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Peter S. Goodman

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Merkel Dismisses Euro Crisis, Champions Austerity At Davos

Posted: 01/25/2012 2:22 pm

DAVOS, Switzerland -- Do they hand out Nobel prizes for advances in delusional thinking? If so, I hereby nominate Germany's chancellor, Angela Merkel, for her address this afternoon before the assembled participants at the World Economic Forum here in this lavish ski resort in the Swiss Alps.

Merkel has contributed mightily to the cause of undermining confidence in the Euro while choking the continent in job-killing, future-crushing austerity. She has staked a decent claim to the title of world's worst advertisement for democracy (though congressional Republicans remain safely in command) through her pandering to German taxpayers, blocking efforts to make the European Central Bank the lender of last resort. Yet here she was on Wednesday afternoon, taking a victory lap for supposedly helping avert crisis via collective action.

Remember the collapse of Lehman Brothers in the fall of 2008, she said, recalling an episode that turned an economic downturn in the United States into a global disaster from which millions of workers and savers have yet to recover. "We've all decided that something like that should never happen again," Merkel said. "Politicians have demonstrated that they are capable of acting, that the world generally, the international community has proved that it can actually work against a crisis, that it can tackle a crisis and master it."

That happened in the same way that pigs have played polo on the moon.

Yes, a near meltdown in 2008 was averted through collective action -- not least via the liquidity of the Federal Reserve and the largess of taxpayers in Europe and the United States. But the regulatory framework required to minimize the chances of a repeat is nowhere close to being in place. In the United States, the financial services lobby, intent on staving off rules that would limit its ability to gamble with taxpayer money, has successfully held off strictures. Here in Europe, major banks and their governmental protectors -- Merkel among them -- have time and again watered down efforts to force them to reserve cash against future losses.

But the worst part of Merkel's address was the way she dismissed what the rest of the planet now regards as inarguable fact: European leaders' apparent inability to marshal the resources to protect their shared currency.

"There is no crisis of the Euro itself," Merkel said. "There is a debt crisis."

There is indeed a debt crisis, and it is being exacerbated by Doctor Merkel's continued prescription of failed medicine: fiscal austerity. The slow growth this course has delivered from Greece to Italy to Ireland has amplified the debt crisis, which has in turn made global investors unwilling to lend to European governments, which has in turn raised borrowing costs across the continent, which has, voila, lifted debt levels.

What Merkel has prescribed may make for good politics in Germany, but it has made for ruinous economic policy. And here, in the presence of the top executives of the same financial giants that started all of the trouble, the German leader doubled down on the resulting pain, calling for more austerity for all.

"We have to ensure that stability and sound public finances are the order of the day," she said. "Indebtedness is the biggest danger and the greatest risk to prosperity on this continent."

No, the greatest danger is the people who buy into the cult of fiscal austerity as the answer to all of life's problems, even as growth slows, major companies decline to hire, and living standards steadily erode for those not fortunate enough to be certifiably rich.

A lot of these people are here in Davos, alighting in swank hotels and congregating at lavish dinners, lifting glasses full of Port to accompany their chocolate mousse while calling for everyone else to go on a starvation diet.

 
 
 

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DAVOS, Switzerland -- Do they hand out Nobel prizes for advances in delusional thinking? If so, I hereby nominate Germany's chancellor, Angela Merkel, for her address this afternoon before the assembl...
DAVOS, Switzerland -- Do they hand out Nobel prizes for advances in delusional thinking? If so, I hereby nominate Germany's chancellor, Angela Merkel, for her address this afternoon before the assembl...
 
