"The plunging euro
Why is the euro plunging against the dollar and the yen? Why are European banks coming under renewed pressure? Should the emerging financial and foreign exchange crisis of countries gravitating around the euro lead to new EU policy instruments?
The euro is plunging against the dollar because investors, in their scramble for safety and liquidity, are flocking to US and, also to some extent, Japanese government bonds which are considered safer and more liquid than other government-backed paper available in the market – including public debt instruments issued by European governments. In other words, the constellation of separate markets for sovereign debt paper of unequal quality issued by European governments cannot compete with the US market for the huge global financial flows in search of a safe harbour. Until the EU develops a unified market for bonds denominated in euro and backed jointly by EU member states – or, better, by euro-area member states – its claim for the status of reserve currency for the euro will not be met. As a result, capital is not coming to Europe, where it is badly needed to shore up its shaken financial system; moreover, the US will continue to dictate the agenda in international monetary affairs, even now, after the colossal damage inflicted on the world by their misguided macro and regulatory policies. To add insult to injury the US government is now paying 2-3 percentage points less on its short term debt than even the most virtuous EU member states."
Situation:
1) In this crisis, investors are investing in the U.S. and Japan
Problem:
1) Not Europe
2) America caused crisis, and we're getting screwed
Solution:
1) European bonds in euros backed jointly
We thus have at the same time strong demand for ‘European’ bonds and a need for massive government capital infusions to prevent the crisis from getting worse in the banking sector and the European periphery. This is why the EU should set up a massive European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF). The fund will probably have to be at least on the scale of the US Troubled Assets Relief Programme (TARP), say €500–700 billion. It would issue bonds on the international market with the explicit guarantee of member states. As the rationale for the EFSF is crisis management, its operations should be wound down after a pre-determined period (5 years?). For global investors EFSF bonds would be practically riskless having the backing of all member states."
Situation
1) Investors love public debt in countries with central banks that can print money
Problem
1) Europe doesn't
Solution
1) European bonds backed by national banks jointly ( By the way, I love the phrase "practically riskless)
"The resources available to the EFSF would be used mainly for bank recapitalisation, especially for those banks which rather ‘gamble for resurrection’ than accept the presence of heavy handed interference of national governments. Moreover, the EFSF could also beef up the funding of existing EU instruments for balance of payments assistance to the European neighbourhood. But a key consideration in setting up such an emergency fund should not be the problems that are already known. Given the unpredictable nature of this crisis, a key consideration should be for the EU to prepare for the ‘unknown unknowns’ that are certain to arrive sooner rather than later."Did they really say 'unknown unknowns'?
Anyway:
1) Let's give the money to banks trying to remain private ( with government money)
2) They like TARP
Good luck.
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