This
speculative attack is another evidence of the need
to strictly regulate the banks and hedge funds
Financial markets are incorrigible. Speculation now
turns against the euro or, more specifically, against
Greece, and will later attack Portugal and, subsequently,
Spain - the most fragile countries in the eurozone.
The price of the credit default swaps (CDS) aimed
at protecting creditors against a possible Greek bankruptcy
went from a level of 120 in October 2009 to 419 on
February 9, 2010. People who buy CDS at such a high
price are betting on the country's bankruptcy, which
will convert this high price into a huge profit -
a bet with a strong self-fulfilling ingredient. The
higher the bets, the more difficult it is for the
country to refinance itself, and the higher the possibility
of bankruptcy.
However, speculators are not likely to win this time.
It is true that the euro has a weak point: the European
Union lacks, on the one hand, a federal authority
capable of demanding higher fiscal responsibility
and higher transparency from its governments, and,
on the other, more resources to help them when in
need. Yet, although the European Commission doesn't
have those resources, European governments and their
ministers of finance do.
The Greek conservative government, defeated in the
last election, was irresponsible both at fiscal and
exchange rate levels, putting the State and the country
in debt. The public deficit rose to 12.7% while the
current account deficit reached 14% of GDP. And the
government lied about figures. But the new Prime Minister,
George Papandreou, is a competent and cautious Keynesian
economist who is already adopting a number of fiscal
measures. And the European Union will certainly give
Greece the necessary support.
The alternative would be for Greece to demand IMF's
support, but Europeans are not likely to agree on
that. Greece is a country already well integrated
into the eurozone - and IMF's support for it would
represent a support for the eurozone, something that
major countries of the region will not accept. This
alternative was adopted for the Eastern European countries,
but those are countries that have only recently joined
the European Union. The huge increase in capital approved
by the IMF was justified by the need to rescue those
countries, whose deficits - the public deficit and
particularly the current account deficit - had irresponsibly
increased. In fact, it was approved in order to rescue
the major Western banks that had equally irresponsibly
lent money to companies in those countries with the
IMF's support, because they would allegedly be "growing
with foreign savings".
The European Union was severely affected by the global
financial crisis, because some of its major banks
had followed the wave of speculation based on "financial
innovations", and also because its countries'
exports were badly affected by the crisis. The household
indebtedness, however, was not as big as in the United
States, and only Spain faced a real estate bubble.
The eurozone as a whole did not have the kind of public
deficits or current account deficits that the United
States had. During the crisis, after a brief depreciation
against the dollar, the euro appreciated again, indicating
a higher equilibrium of the European economy.
For all these reasons, the speculators are likely
to end up losing this game. But this speculative attack
is another evidence of the need to strictly regulate
the banks and hedge funds. The creation of money is
an inherent ability of the financial system; it creates
credit and finances economic development, but money
is a powerful and dangerous public good that democratic
societies must have control over.
This article was first published
in Folha de S. Paulo on 15 February 2010.
February
18, 2010.
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