The Daily Bell Newswire – It's Free!

News & Analysis

EU Dominos Tumble Toward Spain?

Friday, April 08, 2011 – by Staff Report

There is a clear pattern of events in the eurozone, and not much to choose between Portugal and Spain At 20.5%, Spain's unemployment rate is almost double Portugal's 11.1%. Spain's current account deficit looks a lot healthier than Portugal's, and its national debt is lower but there's little between the two countries when it comes to the size of their respective budget deficits. The notion that Spain is somehow different to Portugal is based on a somewhat fanciful belief that it is a more dynamic economy and is immune from speculative attack by virtue of its size. – UK Guardian/Larry Elliott, Economics Editor

Dominant Social Theme: Hey, Portugal's leaders have finally admitted the country is tapped out. Glad that's over with. Now the EU can get back to building stability.

Free-Market Analysis: The mainstream press for the most part is taking the usual ho-hum approach to Portugal's impending default and the Guardian article above is one of the few that takes a different tack. More common when it comes to this latest EU setback is the Economist magazine, perhaps the most authoritative of all the elite media mouthpieces, as follows:

Another domino has fallen in the eurozone debt crisis ... After Greece and Ireland, Portugal has become the third debt-laden economy on Europe's periphery to request a financial rescue. European Union leaders have breathed a sigh of relief. Olli Rehn, the EU's top economic official, said it was a "responsible step for securing the financial stability of the euro Zone." José Manuel Barroso, a former Portuguese prime minister who is now president of the European Commission, said the request would be "processed in the swiftest possible manner."

Of course that makes sense. The Eurocrats who got themselves into this mess by lying to Europeans serially over decades about their real intentions (to recreate the Holy Roman Empire) have become quite practiced when it comes to "bailouts" (which really aren't bailouts as Germans won't tolerate them). This is a kind of dominant social theme: All is well with the EU and its top thinkers can deal with innumerable crises without breaking a sweat. They are cool cats, just like America's Barack Obama.

Yes, things are OK with the Union. It's just a rough patch. On the other hand, had we postulated just three short years ago that more than 10 percent of the EU would be insolvent at the beginning of 2011, we probably could have made a cold fortune from Britain's bookies who will bet on anything. We should have made the bet, too, because we have never believed the EU could work, not so much because of the one-size-fits-all currency but because the entire EU enterprise has been built on lies and attempts to defraud some 500 million people about the real import and ambition of the Union.

The Eurocrats, the top ones, anticipated the current crisis and had made plans long ago to deal with it and use it to their advantage. Every default, every bond market meltdown, every financial failure was to be used to further centralize Brussels' control. Recently we have pointed out that the EU itself is on its way efficiently and silently to gaining unprecedented power over its member states' budget processes – as many administrations, conservative or socialist, obviously can't be trusted to run their own economies. And just yesterday we carried a story about an EU itch to issue its own fixed income securities. There is no doubt what those running the EU have in mind. A United States of Europe and one, over time, that may be even MORE centralized than America.

The Guardian is not so sure. The article points out quite rightly that the mainstream media, in addition to playing down the upcoming Portuguese default, is reporting that Spain seems far better able to weather Euro-difficulties than the current batch of prostrate piggies. The argument is that Spain is in less dire straits generally, that it has a large, diversified economy and that its leaders have been properly decisive about implementing austerity measures and have accepted the "pain" earlier than other countries in similar difficulties.

The article in the Guardian points out that originally Eurocrats claimed that no country would be forced to default. This thesis, it adds, went by-the-boards when Greece defaulted after it was revealed that Greece's situation was a good deal direr than the previous government had admitted.

Then there was Ireland, the Celtic Miracle. Eurocrats justified the Irish default by claiming that Ireland's otherwise healthy economy had been compromised by a severe, anomalous housing bust, according to the Guardian. Now there is Portugal. The argument of the optimists is that Portugal is the last of the Eurozone's three weakest economies. Spain, Italy, even France are all in much better shape. This is the argument that the Guardian summarizes and then proceeds to attack. The optimism that Eurozone leaders have voiced has been shown to be unfounded three times now. Why should current arguments that Portugal is last of the EU's troublesome economies be believed?

