Thursday, 29 May 2014

ARGENTINA and the PARIS CLUB

Argentine Gov't clinches debt repayment agreement with Paris Club

Via Buenos Aires Herald

Minister Axel Kicillof holds a press conference at the Economy Ministry.

Argentina reached an agreement with creditor nations on repaying overdue debts, in a landmark deal that should open up much-needed international financing for the country.
The Paris Club of creditors said the agreement will allow Argentina to clear over five years arrears that stood at $9.7 billion at the end of April. Negotiations over the deal - whose terms one analyst said looked favourable for Buenos Aires - had dragged into the early hours.
The dispute was the legacy of Argentina's 2001/2002 default on roughly $100 billion, which left it starved of foreign capital. The country's resistance to settling with its creditors until now had made it a pariah of international capital markets but a hero in the eyes of many Latin American leftists.
"Paris Club creditors welcomed progress made by the Argentine Republic towards the normalisation of its relations with creditors, the international financial community and institutions," the group said in a statement.
"Realisation of initial payment under a formal commitment of Argentina to fully clear its arrears is a necessary and important step for (this)...normalisation."
Argentina's refusal hitherto to bow to its creditors has also created a mountain of litigation and helped fuel inflation that has eroded living standards.
The main challenge now to it regaining full access to markets is a long-running battle with "holdout" sovereign bondholders who have declined to participate in its debt restructurings. The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to decide in coming weeks whether to take on the case. If it does not, Argentine officials have said the country may be forced into a technical default. Offering the country some breathing room, the Paris Club agreement calls for a first instalment of at least $1.15 billion due by May 2015, followed by another payment within a year.
The group said the deal cleared the way for export credit agencies of its members to resume doing business with Argentina, which should ease making foreign investment in the country. Foreign investment could prompt a revival in Latin America's No. 3 economy, which faces a decline in output this year, not least in helping develop its vast Vaca Muerta shale field.
Buenos Aires has been eager to secure a deal that does not put too much strain on its balance of payments. Argentine central bank reserves stood at $28.6 billion as of Monday evening.
Argentina and Paris Club members came close to striking a deal in 2008 but the government pulled out at the last moment, concerned about its falling foreign exchange reserves in the midst of the global financial crisis. Germany is Argentina's biggest Paris Club creditor with about 30 percent of the debt, followed by Japan with about 25 percent. Smaller holders include the Netherlands, Spain, Italy, the United States and Switzerland.
Argentina wrung a major concession from the Paris Club by avoiding any International Monetary Fund involvement in the deal, which the creditor group usually requires.
The country's history with the informal group of mostly Western nations goes back to the Paris Club's origins in 1956, when Argentina agreed to meet its public creditors in Paris.
Thursday, 5 September 2013 we wrote: 

ARGENTINA: THE GEOPOLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL MONETARY AND FINANCIAL SYSTEMS



IIlustration by Jon Krause

THE VULTURES VICTORY:

VULTURE FUNDS HAVE RAISED GREED TO A NEW LEVEL

By Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics and University Professor at Columbia University, was Chairman of President Bill Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers and served as Senior Vice President and Chief Economist of the World Bank. His most recent book is The Price of Inequality: How Today’s Divided Society Endangers our Future.

A recent decision by a UNITED STATES appeals court threatens to upend global sovereign-debt markets. It may even lead to the US no longer being viewed as a good place to issue sovereign debt. At the very least, it renders non-viable all debt restructurings under the standard debt contracts. In the process, a basic principle of modern capitalism – that when debtors cannot pay back creditors, a fresh start is needed – has been overturned.
The trouble began a dozen years ago, when ARGENTINA had no choice but to devalue its currency and default on its debt. Under the existing regime, the country had been on a rapid downward spiral of the kind that has now become familiar in GREECE and elsewhere in EUROPE. Unemployment was soaring, and austerity, rather than restoring fiscal balance, simply exacerbated the economic downturn.

DEVALUATION AND DEBT RESTRUCTURING WORKED

In subsequent years, until the global financial crisis erupted in 2008, ARGENTINA’S annual GDP growth was 8% or higher, one of the fastest rates in the world.
Even former creditors benefited from this rebound. In a highly innovative move, ARGENTINA exchanged old debt for new debt – at about 30 cents on the dollar or a little more – plus a GDP-indexed bond. The more ARGENTINA grew, the more it paid to its former creditors.

