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anomander rejk

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Kad su postavili onog bankara u Grčkoj, u Americi je neko rekao da čak Papandreu sada izgleda kao Lincoln. (A tamo je to kompliment.) Ujedno na različitim koncima bez konca recitiraju pohvale tehnokratima. Tehnokrati bi imali biti ljudi koji su postavljeni na kormilo Grčke i Italije i tehnokrati bi imali biti ti koji vladaju stručno, a ne politički – i to bi imalo biti dobro. To će ponavljati toliko dugo da ćemo početi vjerovati. Međutim, pristati na ideju da je tehnokratska vlada nepolitička vlada, ne znači drugo do odreći se rasprave o politici takve vlade, prihvatiti oktroiranu depolitizaciju i odreći se uvjeta mogućnosti da imamo neku riječ pri uređivanju javnih stvari.Nema nepolitičke vlade. Vlada – svaka, bilo koja vlada – po definiciji je politička. Hipotetski možemo predstavljati da je mafija nepolitička, čisto poslovna organizacija. Ali u onom trenutku kada mafija dođe na vlast, ona postaje politička i imamo mafijsku politiku. Isto je s tehnokratima: ako stupe u vladu, postaju političari. I kad postanu političari, ne mogu biti neutralni. Kao što ne može biti nepolitičke vlade, ne može biti ni politički neutralne vlade. Želja evrokrata pri forsiranju tehnokratske formule jeste suspendiranje političke rasprave, otvorenog artikuliranja političkih interesa koji se suprotstavljaju njihovom političkom interesu. Tehnokracija po zamislima evrokrata jeste oblik diktature. (I u Sloveniji, gdje još imamo izbore, kandidati koji nude nešto nadpolitičko, tehnokratsko – na pamet mi padaju Zoran Janković i Gregor Virant – po logici su stvari potencijalni diktatori. Vjerojatno ne toliko suvereni diktatori kao što su to vršioci evrodiktature.)
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What price the new democracy? Goldman Sachs conquers Europe While ordinary people fret about austerity and jobs, the eurozone's corridors of power have been undergoing a remarkable transformation Stephen Foley Friday 18 November 2011Pg-12-eurozone-graphic.jpg