The article goes further and tries to suggest that there is a kind of economic pathology, or at least denial, at work. In the first phase, the article suggests, a country is seen to be in difficulties. Phase two involves denials from the country's leaders themselves. These denials continue in the third phase while debt-rating agencies issue warnings of downgrades that are eventually implemented. In the fourth phase, it becomes increasingly difficult for the country to sell its debt without paying punitive interest rates .

Phase five begins, according to the Guardian, with Europe's policy elite "agreeing to a bailout with strings attached" while insisting that such a bailout and surrounding discussions will finally put paid to the country's difficulties. The Guardian does not mention it, but when the financial package is finally delivered, it includes the regular IMF remedy that has caused unrest around the world: "privatization" of the country's resources; higher taxes, reduced public services and pensions. This is the stage where Greece and Ireland reside; Portugal will surely get there.

The question is whether Spain will proceed down this path. We recently reported on an analysis of a Telegraph article that argued Spain would avoid the fate of the "PIG" (Portugal, Ireland and Greece). The Guardian argues otherwise. First there is the economic comparison: Last year, Spain grew by 0.6% while Portugal grew by 1.2%. And Spain suffers from the same kind of housing crisis that put Ireland under. The insolvency of the country's construction industry has "infected" Spain's financial system. This is a polite way of saying that Spain's banks are under water and will remain so until the oversupply of houses and business buildings is reduced and prices return to normal. That could take years.

The Guardian's conclusion is that Spain has some of the same problems as the "PIG" which is already insolvent. These make it an "obvious candidate for some close attention from the bond market vigilantes." On the other hand, the article points out that coming to the aid of Spain is not like coming to the aid of the aggregate PIG. Spain is the Eurozone's fourth largest economy. A default would not be contained. A crisis of such a magnitude in Spain, the article concludes, "will put at risk the future of monetary union in its current form."

We have never predicted the imminent break-up of the EU or even a shrinkage of the eurozone. We've merely indicated for several years now that such events are possible (and from our perspective highly desirable). What is true, and remains true, in our opinion, is that the EU and the euro are involved in a larger tug-of-war between the truth-telling of the Internet and the fear-based promotions of the Anglo-American (and European) elite that have driven this ant-democratic and deeply authoritarian project forward.

But what has surprised us, of late, is the alacrity with which the EU is unraveling. It has led us, even, to speculate that the powers-that-be are doing the unraveling themselves to increase chaos and strengthen the case for a global currency. But we are not convinced, along with many others in the alternative media, that it will be either practical or easy to install a global currency in a short period of time. Meanwhile, the EU itself (or at least the euro) may commence to unwind in earnest.

Even if this somehow plays into power elite hands, it will be an extraordinary unraveling to watch and we would have to believe after 50 years of half-truths and outright falsehoods, such an occurrence would mark at least a setback for the Anglosphere. It would also setback the other regional currency unions that have sprouted around the world, and that would be a good thing as well.

Conclusion: We are always cautious about prognosticating because there are so many moving pieces when it comes to something as complex as the EU. But it does appear as if the Union's problems are growing worse, not better and that if Spain begins to go downhill, the EU could shortly find itself sliding toward a precipice. Were this statement reality (and not metaphor), we would gladly provide the final shove.




Latest Daily Bell Articles

Feedback

Effective April 25, 2012, the Daily Bell will discontinue allowing feedback comments. We have left in place the large body of responses posted in the past, as we appreciate the valuable contributions made by some of our readers.
Showing 1 - 20 of 35 - Newest on top - Reorder Feedback
  Posted by Rob on 04/13/11 06:53 PM

@Pareto

Wrong again....GENOCIDE is exactly what it is, and what it should start being referred to as. That's PRECISELY the meme that this assault on the west needs to be countered with, because that is essentially what it is. Why would you want to pussyfoot around the issue and run interference for the elites, Pareto? If large-scale immigration was being advanced in China, and only China, or Africa, and only Africa, how long would it take for those people to notice they've been slated for extinction? As a matter of fact, how long would it take white liberals to notice the same? My guess is-- not long. Yet migration is being forced into European, and only European and European derived nations. Japan is for the Japanese, China for the Chinese, and so on. But European nations are for everyone, and if you disagree, you're "Racist." Why? Because they're promoting white genocide.

