MikeDC
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Tyler Cowen writes:
Essentially, as far as I can tell, the Eurozone just created TARP for whole countries.
Meanwhile, the Greeks themselves seem fairly unwilling to stop borrowing so much money
This seems, basically, like a homeowner who can't possibly hope to repay his mortgage shooting up a bank because it won't give him a second mortgage
I view the entire bailout announcement, and its scope, as a signaling issue. The Germans loathe such semi-inflationary commitments and basically they just signaled that their banks are a good deal more precarious than the rest of us would like to believe.
So there you have it. Europe is stuck and in response to a crisis they basically raised the stakes. Arguably they had no choice, but they haven't actually eliminated the potential negative outcomes from the gamble.
Essentially, as far as I can tell, the Eurozone just created TARP for whole countries.
Meanwhile, the Greeks themselves seem fairly unwilling to stop borrowing so much money
A nationwide general strike paralyzed Greece on Wednesday as protests against the government's recently announced austerity measures turned violent, with an apparent firebomb attack on a central Athens bank killing three people.
Wednesday's 24-hour strike is seen as a key test of the government's ability to shepherd through tough austerity measures in exchange for a €110 billion ($143 billion) bailout loan from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.
The strike coincided with protests that brought out tens of thousands of Greeks, one of the country's largest protests in years. Angry youths rampaged through the center of Athens, torching several businesses and smashing shop windows.
This seems, basically, like a homeowner who can't possibly hope to repay his mortgage shooting up a bank because it won't give him a second mortgage