ARGENTINA’S interests and those of its creditors were thus aligned: both wanted growth. It was the equivalent of a “Chapter 11” restructuring of AMERICAN corporate debt, in which debt is swapped for equity, with bondholders becoming new shareholders.
Debt restructurings often entail conflicts among different claimants. That is why, for domestic debt disputes, countries have bankruptcy laws and courts. But there is no such mechanism to adjudicate international debt disputes.

Once upon a time, such contracts were enforced by armed intervention, as MEXICO, VENEZUELA, EGYPT, and a host of other countries learned at great cost in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. After the ARGENTINE crisis, President George W. Bush’s administration vetoed proposals to create a mechanism for sovereign-debt restructuring. As a result, there is not even the pretense of attempting fair and efficient restructurings.

Poor countries are typically at a huge disadvantage in bargaining with big multinational lenders, which are usually backed by powerful home-country governments. Often, debtor countries are squeezed so hard for payment that they are bankrupt again after a few years.

FINANCIAL FIRMS PUT THEIR OWN INTERESTS AHEAD OF THOSE OF THE COUNTRY – AND THE WORLD. 


Economists applauded ARGENTINA’S attempt to avoid this outcome through a deep restructuring accompanied by the GDP-linked bonds. But a few “vulture” funds – most notoriously the hedge fund Elliott Management, headed by the billionaire Paul E. Singer – saw ARGENTINA’S travails as an opportunity to make huge profits at the expense of the ARGENTINE people. They bought the old bonds at a fraction of their face value, and then used litigation to try to force ARGENTINA to pay 100 cents on the dollar.

AMERICANS have seen how financial firms put their own interests ahead of those of the country – and the world. The vulture funds have raised greed to a new level.

Their litigation strategy took advantage of a standard contractual clause (called pari passu) intended to ensure that all claimants are treated equally. Incredibly, the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York decided that this meant that if ARGENTINA paid in full what it owed those who had accepted debt restructuring, it had to pay in full what it owed to the vultures.

LENDERS ARE SUPPOSED TO BE EXPERTS ON RISK MANAGEMENT AND ASSESSMENT

If this principle prevails, no one would ever accept debt restructuring. There would never be a fresh start – with all of the unpleasant consequences that this implies.
In debt crises, blame tends to fall on the debtors. They borrowed too much. The creditors are equally to blame – they lent too much and imprudently. Indeed, lenders are supposed to be experts on risk management and assessment, and in that sense, the onus should be on them. The risk of default or debt restructuring induces creditors to be more careful in their lending decisions.

THE REPERCUSSIONS OF THIS MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE MAY BE FELT FOR A LONG TIME


US Judge Thomas Griesa: Impartial or lackey of Financial Institutions?

After all, what developing country with its citizens’ long-term interests in mind will be prepared to issue bonds through the US financial system, when AMERICA’S courts – as so many other parts of its political system – seem to allow financial interests to trump the public interest?
Countries would be well advised not to include pari passu clauses in future debt contracts, at least without specifying more fully what is intended. Such contracts should also include collective-action clauses, which make it impossible for vulture funds to hold up debt restructuring. When a sufficient proportion of creditors agree to a restructuring plan (in the case of ARGENTINA, the holders of more than 90% of the country’s debt did), the others can be forced to go along.

The fact that the International Monetary Fund, the US Department of Justice, and anti-poverty NGOs all joined in opposing the vulture funds is revealing. But so, too, is the court’s decision, which evidently assigned little weight to their arguments.

For those in developing and emerging-market countries who harbor grievances against the advanced countries, there is now one more reason for discontent with a brand of globalization that has been managed to serve rich countries’ interests (especially their financial sectors’ interests).
In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, the United Nations Commission of Experts on Reforms of the International Monetary and Financial System urged that we design an efficient and fair system for the restructuring of sovereign debt. The US court’s tendentious, economically dangerous ruling shows why we need such a system now.


ARGENTINA ANTICIPATED ADDRESSING ‘VULTURE FUNDS’ ISSUE AT G20 SUMMIT

The Argentine leader said Greece is going for its third debt restructuring with ‘shaves’ and yet has been unable to pay, “and to us who have agreed with 93% of bondholders and have been paying regularly since 2005, they want to beat us down”.

