The world's
political leaders, along with financial markets, seem to have
discounted the potential for a Greek default, and exit from the EU, causing significant problems. They are grossly underestimating the
real effects of such an event.
The reason a
default has been discounted is that, not only is Greece a very small
economy, but over the last five years, a large part of its debts were
transferred away from the private banks and individuals that held
them, and into the hands of the ECB and other European central banks.
In other words, the risk has been transferred, during that time, from
private money capitalists, on to taxpayers, which means European
workers. That is what happened with all those private banks like
Northern Rock, and RBS etc. that went bust. They were nationalised
by their nation state, recapitalised, stuffed with liquidity and then
sold off cheap again to the private money-capitalists.
That is what
happens with all nationalisations. Its what happened with the
nationalisation of the coal, steel, shipbuilding, car and other
industries in Britain. It is the standard means by which the
money-capitalists, when they have drained the lifeblood out of
productive-capital, then obtain a transfusion, from workers, via the
capitalist state, so that they can begin their vampire like activity
once more. The only difference with the banks, is that this process
tends to happen much more quickly, because its much easier to provide
the banks with bank capital than it is to provide, say a coal industry, with all of the new machines, technology and mines it requires to
function profitably.
Moreover,
the state in all these cases has itself rigged the market to enable
the banks and finance houses to be able to make profits more easily,
by keeping official interest rates exceedingly low, for exceedingly
long. There is no reason banks have to bid up deposit rates to
attract savers, when they can obtain the short term funds they
require, from the central bank, at virtually no cost, and then lend
out those funds to borrowers, at 5-6%. You would have to be pretty
incompetent not to make profits under those conditions.
When that
process occurred, in the US, the US state financed it, by not only
printing money, but by itself continuing its policy of fiscal
expansion, which grew the economy, and thereby enabled the state to
draw in additional taxes, and reduce its spending on benefits, so as
to cover its borrowing, via the traditional Keynesian means, used
during a period of long wave, secular growth. In Britain, the Labour
government was using the same approach, up until the election of 2010.
Then the Liberal-Tories, having locked themselves into a vote seeking
narrative, of the need for austerity, were prevented from using that
approach. The capital they provided to save the banks was taken out
of the economy via taxes, and government spending. Yet even Osborne,
as the effect of that tanked the economy, covertly changed course in
2012, to increase capital spending.
In Ireland,
the banks simply hoodwinked the state and the people over the extent
to which they had acted irresponsibly, and bankrupted themselves, and
the extent, therefore, to which any rescue would require massive
amounts of capital to be transferred to them. The amounts were so
great that, absent any overall EU state to bring about such capital
transfers, the Irish state could only replace the capital it had
given to the money-capitalists, by taking it out of the Irish
economy. A similar thing has happened in Portugal and Spain.
But, the
Greek economy, and resources of the Greek state, were too small to
perform such a function. The same methods of trying to cover some of
the capital transfer, by taxing the Greek workers, and robbing them
of the services and assets they had paid for, was adopted, but to no
avail. Not only was the cupboard bare, but the austerity policies
implemented, even began to dismantle the cupboard itself. Rather
than money-capitalists lose all their money, and a global financial
panic ensue, as a default prompted an unknown number of credit
default swaps to be activated, global capital began to transfer the
risk out of private hands into the hands of the European proto state
and its institutions.
Having done
so, the risk of a Greek default has now largely been discounted.
But, the fact is that, not only is there still a fairly sizeable
amount of debt, held in Greece, both by Greek private banks, and by
the Greek central bank, but the debt held by the ECB, and other
European central banks, should not be simply discounted either. In
the next week or so, Greece has a number of repayments to make, to the
IMF and others, which currently, its clear, it will not be able to
make. Syriza's Finance Minister, Yanis Varoufakis, has made it clear
that if its a choice between paying Greece's creditors or paying its
pensioners and public sector workers, it will choose the latter.
An outright
default of that type would immediately cause problems, not just for
Greece, but for the global financial system, and for EU institutions.
It would be termed a “credit event”, which triggers a
series of actions. It would probably immediately mean that Greece
was cut off by the ECB, but more significantly, it would mean that a
range of credit default swaps, and other complex financial
derivatives would be activated.