Article 2(c) from the United Nation Convention on Genocide:

"Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part."

I'd say deliberately bringing in people from completely unassimilable cultures with huge birth rates, and passing laws against the indigenous inhabitants being able to criticize said migration qualifies under that definition as GENOCIDE, whether you like it or not.

  Posted by Pareto on 04/13/11 09:31 AM

@ROB

OK, It is a major issue. I am simply saying not to overblow a point.... with talk of genocide for instance...

  Posted by Rob on 04/11/11 03:09 PM

@Pareto

All I have to say in response, is that anybody making the suspect claim that massive immigration from disparate and unassimilable cultural areas into Europe is a non-issue, is the one spreading London memes and supporting the genocide on the indigenous populations of Europe, at the behest of the corrupt elites.

  Posted by Fabian on 04/11/11 11:13 AM

I have the impression that you have an anti big government stance that I share and therefore I don't understand your anti Euro perspective. A German lead Euro would be the best counter balance to the US influence and, in my opinion, the only possibility for smaller nations to be kept away from total Anglo dominance.

Facing America and its absurd model of society and China with its billion plus people, Europe can't spend 90% of its time turned towards its own individual capitals. It needs to regroup and thanks to England thinking they are too good for them, it can quietly do so around Germany. It may not be fun but it would be effective.

Reply from The Daily Bell

You believe the way to counteract the depredations of modern big government is with more big government?

  Posted by Pareto on 04/10/11 04:11 AM

It only takes 20 percent of a population to determine 80 percent of what that country and its dominant culture is.

Alarmist cries about German demographics, or European immigration, are at best useless hand wringing and, quite obviously, a typical London fear meme.

  Posted by Catevala on 04/10/11 12:34 AM

"I have never read anything about central banking. [snip] In this sense it looks like a very convenient and harmless dissidence, because it is ultimately clueless on the causes of our pains and their solutions".

Agree. I have just this weekend found myself, for one reason or other, on some forums I don't usually frequent. On these forums it is quite obvious that STILL most people, either in America or in Europe, are completely clueless about how the System works against them! Thus far the Power Elite can sit back and smile at a job of dumbing down well done.

  Posted by Lyn on 04/09/11 11:32 PM

@Alexesman

"German tribe will be the end of Europe. As usual, natural born Killers..."

I can assure you that the eight generations of Germans in my family has never had a proclivity, natural or otherwise, towards being a natural born Killer at any time.

However, posts such as yours give me pause to reconsider this familial tradition if only for our own survival against bigots such as yourself.

Without apology, Lyn

  Posted by Lyn on 04/09/11 10:43 PM

DB says:

"But it does appear as if the Union's problems are growing worse, not better and that if SPain begins to go downhill, the EU could shortly find itself sliding toward a precipice. Were this statement reality (and not metaphor), we would gladly provide the final shove."

And I would be STANDING ON MY CHAIR APPLAUDING YOU! If only it could be so.

  Posted by Sovereigntea on 04/09/11 12:00 PM

Eurapean Union
North American Union
African Union
Asian Union

All areas being pushed as regions as part of United Nations Agenda 21 you will find them on the map. A chap called Maurice Strong appears to be key.

The above are to be the regions in a fabianist global governance system. This plan is being currently implemented by way deception and stealth. The public of course are not being informed.


What does the Local Agenda 21 Guide say?