After arriving in RUSSIA for the two-day G20 summit, ARGENTINE President Cristina Fernández stressed she will be addressing the “vulture funds issue” during the summit despite the US rejected to mention it in the final statement.
The ARGENTINE president said ‘vulture funds take advantage of everyone”
“Vulture funds take advantage of everyone, not only ARGENTINA” she told reporters adding ARGENTINA will discuss “employment creation, production and investment “which are” the elements which will save the global economy amid a context of crisis”.
“I was reading that in GREECE the government has allowed the sale of food with expired dates and over a million government staff despite not having been paid for the last year, still go every day to work fearing the loss of jobs”, added the ARGENTINE president.

ARGENTINA WILL HOLD BILATERAL TALKS WITH RUSSIAN AND CHINA.

“These are the things we should talk about and deal with the ‘vulture funds’ which take advantage of countries close to defaulting or indebted as us” insisted Cristina Fernandez. “This has happened to the GREEKS and the SPANIARDS and the PORTUGUESE and in SPAIN vulture funds also purchased junk sovereign bonds at rock bottom prices and will be asking for full face payment”.
The Argentine leader said GREECE is going for its third debt restructuring with ‘shaves’ and yet has been unable to pay, “and to us who have agreed with 93% of bondholders and have been paying regularly since 2005, they want to beat us down”.

“The St Petersburg summit is very special since it takes place at a delicate and serious moment of world affairs, not only because of the economic crisis but also because of the complicated global institutional situation such is security in the MIDDLE EAST”
The ARGENTINE head of state is expected to hold bilateral meetings with RUSSIAN leader Vladimir Putin and CHINA’S Xi Jinping.

Secretary General to the presidency Oscar Parrilli also informed Cristina Fernández will be meeting INDIAN and JAPANESE leaders Manmohan Singh and Shinzo Abe respectively as well as SOUTH AFRICAN head of state Jacob Zuma in the margins of the multilateral reunion.
With her CHINESE counterpart, the ARGENTINE leader will be signing three agreements that aim at strengthening bilateral ties in strategic areas such as economy and food.


Paul E. Singer
Cristina Fernandez will also receive at a special meeting the new chief of the World Trade Organization, Roberto Azevedo.
According to government sources, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner will be taking to the G20 table the official decision to reopen the debt swap (which already has half-approval and is supported by the opposition) –facing a 1.3 billion dollar legal dispute against US-based vulture funds-, calls to reform the international financial system, the fight against tax havens, and the creation of employment as a key element both to face and overcome the global crisis hitting the world since 2008.
RUSSIA occupies this year the rotating chair of G20 and is hosting the St Petersburg summit at the St Constantine Palace. Putin said that the summit agenda will concentrate on uniting efforts to prop global economic growth and promote employment by creating jobs.

On Thursday, 14 February 2013 we wrote:

ARGENTINA: HEDGE FUNDS HAVE NOT WON YET




ELLIOT CAPITAL HEDGE FUNDS, A CLIENT AND SHAREHOLDER OF FITCHRATING AGENCY?
 

ARGENTINA"HEDGE FUNDS HAVE NOT WON YET"



It is not a coincident that US Rating Agencies only recently downgraded Argentina significantly, just in time when the verdict regarding Elliot Capital Hedge funds, versus Argentina is about to go in its final round. After all Hedge Funds are the best clients of Rating Agencies and in the case of Fitch rating, who downgrade Argentina, even shareholders.


The verdict and downgrading is part of a power struggle between the International Financial Institutions and Argentina. In 2001 Argentina defaulted, largely because of IMF doctrines, since then the country learned its lesson, paid back its entire dept to the IMF and thus was not subjected to IMF austerity doctrines, something the IMF is still furious about. Thus the IMF currently is entering its second round of in-flight, penalizing Argentina for not letting it conduct an audit in how Argentina obtains its economic data. If Argentina would nicely and unquestionably adhere to the rules of these institutions, the entire case would look somewhat different.


The entire showdown is revenge by international financial institutions simply because Argentina does not adhered to their doctrines which would enable them to control Argentina's Economy and its agriculture commodities. 


ARGENTINA"HEDGE FUNDS HAVE NOT WON YET"

Interview conducted by "Der Standard", an Austrian Daily Newspaper with Economist Andres Musacchio


If the U.S. hedge fund wins the legal battle against Argentina, it would have consequences for Europe itself


STANDARDThe U.S. hedge fund Elliott Capital sued Argentina before a New York courtWhy is the case attracting so muchworldwide attention?


