johnhemming2 wrote:UndercoverElephant wrote:
So if you can't spend your way out of bankruptcy, how
do you get out of bankruptcy? Borrow more?
Spend less.
No. Spending less helps you avoid going bankrupt in the first place. We have bankruptcy laws in the western world, and they are designed to be implemented when somebody is so far in debt that spending less isn't going to be enough.
So I'll ask you again. How do you get out of
bankruptcy? Is piling on more debt a viable option?
I would make the point that leaving the Euro and devaluing is a route towards spending less as a country. It would, however, hit the poorer Greeks quite hard.
Well, you know I advocate that Greece should default and leave the euro, and that in the long term this would be the best option for the Greek people. It is the mainstream European politicians, including the fiercely pro-EU Liberal Democrats, who are resisting this option, because they fear the wider political consequences. And the Greeks are playing on this resistance.
UndercoverElephant wrote:The hypocrisy here is quite breathtaking. Washington itself is the past master of "spending" when bankrupt. Are you aware of the size of the US deficit, the rate it is growing, and the spending choices of that country?
I haven't particularly looked at this. What is your argument in respect of this?
http://www.usdebtclock.org/
US debt currently stands at $18,000,000,000,000. The federal budget deficit is $500,000,000,000 and rising all the time. Because the US dollar is still (for now) the global reserve currency, there is no pressure on the US to decrease spending. On the contracy, it just keeps "printing" money in order to spend ever more, largely on the bloated military it uses to to enforce its political will in various parts of the world.
There is a history to this. At the end of WW2, with the all of the western world in ruins apart from the US, and with the US in posession of half of the world's gold bullion, the US imposed a monetary system where the dollar was the world's reserve currency but that dollars would be exchangeable for gold. In 1971, with the Vietnam war being lost and US internal peak oil passed, the US unilaterally "closed the gold window" and ended convertibility. Since then the world has used fiat dollars as its reserve currency, and the US is free to simply print its way out of its own debt and deficit problems.
This is system is fundamentally dishonest and unfair. One rule for the US, another for everybody else. And it is why the Russians, Chinese and OPEC nations are moving ASAP to a system that bypasses the dollar. When these re-arrangements are complete, and the US is forced to play by the same rules as everybody else, the US economy will collapse.
But I have got side-tracked. The hypocrisy is this:
When the US and UK were in a position of having a serious debt problem and a nose-diving economy, the prescribed medicine was
stimulus,
quantitative easing and near zero interest rates designed to encourage as much borrowing as possible. In other words
create and spend more money. The justification given for this was that we did not want to repeat the mistakes of the 30s, when the prescribed medicine was "spend less" and the result was a downward spiral into an ever-deepening depression.
But when Greece, which can't print its own money, is in exactly the same position, the prescribed medicine is "spend less", and the net result has been a downward spiral into an ever-deepening depression. If spending less just kills off what is left of the Greek economy then it is not a solution to Greece's debt problems. So why the double standards? Answer: to punish the Greek people for electing a left-wing government, that's why. "Punishment beating" is an accurate description. The right-wing, corporatist kleptocracy has nothing to gain by cutting Greece's debts and letting it start again. To do so would be to reward the Greek people for electing a left wing government, and would fail to channel ever more wealth into the hands of the already-wealthy (which has been the actual result of "stimulus" and "quantitative easing" i.e. giving money to banks).