Quote from morganist:
True but the added advantage to the shop owners is it makes their goods less expensive to sell abroad. This is what it does for Germany. Their success is based on Greece's failure.
Quote from zdreg:
"Their success is based on Greece's failure."
nonsense.
demand for german goods is highly inelastic because of manufacturing excellence. e.g. there is a reason restauranteurs, in many cases, are willing to pay 7k for a german oven vs. 3k for a chinese oven. of course german companies are also able to seal the deal with extremely cheap credit arrangements, which narrows the initial price difference by a large amount.
Quote from morganist:
I guess it depends on what you class a success. Yes they produce good stuff but if the price rises too much people will look elsewhere. The effect of not only Greece but the other PIIGS has a huge advantage for Germany. Something I suspect they would be willing to support the failing region to maintain at least for the next year or two. Perhaps that is Merkels real intention of maintaining currency union irrespective of the costs.
Which is more cost efficient. To subsidise an austerity programme across the EU to maintain the exchange rate effect they have or to stop funding it and stop the risk of bad debt from the ESM?
What do you think is more costly effective? Currently I think the subsidy programme is a better deal. In a year or two that might change.
Once you're a Jet you're a Jet all the wayQuote from Ed Breen:
Going to the Euro allowed the Greeks to borrow money at a AAA rating even though they had no way to pay it back. That is hardly like joining the Mafia. Its more like if you imagined that Obama would start a program of unsecured loans for the homeless that were guaranteed by the shop owners of the stores on sidewalks on which the homeless were living.
Quote from Ed Breen:
Going back to the Drachma is not a solution for Greece. In order to have a currency, you have to have foreign credit to back it up. Greece has no credit. If it introduces a devalued currency, that currency will fail and turn into hyperinflation. Greece has to stay on the Euro in order to make transaction commerce from becoming even worse. Greece is going to get dramatically poorer no matter what they do.
Quote from Tsing Tao:
So not correct, sorry. Greece simply reintroduces the Drachma, defaults on all debt, and begins anew. Yes, inflation will pop up, but Greece has defaulted...how many times in the 20th century? Each time people lend them back money. A cheap drachma does wonders for Greece's #1 industry: Tourism.
Quote from Ed Breen:
Zdreg is right. Look how competitive Germany is with U.S. in China; even though U.S. currency is tied to Yuan, so Germany has a currency disadvantage vis a vis the $, yet they are still able to sell high tech value added products into Chinese infrastructure. Your position depends on commoditized products traded on price alone. Germany's economy is not based on such exports. They already sell stuff that is more expensive, because it is better. If you wanted a better price you could already seek substitution; but yet they sell thier quality products.