It's human-nature to accept the condition in which you're presented. The protests will decline in number and attendance over the next few days/weeks. Not to say it won't spread to the other PIGS, but the populous will accept the austerity measures.
Quote from Martinghoul:
The most recent IMF-engineered examples I know of are Turkey and Latvia. Turkey's fiscal position was worse during 2001 and, arguably, it's now in a much improved state. Improved enough to consider helping Greece with their issues.
Quote from christianhgross:
1992 Canada was straddled with a HUGE debt.
http://www.ceocouncil.ca/publicatio...ing_Debt_Crisis_And_How_It_Can_Be_Avoided.pdf
Read the first paragraph. Read how Canada was struggling with a horrible debt problem. One of the highest in the industrial world.
Canada managed it back through tough cuts to its social programs, and fiscal discipline. The commodity boom was around 2002-3 and it caused a boom. But the fiscal discipline was well under way.
Quote from Misthos:
There is one remaining viable option that Europe has. And only one, outside of default or disintegration of the Euro.
It's gold. I know, many of you are laughing. But hear me out.
The Euro area in total, has the most gold reserves of any other currency/region. Over 10K tons. Greece has more reserve gold per capita than China - 14x more. The PIGS alone have more gold per capita than the US.
Allow gold to rise, and I mean a rise that would be unrecognizable - and the balance sheets of Europe change.
Sounds crazy? What's crazy is that for the first time in world history, we have a global debt-based international paper standard. And even though it is collapsing, people still speak and act as if it is the only viable global monetary system. And it's merely 40 yrs old! A blip in human history!
Now that's crazy.`
Quote from christianhgross:
Ok you are DREAMING....
18 months to right the system after a crash...
Try 10 years! If the G20 were to default on all debt the entire system would grind to a halt.
This is what I always see when people say, "oh just let the die fall where it may". They think they will be ok, but having had a family that lived through the German crisis and the European crisis you are only dreaming.
I would love to say "I told you so" if all of this were to occur, but if this were to happen I know you would understand the error in your ways.
Quote from Ivanovich:
The same could be said for the US as well. It has a lot of reserves too. But, and I have no proof of this, the damage done to the balance sheets of all the banks that have paper shorts would cause them to topple and likely neuter any positive that occurs from a higher gold price.
Quote from christianhgross:
1992 Canada was straddled with a HUGE debt.
http://www.ceocouncil.ca/publicatio...ing_Debt_Crisis_And_How_It_Can_Be_Avoided.pdf
Read the first paragraph. Read how Canada was struggling with a horrible debt problem. One of the highest in the industrial world.
Canada managed it back through tough cuts to its social programs, and fiscal discipline. The commodity boom was around 2002-3 and it caused a boom. But the fiscal discipline was well under way.
Want another change?
Singapore
http://www.singstat.gov.sg/pubn/papers/economy/op-e12.pdf
Just because Detroit does not change does not mean other can't change. And I just gave you a significant example of a country that can change.
What you are following is something Taleb highlighted in his Fooled By Randomness. You are seeing what you want to see and hence you are following surviorship bias. You are not looking at all of the numbers.
Quote from Misthos:
There is one remaining viable option that Europe has. And only one, outside of default or disintegration of the Euro.
It's gold. I know, many of you are laughing. But hear me out.
The Euro area in total, has the most gold reserves of any other currency/region. Over 10K tons. Greece has more reserve gold per capita than China - 14x more. The PIGS alone have more gold per capita than the US.
Allow gold to rise, and I mean a rise that would be unrecognizable - and the balance sheets of Europe change.
Sounds crazy? What's crazy is that for the first time in world history, we have a global debt-based international paper standard. And even though it is collapsing, people still speak and act as if it is the only viable global monetary system. And it's merely 40 yrs old! A blip in human history!
Now that's crazy.`
Quote from achilles28:
I like it. Great idea. But rumor has it gold prices are suppressed to buoy US fixed-income and stocks (the illusion of strong dollar). Dollar weakness relative to gold could spark capital flight from US Treasuries and low yielding stocks into commodities and foreign markets. It might just pass the debt bomb from Europe to America ?