http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com
http://albertpeia.com/kicksinthecandowntheroad.htm
‘Has
Do
you solve the problems of a credit card addict by giving that person another
credit card? Of course not. You may delay
the short-term financial problems of the credit card addict by giving that
person another credit card, but in the process you make the long-term problems
even worse.
Well,
that is essentially what is happening in
Just
think about it.
Did
the first bailout package solve the problems in
No.
Did
the second bailout package solve the problems in
No.
Today,
the Greek financial system is a complete and total mess,
and Greek politicians are saying that a third bailout package may be necessary.
Many
are claiming that
Yes,
the ability to inject bailout funds directly into troubled banks is going to
keep some of them going for a little while. But the deal also calls for a
new governing body to be established that will supervise those banks.
Will that governing body be established in time to even provide the short-term
help that is needed?
Yes,
spending bailout funds to buy up Spanish debt and Italian debt will
artificially suppress bond yields for a time.
We
have seen this before.
But
what happened?
After
the bond buying program was over, bond yields started spiking again.
So do
the Europeans plan to suppress bond yields forever?
Of course not. There is not enough bailout
money to do that.
Let's
review the equation that I have shared in previous articles....
Brutal austerity + toxic levels of
government debt + rising bond yields + a lack of confidence in the financial
system + banks that are massively overleveraged + a massive credit crunch = A
financial implosion of historic proportions
Have
any of those elements been removed?
No.
Bond
yields will be suppressed for a period of time, but that will not last forever,
and all of the other underlying issues are still there.
Meanwhile,
the rest of
The
Spanish economy shrunk again in the second quarter of 2012, and
austerity in that nation has barely even begun.
As a
recent CNBC article detailed, the big spending cuts are still
coming....
The
conservatives, who inherited from the outgoing Socialists one of the euro
zone's highest public deficits, at 8.9 percent of GDP in 2011, have said they
will shrink the shortfall to 5.3 percent this year and 3 percent in 2013.
Austerity
has absolutely shredded the Greek economy, and we
are starting to see that same pattern be repeated all over
When
you spend far more money than you bring in for decades, eventually you have to
go through a very painful adjustment. What is going on in Greece should be a lesson for all of us. Debt
allows you to live above your means, but the consequences of going into way too
much debt can be absolutely horrific.
More
debt can delay the consequences of a debt problem but it cannot solve a debt
problem. The following is what Jim Rogers told
CNBC on Friday....
“Just
because now you have a way to get them (the banks) to borrow even more money,
this is not solving the problem, this is making the problem worse,”
“People
need to stop spending money they don’t have. The solution to too much debt is
not more debt. All this little agreement does is give
them (banks) a chance to have even more debt for a while longer,” he added.
But
if you just went by the headlines in most of the newspapers around the world
you would think that European leaders had discovered the cure for cancer or
something.
Sadly,
the truth is that they are simply choosing to fire off a few of the
"financial bullets" that they still have left as a recent Washington Post article
described....
The
European bailout funds don’t have unlimited resources. If they throw $125
billion at
So
what comes next?
Bruce
Krasting believes that the "half-life of this
bailout will be measured in weeks". The following is his summary of what he sees coming next
in
If
I'm right, after a few weeks things turn south again in the capital markets.
Then what?
-
More LTRO. No –
there is no more collateral. All of the swill loans have already been hocked.
-
Cut ECB % rate. Doesn’t matter. It won't change conditions in Italian or
Spanish funding markets one bit.
-
A spending plan of
<1% of GDP. That won’t put a dent in the recession that is
building.
-
-
The ECB goes Defcon 1 and launches a E2T QE
program. No – same answer as above.
- Merkel does a 180 and embraces
Euro bonds. No chance in hell.
-The
-The IMF will come to the rescue? No way –
the IMF does not have the resources to solve anyone’s problems.
In
other words, kicking the can down the road is going to get quite a bit harder
after the current "sugar high" wears off.
Of
course the
So
yes, the global economy is still heading for collapse and
there is still a multitude of reasons to be extremely concerned about the second half of
2012.
What
is your opinion about all of this?
Do
you think that European leaders will be able to keep kicking the can down the
road?
Please
feel free to post a comment with your opinion below....