“¿España? Solvente. Miserable, pero solvente…?”
[ .. ]
Los mejores analistas estiman que 2011 será un año de perros, para toda la zona euro; pero, en particular, para los países periféricos.
Grecia e Irlanda, caídas de hinojos en una crisis pavorosa. Portugal, al borde de la bancarrota. Bélgica e Italia, perdidas en el torbellino del caos político.
España, víctima del cáncer de la baja competitividad, pidiendo dinero prestado, hipotecando su futuro, para ir tirando: “Solvente, pero miserable”, afirma con crudeza Wolfgang Münchau, que ya predijo el mes de marzo del 2007 el tsunami inmobiliario que llegaba:
The eurozone survived 2010. My prediction is that it will survive in 2011. The question is, in what condition?
Quite probably we will see more funding crises, as some eurozone governments and banks seek to refinance their debts. We must also be prepared for a public backlash against what in several countries are the most extreme austerity programmes since the 1930s. The euro, even if it survives the year, will remain a source of political, economic and financial instability for the eurozone itself and the world as a whole.
[ .. ]
What we saw last year was not a speculative attack on the euro, as continental European politicians would have us believe, but a perfectly normal response to a change in risk perception. Smart investors understand that the combination of high indebtedness, high interest rates and low growth raises dramatically the risk of default at some point in the future.
[ .. ]
What about growth? In the case of the eurozone periphery, it is hard to claim that this will come to the rescue. Most of the countries in the periphery suffer from a competitiveness problem – which is what makes this crisis so toxic. If you reform your labour markets and deflate your wages to become more competitive, inflation falls, and so may house prices. The real value of your debt explodes and you might end up insolvent. Combined debt and competitiveness problems are very hard to resolve without devaluation or inflation. It is not a matter of discipline. Infinite discipline could still make you insolvent.
So what about the European Union’s bail-out umbrella? The European financial stability facility (EFSF) is lending money to Ireland at an interest rate of about 6 per cent, which is higher than the country’s nominal growth rate is likely to be for many years. While the loan solves Ireland’s funding problems, it actually exacerbates the country’s underlying solvency problem. The Irish situation reminds me of one of these loan shark advertisements: “Need money fast? No questions asked.”
So how is the toxic interaction of high interest rates, high debts, and low competitiveness going to play out from 2011? I would expect Portugal to be the next country to fall under the umbrella of the EFSF. The European Central Bank has been the only large buyer of periphery bonds in the secondary markets, and is now putting pressure on the countries concerned to accept loans from the EFSF.
What about Spain, Italy and Belgium? Spain should be solvent, but of course there always exists an interest rate/growth rate combination at which the solvency assumption breaks down. With 10-year yields no higher than 5.5 per cent, the approximate current level, I would expect Spain to go through a severe and long recession, possibly with further asset price falls. Productivity will probably remain low and unemployment high for the foreseeable future. But the country should remain solvent – miserable but solvent. If interest rates were to rise to over 6 or 7 per cent, perceptions of Spanish solvency may change.
The main risk for both Italy and Belgium is political. Italy’s banking system is relatively stable but a combination of high interest rates and continued low productivity growth could lead to a debt explosion. Without a stable government that can deliver reforms to boost productivity, it is hard to see how Italy can prosper in the eurozone in the long run. Italy is not a victim of the financial crisis and has so far managed well to stay off the radar screens of international investors. There is no guarantee that this will continue.
Belgium is sinking deeper and deeper into political chaos – and, unlike Italy, it also has a vulnerable banking sector. Belgium is not going to split, but that may not stop investors from panicking about the status of a federal debt that, like Italy’s, exceeds 100 per cent of annual gross domestic product. The underlying problem is that Belgium may not end up with a sufficiently strong central government to take the measures necessary to raise growth and consolidate public finances.To cope with any crisis beyond Portugal, the EU may need to increase both the size and remit of the EFSF. I predict that the European Council would take such a step if pressed – maybe after some dithering by Germany.
The EFSF will expire in 2013, at which point a new, tougher crisis regime will kick in. The EU has chosen this particular two-step construction for mainly political reasons, but from a funding perspective it is a nightmare. All existing bondholders will be protected until 2013. All government bonds issued from 2013 onwards will have collective action clauses. This means that if a government cannot service the debt, it can agree a haircut with a majority of investors – with legal force for all investors, including those who disagree with the majority vote. Looking at it from a risk-management perspective, this means that the entire default risk of the eurozone periphery will be concentrated on post-2013 bond issues. [ .. ] [Financial Times, 29 / 30 diciembre 2010. Wolfgang Münchau, Expect some answers from the eurozone].
Las negritas son mías.
- Las nubes tóxicas tropicales causan estragos en España.
- España, en estado de bancarrota.
- España, a la cabeza de la Europa de la pobreza.
- Europa, euro, crisis. España, enferma de sí misma.
- España, en cuarentena sonámbula.
- España, Zapatero: la década de la bancarrota.
- España retrocede en Europa y el resto del mundo, víctima de su cáncer histórico.
- La gripe y el cáncer de España.
maty says
¿Cuántas veces he comentado aquí y en mi casa que «lo peor está por venir» a la economía española?
Algunos, como Artur Mas, parece que lo saben y se quieren preparar para lo que se avecina, una vez que el tripartito ha asolado las cuentas públicas catalanas, como ha hecho el PSOE de Zapatero.
Pues eso, años de estancamiento económico, con una creciente emigración de la juventudad española mejor preparada.
Con todo, en mayo, millones de españoles seguirán votando a los gestores tan ineficaces que nos han traído hasta aquí, en unos sitios el PSOE y en otros el PP.
JP Quiñonero says
Maty,
Es que eres un santo, qué quieres; y mártir, claro,
Q.-
maty says
No, sólo digo la verdad sin tapujos, aunque moleste. Es lo que tiene no ser político profesional y estar en el anonimato -aunque con una trayectoria pública.
En cuanto se atisbe la salida, procuraré ser de los primeros en anunciarla, basándome sólo en datos y estadísticas y no en milongas.
Mientras tanto, sólo toca procurar salir lo más indemne posible. Eso sí, espero que los votantes impenitentes de aquellos gestores tan ineptos/ineficaces lo pasen peor que mi entorno más próximo, para que así escarmienten de una vez y piensen por sí mismos sin el amparo de una ideología -la que sea, todas nefastas, procurando objetivar la realidad (sí, eso que muchos periodistas dicen que no es posible o creíble, así está el patio) en la medida de lo posible.
maty says
Con datos y estadísticas fiables, no creyéndome los manipulados desde algunos ministerios y que la inmensa mayoría de medios de (in)comunicación tradicionales españoles dan como válidos sin más, convirtiéndose en cómplices de la situación, como lo fueron mientras la economía española crecía con pies de barro.
-> Imagen Indice-de-produccion-industrial-2006-2010.png
-> Imagen saldo-caja-zapatero-abanico-2002-2010.png
-> Imagen Ricard-Verges-Singulars-graficos-PDF.png
Es lo que tiene ser un «cabeza cuadrada».