20.01 11:59

The European Crisis in 2012


For much of the fourth quarter of 2011, it appeared the eurozone was doomed. Debt was piling up for several key states, and those with the ability to assist lacked the political will to do so. But the European Central Bank (ECB) stepped in in December with measures that have postponed - not solved - the European crisis.

Italy’s Debt Crisis
The core of the Continent’s ongoing problems is that most of its wealth is in the north, while the region’s periphery cannot grow without outside credit. That credit was made available with the creation of the eurozone in 1999, putting member states into the same capital pool. Many states - most notably Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal and Ireland - were able to access credit in unprecedented volumes, generating debt loads that are proving unsustainable. Barring extensive, ongoing, outside financial support, these states and much of the European banking system will go bankrupt.
Starting in early 2010 these inconsistencies began ripping through the facade of European stability, and it became obvious that sovereign defaults were imminent unless outside support became available. The question became from whence that outside support would come - or if it would come at all. The Northern Europeans have sought to limit their exposure to the financial troubles of the periphery, grudgingly granting assistance only when the debt loads threatened the disintegration of the eurozone itself. Such irregular aid was sufficient to manage the financial problems of the small states of Greece, Portugal and Ireland - whose combined bailouts only totaled about 430 billion euros ($545 billion). However, as the end of 2011 approached, it became clear that the next country likely in need of a bailout was Italy - and conservative estimates put the cost of such a bailout at 800 billion euros, not even taking into account the weakness of the country’s multitrillion-euro banking sector.
Barring large-scale support, Italy - with its 2 trillion euros in national debt - was sliding quickly toward default. By December 2011, investors were regularly demanding some 7 percent on its government debt - roughly twice what it had been paying during most of the euro era. Such high and rising borrowing costs for a country with a debt load of 120 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) largely made a default inevitable. Simply stabilizing its debt at current levels would have required sustained budget cuts roughly four times what the Italian government is currently attempting (another 3.5 percent of GDP). Considering the political difficulty of such a task, an Italian default was highly likely to occur early in 2012. In February alone, Italy must refinance more than 60 billion euros, with another roughly 40 billion euros coming due in both March and April.
European states were unwilling to increase their commitments, extra-European states were uninterested in paying into funds without more European commitments, and the IMF lacked the resources (by half) to bailout Italy. The only institution that even theoretically could help was the ECB, which, as the manager of the eurozone money supply, could purchase sufficient volumes of Italian government debt to stabilize the system. But ECB President Mario Draghi explicitly stated on Dec. 8 that the ECB could not help: "We have a treaty, and Article 123 prohibits financing of governments." The refusal of the ECB and European governments to come to the rescue of peripheral states in general and Italy in specific meant the end of the euro era was nigh.

The ECB Steps In
But the ECB changed its stance just one day later, leaking news that it was prepared to purchase up to 20 billion euros a week of stressed eurozone government debt. That amounts to potentially one trillion euros per year. Not only is that more than enough to buy up all of Italy’s debt, it is potentially enough to purchase roughly 80 percent of the 1.25 trillion euros in eurozone debt that comes due in 2012. Even adding in planned new debt issuances only raises the total volume of all sovereign eurozone debt to 1.5 trillion; the ECB could potentially buy up two-thirds of all that by itself.
Barring severe miscalculations on the part of ECB officials managing the purchases or national governments issuing the bonds on the issue of timing, it will be impossible for a eurozone country to default in 2012.
Backstopping the eurozone system even further, the ECB also formally announced Dec. 9 that it was granting all eurozone banks access to unlimited, low-interest liquidity loans with up to a three-year maturity. There have been similar programs offered before, but never with such long terms, such low rates or in such volumes. The liquidity program should prevent any eurozone bank from defaulting on its debts as well as granting them sufficient credit access that all may continue to participate in the sovereign debt markets if they so choose. Banks flocked to the new facility: On the first day, the ECB granted 490 billion euros in such loans.
Taken together, the ECB actions have turned the dissolution of the eurozone in 2012 from a near-certainty to a near-impossibility. Issues that have been critical in recent months - the poor and weakening state of European banks, high and rising Italian borrowing costs, the possibility that eurozone states will have their credit ratings slashed, the ability of the eurozone bailout fund to raise large volumes of cash, the utter disinterest of the Chinese and Arab oil states in assisting Europe - suddenly became irrelevant.
There will still be a painful - and deepening - recession. There will still be volatility as the ECB attempts to withhold assistance from time to time to encourage reforms. But the European crisis, at least for now, has departed the field of finance. Instead, in 2012 the European crisis will take a demonstrably political tone. STRATFOR


Expert Opinion

Iran ‘chooses Armenia’ over Azerbaijan

News.Az interviews Israeli international relations expert Arye Gut.

What can you say about the recent explosions and attempted explosion targeted against Israeli embassies in Delhi, Bangkok and Tbilisi?

I think that the Iranian mullocracy and its pals are linked to the two explosions in the Thai capital Bangkok. This proves that Tehran is continuing state terrorism. It is no secret that the leadership of the Islamic Republic and their allies in the militarized Lebanese Shia organization Hezbollah continue to represent a threat to regional and global stability.

A blast occurred in a house where Iranian Sayed Moradi was staying in Bangkok yesterday. Two people who were in the house with him managed to get away. Moradi also wanted to get away and tried to take a taxi, but the driver refused to take the Iranian who was bleeding. As police officers tried to detain him, he threw a grenade towards the police, but it detonated close to the Iranian, blowing off his legs.

However, Iran remains the main threat to Israel, the region and the world. This country is the main exporter of terror in the world. Unfortunately, for many years the West had been ignoring the threat for political reasons. But now the question tops the international agenda. This also applies to Europe, the United States and moderate Arab regimes that fear the regional ambitions of the Iranian regime. Iran’s actions in Iraq, Afghanistan, Bahrain, Yemen and South America are not directed against Israel.

For a long time Israeli security structures have been following the activities of Iranian intelligence, the Revolutionary Guards and Hezbollah terrorists. It is worth mentioning that they conducted joint attacks, for example, in Argentina in 1992 and 1994. In the past four years, these structures have made new attempts to strike at Israeli targets. Several terrorist attacks were prevented in Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Thailand, Turkey, and several other countries. We have enough evidence to suggest that they are behind the terrorist attack in New Delhi and the attempted attack in Tbilisi. Do not forget that the Iranians were planning to attack Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the United States and the Israeli ambassador to Azerbaijan.

How do you assess the Iranian Foreign Ministry’s diplomatic note to its friendly neighbour, Azerbaijan?

This note was handed to Azerbaijan’s ambassador, Javanshir Akhundov. It argues that Baku allegedly assisted agents of the Israeli intelligence service Mossad, associated with attacks against Iranian scientists.

Which team will be the winner of the 2011-2012 seasonal Champions League?



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