In an earlier post, The
Greek Crisis: Economic Meltdown or Mental One?, I took issue with a recent New
York Time’s article which contends that “Wall Street tactics akin to the
ones that fostered subprime mortgages in America have worsened the financial
crisis shaking Greece and undermining the euro by enabling European governments
to hide their mounting debts.” For a variety of reasons elaborated in that post,
I conclude that, “this article might be one of the least persuasive pieces of
financial reporting I’ve seen since the start of the financial crisis, and
that’s saying a lot.”
Since then, the Times has run two more articles, including
one yesterday, blaming the Greek financial crisis on derivatives and the banks that sell them, and reporting that the Federal Reserve is investigating
Goldman Sachs and other banks. According
to the same article, the SEC:
could “neither confirm nor deny the existence of an
investigation,” but added that it was cooperating with United States and
international regulators in examining “potential abuses and destabilizing
effects related to the use of credit-default swaps and other opaque financial
products and practices.”
Whatever that means.
In two interesting posts here
and here,
Felix Salmon takes on another Times piece on the topic, Banks Bet
Greece Defaults on Debt They Helped Hide. Says
Salmon:
Ben Bernanke said today that he’s looking into the issue of
whether the CDS market is enabling some kind of run on the Greek government. I
sincerely hope he was just being polite to his Congressional overlords, rather
than buying in to this theory.
It’s worth looking at the NYT story in some detail, to see
just how little sense it makes.
But today’s news brought the blame game to new levels. Via TIME.com:
It's not quite World War III, but tension over Greece's debt
crisis has ignited a battle of words between Athens and Berlin, reopening old
wounds and raising the specter of Nazism. . . .
Greece's deputy prime minister, socialist stalwart Theodoros
Pangalos, told the BBC that Germany still owed Greece for stealing its gold
during World War II. . . .
Vassilis Tsimpidis, a Greek dockworker who protested this
week against government austerity measures, echoed the sentiments of many
Greeks when he said Greece's modern problems could be traced to German's
wartime sins. "German people believe bad things about Greeks, but we want
to remind the German people that they destroyed Greece in the Second World
War," he said. "We haven't had a good life the last 40 or 50 years
because of the war." Using a figure widely brandished in Greece as an
estimate of Germany's war-related debt to the country, he called for Germany to
"give us �70 billion to pay us for the war. That would solve all
our problems."
German taxpayers, though, aren't buying that argument. In an
open letter published in a Greek newspaper, German journalist Walter
Wullenweber of Stern Magazine compared Greece to an ungrateful child and
Germany to an aunt who is never thanked for her gifts. He calculated that if
all the aid Germans have given Greeks was added up, since 1981, Germans have
given each Greek $12,200. In return, Wullenweber complained, Greeks swindle the
European Union and retire early. "You are by far our most expensive
friend," he wrote.
No comment.
Related Posts:
The Greek Crisis: Economic Meltdown or Mental
One?
The Modern Greek Drama: Comedy, Tragedy, or
Both?
The Modern Greek Drama, Part 2
Verge of the Unböring (The Modern Greek
Drama, Part 3)
Is 2010 The Year of Odious Sovereign
Defaults?
Engineered by the same financial group involved in provoking the US supprime mortgage crisis, chances stand now that this Greek debt crisis has a big potential to destabilize the EU but also to kick back to the US economy as well …
Blame it on Goldman Sachs? Maybe! Not blame it on Greece? False! If there was someone there signing a deal with Goldman sachs, there were the Greeks! If they did not care than, they are very much to be held accountable as well now …