‘The economic crisis in
The following are 27 statistics about
the European economic crisis that are almost too crazy to believe....
#1 The Greek economy shrank by 6 percent during 2011, and it has
been shrinking for five years in a row.
#2 The average unemployment rate in
#3 The youth unemployment rate in
#4 The unemployment rate in the port town is
Perama is about 60 percent.
#5 In
#6
#7 Some of the austerity measures that have
been implemented in
#8 Despite all of the austerity measures, it
is being projected that
#9
#10 In the midst of all the poverty in
The
incidence of HIV/Aids among intravenous drug users in central Athens soared by
1,250% in the first 10 months of 2011 compared with the same period the
previous year, according to the head of Médecins sans Frontières Greece, while
malaria is becoming endemic in the south for the first time since the rule of
the colonels, which ended in the 1970s.
#11 The unemployment rate in
#12 The youth unemployment rate in
#13 The total value of all toxic loans in
#14 The GDP of
#15 Home prices in
#16 The number of property repossessions in
#17 The ratio of government debt to GDP in
#18 On top of everything else,
#19 The unemployment rate in
#20 The youth unemployment rate in
#21 Banks in
#22 It is being projected that the Portuguese
economy will shrink by 5.7 percent during 2012.
#23 When you add up all forms of debt in
#24 Youth unemployment in
#25
#26 If you add the maturing debt that the
Italian government must roll over in 2012 to the projected budget deficit, it
comes to approximately 23.1 percent of
#27
So why hasn't
Well, the powers that be are pulling
out all their tricks.
For example, the European Central
Bank decided to start loaning gigantic mountains of money to European
banks. That accomplished two things....
1) It kept those European banks from
collapsing.
2) European banks used that money to
buy up sovereign bonds and that kept interest rates down.
Unfortunately, all of this game
playing has also put the European Central Bank in a very vulnerable position.
The balance sheet of the European
Central Bank has expanded by more than 1 trillion
dollars over the past nine months. The balance sheet of the European
Central Bank is now larger than the entire GDP of
So just how far can you stretch the
rubberband before it snaps?
Perhaps we are about to find out.
The European financial system is
leveraged like crazy right now. Even banking systems in countries that
you think of as "stable" are leveraged to extremes.
For example, major German banks are
leveraged 32 to 1, and those banks are holding a
massive amount of European sovereign debt.
When Lehman Brothers finally
collapsed, it was only leveraged 30 to 1.
You can't solve a debt crisis with
more debt. But the European Central Bank has been able to use more debt
to kick the can down the road a few more months.
At some point the sovereign debt
bubble is going to burst.
All financial bubbles eventually
burst.
What goes up must come down.
Right now, the major industrialized
nations of the world are approximately 55 trillion dollars in debt.
It has been a fun ride, but this
fraudulent pyramid of risk, debt and leverage is going to come crashing down at
some point.
It is only a matter of time.
Already, there are a whole bunch of
signs that some very serious economic trouble is on the horizon.
Hopefully we still have a few more
months until it hits.
But in this day and age nothing is
guaranteed.
What does seem abundantly clear is
that the current global financial system is inevitably going to fail.
When it does, what
"solutions" will our leaders try to impose upon us?
That is something to think about.