More Downgrades: Will Any Part Of Europe Save Itself?
By: Rachel Marsden
The Fitch Ratings agency has downgraded the credit of another six European
countries -- Belgium, Cyprus, Italy, Ireland, Slovenia, and Spain – citing “the
financing risks faced by Eurozone sovereign governments in the absence of a
credible financial firewall against contagion.” In other words, these
self-styled fiscal medics plunged head-first into deadly disease without making
sure they had all their shots. Is every European country that tries to find a
clean end by which to lift up this mess now just irredeemably doomed?
Klaus Schwab, the World Economic Forum Chairman, opened last week’s annual
gathering in Davos, Switzerland, of the world’s economic and political elite by
proposing the following wisdom at a time when change-purses are circling the
drain: “My wish is threefold – that we build by searching for constructive new
solutions and models, that we bond by looking for long-term vision, and that we
bind by creating the necessary underpinning framework of shared values.”
Of all the possible solutions, that's definitely not it. Presumably, Klaus
Schwab -- bless his heart -- is 13 years old and hasn’t had “the talk” yet from
mom. I definitely would have swooned at such a romantic line in high school, in
the days when I was hitting up mom and dad daily for lunch money and thought I’d
marry Johnny Depp. I’ve since sobered up, pay my own bills, and Johnny obviously
blew me off -- so this kind of talk does nothing for my cynical realist heart.
It’s the kind of self-flagellating collectivism that got the world into this
mess in the first place. Permit me to propose a new mandate: “Focus on saving
yourself first, so you can then help others.”
The concept of "me first" -- or what I now like to call the "Captain Costa
Concordia mantra" -- hasn’t yet entirely escaped German Chancellor Merkel and
French President Sarkozy, thank goodness. Amid all Merkel’s rhetoric about
greater political integration and economic control to “fix” the Eurozone mess,
the two countries have still toyed more sensibly with the idea of the highest
rated E.U. countries issuing new separate debt bonds at lower interest rates so
they can then, in turn, funnel money to the hopeless ones who are taking on debt
faster than they can pay off the interest that gets jacked up higher with each
credit downgrade.
Nice to see there’s still some instinct of self-preservation. The unspoken truth
is that the Eurozone can’t be saved as a whole. It’s only by individual
countries getting their act together and crawling up ashore that they can ever
hope to throw a life preserver to others. But even self-preservation is becoming
increasingly less feasible as the situation grows direr and there’s increasingly
less to preserve.
As Fitch points out, a deepening recession risks leading to a greater public
outcry and rejection of austerity reforms. Italy’s post-Berlusconi Prime
Minister, Mario Monti, is currently contending with taxi strikes for proposing
to give out more licenses in an attempt to increase competition, jobs, and
performance in the sector. Monti is seeking to actively de-bureaucratize and
open up to free-market competition for gas stations, notaries and pharmacies,
taking the power out of the hands of the relatively small few who like to keep
business in the family – literally. Just under 1 in 5 notaries are related to
someone in the business, according to a Bloomberg report. Seeing as how these
unions in their current form were conceived by a fascist dictator named
Mussolini whose heyday was about 80 years ago, perhaps the system’s a bit dated.
Monti still has to get it through Parliament, many of whom work in these sectors
themselves and may not want to vote against their own personal interests within
the socialist system.
Italy also benefits from Monti being a “technocrat” – which is code for a
non-politician who was parachuted in to fix things, but isn’t tethered to
political power at his umbilical cord. Unfortunately, the rest aren't like him,
as they face re-election.
Socialism and its accompanying economic devastation thrive on complexity and red
tape. If something’s so simple that anyone can figure it out, then a socialist
is being deprived of an opportunity to make a livelihood out of simplifying or
translating socialist nonsense for the layman. A whole system is built up around
the complex nonsense, with everyone else getting sucked into the socialist
vortex and thrown a few shingles for the sake of giving socialists and their
cronies some other people over which to lord and thereby justify their parasitic
existence. Before long, economic Stockholm Syndrome takes hold and they
apparently panic at the idea of having to make a living outside of parameters
defined by Benito Mussolini. That’s the dragon Europe is now stuck having to
slay.
COPYRIGHT 2012 RACHEL MARSDEN