• Welcome to the Internet Infidels Discussion Board.

Germany Says ‘Nein’ to Greece Bailout Request

This is no more accurate than your posts on the Ukraine situation.

Do tell us more, Loren. How about you plot a way out of this nasty hole instead of just pointing fingers? Your solutions always seem to involve the poorer people making sacrifices for the rich. Your solutions seem to always involve lots of death and suffering for disadvantaged people. What's with this sort of thinking that attracts you and makes you at least seem so damned mean?

Your reply to Tupac did not even address his question. Instead it accused him of being "inaccurate," when indeed he was right on the mark. When banks advance money they know cannot ever be repaid, why should they not take serious haircuts for issuing liars credit? Quit this ad hom and answer the friggin question!

I was objecting to his repeating the crap about how fractional reserve banking works, I wasn't addressing the Greek mess. I don't think there's a good answer there.
 
I totally agree. But in this case, German lenders are being asked to take a haircut and then immediately lend additional funds. If Greece defaults now, I doubt there will be many lenders willing to trust them again for awhile.
Most of the Greek debt is held by gov'ts. I saw statistics in last week's economist that put total Greek gov't debt at around 315 trillion euros, with only 70 million held by private sector. If Greece defaults, it is Eurozone taxpayers who will end up eating most of the losses, not the private sector. The Greek proposal had some good ideas such as indexing debt repayments to Greek GDP growth (more growth, the larger the repayments, the lower the growth, the lower the repayments). The EU rejected it, and it is cutting off its nose to spite its face in doing so.

- - - Updated - - -

I doubt they could. And the other question is how do the Syriza not keep the promises that got them elected?
Well the Greeks have much more to lose than the Germans. The Greeks need outside help to support their lifestyle. Whereas more and more Euros are believing that a smaller and stronger EU may be preferred.
I disagree. If the Greeks leave the EU, they will endure a short but deep recession, and regain control over their money supply. On the other hand, the Eurozone loses over 250 trillion euros in repayments, prestige, and stability without addressing any of the underlying systemic imbalances within the Eurozone.
It's 315 billions, not trillions.
 
Point of order, deflation in Greece has been an actual thing for the last three years or so, meaning that since 2012, from the Greek perspective, debts owed in Euros have increased in value by something like 4% or 5% over and above whatever interest has been demanded of them.

Inflation/deflation has been more or less steady in the Euro core over that period.

So what looks like resisting a "haircut" for holders of Greek debt is actually the moral equivalent of "theft" in Ron Paul terms. (Deflation is theft from debtors according to his thinking when applied consistently, although I doubt he'd see it that way.)
 
Point of order, deflation in Greece has been an actual thing for the last three years or so, meaning that since 2012, from the Greek perspective, debts owed in Euros have increased in value by something like 4% or 5% over and above whatever interest has been demanded of them.

Inflation/deflation has been more or less steady in the Euro core over that period.

So what looks like resisting a "haircut" for holders of Greek debt is actually the moral equivalent of "theft" in Ron Paul terms. (Deflation is theft from debtors according to his thinking when applied consistently, although I doubt he'd see it that way.)
I kinda doubt someone like Ron Paul would define inflation or deflation in terms of price though.
 
I doubt they could. And the other question is how do the Syriza not keep the promises that got them elected?
Well the Greeks have much more to lose than the Germans. The Greeks need outside help to support their lifestyle. Whereas more and more Euros are believing that a smaller and stronger EU may be preferred.
no they don't. minus debt payments greece is in a surplus. so they have more than enough to meet their needs.
 
Well the Greeks have much more to lose than the Germans. The Greeks need outside help to support their lifestyle. Whereas more and more Euros are believing that a smaller and stronger EU may be preferred.
no they don't. minus debt payments greece is in a surplus. so they have more than enough to meet their needs.

Link?
 
Well the Greeks have much more to lose than the Germans. The Greeks need outside help to support their lifestyle. Whereas more and more Euros are believing that a smaller and stronger EU may be preferred.
no they don't. minus debt payments greece is in a surplus. so they have more than enough to meet their needs.
Does that budget include the €9.9 billion received from EU and IMF in 2014? If so, that would still put them in the red since the surplus last year was only €1.9 billion.
 
?? We all agree that they have too much debt now. So the solution is..... Give them more debt? How does a German politician sell that to their tax payers?
I doubt they could.
And the other question is how do the Syriza not keep the promises that got them elected?

Perhaps they should not have made promises they lacked the power to keep.
 
Does that budget include the €9.9 billion received from EU and IMF in 2014? If so, that would still put them in the red since the surplus last year was only €1.9 billion.

No, by definition a primary surplus is current tax receipts minus current spending net of debt payments.

Generally interest payments count as part of a country's budget. For some reason I don't quite understand it does seem to be the habit to ignore them with respect to Greece.
 
Maybe you weren't aware that "primary balance" was a thing defined by the OECD back in 2005 and not just for Greece?

http://stats.oecd.org/glossary/detail.asp?ID=6789

Correct, I wasn't aware of it until this discussion since most of the time we do not exclude interest when discussing whether a country has a surplus. Indeed I have never once seen the US budget discussed without taking interest into account.
 
Does that budget include the €9.9 billion received from EU and IMF in 2014? If so, that would still put them in the red since the surplus last year was only €1.9 billion.

No, by definition a primary surplus is current tax receipts minus current spending net of debt payments.
I think the definition is revenues minus spending, before debt repayment. Not just tax receipts. So the question still stands, is the money received from the Troika counted above the line as "revenues"? It seems that in 2013, this is exactly how the European Commission defined Greek primary surplus.
 
