The euro was intended to be the single currency of Europe. This made sense to various politicians. Objectors were sensible, right, to the point and spot on generally. This was not about finance so much as politics, about creating a New World Order with Democracy safely destroyed. Countries joining had to meet various criteria. France did it the old fashioned way, by fraud; ditto for various Latin countries. As I write, in March 2013 chickens are coming home to roost. The Financial Crisis 2008, which began in America is spreading its pain around. The Germans did not want to be dragged into this but they were pushed by politicians. Now they know they are being robbed to pay for fraud committed largely by aforesaid Latin countries.
Little Cyprus is broke. The banks are shut while they steal money from people's accounts. But the local Parliament has refused to go along with it. There has been major outrage. See e.g. European Financiers Foul Up Big Time As Cyprus Works On Plan B So they are doing a rethink. Various politicians in Europe have realized that blatant robbery will cause bank runs as depositors take their money out. It might just as well be under the mattress when interest rates are that low. It might be the end of the euro as well.
The euro kicked off way back in December 2001.
Mark Steyn
was just one of the people who told us it was a terrible idea. He was right -
see The
Potemkin Treasury. The euro is the second largest
reserve currency as well as the second most traded currency in the world
after the United States dollar.[5][6]
As of September 2012, with more than €915 billion in circulation, the euro has
the highest combined value of banknotes and coins in
circulation in the world, having surpassed the US dollar.[note
14] Based on
International Monetary Fund estimates of 2008 GDP and
purchasing power parity among the various currencies, the Eurozone is the
second largest economy in the world.[7] The name euro was officially adopted on 16 December 1995.[8]
The euro was introduced to world financial markets as an accounting currency on
1 January 1999, replacing the former
European Currency Unit (ECU) at a ratio of 1:1 (US$1.1743). Euro
coins and
banknotes
entered circulation on 1 January 2002.[9]
While the euro dropped subsequently to US$0.8252 within two years (26 October
2000), it has traded above the US dollar since the end of 2002, peaking at
US$1.6038 on 18 July 2008.[10]
Since late 2009, the euro has been immersed in the
European sovereign-debt crisis which has led to the creation of the
European Financial Stability Facility as well as
other reforms aimed at stabilising the currency. In July 2012, the euro fell
below US$1.21 for the first time in two years, following concerns raised over
Greek debt and Spain's troubled banking sector.[11]
Southern Europe Is On A Precipice
[ 02 Nov 2013 ]
Euro Currency Will Collapse Says Its Inventor [ 17 October 2016 ] “Realistically, it will be a case of muddling through,
struggling from one crisis to the next. It is difficult to
forecast how long this will continue for, but it cannot go
on endlessly," he told the journal
Central Banking in a remarkable deconstruction of the
project. Prof Issing the lambasted the European Commission.
Juncker's 'Torture Tools' Are Useless Against Italy's Well-Armed Uprising
[ 26 May 2018 ]
Europe's cheerful chief enforcer tests our humour. The
methods deployed against a string of distressed nations from
2010 to 2014 were illegal, unconstitutional, and scandalous,
though carried out with the complicity of vested interests
in each country. This created a cloak of legitimacy. Athanasios Orphanides, a former governor at the European
Central Bank, says the nuclear weapon is the ECB’s control
over sovereign bond spreads and liquidity for the banks.
“They threaten governments that misbehave with financial
destruction. They try to scare them into voluntary
acceptance of policies,” he said . “They cut off refinancing and threaten to kill the
banking system. They create a roll-over crisis in the bond
market. This is what happened to Italy in 2011,” he said. Prof Orphanides, now safely distant at MIT in Boston,
says the ECB was careful not to leave a paper trail or take
decisions that could be challenged in court. “They operate
in a grey area without clear legal authority.” The trick is to work hand in glove with the
#Eurogroup,
the Star Chamber of EMU finance ministers that is
accountable to no democratic body and is essentially under
the control of the German finance ministry. “What happens is
that everybody at the Eurogroup meeting gangs up on the
country they want to attack,” he said. One
saw the reflexes of an authoritarian proto-imperial entity
during the crisis. To compound the damage, the policy
prescriptions were incompetent. They led to an economic
depression deeper than the 1930s. The end did not even
justify the means. Covering this episode closely as a journalist is a key
reason why I voted for Brexit, knowing that British
withdrawal from the EU would be traumatic. The
counterfactual of remaining in Mr Juncker’s lawless dungeon
was ultimately worse. The EU’s gendarmes are now eyeing Italy’s rebel coalition
with professional curiosity. This is a harder nut to crack.