Musacchio: Because the verdict could have enormous repercussions on future sovereign debt crises. The hedge fund has bought Argentine bonds after 2001, after the country officially declared default. After its bankruptcy, Argentina has taken tedious agreements with its creditors to reduce the national debt. 97 per cent of investors agreed to the countries dept conversion, both in 2005 and 2010. But Elliott Capital refused. If the hedge fund in New York wins its case and Argentina has to pay back most of its debt to Elliott, it would be tantamount to the premium for uncooperative behavior.



STANDARDThe hedge fund has never agreed to the dept conversionLegally, the lawsuit seems questionable.



Musacchio: Elliott Capital is not a conventional lender, which borrowed Argentina money and now needs to reclaim its money. The hedge fund has bought the debt at a time when the securities were traded in the market with 15 percent of their actual value. Now they demand from Argentina to pay back 100 percent of the sum, including interest. This is speculation in its purest form, and I believe that even in this extreme case the financial industry will side with Argentina.



STANDARD: Why?


Musacchio: Because in case the hedge funds win, it would jeopardize all future debt reliefs. The purpose of dept relief is that the creditors of a financially constrained country waive some of their demands in order to not lose everything. If, it shows that it does not pay off to participate in a debt conversion, future creditors will refuse from the beginning to agree to negotiate for settlement. Particularly in Europe, one expects that Greece and soon Portugal, Ireland and perhaps Spain have also to conduct a dept conversion, which would have disastrous consequences.



STANDARDWhy does the Argentine government not simply drawback and pay the fund, after all it’s only about one billionEuros, surely Argentina could afford this amount?


MusacchioThe amount is not the issue. Last year Argentina paid back a debt of 25 billion euros, thus paying the billion isaffordable. But there is a moral questionFor President Cristina Kirchner, dept 
relief policies are the main components of hergoverning strategy.


STANDARD: How do you think the lawsuit will endArgentina was sentenced to pay the amount, but achieved a delay until March.


Musacchio: Nothing has been decided yet. The hedge fund has not won. Cristina Kirchner during the pending lawsuit several times stated that Argentina will not pay Elliott Capital, even if Argentina should lose the trial in New York. This statement infuriated the New York judge, which is why he set bail for Argentina to pay. Since Kirchner refused to pay the bail, it could easily happen that Argentina's payments to its other creditors - with whom there are no disputes – will be seized. That would technically mean bankruptcy for the country. Whether that happens remains to be seen in March when the next court decision is due.


STANDARD: Can EU countries learn something from Argentina's debt relief policy?

Musacchio: I believe that these countries will not advance if they don’t obtain a debt relief. Just as was the case in Argentina in 2001, the debts of the countries in question are too high. The real lesson from the Argentine crisis is however that the debt relief restructuring alone will not solve the problem. The debt conversion was only a first step to correct the balances of the current accounts.



STANDARDWhat's the second step?


MusacchioAfter the restructuring the Argentine peso depreciated massivelythe government launched a program for the re-industrialization of the country and tried to revive the internal marketAll these measures have stabilized the economy and ensured that growth returnedThe difference to Europe is that Argentina for a while was able to isolate itself from the rest of the world and thus managed to overcome the crisis. For the southern European countries this will be difficultSpain and Portugal aremuch too dependent on exports to Germany than, for example, Argentina and its trade relations with the U.S. Furthermorerelations between banks in Europe are much tighter. I think that an important step for the stabilization of the euro zone will be that Germany finally abandons its policy of wage competitionThe purchasing power of Germany has to increasethe countryshould not only export to the troubled southern European countriesbut also increase its imports


By András Szigetvári via DER STANDARD, (Austrian Daily Newspaper, Translated from German to English by Geopolitical Analysis and Monitoring )

Andres Musacchio, is an economist at the Institute for Economic and Social History at the University of Buenos AiresHe was a guest at the Austrian Research Foundation for International Development (ÖFSE), where he gave a speech regarding the Argentine crisis.



Argentinian Central Bank Targets Growth, Not Lower Inflation



Background:


Fitch downgrades Argentina in the wake of Elliot Capital Hedge Funds lawsuit against Argentina

Fitch Ratings agency announced it has downgraded Argentina's long-term foreign currency Issuer Default Rating from “B” to “CC,” with a negative outlook, as it sees a “probable default” if the country misses its payment to holdout investors.

The agency stated in a communiqué that “the increased probability that Argentina will not service its restructured debt securities issued under New York law on a timely basis reflects US District Judge Griesa's decision on Nov. 21 to remove the stay order on the ruling that Argentina must pay 1.33 billion dollars to holdout investors concurrent with or prior to its payments due to holders of the 2005 and 2010 restructured debt.”

