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-- Euro Pac-Stability rules are for Suckers


Posted by NYCTrancefan on Jan-08-2004 15:06:

Euro Pac-Stability rules are for Suckers

From the IHT-International Herald Tribune - http://www.iht.com/articles/124148.html

Reigniting Europe's bitter internal debate over the management of its single currency, lawyers for the European Commission ruled Wednesday that European finance ministers, led by France and Germany, acted illegally when they suspended the rules that underpin the euro.
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The commission, the Union's executive, must now decide whether to take the council of European finance ministers to court, a move described Wednesday as potentially "useful" by Pedro Solbes, the member of the commission charged with monetary affairs.
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Solbes told reporters at a news conference in Brussels that commission lawyers had found that Europe's finance ministers acted "outside the spirit and the letter of the treaty and the Stability and Growth Pact" - the euro's budgetary rulebook.
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"We are a community of law, and procedures have to be respected," Sobles said. "In order to clarify the framework in which budgetary surveillance is conducted, a Court of Justice ruling could be useful," he said, according to news agencies reporting from Brussels.

-And I thought only America didn't play by the rules Wonder if France and Germany will hold a summit over this as well. I am puzzled as to why the rest of Europe isn't fuming at what these nations have done to the rules crafted by them for European Growth. Just goes to show you that the biggest and strongest tend to get their way, ironic isn't it when you consider how they attack America for not following the rules of international treaties sometimes. Make no mistake that the European Stability Pact is one of those treaties (albeit for Europe) that was cast aside by these two nations at their own behest. Goes to show the rules are for Suckers


Posted by St_Andrew on Jan-08-2004 15:43:

i can understand germany's problem, they are in a dpression and need to get things going, france on the other side could make the 3% if they wanted, but if germany can do it france can do it too .... can't understand noone is acting more than they do


Posted by imokruok on Jan-08-2004 15:56:

Re: Euro Pac-Stability rules are for Suckers

Economists saw this coming from a mile away. Members of the eurozone unified their central banking systems under the ECB with little economic coordination. It should come as no surprise that Ireland's economy is quite different from Spain's or Greece's. Seriously, it was basically, "cross your fingers" and "let's see if this ECB thing works."

We have the same thing in the US. Our states have different economies, but there is only one central bank - the "Fed." But the difference is that we have a single national economy, not a patchwork of different national economies. A common language allows people to move to easily move to areas with better employment, and the differences between state economies are far smaller than the differences between national economies in Europe.

The Growth and Stability Pact is the main reason that Great Britain should stay out of the euro. Joining the eurozone means that the Bank of England will lose the freedom to do what France and Germany are currently doing.

quote:
I am puzzled as to why the rest of Europe isn't fuming at what these nations have done to the rules crafted by them for European Growth.


I think the smaller nations in Europe are fuming, because they know they'd never get away with what France and Germany did. The problem is, what the hell are they going to do about it? I feel sorry for the nations that signed on to the big swindle.


Posted by occrider on Jan-08-2004 17:18:

Re: Re: Euro Pac-Stability rules are for Suckers

quote:
Originally posted by imokruok
Economists saw this coming from a mile away.


http://www.tranceaddict.com/forums/...ghlight=Deficit

Cough ...... Cough


Posted by imokruok on Jan-08-2004 17:40:

Haha...very good.


Posted by St_Andrew on Jan-08-2004 17:46:

quote:
Originally posted by occrider
http://www.tranceaddict.com/forums/...ghlight=Deficit

Cough ...... Cough


hehehehe, but i'm not really sure if i can agree with you here. of course it would be easier for germany to recover their economy if they had the monetary policys to fully rely on. But in the long run i'm not sure if monetary policys is the right thing for solving a country like germany's problems. it would have been easy for the politicians to just devalue the mark, and in that way solve the countries problems, for then. but without that possibility the politicians must do something about the real problem, it will be harder and take more time, but i think that's the way to go in the long run.

also it is not that true about different regions, for example i know that there is less difference between all european country's economies, than there is within the swedish economy.


Posted by occrider on Jan-08-2004 18:40:

quote:
Originally posted by St_Andrew
hehehehe, but i'm not really sure if i can agree with you here. of course it would be easier for germany to recover their economy if they had the monetary policys to fully rely on. But in the long run i'm not sure if monetary policys is the right thing for solving a country like germany's problems. it would have been easy for the politicians to just devalue the mark, and in that way solve the countries problems, for then. but without that possibility the politicians must do something about the real problem, it will be harder and take more time, but i think that's the way to go in the long run.


Most of the time there IS no problem. Economies boom and bust cyclically to the business cycle. The whole concept of monetary policy and fiscal policy is to reduce the amount of time spent in recession. Monetary policy could quite easily help Germany out. Deflation is relatively low in Germany and the value of Euro is high. They could quite easily lower interest rates in order to stimulate business development in an effort to aid the economy without fears of inflation. However it cannot because it has ceded control over interest rates to the ECB. Furthermore they cannot manipulate the M1 money supply (or whatever the German version is). And lastly their ability to use fiscal policies are limited with the deficit caps. Of course I suppose they could simply violate that policy like they're doing right now ...

quote:

also it is not that true about different regions, for example i know that there is less difference between all european country's economies, than there is within the swedish economy.


