Monday, August 17, 2015

Yanis Varoufakis — A New Approach to Eurozone Sovereign Debt – op-ed in Project Syndicate

The eurozone is unique among currency areas: Its central bank lacks a state to support its decisions, while its member states lack a central bank to support them in difficult times. Europe’s leaders have tried to fill this institutional lacuna with complex, non-credible rules that often fail to bind, and that, despite this failure, end up suffocating member states in need. One such rule is the Maastricht Treaty’s cap on member states’ public debt at 60% of GDP. Another is the treaty’s “no bailout” clause. Most member states, including Germany, have violated the first rule, surreptitiously or not, while for several the second rule has been overwhelmed by expensive financing packages.
The problem with debt restructuring in the eurozone is that it is essential and, at the same time, inconsistent with the implicit constitution underpinning the monetary union. When economics clashes with an institution’s rules, policymakers must either find creative ways to amend the rules or watch their creation collapse.…
Yanis Varoufakis
A New Approach to Eurozone Sovereign Debt – op-ed in Project Syndicate

Also

My question to Christine Lagarde, Eurogroup 25th June 2015 – as narrated by Landon Thomas in the NYT

Greece’s Third MoU (Memorandum of Understading) annotated by Yanis Varoufakis

2 comments:

Random said...

First Spain, now this.
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/aug/17/unemployed-young-people-work-boot-camp-tory-minister
Promote to post please.

Ralph Musgrave said...

Well I read that stuff by Varoufakis and couldn't make any sense of it. Someone like to explain it?