STABLE COIN LA VIA PER ESSERE LIBERI DAL FALLIMENTO DEL SISTEMA EURO


MONTI STA SBAGLIANDO TUTTO! DAL TELEGRAPH E DAL FINANCIAL TIME L'ENNESIMO SEGNALE!

AMBROSE EVANS PRITCHARD analizza con estrema freddezza la situazione Italiana, e in maniera piu' educata della nostra...ARRIVA ALLE NOSTRE CONCLUSIONI:

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/finance/ambroseevans-pritchard/100015675/italy-is-trapped-in-a-monetary-volkerkirker/

ANDIAMOCENE VIA TUTTI E LASCIAMO MORIRE QUESTO PAESE. I GOVERNANTI VOGLIONO IL NOSTRO MALE...E NOI ABBIAMO IL DIRITTO SACROSANTO DI DIFENDERCI E DIFENDERE IL NOSTRO FUTURO.

Munchau, dalle pagine del FT attacca ancor di piu' questa europa:

There is no Spanish siesta for the eurozone


The markets have concluded that the eurozone crisis has ended. Several politicians said that they, too, believed that the worst was over. Complacency is back. I recall similar utterances in the past. Whenever there is some technical progress – an umbrella, a liquidity injection, a successful debt swap –

RIDICOLO PENSARE CHE LA CRISI DELL'EUROZONA SIA FINITA

If you think the European Central Bank’s policies have “bought time”, you should ask yourself: time for what? Greece’s debt situation is as unsustainable as ever; so is Portugal’s; so is the European banking sector’s and so is Spain’s. Even if the ECB were to provide unlimited cheap finance for the rest of the decade, it would not be enough.


PER GRECIA, PORTOGALLO E SPAGNA I FINANZIAMENTI A TASSO ZERO DELLA BCE NON SONO SUFFICIENTI. IL DEBITO E' TROPPO ALTO E VA TAGLIATO


In Spain, as elsewhere, it would be reasonable to assume real prices will eventually fall to where they were in the mid-to-late 1990s.
In Spain, most of the toxic debt is held in the private sector. The debt level of the private sector, namely households and non-financial corporations, was 227.3 per cent of gross domestic product at the end of 2010, according to Eurostat.

We should remember the Spanish bubble was much more extreme than others, but prices have only come down by around a fifth. In the Madrid region the movements have been more vigorous, with a peak-to-trough fall of 29.5 per cent.


IN SPAGNA IL VALORE DEGLI IMMOBILI DEVE CALARE E DI MOLTO ANCORA.


The Spanish government has forced the savings banks to write down €50bn in their property portfolios this year. This will only be a small part of what will ultimately be needed if the housing market falls as I expect it will. Official estimates assume mild price falls and a quick rebound in the economy. Both assumptions are delusional. How can the Spanish economy rebound if the private and the public sectors are deleveraging at the same time, and are likely to do so for many years?

The deleveraging of the public sector will be vicious. The deficit was 8.5 per cent of GDP last year. This was a big overshoot, but the reason was not fiscal indiscipline. It was necessary to avoid a bigger slump. The recently-revised target is 5.3 per cent for this year and 3 per cent next year. So the total public sector adjustment needed under the European deficit rules is an incredible 5.5 per cent over two years – this, in the middle of a recession. If you look at the extent of total deleveraging that lies ahead, in both private and public sectors, the question is not whether the Spanish economy rebounds in 2012 or 2013, but whether it can rebound at all before the end of this decade.


The typical European response to the last statement would be to say that economic reforms will increase confidence and produce growth.


E PER L'ITALIA...


The optimists point to Italy, where the appointment of Mario Monti as prime minister has led to a seemingly virtuous circle of reforms and lower market interest rates. The main reform in both countries has been a moderate relaxing in labour laws. While that is probably necessary, I would be surprised if this has a material impact on long-term growth rates. Large parts of the labour market literature would have to be rewritten if it were the case.


But a combination of ultra-lax monetary policies and fiscal retrenchment will delay the unavoidable adjustment. Spain remains stuck in a worsening debt trap, out of which default will be the only escape. If it pursued the agreed policies, it would end up where Greece, Portugal and Ireland are – under a rescue umbrella. This is the most likely scenario for Spain.

In November, I said European leaders had only 10 days to save the euro. My diagnosis then and now is that they have flunked it. The ECB’s policies have not bought time. They have slowed down the political processes and the economic adjustment needed to resolve the crisis.


The worst, I fear, still lies ahead. il peggio, teme, e' davanti a noi!


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1 commento:

Anonimo ha detto...

http://www.usemlab.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=785:inflazionisti-svizzeri&catid=28:forex&Itemid=173

NON MI SEMBRA CHE GLI SVIZZERI SIANO POI TANTO MESSI BENE VISTO CHE PROPRIO I RESIDENTI DEVONO SOPPORTARE EVENTUALI MUNGITURE