Everything is to be standardized; all individuality destroyed; our hard-earned prosperity to be globally redistributed by need (1.0); the "right persons" be undemocratically installed (cf. 2.2.6); obedience to be rewarded and dissidence to be punished (6.4); reporting (6.1) to take place, and a systemic/global perspective (4.0) to be intertwined into any local decision ‒ the elements of the Rothschild/Rockefeller world state standardized locally for the great screwdriver; basic elements are consensus and sustainability (1.3.2), which excludes differences of opinion and expresses Gorbachev´s & Strong´s Leninism; and then this enormous bureaucracy! Well, in order that we become unable to think independently and spoil the rules by controlling and critisizing the dictators, I presume. The Germans know that this is the nature of dictatorship ‒ whether Nazi or Communist. This is the enforcement of Adam Weihaupt´s program for world government.

http://euro-med.dk/?p=18021#comment-15729

  Posted by Rob on 04/09/11 09:43 AM

"Germany's arrested development and reduced status in World equations is to be rued because the world econmoy, Asia and the USA especially, would have much been better of under a German Model of development than a London model of Trade without development.

A more powerful German Economy and international scope is being prepared for Germany."

Considering that Germany's birth rates are the lowest in Europe and well below replacement, and that unassimilable immigrants are being brought in to offset those numbers, who are creating parallel societies hardly in conformity with German cultural norms and ethos, I am sceptical that Germany has a bright future. These circumstances have also brought about a considerable brain drain of skilled and educated Germans leaving the country who have become tired of subsidizing their own dispossession by immigrants like Turks, Afghans, Africans, and Arabs. I read recently that something like 40% of these people are living off of government services.

  Posted by Rob on 04/09/11 09:33 AM

I don't think the Anglo-American elite are seeking to form the EU into a Holy Roman Empire. In Greece,their flag was under attack because of the cross it bears on the upper left corner.

Exactly. Unless the "holy" empire they're trying to create is a Muslim one. Europe's elites can't seem to import Muslims fast enough for their liking.

  Posted by New Age on 04/09/11 05:27 AM

@Wayne

Amazing opportunities are definitely opening up for German companies in this absolutely new age of open global Trade everywhere. Now that the a lot of Euro countries including the UK have very little chance of making it since they are financially unsound, not dynamic thinkiong or right-seeing of events.

I personally do not believe in political pacts for Business and especially for a country like Germany who has all the necessary cards anyway. It is better for to make all the mountains come to Berlin.

  Posted by Reader on 04/09/11 05:17 AM

Spain is looking at a real estate depression that won't go away for a quarter of a century...

If the Spanish economists do not believe this, they can ask the Japanese what happened to them after Japanese Real Estate went bust in 1989.

  Posted by Turbomango on 04/09/11 03:22 AM

I don't think the Anglo-American elite are seeking to form the EU into a Holy Roman Empire. In Greece,their flag was under attack because of the cross it bears on the upper left corner. And though the Greeks think they've won the battle for now, the war winner remains to be realized. In the meantime, noone is allowed to fly it while walking or transporting the blue and white Hellenic flag. That doesn't sound to me like any kind of "holy".

Reply from The Daily Bell

We were speaking metaphorically. You have taken our metaphor and interpreted it literally, which has led, perhaps, to a mistaken conclusion about our suggestion. But thank your feedback and insights.

  Posted by Emily Jones on 04/09/11 01:41 AM

Hello,

I am Emily Jones and I am a webmaster and member of some financial communities. I just visited your site ( Click to view link ) and trust me you are doing a good job for your site. I read some of the articles of your site and I really found them worth reading. The quality of your site is excellent. It will help you to earn extra value from Google.

After seeing this, I would like to do something for your site and that is for FREE!!. I love to write financial articles and I would like to contribute something for your site if you'll give me the permission. I want to contribute original article for your site and I assure you that it will be published only in your site.

Please let me know your thoughts. Waiting for your positive reply. Reach me at: emily.jones025@Click to view link

Thanks and Regards
Emily Jones

  Posted by Wayne on 04/08/11 11:07 PM

@Bionic Mosquito

"I have often considered that Germany's best future might lie in an economic pact with China, Russia, and perhaps Japan and Australia. There are too many reasons why this makes sense for each of those parties. I suspect Germans might consider this too, once they figure out how to remove a large, foreign military presence from their midst. The unraveling of the reserve currency may solve that problem for them."