 
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Reality always bites
Sometimes just a bit peckish
02:27 PM on 01/26/2012
Has anyone noticed how she sounds more and more like Gordon Brown - and we all remember what a brilliant job he did in saving the whole world economy. (Mostly at the UK's expense)
02:13 PM on 01/26/2012
I have just checked the history and accordingly the Silver Bullet will do it, not quite sure though she is quite stout.
12:24 PM on 01/26/2012
TAXPAYERS MONEY ? DID I JUST READ THAT, THE TAXPAYERS HAVE NO MONEY LEFT, OR JOBS TO MAKE ANY...... BOY THIS IS GOING TO BE UGLY
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groland
socially left, fiscally right
11:41 AM on 01/26/2012
I feel most sorry for the Irish! Unlike the Greeks, the Irish government was solvent. They made the horrendous decision to cover the banks (Anglo Irish, BofI, AIB) debts. For a country of 4 million, this is impossible. They should have let the banks and their bondholders go. It is mostly French and German banks that were on the hook, so Merkel's austerity measures are designed mostly to save her own country's banks form their bad loans.
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fugmo
Reality leaves a lot to the imagination.
10:26 AM on 01/26/2012
"What Merkel has prescribed may make for good politics in Germany, but it has made for ruinous economic policy."

It's comforting to see that large portions of the American public aren't the only citizens to bite off their noses to spite their faces.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Norma Ward
07:23 AM on 01/26/2012
Here is an article outlining the story behind the largest sovereign debt default in history:

http://viableopposition.blogspot.com/2011/11/sovereign-debt-default-learning-lessons.html

Over a decade later, creditors are still attempting to negotiate settlement of the amount still owing. Welcome to our future.
07:09 AM on 01/26/2012
I'd hate to be the bearer of bad news, but there is only one way out of this problem.

Our intrepid leaders have only exasperated the issue by another 4 yrs, and added heaps of more debt.

The system WILL fail, it has too, and the only way for it to recover (of sorts) is for interbank, inter sovereign, and bank to people (mortgage) debt write offs.......there is no other way.

The fact that this continues allows the crime syndicate that is the financial industry to continue to make vast profit for themselves.

Anyone here who doesn't think the NDAA is a preemptive rush to contain what is inevitably coming is smoking the good stuff.
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victorianism
Theultrathinnothingnesshasabeautifulendforusall.
06:54 AM on 01/26/2012
It seems that democracy in Germany works.
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05:44 AM on 01/26/2012
Ipm a liberal but I don't like uberliberal articles like these. The Euro crisis is infact a a turning point. Following the change of gvt in Italy and of the President of EBU things are changing quite drammatically. EBU has recent issued 500 bln Euros to central banks (debunking the mantra that the Euro economy lacked a lender of last resort) this has sent interest rates down and softened the inpact of fiscal austerity.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrcontinental
Expat Extraordinaire.
06:11 AM on 01/26/2012
Are you in Greece or Italy right now witnessing this "soft austerity"?
05:20 AM on 01/26/2012
In other words, Merkel is a bad person because she said the banks should eat 50% of the losses from their bad investments, instead of handing over the taxpayers' money to cover 100% the way the US did.
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victorianism
Theultrathinnothingnesshasabeautifulendforusall.
06:52 AM on 01/26/2012
Then big fatty bonuses for everyone but the 99 percent poor.
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05:11 AM on 01/26/2012
Either the Europeans did not anticipate any problems with the Euro, or believed they would stand united come whatever might. Now each one is trying to save their own economy, even at the cost of others. Human nature.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OPeixe
Shouldn't we move beyond the ideas?
12:28 PM on 01/26/2012
You are quite wrong. Unless you are referring to the UK, the Euro Zone is very much invested in emerging stronger once the debt crisis is resisted, because it will. All countries have their problems, most are making huge efforts, the population is supporting these efforts, and there's not a single voice in the Euro Zone against getting more cohesive, interlaced, and that each country must assume its problems before it takes his case to the others.
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Noodlegirl
Well it wasn't me! Somebody open a window...
01:58 PM on 01/26/2012
Wannabe is right. For you to say "all countries" is pure folly, as the EU is not a country; as such, there is zero political union. That is now bubbling to the surface as each country appeals to it's own electorate--the horror!
12:54 PM on 01/26/2012
Not what is happening. European governments are in it for the long haul.
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08:48 AM on 01/27/2012
Sure. Wait and watch. Long haul refers to the severity of the problem. How long the members stick together is another issue.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Free Your Mind
We do not need wars to prosper.
03:55 AM on 01/26/2012
Debt is just a part of the problem, "special interests" are much bigger issue...
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/greece-spends-bailout-cash-european-military-purchases
http://www.alternet.org/story/153795/vampire_hedge_funds_are_sucking_greece_dry?page=entire
http://tarpley.net/2011/10/01/europe-must-fight-back-against-us-uk-speculative-attacks/