A credit
default swap, was originally intended, to reduce risk and volatility,
by providing insurance. The risk, taken by any individual lender, of
lending to any individual borrower, that the borrower may default,
was reduced by allowing the lender to take out a CDS. It was
insurance. If the borrower defaulted, the lender would claim on the
insurance. As with all such derivatives, the way this worked, was by
allowing the wisdom of crowds to operate.
The basis of
the wisdom of crowds, verified by mathematics is that, if a large
number of people are asked to guess say the weight of a cow, or the
distance from A to B, or what the price of oil may be next year,
although there will be a very wide range of responses, the average
response will always be more accurate than any individual estimate.
So, by selling such derivatives, there will always be some who think
the chance, of say Greece defaulting, is high, and some who think it is
low. Some will, therefore, be prepared to provide insurance that it
will not default, whilst others will want to gamble that it will.
By providing
liquidity into this market, the cost of the insurance is thereby
reduced. But, the other consequence is that anyone can buy such a
CDS, whether they have lent money to Greece or not. In effect, like
most other things in global financial markets today, it is simply a
matter of operating within a casino, speculating with money, not to
earn income, but with the hope of obtaining a huge capital gain, if a
bet pays off. The reality is that no one actually knows how many of
these CDS's and other financial derivatives are out there waiting to
be triggered, by some credit event, such as a Greek default.
What we doknow is that Deutsche Bank alone, is reported to have debts hidden in its balance
sheet, via such derivatives, to be equal to the value of the
global GDP! Deutsche Bank is not the world's largest bank, and so it
can be surmised that other, larger banks both in Europe, Asia and
North America, have much larger exposure. Because anyone can bet on
such a default, and can bet using huge sums of money, which is itself
connected to borrowing via a range of further derivatives, so that,
as happened in 2008, someone who thought they were just investing
their savings in a safe bank in a village in Norway, finds that their
money has gone to finance mortgage backed securities that went bust
in the US, so a Greek default, could start a chain reaction that will
bring down the entire global financial system.
Besides
that, we have a situation where all of that debt that has already
been turned over to the ECB and other central banks would be
destroyed. The debt takes the form of bonds and other securities
provided by the Greek state and banks to the ECB, as collateral for
money-capital loaned to the Greek state. The truly fictitious nature
of this capital is highlighted under such conditions, because these
bits of paper, become just that, worthless bits of paper. But, for
the ECB, as for any bank, these worthless bits of paper are part of
the capital superstructure of the bank itself. Its on the back of
this bank capital, that the bank both lends money to borrowers, and
itself borrows money from others, using this bank capital, as its own
collateral against which such borrowing is undertaken. If the bank
capital gets reduced, as it would be if all of the Greek debt it
holds on its books was written off, that would leave the ECB itself
with a capital hole in its balance sheet, which means its own ability
to lend to EU banks would be curtailed. Ultimately, the ECB itself,
like all other central banks, has to recover that lost capital, from
taxation. In other words, it has to increase the interest rate it
charges the state for the money-capital it lends to it, and the state
can only pay that higher interest by raising taxes.
At a time
when the ECB is trying to engage in QE in Europe, and when EU states
are facing slow growth, as a result of the austerity measures already
introduced across Europe, in the last five years, that is not the
direction they want to be going in. Already, the ECB is reportedly
having difficulty with its QE programme. The reason that yields on
European sovereign bonds, including those of countries like Spain, has
fallen, over the last year or so, is two-fold. Firstly, the ECB had
said it would “do whatever was necessary”, and had begun its LTRO
programme of very cheap lending to European banks. The banks, rather
than lending to the economy, bought the sovereign bonds of their own
state, behind which they believed that the ECB and the new programmes, such as the ESM, were now standing.
The second
reason was that, after the US started to taper its own QE programme,
this caused the dollar to begin to rise, and the currencies of a
range of emerging market countries to fall. Their inflation rates
rose, as the cost of their imports increased, due to the falling
currency. Sharply higher inflation rates sent their bonds down, as
money left them in search of the safety, capital gain and currency
gain to be obtained from buying US, UK and European sovereign bonds.