Fitch assured that a missed payment could lead to a “cross default on all exchanged debt securities issued under international law.”

“A missed coupon payment of any other external securities would also trigger a cross default on all exchanged bonds issued under international law,” it continued.

Fearing Argentina will disobey his order, Griesa wants 1.33 billion deposited in a US escrow account by Dec. 15 to ensure payment if all appeals trying to overturn or block his decisions fail.

The “holdout” investors are suing to recover the full value of bonds that Argentina stopped paying in 2002, setting up a battle with the country's government which brands them as “vulture funds” and has refused to pay them.

Fitch put a negative outlook on the credit which is two steps away from outright default.

Argentina has vowed not to pay the holdout investors, led by Elliott Management's NML Capital Ltd and Aurelius Capital Management, prompting Griesa to order the payment be made before the 2nd Circuit rules on his decision.

Fitch highlighted Argentina's 2005 “Lock Law” which prohibits “re-opening the exchange or from conducting any type of settlement with holdouts without prior authorization from Congress” as a likely reason that payment will not be made.

If no payment is made a technical default would ensue, with uncertainty remaining over treatment of credit default swap contracts, which have surged in prices as investors scramble for protection from a default or restructuring.

“The uncertainty related to the impact of the US Court ruling is likely to further damage confidence and intensify political and social tensions in the country and undermine growth prospects,” Fitch said in its statement.

“While the authorities have been able to stabilize international reserves by progressively tightening capital controls, this has come at the expense of increased economic distortions. The sustainability of this strategy is also vulnerable to international commodity prices, especially soy,” Fitch said.

Saturday, 24 May 2014

RETROSPECTIVES 2011 Part 3 Up to July

Friday, 22 July 2011


PEAJE - EXPENSIVE COMMUTING

Food for thought
Alimento para el pensamiento

Argentine luxury – Highway travel
Argentina De lujo  - Viajar en autopistas

Out of a total population of approximately 40 million Argentines, 15.2 million live within close proximity of Buenos Aires, thus making it the second largest Latin American metropolitan area after Sao Paulo in Brazil.
De una población total de aproximadamente 40 millones de argentinos, 15,2 millones viven en las cercanías de Buenos Aires,por lo que esta es la segunda  área metropolitana más grande de América después de Sao Paulo en Brasil.
See http://www.mpsargentina.org/turistic.html

Given the density of this metropolitan area, a large amount of people are forced to commute to work from the outskirts of Buenos Aires.
Teniendo en cuenta la densidad de esta área metropolitana, una gran cantidad de personas se ven obligadas a ir al trabajo desde las afueras de Buenos Aires.

Whereas public transport such as trains and subways are very cheap, commuting by car on  highways to and from Buenos Aires is considerable more expensive than in most European counties.
Considerando que el transporte público, como ferrocarriles y el metro son muy baratos, los desplazamientos en coche en las carreteras desde y hacia Buenos Aires es bastante más caro que en la mayoría de países europeos.

Commuting from Pilar, a popular countryside residential area located 55km North West of Buenos Aires, to work downtown using the “Autopistas del Sol” highway which is the only feasible option during peak hours, toll expenses are approx 14$ Pesos, coming and going once per day, equals 70$ Pesos per week, 280$ per month, 3360$ Pesos per year which equals to 560 Euro!!!! (Exchange rate 6$ to 1 EUR) 
El viaje desde  Pilar, una zona residencial popular situada a 55 km al noroeste de Buenos Aires, al centro para trabajar usando  la "Autopista del Sol", que es la única opción viable en las horas pico, los gastos de peaje son unos 14 $ pesos (ida y vuelta) una vez por día, es igual a $ 70 pesos por semana, 280 $ por mes, $ 3360 pesos por año, lo que equivale a 560 euros!! (Tipo de cambio $ 6 a 1 EUR)

Commuting 29 km from the northern suburbs of Buenos Aires to the city center at peak hours, using the highway for one roundtrip, toll expenses’ amount to 2544 $Pesos per year which equal 424 EUR!!!! 
Los viajes desde los suburbios de zona norte , a 29 kilómetros de Capital Federal  al centro de la ciudad en las horas pico, por la autopista implica un gasto de ida y vuelta de $ 2,544 pesos al año que equivalen a 424 euros!!

Compared to the 560 Euro per year, Argentine commuters pay on highway toll, European countries, with the exception of France are considerable cheaper.
Si comparamos  los 560 euros al año que los viajeros argentinos pagan como  peaje a la autopista con los países europeos, con la excepción de Francia son considerablemente más baratos.  