That's not true. I know half a year ago, France's economy was structurally sound and it would have been detrimental to them for the ECB to cut rates while the German economy was flirting with recession and would have benifited from a rate cut. And like I stated before, inflation is not the same for every EU country, and therefore one monetary policy may have a positive effect on a few while hurting others. For example, Ireland has high inflation at approximately 4.7% while Germany has low inflation at 1.1% and the Eurozone rate is at 2.1%. Each of these countries have far varying growth figures and therefore they are undergoing different ailments which calls for specific monetary or fiscal policies.

http://www.eubusiness.com/afp/04010...4.cg6ajvid/view


Posted by St_Andrew on Jan-08-2004 19:20:

quote:
Originally posted by occrider
Most of the time there IS no problem. Economies boom and bust cyclically to the business cycle. The whole concept of monetary policy and fiscal policy is to reduce the amount of time spent in recession. Monetary policy could quite easily help Germany out. Deflation is relatively low in Germany and the value of Euro is high. They could quite easily lower interest rates in order to stimulate business development in an effort to aid the economy without fears of inflation. However it cannot because it has ceded control over interest rates to the ECB. Furthermore they cannot manipulate the M1 money supply (or whatever the German version is). And lastly their ability to use fiscal policies are limited with the deficit caps. Of course I suppose they could simply violate that policy like they're doing right now ...


true, most of the times there is no other problem but a normal down in the economy. i'm not very into germany's problems but they seem to have more problems than just the usual ones, and they really got to deal with them now to get things going again. again i am taking my own country as an example, during the late '70 and '80s we had a lot of economic problems, our lazy politicians simply solved that by a couple of devaluations, so the economy was really blooming in the '80s, but in reality we had big problems. when most of the world started to have problems with its economy in the beginning of the '90s, sweden's economy nearly collapsed. we hadn't dealt with the problems but now, they were more serious than ever. after that we did a lot of reforms and such and the economy has been really steady during the later parts of the '90s.

but of course during normal circumstances monetary policys are a good way of helping a country out. also under normal circumstances most economies in europe grows _about_ the same.

perhaps it would be better if ECB had a big budget to put into countries that needed economic stimulation, but that simple wouldn't work yet.for example the france would NEVER agree that anyone else (germany) got loads of money for stimulation meanwhile they didn't get anything...

quote:
That's not true. I know half a year ago, France's economy was structurally sound and it would have been detrimental to them for the ECB to cut rates while the German economy was flirting with recession and would have benifited from a rate cut. And like I stated before, inflation is not the same for every EU country, and therefore one monetary policy may have a positive effect on a few while hurting others. For example, Ireland has high inflation at approximately 4.7% while Germany has low inflation at 1.1% and the Eurozone rate is at 2.1%. Each of these countries have far varying growth figures and therefore they are undergoing different ailments which calls for specific monetary or fiscal policies.

http://www.eubusiness.com/afp/04010...4.cg6ajvid/view


yeah true, but who says that everything is the same even within a country? for example perhaps paris has a economical growth of 7% meanwhile Lyon has a economical growth of 1.5%, same goes with inflation, you simply cannot satisfy everyones needs if you do not have a currency for every single little area... so the loss of monetary policies are not that important if you see to the benefits of a single currency unit. and during time goes, the EMU countries economys will grow together more and more.


Posted by occrider on Jan-08-2004 19:45:

quote:
Originally posted by St_Andrew

yeah true, but who says that everything is the same even within a country? for example perhaps paris has a economical growth of 7% meanwhile Lyon has a economical growth of 1.5%, same goes with inflation, you simply cannot satisfy everyones needs if you do not have a currency for every single little area... so the loss of monetary policies are not that important if you see to the benefits of a single currency unit. and during time goes, the EMU countries economys will grow together more and more.


True, and that's why the national government has the ability to intercede in poorer regions if need be to provide loans or whatnot in order to encourage recovery. That's exactly what Arnold is attempting to do in California for example. Additionally, although growth may be different in between regions of a country, inflation remains constant all throughout. This is not the case in the EU. Ultimately US monetary policy is designed to help the US in aggregate, not specific regions. The EU is slightly (well actually significantly) more complex as a result of varying unemployment rates, inflation rates, and growth. So who should the ECB cater its policies towards? If it caters its monetary policies towards the EU in aggregate, all of its policies will be for the benefit of the two largest economies, France and Germany, and potentially hurt the smaller ones ... or say the scandanavian region. If it maintains the status quo in which most countries are doing fine except for Germany, what happens when the German economy goes into deep recession and drags teh EU down with it? Yes the idea is that as time goes on, the countries will become far more integrated, however, my question is whether they are integrated enough at this point for the single currency eurozone to be successful (or as effective as it might be without it).



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