It is interesting also how media in the US is lambasting the Eurozone for their economical problems and predicting its "distastrous end" soon while gladly overlooking not so bright economical situation of many states in the US...
07:44 AM on 01/26/2012
And, the Spanish Flu started in Spain. Put the onus on the foreigners.
08:26 AM on 01/26/2012
It just dawned on me that my sort of obtuse reply seemed like I had misread your comment and was negatively replying to it. I'm not. I agree with you. (Did I use "obtuse" correctly?)
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Reality always bites
Sometimes just a bit peckish
02:31 PM on 01/26/2012
Research suggests that the Spanish Flu pandemic that killed millions in 1918 actually started in Kansas-USA. look it up!
03:25 AM on 01/26/2012
This is a battle of currencies. The Euro versus the US dollar.
It is also about who is in charge. The bankers or the elected politicians
The US dollar is toast because of stunning moronic mismanagement over several years.
The US, England and others are determined to suck the financial blood out of Germany thereby destroying the Euro.
The Euro is a real threat to the US dollars dominance hence the white-anting.
They should stop haranguing Germany and concentrate in putting their own house in order by bringing their parasitic financial sector to heel.
09:27 AM on 01/26/2012
Well said,

but they are owned by their parasitic financial sector. Obama is as much a shill for Wall Street as is Cameron in the UK for the City of London. Both are not interested one bit to regulate the ones that are responsible for the crisis. Unbelievable.
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02:49 AM on 01/26/2012
I don't understand how people on the Left, and specifically self-proclaimed Liberals, can hold Angela Merkel in such high esteem. Merkel is simply an articulate Conservative whose policies match those of our own Conservatives.
03:22 AM on 01/26/2012
I don't think any of your own Conservatives would back what Angela does. She is defending the German state with all its welfare policies, abortion, gay rights, union-friendly, mandatory vacactions, etc. The list is very long.

For your info:
Left and Right are largely different in the USA and in Germany. For the vast majority over here these labels don't matter anymore. It is more the attempt of a "policy of common sense" and this cannot be stuck to either side.
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08:29 AM on 01/26/2012
Is Merkel defending such policies and rights in other Eurozone countries? It seems quite hypocritical for her to defend such things when in reference to Germany and its people, while at the same time trying to force Greece into economically crippling austerity measures. It makes it worse when she audaciously admits that she is more concerned with keeping the Euro afloat than with saving Greece.
03:24 AM on 01/26/2012
Yes, she's a creationist who supports the death penalty and she wants to wants to completely eliminate all the social programs that have worked so well in Germany while increasing the military budget to pay for military adventures overseas like in Libya . Oh, and she wants to double the amount of nuclear reactors in Germany in hopes of destroying the environment. (There is nothing more disliked in Germany than environmentalist.) Seriously, Angela Merkel is a conservative only in Germany and most of Western Europe. But, here she'd be a radical leftist.
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08:32 AM on 01/26/2012
Granted, I should have made myself clearer by emphasizing the economic policy of austerity measures, but not even you could believe that Merkel would pass as as a "radical leftist", unless of course you're referring to how she would be viewed by the American Conservatives. She is not "radical" nor a "leftist."
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
01:37 AM on 01/26/2012
Many of the countries that rushed to the Eurozone will live to regret it. Same for many of the nations clamoring to join the EU.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OPeixe
Shouldn't we move beyond the ideas?
12:34 PM on 01/26/2012
Is that a prophecy?