet conditions have been replaced with new conditions. Goals have been kicked
further down the road. And money will soon flow again.
August 2011: “The
idea that we in Europe have a liquidity problem is completely wrong,” said ECB
President Jean-Claude Trichet. In December 2011, his successor, Mario Draghi,
flooded the land with the huge Long Term Liquidity Program (LTRO), followed by
another one in March 2012. Combined, they handed banks €1 trillion in
ultra-cheap money for three years. OK, maybe Europe didn’t have a liquidity
problem. But then why the LTRO? One of the two guys was lying.
January 2012:
“Spain will reach its deficit goal of 4.4%,” Spanish
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy told his incredulous listeners. Since then, the
goal has been revised to 6.3%. And then Rajoy admitted that even 6.3% may be
unachievable. In the same vein, through July, he reassured the world that Spain
would not need a bailout. Days later, it needed a €100 billion
bailout, just for its banks.
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