Here are some comparisons:
Vignette (road tax system)
Aquí están algunas comparaciones:
Vignette (sistema de impuesto de circulación)

AUSTRIA - Approx 76 EURO (456$ pesos) for 1 year unlimited use of countries entire highway system 
Aprox 76 euros (456$ Pesos) para 1 año sin límite de  uso en las carreteras de todo el país

SPAIN  - Approx 45 EURO (270$ pesos) for 1 year unlimited use of most of countries highway system
45 euros (270$pesos) para 1 año sin límite de  uso en las carreteras de todo el país 
SWITZERLAND -  Approx 31 EURO (186$ pesos) for 1 year unlimited use of countries entire highway system
Aprox 31 euros (186$ Pesos) para 1 año sin límite de  uso en las carreteras de todo el país

GERMANY Free highway usage 
libre uso de la carretera

Use of alternative commuting is rather limited due to infrastructural shortcomings, especially train connections to and from city outskirts are insufficient and outdated. Due to the heavily populated area, use of freeways as alternative commuting is becoming increasingly difficult because of permanent traffic congestion's, thus commuters using their car have no alternative but to utilize the privatized highway system. Subsequently private operating companies such as “Autopistas del Sol”  have no scruple charging higher tolls then in Europe, for lack of alternatives. 
Adding to the toll fuel cost and vehicle attrition, the feasibility to commute becomes “Food for thought”.   

El uso de rutas alternativas es bastante limitada debido a las deficiencias de infraestructura, especialmente las conexiones de trenes hacia y desde las afueras de la ciudad son insuficientes y anticuadas. Debido a que las zonas se encuentran densamente poblada, el uso de rutas sin pago como rutas alternativas es cada vez más difícil debido a las congestiones de tráfico permanente, por lo que los viajeros con su coche no tiene más remedio que utilizar el sistema de autopistas privatizadas. Posteriormente, las empresas privadas que operan como "Autopistas del Sol" no tienen escrúpulos en utilizar el cobro de peajes más altos que en Europa.
Agregando a la cifra de costo de combustible y desgaste del vehículola posibilidad de conmutar se convierte en "Alimento para el pensamiento".


See related links:
Ver los enlaces relacionados:


Saturday, 30 July 2011


LOOMING GENERATION CONFLICT - OLD VERSUS YOUNG

GOOD BY OLD CONTINENT Part 3

In addition to Europe’s looming financial crash there is the threat of a Generations Conflict. With a predominantly old population running almost all aspects of life, the youth of Europe is a minority. In Austria and Germany for example, the old outweigh the young, thus the entire structure of society is built around the needs and lifestyle of the old generation. Young couples with children have to adapt to the “rules and regulations” of the old.    

In some cases young parents have to hush their children when entering the apartment building in order not to disturb the majority of old people living there, in order not to face complaints. Most restaurants and hotels cater for the elder and are not very child friendly, for pensioners dominate the “market” and thus the young minority has to adhere to the needs of the old.

In Austria with its aging population there are many pensioners and early retirees who receive large pensions which enable them to enjoy a lucrative life and thus are the driving force in most market sectors who in return adjust to the needs of those who are able to spend. On the other side of the coin young people, with an average monthly net income of 1300 Euro have to struggle to survive and on top of that have to adjust to the lifestyle dictated by the aging majority. 

Furthermore the young generations of Europe are increasingly worried about their own state pensions, social welfare system which in most likelihood they will not be able to obtain when they are about to retire. Thus the “Generations Pact”, as referred to in Germany and Austria is in jeopardy for the young working generation sees themselves betrayed, paying for the old generation but without receiving the benefit themselves. Thus frustration is growing among the young and a generation conflict is looming over aging Europe.
Looming Generations Conflict, aging society, dept crisis and immigration denial are the most pressing subjects Europe has to analyze in order to avoid disaster.  

RETROSPECTIVES 2011

In 2011 we wrote:Sunday, 19 June 2011

“Does Turkey really need the EU?”