Is it just me, or is there just no way the Greeks are ever going to be able to repay all that debt anyway? Isn't this four month extension just delaying the inevitable default? Or is it just an indirect means to prop up whatever fragile confidence lenders might have in the Greek government?

If I were Greek and remotely rich, I would shift my money well away from the government hoping to use that money to pay the national debt, and that would leave only poorer people to take money... who by definition have little to give, especially those 25% unemployed. I can't see that debt being repaid, and I can't see a country just taking endless austerity without some long-term effects on itself. For instance, if you were young and Greek, would you hang around and stay unemployed, or else go to some other EU country where things are significantly better and try there - and probably never go back to Greece, thus distorting the age demographics of your homeland?
 
Is it just me, or is there just no way the Greeks are ever going to be able to repay all that debt anyway? Isn't this four month extension just delaying the inevitable default? Or is it just an indirect means to prop up whatever fragile confidence lenders might have in the Greek government?

If I were Greek and remotely rich, I would shift my money well away from the government hoping to use that money to pay the national debt, and that would leave only poorer people to take money... who by definition have little to give, especially those 25% unemployed. I can't see that debt being repaid, and I can't see a country just taking endless austerity without some long-term effects on itself. For instance, if you were young and Greek, would you hang around and stay unemployed, or else go to some other EU country where things are significantly better and try there - and probably never go back to Greece, thus distorting the age demographics of your homeland?

I think you are operating on some false premises. As far as I can recall there has never been a country that achieved prosperity by incurring massive debts to hand over free stuff to its citizens. Greece government spending as a percent of GDP is about 58%. Very high.
 
Is it just me, or is there just no way the Greeks are ever going to be able to repay all that debt anyway? Isn't this four month extension just delaying the inevitable default? Or is it just an indirect means to prop up whatever fragile confidence lenders might have in the Greek government?
Nobody knows the endgame. I'd say it's certain the debt will never be repaid anymore than the US debt will ever be repaid or even paid down to any degree. The problem is that the people who make these decisions are shielded from the results of their decisions. They're not the ones who will be out of a job. They'll be fixed for life regardless the direction things take. So don't hold your breath.
 
Is it just me, or is there just no way the Greeks are ever going to be able to repay all that debt anyway? Isn't this four month extension just delaying the inevitable default? Or is it just an indirect means to prop up whatever fragile confidence lenders might have in the Greek government?

If I were Greek and remotely rich, I would shift my money well away from the government hoping to use that money to pay the national debt, and that would leave only poorer people to take money... who by definition have little to give, especially those 25% unemployed. I can't see that debt being repaid, and I can't see a country just taking endless austerity without some long-term effects on itself. For instance, if you were young and Greek, would you hang around and stay unemployed, or else go to some other EU country where things are significantly better and try there - and probably never go back to Greece, thus distorting the age demographics of your homeland?

I think you are operating on some false premises. As far as I can recall there has never been a country that achieved prosperity by incurring massive debts to hand over free stuff to its citizens. Greece government spending as a percent of GDP is about 58%. Very high.

http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/sites/...-10-en&_csp_=068e923eb1ecbbc65ba8f85d03f6f60d

Denmark, Finland, France, Sweden and Belgium spend more per GDP than Greece does and that doesn't seem to be a problem. So government spending as a percentage of GDP may not be as important as you think it is.

What "free stuff" are you talking about and who is it being handed over to?
 
I think you are operating on some false premises. As far as I can recall there has never been a country that achieved prosperity by incurring massive debts to hand over free stuff to its citizens. Greece government spending as a percent of GDP is about 58%. Very high.

http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/sites/...-10-en&_csp_=068e923eb1ecbbc65ba8f85d03f6f60d

Denmark, Finland, France, Sweden and Belgium spend more per GDP than Greece does and that doesn't seem to be a problem. So government spending as a percentage of GDP may not be as important as you think it is.

What "free stuff" are you talking about and who is it being handed over to?

There are also lots of countries that spend far less than 58% of GDP on government and do just fine.

What sort of logic drives you to conclude that Greece's main economic problem is not enough government spending?

Since they only tax about 34% of GDP someone is getting something they aren't paying for, eh?

Not to mention if Keynesianism deficit spending worked for shit they'd have to be one of the most prosperous countries on earth.
 
http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/sites/...-10-en&_csp_=068e923eb1ecbbc65ba8f85d03f6f60d

Denmark, Finland, France, Sweden and Belgium spend more per GDP than Greece does and that doesn't seem to be a problem. So government spending as a percentage of GDP may not be as important as you think it is.

What "free stuff" are you talking about and who is it being handed over to?

There are also lots of countries that spend far less than 58% of GDP on government and do just fine.

What sort of logic drives you to conclude that Greece's main economic problem is not enough government spending?

What sort of logic drives you to conclude that's what I was saying? I was addressing the stat you tossed out that Greece government spending is 58% of GDP as if it actually meant anything.

Since they only tax about 34% of GDP someone is getting something they aren't paying for, eh?

Presumably. The question is who and what are they getting. If it's the wealthy using their connections to get free stuff from the government then how do you propose to fix that with austerity aimed at the general public?

Not to mention if Keynesianism deficit spending worked for shit they'd have to be one of the most prosperous countries on earth.

Except Greece wasn't engaging in Keynesian deficit spending. They were engaging in let's let the wealthy loot the country. There's a difference.
 
Back
Top Bottom