Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
Incredible Populist Positions in Podemos' "Economic Manifesto"; Populism Explained Posted: 02 Dec 2014 01:09 PM PST As noted last week, Spain's top-polling political party, Podemos, released an "Economic Manifesto" that called for "Debt Restructuring" and for Spain to "Abandon the Euro Trap". The manifesto is 600 pages long and I did not dig into the details any further. Via translation from Libre Mercado, here are some additional details to consider:
Thanks to reader "Bran" for some of the above translations. Did Paul Krugman secretly write that manifesto? Regardless, this plan makes the socialist nannycrats in Brussels look like extreme right-wingers. If Spain abandons the euro and adopts anything close to this platform, expect a complete collapse in the Spanish economy. Populism Explained These populist ideas are taking hold for the simple reason the burden of the euro crisis is falling on the average worker, while the banks, the bankers, and the political classes were bailed out. It should be no wonder that with each passing day, radical left and radical right parties attract voters. Eventually, there is going to be a revolt in Spain, Greece, or Italy. Podemos is a strong candidate to lead the opening salvo. For the current setup in Greece, another strong candidate to lead a populist revolt, please see Greece Needs Another €10 Billion Bailout; Syriza Leader Prepares for Power Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Greece Needs Another €10 Billion Bailout; Syriza Leader Prepares for Power Posted: 02 Dec 2014 11:07 AM PST Since the beginning of September, yield on the Greek 10-Year bond has gone from 5.53% to 8.05% with a spike high of 9.28%. Inquiring minds may be wondering what's going on. More than likely yields are up for a number of factors.
Points number 1 and 2 go hand in hand. Alexis Tsipras, head of the Greek radical-left party Syriza is in a substantial lead in the polls. Syriza wants to end austerity and threatens to renegotiate the bailout. The next election for prime minister is not scheduled until June 2016, but a February 2015 presidential election (a largely ceremonial position) threatens to upset the cart. Greek law requires a backing of 180 members of parliament to nominate a president, but support for current prime minister Antonis Samaras has dwindled to only 150 seats. If Samaras falls short, parliament will dissolve and then a new election for prime minister will take place. Syriza Leader Prepares for Power Given the above election backdrop, Syriza Leader Alexis Tsipras Prepares for Power. Alexis Tsipras, leader of Greece's far-left Syriza party, recently traveled to Frankfurt and Rome to meet European leaders. He is softening his confrontational tone with Greece's international lenders. Tsipras has a drafted an agenda for the first 100 days of a future government.Greece in Need of Third Bailout Having already thrown €240 Billion at Greece over the last four years, the Greek patient is still quite ill as Europe Debates Third Bailout Package for Athens. "The era of bailout packages is ending," Samaras promised in September during an appearance in Thessaloniki. "Greece is now welcoming the new Greece."Cost of Protection To avoid the loss of €40 Billion or so, the Troika threw hundreds-of-billions of euros at Greece, and then when that failed, more hundreds-of-billions in a second bailout. We now see that did not work, so to protect the €240 total thrown at Greece, the EU is debating another €10 Billion. Room to Negotiate Curiously, a senior EU official, speaking anonymously said that "Greece is not in a position to negotiate". Really?! Watch what happens when Tsipras wins the snap election and demands haircuts. Greece is at or close to a current account surplus excluding interest on €240 bailouts. Thus, no longer needing foreign support for funding, Greece is in a strong position to tell the Troika to go to hell. And I encourage Greece to do just that. The major problem is Greece still needs massive reforms to make an abandon-the-euro scheme work. Unfortunately, those are exactly the reforms Tsipras will fail to deliver. Of course Samaras failed to deliver any significant reforms either. Thus, the entire setup is unstable. Nonetheless, when faced with the prospect of Greece walking away from €240 billion, I expect there is going to be plenty of room to negotiate. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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