The ascension of Mario Monti to the Italian prime ministership is remarkable for more reasons than it is possible to count. By replacing the scandal-surfing Silvio Berlusconi, Italy has dislodged the undislodgeable. By imposing rule by unelected technocrats, it has suspended the normal rules of democracy, and maybe democracy itself. And by putting a senior adviser at Goldman Sachs in charge of a Western nation, it has taken to new heights the political power of an investment bank that you might have thought was prohibitively politically toxic.This is the most remarkable thing of all: a giant leap forward for, or perhaps even the successful culmination of, the Goldman Sachs Project.It is not just Mr Monti. The European Central Bank, another crucial player in the sovereign debt drama, is under ex-Goldman management, and the investment bank's alumni hold sway in the corridors of power in almost every European nation, as they have done in the US throughout the financial crisis. Until Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund's European division was also run by a Goldman man, Antonio Borges, who just resigned for personal reasons.Even before the upheaval in Italy, there was no sign of Goldman Sachs living down its nickname as "the Vampire Squid", and now that its tentacles reach to the top of the eurozone, sceptical voices are raising questions over its influence. The political decisions taken in the coming weeks will determine if the eurozone can and will pay its debts – and Goldman's interests are intricately tied up with the answer to that question.Simon Johnson, the former International Monetary Fund economist, in his book 13 Bankers, argued that Goldman Sachs and the other large banks had become so close to government in the run-up to the financial crisis that the US was effectively an oligarchy. At least European politicians aren't "bought and paid for" by corporations, as in the US, he says. "Instead what you have in Europe is a shared world-view among the policy elite and the bankers, a shared set of goals and mutual reinforcement of illusions."This is The Goldman Sachs Project. Put simply, it is to hug governments close. Every business wants to advance its interests with the regulators that can stymie them and the politicians who can give them a tax break, but this is no mere lobbying effort. Goldman is there to provide advice for governments and to provide financing, to send its people into public service and to dangle lucrative jobs in front of people coming out of government. The Project is to create such a deep exchange of people and ideas and money that it is impossible to tell the difference between the public interest and the Goldman Sachs interest.Mr Monti is one of Italy's most eminent economists, and he spent most of his career in academia and thinktankery, but it was when Mr Berlusconi appointed him to the European Commission in 1995 that Goldman Sachs started to get interested in him. First as commissioner for the internal market, and then especially as commissioner for competition, he has made decisions that could make or break the takeover and merger deals that Goldman's bankers were working on or providing the funding for. Mr Monti also later chaired the Italian Treasury's committee on the banking and financial system, which set the country's financial policies.With these connections, it was natural for Goldman to invite him to join its board of international advisers. The bank's two dozen-strong international advisers act as informal lobbyists for its interests with the politicians that regulate its work. Other advisers include Otmar Issing who, as a board member of the German Bundesbank and then the European Central Bank, was one of the architects of the euro.Perhaps the most prominent ex-politician inside the bank is Peter Sutherland, Attorney General of Ireland in the 1980s and another former EU Competition Commissioner. He is now non-executive chairman of Goldman's UK-based broker-dealer arm, Goldman Sachs International, and until its collapse and nationalisation he was also a non-executive director of Royal Bank of Scotland. He has been a prominent voice within Ireland on its bailout by the EU, arguing that the terms of emergency loans should be eased, so as not to exacerbate the country's financial woes. The EU agreed to cut Ireland's interest rate this summer.Picking up well-connected policymakers on their way out of government is only one half of the Project, sending Goldman alumni into government is the other half. Like Mr Monti, Mario Draghi, who took over as President of the ECB on 1 November, has been in and out of government and in and out of Goldman. He was a member of the World Bank and managing director of the Italian Treasury before spending three years as managing director of Goldman Sachs International between 2002 and 2005 – only to return to government as president of the Italian central bank.Mr Draghi has been dogged by controversy over the accounting tricks conducted by Italy and other nations on the eurozone periphery as they tried to squeeze into the single currency a decade ago. By using complex derivatives, Italy and Greece were able to slim down the apparent size of their government debt, which euro rules mandated shouldn't be above 60 per cent of the size of the economy. And the brains behind several of those derivatives were the men and women of Goldman Sachs.The bank's traders created a number of financial deals that allowed Greece to raise money to cut its budget deficit immediately, in return for repayments over time. In one deal, Goldman channelled $1bn of funding to the Greek government in 2002 in a transaction called a cross-currency swap. On the other side of the deal, working in the National Bank of Greece, was Petros Christodoulou, who had begun his career at Goldman, and who has been promoted now to head the office managing government Greek debt. Lucas Papademos, now installed as Prime Minister in Greece's unity government, was a technocrat running the Central Bank of Greece at the time.Goldman says that the debt reduction achieved by the swaps was negligible in relation to euro rules, but it expressed some regrets over the deals. Gerald Corrigan, a Goldman partner who came to the bank after running the New York branch of the US Federal Reserve, told a UK parliamentary hearing last year: "It is clear with hindsight that the standards of transparency could have been and probably should have been higher."When the issue was raised at confirmation hearings in the European Parliament for his job at the ECB, Mr Draghi says he wasn't involved in the swaps deals either at the Treasury or at Goldman.It has proved impossible to hold the line on Greece, which under the latest EU proposals is effectively going to default on its debt by asking creditors to take a "voluntary" haircut of 50 per cent on its bonds, but the current consensus in the eurozone is that the creditors of bigger nations like Italy and Spain must be paid in full. These creditors, of course, are the continent's big banks, and it is their health that is the primary concern of policymakers. The combination of austerity measures imposed by the new technocratic governments in Athens and Rome and the leaders of other eurozone countries, such as Ireland, and rescue funds from the IMF and the largely German-backed European Financial Stability Facility, can all be traced to this consensus."My former colleagues at the IMF are running around trying to justify bailouts of €1.5trn-€4trn, but what does that mean?" says Simon Johnson. "It means bailing out the creditors 100 per cent. It is another bank bailout, like in 2008: The mechanism is different, in that this is happening at the sovereign level not the bank level, but the rationale is the same."So certain is the financial elite that the banks will be bailed out, that some are placing bet-the-company wagers on just such an outcome. Jon Corzine, a former chief executive of Goldman Sachs, returned to Wall Street last year after almost a decade in politics and took control of a historic firm called MF Global. He placed a $6bn bet with the firm's money that Italian government bonds will not default.When the bet was revealed last month, clients and trading partners decided it was too risky to do business with MF Global and the firm collapsed within days. It was one of the ten biggest bankruptcies in US history.The grave danger is that, if Italy stops paying its debts, creditor banks could be made insolvent. Goldman Sachs, which has written over $2trn of insurance, including an undisclosed amount on eurozone countries' debt, would not escape unharmed, especially if some of the $2trn of insurance it has purchased on that insurance turns out to be with a bank that has gone under. No bank – and especially not the Vampire Squid – can easily untangle its tentacles from the tentacles of its peers. This is the rationale for the bailouts and the austerity, the reason we are getting more Goldman, not less. The alternative is a second financial crisis, a second economic collapse.Shared illusions, perhaps? Who would dare test it?http://www.independe...pe-6264091.html

Edited by bigvlada
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Mozda Nemacka i nije u tako dobrom stanju.