As the
demand for European bonds rose, pushing yields down, sometimes into
negative territory, this has made it increasingly difficult for the
ECB to find such bonds to buy. QE works by the ECB buying bonds from
the EU banks, and electronically printing money, by making a deposit
in the banks' accounts, in return for the bonds it has bought from them.
But, it can only buy those bonds if there are enough of them
available.
But, there
are a number of reasons why this process itself could go badly wrong.
One of those countries that faced a falling currency and sharply
rising interest rates, for example, was Russia. But, in the last few
months, despite the global price of oil still being half what it was, at
its peak, Russia's economy has withstood, not just that onslaught, but
the trade boycott, which seems to have done far more damage to
Germany's economy than it has done to Russia's. The Rouble has risen
sharply against the dollar in recent weeks, and it has begun to
reduce, rather than increase, its interest rates. But, they remain
very high compared to those in the US, UK and Europe.
This is theprocess I outlined last year. At a certain point, the currencies of
these economies, like Russia, begin to look cheap, especially as their
interest rates look extremely attractive. What used to be called
“hot money” in the 1960's, then swishes back into these
economies, in search of the higher yields available, but also, in the
short term, in search of the significant capital gains to be made by
a rise in the price of the bonds, and the value of the currency.
With the US
tightening monetary policy, and the yields on its bonds rising by
around 30%, in the last few weeks, and a similar pattern in the UK,
and with the yield on the German Bund having risen by 1000%, in the
same period, the last thing the EU needs, at the moment, is any sign
of instability and panic arising from Greece, because that will only
further increase the surge of money-capital away from the EU, and
into these emerging markets.
That comes
at a time when, despite all of the media hype about deflation, at the
moment, the conditions are ripe for a dose of very high inflation.
Whether, the oil price has bottomed or is set for another major leg
down, as supply does not yet seem to have been contracted enough to
remove the excess in the market, the fact remains that, in the next
few months, that over supply will have been removed, and global prices
will stabilise at around $70-80 a barrel. Compared to the prices
experienced in the last few months, that will manifest itself in the
economy as a significant upward pressure on costs.
Its is not
the only one. In the US, Wal-Mart and Target have raised their
minimum wage levels, ahead of increased competition for labour-power, as
capacity constraints already begin to be seen in various areas. Los
Angeles has just introduced a $15 per hour Minimum Wage. At the same
time, productivity levels are falling. Productivity in the UK is
appalling, in large part due to the fact that the Thatcher government
introduced a low pay/low skill/high debt economic model, in the
1980's, and that has set the mould for the economy in the period
since, but global productivity is slowing down, just because of the
phase of the long wave it is going through, when all of the base
technologies developed in the 1980's have already been introduced
into a range of devices, and their effects are now dwindling.
As Marx
describes, it is not rising wages that cause inflation. Wages are
the phenomenal form of the value of labour-power, which is determined by the
cost of reproducing it. If the price of commodities required for the
reproduction of labour-power rises, then the value of labour-power
rises, and so ultimately do wages. That means that profits fall as a
result. For the last thirty years, the process has been in the other
direction, and capital has also been able to depress wages below the
value of labour-power. That is why the share of profits in national
income has been rising as against wages – the rate of surplus value.
But, the
first response of capital, as wages rise, and as it faces rising costs
of other inputs, will be to try to protect its profits by using the
vast oceans of liquidity that have been pumped into the global
economy, over the last thirty years, to increase prices, because
capital, and its ideologists, do not understand the actual source of
profits as stemming from surplus value. They think that profits are
merely an additional percentage amount on top of their production
costs. With such vast amounts of money having been printed, and yet
so little of it having found its way into the real economy – in
fact, because it pumped up the prices of fictitious capital, it may
actually have acted to drain liquidity from the real economy, and thereby caused the deflation there – the tap could be quickly
turned on, sending a flood of this liquidity into the economy,
pushing up commodity prices, and then wages in a traditional
inflationary spiral, in the same way it did previously in blowing up
speculative bubbles.
But, the
other side of that is that those speculative bubbles in shares,
bonds, and property themselves then get burst. Greece could yet be
the spark that ignites the gas in all these bubbles.
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