TURKEY THE ULTIMATE STRATEGIST AND TACTICIAN
 
  • TURKEYS thriving economy and geo-political influence is growing stronger in the BALKANS as well as the MIDDLE EAST
  • EUROPE’S dept crisis and subsequent dependence on the IMF could change TURKEYS mind to join the EU
  • TURKEY is at the verge of becoming one of the most influential power brokers between Orient and Oxidant  
  • TURKEY is expected to be the fastest growing economy of the OECD members during 2011-2017
IN THE NEAR FUTURE THE EUROPEAN UNION MIGHT NEED TURKEY MORE THAN TURKEY THE EUROPEAN UNION

The EU, as in most cases is deeply divided when it comes to the acceptance of TURKEY in the union. If the EU continues to prolong its indecisiveness regarding subject matter, TURKEY might well be changing its mind and turn its back altogether on Europe, for in reality it does not need the EU as much as the EU in most likelihood needs TURKEY in the near future. 


Contrary to EUROPE, TURKEY’S economy is thriving; its geo-political influence in the Balkans, especially in BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA as well as in the MIDDLE EAST is growing and thus becoming a significant broker in both, economical and political issues, whereas the EU looses significance on eco-political influences in its close vicinity.

TURKEY ON THE FAST LANE  

According to the website of the TURKISH STATISTICS INSTITUTE based in Ankara, GDP increased an annual 11.7 percent. TURKEY is expected to be the fastest growing economy of the OECD members during 2011-2017, with an annual average growth rate of 6.7 percent. The country survived the global crisis without Bank bailouts as was the case in many EU countries which were hit by the global economic crisis.

On the other hand the EUROPEAN UNION faces its worst dept – financial crises since its creation and thus relies heavily on the “help” of IMF (International Monetary Fund), which in its self causes a problem for it requires the entire EU to adhered to its fiscal as well as political policies which, as proven in almost all cases around the world, only drags countries using IMF intervention into even deeper financial chaos. 

In view of these facts, TURKEY might be better off to focus on independent economic growth with emphasis on emerging economies such as RUSSIA, ASIA, SOUTH AMERICA etc. rather than a economic stagnating, orthodox, immigrant unfriendly and heavily divided EUROPEAN UNION, which in the near future will see a total collapse of its social security and welfare and most likely economic system, as a result of an aging population, dept ridden society and ignorant technocrats in Brussels.     

TURKEY THE ULTIMATE STRATEGIST AND TACTICIAN 

Geo-politically speaking, TURKEY has been a clever strategist and tactician in BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA and slowly expanded its influence in the predominantly Muslim part of the Federation.  But not only in the Balkans, also in the MIDDLE EAST, has TURKEY become more and more a key player in international politics as well as economics.   




Food for Thought: According to a survey conducted by the GERMAN Marshall Plan Fond in 2011 only 38 % of Turks support joining the EU. In 2004 there were 73% supporting EU membership.

Sunday, 12 June 2011

The Assad dilemma

Subject: Middle East

Food for Thought 

The Assad dilemma
  • Fear of civil war is imminent
  • Tumbling of regime could be used by fundamentalists to seize power
  • Foreign entities are uncertain to either support or oppose the Assad regime for fear of greater instability  in the Middle East
Despite numerous claims that the Syrian regime is about to tumble, one has to consider if foreign entities really are favoring such objective for there are too many unknowns in such scenario.  Until the uprising, the country has been rather “stable” in terms of keeping fundamentalism among other issues at bay.  A tumble of the regime could easily trigger unpredicted clashes among rival fractions which could lead the country to civil war and subsequently to uprising of fundamentalist, a situation the USA, Israel and Europe are eager to prevent.
In most likelihood, as is the case with Egypt and Tunisia, mainstream media will slowly but surely cease to report on Syria’s “Revolution” and subsequently public interest will subside, thus permitting the regime to continue its agenda.
During the second Gulf War the USA could have easily “liberated” Syria, but refrained from doing so, since they realized, or obtained relevant information to the fact that if they tumble the Assad regime, they will face the same dilemma as in Iraq, namely a civil war among the various rival fractions which so far had been kept “under controlled “in Syria by the Assad regime.
In the long run the Syrian upraise will most likely not succeed to tumble the current regime, simply because, geopolitical speaking it is not in the interest of various foreign entities  to have a unknown, unpredictable and in the worst case scenario a fundamental extremist governing body ruling Syria.
  