Germany's Finances Not as Sound as BelievedThe German government likes to pride itself on its solid finances and claim the country is a safe haven for investors. But Germany's budget management is not nearly as exemplary as it would have people believe, and the national debt is way over the EU's limit. In some respects, Italy's finances are in much better shape.
image-285475-galleryV9-hgfg.jpgUzgred, Austrija je u sve vecim problemima.
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Ha!A Economist kaze:http://www.economist.com/blogs/buttonwood/2011/11/euro-zone-crisis-2

A signal to watch forNov 22nd 2011, 14:00 by ButtonwoodTHINGS need to get worse before they can get better. That is the view of many commentators on the euro zone crisis, who think that only when complete catastrophe seems imminent, will European political leaders take the necessary action. (They don't always agree on what that action might be but it is usually some combination of unlimited bond purchases by the European Central Bank and moves towards fiscal union.)Richard McGuire, the fixed income strategist at Rabobank, is very much in that camp. He argues that most of the daily headlines, such as changes in Greek and Italian governments, don't matter. The fundamental problem is one currency and 17 separate fiscal authorities; until that situation is resolved, there will be no solution. Austerity policies won't work.But Mr McGuire has also figured out what the next stage of the crisis will mean for investors. Up until now, the obvious strategy has been to buy German government bonds and sell just about everything else, on the grounds that, if the euro zone does break up, you want your money to be in Deutsche Marks. But if European politicians do unveil a rescue plan, that will either mean the core countries assuming the burden of eurozone debt, or it will mean that long-term inflation risks will have risen.At that stage, investors will pile out of long-term German government debt and into the short-term debt of countries like Italy (since the credit risk will have disappeared). Given that plans always leak, that's a signal to watch for; a sudden rise in German bond yields. Mr McGuire thinks the crunch will come in the first or second quarter of 2012.
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SREDA 23.11.2011 | 10:17Americi bi odgovarao slom evra| NEBOJŠA KATIĆU pozadini svetske ekonomske krize nastavlja se tihi valutni rat dolara i evra. Iako rat nije zvanično objavljen, čini se da je bitka za uništenje Evrozone i evra, nemilosrdna. Ulozi su ogromni i ako evro opstane, ako preživi ovaj veliki test, dolar bi mogao polako sići sa pijadestala vodeće svetske rezervne valute, mogao bi izgubiti ekskluzivitet koji već dugo ima i postati samo jedna od važnijih valuta.
Hell yeah, konačno da neko to javno kaže.
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Možda kratkoročno.
neka Katic navrati do DCa, i objasni da ce dugorocne posledice kolapsa US ekonomije biti vrlo povoljne. svi cemo odahnuti, a Katic ce dobiti Nobela za nesto.
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:isuse: bs, takva evropska kriza bi bila pogubna i za Amere. budala mlati koliko god moze.
On the contrary, Katic je sve samo ne budala, koliko mogu da cenim i iz licnog kontakta. Ozbiljan ekonomski konsultant, odlican kadar iz starog sistema, zna sve cake spekulativnog kapitala. Ovo sto cemo da zivimo je finansijski lom u sluzbi geopolitickih preokreta.
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neka Katic navrati do DCa, i objasni da ce dugorocne posledice kolapsa US ekonomije biti vrlo povoljne. svi cemo odahnuti, a Katic ce dobiti Nobela za nesto.
Missiš da država čiji je projekat "samo jedna globalna sila" hoće da trpi konkurenciju? 'Oće kurac, dizvineš.
Ovo sto cemo da zivimo je finansijski lom u sluzbi geopolitickih preokreta.
Exactly.Samo da vidimo koliki će debili da budu likovi iz sadašnjih vladajućih garnitura kernelOjrope.
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:isuse: bs, takva evropska kriza bi bila pogubna i za Amere. budala mlati koliko god moze.
O evru-dolaru-juanu je pisao Daytrader na ekonomiji.Katiceva teza je OK, tj. svaki krah evra znaci kratkorocno stampanje dolara odrzivim. No, posto je americki dug toliki, dolar ce toliko padati da ce investitori da beze iz tog inflatornog kola u realnu imovinu.
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