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Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by HADENOUGHPIZZA
(Post 11368990)
Which part of the Italian population would benefit from a default ?
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Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by Pulaski
(Post 11370036)
Almost all of them. There would be some short term pain, with the potential for huge gains after a couple of years and in subsequent years. Putting the Lira into the pre-Euro exchange rate mechanism, and later adopting the Euro, has been an unmitigated disaster for the Italian economy.
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Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by Sue
(Post 11369456)
Let's not get hot under the collar folks.
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Re: Italy and the Eurozone
'Putting the Lira into the pre-Euro exchange rate mechanism, and later adopting the Euro, has been an unmitigated disaster for the Italian economy.'
Not according to most Italians. Recent polls have anything between 60% to 75% of voters, wishing to maintain the euro up from around 55% three years ago. Turkeys voting for Christmas? To say the euro has been a disaster for Italy you must compare with the alternative. It's definitely not obvious that the Italian economy would have done any better sticking to the lire and may have done considerably worse. Plunging currency, high inflation, personal savings eroded, IMF bailout with imposed much tougher austerity measures, etc, etc. You can make that case just as easily. |
Re: Italy and the Eurozone
I'll go along with that , the euro has bought its share of troubles but there is nothing to demostrate that the lira would have been any better . To start with we used to get whole news items dedicated to the exchange rate between the lira and the US dollar and what this would do to petrol prices.
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Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by gioppino
(Post 11370056)
Well, what do you expect Sue? Once you have tolerated inflammatory remarks such as: "Not genetically programmed to...", you can't then accuse the other posters to get under the collar. If there was a honest and fair moderation, this language wouldn't have been allowed. But because it has been allowed and possibly fostered, then BE is using double standards against those who disagree.
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Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by HADENOUGHPIZZA
(Post 11370105)
I'll go along with that , the euro has bought its share of troubles but there is nothing to demostrate that the lira would have been any better . To start with we used to get whole news items dedicated to the exchange rate between the lira and the US dollar and what this would do to petrol prices.
What gives under these circumstances is employment - people lose their jobs, and the only "natural" solution is to go where the jobs are, which is Germany, but with language and cultural barriers that isn't happening, and won't happen. And so we have the situation that Italy is in today, which by all accounts is a regular pickle, with a declining economy, rising debt, and a government that can't cut spending fast enough to stop the percentage of debt rising. ..... And in any case cutting spending further depresses an already slumping economy. |
Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by Pulaski
(Post 11370201)
And so we have the situation that Italy is in today, which by all accounts is a regular pickle, with a declining economy, rising debt, and a government that can't cut spending fast enough to stop the percentage of debt rising. ..... And in any case cutting spending further depresses an already slumping economy.
If Italy performed a partial default on foreign-owned debt and at the same time started printing its own currency (but only to service internal debt) then Italy could have killed two birds with one stone. But this will not happen because the financial elite (whose headquarters are at the City of London) need a weak, vulnerable and patronisable Italy to keep the system alive. If Italy attempted to default, you would see the Nato and Allied forces invading Italy, BBC, CNN and FOX news talking of restoring freedom, rogue state, etc. |
Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by gioppino
(Post 11370212)
Italy is one of the few countries in Europe that have mainly run a primary surplus (I don't know the latest figures, the last I have is mid 2013). The bulk of the public debt is due to interest repayments, at least the old ones, pre 2012 when the ECB started their own semi-quantitative easing). Italy is servicing its own debt at much more sustainable pace than many other European countries (only Germany and a few others do better) and surely better then the other PIIGS.
If Italy performed a partial default on foreign-owned debt and at the same time started printing its own currency (but only to service internal debt) then Italy could have killed two birds with one stone. But this will not happen because the financial elite (whose headquarters are at the City of London) need a weak, vulnerable and patronisable Italy to keep the system alive. If Italy attempted to default, you would see the Nato and Allied forces invading Italy, BBC, CNN and FOX news talking of restoring freedom, rogue state, etc. Gipooino is right about partial default, I would not want the coalition of the willing bombing my parents home or the cobra committee meeting to discuss the invasion of Italy. I guess they could always reinstate Mr monti should they need to do so.... |
Re: Italy and the Eurozone
How would Italy identify foreign owned debt ?
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Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by HADENOUGHPIZZA
(Post 11370226)
How would Italy identify foreign owned debt ?
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Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by gioppino
(Post 11370212)
..... If Italy attempted to default, you would see the Nato and Allied forces invading Italy, BBC, CNN and FOX news talking of restoring freedom, rogue state, etc.
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Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by gioppino
(Post 11370241)
Bonds that are in foreign banks.
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Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by Pulaski
(Post 11370261)
Don't you think that's a little melodramatic? :rolleyes:
One moment he is having dinner with Hillary and Tony, the next he gets bombed, tortured with a knife and then shot dead...coalition of the willing and all that It would appear that trying to sell oil to other countries rather than France and proposing African monetary union cost him his life in the end...I mean they are trying the same with bashar but this one has a slightly more seasoned army behind him and the WMD false flag did not work |
Re: Italy and the Eurozone
Originally Posted by fleetwoodmac1975
(Post 11370410)
Isn't that what happened with poor old muammar?
One moment he is having dinner with Hillary and Tony, the next he gets bombed, tortured with a knife and then shot dead...coalition of the willing and all that It would appear that trying to sell oil to other countries rather than France and proposing African monetary union cost him his life in the end. .... ..... I mean they are trying the same with bashar ...... the WMD false flag did not work |
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