For the first time since the creation of monetary union they
face a government in which the critical mass of sentiment is
Eurosceptic. The ‘Italy First’ cohorts of the Lega openly
extol the patriotic lira - or the new florin as it may be
called. A
crude attempt to bully the Lega and Davide Casaleggio’s Five
Star techno-mystics risks defiance and a dangerous
chain-reaction, ending in a €2 trillion default on German
credits to southern Europe and the devastation of the EU
project. The enforcers must be subtle. They will try to peel off
the softer Five Star ‘Grillini’, those such as nominal
leader Luigi di Maio are already showing eagerness for EU
approval. They will exploit divisions in Italian society
just as they are doing in Brexit Britain. They will mobilize
the ‘poteri forti’ of Confindustria and the mandarin class. The
Italian drama of 2011 is illuminating. The ECB used the bond
market as a political tool. It switched purchases on and off
to pressure Silvio Berlusconi, dictating detailed domestic
policies in a secret letter (later leaked). It ordered
specific reforms of the labour law, a neuralgic issue that
had already led to two assassinations. It demanded austerity
overkill on the urging of ‘ordoliberal’ quack economists in
Berlin. When Berlusconi balked, the ECB engineered a bond crisis.
It chose a moment when contagion from the Spanish banking
crash had left Italy vulnerable. This paved the way for a
coup d'état, orchestrated by the ex-Stalinist Italian
president of the day. Berlusconi was toppled. A former EU
commissioner, Mario Monti, was parachuted in with a team of
officials from Brussels. The ECB had no treaty mandate to do any of this. It was
acting ultra vires. There was not a whisper of criticism
from the European press corps. Don’t rely on them to
expose arbitrary practice and defend the rule of law. The forgiving verdict is that EU officials had to take
these measures to save the euro. Yet the Eurozone financial
crisis was of their own making. It happened because the ECB
failed to fulfill its primary central bank purpose as a
lender-of-last resort in a crisis (at a penalty rate, true
to Bagehot). The crisis stopped instantly when Berlin lifted
its veto and authorized Mario Draghi to “do whatever it
takes” in mid-2012. Claudio
Borghi, the Lega's economics chief, says the EU cannot pull
off the same trick a second time. Italians are alert to the
legerdemain. "Everybody can see that the spreads are a tool
of political manipulation," he said. What
unites the Lega and Grillini is a shared suspicion that
Germany has gamed monetary union, setting the rules to its
own advantage. Many think it pursued a mercantilist
beggar-thy-neighbour strategy (in effect, if not by intent),
undercutting Italy's real effective exchange rate (REER) and
trapping the country in a depression. The effect in the particular circumstances of Italy -
which used to have a trade surplus with Germany - has been
debt-deflation, corrosive deindustrialization, an
unjustified banking crisis (Italian banks were not the
villains of pre-Lehman excess), and youth jobless rates
above 50pc in the South. The Lega-Grillini may not
understand the exact economic mechanisms. But their
intuitive conclusion is broadly correct. Italy was as much
sinned against than sinner. The ECB's liquidity weapons can only work against a
nation that is naive, has disarmed itself, and fears
ejection from EMU. If subjected to Juncker's torture, the
insurgent alliance would probably activate its plan for 'minibot'
Treasury notes and launch its parallel currency. It would
reassert national control over the banking system. In other words, Italy would do what Yanis Varoufakis
wanted to do in Greece: wage guerrilla warfare. The Greek
finance minister was famously stopped by the Syriza 'war
cabinet' in 2015. The plan was too radical. The
battle-scarred Mr Varoufakis is now watching the Italian
drama with forensic fascination. He thinks the Eurogroup has
met its match this time. German talk of a Target2 payment
freeze to the Bank of Italy rings false. "It is an empty
threat," he said. Lega strongman Matteo Salvini almost seems to relish the
chance to fight Brussels, Berlin, and the bond vigilantes.