Background Information: See also an interesting article regarding Syria athttp://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MD28Ak01.html

Food for Thought: Most media covering the Syrian protests, mention that Facebook, Mobile Phones and the Internet are the key factors which triggered the protest waves in Arabic countries and keep feeding Syrian protesters with information. Knowing how rigorous the Assad regime, or any other regime in countries such as Egypt, Tunisia etc., monitor and control Internet access it seems rather questionable if the internet is or was the powerful tool which triggered the upraising.
Furthermore one has to consider where the Syrian protest started. In Daraa, a city in the south of Syria, which has a far lesser infrastructure then Damascus, where the majority of people are living below the poverty line. 
Thus internet access, in most likelihood, is not such a common as widely believed.  Sending a private fax from the central post office in Damascus requires the sender to leave a photocopy of the Fax with the authorities in order to control the content.  Internet was only introduced in Syria around 2002 and mobile phone services even later.

Thursday, 14 July 2011

GOODBYE OLD CONTINENT Part 1

EUROPE HAS REACHED ITS ZENITH 

Europe, the once striving continent everyone admired for its cultural heritage, economic prosperity, high living standards and social welfare system, seems to have reached its zenith and now faces the abyss, if it refuses to tackle some of the core problems that engulf the continent.

1.            DECLINING AND AGING POPULATION 

Most Central European countries are confronted with a declining population due to low birthrates and resisting migration. Despite this fact and the consequences of current immigration policies looming over the continent, populist governments refuse to promote immigration for fear of losing votes from the older generations who are the majority voters in the industrial world and who fear immigration most.
This old generation is weary of changes and feels threatened by migration and foreign influence.  There is a growing hostility to anything foreign in Europe.
If Europe continues with this policy, countries such as Austria and Germany will become a large “old people’s home” for the poor. Without immigration Europe will not be able to sustain its social welfare state and economic growth will plunge even deeper.  Growth will eventually halt and subsequently government revenues will stagnate, just when governments need them most, thus jeopardizing exactly these conditions, Europeans cherish most: social security, welfare system, health systems  as well as a high living standard.  

2.            RIGHT VERSUS LEFT

Where as in South America, which most of the industrial world severely underestimates, there is a political center left move and growing economy, Europe moves in the opposite direction. Most of Central Europe no has center right governments and a stagnating economic growth rate. The right plays with the fear of the common man regarding immigration and the subsequent loss of national identity etc. The left on the other hand promote ideas and ideologies that are out of context in the current political and economic situation.

 Still to come:
  • DISINTEGRATION VERSUS INTEGRATION
  • LOOMING GENERATION CONFLICT - OLD VERSUS YOUNG
  • PENSION SYSTEM
  • EUROPE’S DECLINING EDUCATION STANDARD AND LACK OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT  

Saturday, 16 July 2011

GOODBYE OLD CONTINENT Part 2

NON EXISTING MULTICULTURAL AWARENESS
 
Lack of multicultural awareness and the unwillingness of center right politicians to promote immigration cause a negative chain reaction which in the long run will have devastating consequences for Europe as an entity.   
In this day and age to isolate one from multicultural influences is something no county can afford, nevertheless Europe is doing exactly that, thanks to the growing ultra conservative political movements that currently are sweeping across Europe. 

The signs are not looking promising. Ultra nationalistic and conservative politics foster hate and limit visionary thinking.  Right governments and political movements use the aging generation’s fear of foreign “invasions” in their live, in order to achieve their objectives, which are to isolate themselves and their countries. Increasing hostility towards immigrants and foreign visitors in Europe is on the increase. Multicultural awareness among the young and old generation in Central Europe is almost none existent.  Prejudice is ever present.  German speaking countries in Europe generally look down upon Mediterranean people, considering them as lazy and corrupt and thus regard themselves superior. Southern European countries on the other hand look at the northern Europe as being arrogant who lack empathy.

If common people of the European Union lack multicultural awareness, one cannot expect politicians in Brussels to have a broader vision. Europe’s diversity in cultures is also its subsequent downfall as a continent.

RIGHT VERSUS LEFT (edited version)

Where as in South America, which most of the industrial world severely underestimates, there is a political center left move and growing economy, Europe moves in the opposite direction. Most of Central Europe now has center right governments and a stagnating economic growth rate. The right plays with the fear of the common man regarding immigration and the subsequent loss of national identity jobs etc. The European left on the other hand promotes ideas and ideologies that are out of context in the current political and economic situation.
With a dangerous shift to the right, Europe also faces the dilemma on disintegration versus integration of immigrants. Foreigners are simply not welcome and more. Countries such as Austria implemented one of the harshest immigration policies in Europe, thus exposing itself to the dilemma of loosing qualified and experienced workforce needed to fill the void in certain industry sectors. In recent past Germany was short of 10 000 engineers but refused to facilitate immigration policies in order to permit Asian workforce to fill the void.