Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Vote For Whoever You Want, Bailout Policies Won´t Change One Bit; A Look at Eurozone and US Politics; Would it Have Mattered if McCain Won in 2008?
- Der Spiegel Claims Merkel-Sarkozy Agreement Has Collapsed; Bloomberg Reports Europe May Withhold Half of Greek Payment
- UK Banks Abandon Eurozone; Greek PM Seeks Constitutional Changes; Trichet Blames Everyone but Europe for Global Imbalances; Credit Crunch Coming Up?
Posted: 19 Jun 2011 05:52 PM PDT Take a good look at policies in Ireland, in Spain, in Portugal, in Greece. In Ireland, voters overwhelmingly rejected the policies and leadership of Prime Minister Brian Cowen in the biggest rout in history as noted in Timeline Ireland. Did it matter? How? Enda Kenny, the new prime minister quickly caved-in to the ECB and EU regarding haircuts on government bonds. Similar setups are underway in Portugal, Spain, and Greece. Also, take a look at policies in Germany where chancellor Angela Merkel completely and totally caved-in to French president Nicolas Sarkozy and ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet regarding rollover of Greek debt. If ever, if ever a Simply put, bankers insist on being bailed out, and under threats of Armageddon they are. Taxpayers foot the bill regardless of who they vote for. Socialize the Losses, Privatize the Gains The EU Observers reports The junta of experts tells us: 'Vote how you like, but policies cannot change' The formal trappings of clean elections - in which political parties with competing manifestoes contest a ballot free of voter intimidation - are all still there, but someone else has decided in advance what the result will be.There is much more in the Observer article, especially in regards to Ireland. Inquiring minds may wish to give it a closer look. Is it Any Different in the US? For all the political bickering in the US would it have mattered if McCain won the last election? If so how? Would McCain have bailed out the banks and voted for nonsensical stimulus programs? Of course. Indeed McCain voted for bailouts while the 2008 election campaign was still in progress. Flashback October 01, 2008: Obama, McCain Vote for $700B Bailout Bill in Senate McCain now says he was "misled" as noted in Talking Points Memo McCain Rewrites Own History On Bailout Vote McCain said recently that he only voted for the $700 billion package because Henry Paulson and Ben Bernanke misled him, by assuring him it would focus on the housing meltdown, rather than on Wall Street. But that appears to be directly contradicted by the record.Regardless, the key point is nothing about the bailouts would have changed. Would Iraq or Afghanistan be Different? Would US troops still be in Afghanistan? You bet! Would US troops still be in Iraq? You bet! Would the US still be wasting money stationing troops in 140 countries? You bet! McCain Supports Obama on Libya Please consider McCain uneasy over Republican 'isolationism' US Senator John McCain on Sunday expressed concern about growing isolationism in the Republican party, particularly among those vying for the 2012 presidential nomination.McCain tries to differentiate on war policy but for all practical purposes McCain and Obama are twins. Moreover, Obama promised "change you can believe in" but carried out similar economic policies and warmongering of president Push. McCain on Balancing the Budget Would McCain have balanced the budget? Hardly. We would have the same Senatorial impasse we have today. Worse yet, the senator proposed a nonsensical plan in 2008 to Balance Budget by 2013. In his proposal, Mr. McCain said he would hold overall spending growth to 2.4 percent a year. That is a tall order because federal spending has been growing an average of more than 6 percent a year in the last five years.Would any of McCain´s proposals have done a thing to balance the budget? Only a fool would answer yes. So what would have changed regarding the budget? The sad answer is next to nothing. Obamacare To be fair, Obamacare would not have passed under McCain. However, it is also fair to point out Obamacare passed only because of a procedural move, and the Supreme Court may soon invalidate key provisions of that legislation. Bailouts, Budgets, Warmongering The sad state of affairs is that when it comes to the bailouts, budgets, and warmongering trifecta, things would not be much different under president McCain than we see right now under president Obama. There are many reasons for this, but at the top of the list are campaign contributions from bankers, warmongers, homebuilders, etc, to candidates of both parties. Does any candidate really want reform? The answer is "Yes, until they are elected and start receiving campaign contributions". Fear of touching the "third rail" of messing too much with Medicare and Social Security is another piece of the puzzle. Republicans do want to do something about public unions. However, Republicans lack the votes or bargain the votes away in compromises to get other things they want. The result is "no progress" on something that would genuinely help: national right-to-work laws and scrapping of Davis-Bacon. Senator Rand Paul had a proposal to balance the budget. It gathered 7 of 100 votes in the Senate. President Obama´s proposal gathered 0 out of 100 votes. Does anyone really want to do anything or do they just want to pretend they do? I look at the Republican presidential candidates other than Ron Paul in dismay. I see little hope in balancing the budget or getting out of Iraq and Afghanistan soon. I see nothing on campaign finance reform. I see nothing on reducing military spending. I see no structural reforms on pensions or public unions. Most of all, I see how little it would have mattered if McCain won the last election or how any candidate other than Ron Paul promises genuine solutions about the mess we are in today. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 19 Jun 2011 12:02 PM PDT Two interesting stories regarding Greece have hit the wires today. It´s difficult to know if they are related. First, Der Spiegel claims the agreement negotiated between German chancellor Merkel and French president Sarkozy has collapsed; Second, Bloomberg reports Europe will pressure Greece by withholding half of the next tranche of money. The pattern is for Eurozone officials and the IMF to deny Der Spiegel claims, only to find out later that Der Spiegel sources were impeccable. Is it different this time? Voluntary Rollover Plan Off the Table? Please consider Germany 'dismisses Greek debt compromise plan' A German compromise plan to resolve a dispute with the European Central Bank over the Greek rescue that was reported by Der Spiegel magazine is no longer on the table, a government source said Sunday.Europe May Withhold Half of Greek Payment Bloomberg reports Europe May Withhold Half of Greek Payment European governments weighed withholding half of Greece's next 12 billion-euro ($17.2 billion) aid payment, seeking to keep the country solvent while maintaining pressure on the government to slash the debt that pitched the euro area into crisis.Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 19 Jun 2011 05:40 AM PDT The Telegraph reports liquidity dries up as UK banks abandon eurozone over Greek default fears Senior sources have revealed that leading banks, including Barclays and Standard Chartered, have radically reduced the amount of unsecured lending they are prepared to make available to eurozone banks, raising the prospect of a new credit crunch for the European banking system.Trichet Blames Everyone but Europe for Global Imbalances Lately, every time ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet opens his mouth, something silly come out. Please consider Trichet warns of widening global imbalances European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet on Sunday raised concern about widening global imbalances after the financial crisis, calling them one of the main challenges for the economy.The Eurozone is at risk of imploding, Greece needs another bailout, Spain and Italy are on the brink of disaster, and we are to believe Europe is adding stability? Greek PM Seeks Constitutional Changes Yahoo Finance reports Greek PM calls for referendum on constitution Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou called on Sunday for a fall referendum on "changes to the political system," including to the country's constitution.Blaming rating agencies and derivatives speculators for the mess Greece is in is exceptionally lame. Papandreou is hanging on by a thread. If he fails the vote of confidence, this mess will become unglued in a hurry. I think that would actually be a good thing because the longer EU officials kick the can down the road, the bigger the systemic losses. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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