waauw wrote:You're taking this too personal. I'm not advocating anything an I'm not siding with anyone here. I'm merely mentioning that Greece's precariousness is much more complex than what several people here have been claiming. I'm not saying anything regarding what 'should be', only what 'is'.
Its not that precarious actually. A deal has to be made. For instance, if Greece owes someone a million dollars then Greece pays them $100K and that's that, the debt is done. And so on and so on. If you are owed a billion, you get a $100 million and have no further debt claims against Greece.
The creditors take a haircut (which is inevitable regardless), maybe not a 90% haircut but its going to be significant. After that, Greece has zero debt, gets to keep what she produces and and lives a lot more modestly in the future. Getting loans at that point won't be hard because Greece will have zero debt, but they'll pay through the nose for those loans. Not that the Greeks should be very interested in taking on new debt after the hell they went through.
But once that debt is gone then it is indeed wind at the sails for the Greeks. Hopefully they will be wiser.
The problem is, the ECB isn't too keen on taking a haircut, are they? Why? Because if that happens there will be a whole bunch of raised hands in the classroom looking to get their own deal, right? Spain, Italy and other will want the same deal or near to it. Then it all comes tumbling down after that, doesn't it?
The precarious situation isn't in Greece, its in the ECB and deservedly so, right? They are the ones who have over extended have they not? They are now in the position where their existence is in peril. Why are people yelling that Greece should lie in the bed they made but ignore the mess of the ECB and IMF's bed? Isn't their situation just as stupid, ill thought and foolish?
waauw wrote:I agree the global system is unsustainable, but that doesn't change Greece's situation currently.
But its not "Greece's situation", as if they are the ones with the problem. Its the ECB's problem, isn't it? They are the ones who are really on the line. No matter how its tried to be spun that its all the fault of the Greeks, its actually the result of the ECB and IMF's decisions that we are at this point. As such, they are the ones who will ultimately have to pay the price for their malinvestment, their miscalculation and their idiocy, and rightfully so. They made bad loans, knew they were making bad loans, used bogus accounting and ratings systems they knew were bogus. They deserve to go belly up.
waauw wrote:PS: As I mentioned before in this topic, it is highly likely that a collapse of the global financial system will be more beneficial for countries like China and Russia than it would be for the west.
Its going to be beneficial to everyone if what replaces it is a sound financial system. I know its hard to see, what we know today is what we've known all our lives and we are comfortable with it, but its unsound, unstable and ultimately destructive to a great majority of the people of the Earth and truly benefits only a small group of people.
Money was invented with the sole purpose of facilitating trade and commerce, not to enrich a select group of elite. We've long since forgotten what money was invented for and so few really understand what our currency is of how fiat currencies come into existence in the first place. When one sees the process they can't help but think of how stupid it is and sees immediately how such power is quickly abused.
Sound money is the only way forward, at least until mankind figures out how to convert energy into matter, then we won't need money anymore.
If yet another fiat currency system replaces it then it just starts the whole process over again and has the exact same end result. It doesn't matter if its the EU, the US, Russia or anyone else who is in charge of the system, it eventually goes critical and won't last more than a generation. As is the case with every fiat currency ever created throughout the entire history of human civilization.
What was it that Einstein said about the definition of insanity? Yeah, that's our modern financial system, the same spin on a very old fraud that always, I repeat,
always collapses because exponential growth is by definition unstable, unsustainable and eventually collapses. And that is what our modern financial system is, exponential credit expansion and it always ends the same. Always.