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NZ
borrowing to lend to IMF, the latest absurdity
Deidre
Kent
20
June, 2012
It’s
a strange world this world of money.
In
the melee of the Greek elections and the frantic ramming through of
the asset sales legislation came a strange announcement, but it was
lost. It wasn’t even reported in the Dominion Post. The Government
would be lending $1.26 billion to the IMF’s new bailout fund for
the debt-wrecked Eurozone, but it would have to borrow this first. In
addition to earlier billions for the stabiilty fund, the total cost
to NZ would now be over $4 billion, according to Bill English.
Ponder
on that one! We borrow in order to lend in order to save Europe.
Whew. The child in us will ask how money is created in the first
place. Can only banks create money? Of course not. We the people can
create our own money without the burden of interest. But we stupidly
use banks. These days we don’t even use our own banks. So to add
insult to injury, when we want to borrow, we go to overseas banks for
loans because their rates are cheaper.
So
let’s get this again. We borrow $1.26 billion at interest and then
lend it to the IMF. What? At interest? They don’t say. And they
will give it back, the part they don’t use apparently. The Minister
of Finance says it is our insurance policy. And it is the banks who
are in trouble. So we pay interest to the overseas banks so we can
protect them from future bad debts. This is Alice in Blunderland
stuff. Where is the cartoonist?
Reuters
has just reported “Ireland’s High Court began hearing a challenge
to the European Union’s new bailout fund on Tuesday, launched by a
politician who said the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) was not
compatible with the Irish constitution.”
The
Guardian reports: “This, for certain, is a high stakes game. Part
of Europe’s fighting fund has already been spent on bailing out
Greece, Portugal and Ireland. Spain has also pledged funds to the
EFSF and ESM, and these clearly cannot be spent buying up the
country’s own debt…. If the gamble fails, Spain will still need a
bailout and Europe will have nothing left in the kitty for Italy.”
So
let’s go back to the Pre-election Fiscal Update and see what it
assumed about Europe. I seem to remember …yes here it is: The
PREFU’s main forecasts critically assume the reasonably orderly
resolution of sovereign debt problems in the euro area. Wow they
were so wrong. And these our best economists and financial experts?
An ordinary person listening to the news can do better. They could
see that if you are solving debt by lending ever more money to a
country, the problem won’t be solved.
And
here is another thought. If Greece is too big to fail, and Spain is
too big to fail and Europe is too big to fail, then it is going to
apply to UK, US and China too. Who knows where it will stop? The
size of the global economy is about $63 trillion. According to
Bernard Lietaer et al in Money and Sustainability, the Missing Link,
“one day’s currency speculation represents more than the annual
economic output of Germany or China changing hands. The notional
amount of currency derivatives are now more than $700 trillion today.
Currency derivatives by themselves represent therefore almost nine
times the entire global annual GDP”. And that is only one type of
derivative.
No,
the IMF’s bailout fund is going to fail and it must fail because it
can never match the power of the investment banks.
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