6 Ekim 2012 Cumartesi

Here's the Answer: GERMANY, Not Greece, Should Exit the Euro

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By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
Monday, July 2, 2012
 
German taxpayers shouldn't bail out their neighbors…

Instead, Germany should consider leaving the euro.

Over the weekend, Germany's neighbors convinced Germany to sign on for even more help. The Europeans agreed on having a pan-European Banking Union. The idea is that all of Europe would bail out European banks when necessary. The reality is, Germany will be the one saving the others.

Instead of being forced into that position, Germany should consider stepping out of the euro itself.


It comes down to who is actually in the euro. Based on the size of their economies, Germany, France, and the five "PIIGS" nations (Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece, and Spain) make up over 80% of the euro.

All of these countries are in trouble, except Germany.

You already know about Greece and the other PIIGS… but France will soon be in trouble, too…

You see, France has a new President, François Hollande. Mr. Hollande was a key figure over the weekend in forcing Germany to help the weaker countries. Take a look at Mr. Hollande's plans (according to The Economist):

Mr. Hollande will start by cutting the retirement age for some workers to 60, putting the top marginal income-tax rate up to 75%, raising taxes on wealth, inheritance and dividends, increasing the minimum wage and making it much harder for employers to fire workers.  

Far from curbing the size of the public sector, at 56% of GDP the biggest in the euro zone, he seems likely to expand it.

The thing is, if Mr. Hollande follows through with these plans, France could be a bigger mess than Greece and the rest of the PIIGS in no time… Heck, with French public debt at 90% of the country's GDP, it won't take long for France to catch up with the PIIGS.

So the big question is, why should German taxpayers work hard and eventually pay to bail out guys with plans like Mr. Hollande's? They shouldn't…

Again, as measured by the size of their economies, these seven countries make up over 80% of the euro. Only one of these countries – Germany – has its act together. It appears that the other countries are incapable of making the necessary changes.

So why should we prolong Europe's euro crisis indefinitely?

The answer to the problem is relatively simple: Germany, not Greece, should exit the euro…

I wish I had a nifty trade for you on all of this mess… like buying German government bonds, for example. But unfortunately, the land mines are too big whichever way you turn. (If you bought German government bonds denominated in euros, for example, and Germany left the euro, would those bonds stay in euros? I don't know.)

In sum, the quickest, simplest solution for Europe is right under their noses… It's for Germany, not Greece, to leave the euro.

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