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Mit den Tags ‘euro’ versehene Einträge

FAZ hakt Dollar als Leitwährung ab

März 25, 2009 · Kommentar schreiben

Für die FAZ ist der Dollar perdu als LW. Stattdessen geht Holger Stelzner von der FAZ voll long auf Wunschdenken. Aber, mal ehrlich, man kann ja mal als deutscher Journo den Euro ein bischen anbiedern.

Sicher ist China um seine Rendite der T-Bond Investments besorgt und, wie jüngst bekannt geworden, waren die Kaufzeitpunkte für US-Aktien genau die Falschen. Aber daraus Hoffnungen zu ziehen, der Euro könnte herhalten als LW, heisst zu vergessen, dass Euroland die meissten IMF Rettungsaktionen hat.

Der Gedanke, die UN mit ihren berüchtigten Labersessions könne hierzu beitragen, ist dead on arrival.

Just as importantly is what China is not saying. It is not saying it will dump dollars. It is not saying it will buy more euros. The support for a new international reserve assets seems to be an attempt to get around the Triffin Paradox (the contradictory pressures on a national currency that is also a reserve asset). However, these are longer-term issues.

UN headlines can hit anytime over the next few days. Do not be surprised. Do not expect of a large response and if there is, it won’t be sustained. The UN does not have the same clout on financial issues as the IMF. A small group of US critics could capture a platform for their own purposes. It has happened before. It could happen again.

Meanwhile, the dollar’s role seems as secure as ever. There is no clear national alternative and a new international asset cannot simply be foisted on countries. The dollar remains numeraire, imperfections and all.

Kategorien: Wirtschaft/Finanz
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War der Euro ein Fehler?

März 18, 2009 · Kommentar schreiben

Paul Krugman hier auszugsweise. Beginnend mit dem bekannt guten Sozialsystem geht es dann zur Sache.

The only thing working in Europe’s favor is the very thing for which it takes the most criticism — the size and generosity of its welfare states, which are cushioning the impact of the economic slump.

This is no small matter. Guaranteed health insurance and generous unemployment benefits ensure that, at least so far, there isn’t as much sheer human suffering in Europe as there is in America. And these programs will also help sustain spending in the slump.

But such “automatic stabilizers” are no substitute for positive action.

Why is Europe falling short? Poor leadership is part of the story. European banking officials, who completely missed the depth of the crisis, still seem weirdly complacent. And to hear anything in America comparable to the know-nothing diatribes of Germany’s finance minister you have to listen to, well, Republicans.

But there’s a deeper problem: Europe’s economic and monetary integration has run too far ahead of its political institutions. The economies of Europe’s many nations are almost as tightly linked as the economies of America’s many states — and most of Europe shares a common currency. But unlike America, Europe doesn’t have the kind of continentwide institutions needed to deal with a continentwide crisis.

This is a major reason for the lack of fiscal action: there’s no government in a position to take responsibility for the European economy as a whole. What Europe has, instead, are national governments, each of which is reluctant to run up large debts to finance a stimulus that will convey many if not most of its benefits to voters in other countries.

You might expect monetary policy to be more forceful. After all, while there isn’t a European government, there is a European Central Bank. But the E.C.B. isn’t like the Fed, which can afford to be adventurous because it’s backed by a unitary national government — a government that has already moved to share the risks of the Fed’s boldness, and will surely cover the Fed’s losses if its efforts to unfreeze financial markets go bad. The E.C.B., which must answer to 16 often-quarreling governments, can’t count on the same level of support.

Europe, in other words, is turning out to be structurally weak in a time of crisis.

The biggest question is what will happen to those European economies that boomed in the easy-money environment of a few years ago, Spain in particular.

For much of the past decade Spain was Europe’s Florida, its economy buoyed by a huge speculative housing boom. As in Florida, boom has now turned to bust. Now Spain needs to find new sources of income and employment to replace the lost jobs in construction.

In the past, Spain would have sought improved competitiveness by devaluing its currency. But now it’s on the euro — and the only way forward seems to be a grinding process of wage cuts. This process would have been difficult in the best of times; it will be almost inconceivably painful if, as seems all too likely, the European economy as a whole is depressed and tending toward deflation for years to come.

Does all this mean that Europe was wrong to let itself become so tightly integrated? Does it mean, in particular, that the creation of the euro was a mistake? Maybe.

But Europe can still prove the skeptics wrong, if its politicians start showing more leadership. Will they?

Kategorien: Wirtschaft/Finanz
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Euro gen Süden?

März 9, 2009 · Kommentar schreiben

Spreadbets lassen auf ein Absinken des Euro in den nächsten 3 Monaten schliessen.

Kategorien: Wirtschaft/Finanz
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Karl Otto Pöhl: Euro unter enormem Druck

Februar 26, 2009 · Kommentar schreiben

Kein geringerer als der frühere Bundesbank Präse Pöhl:

Karl Otto Pohl, president of the German Bundesbank from 1980 to 1991, gave the warning in an exclusive interview with Sky’s Jeff Randall.

He said countries such as Ireland and Greece are in danger of defaulting on their obligations to the Euro zone. He admitted the Euro was under intense pressure and heavily indebted countries could be forced out of the single currency.

„I think there are countries considering the possibility. It would be very expensive,“ he said. „The exchange rate would go down, 50 or 60% and then interest rates would go sky high because the markets would lose all confidence.“

voller Artikel

Kategorien: Wirtschaft/Finanz
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„The Euro won’t solve anything.“

Dezember 8, 2008 · Kommentar schreiben

Vielleicht hat sich Milton Friedman nur um ein paar Jährchen vertan, aber es scheppert derbe im Euroraum. “The euro won’t solve anything,” OTP’s (Fund management co. aus Polen) Hamecz said. “The country has severe structural problems. Those structural problems are easier to solve outside the euro than inside the euro.”

Bloomberg berichtet über dicke Bremsspuren auf dem Weg in den Euro für Polen, Ungarn und die Tschech. Rep.

„‘Severe Crisis’

“I would remain cautious on central European currencies in three to six months,” said Benoit Anne, emerging-market strategist at Merrill Lynch in London. “We’re going through a severe crisis, with repercussions for all emerging markets. This will probably delay the adoption of the euro in the region.”

Kategorien: Wirtschaft/Finanz
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