Germany and Japan are both nothing more than US military bases at this point. Especially if you add Okinawa to Japan. One has to wonder what decisions they would make, were they allowed to.

Without Japan and Hawaii, (another US military base), the US could never have fought in Vietnam, or Korea.

Oh, let's not forget the Philippines while we are at it.

The US is the "guest with a gun" that never leaves.

I suspect that only a military engagement soo big as to draw on all the forces at hand will lead to US troops ever leaving these countries.

"As of 2007,More than 1000 US Bases and/or Military Installations

The main sources of information on these military installations (e.g. C. Johnson, the NATO Watch Committee, the International Network for the Abolition of Foreign Military Bases) reveal that the US operates and/or controls between 700 and 800 military bases Worldwide.

In this regard, Hugh d'Andrade and Bob Wing's 2002 Map 1 entitled "U.S. Military Troops and Bases around the World, The Cost of 'Permanent War'", confirms the presence of US military personnel in 156 countries.

The US Military has bases in 63 countries. Brand new military bases have been built since September 11, 2001 in seven countries.

In total, there are 255,065 US military personnel deployed Worldwide.

These facilities include a total of 845,441 different buildings and equipments. The underlying land surface is of the order of 30 million acres. According to Gelman, who examined 2005 official Pentagon data, the US is thought to own a total of 737 bases in foreign lands. Adding to the bases inside U.S. territory, the total land area occupied by US military bases domestically within the US and internationally is of the order of 2,202,735 hectares, which makes the Pentagon one of the largest landowners worldwide (Gelman, J., 2007)."

  Posted by Bionic Mosquito on 04/08/11 10:18 PM

@Alexsemen

"German tribe will be the end of Europe ! As usual !"

To the extent anything you write is comprehensible, it is certain when you write an anti-German screed you ensure it is somewhat clear.

You state "As Usual!" Please demonstrate using facts. "As usual" suggests that Germans, far more than most, are responsible for evil in this world. Spell it out, Alexsemen. Give us some facts. Compare the Germans to the Russians, the British, the Chinese, the Japanese, and the Americans. You may do this comparison over the last 100 years or any other period you choose.

You can even choose the period 1930-1945. Even in this period, I am quite certain you cannot back up your bigoted bravado with facts. There were equal and larger evils committed by people of other nationalities.

And cut the phony broken English. I have said it before to you, I will say it again: I know many people for whom English is a second language. None of them speak the way you write, and certainly none of them write the way you write. Cut the act.

  Posted by John1945 on 04/08/11 09:54 PM

Occasionally a piece of poetry can provide a broad historical perspective on current events.

Die Preise hoch, die Laden dicht geschlossen
Die Not marschiert und wir marschieren mit
Obama,John Biden,Tim Geithner und Genossen
Die hungern auch ! ‒ doch nur im Geiste ‒ mit

Der Metzger ruft. Die Augen fest geschlossen
Das Kalb marschiert mit ruhig festem Tritt.
Die Kalber, deren Blut im Schlachthof schon geflossen
Sie ziehn im Geist in seinen Reihen mit.

Pardon my French,Daily Bell-and keep up the good work!

  Posted by Mark on 04/08/11 08:17 PM

I know this goes a little wider that just the EU project as part of the greater whole but...

Let's assume that the Power Elite drag us through vast amounts of turmoil, wars, upheavals and machinations and eventually the NWO emerges from the debris with a unified currency and one world government.

Then what? What's the next goal.. the next objective? What happens post-NWO? The plan must be being created for that.. Can we head them off at the pass?

MM

  Posted by Alexsemen on 04/08/11 05:17 PM

I tell you again:

German tribe will be the end of Europe ! As usual ! "Natural born killers" can not be the future of Europe. Everythinbg that Germans did it was a BIG Machine- the New God of everything, against the human beings- and it was always a weapon ! I've told you ! You will see ! Wait few years ! Never I was wrong !

1 2 Next