He dares his enemies to play the spread game. He once
described the euro as a "crime against humanity" - to me as
it happens. "Salvini positively wants to get out of the euro. Alexis
Tsipras did not. That is a profound difference," said Mr
Varoufakis. He sees an unstoppable sequence as the
Lega-Grillini budget blitz blows up the EU Fiscal Compact
and the Stability Pact. "The flat tax will create a big hole in the budget. There
will be market tensions and the usual reactions from
Germany," he said. The coalition will defend itself with
minibots (though he advises them to keep it digital, rather
than issuing paper - a fine legal point - and to avoid
calling it a 'currency').
"There will be immediate capital flight. They will have
to impose capital controls. Italians will find almost
surreptitiously that they are no longer in the euro, without
a referendum, without a vote," he told The Telegraph.
It will just happen.
the EU has a choice. It can bow to the fait accompli of Italy's revolt
and allow Rome to let rip with fiscal reflation. It can accept that the euro
has slipped German control, and that EMU is henceforth a lira-zone on Club
Med terms. In which case Germany may leave.
Or it can pull out the thumbscrews, the pillory, and the
rack, working day and night to overturn Italian democracy.
If this succeeds, it can only be at an extremely high
political cost. But it might not succeed. In which case
Italy may leave, taking Spain, Portugal, Greece, and much of
the German banking system with it. In a dysfunctional monetary union, you pick your poison.
The exchange rate today 22 March 2013 is 1 euro = US$1.2973250175 so there has
not been a run, not yet.
Euro ex Wiki
QUOTE
The euro (sign:
€;
code:
EUR) is the currency used by the
Institutions of the European Union and is the official currency of the
Eurozone,
which consists of 17 of the 27
member states of the European Union:
Austria,
Belgium,
Cyprus,
Estonia,
Finland,
France,
Germany,
Greece,
Ireland, Italy,
Luxembourg,
Malta, the
Netherlands,
Portugal,
Slovakia,
Slovenia,
and Spain.
[2][3]
The currency is also used in a further
five European countries and consequently used daily by some 332 million
Europeans.[4]
Additionally, more than 175 million people worldwide—including 150 million
people in Africa—use currencies
pegged to the euro.
UNQUOTE
The Wiki is telling the truth more or less.
Says
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, a first rate journo. The euro is a bad idea. It
always was. Now people are suffering big time as a result.
QUOTE
The European Central
Bank is becoming dangerously over-extended and the whole
euro project is unworkable in its current form, the founding
architect of the monetary union has warned.
Prof Issing said the
euro has been betrayed by politics, lamenting that the
experiment went wrong from the beginning and has since has
degenerated into a fiscal free-for-all that once again masks
the festering pathologies.
UNQUOTE
Politicians with agendas experiment on us and walk away rich. We were told
loudly, incessantly that without the Euro we were doomed. They were fools,
rogues and ignoramuses.
QUOTE
Brussels
prides itself on well-honed ways to bring recalcitrant
governments to heel. "We have instruments of torture in the
basement,” jokes Jean-Claude Juncker.
UNQUOTE
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard is a first rate journo, one that
gets taken seriously by people in the finance industry. I
strongly suspect that he is right for the right reasons.
Italy is analogous to someone in debt. If the amount is
huge, the bank has a problem, not the borrower.
Bankruptcy solves problems for
debtors. NB He is right about the
#Eurogroup, a private group
of co-conspirators.