2015/07/17

View From the Couch - 17/Jul/2015

Greek Drama Day 2,190

I've been on holidays for a couple of days so I didn't catch much news. That was sort of the point of the holidays: to get away from it all, and that sort of included this business of blogging stuff.

Anyway... Greece seems to have gone into a political meltdown. First, the Syriza PM Tsipras negotiated for Greece a worse settlement that was on offer for Greece before the 'Greferendum'. somewhere around 30-40 MPs of his side refused to back the deal, but with cross-bench support, Tsipras shepherd the changes Greece had to make, through its Parliament. The only way to understand this turn of events is that Grexit - to the consternation of many - was simply too hard to do and Greece would have plunged into being like an African nation where nobody lends them money and nobody goes there because everything has been looted.

And believe me, everybody will be looting everything the moment Grexit happens and there's not enough of food or medical supplies or oil or cash. There won't be a police force because they won't be able to pay them; and schools will shutdown, infrastructure will shut down. How is the complete and utter capitulation better than that? At least the banks will open again.

You have to understand that the oligarchical rich Greeks who brought about the conditions of Greece to be in the Euro and so much in debt still have lots of money in those banks. All the MPs on the conservative side of politics have that problem - they need the banks to reopen even if only briefly so they can take whatever cash they can and get it out. I know it's a terrible thing to ascribe such a terrible motive to these lawmakers but these are extraordinary times. And let's not forget, conservative lawmakers in any land are the rich, if not the proxies for the rich. They will take any amount of financial pain to their fellow citizen as long as they can keep their rents going; something that's true even in Australia, but that's another story.

All this hollows out the 'Greferndum' as well as underscores why Yanis Varoufakis might have resigned at the point he did. It simply didn't matter what the Greek people - the demos! - wanted. There was no real negotiation, it was simply terms being dictated to Greece by the ECB, EU and to a lesser extent, the IMF. Leading the assault (so to speak) was Angela Merkel who on behalf of Germany essentially gave nothing and got everything. Unfortunately Tsipras now looks like an asshat clown instead of the modern day Themistocles; but all of this might be part of a greater strategy to better engineer a good Grexit rather than a bad one.

Angela Merkel and the northern alliance of countries, banksters and technocrats - the modern day barbaroi - have essentially cited the rule of law as the cornerstone from which they are making their demands and refusing to give any debt relief. Hidden in there somewhere is still the trillions of dollars worth of Greek Bond derivatives that would blow up on a Grexit, so getting this deal done without the haircuts is a great boon for them. It means Germany won't be plunged into the kind of chaos seen on the streets of Athens, and by extension it means the world markets won't be roiled in another GFC so soon after the last one.

Old World Problems

The European Union isn't looking too flash hot these days. Given the choice of kicking out Greece or keeping it and helping it as one of their own, they opted to keep Greece so they can keep kicking it which combines the worst aspect of both options. This does not look good to anybody. Since its inception in the early 90s, the European Union had argue its wide, pan-nationalistic cause against nationalist right wing nutjobs in each and every country. By approaching Greece the way it has for the last 5 years, they've opened up a front to the left as well as to the right, whereby Syriza and Podemos in Spain have now split off to the left of the EU andean demonstrate that the loss sovereignty in the EU project is a major problem for countries with great debt and great unemployment.

Inadvertently, the winningness of Germany on its own has redistributed its low-industrial high-unemployment problem to the PIIGS nations, where they don'thave the control to ameliorate the unemployment being exported out of Germany. All these countries in the advanced, old-world share the problem of not knowing where future growth is going to come from, and so interest rates have fallen to zero, just to keep the economy going and from asset prices from collapsing. In this light, it makes sense that banks become gamblers locked in a zero-sum game (low to no growth) and making money/saving money involves taking it from somebody else (hello Liberal Party of Australia).

The world is running out of growth because there are so few spaces in which to grow. We can chop down all the forests in Amazon and clear out the last remaining wildlife sanctuaries in Africa, but there is not enough space into which the globalised economy can grow. The emerging markets are a higher grower right now, only because they're starting from a lower base. Even their growth will run down, just as it has in China. It's what it means to have a developed economy.

In the absence of a physical frontier, there is only the cyber frontier until space opens up. This explains Google, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft and Facebook, and how Elon Musk is busily building up SpaceX. It should tell you something about where the smart money thinks things are at.

As for Europe, this dynamic is playing out in a new way. Europe will now cannibalise Greece to keep the rest afloat. But it also means the PIIGS are next in line to be cannibalised once Greece descends into the pit of depression. And if the same treatment descends upon the PIIGS, how soon will it become like 1930s Germany where Leftists and Fascists fight in the streets? Or there is a new civil war in Spain? Many of these conflicts now echo older ones, precisely because they're being fought over old settlements that are now being undone in the light of zero growth, ZIRP, and high unemployment. Economic settlements are only as good as the money spent to maintain them. When it becomes cheaper and expedient to let the people starve and fight it in the streets, we'll see some realpolitik and class warfare as a certainty.

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